In ftitlittrutO Oalfh A BLIND MAN'S FIRESIDE. Talk to me,•oh ye eloquent flames, Gossips and comrades tint • Nobody knowl me. poor and blind, • That sit in your merry shine. Nobody knows me nut my dog: A friend I've never seen, But that comes to my call, and loves me For the sympathies between. 'Tie pleasant to bear in the cold, dark night, - Mounting higher and higher, The crackling, chattering, sputtering, spattering Flames in the Wintry L ie. Half asleep in the corner. • I hear you prattle anititnapo And talk to me and Thur.:, That doses in my You laugh with the infliest laughter; - Ton dance, you jest; eh sing, And suggest in the se..ltr. midnight • The Joys of the coml.= Baring. Not even the lark on the fringe of the cloud, Nor the thrush on the hawthorn bough, Singeth a song more pleasant to bear Than the song you're singing now. Your voices are of gladness; Ever they seem to After the eventn 4—M orn in g After the night—the day! After this mortal blindness, A heavenly Melon clear, The smitten see whin the eyes ale dark; Awakel let the light appear: I —All the Fear :Round PENNSYLVANIA. DAN RICE is building a $20,000 barn In Girard. • Tits Blair County Agricultural Fair is to be held in Hollidaysburg on the 28th, 29th and 80th proximo. EBSITSBURG is to have telegraphic com munication with outside barbarism and talks of celebrating the event publiyly. THERE are said to be eighty-one candi dates for nominations at thelorthcoming Republican Convention in Lancaster county.' BaevEn. Methodists want to build a church on the-public square, and the Ar pa says the people object and threaten to osecute: Tnn Johnstown, Tribune says: "The yield is above the average in this part of the State, and the growing corn and oats crops are looking well." Txr, Roman Catholic parsonage at Ebensburg is to be raffled toff at $2 a chance, the drawing to take place dur-* ing the first week of the next Court. A ROUTE has been detled on for the proposed railroad from Freeport to But ler.- Several were proposed and the one chosen is known as the the "Little Buf- Salo Route." 11121 k girl, hawed Powell, livingin Cambria township, Cambria County. had her fciot and ankle cut completely off by a 'flowing machine, which her father was managing at the me. A FEW days ago Mr: William Byerly. of this place, killed a monster black 'snake, eleven feet six inches long. It was oletty located in the cellar just dug for Mr. Welch's new house in... Riverside. —Danville American. - "tan named Samuel Dundore was attacked by a couple of highway robbers near •East Buffaloe Union county, last week. They requested his money or his life, andhe decided to let them have the money, which "animated to $205. NRr N/CEOLAS RIFFLE; of Middlesex township, was killed on the Bth of July, by alarge barn door falling upon him, which he was endeavoring to put in proper working order for his neighbor, Mr. Philip Miller.—Buller Independent. Tice .NortAtoastern Independent is a neat little paper, just started in Butler, with the motto "Independent, Fearless and Free," and with both the Republican and Democratic platforms in its columns. It claims to start with a circulation of 1,500. ON Friday three buildings in Clarks ville, Mercer county, occupied as dwell ing houses, were destroyed by fire. Two - of them were owned by Hon. M. B. Low ry, of Erie, and the third by a Mr. Fruit. The loss amounted to about $3,000 and there was no insurance. ON Monday night last the large store house of A. M. Stewart & Co. and Wm. B. Marshall, in Indiana, was entered by burglars and • the large fire proof safe blown open and robbed of $1,300 in money and Government bonds. The same gang then proceeded to the store room of J. M. Guthrie, which they also entered, and the safe of which they also blew Open, but obtained butlittle for their trouble. THE Greensburg Democrat says: On Monday of last week, Mr. William Sell, near New Stanton, while assisting to 5 unload hay off a wagon, by means of a patent hay fork, the hook that held the tackle to the rafters gave Way, and the pulley in falling struck hint,on the head, injuring him so severely that he survived only until the Thursday morning follow ing. Mr. Sell was aged folly years, and was unmarried. Tnn remains of an:unknown man, supposed to have been drowned, were found on the 31st tilt., among a pile of drift wood lodged on an island in the Susquehanna river, about a mile above Safe Harbor. The body was in such a state or decomposition that the head and one foot had dropped off and were gone.' An inquest was held by A. R. Witmer, Esq., Deputy Coroner, and a verdict Tendered that the deceased came to his death by drowning, or -some other cause unknown to the jury.—lntelligsneer. 'Miss BeitstaiLa Gnazir, 93 years of age, who resided with her nephew, Rich ard Hoffmaster, at 317 Binghampton street, fell out of the second story win dow of the premises about nine o'clock on Saturday evening last, sustaining such severe injuries that she died within about an hour after the accident. The height from which she fell was about twelve feet, and it would appear from a severegull that was cut in her forehead that she struck her head upon the brick vement. She was also somewhat knised about the body.—Reading Times. what an Eclipse Might Be. Al correspondent of the Boston Post says: "Few people trouble themselves to think what the effect would be if the eclipse of Saturday wereto last any length of time, and the sun Were blotted from the heavens. Philosophy declares that not only:would altorror of darkness cover the earth, but the moisture of the atmosphere would be precipitated in Vast showers to the earth, and the temperature , fall to a fearful point of cold, nothing less than 280 degrees below zero. Fahrenheit. :The earth would be the seat of darkness, andmore than arctic desolation. I.,ioth ing could survive such freezing cold, a moment, more than one could breathe In scalding water. In three days after the cooling process began, nothing created would be alive but monsters. that wallow in the deep ocean and the pyeleas reptiles that make their haunts in caves which penetrt.te far under ground. OHIO. THE new opera house at Akron was Opened on the 26th ult. SAMUEL Pi:amnia died at Cadiz on the first of August, aged 109 years. THE Bucyrus machine company has failed and will probably go into bank ruptcy. RAVENNA had a Spiritualists' picnic the other day, at which four or five hundred people were present. • Du. ROSBITER, an aged lunatic, for merly of Miami county, hung himself in the Dayton Asylum a few days since. THE ALLEGHENY quartette club, when it sang in Canton had, according to the Re pository "a small and exceedingly select audience," A cam) of Gustavus Delaney of Blan chard Township, Hancock Co., eighteen months old was drowned in a cistern on the 26th ult. A Mis. JACOB SEACRIST made his first balloon ascension the other day. He went up alone from Wooster, and came down safely about twmity-five miles to the north•west of that place. THE Belmont Chronicle says: "The grasshoppers are destroying the oats crop in some parts of this county. They eat off the small stem that holds the grain to the straw, leaving the field without any thing but standing straw." A swum confederacy of thieves, bound together by horrid oaths of mutual con cealment, co•operation and protection from legal interference, has been discov ered in Fostoria and its vicinity. A newly-received member of the gang ex posed their doings. • • THE Ashtabula Sentinel says: "The wheat crop in this county, while it is much greater than fox many years, knd is very heavy, has been pretty generally got in without loss. :1i he crop of oats'is unusually fine and is latiNV pretty gener\ ally ready for cutting:" YOUNG Joachim Hagglestein of Salem Township, Ottowa County, formerly of Mecklenburg, Germany, being jilted by the girl of his heart, whom. he had brought from fatherland expissly for matrimonial purposes, drowned himself in Portage river on the 34th ult. 4 FEnocious sow, near Newark, a few evaiings ago, • seized a child named Smootz, stripped its clothing off, broke one of its arms in three ' places, severely cut its face and head, and was only pre vented from killing it by the interpositiou of a young - woman who was near. ut hand and came to its rescue. A YOUNG German from near Summer ford, Madison county, was thrown from his wagon on East Main street last Sat urday afternoon, about five o'clock, and shockingly bruised and cut, one of his ears being torn off and an arm broken. He was kindly cared for and taken home, where he died last Tuesday morning. He Was unable to give his name intelligibly. —Springfield Republic. . Mn. ALoizo Elms, of the "Croton House," five miles west'of this city, has a pig now about four weeks old, which he procured frotn a man near Doyles town, that has - but two, legs—the hind legs natural to the hog kind being entire ly absent. The rest of the litter being perfect animals, though not more lively and wide - awake than the two-legged in question, Mr. Ellis reporting that he takes regular and full rations, and poising him self on the two legs with which he is pro vided, gets over the ground about as fast as granters of his age generally do. Akron Beatan. • The Petroleum Trade. At Pen Horn, on the New York and Erie Railroad, about four miles from Jer sey city, is an extensive depot for storing petroleum in bulk. A large quantity, of the coal oil is received here, as much as 120 cars sometimes arriving in a day, hav leg been brought directly from the Penn sylvania wells. Each of the oil cars has two fixed tubes or tanks, each tank hold ing 40 barrels. On arriving at the depot the oil is removed from the car to a re ceiving tank placed at the aide of the track. This is most effectively done by an application of the syphon principle. One end of d great iron syphon is placed in the car tank, and the other end is put into a bucket of oil in the receiving tank. The air is then exhausted from the sy phon by - a syringe, and the pres sure upon the surface of the oil in the car-tank continues to force it rap idly through the syphon into the over flowing bucket, until it has all passed from the car-tank into the receiver. Four thousand gallons of oil, it is asserted, may be emptied from one tank to the other in Ails way in less than five min utes' time. From the receiver-tank the oil is pumped by steam • into huge round iron reservoirs, capable of holding 20,000 barrels each. These reservoirs are made of the best boiler iron, and are tarred and sanded upon the top, to shed the water. In these receptacles the oil remains until It is required for shipment, when it is forced by a steam pump,' driven by an engine of forty-horse power, through a line of iron pipes, seven miles long, to Weehawken, on the Hudson, where it is again pumped from the reservoir into ele vated tanks upon the wharves. Gettysburg Twice a Battle.Flold. An archteological investigation of the country around Gettysburg, conducted by a learned antiquarian, has proved the truth of a belief long entertained by resi dents, that the battle-field of Gettysburg had, in the distant past, been the scene of a bloody struggle between the Indians, or of some unknown and extinct race. This fact is attested:by the exhumation of the military instruments of the com batants and the remains of the dead in what is known as the Indian Field, about a mile southwest of Round Top and of the National Cemetery. These relics are found thickly imbedded in the soil over the whole area of territory which was the scene of the rebel gefeat of 1883. They consist of stone arrow-heads, battle 'axes, war clubs, shields, &c. Borne of them have been disinterred from their tombs of centuries and placed on exhibi tion in the College. . Pon twenty yeara past there bas ex isted a spring of wonderful medicinal vir tue on the line of the Northern,.,Central Railway, a little less than two miles north from the borough of Canton, Bradford county, Pa. A new.rallway station has been established there, and the name of an old Indian chief, lifonequa, given to it. Ever since thp discovery of the spring it has had little more than a local reputa tion, though the cures of rheumatism, eresypelas, scrofhla and various diseases of the skin and kidneyt its waters have effected are someone and remarkable. PITTSBURGH GAZEM: :TITE,SDA.Y„ AUGUST 10 , 1.869. Waslalngton Items. A prominent English gentleman who has arrived here reports that it is surely the purpose of the British Cabinet to ac cord belligerent rights to the .Cubans, and that very soon, following her own pre cedent in the case.of the Southern States. Urgent calls are received at the Treas ury for small currency, from New York, Philadelphia, Albany and elsewhere, but there is very little in the Treasury, there being only $6OOO in 50-cent notes. A small, lot in Pittsburgh has been tele graphed for. Reports from the Indian country are all favorable for peace, and Commissioner Parker sees no reason to fear a disturbance anywhere this fall. The policy of col lecting the Indians in reservations is going forward, and unexpectedly largo numbers of persons are coming, and showing a disposition to adopt the habits 'of civilized life. The system of distribu ting annuity goods at large towns, which led to lawlessness, and ended in a transfer of most of the goods to white traders and sharpers at nominal prices, has been broken up and distributions are now gen erally made on the reservations, access to which is denied to traders. his plan is found to work a great deal better than the old one. The published account of the Associa ted Press describing the riot at Mobile, bears marks of partisan prejudice on its face. The riot was premeditated by the Rebels. The mob were prepared for murder, as will be shown when the un prejudical reports are received. It is understood that the Nat'onal Con vention of Liquor Dealers will urge Con gress to repeal the present tax on whiskey and re-enact the old law, requiring a tax of two dollars per gallon. Judge Dent to-day was delighted with the news from Tennessee, as he consider. ed it the forerunner of a similar result in Mississippi. He called in to see Judge Richardson, Acting Secretary of the Treasury, and assured Mr. Richardson that he was as good a Republican as there \ was in the country. A prominent Tennessee politician now here received a telegram from Nashville to-day, which states that the prospects of Andrew Johnston for the election to the United State Senate are now considered almost certain, \ as the majority of the Conservative members of the Legislature elect are already pledged to him. His only opponent of auy`strength will be Col. Bailie Peyton, but efforts are snak ing to induce the latter to Withdraw from ' the contest. The dispatch adds that the Radicals are divided in opinion regarding their candidate. with a stro,ng probability that Stokes will be their final clioide. Other advices state that Republicafis who supported Sentor for Governor wily bolt the Conservative ticket if Johnson is nominated, and assert that his strength is mainly confined to the Old Line Dem ocrats. A new system of defrauding the revenue has been discovered in practice all over the country. The stamps used are pasted on with rye meal paste,or other ingredient which does not adhere too strongly, to allow the stamp to be taken off without tearing. In this way the same stamp has been used to cover sev eral barrels of spirits, and the same rule is applied to tobacco and segar boxes. The perpetrators of these frauds are in every instance United States revenue officials. What Five Mouths Have Done Let us enumerate some of the results of the brief five months of President Grant's administration, which may be cited to the public in response to the . charge that the public service is neglected. We were told in October last by the same oracles that now find it so difficult, in speaking of the President, to respect the ordinary proprieties of social life, that there would be a deficiency in our revenues for the fiscal year just closed of one hundied and fifty-four millions of dollars. That is what they regarded as the best prospect the future had to offer us financially nine months ago. Now, what has this idle, cigar-smok ing, horse jockey of a President accom plished during the brief five months that he has had such control of the Govern ment as Congress accorded to him? By a 'greater care in the selection of trustworthy agents, and by - a vigorous enforcement of the law, the revenues have so rapidly increased that the direct debt of the government has already, since his inauguration, been reduced between forty three and forty-four millions - of dollars. The revenues from whisky and tobacco alone have more than doubled. A re. duction of the army from forty regiments to twenty-five is to result in a further saving of many millions. The effects of the new policy of the government toward the Indians cannot now be appreciated, but enough is already known to make a further economy in that direction that must be estimated by mil lions. Our Federal securities are worth to-day at least $250,000,000 more than they were worth the day our President wasinaugurated, and are advancing at the rate of ten or fifteen millions a week. There is no doubt of our ability to fund the entire national debt within a year at a rate of interest not exceeding four and a half per cent. We are sure of surplus at the end of the current fiscal year of from $125,000,000 to $150,000,000, and it rano longer a question that our revenues will justify a large reduction of our taxes. —New York Timm. ' LAST Saturday, as a train came around a curve to a high trestle west of Big Mtn, near Marietta, a woman was suddenly discovered walking on the track, and she as suddenly saw the train, and, seeing her imminent danger, dropped between the ties, holding Herself suspended by her arms around a tie, till it passed over her. The train was checked till she was seen to climb up again safely. She looked like a woman a little past middle age, and did'nt scream, but went to work to save herself in a thorough business-like man ner. AT the iron furnace of Mr. J. P. Bur ton, at Massillon, a piece of • lhnestone was recently found, in the center of which was imbedded a- round white mineral substance resembling feldspar, about the size of a nickel, and in the center of tkis, set like mosaic work, was, to appearance, a sprig of four-leaved clover about a quarter grown, each leaf and the stem perfect and distinct. Fr is not generally known that wool growing in South America has grown into such mammoth proportions as it really nas. Even the Australian breed ers have cause for alarm from this com petition. It is reported on good author ity that the number of sheep shorn there annually exceed '70,000,000. The ex ports of Wool to Europe and the United States amounts to 2804000,000; GAS FIXTURES WELIN)N & KELLY, Xanntseturers and Wholesale Dealers In Lamps; Lanterns, ;Chandeliers, AND LAMP GOODS. Also, CARBON AND LUBRICATOR] 0/1.5. 'BENZINE, &O. N 0.147 Wood Street. 4;ylru?3 Between sth and 6th Avenues. I FRUIT CAN TOPS. LABELING COLLINS WRIGHT, We are now prepared to supply Tinners and Potters. It is p e rfect, simple, and as cheap as the plain top, having the. names of the various Fruits stamped 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 UM_ pointer and sealing in the customary manner. • No preserver of fruit or good housekeeper will tux m 625. any other after once seeing I. PIPES. CHIMNEY TOPS. &c. WATER PIPES, CUISINES TOPS A large aaeortmeat, .1111NRY H. COLLINS, apl4:hB7 Ad Avenne.near Smithfield St. DRY GOODS, TRIMMINGS. 0 CD . . 4 r a rii 1 A 4 . 1 pi it C 43 1 0 Oil M . 4 : 2 4 1 01 M ei un I M S '1:11 1 1 13 PI g i=i 1 A gj Z CC CA 1 amok la Pl"' E-4 0 * 1 13 E g : 1:14 rh ,- lw".11 1120 'P w mid Ca iri E• 9* PI L; -4 'ri I=k c> z act z' \ E 4 11 ~ ~~~~ NIIIV StlllldER GOODS AT NACRUM & CARLISLE'S' No. 27 Fifth Avenue, Dress Trimmings and Buttons. Embroideries and Laces. Ribbons and Flowers. Hats and Bonnets. lilove fitting and French Corsets. New Styles rine ley' s Skirts. Parasoh—a9 the new styles. Sun and Rain Umbrellas. Hosiery—the beat Engitsh makes. Agents for "Harris' Seamless Rids." ! Spring and Summer underwear, Sole Agents ior the Bemis Patent Shape Col lars. "Lockwood's "Irving," "West End," "Elite," &v. "Dickens," "Derby," and other styles. Dealers supplied with the above at MA.NUFACTURERS' PRICES. • MACRIPM. & CARLISLE, • WC). 27 -FIFTH AVENUE. ms, DicCANDLESS & Late Wilson, Carr & C 0..) WHOLtrata r DEALERS IN Foreign sad Domestic Dry Gods, No. 94 WOOD STREET, Third door above Diamond alley ' , mint:mat, PA. WALL PAPERS. WALL PAPER. ' TEE OLD PIPER STORE IN . A NEW PLUS, W. P. MARSHALL'S NEW WALL PAPER STORE, .191 Liberty Street, • (NEAR MARRET,) SPRING GOODS ARRIVING DAILY. mhe DECORATIONS—In Wood, Marble and Fresco Imitations for Wails Ana Ceilings of Dining Rooms, Halls, &0., at No. 107 Market street. jrs JOSICFR R. HUGHES & BRO. STAMPED GOLD PAPERS for caarlors, at N 0.107 Market street. WS JOSEPH B. HUGHES .3 BRO. HAIR AND PE/MUM:DRY. TORN PEC#6 ORNAMENTAL HAIR WORHKG AND PERFUMER, Ho. Third street, near Bmithleid, Pittsburgh. Alwatn hand, a_general assortment or La dles t o HAMM, CURLS: Gantlemen , s WHlS tra, rARG, BOALPB, GUARD CHAIM. BRA WS, C. ArA'"2, good Price la nub will given for HAW HAIR. Ladles' and Genthratgais Hats Cutting dons n the neatest winner:kr 'obi ,d, 1! o. • R ABB & Alw;i MITT 1101:781$ ASSOCIATION BULLMINees Noe. land 4 St. Clair Street. Pittsburgh. 211 1 *metal Attention given to the designing and B of COUNT NOlnocs and C ItlrlLTor WEBSTER STREET.—Notice is hereby even that the. Viewers report on widening Webster street. City of Alleghenlo has beets flied In the District Court, as No. 581 July term. 1869, for coniirmauos. J. C. fdeCONSS, Solicitor. jrallmill N ADVERTISEMENTS. HEADQUARTERS FOR GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING GOODS. PUTNAIYI & ADAMS WILL CLOSE OUT AT Greatly Reduced Prices, The Balance of their Extensive Stock of SUMMER GOODS, CONSISTING OF Gauze' Cotton Undershirts & Drawers. Gauze Merino Undershirts & Drawers. Gauze Silk Undershirts and DraWers. Lisle Thread Undershirts & Drawers. LINEN, JEAN AND MIIS;LIN DRAWERS, INCLUDING THE CELEBRATED PATENT PANTALOON DRAWERS. AN IMMENSE. STOCK OF NIZIWS:E1303:4;0011:4V .11 Very Low Prices. GLOVES, SUSPENDERS, • TIES, BOWS, SUM NER SCARFS, ALL REDUCED. SPECIAL BARGAINS IN MEN'S HALF HOSE. A LARGE LOT OF FANCY SIFIBTS To be Closed Out Very Cheap THE "QUAKER CITY ME SIIIRTS," Of which we are the Sole Agents for this City. are unsurpassed in quality. style, make and excel lence of fit. It is a make of Shirts that has beCome Standard, and for which the demand is STEADILY INCREASING. We have these Shirts in all sizes FOR EYELETS AND STUDS, ALSO, To. Open at the Back. 141M.10:1:4 , \51: 11 041 MADE TO ORDER. Also, Wholesale Agents for the Celebrated "NORWICH. MOLDED" Linen Collars and Lenffs, SARATOGA, NEWPORT, 41 Jtranufactsurers Prices. PUTNAM & ADAMS 72 Fifth Avewae, OPPOSITE POSTOPTICIL $4318T CARPETS. JULY, 1860. SPECIAL SALE OF CARPETS. We offer at Rs tall, for TAMMY DAYS ONLY, a line of New and Choice Patterns English Tapestry, Brussels, Ingrain, and Other Carpets, AT LES S THAN COST OF IMPORTATION, d an of entire aok at prices which make it an object t buy this month, as ',these goods have never oeen offered so low. Our Store Will close at 5 P. M. until September first. McFART AND & *COLLINS. No. 71 and 73 FIFTH 'AVENUE, jy9:d iT CARPETS, Floor Oil Cloths, AL,'lnr iST ar Rip Window Shades, AT LOW We offer many, of our goods much below last Spring's prices. Those needirg goods in our line can save money by buy ing'ut once. BOVARD, ROSE & 00., itll4 111 AVENUE. 4:d&T NEW CARPETS! •Tia.re.e, lees. We areunparalleled in VELVETS BRUSSELS THREE-PLYS. The Very Newest Designs, Of our own recent importation and selectedtrom eastern manufacturers. IED11:1111 AND LOW PRICED INGAELATINTS,. VERY SITPERIOR QUALITY AND COLORS. An Extra Quality of Rag Carpet. We are now selling many of the above at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES . TERM% .BRO S., dm. 51 FIFTH ArartE, Jel2 OLIVER & CO. HAVEAEST RECEIVED A FINE SELECTION OF EIBILTSSELS, TAPESTRY BRUSSELS THREE PLY AND INGRAIN CARPETS. THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF WHITE, CHECK & FANCY MATTINGS, FOR SUMMER WEAR, IN TEE CITY. STOCK FULL IN ALL DEPARTMENTS AT °MTH , mcClaNrOgli & CO'S; COAL AND COKE. f 10ALI COAL!! COAL!!! / DICKSON STEWART It CO Having removed their Once to NO. 567 LIBERTY STRE ET, Matey City Flour Milli SECOND ELOOK. Are now prepared to furnish good YOUBIIIO. SILENT LUMP NUT COAL OUSLACE,.at the lowest market Price. All orders lett at their °Mee, or addressed to them through the mall, will be attended to promptly. DR. VirEICUTEIBR MNTINUES TO TREAT ALL private diseases, Syphilis in all its forms, all diseases, and the effects of mercury are completely eradicated; Spermatorrhea or Si nal Weakness and Impotency, resulting from self-abuse or other causes, and which produces • same of the following effects, as blotches. bodily weakness, indigestion, consumption, aversion to society unmanliness, dread of future events, loss of memory, indolence, nocturnal emissions. and fi nally so prostrating the sexual system as to render marriage unsatislactory, and therefore Imprudent, are permanently cured. Persons at- . Meted with these or any other delicate intricate or long standing constitutional complaint shored give the Doctor a trial; he never falls. ' A particular attentioniriven to all Female com plaints, Leucorrhea or Whites. Failing, Inflam mation or 'Ulceration of the Womb, termitic pruritic Amenorrhoea. 'Menotti:grit, Dysmen. norrhoel. andisterillty or Barrenness, are treat ed with the greatest success. It is self-evident that a physictan who confines himself exclusively to the study of a certain clam of diseases and treats thousands of cases every year must acquire greater &Min that specialty than one in general practice. The Doctor publishes a medical pamphlet of fifty pages that gives si lull exposition of venereal and private diseases. that can be bad free atoffloe or by mail for two stamps, in sealed envelopes. Every sentence contains Instruction to the af,.. fluted,and enabling them to ,determine the pre. give n ature of. their complaints. I The establishment, comprising, ten ample rooms, is central. When it is not convenient to visit the city. the Doctor's opinion can be ob %sine I by giving a written statement of the case, and medicines can be forwarded, by mall or ex press. In someinstances. however, a personal examination is absolutely necessary, while in others daily personal attention Is retired, and for the accommodation c f such patients there are trwCintreligeer-Nteduwattg.o,l,,rtbactutzerr, promote recovery, including me d icated vapor baths. All prescriptions are prepared In the Doctor's own labotstory, ander his kagoitia twi tyy " rmast e : resd u tor w ll t ha w edical o t h s e tam i r i p i a.. Ph li • e o o t ura ll MaillietoAterMat."W'uh„iree'os pa to Bruidme 151 M. to MP. x. tHhee,No. 9 w 'Las EtTMEST. (near Court Romeo rittaburirb, Pa NIAGARA U (Second noon. 23 FIFTH AVENUE