Q trtFtittts. ANITA. Ii Irrom the sunny troves of the Southern land, A bird bath down to the Northern sky: And rested itii is lags from the weary Sight Near the spot where my idle Sande. lie. And . I little thought. as I watched it there, That my !nun would pine for the wandering Mtn; - Or my soul be filled with its silvery note— , The sweetest ncr.e the,. man e'er heard. • But I watched it long and loved it more, 'rill its song was never far away; lot' I heard It oft in my dreams at night. And it sounded swL et throughithe aye-long day. So the bird and I were friends at last, Tlit it came quite n and co r nlumage bright, arose like the ray o r an ew star On the trembling sense of my dazzled Eight* . Then I called It a name, T know not why, •'Anita;" and quietly the bird replied, And fiew from the perch wbere it fiht had lit. To a twig 'bat swung at mytadow's side. Eo from that day the bird and I Ilaye joined in a league of endless trust: .And out of this heart shall its song never go Till the heart itself lies cold in dust. EPHEMERIS. —John Surratt is in —Boston is on sleighs again• —Old Sot Smith is acting in New York. —Victor Hugo's middle name is Marie. —Killing time—Shorting a cent'ry— Judy. —Chicago wants to have a gretit * book publishing house. —Rev. Olympia Brown says she is not going to be married. Philip-Philips issinging in the su burbs of Cincinnati. --Lansingburg and Troy, New York, talk of consolidation. —Report says the Marquis of Bute is to become a Catholic priest. —Since 1852 17 hotels have been burn ed down in St. Paul, Minn. —His Honor 'Ara. S. Dodge bas been re-elected Mayor a Sitka. -Miss Blanche Butler is said to be about to marry an army officer. _ —A colored clergy - man is serving on, the grand jury at Utica, New Y'ork. —Last year Vermont paid $367 for bounties for killing lynxes and bears. —The surface of the Great Sah Lake is said to be rising at the rate of o .e foot per year. —Dan Bryant is playing a • urlesque on Much Ado About Nothing, in New York. —Mrs. Gaines is willing to compro mise' with the city of New Orleans for $1,600,000 cash: —Cincinnati has a velocipede factory which turns out 1,600 a week, and they sell at $35 apiece. —The New ,_York Mail thinks James Russell Lowell will have a foreign mis eiou under Grant. —Mr. Grinnell is now said to be the most prominent candidate 'for the New York Collectorship. -Mr. Mullins, of. Tennessee, is said to be the greatest orator in the present House of Representatives. —Robert E. Lee has been elected Pres ident of the Rockbridge dounty Bible Society, in Virginia. —A mile and a ,half in four minutes and fifty seconds is said to be the best ve locipede time made in France. 7 -4. B. Roberts, the tragedian, better known perhaps as "ranter Roberts," is now running a theatre at Lanmster. ...—Xavanangh and Decker had 415,006 worth of billiard tables destroyed by fire at their manufactory the other day. L--One of the Headleys has given emi nent persons a respite from being bio graphized and writes about Planchette. —A. H. Stephens - has formed a law , partnership with his nephew at Atlanta, where they have an excellent practice. —General Grant will go to the inaugu ration bah. Does any cure know if his father allows him to dance round dances? - —lt is estimated that the world pro duces every year four thousand million pounds of rags of which paper is made. —l4 the respectable papers in the country are now suddenly waking up to the necessity of teaching trades Ito boys. —Senor - Gastambide, a Spanish com poser and impressario, renowned 'n Eu rope, is about to visit New York with an opera troupe. —An attempted forgery. of credit to the amount of $lOO l l been stopped in San Francisco 1 of the Atlantic cable. . _ —A New Orle4ns lawyer has .pretty girl whour he took fro on the streets, to yeaTs ago, and fell in lova with. —The King Of Saxony is Oanslating Hamlet into German. He is sild to be one of the best translators, in spite of his rank, in the fatherland. ' —Kerosene is now quite popular in `stead of vitrol for throwing on elegant dresses, and the kerosene or vitrol throw _ era are increasing in some districts. —A sweet young woman was drawn into a carding machine at Peoria, the other day, and was soon a fine specimen of lengthened sweetness long drawn out —The exhibitor and agent of a patent - non-explosive_ gas generator, at Toledo, was blown up by his own machine, hi the presence of a large audience, the other day. —The sheriff's Court at Glasgow, fikotland, has decided that neit:i er chim ir Bey sweeps nor bakers in the working clothes can claim to be carried s passen gers in public conveyankes. r dt Cincinnati had tuaoth ma dog on Monday, who bit about a zen other dogs and a man. The man is dying to curehimself with a. mad-stone, , and the dogs, it is supposed, were all killed. —Carl BensOn disputes Dr. Peaslee'i thesis that the use of tobacco interferes with digestion, produces disease .of the - - - - throat, diminishes virility, blunts the in tellect, and destroys the finer sensibilities. --Yankee Robinson, a diel - try actor of the old school of American comedy, is now in - Cincinnati at Wood's Theatre, where the Lanyeahs, husband and wife, are performing their remarkable muscular and aerial acts. —The Worrell sisters are in Chicago, and have not been as well received as they might have been. Cue of the news papers speaks of some parts of their Field of the Cloth of Gold as "coarse and sim ply disgusting." -Dr. John Hubbard, an eminent phvs clan of Hallowell, Maine, and twice /,Gov ernor of Maine died in his hair on Sat urday last. During his firs term as Gov ernor, he signed the fir t prohibitory liquor law enacted. in that tate. _ —Students of geography look upon Corea as a mereexcresence on the side of China, and yet.4-ithin the past two years and eleven months the inhabitants of that wart have murdered three thousand. Christians, merely because they were Christians. —A little boy named Graham was fly ing hi kite from the roof of a house in. Mulberry street, New York, on Sunday, when he fell off to the pvement below, and was killed, thug becoming another f awful example of the in vitable fate of bad boys who play on Su day. —A negro danced a jig in a Memphis bar-room with such vigor as fo jar a pis tol off a shelf behind the b r and explode it. Nobody appeared to he hurt until it was found that a colored girl, sitting up right in a chair, was stone dead, the bul let having gone through he brain, killing her instantly. —During a concert in th Boston Music Hall, recently, when the organist was "exhibiting the full power • f the instru ment," a 'lady was enthusiastically con versing with her neighbor about her household arrangements. She suited the, tones of her voice to those of the organ. The organist made a sudden transition from "fff" to "pianissznio," consequent ly the audience was somewhat amused at being inf rmed by her, in a shout, that "We frie ours in butter." —Last month the \ New York Society for the P evention of Gambling captured thirty-tw clerks indifferent gambling houses o that city. This Society seems to be composed of a set of amateur sneaks, whose idea of the proper way of prevent ing gambling is to go around quietly till ( El they. find some young an gambling whose employer they kn w. They then go and tell the employer at the young man is a l. ganibler, and h generally gets his walking papers. Gra ling is a dread ful vice, and a demoralar: g one, but we would rather see gambli g upheld than sneaking and spying; ins ort, the end does not justify the means. —Mrs. John Drew, t- her theatre in Philadelphia, has bron ht out 'Yate's drama of Tame Cats. T is is what the Philadelphia Bullttin say on the subject: "Tame Cats will be fo (1 - very prop erly under the head of a-mews-ments. Tame Cats was made perfect in rehear sal at the Arch by patience and pussy verance.l When, the play at the Arch is over to night, the audience will scat-ter. Tame - pate ought to be a purr-manent ittleCesS. L If the Tame Cats get their backs up it will be an Arch-treat affair. • The Arch street Tame Cats represent we suppose the Mews of Comedy. As an accompaniement to Tame Cats tonight might we not suggest to Mr. Dodworth the air "Hest thou no feline?" —The Philadelphia Ledger publishes a much longer list of marriages - and deaths than any other paper in that city. Many of the defunct personages are fond of po etical notices of a hopeful or mournful nature, and there are several quite re markable verses which are popular for this sort of work. For instance, the line "gone but not forgotten" is as popular as it is absurd, for the subject of the notice is so recently gone and as yet unburied,' so that even the worst memory would find It difficult, under the circumstances, to lose him.. Here is _ ii badly rhymed favorite : . To tat brigh nd t la cur Mamie's gone, For Jesus bane ner come: He took her from this world of woe, I'o live with Him at home. Here is a neat lfttle combination: Another .00Wer, nipped in the bud, Gone, but not tor:rodeo. The last line is forced tp close this re markable production. Short was her suffering. Hard was her pain. No murmur escaped her. None beard her complain, May the sun shine brightly And the rain fall ligntly Ou our little Sarah's grave. . 0 ..ne, but not forgotten. __ And for full grown men this peculiar little gem is the especial favorite. We have often seen it three or four times in the same .paper : . __ None knew him but to love him His strong spirit's fled To the Lu:d above, While his active limbs Lie mouldering in the dust. letters of 0;000 has by means married a I. begging I educated , Ali experiment is 'being made with a , c new kind. of fuel on some of the steam boats running on the Mis o urs river. It is a compressed coal, theprocess of preparing which originated in England, and is claimed to be greatly superior to common lump coal. It is now in use on Ward the steamships of the West India and. Pacific Mail Company, and has been found to "make steam" faster, and to ad mit of more compact storage than ordi nary coal.—Harrisburg Guard. A CITIUOIZIS lawsuit is on the • tapir in England. A Liverpool merchant, Bud• denly 'called to tiPew York on, urgent business, took a cab to the steamer, and in his haste forgot to pay the driver. -On his return, three months afterward, he found the cabman and cab just where he had left them, sbeltered by a little wood en shed, and was met by a bill for coach fare for one thousand and eighty hours y day and one thousand and eighty hou sby night. FritsigTßGl3 •Plionsti 4 y, yowl ARY 11; 1869. Destructlou of the International Hotel at St. Paul, Minn—Hurried Escitpe of the Inmates. (From the St. Paul Prise, Feb, 4 1 At about 5:80 o'clock yesterday morn ing the International Hotel was dir,cov ered to be on fire, and in's' little aver an hour was in ruins with nearly stints con tents. Many of the inmates had just time to pack Into their trunks their most valu able articles, or roll them into bundles and get out as speedily as possible, while the large majority saved little more than the clothes they were able to speedily put on. Borne of the ladies, almost paralyzed with terror, escaped into the street with their night clothes and barefoot, and thus exposed to the snow and beating wind, made fl their way to adjoining houses, a few going barefoot as far as the Merchants' Hotel. Of the losses of the different guests of the hotel it is impossible to make a full estimate, but they amount in the aggrel gate to many thousands of dollars. Add these to the value of the building, furni ture, &c., and the stock tal the different parties - occupying the lowerfloor, and the amount of losses by the burning of other buildings, and losses and damages by re moval, and the sum total will exceed $200,000. Brevet Major-General A. Baird, of Pennsylvania, Inspector-General of this Department, was at the International with his family, consisting of his wife and son. The General and wife roomed upon the third floor, while the son occu pied a room on the fourth floor. As soon as the parents were aroused and became conscious of the impending danger, of course the first thought was to awaken their