El : Os 1it0.04..•.1.40#. , LOVELIGIat. •431bdo*n to the meadow st brisk of day, 00 down to the meadow, son John. And labor away 'mid the sweetest bay That ever the sun shone on." And John went down to the meadow-land. Bat he saw not the clover sweet, .lad the sk• was dun. forhe a la sed the sun, Though It reddened his bt with heat. . - Be in'esed the sou, and he mi red the light, And the won I seemed tipzi e down, • Till he Clalgat the sight of Ana a linseriroalsey gown. II; . Till be caught , the eight of agolden II( ad, And a fair and merry face.. 'When so bright and round, with a sudden bound,, r! , The sue went up in its plan ; The •un went up and th 3 lig hcame down. And the geld was ail aglow, • While his heart. kept time to the merry rhyme , Of the reapers song below. And Mary. she laughed at her lover's mood. • As she turned from his loud caress. Though the south wind blew from her lips so true, ' ' ' The sweet little answer, Yee. _ - "Ohl wherefore so glad ?,, said farmer Oral,,_ k Oh: wherefore so glad, ECM :NMI? Tor the storm today spoiled the weetest baf.' That ever the sun stone. n. t , Not John knee, nothing of rain or flood: And nothing of ruined hay; Inc the lowers of joy to the farmers boy. , ' Were scattereaalOng the way. And merry, the,Wedding belle rang 'out. • And merry the pipers id - • -' At tDe goleen,dsera Of thnhatdot morn That ushered (be marrioge nay. . . • PERSOLTASU. Tax young men ,of Washington have Organized, a Library Boelety. GEE. Gitarpr's eldest two eons have been visiting for some time in Washing ton 'county. -• ' • THE_ new, Methodist , Church at Irish Kortfinmberland. county, was completely destroyed by fire last week._ , , Tutrawrow, the ceronaut, has bet $5OO that he cane go from Meadville to . New: York in thirty-six hours, and in a bal loon. The attempt -is to be made on - Monday, the Bth inst. Tan "Doom of the Kn•Klu x.Klan" is the name . of the poem recited at the re cent commencement of Lafayette College by the class-poet, Mr. H. Denny. Mc- Knight, of Allegheny: Ox Thurisday °fleet week an Irish la borer, Working on the Connellaville rail road extension, was killed by the caving in of a bank of earth in Turkeyfoot tOW/t. , _ship, Somerset county, ^. • A 'l'm: . Greensburg Iferard says on Thum - lay of last week some scamp in human shape entered the Engliah Lutheran Church at Adamsburg, that county, and `;stole therefrom some thirty yards of car pet, which covered the floor on and 'around the pulpit, and the cover oft the melodeon. •• Oa Wednesday evening of last week,' • 'Anthony O'Donnell,* miner employed in the mines of the Cambria lion Compa ny, was coming out of the mines from his work, carrying some miner's picks on his ahOulder when he was struck by a car, which knocked him down and drove one of the eharpr picks into his back, it' pene- trated into ,vital parts of the body add' killed him. Tmr. Montour American says: The puddlers havestruck for higher wages at the :National Iron Works. To an ad : vance in wages we understand the mane 'gers make no objection; but allege that the puddlers violated the contract by not giving the usual notice before quitting work. The proprietors have posted up Aqtkces, in which they offer six dollars •• • per •tot,-and: require two weeks: notice previous to-a-discharge, change in prices • or cessation of 'Work. - They alscrperemp ' key - discharged 'all puddlersi who have been engaged in the strike In a later psragraph the American announces that work is about to be resumed with an en tirely flew corps of pruldlers. • A man calling himself Anderion, the Great 'Wizard of the North, is prestidig. hating in Youngstown. Szvimrr•ous new Muses; costing ~ .245. have been put up during the present fleBBo/2 in Youngstown. Gronent Homiest had ' about sixty peach trees destroyed on his farm, near Chillicothe, Sunday night. Some of the larger ones were girdled and some of the young, ones uprooted. A Iffur named Salt, living' near this eity, recently died and willed his whole estate, amounting to about $lO,OOO, to the _Orphans' Home, at Fllit,rock, Seneca county, Ohio.