The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, August 18, 1869, Image 2

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    Ei
liosturgij saints.
TROUTIIVG
OE before your mother
Eattiy Icnowa you's e out—
Goodness I ai I.; 'jolly,
Tramping after-trout'.
Tripping over mosses,
btipplug over s. one: ,
Creeping , 'trough morasses,
Chilled through blood and bones;
"Dipping , ' into spring holes,
Ripping something out—
Wh n ipp s ing .u after trpout •
Goodes! bt it's aeasant.
'.
StumbUng over saw lois&
Where they made a Jam—
. N 4 one can 85711118 We=
Is•nt worth a dam
ater ' •cold as Mazes."
Yoams your feet &bunt; I
Catch your death of—'•Whist, man:
Did you see that trout?"'
Ply him gently,)t lnaly
• Horse hair is out
There's :speckled beauty!
Crook's hooks never fall.
Twenty ounces, plump, Sirs—
'Heft him. If yon count, '
Silver. gold Aga garnets— ,
What can snatch a trouty
Ltght y l
si n gs the a kl tr the tace,
• blithely eam.
Brightly Mint* the foam belle,
Likes poet, , l dream; - •
splitab! there goes •`iuni
Whirr! and he , lB out! F•
Writ t /lama law charming,
Al a school of trout?
PENNSIViatI4.
TICE cotton factory at Harrisburg has
stopped work: •
iFarexs •has organized a gymnasium
company, and is now engaged dbliectirtg
the money that was subscribe&
, .
JITRIATACC)IINTY business men talk of
adopting the.strict cash system for idl
ing. They will still buy in the East-on
time.
SEVERAL, barns 'have been burned
thiongliant ;the State; and the cause is
said to he the overheating of, hay which
had been housed before it was properly
Mit Waynesburg and - Washington
'at,age , was run off with by its .horses the
other day and upset. One lady was se
, verely hurt and one horse was badly
damaged.
• Ax unusual number of meteors and
shooting stars have.been seen all over the
state during the past few weeks, and the
country papers nearly all mention. some
especially brilliant ones. • ,
,
• rs SAID that ,the numerous Altoona
fires were gotten up by the members of a
'- fire company there, in order to provide,
amusement: for -visitors, who at various
times the company delighted to honor.
Tag= is some talk , of sending Hon.
Galusha A. Grow to the' Legislature.
Montrose wants a first-class representa
tive. If we could get a few more such
menln our Harrisburg. councile, a single
session would make up for all the short
comings of past years. •
Twit following is a copy, verbatim. et
iiferatim e&punctuaffm, of-a notice taken
from the shafts of the Pennsylvania
• Coal Company:
EOTICE.
' - To whome it may concern Any per
' • .son'or persons entering this shaft or in
other words—resuming - work before the
Basis is satisfactorily signed will without
any ceremony be deprived of their exist.
ance. By order
July 21, 1869. [Picture of,a coffin];
ten ceremony of laying the corner:
atone of the Hospital for the Insane of
- the Northern District of Pennsylvania,
will take place on the site for the new
building, near Danville, on Thursday,
the 26th inst. His Excellency, John W.
43eary,lvill lay the corner-stone, and the
- Addressappropriatet:to 'the occasion will
tie delfiered - by the ' 'celebtsted Dr. Isaac.
Ray, of P,hiladelphii.' 'The commission
gurwin, Hie commissiond
and Green, have
spared no painial.o niate. the ceremonies
, on this occasion interesting and impress.
sire.
A mart passed throngh AllentoWn the
other day,:.pushing , a' wheelbarrow in
• which'lvas' seated - his -wife,unable to
walk' front' rheumatism, ad whO was
• trundled all the way here on a wheelbar
,roW from Illinois. Two little children of
_ the pair ran along by the sideof the father
' the entire distance. ,We could not learn
the name of the family, nor whither they
were going. Truly a woman is blessed
with ,a faithful husband who would toil
and, slave thus for her welfare. This trip
we believe is wsprecedented.—Corboa
• Democrat. •
Racr.w . my; at Middleboro, in thisconn
ty, there appeared, before,Justice , Pease
a man : who gave hismame as Win. Hart,
of Erie, and Mrs. Mary —; (the Justice.
