II 111 Q CttlittslntrO Gaytts, THE LOVED AND LOST The following poem, from the Church of England Magazine,'will.come like a "song in the night".to many a stricken heart: •-The to - red and test why do we call them Wit? v e cause we miss them from bur outward road, 'God's umeen angel e'er our pathway most, Lcolred on ui all. and toying ,h•m the uiost. Straightway relieved them froaillte'd woary-losd. They are not lost; they hre within the door That shuts out IOSS end every hurtful thing . — With angels bright, and loved once gone hezore, Iu thmr Iludeemers presence e•ennore, And lied Illtmelf their Lord, Judge and King: • And se We al a 105..0. woof.sle ,orrow Of sethsh hcen l rt.; ! t . L-t es leo:. round, som.:trgnmout lo borrow. W Thhy in patieno.. ~ h oul.i:LNYllit the morrow, That sueety must succeed this night of de ~th I,!Sh7e. look u'non.this dreary. de rert path, i: thorns and t.lit ICs witerrsce'r, turn; Wuat trials and xbat 1 c 11.1 . $„‘V 11:.t. wrongs and wrath, ttru7glea and what, these;e Journey batik: They h:svp knapeil 'mu lot we mourn As; tbe poor sailor, when thewreck !s done. W ho, 11:n treavure, strove the shore to reach, white. with the raglux wave.; he battled on° WA , It not joy, where every joy seemed gone, - To fee his loved oueg landed on the bench? • A poor wayfarer leading by the A little call'', ad halted by thewell o wash from off nee feet the Mooring slnd, And to I the tired boy of thatlrislit lane. Where this lougjosirney pal, they tonged to dwell: When lot the Lord, who manly mansions 'sad, - Drew near und looked ep ullhe 'offering twain, Then, pitrieg. snake, "Give me the little lad; 1W - strength renewed, and glorious beauty, clad, I'll bring him with me when I come again." Did slie make answer selfishly and wrong— • Nay Out. Ike 'ROCS I fed hetet, must suare!" Or, rather, bursting into zrateful song, Nhe werit her way TcjOtelDr,, and made strong To stru,"gic onsinee he was freed from care. We will Ito likewise. Death bath mate no breach In love and sympathy' to hope and trusty • - No outward sigh or sound our ears esn resell, Dot there's an inward, sptritnal Sneed". That greets us sttli,though mortal tonguesbb dust. It blils us do the work that they laid down— Tak e cip - the soil.; where the; b'o ' le off the strain Fu Journeying tin we reach the heavenly own, Where are laid up our tre.isures-and our crown. tui oar lost, loved ones will he fouud again ►rolina feasts on open air straw —North C berries —Flogging has-been abolished from the Swedish army. —Bo,ston lias 102 female teachers who de mand the right to vote. —Two_thousand men are employed on the New Orleans levees. —Brazil is raising recruits for her army in England and Ireland. —Belle Boyd is doing something in the newspaper line in Texas. —Vieux-temps is coming to this country with Carlotta Patti this year. —Baron Brisse says he knows sixty-two good ways of cooking pigeon. —New York City had 740 fires last year, which cost more than $4,000,000. -$3OO per month is the salary of each Professor in the California University. —A San Francisco newspaper office is haunted by the ghost of a dead printer. —Some one asks "Why is a - mouse like a load of hay ? Because the cat'le eat it. —George Francis thinks he has everything in Train for the Presideney.