The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, September 02, 1869, Image 2

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    112
ttis Ifittshtt Saidts.
THE HAM-ERIGAN RACE•
ET oantsus C. El=
' , Twos by the wayside, near a Southern town,/
spied a sage beneath a tree reciluing:
Els old straw hat was gulltless of a cru ern:
His pantaloons bad less or clip n than Mang..
addressing him abont the latest news. {t
I quiskly : found h m by his salutation.
A man of boundless and erroneous vietrii.
And Tait and various uastriformation. '
``l reckon you're a Yankee. come," Fold he,
, upon sown sut &Mug miP Mon or anoint!,
To see how being 'Penalized and Free
Aerehs with him you cadi your colored brother.
.2xtinction waits on turn, with all his rights,
till , freely given by your laws confonnned I,
801 l keep attacking the defenceless whita.S. d.
'.- ill the colored race are !tided or wouride
Orleans—behold the lesson tonsil
When in in Convention certain blacts assembled,
A sound of peaceful throngs outside was caught.
And in the hall' the bigots oloodthiretytrem
_ Med: -
Then
the
the winowa. lobbles.,onterl gate,
By the armed Caucasian race surrounded:,
Therarreouscia eal.leu menh-ir murderous hate,
And n in e te en colored were badly wounded.
'gm Central Gent gla. several months ex°.
The eons of ANC held a Leyst meeting,
And divers White Men went to rte the show
-A.neigtve the speakers friendly Southern greet
• in z..
But 101 when speaking had gone on spell.
And iiii,the air with toys! words resounded.
Upon the h spless Whites the negroes
and nineteen colored men were badly wounded.
..In old ,Virginis, at a rural place.
Where many African+ bad come for voting,
'The merest tis drill of the Risher Race
Were looking on and minor matters noting;, ; .
When ata. cry ate: t st me vote remised.
The blacks Infuriate on the haul int bounded,
Their knives and pistols mercilessly lured.
And fourteen colored men were badly wounded.
*qtr., at the Capital of all the states—
Tour boasted Washington, the placid city7+
That was, In lournsis of the proper dates.
Correct reports of what should move your lam
The town ei. amen r+l led countless blacks.
Who armed and maddened and torsot bounded,
Made on ate unrest.steg W hues, atucks,
And flitten colored men were badly wounded.
furtherinwei of late, in Tennessee,
. Where stokes wa: beaten st the polls by tenter,
negrons. armed from nead ta knee.
seemed on a light than on their votes intenter;
To vent some petty. dlaooli: spite.
Theythe pies of some Tag singlege unfounded,
turned with fury ow n s White.
And sateen colored men were badly wounded.
*.The race Hani-erican Is AN ing oat! , •
The sage concluded, with a dismal gesture;
And lett me victim of amazing doubt,
While he went on in raged vesture.
if Southern Whites, unarmed, so deadly are
To Southern Colored men full armed and band
ed,,
Row much more;fatal would they be by far
U by OM R2Coll3trUCtio ll laws unhan Led.:
EptiFMEFJP&
—Mr. Peabody is in Philadelphia.
—A new dancei is called Napoleon
Eugene.
—The Susan Gallon opera troupeis in.
Baltimore.
—Bryant is the literary lion at Newport
ibis seasou.
—Governor Hoffman's Wheys thought
to be dying.' •
—ln Vineland, N. J., grapes are six
cents per pound.
—Chicago has a new paper in. German
and-English both.
.—Bleyst;dt is coming home to America
early in this month.
—A young woman wants to be post
master of Cincinnati
—ln Massachusetts there are 9,500
members of the G. A. U.
—There is said to be a flourishing Fe
nian circle up in Alaska.
—A Mr. Armot, of New York, went
up Mont Blanc this year.
—Gen. Torbert arrived at New York
- from Europe on Monday.
—Four hundred Tennessee nestroes are
about to emigrate to Florida.
—Some of the new twenty-five cent
notes will he issued this week.,
--Bulwer's son Henry is 'writing the
biography of Lord Palmerston.
