Friday Morutmi. Hptenbr 13, 1*67, Democratic Slate Ticket. FOB JUDGE OR THE SUPREME COURT, HON. GEORGE SHARSWOOD, OP PHILADELPHIA. Democratic County Ticket. FOR ASSEMBLY, WM. P. SCHELL, of Bedford, HIRAM FINDLAY, of Somerset. FOB DISTRICT ATTORNEY, E. F. KERR, of Bedford Borough. FOR TREASL'RER, ISAAC MENGEL, of Bedford Bor. FOR COMMISSIONER, P. M. BARTON, of E. Providence. FOR POOR DIRECTOR, JOHN I. NOBLE, oi S. Woodberry. FOR AUDITOR, SAMUEL WHIP, of Cumb. Valley. FOR JURY COMMISSIONER, ISAAC KENSINGEIt, of Liberty. II EX It Y W. WILLIAMS, The Radical candidate for Supreme Judge, stands upon a platform, in which occurs the following language: "Resolved , That warned by past misfortunes, we ask that the Supreme Court of the State be placed in harmony with the political opinions ot a m-'jority of the people." Thus, the Supreme Court, which is the final ar biter between the weak and the strong, between piinorities and majorities, is to be swayed by polit ical bias agaiuat the rights ot that portion of the peopl e who may happen to be in the minority. Hare minorities no rights which majorities are bound to respect? Nay, are not the fewest num ber of people lawyers, or jurists, and is not often the smallest minority right, on questions of law, rather than the mass who have had no legal or ju dicial education ? Who, therefore, could trust a man as Supreme Judge, who will agree to substi tute for his own deliberate judgment, the crude opinions of the mob ? Again, HENRY W. WILLIAMS is the candidate of a party which holds that a man may repudiate his contract to pay a debt in gold and silver, by paying the same in paper money, thus actually making Government bnds worth BO more than ordinary paper money. This is re pudiation. Who, therefore, will vote for H. W. Williams, and become a repndiatioiiist ? g i i % s l I THE REMOVAL OF SICKLES. The* Radical newspapers have set up a universal howl over the removal of Gen. Sickles, the congressional satrap commanding in the military district composed of the late Statesof North and South Carolina. From the opinion of the Assistant Attorney General of the United States, we present a brief sum mary of the facts in the case, which justify the removal not merely, but the prompt punishment of the offender. It will be remembered that a regular term of the Circuit Court of the United States was held at Raleigh, N. C., without the military lines of Gen. Sickles, on the first Monday in June last, Chief Jus tice Chase presiding. At this term of the Court, judgment was entered against two parties, David and Daniel Kahn weiler, defendants of record. Upon these two judgments, writs of execution were regularly issued and placed in the hands of Daniel It. Goodloe, U. S. Mar shal, who was forbidden to execute the process by Capt. R. T. Frank, com mandingat Wilmington. Capt. Frank ' justified his interference with the writ of the Supreme Court, under order No. 10, issued by his superior officer, Daniel E. Sickles; declaring that he would not allow the judgment or decree of any Court to be enforced in violation of ex isting orders. Capt. Frank submitted a report of his action to Gen. Sickles who formally approved of it. For this obstruction of the process of the highest judicial tribunal in the land, and crim inal contempt of its authority, Sickles was promptly removed by the Presi dent, and for this, he is now receiving the plaudits of the radical destructives throughout the country. * We shall not insult the intelligence of our readers by proving that it was the duty of General Sickles to aid the court, if its authority was interfered with, instead of using the military power in his hands to obstruct its pro cess. lie pretends to derive his power from the reconstruction laws of Con gress, but arbitrary and tyrannical as they are, they have not yet abolished the constitution, nor destroyed the courtsoflaw. Chief Justice Chase, who should be good authority with radicals, (if thecoustitution of our fathers is not,) in solemnly ojening the court, de clared that the recent military recon struction acts did not and could not ex tend, in any respect, to the courts of the United States. Judge Chase rightfully holds that the Supreme Court cannot be interfered with by the President or by Congre-s, or by any power on earth. General Sickles holds a differ ent opinion, and has employed the military fo.ces of the country to defy its authority. In the name of the in sulted majesty of American law, in the name of a trampled and dishonored constitution, for the sake of what yet remains of American liberty, we thank President Johnson for removing Sick