—Boaton Post. —Patti's mother-in-law is now said to be the cause of trouble and the trouble , Of Caux. —Small pox is troubling San Francisco dreadfully. -It seems they are really to be pitted. —During 1867 more than ten thousand dead bodies were buried on the river near Calcutta.. . - —Last year the Mayor of Portsmouth, N. H., gave his salary to the High School of that city. —Bismarck's mother was the daughter of a commonor, and was named Louisa Wil holminaMenken.' —Fashionable dinners in New York now have each delicate bill-of-fare enclosed in a golden nut shell. —Mexico is reported to be on the eve of revolution. It always is when it is not ac tively- in revolution. • - —Providence, R. 1., during the past three months has sent 150,000 new rifles to Eu rope and 5,000 to, puba. —Washington is dull this winter, fashion ably speakina, as indeed it always is during the - last winter of a President. _ paperhas been started in' New Eng land which is called The Comet, because it has an original tale every week. —ln Paris there are said to be twenty eight regular newspaper correspondents, twenty. of whom are Americans. --Daring the past three years, in England more than six _hundred boys and .men have been killed by colliery explosions. 7 -Fifty thousand people in New York Wear wigs, and the perruquiers of that city do in annual busines of $2,000,000. —Chicago' has established its first iron blast furnace, an. achievement which the Chicago reporters elaborately glorify. , _—Strange as it may seem, there is a smaller per tentage of foreigners in New York than in any other of the States. —Helena, Montana, has a Skating Rink which is described as a "fine large expanse of ice enclosed bralligh board fence. —Elmer Ruan Coats has composed a poem of 0,000 octo syllabic lines. Elmer will ruin more things than coats if he keeps on. -- 4.r—Some Charlestonians have built a grand hotel at Aiken, South Carolina, for the win accommodation of Northerit invalids. —Some people in Kentucky, near' Louis ville, have been starving to death recently. They have done this merely from lack of food. —Louisa MuhMach's eldest daughter, Frauelein Theodora Mundt, is coming to this country as a prima donna of Opera Bouffe. —Since Cortez went beck on Montezuma so roughly, Mexico, the land of the Aztecs, has furnished :0,011,452,000 worth - Of silver to the world. —The New York Commercial Advertiser says "in no previous season has bad weather on the Atlantic so seriously interrupted mail communication. —Baron Brisse receives ten thousand francs a year for publishing daily bills of fare, and receipts for cooking the various dishes, in Girardin's paper. —Years ago our ears were charmed with strains of the "Sweedish 'Nightingale" and the "Black Swan," and now: we are treated to those of a "Hauck."—Punch. —Forty-two rhiladelphiang killed them selves last year. They would probably have treated themselves just as badly if they had been New Yorkers or Bostonians. —An exchange says a man in Indiana was chopped into cat's meat the other day for the sake of $286. But he euchered them at that, for he had depotited it in a bank. —Dr. Poggioli has discovered a method of improving children by electricity. It he can but carry the method on, from children tb men, galvanism may yet take the place of penitentiaries. —A. distinguished chemist makes the un pleasant announcement.that every spoonful of raw sugar which is put in a cup of tea or coffee is alive with vermin. Refining the sugar kills the insects. —An old green grocer who died in Lon; don last month, left 115,000 to Dickens, on condition that Charles reads the trial scene from "Pickwick" in presence of the go cer's family once a year. —The wife-of Captain Churchill, tailed States Navy, who lost his life by the eiplo- sion in New York harbor, is lying sick an( penniless at a hotel in that city, and contra butions are solicited to enable her to ge ho'me , to. Georgia -Dr.„ Dio Lewis opened his new boarding house to tbe public last Tuesday. It is seven stories high, contains sixty.eight rooms and is furnished throughout with strict regard to health and convenience. It is almost full of boarders. —Anna Dickinson will next "struggle for life" 'on Friday at the Philadelphia Acad- emy of Music. If these struggles are long continued they may end disastrously with more struggle thau life, and what , could the world do without its fair lecturess2 —The Philadelphia - Press says: "Alle gheny and Scranton still have poor gas." As Scranton has never done us any harm, w, do not wish thm to live in Wretchedness, and so sincerely hope that the gas there is not half as bad as it is in afflicted Allegheny. —The bell of the North Presbyterian church, at lowa City, was spirited away 20 years ago and carried to Salt Lake City. The preknt pastor of the church has re ceived a letter from Brigham Young, offer ing to -return the hell to the church at his own expense. —Baron Beust's niece, a tall, graceful girl, once the belle of the Saxon Court, is now said to be the most beautiful noble woman in Vienna, yet she has disgraced herself in the eyes of her uncle and the Im perial household by falling in love with a Prussian officer. i —The Bey of Tunis is a male. Grand Duchess. He had a barber whom he liked very much, and promoted him by regular steps until he had made him general super intendent of the palace. One day the Bey surprised this new officer twisting a queue. It was like finding that Fritz had married Wanda. He began degrading the unhappy man until he was only barber, and now there is reason to believe that he will lose his head as!well as his rank. -The New York Sun objects to private secretaries, and calls the habit of keeping them snobbish. We cannot agree with the Sun, but here,is the way it winds upitsarti cle on that subject: "The practice for nearly every body to keep ahem has been in troduced along with the Grecian behd and the Human wriggle. We wonder that the busiest boot-blacks do not keep private sec retaries. They have so much to do, and their hands are so black, it must be incon venient for them to carry on their own cor respondence." In commenting recently on the subject of experts we mentioned the interesting and valuable fact that the living skull is much More readily fractured than the (lead one. We Understand that our assertion of this im portant fact is called in question, and the fact flatly denied by some medical men claiming to Le experts. We believe, how ever, that it is strictly true. Our authority for the assertion is one that is recognized as among the highest in the scientific world. Dr. Caspar, of Berlin, the celebrated profes sor of Medical Jurisprudence, and the lead ing official expert in Prussia, lays down this fact in his valuable work on Medical Juris- p i udence, as the result of a long and inter e ting series of experiments, and one that c nnot be doubted or denied. Casper is an "expert," in the truest sense of the term, and he asserts that