El tq l. litt,s*,o;64ltttt, PENNSYLVANIA. ANN= Seitonestheatrical troupe is now in Johnstown, with Miss Leo Hudson as star. ' A von= thoutond dollar steam-saw sill has just gone into operation in Sun bury. Miss SARAH £ 30111 , 180 N has been ap pointed postmletretili at Atchison,-Wash ington county, vice 0.-Barr signed. INDL&NA talk s of having a gymnasitun. We think If would' improve the Indiana and do no luum to the Indiana intellects PIE Johnstown Democrat, has the name of •Cyrus,L.Pershing at the head of its columns as the Dem ocratic candidate for Governo..-. . A. rtzw, Republican journal, called The .Public Opus* Is to be started about therdiddle ., ot t arty, is Chambersbtug, by Mr. M . : -. A.:76 Virk•Prest . Judge of the Greens burg district, receives a salary of $8,500 and the Greensburg Democrat calls it an ezorbitant tatiry. Mit.lJotor ar, fbrmerly of Scotland, Fran kiln county, was accidentally killed on Thursday morning last, near Chats worth, 111., by the discharge of a gun.. SOME of this baser sort of rascals broke into the Lutheran Sunday School at Sun bury, last .iteek; 'and stole quite a large sum, the accumulated penny contribu tions of the Attp4 . 4 , 6031 i 4:1 the citizen 6 of Waynesburg are,tired. of eating. heel prided beef, and have formed,a company to buy the wattle , and - employ butchers to sellthe beef to the' people at exactly whit it coats. I • • Urrrowrotim proposes to put up a pub lichuth house-and Mr. H. R. Beeson of fers to sive the ground and the water of his artesian well to .any company who will undertake to put •up the necessary lulldings.' • , Taz 'York Republican says: The har- Teit in this vicinity is very abundant. No'wheit creip like the present has been gatbered in York county for many years. The price of labor is much less this year than last in the harvest field. THE GreellflDUrg Herald says some four weeks ago, Jas. L. Stevenson, son ofJohn Stevenson; of Unity township, had his foot severely crushedat the saw mill of Kr. Jackeor4l—from the effects !of whic.h he- died on Thursday week last.' He was Ilyears of,age. • Ta Monongahela Valley Republican, Is a very excolient locml paper, as indeed it ought to be for • it is eighteen years old and ought to be quite as good as it is. We hope that it wilt keep on growing in strength'and beauty, during innumerable eighteen years to come. IlltivOnn Amu' soles grist and saw mill on Dunlsp's Creek near Merittstown was burned , down on the 2d inst. The mill had just been extensively repaired and improved at considerable expense, and everything, including a hundred bushels of grain and one thousand sacks effionr, was tlestroyed. There was no ,insttrance. THE Lancaster //ionizer says : "Young 5, Neidig , son of Amos Neidig, deceased, was taking'a ride on horse-back, the ani mal beiog somewhat vicious, and when near 'Washington hotel it threw him, striking toe pack part of his head on the ground, with his arm under him and caus ing a fatal concussion of - the brain. He lingered for about three houre and died. THE Monongahela Valley Republiean tells of two dogs which •broke into the sheep fold ofMr. John Vanvoorhts of Car rol 'township, Washington county, and killed forty-three sheep last Sunday. Mr. V. has spent a great deal of labor and money in improving hia,stock, and thirty fonr of the sheep killed were very' fine imported Spanish ewes. Themurderous dogs were shot. I A seD accident hapPened to` braham Ely, an old gentleman about eighty *ars of age, resi4ing about four miles Mini Chamberabrirg,Thn thelreefer road. -He' was picking cherries from the top of an old ladder, to which was attached ab iron book, and the ladder breaking, he fell 'upon, the book which, penetrated his stomach spout five inches, causing an ug ly and dangerous wound. A PARTY.,,Of rogues who had stolen 30 Bead of cattle from John Shoemaker and a horse of G. A. if mith, were arrested in Bedford county last week and lodged in • jail. They had extensive plans _laid for robbing the Bank and County Treasury at Bedford. They:were captured by Sher iff Steckinan and Deputy Buzzard, very adroitly by using a decoy, who got into their confidence and ,learned all their pions. Tire Franklin (county) Repository says: On last Friday afternoon, Charles A. Stewart, of Baltimore, was stopped in theroad, 'on the top of the Strasburg 3fountain,;. and robbed of one , hundred and fifty dollars in money and a 'Valuable gold watch arid ring . 