The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, January 14, 1869, Image 2

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    El
Ctt littihuglj Ctaitttt.
THE PROUDEST LADY.
The Queen Is proud on her throne.
And proud are her MI aide so Line,
But ths , proudest Isdv that ever was known,
Is a little lady, mine. ,
And oh! she flouts Me, she flouts mei
nd spurns, and scorns, and some me:
Thank a n dp on my knee and sue for grace,
And beg oeseacti wltti he saddest Me,
hall ever the same she 'doubts sae.
She Is seven by the calendar,
A 111 's almost as tall;
t ah! this little lady's by far
The proud , at lady of all.
It's her bport and pleasure to flout me I
To spurn. and &corn, and scout me!
But all: l've notion it'S nougbt but play.
And ae. say what she u .nd feign what the may
She can't well do wathout roe.
When 16lie, rides outer nag, ?may,
Park. road and river.
In a little ha, SO isunty and gay.
Oh! then she's proveter than ever:
And : obi - what faces. vrhAt "age*:
What Petulant , pert grimaces:
- Why, the very pony wances'and winks;
And tosses herad and plainly 'Mac
He may ape ars and graees.
= nut at times like a pleasant tune,
r; A sweeter mood'o-ertakts her:
=Oh! then she , ' sunny as skies of June.
end nil her pride forsakes her.
Ohl-shedances around me so fairly! •
Oti2`hot laugh rings ont so rarely!
-- 014=1M COaXtei and nestles.. and purrs, and pries,
In my puzzled fate with ter two great eyes,
•=.' And uwn she loves me dearly.
Alt,Ethe Queen is proud on her throne, •
Atio,proud author maids so Hue;
Bgt the proudest lady that ever was ltnown,
Is this little lady of mine. ,
Clo9d lark! she flouts me, ste Routs me
She epurns„and scorns. and scouts me!
Bat abt reit aUrtion tt , s nought hut way,
And that, say what she wilt and think what she may
She can't well do , withorit me.
EPIIMUat3.
':—Yokes is the text of Parton's next
sermon.
-425 per ton is the price of hay in Cla
rion, Pa.
—A bust of Forrest, the actor, is to adorn
Central Park.
—Juvenile fancy balls are popular this
year in New Lork. ,
--beer are very plenty in Northern and
Central New York. •
--Cincinnati has 100,783 school children,
5,830 of whom are colored.
Hartford, Conn„ claims to have fifty
strictly.professional gamblers.
... r ,There are_abont fifty-seven thousand
churches in the United States.
—Beecher has a new lecture called
"Ainusements and Recreations."
--In Northern Maine:snow is three feet
deep, except where it has drifted.
—An iron company . with a capital of
$120,000 has been started at Erie.
---One .thotisand workmen are .now
- pipped at the Brooklyn Navy Yard.
Twenty-one convicts in the Maine
Penitentiary were pardoned out yesterday.
—More than eleven hundred arrests
were made in New York last • week by the
—Upwards of two thousand gold dollars
per week is the cost of running .a London
theatre. -.'
—Rumor whispers that the - result of Fos
tees' late accident will be a life-long dififig
uration
—The funeral of General Rousseau in
New Orleans is said to have been large and
imposing.
Benjamin Disraeli bad a brother, but
he died of heart disease the'day before
Christmas.
—Ex-Governor Pickens of South Carolina
is lying seriously ill at his residence at
Edgewood.
-—A new poem by Thomas i Buchanan',
Read will appear in Lippincott's Magazine
for February:
—Some of General Kilpatrick's Hartford
admirers have given him a service of silver
plate worth $1,508
—At Rome, N: Y., they - give chloroform
to murderers when they are about to hang
them. That is humanity.
—General (?) Magruder has been lectur
ing on Mexico and Maximilian to small
select Baltimore audiences.
—The Legislature of Wisconsin has pre.
rented a gold medal with complimentary
resolutions to Cyrits W. Field.
