I sillittsburgij &Ott. POETRY OP THE PERIOD. An-anniversary poem, read to the , alumni of Williams *College - last Thurs ` day, is worthy of especial mention. We ye an extract from it—which is aupposed • ,allude to the Boston. jubilee—carefully 'And, and italicised by the New York "Ibune 71 1/re l i abored and we preached for universal skni e gied to see the dawning of the mlilental day; And with Joyful hearts we watched the slow but sure increase ' Of love to God and man and childlike porky. But 10l when least expected that era s .14 X 1 Iton and lamb and thar and calf no al- Jerence now; The bright propitious year of Jubilee has come Forgotten now'the sword, the hatchet s a d the bor. Sure, it must be true that Peace the scepter hblde For so procltints the guns, the organ, the big drum "'Pis true• forever true,' Ihrleb al/ Hassachu - a tta sou/s, - "Tis Lille' respond ten thousand in Boston Colt- scum Being ,shen In the nay of the church mt/itant. I WILLI say nothing, though my heads reach to tvielfth. For though even here men were once biltgerent, :Now, Is peace. at letbst, thia rn great Co• Mott wealth. " EPHENERI.S. —Toni Thumb is in Omaha. —Washington is infected with incen diaries. ; —The St. Louis artesian well is 3,831 feet deep. = —The crop ) prospects in the West are - very gook —Samuel Bowels is again "across the Continent." -All the places of ' summer resort are doing good businesti —Memphis sends five hundred barrels of fruit North, daily. —All the collieries of the Pottsville re gion are in operation. —lO6 degrees in the sun is the Padu eah, Ky., temperature. —*e Knights of Pythias are growing numerous everywhere. —Spiritualism is being investigated by the Dialectical Society of London. ' York and Washington are to have German taught in their public schools. —The prison discipline at Sing-Sing is denounced as miserable, being no dis cipline-at all. —Jeff. Davis' nieces, two young ladies from Vicksburg, are belles among the visitors at Paris. —Boston has a little man thirty-one inches high, forty-one pounds weight, and.aged nineteen years. —New York still has an idea of hold ing a grand national peace • jubilee' to eclipse the Gilmore-Boston affair: , It 'is announced that the friends of Almon Cameron are to start a new daily 'paper .in his interest in Philadelphia. —Miss-Nora Giles, daaghter of Henry Giles, of Maine, and a noted lecturer and essayist herself; was drowned while boat ing last week. Ohye Logan rejoices that ladies are becoming Bohinnisuis in the, journalistic sense and that they find equality In the news Paper world.' the' great inventoruf cruelty to aninkils • in. New Yorir, •has been ar rested for assault and battery, on the 'oath of his coachman. —Thaowners of the orchards in New Jersey advised to thin out their peaches and prop up the limbs at once. The fruit is exceedingly abundant. —Arrangements for another prize fight have been, made between McCoole and Allen, flii-S2MO a side, to come off with in the next four months. —A Chicago court has decided that ex press companies have the right to for ward letters accompanying consignments in unstamped envelopes. —After one more payment thqlncome Tax expires, by 'limitation. Ntne will mourn the departure of that meanest of all systenasof -raising revenue. —The poem of Weslyan University, this' year, was on "The Theory and Practice of Flirting." This college evi dently fits its graduates for society. . —The newsboya of St. Loids have de termined to hold a grand pic-nic excur sion, the expenses of which they hope will be borne by newspaper proprietors. t.;—fihe death of Mr. -Charles Stuart, one of the earliest explorers of the Australian Continenent, and subsequently Colonial Secretary of South Australia, is