son. General Baird hastily threw on _part of his wearing apparel, and then ascended through the dense smoke to the upper floor, and groping his way to the door of his son's room, hurried him out and down the stairs. Mrs. Baird, in the haste and confusion of the moment, did not even think to save her jewels, which were very valuable, but in her night clothes joined her. husband and son, and the three descended through the smoke, which was almost suffocating, to the pavement. Here, leaving Mrs. Baird and his son, the General attempted to return to the-loom and rescue some of their val uables. The smoke, however, was so dense and the dancer so imminent, that he was compelled to abandon the attempt. The loss of General Baird and family was perhaps as heavy as that of any , a ho were boarders in the house. He lost an elegant gold watch Which cost four hun dred dollars. His son Willie lost a gold watch which had been presented to him by his grandfather, which probably cost as much more, and another gold watch, belonging to Mrs. Baird was burned. Mrs. Baird lost a diamond set, a present from her! husband,, which cost $l,OOO. Besides this- the whole of her elezant-wardrobe, a. large amount of sil ver-ware, trunks, mementoes, a very beautiful and costly, collection of photo graphs, books, &b., including all the wearing apparel of the whole family ex cept the few garments they had on, were burned._ The General's sword, sword belt and sash, and all his military equip ments, were consumed. Worse than all, he lost a valuable diary containing a com plete record of all his campaigns, march es, &c., from the beginning of the rebel lion to date, a loss that cannot be esti elated in money. His actual pecuniary loss amounts to several thousand dollars, upon which he did not have a cent of in surance. Rev. Dr. Boardman, of Philadelphia, and his son and daughter, lost everything they had, including trunks, books, cloth ing, &c., amounting in value to several hundred dollars. We are happy to learn that the reverend doctor succeeded in sav ing his sermons. His daughter, in her care for her father, had no time to make her toilette, and escaped with a single dress, and a shawl or cloak snatched from her wardrobe. Miss Bakewell. of Pitts burgh, a relative of the Boardmans, took time to complete her toilette, and saved a Pible and another dress from her ward robe. John F. Lincoln, Superintendent of the St. Paul and Sioux City Railroad, who occupied a room on the third floor, heard - no alarm, but hearing the bustle below, concluded it was train-time. He got up and deliberately dressed himself, brushed his teeth, combed his hair and made a very deliberate toilette. He then put on his overshoes, overcoat, &e., Tend opened the door to be at once almost stifled with smoke, and startled- by the wild tumult from below. He at once realized his peril, and stooping down, crawled along the floor under the smoke to the stairway, and in this manner des cended io the street, almost stifled. In his room were his trunks and a . box with three hundred dollars worth of silver ware,-which he could have at least thrown ont of the window, had he known the building was on fire. His loss, cash value, is $4,800. Thomas Emsly, a wealthy capitalist from Yorkshire, England, who has in vested heavily in American railroads, has been at the hotel for some time past, and was quite ill. He bad to be carried out,, making a very narrow escape. He is said to have lost his trunk, including in Its contents $2,000 in money, a watch worth S7SD, and, what he prized more than all, manuscript notes of his travel throughout the world, extending over a -,eriod of ten years. . Tim But River bridge will" certainly be one of the greatest achievements of mechanical science, and the largest of its kind (except one) in the world. From the plans t as already settled upon, we de rive the information that the two main cables re to be suspended from towers 263 fe a et above high water, or 42 feet higher than the Bunker Hill Monument,. and lacking only 21 feet of the altitude of Trinity