--Fremont Journal. io all parts of the State the harvest news remarkably good. Most of the wheat is in, much of it having.to be i ota with sickles, and all the other crops are said to be especially full and good. . • IN removing the dead from an 'old burying ground : to the cemetery at Co lumbiana, Ohio, a few days ago, the body of a Mr:Baird, who was buried six years • ago, was found:to be entirely petrified. Mna. Kiva, at Pique, Ohio, an to -. defend her child against a vicious cow, a feW days, ago, when -• she was herself caught upon the cow's horns, thrown across a fence and so hurt that her reixtv _ cry is In doubt. ,Ti Salem Journal , rays Mr. J. F. • Coyle has purchased the buildings known as l'ildte's Az Factory, and !snow fitting • iheniliplis,Flsi Mille. Fofa long time there hire:heihr a great need of an institu tion of this 'at this place. The rats. -ing of flax_for the seed has of late been very profitable, and now that the straw can Wand to a lood advantage, it , will still further encourage , its cultic/talon. lithT, 11111031. t. Two gentlemen went to every well in the township on Tuesday last and got a correctestimate of the billy production of oil: The number ,of barrel', from all me-wells- amounted to three hulked and ilfty.one barrels per diem. , . „ A Connzerotnnorr of the Wirt county Meerut writes that' Mr. Patterson is ,`,.. oiling down , a new well onthe hillside. els down abdut 000 feet, and bass good fat ga b b lev the wind roalt. 4 3 A. ' Is putting down a new well the opposite hill; on the rilc.k. Petty - verso the heavy storm up wheel,. hi Creek, on Friday West week, a lad, ut twelve or fourteen years of age, no ng with Mr. Wm. Daig, went"out in he gatden to remove some valuable ere, and tuts not since been heard Ai several init•houses, agrictiltu mplements and even live stock are wn to haveleen carried away in the d.. it is thought *who) , wile; drowned ' floated into. thirOld6 river.-- Ifigel; BM :to 1. fro ral kik MEI Summer In Florida—Night Breezes— Daily Accessibility --New Lines of Travel. and Means of Appresch—Ceear_ Keys—Remnants of Antiquity—The Bffect Drouth on , Corn; Cotton and Sugar—Desire for Northern Immigration—Cattle liaising, etc., etc. Correspondence of the Pittsburgh Gazette.] PALATse, FLonine, July 27, 1869. There has been something of a scatter ing, I fancy, in the group that bade each other good bye in your -sanctum, on that hot June day. Some have doubtless patronized other points of the ,compass, but as for your correspondent, /he found it in his heart to turn his face to and the tropic of Cancer.' The truth I iii, I have long• had "a warm side," as ey say here, for Florida, and have learned by ex . periente that, - while the Bummers here are quite summery enough, they are far from being as oppressive a sone would i judge froth the latitude. I • 'questi ; indeed, whether I have suffered here, m the h t this as much as - thcith n . „• • , defatigielde crps who have ; ;, doing duty tionnichnearer the birth place of the , icebeig :The 'daily , showers the rainy season and-the winds from the Atlantic or the OW, Make nFierida summer a thing to be rethembered, on the wholef with pleasure. ;.;It is a special luxury to be able, • even if the •day has been warm enough to afford , a pretext: for complaint, to open yourwindows to the night breeze and let it shed from its wings - upon your eyelids the balm of gentle slumber. There is too, for susceptible souls, I sin told,.a goodly amount of romance in the moonlight of these parts. especially along the banks of - the noble . St. Johns, opposite this place ,. and under the lordly oaks that here skirl, • its banks: Florida is becoming accessible in the fullest degree.. Besides the close con nections heretofore...made by fine steam ers from Savannah with those coming out from New York, she has now, a line direct from Nei York to Fernandina, in the bands of a company that wield a pow erpf money and energy that seems to as sure the largest success. They ran steam ers also.