PI t littobutgt Gaidtt. TUB ELIXIR> 9F I'm growing old. but what of that? • 'rue winter snows are in my h I air, ' And like an antiquated cat, I love my lire and PAST thair.t. ' To sit and think, and'read theliews. Through pebbles twain.that bridge my nose - A matted stool beneath my shoes. b.o coax the dull blood to my toes. • I'm growing old, but what of that ? Esulrft/Italt insate;gacht*inge of But tellsine, with famplarehat. , i'm corning Ss my yt..uth again. ' - • And bids me Joy that change eterne,, VeneWithe meanest thing: That life is born when grasses turn. ; That out of winter leaps the sprint. r , And *nth a spring: . z:V! That age and mildew pass away,. ' T That abrief title Sets me trea.• 13 r. • • To launch into =fading day. • • The anow.sball fade from out my,hai, Dim eyes and weakness dee yeah - ii.srupesse the wrinkle back m rep r, Ands)! my youth come again. Night games' his wings, end minis to-day, 'Mid: toy and bells the year is born:. Though all things seem so pa.s,away,. To Shall come another morn. Itim we call Death, with kindly hand, elanta alt the daisies of the .Plalnt And' when o'er use be warea his wand, Jabal! renew my youth again. -PENNSYINgiLL ------ , • A. yell. nivAtrr, wrapped ittlirlarge linen min, was fishe d out of „ThOmp'. son's in Ainiatif-county, lasty/sick. Ix htpiondsed that a new . dally.paper shall be started in • Philadelphia,' /which shall be managed by men of ability and experience... You,pitati be*litce:r ip , lB.6iitlY the following . from . the übifegas , ?!Our town appears to . be inf withmenwho , have no regard for 't the law, their neigh bora or themselves." - ' , " • • • • • '• - ' . . GEO. W:Witivett;"cii Dunciiiirupn, wait - killedlastliatarday while driving across the Pe.nnsylVatdit Central track. The horse and, •wagon of the deceased.. were also seriously -damaged ..1 - - . 4 OltaIXA McKim was found lying dead in the reed betweenMiffliritown and Mt. Pleasant ;on SatnrdaY et:enlng•••. A. coro.' ner's 'titling 'decided he had. been that struck dead by lightning .% ,•. r• • -. , • _ Holzman:B."B Ateam flour mill at Mer cerabtul•was buried ' downon the 25th ultimo.- 'A' saw ' milkitod . some valuable machinery were burned at the same time. Loss $15,000; insurance $6,000 , • , Tus . opening meeting of the campaign is to be held at Kittanning on Tuesday, the 'M. -, A. number of prominent speak ers area() be there. Mr. Alexander Bey- . nolds is the . Chairman of the 'Armstrong, County Executive Connaittee." ) LAIX-Nednesday forenoon a little girl three years of age, daughter of • Mr: Sam. tiel Hatheld, of 'Douglass township, Berke county4t - was attacked by a cow arid' pitched into the air,'nne of the horns pen etrating.' the abdinnen,,and inflicting an ugly wound about three tidies Ili length. The child is lying In a crit i ca l co ndition. •. . ON _Sunday morning last a soldier! 1 named.Pedigrew, under sentence of three years' imprisonment in the Penitentiary tor - forging a discharge, escaped from the I guard at the garriatm at Cszlisle, by. tun. [ sing through the, spring near that,'Place t , and concealing himself in, a coin -Mild. He was recaptured later in the day, and t. taken hack to the garrison in irons. .. r i . IT Barrio important to prove a young • I man's age in a recent -trial at Erie, Penn- . :t. sylvan's, the family Bible was intro.; duce& and its record offered as satisfau itory evidence. The opposing counsel a; first accepted At as such, but on glancing 1 at the-title page he found that • the book t was printed in 1865, and he successfolly jdemanded that the evidence should be• „i excluded..; . -' - t Tam Kittaning .Bepultifean says: The t oil excitement at:Parker's Landing is still i . unabated; The place is tilling up very ''...; rapidly,"andt,fast assuming the propor .'," tions of a city.: Wiihear ;of ..a consider •••:. able increase in production' of some of i; the wsilsi and surprises in this way are said not to be an uncommon eminence.. . i The cid theory that Armstrong county is t the "great oil basin" may yet prove not - to be altogether incorrect. i_ IN SMITIOTALD TOWNSHIP Bradford " 1 county,a man named Nickson drove his • • wife away _from home; they having •a child about eight or nine months old,:she took it-with her, On a certain Friday night,••sheretnrned and left the child in . ~,-• the yard of the house where Nicks= was 4.' then liVing ;with - another woman. He' t ,, took thi child to a creek, divested it of 1 moot of its clothing, then Put the_child in : the creek Mid put a large stone upon it. • t A week passed away, and inquiries were ' made. of; .concerning the child. His , I answers / aroused suspicions that it had • 1 been foully dealt with; they arrested him, t and on Saturday night he made a contes t ,- sion of his crime to Maley Tracy. Tracy with several others t•xik their lamps, I went in search of the child, and found it where 'Hickson told them ,it was: On :.`• I Sunday morning, a Coroner's inquest '. • r was held; they ren dered a verdict accord- -' i to the facts aboverstaied, and- Nickson was lodged in Towanda jail. .; ''• The Swaim Bepubitean states that a .:- • . party of twenty persOns recently entered . a cave in .the Mountain; four miles east or Archbald. It lies not fat from the sum " mit, and is reached milt, on foot, through : an undergroith of hnars, bakes, and • i pineso.l Two very pretty. falls out White ',' • r Oak rtin , i-one of which is 60 feet high— .- • • are passed, and arein themselves' worthy , of a visit. :The lumbermen the shin '. .... i gle•makerti have stripped the mountain ,• . i around the cavern Of 'the tall pines onca ...- . sheltering the wild man and his game, .'.. -leaving it almost as i hare of ',trees ,as a, • -, 1 meadow ,down ,in the. valley. The. en ,l 1 trance to this wonderful cave's through • '1 - a fissure of rock,..too low for a person to •,-I ; enter,' only in a stooping position. 'Mined I with gun% pistols, and some•of the bold 1 I 4'craturel'qto dare snake bites in ad-, '•i , i Tama a potilion of ifte party "crept i nto t h e A nent. ' About 60 feet froni the • • mouth, the . walls giitdually expand. into 1 t w ice the olio of the dining room ,of the • -.. ' ; Wyoming House. ,The root and the floor • ' 1 present a, smooth and beautiful appear ' ' I slice- After proceeding -some 200 feet into the , cave,•but haltilliumlnated hy, " ' i lamps; progress Vas' Orustee bY: , falNa rock, but from the fact that.the souna of water is heard b9'Ond'.,thia',,POint, it la ' I probable that they did not. reach Orr i ther end of the cavern. • Kvidetteatut the formei -occupancy of this stony.s,retrest was found in the debris .of firesond. the various utensils exhumed mithillv "“A' - • ; rude iron hoe, with the eye partlY Ibrt. 1 ken, itsedge rusted well, was found bf•P" 'Peckville gentleman; this led t o' faithetr • • 1 • excavatjon., Neatly a peck , of Whit& A, .1 row 010*, cluislter . : : '•,_• 'l In".flfsi; _ ;q•Tar. 4, stone -; PIP!: Yl3 l l,Pe-4ead ,otil bird, grrouga;Nem , qspg,s . , o 4 aererAlikwo' of sosistime pottery; indicated the onar (.sw..ti ti l-.. ..0rii.i ed L.nraiiii,;iy seta of its winter occupants. The rat tlesnake den was next *Visited., , This use over a mile north , of the cave,:oh a ridge of amglomerste, overlooking' the Claire /valley. The day, owing to a slight • rain in the mordng, was not propitious for snakes, and yet some thirty of these mu sical- reptiles were secured. None num bered over twelve rattles, or showed a disposition to fight-if , left alone. There are two dens near Archbald, but this one is the largest snake settlement in the county. ono. fiir: third annual convention of the Ohio State Association of Sidritua ta, is to meet et Akron on the 10th inst. A LITTLE. GIRL in Ashtabula, when asked to define emigrants, replied "emi grants are Dutch people that go away." Jostrus BiTroir, of 15ewport, Wash ington enmity; 0., last year raised a crop of wheat one piece of ground; afterwards the giound. was plowed, end a crop of buckwheat.was raised; and this year a volunteer crop of wheat made its appear ance, • from -which Mr. Britton reaped _eighteen . bushels to the acre. A lbw. Pais celebrated her 105th birthday lately at Cleveland, Ohio. She hei raised: seventeen children. The last was boru when she was 65 years old, and she now enjoys good health, attends church regularly,- is active, has good teeth and improved sight, and her hair is turning black. But she has an internal cancer of fifty years standing. , _, _Tun Cadiz Replibiiean says: "A young WV living in Freeport township, this county, a feur.weeks since was endeavor ing to secure a swarm of bees,when they commenced to settle on her head. In stead of running or going frantic about the matter, she simply stood still and let them settle. In due time they were care fully removed to ahive, and she sustained no injury whatever, except that a roaring sound remained in her ears for a day or two. She was a brave girl." AT Lancaster, Ohio, last week, a little Gsix months of a familnamed ilbert, was left old lying abed, w hile the mother went to attend to her household duties, and to the wants - of another child stricken with, sicknesa. After a while, not hearing the former child, and won dering what kept it ,quiet so ldng, the mother went -.to the bed and found it dead, suspended 'by its neck between the foot board and the rail, where it had strangled to - death. It seemed to have 'awakened and rolled through the open ing. A POST swimsuit operadee was Perform ed by two physicians, near. Hampden, Ohio, last Sunday, in removing an ovar ian tumor from she body of a Nm, Scant. tin.: The town• weighed one hundred and fi ft y' pounds, and the sack alone ;weighed • thirty pounds, and contained four ordinary, buckets of fluid.' It had been grOwingfour years, and had become so large as to .diSplace all the tbdominal organs; the ribs were raised to au angle of 1 about sixty•five degrees. and the lungs . encioached upon, the lower left lung be ing in a gangrenouscondition. , A Startling Incident at' the Louisville Bridge. Clerom the Courler•Journal of the MO About half past four o'clock yesterday 1 afternoon a mishap occurred at the Ohio River Bridge which produced great ex citement among tke bands. employed there, and came near resulting fatally is, one of them. The bridge "Tatters are constructing a tressel from pier 21 to pier 20, preliminary to the erecuon of the 400 feet n &cro the Indiana chute. At the tim m e state d a heavy derriciziind the timbers connected therewith, used for hoisting material to build the tzessel, and eletrated some fifty feet above the river =lace fell with irtremendous crash 'into the swiftest portion of the current, about onehundred and fifty feet from the pier. Twelve or fifteen persons were on the structure at the moment, but luckily but one man was precipitated into the river. We have not learned his name. He fell in the midst of Abe wrecked timbers, end was swept down the rapids five or six hun dred yards. Being an expert swimmer, he kept his head above water and buffeted the seething rapids right manfully. His perilous situation provoked the intensest alarm among his fellow-laborers on the pier and on the island near. Their anx ious watching was happily relieved in a fend minutes, when the man extricated himself from the debris that had acceler ated his downward journey, and struck out boldly for the Indiana shore. Two or three small boats went to his assist ance, but he declined their services and finally reached the coveted bank. It was observed that his s'cirt was bloody and he was very weak on leaving the water. . -A crowd of persons had collected at the point where he landed. and some of them Itlndly helped him up the cliff, and, it is supposed, took him on to Jeffersonville. The derrick will be replaced, so that the work may not suffer much delay. ~ A few days ago the Board of Visitors at one of the London workhouses were approached by an old pauper, who relat ed to them an extraordinary story of the reverses of fortune to which he had been subject, He had several times won large fortunes in trade, and as many times been reduced to abject poverty. His last mis. fortune had been‘caused by the failure of Overend, Gurney & 00., who had de frauded him out of £70,000,_ and he was now too old to try again. Moreover, he was a relative of a distinguished peer of the realm, who had very c ng ruelly refused 'to give hi m the slightest aid. The story got into the newspapers, and the guardi ens of the workhouse soon received an avalanche of letters containing money for the unfortunate old gentleman: One lady sent a check for £lO and an offer to provide a home for life for the poor 01,1 man on herestate in Hampshire. But at this moment it turned out that the old ,rroke had been romancing, and thatthere was not the slightest truth in any: of the ' Odes he had related. Bo the money `Was all sent back to the benevolent do nor% end. he victim' of Oveiend, Gar uey &Co..was sent to exercise himself on the crank. , TIM Chicago, Boras quarrelled soon after its first organization. One branCh of it has just got into court. It secured the establishment of a restaurant where the members tdok their dinneri and teas. Itcame to be the practice to give, and take credit, the keeper being a woman of 0041:propel ty. Some of, them incurred 4teaVy,bills; and when the keeper hinted At_ pay they .took umbrage> and their de parture., P The -restaurant is closed, and dite Wonetwi nevrpoor, Is vainly trying to -recoverillertdebtf. •t o's ?id C.:: PITTS:BUR Gil. GAZETTE FRIDA.I%. , SEPTEMBER 3 1868. , , .. . Fsperieute Or •.Poiventl,lo_ igenillter 1 With Mostl y Visitors-Imi Relation of Isoinejsteange Manteestations—ige Be- ]lever In repocaus. . • Dr, Bellows contributes to Appietan's Journal- I , a paper entitled "Sittings with Powers the Sculptor." In a course of 4 conversation Mr. Powers relites the fol lowing spiritualistic experiences: These spiritualistic phenomena have always interested me, although I have . never been in the least carried away by theni. I recollect we had many "seances" at my house and others when Home was here. I certainly saw, ender circum stances where fraud and collusion, or pre arrangement of machinery', was impossi ble, in my own house and-among friends incapable of ' lending themselves to im posture, many very curious things. That of which all the world hnkheard, I have seen. There was nothing' but moonlight in the room, it is true, and there is every presumption against such phenomena un der such' circumstances. But what you see, you see, and must believe, however difficult to account for it. I recollect that Mr. Home sat on my right Land, and, be side him, there were six others round one half of a circular table, the empty half to ward the window and the moonlight. All our fourteen handsiweee on the table, when a hand, delicate :and shad owy, yet defined, appeared, dancing slow ly just the other side of the table, and gradually creeping up higher, until, above what would have been the elbow, it ter minated in a mist. This hand slowly came nearer to Mrs. at the right side of the table, and seeme d pat her face. "Could it take a fan?" cried her husband. Three raps responded ‘"Yes," and the lady put a fan near it, which it seemed trying to take. "Give it the handle, " said the husband. The wife obeyed, ad it commenced slowly fanning her with much grace." Could it fan the rest of the company?" some one exclaimed,when• three raps •signified assent, and the hand, passing around, fanned each of the com pany. and then slowly was lost to view. I telt. on another occasion, a little hand—it was pronounced that of a lost child—patting my check and arm. I took hold of itt It was warm, and evi dently a child's hand. I did not loosen my hold, but it seemed to melt out of my clutch. Many other similar experiences I, have had. It is interesting to know that the c ffect is not to create supernatural terrors or morbid feelings. My children, who knew all about it, and were present, never shooed any signs of trepidation, such, as ghost stories excite in sensitive and young brains. _ • I have always thought that them. - was something yet inexplicable about the nervous organization which might event ually prove us to be living , much nearer to spiritual forms than most believe and that a not Impossibieopeningof our inner, senses might even here enable us to per ceive these forms. When we see a man in his flesh and blood we see his outward robes. If his nervous system alone were delicately separated from his body, for the' nerves fill not only each tissue of the body, but extend even to the enamel of the teeth and the fibres of the hair. There fa no part of the human frame that is not full of these invisible ramillattions. Show us a man's; nervous msteln, and, filmy NI it might be in parts, his form would be perfectly retained, even to his eyes. Now this is one great step toward his spiritual body. A little beneath the nervous system, the spiritual body, and it might still have the precise form of the man. I believe it possible for this body to appear, and, under certain states, to be seen. Ido riot often mention a waking vision I enjoyed more than twenty years sge, but I will tell it to you. It happen ed five-and•twenty years ago. I had retired at the tuinal hour, and, as I blew out the candle and got into bed, I looked upon our infant child, sleeping calmly on the other side of its mother, who also was sound asleep. As I lay broad awake, thinking on many pings, I became suddenly conscious of a strong light in the room, and thought I must have forgotten to blow out the candle. I looked at the candle, -but the candle was out. Still, the light increased, and I be gan to fear something was on fire in the room, and I looked overtoward my wife's side to see if it were so. There was no sign of fire, but, as I cast my eye upward, I saw a green hillside, on which two bright figures, a young man and a young woman, thele4arms across each other's shoulders, we're standing and looking down, with countenances Lull of love and grace, upon our sleeping infant. • A glorious brightness seemed to clothe them and to shine in upon the room. Thinking it possible that 1. was dreaming, and merely fancying myself awake (tor the vision vanished in about the, time I have been telling you the story and left me wondering), I felt my pulse, to see whether I had any fever. My pulse was as calm as a clock. I never was bro +der awake In my life, and I said to myself, "Thank God, what I have been longing for years to enjoy has at length been granted me, a direct look into the spirit land!" I, was so moved by the reflections excited by this experience, that I could not restrain myself from awakening my wife and telling her what had happened. She instantly tolded her child to her bosom, weeping, and said: "And is our darling, then, so soon to, be taken from us?" I pacified her by telling her -that there was no evil omen in the vision I had seen; that the countenance of the heavenly visitants expressed only peace and joy,'„and that'there was Mailing to dread of harm to our child. And; so, we found it. I have longed much since to have any similar experience, but 'I never had it. Mr. Powers tieing asked whether he really believed in the pretensions of mod ern spiritualists, said: I do not believe in the revelations of spirits, as made known through mediums or otherwise. for most corrupt and unworthy communications 1M often raade; and, with many medic lams, there is 'a great deal of trickery, 1 while there are some so•called mediums who are nothing else than charlatans , But I do believe in thefaet of spiritual man• imitations, animal magnetism, and the moving of solid bodies, by means yet un explained by purely scientific men. I believe we are now at the threshold of 'a new era of discoveries, very unlike t he past. A Dead Beat. umm WIDEN& DAKOTA. TEURITORY Won be knocking at the doors of the Union. Villages are said to be springing up there repldly. More than the thousand per sons have emigrated to the territory this ItituMer. The present population is reckoned at twenty thousand ;"and forty. seven thousand acres ' of lately been Mken up under' the ,boblesiesd and pro eluptiun)aws by Actpo,outtleri. SELF LABELING u.trr-c AN Top. COLLINS WRIGHT,: • PITTSB We i tre now prepared to supply Tinners and poste a,lt is perfect, simple, and as cheap as the Matti top, having the names of the Tartans Fruits stamped upon the cover. radiating from the center, and annidez or pointer stamped upon the top of the can.::.. It is Clearly, Distinctly and Permanently by merely placing the p o in t er the fruit the can contains opposite the and sealing 11 the customary manner. NO preserver of fruit or Rood housekeeper will ace any other afte rmhZi once seeing t. , PES. OHIMNET TOPS. &c. WATER PIPES, ORIIICSIET TOPS A lute assortmaelt, HENRY Ili COLLATE. ip14:IIII • Sd Avenae,near RY 4iFOODS, TRIMMINGS. FALL, 1869. ROMAN PLAID RIBBONS, LADY YASDFSIBILT BOWS, • In plain and 'Boman Colors A 13SAIITIVIIL LINK Or SATIN FRIIALINGS Black Silk Fringes. SILK BUTTONS, In all the newest styles. Also, all the elegant designs of PLAID GLASS BUTTONS, , EMBROIDERIES-A NEW LINE, Shetland . Rtbbed, Ore" MIX and White SHIRTS. AND DRAWERS. ALL COLOB OF ;,Good Country Yarn, A full variety of colon of EASTERN YARNS All-Wool Flannels. Ladies' and Misses Balmoral Hose GENTS' SHIRR KNIT HALF ROSE, MACRUM, GLYDE & CO., 78 & 80 Market Street. ALT P9l -ds f 2 0 E ,w. 42 5 Pil pil4 d cp a gii 4 9 0 Eta P 4 i 0 4A 1 Al GC cc' m m i E -7 1 1 61 r e 4 i; c: ' 0 I 4:3 al ii M d NH NUR GOODS lIACRUI/c CARLISLE'S No. 27 Fib► Avenue, Dress TriMMUlf ll and Buttons. Embroideries sad Laces. Hats a nd Flowers. Hats and Bonnets. Mote fitting and French Corsets. New Styles rimier' Skirts. Parasole—a,l the new styles. nun and Rain Umbrellas. Hosiery—'the best Bnellsti makes. Agents for "Harris' Seamless lids." spring and Bummer underwear Bole Agents ior the Bemis Pat "ent Shape Col lars. "Lockwood i s • "IrrinCEtd , " "Elite." &Ai "Dickens," "Derby." and other 1"1". Dealers supplied with the above at 2vIANII FACTURZRS' PRICIet MAORIThi & CAMBIA N4O. 27 FIFTH AVENUE my 4 , CABS ? ' BioOANDLESS & Co . I • Late Carr a 00.,) wuoisaux DELLICEd an • Foreign and DomeolleDry Ihods, No. 1114. WOOD STMI36% Third 4007 lOW, Dimmed % time e WALL 'PAPERS, WALL PArEIL THE OLD PAPER STORE IN A NEW' PLACE, W. P. iIiUtSBAIL'S NEW WALL: PAPER. STORE, 191 Liberty Street,' • termaa buiterra SPRING GOODS 4.eatv l irre DRILY. wiu TN EC 0 RATIONS—In , WOOdi Marble Auld .Presto liettatlons for Arial Ceillaggi of anx,uoo;aa. Vo. 01 rilatkt street. J - • OSILPH:R. Iltralilltf a sax' iccratinrEti Gotorh i r niS 9 '` J " ruirs ' I Wintrh e 4llo4 , tad. CARPETS, Floor 011 Cloths, 1101..9-nEur Eh Window Shades, LOW PRICES. We offer many Those goods much below last Spring's prices. needing goods is our une can save money by buying at once. YARD, ROSE & CO., jyl4:d/ItT NEW FALL STOCK. 07 CARPETS, The First in the Market. AND THE CHEAPEST , CHOICE'PATTERNS Two-ply and Three4)ly CHEAP • INGRAIN CARPETS. THE TINEST LINE 07 BODY BRUSSELS ir.ver OfEbred ill Pittsburgh. Save time and money by buying from ZeFARLAND a COLLINS: No. 71-asd 73 71,TH AVENUE, - au.U:d AT (Second 7loori. NEW CARPETS! in t We aro now of opening an SUOrtlllett um:mm*o his tin IfibilitiT VELVETS BRUSSELS THREE-PLYS, Of our own recent Importation and selectedfroni eastern manufacturers. MEDIU" AND LOW MOD 45t-rt SI, ICI H IC • - An Extra Quality of Rag Carpet. We are now selling =fly of the above at - GREATLY REDUCED PRICE. Jiro. 51 FIFTH 4PEXE/14, Jen OLIVER rchmocK & co. RAVE JUST RECEIVED A FINE SELECTION OF .11BUS15ELS, TAPESTRY BRUSSELS TEE PLY AND . INGRAIN CARPETS - 'AV FIFTH AVENUE. me, 11309. The Very Newest Deslglus, VERY SUPERIOR QUALITY AND COLORS. M'CILLEM H OS., THE LIMIEST ASSORTII2O OF WitITE,CHECIE &FANCY MATTINGS, FOR SUMMER WEAR, IN THE CITY. STOCK FULL IN ALL DEPARTMENTS AT=:, OLIVEU XeCLINTOCK & CO'S. spa rirra Avams. LITHOGRAPHERS. SLIGTAKiIt«..?UIr t! CANIS. QIIVOEIILT & CWS Eltacceison ),7 to ozo. Y. aosuoubLAN a 00.. • PRACTICAL LITHOGRAPH:ERR . '!he oily_ Ste am Lithocraphic if4tatestuneut West of tre Mountains. - Btudueu Cards, Letter Heads. Bonds. Label Circulars, 13bow Cards, Diploma& Portraits., VIM', Certificates of Da posits, Invitatloa se.. Nos. Tx sad 14 MM musket. Plttsbursu. DR. arna. fir nary TO TRE i AT ALL private diseases., Syphilis in all Ita forms, all nr nary diseases smil the effects of mercur fl.miy are completeiir eradicated; Sperm, resulting from atorrhes. or . nal Weakness and impotenc7 seit-abuse or other causes, and which produces acme of the following effects, as blotcnes, bodily weakness, indigestion, consumption, aversion to society unmanliness, dread of fatare events, la s of memory, Indolence, nocturnal emission% and finally au prostrating the sexual system as to render marriage unsatisfactory, and therefore Imprudent, are pennauntly cured. Persons eV flitted wit these or any other dellcat intricate or long standing constitutional complaint should give the Doctor a trial; he never Nils. A part attentiouiriven to all Female cant. Plaints, Leueorrhea or Whltes, Falling, Indent. =Ma or tilceration• of the Womb, Unfit's, pruritls, Amenorrhoea. Ilienorrhagia, Drum. norrhoes, and bteriUty or Barenneu, are treat.. ed with tee greatestsuccess. It is selPevident that a physician who confines hlmulterclusively to the study of a certain cdasa of diseases and treats thousands of cues. every year must acquire greater skill in that specialty than on« In general Practice. The Doctor publishes a medical pamphlet of Mtg. pages that gives a full exposition of venereal t ad pilau diseases, that can be had free Stale( or by mail for two stamps, In sealed envelopes. Every sentence contains instruction to the at, muted; and enabling them to determine the pre. cise Were of Mar complaints. The , establishment, comprising ten ample rerr is central, Winn it is not convenient to visit t he city. the Doctor's Opinion can be ob. tame I try giving a written statement of the Cale , and medicines can be forwarded by mail or ex. ress. 'ln flume instances . however, a personal examination Is absolutely necessary. while to others daily personal attention Is mu ired. and for the accommodation clinch patients there are aparunents connected with the office that are m.o. Wed with every requisite %hat is ululated to' aromote_ regovery," nieindluS , medicated Tana bathe.' AU 'prescriptions are prepared in the Vector% own laboratorf. under his —Pelconal Mr perrision Modica pamphlets at eMee ' free, re - D7 mad me WO ataMtfa. No matter Whe hau paled. read what lie says. Hours A. 116,10 9 V t. - trahil 1 is. talla t o IMVl strrg h , 9 q I V I . EDUCATION4L. ? pISBOPTMOBPE SCUOOL for GIRLS, will begin its second year D. Y. oti t 15tn of SEPTEMBER nest. the number . of ;mous ail of whom no lathe house, is Bur ited to .hirty. 'french Di taught by a resident governess, and so tar as possible is made the language of the fa nily. Address. for eirmenrih etc.. MSS CHASE, Bistiopthorpe, Bethlehem. Penna. aura.. BISHOP BOWMAN !MITI'. TIITE.—A. Collegiate School for Young La dies, No. 62 GRANT STREET. Tie Fall Term of this School will open on MONDAY, Septem ber 13th. Both Day-and' Boarding Pupils re. ceived. - Per information or admission apply to ' Riff. R. J. COSTER, Rector. _ ITTSBUTIGH FEMALE COL LEGE. Evr.PERSHING.D.D., Free. i. ent. A strictly select Ladies , School for Boarders and Day Pupils. The tepidly t h eemale College In the stet and the Ern inUnited States. Superb buildlnss. with all the monern impnove upents. Every p'tvate room and hall and school room covered with carpets and =palings. The Itistitution has lull collegiate powers and privreges, and grants diplomas to'a'll who com pit to the. Engilsn or Classical course. Thorough and weli.selectept course of study. TWEN TT TWO TEACHERS. Every department made a specialty . Parents are earnestly requested to call and make themselves acqualutsa with the excellent accommodations and ansurpami Fall Term commences ah.rxzmnEß 1., Bend for a catalogue. au2B:n 9 M. SIMPSON, Pees. Trustees. ERSP SCIENTIFIC AND CLASSICAL INSTITUTE, at 'West Chestcr, Pa. The Scholastic Tearof 10 mouths begins WED NItuDA,Y. September lat next. For catalogue, apply to WL F.-WIERS, A3L, au7:nI7A`TDPROPRIiTOE. CLASSICAL . ACADEMY. Mr.. WM. H. WAKEHAM, • A well-known and uccessful Teacher), having returned from the East, S l eetu Sc hools profes sional duties by opening a preparing for Cmitte or Business. Fall Term will begin suitetDll, September liftedn handsome of rooms (now beteg up) over the Allegheny taring' Bane *Fede ral street. Allegheny City. &play to Principal at his former. residence, 31 Union avenue. Alle ghe,yy, Circulars can be bad at the Book Stores. acllf:n6o WM. H. -WASSERSIdr. Miss M. MARE.HAM:ot,r, (Late Associate Principal of Wing Institute,) WILL OPE a SCHOOL FOR Young Ladies and - Xisses, . . MONDAY, September 8, 1889.• At the rooms lately occupied by the Carry Insti. tote, No 5A and 5 Sixth street (late Bt. Clair). Circulars can be bad at all the principal Book stores, or any information »7 be obtained of Mug Markham, at 31A PENN Sr., Pittsburgh. aalB•nsc FE3L4LE EDIICA'IIOII. U. JD MRS. 11. N. MINIM'S BOARDING AND DAT SCHOOL, No. !OH It. Tenon St., Philadelphia, The object of this f chool is to impart a lased cal and useful edueatioa.' Tottbis purpose the rooms are fitted up with every necessary comfort and csmvenienee for twenty scholars only. The most eZelent i tesebers of franca. German and Drawing are engaged. An ample supitly of Philosophical and Cbemi• cal apparatus Is provided for the illustration.of natural science. A pamphlet Prospectus of the school *ill be furnished on application by letter or otherwise. auls.d&V NEWELL INSTITUTE, , 255 and 287 Penn Street, Will reopen on MONDAY. SEPT. 6TII. Terms $4O per session of five months. No extra charges. eacent for Tench and 11i:t -ale. Atudleants to be able to re d easily. - I THE.I3OYs' SCHCOL BOOMS, in AO. 991. have been recently enlarged. and very much im proved. The course of study qualifies for en trance into any College. Thorough. teaching is sty. n in .those studies relating_ to bus'ness. such as SPELLING . . PENMANSHIP. MUTH ME COM POSITION. tie. Elerman Classes deity. The character of the school is. a guaran tee for honest. of teaching. The Teachers are Messrs. 'NEWELL MAL;RTIM.. - BURCH FIELD, SLOANE, and , The School . Rooms for the YOUNG LADIES ate in No. 2515 Penn street. The Booms are spacious and elegant. The Principal, Mr. J. R. NEWELL, will ue assisted by - Miss SPENCER, I Miss E. M. LIGGETT, late of Vassar College, and Miss WAINIMS, already known In the com munity as an able teacher. The two Depart ments, Junior &nil Senior, embrace the usual coarse pursued in such institutions. - 'IHE MUSICAL DkPArrild ENT will be under the tare or Prof. D E HAM and Miss STEBBINS. Prof. DE HAW - charges are WS per quarter. and Miss STEBBINS, $lB per quarter. a cak are known as strictly FIRST-CLASS Teachers of Music. The LADIES' SCHOOL now oilers every adrantage which can pe secured by faithful. teaching and most desirable sorround.ngs. The Principal max be seen daily at rass Penn street. from 91019 o'clock. • anitwFx • SUMMER RE6ORTS. MOUNTAIN, HOUSE, Cresson Springs, Pa., WILL nzmalN OPEN UNTIL SEPTEMBER 25, 1869. G. W. ]MLLES, Proprietor. anao:n73 ASE.HOUSE, STONEIIOIIO, PA. (on line of Jamestown mid Franklin itroad,) EDWARD DOLAN. Proprietor. This favorite Sumner Resort is now ready for the reception of guests. I , is de dititfultv situated. a few rods•frJm SANDY LARE, the most beau tLfe sh tet of Water in Pennsylvania, and is aC.• cessl m by Rail from ALL POLNTS. Splendid 'Medicinal Springs on the grounds. tannin [A: 31 21/111Meqr0.1 # liouszs, BELL & CO., - ANCHOR COTTON MILLS. rr'X'B33l3XM A. Kau taaturers of HEAVY MMDTUN ilia LIGET ANCHOR AND MADNOLIA otvglelCTTW3ll A.WT) IRATTII6III. .7 -.- TT - PrMI B TIEGEL; • (4sts qattes Ink' W. Han)f!aakede.) wirAI::EA)74, No. 53 Smithfield Street,Pithibturgli. 5e53:921 BUSINESS CHANGES nISSOLIITION OF PARTNER- I BRIP.-NoticeU he , eby given; that "the ' panne/00p herasfore existiwg between maREDITA and WM. C. MA .2.IMTGO imaged in the retail Grocery Unstnsas. at No.• .456 ban. dusky meet; was dtssOlved onlistigoat A aBa9. AU accounts will be sett 04 hYrtbe, unitentirtied; also, the undersigned will pay no debts contract.!, ed by syld.C. NSW:Gins after ibis date. - atc:3:n4s. . liAllY JWILIUWITEL E ~ , 1 MI