' 2► . littsbut 604.1 03:1110CIDi:414 —Lilac bushes are in leaf at Boston. —San Francisco has a few ripe cherries. —Agrarianism is gaining ground in ittexico. —Brougham's theatre is said not to lbe successful. , —Hanover's former sovereign is wri ting a book. —Louisville has no,_public librari or reading room. —iftaleigli - has a newspaper called the "live Giraffe." —Soda fountains are beginning to flow again in Savannah. —Hans Andersen, after all, is not coin- Ing, this year, to America. —Offenbach has a new opera said to be super-offenbachically wicked. —A spring of refined petroleum has been found in Smith county, Virginia. - —Judy wants to know what's the dif ference between an orchestra stall and a band box. —Thd scenery at Booth's theatre wont 'work by steam and the old hand style Is now used. -Newburyport is so troubled with ye locipedes,that she says they are not at all practicable. _ —A Buffalo cordwainer is making a pair- of $2OO boots for presentation to Gen. Grant. —The Pope is going to abolish Chasse pots from his army and adopt something more deadly. ' —A. piano has been shipped from New HaTell to Japan; if it reaches there it will be the fiist. Wheateley, the renowned New York theatriCsl manager, is said to be dying of cancer. —A Paris paper gives a ball to its new subscribers if there should be a certain number hy a certain time. —The Arch Bishop of York thinks the --Church of England would not _suffer, by separation frorn the State. ' --Massachusetts has one Governor and six ex-Governors still alive out of the 'fourteen she has had since 1520. —A sleet storm in Angusta„ Me., last Monday, killed or ruined most of the shade trees in that pleasant northern town. —Some Nitahville Germans talk of givz ex.President Johnson a banquet and • torchlight parade when he goes to Ten nihisee. —Miss. Kate Reignolds has brought the "Shadow of a Crime" from Europe with her, and will appear in it throughout the country. —A fashionable Parisian has just re turned from Egypt with a severe disease of the eyes. Her frieiids call it a cata ract of the Nile." —Small-pox, hydrophobia, scarlet fe ver, trichinae, etc., are among the pleas ant .things going on in New York, San Francisco and Cincinnati. Abija Tian died the other day in Westboro, Vt., from the effects of a fall on the ice. This is the second case of the kind at,that plae.p this winter. —The colored folks . of Washington it is'saild are going to try and get up a ball on inauguration day which shall be grand er than that of the white folks. - -A,farm-hand in Tilinois bound, gagged and smothered to death the little son of his einployer, so that he might plunder the house at his leisure. —A Connecticut farmer has kept a re cord of his turkey-raising the past year, and finds that 98 turkeys ate 110 bushels of corn and netted him $220 profit. —That mysteiions Alonzo Hawes comes out in Prins again to say that the real son of Mrs. L. H. Sigourney is alive and in Vermont, and that he _can prove it. —A new fashion in stationery has been introduced from Paris, where it has been used several years—a letter sheet of fine paper which folds so as to form its own envelope. —Borer:3 for oil in Callasiel Parish, La.,Tound a bed (may be a lake), of pure sulphur, only 600 feet from the surface. This is much nearer than most rumors Itaire placed the deposit. —Rudolph Count de St. Leon is now once more in trouble for swindling a cu. e., an innocent New York hack. man. Can this man be the same as the Count de Leon who years ago swindled the • Economites ? —Two young , men in Cincinnati shot a cow 'the other night. They weren't sure whether she was a highwayman or a mad dog—both articles fearfully common in that town-4hd shot and ran away only to ficd the dead cow next day. —"lf you had eightyyears to live, how would you spend it so as to be per t ictly happy here below?" asks a French writer, and answers it himself: "The . ihirty years as a pretty woman, thir vMore as'a great general, and the rest as a bishop." ". • - The: people who , manage things at Norwich, Coun., deserve a page in their honer itillother Goose: The !Muses of Noiwich are mostly of wood. The res ervoir water in theistreets is shut off at night and the fire eitglims are kept on one side of the town and the horses for them 011 the other. —Somebody now says that Dr. M'Cosh never. played a game of whist in his life, and never drinks wine except whorpro priety demands it. Some one has lied re cently about Dr. M'Cosh,' and it would be curious to know whether it be the man who says he does play cards and drink, or the other one. —An exchange says one lot of Hutch- Insons are adfertised to warble their na live wood-notes wild in Chicago, and an other lot simultaneously in Minnesota. Each is the only genuine lot. The Min nesota songsters take oats, wheat and corn for and comprise three ,Thitchinsona and one Hutchindanghter. —How pleasant :it would be if insur ance agents hero would follow the exam ple of Messrs. Tillinghast and Hilt, of Philadelphia, who have been advertising ih the Telegraph one whole page per day. A page of the GAZETTE covered• with a single advertisement would be a neat and not at all gaudy ornament to any man's office. —Pretty soon some of our antiquarians will contend that Bunker Hit battle is a fiction. Already magazine, writers un dertake to prove that Putnam wasn't there, and if he was there he was cow ardly and traitorous, and that former his torians do not know where Warren fell In-the course of a month or two it will be denied that there is any monument to commemorate the spot. —On Thursday Cincinnati had another mad 4og. This one bit a gentleman from Kentucky and two other people, and was then shot by a grocer. Prudent men in the Queen City all carry weapons of de fense now, as it is utterly uncertain ; at' what precise motneut some mad dog, rabid horse or hydrophobical man may not swoop down upon you, bite a piece out of you and insert this fearful epi demic intn your own veins. Cheap Iron. Van Nostrand's Engineering Magacine for February expresses the chief material want of the age in the following impres sive language: The grand requirement of the' age is cheap, abundant and multiform iron; iron at such-low prices that constructors can afford to substitute it for weaker and less durable materials, and that all kinds of construction for which iron or its nseful allay, steel, are alone adapted, will be greatly stimulated. We want iron floors and fronts, iron bridges and sleepers, iron hulls, piers and forts. and iron framing and facing in general, instead of wood. We want steel rails, tyres, wheels, shaft ing, girders, tension rods, engines, tools and machinery better to resist the wear and strain heretofore inadequately borne by iron. And in addition to these com paratively new and vast applications of iron and steel, we want a greater repro duction of the constructions into which they - enter—more steam engines and boilers, more ships and railroads, more• iron defences,. more agrienitural ma chines, more plant and enginery of every description. No one thing, not even cheaper caal or cheaper baead, could 'promote - national wealth ad progress so directly and rapidly as cheaper iron, for its offices and func tions are universal. It shapes, trans ports, constitutes the physical construe, Lions, and is itself the frame-work of our new civilization. A greater production of iron, even at increased prices, has stimulated commercial and manufactur ing enterprises. A vastly greater produc tion at a quarter or half:the present cost would set the world forward ,a century in a decade. - • "There is no other subject connected with phy,sical science, of such present ab sorbing interest, not only to the profes sion, but to every pursuit associated with .or depending upon engineering in its widest sense. The rapid development of new processes, and the promises and ex pectations of schemers and experimenters in iron and steel, are the town talk. And certainly it is not, as it too often has been in periods of excitement of new discov eries, a talk. We are entitled to expect immedi to results ofa character so marked as to vl lbly better the condition of men and natrns. Doubling the life of rail road w y and machinery by the use of steel, involves a saving of mpne7 that must 1).34 universally felt. Reduang the cost of rought iron in its almost infinite forms, is a blessingas welt defined and im portant as a succession of good harvests. Rates of Travel. In a single second a snail travels one five-thousandth of a foot; a fiy, five feet; a pedestrian, at ordinary gait, five and three-tenths feet; a camel, six feet; an or dinary breeze, ten feet; a running stream, twelve feet; a trotting horse, tivelve feet; a whale, twelve and three-tenths feet; a fast-sailing ship, fourteeen feet; a rein deer with sledge, twenty-five feet, a steam engine, twenty-nine feet; a skater, thirty six feet: an English race horse, forty one feet; a tempest, fifty feet; a swiftly._ thrown stone, fifty feet; an eagle, ninety five feet; a carrier-pigeon, four hundred and eleven feet; a musket ball; one thou sand five hundred and ninety-five feet; • a twenty-five pound cannon ball, two thousand two .hundred and ninety-nine feet; a point of the earth on the equator, two thousand four hundred and fifty-one feet; the center of the earth around the sun, four miles; a ray of sunlight, forty one thousand feet. Mn. W. H. Num, in his article on the Revolution in Cuba, in "Lippincott's Magazine," says: "This is apparently not one of those ephemeral revolutions so common to our southern countries, which, like their tiro flies, illuminate but a single night. Creole and Spaniard, al though of one blood and a common an cestry, are two sharply defined classes, wit' no mutual interests, and conse. quently there is not that interlocking by marriage and social connections which Aenerally makes the struggle between a colony and the mother country so painful 'end compromise so easy. There is no large and respectable- class of loyalists, influenced by birth, position and wealth, among the Cubans. •Fealty to the,home government bas never been a trait devel oped in the descrndants of the Spanish conqnerotv, and Cuba offers no exception to the historical rule." IT is supposed that somefellow inven. ted the velocipede as an improvement on the treadmill. In both, the motive pow er is the same—leg; but the velocipede is a locomotive, while the treadmill IS a stationary engine. The velocipede is, however, only an ambulatory treadmill,- thd , forced use of which would be about the same as the constant tramping upon a treadmill. As a means of lOcomotion, it Will never be greatly used, for the.very simple reason that few people care about working their paggage.--Correspondent New BedfordWereury. GAZETTE Barbara Fritchle—Who Waved the Flag • at Frederick! By the setting of the sun on the eve of the 6th of September, 862, a stranger might have paused in thi streets of Fred , . ericksburg, Md., and asked what "change. had came over the spirit of the city ?" Not a flag vas to be seen; not a citizen up on its streets; the pulse of business (never very strong) had almost ceased to beat; and as friend met friend, they whispered with white lips of the approach of the enemy. It was true. General Robert Lee, at the head of the Confederate army, was marching on Frederick, left in the main with its women and children (I speak of the loyal portion) to the mercy of l a chivalrous enemy. General Stone wall Jackson entered the city on Satur ddy, the 6th of September, and General Longstreet on the following Monday came in with the remaining forces. So far as I am informed, as good order pre vailed as could be expected under the circumstances. Their sojourn was brief, kir the morn ing .of the 10th raised the curtain, and the scene presented was truly warlike. Day dawned upon marching columns of F ri infantry, cavalry and - artille wending their way to South Mountain d Antie tam. Onward they pressed, presenting little variety, excepting national flags were tied in horses' tails, aa,nd trailed , through the streets as a ,aming to Unionists of what might occur thereafter. Seated at my door, I had been a silent observer of the morning's pageant. It may be well to state here, althriugh I had not the acquaintance of a single Confed erate soldier, save those who' bad been my neighbors, the house wheie the U. S. flag floated under more friendly auspices, was known to many. Tl . continue: Music was swelling, the sta i and bars were waving, and as I gazed Upon brave men enduring every degree of danger and suffering for what they called their rights, my reverie was interrupted by the sudden halt of a subordinate officer ' before my door; who shouted at the top of his voice, "G—d d—n the stars and stripes to the dust, with all who advocate them!" The hero was borne off by the dense throng, but the insult admitted of no second thought. The flag of my country, sacred to the memory of my grandsires, and to the bestmen of the Revolutionary history, damned to'the dust? It was too much! My httle daughter, who had been enjoying her flaglet secretly, at this mo ment came to the door, attracted by this blasphemous salute, and, taking it from her band, I held it firmly in my own, but not a word was spoken. Soon a bright spot in this motley mass was visible. A splendid carriage, accompanied by ele gantly mounted officers, evidently the flower of the army, was approaching. As they came near the house they caught the glinipse of the tiny flag and exclaimed, "See! see! the flag. the Stara and Stripes!" and, with true. chivalry, hats were re moved 'and courtesies were offered the bearer, but not her standard. They had advanced some paces when a halt was or dered, and soon a lady—then Miss Mar tha Sian, since, Mrs. James Arnold—of Frederick, standing near with other la dies of the neighborhood, admonished me to fly with my colors. I did not fly, I however, nor move, until an officer from ' the above named company rode up, and, ,directing his attention to me, I stepped forward, and the following remarks were exchanged: Officer—Madam, give me your flag. Answer—No, sir, you can't have it. _ . Officer—Give me your flag, to present to General Lee. Answer—General Lee carnal flag. Officer—Why ? Answer—l think it worthy cause. Officer— Po ur flag has been Answer—Only by the cam espoused. Officer (regarding me sten down South, and we will ahoy negro brigades equipped for of the United States. Answer—l 'am informed o jec Here a brother officer warned him of the value of time; and urged a return, which was accordingly made. The Con federate soldier said the office who asked for the flag was General 11111. I remained in the same position, rest ing the staff of my flaglet on the tailing of the porch, musing upon the incident which bad just - transpired,, hen a sol dier, who, it appeared, had eard the re marks, stepped behind me, a d with his i v bayonet, cut off my staff lose to my hand. The report . reseinbled that of a pistol, and turning about, I saw him tear my flag into pieces and stamp them in the dust. I pronounced this the act of 'a coward, and again turned to view the army. Among the Young ladies present, but who died about the close of the war, was Miss Mary Hopwood, daughter of Mr. James Hopwood, well known as a Union 'citizen of Frederick. Seeing my flag cut down she drew a coneealed flag let from her sleeve and supplied the place of mine. In another instant the second flag was cut down by the same man. As soon as the information was conveyed to the officers, one more advanced in years than either of those already referred to, came back to the spot and reproved. in sharp language the man who cut down my flags. MART A. QUANTRILL, Washington, D. C. Feb. 9, 1869. Dos PXATT tells a story of Painter, the Washington correspondent who didn't kno*,all about the Alaska business. He says that Painter was slighted in the dis tribution of tickets of admission to the ceremony attending the funeral of Gen. Baker at the white House, and that,,tind ing a'coal-hole open, he effected a burgle. rious entrance Op the back'stairs through the kitchen and into the East Room just as the'clergyman knelt in prayer. Down went Painter on his knees, but with wide open eyes, through which be saw the,roll of, foolscap comprising, the funeral• sermon sticking trom the clerical ••hat.. This he secured while every head was bent in sol= emn devotion, and made off with it, leav ing the preacher 10 extemporize a lame discourse and read the glowing periods which he ought to have delivered, in the columns of a distant newspaper after a day or two. REsotracr.s or Aptints..—As might have been expected from, similar expert antes elsewhere, the more we learn of Alaska the more valuable do we find it as regards its material resources. The ear lier indication of beds of coal have, dur ing the past year. been follewed up with therdiscovery of richer deposits than ex- ist 'anywhere on the west coast. The latest announcement is that of lakes of petroleum in the northern part of the country, specimens of which, dipped out in a tin cup, andlpoured into tin bottles, are on their way to Washington. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1869. TIEN'IZSTRY_ TEETH EXTRACTID M ~Y a t~l ~y ~i;7-r i, N NO 0 Ha HE RADE WHEN .ARTESKiIIt l TEETH ARE ORDERED, • • A. BULL SET POE SC T DR: SCOTT'S. Alm PENN STREET, ID 000 E ABOVE HA-ND ALL WORK WARRANTED. CALL AND El AMINE SPECIXENS OF GENDINIC VIILCAA ITE. itiv9:d&T GAS FIXTURES WELDIc/N & KELLY, • Itanallsitni•ers snit Wholesale Dealer 4 in Lamps, . Lanterns, Cband.,liers, AND LAMP COODS Also, CARBON AND LUBRICATING OILS, rItENZIMIE, &o. N 0.147 Wood Street. ae9:lt= Between sth and 6th Avenues FRUIT CAN TOPS. We are now prepared to supply lINNERS -and the Trade with our Patent SELF.LABELING FRUIT CAN TOP. It is PERFECT, SIMPLE and CHEAP. Baying the names of the vartuus fruits Stamped uptm the Cover. radiating frum the center, and an index or pointer stamped upon the Top of the can. Ills clearly, dietluctly and Ph,RMANENT LY LABELED by merely placing the name of the fruit the can contains op posite the pointer and sealing In the customary manner. No preserver of fruit or good HOUSEKEEPER win use any other after once seeing it. Send 25 cents for sample. COLLINS ilk WEIGHT, . - 139 Second - avenue, Pittsburgh. PIANOS. ORGANS, &O. BEI7 , I I °E.'"ANDI I ).,A2. CHEAI- Schomocker's Gold Medal Piano, AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN. The SCHUMACHER PIANO combines all the latest valuable Improvements known in the oon 'traction of a first class instrument. and has al ways been awarded the big hest premium ex hibited. Its tone Is full. sonorous and sweet. Tne workmanship. for durability and beauty, surpass all others. Prices from S SU to $l5O. (according to style and finish.) cheaper than all other so called first class Piano. ZSTEVS COTTAOR ORGAN Stands at the head of all reed instruments. in producing the most perfect pipequality of tone of any similar Instrument in the United States. It is simple and compact In construction, and not liable to wet out of order. CARPENTER'U PATENT" VOX HUMANA TRP.MOLO" is only to be found in this Orgar . Price from 1.100 to 0350. All guaranteed for - nye years. BARB. KNAKE & BIIETILER, PIANOS AND ORGANS-1n en tire ram stork of KNABE , B UNRIVALLED PIANOS; HAINKS BROS., PIANOS: PRINCE lc CO'S ORGANS AND MELODE ONS Azid TREAT, LINSLEY at CO'S ORGANS AND MELODEONS. OELABLOTTEI SLIME, 43 rtfth &Tonne. Sole Agent t have my .W7g m" FT‘ ' FW . T:MrMTI BOYS' CLOTHIN6 At Very Low Prices. Gray & Logan, 47 ST. CLAIR STREET, lelB lof a better iahonored. you have 'ly)—Come !you whole !the service that sub- TIEGEL, B !Mate Cutter with W. Efeaptnheidea MERCHANT TAILOR. No. 53 Smithfield Street,Plttaburgh. se33;y2l NEW FALL GOODS. A splendid new stone of CLOTHS, CASSIMERES; lust received by HENRY 31EYER. 1e14: Merchant Tall°4l3 Smithfield street. GLASS. CHI*A. CUTLERY. 100 WOOD STREET. NEW GOODS. - FINE VASES, BOHEMIAN AND CHINA. NEW STYLES, - . DINNE,R SETS, TEA SETS, • SACKING BETE. GIFT CUPS, A large stock of SILVER PLATED GOODS of all deocriptlons. fe t e l l a l l i l aitstlern l O n g: ge . cl bAllte ir cl e . R. E. BREED az CO. 100 WOOD STREET. WALL PAPERS, WINDOW SIADES. A LARGE ABSORTMIST OF NEW TROSPAAENT & opmetz SHADES; At , 107 KarlOt :Stieet. PEAR RIFTS AVENUE., Jos.* MIGHBIB &' BRO. WALL 'V TiILOLD PAPER 'W. P. 19 Hal remoyed Loom NO; 101 L a few doors above No. 19 ST. CLAIR STREET. JIM RECEIVED. ER - REMOVAL; TORE IN ANEW PLACE; AMMULL_TA WOOD STREET to - ,ERTY' 82'BEET, CLAIR. dolt) CARPETS AND OIL CLOTHS TOE LARGEST ASSORITENTI In the City () AT THE I LOWEST PRICES.! A GOOD / 1 4 CAR ar FOR :25 Cents a Yard. d OLIVER McCLINTOCK & COMPANY, No. 0 3 Fifth Avenue. • fel7 51 51 51 Fifth. Avenue, CARPETS, CARPETS, CARPETS. M'CALLIIH BROTHERS, M'CALLUM BROTHERS, HTALLIIH BROTHERS, 51 Fifth Ave - nue, Js aS ABOVE.WOOD STREET. JANUARY, 1860. MRARLAND ct, COLLMS I WILL CONTINUE THEIR ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE - , TWO WEEKS - LONGER. Greater 33argaina than Ever Will be Offered to Cloee Out Special Lines of Goods, at 71 and 78 Fifth Avenue, Second Floor. J&7 DRUGGISTS, aENDERSON J. & BROTHERS, 21136 Liberty street, Dealers In Drugs, nts suilratent Medicines. • 1a5.29 W. lIIACKEOWN & -BRO., WIIOLESALE. DRUGGISTS, A.l.cfro it.A.NOI , Ac mazes OP Cletriacsaa Oil. MOVED TO NO. 105 LIBERTY BMW, PITTt3I3I.TBGH, PENNA. m lir n hp i t e rala r fAtd . , Mass . and Glaaswardtr LITHOGRAPHERS. .... ;MAU. QIINGERLY& CLEIS, Successors to Gro. F. ScuoctotAx & CO.. PRACTICAL LrruocUumetrus. The only Steamj.ithegraphia Erablishrient lne: 2 3 lVill e" Vti r i d 4 Wir t Diplomas. Portratts k views, ilerueeates of De. Dintatiovi • csrld, it.. Noe. TN and Third sines. Tittsbnrgh. PERFUXHRY. ir W lDr PECK,' 011NAllitiTAL HAIR ORIARN AND 'PERFUMER. No. Third Street. tear tiralthilebl. Pittsburgh.. Altreast bend, ad uegal assortment •et Li. diva I ekBAX . CURLS, _ _• Gantlemeu4 WIRIER OMER ALPS.' 'WARD CRAIN% BRACELETS. io. Ars sood Price hi cash will be Oren to RAW HAIR. , • Ladles' and Geuthimeros Mils' Cutting dohs in the neatest remitter. • +moms ARCHITECTS. BAR" mosipa, • _ . Amourri.e.c.raf, FRUIT HOUSE ASSOCIATION BUTLDINGS, Noe, .1 and '4 St. Clair ,Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. Special attention given to the designing and building et COURT- NOIISZS and PUSI,I StaLDINOS. DRY GOODS. KITTANNING EXTRA HEAVY, BARRED FLANNEL, A VERY LARGE STOOK, NOW OFFERED, IN GOOD - STYLE& IW'ELII,O I Ir, DICKSON & CO, WHOLESALE DRY GOODS, 45mQ WOOD STREET. C - - - 0 4 A U - ° Q . a i 7,4 ce• M 0 Pt % f-1 1 I m 7 ' U .. r; Z : E. i • c 4 5 9 W 0 2 54 1 w .m , 1 4 ix 2 Z 0a• E; E-, .4 ci 2 z E 4 .-1 z 1 A -cc w 1 m I 14 a C/2 V la A $ i t E " F. 4 .. a . , Z ri W ' 1 , ..4 I- 4 ki p i 2 12 0 ' I- Z ffi. 4 0 ,gt, el Z iii tl, :4 L--4 n 4 m , cx , ri - z a d t ic4 z DRY GOODS AT CipoS9r, FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY. To CLOSE STOCK. THEMOBE F. PIatILIPS,I 87 ALIBILET 82'REET. de2B °ARIL McCA2CDtESS & CO., 1 1 (Late Wilcox'. Carr & C 0..) - WHOLEAALIE DEALZEB fl Foteign and Domestic Diy • No. 94 WOOD STEM% • Third door above Diamond xney. • prrrsimiteß. PA. FLOUR. PEARL MILL FAMILY tiounlr- - 4 PEARL KILL Three Stu green Brand, equal 9 - f . - _ FRENCH FAMILY FLOUR-: This Flour will only oe sent tnit when esise-. deny erderell. rzszu. MILL BLVL nusisn. Eqn..l to best ht. Louis. PEARL RILL BEDESAISE, • ," - Equal to best Ohio Wu. -4 WRITE CORN FLOUR AND CORN MEAL. R. T. ICEIN4IIIrt a l ma, Allenheny. Sept. 9.1866..:Wm. MECHANICAL: ENGINEER AL BECKETT' glaawascaMOAL rizirdniaza, And etilioltor of Patents. o Y; • • •: (Late of P. - P. W. is C. Balloray.). effleev. 24 o. 79 PRDEBAIi STREET_ __BoOm 1 4: I F NI* Stairs.- P. O. Box 50, •• ALLIGHENr 1 . MACHINERY, of all descriptiotia j Aesived., , -1- BLAST PURNADE and. BULIMIC+ .19:114;', , . 'DRAW tfiefi furnished. Particular attentlC - : paid to desiping cOLLIRRY LQDONOTIVEI ateuts_comadeatiany solicited. Mfr. AA svitri: L .l, G - DRAWING CLAt.9 form elhailles - ILDIffit3DAY wrfiFlT. ; woloOlkg- :WEIGIM AND PdIIIASI7RO, - - eaier of Weights anti No. $ 701nyat Between Liberty taad Pony 'treats: Aryl PM promptly, attkno.4 to Fl:plazieyv;xinri) - 43WW f[AltTriLllN St: Letlig, - No. Smithfield titrect, Rile Ilfannlketurere„- arret , s Pait'Cleeneut and °ravel Booting. tend lbr sale. . i& 54• %Tit