ill Ilitt,shrgb Caidtt. POPULAR NOVA scorix SONG. s When British drum And British gun, are are gone silent,, We'll wear o chains no longer, We'll bow usdown to none. The north may come against us, • The gladder we wit be, 'For we'll•call our men together, And welt march up from the sea: 'Twl.l be ,ree and royal rnarching. That marchlr g from the sea, Let Canada come , 'ststward. With all her traltot-knaves. We'll met them on the mountainS. And gi e ve the ms m foreign graves; With rifle and with tayonet We'll lieu" the country free, And we'll clie lined the a t oun!Alns, FOr.oui homes betide the sera: ;Sten can tlle upon the Mountains Wlia were torn nes:di:lole sea. With tariff and with taxes They hold our people down. But their r..igu will soon be over, When thythe British crown; For ltk- the tutu dcsion Woo threw overboard the I'3, We'll take Comsat:nu chattels And we'll ra,t them in the sea. wealth out headlands We'll have ships men the ova. —ilia,fax Chronicle. COTODVA DISTRICT. [Correspondence of the I'Lt.ttbureh Gazette.] ZOZONIA, INDIANA CO., PA. With all the frauds, chicanery and cor ruption of :popular elections, no better system Of government ever can be de vised than the representative, and in spite of all efforts to the contrary, no voting constituency will long be misrepresented in the men of their choice. One is im pressed with this fact in going ,over that part of New York which elected 'Nor risey. No man so fit to represent those people as the great, successful gambler and pugilist, and in looking around, and exploring this'region, Ihave been strong ly impressed with the suitability of the representation of these people, by stout Old John Covode. ' Congress does not present a wider contrast than Covode or Morrisey; the country has no wirier contrast than their constitnaucies. Of the latter it is not neces sary to speak; bed the former is a curiosi ty. Here, in almost every house, stands the spinning wheel; here are the women who use it. One of our nearest neigh bors has two looms, the regular old fash ioned lOom, none of your flying shuttle concerns, she and her hired girl sit side by side, and weave blankets, twilled and plain, .bags of flax and tow, table linen • and toweling, plain and bird-eye, car pets, of rags and yarn, at the moderate price of. twelve and a half eta- per yard. This mistress and maid not only sit side by side at work, but at table, in church, and :wheresoever they may happen to be. Across the field the hired help of a full farmer was married to the son and heir. a few Weeks ago, witl3 the entire approval• of all parties. Class in society is as for eign to the ideas of these people ,as In dia's castes. The women work afield, roll logs, burn brush, harrow, rake and bind grain, . rake hay, mow back, hoe corn and potatoes, raise flax, pull it, rot it, break it, scutch it, hackle and spin it, snare; bleach, cut, mike and. wear it; raise sheep, cut the wool from their backs, and put it through every process neces sary to convert it into clothing. The men calculate to "take the heavy end of the log," and men and women work to gether in the old style fashionable all over the country in Revolutionary times. The houses and furniture belong to that period, except the log fire. Cook stoves are in every house and up holstered furniture, none about I Oar piano is so great a curiosity that people have come miles to see and hear it; they sometimes come miles to carry us a basket of fresh fruit and vegetables. They take it for granted that you are to ' come and see them, and stay for coffee— do not use tea, and, when you go the coffee • is made by the good wife, while the hus band leaves his team in the furrow to come and show pan welcome. The best the house affords is set before you. The hired girl and farm hand, if there. are any, with the children, gather around the board with you, and the head of the 'ouse bows and says grace, perhaps in English, perhaps in German. If the lat ter, there is a German Bible lying some • vvhere•alxtut for the old folks, and one in English for the children. There is sure to be a Bible in every house, with sharply defined ideas of its teachings on contested points. There is a newspaper, too, and settled opinions as to the policy it advocates. Here your editor finds one or more critics in every house, and sonic of them as dogmatical as any doctor of divinity dare to be. There is a shelf of books in the living room, which generally show use- ' among them are one or more on "the late un pleasantness between the States." Al most every house furnished one or more soldiers to the war. Some of the women lived with only one, two or three little children, on the arm, carried on the farming operations, took the children - through the whooping cough, cared for horses and cattle, and had enough to spare of their own living, while the husband and father fought for the old flag. 'There are no poor: folks in this region, -none who would acceptalms and no one finer than his neighbor. Women go to church in a , calico sun bonnet or .something more pretentious, just as it ' suits them; and men in coats or shirt sleeves according to the weather. It is amusing to think of the efforts in city Pairs to get up "New England kitchens," as' if they were things of the dread '.past. Here, less than• 'a day',ls• journey from your city, we have plenty of kitchens with the old time accompani ments, Pennsylvania kitchens, just, as 'primitive as the New England article. You will "readilY,'see by tbis, that John Cowede is the, right man •in the right„ place. What...though , there are some' boroughs in the districtewhich put on airs of gentility, and might•be I properly rep resented by an aspiring lawyer! There are plenty, of, genteel Congressmen who might take • a st6P-ftitherly interest in • them; and'see 'that their right of fashion pinta 'i s 'not ' infringed; but ' there Is but: plate':: johri Covode, and 'I suspect there are, more,: communities like this hidded awaylike linen, in other, constit uencies:where they lore sce outborne by modern:.improvements, that they arc overlooked 'in' the representation. These our sturdy"old'SParttin could take under his•fatherlyPrcitedtiOn. One thing is cer tain; 'Covode is the ropiesentative of 'an.. era • theught••to have „passed aWay,. and, • -,whieb I find here; bale and hearty,. Like Webater, the good of the good old time, -still lives : and ought to • have . its rspresen ' tatives on the floorsiof• Congresis.: Spragne.represesits the spinning-jenny,. Covode the old spinnifig wheel 'by Which; =ill our grandmothers clothed our armies in the days of the Revolution; and I, as one of the constituents of this district, claim to be represented by the stout old Amer ican 4 gentleman, who has so large an allowance of common sense and old fashioned honesty, without the polish which belongs to the days of improved machinery. JANE G. SWISSITEL3I. LETTER FRO3I.COLOBA.IIO. Worremondenee of the Pittsburgh Gizette.3 Do Boss, Bic SANDY Foss OF ARKANSAS RIVER, L COORADO, • September 7, 1869. Enrrons GAZETTE: T womonths have passed since I wrote last,in which I - have been too busy to write a satisfactory let ter. During this time our survey has progressed one hundred mites westward from Sheridan, the present western ter minus of the Kansas Pacific railway passing near,Fort Wallace and Cheyenne -Wells and striking the Big Sandy ten miles below this pines, near the junction with the Proposed line to the Pacific by the thirty-fifth parallel. My position as topographer and office engineer of the party in the field affords great facilities for acquiring a thorough knowledge of the country, but as yet I have found nothing to modify in my former accounts. I had not overrated its value for pasturage, or for cultivation where irrigation is possible, nor the health giving qualities of the climate, to which nothing eastward is comparable. Per contra there is no timber except a little cottonwood on the banks of streams, no coal till we get beyond the plains, and no stone west of Fort Wallace, where thi re is plenty of beautifully tinted mag nesian limestone, so soft as to be sawn - more easily than pine wood. The scarcity of water for ordinary uses is readily overborne by shallow wells in the dry watercourses or by deeper ones on higher ground, avoiding the patches of alkaline earth which make many of the natural pools unfit to use. Artesian wells may ultimately be used in addition to the few permanent streams for irriga tion, the almost constant wind affording cheap power for pumping and the geolog ical nature of the country, a wide, shal low trough, of Termian or upper carbon iferous strata, filled with effluvial drift from the Rocky Mountains, giving good prospect of obtaining sufficient water by wells reaching through the drift. The heads of streams tap the permanent un derground contents of water, which are generally the sole drainage of the coun try. These pass freely through their sandy course, and when interrupted, by impermeable masses appear as springs, generally of good water, but soon sink again, often to reappear, making a succes sion of springs of the same water, just as landscape gardeners sometimes do to economize water. The Big Sandy, by which we are camped, now a dry sandy bed four hun dred feet wide, but in flood a torrent, with an average fall of nearly twenty fret per mile, has an underground current, which evades the sand so as to leave it in places a loose mixture of sand and water, so un stable as to be ready to collapse under the weight of animals passing across, thus forming dangerous quleksands. On the same stream; the same cause produces a succession of deep pools of cool, palateable water, wherever the eva sion reaches the surface. These are sepa rated by long intervals of solid, moss covered ground, which has none of the appearance of a water course.' A few miles cast of this place, a re markable depression, called Eureka Ba sin, ten miles in width, has been worn out by surface floods and the wind taking up the loose soil and depositing it on the grassy bluffs around in fantastic sand, hills. This depression is two hundred feet below the general level of the plains, and considerably below the Big Sandy, which flows along a ridge formed of the debris which it brings lrom the base' f the mountains, but decends so rapidly as to be low enough twenty miles from here to receive the drainage of the basin. The drift from the mountains, of which these plains are fornied, abounds in many places in fossils. Twenty miles west of Fort Wallace we fauna a fossil saurian whose living length was nearly twenty feet. Petrified wood is common. On Fossil Creek, east of Sheridan, several mastadon and many other organic re mains have been found. At Antelope Station, Nebraska, several new species of horses have been unearthed. Alto gether the plains seem to be the most I promising ot all fields for paleontological I research. Dr. Foster, now President of 1 the American Scientific Association, thinks he has gathered, chiefly from this region, sufficient evidence to establish the existence of pre-Adamic races of men. Whether this be' so or not, the incoleate condition of the country and the blend ing of the alluvial period into the present is easily apparent, and here seems to be the door by which to pass from the pres ent to geological periods. Having given this letter a rather earthy character, I shall in others take up other subjects, among them. the social charac teristics of an uninhabited country. C. J. Mysteries of the.'Mad House—A Pearl Street Merchant Wants to Get Out—A Writ of Habeus Corpus Issued—team lly Secrets Said to be Involved. A gentleman confined in the Bloom ingdale Lunatic Asylum wrote to Mr. John B. Townsend, requesting him to initiate measures to secure his release from confinement. The writer of the let ter is Mr. Henry= Frothingham, formerly a merchant in Pearl street, and who pre vious to his confinement,• always acted like a sane 'man. -'On receipt of, this communication Mr. Townsend proceeded to the Asyluin,for the purpose of holding an interview with !fir. .Prothingham, which the authorities of that institution positively denied, referring ihim, how ever, to Mr. Frothingham's brother for the partieulard of the case. When the latter was called on, he informed Mr. Townsend that his brother Was hopelessly insane, and described a few of his freaks, which plainly demonstrated, a feeble brain. Theie assertions were coMmuni cated to the alleged lanatiC, who ;n,turn denied them in the moot emphatic, terms. Under these circumstances, Mr. :Town send last Saturday, applied to Mr. Jus tice Barbour of the Superior Court; for a 'wilt of hams corpus, which was readily granted. ,The alleged lunatic, who appears to be posoessed of some share of common , sense, is said. to be.,the depositary of a myste rious family: secret, the revelation of which ii.teared by the other members of the family.-N. Y. Times. PITTSBITEGH GAZETTE: MIDDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1869, STRANGE DISCOVERY Ancient Ruins at Saratoga—What For gotton Race Drank and Bathed at -the Springs Ages Ago! (From the Saratoga Post.) In making excavations for the founda tion walls of the bottling house, at the Star Spring, among other evidences cf an occupancy of this interesting locality by a former people, and for purpose's sim ilar to those for which this spring is now famous—the recuperation of health—the workmen laid bare a range of vat i g, some half dozen in number, which had evi dently been used for bathing purposes. The remains of a wall, doubtless of an other century, were plainly developed, one portion being entire for a distance of thirty-five feet, and which ran along the south side of this row of vats, dome five feet from the most southern vat; but whether these were inside - or outside of the building, there is nothing developed, as yet, to determine. Our own opinion is that they - were outside the building, which rested upon the wall, and may, probably, have been part of another es tablishment, and unlikely of a different age. To the north of this wall, and a little west of the vats, the workmen came to a large black oak tree of more than two feet in diameter, with the bark on, and with the exception of the sap portion of the wood, some two inches in depth, the sub stance of the tree was as sound as ever. This tree was not more than four feet from the surface, we should judge; but the ap pearance of the soil above and around it forbade the idea that it had ever been ex humed before, or seen the light of day for centuries. It was imbedded. in a deposit of pure alluvian, so purely vegetable that the black mass spaded up, to else the words of the laborers, "like old cheese." The deposits that surrounded the tree were sim - lar to that found in most of our morasses, and the pores of the wood hay ing imbibed the darker fluid, the timber, though sound, as we have said, was of a ditrk color. A. thousand years may have away since this patriarch of the morass has been cut down. The depos it in which it was imbedded did not come up to the surface, and the strata above it was evidently ofi no recent origin. The vats, or bathing tubs, were of rude con struction, and it is difficult to determine in what century they were used. The "oldest inhabitants," whose familiarity ,with the location extends back to three score years, can tell nothing of their use, or even of their existence. The remains and other evidences of antiquity brought to light in the recent operations at this spring show, unmistakably that a former ,age and - other people knew of the virtue of these waters. Seeing tile Bugs—One of the Absurdities of tue Middle Ages. In the Middle Ages the German peasant suffered constanily from the ravages of enormous swarms of injurious insects upon his crops, and his only means of defence was to institute legal proceedings against his little enemies, before either the legal or ecclesiastical courts. Stich a procedure - now appears ridiculous; but it was then the prevailing idea that every criminal must be punished according to to his crime, no matter whether the guilty were rationally responsible or not. 'nese processes against insects were in the higllest degree curious. Special rules were prepared for them; many —legal gen tlemen" of that time made them their study, and books full of scholarly. research were written upon the subject. The feria of trial varied according to the class of licensed animal. If the animal could be arrested, it made its appearance in person be fore the criminal court. If the crim inals were small, such as snails, cater pillars, field-worms, etc., and the people had no means of capturing them, the case was brought before the clerical judges, the only authorities which were then con sidered capable of bringing down the pun ishment of Heaven upon the offenders. The owners of the devastated field or dis• trict appeared as accusers, and a person was usually appointed to defend the case of the insects. The minutest foims of justice were observed; both parties were heard, and the sentence pronounced by the clerical court. This was usually in the form of an exorcism or ban. The delinquents received peremptory orders to leave the land they had devas tated, and to withdraw to an uncultivAted neighborhood, where they could net larm mankind, and which was often ea. pressly designated to them. ' Such an or der reads us follows : "It its, carterpil lers, snails, and all you unclean animals, which destroy the harvest of our brothers, begone out of the canton which you are devastating, and'llee to such where you can injure nobody." If it was suspected that the mischief makers were instituted by the devil, the anathema was added to the command. In urgent cases, the in sects were tentenced to leave the neigh borhood at once, being allowed from three hours to three days's grace, Fre quently the insects were warned before being brought to judgment, to desist from further injury, and to leave the land, and in order that they could not plead ig norance, this warning, as well as the Judge's sentence was made known in the whole devastated district by means of public criers, amidthe blowing of t um pats and the beating of drums. Such processes are frequently rec riled as having taken place from the four enth up to the eighteenth century. One such. was instituted against masses of Spaniall flies, which had committed much damage on a strip of land. in the electorate of Mayence. The Judge, in consideration of the smallness jor the body' and' youth of 'the-accused," had assigned them a guardian and advocate; and the • latter'. Very" Warmly• defended the , cause of hih Client.' He did not denythe daniage dons by ,theM;`but urge.d, that it was a case of necessity, and. &stied that,they..should have a.territory,allotted to them, where they could live , lilte honest people, out doing others an injury, • :ilia demarlds wore granted, and "even to-day," saysi writer of the period, "the inhabitants 'that neighborhood concluded a contract, with the Spanish flies b,y .Wbichthey give up to them' a certain strip" or. land; so that these chafers shall_ be sufficed iherewith arid no. more attenPt : to pass the boun' daries agreed upon." 'CURRAN; who w as Master of the Rolls in Ireland• Ill 1811, tells .a characteristic anecdote of a member of, the Irish Pulls. went..: Boasting of his attachment to• the jary system, "Mr. Speaker," said he "with trial ,by jury 'I have lived, and,-b, the blessing of God, with trial by jury , will die!" " "What," said Curran ' in I stage whisper, "do you mean• to - be hang ed, Jack?" • . , WM En LILA r,tl 3 . (.11 ;,!: 0: `lit:: ; t) , i CO; t :: , ! 1 ,311V/ f. 13 ) ME Po the plain havin as g 'the . names of the various Fruits named upon the COW'. radiating from the center.. ad an index or pointer stamped upon the top of thcAn. It is Cleat Distinctly and Permanently • - -i,&33]Ci.. - E .O . by merely Pining the name of the fruit the can contains °Vasil.° the pointer and sealing in the customary a uner. \ o preserver of fruit or Rood househeeps in:1125 will use any other after once seeing t. PIPES. CI iVINEY TOPS. Sm. ATER P ES, GMBinEY TOPS E. large assortment, ILNRy IL COLLINS, np14:12:37 2tl liveliejleer Smithfield St DRY GDO DS ria c o g ' ark 04 el glf, . , . tr,. ,„„, 4 , a ,„r •P. w > i n 0 Pe z ;:i . cp 4 A 4 ...a E-i 1,4 •e, z Wsus. rill 114 ,--. . 3 0• ' ' e , g--4 NoZir Pq P w.l 11 2 :' twal ca,„ 4 ; 01 pd g E i . - 4 P..11„^ CIOZ '44 , , A PV. r,l! Pa M 'Ai 4 E :11 c= ; ~..• ( r-, ~.:4 :.' i ...1 t•-• 4; gl i , t-i .--, ,„-, v--4 ,!.. i.; 4 c-s ) ,—, t --: = g i RI v 6 7e . 1 IA - A Z ' - -- 1 1 r.4e I a P 4 CA."22IeVAN.3,) 4 F . ' - ',1 8 ,'....F e- • - Dz„.„„.. 1 3 roteign End Doniestielhi El 301 E, DO 77006 eTTI.EZT, docr Dlrmar.(l - VITT:iRIFROH, PA. EDUCATIONAL. • 1110tISHOPTUORPE SCHOOL for w1:1 begin 1, , beeobil year D. V. on the 13th oene.PTF.MtI It neat. The number punlis all of whom Ilve In the n, la ited to :huts. l•ri.lich Is taught by a reiddent irimniess, and so Jar as possible Is made the haiku:tar or th,, fa elle. Addre,s, for elr. Wars, etc.. Ml zi 72llshoptnorpe, 3lethlehc m, Penna. 1 au:io NEWELL I.'4ISTITLITE, '255 and 267 Penn Street, R to re.onon on 3roNnty. SEPT. nTII. ertns 640 per sission f dye inowns. No extra all argea. exc. t for I , rench and Mu sic. Au:din:oats to he alai to re d easily. THE 1101's' LOOMS, 10 s.o. 26T. have been recent's' enlarged and vet'. ranch Im prove.% The tonne of - , 41..y quainies liar en t;:inec into any College. ThorottAh tesching In Etud , rs retatlng to tue ntss, surhna l'elN3l. o k.lstaril Y. A vITH- co 3, rosi &e. -German Classes det.y. The titlraCttr if the school Is guara, ' tee ior honest. clgr.rons taaell'in.i. The Tr acters are Messrs. NEWVI.I. BIJRCII- ELI). bLOA:S I . IOIIOAN The Sehool Rooms for the Y , 47NG - LADIES 1. are In No. 253 renn stre4t. The I:o.ms are ,paclfats and elegant. Tile Prittelral, Mr. J N F. I. 1., Wilt toe as4isted by .11. , 53 sPENCER, Mls, E. :Si. LIGGETT, litti of Vasisr College, and :Miss R'A'( ItLNS, already krosan in the corn ! mutiny 3.8 rn able teacher. The two I), part. ments, Junl .r anl l. 4 end.ar, etunrace the htu4l course Pursued ha snch ins:lt utlons. PA 3IE NT will he nudet the care at Prof, 1/1.11A1.1 and Miss BINS. Prof' lilt 11,01' etaues are $25 Per quarter. I and Miss sT ft NS, *Piper qvatter. I uth are noun v 5 ftrinly rieS7-CLASS Feathers of Mt, ie. 7he LAI/LE' •.-1:1100.1. non' Ontri every vollelt ran he st..earrd by faithful teaching and most tlesir.able sue.ound.ngs. The Pique:nu may be - e. en daily at 255 Penn street, froin ' o to 12 o'clock. attl.WE:3l FLOUR. Noir EC, E TO . F LOU it DE:MIL:I3S ANIP , NSITNIE [Li. —We are ow reeeiv- In :Cot cl 40,000 tinrhul e.‘relolly sele.td A 34. A 311 0 ,1: AND Ts 13..10E WHEAT, purchased In Gti on. rar e. tirebn awl Mo-ya C. uetleu, Induma. his lot of whew. k the yen' best t lur (Laud .eannot be Aurpasfed The Milte o d tes. hart; also tluluhed our lull rovenients In Machluery.• IloCos unit Loolln4 Looms, i „i 111 .,. n ow prerared t 1117131541 The hest Fieur Ise have mad , for 41 . 11 )(Ili, at piles that defy comp.:1100a on the _nine Urades oL hour. It. T. KENNEDT irno.. Pearl team min, Allegheny. Septernler l 3. l S so, FLIVUR I FL UR I FLOUR. 1 MINNESOTA I AEIF.RS 'FLOURS. 4SO bbs. Legal Ten. er, 317 bldn Ha Ha. 367 Ws Er able 1.20 b Surnmlt'ltitlis '3lO Ws Winonittlo..'sbo WM bl Red River. 133 bbls May .tt CHOICE \CIS [WWI./ TrITURS. 560 bIU Riverside. ifts bids White Star, 500 t 'blue) valetas brandy S ring Nk heat Flour. WisTElt WHit T FAMILY trLOIIR. • city Rlll of Sprlu 'deb/. Ohio. Pride of the West, Dellot MILla. aisllon A, Paragon Mills Etnitlader and Crown, choice St. Louis. or Mae /otver than enn be brought from the m West. WA rT, ',A, ,t, co, jy.x •• , al% and 174 ,- woo4 street_;,. , • - 4' ViAl:l., PAPERS,' ......_____ ILEG A NT. , ' PAPER "HANGINGS ' lincrneled Wall . Tni)ers irWilli tiLIS IW:er r-mu to Boot And culotte. Vermillion grunds with gold and inlaid iiirnmit.. Ell 1t015511.1.10Vp.L -vsaS, IN D lA. TAVESTRY, (IRE 10.{. FAN ELS stimioti and printed mold. lath t/ oily imported Forn ad gale net to be found elsewhere e e3untl7. et W. P. MARSHALL'S . . . 1 NEW WALL . PAPER . ST-031E, 191 L TiEconA Marble and resco linitatlons forWa a Ceilinga or Di ing'MCoolB, Halts, stout at N.. iv: Market q.reet. .„ • ' t — ; en... 4 • ;.0. • QTAIIPED GOLD PAPERS tfor 17 cow: .:nt. lio.lolMsrlzet street. 111701 - 1 1 S.1. Zt BM). - - ARCEITECTS. B A. F at I, MOS E R, A.nci3Erra3ars. taro 80LTSE , 3. OCIITIOX.BMW OI * , Noe ,11 and Gt r t7lslr tweet, ritteburst, Lre. tpeelel ettentOn ptett to the deslketzti, and bagging '1).1 1 31)IIIF ,119plaii and , MBLIC I 3Wt'DnlePo TALL OPENING. FINE A3EOItTIIENT OF ARAB SHAWLS, In Plaid and B0»tali Striped. Ruffled Collars and Cuffs, The New Sailor Collar, - Silk Fringes. • Satin Trimminss. Silk Glass. Buttons. In al the Newest Patterns. 'MISSES FINE WOOL C IPS AND S.ICQUD, An elegant assortment just neared. Hair and Jute Switches. Balmoral and Plaid ilmiery, WootHalf hose, ' Shirts 'and Drawers,. FOR FALL AND WINTER WEAR. YARN, A Full Supply t•f All Kinds. HEAVY PLAID FLANNELS, MACRUM, GLYDE & CO., 78 & 80 Market Street, FALL OPENING JOSEPH HORNS & CO'S THURSDAY, Sept. 11th. 1869. FRENCH PATTF,RN BI)*JNETS AND HATS, YEL.VRT. CAcTUS. and STRAW' HATS. • FIN E FhENCH F Lowy, PIQUErs AND BEDS. GI; :L rIATME• 6 , EAT AN I) BONNET FEATHERS, °STRIPE - TIPS, 0 ,TRICEI BANDS and TRIMMINGS. . •RIBBONS, In sy..ry width' and shade. 6R" DE NAP, BONNET SATINS. shideS. MIL.LINERY VELFETS. tin a.l grades and shade,: iIONNET and 11. AT FRAMES. LACES: . ORNAM.ENTSt • R o lng 03e or the LARGEST ASSORTMENTS of INI Goods ever oti,ned in this market. A full line of the above duplicated In our Re tail Roo-ms. 77 and 79 HARKET STREET sets NEW SUMMER GOODS 1 1ACRUll & CARLISLE'S Dees Trttamin Fs and 'Buttons. .e.mbrolderms awl Laces. - • J:ibhons and . Flowera. Hats and Itotr.ev^. Clovi attlng g'rench Corsets. NCO' Styles 6raoley,sSli.lrts. . Paro.sol:. — al the new sty,es. , ' ;;II:! and Slain Umbrellas. Hoslery—the hest English makes. Agents for •flarrls' iieareless ]ids." :;-ring and Summer U3dCrtrear, Scde Agents nor the itetuls Patent Shape CAI - "Lockwood's "Irtitr." "West tad," "Elite," act "Dickens," "llerhy." ttr.d other styles. Dealers supplied witb. az above st 11/I.IIUFACTIECCERS' PRICES. M.AORITM. & CARLISLE, . FIFTH AVENUE. myt FALL STOCK OF MEN & BOYS' CLOTHING, Now Recelring . by GRAY & LOGAN'S, N 0.47 SIXTH STREET, L A.TE. ST. CL AIR. sel7 24'.44,13.13 . 1L.4 70, - 9 - ritsmoxasvia MP:ACHANT, TAILOR, Keeps constantly on hand • Cloths, Cassinteres and Testings. AIso,UENTLIMEIPSPIIIIN ISHI K GGOI;Dd. No 93 1-2 Soallhileld StrOt, - PITISBURGII, PA. ot l y lt Gent's Clothing made to order In t ie _ NEW'FAPL GOODS. ' . AcDlead new stock at , ctr i oTELS, • ~ /13i1Nwir*Earir,n. erty Street... OF - Millinery Goods, Wholesale . Rooms, No. 27 Fifth Avenue, NO.. 27 16:1_ , 1R0,.7.ANT, TAILORS. ,Just reteiveu vi ze3: lkie.relmat Teller. 73 Smithrteld strest. BTJ!EGpU, , Cutter *.tiyire 14..sperleideJ, Monc4.e.rirr - °Jterf,oll , , No. RS SmithlieldStieet,Plitsburi. se2B:v2l. • • • , • LIVERY STABLES: JOR.N 11. STEWART ROUT. lI.PATTERSOR.. ROBT. U. PATNERSON CO.; .-,41.) • . • s4 l -"- 4"?. COntilliSSlON STAIgiES I COILBRIENTII AVENUE. 16,1021Prilit ~•• • , • , • prztaeulKiliii . PA.-• apptki r . x• :.4, ISM CARPETS, CARPETS. NEW FALL STOCIi. Oil Cloths, Window Shades, DRUGGETS. DRUGGET SQUARES, Ingrain Carpets, At the Lowest Prices Ever Offered. BOVARD, 'ROSE kt, CO., 21 FIFTH AV - 1.2 7 .1.1E. se IR Ca.T NEW CARPETS! ERESII IMPORTATION Purchased by our Mr. H. MaCallum from manu facturers in Europe. VELVETS, BRUSSELS, Tapestry Brussels, &c., THE FINEST Assortment ever offered in Pittsburgh. ALSO, A FINE STOCK _ THREE-PISS, INGRAINS, COMMON CARPETS A FINE ASSORTMENT OF Well Seasoned Oil OlothS. mutrm BROS., Xo. 51 FIFTH dr.E.IrUE, selo lIEV/ FALL StOCK.- CARPETS, The First in the Market THE CHEAPEST. CHOICE PATTERNS Two-ply and Three-ply CHEAP INGRAIN CARPETS. THE FINEST LINE OF BODY BRUSSELS lo'srer, Offered In Pittsbnrgh. Save time and money by Moving from HcFAICUND & COLLINS. No. 71 'and 73 FIFTH AVENUE, arLTS:d&T OLIVER iII'CLINTOCE & CO. HITE JUST RECEIYED•A FINE SELECTION OF 1 1/IBIIIXSMIAs TAPESTRY BRUSSELS THREE Prig' AND INGRAIN CA.B.PETS. THE LAMEST ASSORTMT OF WITITE,CRECK & FANCY ATTINGS, FOR SUMMER WEAR, STOCK FULL IN ALL DEPARTMENTS OLIVER McCLBTOCE & CO'S. 23 FIFTH AVEiZIIE. ItoviizoTtal. cLuis, G ERLY CLEIS, SucCeOsora i 3 tG G.O. F. *LIU:CLIMAX 4.t . 00.. PIR..CTICAL Li 73. Itoissl,rrarals. rrte only . Strzan Littliograpble Iro.tsblich=ent West of trt 11-Juntatr.s. St:shiess Carts, Letter Label", Clrculars Show cord.!, tad.. •Dlpttomas. Fortr:...t.. iivirs CerziPc;.,tf.6 of 1e- I% and 74 eyed ntronr... PlttO,Tireb• , . t axiao,s7.s!4*t_tilp_ v 4 JOIEI fAI N PEC ORNAMENTAL IR ITURItEII AND PILBFL'IIEII. 3 Third street, near Smitt.lield, ritlZitalrgh. Always on hand. a genera( assortment of La. dies, Wllib', BANDS, CURLS: Gantiemen'S WIGS, Torzxs. scAT.,r.5, CrUAItD CHAINS, BRACELETS, fc. OS- geod ?rice in cash will De given for RAW RAUL Ladies , and 6er.iletnen 4 a Ear Cutting" done in the neatest WOCUIIC.T. *rlbl DR. 'WHITTIER (I'll l NUES TO TREAT ALL j private diseases. Syphilis In all Its forms, all urinary diseases and the effects of mercury are ; completely eradicated; Spermatorrhea or demi- 1 nal Weakness and. Inipotency, resulting from • self-abuse or other causes, and which produces ', s o me of the following effects, as blotches, bodily weakness, indigestion, consudaption, aversion to 'l soclet. - „ unmanliness ,. dread of future events, loss of memory, indolence, nocturnal emission% , and finally so prostrating tile cereal system alto , render marriage unsatisfactory, and therefore Imprudent; are permanently cured. Persons af. Dieted with these or tiny other delicate, intricate or long standing constitutional complaint should giv particularr a trial; he never Wis. .1 Aattention Kiss nto all Fenaale corn. F., plaints, Leueorrhea or Whites, Falling, leftism- mstion or 'Ulceration of the Womb, tit - sal:ls, ;. pruritis, Amenorrhoea. Idenorrhagia, Dysmen. .$.. torrhoes, and Sterility or Barrenness,_ ar6•trer•t- sd with the greatest success. ' • It is self-evident that a physician who ofinfineS himself exclusively to the study of a certain e 115.% of diseases and treats thousands of cases every agar must acquire greater skill in that specialty than.oun in general practice. . . . . The:Doctor publishes a medical pamphlet of pagesEnilvYeryelse nature of their complaint.i._ Thcf_ 45tatitahmenz, comprising ten ;ample visit :the city,. the 'Doctor's opinion Can Deal). Press: In ,sume instanees, however, a. Personal for the accommodation t f such patients there are promote recovery, including medicated vapor baths. All prescriptions' are prepared in the sentencethat „tict-oens contains n lull e t e u x s p tr o u s c i t t i l o o n n o t f o v venereal e a a I . and private diseases, that can be had free at dice or by mail for two stamps, in sealed envelopes. flitted, nod enabling them to determine the pre teems. is central. When it Is not convenient to tallied by giving a written statement of the Case, and medicines can-be forwarded by mall or ex examination Is absolutely :necessary, while in others daily personal attention Is reqt !red, and apartments connected with the office that are pro , Tided with every requisite that i s lialeulat ..W to -.. Doctor's own laboratory, under his personal an pervision. Medical pamphlets at Gawp free, or by Mail for two stamps. No matter who have failed, read whst he sm. lionn 9 e.. 34 to BP, X. Sunda 1A X. tg SP. X. 011aceclio.9 vry - Lui ... . , (neer Court Bosom InttatmriN Pa . , 1 1 1111 M A_.tiD ME (Second Floor) IN THE CITE. 133 line Mil