les- ANOTHER victory! The telegraph announces an overwhelming Demo cratic victory in Montana. Huzza! SK'fiLHi OS |>xsi\ E. The dethroned who lately held despotic over that portion of our country, once known in thfc political geography as the States of North and South Carolina, Dan Sickles, publishes six mortal col umns of defense, which will l>e accept ed by thedeliriousfaction asa triumph ant vindication, Chief Justice Chase to the contrary notwithstanding. If his arguments lack thesharpness of the bay onets which he employed in Wilming ton to resist the authority of the Su preme Court, they will be good enough for radicals generally. But candid men will confess that Sickles, pen in hand, smart as he is, cannot assail the courts as effectually as when in the plenitude of power, supported by the muskets of United States soldiery, he assaulted them in the Carolinas. He wastes much time in describing the condition of the District when he as sumed command,and makes loud boasts of the clemency, forbearance and mag nanimity which marked his reign, re minding us in his self-laudations of some of those good kings of whom we read no where but in the veritable his tory of Peter Parley. He denies that he intended any contempt ofthecourts of the United States, he was only en forcing the laws of Congress! In the course of his defense he says: "I do not "believe that the process of the courts "of the United States should override "and set aside the order Congress has "empowered me to make for the exe "eu'ion of its measures"! If Gen. Sickles live long enough he will dis cover that the people of this country hold a widely different opinion. Rath er than permit any interference with the freedom of the judiciary, they will sweep away all the rubbish of military reconstruction laws, and all the agents employed in their execution. With patriotic fervor they will cling to the courts ordained by the constitution for the maintenance of their rights and liberties, when the whole brood of re construction acts and the minions who enforce them in the tyrannical spirit which actuated Sickles, shall be re membered only to be execrated. In offering armed resistance to the courts Gen. Sickles was engaged in levying war against the United States, and was as guilty of treason as the rebels who fired on fort Sumter. But as the President is about to issue a general amnesty proclamation, and as the rad icals insist the war is not yet over, we hope he will include Sickles, and give him full pardon. It is enough for us that Sickles, the King, is defunct, and that Canby reigns in his stead. Le roi est mort, vice le roi! A (>REAI STATE. Soon after the close of the war with Mexico, the daring, intellectuai, ad venturous, self-reliant men of the old States, rushed to the new and rich field of enterprise opened to them on the Pacific. In an incredibly brief space of time, as if by magic, splendid cities arose on those western shores, and the foundations of a mighty empireof free men were deeply laid. Nature was on a scale calculated to attune the souls, and inspire to lofty deeds the noble spirits, who had peopled the land. There were sierras whose peaks piercing the clouds, were crowned with ever lasting snows; limitless valleys covered with perennial verdure; forests of mighty trees beneath the shade of one of which a regiment might repose; rivers fringed with the jessamine and myrtle; countless herds roaming the prairie; the vine shedding its blood for the delight of man in richest profusion. No wonder the proud Californians, dwelling amid the magnificent scenes of nature, should refuse to succumb to a fierce fanaticism which threatened to enguif our institutions. They had no notion that the cultured and intelligent freemen of America should be subjected to the domination of the ignorant and stupid negro and degraded Chinaman. Following the example of Connecticut, California, in many respects the great est State in the Union, speaks with a voice potential for truth and the right; and in October next, the hills and val leys of Pennsylvania will catch the cry and send it back with thunderous reverberation to the shores of the Pa cific. lIAKD I P. The Radical State Committee is com pelled to* go back to 1832, thirty five years , to find an argument against Judge Sharswood. Jordan don't need to go back further than 1855, to prove himself inconsistent and.unreliable, as witness his public denunciation of Si mon Cameron whose close adherent he Is at present. lie must be '-hard up" for arguments against Judge Shars wood, since he is compelled to travel backwards thirty-five years! Hadn't he better tell us why some 40,000 Re publicans of Philadelphia voted for Judge Sharswood, whilst the late war was at its height? KIIOKM THE LEOISLATI'RE, The extravagance and corruption of the Pennsylvania Legislature have be come a by-word among the people.