'2 LA /61t, gittsburgijetaitttf.l [From the Boston Post.) A MODERN DRINKING SONG ..dd apted (Rlighiy). from the old poets. to the new etyle of -•Beeerage — and deicated, BY GEORGE SENNOTT So the "Whiskey Ring." FT I high the howl with Fasil Oil If Wi Stryc an hnineth Tannin l gives relief your cu e p f tn Toil . rwned Iv , Let Strychnine's generous Juice abound I Let 0 , 1 of Vitriol cool your brains, Or 4intmated atoms brew, till yt•ur &Milt!, hearts and veins. With glee—and infusorial glue! • it. ' . tait-dicd out in What foot wool' , h.ve ti bark And bow? The cup that Wit Inebriate. ? And never cheer," they sell us now "The conscious water s aw Its God And blushed." What of it? Don't you feel That water knovre the Dragger's rod, And blushes now —wit C oochineal? e 11t. Ah-h! 'Fragrant tome of Kreosote: Bewitching bowl of Prussian Blue: • Who would not soothe his parching throat With sour mild offspring. "Mountain Stronger than augnt that s acked the trame And shook the mighty brain of Burns. Furely. ell set our heads Ome. Whene' y er his festal day ret urn!: • Iv. Bring on the Beer—Fresh Copperas foam! With Alum mlxed, In powder tine. How could my foolish fancy roam In eaten of whiter ft..th than thine? Thy Indian Berry's F SeellCe spread Through amber wavelets, sparOlnir clear. Benumus dull Care— strlk , s reeling dead — And narcotizes Shame and Fear: T. Drowned Boor,g depths, Champagne! Love anti Beauty ne They fought th' unequal light In vaqi— Shall we, too. dr ink and die! ,tiw,et Acetate of Lead, forold! Fill every drink with pangs—and tOI 'What tortures could—and always did— Anticipate the stings of sell! Then drink, Goyal. drink': We never can Be younger: And eve ntver il ,• Be men, or aught resembling Man, Willle poisoners have the power, , o km; Ameni—Frum frenzy's screech of mirth To maudlin sorrow's drivelling flow, We'll rave, through scenes unmatined on earth Aud not to be surpassed below : ' HEN AND GENTLEMEN. [From the London Satuiday Review.) We have no doubt that we have some time or other before now, commented on the marked difference between our own habits and those of the ancient common wealths with regard to the ways of describ ing and addressing particular persons. It comes briefly to this, that •we cannot, ex cept in the faniiliarity of - private inter cause, speak of a man without using some sort of a title, be it Lord, Sir, or plain Mr., - while a Greek and Roman was simply called by his name. Closely connected with this isr,the difference in the way of addressing bodies of men, and in speaking of persons when the name is - not mentioned. A Greek addresses his hearers as "Men"—Andres. To this he might add any qualification of nationality of office that might be needed; they might be Men of Athens, Men and Judges, or, as in the New Testament, Men, Brethren and Fathers, but "Men" is the universal address, whatever qualification may be added. Roman usage in this, as ‘in the case of proper names, came one degree nearer to modern usage. Peridles could be called nothing but Pericles, whoever it was that spoke to or of him. But Ciesar might be called Caius, Julius, or Caesar, and Calm, juntas and Caesar were each proper ways to speak to or of him, according to the time, the place and the person speaking. So a Roman orator never fuldresses his hearers -u -- -Brerr - c - the formula is never —lilt, either alone or joined, like andrea, with anything else. Romans are addressed as "Qnirites," "Judices," "Commilitones," "Patres Conscripts," never as "Yid." This is quite in conformity with the far higher re gard paid at Rome as compared with Athens to rank and office of every