The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, July 29, 1869, Image 2

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    Ig
Ctt litts6o Gapttf.
.1011 , 16 GRAY, JUNIOR.
taller —Cloud ot acridlt
Nestled tiny stranger ghee.
Thrice welcoMe to the failing 'see
' Or John tim e Senior.
. es.
Three timea,tbree theitunshine red,
hooted through the =thane sPer its bead;
' To ask how time with baby sped,
With John Gray, Junior.
Thrice softly glided neat the *bade.-
fly church enu marble t ab.et made,
To whisper where its mother lad,
Of John Gray, Junior. '
.
And twice three tstnes a tutored steP
sof. iy to the el - sidle crept,
To watetithe stranger as be &tent,
Wee John Gras, J unior.
EY
Tbere as be took tbe tiny list •
lthin Ills kanu and sortly kissed
11. e palm, tsere rose a eh. my mist
'Upland John um, Sculor.
01 cbildbood Welt. or cbool days done.
Or college Donoro fairly on,
And by and by. **Jobb-Gray-and don,"
Senior and Junior.
The while a pltylog angel au. R. -
That ere the Mantua drank the dew,
Life had been - lived its /halls ` h rouga r. ,
For JOho nty, .1 eate
There were white roses everywhere.
hweet Cower•odors mint and fair,
lisonad th e WaXttt linage. there.
trf John tirey, ;calor.
•
Toe sun came as he used to do.
llts.goldeu hair, tone stream u u, gparongh
The ultrid, saT
Johnong "Acue -
lo tiny, Junior.
Then leittbe silentt shaded room_
Yorever tilts Purple gloom
Tc gild the daises OA the tomb
or JOlui kirsT... Jan:or..
,
Now airy es sties lie, •
W bac sender hands lay softl7
hhei•rmentomad wßaielul4 :-
tor,Jonn Gray. Junior..—
Now abeam:All hand the father kissed. •
Forever le.lions through the mist
That lies betiteen yorld said Shia,
• , tor J ohn Oral. lento?. •
Y. Ledger.
11P1MUffiM.
—Bierstadt Was recently in Paris.
—Brooklyn has a bill-poster's war.
—The Revolution wants police-worden.
r -Cuban Colonel Ryan went to Canada.
Gilmore, of jubilee fame, is going .to
Europe.
--Greett`Clay Smith is now a Baptist
preacher.
—Hon. J. P. Raie Is at present travel
ing abroad.
--Arkansas negroes talk of hiring,,Chi
nese laborer's.
• —Alboni now demands as high a salary
'; as Patti receives'.
—Dan Bryant comes back to the'lrish
&lima next week.
—Connecticut is to have a , temperance
convention on the 14th of August:-
: 1 —Lotta,.who isinSalt Lake 'City, is to
open a new theatre in Erie shortly. •
—An exchange asks '‘will - the cable at
Dueka bury bring canards from Frame""
rt —The railroad is called \ "the
1 -broad cage dug leaded". to - destructiOn.7
—Tor some unaccountable reason,,the
I foreign anlimerceof Boston is increasing.
—Charles Francis Adams declines to be
a candidate for Governor in Massachu
.
ME
ME
gill
setts. •
-=Newr O rlea ns had _ the first case of
Yellow fever this smson, on `the 20th of
4 , July. •
• —The opposition to the French line is
•
called by the New York Express an Eng
. l - fish cabal.
—Mr. Seward is enthrisiastiailly re-
'g. calved at, every place he visits on the Pa.
cific coast.
--Parepa and Rosa, with a, troupe of
English opera singers, start sometime in
I September. •
—The last periodical cyclone at Calcut
' .„
ta blew the roof Off of a hospital and killed
; some few patients.
—lsadore Mayo graduated with honor
at the Portland High School recently.
Isadore is'a negress. '
—A Boston paper is responsible for the
• assertion that babies are numerous in
New York ash-barrels.. • '
—Chinese parents cut off the beads of
their children to cure them'of opium-eat
,
The cure is effectual .
—On the line of the Adirondack rail
road in New York, a fine bed of green
• mottled gianite has been found.
=The Detroit'Traufie wants Andrew
Johnson to stop writing his biography,
write his epitaph and then use it.
•
—Louis Napoleon's enemies say he has
loithis head. He seems to get on better
• than Louis XVL - did without his.