—From two to three dollars is the daily
profit of a New York rag picker.
—hidia rubber decoy ducks, with a
seal quack, can now be purchased.
—Chinese laborers in California have
lean:ad to strike for higher wages.
• L— Mark Twain's great moral drama is
called "A night- in ten bar rooms."
—A man in Manchester, Ensland, is
about to pay Millais slo,ooo,for painting
his portrait.
—After all, the Harvards can console
themselves that their defeat was four-oar
dained.—World.
—The Scotch Free Masons must be a
poor lot. The Prince of Araks has been
made their patron.
—A child died, out in Ohio the other
day, from the effects of a bite In the nose,
admistered by a rat.
—ln spite of some rain the Schuyikill
has not risen any, and water gets scarcer
in the Quaker City.
=Miss Kate,Bateman, the greatest na
tive American actress alive, is on herway
home from England.
thousand pounds of seal, in
likee living parcels, wereJecently shot
in Essex river, Mass.
—"Napoleon tas become very gray."
No wonder; "Heir die" would be fatal to
hopes.—N. 0. Times.
—The New York Democrats are split
ting badly into two parties. The Tam
many s and the Manhattan's.
—A sixteen year old Cincinnatian is
writing a tragedy which embraces the
'massacre of St. Bartholomew.
In some parts of Arkansas the ice crop
was very small - and Ice water sells at the
bars for twenty-five cents a drink.
—Four Americans, in Paris, are nego
tiating for the purchase of the Heidsieck
_`Champagne establishment at Rhiems.
—A 'Buffalo man wants to supply his
' fellowlittzens with the current time
'through pipes connected with a sun-dial.
—49 le the ntabber of Heber C. Kim
ball's children, and two of them are call
'ed Slush M. All the rest have different
names.
—Miss Ida Lewis has accepted an hal
talon to visit Philadelphia as the guest of
- the Sailor's Snug Harbor and the Marine
Infirmary
- I —lt is said that Theodore Tilton did
,
.no wear the bloomer costume when he
'Attended ",the Woman's Convention, at
NeW York. .
—The North German correspondent
.sus othe Collossal bust of Humboldt,
'which wasmodelled by Professor Blaeser,
Sias been successfully cast in , -bronze by
Howald, in Brunswick. It , is intended
for New York and NV ill cost about 17,000
thalers.
—Norfolk has an ordinance by which
only eight boot blacks are allowed to
work in the city, and each of those has
his own district.
—Simmons, late of the Harvard crew
has gone to Heidelberg to pursue his
studies, having gone as tar as American
colleges can take him.
' —St. Augustine has become a favorite
summer resort for Southerners. Cool
breezes, fine bathing and even tempera
ture are its attractions.
—While a mother was brooding over
her poverty, her little son said, "Ham-
think God hears when we scrape
the bottom of the barrel!"
—Eighteen American women announce
they are willing to lecture next winter.
We pity their husbands, if they have any,
if they should fail in public. •
—A woman in Paris has been detected
driving a brisk trade by stealing wreaths
of immortelle from the graves of Pere la.
Chaise, and re selling them.
—We had a white frost yesterday
morning; just such a one as cracks open
the watering places and lets our people
drop out, quite ripe for home.
—Gen. Grant met Ida Lewis at New
port and made her a very pretty little
speech, in which he called her "one of
the heroic, noble women of the age."
—On Monday evening a Frenchman
named Bebin was knocked down in
Broadway, New York, and robbed of
2,800 francs in gold and a gold watch.
—lt seems that a daughter of John W.
Forney is the belle of Cape May. This
makes the tenth young lady we have
heard spoken of as enjoying that envia
ble position.
—The right to use the fence, surround
ing the new New York post-office site,
for advertising purposes, has been sold
for $15,000. The fence will only stand
_for about two years.
—At Stockholm, Sweden, when a
sewer was dug recently, the hull of a
vessel was found eleven feet under
ground, which is estimated to have been
there about three hundred years.