- —An English statistician announces that
the United States containslo3,soo,ooo hens,.
to say nothing of the henneries.
—David Dudley Field has succeeded
. to
the doubtful honor of the Presidency of the
Yree Trade League in New York.
--It has teen reserved for Chicago to
invent a one wheeled velocipede. Chicago'.
has honored the reservation by inventing
one. x.
—During his late visit to Florida, Senator
Sprague purchased nine thousand acres of
the best land in that . State for ten dollars an
acre. ,
—A very large crowd of sorrowing Freed.
men followed - the remains of the late John
Minor Botts to' their -final earthly resting
;.—Boston rowdies are on' the increase and
are being more obstreperous. If the keep
On they may become as famous as those of
Philadelphia.
.-Thieves lately stole the carpet from a
church neat Cincinnati. and when it was
newly carpeted brought back the old and
-stole the new one.
—A spiritualistic wires wash ld recently in
_New York, at which one young woman had
a delightful round dance with the ghost of
Benjamin Franklin, -
-The phonographic reporters of New
York City :have ; organized themselves into
-a guild, the ,object of which Is to advance
the interests:of their craft.
—During the year 1808, eleven thousand
six hundred and fiftraix. emigrants arrived
in fifteen • steamers and twenty-six sailing
vessels at the port of Baltimore.
• —At Stratford, Conn., a saloon keeper
has found an oil well' in his cellar and re-
Itises to taki $40,000 for it. Our advice to
him is, change your mind and sell out
. —Massachusetts is said not be have now a.
single highway, or bridge on which toll is
vbarged. All are free. Vulgarly and em
- phatically we say. Bully for Massachusetts.
• —Judge Agnew, of the Supreme Court,
recently fell and' injured himself severely
• -at his yesidence in Beaver. He will probe
,. bly not be able to resume his .seat on the
bench for some time.
• —Two resurectionists, with tWo dead
bodies in their possessien, were arrested in
Washington, on Saturday evening, while
idriving.through the .streets in a carriage
i.i~
:t :, L
:`Y
1 ,
" ?
with .their booty. They were each fined
twenty dollars.
—A family in New Haven was found the
other daTin the act of dining on boiled
dog. They gave as a reason for this eccen
tricity, that the only altenaatiVes they had
were rats or starvation.
--George Alfred Townsend is said to have
severed his •connection with all the other
papers for which he wrote, with the inten
tion of hereafter devoting himself entirely
to 'corresponding for the benefit of the hap
py readers of the Chicago Tribune.
—There have recently been going
through NeW Orleans heavy shipments of
Malaga fruits, etc., fom New 'York to Chi
cago, Milwaukee and St. Louis. The rail
road charges are so heavy that it pays to
ship freight to the west by sea from New
York.
—The Harrisburg Guard, says: "Three
hundred and ninety thousand three hundred
and ninety-five tons of coal were shipped
over the Summit Branth Railroad for the
year just closed, being an excess of upwards
of ninety-one thousand tons over the pre
ceding year."
—The leaAing illustration in the last
number of Punch is entitled "Under the
Mistletoe, and represents. old John Bull
and Miss. Columbia, with clasped hands, in
the act of kissing each other under the mis
tletoe bough, - which the good-natured Rev
erdy .Jolmson is holding over their heada.
—Hearth and Home has a letter on the
"moustache movement," with which the
writers attempt to wither the wearers of hir
sute appendages, because they constantly
stroke and pull them. If the writer will
tell those gentlemen, old and young, some
rational mode of disposing of their hands
when idle, we venture to vouch for the abo
lition of the "moustache movement."
—An exchange says: A recent storm in
Belgium was distinguished by some singular
phenomena. The wind carried 'off several
articles of the first necessity. For instance,
the roof of a house and a lawyer's wife
have totally , ' disappeared. It is possible that
the roof may have been found, but as for
the lady, who was a light weight, her hus
band has given up all hopes of her recovery.
