The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, August 09, 1869, Image 2

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    121
Eittiligt Gairth.
"BY THE SEA:"
ere is a new version of a "Home by
Deep Heaving Sea," as performed at
watering places :
TMVOR—Oh giVe me a home by the sea,
. Where hotels have &number one bar,
Whe girls are so dashing =Tee,
An like to get awarfrom ma ma:
Wh e billiards and faro abonn -
A d you don't go to bed until hree:
Oh here's nothing the country ound
, .L. ke a home ortne deep hem , sea.
I OPE A.NOO . give me a home by the sea, '
here hops are as common a 4 t;
W ere : von may meet a trat-classpartf,
d are sure lo be able to flirt;
O 1 Ocean is perfectly sweet, t
no. as lively as lively can be:
W th newdresses—there's naught so
- - - oomplote • .
s a home-by - the deep heaving sea.
Tzison-011 ive me your loVe by sL sea:
i3OPRAN..I-1 Ott really must ask my mamma,
Tzwoit—MTh nto be any own br de you agree?
tiorttago—l you'll leave coif that horrid cigar.
TENOR—the I'llsend to New tor k for the rlng
-13ornANO—A large diamond of course. it must
be—
BOTH—Let us l•ve, every year, after spring,
In a h -use Dv the deep heaving sea.
EPHEMERIS,
—Fechter is coming.
—Minnie Hauck is in Moscow.
—Portugal wants an ocean cable.
—Bonfauti has become an orphan.
=Stewart's store is growing larger.
—530,000,000 is China's yearly opium
bill. •
—The Worrell sisters cleared 415,000
last year.
--Tuna; calls the peerage a book all
title pages.
—Nova Scotia is emigrating to the
United States.
—Adelina Patti has aged fearfully dur
ing the past year.
—Gavazzi talks of a fearful crisis com
ingsoon in Italy.
Tomahawk says the way to kill time
is to shoot every day.
=Saratoga has thieves, exclusive of
those frbm Wall street.
Some snob has called Long Branch
the Brighton of America.-
= A.fine beer, it is said, can be brewed
from old boots in Cincinnati.
—The Tenor Carrier broke his neck
by a recent fall in Bordeaux.
—Seventy stores on Broadivay are
empty. High rents sometimes can't be
reached. .
—Chang, the Chinese giant who made
such a sensation in London, is now in
New YOrk.
—East Prussian crops are said to be
good, and fears of a further continuance
of the famine are abating.
—Men have been , so scarce in some
parts of the country, that women have
been working in the grain fields.
—lda ,Lewis is now a heroine, but
when she rescued the two soldiers from
drowing she was a she-rowin'.—.N. Y.
\Express.
--Stewart's working girls'_ hotel is to
be a first class one, which will not prac
tice any of the common boarding-house
stew-arts.
—Relations between England and
America—The mother-in-taw and deceas
ed wife's sister are on their way to New
—Exposure to tbe sun, tinder ordinary
circumstances, results in tan. We have
not heard that any similar exposure dur
ing the eclipse resulted in black and tan.
—The eating at Mount Desert Island
is said . o) - be horrible. Hash; fish and a
pudding'made of pats and molasses are
mentioned as constituting the bill of fare.
—Why do not morp peimle learn glove
making; almost any number would be
sure of employment, as the Boston Post
says glove-makers are always in need, of
hands.
—The second volume of M s. Wm. Mor
ris's Earthly Ps.radize will be published
in November. /t is said that this volume
will Wake this the longest poem ever
printed.
---Olive Logan's letters go from bad to,
worse. The next thing may be to have
them bound in yellow and put up in
wrappers by which postmasters may
learn to distinguish them. -
—Muehlbich das decided not to 'come
over this year. Her decision Is a wise
one; if she bad Come last year she would
have been a lioness of the first rank, but
now her fame has faded perceptibly.
Stanley, of Alderly, who died
recently, is succeeded by his eldest son,
who a few years ago abjured Cluistianity
and embraced Mohontmedanism.. This is•
said to be the first instance of a Mussul.
man member of the English House of
Lord S-
—An English pickpocket .was recently
arrested at Homburg, as he was in the
act of taking 15;000 trances from the
pocket of Mustapha - Paysil Paella, the
brother of the Viceroy of Egypt, who
was jus tleaving one of the gaming
tables.:
—The dying lepers at the hospital at
the Siuidwich Islands danced the native
hula hula at'a ball given in the building
to the patients. Many of the dancers
were, so nearly decomposed that they
dropped in fragments;andwere picked up
and carried off: in baskets, piecemeal.
—St. Louis is to have'ti fine new Post
office, and consequently arrogantly de
mands all' the government buildings and
the government too. We might like to
movethe Capitol from scorching Wash
ington, but hardly to broiling, dusty. St.
Louis. There seems to be no imniediate
necessity for making an acrobatic spec
tacle of ourselves by leaping ',from the
frying pan into the fire.
—Doubtless the numerous friends of
E: M. Stanton, in this vicinity, will
recognize at once thefollowing tallble
and ;:clutrasteristie pen 'portrait of -him'
frDill that most moderate of journale,'ltlie
Memphis Avalanche: "The murderous
two-legged hyena, every fibre of whose
vile carcass is saturated with gore. hie
jaws dripping with crimson froth, reek
ing with the blood of half a million fel
low-beings, sacrificed to the tiolochs of
hellish ambition, fanaticism and hate. ll
—lt is proposed that Mr. Jefferson
Davis' admirers shall buy him a country
seat near Louisville. It would be a much
neater compliment if they would purchase
one of the little German sovereignties,
Say Re.uss•Lobenstein, and present it to
Mr. D. This would show that although
they could not help him to a mighty Am
erican empire, they did what they could.
The only drawback to this would prob
ably be that the new prince •would want
to be called Jefferson 1., and the'peciple
of Reuss•Lobenstein like their rulers to be
called Heinrich, but Heinrich XCV.
would not sound so bad after all, giving
the idea of the descendant of a long line
of sovereign ancestors.
Hew Lovely Ladles Look In the Salt Sur
of the Sad Sea.
(Long Branch Letter to Indianapolis Journal
About 10.1. o'clock the white flag is
raised, wldch is the signal for bathing,
when preparations for that rare sport are
immediately commenced, and small par
ties start for the booths on the beach; these
booths are mere board houses, about four
feet square, just large enough for a well
developed crinoline to get in. They re
semble pig-pens more than dressing
rooms for ladies and gentlemen, but they
are all alike, and answer the purpose.
You will see a fashionably attired'lady or
gentleman enter one of these narrow
dens, and in a few moments emerge
minus all the I"toggery" that contrib
utes to make up the inviting
exterior, clad in a flannel jacket and
pants, the latter coming only to the an
kle, generally in their bare feet, with
an old straw hat tied down in the most
ludicrous and uninviting manner to pre
vent wearers from being sunburned, the
reflection of the sun on the water being
quite severe. Bathers when dressed for
the bath all look alike; but those clad in
such meagre habiliments for the first time
are generally nervous, and act very much
as if they were ashamed of themselves,
and glance down at their pants, especially'
if they are ladies, in a manner that is
highly aniusing to all veteran salts.
They venture in the water cautiously and
not unlike young dticks, but finally, after
being buffeted "-and tossed about by the
surf for a half hour, or so, they invaria
bly put on a bold face and march out of
the water as if they were "no novices."
Here is an excellent opportunity for a
single gentleman matrimonially inclined
to see what amount of frauds -there are
upon the market. The young lady who
may appear to possess a handsome figure,
and is always gotten up on the expansive
principle, with a profusion of false hair,
hoops, pads, and all the paraphernalia
known to female genius and penetration,
may prove to be a mere -skeleton when
she is disentangled and 'extricated from
the mysterious and complicated concerns
which surround her. ' While upon the
other hand, if the lady is inclined to em
bonpoint and is laced up daily with a block
and tackle in order to make her waist ap
pear small, or compress her proportions
into an unreasonably small quantity of
dry goods, the fact will reveal itself the
moment she is well saturated with the
surf. She can take none of her "make
up" into the water with her. The ocean is
honest. While the bathing-dress will not
adhere to the skin, it- will do so
readily to_any other substance, like a cor:
set or I shan't tell what else, for the
reason that I am not au fait in such mat
ters. But the woman is before you, de
void of all deformities, and you can form
an adequate idea of what you will be
called upon. to disburse your stamps for,
should you enter into a matrimonial al
liance with her. It would be a great
consolation to know these things in ad
vance. The water is a great leveler of
distinction. It treats all of its patrons
precisely alike; the rich'and the poor, -the
strong and the weak, arkall swayed to and
fro, knocked down orthrown upon the
beach by its- resistless.waves ' as if they
were mere blocks of wood. Every one
is in the best of humor, and if any un
lucky novice in sea bathing should swal
low a'mouthful of salt water and stop to
cough, and the succeeding wave take him
amidships, and send him sprawling to
ward the shore, his mouth wide open, to
receive a fresh supply, the crowd, as well
as the hundreds on the beach, will shout
with delight.
EDUCATING Gists.—lt appears from a
recent report on technical instruction in
Germany and Switzerland, that there is
an institute at Vienna at which the
. daughters of officers with limited means
and large families are educated, so as to
be able to take situations as governesses
in wealthy_ families. The pupils are sev
enty-eat in number, and the expense of
the establishinentis defrayed by the Gov
ernment and private benefactions. Girls
are admitted from six to eight years, and
remain until they are twenty. The pu
pils are distributed into four classes, and
each clam has two divisions. The direct
ress of the establishment has under her
orders four sub-directresses, a mistress
for needlework, and a mistress for teach.
trig' housekeeping.
TUE Detroit Rost says there is a family
living in the Third ward of that city, con
sisting of a mother; two daughters and a
grand-son, whose ties of relationship are
slightly mixed. eldest daughter was
married.a few years since . : to her 'own
grand-father (since deceased), and by him
she had a son; hence, as that child is the
son of his grandfather, he is brother to
his , grand-mother and uncle to his mother.
The other daughter has lately espoused
her mother's brother, consequently our
hero is uncle to his uncle, and putty gen
erally related to the whole family.
To PRESERVE Crll FLowsns.—rat
them in a vase or deep plate, filled ; with
water, then cover the same with a' glass,
such;as is peed in "apiaries, having a small
hole at the top. as the air must not be en
tirely excluded, but sufficient ventilation
given to allow the-, damp to escape. A.
dish of wild flowers thus has been
kept more than ten days in perfect beauty,
making fresh buds and ; ; epanding every
day.
BAPTIST brother—l don't like your
church government. It, isn't simple
enough. There is too much machinery
about it. Methodist brother: It is true,
we have more machidery' than you; but
then, you see, it denstlake near so mud;
water•to milt; ' .• •
PITTSBURGH GAZETTE: 1410I9)AY, AUGUST 9, 1869,
lbeAroitlei? Creed.
The precise origin of this simplest and
most ancient of alt the creeds is involved
in some uncertainty, and has long been:a
matter of• dispute among learned theo
logians. It is at teat certain that
its universal use in the Church may be
traced back; if not to the apostolic age_
itself, yet to that immediately succeeding;
and there is a very old tradition that
each of the twelve articles of the creed
was composed by an apostolic author.
Itita said the twelve:assembled in coun
cil before dispersing themselves to •
preach the Gbspel throughout the world,
to triune 'the symbol or watcliwbrd &-
the Christian Church, and it will be in
teresting to our readers to know the
apostle to whom each article is ascribed.
The tradition is as. follows:
St. Peter—"l believe in God the
Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and
earth."
St. Andrew—" And in Jesus Christ his
only Son oar Lord."
St. James the Great—" Who was con.
ceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the
Virgin Mary."
St. John--" Suffered under Pontius
nate. was crucified, dead and buried."
St. Thomm—"He descended into hell."
[or, "He went into a place of departed
spirits," which are considered as words
of the same meaning, "the third day he
arose from the dead."
St. James the Less—"He ascended into
into heaven, and sitteth on the right
hand a God the Father Almighty."
St. Phillip—'-"From thence he shall
come to judge the quick and the dead."
St. Bartholomew—"L believe in the
Holy Ghost."
St. Matthew— , 'The Holy Catholic
Church, the Cominunion of Saints."
St. Simon—" The forgiveness of Sins."
Bt. Judas Thaddeus—"ResurreCtion of
the body."
St. Matthias—'',And the Life everlast
ing—Amen."
Negroes and the Chinese
"Russell," who is writing letters to the
Boston Traveller from the Battle Fields
of the South, furnishes the following in
telligent view of negro sentiment toward
the coming Chinese. He says :
When we were at Corinth, Miss., the
question of introducing Chinese labor
and driving out the negroes, was agitated
by the planters, One old darkey with
whom we fell into conversation seemed
to take it much at heart, and inquired of
us if we supposed that "dam Chinese
mens would come, nohow." We told
him we thought that some of them might
come, but did not think that their work
would fill the place of negro labor.
"It's jis nere, muss," said he, throw
ing his long arms about in a wild way, "I
hain't seen nary Chinese mens in ail dis
life. But I've heerd dat dey has tails like
de alligators on de toy ob de back side ob
dar heads, and dat dey jist says to dis
ting be thou doned and it am dun, and
Ise* ob de pinnion dat de Chinese mens
dese secesh are atter am de berry debil
htsself what am ter lib on de earth mor'n
a thousand year. He can't come nigh
unto die chile, no how. I'll fight him.
I'll scratch him, I'll shoot him,
I'll fro
eberyting I heti in his face, I'll trod on
his tail, i'll bab my miff wid him if he
turns to brimstone and burns ebery har
from off my ole head, dat I will. I'll
take dis yar ole hoe an I'll jab him afoe
and ahind, and so dorter do de whole ob
de humane family an expostulate him
from dis par land. What kin de Chinese
man do wid dis hard rile. Nuffin what.
ever. De corn will curl up, de cotton
will singe- afoe him as dough he was a,
coal of libbin, shinin fire!"
"But how•do your neighbors feel about
it?" inquired we.
'tor, lor! Dey hab jist tarmined ter
meet at der ole meetin Rouse an dar or
ganize a culled army. And we'se gewin
to choose de preacher capn, and den we'll
go inter 'em prain and preachin."
"But what if praying and preaching
will not .do the work?" said we.
"Why den we take de whole subject
nter our own bans, an' we'll bump 'em
inp an' down till de day of-doein — if dey
don't lebe us in peace - on de land of our
forefadders.—Dey is Imps of the debil,
an! . -our parson knows it, an de sooner
dey be terminated de better fur all pas
sons ob color. De Lord hab mercy on all
dat come , inter dis county! Dey'll be
busted, no how.
A New Sensation at Bedford mprings.
The Bedford Inquirer says: Wonderful
stories are afloat concerning ghosts that
are seen in an old dilapidated building in
St. Clair township. Crowds of people
assemble there daily to witness the phe
nomenon. A number of visitors attend.
ing the Springs have gone out to see,
and curious as it may seem, testify to the
reports current, "that human forms are
seen at all hours of the day, and though
they do not talk, they assume menacing
attitudes, and gesticulate with a stick or
cane." A strange feature of the affair is,
that these apparitions are only seen in
day time and that all persons cannot see
them; of this class, are persons of blue
eyes. The house is inhabited by an old
lady and her daughter, who, though ter
ribly affrighted at the spectres, have not
decamped. We will not attempt to ex
plain the cause of this phenomenon, for
we have not seen it, and though our eyes
are black, we think we would be classed
with the blue, for our faith in ghosts is
ghostish.
- Watering Horses Without Stopping.
A Jersey genius has invented a device
for watering horses when traveline or at
work, by which their thirst may be as
suaged without stopping, it , appears to
be more particularly designed for the .
benefit of the draught animals of city
street cars. Thii bit of the bildle or head
stall is made holloW, and has attached to
it a fleilble tube connected With a tank
carried in-or on the vehicle. .).3y pulling
ikstring the water is caused to flow into
the bit, and thence through a suitable
orifice into the horse's mouth. This beats
the apparatus for filling loconiotive tanks
without stopping. •
A CORREBPQNDENT writes Of Miss Brad
don's illness, as follows, "Reference to
sensational writers reminds me of the
continued mental alienation of the • prin•-
cess of sensational writers, Miss Braddon.
Several months ago I learned with sor
row that her mind had become seriously
affected, and that it had been found ne
cessary to' place her under special medi
cal 'care and partial restraint. Remem
bering the immense amount she had writ;
ten, and, the marvelousls sensational
character of her works, ; was not sur
prised at .stich a pidnfOl result.• I• am
happy to hear that repose and kind care
have done much towards her restoration,.
but she is forbidden to write; and although
'her passion for • writing is still great, this
'prohibition's very rarely relaxed."
GAS FIXTURES
WELDON dE - KELLY,
Manntkettrers mad Wholesale Dealers in
Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers,
AigD LAMP COODS.
Also, CARBONAND LUBRICATING MB,
N 0.147 WOod Street.
Between s t h and 6th Avenues
FRUIT CAN TOPS.
• SEDE:LABEtI - NG
. -
FIITTIT-CAN TOP •
• COLLINS S.: WRIGHT. ••
•
I _ •
- •
•
We are now prepared to supply Tinners and
Potters. It Is perfect, simple, and sae cheap as
the plain top, having the names of the various
Fruits stamped upon the cover, radiating from
the center. and artindez or pointer stamped upon
the top of the can,
It Is Clearly, Distinctly and Permanently
by •merely piscine the name of the fruit the
can contains opposite the pointer and seallng In
the customary manner. 2.70 preserver of fruit or
goOd housekeeper will use any other after once
seeing t. • mh2s
UW , ZMil e. :, l =jl=
WATER. PIPES,
OIUMNET TOPS
A large assortment,
HENRY H. COLLINS,
apl4:hr7 Rd Aventte,near Smithfield St.
DRY GOODS, 'TRIMMINGS.
VA
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cir 14
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.12 ga
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bisiw t
M o C m )
O
440 °I4
9414 111
I=l 4g
E-7 gll3 P 4
c=• 0-0 EDI E'
"e, rill
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mai tri 01
n
ND W SUMMER GOODS
AT • •
•
MACRUI & CARLISLE'S
No. 27 Fifth. Avenue,
Dress Trimmings and Buttons.
Embroideries and Laces.
Ribbons and Flowers. 4
Hats and Bonnets.
clove lining and French Corsets.
New Styles siraalty's Skirts.
Parasols—all the new styles.
Son and Rain Umbrellas.
Hosiery—the best English makes.,
Agents for "Harris' Seamless Kids."
Spring. and Summer underwear,
Sole Agents ior the Bemla Patent Shape Col
lars. "Lockwood's "Irvine," "West End."
"Elite," Stet "Dickens," "Derby," and other
styles.
Dealers supplied with the above at
MANUFACTURERS' PRICES.
MAORMA & CARLISLE,
INTO. 27
FIFTH AVENUE.
my 4
•
CARII, iticCANDLESS & CO.,
(Late Wilton. Carr G C 0.,)
WHOLESALE InALl3ll tj
Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods,
• N0._74 WOOD
STITT REET'.
PA.
Third door above Diamond alley,
WALL PAPERS
WALL PAPER.
THE OLD PAPER STORE IN A NEW PLACE,
W. P. MARSHALL'S
NEW WALL PAPER STORE,
191 Liberty Street,
(MIME RARER T,)
SPRING GOODS ARRIVING DAILY. mhS
DECORATIONS—In Wood.
Marble, and Fresco imitations for Wails
anu Ceilings of Dining- Rooms, Halls, &e a , as
No. 107 Market street,
Jr/7- Jowls R. HUGHES HBO;
-
STRIPED GOLD PAPERS for
C./axiom at N 0.107 Market street:
. j 127 JOSEPH R. HUSHES & BRO.
NAIR AND PERFTMEEIRY.
ILOHN - PEOK ORNAMENTAL
HAIR WOR KER AND PRIAPHISHR. No.
Third street, near Steltbilei& Pittsburgh.
Alwak j on hanu, aireneral assortment of La.
diesi
_RANDS,_
_OblrltLls; Gentlemen's
WIG& OPER& &CALF& GUARD CHAIN&
saAegaiTg. Ao. A. good Price In Crib
Rill, be given for law SM• HAIR...
Ladles* and, Gentlemen's Hair. Cutting done
n cw neatest manner.
ARCHITECTS. •
BAIiR &
raurr.HOUSE Assocuerxori BUILDING%
Nos. I and 4 S:; Otair Ettrett, PlttstiOrgh. Ps.
%Motif attention given to this destgutrig and
Midi= Ef
. OOTTET RtloBl% and PURL] C
8111L-OrNu
,lITEBSTER, fieVßEET.—Notice
v is hereby given that the Viewers report on
,widening Websterstriet, City of Allegbenl, bee
been hied in the / Pistriet Coort, at No. 881
July Tert4/869, tol confirinatio 11.
J. 0. BIeCONSS,
Solicitor.
3729:M79
TRIMMINGS, NOTIONS, &O.
HORNE & Cp.
OFFER THE BALANCE OF THEIR
SUMMER STOCK
9 &o.
AT \
Greatly Reducediri,e,s.
ROOM FOR FALL PURNIA-SES,
Merino Shirts, 50 cents and up.
Jean Drawers, 75 cents and up.
Gents' Linen Co llars, Slightly
Soiled,half price. -
Neck Ties and Bows 'at much
less than cost.
HANDKERCHIEFS..,
Ladies' Hemmed Handker•
chiefs, 10 cents, •
Ladies' Linen Handk‘Tchiels.
8 cents and up.
Shear Linen Lawn Handker
chiefs, 50 cents—an Extra. Bar
gain.
• Gents' German Linen /land
kerchiefs, 25 cene and up, •
WHITE GOODS.
Piques, Swisses,Jticonets.
Nainsooks, Barred and Plain,
AT A GREAT REDUCTION.
3EICCPMEMPLIE".
Plain and Ribbed Cotton. -
Lisle, Silk and Begbriggan Ho
siery.
Gents' Merino,Super Stout and
Fine Cotton Half Hose.
IT THE VERY LOWEST PRICES.
- lilll3o OGrILCYVJE S.
A large assortment of ALEXANDRE.and other
leading 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.
: Ladie.s' Neck Ties and. Scarfs,
much less than cost.
Corsets, of best French make,
greatly reduced.
Hoop Skirts, a new lOt just re
ceived. including extra waists and
lengths.
A good assortment of Travel
ing Satchels.
Silk and Alpaca Umbrellas.
,Pongee Silk Parasols.
Silk and Linen Fans.
Dress Trimmings and Fringes.
Buttons, Ornaments, &c,,
OFFERED VERY CHEAP.
An Immense Reduction
`IIIILLiNERY - WEBS,
HATS, BONNETS, &c.,
At Ralf the Former Rates.
, WILL RECEIVE ON
MONDAY, August 2d,
HAMBURG EPABROIDER'ES.
WHOLESALE DEPARTMENT.
Our Stock in OW department will be found
completein
DOMESTIC Ali D ` STAPLE GOODS,
Suspecders \
Hosiery,
Handkerchiefs,
- -
Merino Underwear,
Braids, Combs,
Buttons, , •?,
Spool Cottofi, \ '
Paper Collars 4
and Cnffs,
Soaps, , erfumeries,
AND EVERYTHING IN NOI t,
Ng, AT TILE
Lowest Market \Bates.
77 3 AN D 79 MARKET IREET.
TO MAKE
A SPLENDID LINE OF
CARPETS,
sT T—T La -4 1 7 %, leg.
SPECIAL SALE OF
CARPETS,
We offer at Retail, for THIRTY DAIS ONLY,
a fine of New and Choice Patterns
English T a agsg er ß e russel . : : Ingrain,
AT LEES THAN COST OF IMPORTATIONS
and. our entire stock at prices which make it an
object to buy this. month, as these goons hays
never oeen offered so low.
Our Store will close at 5 P. N. until September
first.
ReFABLAND & COLLINS.
No. 71 sad 73 FIFTH AVENUE,
jy9:d&T
CAR PETS,
Floor Oil Cloths,
G
Window Shades,
AT LOW PRICES.
We - offer many ol'Har goods ranch below last
Spring's prices. Those needing goods In our
can saye money by buying at once.
BOVARD, ROSE t CO.,
21 FIFTH AVENUE.
incder
NEW CARPETS !
arlarie, 18€5120.
We are now openlng an assortment unparalleled
In this city of FINEST
VELVETS BRUSSELS THREE-PLYS,
The Very Newest Beggs%
Of our own recent Importation and selectedfrom
eastern manufacturers.
ItEDIL'X AND LOW .PRICED
TlNTGrrit
VERY SUPERIOR
QUALITY AND COLORS.
An Extra Quality of Rag Carpet.
We are now selling many of the above at
GREATLY REDUCED PRICES.
IrCILLIIii BROS.,
..ro. 51 FIFTH 4 FEJrUE,
jei2
OLIVER iI'CLINTOCK & CO.
HATE JUST RECEIVED A
FINE . SELECTION OF
BRINSELS,
TAPESTRY BRUSSELS
THREE PLY AND
INGRAIN CARPETS.
THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF
WHITE, CHECK & FANCY
, MATTINGrS,
FOR SUMMER WEAR,
IN THE CITY.
STOCK FULL IN ALL DEPARTMENTS
MI
OLIVER IicCLINTOCK & CO'S.
A 3 FIFTH AVENUE
COAL AND COKE.
()UAL: COAL!: COAL!!!
DICKSON, STEWART & CO.,
Having removed theft Office to
NO. 567 LIBERTY STREET,
(Irately City Flour 11) SECOND }MOOS.
axe now prepared to furnish good YOUGH2O.
GHILNY LUMP, NUT COAL 01118 LACK, at the
Lowest morket price.
All orders lett at their once, or addreued to
them through the mall, will be attended to
promptly.
DR. WEIGITTTE.II,
ugONTINUES TO TREAT ALL
private diseases. Syphilis in all its forms, all
nary dis eradi cat ed : e effects of mercury are
completely Spermatorrhea or nem!.
nal Weakness and Impotency, resulting from
self-abuse or other causes, and which producea
some of the following effects, as blotches, bodily
weakness, indigestion, consumption aversion to '
society, unmanliness, dread of fu ture events '
loss of memory. indolence, nocturnal endssionS: •
and finally so prostrating the sexual system as to
render marriage unsatisfactory, and therefore
Imprudent, are permanently cured. Persons at•
flitted wittheater any other delicate, Intricash
or long standing constitutional complaint sho
give the Doctor a trial; he never this.
A particular attention_given to all Female com. ! i•
plaints, Leucorrhea or Whites. Falling. Infiam. .-;
within or Ulceration of the Womb, Ovaries,
pruritic, Amenorrhoea. litenorrhania, Dysmen.
norrhoesoindetertUty or Barrenness, are treat
ed with the greatest success.
It Is self evident that a physician who confine'
himself exclusively to the study of a certain clea''
of diseases and treats thousands of cases every
year must acquire greater skill in that specialty
than one in general practice. •
The Doctor ;publishes a medical pamphlet cd
fifty pages that Orel A full exposition of venereal
and private diseases, that can be had free at office
or by mall for two stamps, in Sealed envelopes.
Every sentence contains Instruction to the at.
Metedand enabling them to determine the pre
cise n ature of their complaints.
The establishment, comprising ten ample
rooms, la central. When It is not convenient t o visit the city, the Doctor's opinion can be ob
tainel by giving a written statement of the case,
and medicines can be forwarded by mail or ex
press. In some instanees, however, a personal
'examination is absolutely necessary, while In
'others daily personal attentloh is rewired, and
for the accommodation 1 f such Patients there are
apartments connected with the office that a. , 6 pro
vided with, every requisite that is calculated to
promote recovery,' including medicated' vapor
baths. All prescriptions are 'prepared In the
Doctor's own laboratory, under his personal an
wselmon. lledicm pamphlets at °Mee tree, or
failed,
mall for two stamps. No matter who share
noted, read what he says. Hours 61 A.M. to 8 POI.
Stiniims 12 at. to SP. it, 011los,No. 9 WI'LlB
bT99ET, (near Court Nona%) rittaberim b - kos • A
(Second Floor).