= the'Gulf from Cedar Keys to" Mobile, the Florida Railroad forming the link between the two ports. They, can carry freight atllower rates than all-rail lines, whilst their aveldance of the perils of the Keys gives them an advantage in insurance that enables them to compete sac emsfully with steamers that expose I themselves to these dangers. A very fast steamer has been purchased to run between Havana and Cedar Keys, making the trip between sunrise and sunset, en abling the Cabana, who in general, I be lteve, have a , weak stomach at sea, to Teach Northern ports, if they choose, with the very minimum of sea travel. 'On "a hasty visit I made a few days since to Cedar 'Keys, I was impressed with the evident life and spring that char acterized the new community that is gathering around the railway , station. This is not, strictly speaking, at Cedar Keys. The old town 'bearing that name is on a Key or island farther out than that appropriated by the ralirdad comny. the latter being of old named the Way Key, and being accessible from the main land bye long stretch of pilings. The forma tion of these sandy islands of Keys is of great interest. . Colonel Downy,' an in • telligent nevi-comer into the place, informed me that Prof. / Wyman spent loot • winter there and in the vicini; I and was rewarded In his geological researches by the discovery of some human remains ,of extraordinary site. Colonel Downy promised to inter est himself to securefar the Western University the counterpart of Prof. W.'s collection. 4, This is not the first time I have heard of human skeletons is Florida soil, suggestive of en old race of giants. Altogether,' for - the man of general scien tific culture, who can enter with spirit , into discuthions of questions in geology., mineralogy, physical geography, the na. tnre of soils, of which there is here an indefinite variety. together with • points relating to- ethnology and social science in a community working out anew prob lem, I know of no more inviting field for; investigation than Florida. One can `gd scarcely anywhere without falling in with soma one who has an extraordinary spring "Adak" or the like to tell him ef, or some of ck or earth, the conote* tion andp ecu lia rities e of which he Ls t cur rious to know. I have beard in several quarters of the discovery of substances that have the appearance and smells of phosphate of lime. It is a pity the value of these deposits could not be immediate ly and thoroughly investigated. 1 wee even told of the discovery lately in a gorge near Ocala, Merlon county, of a rock rich enough in petroleum to make it combustible. I speak of this only as a matter of curious interest, 'having no idea that the quantity procurable is at all large. . • The drought early; in the season has reduced bye large percentage the antics gated crop of corn throughout Florida. This. Is bald, particularly on the freed men, who are in general unprepared to buy. - The cotton, however, t.hus far very premising, and, while! there is a daily dread of the caterpillar, especially bo as we are now having heavy rains 'datly, one of the most intelligent .planters in the State assured me the other day that, with a l t that this destructive worm , can . Possibly do thus late in the season,' the yield of 00tiOtt,thlg year can scarcely but •• be handsomely remunerative. He spoke tiso most liopefull3r of the sugarcane, a crop. in his opinions althgether peter. able to cotton.