—The. London Daily News refers to the
appointment of Mr. John Savage, the
Fenian, as Consul to Cork, as proving ex
clusively that President Johnson has a
sense of fun and "a power of banter as
exquisite as Mr. Russell Lowell or Dr.
Wendell Holmes can bust," and it thinks
Mr. Gladstone might refute the slander that
he has no appreciation of humor by appoint
ing Mr. Judah Benjamin as envoy - at Wash
ington. •
—The notorious Philadelphia rough, Jim
Haggerty, 'is in gaol in that city, and some
of his friends endeavored to release him by
breaking into his cell from the outside. This
attempt so amuses the Philadelphia Bulletin
that it gets off the following:
Haggerty 'says he only wanted the bar
taken , out of his window for additional
security. He wished to make a fresh bolt
out of it.
The way Haggerty's friendsbandled their
crow-bars on Saturday night proved the
prior attachments for him.
The attempt to bore into Haggerty's cell,
on Saturday night, did not augur well-for
his innocence. ' •
Several "jimmies" were found outside of
the Central Station on Saturday night, but
the principal "Jimmy" remained inside. •
—yesterday morning we saw a crowd o f
from fifty to seventy-five persons, men,
women and children, standing on the lower
side of the Allegheny Suspension - Bridge,
eagerly watching eight men and two dogs
On the steamboats and wharf below, en
deavoring to kill or capture-a rat whichkul
taken refuge on a spar Which was floating
between the boats and the wharf. The sa
gacity and agilitYof the 'rodent proving too
much for the sticks and stones of his assail
ants, one man .boldly got into a skiff, and
armed with a' stout pole got near enough to
push the scared animal from his perch on
spar into the water among the broken ice.
Several times the drowning animal bravely
clambered out, onlyi-liowever, to be tkrust
ba4 by thehraye St: George in 'lli skiff.
Breathlessly the dogs and eight men watched
the struggle, and the final agonies , of the
au4cious animal were heartily greeted by
them and by the crowd on the bridge above.
We)think the admiring army which gazed
from the bridge might testify their apprpha
tioi byltaving :handsome commemorative
badges made for the Victors, oh which
might be some such legend as "These eight
assisted only. by.dogs, poles and sticks, val
orously succeeded,after a spirited conflict,in
drowning a rat January 13, 1868."
The "W ua mate , story in Ohio.
[From the eineintatl Commercial.)
Gallipolis IS excited over a wild Man, who
is reported to haunt the woods near that
city. He goes naked, is covered with hair,
Is gigantic in height and ,"his eyes start
from their sockets." A carriage, contain
ing a man and daughter, was attacked by
him a few days ago. He is said to have
"bounded at the father, catchine, him in a
crip like thet of a vice, and hurling him to
the earth, falling on, him and endeavoring
to bite and scratch like a wild animal. The
struggle was long and fearful, rolling and
wallowing in the deep mud, half •suffocated,
sometimes beneath his adversary, whose
burning and maniac eyes glared into his
own with and savage intensity.
Just as he was about to become exhausted
from his exertions, the daughter, taking
courage at the imminent danger of her pa.
rent, snatched up a rock and hurling it at
the head.of - her father's would-be murderer,
was fortunate enough to put an end to the
struggle by striking him. somewhere about
the ear. The creature was not stunned, but
feeling unequal to further exertion slowly
got up and retired into a neighboring copse
that skirted the road."
ix speaking of the long-eared libel verdict
against the Chicago Trthune, the New York
Comnereial Advertiser relates: "Not long
since, a subordinate employed on one of our
New York journals passed, by mistake, into
the printers' instead of the' reference bin, a
savage and malicious onslaught upon the
principal proprietor, and it appeared a few
hours later on the editorial page. An office
errand , boy, who aspired to'editorial respon
*Andes, was recently detected in sending,
newspaper extracte up 'to the printers. We
speak of these incidents to' show how easily
a mistake may: occur in, the conduct of a
large (daily fournal , Which ,employs Many
heads and halide, and la necessarily made up
rapidly."