wouldn't give her iiiune), said tb_be ,a
school ma'm of, this -city, formerly of
Fairview, Mercer county. The lady was
Married in a white dress, but had another
:"Witfitrel In, using the buggy:in front of
‘
ilia door as a dressing room, for the par
pose of putting it on. The bridegroom
tendered a small amount of currency for
the trouble given, and drove off in a great
-hurry, seemingly.in fear that some one
might come unbidden. , No carda. r -Erie
Tick Punxsutawney Picsindenier says:
"On Maid - ay; afternoon a most shocking
'accident occurred on East Branch, near
• •
Rig Nirhicb resulted In the death of
. - z•I John Nehemiah, of 'town-''
ship.; ! :He.waa engaged in felling a hem
lock tree, which; hrits fall, struck a small ,
r'"detd - rnaple, breaking it in several pieces,
one of: which' flew /back end 'foremost,
• ' striking tilif on the side and gfoin, tearing
'tliti'fleshliWaY'and'intitilating him in a
most horrihle manner; His death must
have been - almost •instantaneons. Mr.
'Mania& was alone when the accident
occurred; but, from all appearances, he
atteniPted! .- to escape; by getting • be
hind
another tree; aUd•paust have neatly
• succeededin doing so when the fragment
,„ • struck him, as,,in, its coUrse, it tore the
bark off the tree behind whicb.he was lying
• when found.
. ; Wn saves the outlines of an occurrence
in the upper end• of this county, which is'
" terrible. I .Kfamily had a large bull dog
who showe d a fierce disposition toward
' strangerlOnthad always been peaceable
enough the family,and ao one had any
fesztkOf PcdiatprbAtg The children. 'One
day/ last week, one , of,lbe little Imes watt'
sitting on the lloor and the dog standing
• by, Iwhan dial child grasped at his tail,
• - probabl y i to' -Waist it in getting on its feet.
„The an mal!ttirned upon the child, seized
it 1 Via back' of the neck and shook it
violently, and kept his hold until his jaws
were rorta4 open and ,be,;was driven from
the The father: took a gun and
fired two loads int:tiblm, but the dog made
for the' :house again, ;to finish his work
; on' the child, when , athird shot dropped .
-," him..• teeth had crushed through the
,
skull at the' back of the head, and the
1 ehild r ailfS mitt dabgthr: , 'Wct shalt ►rob.
ttie Matter befotelbUr•
next lasne.—/ffialiate'VeNiett
=I
WEbT TIMECIA.
ALLEGED discoveries of gold are the
latest sensation in Tucker county.
TELE people of Charleston are begining
to put up their new, capitol buildings.
THE Weston "Democrat" is exercised
over a prophetic egg, shaped like a pow-
Ider-horn.
A SEVERE hail storm, seriously dam
aged the corn and wheat about seven
mil es out of Morgantown. Hail stones
the size of hen's eggs, were picked up in
numbers.
WE learn that some of the stockholders
of the Riverside Iron Works at Wheel
ing have purchased land in Kanawha
county, where they propose erecting an
iron furnace at an early day.—Btiff. Ind.
Tun Morgantown Post says; A little
daughter of Mrs. B. H. Sear was attack
ed in a blackberry field a few days ago,
by Lee Crow's savage bull dog. The
animal bit her in several places, making
ugly wounds.
.TomE . A. TRIMBLE, of Elk township,
Barbour county, was thrown 4 from a
reaper on Saturday of last week,nd had
f t
one of his feet almost sawed o by the
sharp kniver of the machine. A shoe on
the other foot was badly cut.
THE Charleston Journal says:• We
are gratified to have it in our power to
announce that a number of gentlemen;
representing a large amount of capital,
have completed the neCessary errange
meats to erect large and extensive iron
works just above Malden, in this county.
We understand the land on which the
buildings are to be erected is to , be
sold at the price paid for it over thirty.
five years ago. That is the proper spirit,
and we accept it as an omen•of hope.
D'eltrlum Tremens in the New York
1=
Dr. Roosa contributes to the September
numter of Putnam's - Magazine a pleasant
historical sketch of the New York Hos
pital, in which several incidents of prac
tice in that venerable Institution are nar
rated. The following passage describes
the scenes in one ward:
"The ward devoted to sufferers from
mania potu, or delirium tremens—the
trem.' ward, as the nurses and house
doctors were apt to call it—would alone
furnish scenes for the pencil of the artist
which might surpass thote of Hogarth or
Holbein, so frightful is the demoniac ap.
pearance of man when the victim of his
passions, and overcome with awful dread
at the horrid shapes which his diseased
brain had pictured. The visitor to such
a ward, when it is well filled, would al•
most imagine that he had entered one of
the portals of the regions of the lost.