Church steeple. It will cross the East River with, a single span of 1,600 feet, and 182 feet above high tide. In its total length,' :3,862 feet, it will be sur passed only by the Victoria bridge of Montreal, which is 6,600 feet long, but lies near the water and rests on twenty fortr solid abutments. The span of the Niagara Suspension Bridge, 821 feet ) Is but about half that of the Brooklyn bridge. The largest span or ? the Menai Tubular Bridge is, but 450 feet., and it lacki 220 feet of the length and 27 feet of the height of the East River Bridge. The Wheeling Bridge,' over the Ohio, which blew down in 1854, bade span of 1.010 feet. The city of Brooklyn has alrendy voted $3,000,000 toward the work alnd New York $1,600,401.m0re. The total estimated cost of the work is $8,000,000. Tux statement isent to some of the newspapers relative to the foreign debt of the Dominican republic is an error. The entire indebtedness of the 'republic on January 1, 1869, inclnding the paper cur rency now in circulation, did not exceed $llOO,OOO. TEETH EXTRACTED wrrixotrr PAIN I c N? causes MADE WHEN swamis. VETS ARE ORDERED. A POLL BET Iva si, AT DR. tiCOTT'S. 175 PENN STREET, SD DOORABOVE HAND ALL WORK WARBANtED. CALL AND Ea AMINE SPECINENB OR GENUINE vimcms rrx. 13199:dta CHAS FIXTURES WELDON & KELLY, . Stalmfacturers and Wholesale Dealers In, Lamps, Lante as, Chandeliers, AND LA P GOODS. Also, CARBON AND lIBRICATING OILS, WEN , &o. N 0.147 WOod Street. se9:n22 Between sth and Bth Avennee. FRUIT CAN TOPS. We are'now prepared to supply TINNERS - and the Attie with our Patent SELF.LABELING FRUIT CAN TOP. - itls PERFECT, SIMPLE and CHEAP. Having the names of the various fruits Stamped upon the Cover, radgatlng from the center, and an index or pointer. stamped upon the Top of the can. It Is clearly, distinctly and PgRMANENT LT LABELED by merely placing the name of the fruit the can contains op , pestle the pointer and sealing in the customary manner. No preserver of fruit or good HOUSEKEEPER wits use any other after once seeing it. • Send_ 25 cents for sample. COLLINS it WRIGHT, 139 Second avenue, Pittsburgh. PIANOS. ORGANS, &C. BUY THE BEST AND CHEAP.. EST PLANO AND ORGAN. Schomokker's Gold Medal Piano, AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN, The SCHOISIACKER PIANO combines all the latest valuable improvements icnown in the con struction of a Int class instrument. and has al ways been awarded the highest premium ex hibited. Its tone is full, sonorous and sweet. The workmanship. for durability and beauty surpass all others. Prices from $5O to 8150. ( according to style and finish.) cheaper than all other m oaned flret elus Plano. , ESTEVE. COTTLGE ORGAN Stands at the head of all reed Instruments. In producing the most perfect pipe quality of tone of any similar instrument In the United States. It is simple and compact In construction, and not liable to let out 01 order. CARPENTER'S PATENT " VOX MUMANA TREMOLO . Is only to be found In thls Omar . Price from $lOO to 0130. AU guaranteed for Sive year's- BARB, KIM & No. 131 ST. (.7L E A11 1.11 51. ST ET. PIANOS AND ORGANS—An en tiro new stork of KNABZ'S UNRIVALLED PIANOS; HAINES BROS.. PIANOS: PRINCE & CO'S ORGANS AND MELODE ONS and TREAT, LINSLEY it CO'S ORGANS AND MELODEONS. CHARLOTTE BLITIKEI, 43 Fifth avenue. Sole Agent • r 47. lILMIRTERS 11. FOR BOYS' CLOTHING. Gray & Logan, NO. 47 ST. CLUB STREET. B TIEQEL, * Mate Cutter with W. Heepe_abelde,) DIERACTIANT TALEL•OII, No. 53 Smithfield Street,Plttabetrgh l 5e29:921 NEW FALL GOODS. - _A splendid new stoet of CLOTHS, CASS Ell KEES. &C., Just received by lIIICNItY MEYER. sett: Merchant Tailor. 73 Smithfield street. S. CHINA. CUTLERY 100 WOOD STREET. HOLIDAY. GIFTS. FINE VASES, BOHEMIAN AND CHINA. • ' NEW STYLE S, DINNE SETS, 11 TEA SETS'aIFT CUPS, r, SMOKING SETS, A large stock of SILVER PLATED GOODS of ail descriptions. I C I [eelar- e d :I' x ii( 1 ) 11 . 