The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, August 26, 1869, Image 2

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    El
tits littibutal etaisitt.
TEE OLD WORLD AND T NEW.
There , . s checkmate universal
In this blind old world of ours.
• The earth has lost its vtgor,
Men's brains have lost their pow, :es.
Alas !'for the young fruits blittra;
And the flowers rust cannot looT!
Alas! for the lack, e and sun.
ALasi for the lowering glocrm! 1,
Alas! for the thiratibarreits,
Ayr the moors that yield no coral
Alas' for the lingering harvests,: 11
• And the still delaying morn! I t
By millions starve the beggars \
Around the untitled downs,
And the orphans weep in cite alleys
Of the igen cud stunptuous tosenti.
There "a deaftmate universal,
In thisold world of ours; '
1 he earth has lost its vigor. •
Men's bra.nshave lost their powers.
- Yet I hear an angel crying,
'Away to the Virgin Land.
Away to the doundtess prairie,
Fresh from Sod's shaping hand."
I •
And I see the Eastern sunbeams
Feint to the woad free West.
And l watch the seabirds .eading
To the golden realms of rest.
There's a checkmate universal
In this dumb old world of ours:
The earth his lost th. •Igor,
Men's brains have lost their powers.
Yet I know the flowering prairies
Shall soon r alt with the ripening grain,
And the merry strevms now tartan
Over the desert Plain. ,
Break tro old types. lay orothere.
Pave roads with Pharaoh's bones,
Hew from the Pi molds of the Past
The ntnre's temple 'doom
—.4ft Ms Year Round.
EPHEM R S.
—Balfe the composer is nearly scanty
years old.
4apt. Mayne Reid is now living in
Brooklyn.
,—An exchange sillys "Absinthe con
quers love."
—The Austrian Bishop Rudiger-is to
be made a Cardinal. ,
—Large deposits of guano have been
discov,ered in Russia.
.- . —Valuable beds of iron ore have been
discovered in Georgia.
—Exiiemes always meet. Woman's
sphere is .nan's fear.—Ez.
—The latest product discovered in the
Rocky Mountains is diamonds.
—"Old Mr Montijo's son-in•law" is
what Rochefort calls Napoleon.
—Mottoes for striking mechanics—A
little earning is a dangerous thing.
—The New Orleans people talk of cov
ering the levee along the river front.
—The prosped of the International
boat race is quite rate-ey—Oom. Bulletin.
—Atlanta—The place from which to go
to the sea—is called the Chicago of the
South.
—What mental process resembles a min•
nte's reflection? Second thoughts.
Punch..
—Black velvet bows with very long
ends are now worn by ladies on their
shoulders.
—Report says that Miss Olive Logan
and MiEs Bengal are stopping together
at Saratoga.
—The patentees of the "Byron Col
lar" have comtnenced an action against
the ".Atlantie."
—The population of Rome, by the re
cent census, is 220,532. The ecclesiasti
cal population is 8,480.
—Mr. Bateman is to bring Strauss with
his fine orchestra to this country during
the autumn some time. ,
—Many of the old elms in Yale College
grounds have been cut down to make
room for new buildings.
—A fashionable restaurant is like an
cient Egypt, because it has a Pyramid of
Ch(e)ops and a Temple of. Isis.
—More diamonds have been aiscover
ed at the Cape of Good Hope, one of
which is said to be worth 280,000!
—The Emperor of Austria with his
wife and mother propose visiting the
King of Italy at Florence in October.
—All will doubtless be interested to
learn that a son of the Prince of Monaco
is to marry a sister of the Duke of Ham
ilton.
—New York has plenty of rum and
water, and jeers at Boston and Philadel
phia because they each lack one of those
liquids.
_ • I
-Rumor saps that Ralph Waldo Em
erson and Oliver Wendell Holmes have a
pair of gloves •bet on the international
boat-race.
—A street preacher was arrested in
Philadelphia on Sunday last. He ob
structed the sidewalks and interfered with
i church goers.
—Henry Kingsley, the well known
novelist and brother of Rev Charles King
sley, is to be the editor of the Edinburgh
Daily Review.
—An exchangelays: What is the dif
ference
f between an editor and a wife?
One sets articles to rights, and the other
Writes articles to set.
—The second moon which we are short
ly to have, , is to be nearer the earth than
the old one with which _we have hereto
- fore managed to get along.
•;--A new opera of Wagner's is to be 1
brought_out you , gorgeously in Munich
this week. It contains, among other
lio*elties, a Oltatring scene.
-A.Cassablaiica has revived, he is one of
the gentlemen cOmootting_ the committee
iiipoiritecl, some dole since in France, to
.examine the. Senates Consultum.
-The porter of the Temple of Isle, at
,ithebee, had a daughter. This girl died,
And her interesting remains in the shape
of a mummy have recently been found.
" Paris has a velocipede with five
• •
wheels .
We have always regarded the
Oh' wheel to a coach as rather unisefal,
:but with 'a
velocipede it may be different.
—Spritualists are boring for oil in the
midst, of Tonawanda swamp in
_New
A.ptedium has given the informs.
.datithat a 450p,000 well can be struck
~
just there
-] Two boys in a Chicago prison tried
in Vain to get out through a small hole;
i
4
;
I'
-I
they then got soft sotn;' after smear
ing themselves over succeeded in slip
ping through and escaped.
—Mr. Burlingame's French interpreter
was thrown from his horse and injured,
and for some days the Chinese were un
able to express their feelings in a way
that could be understood.
—Female compositors were employed
in. Italy as early as 1481. We are unable
at present to state what wages they .re
ceived, or how they compared with the
wazes of men at that time.
—An Austrian woman has been arrest
ed for the horrible offence - of bleeding
young girls and drinking their blood to
replenish her own supply. On being de
tected she tried to poison herself.
—Napoleon, Wellington, Humboldt
and envier were all born in the year 1769.
It is curious to try and imagine in just
what condition the world would now be
if these four had never been born.
—The wife of a judge at Odessa in
sulted a coachman, who summoned her
before her own husband in his official ca
pacity. The justice issued a warrant for
his wife, investigated the affair and fined
her fifty roubles.
—The royal family of Prussia have
subscribed quite liberally to the Hum
boldt monument which is to be erected
there, and the so-called Feudalists in
Prussia have taken offence at such liber
ality in such a cause. -
—Nark Twain, who has just assumed
his duties as one of the editors of the Buf
falo Express, says he intends hereafter to
give up swearing, though he don't see
very well how taxes and house rent can
be discussed without it.
—A friend who was unable to go to
England to see the International boat
race, now congratulates himself that he
has staid at home, as the cable will
bring over the news of the result several
hours before the time settled for it to take
place.
—At a recent meeting of the Ladles'
Sanitary Association of London, at which
a number of prominent surgeons and
physicians were present taking part in
the proceedings, it was decided that there
are not at pesent sufficient data to war
rant the present law compelling vaccin
ation.
—ln St. Louis they propose to , cele.
brate the Humboldt centennial by pope.
lar festivities and the erection of a grand
observatory, vivarium or zoological gar
den. Which of these three desirable
things will be chosen as the lasting monu
ment to Humbo:dt, remains as yet to be
determined upon.
—A curious old portrait has been dis
covered of Napoleon I, painted at Ajaccio
in March,
.1773, by Cavalluci. The future
Emporer was then but four years old. He
is dressed in a sailor's costume of dark
olive green, and wears painted shoes, with
silver buckles. Thick hair fang over the
child's forehead.
—The Jewish feast of the Atonement
comes off on the same day as the Hum
boldt centennial and some of the Hebrews
of Cincinnati desiring to take part in the
Humboldt festival, have addressed the
committee, having that matter in charge,
requesting the postponement of the cele
bration for one day.
—One of the most clarions l instances of
the community of art is to be , seen in the
Cathedral 'of Cologne which is now
being rapidly pushed to completion. It
is a Roman Catholic Church, while the
repairs and other work now being done
on it are at the expense of the King of
Prussia, an ardent Protestant.
Tun London correspondent of the Chi
cago Tribune says: Mrs. Linton is the
contributor to the Saturday Review of the
"Girl of the Period" articles, which
gave terrible offense. Her husband, an
able engraver, has been in the United
States, I believe, for some time, and I
am sure his talent must have been dis.
played there. Before her marriage, Miss
Lynn published some novels which at
tracted considerable attention by the au
dacity 01 the theories which were broach
ed, as well as by the incidents detailed.
Mrs. Linton, I understand, is collecting
her 'contributions to. the Saturday Re
view, and a remarkable volume she will
make. There seems no possibility in
these times of preserving the anonymous
long. A year is the outside. Perhaps
the secret of the authorship of "Ecce Ho
mo" was kept as well as auy of recent date.
There were all sorts of guesses until at
hat Prof. Seely's name crept out. The
"AmaU3ur:Casual" was another success
for a time, but the gentleman in question
fell out with the conductors of the peri
odical in which his adventure appeared,
and ultimately Mr. Greenwood published
his name as the author. The Saturday
Review; perhaps, would have preferred
the anonymous to the "Girl of the Period"
contributions, and would like the surmises
as to Marchionesses and Duchesses best,
for Mrs. Linton, though a clever woman,
is out of the silver fork school to which
the Saturday Review professes its con
tributors are restricted.
SISIIARCIC had a world of bother be
f3re his'courtship of Mlle. Von Pattliani7
Mer was brought to . a connubial conclu-
Mon. The old baron was quite wrathy
that "that madcap Bismarck should have
the courage to apply for the hand,of my
dear, gentle Johannah." The old.baron
ness was still more obdurate, and it was
not until Bismarck came to Read , ' in
person, and in her presence passionately
pressed his sweetheart to his breast, that
she relented, cried a bit, and said, "Bless
you, my children." On the wedding trip
• Bismarck met his sovereign, Sing Fred
erick William IV, in Venice, was invited
to dine with the old potentate, who then
and there saw the stuff of which he was
madil, and at once took him into his con
fidence.
Mns. STOWE abhors Calvinism as much
as she abhors slavery. In her Okitoton
Folks she attributes the lapse from virtue
of.one'of the female characters to Calvin
ism, and in her defense of Lady Byron,
which bas just appeared, Mrs. Stowe,
through the mouth of Lady Myron holde
"the Calvinistic theology ea heard. la
Scotland ai responsible, partially, at
least, for ,"
the social erhnee of Lord Byron.
rinsaugp„,GAZETTE: THIIIISPA.Y; AUGUST 26, 1869
Woman's Sphere
A. Miss Catharine E. Beecher, by re
quest, read a paper *fore the National
Teachers' Association, in session in Tren
ton, N. Y., entitled, ' , Something or
Woman better than the Ballot," from
whieh.we extract the following:
How much there is included in wo
man's distinctive and appropriate duties,
and how much science and practical
training are demanded properly to pre
pare for them, few realize. The selec
tion, preparation and care of food and
drinks for a family, are, in Europe, made
an art and science, to hich the meet lit
erary and cultivated devote attention The
selection, fitting and making of clothing
are other branches for which science and
training are demanded. The CM of
young infants and the nursing of the
mothers demand science and practical
training as much as any profession of the
other sex. The management and gov
erning of young children require as much
training and skill as the duties of the
statesman or warrior. The nursing and
care of the sick, if performed by conscien
tious scientifle and well trained nurses,
would save thousands of the victims of
ignorance and neglect. And then 'there
are out, door professions connected with a
home which are as suitable for women as
for men. The business of raising fruits and
flowers is especiall suited to woman as , also
the management of the dairy; and for these
the other sex are regularly instructed in
endowed agricultural schools, while wo
men cannot share these advantages. The
arta that ornament a home, such as draw
ing, painting, sculpture, and Dindscape
gardening, are peculiarly appropriate for
women as professions by which to secure
an independence. Yet but a few have
the opportunities which are abundantly
given to the other sex. These are all em
ployments suited to woman, and such as
would not take her from the peaceful re
treat of a home of her own, which by
;hese professions she might earn.
A collection of the more remarkable
precedents of love-letters, well chosen,
would be both useful and interesting;
and it would not he impertinent to ex
amine how far the modern facilities of in
tercommunication may not have induced
some deterioration in the style of amor
ous composition. Southey, apropos of
the loves of Leonard Ban and his cousin
Margaret, observes that theirs were not
times in which a sigh could be wafted
across the country by mail-ce ach at the
rate of eight miles an hour. What would
he have said of these days, in which, for
three cents, half an ounce of assurances
of unalterable affection maybe transmitted
from New York to Boston in a few hours,
or, indeed, the sigh (if under twenty
words) may be wafted Instantaneously by
electric telegraph? Here we may observe
that, in actions for breach of promise of
marriage, written evidence of the prom
ise, though its absence may weaken the
plaintiff's case, is far from being a sine
qua non. For example, in a case tried
some years ago, in which a marine-store
dealer. was the defendant, and a damsel
of Portsmouth the 'plaintiff, defendant's
counsel insisting very strongly that not a
single scrap of love•letter was produced
on , the other side, the learned judge
warned the jury against attaching much
significance, observing very pertinently
that it was absurd to expect that the man
would occupy himself with writing love•
letters to the young woman, when all he
had to do was to go round into the next
street and put his arm around her waist.
Ups anti Down! of. Fortune
An English paper has the following:
"At the last meeting of the Paddington
Board of Guardians, F. B. Prescott,
Esq., banker, in the chair, the Chairman
stated that while visiting the infirmary,
he had been accosted by a pauper Inmate
who a few years ago was in possession of
property worth from fifty thousand
to sixty thousand pounds; was a
blood relation to one of the highest peers
in the realm, and vitose fortunes bad
been completely broken by the failure of
Messrs. Overend and Guerney's concern.
This man, who Is seventy years of age,
after recounting in a forcible and intelli
gent manner • the difference between
the present and his former mode
of lining, and, also, after stating
that he had met with every kind
ness from the work house officials, asked
him (the Chairman) to request the guar
dians-to grant him a few indulgences- be
yond those accorded to the lower sub
stratum of paupers living In the work
house. The Chairman added that such
had been the gentlemanly behavior of
the man while in the house that the mas
ter and matron had frequently supple—
mented the diet usually allowed by little
luxuries which they had paid for out of
their own pockets. After the vice Chair
man had expressed his ;regret that the
law did not allow guardians •to draw a
line of demarcation between the treat
ment of the well•conditioned and ill-con
ditionad pauper, the Board resolved that
Lord be written to, informing him
of his relation's present circumstances.
Pr sus been ascertained that the climate
of Key West, Florida, has a similar adap
tability to the manufacture of cigars as
that of Cuba; and that a celebrated Ha.
vans cigar manufacturer determined to
try the experiment of establishing a large
factory for the manufacture of cigars at
that point, which is said to have proved
a success. The tobacco is brought from
Cuban fields and 200,000 cigars per mouth
are now being turned out from-the Key
West establishment. They are said to
equal in flavor the finest brands of Cuban
clgars v and can be furnished to . American
consumers at from thirty to forty per
cent. less than, the present prices asked
and paid for similar articles. More face
tortes will be speedily established at Key
West, and altogether there is a good
prospect ahead for sinokers; that is if the
whole thing is not': clever dodge for
smuggling purposes.
WB ABE =Wed. to observe that many
prominent journals, which ridiculed the
idea of the Empress of France visiting'
the United States next summer, a fact
first announced in this journal, have
since informed their readers that cottages
have been engaged - at Saratoga, for the
use of the Empress and her party. The
Prince I
y mperial who is now in his four
teenth ear, will accompany his royal
mother,
mother, and the entire cortege will con
sist of about thirty persons. The Em
press wil! visit Boston,Newport, New
York, Saratoga, and iagara Falls, and
may possibly extend her tour to Califor
nia, proceeding to PhiladelPhia, Balti.
more and Washington on her return from
the West., "It has been one of my
dreams to:visit America," said the Em
press to our informant,next year I
shall see New York and Niagara Palls,"
Appteton's Journal.
Love—Lettere.
SEIJP LABELING
FRUIT CAN TOP
COLLINS & WRIGHT,
Re are now prepared to supply Tinners and
Potters.- It Is I)erTect, simple. and as cheap as
the plain top, having the names of the various
Fruits stamped upon the cover. radiating from
the center. and =lndex. or pointer stamped upon
the top of the can.
It is Clearly, Distinctly and Permanently
by merely , piecing the name of the fruit the
can cortains opposite the po.nter and sealing In
the customary manner. ,h , o preserverof fruit or
geeingousekeeper will use any
. other after once
t. tah2s
= r e t k 23 . •• ; •
ViTATEB PIPES, _
" CHIMNEY TOPS
A large assortment.
HENRY IL COLLIMES.
apl4:hll Sld Avenue.neir Smithfield St.
DRY GOODS, TRIMMINGS.
2,000 POUNDS
OF 211 AT
60011 COUNTRY YARN,
Which we have been selling for several gears.
JUST RECEIVED.
FLANNELS; AT LOW PRICES,
Full Line of Colors.
BUMMER GIOODS,
j AT REDUCED PRICES.
3:1C1C13, igh313.1.11t9,
A FULL VARIETY.
CORSETS, all the best makes.
PAPER COLLARS
OF ALL DESCRTPTIONB .
AND A FULL STOCK OF
Ladies' and Gents' Furnishing Goods.
WHITE GOODS,
HANDEBBCHIEPS,
LACES,
TRIHMINGS.
BUTTONS.
MACRITM, GLYDE & CO,
78 & 80 litarket Street.
00 Di
4%
ck 3 e 0 b
, hi p F . 4
W. rl Pir m
g 4
1: 1 4
cal tri
t=i €4 re 4
mo FA
E as tn E 4
OD P . I t s 4 rfi
M t= 04
E mi l "4
el
res 0%
sod
Nlitil SUMER GOODS
ACRD:& CARLISLE'S
No. 27 Fifth Avenue,
Dress Trimmings and Buttons.
Embroideries and Laces.
Ribbons and Flowers.
Hats and Bonnets.
Glove Itting and French Corsets.
New Styles elms loos Skirts.
Parasols—all the new styles. •
Sun and Rain Umbrellas.
Hosiery-the best English makes.
Agents for "Harris' Seamless Kids."
Spring and Summer underwear,
Solo Agents tor the Bemis Patent Shape eel.
lars. "Lockwood's "Irvin." "West End,"
"Elite," act "Dickens," "Derby," and other
styles.
Dealers supplied with the above at
MANUFACTURERS' PRICES
MAORI:PI & °MUM,
NO. 27
FIFTH AVENUE
my 4
DicCANDLESS & CO.,
04111181Lste Wilson. can s C 0..)
WHOLliadqg DICALXIM
Foreign and,Dinnestin, Dry 43k oda,
go 'O4 woori mum% •
Third door 111:wris Diamond
. • P=dl3l3lllll.
MERCHANT TAILORS.
BTIEGEL)
. (Late Cutter witlt W. Hespeabelde.
B 3 Smithfield Street,P%ttsbur=h.
seSS:III
WEW SPRING GOODS.
A splendid new stock of
CLOTHS, cassimmucs,
nit received by aunts swum.
sel4r Merchant Twor. 73 Statttneid street.
ri-..3- .„8,1-
CNIO PECK. ORNAMENTAL
AM 'WOMAN AND yzaanninor. l : fo.
Il i
Thud inn near Broltblield, rittsiburg •
alwatrahan a naval assortment of La
dies.eantlements
1 1 7143&__ _M. 80, Lre, GuABD CU M " ,
BRamalAnanclie. Na li t h irel Psuraili cub
will be Flees for RAM
Ladles and Gentlemen's Hair Ctattla Immo.dont
a the WWI mama. 11
HEADQUARTERS
GENTLEMEN'S
FFItNISIIING GOODS.
PUTNAM & ADAMS
IVILL CLOSE OUT AT
Greatly Reduced Prices,
The Bats nee 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
MUSLIN DRAWERS,
NCLHDING THE CELEBRATED
PATENT PANT,II.OON DRAWERS.
AN IMMENSE STOCK OF
LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS
.11 'Very Low Prices.
GLOVES,
SUSPENDERS,
TIES, BOWS,
SUNKER SCARFS,
ALL REDUCED.
SPECIAL BARGAINS IN
MEN'S HALF HOSE.
E
FANCY SHIRTS
To be Closed Out Very Cheap.
QUAKER CITY FINE SET
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 INCREASINC
We have these Shirts in all sizes
FOR EYELETS AND STUDS
To Open at the Back.
(FINE DRESS SHIRTS
MADE TO ORDER
Mso, Wholesale Agents for the Celebrated
"NORWICH MOLDED
Linen Collars and CuEs,
SAP,ATOGA,
NEWPORT,
NIAGARA,
P rlirLC:lltl
.fit Manufacturers Prices
PUTNAM & ADAMS
saborsair
SHING GOODS
FOR
A LARGE LOT OF
THE
ALSO,
72 Fifth Avenue,
OMEM POSTOPPICL
CARP-ET$.
CARPET S,
Floor Oil Cloths,
3111.1L9C u r IN G !3!
Window Shades,
AT LOW PRICES.
We offer many . of our goods much below last
Spring's prices. Those needlig goods la our
line can save money by buying at once.
BOVARD, I ROSE tk, CO.,
21 FIFTH AVENUE,
j7l4l:daT
NEW FALL STOCK.
CARPETS,
The First in the Market
D
THE CHEAPEST.
CHOICE PAT'TERIiB
Two-ply and Three-ply
CHEAP INGRAIN CARPETS.
THE FINEST LI OF
BODY _BRUSSELS
E..ver Offered in Pittsburgh•
,*ye time and money by buying from
McFARLAND & COLLIN.
No. 71 and 73 FIFTH AVENUE.
auZ:d aT
NEW CARPETS!
aru.rie, MEMO.
We are now opening =assortment unparalleled
in this city of IrtNEST
VELVETS BRUSSELS TREE-PUS,
The Very Newest Designs,
Of our own ree.nt Importation and Selectedfrom
eastern manufacturers.
MEDIUM AND LOW PRICED
TN4G-rt ArNS,
VERY SUPERIOR
QUALITY AND COLORS.
An Extra Quality of Rag Carpet. '
We are now gelling manT of the above at
GREATLY REDUCED PRICES.
•
BROS.,
..ro. 51 FIFTH' .4NEXUE,
Jen
OLIVER ICLINTOCR & CO.
• RAVE JUST RECEIVED A
FINE SELECTION OF
EUITSSELS,
TAPESTRY BRUSSELS
THREE PLY AND
INGRAIN CARPETS.
THE LARGEST LSSORTAILIT OF
WHITE,CHECK & FANCY
MATTINGS,
FOR SUMMER WEAR,
IN TEE CITY.
STOCK FULL IN ALL DEPARTMENTS
OLITEU McCLINTOCH & CO'S.
533 FIFTH AVENUE
LITHOGRAPHERS.
81.214.11.31321 323.113;
SINQERLY & CLEIS, Successors
to Ozo. T. BOOOMIYAN a CO., 1 -
PRACTICAL. LITILOGRAPHEBS.
The only Steam Lithographic "Establishment
West of tre Mountains.-Business Cards, Letter
Beads, Bonds, Labels, Circulars, Show Cards,
Mimes. Portraits, Views. Certificates of De
sosita, Incitation burls, so.. Nos. 7$ sad 74
sated street. Pltesharsh.
DR.
QONTINVES TO TREAT ALL
private diseases, dypbßle In all its forms, all
ary diseases, and the effects of mercusg e ns
completely eradicated; Spermatorrhea or
nal Weakness and Impotency, resulting teem
self-absuse or other causes, and which produces
acme of the following erects, as blotcnes, bodily
weakness, indigestion, consumption, aversion to
soclery, unmanliness, dread of fuMre events,
loss of memory,
all so i n t d r o altenngc e,hnocturnal)
s emission..y
rnendfen m y arria p g os unsatat t ac e oy, and s h m ef a r o e
imprudent, are permanently cured. Persona af
flicted with these or any other delleatq Intricate
or long standing constitutional complUnt silo=
give the Doctor a trial; he never tails.
A particular attenUongiven to all Female em -
plaints, Leuoirrbes or Whites, Filling, inflam
mation or Ulceration of the Womb, Ovatitis,
pniritis, Amenorrhoea. Menorrhagta, Dysmen- •
norrhoes, and bterility Or Barrenness, are treat.
ad with trus greatest success.
It is selforrldent that a physician whoconfutes
himself exclusively to the study of a certain class
Of diseases and treati thousands of cases every
year must acquire greater skill In that specialty
than one In general practice.
The Doctor publishes a medical pamphlet of
fifty pages that gives a full exposition of venereal
and private diseases, that can be bad free &Lonnie
or by mall fOr two stamps, In sealed envelopes.
every sentence contains instruction to the at
dieted, and enabling them to determine the pre.
else nature of in complaints.
The establishmen comprising ten . ample
moms„ is central. Do ctors is not coavenient to
Thit the city, the opinion. can be ob.
tainel by giving a written statement of the case,
and medicines can be forwarded by mall or ex.
press. In some Inatanees, bowevee, a personal
examination Is absolutely necessary, white nn
othemdally personal attention is regaled. • lad
for the accommodation c f such patients there aft
. apar=ents connectenurith the office that are
'tided with every requisite that Is calm
promotcovery. Including medicated e l m,.
baths. AU prescriptions are prepared Its wi
Doctor's own laboratory, under his 2ersofi v a .
or.„ Medical pamphlets at, omee
= W aal :bravo stamps. No matter who.
or
felled. read what be say*. Hours 9 Aar. to pu r e e ;
31101i/tie K. C ourt H enn . ) . No. 9 WY.Ella
ISTRIAT. Meat puti
14188.
LV
(Second Floorb