151 s littsbititO4rttt, REBUKE, The world is old, and the world 16 cold, And never a day Is fair, I said, OnnOt 'lse heavens the sunlight rolled. The peen leaves rustiest above my head, And the sea was a sea of gold.• The world Is cruel I said again, 11. r the is hars dr ear y m shrinking ear, s And the nights re and tali i f pant Out of the darkness a weer anti clear. There ripnlsil a tender strain; Rippled a sodream d &Sleep.. That sang Ina of the budding wood - Or shining Rebid where the reapers re p, -;,- Of a wee brown mat. and a nestling brood, I' ' ' 'And the grass where the befrles peep. ' The world Is false, though the world be fair, . ' And never a b.-art Is pure 1 said. And Jo! the cif ging of "'bite arms bare. ' - The innocent Ruin of my baby's head. And the Ilsp of a thlidlan prayer. ' . • (Overland M. 4114/y PENNYLTANLi. Raiz has a velOcipede school. INDIANA complallts of mad dogs. LOOS - ILAVF.N is to have water works VERANGO county desires an alms-house HARRISBURG is infested with scarle fever. WipeEsesause has a VOLOCIPEDE School. SCARLET FEVER rages in some parts of ,Berks — county. Tim Lancaster LocomotiVe works are *gain in operation - . TIOOA COUNTY is suffering from the savages of Scarlet fever. A COMIITNITY OF 'MORMONS has a local habitation in Hyde Park. A REVIVAL is going on- among the colored people of Indiana. • • OIL Cneux„at Petroleum Centre, has not beenfrozen over this winter. JoiorsTowttr had six evenings of the •'Drummerßoy'•of Shiloh" last week. ALTOONA needs one hundred more housei to accommodate its population. - .AT Punxutawney, Rosenberger'is &tote :and: its contents were burned last week. New CAsTLE, having received its char tat, may, now be considered a full fledged city. _ • • LAWRENCE county paid off last year 1185,498, or more than one-quarter of its debt. A Pitonor is on foot to build a rail road from Uniontown down into Wes THE HOOP rorx business of Bedford ''county has been seriously affected by the revolution In Cana. Bir.rnmusu is to have a steam fire engine and bonds of the borough have been issued to pay for it. THE Lehigh Valley Railroad has just completed' its double track, which now extends all the way from Mauch- Chunk to Easton. W. W. RonxßTspN, of Island Run, Beaver county, died with lock-jaw on. the 22d all. He had cut his foot badly some time befbre. A sow of Dr. G. B. McDonnell, of Conneautville, was badly scalded the -other day by a kettle of boiling lye be ing upset. It is thought he will recover. WHARTON FURNACE, in Fayette county, near Uniontown, has recently been leased by some McKeesport iron masters and pat into complete running order at an ex , Dense of nearly 420;000. A UALF-WITTED roux° MAN has been conned for ten years in a small room in the Berks county poor house, fastened by a heavy chain. A new steward taking charge procured his release. SUNBURY had quite a crop of mad dogs last week, and so this week those dogs who did not go mad have to wear muz zles a clear caseof punishment for being virtuousi and curbing temper. MRS. ELIZABETH ROBINSON, Of Car lisle, while delirious from the effects of an incipient attack of small-pox, the other day, .threw herself in a stream, where her drowned body was found floating some time after. Taw, extensive Altaluny slate works of , ,- Yerkes & Martin, at Lymmport, Lehigh county, were entirely destroyed by fire an Wednesday morning, causing a loss , of $20,000. The works were insured to the extent of $9,000. Iwcwsrueitixe are loose in various parts of the State, the saw mill of Mr. Jacob Luther, near Carroltown Cambria county, was totally destroyed by fire on the night of the 24th alt: Loss about $5,000; no insurance. Mae JANE 8E1431 who lives in Reading attempted to lift a kettle of boiling water from the fire last 'Wednesday, but failed and upset the seething fluid over her face and hande, scalding oat both her eyes " . and severely , burning her face and hands. MIL AND Mns. JACOB Karrimit of Ve , iumeo, Crawford County, celebrated their golden wedding on the 4th inst. -12 of 'their children, 84 fgrana children' and 2 • • great geand children were plesen and 1 'child, 16 grand'children and 19 great - • grand ,children' Were unavoidably de tained. , ?dn. Jam. Dourtscn, of Cherryhill - township, Indiana county, while_on his . way home from the county. seat, - fell oat of his. wagon' and was killed by its wheels passing over his head, before 'his ..frtends who' were with him;,conld render , any assistance. A deep rut in the road is supposed to have been the immediate 'cause of the fatal accident. EP NEAR Canneantville a Mrs.lGehr Wrapped her baby up warmly, put on its :cap, which was fastened by arubber cord ..iander the chin, and started off with the little one on a trip:Jo Lineaville. on :reaching her destination she was by no 'lnane pleased to'discover that the rubber ' "cord- hadbeen so tight 'as to choke the • baby, whichwas dead in'her arms. A yißi_painful and.fatal accident hap patied,at , Hayfield, 'Crawford co., on the 221id.ult..An the family of Mr. Martin liChemberlain. As one of the family;was , :11fting s coffee pot from the• stove, the , beadle CAMS off, and the contents falling nporik Obßd softie fcruf years'old,scalded hint so badly that he died afterlingering itn 'great "distress for two or three days. . , _ bit smay night last, as Marcus Gni- Leman, of Poll Carbon, aged 24 yearsi fitting in a chair in the libraiy, • alone, reading, he died.. Shortly after, his father, while preparing to go to bed, Called him. Receiving no answer, Mr. G P i terman went Into the, library and found his son asstated, sittingin the chair, dead. Tlis cause of his death was heart , disease. - A AT PorrsviaLit the collieries now ) . are nearly: all idle, and with every probability that they.wiltreinain so for several weeks. .The operators, on account of the closing of asaription, have reduced the wages =A of the men, thereby vacating their labor, as the miners ate chiefly in a llliden, which forbids them working at less than "Union" rates. Talc Reading Journal says : A gen tleman in Upper Marion, Montgomery county, found a piece of limestone, and noticing some curious marks upon it, had it placed in the hatids of.one of our atone cutters to be polished, and now apoears on both sides representations of a land scape, including hills, valleys and trees. It does not loos like the fern fossils we sometimes see in cabinets of 'science, be ing more prominent and distinct, and is really beautiful. • HARDLY A DAY.PASSEB at Suaron dur ing which some ore is not injured by cars or ruins, for instance, see - this little list. On the Ist inst., a littb boy named Atkins had his hand crushed at the null; on the 3rd, a man named Moiled had his hand caught in the rolls at Westermann's mill and the amputation of three fingers was necessary. On the Bth, Robert Bell, at King's stove works, .dropped ea heavy piece of iron on hie leg inflicting a dan gerous cut; on tne sqme day a young man named Arid Roberts, slipped from a moving train' and fell across the neigh boring track just i n time to have another train pass over and cut off both of his feet. On the 2nd inst., a boy named Hubbard jumped from a train, fell, was run over, and when picked up had his legs broken in several places. On the 13th inst.; the locomotive, Sharon,.burst her boiler, ruining the engine, but, al most. miraculously, :rot injuring any person, although twelve pe ple were tiboard and they were Sharonites too. A Silk Community. (From th, Baia Francisco Herald, Feb. N.) The latest and ,most novel idea in the silk culture is 31r. D. F. Hall's embryo "silk community." According to the Los Ang,elos Star, 31r. Hall has bought Marge tract of laud, forining a part of the San Jose Ranch, about thirty-two miles east of Los Angelos, on the *an Bernar dino Ranch. The land is well watered by the San Antonio Creek, and two other small streams fed by springs on the north side of the land. HC.proposes to lay off the entire tract, which is two miles and a quarter one way, by one and a quarter tile other, into blocks and streets of suitable dimensions for the conveni ence of the resideuts, and offer it for sale to actual settlers.. The blocks will be forty acres in size, to be subdivided into lots of from one to ten in . size. Teri-acre lots will only be, Sold to those who will make improrementti thereon. There are certain benefits to be derived - from a settlement of this kind, entering upon and making a specialty of the silk culture, that will ,partieularly commend tb those wishing,,to enter the business, and particuldrly immigrants' from the densely populated countries of Europe. For an extensive cocoonery but a compar atively small quantity of land is reqiiirei, as it is computed that seventy-eight tons of mulberry leaves will produce one mil lion cocoons, and that three acres plated in mulberries will yield ninety tons of leaves, Upon this basis a ten•acre lot will be ample for producing three millions of cocoons, and have sufficient spare grounds for buildings, 'fruit and flowers, without which no place is fit to be called home. Tea Swindlers. Within a few years a large number of tea companies have sprung up in the me tropolis, `which claim to import direct from China, to furnish a superior article at reduced rates, and which advertise largely all over the country. One street is fairly lined for a considerable distance with them. We are assured by those claiming to know, that several of these tea establishrhents are organized frauds upon the people; that they use the leaves of the Camelia, which so closely resemble genuine tea that they are frequently mis taken for them by botanists; that they largely Import and palm off upon pur. chasers Chinese "lie tea;" that they use the leaves of ash, plum, and other trees, and mingle them with good tea; and fur thermore that they re-dry and color gen. nine tea leaves that have once been used, or have been damaged by 'water, etc. There is one of these companies which, we are 'told, does nothing else but pur chase damaged cargoes or chests of tea, and then dries it on the roofs of certain buildings not a thousand miles from where we are now sitting. The drying process having been completed, a small quantity of a superior article is added to the damaged in order to give flavor; and it is then done up in packages for distri bution all over the country. Those who are accustomed to patronize these tea es tablishments would certainly do well to analyze and test the quality of the article which.is dispensed' to .them.--New York Advertiser. Physlcking Cupld.Wlth Senna. A dear old lady at Brighton, (England) who has a finishing school for young ladies, finds her great trouble is the pro pensity of her pupils to fall in love. "My only plan," she says, "when see that the tender passion has been devel oped, is to crush it in the bud." "What do you do?" "You you will smile when I tell you;for my receipt is the antithesis of romance. It is a dose of senna tea. "Senna tea?". 'Yes, senna tea. When ever,' perceive—Es I quickly do—that one of my young ladies haa fallen (as she fancies) into love, I at once take her into' hand. I never hint at, anything con nected with the tender passion, but I treat her as an invalid, who is suffering from impaired digestion. I keep her closely to the house, and dose her liberally with serum tea, standing by to see that she drains the dose to the dregs. This plan is always attended with success. Sometimes she gives in after the first few doses; but usually it takes two or three days to complete the cure. I had one ob stinate and protracted case that lasted a whole week; bin I was firm to my plan, and in the end it succeeded. You may depend upon it that, as a:cure for a school-girl's calf love, there is nothing like senna tea." ; ments'ha ve been STEAM Berm:rm.—Some recent experi— made in England, en the effect of a non -conducting coating of cement in reducing the radiation'of heat from the surface of steam boilers. Lithe experiments;- referred to, the boiler. had a superficial exposed area of two hun. dyed and eighty square feet; and it was found that with the boiler uncovered, nearly fifteen cubic feet of water were evaporated each hour. After the boiler had been covered with a nowconducting cement, the evaporation was at the rate of 'twenty and *half feet per hour. The coal used, and all the_other circumstances in the two expertments,werkprecisely the •&. I PITTSEIJRGE GAZETTE: TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1869 IT is estimated that in Great Britain the annual consumption of intoxicating liq- uors is 1,025,000,000 gallons, upon which a tax of $120,000,000 is paid. Tan depth of snow in the Maine woods is almost unprecedented at this season of the year. In many places it lays seven feet deep on the level. THE Spanish recipe for salad dressing is a model of terseness and • exactness : `.!A spendthrift for oil, a miser for vine gar, a eounselor for salt, and a madman to stir it all up." A cess of "cruelty o animals," for the consideration of the S3ciety : BeD . • (Alittle darkee in bed, with nothing over him.) IT appears that a statue of Mr. Lincoln is considered more desirable In Washing ton than justice to his widow. Miss Min nie Ream gets . five thousand dollars for a plaster cast of the former, while Mrs. Lin coln has nothing, so far, to show foi the latter. SO ANGRY was Napoleon 111 with the Belgian Government on account of the Railroad Bill, which created such a sen sation on the European continent, that he said to M. de Lagueronniere in the most excited tone: "Bing Leopold will re. member. this. Oh, •he will. remember this !" • . . SuPERINTEHEENT Kennedy made an interesting report to. the Police Commis sioners on the "Social Evil," showing that, on the 26th . of January, there were, in New York and Brooklyn, 496 houses of prostitution; 107 assignation houses; 33 prettY waiter-girl saloons; 2,107 public prostitutes, and 255 waiter girls. THE exodus of French Canadians from the South St. Lawrence parishes to the United States still continues; many fami lies were going without disposing of their farms. Efforts are being made on the part of the Dominion government and military authorities to retain a larger number of troops in Canada than the last official order contemplated. A CAE•COUPLINA, it is reported, has been invented, in operating which it is not necessary to pass between the cars, and thus run the risk of being crushed. The other advantages of the invention are that by its use the disagreeable jerk in the starting of a train is avoided, a spring be ing -so arranged as to play on to an ad justable head and take up the lost motion of the link. ' WILL some "keyind friend" parse the following opening sentence of A. J.'s after dinner speech in Baltimore last week ? "Gentlemen.:—ln rising after the reso lution has been read of sentiments therein expressed for the purpose of making an address to simply return my thanks for the compliment I have no speech to make relative to publie affairs but what bas al ready been expressed and in rising now it is only to tender my thanks." WHAT the crusaders could nct do by tire and sword, the Princess De La Tour d'Auvergne has accomplished by money. The impecunious Moslem has sold to her the noted Mount of Olives. At Jerusa lem this Princess is erecting a camps Santo, to be named "Pater Neste,." Upon the walls of this cemetery the Lord's. Prayer is to be inscribed on bronze plates in all known languages. She has also created a fund for the maintenance of a priest at this sacred sanctuary. A PHYSICIAN writes to the Dubuque Journal of .Medicine in support of the old notion that people sleep much better with their beads to the north. He has tried the experiment in the case of sick per sons with marked effect, and insists that there are known to exist great electrical currents, always crossing in one direction around the earth, and that our nervous systems are in sonic, mysterious way con nected with the electrical agent. Let the beds all head towards the north pole. A RECENT writer says it is surprising howinfectious tears are at a wedding. First of all, the bride cries because she is going to be married; and then, of course, the.bridesmaids cry, perhaps because they are.hot; and the fond mamma cries be eause she'll lose her d-d-darling. and then the fond papa cries because be thinks it proper; and then all the ladies cry because ladies, as a rule,• will never miss a chance of crying; and then, perhaps, the grooms men cry, to keep the ladies company, and all this band of Niobes seem rather to en joy this Niagara of eye water. All ex cept the bridegroom, we have never seen him cry. No, not even whimper. Cuorranse had his wife wrested for. assaulting him with.a fire-shovel while at his devotions. It was an aggravated case. But Mrs. Choptanks asked to be heard. and,she said that little Choppy "didn't dar give her any of his sars in his talk; but he abused her in his prayers, and on this occasion he was on his knees, with a crowd about the door, gathered there by his hollerin' and a calila' on the Lord to forgive f this black-hearted wo man; 'make her tell the truth, 0 Lord,' hehollerecl, 'and make her quit gaddin' about and lyin' to .the neighbors,' and I couldn't stand jit, and just took Winn swipe with the ;fiat of the shovel, and I'll do it.again." ; A SOUTHERN' writer, who has just had an interview with Mr. George D. Pren tice, says he is not the matt he was ten years ago. Indeed, his genius is gone, and his person is a mere. wreck.. His family is broken up—hls wife dead, one son killed on the Confederate side, anoth er settled on a (FM down the river—and the old man, verging on three-score and ten, cooks Ids breakfast and dinner in Ins little room on the third floor . of - the Co4r ier. building and lives onl_y in conversa tions about the past. This man once wielded an Imperial with.bis wit and his music. Now the world has whirl ed past him; and he lies on the shore a mere stranded wreck. • • SAN evidence of the change, which a few years 'make in the fortitnes of in. dividuals, the St' Louis -paperi of to.day publish the application of Captain M S. Grant, dated August 15, 1859, to- the Court of Countr ConimissiOners for a position as county engineer. The' aPpli. cation Closes as follows: ;'"Bhould your , honorable bcidy see proper to:giva me the appointment, I pledge myself ,-,to give the office my entire , attention, and shall hope to give general satisfaction." His Petition was signed by the following citi: tens : Tay lor Blow, 'L. A. Benaist, C. W. For d, John Reinck How ' Judge MongyGeorge, W. S. Hille. l, W. Flabbac y k, r John Colone F. Darby, and fifty atp e hpi th ipec e lial rs acantip . osne n t early all Democrats. The el:'• of ofecoun r p e li te s c te t th e n d e . yheitig A mh n es_ d thist nixnao rejectedoanftehtr the gift of the greatest nation on earth: CLIPPINGS PEARL MILL , FAIILY FLOUR PEARL MILL Three Stir Vseen s arind, equol.to . , FRENCH FAMILY FLOUR. z i hr- o reur will . only ce Gout, On when. tope ' , : MULL =LI. EtLlyE '*AND . , • Equal to bolt St. Loos: . ;MAIM GILL BED MEIN% Imaatto bett'Obtoittoo. minx 00BN PLOUB .4/41), CORN MEAL, •XENTEDI & Alleobelm Sept. 94,111611. I , Abtar, /4rtz.' B. LYON, die• of Weights and Measarta g No. SPOWITH 8 num% CEIBIZEINT, SOAP, STONE, &C, ,11[111TYLIN: LAREf: NO., 124 Smithfield street, Sole Manntaettires_s of. errenni Vett Cement , sed G ravel iiordillfi• ma. Serial for sale. latisat• MAX*PA43ME DENTISTRY T EE "' f' ITRA CISD • WITE101:71' PATIVI NO CHARGE MADE WiihN ARTIFICIAL TEETH ARE ORDERED. - A FULL IiET FOR SOL AT DR. SCOTT'S. 3170 PENN ETRIEET, is DOOR ABOVE HAND ALL *or..P: WARRANTED. OALLAND AMTPM SPNCiIiZN2 OENUINE VIILCA.I. ITE. TarinikT GAS FIXTITitt-S WELDON & KELLY, Manufacturers anfll Wholesale Dealers in Lamps, • ' Lanterns, chandeliers;* . AND LAMP COODS. Also, CARBON AND LUBRICATING OILS, eitc. N 0.1417 Wood Street. sesaLM Between sth and Bth Avennea. FRVIT CAN TOPS. • . _ We are now prepared to sup TINNv De • = llPOiiimi the rrad — e with oar Patent • SELF...LABELING FRUIT' CAN . : TOP: It is' PERFECT, SIMPLE and CHEAP. Haring the names of the various fruits • BearaFed upon the Cover, raddating from the center, and an Index or pointer stamped upon the Top of the can. It is • clearly, distinctly and PERMANENT , ,LY LABELED by merely placing the name of the fruit the can contains op posite-.the pointer anti . sealing In the customary manner. - No preservOr of fruit or good HOUSEKEEPER vni use any other after once seeing it. Send 25 cents for sample. COLLINS at 139 Second avenue, Pittsburgh. - PIANOS. OROANS,, &C. 13vir THE BEST AND CHEAP.- EST PIANO AND ORGAX. Schoniackeek Gold Medal Piano, AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN, The 1301101dACKE13 PIANO combines all the latest valuable improvements known In the cox, struction of a Bret class Instrument. and has al ways been awarded the highest prexaltun ex hibited. Its tone is MI. sonorous add Sweet. The workmanskiv. for durability and beauty, surpass all others. Prices from 850 to $l5O. (according to style and finish.) cheaper than all other so called first elan Plano. ESTEY'S COTTA. O IX ORGAN Steads at the bead 'of all reed insruments. In producing the most perfetupe_quallty States of any similar Instrument In the United It is simple and compact In construction, and not liable to ret out of order. CARPENTER , n PATENT VOX HUM.ANA TREMOLO" is only to be found in this Organ. Price from use isse. 'All guaranteed for lire ream BARB, 'MAZE & - BUIIITLER, Na. 12 BT. CLAIR STREET. pIAN ORGANS-;An AND ORGANS—n en tiro new stock of ENA.BIC'S UNRIVALLED PIANOS; RAINES BROS., PIANOS: • • PRINCE & MS ORGANS AND MELODE ONS and TREAT, LINSLEY & ORGANS AND MELODEONS. • ORARLOTTE EILIIBIR deb 43 Fifth avenue, Sole Agent. I'6 oajiw:cluesA o !xi tigazji BOYS' CLOTHING At Very Low Prices. Gray eic Logan, 47 ST. ;CLAIR STREET, feli NM2II Mate Cutter mdUt W. Hespenheldeo 3 :ILEARCMLAivir No. 53 SmithaeldStreet,Pittisburgh. seX:y2l NEW FALL GOODS. A splendid bey stock of CLOTHS, CASSIME.BES, trai Just received by HENRY' MEYER. sell: Merchant:Taller. 73 Smithfield street. - CUTLER ' . 100 WOOD STR NE* GOODS. -VINE VASES, 110 HEII/AN AND CHINA. YEW STYLES, - DINNER SETS, O TEA, OETS, SMOKING SETS, Ur" cu n' . large stock of - SILVER PLATED GOODS • of all deieriptions. CW and"-examine.onr goose, and we feel astbaled no otte need fail to be mated. • R.. E. BREED & C O 100' WOOlO . STREET. FLOUR. (Between igberty and./elrt Meets- Onittra pronintiv atifingtpa 2iß~i FELROY, DICKSON & CO, DRY, GOODS t.) U ce 4 A . I I E-4 ;if E l a ° 0() 54 1 2 ;4 Z 0 El r 4 rk Ea frA U 1 V 12, 0 a u).4 w 4 1.• ff! 0 1-1 gq A . 0 • Ca 4 Z DRY GOODS AT cower, FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY. TO CLOI3E wrocit. THEODORE F. PHILLIPS, 87 MARKET STREET. de23 • OARB., McCANDLESS & CO., ' (Late Wilson, Carr & C 0.,) WHOLESALE DrAratizA Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, Ho; 9* WOOD BTIIEZT, Third door above Diamond alley, WALI. PAPER. TILE HD PAPER STOKE IN A NEW PLACE ) W. P• MARSHALL ' S NEW WALL PAPER STORE, 191 iiberty Street, SPRING GOODS ARRIVING DAILY. nth( ALL PAPER, Zs New and Beantifttl Deidgns, For PARLORS, HALLS, DEICING 800103 and CHAMBHEIS, now receiving 1n great vcriiity No. 107 Market Street, JOB.& lino. zahs Uliliiiilig ?[!‘7 .., N . ! • JTIBT RICOiCIVE.D- AT EEO ME V‘O ~.r -.~N.. -.. DRY GOODS. 54, KITTANNING EXTRA' HEAVY BARRED FLANNEL A VERY LARGE STOCK; NOW OFFERED, IN GOOD STYLES. WHOLESALE sigh WOOD STREET. PITTSBITE4III. PA. WALL PAPERS, MOOR]) & CO's, 181 WOOD STREET. • - • •i •••i;. • • ' ,`•:' • ".1 CARPETS AND OIL CLOT 54. NEW CARPETS.. , . A2' STOCK TT. R sx • NT . . I..JD • .3M • IN THI,S 11.ARICET.1 We simply request a coraparlson of Prices, Styles and Extent of Stock. The largest astortment of low priced goods In • any estabilshment, East cr West. 3 IacCALIIIIII 'BROS., • .• %re 511 FIFTY 4 t".E.NUE, mhl2 (1.11.0vE w °op.) • CARPETS. We are now receiving our Spring Stock of Carpets, &c., and are pre pared to offer as good stock and at I 'as low prices as any other house in the Trade. We have all the new styles of Brussels Tapestry, Brussels, Three Plys and Two Best assortment of Ingrain Carpets in the Market. fl BOVARD, ROSE (t. ZI .FINTIi ANTNuE. OLIVER McCLINTOCK Have Just received and are no opening the 37 largest Importation of the most besatina A. ) 1 . 1 :21 * 113 aver brought to this city, being Imported hi . ; them , direct , from the most celebrated manufac;;C tortes of Europe. OLIVER • a McOLINTOOK COMPANY t i r.! rte: No. 23 Fifth Avenue. SIVE TIME AND MONEY' N'FARLAND COLLI Have Now Open Their Neiv Spring Sloe OED Pine Carpet ROYAL MMmSTER, TAPE STRY *ELVE English Body Brussels. r • The Choicest Styles ever offer this Market.' ,Our Prices at the LOWEST. ; . 3 A SPLENDID LODZ OP 0 CHEAP CAIXPETEL • tood Cotton Chain Carpe Carpe EM 25 CENTS PER YARD. V' ILIUM) 61.`' 001111V1 71 AND 73 FIFTH PIMA! (1411tIOND FLOOR) I! Ti LITHOGRAPHERS. aat ttuturantoaarir..."......... INGERLY.& CLEIS,IInc 1.• to (49. 80litromuN a CO.. _PAN:THAL LrI'HOORAPREES. .Tito Mar i ; btatm Llthoaripnio :.istabashm 'West of e Mountains. -, Bastneu Cards. Le Diplomas, Portrait, Wiews Certldca:ea of nn!, laettattoa uses ar.o.. Nor. TA sad 'awn Mee% Pittabarsk: & COM:PANY, IN