so thoroughly sound is this principle that where a body is found with injuries on the head, and it cannot be otherwise determined whether they are ante or post-mortem wounds, the nature of the fractures of the skull will decide the point, because it is almost Impossible to inflict • them 14 on the dead body. Of course medi cal men will disagree upon this, as they do Upon most other subjects, -but until some higher authority than that of the great Prus sian expert is produced, his di turn, based upon the experiments which he recites, ought to and-will carry great wcight. We know that his views upon this subject are sustained by some of the leading scientific men of Philadelphia. whose opinions are entitled to the highest honors.—Philadel phia Bulletin... • THE PETROLEUM DEPOSITS tn the . region of the Caucasus are very remarkable.• For Litany centuries the springs have been known, and the oil has been collected by skimming. On the eastern shore of the Caspian, 20,000 such wells, all of them quite shallow are now skimmed:d. The wells are described as being often quite close to each other, and the sinking of a new one, it is asserted, does not affect the productiveness of another near it. One sunk in 1803, by the very side of another, which had for cen turies produced 8100 pounds per day, yielded 40,000 pounds per day, without af fecting in the least the first. The'American method has lately been introduced, and flowing wells have burst forth from a depth of 250 feet, which have,until controlled, Maintained a jet from forty to sixty feet high. It is calculated that 10,000,000 pounds arc annually produced in the Cau casus region, while 200,000 pounds of parka fine are now made from asphaltum. THE city passenger railways of Chicago are composed of three divisions, the 'North, the South and the West. The north division owns thirty cars, two hundred horses and four dummy engines, and employs one hun dred' men. During 1868 the number of miles run WAS 447,700; passengers carried, 2,740,000; and the gross receipts, $140,500. The south division owns forty-two cars, three hundred and seventy-five horses, and employs two hundred and twenty-five men. Last year the number of trips made each day was three hundred and ninety-six, and the gross receipts were about $350 000. The western division owns forty-four cars, three hundred andlseventy-seven horses, and . em ploys two htipdred and sixty men. In 1808 the receipts ere $383,454. The total of the three divisio •s is as follows: Dummy en gines, 4; car-, 110; horses, 932; men cia ployed, 585; eceipts, $882,954. PITTSBURGH GAZETTE: TILTPSDA.Y. jA.NUARY 12, law - TEETH EXTRACTED - NVITELOITT PAIN I No CHARGE MADE witEs AsTnnotkL worm ARE ORDERED, A riLL„SET YOB AL _AT DR. SCOTT'S. NTS PENS STREET, lb DOOR ABUTS RAND. ALL WORE WARRANTED. f 2 i- AMNE ESPECIMEDIS OF mom d&T " ITE. 79: -WE D LON & KELLY, Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers AiiD LAMP COORS. Skulls. GAS FIXTURES Mao, CARBON AND LUBRICATING OILS, BENZINE, ace. N 0.1.47 Wood Street. se9nio Between sth and . oth Avenues. PIANOS. ORGANS, &C. BEY THE BEST AND CHEAP.. EST PIANO AND ORGAN. Schomacker's Gold Medal Piano, AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN. The , SCHOMACKER PIANO combines all the la teat valuable Improvements known In the con strucliisn,of a drat class instrument. and has always been awarded the highest premium wherever ex