'The robber stepped out of the woods bordering the road, when Stewart approached, and 'with a pietol uncomfortabl n his hd pur ; suede& him toitielive y r up. ear This ea is only .cue of apries of'robberiesapd burglaries *hick bave been ,committed recently in that part'of the "minty. •„ME DOyleStOWil DAMOCiai Bays: On - last Tuesday:a young man named Betts, a resident of Solebury township, met with a terrible accident which speed resulted kis death: We are in formed that he Was, at the time of the-oc currence, bringing in a load of hay, upon which thereVasplaaed an bid-fashioned, revolving ' rake. ' - When nearing the barn the load wad oyerfurned, and; in some tlnafinei i iinkribiAn, one of the wooden Opics was thrust into. his body, inflict s such terrible wound as to cause hit death skiing the night , 'ra z z vein state that can 8 ;p r,. : el4 - trof' that. place r aketk At fOuliea Pais,/ dfiainiatred feW .SgOr.lll4 'Whist accounts had not been heard from. Ori Monday Egiorn lag of. last -week ft-, - pair, paf , akeeff was foustd'on the bat* of the *reek/ and in one of theM waifante signed)), the lad, stating his detefirdrugbme to commit 11111- aide. It was supposed- he had' ilrewned thimielf and 'search was Iliad* 'for the body, but, as it wild not. he leitilds the belief on the part or most of the people ie that he decided to runaway from home and resorted to this device to delay par, ON Monday the 14th tilt. a bear weigh ing four hundred' pounds, was killed in Ai egg township. Union county. He was seen on:the Sunday evening previons, after sheep, having driven them out of the woods to an adjacent bgpse ; where he became frightened and mitt'ned to the Woods. Search was made; but owning to the extreme darkness and rain, with out success: About midnight be returned in search of the sluce and not being able to - find them, He carried off a beg. In the morning the neighbors were aroused and the search renewed. He was foun only a few hundred yards from the house. After running a short distance he was shot. _ MR. BA'lT.ey the State ldstorian, has finished the second volume of the History of the Pennsylvania :Volunteers, and it is now all stereotype*by, he State .printer. It will embrade nearly fourteen hundred ; pages, with finely executed maps of the battles of 'Antietam and Gettysburg, giv ing the whole section- of our State in which the rebels operated; also, enii of Sheridan's and Sherman's ca mpaigns, . Predcaicksburg, the, Wilderness, Ac. It brings the histiriy. dOwn to SAeight sixth Pennsylvania regiment. Althod h no appropriation Was made by the 1 t Legislature to cover Mr. Bate's e penes, he will proceed with - the work without clerks, his salary being guarante d by .the . act of 1867. , It will probably reach four volumes. ' - WEST VIRGINIA: ON Sunday, the 18th inst., Edgar W. Wilson, of Morgantown, West Virginia, shot and dangerously wounded a hoy named Leroy. Wells. Edgar Wilson, who is it boy about.'fifteen years of, age, was left by his mother to watch the:grounds and orchard while she was attending church. It appears' that Wells and an , other boy came to the orchard and were helping themselves to some choice cher ries, when Master Wilson ordered them off. They not , leaving, he went to the house and.teld.ng a shot gun, again or dered them to leave or he would fire. They not heeding him, he fired, and the whole load lodged In the body of young Wells. It is doubtful' whether he will recover. Wilson was arrested, but was admitted to bail to apftear at the next term of Court. - - e Tits West Virg/. J ournal says: On Tuesday, morning our friends of the Re publican office were surprised by the re ceipt z)f a small square wooden box con taining a large live rattlesnake. Of course such a distinguished arrival was duly an nounced through the press, and among many Who dealredio be made acquainted with the snake wits& Joung man by the name of Jo,. Wagner, a Pennsylvanian, we understand, who appeared to go snake crazy, for he went to the office, and though warned not to do so, took it out and played with it, patting its ugly head, and putting its head on his cheek, and finally he petits head in his month, when the snake appeared to resent this hist familiarity, jind bit him on The tongue. He then said , that it had bit him, and put it back in the . box, and Kr. Quigley ran down to the drug store to get a bottle of whisky; and coming back met Wagner at the foot of the stairs. He was taken at once to the drugstore, where two phy sicians did all in their power to save him, but their efforts" were vain. He died In an hour and a quarter after being bitten. Eugenie to Visit America. Appleton's Journai says: It is pretty generally known that Prince Arthur, second son of the Queen of England, will visit Canada and the United States during the present season; but 'the fact that we are about to announce kas not yet been made public—that amore illustrious per. son will land on our shores next summer in,the person of Eugenie Montijo, grand.. dmighter of olth. Mr. Kilpatrick, at, one tinie American Consul at Malaga, and a friend of Washington Irving, t who, in one of his letters says: "Louis Napoleon and. Eugenie Montijo, Emperor and Em press of France!-,-one of whom I enter tained at mycottage on the Hudson; the other, when a child, I had on my knee at Grenada! , It seer s to clap the climax of the strange dramas of .which Paris has been the theatre during •my lifetime. * * * . The last I saw of Eugenie Montijo aho was 'one of She .reignlng belles of Madrid." Eugenie will not visit , the United States as Empress of France, but will travel incog. under an assumed title, which, however, will 'not prevent her re ceiving a most cordial and enthusiastic re ception wherever'she may skow, her still beautiful faCe, She will be the first of the crowned heads of Europe'who has landed on American soiL • An Item for the Ladies. . Great improvement can be made by or dinary laundresses in doing up cotton muslins and organdie by dipping them in a starch made by mixing a twelve cent bottle of white • mucilage with a pail of blue water. After this, clap the muslin : well, or Shake them out, , and iron with a moderately heated iron, putting a piece of old jaconet over the dress before it pressed. The improvement will astonish Any hohie committee on domestic affairs. The reason is very simple; in the first place, the basis of mucilage is the clear gum of starch, whilth gives newly menu; lectured goods that =crispness ".without gloss, which Is so desirable. In the nett place the hot iron shrinks the muslin'and crushes the thrtads, giving them a wavy' look, which'the care . suggested prever.M. Lacei r should be dipPed flat into boiled starch, and then into, cold, and stretched by hand when halfd_g, never suffering, them to be'. ironed. The mischief done. to fine articles by Irons is so great.that I hope the time will come when ladies will 'no more think of having their laces and muslins washed at home than they would press their. straw , bonnets by hand, but will send them to the tender mercies of the mangle, cir press, in the hands of blanatisaetthe: • ; • The Wedding Ring of Mary and Joseph. Whatever may be the fact , as to the use of marriage zings in the Bible days, monk ' Joh legends relate that Soseph and Mary used one, and, moreover, that-it was of onyx or amethyst It was said to have been discovered in the.year 996, - when it was given by a jevieller from, lerusaltim to n. 1601143? of. Clualum, who had lien sent to Rome by the wife ofa Marquis. of', witrio, to make purchases forher. , The jeweller told the lapidary of th e p re cious• new of the relic, but he despised it, and kept it for several years among other ar ticles of inferior value. However, , a mit.- acre revealed to him' its genuineness, and• It was placed in a church, where 'it worked many curative tionders. In 1478 It was deposited with some FraniiBMlB at Odium, from whom it was stolen; and Ultimately, it found its way to Perusta, where a church was built for it, and it still • performed miracles; but -they were, as Hone ova, trifling in comparison with its miraculous powers of multiplying. it self. It existed in different . churches in Europe -at the same .tlme, each ring being as genuine as the others. PIrISWRG j GAZETTE s FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1869. , . Jeltiw riu• - Lolre a Lavryer Tanted negro annetrel. His.name .is Lew. Benedict. His fa ther Was a well-known Near York law yer, who died when the , oldest child was fifteen years old. The property left by the father the boy turned over to his mother and sisters, and determined to strike out for himselL 'At seventeen years of age he entered a law office, and at twenty-one he completed his studies and was pronounced a young lawyer with a bright future before him. - About this time the young lawyer fell In love with the daughter of a wealthy New York merchant, and the love being reciprocated he asked pa for his daugh ter's hand. Pa was indignant, and to forever kill the young lawyer's ambiticin he told him that when he had $50,000 in cash, his own, he mgiht ask for the young lady's hand, with a hope of success. This was all very nice, but to the young 'law yer just putting up his shingle, $50,000 was a great deal of money, at least the young lawyer thought so'as he figured up how many briefs he must have to make that amount. The-result of his delitwations was the conclusion that ithe w ine d to make this ,sum at the bar. he could - do so, but by the tinie he hhd done it, he would be so old that the romance, of loie would be all gone.- For a long ten days the young lawyer bemoaned his fate, and then ; af ter.obtidning a promise from.; the young lady that she would wait, he disappeared from New York. In early the young lawyer had quick wit, and eae -day, meeting a negro minstrel manager named Duprez, the latter told him he had 11 tal- k ent which would makp ,$50,000 in five years. Ls the young lawyer's frame of mind it did not takelong to convince him, and dropping 'Coke and 'Blackstone, he took to burnt cork, under the assumed name of Lew. Benedict. For a time the new business was harier than the young lawyer bargained for, but he made money so fast that his prejudice was soon overcome. At the end of the first year he bad laid up $5,000, at the end of the second year $lO,OOO and now it is said that he has nearly • re ached the figure of $50,000 in bonds. All the time he has been in the burnt cork trade he has Improved his spare mo ments by a study of law books, and in another year he will go lick to New York with $50,000 in his pocket, claim the hand of her he so fondly loves, and who has been so devoted to him, and at the same time again embark in the prac tice of law.—NgtionaZ Chrenkle. Human Nature Behind the Counter. One sees aigreat deal of human nature at these same dry goods stores, with their pale, slender, white-faced clerks, who give such extraordinary attention to their hair and whiskers, and get up such marvellous neck-ties, and never lose their tempers, and measure your greatness by the depth of your purse; real gentlemen, some of them are, with their bland polite ness, which comes of a gentle, kindly nature; the true gold, which no amount of -canker and fretting can ever rust; and and they go through the tread-mill of life as though they were stepping •on roses. One likes to buy of them, because it ele vates the common barter of trade into a pleasant interchange of courtesies. Very observing those clerks are; noticing the small caprices of women, which rear themselves up like mountains before thorn; the petulant , temper, _which is the result of that in-door isolation that hardens the heart and softens the brain. There are a few unworthy clerks—a few who fail in the elements of .courtesy and cleanli ness; but the majority are patient, pains taking men, whoie life is a constant round of hard work and poor pay. If women would stop to think—only they seldom do—they would see how a kind word or pleasant smile might often en liven the dull gray of ,those lives, partic ularly of those staid, ; quiet, • middle-aged men, whose chests are narrow , and cheeks hollow, and who have wives and 'babies in the fifth stories of large boarding houses, or Who live in a cottage od stilts, and economize themselvesinto.graves. "A little word in kindness spoken. A motion ors rear. Will often heal the heart that's broken, And n2a:kn a (den aincere." Remember this,_deal ladles, when you sit in silks and laces, with the aristocratic odor of fife about you, and tumble the dainty' goods, that yet are not fine enough for you, into, tangled disprder. : —Chieago Tribune. The Strength of Men, Animals and In. seeto. , A mire:of thirty, weighing on an aver age a hundred and thirty pounds, can drag,. according to Reginer, only a hun-, dred and twenty pounds. The propor tion of the weight drawn, to the weightnf his body is no more than ,as twelve to thirteen. A draught horse can exert, only for a few instants, an, effort equal to about two-thirds of his own proper weight. The man, therefore, is stronger than the horse. But, - according., to Plateau, the smaller insects drags w,ithout difficulty five, six, teth twenty times its pwn weight. The ,cockchafer draws fourteen times ite Own. weight, and more. Other coleoptera to are able put themselves into equilibrium with a rce of traction reaching as high as fort -two times their own weight. In sects, erefore, when compared wilt the vertebrate which we employ as beasts of draught,. have enormous muscular power. If a horse had the same" relative strength as donacial the traction it couldaxer else would be equivalent to some'sixty thousand pounds., - , X. Plateau has ,also adduced evidence of the fact that, in the same group of insects, if you: compare two insects, notably differing in 'weight, the smatt er and lighter will. manifest the greater ,strength: strength. • 1 .--;.-....-......6 A Tatatoitax has been received at Girard announcing . that Charles White, the Hon tamer, traveling with , Thayer's menagerie, was actually eaten up by the lions on Friday, night, in a small town in Michigan. He is said to have been struck on the shoulder by the same lion, that same so near killing- him at Rochester, knocked down, and , the others at , once Sprang (whim, and before theruould be beaten off had torn hfm.to rdeces and'de. Ynnred the greater portion of his body. Tax ,cabbage AY, which' is 'very de structitre ,to cabbage and . ,, cauliflower Pit Mint hes made its appearance in Maine. Yt waatirst seen us America in . Quebec in 1854, and was probably brought to the States in grain from Canada. It ni sembles the common butterfly in'general aPl l . l ..Falice• • A Gammen - on' has been called; to meet litMeMphis on the 18th of July, for the stiedal cincouregenientof Chinese ini migrrition.:: it will be composed of dele gates from 'all parti'of the South, partlim. larly from Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas and Tennessee. GAS FIXTURES WELDON & KELLY, Yam,!Lauren and Wholesale Dealers ln Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers, AND LAMP COODS. Alin, CARBON AND I,ITBBICATIN6 No. 147 Wood_ Street. BeandB Between Bth end 6th Avenue, FRUIT CAN TOPS. SELF ..taI.I3ELTNG , • -, '•••••••••-..) '• TOP.. c 0 L 'LISS , • " P IT T51317.1W4,PA - We are now prepared tet_aupsdy.iinnere and Potters. It is perfect, simple. and as cheap as the plate top, having the names, of the 'various Fruits stamped upon the cover, radiating from the center. and an Indexor pointer stamped upon the top of the can. It is Clearly, Distinctly and Permanently LABELED, . b► merely piscine the name of the fruit the .can contains opposite the_polnter and sealing in the customary manner. No preserver of fruit or jrood housekeeper will use any other after once seeing it. ' mb2s . WATFit PIPES, ' • CHIMNEY TOPS. - , A lrire assortment, HENRY H. COLLINS. apl4zta7 2d Avenne,neir Smltbfleld St CARPETS. NEW CARPETS. FINE CARPETS. CHEAP CARPETS OIL CLOTHS, WINDOW SHADES. 311Eatt1]ags- BOYARD, ROSE & CO., 21 METH AVENUE. iniuidairr NEW CARPETS! aruaae, .1.1369. We are now opening an assortment uripandleled In this city of FINEST VELVETS BRUSSELS .THRE-PLYS, The Very Neweet,Deelgns, Of our own recent importallon and selectedfrom. eastern manufacturers. MEDIUM. AND LOW PRICED • INGI - RAINS, ' • VERY SUPERIOR QUALITY'AND COLORS. Ai Extra - Quality - of Rag Carpot. We are now selling many of the above at OREA.TLY REDUCED PRICES. 'Al ' ellllsl , BROS., Aro. 51 40.VeTITE: jell „ _ OLIVER M'CLINTOCK . 6z CO. HATE MST RECEIVED Al FINE SELECTION OF IMITSSEL,S, TAPESTRY BRUSSELS . THREE PLir AND INGRAIN CARPETS. IHE LARGEST ASSORTIIENT OF MiITE, CHECK & FANCY MATTINGS, FOR SUMMER WEAR, iN TU CITY. STOCK FULL IN ALL DEPARTMENTS Da OLIVER, Ide,CLINTOCH 4 CO'S. A 3 FIFTH AVENUE GLAM. CHINA, outimity. 100 WOOD Si'"MET. DEW GOODS. FINE VASES; BOHMNIAA AIND CRIS& "W 8 DII TYI ME 81M8 - TNA • SMOKING BETS, GUM C 17113. • A bite stook of • -• • SZTEB MUD . GOODS of all deocriptioas. g i glriil CM Wila?telraeralad . R. E. BREED_ ar. CO. W 0 Pa 100 WOOD STIUCET. TIIIIMMINGS, NOTIONS, &C. NEW AND DESIRABLE GOODS. Silk Fans, _Linen and , Palm Leaf Pans, New Japanese Fans. SILK PARASOLS, all the New Styles. WHITE . GOODS, A Beauilful Line. SUMNER BOULEVARD SHIRTS At Reduced Prices. • New Puffed Collars and Cuffs; In Paper and Linen. CORSETS, a Complete Stock. GENTS' - SUMMER UNDERWEAR, In NerinO, Gauze and Cotton. WHITE AND STRIPED, DIUSLIN SHIRTS. Our Stork of COTTON HOSIERY Defies Competition. EMBROIDERIES, LACES, lIANDECERCHIEFS. MACRITM,GLYDE Bi 4). 78 & SO Market Streit. , moo. SITHREEE TRADE t WHITE GOODS, • 'STOCKINGS AND GLO VES, Hats, Bonnets and Sundowna, HOOP SKIRTS, FANS, HAIR GOODS, Paper Goads LinenEllandkerehiefs, SIMMER DNDEIZGARRIENTS, PLAIN STAR SHIRTS, FANCY SHIRTS, NECK TTSS .h= SHIRT irktONTS, SUSPENDERS, ' - B SI T aZ d ' i l i frA e llSt itPHYR SHAWLS. LACIEs, • • And a full line of NOTIONS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION . AT Wholesale and ' l ' Retail. Stock always complete and fair prices. Whole sale Agents for Id.ERBEROLE d. LIBBY'S wipe, riot make of PAPER COLLARS. Trade 'sup plied at Factory Prices. Merchants can save time and money by "sort ing up" from our stock. - JOSE:11.'110RM& cO. l , 77 AND 79 MARKET STREET. iys NEW ,SPRING GOODS MACRU3I&, CARLISLE'S Dress Frit:amino and Buttons. InsbrOlderlel and Laces. ---- Ribbon and 'Flowers. F Hata and Bonnets. Glove fitting and French Corsets. i• New Styled Bradley's Skirts:- Parasols—all the new styles. Stud and Bain Umbrellas. • , Hosiery-4 . 6*dt English makes..l Agent/ for • iiarris' Seamless Rids." • Spring and Summer underwear, Sole Agents for the' Bemis Patent Shape Col lars. "Lockwood's "Irvine." `•West End," "Elite," A.e; "Dickens," "Derby," and other MANUFACTURERS' PRICES. MACRUM '& CARLISLE ) • NO. 27 FIFTH AVENUE. 7, WALL PAPIEII‘ .A.PiID • 1 • ' / ! WINDOW SHADES, OF , New and Itandsbme .Dgsigns x Now OPENING AT No. 107 Market Street (NEAR FIFTH AVENUE, Embracing a large and carefully selected stook of the newest dealing from the FINEST trrAltr- ED GOLD to theCREAPEST ARTICLE known to the trade. All of which we offer at priC434 that Will pay buyers to examine. • JOS. R.. HUGHES & BRO. ' WALL PAPER. • ' TUB OLD PHIS STORK IN A, NEW PLACE; W.P. MARS T.T , 9B NEW WALL PAPER STORE, SPRING Goons ARRIVING mbe PEARL ELL FAMILY FLOUR', MUM; WILL Three Bur Gran Brzad. Wig to FRENCH FAMILY FLOUR. Tbl E a2r elaln cady DO oeat . o dt when eat* ard red. • P Ma /6 ill 'u l Tititas i t PEARL Ruiz gani m i t i o wl i t o W CORN FLO% D OORN RR c it • B. T. 1 & B 80:, a4eitisay, Sept. 9,1000, PaaaL MILL. No. 27 Fifth Jiventlte Dealer. supplied with the above at WALL PAPERS, 191 Liberty Sired, /NEAR NABILET,4 FLOUR. II DRY GOODS. .02 2 o • 0 • 1:12 tA3 -itg rig I - \ 0 e l 1 4 ,4 go ti wri wal j ; la iime an IA Z 0 0 2 no W 0 0 o 2 0 • 0 ca . E-1 " , z A El ad h i , " 2 4 Kul NEW SPRING GOODS JUST OPENED, AT THEODORE F. PHILLIE'S', 87 .Market Street. Prints, -Muslins, Dress Goods, SIM, SHAWLS. FULL LINZ of SILK SAQt7ES, Very. Cheap. ST. • MARKET STREET. • 87. C "ll e i te t W Al4P Corr t 1 0:t. °19 ) - WHOLESALE DIALNEB IN Foreign Domes is Dry Goods, • . Cl 4 WOOD Third door idxcve DlamondrAmman.. PIANOS. °ROANS, &O: >' UT THE BEST AND CHEAP EST ruiv),AND °BOA*. Ichomacker's Gold Nodal Plano, AND ESTEY'S COTTAGEORGAN. Tit SCHOMACESP. PIANO combiner, all the latest valuable Improvements known In the con structlon of a drat class Instrument; and has al 'ways been awarded the ILIA' hest premium ex hibited. Its tone Is full, sonorous and sweet: The workmanahlu. for darabillty and ' accord R s all otheri. ' Prices from Mk to 11.150, to style and-lirdsh.) cheaper than all other so. e ailed drat class Plana • .ESTAT'b UOTTA9Z ORGAItt Rinds it the bee pf all reed Ina:nue-Ws.- in produchig the moat perfect pipegnallti, of any similar instrument in the United States. It la simple and Compact in amiatruction. and not liable to wet out of order. • • CARPENTER'S PATENT " VOX HUMANA. ' TRXMOLO" only to be found in this Organ Price from $l OO to 8510. guaranteed for Ave Tears. BARB, • SNAIDq & BBEITLER, - ‘. No. 121 T. CLAM STREET. .11V.tyrders for tuning and. repairing will los promptly attended to bv*C. F. Mathews. WINES. LIQUORS, &c. SCHMIDT & FRIDAY, IMPORTERS OF WINES, BRANDIES 3 GIN, &C,, WHOLESALE DEALERS IR PURE RYE WHISKIES, , 409 PENN. STREET., Have ItemoVed to NOS 384 AND 886 PMIN, Til4l . 4 ff th St., (fornierl , CanaL) j a osEPEI SINCII Co., z • Kos. ifuSsz ies, Ha, DS And Flan STREET, rrrrsßtrEati. 717ACTErftliS Car pepper Distilled Pare, Bye indaleyi Also, dealers in FOREIGN WINI2I and LI. QUORS. HOPS. &c. sum.nsa STONE. WEST COMMON Machine. Stone :Worke r . • Northweit corner of Wait Common. Alletben7. ,rztiarm. avviursa & CO. Have on hand or Prepare on short notice Hearth and Step Stones, Flags' for Ladewalkiy Brewer Narita, ac. Head and Tomb Stones, ha. . - nrdere twrimntly exaen tad. Prices reasentatili DR. NVIIITITER, ONTINIIES TO TREAT ALL r - urPprivate diseases. Syphilis in all its Emma, all nary diseas and the effects of. are compioteiy ecitted; Bpermatorrhes or nal Weakness and. Impotency, resultiag from ", 4, self-abuse or other causes, and which produces` • same of.the following effects, as bloitenes. bodily • weakness, indigestion , colisuMition.•avershin to society, unmanliness, drelui or !Inure events. loss of memory. Indolence. nocturnal. emissions, • and finally so prostrating the sexual system u to render-marriage unsatisfactory, and therefore Imprudent. are permanently Cued.. Persons of- dieted with these or any other delicate,. iotricage ' or long standing constitutional compliant shoal 8 give the Doctor a trial; believer p.lls. • .- ' A particular attention giver, to all Female e_oni- - - plaints, Leurorrhea or Whites,' Palling,:iiisem-. ' • 1 'nation or Ulceration of the Womb. tirsznis. ',' - ' • prurltia. Amenorrhoea. Menorrkagia, Tlysmen- • norrhou, and literally or Barre/Mies% are treato ed with the grestest success.-- ._ _* It I. self-evident that a physician, ono ooadne.s himself exclusively to the study eta certainties. of diseases. and treats thousands of CUM eVery year must acquire greater skill to that , • one in general practice. ' • " The Doctor publishes a moldiest pamphlet 61t 7 Imitelltlisi gives A MU exposition's:if - venereal *nu Dante diseates, tb at can be Warms ai Whet or by -mail for two stamps. in sealed envelope s. i Every sentence coatains instruction tO the a t ' • Elated, and enabling them to determine the pro. 1 else nature of their unailidins. • The establishment, comprising ten ample • speeUl itioitap k is central: When It Is not Convenient to '\ \ 'visit e city, Ahr Doctor , ' opinion can be ob. Leine by Eying a written statement of the case.. ' •-• and medicines can be forwarded by mall or ex press:. In wane fustanees, however. a personal - - - examination Is Absolutely neursary.• oldie In . othenrilaily personal attention to re and for theuccommodation e f such platten there are ots connected with the AM erif s tiVrrith evert' -regulate Ili med iate to PromOte recovery, Includingis Naha. AM prescriptions aro_ prepared In QS . Doctor's own laboratory, under his pennant ne on. Peelle& pamphlets la Care tree, or .. ry.% 1 1 for two stamps. No matte who 2 have • - . h H aled, read whit he says. olm 9 A.m. to 8 ?Jo. Sii_nd_g•s 11 M. to 9P. m. ogiee t. md. * • Arms • . b=„NAT. ( near Coast Unieseo Alask a / 4 4Z% ~ EN