kind. In the Athenian form of address the common hu - inanity of the speaker and his hearers is the thing which is put most prominently for ward; the official descriptions something secondary. In the Roman form of address the official description is everything, and the common humanity is not put for ward at all. ;This is not e exactly the same as the modern style of address, but we feel that we are one step nearer to it than we were among the Greeks. There is no word in Latin, any more than in Greek, which exactly trans: - lates the word "gentleman." There is certainly something very odd in the custom which, among our most modern European nations,. requires an assembly to be addressed, and in many cases an individ nal to be spoken' 'of, by some purely com plimentary title. "Gentleman," "Mon sieur," "Herr," are words which must, even in the most inappropriate applications, be ever on the lips of a speaker in any of the three chief European tongues. Nay, the orators who, at the present day, can still employ the speech of Demosthenes, address a modern Athenian audience, no longer as andrea, but as kurioi. The English ex pressions, if one comes to think of It, are the oddest of the four. "Monseiur," "Herr" kurios, are instances of the custom, borrrowed, most likely, from the East, by which it is thought courteous for the speaker to talk of himself as a servant, and of the person to whom he speaks as his lord. In English the word "lord" has gained a more definite political sense than the - words" which answer to it in other lan guages. No assembly, therefore, is ad dressed as "My Lords," except the as sembly to which the title belongs as a mat ter of strict political right. Yet the old form of address, "My Masters," is a trans lation almost literal of "Messieurs" and "Melne Herren." Modern English usage, however, requires that nearly every kind of assembly which is addressed directly—for the House of Commons is addressed indi rectly—should be addressed by a title which is, properly speaking, the description of a particular class of society to which, in most cases, the mass of the assembly do not really belong. To address a mixed assembly as "gentlemen" is, in itself, as 'absurd as to address them as knights, earls and princes; it is far more absurd than the conventional self-abasement of addressing them as "Mas ters" or "Messieurs." But usage calls for it, and it is difficult to see the origin of this usage and of several usages closely connect ed with it. We will not go about to undertake any task- so perilous as that of defining a gen tleman. Perhaps, speaking roughly; it may be understood to mean that a man holds a certain position in society, and that he at, the same time behaves as a man bold ing that position in society ought to behave. This, last qualification, or something like it is certainly implied in the modern.cuse of the word. But it is very remarkable that it should be so. In itself the word "Gentle man" implies a certain rank, just as the word "Nobleman" implies a certain rank. But the word "Nobleman" is applied to a man quite irrespectively of his character, If the conduct of a nobleman be in any marked way ignoble, the contrast between name and nature may add point to a sar casm, but the fact that he is a nobleman is not denied. But if the conduct of a man in the rank of a gentleman is unworthy of his rank, we do not scruple to say expressly that be is not a gentleman. Nay, we may say of the nobleman, or the prince, whose' con duct is ignoble or unprincely, that lie is not a gentleman. And„more curiously still, there Is hardly one in any class who would not look upon it as an insult to