=lf a Mormon Elder loses but half a
hundred of his offspring he usually con
siders himself fortunate, but if the num
ber reaches seventy or eighty he begins
to be alarmed for the rest of the family.
thermometer•which has been kept
for seventyflve years in the vaults of the
Paris observatory, at a depth 'of ninety
one feet below the surface, has not varied
more than half a degree during the inter
val.
—lt is said that Gough says he thinks
the temperance business better than any
otter he could engage in. He makes a
very fine Income out of it, but people do
say that his interest is greater than his
principle.
—John Morrissey complimented the
Haymakers B. B. Club by saying he had
bet $lO,OOO "on them, and has $lO,OOO
more to invest in the same way, besides
a son whom he intends shall play in their
first nine.
—A gentleman one day indiscreetly
asked a lady how old she was. "Let me
see. I was 18 when I was married, and
my husband was 30; now he is twice 30,
and that is 60; so of course I am twice 18,
that is 36."
—Mrs.• Jane Mcirthy,, a venerable
Widow residing 'in Switzerland county,
fndiaMt, recently discovered an old leather
sack containing , \ 51,,950, in silver coin,
that was hidden by her grandmother for-
ty-one years ago.
—When Mazzini was expelled from the
southern cantons of Switzerland, he was
elected a free , citizen of Zurich, a fact
which so affected Mr. Swinburne that he
has" written a sonnet about it for the
Fortnightly Review.
Tau following incident is related by a
Southern gentlemin as a part of his own
experience :
Hissecond "court" after his admission
to the bar was in Washington, Georgia.
There were then no railroads or stages
between those towns. He had no horse,
and was too proud to try to, borrow ono
where he lived. The whole dislance was
beyond his strength, should he undertake
it on foot. He walked to his uncle's,
which was about ten miles,or half the
distanae, and a little out of he way, car
' rying his saddle-bags with a change of
clothes on his shoulders. He walked at
night to avoid-the July sun, and rested
on wayside stones. The uncle lent
him'a horse. and he proceeded the next
morning. -The change of clothes consist
ed in part of a pair of thin, white cotton
pants, of cheap material, suitable to the
season, and starched into the appearance
of linen. That he might enter the town
and court-room as decent as possible he
dismounted near the suburbs, and doffing
the somewhat worn unmentionables with
which he set ont, put on the white ones
in their stead, and so attended court in
white pants. They were taken of with
equal care when he again rode out of
town. Such were the early straits of the
Confederate Vice-President Stephens.
I ABATILTOGA correspondent of the Bos
ton Traveller giveanto following descrip
ticin of the make-up of a lady who appears
at one of the hotels in that rendezvous of
fashion and folly, and who, and old bach
elor lounger sneeringly says, evidently
needs but the ballot to render her
perfect woman, nobly planned,
indeed a very "phantom, of delight."
Here is the bill of particulatz:
"Kra M—, from the Hub, appeared
yesterday In the most gorgeous costume
of the season, at the ClaYendon, where
she is spending a few weeks. Her dress
consisted of a magnificent corile4lnted
satin, outwit)" the long train (12k ieet),
low neck and short sleeves. The mete
rial is said to have cost $lOO per yard,
while the gorgeous trimming of. white
point lace, valued at $75 per yard, and a
point lace shawl worth $750, made up
the dress, and jewelry, diamonds in the
hair, an d' other ornaments; made a: toilet
reported to be worth $85,000, .
PITTSBURG-ff. GAZETTE: 'IITURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1869,
THE HtIiENG
,BIHD.
lam particularly blessed with hum
ming birds. I can hardly look out of a
window on any side of the house; morn
ing or evening, that I do,not see one or
more of them coquetting with flowers.