J—A new Irish comedian, named Dom
•k Mtirray,fr om over the water, makes
his debut in New York next week.
77: —An exchange has the - following
among its specials : "July 23, Long
.• • Branch; General. Grant ate a clam."
oh u Brougham delighted San Fran
; cisco with his Poiahontas. John'would
delight anyplace he ever pleased to per.
• • form.
':,, —The Lydia Thompson troup is about
V to leave New York and Niblo'e, where it
has had a successful season of forty-five
*-; weeks:
-—A London paper suggests
that the
•Alabatile claims staked
beon the contest
• :` between the Oxford and Heriard boat
crews..
—.Siiee.breeches are looking up.
Trousers are dOomed, and five years from•
now the man who wore them" bi
11 looked. tlOn,titi-aiiold-fogy.
—Longfellow is -- on, - his way home.
1:j 1 Opinion ‘Olll the Low
. artine of ,A.trierice• add SOB he speaks
:rt •
fluently eighteen different Itufgnages.
• ; —The advocates of coolie, importation
•
are trying to t#IiPV- Pike"' :over ,
'way or.thlnitieg by, vigor* of Cheap,
careful and restiectlul serVents instead of
what we now "have. _
—Wade Bolton, the man who was re=
cently effot'lli MeniPide !),'Y i*lierls.
left, by 'Wawa, $1 ,000 to .Mis. - ,'Stone .
,)., •
wall Jackson, and ten sores of .. , 14 Od
each of biitornier slaYes. „
—The Bolton Commercial Bulletin
„bows duller an amount;Of common sense
sonfetisies; fOrtineletwei is eels we, must'
Mil
ME
• -,
offset the Satz canal by a similar enter
prise on our own continent.
—jay Gould and John Russell 'Young ,
are starting a penny Morning paper in
New York: Mr. Young, in spite cf his
indignation, Saone to have peen seriously
`affected by_the recent Bun stroke.
—A woman recently buns herself in
Missouri because her husband went to
California. Next week there was a stam
pede of husbands Californiaward, but it
was:, not followed by the , desired results.
—An exchange says: If young gentle
men of middle age who have to dye their
whiskers, will consult Byron,Plautus and
Menander, they will end, to their cons°.
i lation! that "whom the gods love die
young." -., - •
—Rev. Mr. Haller.: died in a smoking
eir, and that fact is held up as a warning
4,ainsi the use of tobacco. We have
itaard of men dying in chtirch, but never
heard that urged as an: argument against
Public worship. .
A. woman is coming eastward from-
Nevada who is said to be mtuvellously
Strong. Among other lugs, she: , ., makes
a table" f herself, and allows an <anvil to
.
be placed on her breast . while a hotse
shoe is being Made ppm it. , .York
—4 $250,000 rival to the. New 1
independent is to be started. We
h ope
lbws it Is to be , the same style as that
i paper, it will not be called a. religious
,journal, for that would be a 111/8110/111er,
besided very poisibly inducing some peo 7
1
ple to read it on Sunday, who- otherwise
wouldlnt. • :
'Spiritualism and Science.
Professor 'Tissot, of Dijon, Prance, an
eminent psychologist, has recently pub
lished a work upon the Imagination, in
which) he argues that the phenomena of
spiritualism and kindred mystsms can
all be accounted for upon purely scientific
grounds. He combats Ake _modern ten
dency to adopt the ancient bel i ief in sor
cery and magic, and says that the most
marvelous manliest:Minna; which have
stimulated the groWth of this belief- can
be explained by the same laws which
govern the tiroduction of the :distinctive
teatures of the'different'Anown species of
somnambulism. , ; ,He divides the latter
into, four kinds, and illustrates the.pecn
,litirities of each•by factaiwithin his own
and. the experience of other scientific
men, not less ,strange, and, startling than
anything with which we are familiar in
the annals of spiritualism. ' The case is
related• of a:young girl subject to par
oxysms,. the result of a disease with
whith she was afflicted;: - • '
The paroxysmtook place everi day in
the morning, a few hours after getting up.
She then fell into a sort of a sleep, with
her eyes ihut. 'ln this state she leapt
with marvelous agility -end 'ran with
greater swiftness than she could have
done in health. In running,,she al ways
went towards a given spot in the neigh
borhood; t'never changing her coarse.
She 'often said, wbso the felt the paroxysm
approach. that she bad wished to go
there, and as soon as she had reached
the -place she would return, sometimes
without taking the same road; and,
although the path was very bad, she
never stumbled. When she said, es the
paroxysm approached, that she wished to
run to such or such a place she was ac
castomed to add that, during the night,
the had dreamed that she , should do so.
Invain was the attempt , made to stop
her on account of the danger; she
persisted in running to this given
place, .and nowhere else. On awa
kening- she was extremely feeble, but
gradually her strength returned, and she
suffered most when prevented from run
ning.- When she came to herself she had
no recollection of:what had passed in her
sleep. Sometime before' her illness she
said she• had dreamed that the water of a
neighboring Boring; called Dropthrn,
would effect her care. She drank it du
ring her paroxysms, and-at other times.
Ifgiven any other water she would reject
it impatiently, hut always drank willing
ly, with closed eyelids, water from the
spring. Before the last paroxysm she
remarked—" Now I have only three leaps
to take, after which I shall neither leap
nor run any more." Accordingly, hav
ing fallen into her usual sleep, she jumped
upon a mantelpiece, andthen down 'gain;
having repeated this performance three
times, she stopped, and never afterward
lither ran or leapt.
A Milian Body awl the hour of Day.
Seat yourself at a table. Attach apiece
of metal (say a shilling) to a thread.
Having placed your 'elbow on a table,
hold the thread between the points of the
thumb and forefinger, and allow the shil
ling to hang in the centre of a glass tumb:
ler. The pulse will immediately cause
the shilling to vibrate . like a pendulum,
and the vibrations trill increase until the
shilling strikes the side of the glasa; and
suppose the time of the experiment be nt
the hour of seven or half past seven, the
pendulum will strike the glass seven times,
and then lose its momentum and return to
the centre; it you hold the thread a suffi
cient length of time, the effect will be re
peated; but not until a sufficient length
of time;luks elapsed to convince you, that
; the exp eriment la complete. We need
not ad that the.thread must be held with
a steady hand, otherwise the vibrating
motion would be' contracted. , At what
ever hour of the day or night the experi
ment is made, the coincidence will be the
Bowso rsos and knocking knees are
among the commonest deformities of bu.
man nature; and wise mothers assert that
the crookedness in either mss arises from
the afflicted one halting been pat, upon his
or her feet too;early in babyhood. , But a
Manchester physician, • Or. Crompton
Who Use watched for the true cause, thinks
differently—Bs attributes the Ind , men'
dotted distortion ton habit some young
sters delight in' of rubbing 1110.061 e of:One
• foot against that of the Other: some will
go to sleep with the soles premed togeth
er. They appear to , enjoy the, cont Act
only when the feetais naked; •:they
attempt it *hen they ire welted' or :s '
pend. -Solhe remedy is obvious ke e p
the bahy's sOleicovered. Knocking knees
the doctor ascribes to a different , childish
habit, that of ,aleciting twills side with
one leg tucked into the hollow : behi nd the
other. He has found tfiat where one:leg
has bah howed inwards,. more than the
other, the patient bee always slept on one
'side; end the uppermost member has been
the Most deformed. Here the Orients.
titre - Is to pad the insides of the knees to,
as to keep them apart and let the. limbs
grow freeiy their own way.
PITTSBURGH GAZETTE : THITRST) XY, JULY 29, :ISM,
--___
Ladles at the Adironda elr.a.
A correspondent:Al the Boston Arlan:
firer, Oriis, oing..- the. Adirondacks by
the-igniatataits of the Hey. Mr. Murray's
tiorikr i'irites: t. '
I meet people wlio protest with much
energy against the coming of ladles to
the Wilderness, and assert that it is "no
place for women;" and the table at one
of the hotels the other day was greatly
entertained - by the torrent of indignation
poured forth by,. a lady who considered
that she had been induced to come into
the Adirondacks on false pretences, and
promised to "show up Mr. Murray in
the N'York Herld." But I cannot join
this crusade. I think there is,no lady
Nebo could not hearilly enjoy th tranquil
row from Martin's to Bartlett'e, corn
-fortably established in a light boat, con.
SCIOTIB of the becoming novelty of a High.
laud costume, with natty boots and red
stockings, graceful sash and jaunty
cap, and the unaccustomed but fiuici.
noting ornaments of pearl-handled
pistols, i a glittering hunting knife,
and a phased silver drinking cup
hung about the waist, with a coquettish
ivory whistle suspended from the neck.
But I think I have known ladies who :
would not enjoy, even in the same array,
crossing a carry in a rain Storm, face and
'hands4ipping with tar and oil, mosquito
bites smarting on wrists and temples, the.
bootsF ked through and through, the
uail a
reseal .stockings in the ca rper bag
nq wet, guide end acort 'B6 loaded
with 'at and baggage as to be Iricapable
ti
of re nd ering assistance, „ and a- slippery
log to pang to a himbla into , a ehglow
poolwith a muddy bottom. Ladles who
can p s such an ordeal without loss of.
temper which would make all its evils ,
tenold wose, can safely make their plans
for f the Ad r irondacks. They.w nd
ill fl no
panthers, no Basket.. In their guides
they will encounter respect and courtesy
as genuine as that which they receive in
a Boston ball room. - They have as good
a chance. of killing deer and , catching
fish as anybody. They may even die,
pease, if they choose with the inconve •
nient appendage of Male escort—going,
of course, in parties of two' or more of
their own sex. The eaperitnent, I think,
hae never been tried before; but its fen
iribility has been tested this year, and
with entire satisfaction to the parties
interested.
, .
Row Bad Boys are- Reformed `in clew
I, • 1 ,il ersey. • • ' -
The New Jersey State lieforin 'School,
.
at Jamesburg, has sixty boys in: charge.
A Newark`paper gives the following ac. ,
count of the diacipline of the institution:
"The school has a farm of five-biundred
acr connected with it. The boys thus
ha an opportunity to • engage in al
kin mof far work--plowing, prepar
ing mires, fitting the soil for seed
planting, haying, dr.C. The smaller of
the inmates are mainly engaged in plant
ing, weeding and 'training the small
fruits—a work in . which .they seem to
take great satisfaction. It is designed
to turn the farm into aach. purely fruit
farm, and thousands of pe, pear, and
other trees, &c., are now being planted.
Last year the whole products ,of the
farm amounted to 55.902 51, - of which
there was consumed by the families lira
ducts of the value of 5928 50.
“In the school the boys axe divided
into two grades, acoording to their pro
ticiency. One is in the school in thi) fore
noon and the other in the afternoon.
They are taught all the common English
branches, and have generally' made
commendable proficiency. Many who
could not say their letters whett they en
tered, now read quite fluently, and are
improving in other studies. Just now,'
when the growing or ripening crops
make pressing demands for labor to cul
tivate or secure them, the exercises of the
school-room are temporarilly suspended.
These harvest and other vacations are,
however, made up to the students.
When snow -covens the ground , or, the
weather is inclement, the scliool hours
are doubled. ' 1
"In summer the boysrise at fiv
o'slock, and, after washing, perform 'the Dren Trimnato .,,,, Btu , it ,
tasks assigned them, assembling for kmbroiderits and Lseta.
Prayers at , a queirter to seven, this being Ribbonsand I . low , tra .
followed by breakfast, and the departure
, Saki and BOLIItte.
Of all to their various points of labor. I Wove fltlatig and Freud Corsets.
At half past eleven all come in, and , at 1 New so St r ea , I r t i rle it n Y eZ ' %Ter:
twelve have dinner. An hour is then
allowed them for play, and at half past 1 I:lroeisenryd—RaitbenbUesir EnligUsasii tt.
~
one they return to work, at which titey for Harris' iteatuless 8010.
remain until hail past five.
fling they have various exercises, another
In the eve - t filiellst:iteDndts's'ulaioruae
. u ;e d /U rwe i l :iiis.nt EntPe
o t i jol:
Dirs. "Sockw?,c,del 1.7 , !,,..,E, e , • , :tP:ei l _ . .E . ..., :ey
hour for play, etc.: and at half past ne,” iftc; , Die ens, LB ruy .ww v,. ,
eight retire for the night. In winter the i *"."'" D e alers ruppliet: wits the alxrre 114
ordefr of the day is somewhat different,
the time being given rather to study than 1 MANUFACTURERS' PRICES.
towork. - 1
"A careful examination into the ex
penses or the institution during the past
year shows that the cost of a pupil aver
ages three dollars per week for board
and clothing, fuel, lights, salaries , end
inc,ldentals."
The at. Clair Manuscripts.
The papers of General Arthur St. Clair,
at one time Governer of the Northwest.
era Territory, now offered for sale by his
descendants, have been examined by an
agent sent for that purpose by the West
ern Reserve Historical Society. As no
trace had heretofore been found ofGov.
St. Clair's official records, the announce
ment of the existence of these papers at
tracted great attention among the stu
dents of the History of the West, and a
bill was introduced in the Ohio Legisla
ture to appropriate Money to secure the
prize. The bill passed one branch of the
Legislature, bat failed to reach the other
House before the stated time of final ad.
journment. The Western Reserve His
torical Society and the Governor of Onto
therefore appointed a joint agent to pro•
ceed to Kansas and examine the papers
to ascertain their value. The , report
of the agent has just been , published,
from which it appears that one half of
hmmanuscripts
l c man e b eor
deciphered
Some of the papers are stained • and
Others have become imperfect by Data
• ral wear and , decay- The ,remaining
halite in a fair condition. In reference
to the historical value of the manuscripts.
It is reported that they : are, not as im
portant as they were supposed to boon
matters of general interest. As ,far as
General S. ,91atr's public career is con
cerned, they are very fall giving lung
'and detailed.accounta o f his evacuation ,
of Ticonderoga in 1777, and his disastrous
defeat, by the Indiana in Duke county„
hio, on November 4th,
: 1791. The rove.,
fintionery , Compendium, in Instr. large
volunies. is ' reported to be invalnabie.
and to contain a mass of, matter highly
aervicsable,to the historian. The exten.,
sive correspondence of tit. Clair as Gov
vro of the Northwestrferritory is also
er y'complete: The Archives of the .
Territory visaed' Into the h an Ms of Charles
Willing Byrd, the setietary of the Terri
, tory, but what disetoeittOtr made Or
them blf not ktiown, ,- bnt it is imppoied
that Byrd • tarriedthem to I Virginia,',
where • they may - yet be ' feund in - tba
theof his •deicendimiti. • *The •er
the agent 'Of the ' .Iftstoricei Society for
- f the papers was refused, by the beircbt
9enerall3t,' '
, •
=MI
WiI4KON
Xistageprersand Wboless.% Design la
Lamm" Lanterns, : Jsbandellers,
AND LAMP COODS.
Aim), CARBON AND LUBRICATING 07/13.
•sue moo.
N 0.141 Wood Street.
se nn22 Between BO and 6th kreatte,.
mTn - 1 ,- c - eiki l io - Fa•
We are now prep a r ed to .• . • . ,
Posters. his per t, simple. and al. cheap II li 1
the plain top, ha ng the names of the vinous
Fruits stamped upon- the corer. o f from
the center, and an index et pointer ttninped upon
the top of the can. ' -
it Is Clearly, Dlstinet/y and Perlaapently
, . .
, .
1AA33E.1..-ED •
~„.. .
..
by akelrely lle the dame of' oie trait the
can contains' Opposite the_jminter and Dealing in
the customary manner. No preserver of fruit or
Rood housaireeper will 'nee any other attertaii26
owe
seeing t , ... - .
.• „ .
11133.TCHIPINE TOPS:
W v
iv TERviiPimlillPEl: ITOps
large assort:cleat,
' BENET B. COLLINS.
apiltarl Set Avenue:Sew BadthaeldBe.
DRY -GOODS, TMI/MaNGS.
i;-I.OODS
REDUCED RATES:
Would call atteutfoc to the lartie :eduction ■ea
hayo ;code In ' . „
Silk Parasols and San ;Umbrellas,l
SELLING AT HALF PRICO.
COTTOVUTIOSIERY, 7
LISLE OLOVRIk;
CiIdIIII3R UNDERWEAR.
All at Very Low Prices.
COLOBETI 811. E.
tiILIK. BOW
. Hoot , isinrrs,
• COBSETS,_
WHITE AtARSBILLF,S,
IRlrl3 LINEN.
WHITE 01.M)TAti,
(of ail MU.)
F RIN 6 M. BuTTONE.. I2 6 3 ' goy DERI ES
.•
MAaRITIC GLYDE CO,
371078 & 80 Market Street.
NEW SIMMER GOODS
lIACRU CAWSLE S
No. 27 Fifth Ave, ne,
MiIORMA & °ARM&
Nc•. 27
et a
S 2
0 th
iv $ l l t i
cW If 0 ti)
0, 04
I = 72 5 ce,
. . _
r 4 11 :$
o j p
INgal 13 04 i t
111:1 G03
Ili C 444
s ix 3
& h
via
4 ;
m
sod
asectoimaiss& och,
(um our p0..1
, wuoyziMSE DZAIMIL. I * -
toreigamestio Dri•Giodis9 .
Ivo 94 *OO6 nu* .
itird ocoOTIOOVii Dissoolt!l appßoninaiti, YV
- .arrioei
1 1 , 01 I N PECR_, ORNAMENTAL
At
.WORATA Alcii 'PritYlol.llt. Ho.
T Meet* near mini/Mid, Patois:ire:b.
Alva on liana,' ajtsnerat aseortmenr or La.
.41wri flatrios. OUR:likilanemento
' tica • BOALTS; Aftf Cia.INE4
pc? .ffir i.., .g.,, rrtee Is earb,
elmberiven or BA.II li.a.w.: • •
' . ea awl,. eientiumer 's Bair ,thittitte dont
ereeattel. mariner . ~...,,.., , ~ a* or,
JUST RECEIM
FANCY
Linen Cellars and Cuffs,
NEW STYLES.
TUCKED, E.IIIIIIWIDERED
APB
Plain Linen Chemizettes.
SHETLAND
AND ,
SEA SIDE . SHAWLS.
PORE = PARASOLS,
Different, Colors.
TRAVELIN BAGS AND SATCHELS
Palm, Linen, Silk Fang,
JAPANESE F-ANS
I3E 4c•c:)7P 1933irl
TEE CUTEST NOVELTIES.
BALDIORAL SKIRTS
AND SKIRTING.
Y3,id 4/3/rl4ColVefii,
ALL SHARES.
Silk, Lisle and Cotton Gloves.
HOSIERY,
All Kinds, Including a Full Line o
----
BALBRIGGAN •
A.
.1) FINER 31A_VC. VA&
Plain and Embroi,eTed Corsets,
HAIR ROLLS,
Coils and S,witches,
lIAND)MCIfIEFS.
FULL etibOUTMENT OF
RIMER UNDERWEAR,
ILL SIZES AND QUALITIES. ,
tients' Shirts, Rose, Ties,
SUSPENDERS, DRAWERS, &C.
WHITE GOODS,
BATS.
BONNETS ,
FLOW RS,
13 _4. G-,A. IN
IN ALL ENDS OF GOODS.
Stock. Kept tip , During. the Season
BY DAII . S AEA OF
•S -- Joliv I urco4o-n,s,
JOSlti'll lOW & CO'S,
,77 dsTIR9Er.
yrpasio
a-
SPEOIiSL SO= Or
CARPETS.
We offer at Retail. for THIRTY DAYR ONLY.
a doe of New and Cole Patterns
English Tapest, Brussels, ingrain,
and Other Carpets,
AT LESS TRAN cf , ST OP 131PoRTATIOTI,
and. our entire Stock at prices whiett mole It an
obleet to buy this month, as these goous bate
ntver °ten peered so-low.
{tar &ore will hiosa at Sr. 31. until tirpterabee
tret.
DM
CARPETS,
1121 V gr 1.24" Or 13•11
-AT.LOW PRICES.
We offer many of our 'goods mqcb below Lin
bpring's prices. Those needing goods in OC3'
line can date money by buying st once.
BOVARD, ROSE k CO.,
n FIFTH ASENtrIL
NEW CARPETS !
We are now c.penine an assortment napielee.,
in this city of FINhBT .
VELVETS- BRUSSELS -THREE-PLK
Of our own recent nnportatinn and selected:sow ,
eastern isenulacturers..
DEDI 111
AND 'LOW PRIC E D'
An Extra Quality of Bag -Carpet.
ill
RIBBONS, widths,
WAIST and -14E.0
RIBBONS.
CALL, AT
CARPETS
dcFMMAiffl) & COLLIM.
No. 71 and 73 FIFTH AWN t
(St cotiti Floorl
Flop) - Oil Cloths,
Wiudow Shiides,
I.4:daT
113439.
The Very 'Newest Desigu,
• ITki GRAINS,
VERY SUPERIOR
QUALITY AND COLORS;
at
We ore now selling nanny of the at,o7e
GREATLI REDUCED PRICM
ITILIR liltoS ~
/to. 51 FIFTS ArE.ll 1'1E74
OLIVER &
HAVE JUST Minn" ) A
FINE SELECTION OF.
ItlairgisELK ,
TA.PBSTRY BRUSSELS
Taass: PLY AND
[ INGRAIN CARPETS.,
TILE WISEST ASSORT NT
WIIITE,CHECS & FANCY
VULTTINGS,
FOR SUMMER WEAR,.
IN TUE RTY•
STOCK Fat. IN ALL DEPARTMENTS.
na
OLIVER ItIctIENTOCH k CO'B.
Sl3-TIVTEt tiVENVE
COAL AND COMB
cosin mum,
'DICKSON, grEwART & ce.,
Havir4 removed their Meru
. .
NO. 567 LIBERTY STREETS
1.1...ne1i city ,Tiour Kill) lIICCORD EWOE. •
ate no* trre NUTed to tarnish rood VA) IiB2CNT
atlas - 3r Lulu NUT co6l, ousiAcr.. sz the
lowest morket Prloe.
611 orders lett at, their aloe,' or isOoresood so
them I.llroulitli the Insll. wal be encoded le
proMette.
DR. '. :s lx:
cuOsrI:TINV'ES TO TREAT ALL.
• private disesses„Byptalls In 11l its fonns. all
or diseases, arid use abets of mercury are
completely eradicated; flpermatorrhes or Bms.•
nal Weakness and Impotmicy. resulting from
self-abuse or other causes, and 'which Prodilems
ume ot the folicrelng effects. as blowbes, booing
weakness. indtges2on, consumption; aversion to
society, , unmanliness, dread of fixture creole,
loss of Memory. Indolence, nocturnal etnissiott,
and Inally wi prostrating Ue sexual systenras to
render marrlue unsstastactory, and murelose
timprodeht, are perroasent turd: l'erums O.
flirted vitas these or any o ther delicate, routed
or long standing constitutional completnt simians •
Eve the Doctor a trial; he never DIAL%
A particular attentiouitiven total Female ewe
plaints. Lesloorttellor N ine* . 'Bailing. Ma r
;nation or Ulceration the Womb, Clvarills.
plurals. • aiimmorrhoes: Itenorrhagta. • Dysinem.
norrhoea. and toterillty Or Barrenness, ate_' tress
ed with the greatest enceess. ... . • .• _ _
_,
It Is stlf.evident that A physician who Ounnee .
him self exclusively i
ts the study of a certain class
of 211/esses anti treatbonsands of (3130 !Ten
• TWIT Mllll. aconite *rester ekill in that uccilOtY
iltan on. In generalbractict. __,„ ,
• The Doctor publislies•a Medical •PanipoAt 0 -
1 Biti Pikes that lives)" itaexposftion of venereal
an, private diseases. tb at can belied free aiding.
or by mail _tbr two *Wept, in realed euvelopes.
r
Beer! ',Otani:Ceara:Mae tame-roan
io the afm
\
• nictW. and enablAng_theln to: iiiWg'PPe eh Pre"!.
else nature or tam °Mug:lilts. , •
.• The • establishment; r. Mit, ten- ample •
looms, Is central. -When it ntitocraventent, vs' •
Tien we city. the Doctor's Ilitinil 4l mu be ob* •
tainel bv-giving a written-statement of the cue,
and medicine, canto forward ed by• mail or ex
press. In some instances. however. a persoul
eexamination is absolutely necessary, while to
xamination
others daily personal aLteution is rev. ired: and
\
for the
toccdstn r finicti Ostletas thaw are
• apertmeu a connected with office test we Fro-
Vided with every reoulritethat is calculated to'
promote recovery ,- winding • medicated• lance
baths. Alt prescriptions ere prepareu in ithe
Doctor's own laboratory, cinder his personal
••oe err.
pervialon. liedicat pamphlets at- wilco free.,
by moil for two, stainto..-lio mattes who Due
falltd, road whathesaYs. bloureli A.M. tar,w,,
!Sundays 12 st. to it r. 311 . - tnitar , a 4° ! 0 1.111
' 2TAKET. (nut iglu% :licreacistrusgh, 2,,,
- - . . . - ...
REV