- Some of , blo estimates of what can be -done on, such lands as he works, in - Marion • county, estimates founded onwhat' he has actually done, are simply startling. ; There is_ great `` deal of 'emulation among the people of various, sections of Florida to secure . the settlethentj among them of goW, substantial and energetic men from the North. ,The planter,to whom I have just referred,: bas entered' into -a ce-partnership with such a gentleman , in , Pennsylvania,. which , hat! proved most satishictory.to bath' parties. • • - regard to the expediency of north ethers emigrating; to this . State, I 1 would say that abundanCe of testi:ooo, of the . strongest kind c can be iiddfthed both pro sadcontra.' ,Most of those who pave come dissatisfied will be found, however.. to be those:who have madffthe portant move of a change of homes with inadequate inquiry as je what they are to expect here. This la 'no place for mere romance, nothing indeed can be more exquisitely beautiful ',thin some of these' Florida scenes, btit work here is just what, it le, everywhere, ii,hfird, stubborn thing that but,lll es with most 'lnen's inclina tions. w onid .stlitset•no one to come o}llo. LEITER 12C1111 FLOBIDA. PITTSBURGH GAZETTE: - FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 1869. here until he is thoroughly aware, not only that he has hardship to. undergo, but alio what their exact nature is. What to some is a matter scarcely of com plaint, is to others quite intolqable. That livelihoods are made here by , new comers with less cost to muscle and to theseneral constitatiorkthan by farmersat the north, the testimony of multitudes , proves. I have just heard of the arrival hen of the steamer Lonisburgb, direct from New York. She Comes to carry live cattle to the New York market. It is contemplated to keep up a fortnightly line. This will give an idea ,of the capabilities of this country for stock raising. I question whether' Ahem is in the Union a community where better order Is maintained and where better fee:ing pre vails between the different Classes or so ciety than in Florida. The\ freedmen, whatever may be said of their industry' and thrift, are certainly quiet and peace able. It is surprising how different are the representations you will, receive from gentlemen of equal standing, and reared too, under the same political intiuences;• in regard 'to the conduct of this people. My own Conviction is"that if one comes prepared to pay wages in cash, and settle somewhere near their own little home steads, he can command all the labor he wants. They, will riet go'far fro& home on along engagement upon any terra. r do notsee bat they are as respectful and as ready to oblige a friend - Or a stranger as they ever'were. • . But I have gone far past ' the point at Which I should have ,declared myself, as ever, yours, • C. P. 8., Attempted IYiuraersMd Suicide. The particulars of , an exciting affair that almost ended in a double tragedy transpired in lielark,, N. J. ::A well known and wealthy French gentleman, it was reported, had made a determined attempt to take the life of his daughter and her lover, and had afterward at tempted to cut his own throat. On Sat urday morning Mr. Peter F. Sedille, re siding in Railroad avenue, discovered what he thought to be a proof of crimi nality on the part of his daughter and Jorh Conover, who had been paying his addresses to her. On Friday evening, eo over called at the house, and the pair, sitting upon the sofa, had - fallen asleep. They were awakened at daybreak on Sat urday by the footsteps , of the father. The girl, who, it is stated, has always been severly treated, hurried Conover out of the room, and told, him to hide himself in her room up stairs. Bat the fath r's suspicions were aroused end hefoliowed. When he discovered the presence of Con over he went down- stairs, and seizing his daughter, dragged her rip to the room. He then drew a dirk, and attacked both, but Conover, who possesses considerable strength, defended the girl and himself with such vigor that the father was forced out of the room. He then procured a loaded rifle, aimed atConover, and pulled the trigger, but the charge failed to go off. Before he could make another move• meat the father of young Conover enter ed and secured Sedille, while the girl and young Conover escaped from the house. .A.fter Sedille had became calm, the girl returned to the house, and trk d to per suade him of her innocence. But he at tacked her again, this time with a razor, and was straggling with her when the neighbors, alarmed by her cries, came to her rescue. The girl was again removed and Sedille was for some reason &lowed to go at large, no information of his con duct being given to the police. On Sun day he sent for his daughter, and in her presence destroyed his will, in which he had provided for the payment of $20,000 to her upon his death. During the day, it is stated, he made an attempt to take his own life, but was again prevented from executing his "intentions. Itis sta ted that he will be placed in the Lunatic Asylum by his Mends. The Rev. J. C. Fletcher, late of Brazil, now Consul to Oporto, gives tho fol lowing information in a late leclure. A good cup of coffee could not be made by bulling—the best cup goes up in smell to the fourth story of the house, and people should brown and grind their own coffee. There is no way for the tooth and west to get good coffee except to ask for the golden Rio, or gold washed Rio, and when they ask for that they will get what they want. Coffee, should be browned in a cylinder evenly, and not burned. It should be ground, 'about like corn meal, and one table spoonful put in the pot for every cap. One cup of water for every four cups of coffee is enough.:: It should not be boil ed; percolating Is the only Christian way to make coffee, When done, pour one quarter of s:cup eif the decoction in a cop, and 811 up with boiled milk. By , this plan you will have a drink worthy of the gods. Water and coffee have no affi nity for each other; boiled milk only should be used. There were grown in the different countries in the years 1886 87; flacks. Venezuela, . . .. . 193,000 Java, . . . . . . . 240,000 Ceylon, . . . . . 250;600 Costa Rica, . . . .• . 00,000 Guatemala. . . . . . . 80,000 While in Brazil were grown, . 2,090,000 Of which 1.100,000 sacks came to the Baited States. It is also true that the boolus of our Custom. owes show the Importation Of but f i ve ' maks of Mocha from Africa In the past Seven year, The blossom of the coffee plat is like the white jessamlniy, and exhales an aroma worthy of Edev. At the heed waters of La Plata I saw- a„stretch of coffee orch• :aide'. 80 miles 14, eztent. One planter, out of 450 acres of ground, made, clear of all expanses, with 70 negroes, $48,000 in gold. • Bow to ace the' nollpse. , We submit the following eclipse 'calcu lation after deducting the, latitude of one node which is 30 degrees and the other in longitude 80110-410—the equatorial parallax. Letsand it. be the co•ordinates of any point onthe inn's course, and X and W the coordinates of any point on the elliptic curve of the mbon, then we have the following equation!: 1. • 1. lI.—P. Bin. L. COS. DXP. Cos..L. Sin. D. Coe. T. 2. 0.-" P. Co.. L. Sin. T. Solar co-ordinates." , ", - -: '• - 8. W—DX.hl. iiiii. B. 4. X—hi. Cos.- Lunar co-ordinates. ; e , In these. remarkable . equations,. P.. Is the semi• diameter of projection . L. the latitude; I); tlielan's dec 'nation; T. the i i time from apparenrymoran and ' D. repre sents this diversity in; edinittietrbe. , tween aun and moon. at conjunctiva in night ascension, Then wind 'up with this 'continental. equation: (S.al/425( WAY.2...-to the times the eclipse of tbe, sun takes. place next • Saturday, • which will be ratlitt.