be told ex pressly that he was not a gentleman. A tinker would, perhaps, hardly say in so many words; "I am a 4entleman," but he would certaily resent being told that he was "no gentleman." And an assembly of tinkers would certainly `expect to be ad dressed, not as "Tinkers," but as "Gentle men," and there arecases in winch it would be expedient to apply the wo - rds "this gen -tleman" even to the individual tinker. There is something odd about this, some thing even more odd than those usages in other tongues by which some extravagant title, Excellency, or the like, is lavished upon everybody. In itself, to say that a man is not a gentleman is simply to. state the fact that he.does not belong to a certain rank in society, just like saying that he is not a nobleman. No one counts it as an insult to be told thht he is not.a. Lobleman, or rather the remark would be so wholly void of point that no one would make it by way of an insult. Yet, as we have seen, it is felt as an insult by a man of any rank to be told that he is not a gentleman. This shows that the word "gentleman" has gained a secondary meaning. And the fact that it should have acquired such a secondary meaning may perhaps be explained by the general facts of English history. In Eng land the rank of - gentleman was social and conventional, not legal; it was an affair for the herald and not for the lawyer: Deeply aristocratic as have been many of our cus toms and some of our statutes, the common law of England has never been dem ocratic. As Hallam says, "It has never recognized gentlemen. There are only two orders of Englishmen, the peer and the commoner; a nobility, in the conti nental sense of the word, we never had. Whatever ',might be the fancies of heralds, there never was at any time in Eng land the same barrier between class and class which in France distinguished the "gentilehomme" from the "roturier." And for the cause of this, as of every other fact in our history, we must go back to the earliest time. When the hereditary nobility of the Earls, in whatever that nobility con sisted, gave way to the official nobility of the Thegns, the thing was done, once and for ever. The Ceorl had always the chance of becoming a Thegn, and he kept it ever since. The-backward change which hap pened in Normandy and other continental countries never happened in England ; pos sibly the Norman conquest itself did some thing to hinder it from happening. The shuttle of laUded property which followed on the Conquest—which rather, perhaps, was the Conquest—the confiscations, the grants, the exchanges, undoubtedly placed a powerful aristocracy of foreign birth in the highest rank of all. But in the second ary classes, the smaller landowners, the burghers, the inferior clergy, they had the effect of jumbling together people of all kinds of origins, noble and ignoble, native and foreign. The fact has probably had a good deal to do with hindering the formation of any such impossible barrier as separated the "gentilhomme" from the "roturier" in France. The law never drew any, marked distinction between the gentleman and the ordinary freeholder. As the gentleman bad no legal privilege, there was nothing to hin der a man of one class from rising gradu ally into the other. We remember being struck years ago with the gradual rise of a Northamptonshire family in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. The pariah church contains the tombs of four generations, de scribed in order of succession as "Merca tor," "Generosus," it Irminger," and "Miles." The family is that of Andrews, of Charwelton, one of whose members had thsk bailor or dishonor of