hibited. Its tone is full, sonorous and sweet. The workmanship. fordurability and beauty, surpass all others. Prices from $5O to $l5O. (according to style and finish,) cheaper than all other so-called first class Plano. &STEVE. OOTT/VIE ORGAN Stands at the bead of all reed instruments. In pro ducing the most perfect pipe quality of tone of any similar Instrument in the United States. It is sim. pie and compact in construction, and not liable to' get out 01 order. CARPENTER'S PATENT " VOX HUMANA TREMOLO" Is only to be found in. this Orgat. Price from $lOO to $550. All guaranteed for tire years. BARE, 101 ARE & METTLER,' No. 12 ST. CLAIR STREET PIA.NOS AND ORGANSAn. en tire new sto-k of RNABE'S UNRIVALLED PIANOS; HAINES BROS.. PIANOS: PRINCE & CO'S ORGANS AND MELODEONS and TREAT, LINSLEY A CO'S ORGANS AND 31ELODEONS. CUARLOTTE BLUME. deS 43 Firth. avenue, Suie Agent. Ler 0 1 / 2 . i ail mii*Cok IN z ail . - pr . RUH, Practical Cook, Re - sPetfully announces to the public that he w On Saturday and Monday Next, Open to the pablic the DELNIONICO RESTAURANT, FOR GENTLEMEN ONLY. It ydll be his earnest endeavor to furnish his pa, trona. at all times with the most palatable viands which the market or the season affords. Tim LIQCORb, W I N of various dates, ALE, BEER, etc . will be their own recommendation. Orders for tine Cooking for Weddings, and other , Festivals, will, as heretofore. be promptly and cheaply attended to, reauestinK patron e. OCE:y6B Fl. MTH. GEORGE BEAVEN, IKANI:7PACIVEZR Or CREAM CANDIES AND TAFFIES, ES,nd d J SAUCES. E ealer in al kiLLnds LEE of , FRUITS,aOI , NUTS, PICK L ko., 11 reRDERAL ST.. Allezbonv MERCHANT TAILORS. B . TIEGEL, (Late Cutter with W. Hespenheide,) 2IXEOFCCIIA_N'T TAII,OII, No. 53 Smithfield Street, Pittsburgh sex:ra • NEW FALL GOODS. A eplendld new mot of CIATIIS, CA.SSIMERMSaiso. Just received by 5e14: 31e.rfihaist Tallor. 73 Smithfield street SEWING MACHINES. rriElE GREAT AMERICAN COM- A. BINATION. • BUTTON-HOLE OTERSEUnN43 AND SEWING MACHINE. IT MILS NO EQII/IL4 • BEING ABSOLUTELY THE BEST TAIIILY MACHINE IN THE vg ,, aLn, _AND . TRINISICALLY TaE - CHEAPEST. air Agents wanted to sell this Machine. CHAS. C. 33.4L1A51.F..3r. Agent for Western Pennsylvania. Corner FIFTH AND MARKET STREETS, over It lehartiswi ' Jeweiry Store. . WALL PAPERS, N EW WALL PAPERS, For Halls, Parlors andiChamberB, NOW OPENING, AT 101 Market St., near Filth Ave.; JOS. R. HUGHES & BRO. sell 4: DYER AND SCOURER., li e J. LANCE, DYER MID SCOURER. No. 8 ST. CLaitin STREET And No. 185 and 187 Third Street, PITTSBURGH. rA. COAL AND COKE. COAL! COAL 22. COAVII • DICKSON, STEWART'S; CO., Having removed their Utile° to NO, 567 Ll33F7llane" serzw.:Fir, (Lately City Flour Mill)tiflCOND ELOOB. Are now prepared to furnish good Y9UGRIOGRE. NY LUMP, N UT COAL Oft 3LACh, at the lowest oArko prece. left at their office, or addressed to them through the mall, will be attended to Promptly. TOBACCO AND CIGARS. E XCELSIOR WORKS. B. W. JENICIIVSONs sautaeturere and EtAter& . Tjboiro, Snuff, Cigarb, P1p05, , & 43. 1 N,• 6 YEDICII/J, BT.. ALLEGHENY aR•V" ARCHITECTS. 'B Si.ARR MOSER, ARCHITECTS, FRUIT HOUSE ASSOCIATION BUILDINGS, Nos, and 4 St. Olair Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. Special attention given to the designing and building pi COURT HOUSE -1 and PUBLIC, 8U1LD12445. CHOICE GOODS JOSEPH HORNE & CO, BIRD'S NEST VELVET HATS,' HAT A• 413 BONNET FHAIKES. GERMANTOWN WOOLS. ZEPHYR A.ND KviTTING YARNS, BLACK V x. LVET KEN, BONNET VELVET, BLACK a 4d 0 ISA n GE SATINS, TRIMMING SAT•Ns, ALL SHADEs, .• SASH. AND ROW ItlitsONs , ASD BLACK SATIN 8188 uNS, ail widths. In White, Opera, anti Dark. Fur Topped Kid Glows. Wool Mitts and Gloves, fibbed Fancy and Plain, HANDKF.RCHIEFS , K.III3IWIDF.RIES. POCKET B CALF W ALLETS,'Ac WOOLEN GOODS, MILLINERY GOODS, ROOP SKIRTS AND CORSETS, 77 AND 79 MARKET STREET. BEDUCTED PRICES. ONE MORE CASE OF FINE CASIDIERE SCARFS, in all colors, LADIES S: GENTS FINE FUR•TOFFED GLOVES Woolen Hoods, Shawls and Children's Sacques, Ladles Hemstitched Embroi cered and Lace Handkerchiefs, Gents Silk llandkerchiefb, iu all styles. HOOP SKIRTS. BALIiDII. kr, SKIRTS, PAPER COLLARS AND CUFFS, WOOLEN MITTS AND WRISTLETS• DIIA,CRUDit, CLYDE & CO., 18 mid SO Market Street. 3110131 & yCIRLISLE, NO. 19 FIFTH AVENUE, HENRY ]MEYER. US AND NOTIONS. Mal RECEIVED DAILY, ALEXANDEE'S ILID GLOVES, lIO9IERY. STILL I'UNTHER REDUCTIONS IN NEW GOODS GREATLYAT STRIPED FELT SKIRTS JUST 11.CEIVED WOOLEN HOSIERY at very low prices. A large raritty of THE NEW SKIRT, - "LE PANIER PERFECTION." `;THE FAVORITE," "THE roruLka, ,, "THE IZEC,EPTION,' THoMpsON'S TWIN SPRING, "WINGED ZEPHYR." "GLOVE FITTING," CORSETS AND PAT ENT "PANIERS." THE NEW GORED OVER SKIRT, "BELLE HELENE," richly embroidered; au elegant street or Skating Skirt. RICH RIBBONS FOR BOWS, SCARFS AND ROMAN STRIPES AND' PLAIDS. sAT I NS, all shade.; and widths. FhoWERS. PLUME", HATs AND BONNETS. LA DIES AND CHILDREN'S MERINO UNDER WEAR, Tile richest Juni latest novelties in GRIPS, FRINGES AND BUTTONS. We especially direct 'attention to the great excel lence of the HARRIS SEAMLESS illeniliont KID GLOVES" over all others. and for winch we ate the Sole -agents. • A complete Bee of GENTLEMEN'S "STAR" SII I las SUSPENDERS. GLOVES, HALF HOSE, DEKSHIRTS AND DRAWEIV. SELLING GENTS FOR LOCKW OOD'S PAPER cIOOLLI, and A all other popular le*es. MGR & CELISLE, NO. 19 FIFTH AVENUE. CM A . MERRY' CHRISTMAS NEW GOODS FOR THE HOLIDAY DENNISON & HECKERT, . NO. 27. FIFTH AVENUE, Rase Just received a large and judiciously assorted stock...A • EMBROIDERIES, DACE GOODS, TitIMMINDS, 11 VSIEItT, Hid Woven. ilandkerehief , , Slipper • Patterns. Zepli,r Hoods. Scarfs and Gents tarnishing . • Goods, ~ and Notions generally. A lolV selection afforded in special novelties suitable HOLIDAY - PRESENTS, to which the attention of lady renders Is specially called. . . DIENISTISONA. HECIiERT, deB NO. 27 FIFTH AVENUE. PRICES MARKED DOWN. • BARGAINS ALMOST EVEItYTHING. REAL It FM STITCH, all Linen. IIkIiDREIC CHIhri, 11e, 19s, ti:lle'and tpwards. iArlf; LGSit KELL LINEN HAIaIIEERCHIEFS 'W.V., Se to SOc. All our HATA at Olt?, half regularl)T.CCEl. All the new 13.11..titiltAL Mall:TS nod Erroll.PY's latest styles of 1100 r SKIRTS, at the Lowest Prlees In the City._ .• • • ENTs , . MERINO VEST and DimwERS, 40c to 0, 00 .. • AT ETON'S, No. 17 Fifth Avenue. des- • . . SHEETINGS AND BATTING. 110 - Lizz9, BELL ANcHott COT PITTE~B Kano tutors of TrEA.vv ANCHOR AND sv , nrrirras A 51. . •••••••• KITTA.NIENG EXTRA HEAVY Barred Flavnel, =I A VERY LARGE STOOK, 1 4 4c:0 - I;nr Car ®d ' IN GOOD STYLES. NELROY DICKSOY & CO. WHOLESALE 3130XV ° 2" a,rC)o3Dgii, WOOD STREET. ® (11 g ,:,3. 0 , g a a ° A z z ra r: a II oc E i a ;T4 •, w .' A ,• , ~,, ~.., , ; 4 :2 will go= AO. r g . , 0 '%i pii 1 ' .r 1 E -. ..,- W . PI 4 , 0 ~- ~ ri , 141 •p., 74 o o'• H ri2 l oi A 4 o o z 1 22 .1 „ • , , E. 4 siall . j i- 14 .."1 0 04 W.; tri • Ci 44 DRY GOODS .A.Pr COWL', FOR TRIRTY DAYS ONLY, To -c-Loerv, STOCK. THEODORE F. PHIVLIPS, 87 MABILET S2rBEET. de23 CLOSING OUT SALE Oi l `1)11.R3 4G-CIoODS AT J. 111.13IIIICEEFICLII SsCO'S• 2 NO. 152 ST. CLAIR STREAT, All Wool Grey Twilled Flannel for 37 worth 02c. Delaines for 20c. worth 25. Soiled Blaukkets $l-,00 worth $5,00. Waterproof for $1,25 worth $1,50. Poplins for 37,4 c, worth 50. • Kid Gloves for $1,50 worth $21,00. Paisley Shawls $13,00 worth $20.00. Velveteens 2,00 worth $2,75. Blenched Muslin 12lic. worth 10, Uuubleached Muslin 12?ic. worth 17. Cheapeht and best stock in the city. No. 52 ST, CLAIR. dear Liberty street. deZ 1.68• HOSIERY and GLOVES. - SOUCY, 112iir No. 168 Wylie Street...ol 16S. 16S. CARR, WicCANDLIESS & CO, (Lato W)lson, Carr, C 0.,) WHOLESALZ DEALERS 1N Foteign and Domestic Dry Goods, No. 94 WOOD STREET, Third door abcive Diamond alley, CO.; ON MILL 1-141-13.. - _ BratTA Talc PHILIP CLB/8. SINGERLY #4, CLEM, Successors to GUI F. SCMI6IIIIAN & Co. : rytAicuree.L.LrrgotaikAritzus. The only Steam Lithographic EStabllsholeot West of the IcOUUtalill. 13119111e40 Cards, Letter Beads. Bonds, Labels, Circulars, show cards, Diptomas. Portrsitc Vtaws, Certiti ,:ates of Deposits, invits tloll CSA - .11. ri35% and 74, Third .streeti Picsiutu"4l. DIUM. and LIGEIT ItIAGNOLLk D BATTING. 54. „5„..9 NEW GOODS. NEW ALFACCAS. firEW 1110131Ukill. BLACK SILKS. PITTSBURGH. Pi. LITHOGRAPHERS. .CARPETS REDUCTION CONTINUEI FORA FEW BAYS. Taking advantage of the extreni depression in the Eastern Marke during the Holidays, we have adde largely to our stock at much helm . Market Rates. We will continue t sell at our present reduced prices lb TEN DAYS longer. M'C.ALLLUM BROTHERS. JANUARY, 1869: ioddl,.xl.x=noeir M6FARLAXD & COLLINS WILL CONTINUE THEIR ANIiUAL CLEARANCE SALE TWO WEEKS LONGER GFreater Itargains than Eve] Will be Of eyed to Close Oui Special Lines of Goods, at 71 and 73 Flth Avenue, Second Floor. Ja7 IllETPTJerri 4 larti CARPETS, cxcLa4c3r_Aor:›siemEss, deo . 9 cfcc. We offer our stock at reduced prices for a SHORT before commencing to take stock Now is the time to buy. BOVAFtD, ROSE & CO. 21 Fll7ll AVENIJE. vi.A.4.tw7 GLASS. CHINA, CUTLERY 100• WOOD STREET. HOLIDAY GIFTS. FINE VAgEg, BOHEMIAN AND CHIN. A, NTEW STYLES, 4 ' BONER • SETS, TEL SETS, CIFT CUPS, SMOKING SETS, A large stock of SILVER PLATED OOPS of all de4crlptloos Call and examine our goods suited.e:feel satisfied no one need fall to le . R. E. BREED & Ca 100 WOOD STREET. ROCK THE BABY EAli 'S PATENT CRIB. - ; 1 . BOLD ONLY BY ICS. LEMON & WEISE. Practical Furniture Manufacturers, &en:7, ns FOURTH ILIVENIT Where may be found a full assortment of Parlor. Chamber ant Kitchen Furulture. den WALL PAPER—REMOVAL. THE OLD PIPER STORE IN I NEW PLACE,i l it r e P. lIIARSICEALIA I Has removed from ST WOOD STREET to NO. 191. LIBERTY STREET, 1: a Tew doors above ST. CLAiR. t'iS I latiNEY !, MONEY :-$4,900 to A TAL Invest In a Mortgage on City or Connty Property; fur a term of three years. Vi.ooo to loan on Pond and Mortgage for 'A years. WANTlM—itittness or Accommodation Paper to t. the amount of 420,000 t. time from 00 days to 4 months. - WANTED—To exchange a Farm of'loo.A urea of ,• Land in Missouri for a Family Horse and Spring Wanon.Apply to IL Mei. tN k del . Qvrner Foul tit Av. and dmittsdeld sty EMI