"One poor victim lies muttering to
himself, and constantly picking his
bed clothes, now and then rising up and
fixedly staring, with horror delineated in
every feature, on some tancied demon
emerging from a crevice or corner.
Another Is hurling back; with awful
blasphemy, the taunts and jeers with
which his imaginary enemy is tormenting
him, while in the grated room off the
main ward, reserved for the most violent
cases, a poor ...fellow is rushing madly
about, fighting a mortal combat with what
seems to him a rearenemy. The straight
jacket and well padded walls, however,
protect him from doing himself any
harm, while the strong men, chosen as
nurses for these patients, cow them down
with a steady look, and preserve a Satanic
order in this pandemonium. Occasion
ally, however, a sufferer from the
effects of strong drink, instead of fear
ful shapes and imaginations, sees gentle
spirits and dreams delightful dreams. A
smile la constantly playing on such lips,
and he seems like a child dreaming of
angels. I well remember a poor artist
who bad often suffered from delirium
tremens, who told me that in his hours of
insanity he saw images that Raphael or
Angelo might have traced, and that ,vis
ions of nrtistic beauty floated before him
which'he could-never execute in his sober
hours, and yet the period of remorse and
intense physical suffering came to him all
the same.
"It is said that one patient bas been in
the hospital more than a dozen times; but,
as a rule, two or three attacks finish a
career. The writer once beard an emi
nent Professor of Medicine say that he
had no hopes whatever of thereform of a
man who had once had delirium tremens.
But this was before the days of inebriate
asylums."
Public Parke.
The authorities of Chicago have recent- . 1
ly published an elaborate report on the
subject of public pleasure-grounds, giv
ing_the areas of the large parks of the cities
of Europe and the United States. From
these statistics it appears that Windsor
Park, England, has 3,800 acres; Rich
mond, 2,468; Hampton Court and Burley,
1,812 acres. In Lbndon, Hyde Park has
.389 acres; Regent'd; \ 473 acres; Batter
sea, 175 acres; St., James; 55 acres; Ken/.
sington, 262 acres; and Green, 55 acres.
Phoenix •Park. Dublin, tins 1,752 acres;
Birkenhead, Liverpool, has 182 acres,
laid out under the direction of Sir Joseph
Paiton. The •Bola de Boulogne, near
*Paris, has 2,158 acres. 875 of which are
Open turf, 607 woods, 174 water, 365
acres in roads,' 171 in nurseries and
flower-beds. The Thiergarten at Berlin
comprises 200 acres. The Tzsrskoe Selo
summer garden at , SL Petersburg consists
of 350 , acres- • . '
In the United States,Fairmount Park,
at Philadelphia, has 220 acres, and in
the course of a year will be extended to
2,700 acres; New York Central Park con.
tains 8.62 acres. In - Baltimore, Druid
Hill Park has 550 urea,' and Patterson's
Park 1251 acres. In Brooklyn. Prospt et
Park contains 550 acres. , Boston 'Coin
mon and the Providence (It. I.) Park are
each . 4 mile, in circumference. - Cincin
nati has a park of 150 ("cies. Bt. Louis
has 287 acres of piblic'grounds, •distribu
ted among fifteen small parka; and Chi
cago is going to have a large park, and
has 126 acres of public ground to small
• parks now. • ' •
Tun New York 'Evening Poet of the
llth inst., says : air: Bonner took Pex
ter over to 'Brooklyn - yesterdtiy after
noon, and drove him a mile on the Pros;
,pect Fair Grounds in the extraordinary
time of 2:28i. This is the , fastest time
ever made to a road wagon. DeZter,.twO
years ago, trotted a mile in, a publiclace;
before Mr- Bonner, Owned him, in 2:24
to a skelettin•laragon, which time has
never been beaten In public; ,but pater
-
day, in going to a road-wagon, he had to
carry nearly 100 pounds more than on
that• occasion, and yet, notwithstanding,
he beat hlittikeletont
the heavy weight,
wagon time. - This performance., proves
that Dexter le a better horse ithly 'Beason'
thdritiatitt.ever beelreA 610 .1
PITTSBURGH GAZETTE: WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1869.
• -
Paradise Lost.
Thistory of . "Paradise Lost'," which
,
may be new to some readers, is briefly as
follows: It was Wholes life-long ambi
,
lion to write a great work that his cow::
try would not willinglylet die, and he
doubtlessought, during the troublons
times,of the civil war,
that his fondly
cherished hopes were baffled; that he
had indeed been born an age too soon;
that he had fallen upon evil days and evil
tongues; but when peace smiled again
upon his native land, he turned his atten
tion to the selection of a subject. Before
he determined on his long philosophical
poem, be appears to have fanged through
history in quest of a topic ofs ufficient
h4interest and capability. and to ve dwelt
for a time fondly on King Aithur. At
last, be reached a point beyond which it
was impossible to go. Milton's choice
was made, and "Paradise Lost" grew
slowly into being. .
The exact date when Milton—of whom
the Bishop of Avrancheti wrote to Selma
sills, who had done him the honor of
abusing him: "How can you occupy
yourself with an object so insignificant
as this, Milton l"—began his great chrls
tian poem is not known;,but we do know
that for many years, mostly under his
own roof in, Artillery Walk, or while
sauntering through the'streets of London,
when Chariot Stuart wag amusing himself
with his licentious court; iwhen John
Dryden was witnessing his( own plays
performed at the Lilobe Theatre; when poor
Sam Butter was growing morose from
neglect and ill usage; 'when the lively
and garrulous Samuel Pepyswasrunning
'about embalming notes for posterity, and
when the Puritan poet'S friend, Andrew
Marvell, was interesting himself in his
belialf—the plan was carried and resolved
in the blind man's brain, till at length,
he was able to exclaim:
. .
"Give me thy lyre 1
Bel the stirrings . of s gift elVhe;
Li; by no Brill cf mine:"
By dictations of fifty to . a hundred lines
at a time the work was at last completed.-
We have no accurate information as to
the exact date when ',`Paradise Lost"
was finished, but It was some time previ
ous to the 27th of April, X 1667, thb day on
which Itwas sold to Samuel Simmons,
bookseller, for five pounds down, with a
premium of five pounds more when thir
teen hundred copies of the first edition
were sold. and five pbunds when thirteen
hUndred of the second should have been
sold, and so on for successive editions,
each edition to consist of 1300 copies.
As originally published, the poem con
' sisted of ten nooks, and was sold at three
shillings. The , stipulated 1300 copies
were disposed of before the 26th of April,
1669, on which day Milton signed a re
ceipt for the second five pounds, which
we have seen hanging in a neat frame on
the walls of the famous breakfast room of
Samuel Rogers. The remaining 200
copies do not appear to have sold so' fast,
as it was not until the year of Milton's
death that a second edition was pub
lished. .
In the second edition the ten books are
converted into twelve by a division of the
seventh and tenni, and there were also
some few alterations. A third edition ap
pftred in 1678, and in. December, 1690,
Mrs. Milton parted with her interest in
Paradise Lost for eight pounds, paid to
her by Simmons; so that the total amount
received by the poet and his fandly for
this matchless work was twenty-seven
pounds, or $l4O —less than Alfred Tenny
son was recently paid by the publisher of
a popular English periodical for writing
a dozen lines.
ArtUtclal Ruse Perfume.
It is well known that most perfumes
and flavors may now be made without
the use of the original substance; modern
chemistry having informed us of the com
position of many of them, has made the
perfumer independent of most of the
original plants used. Thus, for instance,
the bitter-almond flavor is made from
nitro.benzole, which latter Is obtained
from coal tar. and , called oil of myrbane.
Pineapple flavor is made from the essence
of rancid butter; banana flavor from old
cheese; pear flavor from nitrous ether;
and oil of cloves from oil of ants. Bat
there are several flavors and perfumes
that resist'attempts at imitation. Oil of
roses was one of these, but It has now
been brought within the reach of art,
and good rose water has been made from
salicine.
This substance is the bitter principle
of the young bark of poplars, willows
tnd several other trees. It may be trans
formed into an acid known as aalicylate
of potassa. This last substance will
decompose spontaneously, and the pro
ducts of the decomposition possess a
strong rose flavor. The chesprst method
of obtaining it is to take the oil of win;
tergreen (01. Gaultheria*, which is com
paratively low in price, and, by the way,
the heaviest of all essential oils, and boil
it with a solution of caustic potassa.
The oil.of wintergreen has acid proper
ties, and Us been proved to be similar'
In its nature to salicylons acid. The
crystsline paste formed by this operation,
separated from Its mother lye, gives,
upon distillation with water, rose water.
Perfumers will t no doubt, take advantage
of this.--Monufarturer and Builder.
England is re‘ising her laws in respect
taproperty holding by married women.
The wife la to be secured in her own prop
erty, and to be liable to the parish for the
maintenance of her husband, as the latter
is liable for the support of his wife. A
crusty old bacheldr of an editor says that
the next step will be to exempt both bus
band and wife from the pecuniary oblige•_
tions of the other. and "it is not certain
but that the husbands of this country
will hold up both hands for such a law.'
Husbinds in. England - are to be exempt
from the debts the wife contracted previ
ous to marriages In Vermoid the old
practice With Yankee peddlers was to
give unlim'ted credit to handsome girls,
whose prospects for marriage were good.
The, husband and wife problems are
struggling to settle themselves. In China
they have tong been settled—the husband
owns his wife and works her as he works
any other dorriestic
.Ano'rum general strike is predicted as
near at hand, in both the Lehigh and
Schuylkill regions, following the action.
of the Mauch Chunk meeting of the 12th
inst. This, verified, • will additionally :
complicate affairs between the buyer and
seller, and the consumer will have his
embarrassment at "the situation," in all
probability to estimate in paying consid• '
arab!) , more for the next orders , he may
.forward.. -
U „RAPPER, the missionary, now ilv
-iligli,VisalgolitowcoUntYt ie KONS bacl
Husband and Wife.
FRUIT CAN TAPE!!
•
sE ur;ii_pELlEsT.ur; ,
FR ZOP
• .••
We are now prepared to supply Tinners and
Potters. It is tierfect, 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
by Merely piscine the name of the, fruit the
can oortains opposite the pointer and sealing in
the customary manner. No preserver of fruit or
good housekeeper will use any other after once
seeing t. - mbM
PIPES. CHIMN • Y TOPS. &c
WATER PIP - 1
GUINN=
A large aasortmezt,
ER
1p14:h37 9d JLTignu
DRY GOODS;
2,000 PO UNDs
OF THAT
GOOD COUNTRY YARN,
Whichw, have ,i!een,iil!ing for several yeate
- JUST RECEIVED. .
FLANNELS, AT LOW PRICES,
Full Line of Colors.
sum - i - g,R . GOODS-,
AT RIMMED PRICES
litcocop 19151 r-ts,
A FULL VARIETY
CORSETS, all We best makes.
PAPER COLL ARS
.\\\
OF .A. 1.1.4 Dr.fiClitr \ i" ON B.
AND A FULL STOCK OF
Ladies' and Gents' Furnishing Goods
WHITE GOODS.
HA NDESECHIEFS,
LACES.
TBDININGS
ISTITTONS
MACRUM, GLYDE & CO,
78 81. 80 Market Street.
g
. A
ci;
14
sn 144
ck3a 00 14
` 4 l, th
Pill 4
P,
oat j• z
tmi oi vs A t 4
CO2 5 Pig 12
$ 1 ,4
CO
ET' * Pa E 4
za
Ir. 0
V) "4
t ll4
as . E°4
10% 44 1 V 3
gal - is
aik
led ci
NEW SIMMER GOODS
NI
IIACRITII &CARLISLE'S
No. 27 Fifth Avenue,
Dress Trimmings and l i ßuttons.
Embroideries and Laces.
Ribbons Bo n netser&
Hats and.
Wove Itting and french Corsets.
New Styles. limier' Skirts.
Parasol.—all the new styles.
Min and Rain Umbrellas.
Hosiery—Mte best English makes.
Agent, for 'Hants' Seamless Kids."
Spring and Bummer underwear.
Sole Agents , or the Bemis Patent Shape Col
lars. "Lockwood's "Irvine," "West End,"
"Elite," dot "Dickens," "Derby," and other
sty 'Dealers supplied with the above at
MiLNUFACTURICRS' PRICES.
MACRUM & 040,MMMI
NO. 27
FIFTH AVENUE.
m 74
BIIcCANDLESS C 0. ,,
V {Late Wilton. Carr
WHQUIZAtIar. Ditaxas IN '
•
Foreign and Domestic Dry 6h3odoi
Vo. 941 WOOD sisarr.
nut 40 above Dtamosidiater.• • •
,errretnieg.
PdEROEIANT TAILORS.
B TIEGEL,
.(L46 Ouster 4th W, Berpenbelde.)
DERISCILajer TA—ITAO.B.
No. lasuathnold stroot,pittotoro.
.NEIN SPRING GOODS. ,
olladid nob swot of 4
CLOZ'lls, cjiisrmartss , tee.,
JoAtiviii by IMF&lilt Ilslnirat„
emu 'slterebant Tanor. 73 Bmithteld streei.
NAIR AND PERFUMERY.
•ERN! PEER..., ORNAMENTAL
HAITI AMIMILEis .AL'EI PltltirintlCß, , No,
:TWO, street, near Smithfield, Pittsburgh,
%
Alva aon hand,' A _general Assortment Or Lst
dies - v s sarDS, - otanail usnuertren I
Wldt p. . -pciALra, GIIA.RD CILAINB,
Blat o A .St, 411" A Mod rMAM is cub
Flu Oyes •to 13111% , HAL*, ,
_. itt i ..,
‘' Isalast.: ands Seuthesen . . ,Bai: cc done .
Ili QC 'Satan • sliftWoi. li. - r - :.. t la
JOSEPH HORNE & CO,
COME THE
WHOLESALE BUYERS
To their Extensive Assortment
NEW GOODS
Bought from First IlaUds
TOPS
Y, H. COLLINS,
near Smithfield St
RIMMINGS
WHICH WE OFFER TC CASH AND SHORT
BUYERS. AT -- A SMALL AD
N'ANCE ON MANUFACTII
. HERS' PRICES.
25,000 POITNDS
KNITTING AND ZEPHYR YARNS
BLUE MIXED COUNTRY YARN
BAMIED.DRESS FLANNEL
Of Best Make.
Rob Roy and Shirting Flannel.
IIaC)IMEM- I EL:W.
Ribbed\liderino,
Bibbed Wool
Tartan and
Balmoral Hose„
FOR
LADIES' AND 'CHILDREN.
GENTS' WOOL
Heavy Cotton Half Hose
Suspenders, in all qualities.
Morrison's Star ..hirts, all sizes,
in every quality.
Wool . and Merino Shirts and
Drawers, Ribbed and Plain,in White
and all the various mixtures.
HANDKERCHIEFS.:
Ladies' Hemstitched,
Embroidered
and Lace,
NOS, NOTIONS, &O.
WOULD RESPZCMILLY
OF
OF
AND. FOR CASH.
In all Colors and Mixtures,
AND
dents' Hemmed,
_Hemstitched, Plain.
Colored Silk and
Cotton Hankkerehi , is
Hamburg sand Jaconet Embroideries,
Imt. (limy Laces.
lmt. Val. Laces and Insertions.
Chrochet Edgings,
\Vide Co ton and Linen LatC3,
Late Collars and Chemizettts.
HOOP SHIRTS.
EVERYTHING IN LADIES , AND MISSES
SKIRTS, INcLUDING THE MILE&
BEST SHAYE.s.
layis.ble Walking,
Pi hem AlleP;
and indiatinct able
CORSETS•
American, German and French
IN ALL NUINDEBS.
PAPER COLLOS AND CUFFS
FOR
Ladies and Gents,
1 0f Me rserole & Libby's Celebrated !ak
FOR WHICH WE ARE THE
OLE AGENTS IN PITTSBURGH
EM
NOTIONS,
SOAPS,
PERFUMERY,
BUTTONS,
BRAIDS,•
TAPES,
COMBS,
PINS, &a
an
DEPARTMENTS COMPLETE
Prices Very Low !
77 AND 79 MARKET STREET
1133
CARPETS
C - ikRPETS,
Floor Oil Cloths,
x Da - cr. Op
Window Shades,
AT LOW PRICES.
We offer many of our goods mv:ch below las':
Spring's =lets. Those needivg goods in oar.
line can save money by buying at once.
BOVARD, ROSE tt, CO.,
FTFTH AMITE.
.114:daa
ar - rix.smr,„ isee
SPECIAL SALE OF
CARPETS
We offer at TOUR, far THIRTY DAYS ONLS
a tine of New and Choice Patterns
English Tapestry, Brussels, Ingrait
and U th er Carpets,
AT LESS THAN COST OF IMPORT-10dg!
and our entire stock et prices which makeit
object to buy_ this month, as these goo.3ftia•
never been offered so low.
Our Store will close at 5 P. st. until Septetab ,
tirst.
NeFABLAND & COLLINS.
No. 11 and 13 FIFTII. AVENUZ,
jy9:d&T
ESP CARPETS
ahmae, iseser
We are now openinz =assortment =parallel
n this city of FLINT.EST
VELVETS BRUSSELS THREE-PLI
The Very Newest Designs,
Of our own recrnt Importation and selectedfr
eastern manufacturers. •
KEDITT3I SAND LOW PRICI
][ - INi - Grit.2§..llNll-S,
VERY SUPERIOR
QUALITY AND COLORS,
An Extra Quality of Rag Carl
We are now selling many or the above at;
GREATLY REDUCED ,PRICI
MUIR . BROS..
Aro. -5L FIFTH 4FEJrt
-Jel2 \
OLIVER g'CLINTOCK & C
HAVE JUST RECEIVED A
FINE SELECTION _
BRUSSELS,
TAPESTRY BRUSSEL
THREE PLY AND ; i
INGRAIN CARPET,
THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT C
WRITE, CHECK & FANS
NATTINGS,
FOR SUMMER WEA ;
• THE CITY.
STOCK FUL IN ALL DEPARTME
°urn, -KenoTocK & Ct
513 FIFTH A.VENITE.
COAL AND COKE.
COAL!! COALU!
GOAL
DICKSON, STEWART & COI
Having removed their Office to
NO. 567 LIBERTY STR Ij
(Lately City Maur MI11) SECOND ZLOc
Axe w prepared to furnish good od YOUCI
SHI no NY LUMP. NUT OOLL ORIBLACK.
lowest market price. •
All orders left at their office, or addreal .
them tame' the mail. WM be attend.
promptly.
INIrITTLER
cONTLICUES TO TREAT
private dlseasei . Syphilis in all its fors:
n nary diseases, and the effects of mescal
completely eradicated; Spermatorrhea
ted Weakness and Impotency, resultink
self-abuse or other causes,' and which pr'
scme of the following effects, as blotch
weakness. indigestion. consumption, a - •
society unmanliness . dread of future
loss of memory: Indolence,:nocturnal emi
and Sanity so prostrating the sexual systei,
render .marriaae unastistactery. and thel
imprudent, are permanently cured. Pere.
filmed with these or any other delicate, lei
or longstanding constitutional
give the Doctor a trial; he never fails.
•A particular attentionitiVen to all retrial,
plaints, Leneorrhea or Whites. Palling, lk
nation or Ulceration of the Womb, tut
pruritia, Amenorrhoea. Menorrkagla, D.
=rafts, and bterility or Barretittess. are
ed with the greatest success.
It is self.evident that *physician who co,
himself exclusively to the ettidy of • testa.;
of diseased and treats thousands :of case s.
”ar must acquire greater chili in that a;
than one in general practice.
The Doctor publishes a medical pampl
fifty pages that sites tall exposition of v.
and private diseases, tb at can be had tree it
or by mail for two stamps. in sealed envii
Ever, sentence contains Duda tietion to
Ai de - a. and ensto;ing them to determine
Case nature of their complaints. ix
The establishment, eomprising ten
rooms, is central. When it is not conven:!
Thin the city, the, Doctor's opinion eat
tains( Dv giving a written statement of tt'iSe•
and medicines can be forwarded by
press. In some Instanees, however,
examination Is absolutely necessary,
others daily personal attention is reqt ire 3
for the accommodation r f s (mkpatients tt
apartments connected with the office that t -
vided with every reqhlsite that is calcul:
Doctor's
sillmi I
a I 1151 111Aforc: r e c ov ery,UlirWi n:C iedilareseri l, arat4lPtnilunry ° llll:lPaud tha pam phlets
areote under
mattermedicated:g
ah prepared
t Per 5
felled, rewhat be sari. Hours
dUndlin_ U 3c. toss!. om m
terum. lbw Court itonse,f
(Second Floon_
na