PTIT8131:111G-Ti GAZ 'T THURSDAY. -JANUARY 14, 1869
TEES'S EXTRACTED
ivncErtolFl PAIN:
ao osAßea NA= WE= Airrnnowt
iscrii ARE offincatp.
s PULL 832 FOR q.
AT DL SCOTT'S.
ale ?maw trritzvr, sa DOOR ABOVE HARD.
ALL WORK WABRANTRD, DATIL AND IX
ITE.
AISDNZ SPECECERS OP 0' RNITERS. VDJXAN
ttiyind&T
GAS FIXTURES
WELDON & KELLY,
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers In
Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers
AND LAMP DODDS.
Also, CARBON AND LUBRICATING OILS.,
'BENZIN - F., Ott,.
N 0.14 7. WOOd Street.
• 5e9:n,22 Betwedu6th and 6th Avenues.
PIANOS. OBIG
"BIN THE BEST AND CHEAP'
EST PIANO : AND °ROAN.
.. . .
Schomacker's Gold Medal Piano,
,
AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN.
The SCHOMA.ORZR PIANO combines all the
latest valuable Improvements known in the con
struction of a first clans instrument. and has shrill
been awarded the hlghes premium wherever ex
i
blbited. Itttone is full, norous and sweet. The
workmanship. for durabi ity and beauty. surpass
all others .' Prices from oto 1150, (according to
style and finlsh,) cheaper' than all other so-caUed
first class Plano.. , . • • ,
ESTET'S CerTTAON ORGAN
Stands at the head of all reed inotruments. in pro
ducing Instrument atrfect pipe quality of tone of any
almilnx ln the 'United States. It is aim.
pie and compact in construction, and not 'liable to
get out of order.
CARPENTER'S PATENT "VOX IiUMANA
TREMOLO" is only to be found inthis Organ .
Price from 11 00 to 1 550. All guaranteed for Ave
years.
BABB, }MAKE &BV PILES,
No. 12 ST. CLAIR STREET.
PIANOS AND ORGANS—An en
tire new sto.k of
SNARE'S UNRIVALLED PIANOS;
BAINES BROS.. PIANOS:
PRINCE Sc CO'S ORGANS AND MELODEONS
and TREAT, LINSLEY & CO'S ORGANS AND
MELODEONS.
MELARLOTTE DIAJME..
deS 43 Fifth avenue, Sole &gent.
CONFECTIONERIES.
In
RUH, Prac!ioal Cook,
ei*:etfully antionnces'to the public that he will
On Saturday and Monday next,
Open to the pnblte the
DELMONICO RESTAURANT,
OKICTLinfInt ONLY.
- It will be Ids earnest endeavor to runtish his pa
trons at all times with the most palatable viands
which the market or the season affords. The
LIQ,UORe„ WINES of various dates, ALE, BEER..
etc,will be their own reeommenoailan.
Orders for tine Cooking for Weddings. and other
Festivale, will, as heretofore, be promptly and
ellekpllfattunded to, requesting pateon.ee,,
act,
GEORGE REAVES,
ILLNTIPACTanza OP
SEEMI CANDIES AND TAFFIES
And dealer In all ktadi of morn, rrim, nos
LES, SAUCES. JELLIES, &c.,
ee4 . If% PADERAL Allerbenv.
BTIEGEL,
• (Lite Cutter with W. liespeaheide.)
.. • ..•1= MALIX4COR.
No. 53 Smithfield Street, Pittsburgh
se2e:rm "ipso
NEW FALL GOODS.
A splendid new steel of
CLOTIELS, CASSINCEAMIS,dco
Jost swot - fed bi FEENRT NETER.
Kali: Merchant . Tailor. 73 Sraltliflell atreat.
TILE eIIEAT AMERICAN. COM
BINATION.
Burros-nom onaramse _
AND SEWING MACIELNE.
IT HAS SO DONAU •
BEING ABSOLUTELY TEE, BEST IrAIdILY
*I34III4NIdINZLIV ;II IIT E CiitIi n a p I ,. .4 . 1.24) .
4G/Agents wanted to well this
C. ESAXASTarAr.
Owner Irma Agent f l,l2fl e tZ e T a 144 5 g: 4 1 1'1e r
atenardson,s Jewerslitore. . e 64
WALL PAPERS,
Per Halls, Parlors anti! Chambers,
NOW OPENING, AT
101 Market St., near Fifth Ave.,
JOS: R. •HUGHES & BRO.
pkv i ialtOtr:Villalt/Air , e); 4 l
SEWING MACHINE'S.
WALL PAYERS,
DYER AND SCOURER,
J. LANCE,
DYER AND SCOURER.
140. 3 ST. CL.A.11%- STR3IIEI3O
And i0a.135 and 187 Third Streets
FITTsBIIRGR, PA..
COAL AND COKE...
COAL! COAL!! COALIU
DICKSON STEWART & CO.,
Having removed their °Moe to
507 1.41.13E13,17Y. STREET,
(LIMY Olt) , Motu MUI) SECOND ELOOII.
Axe LUMP, krekwd UALish good YOUGHIOGHE
NY NUT OR 'BLACK, et the lOv eisi
morket mice.
AU •orders left at "their °Sloe, or addressed ' • to
them through the mail, will be attended to OromPti3l.
TOBACCO AND CIGARS..
EXCELSIOR WORKS.'
ar XV..biIECINEKPrit ••
s snufacturers and Dealers
721110,0 g Snuff Cagazzi & 43, ,
p: 6 isinaia. BT.. 4iLLI6ITZNY
et•V"
ARCHITECTS.
&
Alicurr.E.cwo,
FRUIT HOUSE ASSOCIATION BUILDINGS, Nos.
a and 4 St. Olsir Street. Pittabluah, Pe. inmate
stteatioa given to the designing and building o
COUNT ROUSES and PUBLIC BUILD/NBIL
efOICE GOODS
AT
. 1.
JOSEPH BORNE & CO.
RECEIVED DAILY,
Bisqrs NEST VELVET TIAT 4 ,'
TEAT A ISONNET F KAM KS.
GBH:RANI OWN WOOL;S,
ZEPHYR AND KITTING YAIIN's,
BLACK V t.LVET FEN.
BONNET VELVET,
. BLACK d GE SATINS,
TRIMMING SAT Ns. ALL SHADEd.
SASH AND KOW•R.LiisONs ,
AND BLACK SATIN RIBBuNt3, ail -
11=8/MDRE'S EID GLOVES,
In White, Opera, and Dark. Fur Topped Rid
GloVis. Wool Mitts and Gloves, Ribbed Fancy and
Ptah
HOSIERY+
PALIE RT IT S
ALB s
. S ,OK vg B iLLETI3, &C
HANDKERCHIEFs.
- C
Eallitto
STILL U3TBEB REDUOTIPNB
WOOLEN GOODS,
MILLINERY GOODS,
HOOP SHIRTS AND
77. AND 79 MARKET STREET.
ECRU & CARLISLE,
NO. 19 FIFTH AVENUE,
THE, NEW SKIRT,
"LE PANIER PERFECTION•"
,` ',THE FAVORITE." `•THE POPULAR,"
"THE RECEPTION.'
THOMPSON'S TWIN SPRING.
"WINGED ZEP BTU, "
"GLOVE FITTING," CORSETS AND PAT
ENT "PAN - MRS.'
THE NEW GORED OVER SKIRT, "BELLE
HELENE," richly embroidered; an elegant street
or Skating Skin..
RICH RIBBONS FOR BOWS, SCARFS • AND
SASHES.
ROMAN STRIPES AND PLAIDS.
SATINS, all shades and widths.
FLOWERS. PLUMES, HATS AND BONNETS.
LADIES AND CHILDREN'S MtLEINOHNDER
WEAR, -
The richest and latest novelties •in GIMPS,
FRINGES AND BUTTONS.
We especially direct attention to the great excel
lence of the HARRIS SEAMLESS OtouillonN, KID
GLOVES" over ail others. and for which we arf the
Sole Agents.
A complete line & GENTLEMEN'S "STAR"
SHIRTS, SUSPENDERS. GLOVES, HALF HOSE,
LrIDERsHIRTs AND DRAWERS.
SELLG AGENTS FOR LOCKWOOD'S PAPER
GOODS, I a nd all other popular makes.
& CIBLISLE,
NO. 19 FIFTH AVENUE.
noZ
i MERRY CHRISTIE/S
NEW GOODS FOR THE HOLIDAYS.
DENNISON & 'ECKERT ,
NO. 27 FIFTH AVENUE,
Have juid reeelyed a large and Judiciously asserted
stock
E3tiROIDERIES ,
TRIMMINGB,
Sid Gloves. llandlierehiefo. Slipper
Patterns, Zephyr Goods, ScarlS
end Gents Varnishing'
Gods,
and Notions generally.
A splendid selection is afforded in special novelties
suitable tor
HOLIDAY PRESENTS,
to which the attention et Lady readers is specially
called. , •
DENNISON & HECKERT,
puxcEs MARKED DOWN.
•
BARGAINS IN ALMOST -EVERYTHING.
REAL UESI STITCH, all Linen. HARDIII/11.1
CHIEFS, 17c, 10e, Rile and upwards.
TAPE BLRuElizb LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS
tlge, Sc to 50e.
An oar HATS at one-half regular prices.
Ail the new BAWD-MAL ShilITS and Bradley's
latest styles of HOOF SKIETS, st the Lowest
Prices In the City: •
ENTS' iflatliio VEST and DRAWERI3, 40c
to D 0,00.
AT EATON'S,
•
No. 17 Fifth Avenue.
deb
BEINETINGS AND BATTING.
FIOLOIES, BELL & CO.,
ANCHOR COTTON MILLS.
erx-rsnicricsnmc.
* ldling Wren of HEAVY =Drum and LIGHT
- ANCHOR AND INAONOiLJA
SIT I LETINGS AND BATTING.
GAS AND STEAM FITTING.
--
JOHN Y. COOT= JOB. ILATZ FIXKILT BIM
j9ON M. COOPER & CO.,
Z___S FotflilDEßS,
GAS AND STEAM FITTERS ,
imam: Moron of PUMPS AND BRASS WORR,o
everyryprßeriratonoi agto rs. ln HAS nrrunca
AND
Corner of Pike and Walnut Streets,
• PITTSBURGH
vsolPot•
111VANTED-ON COMMISSION)
• ONE , HUNDRED TONS OR
PCKni-nerVi r
FOR THE • HOLIDAYS .
The highest
_market prices' and quick sales
guaranteed. Mark, packages distinctly add send •
voices by mail.
S. 'P. BALLARD &" CO. • .
COIIIMIIISiOII Merchants. 332, Washlugtan_att.
New York., , _
GOOD NEWS.
CHEAP SSW) IN DEAR TDOS
Enquire for WATtiDtS Dread,
Ti e israest and best. The initials "Fl. W."
every loaf. Take none else.
51. -
ETTAffnNG
Barred Flannel,
C:›lTered.,
IrELROY,
DICKSON
& CO.
3D3EILIr 4M4:::OC7O3DES,
... ~ ix .
O , .
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D• at
0
„..,
ai a
, d ,
i „ a
pa
A Fr. 1
0 N w ,til p ..r.
(2 p4 pg if.
si 04 QI i t , E .- 4 • ?4 !A
cs • zw . 1,:
2 kj
ez 0 r ti f 4.1 1
0
r i i s Is 4 u 2 nF4 P 4
0
gimw
Imi
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4 0 Ws I:ra
-9 ca
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a l ' 6
z
LACE GOODS,
HOSIERY,
No. 27 FIFTH AVENUE.
EXTRA HEM
A VERY LARGE STOCK,
IX, GOOD STYLES.
WHOLESALE
s.'de&
WOOD STREET.
DRY GOOD S
Arr cosrr,
FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY,
1 :TO CLONE STOCit.
ITEMOBE F.
87 MARKET STREET.
dad
CLOSING OUT SALE OF
nom,_ 13-0040313 S
AT-
J. DI BURCHFIELD & CO'S
1. NO. AO ST. CLAM. STREET,
An wool prey Twi:led Flannel for 37 worth 02c.
De!eines for 20c. worth 25,
Slightly Soiled Slankkets $4,00 worth $O.OO.
Waternroof for $1,95 worth 51;50.
Poplins for 3734 c, worth 50.
Hid Gloves for $1,50 worth $2,00.
Paisley Shawls $13,00 worth $90.00.'
Velveteens 9,00 worth $2,.75.
Blabbed Muslin 1235 c. worth 18. !
Uunbleache'd Muslin 1230. worth 17.
Cheapest and best stock In the city. / I No. 2ST
CLAIR. near Ltbeity meet. I acM
NEW GOODS.
NEW ALPACCAS.
NEW MOHAIR.
BLACK
HOSIERY and: GLOV S,
F. SOUCY,
Pr No. 168 Wllle Street.
16S. 16S
QUM, PIeCANI)LESS & CO.,
(Late Witaon, Carr & Coo
WEOLESALI DEALERS ER .
Foteign • old Do!natio Dry
No. 94 WOOD EitßiZT.
Third door above Diamond alley,
PITTSBURG
LITgOGILsPOM.
m i ss
BENJAMIN BINGER= IBM cp
QINGEULY 86' CLEM, SUcc I
p., to Gs°. P. BancarmAt & Co.
PRACTICAL•LITAILOG . HI
The only Stearn Lithographic Establistun t :
of tbe "Mountains. - BUlSitlella CILIdll; Lette liel
Bonds, Labels:Circulars, bhp", Cards, D pion
Portraits Views, Certificates of Ds oa t lir
tion OsAr, ilia,, Dios Tii, Ind Tik T :It
rittaOht,i 14 , ' .
CARPE
54 •
REDUCTION - CONTINUED
FOR A FEW BAYS.
Taking advantage of the extreme
depression in the Eastern Market
during the Holidays, we have added
largely to our stock at much below
Market Rates. We will continue to
sell at our present reduced prices for
TEN. DAYS longer.
NTALLUIi BROTHERS.
exersia cobzelj
CARPETS,
COCX-a CIACYX9E-1.15,
ceo.9 cik3o.
We offer our stock at reduced
rites for• a SHORT TIM Bef o g E bore
commencing to take stock.
Now is the time to buy.
BOVARD, ROSE & CO.,
21 FIFTH AVENUE.
e9:d&w?
ANUARY, 186
CARPETS.
FARL IND 6: COLLIN'S,
ANNUL CLEBANCE SAE
TWO WEEKS LONGER,
Greater Bargains thap,
Ever will be offered to
close out Special Lines
of Goods, at
71 AND 73 fitgni AVENUE
GLASS. CHINiL CUTLERY
=E
DoNER ors, sEirs,
PI SMOKING SETS,
;4
.:ILVER PLATED GOOD
West
CAA:,
IMMO.
Will Continue their
SECOND PLOOR.
M:M=E=MMI
100 WOOD STREET•
110LMAY
FINE
,VASES,
BOILEMIA.NAND CHINA;
NEW STYLES,
CIFT CUPS;
large stock of
of ikdescriptions.
- • • •
Call and examine. oar goods antedef:
attsfled no one need fail to no
R. E. 'BREED ac.
/00 WOOD MEET.
El