El es =3 , . , . ' rare kispr the folios - ring 11.5mrn 2tedan's "The Blameless Prince, and Other noems," i niallshed 1" 1.. ~,.s ,i", fli,r. The sunset darkens In 'he West, The sea gulls haunt the bay. And far and high the swallows fly, uo watch the dying day. ' Now where is she that once- with m lih" rippling waves would list? --" And 11l for the song I loved so /Wag, And the darling lips I kin: Ten ;winkling sail may whiter gleam ii i • Than•falc n's snowy wing. Her lances sr the evening star Beyond e wares ma? ding; ' • Flbst on a float, enchanted boat; Hear true hearts o'er the main, But I shallg uide thy helm no more, Nor while r love again! NSYLTANIA.. Bums co ty has a touch of oil fever. CLesslc Gettysburg has a velocipede *school. Maer.vm;s firemen are exempt from all city taxation. - MCKi3AR BIICEEANAIq is with his datigh. ter acting in Erie. ' DOYLESTOWN is trying have hydroid. Water. We hope it will succeed. MISS AUGUSTA DARGOR is to give a rending In Johnstown early next month. Ears, generally, seems pleased at the appointment of Mr. I. B. Gars to the postafflce at that place. Two head of cattle and two dogs have recently died of hydrophobia in the neigh borb:oed of Norristown. Tim Gmenvilie Argrus.has changed pro.; prietom and improved in appearance. It Is now as handsome a country paper as anypublished in Western Pannsylvinia. pos peatoMees at , Aluon'and BUN% i, 4 in / caster county; : were robbed B - day week of a large amount of .stanics and a couple of watches belongta to official& t Tsa idonorphela Republican sayi . Rev. ,Vanifie, in charge of the Baptie Church, Olive Branch, was diamiew from his charge on account.of conduct un becoming a minister.- 1. Mu. Thos. Warman, : of Connellsville, foimerly , & lieutenant of the 14th Penn sylvania Cavalry, has taken charge of the scientific department of - the State Agri cultural Farm at Indiana, t'a. • _ On Wednesday morning last the house of Rey. John R. Snyder, one mile below Richfield, was destroyedby fire. The in surance expiied about a month ago and bad not been renewed.—Juniata /Sentinel. Ow Wiwi:giver. the 81st of March, a fire broke out In Montour, which con sumed.aight houses and 'damaged many others. The loss, about $25,000, is the heaviest ever experienced by fire in Mon: tour Tim Cazlisle Herald says: "It Ie ru. mored 'that 'a party of gentlemen from Lebanon county have been looking along tbelline'of the South Mountain Railroad with the intention of building large iron Works,"; THE newly incorporated woolen man ufacturing company, at lJnicmtown, bas purchased Bailey's old tannery which is no* being thoroughly overnauled and prepared for the reception of machinery, which, it is hoped, will soon be in active operation. Tax Raftrinan's .leturnal says owing to the cold and stormy weather that pre vailed in this region for some days, raft ing.was very much retarded. But now, that pleasant Weather prevails, we may expect that running will be resumed with renewed vigor. THE Mount Union New says that a lit tle child of Mr. Allen Bell, in Barree tevOnship, aged twenty-two months, on last ; uesday a week, during the absence , ita nxotheT for a few minutes, fell into a ran near the house and was "drowned before being discovered. IT ie STATED that the Corry machine works, which are now turning out 250 ClimaxmoWessa week, are to be enlarged so:as to ,'• employ one thousand men and turn wit onetbousand machines per week. By this calculation it takes one man just a week to make one machine. _DURING the last two weeks in March, holes: than three men were killed while engaged in driving logs in the Binnema. _honing and its tributaries. Beveral others have .also been seriously Injured. We have not learned the names of the killed or wounded.