E==== II littsinit Saitits, '.WHAT THE ENGIN , SAID a , . The Overland for June crosses , the*MillitlikSili the *cOmpleted Pacific Railroad.. XS . ; there - 4re ten reader+ who hive not been told firifore that it. is the ••g c l:ate A work of the agel fii they win* perhapb, per,hapi, erloak ,he one salon here of much'ef the Impuler rhetor:e in regard to ''itsdit soluble lieli," "wddln g of the East to the West," he. But some ho remember to have reau that "the tiro IOCOMOtIys a •moved- up \ until their. pilots sobbed tugs Vier, byekballeAii the friendli salute of their irespective owners,; did net perhaps 'titer ~i 1 lrita'r TES relectwEs SAID. What was It the el:mints Said, 'Pilot 1 toucting — bed. to head • T on tee bindle tr.rl:, ,••,. ayrOricl bc.ind each hack: '' • _. is what the engine:, said, i ;IP rted and % coo V:, &prefatory screech; • ' • ,' 1 ',in florid Wetteru .p.tch, . • ~rio the Ens lue c..,u; the 'NI, est. • ' ." BM from btecra's crest : I ' • Limb, if attitude', & test, ' • , Why, t reckon. It's eoniessed That late done 131 Y level best." • • . fl,iffh the Engine from the East: , . "They who work bt Strait.. the least; . .hpose ye whistle down-yonturakest 1. le hatTehlve tionels no great. shakes; • Pretty rair—ent let ,our a.eetlng . , ' Be • different s lad Of g.eetbig. Let these fbiks, with champ - Arae stuffing. • Not their Anglues, du tue /hid 59. Listen! Where Atlantiebests • - : etbores of snoW an su.ouer heists; Where the Indian a utum n skies - Paintirthe wouarvittb watepum dyes; - "have h e the ffsloic sun, ~,,.! Beebte.ail he l. 'AIM upon A . Blessing ss , l that he has blest Nursing nmy Iron oreast • Allblevivitying beat.. ~ . • • All hi, clouds about my crest; .. And belore my. llyirg feet . livery sliailitm must retreat." - • geld the West till Engine; `Thew r'. And a ton tr low wnlitte blew. "T%Aalumf no w on e e o y r h a u ' dd tehet o— ds Ton brag of your l•Assil You dor - Why. / bring the Es 4t to you All the Oriein—ad Csthay— rind thraug ; Me the shortest way, And the sun yotttAphe follow here ,Rltes fumy heinre. Beal ly-11 -one must oe rude — Length, my friend, sin. longitude." Bald the Union: "lion' t reflect, or 1 , 11 run over come 'Director." ' Bald the Central: "Um Pscllle• But -when riled. I'm quite terrific.: . • Yet. to•day we shall mi, quarrel Sued to show sheet folks this moral. ' Bow twtr Engines - 1n tnelr vision— , , Unce have met withput cultism/h. , ' a That is What the Sugines bald,- s ,Unreported and unread. • Booker' sightly throu gliille nose, V/ ith a weletle at the Won.. • , • Ow lona ifonthry EBIENLMIS. --Belle Boyd is married again,. Cincinnati has a floating bath house. -- —Rztt: trzi and his wife havetquarreled. '—'-Texan farmers have cat their.wheat --TheDuke of Edinbtrgh to Visit Japan, -Mrs. Scott Siddons is coming back in September. ~. iriMldoslptitoes are becoming great bores rt. ' t yroman's rights store is the latest Boston 10a., . ; ..-SistertPatiocino has started a nun . Ileri in-Trance. much by --G,reen-corn is enjoyed very Charlestonians now. --The ,grass 'hiipper pest is becoming, alarming in Missouri. .. --g'ffestern farmers offer atreward for a nseM grasBl/611Per triP• Hiss Maggie 'Mitchell's mother died in New York on Sunday. .—& gentleman of New York recently bequeathed $50,000 to Yale College. —The New York hotel waiters have given in, and the strike is at an end. --Tilme.'ROSSini has sold the unpublish ed mimic of her husband for $30,000. —A firmer in Georgia ,Iraa found hu man bones mixed in with his guano. --StraWberries sell, in some parts of :Southern Illinois, atrtwo cents a quart. —L picttire of Bieratadt'e took the first prize at the last art exhibition in Berlin. Two unknown .dead bodies were found in the river at Cincinnati 'on Mon- —A Cincinnati bar keeper -absconde. on Monday with $75 belonging to his . employer. _ . 1 —The cap makers have struck is New Yorks so hats will Probably be more worn than ever. I —Twelve acres of the Regent's Park. in London, are to be fenced in and'!uEed as a cricket ground. • —A, colony of Poles is to settle in South Carolina, -where it has procured - 50,000 acres of land. -A fifteen ton steam roller has been added to the stock of gardening utensils in use at Central Auk. —Mr. Burlingame and his mandarins are going now to St. Petersburg, where they are to be magnificently received. —Moie gum tieienteen million dollars worth of property have ; been destroyed; by fire in this country since January Ist. — 4 %neer in Vermont has, been feed . 'lug this spring to bin:cattle, hay which be has hid. stored' away' for thirty-four years— , , , . , . , •; ~. , —A. company of 'Englishmen has been grptitd' , Y 4 ' large tract 4 land In the Eat , •pire Of Morocco for the purpose Of 'raisins, cotton. ' =The r clerk Of a county in Indiana has been-sied•by the parents of a yoing lady int* ige, to lehßof he l!ltitet l a marriage ; Ilcente.t , • L .,, , ~ • •• , • --The Queen of Madagatear, elogether - with her . Cabinet Ministers,were b ap. .... 1444:5.,,Teiit:3 in the. F:40119.4 Missionary , • :- ....4014-/--. ••,- - : . .., - 1, , , Tigs - bark *anat , and .):Itnuej from .- •., ... OW . 0 '' iii,"43lS, pat into li York herbeis 3 ii ~ ‘ :-'-4!ii"411...........Y.;..14.4 $kYlllO 3't? , feverl / 1 : 7 , • , . ....n.w....u. fg 1.; , ; 1 ?•: , :,-,, -.I .1: , ~ .-,' . 1 % —Mr; Claorge:Peabpdr-f.arffiv inthe 1 15 a 0tit4 - . ,o*, #(7 5(9 r 1 ,k , 0 T• 11 C 8dil 4 , ii cor n • - , 7iiiit'iabitter -health : , than wheA•he left miltityceol.,,i ,L .:'.., :. : , -1 ; - ' I ,`: •;•oth'id 'Madrid - sad -filiii ia o3 4 ll, Yr ere h. , jun.rested•in Chicago , one - daY , last : week lestizift liOists - standing unhitched in She *Ceti. ;... ' . • •,\ ,- , • (',- -41i'l Syractise; liev,l'orl 'a child, , , *lever' ,Year old, has.hoen mrsteil . for '. isolaitning another child •and setting fire .- , 'l" ~, t I,- " 14 a 4, 4 6 1116 1 f -: ' ,1 1 „1. , ' • .---A -, ,-144i3OELtiree. stem iniikinge, in - ' ' . :ii;,:. i ... Bronson. Micnigan, fell . on Thursday 18 0, btliying three men, who were Embse- , quenly rescued. 1 . ~.-' . —There is still living in England an old man, one bitylred ' and six years of ag4, who fought on. the British side in the American Revolution. - -=Strawberry festivals are common now in Cincinnati. Another Be ek and our time will come, if we can y weather warm enough to enjoy them. —At Springfield, Ohio, on Sunday, a number of boys were playing on a turn-, table. One was caught between the table and the wall, and crushed to death. Fechter wears a blonde wig when he pl 13 Hamlet. As he can hardly think H let wore' a wig, he probably does it to show his opposition to the realistic d a. —On Monday night the'owe of . R. L. 8 ith, Esq., at Lysar der,. Onondaga unty, New York, was - entered by hur who stole more than $20,000 worth f bonds and mortgages. —When Carlyle was taking , ten with Victoria the other •day, he grumblingly remarked, "There is nothing but wealth, wealth," and the latter replied, "there is some.poverty, Mr. Carlyle." —.Maximilian's inland estate in the Adriatic ileabeen sold. The well -kept J. foreats will be cut down to give place to lime-kilns, andlhe castle, built by Rickard Occur de Lion, will be made a bathing house. —The assassins of State Senator . - - At 'king, of Georgia, will probably be ar rested. The Sheriff of Warrenton has been granted a military escort and troops have been sent to assist him in arresting the criminals. —Wm. H. 'Beard, the artist, hhs printed a companion 'pleture to his "old woman who lived in a shoe." It is en titled "Gulliver 's foot," and is said to be very humorous and excellently conceived and executed. —The New York Post says : Eliza J. Bevens, who caused-the arrest of Kate Fisher, the actress, on a charge of lar ceny, and was herself subsequently served.with a writ of /abuts corpus to give up a child retained by her, has fled from the city. ---A married man who, eloped from Mississippi has just written to his deserted wife to educate his three children respect ably, as he hopes to meet them in heaven, if circumstances over which he has no control should forbid their meeting again ' on earth. .I . —'Oa :IS nday four men, two women and a r. iid went out in a skid, 'from Crown tv, below Gallifiolis, upon the Ohio, to 'de - uponthe swell of -a passing steamer. The skiff wan teu heavily laden ands drowning all of the seven per sons on ard. , P iladelphia paper, in speaking of -A a pro ent lecturess, says she lost her temper hile speaking in that city, and a Boston per replies that is all a mistake, as she showed it when she lectured in Boston, afterwards. Northern capital is rapidly investing in Southern real estate. A New York gentlem l an has just bought 14,400 acres of rice and timber lands in South Carolina for $40,000, and 2,400 acres of plantation land in the same State for $28,000. -4. report at the War Office, received from h e Plains, says that the immediate canoe of the lite Indian troubles in Kan sas w the firing upon a squaw by some settlers. Eleven white persons are ; known to have been killed in' retaliation ti kir this outrage. -The King of Denmark has the repu tation of being the best match maker in Europe, but be has secured a husband for his next marriageable daughter, the Prin. cess Thyra, who is not so great a catch, by far, as those of his elder daughters. i He is the Prince Ernst, eldest son of the ex-King of Hanover. ISEIE _ • , - '•••' • • • * Of, 24, at. 4. 41b 41, • • 4 W . ! 4 ' - " • I - I'rol3tlllG 2 GAZETIEi 1181131111 AT. NNE 10, 1869. A Bair in a Watch. A good story is told of two boys living in Western New York, many years ago, whose father, on returning from a visit to the East, brought them as a,present a silver "bull's eye" watch. There was a warm discussion as to which of the boys should carry it, but it was finally decided that one boy should carry it one day, and the other the next; and that the one not carrying the watch should always have the key in his possession. This watch was the only one in the settlement, and the display of even the key was •an en ;viable ornament. One day the elder of L to i the brothers was to make a journajr [ - the city, to be gone two days; and, after along and serious conoiltattcon, it. was determined that he . Must maintain the dignity of the family; by ' woing 'the watch; but the younger Was to-retain retain the key. g ood minding, bethought them to gi* it a good minding, that. it inlight, xi= for, twice alts -. usual period )bE ,twenty-four' hours. The key was applied and twisted , vigorously for fifteen !blunt* when they found•to their consternation'thit machine' no - longer "tielted."' TbeS' shook it and thumped,. tett tie . sighs of lif e appearoL So a diagnosis:,Was deter mined upon. Attek eareNitticiectlon of the interior mriteries, 'the: eader. brother exclatmed, "I have it, joeinTion't you see that fine hair curled npiathere? that's - what stops it." .-"Fact.i" eold•Zoe; "that must be it. Can't we' yank it out?" A "pin was at once bent up Into e hook, and "the hair" was "yanked" - 0ut..., The watch didn't go any better wiles relieved of it; and to this day the boys liwromot been permitted to forget about the wstch With the hair brit. Arr fiatirely new style of engine boiler has just been made in Detroit.. It is Of steel, 5-16th of an inch thick; single shell, 20 feet long and `4 feet in diameter, and, is, intended -trOstand upright 'upon a five foot"squire furnace. - In its center le , a flue 86 inched in diameter at thcrbase,and , **rin • g: to a' diameter of 16. inches 12 feet front the base. ,' For, the remainder. of the way, where it is abo!re witteit• it *24 inchesi in diameter and surrounded b> fire • El p tilios of the /Lemke ll , 2 l4% , In sAartielo on the general - aspect of theatrical affaire, - the New duns Yor- . . . ... presents sotto strictures which we worthy of a general applicatioM It says: Now, as oftenheretofore,"the.almighty dollar" is the chief Object of pursuit. Various persons are enga ged,g according to such intelligenc e ; as they possess, in the business of conducting what they call theaters; but the idea that they hays as sumed anything more than a mercantile responsibility seems, for the most part, to be utterly absent-fromtheir minds. Lit tle or no heed is given to the drama. Acting, as an art, may here and there find a practdcal advocate; but, in the main, the especial object for which the stage was de vised—the soul of that and power -whereby it has lived and flourished, and may claim consideration as one of the forces influencing the _educatten of man kind—is altogether ignored. This is not a new state of facts. lihas existed for a long time. True, the monotony of this coarse spectacle,of mone y grabbing under false pretenses; has 'been occasionally varied by a spurt of honest dramatic effort and enterprise% A feW' persons, conse crated to the player's art, have tried to act good plays well, and therein to keep faith with their calling, to maintain the stage in dignity and usefulness, and to justify intellect and refined feelings in their ad vocacy of the drama as a beneficial and honorable institution. But,temporarily at auji + rate, the,' false pretenses hive! the best of the battle. Next week only one theatre in New York—that of Edwin Booth—will present the diaMa. The rest will be devoted to bosh, which will be presented under the disguise of drama, This is neither more nor less than mer cantile subterfuge. What we have so often said before, therefore, is now in order, to' be said again. The theatre is not merely a place for the sale of mer chandise. It is one thing to buy anti sell goods, and another thing to administer the arts. The keeper of a theater is a man of business, indeed—but he is also a preceptor of the public mind, and he sus tains a responsibility scarcely less grave than that of • the clergyman himself. Bucji a preceptor has no right to trifle with his trust. If he cannot fulfill his duty, and keep his theater open, on the basis of plays well acted, he had better close that theater and resort to some simpler vocation. To say that the public will not eat , for good plays well acted is not to the purpose. If the public, indeed, will not sustain decent theaters, then it is best that those theaters should disappear. Their conductors surely can turn to some thing else, less exacting morally and financially, and therefore more profitable. It is a simple alternative. The Cumber land sunk with her colors flying at the masthead. ailure is not ignoble in a good cause. F But VI pretend to keep a theater, and yet Co turn it into a dance house or something worse; is to be guilty_ of imposture—is to defame the drama by degrading its surroundings, and to de fraud society of the benefits which it ought to receive from a noble and beauii ful art. Nor is it a defense to say, that society repudiates art t and prefers female calf, tinsel and red fire. The allegation is untrue. -In every ; community, of course, there are foals and beasts who, instead of the - drama; would prefer a rat fight or a show of model artists. But that ts no gbod reason Why e theatrical manager should give . ,them what they want. Ms concern is with the drama. In every community there are wise, re fined, tasteful persons in sufficient num bers to sustain decent, high-toned thea tres in a sufficiently liberal,. way. To discard these, the , pander 'to the mob, is I willfully_ to do wrong for the sake - cif gain. The, plea that. the public) will have this, and wont have the other, &c., has : come to be as disgusting as it ia trite. The public should be made to follow, and not forever be permitted to lead. It is piti ful, indeed, if intellectual men must stoop to scent out a taste for carrion and feed vultures because the dirty business pays. This practice of concession to the assum ; ed appetites of the hydra-headed mob has rotted the stage nearly to its foundation. Another ominous evil combines with it, too, in the influx, into the dramatic world. of a horde of outside' barbarians—utterly 1 tbreign to the stage—who come to specu late in theatres as they do intotton and in pork. These men. .be it here. id, know no more about the drama, and c sa are , no more about it, than the man in the moon. Looking about upon the theatres of New York, at the present thne, it is , 1 easy to see how these influences work. The stage is overwhelmed with mummers 1 and dancing girls, variously ridiculous or ; vulgar, who are striving, with all the little gifta they have, to win the reward of prosperity by pandering to the sensual 1 instincts of the people. And this medley [ of bombast and dirt i proclaims itself as the drama; while, in morethan one thea- tre roues and courtesans,, Sometimes con ' sorting with the manager himself, flaunt ; in the boxes, in their gilded trappings of brazen vice. It ie a revel -3f Cyprians, on the money of prosperous counter jumpers. This - state of facts, we remember, • was lately made the occasion of • a somewhat -•_ hasty and irritated: • protest, in public speech and letter, by Miss Mee Logan; and we observe that the -lady- - has been pretty soundly abused.for what is called an attack on "the preitessloit;" What profession; we should like to knOw, is insulted by such a protest, Nobody at tacks the' stage in' attacking a brazen im posture, reeking with vice, that has men dciously assumed the stage's - form and 'function. Acting . fti , art, honorobbs art, and the people who',wprtMly. pursue it 'and liye by it are honorable people; and it is th eir interdst,.anol,Dot agatst it, that that rebuke of all thin, frivolity and vice is directed. The bar e legged women who tramp over the boards in, btulesque 'and kick up their heels in :ilia sari-can, have, with here and,there an exceptiou7- no more title. to baregarded* gifnikp e ,* of the dramatici-prefessienthanth e _t have, , to be regarded aa members,of thalrrertch ' Academy. They fira.a sort , of-thngns upon the stage,: andlha- fungus- htUf now_ become excessive arid tritiderabla, We' do not mean to say that; in all Bak flock' of pantomimes,,‘bnileit,qties, and ballett,', 1 existent or yet to come, features of Merit t l may' not be four d: Nonsence 1 has its grout and' its VI lita, as well as Bailee , ' But it is 'needful: remind theatrical manr agora that thera laAnith an institution as. The Drente, for the development of which. theatres,axist, and that Inteillgeoci,Us te,l reffaement, and moislity —matters of great import to ~the 'welfare , pf society—have , rig tsthafthastrical, greed cannot eafely Tin te. 'Licentiousness and:it:4lM thirst. for gain have; gone very far, of late to rain the American' stage's" a .vehicle.or art and a school of,actins. and strong measures are justiffaltle to combed the strut: :S :1..:~ WEL},_ iPN & KELLY, iuntacturgniad wholesat vegan 1311 Lamps, Lanterns, -Chandeliers, AND LAMP DODDS.- Also. CARBON AND LUBRICATING OMB, israczxrrv., &o. No. 147 Wood Street. se9:u22 Between sth and 6th Avenues. N TOPS the ?Eel r the eei center. and an Index or Reinter 'tamped upon the top of the ten. It is Clearly, Distinctly and.Peniminently lAILIZOKIA - ED. by merely visaing the name of the fruit the can contains opposite the pointer and sealing in the customary manner. No preserver of fruit or good housekeeper will nse any other after,once seeing it. mb2s WATER PIP A large arwrtraeat, HEN spl4:hB7 Sd Menu WALL PAPERS, WALL PAPER Arm WINDOW SHADES, OF New and Handsome Designs, NOW OPIIiING AT NO. 107 Market Street (NEA.Ii FIFTH AVENHE,) Embracing s large and carefully selected Mock of the newest' designs from the rarEgT STAMP ED GOLD to the CHEAPEST ARTICLE known to the trade. All of which we offer at prices that will pay buyers to examLue. JOS. R. HUORM & BRO. riami: 41 WALL PAPER. THE OLD PIPED STOKE 111 A NEW PUCE, W. P. MARSILV.L'S NEW WALL PA.FER STORE, 191- Liberty litreet; MADEST,) SPRING GOODS ARECIVIIiO DAILY. mltil WINES, LIQUORS, Zte. SCHIIIDT & FRIDAY, impiipTass OF WINES, BRANDIES % GLN, &G 13110LESALE DEALERS 13 PURE RYE WHISKIES; 409 x•ENR rRET, Have Removed to NOS. 884 A-lip 1146 rENN, Cor. EleventhSL• (formerly CanaVi) JOSEPH S. FINCH& CO., Nos. 185. 187. 189, 1914 193 and /Mt FIRST STREET. PITTSRIIROR. Marroraoronsne or Copper Distilled Tare Rye Whiskey. Also, dealers In 'FOREIGN WMB and 1,/.. (WOW& HOPS. Ire.. ITIAMI.IIIIS GLASS.. pIaINA. ~OUTLEIRy. 100 WOOD STREET. 1- NEW GOODS. FINE VASES, SoIIENIAN AND cUINA. i • NEW trYLES, • D1N271.1 BETSA • TICS OLT% I 61IFT 0131% SMOSTI64I SETS.' luge st99k of gISILTP MUM 0 .4 00 PS of in description. ;4 1 r'4l .• ,-• ; - ~ eau iria exasolise our - go ud : d a tedVSilded so sae bred suro.,.. r,be n salt ed, .ir,.: E.„BREED.4. , CO 100 ; , WOOD sTarmr..( „ PEARL , 111 k, maLariu. Tbrele Star Grain alkall to fitENCH FAillilLY . Lltj FLOUR. v a ts ir fi laly oti : Daly t ” &aster.— L• • • 7 " ,r 1114114 ;1 B• 1 . 11 u 4 i 1z,1o11r11S•2i1 166 •11;00 D . r loot. warrommasa T rAViwbe r ßs u o s .4094. 9 1 , "wt. 94 v 099... MILL. a. at.riaArr . BRATir. orug , A 4 Alm CARVERS . OR NA R e tr in E ir sky ll .st, Idlegheay; nt 4116w ii :rs ni T tru r ti d ,t' A .LtOsso,conguali P - a ., , ~k •ler 11 le br— -25019 •PA vAiiinELD. r • • r. - - NEW AND DESIRABLE GOODS. 1131 Linen andTalin Leaf Fans, SILK PARASOLS, all the New Styles. SIMMER BOULEVARD SR!RTS New ;puffed Collars and Cuffs, in.raner and Linen. CORSETS, OColiplets Stock. GENTS' SUMMER - UNDERWEAR, c' In Merino, Gauze and Cotton. WHITE AND STRIPED USIA'S SKIRT' Chirtoct of COTTON, HOSIERY neftes'competition. Emintoinzatzs , MACRITSI,OINDE'& 43O . ;78 & 80 Market Street. Je9 TOPS TO THE TRADE Ex S. COLLLNS e,near Smithfield St ItEN'S AND. BOYS' STRAW PUrchased I;nder Regular Prices, TO BE SOLD AT, A - ."FLOUL New oapanvee Fan'. WHITE GOODS, A Beautiful Line At iediiced Prices. 25 CASES, TEL.ALT 1E; . AND BARGAIN WHOLESALE ONLY. 'JOSEPH. HORNE & CO NSW SPRING GOODS MACRUM & CARLISLE'S No. 27 Fifth Avenue, Dreu Trtnuntngs and Buttons. Linbrolderies and Laces Elbkons and Flowers. Hats and Bonnets. eirove attlng and French Corsets. New Styles Uric ley's Skirts. parasols—a!l the new styles. _ Sim sad Rain Umbrellas. Hosiery—the best English snakes. Agents for "Harris' Seamless Rids." Spring and Summer underwear, Sole Agent,s for the Bemis Patent Shape. Col. tars, "Lockriood's "Irving." • 'West End,; ' "Eine," 8e• "Dickens,, ' Derby;'! and other Inlet Dealers supplied with the above at IA &NU FACTURERS• PRICES ILACRMA. & CAE.pIMI NO. 27 FIFTH AVENUE, Ri74 STONE --- - WEST COMMON Id - whine Stone Works,. Northwest corner of West Common illegbenT , , IFREWEE A.TV ,41Ia CO, Have on band Or prepare on stiori:riotbie Hearlb and Step Bloats, Flays for Sidewalks. Brewer? Vanits. ,Head and Tomb Stonea. kv. Ordera nrnmnpV;eitunit,e. 1-.1•11.0es reamvpsble , DR. , WHITTIER.. cOT_ITINTES TO r TREAT ar 'ALL private inesse!. flyPhillilitrall iteln r m y s, a e ur diseaandtneeffeetrfm ou na re completely eacaed: Sperni nal d— Weakness,-and Impotency, resulting !rem self-abuse or other causes and: which 'reduces acme of the following etreas, , as ,blotches, bodily weakness, Indlgeation consuMption, av to 'society, unmanliness; dreed of Mete events, loss of memory, indolenek,necturngl , emitrione. and Emily so. prostrating On sexual Mara Is to render' marriage unsatisfactory, t Odom imprudent, are perntanetnly enteda Patine, of with these or any other delicate Intricate or long standing constitutional ceoplplMetlltOuld give the Doctor atrial; te mere, - 1- , • A particular attentionAlvento i lllFentale cton. Saints, Leueorrbes or bites; sans& thdsm mitten or 'Ulceration of the emb, -- ovstitle, prniitts; • Amenotabea. Dyememe, florrboea. and bterlU l y or Barrenness, are treat ed with the greater stamen, ~ It to self-evideutt dt a pbyeletrai'velio cenduee himself exclusively to the, study of a certain of diseases and treats thousand s of cases ever , year must acquire pesters/LIU In that simetaltr than one to general prunes.. . . • The Dotter publlihes a. medical Isamehtet re t !MY Pages that eyelid MD expointina of vote mna private diseasesh , lb at can be had free at 08 104. or by, mall for two stamps,,tgeolomenve lo p m. Every sentence contains e on to the af !UMW, and enabling theta. to determine the pre- Meg - nature or their complaints. , The ea alutibment, eoznorldsta ten ample roomE is centre]. When it is not avenlent to "Lit th e attn. the Doctor's opinton . ean'be ob taine3 b giving a written atatement.ef the ease, and med icines earl be forwarded b 7 Inall or em press. In svine lastaneev, aciwever4 personal eMaraisation. ill absolutely necersary.l while ,otaere Mallgp,ellorial attention la ME , MA 'rtrrthe accommodation f such eatiertts there are apartments connectedwlth tale Odieetnat ar c e t S • vUed with eyery rolotsit4 toot Oolai f 9 Droutott ,reedvery, inelnabig , wine aPel baths. AU prescriptions are prepared! •IA the Doctor's rowalaboratorre ender lie pet - pervision. , Kedleal PolOPhlote let.Cilice free, or by mail fbr• two 'stamps. ' No statterafko lease' failed, read what he says. Hours 9 A.m. to 8 INgt.• nandays ar.., Ofece.:No. WYLIE STREET. Diem' Co rt Menge: , 'Pittsburgh. • ußeinuort, otols"-' • imogivisuow bRADIO3. • r - 2.44icvIaiDPSENR34 ' TAISL,lO:erli FIJ rpm,. O FAYF ' •. ILLIPIL 4. FU • airr and 211=tti' tutet SI C , ;g W4l '5 P 4,„! c=l rm ti 04 it% P4 o an : a 4 mo 1 , 4 ti EAT 511 E4 ID E; 4=o O 1 13 TA I =l 0 I = l 1 1 1 b No acl z E 4 e :11413, NEW SPEING GOODS JUST QpENED, AT THEODORE F. PffiLLII I F, ' 87 Market Street. Prints, kw3lins, Dress Goods, SILKS `SHAWLS. 1 7LL LINE OF SILK SACQUES, 'ery Cheap. SI. MARKET STREET. • SI.- so I _ CURB, MCCANDLESS & co (Late Wilson, Carr & C 0.,) VrHOLISALII DEALERS IN Foreign and Domestic Dr`! Goods, .so. 94 WOOD mom Ttdrd door above Pismond alien rrrnonnzes, YV SOLUTION. ICE - - DISSOI, TION. I. The partite blp. between the subscribers as Boller Make . acc., under the name of WM. BARNHILL CO., was dissolveds-by agreement. on May Sit, 1 9. The books- and debts owing to the late II will be settled add collected only by sir. OEO. S. ARKSTRONO,nt the tate of ' the late firm, Vo. 516 ierrn street, Who is there- ante duly annorlzed.and claims against the Srm mill be preaen dto bim. .• t ' 1 WM. Bessartoi., • 1 LEVI BRENNEMAN. liirrszusoß , Jane 3. 1869.. • lee 01 , 71 CM Wass POINT 1 , 01:71.1DRY, bray 10, IS6W. DiSSOPMON• , The arm' of EDWARDS. SMITH & CO., bee this day been dissolved by mutual consent. The business will hereafter be conuucted under the style of SMITH k It. BOW ARDS, T. H. SMITH,. Wid• Raving disposed of rag interest In the West Point Foundry to Messrs Smith & Warstek, I take great pleasure in recommending the , new firm to the confidence and patronage or the bust' Deg& comtunniti. it2aril • DYER AND SCOURER,, HJ. LLNCE, . DYER AND scouitelti, Zgo. 3 ST. CLAD' SWILIMEM And Nou 136 and 137 Third street, .FITTREITRfift. latourrEcTs. BARR & MOSER, • • IaUCLUTF.Crigs /11117 HOUSE ASSOCIULTIODI ELTILDTEIGIS,' Nos. and 4 st. Clair Street, Pittanalik, Spetl attention litlVen to the designing and balna of WORT . HolltiNs and Tirlitat BITITIMTIMet 2,000,000 A"" qiimaz LANDS FOR SALE. Union raoitle A:MA:fg Company, sesumf nmuozr, Lying Lions the line of their road, et moo 're *Yr PER . ACRE, Aad on •0113DITV1FIVS, Y 84313. Fr ipartl Cn seams .1101011 UP. DEYEREVA, Lan d C ca la lis tonr. Topeka , Isape.. or cuss. B. kursonar, bees.; g PI iliatlerfar ALL TrIENIEW STY 3. AT TEL LOWEST PRICES, AT MekOltD '8; CO's, 1311VOOD =Err. D a LICA Impotkilaid retaU 4:toiler in • kxsmt 'sbrAvkitbwmrtlr, WEDDING; VIMTING:IARTY r MID BUSiMESS . CLAD incOMANTE!itil; 3E0110611AM% 'AR/g' ILtIIMIHATINEir Orders by atisq rialtd , prfiftiptittentlon: Bead, 1 • 1.00 aitestiaint St.. Philo; ~. , - aved27-Tnekr •••• - • • • 1 • itICTiA.IRD i'DPirABDS. BY THE, • St. Lout,. Mlssourk. =EI