an . nounced. —A Raman Catholic Church has jast been completed in Fall River, Massachu setts, the corner stone of which was laid eighteen years ago.' It has cost over $200,000. —The Germans of Chicago ask for the erection of an emigrant house 'capable of containing one thousand persOns, to • which foreign new comers can repair till otherwise provided for. —The 2Eina Insfirtuace Company held its 'fiftieth annual meeting at Hartford, recently.' Jambs M. Goodwin, an origi nal director, and who has served ih the *board half' al century, 'was present. -As soon as the. Great Eastern returns from heipresent e work -:laying the Franbo Asnerican table--she 'will take fresh ca- MO on board and proceed to India to lay - a line between Bombay -and Suez. —ln Paris "low shoes" are coming in fashion for ladies,the color of the stocking, and the stocking the same color as the dressialsoi the ladies are Universally" adorned with the large ' , sailor / collars." —The - citizens ofOmaha have started a , • R subscription paper to raise - ou t ! hundred mid fifty thousand dollars for el purpose of erecting a first-class hotel in that city. •oillbont ten -imusaii4,4ollera have.. been 4Ttitis*skildiku *okotgroweit;• it Is Stated, haviliecome alarmed itthe conk- petition from BoOtith Aniericat-Ithem-4 is reported 70,000,000 sheep are shorn° every pate, and the exports of wool*ta 330,000,000 pounds. —Young men men of fashion whO have fallen into the button-hole bognet style, will be pleased to learn that the Lohdon snobs, who introduced that romantic idea; have improved upon it, and carry a little poodle dog in, theirarms. Imitate is the word. .-. —lt is stated that certain members of the Medical Society of the District of Columbia, are preparing a petition, to be signed and presented to Congress upon its reassembling, praying a revocation of its charter because of its' refusal to• admit colored men to membership. -- -7 1 An immense shoal of speckled brook trout appeared in Lake Superior, at Du luth, last week. The members ofthe Buffalo Concert Club, / encamped at' that place, caught them by the dozens. The fish averaged about half a pound each, though some of them were more than a foot in length. i —The Atlantic cable of to-day is pecu liarly an English institution, having its termini on English territories. The French cable will make us feel aI ttle more easy and independent, as in c of war with Great Britain she could not \de. prive us of telegraphic facilities while en joying them herself. —The Viceroy of Egypt has contracted with E. Remington & Sons, of Ilion, N. Y., for 60,000 of their rifles. This house continues its weekly, shipments to the Spanish Government in Cuba. It has never sold arms to the insurgents, but has transformed about 8,000 Springfields for houses in New, York that may have furn'shed the Cnbana. —An English paper says it is not at-al an uncommon thing for ladies traveling, in first-class English railway carriages *o cut down and carry away the silk cur tains of the windows for the purpose of making aprons of them. So general did the practice become on one line, that all new curtains were made of material the was not worth stealing. ' —The Texas cattle trade is immense. A Denver dispatch says the banks in that city have, within the past two months, sold drafts amounting to nearly five hun dred thonsand dollars for the purchase of Texas cattle, which will find a market on the Union Pacific road, west of Cheyenne, though several thousand head will be stopped east of that point. - - -"Olivia," the correspondent of the Philadelphia .Press, excuses the ,etrong mindedness of Susan B. Anthony. "Let us," she says. " visit her faults tenderly. Baby lips have never pressed her hard, cold cheek. She has never tasted the sublimity of motherhood. She has never bathed in that immeasureable sea of glory whose waves touch the gates of Paradise." —Many people outside the profession know how to run a newspaper. The New York Timm is said to have received, since Mr. Raymond's death, an avalanche of propositions from would-be editors. They are classified as follows: - Persons willing to be managers, 6,259; financial editors, 5,670; leader writers, 665; theat ricarcritics, 2,076; reporter, 1; night edi tors, 0; errand boys, - 0. - • —One of the gentlemen, called upon for a speech at the Williams College an nual dinrier was Mayor Sam'l McClellan, of Wheeling, West Va. He excused him self, bat said that he would, however, leave his autograph, and he handed Mr. White, the college treasurer, his check for five - hundred dollars. The colleges generally would be glad'lo commute the after dinner speeches in that way. —A-young lady's opinion of, the bon net of the season: "Oh; the Sonnets of my girlhood—the kind I wore, to school! I really thought them putty. I must have been a fool. And yet I used to think myself on hats a jaunty miss. Per- haps Lwas, as fashion went; but what was that to this? Oh, the lovely little pancake—the alarming little mat! It makes my head so level, and so very, very flat." —Miss Craig, who captured one hun dred thousand dollars from the bad spell ing Sprague, on a breaclyof promise case, is about to be married. The wedding will probably not take place until the pecuniary difficulty with4Sprague, the former lover, is settled. The fortunate youth on whom the mantle of Elisha' is about to fall, is said to be a Handsome and deserving fellow, who isn't troubled with "arisiplace," tumors nor weak eyes. —Burlingame has met with success everywhere. He has already Aecured the c,o•operation of tl# Untied States, En gland,und France; ancrproceeds to Berlin, which is the .neat point at which the Em- bassy will sojourn. while on its European tour. Whateveroppthition the policy Of Mr. Burlingame advocates had to en counterovhich was chiefly in England, has been overcome. . Now his advent is eagerky awaited in rEit. Petersburg, and alsq*hen• China and the Chinese are en. . . .. . tering upon a new'em. ' - --Swainish, Ga., is moving to secure a direct importation business with Prus. shvand Germany. At a recent meeting held by the citizens it was stated that an interview had been held with His Majesty, the King of Prussia, and the Minister, Cornt, Bismarck, whci ; expressed them. Selves favorahly toWards the project, de , siring extend the commerce of the kingdom by direct trade with the South ern ports, having stark° sea coat on the North and Baltic seas, the products be ing manufactures of cotton, linen and silk•; also porcelains ' atilt- wines. The imrbigrants of middle anoßouthern Ger many would alsO Elvall themselves of the tipOrtimity of becOmb4 Southern set tlers. PITTS#UEO,II G-AZEartl: WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 1869, Woman's illisalon Rev. Charles Kingsley in a recent ad. dress to women published in Good Words, says: . 'I should have thought that the very mission of woman • was to be, in the highest sense, the educator of man from infancy to old age that that was the work toward which lii the Godgiven ca pacities of women pointed, for which they were to be educgted to the highest pitch. I should have thought that it was the glory of woman, that she was sent into the world to live for others, rather than for herself; and therefore I should say, Let her smallest rights be respected, her smallest wrongs be redressed; bat let her never be persuaded to forget that she' is sent into the world to, teach man, what I believe she 'has been teaching him all along, even in the savage state, namely, that there is something more necessary thin the claiming 01 rights, and that is, the performing of duties; to teach him specially, in these soicalled intellectual days, that there is something more than intellect, and that is—purity and virtue. Let her never be persuaded to forget that her calling is not the' lower and more earthly one of self atsertion, but the higher and diviner call ing of self-sacrifice.- and let her never desert that higher life, which lives in others and for others, like her Redeemer and Lord. And, if stny should answer, that this doctrine would keen a woman a depen dent and a slave, I answer not so; it would keep her what she should be—the mistress of all around her, because mis tress of herself. And more, I should ex press a fear that those who made that answer had not yet•seen into the mystery of true greatness and true strength; that they did not,yet understand the true mag nanimity,lhe true royalty of - that'spirit, by which. the Son of Man came nA to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many. Surely that is woman's calling—to teach man; and to teach him what? •To teach him, after all, that his calling is the same as hers, if he will but see the things which belong to his peace. To temper his fiercer, coarser, more self-assertive nature, by the contact of her gentleness, purity, self-sacrifice. To make him see that not by blare of trumpets, not by noise, wrath, greed, ambition, intrigue, puffery, is good and lasting work to be done on earth; but by wise sell-distrust, by - silent labor, by lofty self-control, by .that charity, wnichabopeth ail things, be lieveth all things, ezdureat all things; by such an example, ix, short, as women now in tens of thousands set to those around them; such ' as they will show more and more, the more their whole womanhood is educated to employ its powers without waste and without haste in harmonious unity. Let the woman begin in girlhood, if such be her happy lot, to quote the words of a great poet, a great philoso pher,. and a great churchman—William' Wordswoith—let her begin, I say— "With all [Wogs round about ber'draw From atay-iltue and the cheerful dasea _A uanclog shape, au Image gAy.; to haunt, to s.dttle, and Mahal'. Let her develop onward— ''A spirit vet a woman. ton. 'Mtn household motions tight anti free, ' nd stros of virgin liberty. A countenance In which /bail meet sweet records. promises as swei t: A creature not too bright and good For humen nature's dauy food; For transient sorrows, ample wiles, • Praise. blame, love, kisaes,tenrs and settles." But let her highest and her final develop ment be that which not Nature, but self eduCation alone can bring—that which makes once and forever— _ 'A being breathing thoughthl breath; A traveler betwixt Life and death . Wlth reason grin, with temperate *lll, 'Endurance, Tosealght,•strength and sktli A perfect woman, nobly planned. .To warn, to comfort, ano command. And ybi a spirit, stiq, and bright With something of an angel Alen- The Century Plant. The Century Plant now aboukto som in Rochester, has reached a height . of 15 feet 9 inches and will probably reach 20 feet. It has 20 branches and buds now visible ' which are to bear the clots. tern. The lower branches are about 15 inches in length .and 5 inches apart, where matured, and they gradually Shorten until they reach the top. The lower-most arm is 11 feeli6 inches from the ground, and there a 105 distinctly formed buds on this oldster. We esti mate there will be 1,500 Sowers on the plant. in other plants which have flow ered in England and elsewhere, these arms, when fully developed, have meas ured four to six and a half feet in length, and the clusters of flowers from 14 to 18 inches in diameter. The single Howe is not handsome. It is only four or five in ches in length, of a greenish yellow color, andl very. fragrant. The Wit beauty is the wonderful pyr amidal candelabra shape of form which it attains when in full bloom, the large clusters and numerous flowers in each, which will appear at the ends of the arms or branches, the lower ones being the longest, and gradually shortening in a pyramidical form till they reach .tbe top, where there will be a huge cluster of flow era. This. particular plant was brought to Rochester thirteen years ago. Its age is very accurately known, flaying been purchased in 1809, by the late Ron. John Greig, of Canangaigna, and owned by him until 1856, when it was purchased by the Hears. Frost, making it about seventy years of age. Ithasthirty leaves averaging.iour and a halt to'six feet in length, of bluish 'green color, finely marked with yellow stripes, the leaves beingsix to nine inches in width and three to five inches thick at the base.— Rochester Ezpren. 1 The Utterly Disengaged Bachelor. He is generally tuide; five•tuid-twenty, for we do not allude to old bachelors. He dresses well, but not anxiously. It does not much matter to him if his gloves are not buttoned, or if the parting of his back hair is not quite straight. His whole manner is that of a man who owns him self; who has no one to think of when he does anything or says anything. He con sorts with gay,fellows who smoke a great deal, and he smokes a great deal himself. He doe ith Mind owning to have been out very late last night, and being unable to finds Oka for his latch key when he raacheithome. He Changes his boarding plies frequently,and is generally ahead of his saltily. He laughs at engaged fellows and pities "Intwied ones. He - is off-tuind in his manner, and pays great attention in a Jolly sort of way to the last new pretty girl. He patronizes the burlesque opera, and goes 'alone with boquets to fling to the most fascinating performer. Even there he itkfickle,and the sylph with black hair, Who is his idol one night, is quite forgotten the next for the blopdd in' bide and silver. 'On the whole, he is ex trentely happy—has brighter eyes,fresher Mil,: and nicer hair than any : other kind of:matt:you meet; and seems to hate "dtsengair: "not in lOve" written_ GAS FIXTURES WELDOIir & KELLY, itannteettuwee and wlt'ciu — neue Dealers is Lamps, - Lanterns, Chandeliers, AND LAMP GOODS. Liao, canoe AND LUBRICATING on a. BENZINE, eg o. N 0.147 Wood Street ae9vaz Between sth and 6th Avenue*. FRUIT CAN TOPS. N.? . t 'TR 111 3EET;7t:fr -- We are now prepared to. supply Tinners and Potters. It is perfect, simple, and as cheap as the plain top, having the names of the various Fruits etamped upon the cover, radiating from the center. and an index or pointer stamped upon the.top of the can. It Is Clearly, Distinctly and Permanently LABELED, • by merely placing the name of the fruit the can contains opposite the pointer and sealing in the custo ary manner. No preserver of fruit or good ho , • keeper will use any other after once seeing t. mh2s I;•i4t3+4kiwit6iitat., , kirm.o WATER PIPES, GUZIONET TOPS A. large assortment, HENRY H. COLLINS. apl4:b77 2d Avenue, near SralthSeld St CARPETS. a L 1 .1869. SPECIAL SALE OP CAR PETS. :Be otter at It, till, nr TEDI:TY DAYS ONLY. a .tre 01 New and Choice Patterns English. Tapestry, Brussels, Ingrain, and Other Carpets, AT LESS THAN COSS OF IMPORTATION. an... our entire &Lock at prices winch make It an object to buy this month, as these goods have never oeen tittered so low. ch.r Store will close at 5 P. M. until September dist. 31cFAJILAND & COLLBS. No. Ti sad 73 FIFTH AVENUE, r3:d AT NEW CARPETS .Tun.e, IEIO9. We are now openine an wortment unparalleled In ails city of FINSST • • VELVETS BRUSSELS THREE-PLP The Tery Newest Designs, Of our own recent importation and selectedfrom eastern manufacitireri. MEDIUM AND LOW PRICED INGrEitAINS • VERY BIIPERIOR QUALITY AND COLORS. An Extra Quality of Rag Carpel • We an, now sellinz many of the above at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES MUM BROS., Xo. 51 FIFTH ArE.rUE, jr/2 OLIVER iII'CLINTOCK & CO. HATE JUST RECEIVED A FINE SELECTION OF RiarssELs, „TAPESTRY BRUSSELS THREE PLY AND INGRAIN CARPETS. THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF WIIITE,CHECK & FANCY mammas, FOR SIMMER WEAR, IN THE CITY. Stock FULL IN ALL DEPARTMENTS AT own NeCLINTOCK & • CO'S. 23 FIFTH AVENUE. I * è R " . " . (I.ate Cutter with W. Heszieuheidea lamitclizArrr TAILOR, No. 53 Smithfield Street,Plttaburgh. searal - NTEV SPRING GOODS. „7 1 r A iv/ ,toot of CLOTHS, G4SSIMERES, teat Jost received 01 . usunty rem lirerehiint Tailor. 11313mIttaleldstiliet. ICE; ICE: ICES ICE! Of KEEBS, • I 0 t DEALER, NO. 65 Diamond Alley, Prrialiniant: ME , • , ifir c P?'4le rs'addr e s I i d to Vr. XILICBS, Ilatigi Mud% Aliegbelii. wit% receive eitenotiittention. w.airenarusiiing In flitibtirigtialUl Alleittieny. m721:)10 TRIZMZINGS, NOTIONS, &C. SIITDIXEB GOODS Would call attention to the large reduction we have =dela Silk Parasols and :Sun Umbrellas, COTTON" HOSIEitr. .I.I.SLE OLOV FS. '6U3I3IICR UNDERWEAR, All at Very Low Prices. • COLORED SIT.K. FANS. • - SILK BOW-. HOOP SKIRTS, • . CORSETS, WHITE MARSEILLES. /RIND LINEN. WHITE GOODS, • FRINGES, (of all kladq.) MACRTJM, GLYDE & 'CO. 78 & 80 Market Street. i9lO GREAT REDUCTIONS Straw and Millinery HAIR. GIMP AND BRAID HATS AND BONN KT+. FRENCH FLOWERS, CHAPF.s, LACES. FBAILES; &c., &c. At Very Low .Prices. SUMMER UNDERWEAR. r • mi SHIM 5, sUSPENDI.RS, -NECK WFAR. HOSIERY, • LADIES FINE COTTON. BALBRIttGAN. LIaLE, and SILK HOSIC. HOSEGENTS SUPERFINE AND FANCY HALF FINE SILK FANS. PALM AND LINEN FANS, TRAVEI IMO SATCHELS' • IMP SKIRTS, CORSE BOULEVARDS AND WHITE SKIRTS, WHITE GOODS, ZEPHYR KNIT SHAWLS, PIQUE HATS, something , new. EM iiROIDERiES._ . - LACES, LACE GOODS. LINEN. COLLARS AND CUFFS. New Goods .Arririno . Daily. JOSEPH HORNE & CO Cif rend Floors 7 7 AND 79 MARKET STREET. 1914 LTG SPRING GOODS NACRUII it CARLISLE'S No. 27 Fifth Avenue, Dress 'Trimmings and Buttons. Embroideries and Laces. Ribbons and Flowers: Hate and Bonnets. Glove hiding and French Corsets. • • New Styles Bradley's Skirts. Parasols—all the new styles. Sun and'Enin Umbrellas. Hosiery—the best English makes. Agentater “ilarris , Seamless Kids." Spring and Summer underiresi, Sole Agents tor the Bemis Patent Shape Col lars. "Lockwood's "Irving," '•West End," "Elite," ,tc; "Dickens," "Derby," and other • . Dealers sripplled with thsiibove MANUFICCTUREFIVPRICES. MACRUM & CARLISLE FIFTH AVENUE. tart WALL PAPERS PAJNEIit AND WINDOW SHADES, OF • - • New and Handsome Designs, NOW OPENINf AT • No. 107 Market Street (NEAR FIFTH elms:lmo Embracing a large and carefully selected stock of ihe newest designs Lon* the "MEET START ED GOLD to the CHEAPEST ARTICLE known to the trade. All or which we ofrir at prices that will pay buyers to examine. • • JOS. B. HUGHES .& BRO. WALL PAPER. " THE OLD PAPER STORE IN A ionf PLACE, W. P. )11811.SH8LL'il NSW WALL PAPER STORE 191 Libertv Street, ' OMAR 31412118 T,) SPII.DiG GOODS ARRIVING nu* i HOLMES, BELL& CO4 AN‘OR . COTTON 111141.1-1. liimmumseiffilAv*lnamni same= *limos'AlD IMl:l=ifee 'AND EATTINIL REDUCED •RATES. . SELLING AT HALF PRICE. BUTTONS, EMBROIDERIES. C1i.004007061. NO. 27 ME DRY GOODS. w 04 - cp M • Al r-'4 115 mai 112:1 ,b 4 co 2a i m 7 f - 4 gm 464 E i 4 ! 4; =I 0. 113 • 0 - i=i 0 04 .I=o , ;.? , 1 E. 4 014 z ,11 gal tot - g _ L NEW SPRING GOOD' JUST OPENED , j• AT THEODORE , F. PHILLIPS 87 Market Street. Prints, Musliti§, Dress'Good . srLirs' SHAMS ruLL LINE o SILK SACQA:TEE Very Cheap. S 7. MARKET STREET. S &Pa 1 Chnit, McCALIOILESSIt CO., (Lars WLlson, Carr a Co:.) D.Ear.vaa Foreign ind - DornestieDry Quit No. 94 WOOO BTREZT. Third door above Dsaawadatlev. r mmmannwag,rA WINES. LIQUORS, 80. SCHMIDT & FRIDA7 IMJPOWEESS Or WINES, BBANDIES, GIN, &i WHOLESALE DEALERS IS PURE .RYE 409 PENN STREET, Have Aemoved• 1.4` NOS. 854 AND . 886 PENN, Cor. Eleventlit St., (formerly Cana, H TOSEOII S. FINCH( & cm, u Nos. nus, IST, 189, 191, 193 and 193; FIRST STREET, ITITSBIIRGR. sumrpacTrrEzas OP Copper Distilled Pure Bye Whisk: Also. dealers in FOREIGN WIN and QIJORB. HOPS. de. . mh23.17C, GLASS. CHINA. ' CUTLER $OO WOOD STREET. NEW GOODS. FINE VASES, BOHNNIAN AND O,IIINA. KEW STYLES. • . EILDiNER SETS, TEA SES, f smoims9. SETS, A. /urge stock Of 'SILVER PLATED GOODS or au deicriptions. Call and examine onr geode, and we feel setlened no one need ran to be suited.' R. E. BREED Er. 100 WOOD STREET. STONE. . . WEST COMMON ' • Machine Stone Worke. Northwest cornerofWest Common.legbi PRED'K ATV/LT/UV& "CO. Have on hand or iri bl apare on short nottce Hec and • Step Stones , a thr !sidewalks. Brew, yaetts. lie.. Head an Tomb Stones. &a. (Wien nminntly amenitoe, Prime a IsInTnER , riONTENITES TO. TREAT Al ek . ./ private diseases. Syphilis In all lie forms urinary diseases, and tne effects of mercury' completely eradicated: Spermatorrhea or - Se• nal Weakness and Impotency, resulting self-abuse or other causes, and which prod* acme of the following effects, as tdotcties,AF weakness. Indigestion, conantlintiorl. avant society,. Unmanliness. dread, reif Ibture eves loss of memory, Indolenceinciednrrial emissie and finally an prostrating me Sexual , system render marriage unsaUshletory, and theret Imprudent, are 'penziaerdly cured . Persons Mated with. these or any other delicatelutrit or long standing constitutional complaint she give the Doctor a trialt• be never falls. - A particular attention_ given to ail Female c, Plaints, Leucorrhea or Whites,_Pailing, =Lion or Ulceration of the- Womb, turartr prIII•11:18, Amenorrhoea. Jaellorrbaits• D7s a( norrhoes, and sterility or Barrenness, are try ed with the greatest success. It is self-evident that a physician who confi himself exclusively to the stndYcf s curtain of or disuses and treats thousand* of cases er. 7pir Must acquire greater still IA that speci4 fdian onein general practiCe• - • . The Doctor publishes a medical pamphlet fifty pagesthat eves a full exposition °Cynict and private diaeases, that can be had free at ot or by mail Ibr , two stamps. In sealed envelo! /freer sentence! contains Instruction to the , flitted, and enabling them to determine the ,else nature of tri -ar complaints. 1 The esialaishment, comprising ten as is central. When it Is not coareulen: visit the aim the Doctor's opinion can be " panel by giving a written statement of the cf and medicines can be forwarded by mail or mess. In sume instances. however, a verse examination Is absolutely. nsupsnary, whi t ! others daily personal attention la reqt bed, for the accommodation I f such patients there! ants connected with the mm that amt •• a rrriTeih every requisite that la cau telvi promote recovery, includieg eedi es baths. AD prescriptions are prepared in Meters Olyrt laboratory, anderthis persoaat =tMenem pamphlets*Pomcepamphlets!free! or two eta.Mps; No matter who ill failed, read what he says.: Hours tl Aar. to 8 pi Bunilen...l,ll Weir. tr. , I.MOto. b ilEll irTZW, (near Court Setae,' ruu 0 ett si ra 0 riej ■ GIFT CUPS,