--Raftinuin's /eternal. ON Thursday morning a girl about finite= years - of age was drowned in the Monongahela river near Port Perry. The unfortunate girl was subject to fits, and .it is supposed while walking by a steep place on the bank was seized in a fit, fell -into the river and was drowned. Her body was recovered and buried on Friday. Ax Piatkityrvrun there is at present very little or no excitement among oil operators or land dealers. ,About twenty wells, have been abandoned within the last three weeks, and drilling has been ,inumeuded on six or eight new wells dur -Ing the same time, but there is, notwith sidanding,_a goodly number of wells still in process of drilling. • iiv z -mums from the Middletown - journal that on Tuesday of last week a • pop ot seven young men started form the neighborhood of the Cameron Fur- Dade, at that place, in a small boat, or a ride on the Swatara creek. The wind was pretty heavy, and — their boat was up. let, Land two of.the y, Simon C. &In . merman: and Benjamin Fralich, were 'drowned.. ..r:'011 April let, two , children of Prink llliard, of - WaehluPon iewnehlP, Butler , a?ttritYi aged respecuvely twelve or four. teenend:two years, were -so badly burned that death ended their sufferings on the • Ibllnwinirmight. ! During the , absence of, 'their parehts they attempted to revive the by potring petroleum on it, but the tialiter communicated to the can and therke tki the children's clothing. • rTer, La wrence Journal of',New . Castle says:" On Saturday of last ' week, While James:Pollock, clerk in the drug store of S. , llsKinley, in this city, was lifting a 'tattle from a shel,4 he accidentally struck another containing aqua fortis, causing it to fall upon his person. Some of the cot tents fell upon face and neck, burn ing bim, quitiseriously. His coat and vest *ere totally destroyed. A urns daughter of Hr. Joseph B. Holloway,. residing about a mile from the village ,of Douglassville Berke county, t was terribly bitten and injured.:by a rat,, on Tuesday• night last. During the night the:parents were roused by the screams of. the little one, and on procuring a light found it to be all over blood, the, palm and two fingers of the left hand having been badly gnawed, and the flesh eaten by a rat. The face was also somewhat • . `••- 4•4: 7 ' ' 7 r . - ' • "so 44,2.41, _ . • - - - et -.4 .Wre'• Y. • ' • • ,5441- •r. ,(4-SWfT '-'4V,4-1N4A.401f , , bitten. The child, which it only ten or eleven months - old, will probably lose the use of the two injured fingers. War. Hrtx, a eon of... Jacob H. Hill, of Oley township, committed suicide on Sunday morning by hanging himself in his father's stable. The boy was weak minded, and seems to have been infected with the suicidal mania pervading that section of the county—this act of self destruction making the third case of W eide in that neighborhood within the last few months. Young Hill was about six teen years of age. THE MiZtonian says an old neWspaper published at Northumberland, sixty-five years ago, gives some interesting items of those times. The editor says: We no ticed one thing in the paper that surprised us. It was a statement that a lir.Coates, of this State, had invented &mowing and reaping machine for grass and grain. The machine, it was claimed, would cut the grain, lay it in regular order and rake it into, sheaves at one operation, and would do all this as fast as a horse could walk. This is 8)3 much as the improved machince of the present day claim to do. McCormick and Manny must have got their ideas from Coates' machine of 1804. ' YEBT&B,DAY morning about ten o'clock, at Mahoney City, Hir m Ware, one of the firm of Hoppes & Coproprietors of the extensive oaring i i fl of that borough, waskilled by a terrib e accident: It ap pears that while tinting \ a bolt at tached to one of th 6 ' 11 stones in the pit of the mill (a dark dungeon filled with cog gearings, ,belting . and drams,) he was drawn into the machinery by, it is sup. posed, the tail of his coat catching in a belt. His head, above his nose, was en tirely cut off. His skull was bfoken in a dozen places, and strewn all over the pit. :His brains were gathered up and placed in his hat. Mr. Ware was about forty five years old, and one of the most enter =and highly respected citizens of oy city.—Miner's.fournal, April 3. ~~,~ ~ gig. ~~ CANFIELD had several inches of snow on the third. • Wnzo P/GEONS ere very numerous in Madison county. TAB Ohio State Festival of Bong will be held in Mansfield on the 19th and 23d of April. Younosrown is to have a fine new hotel to cost, exclusive of the lots' on which it is to be built, forty thousand dollars. - • TnE number of marriages in Ohio, dur ing the year ending July Ist, 1868, was 28,221, about 1,000 less than the preceding year. The number of divorces granted during the same yesir number 847, a de crease of 120 as compared with the year previous. • A cALL, signed by six hundred d eighty persons, residing in,fifty-five un ties in this State, has been Issued, 'ng a State Temperance Convention t. meet at Crestline on the 15th of April .r the purpose of organizing a State Temper ante party. / JACOB ALBERT, who lives in Monroe county, has succeeded in buying stock of the people In tire southern part of the county to the value of several thousand dollars, with the proceeds of whfch he has left for parts unkown, without pay ing for the stock. LAST Thursday Mrs. Stisan Moore, aged about eighty-five years, residing at Wellsville, was burned so seriously that she died in a few hours. None of the family were in the room at the time. The inmates of the house and some of the neighbors hearing screams ran id and found her lying-on the hearth burned in a shocking manner. Ox Saturday a daughter of Elisha Doudne, near Barnesville, Belmont coun ty, went with a smaller brother to 1311 a chicken; she was holding the chicken while the little boy undertook to chop its heed off with an axe; just as the boy was about to strike the chicken threw up its wings, frightened the girl, who threw out her hand, and the descending axe struck her arm at the wrist, severing her hand from the arm. lira want; informed the other day of the birth of a child near Benacaville, this conaty, that has feet like those of an opossum, and a double hare-lip, with the nose hanging doivn like the trunk of an elephant. , The mother of the child says during the earlier stages of her pregnancy she was badly frightened by an opossum, which, the Doctors say, was the cause of the deformed progeny. At list accounts the child was still alive.—Cambridge Jef fersonkn. A. Providence (R. I.) letter to the Bos ton Journal says: 'lda Lewis has again distinguished herself by rescuing two men from drowning. We cannot recollect just how many she has saved from watery graves, but we think the number is not less than a dozen.. Her father is keeper of the Lime Rock Lighthouse, located near Fort Adams. Having been almost a helpless invalid for a number of years past, the labor indispensible to keeping the light in proper order has devolved upon his wife, who has found an 'able assistant in his daughter Ida. The latter jumps into her boat almost daily, regard less of what the weather may_be, and with a pair of oars, propels it to Newp3rt, dis tance one and a half miles, in an incredi bly short space of time. She has been 'brought up on the water,' as it mere, and can manage a boat better than nine out of ten of the male sex. In fact, she claims that she . 4 aut row a boat faster than any man in Newport, , and we are inclined to believe her, having witnessed her manage ment of one on several occasion. 'lda is , about twenty-three years °Page, "tall and slender, but possessed of unusual courage and endurance. She, never hears the voice of distress, night or day, wlthont jumping into her little craft and proceed- . ing to the scene of trouble. She has en countered' great perils in the prosecution 'of her humanitarian offices, but her great tact and coolness have always been equal to the emergency. AT CADIZ,' Ohio, the other day, the lean of the United Presbyterian church, resolved to, surprise their pastor,. Rev. Mr. Me loy, with a present of an elegant dressing gowst. About the site it was completed, the makers concluded to hold a fair, and, believing some money could be, made, and an additional compliment conveyed to their pastor at the same time, they put up the garment to be "voted, on" at a quarter a 'head, expect big; of course, that Mr. lfeloy would get a biglnajority. it did not-ork that'Way s however. On Counting the ballots' how ever, it was found that Meloy had 105, and Newman 216—Newman being a col ored, preacher! OHIO. Anew Grace Darling. PITTSBURGH 'GAZETTE ' TUESDAY, APRIL 13 1869, giLeVs Have a Urink6::-Sesaethlng.HuHut,.: an Absurd AmerleanlCustoam. A temperance paper getabff the follow ing : The ridiculous, absurd American cus tom of "asking" is responsible for seven eighth—mind, we . say seven-eighths, and mean it too—of all the liquor consumed in this country. Abolish that custom to day,and where there are eight barrels of liquor drank now, there would be but one. We believe this, and believe it can't be gain -said. We appeal to an y number of drinkers . for their opinion in matter. To this custom we awe our "drinking between drinks," which some wag, with more truth. than poetry in his soul, said was the only thing that hurt, or words to that effect. • What a piece of ridiculous folly it is to go into a place, if in the mood for liquor, and to ask five or six acquaintances up to drink with you; yet it is done all the time, and by parties who, perhaps, wane the money for stockings; but not to do it when your acquaintances are about, is to be looked upon as "small potatoes" and few in the hill. Take the following as an illustration of a delightful "fix" liable to arise from this absurd custom: ,1 Yon feel in a mood for a glass, You go for it. Meet a friend just -as you are about to enter a i glu-milli and you'ask him in." Enter, and he coined u n a group of five or six of his friends,' ho i i i, have just entered and are conversing for a moment. You arc introduced all around by your friend. Where are you now? With a dollar in your pocket and five or six fellowß on your hands, only one of whom you ever saw before, and morally bound by custom and impelled by false pride to ask thein to join you in 'a social glass. You can't getout of it; they know 'you come in for liquor, and as your friend in troduced you and didn't invite, why you. must do the honors, and you say you are . glad to see them (an infernal lie, by the way) and ask them up. If you are known at the bar, all right; if not, you have to borrow of your friend: How's that? Perhaps some of the party might ask you some other time, but the chances are they wouldn't know you from &baked apple. A moat Absurd, dead fraud this "asking" in connection with liquor. Do we ask, coax, prevail on acquaintances to go in and have neckties. gloves or boots with us? "Come in and take a bottle of wine with me?" men will say, and take you by the arm, and in you go. Do they ever say, "Come in and have a hat with me?" Are you continually urged to eat things? Do they ask you to take pocket knives, lead-pencils, hair-dye. tooth- powder, paper collars or umberellas with them? No, this "asking" business is .nfined to liquor. It is liquor liberality, r. r a custom, rather, that extends itself to no other article, if we except oysters and elms, ,but in these it is limited. Takes party of six Germans, who go in for their lager. They sit down, and each one drinks what he • wants and pays for what he drinks. He isn't forced and bantered because he does not drink more. The same with Englishmen, Frenchmen, and all other people on the face of the globe, except Americans. You-know how it would be with six of the latter, did they go in for lager. There would be thirty-six glasses drank, or paid for, if not all drank, because each must "ask" the others. Humbug ! Folly !" - Imagine a case like this, did the "ask ing" business extend beyond the confines of liquor. Two gentlemen walking up Broadway. One is attracted by a fine display of bottles—no, boots, shoes, eto., in a window. "Bob, let's go in and bave some boots." In they go. "Take bold, Bob. What's your fancy?" t'Thank you, Tom, but I'm not taking bootsjust now." "Oh, get.in. Take hold. One pair won't hurt you." "No, excuse me, Tom." "Take something, Bob. Take home a pair of boots for your wife. Don't see me do this t4ng alone." Bob comes down and takes* pair of boots. It's no use. Who could withstand Tom'S ap peal? _ Cost of Recent ►are. The following curious statistics are published in a Paris paper of the number of men killed in action between the years 1854 and 1868. The sum total in both continents of human beings sacrificed to Bellona is thus given: The war in the Crimea, 748,900; Italy, 44,000; Schles wig-Holatein, 8,500; North America, 281,000; South America, 519,000; Ger many, 45,000; Asia and Africa, 95,000; sum total, 1,786,400. Theexpenses amounted to 47 miliards 870 million francs, thus divided : Crimean war, 8,500,000,- 000 f.; Italian, 1,500,000,000 f.; Schleswig- Holstein 180,000,000 f.; North • America, 23,500,000,000 f.; South America, 11,500,- 000,000 f.. Germany, 1,650,000,000.; Asia and Africa, 1,000,000,000 f.; total, 47,- 070,000,000 f. A. PHILADELPHIA paper says: This end of the Twitchell case closes one of the darkest tragedies in the history of the Quaker City, replete as her annals have lately been with deeds 9f bloods. From out the depths of her intense respectabil ity and prim social life, where it had lain dormant and unsuspected, suddenly sprang this horrible Twitehell faintly. It is now admitted that Mrs. Hill formerly 'kept a disreputable house In Washington, and that her daughter was an illegibimate child whose father was formerly' a mem ber of Conyess from Ohio: This daugh ter entered the Twitchell badly as house keeper for the father, and, it is asserted, maintained an illicit connection with blm for several yearr before marrying the son. The tragedy of to-day is regarded as a sequel that blight hive been expected from such a I etrospect as this: . • Tan Wheeling Inteiikencar la informed , that a short time since: an! opening was discovered in the ground near Cranberry Summit, which, on being enlarged and cloired up; proved to be the entrance of an old mine, in which were &covered several old English' tools; on one'ef the timber supperts of the roof of the mine was found inscribed "1808."-. . 'A. Dirther investigation led to the discoveiy that this was a silver mine, which- had at one time been worked. , 'Specimens have been sent to Philadelphia for lissay, 'but we • - have not yet learned the probable 'yield. Tusk isa girl in. Linn conntY, lowa, sixteen years old, of whom the following is narrated: For six weeks of the coldest weather of last winter, during the .sick nese of-her father and mother, she at tended, carefully and well, foity-eight sheep, seven beta of horses, twelve head' of, cattleand tWo, : calves, besides 'milking *4O, cows,,driVig the cattle a tillatiq of' a mile every day to water, cleaning the house-stable, doing the house-work and taking care of her sick parents. GAS F=MB WELDON & KELLY, lisatullietarers sad, Wbolesale Dealers is • LIMA Lanterns, Chandeliers, AND LAMP . GOODS. ALIN CARBON:AND:LIIIMICATINdorus, ligp..przr4v - m, &o. No. 147 Wood Street.. Sega= Between sth and 6th Avenues. FRUIT CAN TOPS. SELF -LABELING:` -, • , ,P1TT5331.7 . RG.11.PA.: • •- We are ow prepare sim p le.ply Ttnners and Potters. It Is . perfect. and as . cheap as the plain top. having the names of the various Fruits -stamped upon the cover. radiating from the center. and an index or pointer stamped upon the top of:the can. It is Clearly, Distinetly and Permanently by merely placing the name of the fruit the can contains opposite the pol titer and 'sealing In the on stomai7 aiannPr. I No preserver of =ft or good housekeeper will use any, other after once seeing It. . mb2s WALL PAPERS. W ALT :PALP AND WINDOW' SHADES I , o New and . Handsome Designs, • NOW OPENING AT No. 107 Market Street (NEAR FIFTH AVENUE,) - Embracing a Wire and carefully selected stock of the newest destine from the FINEST STAMP ED GOLD to the !CHEAPEST ARTICLE known to the trade. AU of which we offer at prices that will pay bayeia to examine. i• ab 23 JOS. R. HUGHES dc 11110. 4 41 IivALL PAPER. THE OLD PAPER STORE INI NEW MCA W. P. NEW WALL PAPER STORE, 191' Ltberiy Street, (NsAs mmurrr,) SPRING GOODS AMB.IVIISTO DAILY. mh6 F M'PHERSON .& MUHLANBRING, No. 10 Math (Late St. Clair) Street. (Successors to W. 11. IkIcSIEE & C 0.,) MERCHANT TAIL° . RS,. Have Just received theli carefully selected stock of Spring aad Summer t 1 °oda, and will be glad to dhow or Department ld and new cestomers. The Cutting wilt still be superin tended by W. C. A. mujiLeignEnco. I take pleasure In recommending the above firm to the liberal suppOrt ol the public. entataill • W. H. McGEE. BTIEGEL, .q.atis cutter mita W. Erearent!eida) BLEICIFIA.I4,T TAXE.OI%, N 0,53 SmithfleldlStreet, Pittsburgh. NEW. SPRING GOODS. • splendid new Mott of CLOTHS, CABIIIMEICES, deC., j inn received by 7!:11:1CIntY 311GYER, sett hierehent Tao!. 73 Smithfield street. PUNOS. ORGANS, &O. MITT THE BEST AND CHEAP. „gas EAT PIANO AND ORDAIN. Schomaeker's Gold Medal Piano, AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN, The 8 01 : IONACIErft PIANO combines all the latest valuable Improvements known in the con struction of a first class instrument. and has al wave been awarded the hin hest oreminm ex hibited. Its tone is full. sonorous and sweet. The workmanship. for durability and beauty surpass all others. Prices from 1150 to 11150, ticcording to style and fi nish,/ cheape.r than all other so called Arai class Piano. . _ESTRY , ss tlir/TA , 3E ORGAN Stands at the head of all reed instruments, in producing the most perfect pipe quality of tone of any similar instrument in the UMW States. It Is simple and compact In construction • and not liable to yet out 01 order. CASPENTAIVIS PATllber •• VOX HUMANA. TREMOLO" Ls only to lbe found In this Orgae. Price from $lOO to 41550. All guaranteed for Ave years. BABB,. KNAKE & METTLER, No. 1 BT. Main ATRIUM. !pi lANOS AND ORGAN —An en tare new student INABET UNRIVALLED PIANOS; HAINES BROS:, PIANDa: PRINCE a CO's ORNA.NR AND NEUMAN ONS am; TREAT, LLNSLET (X)11 ORGANS ANDAtztapintoris. , ONIAII2.O27I,DLITIUL' deg. ' • , AR b nte,,Sele Agent. GLASS. CHINA CUTLERY. 100 WOOD, STREET. NEIV, GOODS. FINE VASES, 11101ERMLiN AND CU SA. NEW BTYLES DIDiN , T" BErth iarPT CV 8, 0 0 43 A _ c SMOKING airit tooti w, PA - " SILVER PLATED GOODS gg i of all descriptions. FA - Call and mulatto Oar moll, And will foci sattilleilso pas *SLAM to bit spited, g Eta, E. - BREED &. CO'. /00 WOOD WIDEST,. ival 31(0: ir 00 J , 3vivill;i 8. , LY0N,1 flettier , 01Wedgkts and BIBABIIrek Bro. TO)113TB BrBEBT, 'Between Line!ty and Terry street', Mlle" promptly attendant to. TRIMMINGS, NOTIONS, &O. 1111 RD ARRIVAL OF NEW GOODS AT HORNE & CO'S, Will receive during this week extentive assort.; menu of Hats, Sundowns, • Bonnets, Ribbons, CALL SHADES AND. WIDTHS.) ,Fl6Wers, Silks, Laces, Frames, . Illusions, ' Dotted Nets, (imps, • - . A 1413 MILLINERY GOODS . Of Every Description, Including all the LATEST NOVELTIES, to which' we Invite the attention of 1111111Iners and Deateivo ape GREAT AUCTION SALE CONTINUED, or • MACRUM & CARLISLE'S ENTIRE STOCK OF Fancy Goods, Hosiery, . Trimmings; EINIBROLDERIEN, FURNISHING GOODS, NOTIONS, ise AT No. 27 Fifth Avenue,. Having secured the store room. No. 29 Fifth avenue, lately occupied by A. H. English & Co., we bake removed the entire stock of NIACRUNI & CARLISLE . From their old store, No. 'l9 FIFTH AVENUE, . And will continue - DAILY AUCTION SALES, Commencing THURSDAY. kern Ist, at 2 P. X. and at 10 A. it.. 9 and 7P. Y. every day here alter until the entire stockis closed out. • 'H. B. 10A1THSON & CO., TIONE& HACRIIId & CARLISLE Invite the attention of their old customers to the elegant new stock they haveJust .. .vetted at their new store. No. 97, FIFTHapt SECOND ARRIVAL OF New Spring Goods. EMBROIDERIES. A FULL LINE In Jaconet, Hamburg and SWLIS. WHITE COODS. At the LoWest, Prices. vxtx ITGaES, IN ALL STYLES AND COLORS. LACE COLLARS. new style, . MLR SCARFS, for Ladles, CORSETS, in 'white and eolored. VALENCIDNICIES AND TNREIAD, Cluney and Maltese Laces. GENTS NIIDNISHING GOODS, OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. Jockey, Dickens and Derby Collars. WHITE STAR SHIRTS, COTTON HOSIERY A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT. 3111.011,1Thi, CLYDE ar. CO. 78 and 88 Market Street. E 4 :I ai 44 atiii 4 1 3 :Y-4 414 aSi HOLMES, BELL & CO, ANCHOR COTTON MILLS. Pl7`T'SECUltfal3. Manufacturers otEIZAVI 1121DRIN and LIGHT AMMO! AND MAOSOLIA SITILICTINGS AND BATTING .DR.. warren:Eß, CIONTECUES TO 'TREAT ALL ‘,./ private diseases. Syphilis in all Us forms, Gonorrhea, (Sleet,- Stricture. -Orchids. and all urinary (dimities, and the effects of mercury- are commeteiy eradicated; Spermatorrhea or Semi nal Weakness and Impotency, resulting from Self-abuse or other canes, and - which produces acme of-the following effects, as blotenes, bodily weakness. indigestion, consumption, aversion to 'Moiety, - unmanliness,' dread of future events, loss of memory. indolence,: nocturnal emissions,' and .iipally so prostrating the sexual system u to 'render menial* unsatOrtactory: and therefore imprudent, are permaaently cured. Persons af filmed with these or any other delicate Intricate or long standing constitutional complaint should ere the Doctor a trial; he never' till.. A particular attention given so all Female corn. plaints, Leueorrhea or Whites, Falling, Inflam mation •or Ulceration of the' Womb, Ovaritis, pruritts, Amenorrhoea.. lienorrhagia, Opinion norrhoea. and Sterility or Barrenness, are -treat ed with the greatest success. It la Belf•evident that si PhYsicisis won confines himself exclusively to the of a certain clam Of diseases andtreati thousands of crises .every year Won acquire greater skill in du* specialty than ons*generel practice. , • The. Doctor, publishee a medical pamphlet of My pages that gives o.fnh exposition of venereal anti private itseases,itbat can Imbed free Motha. by mall - for two stamps, *sealed envelopes. Every senteace contains metruction so the af flicted and eaabling them •to :determine the pre. , else niters of titeireoardainto. - .The, establishment, . corn rising ten ample rooms, is central. WheirLt is not convenient to visit -the city, the Doctors - opinion .can be ob. tat Red by giving a - written - statement of the oasts, and mediclnes can be forwarded by mail or ex press. in some instances, however a personal examination' is absolutely netessari others daily personal, attention is relit Ire .d, and for the accommodation et such patients there are apart/meats Connected with the oflicettutt are bro. India In tided With every requielse, that is reloulated to eve l ote i rforery k including j ruedleated repor puons are prepared- in the Docarie own laboratory; si t ter lialpertal on nervision. Medical ,peop Is at °wee tree, an or by mall for two stem*. tr matter who have iled, read what he says. Hours 9 I.lt. to =l9 ie. to SI r. 011ice,_No: 9 INTLIE (neat Court Hoitiod• ritlebargq, I:=21 OARPETBAND OIL CLIMB. CART 200 PIECES BODY BRUSSELS. 425 PIECES TAPESTRY BRUSELS, 450 PIECES 3-ply and 2-ply Ingram The above includes all the Newest Styles and Designs, and are now In Store and arriving, to be sold LOW FOR CASH; OLIVER IPCLINTOCK & CO'S, [4l. NEW CARPETS. S7L"COCIE. • 3F1.. . I I-N, THIS MARKET. We simply request a comparison of Prices; Styloi and Extent of Stock. The - largest assortment of low priced goods In any establishment, East or West. ' • IIicCALLIIIII 8R05.,. . ./ro. 51 'FIFTH ArEftruz, =hit (ABOVE WOOD.) • ~ - 23 Firth Avenn mh27 CARPETS. We are now receiving our Spring Stock of Carpets, &c., and are pre 7 pared to offer as good stock and at as low prices as any- other house in the Trade. We have all the new styles of Brussels Tapestry, Brussels, Three Pips and Two Plys. Best assortment of Ingrain Carpets in the Market. BOVARD, ROSE (t, CO., 21 HELM AVENUE. Rad:d&ver SIVE TIME AD MONEY. I'FARLAND & COLLINS Hare Now Open Their New Spring Stock OF , Fine Carpets, ROYAL MINSTER, TAPESTRY VELVET, English Body Brussels. -The Choicest Styles ever offered thU Market. Our .Prices are the LOWEST. • A SPLENDID tutus OF CHEAP CMIPMI. Gkwd Cotton Chain Carpets lag 25 CENTS PER YARD. It'FAIUM) & COLLINS, 71 AND 73 AnNlm, lobe : j (SECOND FLOOR.) ,InAut„AND TOUR • PECK ORNAMENTAL U HAM .WO X 1 ANDaplUppam No. Third st^et near emit ttstoulb. , Abra%on aancveral assortment of La- dice 111 Mt ,Vantleen's WldEt thrac tr. , W ARD CHAIN% BR& &a /Pr A . good rrt wtu be given for SA oe is CashBAIL Ladles' and eentlemen , s Hair eattlng done in Me neatest manners - mei all