The originay puree of .all executive and legislative perv:er is, Abe' same—the peo ple; the warrant and lee - astir° of those powers the samee,the Constitution. In his constitutionol and legislative sphere, in the exercise and conduct of his depart ment, the President iti - as free to act and as independent as Congress. While acting within the bounds pre scribed for it by the Constitution,• he is op.:mare accountable or responsible to Congresathan Congress is to him. Con gress has no more authority to censure and' condemn him than he has to censure and condemn Congress. His discretion exercised within the bounds of the Con stitution, is no more subject- to the ani madversion or reproof of Congress than are. the .constitutional and discretionary acts of. Congress to his. . -Neither Congress or the President has any porters or authority not derived from and fated in the Constitution. The only qneatfon ~with reference to which the oommittee were authorized to enquire was whither the charges against the Frieldent were true; and constituted an offense or offenses subjecting him to im peachment. Certainly if this is not the only.question referred to the committee, it is the only question which the commit tee, as such, hal investigated. The political purpobse by the acts of the President has not for one moment engag. ed the attention of the committee. We most certainly have no other motive than to serve'our country and do our duty.— In the matters referred to us we have never once,.in the taking of testimony or the examination of witnesses, supposed that any question other than the impeach ment befere us. The impeachment of the President, thief officer of this great 134 Republic, th re inquiry with a view to ascertain whet er he bad committed any offense for, which he ought or might bo put upon trial before the most august tri bunal of the world, impressed ue from the beginning with most solemn awe. We endeavored, in the investigation, to exclude from our minds every ques tion of mere . politics, and, as far as possi ble, to be uninfluenced by . party bias.— We were admonished that in one sense, the nation, the people, in the person of their Executive head, were on trial before the world, and --that personal animosity and party politics should be inflexibly and scrupulously forgotten and ignored. irldt!tiny cause, to have shrank from a full and careful investigation of the great question of impeachment, was cowardice; to hare pursued it in the spirit of party, to have degraded it into a mere investi gation of politiCal policy, with reference to partisan success, would have been meanness, and would have degraded the nation itself by scandalizing the nation's constitutional head. We repeat, therefore, that the investi gation of the committee was, so far as we took part in it, with the sole view to ascertain whether the President, under .the charge preferred against him, was guilty.of any impeachable offense. Not only so, but with the belief that it was the on'y question we were authoriZed or expected to inquire into. Not a witness was called or examined with any view to proving a case for merely censuring or condemning the political action of the President. No suggestion was made, or intimation given by the majority of the committee, till the resolution of censure was offered, that there, was any purpose of consider ing, as a committee, any'but the question of impeachmern, nor was there then, as we understand it, any purpose of report ing such resolutions in the House, for its official action. We think, therefore . , 'that we are warranted in saying, that although mach testimony, irrelevant, illegal, and experimental, was taken much that had no bearing upon the question of impeach ment, and much more that-was not testi mony in any case, or for any purpose ; that none was take,n with any view except the inTeraehment, and hence we insist that, if the committee had the right and jurisdiction, which we deny, to inquire hit° the political end discretionary acts of the President, with a view to his con demnation, that it has not in any legiti mate and proper manner, investigated, or attempted to consider that subject. We do not impugn the personal • motives of any member of the committee who differs with ne gar intercourse upon the com mittee.has been pleasant,; and the courte sy with which we have been treated, uni form and uninterrupted. We entertain none but the most kindly personal feelings towards every member, but candor and a sense of duty compels us to declare that we can find no warrant or excuse for this traveling outside or be yond the subject with which the commit tee was charged, to censure and condemn the President, except in the prejadice and zeal of overheated partisanism. The President needs and can ask no , defense from us upon party grounds or upon any other than those which spiing - from octal obligation and duty.. lie Was not die President'of oar choice and linit !Loot elected by our votes, nor is it 'necessary that we should agree With him "or justify or approve all be has done-- Neither do we feel called upon to review all.tbesreat mass of testimony taken by tWo nOmmittee, to show that his censure add condemnation are not warranted by thOngh taken ab it has been, and un 'challenged as it 'was. In that regaid, we do not, however, believe the unbiased, the unprejudiced mind wilt be able in tke testimony to dis. cover any just or reasonable cause for condemning or , impugning the motives by which be was actuated. Indeed, dif fering with him in opinion, as we have, ea to the policy and propriety of 'many things he Has done, and nutty More that be has left undone, we feel; WmPelled to declare that the proofs before us will not warrant a charge that be was in any in. stance . controlled. by motives . other _than those pure and.. - patriotio..- His greatest otentle,, we apprehend, will be found to be that hp has not been able or willing to follow those who elect ed him to his office in their mad assaults upon and departure from the constitu tional government of the fathers of- the Republic, and that, standing where most of his party professed to stand when they elevated him to his present exalted pod tion, he has dared to differ with the ma jority of Congress upon great and vital questions. He - has believed in the con- - i and - bindine , obligations of the Constitution, that the suppression of the rebellion against the Union was the pres , ervation of the Union and ,the States composing it and that when the rebellion was put down, the States were all and ' equally entitled to representation in the Congress of the United States. Planting himself firmly and immovably upon this position, he has incurred the fierce and malignant hatred and opposi tion of all those who claim, by virtue of the allegpd conquest of the territory, and the subjugation of the people of the latply ! rebellious States, the power and right to dictate to them the constitution and laws they shall live un der, and the liberties they shall be per mitted to enjoy. , In this difference be tween Congress and the President, • and the desire of each for the adoption by the country of their respective views, is, we suppoSe, to he found not only the cause for the movement to impeach the President, but of his censure and con demnation. Out of it has grown the em bittered feeling and violent hatred of the President by his former friends. 'The majority of Congress and of the committee have entertained, and been prepared to declare at all times, in Con gress and out of it, even more strongly than is, expressed in their report, the same censure and condemnation. This opinion was not formed upon any testimony tak en before the committee, or upon any facts elicited-by its investigation. It was a political opinion growing out, of a dif ference of views upon political questions. It was the opinion with which the major ity of the committee entered upon the in vestigation.. It was that which inspired and stimulated all its inquiries and exam inations. But notwithstanding these pre existing opinions and prejudices, the mi nority of the. committee have been com pelled to find, after , the fullest examina tion and the most protracted deliberation, that the President had committed no of fense for which, under our laws, he can or ought to be impeached, and hence none, as we insist, subjecting him to the official jurisdiction of the committee of the House. , The eenstA and condemnation President, either by the majority or ority, is without our jurisdiction, not jus tified by the facts or 'becoming one de partment of the government toward the other, and calculated to bring reproach upon the committee, the House v and the nation. We cannot ignore the fact that time has-been spent, and testimony taken by the committee, endeavoring to ascer tain if the President, in his oTtcial capaci ty, has spoken censurously or condemna tory of Congress, with a view to his im peachment. Therefore, can it be more becoming in a committee of, this House, or in the House itself, to go beyond its jurisdiction and censure and condemn the President, than for him to censure and condemn Congress? Is not the impropriety of the one as apparent as the other? If one is im peachable, is not the other wrong? What would be thotight of the Supreme Court' if, after having been compelled, in a case properly pending before it, td decide an act of Congress constitutional, it should, becausl3 it did not agree to the propriety or policy of the enactment, declare its se vere censure. and condemnation of Con gress for having passed it? Who would hesitate to pronounce this an unjustifiable and even an unwarrantable interference with the rights and duties of Congress by the Supreme Court calculated to die verb the harmony or vur governmental system, and to bring into unhappy, if not fatal, collision, the ;so-ordinate depart ments ? Like this attempt to censure or reprove the President for acts or wrongs not amounting to offenses subjecting him to the legal jurisdiction of the House of Representatives, such an act would, it seems to us, be sheer impudence; an act on the part of the court justly meriting obloquy and reproach:, Such interferen ces by one department of the government with the others, without authority of law, must and will most assuredly break off that courtesy which should at all times' characterize their relations and inter conrse.! i The end cannot but be forseen ; the antagonism will ultimately produce enmity, open hostility and aggression, which mast result in the destruction of one or more departments, and, as a cense (pence, destroy our system of . govern ment. Altogether, with all due 'respect to the Majority of the committee , we can not regard the charges ninde against the President as a. serious attempt to pro cure his htipeachment, without dwelling upon their utter failure to, point to the conanaissien of a sing,le act that is recog nized by the lawS 'of our country us 'a high crime or misdemeanor. ' The inconsistency of the majority can not fail to challenge the attention of the country. 'Acts for ,tvbich Mr. Limeoln w as unanimously 'applauded are deethed high cruses iii Mr4ohtison. For every act so'gravelY condemned, the President had the sanction approval of his Cab inet, and yet while - he is arraigned hifore the world as a erithinal of they deepest dye, they are ,noLOnly not' irepeached, but are recognized 'as especial fayorites, of the party of impeadiment, 'The 'latter have even - gone. so far as to unite in the passage of an extraordinary and unprece dented law to prevent the President from removing these officers from the• places ililliclrthey hold. Mr: Stanton, the late Secretary of War', gave his emphatic approval of the acts for which the President is arraigned; and yet the el-Secretary is a favorite and popular martyr, and the whole country is vexed with clamors for his restoration to power and place. The President is held criminally responsible for the acts of sub ordinates of which he did not even have the slightest notice or knowledge; and yet those bringing him to trial' enact a statute depriving: him of all control over. these same subordinates, and they are deemed worthy of the especial protection of Congress. 4 The President has used every means within his power.to bring the great,StatS prisoner,' Jefferson Davis, to a speedy trial, and yet he has been denounced throughout the land for procrastinating and preventing the trial, while judges and prosecuting officers, having entire control of the matter, have been deemed worthy of the most honored plaudits. Were ev er inconsistencies more glaring and inex pli6able than these, and can we possibly be mistaken when we assert that, how ever honest may be the majority of the committee, the verdict of the country and posterity will be, that the crime of the President consists not in violations, but in refusals to violate the law ; in be ing unable to keep pace with the party of progress in the rapidly advancing movements, or to step outside of and above the Constitution in the adrninistra tide of the government; in preferring the Constitution of his country to the dicta tion of an unscrupulous partisan cabal ; in daring to meet the uialedictious of those who have arrived at the accom plishment of a most wicked and danger ous revolution, rather than to encounter the reproaches of his own conscience and the curses of posterity throughout time ? If the subject were not too grave and se rious a one for mirth, some of the.grounds of impeachment presented by the majori• ty would certainly bo sufficiently awns- The President is gravely arraigned for arraying himself against the loyal people of the country in vetoing the miscalled reconstruction acts of Congress, when, without dwelling upon the constitutional right and duty of the President in . the premises, Congress itself has for the same acts just, received the most withering and indignant condemnation and rebuke from the entire people from Maine to Califor nia. Ihe impeachers, forgetting that they have been themselves impeached, and that the verdict of the tribunal of last re sort has already been rendered # gainst them,' still persist in trifling with - - the peace, safety, and prosperity of the coun try, by precipitating upon it this danger- ' ous question, at a time so critical as this. It is wicked thus to, trifle with the inter-. ests of a nation, and disregard the voice of a great people, when spoken, as in this case, so emphatically in favor of the pres ervation of our constitutional form of gov ernment, and the rights and liberties es tablished by out Revolutionary fathers. We should not attempt to add any thing to the able, and as we believe, un answerable argument just presented by the Chairman of oar committee, upon the law of impeachment, had not experience taught us the wonderful diversity of hu , man judgment and conclusions. We should Lind it difficult to believe that there could, upon the questions submit' lel to us, possibly be two opinions among candid and intelligent men. Blind bigot ry and unbridled partisan rage, it is true, can see no crime ip the most meritorious actions-, and men governed by these un hallowed passions do not hesitate to drag to the stake and the torture of the inquisition, all who will not conform to their wretched creeds and miserable dog mas. They substitute their own crude and often crazy theories for truth and justice, -nd under pain of the severest penalties demand of all men to bow down and worship the idol the have erected. That their own judgment may be fallible, or that other men, differing from them, may be equally wise and honest with them selves, does not occur to their minds;— and they will without hesitation, ques tion the justice even of the Almighty, if the ways of Providence do not conform to their own crude theories. This class of men has constituted a con siderable portion of mankind in all ages, and in none have they been more nume rous than in our own. They have furn i.hed the bigots And persecutors of ail times; and their pathway through ~the long line of history, from its earliest dawn the present time has been marked with carnage and desolation. With such melt, no argument based upon the Con stitution and established laws can have any effect. They are too pure and im maculate to be fettered by the restraint of constitutional or written laws. They are of law unto themielves, and both men and gods must conform to their views and theories, or receive their bit. terest maledictions. But our people will never submit to have their Chief Magis trate arraigned for trial for offenses un known to the laws,'and which exist only in the heated 'brains of his 'political ene mies. It would - be a pereedent disastrous in its consequences, and subversive of our political institutions. • We cannot doubt, that the evidence herewith, this day submitted, will be re ceived with - one universal burst of Wig natiOn by4he American people.- If they retain any - juit pride in their countrpand itsinstitutiona, they- will blush- to find .that the ohief officer of their government has for-ten mouths - be'en,!subject to the scrutiny ofa secret star - chamber, an in orisition unparalleled in -itst character' in the annals of civilization. ... A drag-net bas been put to catch. every malicious whisper throughout the land, and all the vile vermin, 'Who bad gossip or slander to retail, hearsay or otherwise, have been permitted to appear and . place it upon record for the delectation of man kind. Spies have been sent overthe land to hear Something which might blacken the name and character of the Chief Mag istrate of our country. Unwhipped knaves have given information of tabu 'mar letters and documents, that, like the ignis fatuus, eternally elude the grasp of their,pursuers, and the chase ever result ed only in aiding the depletion of the public Treasury. That mosti•notorions character, Gener al Lafayettte C. Baker, Chief of the De tective force, even had the effrontery to insult the American people by placing his spies within the very walla of the Execu tive mansion. The privacy of the Pre..si dens's home, his private life and habits and most secret thoughts, have not been deemed sacred or exempt from invasion. The members of his household have been examined, and their chief prosecutor has not hesitated to dive into loathsome dungeons and consort with convicted fel ons for the purpose of accomplishing the object of arraigning the President on the charge of infamous crime. When we consider all these facts, any. that the investigation has been a secret and ex parte one, carried on at a time of unparalleled party excitement, when the President has been hunted down as no man was ever hunted down before, it is really wonderful that so little has been elicited that tends in the slightest degree to tarnish the fair fame of the Pret-idt•tit. Iu what we have said of the evidence taken before us, we must not be consider ed as reflecting upon the action of the committee or any member thereof. In an examination before a committee it would be impossible to confine the evi dence to such as would be admissible be• fore a court of justice. The first witness examined was General Lafayette C. Raker, late Chief of the Det ective Police, and although examined on oath, time and again and no various occ asions, it is doubtful whether he has in any one thing told the truth, even by accideyt. In every important statement he is co'n tradicted by witnesses of unquestioned credibility, and there can be no doubt, that to many previous outrages, entitling him to au unenviable immortality, be.has added that of w il;h1 and deliberat e perjury. We are glad to know that no one mem ber of the committtee deemed any state ment made by him as worthy. of the slightest credit. What a blush of shame wtU tinge the cheeks of the American Student in future ages, when •he reads bow this miserable wretch fior years held, as it were, in the hollow of his hand, the liberties of the American people ; that clothed With poWter by a reckless adminis tration, and with his hordes of unprinci pled:tools and spies penetrating the land everywhere, with uncounted thousands of the people's money placed in his bands for his vile purposes that creature not. only had the power to arrest without crime or writ, and imprison without limit, any cit izen of the Republic, but that he actually did so arrest thousands all over this land, and filled the prisons all over the country with the victims of his malice or that of his master. This whole system, such an outrage up on the Constitution and every principle of free government, anti-American and anti republican, has ; with its originators and supporters, thank God, been damned to eternal infamy; and it, is pleasant. to reflect that not only the system but its uncrupul agent, will go down to posterity loaded with infamy and followed by the curses of millions. It sometimes happens that the admin istration of the most dangerous ugnrpa-. tion is placed in the hands of men so re spectable for character and talent as to disarm suspicion, and conciliate even these whose liberties are endangered. We have reason to be thankfhl to an ever kind and merciful Providence, that the worst feature of the worst despotism, when the attempt was made, in an unhap py hour, to transplant it to our free American soil, was placed, for its admin istration, in the hands of a class of men so destitute of tnanhood and character as to arouse the undying scorn of the entire people; and as these infamous outrages were not sanctioned by any precedent in our own country, it is hoped and believed that they will never, throughout all time, be deemed worthy of imitation. It is not• our purpose now to' attempt an analysis or discussion of the evidence ta ken before us, or to point out the gross absurdities and inconsistency of a very large portion of it. It will be read and be considered by.the American people, and we cannot doubt what their verdict Will be when those who have bk.n attending to load with disgrace and infamy the Chief Magistrate of our county, shall stand pil. loried in the undying scorh and •indigna tion of ¢ great people. Re': after passing through this fietv or deal, we have no hesitation in predicting, will haVe, and retain, all over the land, even to n greater extent than heretofore, the respect and confidence of his country man. (Sigliqd) S. S. .111insnALL, CHARLES A. ELDRIDGE. Fenians Executed. MANCHESTER. Nov. 21—Noon.—Allen, 'Arlon and Gould, the corivietedTeniatis, :have been 'executed, All is quiet here. l , yi Porrrsistotmatl3o.,-#.--Frank Johes, DomOiat, haS been elected Mayor orthis pity by 50` iurjority, in a. tote! . vote of 2- 052, the largest vote ever cast here: " rfsier r roen Nov. 25.--At tbe towro.'ol - -.held here to-day, thq,Demactitie ' ticket was elected by en .arerago niajoriiy. of 500. oltr.ost. pmernt. A. 3.,GERRITSON, Editor' MONTROSE, .TUESDAY, Dice. a, 1867. The Impeachment Bubble. The impeachment fever reached the crisis last week by the sudden conversion of the odd member of the committee,(who bad been reported to have failed in ob taining certain favors from the President,) and the appearance of a lotig, violent,but weak rtrajority report in favor of impeach multi which was presented to the House. We print, minoriOeports. This action of the defeated Radicals is one of the tbolish and wicked steps taken by them, which ensures their downfall. The end of this -will be a debate about impeachment and 'a -Democratic victory in 1868. I=l= Trial of Jeff. Davis. Chief Justice Chase, who wants to be President, and therefore dreads to have his secession theories 'ventilated, was ab sent from Richmond on Nov. Al, when the U. S. Circuit Court opened, and as no " judge" was present except Underwood, the Davis trial was put over till the 4th Wednesday Of March next ; at which time Chase will no doubt again manage to dodgetl•e trial. Greeley 3: continue as bail fur Davi,+. --► CM .0-- The Great Democratic Victory in the Empire State. Ofli6ial returns froin all the counties, says the Albany Argus, give the Demo cratic State Ticket 373,886 voles, and the Radical State ticket 324,017 votes, mak ing a Democratic majority of 49,569! In 165,when Slocum and Barlow were candidates for Secretary of State, Slocum received 272,76 U votes, and BarloW 300,- 254 vote.k; Bal low's majority, 27,4131. The comparison of this year's vote should be made with that of 1865; when the election . W3R for the same class of State officers. therefore be teen that the in creased Detnocratic vote over 18(15 is 104- 1.20 'Yhe Democratic vote thi4 year is the largest vote ever polled by any political party in this state ! New Jersey The official Democratic majority hi New Jersey is 1;921. The vote was as folio : Democratic 65,431 ; Radical 48,- 507. The Democracy hold 18 counties and the Rads 3. Democratic gain, over 20,000 in one y , ear • • Doings in Congsess. Nov. 25.—Senate met; first item of bu siness was reception of petition from Alas ,, tichusetts for negro female suffrage in District of Columbia. In the 'lonic Air. Butler offered a to the effect that the national indebted ness shall be paid in exact accordance with the acts of Congress creating it ; that is, tbro, all debts contracted to be paid in gold are to be so paid, and 01 not b o contracted, to be paid in lawful money of the United States. The Judiciary committee being ready with reports on impeachment, the majori ty report of some 150 printed pages wa'S partly read and then dispensed with. The conclusion is that "In accordance wif the lestimony herewith submitted, and the view of the law herewith presented, the committee is opinion that Andrew Johnson; President of the United. States, is guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors, requiring the interposition of the constitutienal power of the House on that," Jre. It closes, with the resolution: Resolved, That Andrew Johnson, Pres ident of the United States, be impeached for high crimes and misdemeanors. Mr. Wilson,,of lowa, chairman of the committee, presented a minority report for himself and Mr. Woodbridge; the con clusion of which is as follows: We therefore declare that•the case be fore tis, piesented by the testimony and measured by, the law; does not disclose such • high crimes and misdemeanors, within the meaning of the Constitution, as requires the interposition,of the consti tutional power of this House, and recom mend the adoption of the following 'reso lution: RAcilved, That the Committee on the Judiciary be discharged fiont further con sideration of the proposed 'impeachment Of the President of the United States, and that the subject,,he laid up:in the table,, l!larstail,, of lilinnis;, on behalf of himself and Mr. Eldridge, stated that ,they fully concurred in the resollitiMijnst offered•by the,chairMan, and'also eel-Murr y ed entiriy` with the arguments presented by the chairman with reference to the governing the ease, and the application of the eviience thereto;, but ‘here were on ,tlecondaif . pothis Matt* Of ',difference between' thern'and.their nsseociates•Wil ,sen 'and Vi r eodbridni and le therefore presented" the Vieivs _ of himself and - Mr. Mr. Eldridge„ The reports Were all laid :On the; table: end' ordered ; Vo' . Printed; subjp . MTW4s pbstponed and _made ibe„sPecialoller ter Wednesday, Poi:. 4. t.. The 'Speaker 'announced • . tees: Judge Woodward is on Mining and. Private Land Clain s. Nov, 20.—rIt1 the Senate Mr. Morril in troduced a bill looking to the resumption of specie payments.: It provides•that the Secretary of the Treasury be authorized after July 4, 1889, to 'Jay legal tender notes in coin when pretented ; the second section .requires, the Seeretaty of the Treasury to sell any excess of Coin over 875,000,000, which may be in the Treasu ry after paying the interest on the public: debt, and deducting the gold certificates; the fourth section requires the banks to redem their notes in coin or United States legal tender notes, after July 4, 1869. Tho bill was laid on the table and ordered to be printed. The Senate was.in executive session for about three hours this afternoon, and the result of its proceedings is the confirma tion of the following named gentlemen, whose nominations had been lying over since the taking of the recess at !the July session, namely ! Horace Greeley, Minis ter to Austria • A. C. Hunt, Goyernor of. Colorado; and Horace Capron,of Commissioner of Agricu ture. House not in session. ie~n..blyertisentenis. VASSAR COLLEGE for Young I f ddieA. The Trustees, orthie institSflon, dceirin4to ea tend tiro benefits of Mr. VSISEFIT'S munificent gift forth° better education of young women ovill adtait, at any time in the Collegiate Year, stodente p 7 pareo to join college classes, charging expenses only from the dOts of their reception. Terme low; great fncilitlea for ed. ecation, sorb an Cabinets, Art Gallery. Library, Marita l Conservatory, eze. For circulars coo teinio g full infer , mat OP address. J. N. SCHOU, Poughkeepele, N. Y. THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST! 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It ERPLuIN ?WE flEn TALENT in all Depart It 4 corps of Editors, Con dre.,Compri.el motny of the he9tlFatmers. Planters, Wool Growers, Graziers, riorticrdttuiers, a te , nod also Authans,,btboLarS, of note and ability. In brief the Ittnat. le Ably Edited, Profusely Illustrated. No, tly Printed—Practical. Seten• tier, Panful—Moral, lingructive and Et.t,prtainiw,. , Wherever loeated—lu Cop utry. VlPageor City— YOU WANT THE RURAL !, 'TOIIIIIMIILT AND PALEN DEANTAJISIT IT! For it is adapted to the wants or sill Note that it is not' sonontitly. bet 4 Large and Bead Ufa) Wed/l;, that Vol. XIX will be materia 113 'Fills/ d. Enda N. contains Eight Double Qitarto PR:CA. print ed in extra style—Clear Pype, Good I , ,,pec, and m o r e and better ILLVSTRAT/ON. than any other Journal ut its Claes. A Title Page, Index, &T.. at close or Sul. f 3,00 a peat; to Clubs of ten. $2 20 porcopy. Vol. XIX begio.a JUL 1. 1:363. Now ia' the time to enbserite andejifl great O ff er% to Mel) Agre•ntS. 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A truthful adviser to the married and those contemplating marriage, who entertain.donhte of their physical, condition. sent r free of ,postarro anr arcs's, ori 'receipt of 24 coats in stamp or thctierml cur 'revey, by addressint LA CH01%,.N0. St Maiden Lane, Albany, Vie : Anther may be.conenited up on any of the dieeases•-apen Which thls lidolc treats, el ther personally or biddiclatis pentto 41 1 Y Part of the world., • „ • .-..Coneumptiq Loan be Cured. „ _ .The true Remedy at last discovered, I.lphnnee Paten' ?SEAT Cunn, prepared front the formula of Pent Trues :echo of. Pails; cure .Consumption; •Lung Discuses- Bronchitis, Dyspepsia. Afaimunne,Gyucral llebilityand all Morbid conditions of the system dependent" Oh defi ciency orvatal forc,e,- It i pleseant to tastejsada sin• Fie bottle will convince the meet skeptical of the virile oft iko great hcalitigxemedy of rtioUgo: ; sl'nboiiie. 4 or sin bottles for ft.s. tlent.hy..xxpreas. sold by S. UP HAM, No. 25 booth Bth at., Philadelphia, and principal :Drogghtts.: Circular& 444 frceE., , • r J T C44 Wi ll PATENT WE4TANE.STRlPS.—An.ex amination of Its m4lts wiR cotivinco'ap'oun th at Torre `d Wonthrs Ettipsoricel all ot Send il)natratedtircular. Agents winaject eypry,tnivn. 8..8°, 4", TORRHYI .V/Coi,:_t3oter2lantitieturert, l2 MaidouLlintr,NowSol)r- - , ..• ;., • • : c? Thitepagulacently ; filni4rated ited!ast 11ookiN cos taintilP in!ilOrtatti PbOtoludictillutot melon, for Men and wean; aeat.traeolajgcelpGot 15Cente. byaddivelF Ing the Samba, ogebq Now. York )1611calyprsOy , ICo 90011atert plsieirMvOlrork 'City..