attending as Sher iff of htawantyatme neneading of Queen Mary Stuart. All this has probably something to do with :our English laxity in the use of the word "gentleman." It is an insult to refuse to a man in any pointed way, Et title to which he may not have attained but to which he conceivably may attain. It is an insult to refuse to him a title to which we' may fancy that he has ndclaim, but to which he may himself fancy that he has a debit. It would be absurd to call a man a Duke who is not a Duke, because the rank of Duke is strictly defined, and there is no doubt who are Dukes and who are not. But the rank of gentleman is not defined, and where the thing is possibly doubtful, each man takes to himself the benefit of the doubt. We, therefore, when people are to be pleased, esnecially when votes are to be gained by it, not only directly refuse the title of gen tleman to no man, but even directly allow it to men dell conditions. But from this there has come a curious re action. It is said that in some parts of America the word "gentleman" is so uni versally applied to everybody that the word is beginning to have the distinctive sense of "gentleman." And something like this may be seen among ourselves. Men who have an undoubted right to the title of gen tleman seldom apply the word to one an other. If an undoubted gentleman uses the word "gentleman" to one of his own class, it is most commonly by way of special praise or blame, by way of asserting, or denying that he is a gentleman in the highest sense. Otherwise, in simply speaking of. A or B, he will commonly use the word "man." But the moment he gets among people of a somewhat lower grade than himself, he is forced to have; the word "gentleman" every moment on his lips. He uses it if he speaks to an inferior one of his own rank; he ap plies it to all those among his inferiors to whom he wishes to be civil- In short, to speak of a man as a gentleman is speedily becbming a sign that you really hold that the person to whom or of whom you are speaking is not a gentleman. A Nut for Geologifits A remarkable discovery was made in the underground - workings of the Star Mine. In a lot of ore sent to Davidson's mill at Sliver Mountain, in September, 1867, for experimental test, there was found imbed ded in the-solid ore "an arrow-head of solid silver," four inched in length, having a small piece of the - root of a tree attached to the point. The ore was taken from the vein at a depth of three hundred feet below the surface. This arrowhead was an inch broad at the base, where it was attached to the shaft, and split down about au inch, and pressed apart, evidently for giving it a better hold on the wood. At the 'mint, it was abdut half an inch wide, and of the uni form thickness of an eighth of an inch. The silver was slightly alloyed with tin, but otherwise very pure.' It was perfectly in crusted with rich sulphurets of silver, which, scaled off, revealed this wonderful relic of another age and people. This arrowhead and the ore which incased it I carefully ex amined while at Silver Mountain, last sum mer. It wasin the possession of the Hon. Henry Eno, Judge of Alpine • county.—Ne vada Letter. 