-12ara - past meridian. . JLDON & KELLY, ntlCtller and . Weida:ale Dealers Is TAMA Lanterns; Chandeliers, AND LAMP COODS. Alp. Wawa AND Lumnoamme onus. BENZINES, &o. N 0.3.47 Wood Street. „ e9:nzt Between 50 and 6th Avenue*. . •• . . S . LABELING ITRUIT : CAN TOP. r iOOLLINS Bt . RIGhT PITTSBURGH, PA.' •now prepted to supply Tinners and Potters. IA is per eel, simple, and 11.11 cheap as the- plain top, having the Mimes of the various grafts stamped upon the cover, radiating from the center • and an index or pointer stamped upon the top of the can. , . . b Clearly, Distinctly and Permanently - • \ \ILA-13W; • • by merely placing the name of the fruit the can contains opposite the inter and sealWr in the customary manner. NO preserver of fruit or, good housekeeper one any other alter,..crnce seeing C. ' `PIPES. OBIBMBY 'TOPS. &c. WATER PIPESk , ,'• • CRIBINEIT Tar/3 ♦ large assortment, • HENRY U. (X)4INS. ap141b37 Sd Avieee.near Smithfield St. Coffee, GAS PIXT FRUIT CAN TOPS. RY GOODS, TRIMMINGS. • c:6 6 0 1 1 ms bit el w o m Eli to 41 0 M 02 ;4 002 fki © r, r l • CD 0 3 w a l k . 13:1 v.* ‘,O C 3 Ems 1.4 pi t VD IN gat lea SOUR GOODS NBV & CARLISLE'S No. 27 INfth Avenue, Dress ?tienttars and llnttona. Embrolderles mid 'Aces. Ribbons and Viewers. Elataand Bonnet s. Glove 'lnns and much Oorseta. New Styles elm ler Warta Parasei.—sa the new etyma ban and Bain Umbrellas. - Hoslery—tke best English makes. stems for `Berets* Seeddets HIM." t4prLtut and Bumper under Wear, BolaAieres ter the Besets Patent 13bdP0 edi° lats.••Loelcgrood,s ”Irrtnig,"_ ••West lad," ••date,"*.et •lileXena, 1 . ••Dahy, ,, and other styles. Dealers ;lapelled with the shove at MANUFACTURERS' PRICES. MAORTIM. & CARLISLE, 10. 27. FIFTH AVENUE SII3NIER GOODS REDUCED RATES. World call attention to the lame reductlon we have made . llk Parasols and San 'Umbrellas, SHLLING kT RUE PRICE C4)."°4 n ETER T U . LOVIE%_ SClMlffitc IaNDERWZAB, All at Very Low Priops. cot,Vl io tiViF 78 ' ifoo ntnt4 P --W1Pt314'421 ItARSIETLLICS. LlZ4Vi cionts, . WB4II (of stl'klady.) rit/N33B` BUTTONS, raisaatmatia. MACUM, GLYDE &fa 78 & 80. Narket: bto Ik 0411811.81M!Olet rt liiioLl6l4Za DMUS £8 Foreign and Donsfttie %Mil . Nem wicummyrisum "lirsi‘rabli" AMMO*: rA, HAIR AND PERFIIMERT. llinr, PECS., 011 N AIItENTAIL By gAut'"ftrta A l D tha lli n g t blib ll ' i% _bled Mee near But rit w at m ent o r i. a . th.Ai" 1 4: 44 01./aLat Aan c alli. lll . WIMPS. elJamy a voi A c i ialritir6 rgift a Cll4 Trtf rrts IVadles, of "oentiegies I Clatellt a the mates% assaaari -', it , oar H.ORZTE & CO. OFFER THE BALLECE OF THEIR SO3M STOCK 1!313 Greatly Redueed Prices. - TO MAKE ROOM FOR. FILL FERCUASES, .Ifferino'Shirts, 80 cents and up. Jean Draivers,7 cents and up. Gents' Linen Collars, Slightly Boiled,/mai price• ; '..lfith,,Ttes,and Bows at much less than:coif:, HANDFLEILCHIEES. Ladies' Hemmed Handher chiefs, 10 cents. • Ladies' Linea Handkerchiefs 8 cents and up. Shear Linen Lawn Hander chiefs, 50 cents—an Extra Bar data. Gents' German Linen Hand kerchiefs, 25 cen's and up, WHITE GOODS. Piques, Swisses,Jaconete. • Xainsook;;;parred and Vain, AT A GREAT ° REDUCTION. N Plain and Ribbed COt ‘ tem. Lisle, Silk and Balbrlegan Ho • \ siery. Gents' Aferino, Super Stout and Fine Cotton Half Hose. AT TOE VERY LOWEST PRICE GLOVES- A larva assortment of ALTKANDRE,and other eliding makes In the most DESIRABLE SHADES. Wide Ruffled .Linen Collars and Cuffs. Colored Trimmed Linen Sets. Handsome Sash Ribbons, plain and fancy. Bow and Narrow Ribbons. Ladies' Neck Ties and Scarfs, snuck less than cost. ". Corsets, of beat French make, greatly reduced. Hoop Skirts, anew lot Just re.. coined, includingextra waists and lengths. A good assortment of Trave/- ing'Satchets. Silk and Alpaca Umbrellas. POrigee Silk Parasols. Silk and Linen Fans. • Dress Trimmings and. Fringes. Buttons, Ornaments., &c., OFFERED VERY CHEAP. An Immense Rednition lIILLINERY NOBS, HATS, BONNETS, I:c., At Hall the Former Rates. WlLLancEivsms - MONDAYJAugIist .2d A SPLENDID LINE OP HAMBURG EMBROIDERIES; WHOLESALE DEEMTHEA T T. Our Stock In Ws department ;will ths loud complete to DOMESTIC AND STAPLE GOODS, Suspenders. Hosiery, • • Handkerchiefs, • Iderilo.Underwear , •Bralds, Combs, =lll Buttons, ;A% ; . Sp oo l .Cotton, Pawl'. collars and_soaCnlTs, INOTIONS, Lowest Market Bate& 77 AND 79 IA; MOIR BM isee SPECIAL SALE OF CARPETS We offer at Be tall, for THiltri DAYS Or IC a line of New and Lltiolce Patterns English Tapestry, .Brussels, Ingrar, and Other Carpets, • LT LESS TRAY COST OF IId7ORTATIOi and our entire Brock atrices which snake It object, to buy thls month, as these goods hal never oeen offered so low: Our Store will close at 5 P. X. until Septemb'. first. McFAIILAhIik& COLLINS. 