— Scarcely any public print of any party dares to defend that. The Radical jour nals themselves denounce it, and some of them, in the profoundity of their dis gust, have been led to exclaim, "An other such legislature will sink us /" Just look at some figures in this connection : In 1847 the pay of members was three dollars per day, and the pay of officers two dollars per day; the number of offi cers, pages and reporters in the Senate did not exceed 12; officers, pages, repor ters. <fcc. in the House, about 15. The wholeexpensesforthesession $57,819.19. In 1867 the pay of members was an aver age of 810.00 per day; the number of offi cers, pages and reporters was 40; in the House the numberof officers, pagesand reporters was 82. The amount of mon ey drawn from the treasury by these at taches of the two Houses for the ses sion of 1867, was $91,654.58, being nearly twice the cost of the entire session of the Legislature under Demo cratic administration. The entire cost of the Legislature of 1867, including pay and mileageof mem bers, pay of officers, pages, clerks, and hangers-on was $265,061.10, while that of 1847, under the adminis tration of Gov. Shunk, was but 857,819.- 19, or only a little over one-fifth as great! We append some of the leading items of expenditure, as they appear in the Auditor-General's report: Senators' pay, mileage and stationery $.'15,477 00 Representatives' pay mil eage and stationery, 81" 64 per day 107,508 45 Bailey and Kennedy, Preach ers 000 00 33 Senators and 29 regular of ficers 28,893 80 25 women 921 00 7 pages, 1,270 00 4 reporters, each 8200, 800 0q Contingent clerks, 4,633 (Ml 1(K) members had 65 regular officers drew, 57,5)10 78 13 pages, 2,359 50 women 1,240 00 postage 9,256 00 Members having been ap pointed to different com mittees during thesessions, for which they charged, 15,170 59 Miscellaneous, 10,601 04 Total $265,961 16 Think of it! Formerly 27 officers, pages, and reporters sufficed the Legis lature ; now 122 are employed to do the same work performed by the 27! Form erly 857,819.19 paid the entire expenses of that body ; now it takes $265,061.16, to defray the same expenses! Yet, there were in 1867, but 133 Senators and Members, the same number as in 1817. In view of these facts can any man who desires retrenchment and reform in the Legislature support Messrs. Wellerand Richards, who were members of the last Legislature and voted for, or ac quiesced in, the enormous expenditures above stated? Let the tax-payers an swer. We do not feel inclined to cover up the sins of any one, even it he be our friend, and we certainly shall not hesi tate to say that the conduct of the Pa cific Republicans has been such as to richly merit defeat. With a reckless ness opposed to common sense and honesty, the party leaders have so ac ted as to reduce the magnificent ma jority of nineteen thousand to less than nothing. They have allowed a "ring" to be formed which bought and sold the Legislature. They have nominated bad men for high positions, and have given the most responsible offices in the State to men utterly unfitted to hold even the meanest positions. The Evening Telegraph , one of the organs of the"unco godly" in Philadel phia, wails thus over the defeat of its friends in California. Before the elec tion it had not a word to utter on the subject, but now finds a poor consola tion in abusing the discomfited. It is safe, and has a look of honesty to de nounce those at a distance, but some how or other the Telegraph has nothing but praise for the same sort of precious scamps who rule its party in Pennsylva nia. Its pictureof California radicalism suits this latitude exactly, but it will not print any portraits of the rascals who control its party in this State. After the election we expect to hear the same sort of consolation over Radi cal defeat, coiningfrom the press of that party on the Pacific. HE ASSESSED ! Democrats,attend to the assessments! See to it that every Democratic voter is duly assessed ten days before the elec tion. The last day on which assess ments can be made, is SATURDAY, SEPT. 28. A mass convention of black and white negroes was held at Wilming ton, Del., on the'third inst., at which Congressmen Bill Kelley, of Philadel phia, was the principal orator. Ivelley said: "We have determined that the bondman, his broken shackles yet clinging to him shall vote, shall enter the jury box, and shall have all the rights of a citizen." Does the Bedford Inquirer endorse that sentiment? If not, radical editors and Radical Congressmen must differ. As the Bedford Inquirer is too coward ly to answer our question as to whet - it and its party are in favor of establish ing Negro Suffrage in Pennsylvania, we will ask another not so difficult. — Should Congress pass the Sumner bill to force Negro Suffrage upon the People of Pennsylvania without their consent, will, or will not, Judge Williams, if elected, decide that bill to be constitutional I VICTJORY! California Responds to Connecticut! DEMOCRATS MAKE HANDS ACROSS THE CONTINENT! THE GOLDEN STATE eeideeivietdi The Pacific to the Atlantic Greeting! THE RADICAL SPELL BROKEN AT LAST! DrniiK'nitlc Governor, Democratic I.eg'- iNlatnre ami Democratic I'oiigfreHS men Elected! DEMOCRATIC MAJORITY 10,000! lIOW ARE YOU, It A Dlt'A I. MARTYRS, SHU EES. Ml EK ID AX A CO.? NOW FOR PENNSYLVANIA! All hail, California! At last the in cubus of Radicalism is being lifted from the breasts of the American peo ple. Connecticut first shook the mon ster from her bosom, and now Califor nia, Pacific answering to Atlantic, has risen in her might and cast from her the burden that weighed her down. — The glad tidings from the Land of Gold, will cheer the hearts of the friends of Liberty, and Pennsylvania and the re mainder of the Middle States and ma ny of the Western States, will emulate the example of their Pacificsister. The last election carried by the Democrats of California, was that of 18A0, eight years ago. Since then the Republicans have carried the State, year after year, by from 18,000 to 20,000 majority. Rut the brave and true men of Califor nia, struggled on amid the gloom of de feat, until at last their constancy was crowned with victory. In 1803, the Re publican majority for Governor was 19,- 723, and in 1804, Lincoln had 18,293 o ver McClellan. In spite of these odds, the State has been redeemed. Let this bo.a lesson to the down-hearted and dis pirited every where, for it shows that ''some things can be done as well as oth ers." Now for Pennsylvania! fSpecial to the Aye] SAN FRANCISCO, September 5. —The Democracy of the Pacific greeting to their brethren in the East. Haight, our candidate for Governor, and the entire Democratic State ticket, has been triumphantly elected by at least three thousand majority. We have carried two Congressional districts certain, and the remaining one isdoubt fu I. The City of San Francisco gives o ver three thousand majority for Ilaight and the city ticket. The revolution is complete, and a Democratic Union Senator is secured in place of Conness, the present Radical incumbent. Penusylvanians, as you love your liberty, emulate your Democratic brethren in California, and redeem your -state from Radical misrule. H. M. N. SAX FRANCISCO, September 6.—The Democrats have carried the State, Leg islative, and m unci pal tickets in San Francisco by overwhelming majorities. The returns from the interior contin ue to swell Haight's majority for Gov ernor, which may reach 8,000. The en tire Radical State ticket is defeated, and it is doubtful if one Radical is elected. The result is astounding to both par ties. Nothing worse was expected than the defeat of Gorham, the Radical can didate for Governor, and two or three others on the State ticket. The returns are not nearly full. The Democrats will have a majority in the assembly. Mr. Haight addressed a meeting last night, claiming the election as a protest against the corruption, extravagance, Chinese negro suffrage, reconstruction policy of Congress. * LAT SR.- Majorities reported from twenty^even counties show Haight (Democrat) to be 7,oooahead, and the counties to come in generally give Dem ocratic majorities. Another private dispatch indicates the election of the three democratic can didates for Congress, together with a majority of the State legislature, which elects a United States Senator. WASHINGTON, Sept. 6.—At ten o'- clock to-night the President received the following dispatch dated San Francisco, this day: "We have carried the State by 10,000, electing our whole ticket, two members of Congress and a majority of the Legislature. This is purely a tri umph of the policy of your administra tion, condemning distinctly congress ional reconstruction and negro suffrage, North or South. THOMAS J. HENLEY, JOHN F. MCOAULEY. DATA. Ono IfuiMlrod UIIIIH for Califiiruin, Uarrisbuko, Sept. 7, 18G7—Eve ning.—The Democratic citizens of this town are highly exultant over the cheering newsfromCalifornia,andat the present time they are firing a salute of one hundred guns in honor of the great victory. Thousands are congregated at the scene of the firing, and all join in the determination to exert them selves at the coining election and re deem the State of Pennsylvania from Radical misrule. Great joy is manifes ted by the Democracy, and the streets here to-night are lined with citizens, all participating in the celebration of the victory achieved by the Golden State. The Democrats are now in for the campaign, heart and soul, and none doubt but that the ticket will be elected this fall by a handsome majority. The example of California is to be followed. "DID YOU II!MIt THE NEWS 1110.11 XAisur The Democrats have made a gallant fight in the State of Maine. The elec tion for Governor came off last Mon day, and the result shows a Republican loss since lad year of 14,000! Such is the announcement by telegraph, and we doubt not that further returns will improve upon this. The Republicans have lost at least one half of their ma jority of last year, which was 27,255. The Democrats make considerable gains in the Legislature. Since writing the notice of the Vermont election, in an other column, we have learned that in that State the Democrats have elected a Senator, the first for many years. Hurrah ! boys! Things are going with a rush for the Democracy. VERMONT. Even in the Green Mountain State, which never gave a Democratic major ity since the adoption of the Constitu tion, Radicalism is on the wane, the majority for the Radical ticket being 18,OU0 this year, whilst last year it was 23,000, showing a Radical loss of 5,000. CiE.VKKAI, A U.YKSTY! A Xew Emancipation Proclamation ! The ShaekleM Stricken from the I/imbs of White >len! All hail, Andrew Johnson! The Presidenfof the United States has just issued a proclamation restoring to the rights ofcitizenship, the great mass of the white people of the South. This is, indeed, good news for tiie friends of civil liberty. The day isdatvning! Be of good cheer! The Copperheads are again full of Negro Suffrage; they assert positively that it is the intention of the "Radi cal leaders to force Negro Suffrage and the Political Equality of Whites and Blacks upon the people, without their consent." This has been their constant cry since the organization of the Re publican Party. They are determin ed to educate the public up to it.—ln quirer. Observe! The Inquirer does not deny that the "Copperheads" tell the truth, when they make the charge that it is the intention of the Radical leaders to force Negro Suffrage and the Political Equality of Whites and Blacks, upon the people, without their consent. It cannot and dares not deny the truth of the charge. We can prove to-day (and hold ourselves in readiness, at any time to do so) by as respectable and reliable a gentleman as lives in Bedford, that JOHN CESSNA, the leader and oracle of the Radicals in this county, publicly boasted, a few weeks since, that Congress would, next winter, fix Negro Suffrage upon Penn sylvania. Let the Inquirer deny this if it 'are, and we will substantiate what we say. GEN EItAL CA R L SCH U RZ, Who St Um p ed Pennsylvania for Lincoln in 1800, and is now editor of the St. Louis Westliche Post , advises his German friends to vote for Democratic muni cipal and State officers. The editor of the Illinois Staats Zei tung, in the course of a speech recently delivered in Chicago, said, in reference to the fanaticism of the Radical party, "as he had advised his German friends to leave the Democratic party in 18.34, as eagerly would he now advise his German fellow-Republicans of 1867 to part company with a party that has recklessly adulterated its national programme by New England section alism." WAIT A LITTLE.— The celebrated false prophet, Dr. Cumming, has sev eral times predicted the end of the world and fixed the day for it to come off, but his predictions have always been falsified—the world would in spite of him, roll on in its accustomed cour e. The doctor now, however, is determin ed to attune for the past, and acknowl edges that in his predictions he was mistaken. He says that in revising the calculations on which he based the an nouncement of the world's ending in 18-37, he discovered that he overlooked figures which add something like a quintilion of years to the race which this mun lane sphere has run. To seethe real day of the end of the world, there fore, we must wait a short time longer. A MISTAKE.— The Boston i'ostsays.* "A big cigar, a little cane, and immeas urable cheek, doesn't make a man a mong men." The l'ost is mistaken. These "elements, so mixed up," not only make a man among men, but a mong a certain class of women also. XtWS AND OTHER iTEJfg. The Monroe (Mich.) Oomtnerolal says that in the neighlx>rhood of Monroe far mers and gardeners have planted with in three years 37,000 vines. Many of the vineyards are now bearing, and the yield, both in quantity and quali ty, surpasses the expectations of the most sanguine. • —A negro and white girl from War ren Ohio, were married at Sharon, Mer cer County, this State, a few days ago, by a Radical Justice of the peace. "The world moves," exclaims a Radical or gan, over the occurrence, but it neglects to say which way. —When the Sultan was in Paris and London, he was shocked beyond ex pression by the low-necked dresses and bare arms of the women of fashionable society. —During the past twenty years, four million emigrants have arrived at the port of New York. —Three hundred and thirty deaths by cholera have occurred in the Indian Territory, south of Kansas. Thirty seven percent of the population at Fort Gibson have also died. At Fort Ar buckle sixty soldiers and seventy-five Indians have succumbed to the scourge. —At Cincinnati, on Tuesday night, Joseph Zu in busch stabbed hi msel f tot he heart in a millinery store, where Miss Amelia Dolletold him shenever wanted his company more. —Hamilton, Ohio, with a population of only fourteen thousand, makes more malt than any other place in the Union, and has 325 drinking saloons. —Mr. Whitney was fined fifty dollars for being disrespectful to a Bureau a gent in Texas. He paid the money and received a written receipt. —A double apple tree is owned by Judge Moss, of Livingston County, Mo. The apples grow in doublets, Siamese twin fashion. —ln Granville county, N. C, 357 whites and 1,017 blacks have been regis tered. —General Cyrus Hamlin, son of ex- Vice President Hamlin, was buried at New Orleans yesterday. —Seven thousand dogs have been impounded in New York this season. HOME HINTS. —Some persons seem to have a mania for going abroad to pur chase that which they can buy at home, as though an article coming from a dis tance is a good deal better than the same at home. This is wrong, and detrimental to the place in which you live. Disburse your money where your ii.terest lies. "Liveand let live," should be the motto of every one. Do not be deceived into the idea that you can save money by sending away for an article that can be had at home; for you cannot do it. We can do printing of any description as cheap as any one, having a large and varied assortment of job type; so can our merchants seil as cheap, and so can our manufacturers and mechanics do work as cheap. IT is the interest a;, well as the duty of all of us to encour age home enterprise and industry. PHILADELPHIA covered herself with glory by f> eding the soldiers who went to the late war from all parts of the North and West; and now an associa tion of Philadelphians, not "weary in well doing," have organized a scheme to shelter and to educate the orphans of the same brave men who were wel comed there in those troublous times. Riverside, New Jersey, is the site of their Institute, and the funds for its en dowment are being raised by the Wash ington Library Company of Philadel phia, by thesale of stock at one dollar per share. With each share a hand some steel engraving is given at the time of purchase; and, as a further in ducement, all are entitled to one of the $OOO,OOO worth of presents to be fairly distributed to the stockholders; or, in other words, for every share of stock held a present is guaranteed. One present to be given away is worth $40,- 000. Read Advertisement. SPLENDID PHIZES IN GREENBACKS. —Over $">,000 in Greenbacks ; $lO,OOO in Sewing Machines; $9OOO in Wash ing Machines; a vast amount of I loop Skirts, Albums, Books, Gold Pens, Pencils, Lockets, &c., &c., to be dis tributed to the subscribers and purchas ers of the 'HOME AMUSEMENT.' Every yearly subscriber gets twenty-four tick ets, drawing from $5 to $lOO each in Greenbacks. Canvassing Agents clear from 10 to $l5 per day raising clubs. Sample copies with a prize ticket and full directions and instructions to A gents, sent by mail, by inclosing ten cents, addressed to the HOME AMUSE MENT, 78 Nassau Street, New York. Male and Female Canvassing Agents wanted in every town and neighbor hood in the United States. [aug!hvB , EYRE & LANDELL, 4th and Arch Sts., Philadelphia, are now offering a large stock of fall goods to purcha sers. This is an old established and re liable Dry Goods House. Head adv't. INFORMATION. —IN formation guar nntecd to produce a luxuriant growth of hair up on a bald head or beardless face, also a recipe for the removal of Pimples, Blotches, Eruptions, etc., on the skin, leaving the same soft, clear, and beau tiful, can be obtained without charge by address ing THOS. F. CHAPMAN, Chemist, 82.5 Broad wry, New York. scpldmS HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCIITJ and IMPROVED ROSE WASH cures secret and delicate disorders in all their stages, at little expense, little or no change in diet, no inconvenience and o exposure. It is pleasant in taste and odor, im mediate in its action, and free from all injurious properties. _ ERRORS OF YOUTH.—A Gentleman who suffered for years from Nervous Debility. Premature Decay, and all the effects of youthful in discretion, will, for the sake of suffering humanity, send free to all who need it, the recipe and direc tions lor making the simple remedy by which he was cured. Sufferers wishing to profit by the ad vertisers experience, can do so by addressing, in perfect confidence, JOHN B. OtiDEN, mayl7,'67-ly. Cedar Street, New York, SHATTERED CO NSTITUTIONS RE STORED by Helmbold's Extract Buchu. SPECIAL NOTICES, TUB GLORY OP MA N AN 8 TR ENG TH. —Therefore the nervous and debilitated should immediately use Helinbold's Extract Buchu. FACTS FOR THE PUBLIC, Easily verified by examination, which we re spectfully invite. 1- We have the largest establishment for the manufacture and sale of Clothing in Philadelphia, extending through from 518 Market street to 511 Minor street, and occupied exclusively by our selves. 2. Our building, having been constructed by us for our own exclusive occupancy, and for the busi ness to which it is entirely devoted, unites all tho conveniences and appliances which have been found necessary or desirable. •i. \\ e have an ample cash capital, enabling us to tnake all purchases for rash and giving us a se lection, at the most favorable prices, from the markets of the entire world. IN THIS PARTICULAR WE HAVE ADVANTAGES SHAITKI) BY NO OTHER HOUSE IN THE TRADE. XT its fart is well known to the entire business community. 4. We sell our goods foreash only, which, though it business to those prepared to pur chase in thvl way. enables us to ?ive them such advantages as no house doing a different business can possibly offer. 5. A business experience of a quarter of a cen tury has informed us fully of the wants of the public and of the best way to meet them. 6. We employ the best and most experienced Cutters and Workmen in making up our goods— the style, fit and make of which are unsurpassed. 7. All persons, whatever may be their physical peculiarities (unless deformed), can be accurately fitted at once from our stock, in most cases bettor than by goods made to order, and prices 25 to 50 per rent lower. % 8 Our business is large and constantly increas ing, enabling us to keep the largest, best assorted and most complete stock of Men's, Youths' and Boys' Clothing in Philadelphia, to which large daily additions are made of fresh goods, replacing those sold. 9. For reasons already enumerated, we can and do sell at prices guaranteed in all cases lower than the lowest elsewhere, or the sale cancelletl and money refunded. 10. All goods when offered tor sale are represen ted to be exactly what they are. 11. W hen buyers are, for any reason, dissatisfied with a purchase made, if reported within a reason able time, we pledge ourselves, by exchange, re funding of money or otherwise, to givs full satis faction in every case, and request that all such may be reported to us for adjustment. HALF WAY BETWEEN I BENNETT A Co., FITTH AND TOWER HALL, SIXTH STS. ( 518 MARKET ST. AND 000 BROADWAT, NEW YORK. jun2l CONSUMPTION* CURABLE BY DR SCHENCK'S MEDICINES. —To cure consumption, the system must be prepared so that the lungs will heal. To accomplish this, the liver and stomach must first be cleansed and an appetite created for good wholesome food, which, by these tnedieiDes will be digested properly, and good healthy blood made; thus building up the constitution. Schenck's Mandrake Pills cleanse the stomach of all bilious or mucous accumulations; and, by using the Sea Weed Tonic in connection, the appetite is restored. Schenck's Pulmonic Syrup is nutritious as well as medicinal, and, by using the three remedies, all impurities are expelled from the system, and good, wholesome blood made, which will repel all dis ease. If patients will take thete medicines ac cording to directions, consumption vcrv frequently in its last stage yields readily to their action. — Take the pills frequently, to cleanse the flver and stomach. It does not follow that because, the bow els are not costive they are not required, for some times in diarrhoea they are necessary. The stom ach must be kept healthy, and an appetite created to allow the Pulmonic Syrup to act on the respir atory organs properly and allay any irritation. Then all that is required to perform a permanent cure is, to prevent taking cold. Exercise about the rooms as much as possible, eat all the richest food—fat meat, game, and, in fact, anything the appetite craves; but be particular and masticate well. 2d w WHAT EVERY ONE WANTS.—A good, reliable medicine that will be on hand when re quired, and never fails when called on. That is now to be obtained in Dr. Tobias' Celebrated Ven etian Liniment. Many thousands call it the Wonder of the age, as it does all that is represented and more. It cures Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Spasms, Vomiting, Croup, and Sea-sickness as surely as it is used, and is perfectly innocent to take internal ly, even in double the quantity named in the di rections; and as an external remedy for Chronic Rheumatism, Cuts, Bruises, Old Sores, Mumps, Toothache, Headache, Sore Throat, Sprains, Insect Stings, Pains in the Back, Chest, and Limbs, thousands have testified to, and their certificates can be seen by any one at the Doctor's Depot, 5G Cortlandt Street, New York. Hundreds of physi cians use it in their practice. It has been intro duced since 1847, and hundreds who now have it in their houses, say they would not be without it even if it was $lO per bottle. Every drop is mix ed by Dr. Tobias himself, and can be depended on. Only 50 cents and $1 per Bottle. Sold by Druggists. Depot, 5G Cortlandt Street, N.Y. Sepl3w4 A GENERAL MASSACRE of the fibres of the head, the whiskers, the mustaches, or the beard, can be easily accomplished by the appli cation of the scorching hair dyes, and when every hair is KILLED DEAD, the parties deceived by these nostrums will regret, too late, that they did not use the wonderful and entirely peisonless prep aration which, IN FIVE MINUTES, produces a black or brown which is not surpassed by nature's own hue. Be wise in time. The only safe and sure article is CR IST A DORO'S HAIR D 1 E. Manufactured by J, CRISTADORO, 68 Maiden Lane, New York. Sold by all Druggists Applied | Hair Dressers. ♦ sepl3w4 < HELM HOLD'S FLUID EXTRACT OF Bui'iiu is a certain cure for BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, FE MALE COMPLAINTS, GENERAL DEBILITY, and all diseases of the URINARY ORGANS, whether existing in MALE OR FEMALE, front whatever cause originating and no matter pf HOW LONG STANDING. Diseases of these organs require the use of a di uretic. If no treatment is submitted to, Consumption or Insanity may ensue. Our Flesh and Blood are supported from these sourees, and the HEALTH AND HAPPINESS, and that of Posterity, depends upon prompt use of a reliable remedy. lIELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCIIU, Established upwards of 18 years, prepared by U. T. HELMBOLD, Druggist, 594 Broadway, New York, and 104 South 10th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. marB,' 67yl To CONSUMPTIVES.— -The Rev. ED WARD A. WILSON will send (free of charge) to all who desire it, the prescription with the directions for making and using the simple remedy by which he was cure! of a lung affection and that dread disease Consumption. His only object is to bene fit the afflicted and he hopes every sufferer will try this prescription, as it will cost them nothing, and may prove a blessing. Please address Rev. EDWARD A WILSON, No. 165 South Second Street, Williamsburgh, New York. sepl3mB TAKE NO MORE UNPLEASANT and UNSAFE REMEDIES for unpleasant and dangerous diseases. Use Helmbold s Extract Bu chu and Improved Rose Wash. BLINDNESS, Deafness and Catarrh, treated with the utmost success, by Dr. J. ISAACS, Occufist and Aurist, (formerly of Leyden, Hol land ) No. 805 Arch Street, Philadelphia. Testt monials from the most reliable sources in the city and country can be seen at his office. The Medi cal faculty are invited to accompany, their pa tients. as he has no secrets in bis practice. Artifi cial Eyes inserted without pain. No charge made for examination. |may3,'67yl THE HEALING POOL, AND HOUSE OF MKRCV.— Howard Association Reports, for YOUNG MEN, on the crime of solitude, and the errors, abuses and diseases whioh destroy the manly powers, and create impediments to mur riage, with sure means of relief. Sent in sealeß letter envelopes, free of charge. Address Dr. J. SKILLON HOUGHTON, Howard Assoe.iaiion, Philadelphia, Pa. j un 7> ityl.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers