Tg Ctlitinbia §pg. . ;Z. , f • t 4,y A. M. ItA.N.BO, _Qaurnbia,, Pa.— Sicturclay, July 31, 4860.,,, CcemomernoNS.letters, contributions, generally of merit and interest to the reader. will be 'acceptable from friends from all Quarters. • „ The Spy for the Campaign. , We will send the Weekly SPr for the oumpnigu, in olub;t,of five - or for Tv4'NTS-FIVE CENTS, each . single suh scriber THIRTY 'CENTS. This will about cover the expense of the piper upon -which the SPY is-printed. Send in your names during next week. We hope our Republican friends throughout the county will interest theMselves in the matter. Every Republican as well as every Demo crat should take the S. We hope to have a favorable report from our Repub licans friends in every district. Want lEcotal Division. The German Democrats of New York city are reported as dissatisfied with the Irish enutrol of the party, and holding, all the ,offices while they must be content with lager"and - voting the " straight" tick et. They complain that they have no representation in the " ring" and are not disposed to both cut bait and GA, with no share for themselves. Pennsylvania Threatened. Pennsylvania is threatened in the West, The Chicago Republican says: "The Pennsylvania coal operators, ' who are. plunderini the people by their scoun drelly combinations, may as well 'make hay while the sun shines. • - We • give them due notice this is their last Chance. The net session of Congress . will attend to their case, and, by abolishing the tariff on imported opal, knock' Alie• pins from under their villainous stricture. -There is not a protectionist outside the State of Pennsylvania who will not unite in the de• termination to end this system of deliber ,ate robbery of' ilia public by the surest and wok means :, -The-war ery of the Western Congressmen nest fall will be;:.A:viay with thetariff on Coal"? So play out your little game, gentleman, , it is almost ended!, • • A tipmr.v.o of oar candidates for office under the.mistaken notion that George Brubaker is omnipotent in settling tick ets, have been courting him for the Thug vote; •but within a short time past they -have begun to smell a rat, and learn that an alliance with him is death to- their prospects; and that their best plan is "a pretended repudiation of him. Hence they publicly assure the voters that they are no Thugs--no Brubaker men—that they have formed no combinations or rings with any other- candidates or any other person, and are honestly running on theii own Merits. They may. tell that story to those who will believe, it. We' can't be,gulled by an artifice so tracts-. . . . . parent:,' They have been.criught in the, act and their - denia) .bcigus. • George Brubaker's:ll6l(ot is, Made 'up and we, know That these gentlemen arc on it. We shall publish it in a few days and they :will be exposed4in their treache'pr. Burnt brtudy can't save them. They have linked their fortunes with Brubaker and his Thugs and they are welcome to the consequences, which may possibly in form some other gentlemen of what they too may expect hereafter, when they learn toollate that ‘.` honesty is the best policy" and that dirt clefileth". Geary ut Laiokout Mountain. A. Philadelphia, letter says : The Gov ernor's-ripe experience as au Executive, his 'world-wide military - celebrity, his in valuable services rendered to every por tion of the Commonivealth during his term of office, together with his advocacy and practice of strict temperance princi ples, have t,iverk' him,° hold upon - the Re publican party of the State which cannot be:easily shaken. --Hisre-eleetion is con sidered a foregone conclusion here, no mat ter', who the -opposition may „select at his , opponent., I heard an anecdote here to day- in relation to' the taking of Lookout which Might he inserted in this connection, and will doubtless be interest ing to your readers. . Gov. Geary has fre . quently been asked to relate the •eireum 'itanees connected with the initation of the capture of this -famous Mountain in 1563, but his known modesty has made 'him re :tieent concerning his military reeerd, and• it was ooly,ineently that the following im portant, chapter has been added to the history of that a - Ceti - dui battle: I give it „substantial as related by 'the Governor himself 10 a personal friend; -It,appears. that Gans. Geary and Hooker were riding togethbr. ,ene day just before the` capture `of .the'Alonetain,,in full view of 'it; brist ling as it was with rebel infantry andartii lery, when - Gen: G. remarked, 'looker,' (theirielatiOns"Were of that intimate char acteethat titles-between them werenlways .dispensed with,).' Hooker, I have a plan 14 - -which I can take Lookout -Mountain.' '..What is it; a eary ?' a.sked Gen.. 'No . „. man, Hooker,' replied Gen. G., can - know my 'plan of - attack until I get an order. to take the menu Lain. Give ” me' the order .and then I will let you know my plan, but 'net till then.' -- Gen. Hooker, as his ens -toin ';Wa's when' in deep thought, held 'his" ,bead an 'inclined position, as if closely examining the quality of the hair in his %eliarger!.s mane; and so the two rode side hyaide far more:than a mile; when Gen. suddenly, looked. up and said. 13y, Cr-d. Geary, I believe you arc the man to take - Lookout Mountain—l give you the, 'order. tOirWillniove'yeur'divisioti upon Wto-morrow morning - at daybreak. _Now ine , your -plati - lof !attack.' Gen, G.,' therd'Otailect the 'niodiii.aii.e'randi to his. ' superior .ollIcer„ when •pueker delighted ',cicala's:and; fl'au4layedlit;:the ,nail on the 'beaci; t ,, Geary—The .;"Mountain'-'is' ours • The aexemoriing, Gten,,Geatffotight'ttie -battle-;of-,Lookout::,Moubi.ain;.above ',the, clouds,a''Ml•ktibW:4tiiei,:r4ad ' It will 'take more'tbn" . 61 4,r 11 „#7., ,, P 0 1 2,?:9?ge, thunder to heat ' RELin our inducements to camptp6n•, subscribers. , 47, lir.goVE - 04; * tax 7tiziAurgiker; az&rents, nr•Th 7&' may baredueeil. , l'ob::Nan'seartdidate—a\-fitteen: -- • ! forPitbkeYd I 4 AFTErov.severe contest dia.:Democracy have chosen Roo. William A,. Ga/braith of Erie, Chairman of their State Commit tee:: Editor A QUARTER million of dollars bid for the Governor's office—seventy-five cents a piece for three hundred tliousland Dem ocrats! .• WHEN a Connecticut :Yankee professes his willingness to pay a quarter of a million dollars teget an office, it,niaY:be'prcpiini ed that. he " rayther calculates" on setting his money back again. now QUESTIONS for young .Democrats in Pennsylvania : How did the-candidatefor 'Governor begin life ?' As•a Pabkei. When did he do his first,, paeking ?,. When'he packed his carpet-bag and packed off from Connecticut to PertuSylvania..' When was his latest packing done? ''Wen lte . p&Cked the Harrisburg 'Cc:nVerkiinn':,*, TUE. West Chester,l7?extaticitii says : "A number of the leading Democrats -in this county are greatly chagrined over the nomination of Judge Packer. Some of them openly denounce him :ts a very '27Lea7Z loan, and predickthat be will refuse toad vance the "iitiews of war, to carry, on the Campaign." The Income Tax. It is reported that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue has issued" instructions to the assessors and collectors calculated to secure more accurate returns of the in come tax. In Washington ..a list of per sons who have madc'no' return of' income has been fainished to the Commissioner, and he has directed a reassessment2,in all these eases. It is also asserted that many persons have made returns but have not paid the tax, and that the collect:Ors have made 13 o effort to secure these sums. EV EltY Governor of the State of Penn sylvania has been a native born Pennsyl vanian. Mifflin was born in Philadelphia, IW.Kea.n in Chester county; Snyder in Lan cester,Findlay in Franklin eister, Shulze ,and Ititner in Berks, Wolf in Northum berland. Paler and Shunk itt-?lontgoate- . , ry; Johnson and Geary in Watilo - rcland, Bigler iu Cumberland, Pollock in North umberland, and F. Packer and Curtin in Centre. The people of Penn sylvania have no idea that the harmony of this list baßbe broken by adding to it the name of a " Connecticut; carpet-bag ger.". The New Paper for the Government Secretary Boutwell has notified the public that by authority of law be has adopted a distinctive paper, which will hereafter be used; until otherwise ordered . for all obligations and other Securities of the - United States. Pee of _its peculiari ties is the introduction of coloied silk, cot ton and other fibrous- materials into the body of the' paper while in the process of _manufacture. 'By the law of the United. States it is made, afelony, subjecting the the. convicted offender to a maximum find` :office thousamrdollars or a maximum frni `prison/vent, with,...bard' Idhor; --- fo - r"filteeiit years, or both at the discretion of 'thel court, for-any person to have or retain in his possession or custody any paper adapt:, ed to the making of such obligations or, securities and similar to that designated by the Secretary of the Treasury or some other proper officer of the - United States. , The new national currency haS deme much to reduce counterfeiting, and it is to be. hoped - that the effect of Mr. Boutwell's now order will be to abolish - it altogether: Andress' lohnson.in Teirmessee. Johnson's course, says the Nash ville Press and Times, has made it neCes.--: sary that we-should-say in emphatic lan,' guage that his help is not at all needed in this' canvass ; that the absurd and malig nant harangues which he is Ow Making, in, onr judgement, .are calculated to do much mischief; that it is slat- true, as some 'of his friends are; constantly asserting that a political alliance has been sealed between • himself and our Gubernatorial candidate. On• the contrary, we assert, what we believe to be true', that,Governor Senter—representing,,,as he does, the Re publietin party of Tennessee—does-not de-' sire: - his returnto the United Staie's Sen ate. • We cannot close without declaring, for the 'satisfaction of our friends-at a distanCe that there is not the' smalleSt danger of Mr. Johnson ,ever being sent again to the National Senate — from' this State. His public eat eer is at an end forever, as' he Will himself ascertain in a few weeks. The people of Tennessee are not yet mad enough to fell interested in needlessly get-' ting up hostile_•relatjon,sbetwsv them % selves and those at preientitipOwer in - Washington city - •- • The DevilDerstie Platform.. i?or. the conveuiet . ce of "that lrge cloys of the Democracy whose, powers., in -the " readin' and ritttn"--line are limited; we have prepared a short and easy 'edition of the Harrisburg platform. It, will be. in-' valuable in Berks and York counties, And - manylocalities that need uot=be enumera ted. The cations county Muninitiees will doUbtles's'reeommend that. it be committed to heart, and the-Chairman of the Central Committee will have it printed in italics,, , small caps, exploSi;e',puc.tuation ,marks,] and dislocatekparagraphs, a4disCributed' i u 'stunning handbills ad ornedi with- chaste: woodcuts after'the'style or Brick' 'Potne- roy. , ..The, Democracy of 1.. ycnaql — vania, in comatose convention, do declare: , - 1. 1798:' ' the stable dOei.afler die„, . is gone.„ 3. Contradiction of the fifth plank. :Is not the negro - a - laboring - man; and the bal lot an:" amelioration?":' ',• 4: let, nq itz Floyd and the old , titno.. 5. Clap-trap to eateli G. Cons.airsufh'.ol. 7 .„—,..M.olinsonl''' Halters in a double sense. Coffee colored' naturalization-, papers; for e;;ery'shipkind." " ' "' 6. Don't pay your taxes:'"' Securities. WiTorrk:n.—A lady, Ivho resides in Detroit, on Thursday, gave birth to a male Qhilc :weighi .wanng fifteen and one-half Doi:lnds:it • -.4l.Aiztittne is Livithian. 10: 4 ,,,%9# '.-.A. - YouNci lady studying French, ithq."find ,l ' .7.ing!,that "belle" meant "line,",toidFsom.e letter that we had a gigitViietir46l belle-weather lately. TIEE Migaissippi river is higher than at an time this season within and half feet orthe Water maric of ISCI. The bottoms opposite Quincy, 111., are limn:- dated. A roost shoemaker, named...Donohue, re siding in',East * streek"_lle:wark r , Luis fallen heir to the of two hundred thou sand dollars-in -gold, by.the death of.his brother—,„i, • TITERE is n yeteran soldier in the A.S . YI 'at Augusta; Maino,who has thirteen wounds received in 4 the Mexican and Union wars. Ten of theirirweie occasioned bk'brillets" or shells, and threenre saber cuts • -Izia2not , an uncommon complaint against a newspaper% that it has • not...life , enough.. But an editor,'reports Mils objection made to his paper by, a, gossip loving lady " I like your paper very much ; • have _.only one objection toll: It has not deaths enough . 'viii 13,Xi0.X PAciFio.=-The" Cheyenne Leader says,: otal amount of freight reCelFed for, the Six Months, ending Jane 30; ; ISlic, ,is, ; 17,2:03,1( . 10_ pounds, - amount ing 5387,891:05'. revenue to the Union Pacific Company. The. passenger traf fic, from point, during the same time, amounts to a total 0f5110,575.03. .The entire rc6el pts from business done at this point, reaches half .a million dollars for the six months 'named. In these 'figures no note is taken of the business done in the way.of truusportatien_o_f_goxernutent sup plies and troops. The New Offices ,of the renusyl vanisi Railroad Company. ,The work of preparation in building the new additional offices of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, ,on the south side of Willing's alley and Fourth street, is pro gressing with unceasing activity. It will be one of the most magnificent and substan tial edifices in the city of Philadelphia, It has a trout of 98 feet. on Fourth street, by a depth of 175 feet eastward, connecting with the rear of the immense building of the Com pany fronting on„ Third .street. The new office will-be four stories high, us follows: First story, 18 feet in the , clear ; second story, 15 feet; third story, 13 feet, and fourth story 12 feet., In architectural design it will comport with the present beautiful buildings of the company at Third and Wil ling's alley. 11. , Acttnit A - GAltrzrl,3Aftergi..—Says a co temporary, the only-argument the Demo crats have been able to urge against Judge Williams as a candidate for the Supreme Bench, has been that he was a carpet-bag ger, imported from Connecticut, and it would b6unsafe to place in such a..... posit ion one not a native of this State. What have they to say about Asa Packer? He, too, is a carpet-bagger from the Nutmeg State. Will it be-wise to, entrust him with so much power:especially well known his whole interest consists in crashing out the great internal improvements °fills adopted State and advancing those of New York? It is that the capitalists of Now York city calcu late to control the entire railroad construc tions of PennsylV•ania if Mr. Packer is elected. Au Immense Snake Killed. The Columbus, Ohio, papers report the killing of an immense snake on the Cliittet.- den farm, near that 'city last week. The monster had been seen on several occasions; and on Monday it eliased,two boys nearly, belle mile. On Tuesday morning the :tame two boys again visited the Chittenden farm better prepared to encounter the foe, should ho put in an appearance. _ _ They had not been :on the grounds a great , while, before ,i titer • discovered the monster; who was approaching them 'With evident warlike intent., The • boys took po anion-read aa. soonj'afa :an 'Opportunity , pre -sentedrmado stielt well-directed shots, as to_ place their .enemy. entirely_ in their power, when they soon. despaicbed him. The mon- 1 ster Measured sixteen feet in length, and was proportionately large. Pact:J:ll.'B recent Mirchase of the Penn sylvania Democracy furnishes -a tine 'field for the arithmeticians of that party. It is undeistood, very generally by- this time, that the sum paid to the delegates for his nomination,and to buy up those treacherous journalists who had been supporting Cass, added to what ho stands pledged to give to purchase his election, will foot up a total of about a. quarter of a million of dOltars—a mere bagatelle for a Democratic fifteen millionaire.' Supposing this sum to be rateably apportioned among the counties,' what will be each 'county's share. Hew much for 'Lancdster?" - Row much for ' Westmoreland ? 'flow much for York? Row much for each of the rest? 'We sub mit the problem to those expert Den:mcratic, statisticians who figured last year so ac curately, on each corraty's share of the - national debt. The-problem will not be so very difficult, if' they will- bear' la - , mind 'that each Democratic vote is to be reckoned at about seventy-five - cents. • - Bloody, Result, or u. Joke. :Near Ilillsboro, Illinois, George Black burn, aged eighteen years, killed his cousin, John T. Blackburn, aged twenty-two years. John was driving a reaper and George bind ing in the harvest field. • The first provoca tion waegivertby„George throwing apples at John as be passed on the reaper, in which condUet ho iiresistednotwithstanding the remonstrances of his Cousin and uncle. Yohn'finally told h int' if the offense was re peated he ,would chastiSe him. George coolly armed himself wiilf7ri knife,sharp enedon Jileshoe, and' repented the provo cation..,ihi drew a line on the ground, and 'threatened John ifhe crossed it he would kill hini: : John picked - bp a piece of wood as thouglfto throw it, but:Without' doing so turned Of to follow the reaper. George im mediately , sprang at him and stabbed him twice :Whitest instrindi ii.41 . 11 - ng," him. The. murderer; afar from evincing any remorse - for - the f crithe,' has ever since evinced the greatest' hardiness, jesitifying time 'to kill others, end joking on the sub jee.t.. 'The' day `folloWing the 'act he 'was 'ariested and bud u preliMinury end was committed Mjail to avian his. trial, "npini which ho remarked that 'be; would'rather board in ilsboro' than work hi the'lleld:' • Sadden Death of the Man who Drew the Crosby Operas House. The CineirMati7Flatiiiiiir", of Saturday . • On-"Saturday' afternoon a'pleasitre'party, arrived at 'the Bin:net . loiise from 'Torts-, Mouth. 'Oblo:' They were'beand for 2;:ner - 44k;' - nria•'ltulliiirii 'their' number 'arni: Aft%) Itocher;111. 1 Nal Lee 'iettie - 41' ta" his" . raOrif ut quite 'an apertY, 1186 - r oii Thinsday morning, 'and - on being yiStorday itiorning' complained of . feellud sick. He casntinnod to grow woese„! and a PhydiCian waSsentiOr, who dide:irerY- , , thing his power M . alleviate the stiffer-; lags of the sick - rnan,-butrall-vrithout avail.l . I.lr. Lee died about•three, o'clock yesterday! afternoon., His disease was ascertained to.' be that pf dropsy ,of the,. heart., He. was, about 5l years of, ago, and resided at Prairie: do Itocher.lll.,:where hispody will be sent; for interment. , • , Mr. ,Lee held . the ticket wtrieb. drove Crosby Opera Bouse at, the, lottery, took place in,tbat.cily.somo.two years ago. lie was at tlitit,titue a fe.rmeir.livinu quietly. bomeiuPrairiedo P.otrber. Ile drew, havingdisposed or it, ..,..at;a ;ante ,?tas sinee,:been,:taking „tmatters„easily, i At„pe, time of deatli liawas making his way East , nteafiniio spend the tiummor,„air seine of tin) tistoyn , watering places. ~'4;; V :, (From3.llyr SPY.I Telegri r tplkz v . 44/ 1 7,-, 'l4 rii rD6I9 t ilsf;c 23. t lion., Win th, ter4y'electe4tChairnian of the, 'Denillarati4 State'Pomn:littee.,XlN,, • „ ORlcial returnsktifllic\receite WaShingion Territory show a majority for Garfield, the Republican candidate for Con gressional delegate, of 148. There was a .majority-ordSB-.againststheNpropositlon a State Constitution. • I Futher s -MeAfahon 'iVitsf - Yesterday'reiiteed from prison by tho Canadian authorities. Over,Sis o ooo worth of opium has been seizedoplhe:Cliinese:sMainerit*n r s rati. Cisco, for VloYation'of the revenue. ,- - _Two drunken men, were run over, and killed by,,tleconlotlyeut Tndlopurolis, yeg-: erday: , ~ SATURDAY, July 24. A n uniber of Indian outrages are reported from Arizona, among which are the killing of mull- carriers and destruction of Mails between-Tucson and Masila. A company of cavalry have killed- eight Indians at Camp Vede.--:,' • Ex-Governor Crape, of Michigan, died at , Flint,-Mich:, yesterday morning. • The new fractional currency issued to date amounts to $120,000. Win. Edwards, colored, was executed for murder at St. Louis, - yesterday. Another colored man, named Peter Riddich, was hanged yesterday -for murder, at , Ports mouth, Vu. During the execution of the latter a frame building tell, seriously injur ing seven workmen. James Wells, of-Jersey City, committed suicide yesterday. Family unpleasantness is assigned as the cause. Counterfeit $2O greenbacks, m ell executed, are circulating in Philadelphia. Canterbury Hatt, in Washington,. a va riety theatre, was-burned yesterday. I'L'htf , lossis 'from ten' to fifteen 'thousand dollais.- A fire at Perkin, 111., on Thursday, de stroyed $20,000 worth of property. - -An International Industrial Exhibition will be opened at Btiffala Our the Gth of Oc tober next. • Monty, July '2O A ten dollar greenback has been sent to the Treasury Department as a eounterfeit, by a new York bank. On examining the note, the experts or the department differ, some bolding it to ho genuine and others counterfeit. The abstract of the condition of all the National Banks of the country on June 12, shows resources and liabilities aggregating .51,564,15,000. The specie amounted to 318,- 455,000. Four persons, two of them young ladies, were drowned,by the sinking of a boat at Auburn, Me., on Saturday. Two men were killed and several wound ed in a political fight in the Barnwell dis trict of South Carolina, recently. The nom batauts were all whites. A laborer named Dougherty wasotAlled nmu patned Stevens, at a cemetery near near Memphis, yesterday. Dougherty was trying to Prevent Stevens from shootififthe superintendent of the cometery,with whom ho had a dispute about digging a grave. Martin Collins was stabbed to death on the street in Cincinnati, by Thome. , *Kin ney, yesterday. Several men were injured, one latally, by ,the caving in of a sand hank on the New York Central Railroad, near Ilion, on Sat urday morning. Tames W. Davis, and others, sub-con tractors, have brought suit in St. Lonis, against Oliver Ames and other contractors, on the Union Pacific Railroad. for $1:04,000, claimed to be due them. The defendents allege that the claimants were overpaid 57,000. The bark Lyman Cann, from Matanzas for Queenstown, put in at New York yes terday, having yellow fever on board. !rho captain, his wife and a sailor died of the fever at sea: ' 4 A man, giving his atle as T. B;Briynn; is under arrest at floston,fdr tryingAo get $l5OO, from the Mount _Vernon: - 13 , 22 p, on fc!rged_checks. - _• The deaths in Philadelphia city last week numbered 4011, an increase of 69 over the number for the Week previous,., TUESDAY, July 27. Deputy Sheriff Gregg, of Rensselaer county, N. Y.; went to the house of firm orli yesterday, with a posse of twenty men,to levy for rent. About forty men were on the premises, and the Sheriff was resisted with firearms and drien off. Gregg and Several of the posse were Wounded, the former, it is feared, mortally. - The Maryland Court of Appeals has'sus 'tallied the judgment of the Criminal Court 'of Baltimore, imposing a fine of $lOO upon 'EllasWard, Jerseynian,for peddling with out a State license. Hon. A. B. Peek er,broihor of ex-Governor William P. Packer, and lately ASsociate Justice of Lycoming county, died al -Wil liamsport last Sunday, aged Oh years: Wni. Ploeger shot Ernst Niemier dead, in St. Louis, on Sunday night. They had: been intimate friends, and the murder is attributed to Ploeger's jealousy of his The Shattumac Mills;at Waterford,N..Y., were burned'yesterday, with a large -quan tity of flour and grain. Loss $60,000." Large fires are raging 'in the forests of Washington Territory. 'A 20-Inch - gun, weighing over 57 tons, and capable of throwing a shot weighing 11000 _lbs.', has just arrived at Fortress MOnroe. It was cast in Pittsburg, and there is but one other of equal size in the United States. The wheat crop in Wisconsin and lowa nromises to bo very large. WuDNEsmtr, July 2S The laying of the French cable was cele brated ut Roxbury, Mass:, yesterday. A congratulatory dispatch from the Prefect of Paris to the Mayor of 'Boston was rend by the latter. The internal revenue receipts from July Ist to clate . amount to .1317,860,000. Major General A. S. Webb has accepted the presidency of the College of the City of New York, and will asstnne its duties on August Ist. President Grant will go to Washington to attend the Cabinet meeting, on Friday: L. .lmA,, return to Long Branch on:Saturday. • - Edward Ealpin was killed. on Monday night, by . falling - frorn Table Rock, Niagara 'Falls, a distance of-180 feet - Ralph Withing-i ton, of PhiladelPhia, jumped from an ex :Press/rain on the Great. Western Canatia, yesterday, and received Injuries. which may be fatal. , . During' a fire nt St: Louis, • yesterday morning, seven .men < were injured by•the upsetting of a book and ladder truck, some of them seriously:- •4 , : , Four ice houses of the - Washington Ice Company, at Rondont, N. Y., were yeste . r day- destroyed byfire. 4 , The -disaster was caused by lightning. -,4 ri! a , rEL . • . • AIRSD A • N, Ju, - • 2.9.1 I Atrain on the ISieinpilis and Louisville ,Ralireed",brofze,thrOtigh. a tiestle bridge near Clark'sville4"enn., yesterday, tnornhig., ; All but one of the cars were destroyed „by fire, three persons _being_ki:lled and s wounded, 11 of the ]utter seriously. Es-Secretary Seward arrived atVictlaria Vancouver's Tsland, on'the 20th inst., and was receive:ll)r the Mayor and priucipal citizens. was, also serenaded in theleve', ning; and roadeaspeecb, expressing friead% ship foiGreat Britain. „ = • Mi. George .Peabody' was ,presented.at ,ivhite.Sttiphur Springs, yesterday with sOlOneris adopted by the soJonrners there; , eottiplithentinglina for Lis !maul ficencd iti the cause of Southern education. Ilt;' re illied-appfofirlately. A ball will be given in hislittor,onAugust .11on.,,EdWarcl . ..11cpherson. of , Ahe I:Consent Itepreselditives,auiled for Europe ‘frOni * Balicmorey;esterday.; ieis ens eharied,.'ivith lam, at Altopni c are, under trial at:Holli.- "daiebitrk, and' one; ef , , them, Tlia'inets Beals, was convicted YeSterday.` TILE corn crop of thikUniteti States for 190$ was nine hundred! - ;a r s' lions of,bushel; of weseStported. The r 4ligttp Itakitred4l I AwentSrfice millions oftiushelend op:his the lat er portion was,expoiqd Monuments Worth Having. The monuments in the splendid suspen sion bridges left behind him by the great ,engipeer..and, bridge „builder,.,.Roeblingo over the Niagara, the Ohio and Mononga dude. rivers, and -his plans" for the East , I river bridge at New York. The loss of such a man is the loss of a public benefactor; lantoLie greitt wo - rks':remaitt-as his it : lona- 1 4 : l lnents; Munn their pnictioul grand uie they dwarf the Pyramids of Egypt and the Co, lossus of Rhodes._ „ . , - .. • The Warin Cuba. Hostilities are being actively carried on in Cuba. From Havana, under date of 'yesterday, we have Spanish' reports of fighting at various points of the island.. The accounts from RemediOus, Sagua, Villa Clara, and Sand Espiritu go to shoW ad vati lageS on the Spaniards. In a fight which Villa Clara' the insurgents lost, it is said, twenty men, including Major Margue:L They were an fortunata in the same locality a short time since. It is bloody work and exceedingly demoralizing. How long will it continue, or will any greater Power inter fere? Origin of 'Methodism Methodism originated in Ireland, at Cork, in 1748. In August of that year, Mr. r Charles Wesley preached a famous sermon In the open air to more than 1000 people,and in the following month incorporated in church fellowship some souls whom he had won for Christ. As in other places, the planting of Methodism in that city followed _by.'fierce persecution. In May, 1730, Mr. John Wesley preached - in Cork, and - -was •Inarnedqn effigy by a frantic mob. But " none- of these things moved'' him, and within r sic years a chapel was opened by him on llammond's Marsh. In September 1782, Cork ,was enriched with the dust of one of the pioncr Methodist preachers in North America. Richard Boardman, who rests under the shadow of the old cathedral in hope of the resurrection of the just, Mr. Wesley's last visit to. Cork was only two years before his death. Methodism is now strong and influential in that city. • Literary Notices. TILE CLEILDEEN'S Bonn. AND ONCE A MONTI", for August, has been received and are excellent numbers, fully up to their high moral standard. Arthur's publica tiims we always consider the best fami ly reading. Per subscriPtion . s, dm., address T. S. Arthur di Philadelphia. "Arrrituir's Hem LL MAGAZINE." —The August issue of,this periodical, which is an ever welcome visitor to our sanctum, has been received. There are in it some charm ing short stories, a, further instalment of "The Grahams iota the Armstrongs," clever story by the editor, T. S. Arthurothd lauch other pleasant matter. Tarr I~~occ~rs Auttoan.—A new book has just been published by the American Publishing Company, Hartford, Conn., on titled "The Innocents Abroad, or the New Pilgrims Progress," by Mark Twain. Agents will do well by sending for it, us Mark.Twhin is so well known, the book will have a largo sate. BEYOND.THE MISSISSEPPE.—Perhaps one of the lineal books of the war, is that writ ten by Richardson, and advertised in thiti issue of our paper. It gives a graphic de scription of the West, scenery and people. Its illustrations are all good and we would advise everybody who has not already read it, to get it, as goes to make up a complete • librarv. IFrem the Mt. Joy "Herald." - Henry Bechtold.. Mu. EDITOR :—As the time for the County election is near at hand, It is important, that the people be informed of the character and claims of the different-candid:lts. Every voter ; as lie As supposed to vote under standingly, should be 'cOnvlaced - that- the 'candidate for whom be cast§ his_vote is properly quadded for the position hieh he seeks. •Thero are two things which are necessary_tir.quidify a person for public posgirili. The first is ,/insiness capacity. The second is good 'lnnril character. Both these are combined in our townsman, Mr. Henry Bechtold, candidatefer -- the register of wills. •lie has been.known among us for many years as a perfectly reliable linsiness man. He spealis the English and German ,languages, and is capable of tilling any position within the gift of the county. His mortal character is beyond reproach. lie is perfectly honorable and upright, and is worthy the confidence of the public, • • Every citizen of our borough should susf lain him at 'the coining election, and thus encourage business talent, and - moral ex cellence. -A. Interference. Ma. EDITOR a candidate for the As:. stanbly, I beg • eave ;to protest age i ask peci ple from Harrisburg and other places inter fering with our county nominations. - I um not willing that the State -Treitsurer,- either in person or by agent, shall -come here and by manoeuvre and intrigue so come - toil to politicians of a Wily caste, dictate who shall, or shall not be voted for. Let them stay at home and mind their own business, we feel .cotnpetent to attend to ours. We have had a little too much 'of this sort of thing, for it is especially demoralizing to some of our gentry of easy virtue, and if persisted in, I apprehend, instead of our.having to bribe the rings and cliques of Lancaster, under the Tong rule, we shall have to go to tr tr risburg and buy our nominations froM an other class of office-brokers, who havo.set up for business on n larger and more ex pensive scale. I hope the people at the next primary election, will select our best men without.dictation from abroad, and by so doing inform those meddling corrup tionists that when we want them we will send for them. A CANDIDATE. Assembly and Calmly - Comm-is- sion er. , Mat. EDITOII.:—We are pleased wih the prospect of electing Mr. John K. Reid, of ,Lancaster, to the office of County Commis sioner. It is time that a competent and honest man should till that post. ' The af fairs of the county require to he looked after, and should he be eiected,- we will not hear of excessive mileage. $69,000 for bridges and other extras. We have no doubt, the people appreciate his services as skDirector of the Poor for six years past, and know that he cannot fail to be a good and honest Commissioner. We have every assurance that IT. M. Engle wilt llltlk.o a first-rate run as a candi ' rte for. Atsetubly.-- Mr. Engle, is u. good. honest and intelligent farther, and one of the * editorial committee of the Lancaster Fdiviter, a valuable agricultural paper pub lished in' Lancaster. We shall be proud to have him elected for we know that the voters will_i,ever have cause to regret it. He is opposed to the pester and folder swindle, and is fully able to slate the dis tance exactly between Donegal and Harris'- . burg, WEST lIEMPFIEGD. HEITOR SPY i—Permit me to criticize in a friendly way a few of the recent items,of your peper. You tell us that a California editor calls' Anna Dickinson""oxeyed," as if It-were intended for satire or burlesque. But this .word -is a literal translation of Homers' epithet applied to the Goddess out Juno. It is not so pleasant to English ears as' its 'kindred epithet "Gitzelle eyed," lint three thousand years of classic celebrity.. have consecrated the phrase "oxeyed .Juno" us the highest compliment that can be pad , to tamale betinty• - in any language' of - the , The resemblance of woman's eyes to those of the Ruminantia has been a.favorite theme of poets in tillages and nations, and in - many instances the pariillel is undonbt; edly correct; but in the case of Miss Dick inson it seems to me singularly inappropriL. ate, for her oyes are neither large enough nor placid enough to entitle them 'to this classical epithet, and your California man has probably borowed the expression with-. out comprehending its meaning. Again you tell us in another place that the mortality among drunkards is. five Cities greater than among temperance men. For ~ drunkards; you should= have': written . drinking men. for It is not drunkeness, that kills, but the drink, as any man may. don 'ylifee'himself Who will-make two lists`Of his acquaintances-of those , tha tont get drunk and soberagain.two•or .three times a day and of those that feel it no morethartif they poured it into' knot-hole, and'he'will find in the average of any number 'Of case's that the dru n kards-willltve-the-longest, and the reason for this is,plairt, for,,drunkenness is' the desperate-reSistiince of a 'sditnireoristi tatiOn to Met pcilson' whiolvassails St -while onttof less vigor accepts the' condition and. submits quietly to tim doom imposed. . ''Editoristi Brevities. •a• plenty. Brdneman's. i—Plato is still around. oatilt(rop is good. ut Boston. !iis+;Theigistir is in Lancaster. ` . "-t•'`..F.eii.o" rages in Chicago. —Hartford has 28 churches. —The Quid, Yanc is red• hot. —The new reservoir is leaky. "-dttipe"ivls`y rooins ti re . --Batter is ten cents in Texas. —Take the Sev, and pay for R. —Poor stuff—kerosene whisky. —The French cable works well.. --ADooctresi Bosley is handshMel —Ole Bull has gone to see John. -- ••••llraguay belles - go - biirefOoted: — ---- -Good comic.writeis are scarce. —Arkansas wants Chinese labor. —Protection is the coming issue. —McClellan has gone to St. Paul. —Beware of sun-burned peaches. —Hartford schOols teach German. —The bulletin hoards are a 'failure. —The New York Nation is failing. —Vineland has a historical society. —Our new freight depot is a failure. —Backgammon—the Grecian-Bend. —Barnum is writing his tin-horn •life. —Coulter is to boat race with Hamill. —A drought worries Carolina farmers. topers take to root beer this weather. —Zell's Encyclopaedia has reached "Bile." • —Collars live cents a box at Brenemun's. —Sing Sing has leaked another convict. —The population of Mexico is 9,000,000. —Extract of lobelia cures mosquito bites. --Boston's f )reign commerce increases. —The French roof prevails down East. —Marietta is to have a colored brass band. —Hartford is to have a new morning pa per. —The White Pine excitement is dying out. —Tito mosquitoes are commencing to —The New Jersey glass works are all idle. —"Satan " is to be produce(' in New York. —This year's crop of blackberries is enor mous. —The court dress of Paraguay is red satin. —Olive Logan wants to "interview" Grant. —A. Pat-is street has been named after Milton. —Mrs. Julia Ward Howe is s good public speaker. —Columbia bloods wear button-hole ge raueurns. —Ben Butler is president•of a cartridge company. ' —Vanderbilt is going to marry a girl of seventeen. —The ,%ssociateil Press monopoly will be suppressed. —Pluto, go to the post office and get your letter. —George Peabody seldom receives a beg ging letter. —Shaving is very bona cial as a ".'cooler," in summer. —Healthy weather—small sales at the drug stores. —The weekly SPY for the campaign only thirty MILS. -1)r. W. McChesney left for St. Louis on Monday. —A Georgia - paper is called the "Air Line Eagle." —The Erie road has a "dead sure thing" on passengers. ' —Fifty cents a shine is : the Long Branch boot black tariff. —An exchange calls , Curtis literary daffodil. —Cincinnati is going:to revive its law against swearing. —White flannel shirts are affected by the swells at tho seaside. —Nearly one-third or, the • population of _Prance live in Cities. —Old Roberi 'Lee is 'puckering. at. Vir ginia Alum Springs: —Tbe.Walnut street concert was good, on Tuesday evening. —liumboldt's posthumous papers will be published next year.: —Disease' is making havoc among the California silkworms. •=lour carloads of Chicago butter have reached Sao Francieso. • —Song of a magistrate—Let ats speak of ti man ua.3v,P'v Et_linecl 1 4 rn " —The lintehinaorti-Fatnily Lave added two more to th4ir circle. —The .iEolinn Quintetto sang at Betsey town Thursday evening; —A California paper describes Anna Dickinson as - '"ox-eyed." " —Lord Mayo has decided that liindoes may be made Free Masons. ' —Out in Oregon they look upoir Seward witiuntich curious interest, • wonng• lady stopped on -at blrackborry and slipped down Ely s e steps. • —A "sm Ile " that:bretel Is sorrow—the one,yon take in s liar-room. Paris they ,turn (int a fine old Egyp than Iniinuny irrthree dayS. . • —Except in piiint of foraile, Packer and Perishing are as like as two —Victor Hugo used the wad " Irradia tion " 544 times in his last book: —The New York. Tribune says, Chicago is the rainiest place in the .world. - -Fred. Myers,candidate for Sherik,drop— ped into this office on Wednesday. —Young ladies who play croquet,are known us "maidens all for lawn. , ' —They raised money in Aleinphis - tbr re prieving murderers by public balls. Travelers in the Saranac regions regis ter the:nselves as " Murray's tools." —Copt. Mackenzie Las won the: ehes.s tournament of 90U genies in New York. —Vineland, .3s.r. 'J., will send 50,000 bas lets of peaches to 'New Toid; this season. —G..C. Franeiscus, General Agent Penn sylvania Itailroad,Was in town on Sunday. —When lovers quarrel what presents made on either side are not returned? The kisses.. - —Excursionists miss. the steamer Callie from the waters of the Susquehanna, this sentinel.. —The Middletown base ballists did not make - their "appearance on Thursday. Afraid of a airplay. . Simeon B. Jewett, formerly United States Marshal for Western New York, died near ltochester yesterday. —Thomas A. Scott, Vice President of the Pennsylvania Railroad, passed through this place on Sunday in a special train. —"Let us have P's" said the Convention at Harrisburg, stealing Grant's thunder; and so they nominated Packer and Perish- —Watches, Jewelry, Silver and Plated Ware constantly on hand at J. R. Stauffer's, 1.18 North Second street, Philadelphia. This house is worthy of public -patronage., Reader, bear this fact in mind. Ris card in this issue. Candidaies for °Mee. Entron:—l would be sorry to _learn.. 'that any candidate who was basely and •treacherously defeated last 'year 'by the' Thugs; should consent • to • play second die to them for the, purpose of being put upon their ticket. Yet. there are ruiners, that at least two who have bad a taste of office,are so anxious„that.they are willing , to forsake their old friends who elected 'them two years'ago.' to get another pull at the public teat. = This perhaps none of our business ,if. they; choose to take .the, risk.' But, - the consequences will lie,alftheiroivn., 'and all we min -say,tisi,-that' their - chandes are not improved,,and-wille beautifully, less, by the operation., They ;will find. too,. they, are not the, only anxious ones' who are dtiemed,to disappointment , 'anti that Thug-, gem no • matter Show' dishonest; is not yet= ; omnipotent.'. Before we stake up our minds to vote for any ,one in particular, would it not be well to - inquire' inni'the merits and demeritit of those asking our support? As the of ice: 'Sheriff is a very important one, And should` be tilled by a thorough Republican. and an honest man. I beg leave to submit a few queries to which I would respectfully ask a , .1...H0w, long since ,Mr. Hildebrand the' Thug candidate for Sheriff has belonged' to - • our party. '2..Did-he not , belong =to the Copperhead party, , until a abort time ago ? . • , , 'Were, there not during the War some strong doubts about hisloyality? ' - e4.'By what hocns pocus has he'beconae so , prominent.in the Thug Ring? 5. Does he belong to the whisky ring? • 8. If he does not belong 'to the' whisky rl ngov clikatliiirpiere - andinimactdate dia ,tiller, :AUL*. Benjamin Stauffer, take so ,active alien for him? 7.: - How much did 'he.giVe George 'Bru baker to be'put 'on 'the Thug ticket -= was it • a thouiand, or onlytiveltundreddollars. I When these queries are answered„a few more may be propounded.' d,tw - 'A REPUBLIC:A:Q. SPECIAIW2rI622r. CHt LET ,ICOTAI'RgJI7DICE USUB.?„,YOpit REASON. It iinAtc.tbsOn the mindifo r prialiy . : persons, a !,VrejudiCif.lexlSts:niainst what ar - ikeallett , patent med fileineg iffAylls i'whhOuld this Atientifou resorting an article that;bas such an tirray,of jestimony to ,support4ilts HOSTETTEW§ „ STOMACII BITTERS? -Physician - a Presaribe it ;IviiyZimettld'you discard it? Judges, usually considered men oftslent, have used and do use It in their families.; why should you reject it? Let not your prejudice usurp your reason to the ,everlasting injury of , your ; health. If you are sick, and require a Medicine, try these Bitters. When the bodily energies are worn out by anxiety And need a stimulant, this is the best that Can be taken. It is tempered and modified by hygienic herbs and roots, which prevent it from levering the blood; and hence it does not produce a mere tem porary excitement, to be followed by injurious reac floe, but communicates a permanent porency to the Seine' orits - herbal eori stituents are slightly,soporifle, so that in cases where sleeplessness is 011 E) of the necompaniments of nen , ens disease, a dose,of it taken, toward bedtime will fond to produce qUieland refreshing slumber. e For palpitation of the heart, tremors, hysterics, fainting fits, general restlessness and the causeless fears and distressing fancies to which ladies are especially 'subject, under the certain morbid conditions of mind and body peculiar to their sex; the Bitters will be found the most agreeable and certain or all cone ter frrilante. .g4';" 4 > The constitutionally nervous may,readily keep theft' infirmity in constant check by the daily use of this healthful vegetable tonic; and those who have 'shattered their nerves,'? as, the phrase is, either by imprudent indulgence or unduo physical or Intel leettml labor, will find in this vitalizing elixir a prompt restorative, rjuly3-Im. SPECIAL NOTICE. SCHENCK'S PUJJIONIC SYRUP - - - - Seaweed Tonic and Ma ndrake Pills, will cure Con sumption. Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia, if taken according to directions. They ere all three to be taken at the same time. They cleanse the stomach. relax the liver, and put it to work; then the appetite becomes good ; the food digests and makes good blood; the patient begins to grow in flesh; the dis eased matter ripens in the lungs, and the patient outgrows the disease and gets well. This is the only way to cure consumption. To these three medicines Dr. .1. H. Schenck, of :Philadelphia, owes his unrivalled success in the treatment of pulmonary consumption. The Pal monte Syrupripens the morbid matter in the lung's, nature throws it off by an easy expectoration, for when the phlegm ,or matter is ripe, a slight cough will throw It off, and the patient has rest and the lungs begin to heal.. To do this, the Seaweed Tonic and Mandrake Pills must be freely used to cleanse the stomach and liver, so that the Pulmonie Syrup and the food will nuke good blood. Schenck's Mandrake Pills act upon the liver, re moving all obstructions. relax the ducts of the gall bladder, the bile starts freely, and the liver is soon relieved ; the stools will show what the Pills can do; nothing has ever been invented except calomel deadly poison which is very dangerous to use ex cept witu great care), that will unlock a gall-bladder and start the secretions of the liver like Schenek's Mandrake Pills. iLiver Complaint is one of the most prominent causes of Consumption. Schenck's Seaweed Tonic is a gentle stimulant and alterative, and the alkali in the Seaweed, which this prescription is made of, assists the stomach to throw out the gastric juice, to dissolve the food with the Pulmonie Syrup, and it is made, into good blood without fermentation or souring in the stomach. The great reason why physicians do not cure con sumption is, they try to do too much ; they give medicine to stop the cough, to stop chills, to stop night sweats, hectic fever, and by so doing they de range the whole digestive powers, locking up the se cretions. and eventually the patient sinks and dies. Dr. Schenck, in his treatment. does not try to stop a cough, night sweats, chills or fever. Remove the ' cause, and they will all stop of their own accord. No one can be cured of Consumption, Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Catarrh, Canker, Ulcerated Throat, un less the liver and stomach are made healthy. If a person has consumptitin, of course the lungs are in some way diseasetLei tiler tubercles, abscesses, bronchial irritation, pleura adhesion, or the lungs are a mass of inflammation and fast decaying. In such cases what must be done? It is not only the lungs duo are wasting, but it is the whole body. The stomach and liver have lost their- power to make blood out of fend. Now the only chance is to take Schenck's three medicines, which will bring up a tone to the stomach, the patient will begin to next food, it will digest easilyand make good blood; then the patient begins to gain in flesh, and as soon as the body begins to grow,the lungs continence to heal up, and the patient gets fleshy and well. This is the only way to mire consumption. When there is no lung disease, and only Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia, Schein:kis Seaweed Tonic and Mandrake Pills are sufficient without the Pul monic Syrup. Take the Mandrake Pills freely in all bilious complaints, as they are perfectly harmleas. Dr. Schenck, who has enjoyed uninterrupted health for many years past, and now weighs 24.5 pounds, was wasted away to a mere skeleton, in the very last stage of Pulmonary . Consumption, his physicians having pronounced his case hopeless and Abandoned him to his fate. Ile was cured by -the aforesaid medicines, and since his recovery many thousands similarly afflicted have used Dr. Schenck's prepara tions with the same remarkable success. Full di rections accompanying each, make it not absolutely necessary to personally see Dr. Schenck, unless the pa fleets wish their- lungs examined, and for this purpose lie is professionally at his principal office. Philadelphia, every Saturday, where all letters for advice must be addressed.. He is also professionally at N 0.32 Bond Street, ew York, every other Tues day, And at No. 30 Li li. nnover Street, Boston, every other Wednesday. He gives advice free, but for a thorough examination with his Respirometer the price is $.5. °Mee hours at each city from. s A. 31 to 3 P Df. Price or the Pulmonic Syrup and Seaweed Tonic each St lia per bottle, or S't SO n half-down. Man drake Pills 2.5 cents a box. For sale by all druggists. Du. J. It. SCHENCK. - 15 N. 6th St., Phila., Pa. mr tfl A QREAT'REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF THROAT AND LUNG 'DISEASES. DR WISHART'S RISE TREE TAR CORDIAL It is the vital principle of the Pine Tree, obtained by a peculiar process in the distillation of the tar, by which its highest medical properties aro retained. Id is the only safeguard and reliable remedy which lies ever been prepared from the juice of the Pine Tree. It invigorates the digestive organs and restores the appetite. It strengthens the debilitated system. It purities and enriches the blood, and expels from the system the corruption which scrofula breeds on the lungs. It dissolves the mucus or phlegm which stops the air-passages of the lungs. Its healing principle acts upon the irritated sur face of the lungs and throat, penetrating to each diseased part, relieving pain and subduing intim tnation. It is the result of years of - Study and expe . riment, and it is offered to the afflicted with the positive as surance of its power to cure the following diseases, if the patient has not too long delayed a resort to the rnealis of cure:— Consumption of the Lungs; Cough, Sore Throat acid Breast, 13ronehitis, Liver , Complaint, Blind and Bleeding Piles, Asthma, IA hooping Cough, Diptho ria, Sc., &C. e are often asked why arc not other remedies in the market for Consumption, Coughs, Colds, and other Pnlmonary affections, equal to Dr. L. Q. Wis hart's Pine Tree Tar Cordial. We answer: Ist. It cures, not by stopping cough, but by loosen ing and assisting nature to throw off the unhealthy matter collected about the throat and bronchial tubes, causing irritation and cough. 2d. :Ido•a throat and lung remedies arc composed of anodynes, which allays the cough for awhile, but by their. eonstringing effects, the fibres become hat ' deued. and the unhealthy fluids coagulate and are retained in the system, causing disease beyond the control 01 our most eminent physicians. , The Pine Tree Tar Cordial, with its assistants, are preferable, because they remove the cause of irritation of the mucous membrane and bronchial tubes, assist the lungs to act and throw off the un healthy secretions, and purify the blood, thus scien tifically malting the cure perfect. Dr. Wishart .has on file at his office hundreds and .thousands of certificates from men and women of unquestionable character who were • once hopeless ly given d to, but through the Providence of Vint were completely restored to health by the Pine Tree Tar Cordial. A physician in attendance who can be consulted in person or by mail, free of charge. Price of Pine Tree Tur Cordial $1.20 per bottle, $ll per doz. Sent by Express ou receipt of price. Ad dress, "L. Q. C. Wishart, M. D., No. 232 N. Second street, Philadelphia, Pa." apt;-3row MANHOOD IN TilE YOUNG AND RISING GENERATION, the vegetative powers of life are strong, but in a few years how often the pallid hue, and lack-lustre eye and emaciated form, and the impossibility of appli cation to mental effort, show its baneful influence. It soots becomes evident to the observer that some depressing influence is checking the development of the body. Consumption in talked of, and perhaps the youth M removed from school and seat tato the country. This is are of the worst Increments. Re moved from ordinary diversions of the ever-chang ing scenes of the city, the powers of the body too much enfeebled to give zest to healthful and rural exercise, thoughts are turned inwards, upon them selves. If the patient he a lemnle,the approach of the men ses is looked for with anxiety. as the first symptom in which nature is to show tier saving power in ditins ing-the ejrcnintiomand rvisiting the cheek with the bloom of health: Alas! increase of appetite has grown by what it.fed on; the energies of the system are prostrated, and the whole economy is deranged. The beautiful and wonderful• period an whiehaiody and mind undergone faseinatinga change from child to woman, is looked for , in vain, the parent's heart bleeds in anxiety, and fancies the grave but waiting for its victim. - • . . MLIXEOLLOR EITILACT BUCiln, for Weaktice-s arising from excess of early indiscretion, attended with the following :symptoms: Indisposit:on to Exertion, Loss of Power, Loss of Memory, Diiuiculty of Breath ing, General Weakness, Horror of Disease, Weak Nerres, Trembling. Dreadful - Bort - or of Death. Sweats. Cold v'eet, Wakefulness. Dimness of Vision, Languor, Universal Lassitude of the Muscular Sys tem. Often Enormous Appetite with Dyspeptie,Symp toms, Hot Hands. Flushing of the body, Dryness of the Skin, Paqid Countenance and Eruptions on the Face Pain in the Buck. Heaviness -of the- Eyelids, Frequently Black Spots Plying before the Eyes, with Temporary Suithsion and Loss of Sight, Want of At tention, Great Mobility, Restlessness, with Horror of Society. Nothing is more desirable to such patients 'than Solitude, anti nothing they more dread, for Fear of Themselves': no - Repose (;sl' marmot, ' Earnest ness, no Speculation, but a hurried Transition from one question to another. •' Theseesymptornajf allowed to ;go on—which , this Medicine invaribly removes—soon, follow Loss of Power, Fatuity, and Epileptic Fits, in one of which • the patient may expire. During the Superintendence of Dr. Wilson at the Bloomingdale Asylum, this sad result occurred to two patients; reason had for a time left them, and both died of-epilepsy. They were of both sexes, and about twenty years of age. Who can say that these excesses are not frequently followed by those direful diseases Insanity aad Con sumption? - The records of the losime - Asy turns, and the melancholy deaths by Consumption, bear ample tO the truth of those assertions. -In Lunatic Asylums: the most, melancholy exhibition appears. The countenance is' actually sodden and quite des titute—neither Mirth or Grief ever visits it. Should a sound of the voice occur, it is rarely articulate. "With woeful measures wan Despair Low sullen sounds their grief beguiled." Whilst we regret the existence of the above dis eases and symptoms, we are prepared to offer an in valuable gift of chemistry for the removal of the con sequences, bielmbold's Ilighly Concentrated Fluid Extract of Huelva. There 1s t:0 tonic like it. It (son 'anchor of hope to the surgeon and patient, and this is the testimony ef all who have used or prescribed it. Sold by Druggists and - Dealers everywhere. Price_ $1.25 per bottle, or six bottles for Safie. Delivered to' any address.- Describe symptoms in all communion . _ - • ' •- Address IL T. TIELUDOLD, Drug and Chemical Warehouse, Os 4 Broadway, New York. i fre-Xone tre , genuine unless done up in steel.en. • rared'.wrapper,- with 'fae•simile of my Chemical Yarehouse, and signed - Tune 15-s.lnd&w Ir. T. .11EL3ItOLD. SP_ECIAL NOTICES. DEAFNESS, BLINDNESS alai CATARRH treated with the t1i1110.4 success, by J. Ishhcs,7ll.l)., and Professor of Direr/ate of the £lo awl Ear, (his specialty) in the afulical College of Pennsylvania, 12 aeon experience, (formerly of Leyden, holland,) No. 805 Arch street. Phila. Testimonials can be seen at his office. The Med (cal faculty are invited to accompany their patient., as he has no secrets in his practice Artificial eyes inserted without. pain. No charge for examination. rjuly3l.ly - AS THEY *RE - : '..' - ' - -'?'"' -u r We began in igel to make Improve ments in the style :and ~make of Ready-Made Clothing, and continued to do so, introducing new styles and Ideas every year. so that the entire char acter of the bUSinelOr is now vastly better and totally different -from the systems of older bosses. f Our first idea is to learn exactly i_WHAT THE CUSTOMERS WANT, and Instead of persuading hint to buy whet may be .meet conveniently at hand, we take the utmost pains to meet HIS wishes. The building we occupy is the MOST CONVENIENT SIZE, LARGEST AND , BEST ADAPTED for, our business of Lany in Philadelphia Customers can see what they are buying, our , Establishment being on the corner of three large streets, Itlar (ket, Sixth and Minor streets,) abun dant light is afforded from all direc tions. A light store is far better for customers than a dark one. f Merchants Anew that our sales are I larger than those of any other licuse iin .Philactelphia, In our line: hence we have to buy larger quantities of goods, and so get them at lower prices, es pecially as we buy altogether for cash. Buying cheapest, we cute sell cheap est. {We closely caymans every inch of goods that comes int. our Establish ment, invariably rejecting all irnf perfect, tooth-eaten and tender fab rics. [The time wasted in looking over the c.t.o , :ss of a dozen stores can Le avoided. fcr, under cuts roof, we offer for sale tan assortment equal in variety and ex tent to that embraced bye score of the t ordinary houses. iWe have 600 hands employed in the manufacture of Clothing, who . are constantly making up stork to take the place of that daily sold; this gives our customers acts and fresh goons to make selections from. l it is an undisputed fact that lour second (a largo ' Hall on our ( second finer fronting on Minor street,) .1 has nothing in Philadelphia, to equal ii,- We have hero concentrated the [best skill and workmanship, and those who prefer Clothing ' made to order really have advantages they do not re. eeive elsewhere. Ml= blip Ut VI. What Castonters Want. SIZE 31 .1 130 I 140 3"ndoto Ti Large Pur chasea. In patioit Great .Yawing I • sh Gt.ds CrWorn Deg.a t nt it •DEDUCTIONS r From all of the abovo we deduce . this onp fact, that Oak hall has ALL the I advantages of any other Clothing Es tablishments in the city, anctin addi tion these. Ist—A firm composed of young men of the present generation, fully In sympathy with the tastes of the day. 2d.—An Insight to the wants of the people and an en terprise to meet these wants, which in seven years has placed Oak Ball in a position not td ways attained in experience of twenty-five years. ' 3d.—A Building better located, better lighted, better adapted and newer in all its appointments. 4th.—Workmen, especially Cutters, .who are not only from among . the best and moat experi enced, bus are artists in their professions and couple with good work a stylishness, in which Philadelphia tailoring has been particularly deficient. . It is the liberal patronage with which wo have been favored that has enabled us to offer the un paralleled advantages, and this patronage continued and extended will Multiply advantages, which we divide between our customers and ourselves. A visit to Otia Hall will PROVE every fact above stated. WANAMABER A BROWN, OAK BALL ' Pot-matt CLOTIIINO Boost. 1 Corner Of Sixtirand Market streets. I)educ tams. ASIATIC CII9LEII<:I 4 7np SNRIs:GES. PROOF OF INTRINStC 1111Ea1r. DEAR Sins.—Miight to have acknowledged long ago the box of Pain Killer you bad the goodness to send 'me last year. lls coming was.most providential. I believe hundreds of lives were saved, under God, by it. The Cholera appeared here soon after we re ceived it. We resorted at once to the P. 51.11 MUM, using as directed for Cholera. A list was kept of all to whom the Pain Killer was given, and our native assistants assured us that eight out of every ten to whom it was prescribed ; recovered. It has, too, been very useful in various other diseases. It has proved an incalculable blessing to multitudes of poor peo ple throughout all this region. Our native preachers are never willing to go out on their excursions with out a supply of the Pain Killer.' At gives them favor in the eyes of the people, and access to families and localities by whom otherwise they would be very in differently received. Believe me; dear elrs, 'gratefully and faithfully yours. J. M. JOHNSON, ju ly3dm dins] Missionary at Swntow, Chinn. AVERS' PI EPA A YEE'S SARSAPARILLA, FOR PURIFYING THE BLOOD. The reputatios. this excellent medicine enjoys, is derived from its cures, many of which are truly marvellous. Inverate cases of Scrofulous disease, where the system seemed saturated •with corruption, have been purified and cured by it. Scrofulous affections and disorders. which were aggravated by the scrofulous contam ination until they were painfully, afflicting, have been radically cured in such great num bers in almost every section of the country that the public scarcely need to be informed of its virtues or uses. Scrofulous poison is one of the most destruc tive enemies of our race. Often, this unseen and unfelt tenant of the organism undermines the constitution, and invites the attack of en feebling or fatal diseases, without exciting a suspicion of its presence. Again, it seems to breed infection throughout the body, and then, on some favorable occasion, rapidly develop into oue or other of its hideous forms, either on the surface or among the vitals. In the latter, tubercles may be suddenly deposited in the lungs or heart, or tumors formed in the liver, or It shows Its presence by eruptions on the skin, or foul ulcerations on some part of the body. Hence the occasional use of a bottle of this Sar saparilla is advisable. even when uo active symptoms of disease appear. Persons afflicted with the following complaints generally find immediate relief, and, at length, cure; by the use of this Sarsaparilla: SG. Anthony's Fire, Rose or Erysipelas, Totter, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Ringworm, Sore Eyes; Sore Ears, and other eruptions or visible forms of Scrofulous dis ease. Also in the more concealed forms, as Dys pepsia, Dropsy, Heart Disease, Fits, Epilepsy, euralgia, and the various Ulcerous affections of the muscular and nervous systems. Syphilis or Venereal and Mercurial Diseases are cured by It, though a long time is required for subduing these obstinate maladies by any medicine. But long continued use of this medi cine will cure the complaint. Leucorrboea or Whites, Uterine Ulcerations, and female, Dis eases, are commonly soon relieved and ultimate ly cured by its purifying and Invigorating effect. Minute directions for each cuse are found in our Almanac, supplied gratis. Rheumatism and Gout, when caused by accumulations of extra neous matters in the blood l yield quickly to it, us also Liver Complaints, !torpidity, Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver, and Jaundice, when arising, as they often do, from the rank ling poisons in the blood. This Sarsaparilla is a great restorer for the strength and vigor of the system.. Those who are languid and listless, despondent, sleepless and troubled with ner vous apprehensions or fears, or any of the affec tions symptomatic of weakness, will mid imme diate relief and convincing evidence of its res torative power upon trial. Prepared by DR. J. U. AYEIt CO, Lowell, lass: Practical and Analytical Chemist's. SOLD HY ALL DRUGGLSTS EVERYWHERE upll--lwiLtw AYER'S Hair Vigor, FOR THE RENOVATION OF THE HAIR THE GREAT DESIDERATUNI OF THE AGE A dressing which 'sat once agreeable, healthy and effectual for preserving the -hair. FADED OS GRAY HAIR I$ SOON .RIZTOSED TO ITS OItI GINAt COLOR AND Tug GLOSS AND FRESHNESS OF 'remit. Thin hair is thickened, falling hair is checked, and baldness often, though not al ways, cured by its Use. Nothing can restore the hair where the follicles are destroyed, or the glands atrophied and decayed. lint sneb as re main can be saved for usefulness by this appli cation. Instead of fonling-the hair with a. palsy sediment, it will keep it clean and vigorous. Its occasional use will prevent the hair from turn ing gray or falling off, and consequently prevent baldness. Free front those deleterious sub stances which make some preparations danger ous and injurious to the hair, the Vigorcan only benefit but not harituits If wanted merely for a 11 A I It •DRESS G , nothimr, else eau be found so desirable. Con taining neither oil nor dye,lt does not soil white cambric, and yet lasts longer on the hair, giving it a rich glossy lustre and a grateful perfume. Prepared by Dn. T. C. AYER & Co., Practical and Analytteal Chow.fats, _ _ _ _LOWELL, MASS, ont.3l'Mlychal PRICIER] 60 1000 LIVES LOST! ONE LIFE SAVED. ' bfothers, why will you let your children waste away and - die? • - • 'Thousands of lives are yearly lost for the want of a Safe, certain and pleasant remedy for REXFORD'-S • MEDICATED GINGERBREAD .NUTS snppty thls - Wanti. are pleasant to take, act:promptly. and are perfectly harmless. CHILDREN CRY FOR. THEM.. One dose lately relieved t. child of over' one thousand worms, and saved its life. Do not de lay. Use them at once, - and see your children speedily restored to health. For sale by all druggists. PRICE 25 CENTS PER BOX. - F. C. WELLS S CO., Proprietors apls-lythtnvl - - • -New York. • TEAM - PRINTING:---Call at the § Steam Printing House of the COLUMBIA 17:rear of Columbia. National Bartic;:and-oir amine specimens of Letter IlearlaXotes,Cardstke "Ik;VEDDIN 'CARDS I neatly pri G- titAd at tble Office
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