71 tad 73 FIFTH AVENUE. MB CARPET'S, Floor Oil Cloths, ma.A.aruneriv - Ea.6 Window Shades, AT LOW PRICE§ We offer many of our goods ranch below Spring's urines. Tbooe needing go - ods in line can save money by buying at once. BOVARD, ROSE di CO tl MYTH AVENUE. irtdaT EW CWit,PETS 3u23.e,.196 9 . E We are now opening =assortment unparalle In We Clt7 of FIN UT i • VELVETS' BIIIISSEIS 1111E-PIA The Yen Neirest Designs, Of or own recent Importation and selectedfs eastern nautufacturers. MEDIUM AND LOW PBJ.CI IiNTGORALISTSI VERY SUPEBIOB QUALITY AND COLORS; An Extra Quality of 'Rag Cali, We ere now eelllnginatty of the shove at WEATLY- BE.DIICKD' PBICI 'CULL N BROS., Jro. 51 FIFTH 4.lf!"EJri OLIVER WILINTOCI &U HAVE MST RELIVED FINE . SELECTION d. itUlrsonms, TAPESTRY BRESSEL 1 THREE PLY AND! INGRAIN CARPET, THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT 0, WiIITE,CHEcK. & FAN( REATTDIGIS, FOR SUMMER WE.&, IN THE CITY. STOCK FULL IN ALL DEPARTMSi OLIVER , NeCLINTOCH & A 3 FIFTH ,AITE.NIIE COAL.AND COKE. DICKSON,OALI COAL!! COAL!!! •: - C • .., STEWART & CO:, - . Saving removed their Mice to 4 NO. 56 LIBERTY SULFA .., ... . . 4 iIA at/ / Moat 1014)EXCOND BMOC, are ncwms_ -d to thraish rood YOUEti _pra 'MUM 1.11N.P. /CIIIT Mal.. OBBLACK. V lowest ,raoreet price. the ir ,--1 Ail ogees - tett et °Moe; or eadrett• thorn' 1 Wank th e resit, will be ettend protest's. ",DR. , , : I IDI : ~' cONTINVES 4 TO ' TREAT 4 private diseases.. Syphilis in all Its torn. ur nary diseases, and =eel:recta of mereur comV_etelY eradicatetit llitent=torrbes or ."I sal weakness' end Impotency, resulting self-airopeorotlter causes, and which some of the following e ff ects, as blo , weaknest, initgestion, consumptio n. av .. society* nontanlintot, dread of future m tomtit mentoll. indolence. nocturnal Mb and fina ll y so prostrating *be sexual systen'l render nuuttule nnsaUstsetory, and the— improdent, are permanently enrol. Per so '', dieted, with these or any other delicate, tut t or long standing constitutional complaint a give the Doctor a Mal; be never ftils. r- A particular sttentiongiven to all 'Female; Plaints, Leuttorrhea or Whitea. Telling, It .; nation or, Ulceration of the Womb. Ort - i prutitis, Amenorrhoea. llenorrbastia, Dy • norrbees, and blarility or Barrenness, are f. 41.• ed with the greatest success. - It is self.evidentthat n physician who ca: , . himself exclusively to thot study of a curtail:., of-diseases and treats thousands of elutes ',..- year must acquire greater skill= that gm than one in general practice. f - i The Doctor publishes a medical Damph; % pages that, gives a iull-exposiUon orye% An wive diseases, that can . be had free 1C,, , , or mail for two stamps, in sealed cave; 1 Wart entiemas contains tnitructbin to t-,4 filmed. and enabling thew to determine th y else nature of =sir eomplaints. The establishment, comprising ten . -,. YOIMEIS, la central. when it is not convent `> q visit the city. the Doctor's opinion can -', , tainel by givitnt a written statement of thr; 1 end medwines can be Ibrwarded by man w;,. press. In some =shunts. however. a p* f; examination Is ablolutely nucessary. w' '". others4laUF Personal attention Is relit ire, ~,, Mr the acoonnnodation t feu= patients In amrtMentsconnectellwith the office that, aq tided with every rim:Mito that is cakulif 4, promote reaaterT, including uredicated .--, oaths. All: .wi p ed 7 si lp ram tiou p s b a ie re ta rt a r t e o pave me : i t - , I fr t t : resei l fb alni r w t ttai w is o b : t e rik e ta ny :L i : ttuirl'intallestierslw. tobt„' landmiAll W. to AI% . Dam tic k ow LEM% Dint COW& ilOnichs Pittman,. - --t II (Second Floor) Da
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers