, . . . . • . I . _ .. . . .- . I - . . . . . • - . . . 1 \ ' z.. . I . . 'A ~ • •'- - . . . . . • . ... . , . , ~.. _ . ._ . .Y" -- , _ . ... THE DAILY GAZETTE. , OFFICIAL; PAPER Of Pittsburgh, Allegheny City and Allegheny County. . GAZETTE BUILDING: Corner of Math Ave... mad Eledtbik4/ Mmes. . TUEBIOAY. JUNE 14, 1470. Prinoi.Eux at Antwerp, s:g. BoNDi at Frankfort, &WO GOLD closed inNew York o , at. 112W112p. HON E. McJr:catu. one 01 , Z:blest lawyers in the State, was u • ounly nominated, on the 11th inst ,by the Re• publicans of Butler county, for Cougress, subject to the decision of the roof , rees of the district. AN Important amendment has been of fered by Mr. Judd to the .Forty-fick Mitl lons Currency bill now before the Mouse. Its second section substitittes $9.5.100,000 of the new National bank note. for ; $13,- 500,000 three per cent. .certificatei. and $39,860,000 greenbacks, both directed to be cancelled. The Judd amendment. pro. poses to strike out this feature of green. back cancellation, thereby presenting a direct issue upon inflation to that extent. WHISKY yielded. last year, under tl, old ratio of taxation 'and a Johnson n plan of collection, a revenue of but $ 2,. 000,000. • Under the present reduced te, and with a more faithful administrati.n of the law,Xlte revenue from that sour . will be nearly $52,000,000. The ring no proposes to increase the rate again, pinu ibly suggesting that there cm be no fa - ures in the collection undei."Presiden Grant. The suggestion is good, but the proposal will fail, as it should. ' TIM plea of insanity in criminal marts bus of late engaged much attention among medical men of science. At a recent meeting of the Medico-Legal Society of New Tork, the suggestion, made by Hoe. Alcorn, that the plea, when made, should be referred.for adjudication, upon its own merits, to a separate special tribunal, was eihaustively discaseed, the conclusion being general among the members that the better practice would be. found in that direction. Dr. Hammond, - upon whose professional testimony the. McFar and case was made to turn, is reported as follows: In his opinion the hypothetical ques tions always put to medical witnesses in cases where insanity is sought to be es tablished, should be framed' and put by Court, based on the evidence elicited, and not by counsel on either side; for these questions are now framed to suit the pros ecution or the defense, as the- cane may be. He contended, also, that means men should be punished according to the ex tent of the crime committed. Even hang ing them mightbe safe in some instances (as he thought it possible for them, in many cases, to control their impulses) as it would prevent the propagation of insane people. The letting loose of McFarland. he thought, was an outrage; for he was now the only man in this community who was privileged to do icon as he pleases. He should have been sent to the Insane asylum. A FACT WORTH KNOWING, We have heretofore thoroughly dis cussed the questions suggested by the attempts of last •winier, to divert the sinking fend of the CoMmonwealth from its only constitutional application. Our comments have been mainly directed to the general aspect of these qtiestions, re gardless of merely partizan considerations. But it is prOper that we should address at least one pertinent observation to our Re publican friends in connection with the whole matter. They should be apprized of an instructive fact, - not yet generally known. Of the entire nine and a half millions of dollars which were, by the operations of the Omnibus bill, to have been "diverted" front the State Treasury, theibeolute control of the disbursement of eight millions would have fallen, by express arrangements of all par ties interested, into the hands of three of the most bitter and moat unscrupulous partizans in the Dem ocratic opposition. We name Meters. F. W. Hughes, of Schuylkill, .W. A- Wallace, of Clearfield, and H. B. Low ry, of Erie. Of the political claims of the two citizens last • named upon. the confi dence of a Republican people, we need not speak at length; our readers know them as well as we do. Of Mr. Hughes, let us say, this: that, as Secretary of State under Governor Bigler,-public attention was drawn to his leading share in the first Inauguration of Xhe scandalous practices " which have since attended most of the annual elections lb the Treasurer's office. Nor has his public career since that date been each as to commend either his (apse; ity or his principles to the honest and In telligent approval of any portion of our people. We have no hesitation in stating, is a fact certain to have been accomplished, that to these three citizens • would have been entrusted the control—and after a policy which would have been at least partisan; if not persimal—of the disbarie. meat of nearly eight-ninth' of the vast sum which that bill proposed to take from the public treasury. Once ' the bill had been signed, and the "exchange" per-, fettled, these citizens and their friends would themselves have been loudest in their denuneks ... Bons of a Republican State government,-which bad been guilty of this fatal mistake. And the more vehement these denunciations; the more just would they have been. Where would, then, the Republican party of Pennsylvania have been able to shelter itself, hissed, as it would have been, from every hurting' in the Commonwealth? • —lt was alike entertainment, to which a Republican people were invited by certain venal legislators. NEM 11111 MIN FOIANCES OF FEZINSYLVANLi. The Sinking Fund Commissioners ad vertise their readiness to redeem the State loan of July 11, '4O; from and after the Ist proximo. This loan,of about one and a quarter million of dollars, i■ by Its terms reimbursable at any time after the let of that month. The principal will be paid in Currency, and the accrued in. terest, ceasing to run from that date, will be met in gold. The July interest on the "inclined plane" loan of April 10,'40. for about $400,000, and ipon the $423.000 loan of April 2,'52, the first being at 6 per cent. and the second a part at 4+ and the other part at 5 per cent., will also be paid in coin at the same time. Payment may be had fromllds date with the proper rer tete of interest. The interest due in August will doubtless be paid alto in gold. The Commissioners properly re. gard the authority conferred on them to this end, by the late Legislature, as man. &tory, and thus proceed to acknowledge the authority of the Important Judgment of the U. S. Supreme Court. There Is some foundation for the opin• ion that the Commonwealth is now In the way to be able to pay or not _less than two millions Yearly, from the mincipalof her public debt.- And this, to notwith• Winding everything like ilk general State tax lumbeen taken Off the shoulders of the people. It Is belier that DO math • r I , ' . - • ~ , . . . •'' • ' ' . ' -...,.. ' ..........- ~.. ~ _ ... , . . _ l. ,--.••••••••:;,-----,1.--•-4?-1.-•...7,7',"Z7S,17,-7-•.;,,X•M4,_..:,,...4,-;..L4,..:,..,.,.,...."'..•• , . , , V..........a.....P.....-4,2.4....,-...a, ,14:-.... ~, , • .,....,,-,./ . ,• 4,1. ... - 4, - 4.7 , ..' , • , ..% - ii'.-4,1'0 ,4, ‘• ,, ;' , ' , q2- ,- 4; ,, •. •• • ,. W.TA- - W ,..4...,. .. • : ,17 k4. , "W ,,.. . 4 . 51 - ' "..r''' e , t7v.v. a'iii. , el...'• ' - ,•..r., ..‹...,..i, ..,..,-...,„--. „,•,......•., .. , ,,r. •,.....••• ,-.3... , , , i...p....%,...-• ~..- A .4-• .•••-( - , •ti, , ~,,,,,,,,,,, - • -,,,.. 1 „ej.--- 4- • - --"---. • ,-I * -, = . 1 , ..4::: ,- 3 , .e4A-4 ,- ..i - J:::: 4 04,3,44;4V07;g67:11WpL.' , .‘40 , vi1.th5k..re551 , -a^0,... . , - ,g.warc - --4? 4,-, -- - ,...?... 7 .:E- 44 ,4%,...4 . -.7. ,- .±....1 4 ;415 , ,,i.7, 4 4 1 ,, , , , -q5,1 : ,,,,....04,i1 v t r v - t - -. ....i‘0i *- 1"4"N„,': , -.1.4.1,W,431, W...ti----.5,—.1•A tax but now any legal authority for its collection. If t i;evied eo nomine, in any locality, for i purpose whatever, it has bet; held that its collection may be suc cessfully resisted. "The entire revenues of the COntmonwealh are now legallyde rived only from the special taxes author ized Eby various laws.. Thle state of our { finances cannot fall to be most gratifying to the people of Penn : sylvanus. It remains only to pursue toils logical conclusion a policy which has al ready achieved such an agreeable success, by realizing the proCeeds of the nine and a half millions of bonds now in the sink 'ng fund, and applying the unions fast as may be to the further reduction of the aggregate State debt. We furbmit to the public judgment the expediency of cuch a sale, as soon as the par value of the bonds can be obtained. The public ac counts would thereby be released and aim plified, and a tempting prize for covetous I rapacity, organized under whatever font, or upon w haterer.speciotts plea, would be ffectively and profitably disposed of for eVer. yesterday The Constitiition authorizes this appli cation of the betule,`and the experience of the Commonwealth powerfully supports the plan suggested. regard it an not only deserving but urgently requiring a careful public consideration. A DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE Fourth in intrinsic Importance in the catalogue of the highest offices of our Government, stands that of the Internal Revenue Bureau.'llhe Presidency, and the Departments of i.tti and of the Treaff. -ury alone precede this Commissionership in their positive influence upon the public affairs. With two millions four hundred thousand dollars of debt still unpaid, but to be paid with an honorable and diligent' regard•for the public faith, the intelligent reader will agree with us that the situa tion cannot admit, probably for twenty years to mute, of dispensing with the revenues yielded to the Treasury under the most judicious forms of Internal tax ation. We perceive that we cannot spare them now. \There should we find our selves--what would become 'of the pub lic faith to our creditors—of the duty of the Republic to its numerous pensioners —without the $180,000,000 now derived annually from this source, at least one. half bein actually needed to meet our regular expenditures, and not more than one-half being applittaide to the redtiction of our immense debt? Are ' our ordinary , expenoco likely to de crease,. the revenue • from other sourcesa duties upon imports for ex ample, lily to swell so high as to make up for eigittyor ninety millions lost in sweeping away all internal taxes? Does any one sae a reasonable prospect that we may expelt this, next year, or within five or ten years oven? We hear the notion agitated vary clamorously In wine quar ters, that we are paying off our debt too rapidly. Is not that, even, better than to cease paying off at all? Owing more than two billioUs of dollars, has the time yet come to tall( of anything else but - of re demption, lay every practicable and instant means, until, at least we shall be' able to reckon the vast aunt remaining unpaid not by billions but by hundreds of millions? We subtioit to the plain citizen, whose judgment is unbiased by his direct per sot al interest—and that means the great body of the American people—is it sensi ble, is it honorable, is it just to ourselves, or to our crOitors, to hearken to this pre mature cla• against that Republican policj, upon which, thoroughly dismissed and clearly comprehended two years since, the present Administration was en trusted with office ? Would it not look bet. ter, would it not actually be far more statesmanlike, patriotic, honest, to post pone even the suggestion of the ernalleit abridgement in our airmail, until at taut four hundred, or better still, fourteen hundred milnorm more of the tuitional debt Shall have been discharged? Then. indeed. we might feel that the country - would command the situation, with a vol ume of incumbent debt which a continued peace would speedily absorb, which would not paralyze the national arm with the first hostile shot flied la a foreign war, and which no . creditor, at home or abroad, could doubt our ability to discharge under any emergency whatever. We may take it for granted that th.. Treasury - must rely, largely upon . these in ternal reedarces for the beet part of a coming generation. It is, even, not too much to expect that, through this period, as at preient, very nearly one-half of the total public revenue will be derived from that field of taxation? Evidently, this was the view taken by the President when, in bin first message to Congress, he suggested that the Inter nal Revenue bureau be made a distinct department of the government. ,In sap. port of this view. the Rouse Committee of Ways and Means months ago reported a bill to erect the change proposed. Since this we have heard nothing more of it, until My. Sehenck,three weeks since, sub- matting his internal tax bill, referred to another bill, to be subsequently reported from his committee, embodying and legalizing the President's recommenda tion. The President's suggestion was endorsed by his Cabinet. It is suncirted by the unanswerable logic of the facts, in the sit• nation present and prospective. It is aided by the universal public confidence in the integrity and efficiency which now enable the Internal Bureau to con. tribute, under en honest enforcement of the laws, nearly the one•half of the:cur rent public receipts. • The sinews of the National strength are in its revenues, whether in war or in peace. Hence we may justly claim the superior intrinsic importance of these financial departments, next to the Execs• tire itself, and perhaps the State Depart ment, over all other bureaux in the Na tional Government. The War, Navy, Interior and . Postal Departments are mant• testi) , of less consequence to the healthy maintenance of the National strength. Yet, these financial interests, capable as they are of a distinct and independent division into two separate departments, subdividing wholly with special respon sibilities of quite .equal moment, are com mitted at present toe single officer, whose duties would still bo ample if he were re , . tiered altogether front the details of the collection of any revenues, foreign or domestic, at the customhouse or in the interior, committing that went to other bands, and himself charged only with the financial administration of results. Relieve Mr. Boutwell, or whoever may be Secretary, from the details of all col. lecticms. That coven work enough for a departnient by itself. Let the Secretary deal only with the aggregated receipts, and thereupon admit:deter his budgets, To meet the expenditures for all ordinary purposes, to take care of the public obli gations, to conduct the details of his un ceasing labor In the arrangement ef rap• propriations, in tbe application of the sums to. be admired, and in the vastly compte• . hensive fields now occupied by the bail nese of the debt and currency departments —here is work enough for any one officer, enough to make that °Mee, as it should be ranked, one of the very first in the Ei• eutive departments. Our minister of Fi nance would then be an executive officer In the highest and most useful .sense, dealing not with details,but at liberty to work out the results prepared for his use n the current financial policy of the Re public. The Conunissioner, be the incumbent whom he may, should be independent in his functions, andlinVis now; filling a niere-Tressury bureau. The reolamaibil" Ries and the power, like the actual labor, Of the officers should be divided by a clear ly marked MM. Mr. Immo - ell and Mr. Delano, for example. are public servants in hearty accord with each other, but the country can not always depend upon per sonal relations Which at present enable these two otticen to deenlope the highest practicable 'degree of public usaulness, flow did McCulloch and Rollins agree? Why are we not exposed to similar wrang- Rugs and clashinge in the future of at ars tent which is likely to survive the busiM7ea life of this generation of citizens? ' Let us have unity—a direct responsibil ity! Lot us relieve the Secretary of the minor detiils which no Finance Minister = wliose annual budget covers nearly t 490,1 (loom and who is chargeable with the sucemisful management of over two bil- Rona of a national debt should be chargeable with for an hour! The Presi dent and he cabinet, including . Mr. Bout. well himself, have earnestly desired this new assignment of official resposibilities. We large the importance of theie sue gestions upon Congress, and trust that, before its adjournment., an Independent Department of the Revenue will be erre ated, Its powers defined and its vast re sponsibilitiea clearly marked out. I= How pleasant it would be if every body liked to pay his taxes! How much more comfortable the general feeling, if theta were nobody to complain! flow little the encouragement we really have to suppose that the hour will ever come when taxa. lion, in any lona, or to any extent, shall not be odious to a considerable prt4iortion of those classes upon whose shoulders it shall fill. At present, only those escape from taxation who have nothing to lay with, if taxes were assessed upon them. And the reader has certainly, at some time et other, been struck by the 'curious fact that Such poor men arej always ready to exchange their impoverished state, free as it is from all public burthens, for the op pressed opulence of their wealthy neigh bors, and that the latter never feel their burthens to be eo crushing that they would accept an exemption divesting them, by the same act, of their inviting posenstions. The fact indeed may be curious, yet its explanation tato." obvious to need our X' ex planation. lis simply enough that we know that the arguments, which are array ed against any one established form of public impost, are almost invariably capa ble of being addressed, Intattn4 ututandie, in oppoeition to any plan substituting other forms therefor. Yet, are we demanding an Utopia Y. Shall we never know what it is to dwelt •in that state of matchless 'Miss= property is not I Where the gore is an abut mction,always intangible, where there are no warn, no crimes, no man's hand against his neighbor's person or es tate, no debts, no taxes, no excise-men, on contributions out of individual means for the . maintenance of the perfect social onler which ProvitleUce may have of litined. but which the race, in none of ita concrete.... tan yet achlevini crime the world began" Only there, could we hope for that univer oat matinfaction of the individual citizenn. which tilt society of thin aga must regard as an impracticable chimera.• If we must hare tales, then, how do,•s it happen that their imposition hen been, without one exception, either in instance or form; since the race grouped itself into the nodal abide, more or lens inquisitorial? Taxes imply always something to tax— either persons or property, and (or obvi- ous reason= usually the litter. Before levying and collecting them,something to tax must be found. Howl Property may be Visible, or so to speak invisible. So much of it. in valuation and actual power of benefiting its possessors, comes under the latter head, that the Ingenuity of flovernmenta has been racked for con cries to uncover its concealments and bring it within the sphere of positive submission to the bonbon of the. public needs. Property is always toe.- cretive, subject in that respect only to the epeeist fancies of its owner, or the neces. attics, actual or supposed, . of each bull. cidual use. Beyond the tenure of a' large mute, a fine house, a showy equipage., or a few other visible forius in which cap rice or ostentation may reveal the wealth of a citizen, his Invariable inclination in to confine to his own possession not more his wealth than the sole knowledge of Its form and extent. !Ands, /rouses or equip. age. cannot be covered up ; their valua tion is known to others es well as to him self, but all else that he owns he himself knows most about—and it ism; to that class of his posseselons, which, \ as society ad vances, grows alwaye dispoportionately larger and larger—that an ndiess strug gle goes on between the secretiveness of wealth and the sharp Inquisitions of the tax-gatherer. - Even In the 'ace of each visible property as we have specified, how rare it is that the owner doe's not demand a much lower valuation than the officer's convictions of dull can agree to! Even there, the latter's persistence in him esti- mates and demands Is also reganled es Inquisitorial and oppressive: If they tax at Still Utopia, It would be only thine that the visits of the' gatherer could be reckoned as anything but unwelcome, and in some form oppressive. Since men's affairs have to enquired into, to reach a fair approximati n to their just share of the cost. of a 1 state which defends even their smal est pee. sessions from illegal 'violation, d since this beide equally good u to all property, visible or invisible, why need ibeorists dwell on their objection to any one form of taxation as inquisitorial? in an adjoin ing State, which years ago introduced a system which Lexie every citizen accord ing to the actual value of his means,' and requires from every citizen, without excep tion, the formal verification of his ex hibits by oath tinder penalty, the entire system from beginning to end is as rigidly inquisitorial into private affairs an, for ex• ample, the Federal plan of taxation upon incomes. The Ohio journalist or Congress. man, there fore, - who has "Omitted to such an inquisition for twenty years past In his own State without a murmur, yet who ,. now declaims against the Federal system as if ".it were an unheard of and monstrous oppmsseion, ought simply to be laugh ed at for his ridiculous- inconsisten4. We repeat there is not one single feature in the nature of an official inquisition Into private affairs, In the Federal plan of income re; which has not been vogue in all the taxation, rear ind personal, of the great State of Ohio far twenty years past, without one word of that popular clamire which a few politicians have lately endeavored to Inflameiminst a govere ment struggling under a gireful burthen of debt. Ohio is not Pennsylvania, or the Union, but the Illustration is pertinent— afforded as It is by a State possessing the most, perfect system of taxation of all the thirty-seven, a system also the most pop ulat with its people. - nut reader observes, then, that we te pid this income tax as , properly no more. odious, Inquisitorial or unjust, in theory, than any other ihrm of taxation. Like any other tire, it cab ably be unjust when it is unequally levied or excessive in its Wei and results. We • think the House has done wisely, first, in retaining the PITTSBURGH DAILY . GAZETTE : TUESDAY• MORNING, ' JUNE 14, 1870. form: second, in increasing the exemp. tions and reducing the eaten to thelowest practicable limit. Retaining, as we must, Oda with other farina of internal imposi tion u p on property, ti=e shall, be enabled to go steadily on, decreasing the volume of our indebtedness In accordance with our reiterated pledges in 1808, with the requirements of an inviolate public faith, and no as to rivet permanently the . - confidence of that capital to which wo owed the sinews of a KUC ressful war. Whemyeats hence-j-and the period will/Ite mere brief under Republi can rule titan any other—we shall have ii i , coot 10' thst volume of debt to a point where to'furiher and complete absorption will / within the reach of our resources in ind&ct forms—when our two billions and.a quarter shall be so shrunken that we can pay interest, a percentage of the principal, and all Mtr other ordinary ex penditures, from the receipts at the cuo totn-houites—thenrbut. not until then, we insist that all ferias of direct taxation shall 'taken off, awl that the financial system , t the. Itepublic may Rarely and ought pcomptly,to revert to the established prattles all its former history, that of nn indirect ,ax upon importations, especially upon articles which enter intocompetition with doinestic production. At present, we need hoth forms of resource. When a choice shall come to he made, under diminished obligation • of debt, there should be then no clmice, for no intelligent supporter of American republicanism could, either then or now, hesitate to hold and defend the paramount claims o American industry. But looking for today, at the ?kindle' as it is, we lave no room for this or an_ other choice We owe more than tw thousand millions of dollars. which. oil largely become due in a 'very few year hence. We can pay neither aught of t h e rineilml, nor a penny of the promised in erect on tit - id debt, nor even meet till tilt ordinary expenses of our government out. side thereof, without taxing an we have taxed, at the poem of the main and at the door of wealth, luxury, of superfluity all over' the land. We must tax outside and tax inside, directly and .indirectly, quite as much in amount as it is proposed to tax now—or we must ignore our honest obligations. ITSnv absnrd to talk nnw of raising CM, 000.000, or "even CW0,000,000 in revenue ti t heports alone! Indirect taxation alone is preferable, but is wholly impend instil° for thepublic:relnince. We must search as well 'within the land for the wherimithal .to sty oar creditors anti maintain the Itepub lk as n nation. Admitted then that an internal revenue is not to be dispensed with, who shall devise a juster or more el. (retire system then the present? Ah ! how tholie wise doctors would disagree when each man of them collies to submit his in dividual crotchets to the public! We want to see something better suggested in its place, before we can agree to let go our :hold upon the system which now so well answers its purpose. lEtell=l3Ell the B. &0. It. It. e_ pant'-, by the Preni dent of the corporation, we find matter.° much interest to the citizeninf this region Mr. (iarrtAt said. that co nohlerable I tereat and endiuniasin was manifested it Pittsburgh regarding the Pittabnrgh an, MIEMM as • itlt the great iletrnieunt oii trade ther look to the traiitifer of a large portion o t to Baltimore, and a large businean frost that section of-Wentern- Pennsylvania in also promineti when the. Pittnburgh anal Connellsville Road ht finished. In Pitts burgh, it in asserted, the anxiety is ex• Item(' for a new mate from . Pittsburgh t Chicago, to bt. under- the control of 0 Baltimore and Ohio. A • line for the d sired road exists, in the opinion of the of. fivers of the Pittsburgh and Connell!, ville Road, and -in order to prevent claims or occupation by other interval*, the P.ittw burgh and Connellaville Company ham lo cutest and secured thin Important line." Mr. Xiarrett mpresents the people of 011io and Indiana, whom he suet, as mani• 'eating gniat anxiety for the construction of the new mute fnint Chicago. and that to people of that rity and the entire Lob :whin. recognize Italtintore as a city ftil I commercial atremyrtly and of econond I power, and which should be the great outlet of the West to Europe. the great objective point on the tide-water. 'rite proposed line, he claims, will , offer greater advantages titan the three great routes now used, the. New York Central, the New York and Erie and the Pennsylvania Cen tral. It so occurs. imps Mr. Garrett, that un: der the "peculiar financial syritem" of the Northern Railways they have continued to make stock dividends, and by various devices and pm-rases enormously enlarged their nominal capital." and he then par ticularly refers to the Pennsylvania Rail road Company and the New York Central an CMS. impoint. The recent leans of the Pittsburgh, Ft Wayne and Chicago Road by the Penn Sylvania Company in particularly referret to by Mr. Garrett an illustrating the poii cy of "Northern Itailtraye." Mr. Garret continues: I havjlto hesitation in saying, from my examination of the subject and innu the conclusions of the professional men who accompanied me, that a ling-class line can he constructed from Pittsburgh to Chica go at a cost not exceeding VO,OOO per mile, exclusive of equipment. Those great interests recognize that combina tion of equal facilities, whilst represent. ing a cost and capital of but one-third no which to make dividends, that such aline, built in connection with that city, saving, In reaching the seaboard, 150 miles of transportation, working with the Pitts burgh and Connellsville and lialtimorb and Ohio Roads, which have coal on their lines, furnishing fuel at the minimum cost. Those interests reolgnize that ouch • line cannot fail to add largely, through economies in iransportation, to the wealth and prosperity of the Weat. That whole region is aroune.d to the necessity of build ing a line that will present such econo mies and advantages. The intermediate towns and cities propose to subscribe hun dreds of thousands of dollarsio the stock of such a line. Their anxiety is intense for a direct . road to Baltimore, and the probabilities are that aubscriptions of parties interested between Pittsburgh, and Chicago will furnish a large portion of the capital „_required for-the construc tion of the road._ IiREAT aro expected in certain quarters from a new railway invention, thus described: his an improvement on the c a r axles, by which the car can travel on any gauge . of road, and consists of a steel "feather; one a half inches in width, inserted to a lateral groove, in the axle five-eighths of an inch deep.Thts, unlike former inven tions intendedlto work the same molts, does not weaken but strengthens the axle; in this feather notches are cut so that the wheels can—be spread apart or moved nearer together. The first car with the Invention applied left Jersey City on Sat urday, the applied of May, and arrived at Chimgo, 'mind for the Pacific Coast, op the ltd of June. By this invention t • controllers of Erie expect to run to Chi- - go and the North-West over connectio . with Western lines on friendly terms wit AT a meeting of the Medical Society of Penaltytrellis, held in Philadelphia, Dr. Atlee, of that city, presented an appeal in behalf of women's colleges and women physicians, asking recognition and the abolition of the rules by which this so ciety refused to recognize these women or their institutiotut Dr. Atlee, in connection with the sub ject, submitted the following: Whereas, The past adieu of the Medi cal Reidy of the State of Pennsylvania towards the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania, originated in - the alleged Irregular organization; and whereas, the Women's. Medical College is now organ ized upon the mane basis as the colleges -recognized by this Society; therefore, Reaolred;That the State Sodety hereby withdraws its objections to the Women's Medical College as at present constituted, and rescinds-all reeolutierut affecting that Institution, And the status of Omsk pisc titioners of - good moral and professional standing, who observe the code of ethics of the National Medical Association. During tits - 36;111/1/i013, Dr..tolin Aden alluded to the age of progress in which we live, declaring that we cannot deny to regular gradnates of a regular institu tion their rights and privileges an physi eons, whether they may be male or female, white or black, provided they live-accord ing to the code of ethics. This declare. lion gave rise to considerable applause, mingled with hisses. Dr. Dross opposed the motion,belleving that woman was eminently qualified for the practice of midwifery and the dis. (lures' of women, but Las not intellect enough to dive into the mysteries of the practice 1/f ,medlcine to fill allti e re quirements of a general practitioner lio could also see no rethein why the lored man should be entitled to whittle& more titan the white woman. lie has never contributed a page to medical literature, and lie (the speaker) will oppose. as long as he lives, the aims of politicians in forcing these people upon us. • After much discussion, the • resolutions were laid on . the table by • a vote 3 of 6 yeas to 411 nays. On Saturday the Society adjourned to meet in Williamsport on the second Wrtinesday of June, 1870. I= During the hot months of summer...Mr should provide themselves with some Corsi 41110. (active like Chloride of Lime. You will end freshsoppif 4uxt revolved this day aLJANIES L. 501088 &ft/811800 STORE. comer of rem and Sixth streets. CHLORIDE OF LIME. • 'World., of Limo. CRloOdoof Lima. ..M f° ll° of Limo. I S . 1 1 .11!.?: W°°' . . Chloride of Lime. . Chloride of Lime. . SO AMES E. B DRUG.. Cosner Penn and SJnt 1=139 iltomellmes there in a—lack of vitality In large and apparently well developed frames. Kerculean ldfinWP and muscles aro not slimy.. Indlcati4,e of stamina and constltugunal vigor In their poSsensor. ILicalth depends more upon the condition of the stomach, the liver end the bowels. than upon the breadth of the shohld era, or the site of loose levers end Pulleys of the content in which streructh Is sup- Peed to reside. All of this grand animal metehln. cry Is of Itself no protective agalitehelektiewa end decay. Easy and perfect digestioti, regular end healthy secretions. uncontemlnated_blood. and a granter discharge of the waste molar at thibody through the Intestines, the kidneys and the pore.. o the most potent safeguard. of".t d 1 ". ... the best guerantles of longevity lo ymmonft Mess objects is Ho . ergot end anol Stomach Bitters. The ingredients of which the ()real Tonic and 'Alterative It comiXwed eft taken solel from the ve kindom, and t me dicinay l virtues are nogetablet couniergbal.ced byheir the arid r from indigestion. bllousness, intertnnent fevers. nerv ous debility or constipation, not only land Innndl. ate relief from the use of thisagreeable stimulant and Wirt...rant. increasentine% conscious, no time wear. on. tit an or ronsUltalon alastl.l - and vital force. labor andcarotin. , no longer produce the same effect upon t hem as heretofore. and lhey.leal as I m e tad ¢red a new htgd on Rte.& reserve of nd physics. energy. Thus has been the experience of thousands of both sexes, and every day adds to the mans of cinglrmit. !t o le ' rt ; t it Tiritoll'ie"rre.leglest.;.arnd7pTs'iggailtd fluence over the minds and bodies of invalids. Hostetter's Bitters is the tonic neon which they can rely fur swift and permanent restoration. I,p4AwAqvwvows , '4 , l4o FABER & VAN DOREN 367 Liberty Street, PITTSBURGH. PA. STEAM ENGINES, ==l MACHINERY, Steam Pumps, Engineers' and Maitinists' Tools, STEAM FIRE ENGINES I.3IELTING-, • =ME= Voolen Machinery,. Machine Cards firMannfaeturf•rn' and MIII Sup. Oleo. A ronslant supply on band and furnished on short notice. 1401,1C1T'E.13 LETTER C opgin Pr esses. WII EEL P }MISES. BAR PRMISM. LETTER SIZE PRESSE, • CAP SIZE PRESSES. CARMINE AND GILT PRESSES,, WALNUT PRESE:STAND, MANN'S COPYING BOOKS. • FRENCH COPYING HOOKS. NOTE SIZE COPYING BOOKS, LEITER SIZE COPYING BOOKS. CAP SIZE COPYING BOOKS.. ARNOLD'S COPYING ELUID: SSIITICS COPYING FLUID; FRENCH COPYLNG FLUID. VIOLET COPYING (1.5710. RUBBER COPYING SHEETS. CAMEL'S. HAIR COPYING BRUSHES, WATER BOWLS.CHINA AND IRON. J. L. READ & SON, No. 102 Fourth Avenue. . IMPROVED CHERRY SEEDER. It haa bee sin ` use for the last sleyeara.and never failed In anh, 11:111Mtle! to glee entire Galant lion to the purchaser. When ran to (Wall capacity.lt seed abuabel of Chortle. In 'JO minute. he Machine Is (heap. Simple. Durable and Ilmsome. :T Ga he Hopper Cherries. Is adjustable. thereby adapting It to all nt It Is the beet Cherry Seeder in the Market. No pt exceion. All order" addressed to. JAMES BOWN, N0.136W00d Street, PITTSBURGH. PA. Will be Filled at • Mit I NUFACTURERS'PRICES. le SPECTACLES. • THE EYE lir. FRANKS. the eelebrated_Lectunr on the Eye, mid Manufacturer of Patent and lmprovesl Spectacles, has returned to fqMahwah. and is now at the ST. CLAIR HOTEL, where he edlasta hla fee•famed Spectacles to defective vision from an emonirmilon of the eye alone, to as to Cult equally well by day a. by artificial light without feline, from IR to 2.5 years. Dr. F. maybe prormelOnallY consulted on all diseases of the Hum. Eye,and has a large stock of his Spectacles and Eye Olusee for side. About 4,000 pairs of these Spectacle. were mold on Dr.Fninks last visit In the space of three month., Siring the most entire satisfaction to all,. the medical gentlemen and citisens of Pittsburgh have by cattllicato testified. Be partieutar and enquire at the Ladies' entrance on Penn street for Dr. Franks oMce, ROOM St. Clair Hotel. aptlormn Unds,Factories & Mills. JOS.C.G.KENNEDY& SON, , Are Agents for the We of large and mall FARMS end valuable tracts of TIMBER and MINERAL LANDS and MINERAL SPRINGS Omproved) the States of Maryland. Vim... North Cart... Georata. Arlo.. .4 14/ealulppL They al. offer IRON FOUNDRIES. COTTON FACTORIES .4 FLOURING MILLS at a great /.itcaln. letytttlftT DISSOLUTION. The co.partner seers Ze h talat"tiVita,Vaernu;Te. oVit'"'leAOlthaj . it.tYlrtrir SP tni s nl ea""U wil De moLmoed St = t og m etr i arjAll o roants of the lite dem ee1.10111,1 .10111 , 1 SPICER, Jellkyht WM. OP 66R. FULTON'S DINING ROOMS, FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN. 'No. 97 YOORTII 'AVENUE, neer Wood street OPEN ON TIIIIUSDAY, Juke OM. CHEESE, la rag P b l;;TAlrmile ... ' J. B. a..nsiFIELD. 14111. Vim CEitEra.—loo bbis. Louisville lIY- Snails Cemati. the best" le woe. Tor br Pl7/. 3, 11V iktf;t j,12141bi: NEW GOODS Lowest Prices, WE SEMPLE'S, ISO and 182 Federal Street, A MAPLE= STOCK or Millinery Goods. Ladies' and Misses' Bair Hats. Ladres' and Misses' Fanny Gimp lints. Ladies' and Misses' Pialnand Pearl Straw lists. Boys' Straw Caps. ladles' and Misses' Sundowns. Ribbons. blowers and Rows. GUIPURE LACES, hClo ride of Mom AT NS & CO.'S It (old M. Marl Moroi. Parasols and Sun Umbrellas. ladies' Green and Blue Kid Gloves. Black lace bilk and 1.1.1 e Thread Glove.. Paint Leaf. Willow and Fancy Yana. Ladies' Linea Suits, Ladles' and Children's , Fanny Apron. Buy,' Linen OYU, Ladles' Fancy FistsßO , Lase Collars and Hand kercllers. Wholesale and Retail, 180 and 182 Federal Street, Allegheny Morganstern &Co's, SPECIAL BARGAINS!! P.TR.4SOLS Rega,rdless of Cost! Pongee and Silk Parasols for $1 - Shetland Shawls for " Hew. ;AM and At Hemstitched Handkerchiefs, at Linen Towel.. At Nene Jean 'leaven. at Green Kid Glove, at P. K. Thr Suite. at Ito.. Skirt.. at Calld .filrll.o yourself that so other boo . sells goods as low as we do. NOS. 78 and 80 Market Street lel° FOURTH ARRIVAL Suez- t ter DresseB, NWWWAWIC.4,- DRESS. GOODS The Cheapest and Randsomes BELL & MOORHOUSE 21 Fifth Avenue. SPECIALTIES === Hats and Bonnets, AT HORNE & CO'S. lIAIR OTS LADIES' EIA AJ3 . . CHILDREN'S CACTUS AND Freas suartment FINE TRENCH FLOWERS bode , ROSE .51 BRIIS, °RAM Sthe.ES saa PIQUET" . RIBBONS. all ' EBATigitilignr. AND HAMBURG RNAL AND IMITATION LACE AND HANDIERRCIIIISTR. C°l4jata MINNIE KBIBILOINA LINEN sm.. s ie r il a lMP UNIT AND B ROWN LINEN DRIBS f ROBES AND DRESsDEL A RID G reil~ 11 LoVill * ln Lien. E Eno' cowmen number.. ve° l " "d NEW GOODS Arriving Every bay. 77 AND 79 MARKET STREET On a 1 1 ar with Gold! Ou:E NOW OFFER .INew Stock or DRY GOODS WASHIiiGTON. O. C. AT EASTERN PRICES Examine our Goods & Prices ARBUTHNOT, SHANNON &CO. No.llsWoOdStreet. Bakery, C"feetionery ICE CREAM. Tt,„„„dir....dh,.. eltetallied the aterre Ima m av v e 3Z , A , nalra Zu . from tho Perit. where held preserms t7Z47.% orders In tan hoe. Blesoloon 1550d5....ay.",, op for the comosters of toe QOM, Vb. wi jr rs eormenlent' to the Port eausesemma fodri gass moods, ettendsoee sad velem .Ths pet. he Wrongs* le eolleitod• WK. A. 11.110DES mylitiffi Mtli=2 MEM ITEM= = WE • SEMPLE'S, IMO I= MACRUAL GLYDE & CO IPi! • 20, 25, 37;, 50 and 75c., ASSORTMENT In this Market. PARASOLS AND BUN UMBRELLAS. PONGEE D COLORED LINED. A new lot Net received. NOTIONS DRYERS ♦NE INVITED TO NEW ADVEETV 3ENI:ENTs. I SPECIAL BARGAINS . of the Simmer Dress Goods CQ • es4 Meand Obiobilload S \ EMPLE'S, 180 and 182 Federal Street, ALLFAMENY, At lEar., Dark Colleas—e good barge Jn. At 1.134 c.. Striped Red Figured le J i athee. At 1 . 2)4e- Striped nudes. At 12Sic.. Wash, Poplins, Ter-, Cheap. At Key Lucky Jean., At Ilht...leurme see 'Kisses' Bets. =I Summer Shawls. Light EP s eined Woolen Shawls. White and Cnlored Bong Shawls. Blast I.ase Shawls. Shetland Shawls. • AT ATTRACTIVE PRICES = Summer Cassiiiieres, COTFONADES LINEN DRILLS, =I Housekeeping Dry Goods, =I Wholesaler and Retail SEVLES, 180 and 152 Federal Street, Allegheny BUY THE GENUINE; CLA K'S "0T " , , , Poo COTTON. GEO. A. CLARK, AGENT SOL Everywhere. Sold earl-Ir% ) 114 BAILE y & C . O 12 , .1 CHESTNUTST, PHILADELPHIA )) CIVCC6IOI . 6ISTICIif. The reputation and experi ence of 40 years. warrant us in saying that our stock of Fine Timekeepers of the best Euro pean and American Makers is now the largest in the coun try; and we guarantee that each Watch wo sell, is finished with great mechanical precision, has all the late improvements, and will run regularly, well, and give satisfaction. Inquiries prernpily replied io. Wakes tonna IT Wren for annul. 01IN STEVENSON'S SONS Sz - , CO., JEWELERS, 93 Market street, Pittsburgh (TILIRD DOOR . FROM EIFTII.I Hare on hand all the latest novelties In Pine Jew elry; alai Silver Mimes and eater Plated Ware of bee designs, suitable for wedding gifts. Watches of il the American m at ers In gold end sliver cases. Bath Key and Pendant Winders con. steady on handell as a fell variety cf the liner grades of t ,as he B w lass Watch. including Jur. Vaasa. Jean, Perresimur., end others. We call particular attention to our facilities for repel..tug and regulating Watchee. To that branc of our business we prem ram. Ceder. hy all promptly ailed. Beeline of WY goads sent In drawings by mall at leanest. myleetW • IME=2I 1=! ARNSTHAL & SON Virginia and Louisville Tobacco dgency, SEGARS Fine Cot Chewing and Smoking Tobaccos, SMITIIFIELD BTFIZET. Pittsburgh. my 11,5 "HILL & SEWER PIPE CO, " 65 and 67 Sandusky St, Allegheny. Manufacture hIEbIT VITRIFIED WATER AND SEWER PIPE. Dealers In CHIMNEY TOPE. ELM and HYDRAULIC CEMENT. C. G. MeNCELLEN, Agent. myr DRY YELLOW • PINE ANT) OAK. A dret.d.ols lot. thoroughly seaweed la the rough. or planed. I the yard. • J A ES 191 Sandusky Street, Allegheny City. DECORATED AND -PLAIN Marble and Slate MANTLES Made by steam pow' The wily liaison:a Western Pennsylvania *IMO Slate and Marble Muni Mantls ara made. Leant Marble Mantles.Watim mating. COUZIMIII. Tarature T. as., inarblented from white mania and Mate to emm.7 salMaimat the choicest noutles of all vadetlea aid colors. Sold at Nem To:barium atlllll and 3111LUssaTT STREET. rituftrib. W. W. WALLACE. S.. MORROW, Hate of PlUsimmorts 3 Morrow) \ GIUCKIESSOR TO /SEAM k RELLE.P4' Masafacer of TIP! COPPER sad SHEET Ilti)lf HARE, It STOYES for steamboats ens Ho -1.. P m wows& COPPER Jobbing outmoded to promptly. No. 112 First Avenue, Ma. Market camel.) OS7IRs7I PITTSBURG'S. PA. °HELP • • RTOTES TEN DER& AND TINWARE. COAL B EIRE IRONS; ER. 104 at P. C. DISTIrB, Ml= NEW ADVERTISEMENTS The Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad • completed end molt. mom 111C11410NM TA, o the celebrated WHITE sui,riten SPRINGS. n West Vingll3llt. 2 , 27 Mlles. It le beiniaMpldrir atended to the Ohio river. tkOD Wires lOtther ...wag In all 49! mtic•. In It• Progress tVelitvnird.lt penetrates and OP.= p to market the WONDERFUL COAL. DEPOSITS =I GINIA. And tens brings the superior andabundard Coals of that section'. Into communisation with the IRON ORES OF VIRGINIA AND 011f0. and the WESTERN. SOUTH WESTERN AND EASTERN MARKETS. When completed It will connect the surEniolt HARBOR FACILITIES OF THE CHESAPEAKE DAY with reliable navizatlonen theOhlo Neer, aria them with the ENTIRE SYSTF-H OF RAILROAD AND WATER TRANSPORTATION OF TIIE I=2 It will snake a SHORT. EASY, CH SAP anti FA VORABLE ROUTE from the WEST to the SEA nti will einenniod a LARGE SHARE OF THE E:I0I1310 US FREIGHTS seeking transportation to the coast. • t will thus become one of the mostIMPORTANT = LINES OF RAILROAD In tho country. and cm METEM The completed portion of the 11.4 Is doing •110FITAIILE AND INCRDASINO DUSINME, end to fully 'equal In trade to the whole 'mount of the loorunge upon the entire L1ne—(915.000.- 000.) • The loan of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Company, being a FIRST MORTGAGE UPON THE ENTIRE LINE. PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENTS. WORTH WHEN COMPLETER AT LEAST 000.000. Is literature one of the most substantial neervallwe end reliable ltallroad Loan. ever of , ered In tho ronrkel.sand to . pecallealy adapted:to he manteof Investots and Capitalists. Who deelre to leeks their Investments with the revel, malefactor, monomer, of POSITIVE AND UNDOUBTED SECURITY. I= $l,OOO, $5OO and $lOO, nd noty . beaS COUPON or REGISTERED. Interest. NII per cont. per annum. pnueblo MAY Ist tad NOVEMBER Ist. PRINCIT•AL AND INTEREST PAYABLE IN OOLD INI , TWE CITY OF NEW YORK. ' Price 9 AND ACCRUED INTEILL‘T In Cm. WSMnt Price they pny nently SEVEN PER CENT. IN DOLD on their cost. All Government Bonds and other Bev.Klee dealt In at the Block 'Exchange. received In exchange. at their foltnlalltel value, and Honda sent to all parte of the country. free of Express charges. • They can be obtained by ordering direct from an or through any reeponflble Bank or Hanker In any Part of the eouoti7. Fisk & ,Hiatch, BANKERS. No. 5 Nassau Street, New York Maps, Pamphlets and full information furnished upon application in person or by mail. _S. M'CLEAN & CO. 1341'4 - KERS, 65 Fourth Ave., Pittsburgh ecena for the we or these Bona_ WARNER'S PILE 11-142.1\iii.MCV Ny Anti KILLS I'll.o REMEDY has ;lever felted . not even In one case) In cave the very ,tarsi eltees at Blind. Itching or Bleedingl'llee. Thom mho ere afflicted Minnie inamedlelely call on their druggist and get WARNER'S PILE. REMEDY. It Is [meanly for the Piles, mid la rot recommended to any other diseme. It has randomly mesa over thirty years atandlog. Poke $l. For sale by drag slats every - ahem. • mritirrrn ' _ WHEELER'S Patent Stamp Cancelers. EDWIN STEVENS, No. 41 S. Third Street fatILADELPHLA. CenerallA gent for State of Pennsylvania All ordoim wlll he elled thrown thlo once for teas MAO. WkiITAPES Chimney Tops, HOT AIR & CHIMNEY FLUES, BLe. A large m3d fall assortment constantly on Sand. HENRY H. COLLINS, ~p2l.wat . 133 SECOND AVENUE. COAL AND COKE. MORGAN CO., MANUFACTURERS OF C 0 N NELL S VILLE COKE, At their 'Nines, Brood Ford, P. It B. B. B. Office, 142 WATER STREET, SIIIP TO ALL POINTS BY RAILROAD, And Deliver in the City. mylL:l6 Oscar F.Lamm&Co. IILANUFACTUREIIB OF ' CONNELLSVILLE COKE, DEALERS IN Youghiogheny and Anthracite Coal PITTSBURGH. PA.. OFFICE : BOON No. 5, Gazette Building. ISF - Ordere reepectAdly oolle/ted. COAL! COAL! YOUGHIOGFIENY GAS COAL CO. Tbis Company are now ore:sins:l to famish the Iron Coal of =raise or (1111iI1111., AT FAIR RATER. Office End Yazd adjoining the ConnelLsrlile Rail. road 1: , coot.loot of Try Street. Pittsburgh. Orders addressed to either Mines. West Newton, Ps., or to Tare, will be promptly silo: dad to. H. P. 011ERN. Ilecnrtarg. splkr7s Charles IT Armstrong DEALER IN Youghloglieny and Connellnille Coa And Maardacturar of COAL. BLACK AND DESEXPLIITRIZED CO= . . OITICE.A.MD YARD. corner Mainland Morton eines. Men, mad Clymer greets. Ninth wan; sin. Second street, Eletth want and at foot of Rom street, P. & C. R. R. Depot. mad. Orden left at either of the above othon._or ad. dresant to me through Pittsburgh P. o.osUl metre priming attention Cr, 471°811,11'h`°. trorforig;l. TiZTP t, co, Minsbell, Stevenson g. Co.. Rimini Co., Ong ti Huhn. Ala. Bruin& Pertain. '4 Co...,Pnalt, AVM. B A . .14.35 i 6 co. .I ." et len. McKeeA Co.. Union Depot Motel. Corneas- Me R. R.. Pensisrinnla A. ft-. Aileen./ Yeifer R. /1- COAL! COAL!! COAL!!! DICKSON, STEWART & CO., Having vsmoTod Ul'll.OlEO4 to No. 567 Liberty Street (Lately Clty Flour HIM SECOND FLOOR. . Ars 11011 preparod to banish good YOUGHIO GHENY LUMP NUT COAL 011 PLACE, at the lomat MIME prim. All orders lather ofte,oraddraseed to them llama the maltell. lOC be wended to promptly. CARPETS, OILCLOTHS, &o CARPETS. SPRING STOCK. Fine, Medium and Common CIRPETS. , Oar Stock Is the largest we hare ever offered to the trade. Bovard, Rose & Co., 21 FIFTH AVENUE =EU April Ist, 1870. SPECIE PAYMENT Resumed ! From this dais bitter Cheops will i.e ton to h customers. st M'Farland &Collins CARPET STORE,' 71 and 7:3 Filth Ave. [Tour prices pre the lowest le MIN market- CARPETS. New Rooms; New Goods! NEW PRICES We hire IneaßnnleA .the oPeelna of our 214. FINEST DISPI.AT OF C.IRPETS Ever Offered in this Market. LOWEST PRICES SINCE 1861 OLIVER MeCLINTOCK & CO, 23 Fifth Avenue. NEW CARPETS. - Reduction in Prices TO CORRESPOND WITH WHOLESALE RATES. McCallum Bros.; - - No. 51 FI FTEI AVENUE. ABOVE WOOD STREET. UPHOLSTERERS. Manufecterem of SPRING. .11A111 and RUBE arATTKICSSF.S. Feather Bolsters and Pilkrws. Church Cushions. Cornice Mouldings and all that& of Upholstery work. Mao. evabsv. in 'minnow Keene, neg. (Preen and White liollands. Cords. Tassels. rm. Particular attention Is given to tall. leg hp. cleaning and breaking, altering and relay ingle. Our pof cleaning carnet Is the only way in which can feel assured that the colors are pre. served and the-good. thoroughly freed from all dust and vermin. The price for cleaning Cu been greaMy reduced. Our exerts. will mil for and de. liver all good. free of charge. ROBERTS, NICHOLSON k THOMPSON, Upholsterers and Proprietors of Steam Carpet Beating EstabllehMent, NO. 127 WOOD STREET, - • mh7 Mil Near Fifth Avenne. Pittsburgh. Pa. CARPET CHAIN Of all Colors, OH HAND AND FOR SALE AT ANCIIOIt COTTON MILLS, mr ., :. Alle g heny City. QUEENSWARE 9UEE,NSIVARE, I= China and Glass SILVER PLATED GOODS. DINNER AND TEA BETS, TEA TRAYS I=l The best Impvrted WHITE ATONE WARE Ano COMMON l/OODS - t low =I R. E. BREED & CO, RE 124 IVod lreet Iffirrtters ,and Denkra in FRENCH, CHINA, FMB CUT CLASS AND Queensware. /n.lO ESTABLISHED 1828. saner if10ar..../a.amr HIGBY,,CIIST & CO., . No. 189 Liberty St., Wholesale and Rebell Denture and Jobbers In RIN T A io NatirARE, ULAdI and MAIZE- The attention of 111 requlrlne goods In (be above ' 11. to directed to our Stork. imported direCtle Wow the best European Invert& Andwe we now welling a flub and desirable lot of the slam DR. WHITTIER CONTIPUIVIS TO MEAT ALL PRIVATII OLIIXA IMIsfirPhths In an its forma. ell urinary diorama. and the affects of mercury are completely *MM.. ted:Spenohtorthes or Eel:deal Wealostma and fm. • ....readttne tient Mlietboac - or . other maim. and w icit produce come of the fentellbete ea blotehea, bodily wentime. ma • gomption, orershio to society. unman Mesa Meld of future MP% lout of enentm7. indoMene.., ilea tarns! .Maslen., and null) so mil eez.. WI mime so to render manime an and therefore imprudent. ate vermatoratly Penmen afflicted with OM or any other delicate. inttleate or lam Handles onitothatlanal complete; Mould giro the Doctor • Malt he Lever latla. A vertical. Mention gime to all Tamale come Planta Isiecombea or Whltm. tothunmar. Um or Maranon of Me Woe u naTarltio, amenorrhoea. blenonimaia. mortlitratt Mullis, or Ihmennese. are with the Mate " Itt=elderrt that • physhilan who centime blimalfaxeinstrely to the stntly of • certain ohm of Memh and treats thonoonda of came every re greater still In that syeetanl rhanOTl " 7ten.l i groctice. The Doctor publis es o medical pomphlet any awes th at glom a ell orrositlon of reamed and tori•SLO disease+ that can be hod free at Moe or by mall for two Mamie. In milled enselop“. sentence matins instruction to the afflicted, enabling than: to determine the precise nature their cement:eta. The retabibtill.COU compriting ten ample Mame. WlZ::When It fa not convenient to Man the the ENNetrell opbtion am be obtalhedbyerMW • statement et the atm. mil Malan., OM be forwarded by 0.111 Of erfirell. 1121101310 MUM. M. however, •_a perecond examination la obsolulelf . Wlttle in others daily pommel re= " itma. end for the moototoodanot= mealleM there are ernements connected with the aloe Mat are provided with every mashie that is oslealated to promote recovery. include* oii—edt . =me. both. Ali premiptione MAL.. Doctor'. own laboratory, tinder Ma mterstaloo. Xedleal pamphlet.; olliceSV by man fOr ;woolen:pa No wetter Wire' ed. twin what he tern. Limn 9a. if. to r.'ll. Mil ISM. %r. o. Tull Wag Cosa Xtous)lllAsiranth. ' •