Of all the hundreds of humming birds de
scribed by Gould—and Professor Alfas
siz informs me that in South America
there are ltterally thousands of species—
we have but a single species, the ruby
throat. This tiny creature is hardly sub.
stantial enough to be the shadow of a
plump robin. But it is a bird of great
spirit, and of singular power. That vi
bration of wing by which it is enabled to
hang suspended at the mouth of a flower,
so still that the eye cannot detect a mo
tion, most require extraordinary power.
i lt does not seem to fly, but to jglance off
from one spot to another. It is more like
la Ruh of light than a veritable piece of
wing travel. The battles of the hum
ming 'birds are worthy to be described
by Homer. Battles? Yes. It is a fierce
and pugnacious little beauty. This may
easily and frequently be obserYed,at the
pairing time, during the' lastiweek of
May or early June. When an accepted
lover sees some gay Lothario approach.
ing his matrimonial bower, he darts at
him with such whirling fury that midges
must think it a battle of eagles. Whether
they drive their sharp little bills it each
other, ho mortal eye can discern. But
they dash upon and beat each tither with
their pretty wings like enraged fairy
warriors. Of course the interloper, not
having the moral support of an approv
ing conselence, is defeated. He must be
a poor humming bird that could not
whip twice his weight of humming birds
when his darling love sits just behind
him ready to take -his rival,' should her
husband fell in the conflict of perilous
love. But if the dear ruby throat comes
off-conqueror, his mate is more proud of
him than ever, and their caresses are
sweet and nimble to an amusing degree.
It is generally supposed that humming
birds feed upon the honey of flowers.
Doubtless they do in part. But they are
not quite so etherial as to live upon that
wholly or chiefly. Without neglecting
the honey, they teed mainly upon the in
sects which resort to flowers for the
honey. Honey and meat make a very
good humming-bird diet.
Their long, needle-like bill is admira
bly fitted to probe the tubes of the honey.
suckle and the deep-seated cells of other
flowers. There is a regular division of
the different feeding-grounds among birds.
The robin does not forage on the hunt
ing grounds orthe fly-catcher. These do
not meddle with the sphere of swallows,
&c.\
Thrushes, blackbirds, grackles; bobo
links, meadow larks, and such like, find
their food chiefly upon the ground, grubs
of locusts and beetles, the beetles them
selves, grasshoppers, crickets, the larvte
of insects, together withearth-worms,cut
worms, caterpillars, &c. Woodpeckers,
tomtits., nut-hatches, take charge of the
trunks and branches of the trees, and find
their food in crevices of the bark, and in
holes.
Still another class of birds, such as
sylvan& and fly-catchers, hover about the
foliage of trees, and catch the flying in
sects which abound there. But in the
great air above all, swallows, martins,
whippoorwills, night hawks, kte, pursue
their insect food. Still other kinds di
vide off to themselves, somo swamps,
some the sands of the shore, and some
the waters of lakes and seas.
In this great winged army which labors
all Summer to subdue the myriad-host of
insect enemies—and who maintain their
place in creation by the semi-omnipotence
of fecundity—belongs the humming bird.
He finds his meat awaiting him in the lap
of beauty. He goes to market in honey
suckles, and finds his fragrant shambles
in the glowing and perfumed tubes and
bells of glowing flowers. He has no song.
His note is like the squeak of a mouse,
or the metallic gratings of some kinds of
beetles. Of what use the brilliancy of his
plumage is I cannot imagine. The focus
of color is under his bill where he cannot
see it himself, and be flies 56 swiftly, that
no one else can see it.
Although this brilliant little bird attacks
and•drives all common birds with the
greatest ease, yet Audubon states that it
is itself sometimes chased by humble-bees
—which all good boys pronounce bumble
ti?es—although the humming-bird pays
no attention to the pursuer, but goes
about its business without deigning to
notice it. On this account, no doubt, the
conceited bee imagines that no humming
bird dares give him battle! I have seen
bumble-bees chasing humming-birds in
other spheres of life. A gay and charm
ing creature, just seventeen, seems to
arouse certain pragmatical and stupid old
gentleman •to extraordinary efforts.
Everybody laughs. It is rare sport for
her, and rare sport for the knowing com
pany. And yet, sometimes, a rich old
fellow of fifty captures his prey. An owl
married to a song-sparrow l A beetle and
a glow-worm! A bumble-bee and a hum
ming-bird
Such misalliances furnish us a funeral
and a wedding in one.—lf. Y. Ledger.
BATTLECUEEK, Michigan, is the head
quarters—the Jerusalem, the' Mecca or
the Geneva, if there be any ground for
choice—for the sect known as "Seventh
Day Adventists," in the North west.
Their newspaper organ and general pub
lication office established here. A large
section of the Northwest quarter of the
city is mainly built up by them, adding
much to the population and wealth of the
town. " Saturday Is kept as their Sabbath.
with the same earnestness and solemnity
that Sunday is observed by other sects.
On Friday evening the arm of industry
rests its wears muscles, which are not
again brought into action: until Sunday
morning. On Saturday, while the hum
of. business is uppermost h the principal
part of the town, the bell of the little Ad
vent chapel rings its devotional peal. and
old and young, in their modest Sunday
suits, are seen wending their way to
church. From this conscientious differ
ence in belief, has grown a generous
spirit of toleration on all hands, and the
Adventists and their orthodox brethren
hold each other in mutual and kindly es
teem and respect.
A Nww Yonx CITY railway company
has adopted the theatre plan of selling
seemed seats. A passenger may buy a
ticket, at a small advance, with a coupon
or number, which gives him a seat in the
cars. Some of the papers praise this pro.
ceeding 'as if it were An extraordinary
concession or favor to travelers. Where t
as, every , railwa?. company is bound to
provide a seat. and generally does, for
every passenger, at no advance upon'the
regulax rate of fare. Tne car seats are to
be numbered, as at the theatre, and tickets
issued to,correspond. : • 3
FRUIT CAN TOPS.
SELF LABELING
R turf- cA N TOP.
COLLINS. & WRIGHT.
We are now prepared to supply Tinnera and
Potters. It is perfect, simple. and as cheap as
the plain top. hating the names of the various
Tram stamped upon the cover. =Mattng train
the centertop . andeau andcx orpointer upon
the of the .in
It is Clearly, Distinctly and Pernumently
by merely placing the name of the fruit the
can contains opposite the
_pointer and sealing In
the customary manner. o preserver of fruit or
good housekeeper will use any other after once
seeing t. mh2o
PIPES. CHIMNEY T
WATER. PIPES,
0811SPIST TOPS
&large assortment,
HENRY H. COLLINS.
aid4:h37 AdAvenne,nesrSmttbßeid6t.
DRY GOODS, TRIMMINGS
rl
12
P
na
0
al
0
NH SUMMER GOODS
MACROS:CARLISLE'S
No. 27 Fifth Avenue,
Dress Trimmings and Buttons.
Embroideries sad Laces.
Bibrena and Flowers.
Hata and Bonnets.
°love fitting and French Corsets..
New Styles or= lty , s Skirts.
Parasols—ail the new styles.
sun and Rain Umbrellas.
Hosiery—the best English makes. ,
Agents for "Harris , 'Seamless Kidsi."
Spring and Summer underwear,
• Sole Agents ior the Berets Patent Shape Col
lars. "Lockwood , s "Irving,"est End,"
"Elite," &e: "Dickens," "Derby, and other
styles.
Dealers supplied with the abOre at
MANUFACTURERS' PRICES.
•
MACRIDIE & CARLISLE
TN - 0. 27
FIFTH AVENUE
m 74
CARR, RIcCANDLESS & co
(Late Csrr R C 0..)
WHOLESALE DEALSIIS
Voreign and Domestic Dry Goods,
No. 04 WOOD STREET.
Tllird door above Diamondalias.
PIT TSBTLCOM
WALL PAPERS
WALL PAPER.
THE OLD PIPER STORE IN A NEW FLUE,
W. P. ZILARSELALL'S
NEW WALL. PAPER STORE,
- 191 Liberty Street,
(NEAR MA M.)
SPRING GOODS ARRIVING DAILY. =he
DECORATIONS — In Wood,
Marble and Fresco Imitations for Wails
ana Ceilings of Dining Rooms, Halls, le.. at
No. 107 Market street.
JOSEPH R. HIIAHES BRO.
TANIPED GOLD PAPERS for
S
:warlors, et N 0.107 Market street.
]9%7.1081341 R. HUGEW, BEO.
MERCHANT TAILORS.
B TIEGEL,
° MateCutter with W. Hespenheide,)
• - .'SAILOR,,
No. 53 Smithfield Street,Pittaburgh
seZS:v2l
NEW SPRING GOODS.
A splendid new stock of
err rag, • GASSIIIEBES,
Just received by IllitailLY iLEY/Cit.
lierobant. Tailor. T 3 Smithfield street.
COAL AND COKE.
( rusk COAL!! COAL!U
‘,l
DICKSON, STEWART &
Having removed their Mace to
NO. 567 LIBERTY STREET,
MatellrOlti Flour Kill) 81100 . ND MILOOB. •
a are
lum am". Hrs. oath d r l3 aligrat the
Lowest morket price.
All orders sett at their office or addressed to
them ' through the mail, wile be attended to
proutottr.
BUSINESS CHANGES.
IMISSOLUTION OF PAIL NER
1, iiHl.P.—Nottee is limbo Risen. that ihn
nartnerstilp beret .fore existlrg between MANY
MAREDITH and W.M. C. 21191+901TH. • nagged
In the retail Grocery Onalneu. at . No. 958 ban.
dusky street, was
sett on
the
9 ash%
All dements will be ed by the undersigned;
also. thitundersigntd wilt pay no debts contraet7
bY O. MAIUNDITH atter lab date.
MANY ILIOREDITH.
HEADQUARTERS
GENTLEMEN'S
HUSHING GOODS.
PUTNAM sk, DANS
Greatly Reduced Prices,
The Balance of Mar Extensive Stock of
Gauze Cotton Undershirts & Drawers.
Gauze Merino Under shirts & Drawers.
Gauze Silk Undashirts and Drawers.
Lisle" Thread Undershirts & Drawers.
MUSLIN DRAWERS,
PATENT PANTALOON DRAWER
;i
El
LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS
GLOVES,
SUSPENDERS,
TIES, BOWS,
• SUMNER SCARFS,
MEN'S HALF HOSE.
FANCY SUIRTS
Of which we are the Sole Agents
for this City. are unsurpassed in
quality. style, make and excel-
FOR
VILA CLOSE OCT AT
SUMMER GOODS,
CONSISTING OF
LINEN, JEAN AND
INCLUDING TIIE CELEBRATED
AN EiKENSE STOCK OF
At rery Low Prices.
ALL REDUCED.
SPECIAL BARGAINS IN
A LARGE LOT OF
To be Closed Out Very Cheap
THE
QUAKER CITY IDE SUMT
lence of ilt.
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
ALSO,
To Open at the Back.
FINE DRESS SHIRTS
MADE TO ORDER
Also, Wholesale Agents for the Celebrated
"NORWICH MOLDED'
Linen Collars and Cuffs,
SARATOGA,
NEWPORT,
NIAOMM
.fit Manufacturers Prices
HUNAN & inns
72 Fifth Avenue,
• OPPOSITE TOSTOFFIQL
auS-Turr •
'C
A R So
Floor Oil Cloths,
ALTRI" IN' Gra,
Window Shades,
AT LOW PRICES.
We offer many of our goods much below hug
Spring's prices. Those needing goods in our
line can save money by buying at ouce.
BOVM, ROSE CO.,
21 FIFTH AVENUE.
j7NM&T
NEW FALL STOCK.
CARPETS,
The First in the Market
AND?
THE CHEAPEST.
CHOICE PATTERNS
.Two-ply and Three-ply
CHEAP INGRAIN CARPETS.
THE FINEST LINE OF
BODY BRUSSELS
Ever Offered in Pittsburgh.
Sate time and money by buying from
NeFAIILAND & COLLINS.
No. 11 and 73 FIFTH AVER OZ.
W CARPETS!
arlaixLe, 11309.
We aro now opening an assortment unparalleled
In this city of FLICEST
VELVETS BRUSSELS TRREE-PLYS,:\
The Very Newest Deslgus,
Of our own rec.nt importation and selectedfrom
eastern manufacturers.
31ED1131 AND LOW PRICED
1TV413-Et
VERY SUPERIOR
QUALITY AND COLORS.
An Extra Quality of Rag- Carpet.
We art now'aelllng many of the above at
GREATLY REDUCED PRICES.
'CILMI BROS.,
No. 51 FIFTH ArEarlJE,
jell
OLIVER iI'CLINTOCE Si CO.
RATE BUST RECEivtD A
FINE SELECTION OF
BRIMSELS,
TAPESTRY BRUSSELS
THREE' PLY AND
INGRAIN, CARPETS.
THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF
WHITE,CHECK & FANCY
MATTLNGS,
FOR SUMMER WEAR,
IN TEE CITY.
STOCK FULL IN ALL . DEPARTMENTS
OLIVER McCIJNTOCK & CO'S.
513 FIFTH AVENUE.
LITHOGRAPHERS.
SZXJAXIN enraramy..................ratur mars *
QINGERLY ' , OLE'S, Successors
to ago. Y. SCHGCMdAIe I CO,
, PRACIICALL.LITUDISIDAPIIEBB. sa
The only Steam Lithograptde 'establishment 1.. Z
,W eat of tre ',fountains. Business Cards, Letter C*
Rends. Bonds, Label_ Circulars bhow Cards,
- Diplomas. Portraits, VI swa, Certificates of De-
.)ota D
f. Invitatto, r.% Ao.. NOS. TO sad y.
Pittatterar. 1-1-`
DR. WHI'rTIER.
CONTINUES TO TREAT ALL
private diseases. Syphilis In ail its forms, 1 - 2 ..
my diseases and the effects of mercury are
comotetety eradicated; Spermatorrhea or neon.
nat Weakness and Impotency, resulting from •
self-abuse or other causes, and which produces
scme of the following effects, as bi,tenes, bodily
weakness, indigestion, consumption, aversion 19F
society, unmanliness, dread of future events,
m F
loes of emory. Indolence, nocturnal emissions, r
and finally so prostrating theUxnal system as 90
render marriage unsatisfactory, and therefore
Imprudent, - are permanently cured. • Persons
Meted with these or any other delicate, Intricate
or long standing constitutional complaint should
give the Doctor a trial; he never tails.
-A. particular attention given to all gerealecoln.
plaints, Leneorrhea or Whites, galling.
motion or Ulceration of the Womb. Multi&
pruritis, Amenorrhoea. Henorrnagla, Dysmen
norrhoe& and bterillty or Barrenness, are treat. If
ed with the greatest success.
It is self.evidenttitat a physician who contuse L'
himself exclusively to the study of a certain class
of diseases and treats thousands of cues every t,
year must acquire greater skill in that specialty 1" .
than on- In general practice.
The Doctor publishes a medical pamphlet of
fifty
pagesthat eves a lull exposition of venereal
and private diseases, that can be had free at office E
or by mail Mr two stamps, in sealed envelopes..
Every sentence contains institution to the af.
flitted, and enabling them to determine the pro. ~
Mee nature of th eir complaints.
The eat ablishment, comprising ten ample
rooms, s central. When It is not convenient to
visit the city, the Doctor's opinion can be ob• i
tainel by giving a written statement of the cage,
and medicines can be forwarded by mall or ex.
press. In some instances, however, a personal
examination is absolutely necessary, while in
others dallypersonal attention is reqt ired, and
for the accommodation t f such patients there are 1
apartments connected with the office that are gra
vided with every iequUlee that is calculated to
promote recovery, including Medicated 'Vapor
thittba. •AU prescriptions are prepared :in the
Doctor's own laboratory, under fats per sona l mz „,
pervislon. Medical pamphle at °ee free, Or
by mall for two stamps. N omatter who WWII
failed, reed what he says, lions 9 A. 9. toll r_
Sundays 12 to 9F. K. Offlce,No. 9 WTDIE
6T9.99T, (near Court House ,) rittsbuzirk, pa
03ecend Floor).
na