1 ): need" be salted. R. E. BREED Ar. CO. 100 WOOD STREET. WALL APEIRS, WALL PAPER -= REMOVAL. THE OLD PAPER STORE IN A NEW PLACE, Mr. P. 1111.A.1tSUALL Has removed hoti 191 WOOD STREET to NO. 191 LIBERTY STREET, a few doors above ST. CLAIR: DYER AND SCOURER, H,L LANCE, AI DYER AND SCOURER. rro. a Soc. ez,Ara STREET And Nos. 136 and 187 Third Street, PiTTSBURIM, re. CgRhETI3. BOVARD, ROSE & CO., OIL CLOTHS. BOVARD ; ROSE & CO., Window Shades, BOVARD, ROSE & CO., 21 fe9:d&vrT SPECIAL INNOUNCEMENT. ! TO MEET THE GENRE,. kV DESIRE OF THOSE who nave been deferred from purchasing until after the diet of the ye ar,we hive concluded to continue our t GREAT REDUCTION SALE FOR A FEW WEEKS LONGER. This Is Posi tively the last opportunity to secure bargains in CALIZI 7 9OI -I S, Oil Cloths,* Mattings, &c. Good Carpets for 25 cents a Yard. OLIVER M'CLINTOCK AND COMPANY No. 23 Fifth Street. laig 51 51 51 Fifth Avenue, CARPETS, CARPETS, CARPETS. N'CALLIIIi BROTHERS, lII'CALLUII[ BROTHERS, III'CALLITH BROTHERS, 51 Fifth Avenue, JaZ ABOVE WOOD STREET. JANITABY, 1869. 'CgRI'FTg3. McFARLAND & COLLINS WILL CONTINUE THEIR ANNUAL CLELEASCE SALE TWO WEEKS LtINGER. Greater - Bargains than -Ever Will be Offered to. Close Out Special Lilies of Goods, at 71 and 78 Fifth AvennN Second Floor Ja7 DRUGGISTS. ENDERSON J. & BROTHERS, • 268 Liberty street, Dealers in Drugs, &into and Patent Medicines. . iaSat W. RACILEOWN BRO., WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS - MARCIPACTIMZELLI OT C 61.1 ELI I I3 COM. . ' MOVED TO NOODS LIBERTY STREET, II Y/TTSBUBGH, rETINA. White Window Lead, elms nd Glassware at Mitnufacturers orlces. • I dee SHEETINGS AND BATTING. 13 . 0LME9, BELL & •4:hy ANCHOR COTTON NULLS. Wm MMus of 1114.V1 mina sad \ LIMIT AN CHOU AND MAGNOLIA SFICETINGS' ANp BATTING. *3lO : WV 111,D1WW43.1.A ,delll iiERCIEfAL lIECKETT, DIEOZANIOAL ENGINEER, And Solicitor of Patents. • (Lute of P. Y. W. 30. Once, No. VII FEDERAL STREET Room No. UL . stairs. P. 0. Box 30, ALLEGHENY M • ' MACHINERY. of all descriptions, designed. BLAST FURNACE cud ROLLING MILL DRAW desi gning shed. Particular attention paid. to COLLIERY LOCOMOTIVES. Patents con utientially solicited. Anr An EVEN ING DRAWING CLAES for mechanics even WEDNESDAY NIGHT.• anOnfli O n ODA ASH-100 tons choice braxOs In.storeland for sale by nol7 J. B. OLNIPIELD & M I DRY 54. KIITOMNG EXTRA pAVY BARRED .FLANNEL, A VERY LARGE STOCK, .' NOW OFFERED, IN GOOD STYLES. AI'ELROY, piciisoN WHOLESALE DRY GOODS, adeA. , WOOD STREET. • ST a I:4 g is z gi e. § 1 1:4 0 2 '.41 4 ~4 0 p 4 z CA c ;T1 I w V o Fi W A m o o 0 .4 2 ; z ff . 4 r i t , n I 1 ` g Pq I I ' Li t fet 0 Z I I z 0 z z I DRY GOODS AT COST, FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY.. TO CLOSE BTOCS. THEODORE F. PHILLIPS,. ,!87 MARKET STREET. !!!!!I eiIIaMcCANDLESS 67. CO., tLate Wllaon,-Carr it C 0..) wauwALE DEALERS IN Foteign and Domestic Dry goOds r i No. 94 WOOD STREET, . Third door above Diamond alley, PITTSBURGH. Pl. CEMENT, SOAP STONE, &é., HARTMAN & LARE, No. 1241 Smithfield street, Sole Ilannfaetnrers of Warren's Felt Cement and Gravel Roofing. Ma. terial for sale. 1a5:80 HMG CEMENT DRAIN PIPL • cbeapest and best Pipe in the market. Alec, itonakawas I:LYCRA:OLIO OriMENT for sale. B. B. & O. A. BRACKETT & CA. Ofilee and Mannfactory-5140 8E1313.00A8T.,{( Allegheny. Jar Orders by mail promptly l eZgrie &Um, ded VI a; (0:Y Djiri 3f.li zjiji B. LYON, f:'," neater of Weights and 11.easaress ': No.* PiIIHTIt 6 MEET, t tßetweeitibersy and Yerry.streets. szita' uremTtly attandal t 4 }MR AND PERFUMERY. 11101131 • PEC__,,IE -011NADIENTA qf; . HAIR WORZAIL AND ,PRIWUKIER, No. Third street. near SmittiAgd, Pittsburgh. Alwanon hand,Aumneral assortment or La4l.;-..-., dies, wiGIekRA..I.MS, CURLS: 44 antlemen's WIGS. TOPERS. SCALPS, GUARD URAINS.iVt BRACELETS. Re. fir A good- Pries in cask '4 - will be given for RA W HAIR. Ladles' and Gentlemen's-Hair Cutting dent- In the venue*. minnow. Inb2:o -t WINES. LIQUORS, tko. jpsispu S. FINCH Si, CO., `,--•:- _ i,.., Nor. 185,187,189, 191, 198 :tad 195 s ';‘,!:.: PIR3T'BTBZET, PITTSBURGH, `i- -- . xerorAcrtraras OT tr-, ... Cepper Distilled Pure Rye Whiskey, - ' Also, dealers In FOREIGN WOMB and LI QUI/El3,k HOP% U. nals2B,lo