The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, August 19, 1869, Image 2

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    13
littAurgb
TILE BABY'S DRAWER.
eres a little drawer In
curare hamber
'Guarded with tenderest
Where the dainty clothe neverying
• Ttat my darling shall wear.
And there while the hours are waning.
•
7111 the house is ail at rest,
I sit acd taney a baby
• Cicse to my aching breast.
?Sy darllng'ispretti*, white garments:
' I wroug ht them Bitting apart
While h is mystic the w throbbing
Under my throbbing ears. •
And lftea my bap.) , earning t
Breaks In a littte F g
Like the mramur of irds at brooding
When tile days are warm and long.
T. finished the dainty wardrobe,
And r ub esrawer was almost full
With of the Aue publin
And robes of the whitest wool. -
I folded Vault all to ether
With a rose for ev ry hair,
F telling. and Bay in "tient fragrant,
rit. for my prince to wear.' '
Ah;tbe radiant Sn mer morning,
S.) full of a moth r's Joy:
"Thank Hod. het fair and perfect,
Let him
ne -born boy."
Let him wear the ratty. white garments
I wrought
sweet and
apart;
Lay him, h o sweet and helpless,
Here, close to my throbbing heart. .
Many, and many an evening
I sit. since my baby came.
-Sat to • 'What do the angels call him V'
For - he died without a came;
Sit l' tne ho e urs are waning,
An w d il the hous is all at rest,
Arid fancy II baby nestli g •
Close to my aching breast.
—P utnem'f. Mal/arise
EPHEREBIS.
-Kansas has found OIL -
—Green is still the color in Paris.
—450 Danish Mormons haVe arrived.
—Mr. Stanton's health seems to be re.
turning
-. Kentucky, as well aa Pliiladelphiaa
very dry., •
-_Camphor is good for driving away
mosquitoes.
—The English Yacht Club has one
lady member.
—Gen. Fremont has gone to Denmark
'with his family. '
--Sacramento river sand is said to be
worth $8 per ton.
—Gen.-Williams is now called the hus
band of Mrs. Douglas. •
—Two nieces L of Jefferson Davis are
said to be the greatest belles in Paris now.
—Ex -Bishop Colenso is ill. If he dies
at home it will be on one of his Natal
days.
—Robeson has gone on a trip down the
Southern coast. Robeson cruise, O I—N.
Y. Leader.
—An exchange thinks that the Chinese,
for an industrious people, have a great
number of idles.
—t-Ristori has written a book about
America; it is called lies. Souvenirs
Trans-Atlantiques.
—Earope is said to be destitute of first
class professional tenors, while sopranos
are unusually plentiful.
--Maine and New Hampshire, which
have been drying -up for wantof rain,
have just had a fine shoWer.
—A trapeze performer in a London
music hall his delighted his audience re
cently by a dremifil accident.
—Quilt) says that as the Carlists are
entering Spain in bands, the revolution
ists may - have to face the music.
—New Jersey has more than her usual
supply of sweet potatoes this'year and
they are unanimously Jersey potatoes.
—New Albany is have a bridge over
the 01 , 10. What width of span ,Is con
- templated we have not been informed.
The, Passaic Falls in New Jersey are
to be completely dammed tip for manufac
turing purposes and the Cascade is ruined.
--In Atlanta, Ga., recently, a negro
was fined $5O or six months in the chain
gang, for having had the bad taste to
_ marry a white woman.
—An exchange in_noticing the fact that
a girl had swallowed forty percussion
• caps, concludes that she will make a noise
in the world some day.
was so copiously
—St. Peter, Minn.,
rained upon recently that it rivalled, Ven
ice to such a degree that the streets were
navigable for dug-outs.
=Prussian and Russian papers jeer at
Von Beust because he makes so many
• speeches. The speeches tell the peo
ple unpleasant truths about Prussia and
IMO
=I
Russia.
—A tooth . weighing sin and a ha:
pounds was dug up near 'lndianapolis the
other day. The roots were slightly de
cayed. So large a teeth must have had
enormous aching capacity.
—"Thehlonde Admiral" is a title which
r
is now Oxen Fisk becaiise he runs a line
of steamboats. As he has recently con
ducted a war we suppose he will assume
the title of Field Marshal at least.
—The Boston Post says "some kinds
of country board this season are hard
pine." For instance. Olive Logan has to
do a good deal of hard pining because she
is a brunetteand at the sea-shore.
—The Ray. William Morley Punshon
visited both Chicago and Cincinnati, and
he says that at Chicago everybody seems
to be going to some place; at Cincinnati,
they look as though they had been there
and returned.
...In China everything is upside down.
The Chinese are introducing their topsy
turvey customs to,,California, and we read of a Ban Franciscan boy having' re
proved his father for profanity, ,ind thud
ly ending up by having him arrested.
—The dearth of good tititi for novels
is having strange results- in' England.
The last book out is called the "O.V. ~
or How Mr. Blake became an M. F. RH. "
Several thousand stories can be on
this system without .using the timedi
twice.
—A recent railway accident in Eng...
land was caused by the color blindness of
the engineer, who couldn't tell the red
and green lights apart. There is said to
be snore blindness as to the. colors red
and green than any others, alt.hough we
A
„ .
.', i
.
I
• 4
1
MI
EMI
ME
have quite recently seen a person who
couldn't tell yellow from grey. ,
—The New York -Star thinks that Mr.
Bigelow, the new editor of the Times,
ought to cherish the memory of appo.
pleat', as he has twice profited by its at
tacks—once being elevated to the post of
Minister to France, on the death of Mr.
Dayton, and now succeeding Mr. Ray
mond, who died of the same disease.
—The Cincinnati Enquirer says Mr.
Pendletort's election is as certain as the
dawning or election day', The same pa.'
per felt morally certain that Mr. Pendle
ton would be the Democratic candidate
for President last year. We may there
fore condense the two statements thus:
Mr. Pendleton's election-is as , certain as
was his nomination last year.
—All sorts of trades and occupations
have formed or are forming unions in
order to keep up prices, wages, etc. All
these 'unions object strenuously to, the
landlord's union which keeps up the rents
too. The only people who have formed
no union are the consumers; if they would
really unite , in a sincere determination
that prices must become reasonable once
more, the most desirable of reforms could
speedily be accomplished.
—The water famine at Philadelphia is
bringing. out numerous correspondents
who fill the paper with suggestions and
threats. Condign vengeance is threaten
ed to all who sprinkle the streets, water
their gardens or wash the pavethents.
One gentleman viishes the steam fire
engines to be brought into use to assist in
pumping water from the diminished
Schuylkill into the reservoirs, and in short
that large class of persOns who feel
obliged to communicate their ideas to the
papers, has been thoroughly aroused.
Rigor for Venlig Life.
Life is an-earnest battle. U'is no trifle
to have a nature fearfully and wonder
fully made—strong desires that must be
regulated, enormous exposures that must
be avoided, fatal proclivities that must
be resisted and overcome.. And therefore
it is that we so much need that early train
ing, that early discipline, which it is hard
to see whether parents and governors are
more slow to apply or children and youth
more reluctant to receive. Let the fault
be where it will, it is a fatal fault. Suc
cess, usefulness, virtue, happiness, peace,
salvation, heaven—all depend upon our
entering life fully armed in suitable moral
harness; with nroper convictions as to
what the exposures, dangers and temp
tations of body and soul are, and with
such settled rules, habits and principles,
such a trained conscience, Such an estab
lished reverence for God' and duty, as
must deprive the world of all its power
to deceive and betray. Those of us who
are parents should remember that it is we
who put the harness on our children.
They do not gird themselves. It _is
ice then, who are mainly refvn
sible for its want of strength its
loose, ill-fitting character. In our tender
ness we refuse to draw the buckles where
they will hold, and if the shoulder chafes
or reddens ever so little with the strap,
we are the first to remove it. We are
sorry to think the young bosom must con
tract its inspirations beneath so sturdy a
coat. We lift We sandals and plead Or
the feet that are 'to press their roust
seams; but where are our recollections
that we do not think of the sharpness of
the spear that that heavy corselet is to
resist. the weight of -the battle-axe that
leather piece is to annal, the roughness
of the road those stout shots are to make
smooth? Is it not because of the tender
ness of the flesh that we need our leather
mail, and are we to dread our armor more
than our enemy? That is the miscalcula -
tion of life; the sacrifice of our life-long
safety to our immediate convenience; of
our whole usefulness and honor and tri
umph as men and women to our
season of careless, self-indulgent, shor gl t
gent happiness and freedom from self-im
posed restraint as bays and girls,
young . men and maidens.—h'ev.and
Dar.s
ROUNDS.
Felt Paper.
Every one is familiar with the applica
tion of paper in the manufacture of col
lars, cuffs and shirt bosoms; and to a less
extent in making waistcoats, and hats
and bonnets. A new patent has, how
ever, been recently taken out in France,
for the preparation of what is called felt
paper, in which both animal and vegeta
ble materials may be employed, Lind
which, by this patent, makes a paper of
extraordinary pliancy, flexibility and
strength, resembling the ordinary woven
fabrics so much as to admit being sewed
together and worked up into any article
of dress or clothing whatever. Handker
chiefs and petticoats, with scolloped and
embroidered skirts, bed spreads, window
curtains, quilts, table cloths and otber
articles, scarce distinguishable from the
genuine, are produced at so marvellous
ly cheap rates, the cost of these, even for
the largest size, scarcely amounting to
twentv.five cents each. Imitations of
leather, coverings for furniture, and even
shoes have been made from materials sim
ilarly prepared; We are all familiar
with the uses to which paper is applied in
Japan; and it is not at all improbable that
a few years will witness as extensive an in:
troduction of the same materi
the operations of every day life.al here into
Health and Beauty.
The majority of women lead far from
wholesome lives; and as beauty is more
or less a matter of health, too much can
never he said against such abuses of it as
are yet in. fashion. The worst of these
of
abuses is that they lead to a perversion
taste. Quite naturally the fragile type of
beauty has become the standard of the
present day, and men admire in real life
the lilly.cheeked, small-waisted, diaphan
ons-lookine creatures idealized by living
artists. When we become accustomed to
a nobler kind of beauty we shall attain to
a lOftier ideal. Men : will seek nobility
rather than' prettiness, strength rather
than weakness, physical perfection rather
tan physical degeneracy, in the women
they select as mothers of their children.
Artists will rejoice and sculptors will
cease to despair when' this happy con
summation is reached. Let none regard
it as chimerical or Utopian. A very little
rationalism brought te bearpon daily
life would place physical well-being with
in reach of womeil of all ranks; and
where health leadtt the ; way, beauty Is
seldom slow to follow.
PITTSBURGH GAZETTE: Till RSDAY, AUGUST 19, 1869,
ISARLTOak
Seen With a Woman's Naked Eye.
r Este Field , ' Letters In ilia New Tort
Tribune. A
hat do people talk about infiaratoga?
Plrst, horses, the betting, then suppers,
ners, etc : , then women. It may be a
od plach for match making, but I doubt.
Lt I doubt it .for the reason that there
e so few eligible men here, and those
f w are so .-exceedingly averse to matri
ony. What the young women do lam
a loss to imagine. I should think,
however,..that they would enter for the
"Consolation stakes." To get up a ward
robe, array yourself in three dresses per
day, pay a large hotel bill, and then not
kill your game, must be the worst possi
ble investment. It was only the other day
a mother complained in accents not un
like those of that lone, lore creature, Mrs.
Gummidge, what a terrible trial Saratoga
was to her. She had brought her two daugh
ters here for three seasons, and they were
still on her hands. Aye. madam, and
they will remelts there. The men who
seek wives at Saratoga are fortune hunt
ers. Go home and set your daughters to
honest work, and then perhaps they will
find honest husbands.
But tne butterflies flap their wings and
dance and flit in spite of odd against them.
A butterfly in one balance and a horse in
the otter! The clothes I have seen during
the past week are the most wonderful
panorama I ever beheld. For "loudness"
and startling effects I do not believe they
can be equaled except by the wardrobe
of Niblo's . Garden Indeed so many of the
women resemble the supernumeraries , of
Black Crook and White Fawn that I
sometimes think .I must be seated in the
parquette of the theater, There are the
blondes, of the period," as they
are called here, with just such heads as
lorgnettes have been 'pointed at for so
long a time, with such decolletes dresses.
If the skirts are not as short as the v. aist,
itis owing to a wretched conventionality
that still draws a line somewhere. There
1 are the ladies who enamel, and they have
L husbands! What must these men be
made ol? And these women dress, and
then dress and then dress. For what?
To attract the attention of vulgar men,
--who study them as they would prize
animals, and use no refined language in
discussion their points. It is most horri
ble, and I do not see how any woman of
.modesty or sensibility can be willing to
subject herself to 'such coarse scrutiny.
For a woman to dress to gratify -those
who kno* and appreciate her, is not only
a pleasure but a duty. To put herself on
exhibition for the benefit of the general
public is such a lowering of womanhood
as no one who respects the sex cares to
see.
If women , had common sense there
would be comparatively little]display. In
the first place no one is of consequence
in great crowds unless she chooses to
make herself conspicuous. In the second
place no woman can enjoy any comfort
outside of the hotel unless she wears a
short dress, and at Saratoga any but the
stoutest w alking dresses will be quickly
ruined by the dust. Therefore, to appear
in expensive toilets, women must forego
every form of exercise but that of driving.
This too in summer—the season for out
door life! And after all, what IS gained
by this extravagance? Men do not make
such fools of themselves. Nothing can
be prettier than the present style of short
dresses, a few of which would be all
sufficient for the ordinary hotel life. A
pretty face is pretty, and an ugly face is
ugly, no matter what the clothes may be.
A good fitting gown, a tastefully dressed
Lead, a decent boot and glove, are the
important features of a woman's toilet,
and anyone who possesses these requi
sites will be a beauty if she is a beauty,
and will assuredly be a lady if she is for
tunate enough to have been born and
bred so. To try to be one or the other is
the wretched comedy that is daily played
at Saratoga, to the satisfaction of no one
and - the disgust of many. Alas and slack!
There is the young lady who sings in
the public parlor ; there is the young gen
tleman who plays waltzes on the piano to
admiring young ladles ; there is music by
the band ; there are hops ; there is flirta
tion unlimited and playing with fire, be'.
it is all play. Nobo dy is injured but
those who bet heavy amounts - and play
with the tiger. Vauxhall's failure to•day
has spread gloom over the town. Said a
shop-keeper:"Vauxhall's defeat will
make a great difference in trade. All my
customers have lost, and I shall leave
town tomorrow." Such is life here.
Everybody is grasping for money. Even
the dipping boys at the springs look to
visitors for their pittance, instead of Ming
paid a regular salary by the hotel keep
ers. New York papers cannot be bought
for less than ten cents at the hotels, while
_at a bookstore on Broadway they are
sold for half that amount. Every stranger
is an orange to be squeezed dry. Let
those who like this heroic treatment try
it. Like the desperate shopkeeper, I shall
leave Saratoga in the first train to-mor
row morning.
The end of it all is this : If _you arc a
man, you despise women ; if you are a
woman, you despise men. Time lesson,
therefore, is bad, and the sooner you find
an antidote the better.
Wurliing tier Nay.
From Chicago, where most of the won
derful things occur now-a-days, we Nave
a story of a wonderful young lady. iler
name is Broderick, and she is less than
twenty years old. She has been toriome
time employed in painting and ornaraert•
ing chamber furniture. Succeedin eh this,
although making good wages,. was
ambitious to do better, and has taken the
contract for painting the interior of the
four story brick house now being com
pleted for the use of the Woman's Home.
The work is done indoors; she under
,stas perfectly mixing colors and apply
ing t nd hem a brush; is neat, more
economical in her use of material than
most men painterf, and more expeditious.
Ax ill•natured Frenchman has invented
a toy which he calls the grirnacti•
scope. You place the carte de visite of a
friend in the apparatus, and she ap
pears distorted in na thousand hideous
ways, the innumerable combinations of
the kaleidoscope being success fully ap
plied to the art of making ugly one's
fellow creatures.
ON the occasion of the eclipse in Vir
ginia a colored individual became great
ly dated. "Bress de Lordl" said he,
"di nigger's time hab come at last, and
now we's gwine to hab a bracl sun."
SOME one has beautifully aid, "The
water that flows. from a sprin does not
congeal In winter, and those sentiments of
friendship which flow from the heart can
not be_frezen by adversity."
._-------_=_-
SEITE.LiUqELING
. • . • ..
Fall-GAN -TOP
..,-..... caolis, F.. , .WRIGIIT,
- '
' irrrgi3illl.G ll PIA: .h.;
. , -. ... .. .
We are now prepared to supply 'Miners and
'Potters. It is *perfect, simple. and as cheap as
the plain top, having the names of the various
Fruits stamped upon the corer. radiating from
the center. and anlndex or pointer stamped upon
the top of the can.
It is Clearly, Distinctly and Permanently
=,A SELED.
by merely placing the name of the fruit the
can contains opposite the pointer and sealing , in
the customary manner. No preserver of fruit or
good housekeeper will 0.68 any other after once
seeing t. . m. 25
IPES, CHIMNEY TOPS. &c,
NV ATER PIPES,
CIIISINET TOPS
A large assortment,
HENRY H. COLLINS,
E======
RY GOODS, TRIMMINGS.
2,1300 V 0011.77C1)
OF VIAT
8008 COUNTRY YARN,
Which we have been selling for several years,
JUST RECEIVED.
FLANNELS, AT LOW PRICES,
Full Line of COlors.
SUMMER GOODS,
AT REDUCED PRICES•
hoop 1933ii-ta,
A FULL VARIETY
CORSETS, all the best makes
PAPER COLLARS
OF ALL DESCIVIVTICINS
ANVIL FULL STOCK OF
Ladies' and Gents' Furnishing Goods.
WHITE Goons,
BANDISAACTITEIrs ,
LLCMS,
TRIMMINGS.
RIITTONs.
MACRUM, GLIDE & CO,
78 & 80 Narket Street.
&u 9
C=s 1 0
sz a l
jo 1 r,
tag d
c=s 4 tal
674 ITS P 4 Z
' P a
.11224
41 a z
ran
ran; l l Pig f a t
F=l
r , •
110 P 4 11 .
c=o 0. ot GO Es
W. 4
0 r ii.d
A
est -4 pi s
i=o cS
sza 114 E 4
get 0 1 41 2
tis 4
Nit SUMMER GOODS
IACRUI d, CARLISLE'S
No. 117 Fifth Ajenue,
Dress Trimmings and Buttons.
Embroideries and Laces.
Illb%ons and Flowers.
Hats and Bonnets.
t.rloee flttlug and Fren eb Corsets.
New Sty tea drauley's
Parasol,—a 1 the new styes.
mossy Rain Umbrellas.
Hosiery—the best English makes.
Agents for —Harris, Seamless Rids."
tkpring and :Summer underwear,
Sole agents n or the Bemis Patent Share
ovCol
vine.""lr •'West End."
lays. "
••F.dte," act "Dickens," "Derby." and other
styles.
'Dealers supplied with the above , at
Id U FACTU RICRS' PRICES
ILLORTIM & CARLISLE,
110..27
FIFTH AVENUE
triy4
DicCANDLES3 As CO.,
C aLri lLate
WUD Wilson. Carr & C 0..)
lALBALB DEALERS a
Foteign Ind Domestic Dry Weft s
No. 94 WOOD 137 ; 111EKT.
Tiara door 'bon DiamoadAlgntatau.
FA.
MERCHANT TAILORS.
yc t TIEGEL,
(Lite• Cutter with W. Hereenheide.)
MEIRCIAL&WE TALIZE•OII,
No. 53 Smithfield Streot,Pittsburgh
se26:trzt
"VEIV,SPRING GOODS.
A. splendid new met of
CLOTHS, GissrmEßEs,
Jost received by HENB.4 NEYEH•
Ir.n?lrl iiirT
NAIR AND PERFUMERY.
JOHN PECK, ORNABILENTAL
HAIR VIOUSEu AND YEIINTWER, No.
I Third street, near Smithfield. Pittsburgh.
af e
Always ti
hand, 'Arai assortment ot La.
dies 3 iMiS,_ BAN 0111LLS; ji tlen3P -
Wllol.,2oPirati. SO PS, WWII) MU
BILLONLZTS, &a rfijr_4. giood pri it
will be gav el" fel RAW wan. .
Ladies, Mid OentleineWs Hair Cu e
a
to neatest anima,
JOSEPH BORNE & CO.
WOULD BESPiCTIDLLT
CALL THE ..ITTEXTIOX'
WHOLESALE BUYERS
To their Extengve Assortment
NEW GOODS
Bought from First Hands
WHICH WE OFFER TO CASH AND SHORT
TIME MITERS AT A SMALL AD
VANCE ON 'MANUFACTU
RERS' PRICES.
25,000 POUNDS
KNITUNG BD ZEPHYR 'URN
BLUE MIXED. COUNTRY YARN
BARRED DRESS FLANNEL
Rob Roy and Shirting Flanne
1-3CCO X3M3E:L."SE"
Ribbed Merino,
Ribbed Wool
Tartan and
Balmoral Hose
la
VI
LADIES' AND CHILDREN
Heavy Cotton Half' Hose
Suspenders, in all qualities.
MOITiSOWS Star ~hints, all sizes,
in every quality.
Wool and Merino Shirts and
Drawers, Ribbed and Plain,in White
and all the various • mixtures.
OF
OF
AND FOR CASH.
In all Colora and 311xtures,
Of Best Make.
FOR
GENTS' WOOL
AND
HANDIKERCHIEFS.
Ladies' Hemstitched,
Embroidered
and Lace.
•
Gents' Hemmed,
lienistitched, Plain,
Colored Silk and
Cotton Hankkerchitfs.
Hamburg and Jaconet Embroideries,
Cluny Laces,
lint. %al. Laces and Insertions,
Cliroehet Edging,
Viide Co ton Lied Linen Laces,
Lace Collars and thcmizettes.
HOOP SKIRTS.
R.VERNTRING LP,TaIas'NIMES
SKIRTS, THE Ta D
itEt:
liEsT StiAeLs.
Invisible Walking',
Pi ire,
ilieesB
and In ' dlstinetAble
C4OOJR.SJOrr S.
American; German and French
IN XI.L WOIXIBERS.
PIPER COLLARS BD CU
FOU
Ladies and Gents,
Of Ilerserole & Libby's Celebrated Mak
FOR WHICH WE ARE THE
SOLE AGENTS IN PITTSBURGH
NOTIONS,
r,
SOAPS ,
PERFUMERY,
BUTTONS,
BRAIDS,
TAPES,
COMBS,
PINS, de
DEPA.RTNENTS COMPLETE
Prices Very Low !
=XI
AND 79 MARKET STREET
inn
tiN
CARPETS;
Floor Oil ClCths,
"NlC.Afrir IN Gr. .19;
Window Shades,
AT LOW PRICES.
We. offer many of oar goods much below last
Spring's prices. Those
needing goods In our
line can sayelioney by buying at once.
BOVARD, ROSE & CO
.,
AVEI§TUL
3tJL"152",•1869-
SPECIAL SALE Or
CARPETS.
We offe Newtail, tor TRIRTY DAYS ONLY,
a lthe ot tt(' Choice Patterns
T a pestry, Brussels, Ingrain,
and Other Carpets,
ALT LESS THAN COST OF LATORTATION ,
and our entire stock at prices which make it an
obje tc to buy this month, as these goods have
never been offered so low.
Our Store will close at 5 F. at. until September
first.
•
IIIe,FARLAND & COLLINS.
No. 71 and 73 FIFTH AVENUE,
zra
EW CARPETS
iTtiaae, IE3OO.
We are now opal:dna an assortment unparalleled
in this elt7 of FLK.EtiT
VELVETS BRUSSELS THREE-PLIS,
The Very Newest Designs,
Of ocr own recent tmportation and selectedirom
eastern manufseLnrers.
NEDILII AND LOW PRICED
ILINTGrrit S
QUA.LITY AND COLORS.
An Extra Quality of Rag Carpet.
We are now selling many of the above at
GREATLY REDUCED PRICES.
MUM BROS.,
.Yo. 51 FIFTH .111EXITE,
jet
OLIVER III'CLINTOCK & CO.
HATE JUST BEEEMD
FINE SELECTION _OF
IiTSSELS ,
TAPESTRY BRUSSELS
THREE PLY AND
INGRAIN CARPETS.
THE LARGEST ASSORTHEIST OF
WHITE, CHECK &FANCY
NATTINGS,
FOR SUMMER WEAR,
IN TB CITY.
STOCK FULL IN ALL DEPARTMENTS
OLIVER McCLU§.47OCK & CO'S.
23 FIFTH AVENUE.
(joALI COALI! COALIII
DICKSON, STEWMtT &
HEIVIIIK re,11:10 0 740 their Office to
NO. 567 LIBERTY- STREET,
(Lately City MOUS IttU SIiCOND ELOOII.
9°17E1.91' aerffeAArglitioVgdrineeltuti:;
.owest morket price.
All orders le f t st. their office or addressed to
them through the am% vie he attended to
proximity.
DR. wHarrrant:
CONTINUES TO TREAT ALL
private diseases. Syphilis in all its forms, all
urinary diseases and the effects of mercury are
compietely eradicated; Siwnnatorritea , or Semi
nal Weakness and Impotency, resulting from gi
self-abuse or other canes, and which produces ve,
acme of the following effects, as blotcnes, bodily .
weakness, indigestion, consumption. aversion to
society, unmanliness, dread of future event.,
loss of memory. Indolence. nocturnal emission,
and finally 5. , prostrating the sexual system as to
render marriaae unsatistactory, and therefore
Imprudent. are permai,ently cured. Persons af
flicted with these or any other delicate, intricsan
or long standing constitutional comulaint should
give the Doctor a trial; he never falls. ,„..
A particular attention given to all Female vitrn
t Leueorrhea or Whites, Fallingndent .
matlon or 'Ulceration of the Womb Ov a ritis ,
pruritis, A.rienorrhoea. -Blenorrhagia, Dysmen..
norrhoels, aiitlbtertlity or Barrenness, are treat
ed with the greatest success. -
It Is self.evident that a physician who confines
himself exclusively to the study of a certain class
of diseases and treats thousands of cases every
year must acquire greater still in that specialty
than one in general practice.
The 'Doctor publishes a medical pamphlet of
fifty pages that gives ,a lull exposition of venereal
and private diseues, tbnt can 'be bad tree atotice
or by mall-for two stamps, in sealed envelopes.
Every sentence contains 111 . 11tkUCtiOli to the If.
icttietatettgerhgret tchoelpitains. det ermin e
the
Pre.
The establishment, comprising ten ample
rooms, is central. When it is not convenient to
visit the elm, the Doctor's opinion can be olt
lathe i by gliing a written statement of the case,
and medicines can be I forwarded by mail or ex
press. In some instanees , however, a•persolial
examination is absolutely necessary, - while In
others dallypersonal attention is reqtired, and
for the accommodation t I such patients there ate
apartmeuts connteted with the office that are pro.
'aided with every requisite that it calculated to
promote recovery; Including medicated vapor
baths. All prescriptions are prepared in the
Doctor's own laboratOry, hider his pe r s onal is.
pervision. Iledicat pampts at Whets free, or
by mall for two stamps. No matter who Dave
galled, read what he says. Hour. 9 A.X. to SP, is.
Sundays 12 at. to Sr. at. Oface,No. 9 WYLIS'
LagasT, (near Coat Rouse.) Pittsbugh. Pa-
EU
(SEceitd Ihoorl
VERY SUPERIOU
E 3131
COAL AND COKE