'AT THE late meeting of the British Asso ciation, attention was called by Mr. Rohn to :a process of manufacturing steel upon the open hearth of a Siemen's furnace, which is in successful and economical working in England. It is closely related to the idea of melting wrought ircn by liquid pig iron, and thereby converting the whole Into steel, The method is applicable to the conversion of_ old scraps of wrought iron and steel, including old iron rails, into steel, and the prime cog in England is about thirty.seven dollars per ton. By processes such as this and others recently introduced, like Heaton's, it is believed that the cost of steel will soon be not more per ton than the present price of iron. PITTgittRGIT GAZETTE: SAT() it JANUARY 16, 1869 TEETH EXTRACTED wrruo7 vAnc: NO CHARGE BLADE WHEN ABTMCIAL TEETH ARE ORDERED. A HULL BET FOR $l, AT DR. SCOTT'S. SIU PENN STREET, aD DOOR ABOVE HAND. T ALL WORK WARRANTED. GE N UINE AND EX- J AMNE BrECLITENS OF GRNunrs, vII.LcAN ITE. nisl:d&T GAS iii WELDON & KELLY, Manufacturers sad Whulesale Dealers in Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers AND LAMP GOODS. *Also, CARBON AND LUBRICATING OILS. - BENZIN - F., - N 0.147 Sood Street. .e9:n= Between bth and sth Avenues. FRUIT CAN TOPS. We are now prepared to - supply TINNERS and the rrade with our Patent • SELF.SMILLING FRUIT CAN TOP. It is PERFECT, SIMPLE and CHEAP. Having the names of the varicus fruits Stamped upon the Corer, radiating from the center, and an Index or pointer stamPed upon the Top of the can. It is ch-arly, di-Melly and PiI.R.HANENT IN LABELED by merely placing tha name of the fruit the can contains op te the pointer and sealing in the customary manner. •• NO preserver of fruit or good HOUSEKEEPER will use any other after once using it. Send 25 cents , for sample. COLLINS & WRIGHT, 139 Second — avenue, Pittsburgh. PIANOS. :ORGANS, &C. BILTY T HE BESTORGAN. AND CHEA.P.- O AND Schomacker's Gold Nodal Piano, AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN. The SCHOMACITER PIANO combines all the la test valuable improvements known in the con struction of a first class instrument. and has always been awarded the highest premium wherever ex hibited. Its tone is full, sonorous and sweet. Tne workmanship: for durability and beauty, surpass ail others. Prices from 00 to $l5O. (according to style and fluish,) cheaper than all other so-called first class Plano. ESTEY'S COTTA'3E ORGAN Stands at the head of all reed instruments. in pro. ducing the most perfect pipe quality of tone of any similar Instrument in the 'United States. It is aim. pie and compact in construction, and not liable to get out of order. CARPENTER'S PATENT "VOX RUMANA TREMOLO" is toyonl to be found in this Orgar Price fromsloo 1050. All guaranteed for five Tian. BABE, SNAKE &METTLER, No. 111 ST. CLAIR STREET. PIANOS AND onGANs—An en tire new sto-k of KNABE'S UNRIVALLED PIA.N - OS; BAINES BROS., PIANOS: PRINCE k CO'S ORGANS AND MELODEONS Ind TKRAT, LINSLEY & CO'S ORGANS AND MELODEONS. -CHARLOTTE! BLEIDIE. deb 43 Fifth avenue. Sole Agent. CONFECTEONERIES: RUH, Practical Cook, =;t:etfully announces to the public that be wll On Saturday and Monday Next, Open to the puhnc_the DELMONICO RESTAURANT, It will be'bis earnest endeavor to furnish his pa trons at all times with the most.palatable •iands which the market or the seso affords. The LIQUORS, WINES of various d a te s , ALE, BEM etc , will be their own recommends! ion. Orders for tine Cooking for Weddings, and other cheaplyestivals, will, as heretofore, be Dmptly and attAnded to, regnetting patronage. ro -oce:y6B EL RUM G EORGE BEAVEN, YARDTACIIIIIE 6 or CREAM CANDIES AND TAFFIES AO - d dasler in ►ll ktnd■ of 'FRUITS, blind, PICK LES, SAUCES. JELLIES, &c., ic• BTIEGEL, • (Late Cutter with W. Besperibelde,) af-F-.ltici-rArcr TAILOR. No. 53 Smithffeld Street, Pittsburgh se26:v2l [N NEW FALL HOODS. . , A splendid new stock of CLOTHS. cA.serarmarmisosc Jast reodved by telt:. Merchant Tailor. T 3 Smithfield Wee . LEVI WitSll/ r.TA laiWZ MBE GREAT AMERICAN CO - BINATION. • BUTTON-HOLE OTEBEELKENG AND SEW KAU =LAIL IT HAS NO EQUAL, I'W ABSOLUTELY THE BEST TARTLY MACHINE IN THE Vrc'ALD, AND IN TRINSICALLY TBE CHEAPEST. airAiSonta wanted to sell this Attic CHAR. C. BAT. EY Agent for Wistens ennsylvanla. Corner 717TH AND MARKET BEETS, rer Richardson's Jewelry Store. 64 N EW WALL PAPERS, For Halls, Parlors andleham 6 ' - NOW OPENING, AT 1O Market St., near Fifth ~v 1 IOS. R. HUGHES & BRIO. .ent YOE GENTLEMEN ONLY DM PEDISCAL ST.. Allegheny MERCHANT TAILORS. HENRY DIEYSIL WALL PAPERS, DYER AND SCOUR • J. ~ LANCE, H. DYER AND SCOURERI Ito.S ST. CLAIR writ 'X' And No. 185 and 187 Third 8 :3 PITTBBIIRGH. ARCHITECTS. B ASIL & MOSER, A.ltcurrmvre, FRUIT HOUSE ASSOCIATION NUMMI( • S, II and 4 St. Clair Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. line attention given to the designing and buytlin COIIRT IiOIISES and PUBLIC 111.1J1DINOS, FALL ASSORTMENTS OF DESIRABLE GOODS . Ina EPH HORNE /c. CO'S. TRIMMING SATINS, • IN BLACK I ORA . NGE AND ALL COLORS. PL AND STRIPItD SATINS. BLOCK ANI COLoRKD 11 , .NET VELVETS, BONNET AND NECK RIBBoNS, H AT.IDSO3I V. SASH hIBBONS, MLR SCARFS, LACE'i AND LACE GOODS. EMISRUIDERD-.S. Ntiv design. Another lot BOT_TLEVARDE SKIRTS; IN STRIPED AND BRAIDED. Just received. W 4,01, AND iIIt.RINO UNDERM EAR, all sizes and ruantit'es MORRISON'd STAICSIIIRTS ?A N i t . `r , MERINO AND WOOL ',; MOS.. I. DIES' PLAIN AND !PAN C I WOOL and MER INO HOSIERY. 1r ECED COTTON linSE. W4l)ob t. LOV ES AND MITS. ADEN AN DID , 'S KID GLOVES, 113 N DKERCIIIEFS, W )OLF. % GOODS, 11 UP nEll TS AND CORSETS, T THE VERY LOWEST PRICES. and 79 Market Street ~ • Jai 11CRIA & CARLISLE, . 19 FIFTH AVENUE, THE NEW SKIRT, "LE PANIER PERFECTION." THE FAVORITE." "THE POPULAR," "THE RECEPTION,' THOMPSON'S TWIN SPRING, "WINGED ZEPHYR." "GLOVE FITTING," CORSETS AND PAT- E T "PANIERS." THE NEW GORED OVER SKIRT, "BELLE H LENE," richly embrotered; an elegant street o ! Skating Skirt. RICH. RIBBONS FOR BOWS, SCARFS AND SASHES. OMAN STRIPES AND PLAIDS. AiTINS, all shades n d widths. LOWERS. PLUM Es, - HATS AND. BONNETS. LADIES AND CHILDREN'S MERINO UNDER yAR, The richest and latest novelties In *GIMPS, F INGES AND BUTTONS. We especially direct attention to the great excel nce of the HARRIS SEAMLESS (Routlion) KID fitll,eolgEeSn' Agen t s . IA all others. and for which we are the IA complrte line of GENTLEMEN'S 'STAR" SHIRTS, SUSPENDERS. GLOVES, HALF HOSE, NDERSHIRTS AND DRAWERS. SELLING AGENTS FOR LOCKWOOD'S PAPER 001./S, and all other popular makes. MICRUM & CIRLISLE, N 0.19 FIFTH AVENUE. noM I MERRY CHRISTMAS ! NEW GOODS FOR THE HOLIDAYS. DENNISON & HECKERT, NO. 27 FIFTH AVENUE, Have just received a large and Judiciously assorted stock of E'SIBROIDERIES, TRIMMINGS, Sid Gloves, Ilandherehiel , , Slipper Patterns, Zephyr Goods, Searre and Gents Furnishing Goods, and Notion! generally. a d a t t a t e e n i ol o i r d selection is afforded in special novo/Wee HOLIDAY PRESENTS, to which the attention of lady readers is erpeelally called. DENNISON & HECKERT, PRICES MARKED DOWN. BARGAINS IN ALMOST EVERYTHING. REAL HEM STITCH. an Linen. HA:SHEMIN. CHIEFS,-17c, I9c, 2.2 c and upwards. TAPS BORDERED LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS 5I cc,, Sc to 50c. All our HATS at one-half reviler prices. All the new BALMoRAL shiRTS and Bradley's latest styles of HOOF SKIRTS, at the Lowest Filets In the City. CENTS' MERINO VEST and DRAWERS, 40c to 45,00. AT EATON'S, No. 17 Fifth Avenue. dot CEMENT, SOAP STONE, &o. HARTMAN & LABE, No. 124 timittltfleld street. Pole Manufactureri of War re Cs "Felt Cement I'lldt:travel Roonng. Mat Mal for RYDRAULIC CEMENT DRAIN PIPE Cheapest and best Pipe in the market. Also, BO SE DALE HYDRAULIC CribißNT for sale. B. B. & C. A. BBOCKETT At CO. Office and Mannfactory-140 REBEOOA Allegheny. air Orders by mall promptly attende to. te22:rici Eittil'iNGt3 -- AND BATTING, 110131E8, BELL & CO., ANCHOR COTTON MILL PFT'rk3JßlTitr*H. CM Mann turera of HEAVY MEDIUM and LIGHT ANCHOR AND BIADNOLLI SI-TILE:TIMIS AND BATTING. --- COAL AND COKE. COAL! COAL!! COAL!!! DICKSON, STEWART & CO Saving removed their Othee to NO, 667 LIBERTY STREET , (Lately City Firer Mill) SECOND ELOOS. Are now prepared to Al •Oh good YOUGHIO OII3- NT LUM.', NUT GOA. DR BLACK, at the lowest :aorta t price. All orders left at th 1r °aloe, or addressed to them through the mall. 111 be attended to promPtlY. WEIGHTS AND MEASURES, 11 IL LYON, Senior of Weights and Measures, cm. No. I FOURTH SICHRT, dal ord tr. promptly attended to. 54. Barred Flannel, ra - cyvv . correreci, ArELROY, DICKSON & co. LACE GOODS, IiOSIE.EY, NO. 27 FIFTH AVENUE ~,,,,,,,,,,,, tßetween Liberty and Ferr9 &Meta KITTANNING EXTRA HEAVY A VERY LARGE STOWE, IN GOOp:,STYLES. WHOLESALE rpruw . ffit•ek. WOOD STREET. Ci M 1 06 0 ah 1g a 0 , 4 ill , P En • . r: 14 a P t a 0 us H M o '-' w 7.% n Phi gf 4 = 0 01 0 m E . ( • fr , a. O4 ga td 1 / z w 5 E-( '''"' 0 Ir. - ; 7 3 I frl A et 111 Cr+ 44 ;.1 Il ei 4 54 0 I CD i g 0 wp i CD mg S I I. ' 0 E 4 67. 0 % 0 K VI g W/ a Ol , r.. go, 0 fit I F i 1 r 4 I Q 114 A Ci DRY GOODS AT COST, FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY, TO CI.JOBE STOCK. THEODORE F. .PHILLIPS 87 i MAIESET STREET. del2 CLOSING OUT SALE OF . . DRY 451 - COODS AT J. Z. BMICI & CO'S1 3 N0._52 ST. CLAIR STREET, All Wool Grey Twilled' Flannel for 37 worth 62e. Delatnes for 20c. worth 25. Slightly Soiled Blankkets 34,00 worth 30,00. Waterproof for 31,25 worth 61,50. Poplins for 37Sc, worth 50. Bld Gloves for 31,50 worth 32,00. Paisley Shawls 713,00 worth $20.00. Velveteens 2,00 worth 32,7 5 . Bleached Bustin worth 10. IJunbleached Maslin 12Xc. worth 17. Cheapest and best stork in the city. to. 52 ST CLAIR. nest Liberty street. deM NEW GOODS.- NEW ALPACCAS. NEW MOHAIR. BLACK SILKS. HOSIERY and GLOVES V. SOUCY, I No. 168 Wylie' Street. 168. CARE, McCANDLESS & CO., (Late Wi)son, Carr /t. C 0.,) WHOLwRALIE DRAT lrftli Foreign and Domestic Dry Cloode, N0;94 WOOD STS.KET Third door above Diamond alley, LITHOGRAPHERS. -- - 321CIANIX SINGEELT..... PHILIP CLEIS. SINGERLY & CLEIS, SUCCOSSOEI a to 080. 7 BOIIIICHItAN & CO.. PRACTICAL LITHOGRAPHERS. The only Ste Lithographic Establishment West of the Nountatis. Business Cards, Letter Beads, Bonds, Labelo , culars, Show Cards, Diplomas. Portraits, VI awe, 7ssertiiies of 74 Third Invita tion CID:9, .. Noe, 4 sod '74 Third street, i'LLslo'32'4,:, • apl3: CARPETS AND OIL CLO CARPETS. 54. REDUCTION CONTINVED FOR A FEW DAYS. Taking advantage of the extreme etression 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. NTAILUM BROTHERS. JR7EIITTCPIQN ! ! CARPETS, OIL CL•O'rII IS, deo., cfccs. We offer our stock at reduced prices . for a SHORT TIME before commencing to take stock. Now is the time to buy. BOyARD, ROSE & CO., 21 FIFTH AVENUE. ie4:d&wir JANUARY, 1869. CARPETS. EFARLiND & COLLINS, Will Continue their ME CLEARANCE SALE TWO WEEKS LONGER, Greater Bargains, than Ever will be offered to close out Special Lines of Goods, at 71 AND 73 t'll Ili, AVENUE, GLASS. CHINA. CUTLERY BOHEMIAN AND CHINA, DINNER ors, 112 PITTSBURGH. PA. Ell SECOND FLOOR. 100 WOOD STREET. HOLIDAY GIFTS, FINE 'VASES, NEW STYLES, k ii :411:3 vo %.:1 GIFT CUPS, SMOKING ( SETS, A large stock of SILVER PLATED GOOD of all descriptions Call and examine our goods s ti ltede:feel Welled no one need fall to be ' . E. BREED 8 CO. 100 WOOp STREET.