1 Ell littAut Gaidtt. FIifiLGERM'S. (From the Saturday Bevies.) The ,classifigation of . engagements ac cording to,their duration gives us several interesting . types. ome engagements ( ed are of ,a short but ra ems kind; others are of a protracted nd Platonic charac ter. Some are con fora fixed term of years, as the en agement of a minor to marry when he att 'ns his majority or of ti..._. widow to wed aft two years' inconaol ability. Others e terminable/after an indefinite period, where a fellow • of a college engages t marry as soon as he gets a living, or where a young lady promises to make er lover happy when he can show that he is able , -to maintain her in the style to which she has always been accustomed, and to aupply her with the comforts and refinements which she:. has a right from her position in society to expect." Other engagements may be considered as terminable at pleasure, such as those projected between officers of small means and the notorious flirts of a gar rison town, which, it is pretty well under stood, are only designed to last until the •regiment is moved to fresh quarters, or till Providence provides the fur coquette with a more handsome or more substan tial lover.. These, with many others which it is unnecessary to enumerate, are various species of engagments differ- entia d according to the nature of their durat on,' But the division 61 the e. enga ements with which society is I most . familiar, and the one which will occur to all parental minds as the moat important, is the simple-division of them into Long and Short. The gen uine old-fashiOned Long Engagenient, of that life-long type with which our grand mothers and great-aunts were familiar, has happily almost ceased to exist. Any woman belonging to the professional rarika of the middle class, who is 'more tha v n fifty years old, will be able to recall se eral instances of men, generally Fel lows of Colleges, whoil when young contracted engagements which they were unable to fulfill until they bad reached that time of life at which it is not very nsnal, or very seemly, either to marry or be given in marriage. Such instances of life-long engagements were by no means rare 'fifty yeare ago. The Cellege Fellow of twenty-five hav ing engaged himself to a young girl of twenty, - and havink no sure expecta tion of. patronage outside of his College,' Odd not then, as now, cut himself adrift from his academicatties, and start forth tu make his fortune independently. by tuition, journalism., or the public service. Stich extra-academical means of making use of an widen:deal education were then Omparatively unknown or unpromising. The avenues whereby a gentleman of liberal education could enter the salaried sphere of existence were then compara tively few, and Atli' almost confined to , the "three liberal professions."' The , really well-paid schoolmasterships were then 'very few ; .there was no Hai leybury, and no Ridley, . and no Bradfield ; there were no professor ehlps at Ring's College, London, and no inspectorship of Schools. The young Fellow who had taken orders haft noth ing to.look to but a college living, so he waited on, perhaps for ten, perhaps for twenty, or even thirty years, until his youtidtd ardor had cooled down into a quiet, bookish sort of attachment,; and his betrothed had come to look forward to ', her marriage' rather with pride than with passion, as the event which would one day give her, the privilege of humbly helping that learned man in his labors, or at least secure her the mononoly of aura i• g his declining years. / Such long 'engagements as this are now e eraely rare; one scarcely ever earshes of couple being engaged twenty r, d the friends of a young fiancee are g =rally rather disgusted if she remains married 'so many months. Any en gement which lasts over two years is ow called a long engagement; and one Which extends to five years is reckoned a ' elancholy and yen! middle class affair. ong engagements, in fact, even in the odern sense of the terra, are confined alnibst entirely to the r middl ranks of the :i. community.: They nearly asi much a niddle-class institution as early dining or "eat. ....----- 273 Lord Rosse has been measuring, says ace a Week, the heat that comes to us tom the moon. 'Using one of his great 1, • fleeting telescopes as a burning mirror, e has condmped the moon's rays upon one of the most delicate of heat gaugera— a thermo-pile. Without ..being able to ; determine by what fraction of a Faren 'heit's degree the lunar warmth increases phers, he has found as an approximation, that the radiation fromthe moon is about the temperature of the terrestrial atmos the ninety-thousandth 'part of that from the Elan. He conceives that the variation of heat from our Satellite follows the same law as that of its light, viz: that we have most warmth from the lull moon, and least from the nearly new. 1 By comparison with the terrestrial I. source of heat, Lord Rosse estimates the actual temperature of the moon's surface at lunar mid -day to be about eve hundred degrees Fahrenheit. This scorching re-_ sults from the slow rotation of the - moon which makes its day equalto our month, and from the absence of any atmosphere to screen the lunar world. Years ago, Sir John Herschel, who has more than once proved' himself a prophet by his sa gacious Inferences' "remarked that "the surface of, the full, moon exposed to ns must: necessarily; be very much heated, posaibly,to s degree much exceeding that of boiling water." , Fontenelle and his followers to the,contrary ntAwitlistanding, the moon canto no place for living be. lags, unless they are, salamanders. _ . 1 GBOtagp WAS BROSSS for the foundation of the Lincoln a monumofet, atw Bpeek. Theringdeld, 111., on •Thrumday last Monument Astmciation oas t at its cora. numd, contributed from us sources, funds amounting $158,663. A. eon tract has , been entered into with Wm. D. Bicharthien for the erection of the monu. 'ment, except the statuatrthe founds .,lion during the year 1869, end ,: to finish the whole during 1870. for the sum of $186,550. Larkin G G . Meade has contract ed - to deliver the ecuipture required by his ,design for the sum, of $70,000, made Asp o Lincoln $18.700 fr the statue of • 518.700 for each group op , porting 'that Motu, and $15,000 for the coat of anus. - The Anociationhas there. , fore incurred' liabilities to the amount of .$1'51,750; leaving a balsam of $8,918. GELlMLrsTELutipice. Tintßoston Jubilee organ was destroy ed by the hurricane last week. Viz German language is being taught in the public ; schools of Wheeling. Mns. SCOTT-SIDDMis is to play at the New York Sixth Avenue Theatre. Tun Ohio Baptist Convention will be held at Springfield instead of Columbus. LL IT wasproposed to dispOse of the Boston Coliseuru by lottery; on the principle of the gift enterprise. ABMs"- one-half le Cotton crop in Georgia and Florida has been destroyed by the caterpillars. ' - THE Circleville (0.) Union says the brown corn 'men in that _neighborhood will have a reasonably good harvest. TUE 1 saloon keepers of St. ' Joseph, Mo., have petitioned the police to close up their bare on. Sunday, and prosecute them if they open. Tan grape malady is in the region of Lancaster Ohio, and promises to leave, but an insignificant crop of those hither to deemed standard sorts. FIVE Indians confined in jail at Omaha were purposely given an opportunity to escape, this being considered the cheap est way of ridding the `county of their presence. Mae. SPABIEAVE, aged sdenty, re siding at Walpole, and was shot dead on the 4th by her g n, aged eleven years, who said he did it "to git the old critter out of the way. 'Davin LELson, of Madison county, Ohio, the cattle king, is fattening two car loads of short horns iof the Christmas trade, which will it is estimated, a ton and a quartes each. Tun notorious, thief, Wm. Hall alias Poker Bill, who robbed Gov. Merri wether at Louisville a short time since, was arrested at St. Louis, while on the eve of starting for Chicago. On the sth, at New Berlin, Ohio, a son of Gideon Cornelius, aged seven years, was shot dead by a companion aged twelve years. They were playing with a gun which they supposed to be un loaded. • IT is authoritatively stated that nothing further will appear from Mrs. Stowe in the Atlantic.ldonthly, but that she will give the public an opportunity to read an explanatory and corroborative article through some other medium. THE father and mother of General Rawlins are both living at Galena, 111. He was one of nine children—eight sons and one daughter—all of them now living but two the sons. General Rawlins left three of children by his first wife. Is is reported in Boston that Mrs. Stowe is so overcome by the unexpected reception of her article on Lord Byron that she is quite ill. Domestic afflictions and grief are assigned as the cause of her imprudence in publishing the article. THE red-huot Democrats of Texas, will nominate for Governor Gen. J. J. Byrne, formerly a pressman in the New. York Herald OffiCe,-sfterWard Colonel of the New York 18th Cavalry, Brigadier Gen eral and United States Marshal for East ern Texas. HlLLSBOnonoti, Ohio, had been with out rain for three weeks. Tan Cincinnati conference of the At E. Church being in session there, the ministers, on the 25th inst., prayed fervently for rain, and that afternoon the windows of Heaven opened and it came in torrents. • A nrrutunous coal vein is supposed to have been discovered at Cowlesville, Wyoming county, 25 miles from Buffalo, four miles from the Erie road and five from the B. &W.R R. Its productive ness is not ascertained, but the coal men of Buffalo are greatly excited. Fusco. WrivaLow, son of Dr. C. F. Winslow, of Boston, has lately received the highest honors ,of the German uni versity of Heidelberg, and is but eighteen and a half years old yet.. The distinction has been bestowed on only One other American student for many y s. . THERE is a project on foot or a tele graph ship to be stationed fifty-give miles off the English coast, between Sycilly and Ushant, connected by cable ttritY Pen zance, and furnishing intelligence to all vessels that desire it, from all parts of the world in telegraphic connection with England. . AA-ImM LINDER, of Madison county, Ohio, in the last fourteen years has ship ped over 25,000 cattle, 65,000 i, sheep and about the same number of hogs, .to the. New York market, since 1865—more than shy other shipper in Ohio. Linder & Johnston bought, clipped and sent forward 8,000 fat sheep last spring. Bluotren Youno has returned a fraud ulent income return of the rents, profits, tic., of the church of the Latter Day Saints, for 1868. Having been requested to make a proper return, he informed the assessor that the revenues of the church amPunted to but $440. Not satisfied r i s with this ;the assessor will astiess the prop erty himself: Our. of the Landon pa sayr although all pare spring cre k ice E England goes under the n me of Is ham. Lake ice, importatio of ice the American continent h long ceased. In hard winters m ch ice I collected in England, and t least thousand tons are imported rum Ni to supplement the hone ply. A WELsa paper says th t, at 41 religious meeting in the di trict in it circulates, the assembl d clerk discussed `•gweddi gy naul eld fool, that the subject for debate thd meeting is " Yegrythrolc ed set. erefyinewn gwald." We have no hesita. tion in pronouncing forthe affirmative of this question. Why'not? ,' , A YOUNG Nan about eighteen years old succeeded in "seeing the elephant" at Bucyrus, Ohio, recently. He was teasing and abusing a young elephant in a men agerie and the animal, suddenly straight: eulogies trunk, dealt him a blow squarely between the eyes. • lie arose and departed a wiser young man, his sight of the ani mal having cost him an elegant pair of black eyes. ' ‘ • Tim corn crop of 'Wisconsin, says a paper of that State, is .a nonentity, it is a ,factotem, a humbug, a bauknipt. Every body seems to have planted the small yellow kind, and as eniblematic of its goneupness it Is wearing the weeds of utter disconsolateness. It no more ap• pears In silks ,and tassels. Joseph of old would make e,Poor stagger buying corn the •coming honest. t i k In Portsmouth, N. ~ is a young Irishman who seems ot -to be a favorite of fortune. Be lost n his wife a year or two ago by a railroad accident. His second wife,. with her child, died in child bed a few days since; after a terrible sur gical operation. Within a few hours a Lunar • lieut. PITT Omar: GAZETTE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1869. rismorsoi good horse belonging to him fell and was severely injured; and somebody stole from fifty to eighty dollars belonging to him and his late wife from a drawer in the house. • Mn. &mum. STEVENS, of Belleville, Ontario, claims to have invented an en tirely new process for refining petroleum. The oil rune from the still complete, and does not require any subsequent treat ment by acid or other chemicals. This process is effected by superheated steam, and the direct kotion of fire on the bottom of the still is therefore not required. It is stated that about 60 per cent. of burning oil can be got off and the residuum is made into a splendid lubricating <AI. It will not gum, and is free from any impurities, and is valuable as a tanner's oil. FROII the table of revenue receipts for the fiscal year 1867-8, just published, it appears the largest amount of duties paid by any one class of article. is yielded by sugar and molasses, which are credited with $34,770,065. Next come woolens and woolen manufactures, yielding $ll,- 458,755; coffee, $10,657,845; women's and children's dress goods and Italian cloths, $10,650,901; iron and steel, $lO, 524,024; tea, $9.414,664; cotton manufac tures, $7,202,871; spirits and wines, $6,- 309,523; flax and manufactures thereof, $4,645,043; dress and piece goods, $4,- 526,706. SOME of the North Carolina Ku-Klux, arrested recently, have turned State's ev idence and exposed the whole Klan. A correspondent gives some of the principal rules, oaths and obligations. The first ceremony is to blindfold the candidate, he being first asked: "Do you believe in a white man's government ? " He is then taken inside, caused to kneel, and, with the hands on'the Bible, take the following oath: "I solemnly swear that I will never reveal anything that has transpired, or may transpire in the order that lam now about to join, even should I not identify myself therewith." Each officer administers a different oath, or exacts an obligation if the person is about to join the order, some of which are as follows: "I pledge myself if any of our number get in jail to bail them out if possible, if not, assist in taking him out. ' If one of our number comes to trial, I promise to get in the way of the Sheriff, to get summoned on the jury, and promise to acquit the prisoner." . "I promise to as sist a member if he gets in trouble, even to they risk of my life." "I promise to resist any attempt of an officer to arrest one of our number, with force of arms, if necessary. The sign of reeognition is the right band placed on the breast; the sign of distress is the hands clasped be hind the head; the grip is a shake of the hand with the forefiner doubled in. Dn. Jour: Wflains, the oldest resident of Wilkesuarre, died recently. A LARGE EAGLE was shot in Granville tp., Mifflin county, on the 31st nit. A aux named Aukerman is reported to have been murdered in Clearfield county, near the Cambila line. Rtnions are afloat of traces of incendi arism at Avondale. The jury of in quest commences its sitting on the 11th. 'TEE residence of Hardman Phillips, of Yeagertown, Mifflin county, was burned on the 2nd. House and f/rniture insur ed for $4,660. WM. VAUGHN. aged , (hirty years, com mitted suicide in the Franklin Cemetery, Philadelphia, last week. He was a resi dent of that city. A men put off a train at Mileaburg, for refusing to pay his fare, attempted to avenge himself by firing at the- cars, for which he was arrested. Tan Pennsylvania Railroad shops, at Patterson, are to be closed on the Ist proximo, the machinery and hands will be distributed at other points along the road. LAST Friday, while the afternoon train for 'Youngstown was making up at Sharon, the Shenango bridge gave away and let the engine and tender into the river. A CIFILD of Franklin Speice, of West Beaver township, Snyder county, recent ly tell head first into a tub of hot water. The skin of its face and arms peeled off, but its life was saved. EUGENE F. JorixsTori, charged with the murder of Levi Ennis, in July last, was tried at Bellefonte, convicted of mur der in the second degree and sentenced to the penitentiary for eight years. IT is pretty well ascertained that the "meteor" which exploded and caused the destruction of scar on the Franklin branch of the Allegheny road, was of earthly manufacture and partook of the nature of a torpedo. Tan engineer of the Thomas Iron Company, at Wilksbarre, corrects the statement concerning the Pine Ridge colliery, spoken of as "that fiery pit which has swallowed up many victims," and says no fatal accident has ever oc curred in those mines. ONLY seven plans have been submitted old in in competition to the. Board of Commis- Wen from stoners for the erection of the Public Buildings on Independence Square, Phil. since adelphia. The committee will make their la now . thirty decision this month on these plans, paying a premium of $2,000 for the design bar _orway ing the most merit, $1,500 for the second he last best, $l,OOO for the third and $5OO for the fourth. All the buildings now on the which Square are to be removed, except lade -14r12en,, pendence Hall. The buildings are to be " a " Ore proof throughout. r next AT Petroleum Center, on Friday of 'vdiled last week, the decomposing remains of Fannie C. Garrett, a young woman who had "disappeared" a few days previous, were discovered in an unoccupied room. She had been employed at one of the ho tels, was discharged, and failing to find employment elsewhere engaged as wait ress in a "free and easy,"., where she re mained but a few days. The attention of the owner of the room in which she was found was attracted by a foetid odor proceeding from it, and the door being broken open she was found suspended from a beam of the roof by a piece of clothes line: I Tan Shenango and Allegheny Bali road has been completed from Greenville to Mercer and was opened a few days since, the event being celebrated at Mer cer, by the suspension of business, the closing of public offices, and the people turning out, en masse to witness the ar rival of the first train , from Greenville. An impromptu meeting.was presided over by Judge Trunkey, and addressed by, Prof. Williams, Win. Reynolds, Alfred Huidekoper and. Geo. Delamater, Begs., of Meadville; 8, Griffith, Esq.* Bon- Wm. Stewart, and Rev. J. R. Finey, of dl Mercer, and Thos. H. Wells, Esq., of Youngstown. • that STATE NE VI . S. SETIF.LABETING.,. :- FRUIT-CAN TOP:- COIsLINS k NV INIGHT, • - . - P ITT Slit'U G#, We are now prepared to supply Tinners an. Potters. It is perfect, simple. and as cheep aS. the plain top, having the names of the various' Fruits stamped upon the cover. radiating from the center. and anindex or pointer damped upon the too of the can. It is Clearly, Distinctly and Permanently by merely placing the name of the trait the can corteins opposite the pointer and sesling in the customary manner. 1.70 preserver of fruit or good housekeeper will use any other efter once seeing t. mh2s IPES. CHIMNEY TOPS. &c. UTATER PIPES, 0111PINET TOPS A large assortment, HENRY H. COLLINS. apl4:bsf7 Ad Aveme,ness Smltb field St. DRY GOODS cei o w 4 4. c.D . 4 44 , i s ch- .t. i c 4 WI ro 2 N z 2 . 4s ;.. c=) .... E Go l tz p. ,4 . .t 4 z = i d 4 Z r 4 5 W 4 w 14 5 t z % ced Si 4E I:b g g E 4 I=l 01 um 4, oi ;A 41 Go -00. , ' PCS ;A cil gl I."` Ut 8, 4 734 - 4- P c 7) 1 0 0o r ~-; 1 5 =o, 2 ,cn - ipld W 0 ".4 0.. 04 Z ..s. ...1 E 4 W : 14 E . 41 t=) 0 O !, 3 r t 4 ri i go Z ,-I ..;.. •7 4 ad, he A Z acq he 0 0 rho ' 4 0 ARR. BIeCANDLESS a, co., llAte Wilton. Our i C 0..) WHOLZBALI MULISH 139 Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, No. 94 WOOD Fruit% Third door above Diamond oiler errrimusen. PA. EDUCATIONAL. PIISHOPTHORPE SCHOOL for GIRLS. will begin its second year D. V. on t an 15th of SaPTEMBER nest. 'a be num b e r of pupils ail of whom live In the house . lied to aurty. Vrench is taught by a resident governess, and so far as possibta is made the Lauinger of the tinily. Address, for circu'ars. etc.. MISS CHASE, Illshoptuorpe, Bethlehem, Peta nl. ____. —-.---- - - - - - -1-1"0 ._ EGABA V INSTITUTE, 1541 end 1529 'SPRUCE STREET, Philadelphia. Pa. ENGLISH AND FRENCH. For Young Ladies and Misses,Boarding and Day , . will reopen on MONDAY Berea ber O. FRENCH Is the language of the family, and is constantly spoken In the Institute. MADAME IPHERVILLY, IFX:rrtie Principal. yoIiN4iLADIES9 SCHOOL, No. 29 NINTH STREET, late Rand, Will open WEDNESDAY, Sept lit. The School has elegant and commodious rooms. a full corps of able and competent teachert. and every faciiity fJr a thorough education: Besides the usu.l advantages of Maps, Charts and Flillo sophical Apparatus, pupils will Lave the benefit of a large and valuable Cabicitt of Natural Ills tory. Applications for adcalialon may be made personally or by letter to the principal. at No. 3Y FIFTH AVENUE. REM. S. rd. GLENN, A. DL, PRINCIPAL. wavEllls-Trits _ Miss M. MARKHAM Late Associate rtinetpal of Trying Institute WILL OPEN A SCHOOL FOB Young Ladies and Misses, MONDAY, September 6, 1669. At the lately occo pied by the Curry Insti- tute, No ti rooms dit and 51 Sixth street Cate St, Clair). Circulars can be bad at all the panel pal Book stores. or any information may be obtained of Miss Markham, st 312 PENN BT., Pittsburgh. isSx WALL PAPNRI3. ELEGANT PAPER HANGINGS. Enameled Wall rapers in plain tints im cr. 'awns to soot and smoke. Vermillion g,onuds with gold and inlaid Moir. HOSill is V e.t... VEIN, INDIA. TnrhSTRY. °REEK PANEL'S stamped and primed gold. Newly Imported and not to be found elsewhere In ten country. For sale at W. P. MARSHALL'S NEW WALL PAPER 81'01E, 191 /Liberty Street. D • • EC ORATIONS—In Wood, Marble and 'Fresco Imitations foe Wails atm Ceilings of Dining Booms, Balls. No 101 Market street. JOSEPH R. 111101fgg & Bso. QTAIRPED GOLD PAPERS to: 1„." twarlors.'st N 0.107 Market street. Areltni HUGHts A BRO. VLOtrit 1 FLOUR 1 FLOVR 1 I al ' 'MINNESOTA BAKERS FLOURS. .• 480 blue. Legal Tender, 367 Wale Ha Ha,. 367 - bbl. Ermine, 170 bbl. Summit Mills 9170 bbis ' Winona,Co.. 580 bbl. Red River. 133 tibia May Day. • CHOICE WRICIIINSITN FLOURS. • 660 bbl. Riverside., 865 bbl . White Star, 500 •-'bble WINTER ands Spring wheat Flour. •- - WRENS FAMILY 7L01311. City Mill of Springlield. Ohio, Pride of the West. Depot Mills, Massilon A, ParagOil MIMI. ' Ringleader and Crowe, choice St. Louis. • e•or sale lower then can be brought from the West. WAIT. LAND 4 00: j .37 21 " -OS and 174 Wood street. • LIVERY. STABLES. JOILS H. 811AWAlre .......... ROBT. naArrgasox ROBT. H. PATTFIEttiON a. CO. -14,117:kint. SALE SlrD CO=ON COB. BUM AVENUE k 11BRILTI fT PlTTSllunau, PA. areakbf FALL, 1869. ROMAN PLAID RIBBONS, LADY VIJDIDII3ILT BOWS, In Plain and Iloman Colors. A BILAIITIFUL LINE OF ATIN FRILLIN GS Black Silk Fringes. SILK BITTTONS, ha all the newest styles. Also, all the elegant designs of PLAID GLASS BUTTONS, EMBROIDERIES-A NEW LINE. Shetland Bibbed. Grey MIX and white SHIRTS AND DRAWERS Good Country Yarn. A fill variety of Galore\ of EASTER ;YARNS 111-Wool Flannels. Ladies' arid Misses Balmoral Hose. GENTS' SHAKER KNIT HALF HOSE, MACRITM, CLYDE & CO., 78 & 80 market Street. au".7 DESIRABLE GOOD Received This Day by JOSEPH HORNE & CO NEAP STYLES NECK, BOW A BASH RIBBONS. PLAIN, BROCADE AND FANCY ARAB HAWLS, SAILOR AND BLONDE EATS, HAT PLUMES AND BIRD ° , CHOICE F-ENCII FLOWERS, t OLoite D 0/LOBED VELVETS in every_ Amide, Nc HAI R N rits ETS. T end CH endAITCRE. N - GERMAN COSSETS, __ TRAVELING SATCHELS, FPIE SILK FANS, LINEN FANS, Another lot, includinghades. the Bright and Light S ItA.DIRURG EMBROIDERIES In new designs. FURNISHING EIGODs. New styles In NECK WEAR., FINK SUSPENDERS. WRITE AND FANCY SHIRTS, NEGLIGEE SHIRTS., PAPER COLLARS AND CU • FS, NE.w RUBAStR JEWEL.EY. SHELL BRAEVE.I .4 AN di BANDS And a general assortmen ß t or Notions, 77 and 79 MARKET STREET I'M CARLISLE'S styles. Dealers supplied with the above at FLOUR. ALL COLORS OF In cholee etylee. The new r DIV iEBENT COLOM HID GLOVES TVhotesode and Beta'il, Hi SIIIIER GOODS No. 27 Fifth Avenue, Dress Trimmings and Buttons. Embroideries gad Laces. B H i a bo anndßdn Fow.ers. Glove tatting and French Corsets. New Styles erecters Skirts. parasol.—art the new styles. • Sun and Rain Umbrellas. Hosiery—the best English makes. Agents for "Harris' Seamless Kids." Spring and Summer underwear, Sole Agents .or the Bemis Patent Shape Cet era. "Lockwood's "Irviitg." "West End," "Elite." Itel "Dickens," "Derby." and other MANUFACTURERS' PRICES MACRITM & CARLISLE, NO. 27 FIFTH AVENUE my 4 MERCHANT TAILORS. p. 101'.A.113133LAE, FASUIONABLEI MERCHANT TAILOR, Kteps constantly on hand Cloths, Cassimeres and Vestin Also, GENTLEMEN'S 113BNISHING GOLIDB No - 93 1-2 Smithfield Street, airGent , s Clothing made to order in the Meet 5e3;1033 B°" C1.4007CH1N451-. Our entire Summer Stock of Boys'. Youths' and Children's Olothing. closing oat at greatly reduced prloes. ORAY & No. 47 SIXTH STREET LATE BT. OL A.TR. 12:9 VEW FALL GOODS. J6 ‘ • Welled new stool of oLoTas, GASSIMEBBIIis &OH Jost received by 11ZWRIF PiMIME. sea: Merchant Tailor. TS Stnlthileld singe. TLEGEIL, ° Cate Cutter 'Mai W. Respezbeldfs. BcCELTICrEL&NT TAl?.ps• No. 53 ssnithrield Slavet s Pittsbures. se 21 AROBITEOTSI BARR is, MOSER, • A.II.IMME OI MUM EOM 112800IATI ON BUILDINGS, Nos. end 4 Bt. Glair Street,. Pittsburgh. Pa. Mention given to the designing'and building of COUNT NUMB WI PURL) 0 WEITUCIGEti NEW CARPETS! ERESR IMPORTATION Zr,c";:tbNilVedr., MoCallum from InaMt- VELVETS, BRUSSELS; Tapestry Brussels, &c., THE FINENT Assortment ever offered in Pittsburgh. ALSO, A PINE STOCK OF THREE-PUS, INGRAINS, COMMON CARPETS A FINE ASSORTMENT OF Well Seasoned Oil Cloths. nun BROS., Xo. 51 FIFTH JIVE.TUE, selo CARPETS, Floor Oil Cloths, WC .A.Tffr I. N Gr. lißp Window Shades, AT :LOW PRI-CES„ We offer many Spring's prices. line can save mon BOVARD, ROSE & CO., 21 - FIFTH AVENITL 14:CAT' NEW FALL STOCK. CARPETS, The First in the Malket THE CHEAP E ST. Two-pty and Three-ply CHEAP INGRAIN CARPETS. BODY BRUSSELS Ever Offered in Pittsburgh,. bare time and money by baying from 'So. 31 and 13 BIITH AVENUE. auZ:d &T OLIVER M'CIANTOCI, & CO. HAVE JUST RECE n'ED A FINE SELECTION OF BRITSSELS, • TAPESTRY_BRUSSELS THREE PLY AND INGRAIN CARPETS. THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT WHITE, CHECK & - FAN DIATTINGS, FOR SUMMER WEB! IN THE CITY. STOCK FULL IN ALL DEPARTMENTS OLIVER IffeCLDITOCH & C, MAUS. QINGERLI" & CLEIS, Successors ta to ORO. E. SCMJCIIIIAN a CO.. rus.cricsar. ILITIIOI2IBAPHEBS. The only Steam Lithographic 'Establishment West of tre Mountains. Business Cards, Letter Beads. Bonds, Labels., Circulars, Show Cards. Portrslo. Viawc. CertiScates of De. posits, Invitation Csr3s, Woe. TS apt( 74 mom pittpborwh. BAIR AND PERFUMERY• ORN PECK, ORNAMENTAL FAIR WORKER AND rElatthlES, No. 11 , Third street, near Smithfield. Pittabirgn. AITM K . hstartersl assortment 01 La dles. es. BAlard CURLS; Gentlemen's wies. PEES scrtura, Guam:ow:Timm BRACELY.TV. e:e. saritad Pride In nub will-be given 107 RAW talidiell i and Bentlemenks Bairflostinr done .1312 at in tap rwatPat manual.. PITTSBURGH, PA DR. WHITTLER. riONTINVES TO TREAT ALL private diseases. Syphilis in all its forms, all urinary diseases, and the effects of mercury are compietety eradicated: Spermatorthes or Semi nal Violates' and Impotency„ resultiag from self-abuse or other causes, and which produces acme of the following effects; as blotthes, bodily weakness, Indigestion, consumption, aversion to society, unmanliness, dread of future events, loss of memory, indolence, nocturnal emission% and finally 110 prostrating 01114.11110 11110011 as so render marriage unsatisfactory, and therefore imprudent, are permsr , ently cured. Persons at dieted with these or any other delicat intricate or long standing constitutional comp Wat should give the Doctor a trial; be never Ws. A particular attention given to all Female emu.. Plaints, Leueorrhesior Whites. thFamllibnO pmruriotis,AmUnrrrhoen.oMenoWkogla, iunas.: Dysmen. norrhoes, and bterility or $lllOlOlll3l, are treat ed with the greatest success.. It is seltervident that a physici an who tontine* himself exclusively to the study of a certain class of diseases and treats thoutands of cases ever, year must acquire greater skill in that speciral than one in general practice. Tbe Doctor publishes • a medical pamphlet of fifty pages that gives x bill exposition efresereal and private diseases, that can be had free at office. or by mail for two stamps, In sealed envelopes. Every sentence contains instruction ewe pre• al. acted. and enabling them to determin W T nature of their complaints. The . establishment, comprising tan 'am ple rooms, is central. W hen it is not convenient to t b e city, the Doctor's opinion can beta. bane] be giving a written statement of the calie, and medicines can be forwarded by mall or ex press. In some lustanees, however, a personsi examination is abaolutely necessary while in others daily personal attention Is req tired, and for the accominodstion r f such Patient , * there are spartMents connected with the office that are pro. Tided with every requisite that is , calculated to promote recovery, including totted la Whs. All prescriptions are Pre in the Doctor's awn laboratory, under his personal su b. xediest-paraplitels at oMee free, or r il 3 " m all : or two sump& No matter who WM failed; resd what he says. limns 91. N. to 8 P.Y. Sunday' 19 sr. to Er. ar.. Ord .th. '.No. 9 WELDS lITES=. (near Court Sense,s littalmrla,Eii AND moeh below last lugu goods la One at °ace. AND CHOICE PATTERNS THE FINEST LINE OF MeFLBLA?4'D & COLLM3. (Second P 1001). Ina 23 FIFTH .A.VEHME LITHOGRILPB'ERS. - 121 O'S.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers