PI TTSBUR (i H GAZETTL' =M=UI PITT.S:RIIROH;.,. wviirrsliAr MORNING, APRIL 25',-18M:*; C 2 1 . E0 Adverthecria—terither Vie Editorial !Loom :-.'arprtattairsidablutonettortlis - Dady adze/gaze carried' hodedra their notiepstoippeal. :ii.thigisperatt Monday iveainx; .ICL'pLtsm kind them fn fiereaftee Rai— Advance ?apneas.— . " taken far the Daly or Weskit' Gazette. ..edem 'Payment la reeds la ulnae. Mimeses, tha " thee bitm to which the imbecriptloa Is paid. the paper • willhe luverlably stoned, =less the imberriptiao t. to neared br adman ParteorA. All tranzieot ideerUelait. „,„,„, description. will be required to be paid Pa ad • eA ree. The only etetetlens .111 be where special month. 1 7 - o r rearlr contracts are made. _ arplaair • b ,WeeklrGazeue.—The Wand's . heulstioss ofooi Viotti Gisette offers to our Imminesernat mot Seeizable - medinin or Luskin their business kuorn One eirtubithsu Is beeves:nus and firs thou:mud; resehinS aimed seers merchant, insmstieturer and shap-toeuer In Western Nonsrinusta and lesstsrn Oblo. . _ n. K nu ruate7 chi - gtaith, twig and mw connected with the Ptusburgur Coulter.. te authorised to solicit maticriptiatts .11 sivertherteuts tar the Pittsburgh thsette,secopling to Our published Lams Pittsburgh Huth 1. 19th. . _ Removal . . • ' , MR OFFICE of the Pitteturge - Gazette lbla been temovAll intim nen building on FliTh great, j m net above linaltlllielid, and inimediataly adjoining the othallat Pnitoatant Church. artuling Matter •on'tittelic snits Of this hispetr COUNTRY BONES FOR CITY BUSINESS - • MEN. t In thin cloning article, the subject chosen for discussion and enforcement may be considered by 6013113 as irrelevant .and as more appropriately belonging to a beading admitting of a more gen eral range. This is true; but still it is so appliz -tablet° that targetless et persons who naturally, and from the influence of early education, sigh ferticoeutry home, but are always, putting off the day of anticipated enjoyment under the plea made to their fainilies and their consciences that a competency must first he acquired, and then the enjoyments will cotne,.that wo have chosen to close our aeries with an article on this subject, 'chosen almost entirely from a paper publiahed in the "North British Review," for May 1854. The article is entitled "British and Continental characteristic," and its object is to show the different Views taken of the °Wect and aims of life, and what is regarded competency by Englishmen and Americans, :ohabitants of continental Europe. The writer, after noticing a pleasant French . publication which shows how much real social happiness and real enjoyment can be taken oat of a very little of this world's goods, proceeds to remark that the extremes of character in civil ized man are to be found in the Asiatic and the American—the silent, dignified, placid and stag , nant Mussalman—and the striving, pushing, restless and progressive Yankee: Oar own coon ,: try is plabed in one of the extremes—enjoying - the pleasant eminence of one of. the exaggerated types of civilized humanity. Between those ex treme live the easy and joyous Celt, generally contented_ with the' passing hour, but often contented with - too little; the stationary and phlegmatie German of the South, cautious, unas fruial and complacent; the Norwegian, whose life in most things resembles that of his Teutonic, brethera; the Salsa; who approximate he nearest to the Anglo-Saxon; and finally the British, only a few degrees less ambitions, insa tiable unristing and discontented than their western offspring. The writer then gives a rapid sketch of the state of society in regard to physical comforts in. various countries on the continent of . Enropn, and ahows conelusively that although there is less aggregate wealth, and less progress, as it is termed, the n in England and America, there is more eer • oty of a comfortable livelihood, more freedom fr m care, less harrowing anxiety, and far lets .. .11 Poverty- There is less exagger ated weal , bat truer comfort. The rich are not so we thy, and the poor aro not sunk into . such depth of physical and social. degradation. Speaking o the French, the writer says: "They e the best of what theyhave,instead of anxious] striving to increase it. They-. cut — their coat • .rding to their cloth." They are not torment d by the desire to imitate or to equal those to wh... fortune has been more bountiful. They are con anted to injoyorliiie their analogues, in England •uhl be fretfully laboring to argufret . They are no as ire are, for ever haunted by some thing in the • • lance to be obtained or to be es caped. The' do not, like ps, immolate the pos sessed pres on the shrine of an uncertain fa . tyre. They do not pull dom their house to build their mon ~ e nt. They perform cheerfully and faithfully t. sir humble and, perhaps, uninter esting tune ens, and devote the rest of their time to sin e, social, . .unambitious enjoyments. There are ,o era again, who finding themselves at their en ce into life in possession of mod ' erate compe ence—a small patrimonial inherit ' anee—ilelib rately pause to decide on their' Ca reer. - On e one side lay the possibilities of wealth, the ands tif distinction, the gratification of comme or - political emcees, to be pur chased by h ing and irritating strife, by cork ing cares, severe and unremitting toil. On the-other li the charms of a life of unwiring ease, of quie nights and unanxious days, of the free enjoyment of the present hour—something of a butterfl existence, in short Nine Yankees out of ten w .uld choie the former, nine French. men out of a will prefer the latter. We do not hire intend . pronounce which is right; bat it is bard to p rsusde ourselves that all the wie der:ay/lithe true estimate Olthe objects and the worth. of lit lies with tho - man who decides for the thornier. rid rougher path." .The rerie ernext turns. his attention to the state of libel ty in. England and America. Tic _ describes 0 , , characteristics with a master baud, which none - • read without instruction. "Now let us cast a glance at the contrasted tower Engl It and American social existence ; hit i we may class them ther, for the main differ -nice is, that in Anieri our state of struggle ii m even ore anisette], &carried on under more favorable prispects of =tons.. And wo have a taw who cling to the "even tenor" of existence as - the prefers le State ; in our exaggerated and ..caricaturing escudo/its scarcely any such are to be found. Now, we are` no advocates for a life of iliac on and repose. Activity is better than stagaat on • exertion in pursuit of any Ob-' ject, is belt than ' an existence with no object at all. We k ow: well that out- of dissatisfaction' __ with our p sent condition 11%70 arisen all our successful eq'uests of higher and more desira ble towlitioas; . that to the restless energy and aspiring teitoper of . the - Aoglo-,qaxon may be . traced a lalge .preportion of the - material pro ' greas, and u t a little of the intellectual progress of the world : ; that civilization; if it does not toe aist in perpetual advance, at• least owes its ori gin and present perfection to perpetual endeavor. Bat we .cannot permit ourselves to regard the struggle to lie rich as worthy of admiration _for itself. We cannot bring oitristilves to'regard the :gallant and Persevering:energy which is devoted to "getting on In life," as consecrated to a high, aim. We cahnot persuade ourselves st once, and without inquiry, as many, do, to pronounce the life that enjoys, as ipso Jae:* and per. ae, - meaner than - the life that toils. We mourn over energies wasted by misdirection, .us mueli - as over ener gies‘ guru. ad to lie dormant and din oat. The man who ethics for a clear duty or a noble prize As Wend . qnition a higher and worthier being than the man who glides ' through life. in happy, -and innocent 'tranquility; but , weare by, no so sure: that the man who,basing a milt 'delta, , pen years, and strength, and :spirits, and temper , ' striving for s fortune, bps made a 'riser or abe choice than the man who, 'hay ing a competince, sits down thankfally and to enjoy it with his family and friends. 21; be able t. 4 make "the future and the distant predominateiover the present," la unquestionably ' to have ris.ifilg the wale of .thinkiog beings; . but itby no means follows, that whatever is . dis taut and future ought to predominate over what: - ispresentandat-band.l Ws agree altogether in the tone of the follewing.remarks front the pettier our first and most genial political economist; • • -- •"I eannonwesrat a otattenary datiedracitel and wealth with thennaftsotednendon manifested toward. It by Do. 1 - Mint econom'sto of the old school. I ma Ladined to be. •• line that It would br,• on the *We. S very sonsleeraMe iMMOVOSIMIOC on our weer- nt condition. I confess I am not dunned with theddest of life 6•14 out ly [ham who thick Ind the normal state of human talus le that of •=, that the =g r a:llf: on Noah otheesettlela fogfir.r. .Ming type of weal life are the tent desirable lot of human Mod. or anything truth. dbsimnr. , abh. , ymplena of one ol the ohms of advstria program The north :ern and soldd a Slims of Amm.ea are a 111.411101 i of I.IIIS '•rtsgerof in vary feraraldedreumetaneem bay ' lug apparently got-rld enialislitudie•sand ineemmtt. Ws that aff of tenons Of Canendan nee and of the man sax, while the oropurt.lon potol'ation to amino' and laud la ouch al to !We abundance to everr able Ladled • • member of the community r hddoes not forialt it by mi. aoudad: - They . bare Ms points of eltutism, and thoy - have mooned and att that then sdiantates mom as yet to bens done Po than triotwithatandlos.eome bond., .ens =tons vet a better tendency) le: that the Hie of the whole of one see is d.roted 4.dlunti..g. and - of the other to breading dellar•benters - Tole to no: • kind of wool& perfection width philanthropists tonone vitt feel amarry goner dedreto arel•P in auditing.' . 4 •ld t egt string thstow th paellaallattlirlebu aye sraal obleatrgA 7 . ll4 ire Path lteraitailunont shouTC. hi *pm tfl 'about favor or la.:tco.stos one tistatefor.,..nnmajtnt.tinidg, el, no r ho Tenon to poor no th one rU 07.4 P 7 4 1!" cat. ""11. tbs eitstybe Pr niaakind •hou'A be:kopt dos ploymeut rine., as that were folinetly by thil arwl- • isle of moon:Mil the nttet minds snored in slanting the Mimes to totter Mama godonbt ., Ur /"" d ul in- son 'hi. thus 'that they shonlo. goat sad gnat. , norse...ttmy spat warn Rime and' let than ban them. In the meantime. Mum who do not gib empt pterint iesy earn m e ss o s - humpri imprwoment. oafs lin/roaht me, be noosed PR Ipbbt lively /belfry:eel to the mer• itattn4o4 , or pet.alg,ths sad acenunistlen. 1 know not, "by It Mamie( twos I►lino( arogrataLstton. that peranua who an Mandy rioUr Mao SOT amemeeds to kw, wooly haredoutted their moans of _ , unossumbur thillge WMr girtlittl• us no Nome. mot ss representatives of wealth: or that !mailers of tadirlL a should paw over every rear froth the ml Idle ciao to- to a richer dam, or from the clam of.the o=.lDied.rich - to tollgat of the unatcoDieiLo ; _ /lie indeed o"Eiml spectacle, 'tha' t of so vest s pro Portion of:the batienal operyy still devoted to mere mate/kat Itequittitien; still laboring in a field in which such ample harvests have been al resufy4ainedsl.till,pushing aninadirection where there Is little left to win,—while so many social problems - remain still unsolved, so massy geievons.wounda still vurbealed,_ so many noble paths still unfrequented or unexplored. Wo still press madly forward in therate; thoughthe goal can present us with no new attractions; we still straggle .! to get on," though we hove got far enough to-command all the - substantial sc. quisitions and enjoyments of a worthy Met wo still. persist in striving and toiling for added wealth, which can purchase for us no added hap piness, and in the hot copmetition we push aside or trait& down many who really need what we only desire.. 'Now roads, raster ships, more ra pid and cheaper locomotion, speedier transmis sion of intelligence, greater physical comforts,— all these are valuable things, and objects of le gitimate exertion. But of these we hate now almost enough; we have pushed on long enough and far enough ifs this exclusive line; there are other fields- to be tilled, other harvests to be reaped, other aims to be ashiered. Thousands and thousands of- course must, till some blessed change comes over our Social state, spend life in striving for a living, and thousands more must concentrate all their exertions on .the acquire ment of a /*impotence; but why should this competence be made, by our increasing luxuri ousness, an erne vanishing polit? And why should those on whom no such hard necessity is laid, imitate their needier brethren? Why should riot thoso-who have a fortunesafficientto supply all reasonable wants, and to guarantee them against anxious 'cares, pause awhile upon the dusty and-Weary thoroughfare, and try to form ajuster estimate of the purpose of life, and the relative value of its .ainss and prizes?— Why should we so cling to the undoubted but fragmentary truth that enjoyment lies only in the race, in the contest, in the effort? The suc cessful barrister at the summit of his profession and the height of fame, is so overwhelmed with business that he has time neither for sleep, nor society, nor recreation, nor literature; his strength is overtasked his life is slipping away; he has not erenleleurelarlhe sweet amenities of the domestic circle; he is amassing thousands which he does not want and cannot spend; he is engrossing briefs- which poor men thirst for In vain; yet when dees be over resign.a portion of his business to hungry competitors? when does he ever resolve upon "shorter hours,"—less toil and less emolument? When does heaver say to himself—"l will no longer spend my labor for that which is not bread, and for the food which satisfieth not; I will pause, I will rest, I will en joy, I will contemplate, I will consecrate my re maining years to my family, to my country, to my soul?" The physician, in the same way, who has worked his way up to the first practice and reputation, and is earning wealth for beyond his needs, and has no rest night nor day,-"who can never take up a hock, and seldom finisha dinner, and scarcely ever go into society, and only at rare intervals run for a hasty holiday into the country,—how rarely does ho retire and lea the field to rising rivals, till his infirmi : ono pel him? In these and similar cases, Indeed, it often happens that it is not the desire of acquisi tion nor yet the love of their profession, which ;retains these men in their unreeling harness, but the conviction that they could enjoy no other life; they remain "slaves of the oar" because they could not be happy in their freedom. They have lived so long and so exclusively in their work that they have lost all relish for the sim pler and quieter enjoyments of existence; litera ture and science have no longer my Chlllll3ll for them; political and public objects, ignored or forgotten for long years, cannot now excite their interest, and their sympathies with social life have become extinct or feeble. What greater condemnation can be passed upon the narrow groove in which their life has run—upon the partial and fragmentary cultivation of their be ing which has brought them to this pest—upon the social system which so fitters this one-sided, - machinodike, incomplete, undignified - existence? It is true that as matters are now arranged in England, and in the etate of fierce competition in which we live, and move, and have our being, this devotion of the whole man to this work seems indispensable to success—it is one of our most grievous social evils that it should be ro;— . but it is owing very rach.to the very instinctive ,and pertinacious etrifo "to get on" which we complain of.--a - strife not indeed objectless, but continued long after the original object hasbeen obtained. For if our mode of life were simpler, if our standard of the needed or the fitting were more rational and less luxurious, if our notion of a "competence". were more real sod less con ' vet:diens], and if we were more dispose} to stay • our hand when that competence was gained,— this competition would . become far less severe and oppressive. men might possibly have to work 'nearly as hard in their several callings, but they WOULD - WORE FOlL . rmiss man, and the earlier retirement of the successful would make more frequent openings for the needy and the stri ving; the barrister and physician would be sat isfied with - making their 15,000 or .£lO,OOO a year for fifteen years instead of for twenty-five; and they would hate the double gain of creating a vacancy for others, end of retiring themselves before life had become wholly dry, doll, disen chanted, and tmenjoyable. • The thing wanted is the general adoption of a juster and' worthier estimate of the trite mean ing, pleasures - and purpaseS of life—s perception that existence was given us far noble aims, not for sordid acquisitions—that when sufficiency is once attained, the pursuit of wealth bringemany ' cares, etterifices and privations, and its &equita tion can pnrchaSe only fresh luxuries . which bring no fresh enjoyment. If this Idea could but gain entrance into the upper circles of I.OCI - • if the rich and greatthete whose well es tablished and recoemited position gives `them absolute freedom if (bey choose to take it—in stead of living in a style of inordinate luxury . which others are always endeavoring to ape'or ' emulate, were to set an exempla - of simplicity and - moderation, td exchange gorgeousness for arts taste, An prefer th arts which adorn life - for - those which merely inbiter to its volupttions smoothness; to dose a career of hollow splen dor and joyless show or one of true and benefi-' deist social influence ;jf those who can and - do give the tone and deed e the direction of the rut , tional inind would, o' of tree wisdom awl real preference, tacitly impose upon themselves come "sumptuary laws, " and adopt a style of living which should mae display vulgar, and opulence therefore comparatively useless—it is not easy 1 to conjecture bow rapidly the ehntagion of the sound example would spread downwards,• how vast a proportion of the suppoied necessities of life would be Ins;antaoeously swept away, and how sudden a chnl would come over the present universal and "feverish passion for unneemary wealth. Sound political economy would frown upon no such triumph of rationality ; —those who resolve to live sensibly need not fear that they will thereby infringe any scientifie princi ples or natural laws. We preach no restrictioe of civilized men to the eimple requirement', of the savage; we-wage no war against acquired tastes or artificial wants; we do not seek to dis courage those who eau from indulging In the el. egancies 'or miltiviting the refinements which eotten)snd embellish life ; —we only desire to limit Itixerriouti expenditure to that which con fere .ieal and not unworthy enjoyment, and to terminate' the ..pursuit or wealth when all the means of . true happiness' which wealth can purchase : are already in our reach. We 'would at least have every man. be content with . literal' goblet, without seeking to dissolve within it the needless and oufastened pearl. • We wish . to seo the middle and upper life of England les; a'scene of bustle, of effort and of - struggle, and more ono of placid content and intellectual - se. reality"; less of a marl gallop and more of a quiet progress . ; - kind's dusty race-course, and more of 4 cultivated garden;, less of a career which dissests us in our hours of weariness, and sick ens as in our Moments of reflection, and More of boo which we can enjoy while we read it, and look - hack. upon it without shame and regret when it is closed. • Need wo fear that the world would stagnate under such a change? Seed wo guard - oursclves against the misconstruction of being held .tu recommend s life of complacent rind inglorious inaction? We think not. We would only Buh -1 salute • nobler for a meaner strife--a rational for an excessive toil—an geloyment that eprings from serenity for ono that springs from excite ment only; wo would enable our countrymen to find happiness in contemplation as veil as in lion: _To each. time • its • own preacher, to each excess its•owdenunteraction. In an age of Ws sipation,languor and-stagnation, we should join with Mr. Carlyle in preaching the "Evangel of Work,...and say with him blessed .is the man who has found his work, - let him ask no other blessedness."- In an age of strennons, phren lied, feverish, excessive, and often utterly im tional and objectless exertion, we; oln Mr. Mill in preaching the milder toad more needed Dian. gel of Leisure. ,, • . - . . . _ We haie but little to addto remsrks so sound . . Ind forcible, No candid man can deny, their truth. Let any man who has artieed Et:middle age glando back over the past, and call up in re= view before him the spectres of these who have lived all their lives for the sole purpose of acqul-' ring wealtlytlattering themselves It was :only `a eempetenee they were seeking, denying theta selves the enjoyments ottAsure, the pleasures of social hiterourse, and robbing their families of their society and their children of parental Instruction and example, vet' always_ flittering themselves that the covetea time for leisure and enjoyment would come, when they wero sudden ly surprised by the approach'of death, and on. .li;theti learned that ti y lotd,gro au 01d. nod_ that they lla!ested their wimle lives. necessary ;, AB& Worming toil to acoumulits riches which blesselneither thetonor their chil 4ren.:. Look limn° iresetit. Are there netmany iri every mane acquaintance who will stitfctealte .Plet‘*°l _ We are net opposing honest industry, nor at tention to bnsiness, nor a proper ambition to ex cel ass merchant or Mechanic, or in a profeselon. But take care,that the businua 4008 not ttbserb the whole being. Leavenotrationaland human izing enjoyment to the future. Begin to enjoy as you begin to lice. Life is too .ehort and too uncertain, to waste all its best days in the race for money, with the hope of liesuro and retire ment which in nine cases out of ten is never ro aiisel Of all the uses the immortal intellect and capacities of man aro put to, that of insatia ble delving for inordinate wealth is the meanest, and the resulta aro usually the most pernicious. But what has all this to do with country homes? Much. la the commencement of these series we stated, what most men will acknowledge:in time, as'regards themselves, that the enjoyment of a country home, with the leisure, home delights and eocial enjoyment it brings, is the object which the great majority of city bushaess men set before themselves as a etimulus to exertion. When a certain amount of wealth has been gained, When a competence has been acquired, then, oh, yes, then wilt be the time for enjoyment; then will &country home he puchascd and embellished. Now the object of this article is to show that the Mee suer wealth does not bring happiness, and that a competawe is Nandi° a far less amount of prorperty than most Americans aro apt to imagine. Tbp rational mode is, not to give up business en tirely, but to commence present enjoyment, and be content with less gains. Put not off enjoy ment until enjoyment is impossible. Begin to enjoy a country home while the feelings are yoling and fresh, and while you have your chit dre'n around you, who will thus learn from home example and instruction that true happiness is found in social life, in the cultivation of the in tellect, in the expansion of the affections, in ra tional enjoyment, in home pleasures, end not in the mad race for wealth, and in the hot-bcd of city excitements. SPECIAL NOTICES McLane's Worm Speciflo.—The follows Inc. from s customer, shows the demand which this great medicine Imamate:l •hnrnror It has been Intrndneed : I=! avtlerscsO—ln ronsequedire nr th, emit ausrinnotinii of your "Worm Ppmltle" irl this plane and rieluitT. we bars entirely. exhausted our stork. We should feel obliged by your Lin...ling, via laming. N. Y.. 23 down, with your bill, on the remotion of •hirh we will remit youlithe moues. From the wonderful elTeets of add ebeelfie In Ws neigh borhood. there could be eold .nnallr a levy.• quantity. If to be bad. (whelewsle end retail) from mom heal agent.— If To. • 0t0611.0.1.0 M. torten for trouble and expenee vending, I think I mold make It to your advantage do re. Thom respectfully, WU.a, MALLORY. Masts. J. KIDD k Cu. Per Wm. E. Num. Ill3ernreheaera will be to not for DR. m.LANirs CELEBRATED VERNIIYUGE. and take none else. All other Veritilltigas, in Nan:nu-Won, are worthless, Dr. ll' Lana'. Vertalfurs. also Ida Calebratod Liver Pill& 6n now be had at all reepoctable Drug Rom In the United Kates and from the sole groorletora. Also for We by the sole ortopriennw. VLRNINU Bruno mg:ld/era Brinmenre to J. Kidd A Co.. 60 Wood. et. A Gentleman living on Squirrel Hilt 1111711: .. .11y wife has been lamely Misted with Dyepereht AM the last year. During this time she had owl so many fttalifinrt which manual to eggreintto rather than remove the disease, that we almost ilerrainol o f her reeneery.— Living in the country she enjoyed all the whim:dams of pure etc and overtire yet each day elm seemed to la mere enfeebled,- With mote giftleuity I prommtled her to take your lloiland Bitter. which t ern harry to state has con, Pleteir Marvel her. Se. adrymisement. tor seta by Data rage, corner of Smithfield artil Third streets, ?Inshore.. Pu• a plait/ • T. The Greatest Medical Discovery OF THE AGE • Mr. Kennedy, of Roxbury:taw dieeovered In one of our enegtoon peattue yowl. • remedy that cure ferry/awl of Manor, from lA< wore/ giarefigla to n OM/4M I . IIOPI, It. hot tried It to ever .!.ran bundrel ogee*, and time tallel mangy'. to tog - omen (bah thunder Smarr.) He haa now to lela yagewinglen gene two handeed geftlneatin,,,r its valne, all within twenty ell:et of newton. Two bottles are warranted tog nun. nursing Wire leo th One to three '.*:'.time will cure the went kind eg pimples of the are. Two In flow bottto• will cl_lor thw •T‘t.ca 01 toioa. Two Intik* are warrantol to cu. am wont taxa.. ill th. month and nncetarb. Timm to 2,11.01410 s aro wyrautH too out, tho worst eW envip•ls. One to tow truth. vs warranted to curs an huts, la the 11)ea. 'Nen iwttlow an warruoteol to cure months of the sus sad blotrtuurooou Uto hair. • Your to six twttlro warm:Owl to wars sorrow and running °Writ 0.. bottle will ore wser erurtiou Ala Two to thno. tostUrs ors warrustwl a M.te ttlti rumor ringworm. Twoto throe to. ttlos saw warranted to Cuss the most dos torrotir ak.pra or rheumatism. Three In fear lortlre are warrseted to can nit rheum llra to eight twit tee era CUT/ the wer.t two of scrofula • brneht Is silvers srporienned Irate the ant bottle, wed • terreet Cure Le whrrsahrd when the above trustlty Is Elam !Volt.log locks orrturrobable to U.. who lure In Vain fried oil the wotslosfut mr.lielnes of Ule l eiAf. ea that a essontou nveLl. sTO•lon lo the gAsturu. and along obi stun* walla shonl4-eur. every humor In the srasuot 7st 11 Is now a Ansa but. If Tow kayo • lavatnr Plias to start Sheri an no lb we owl; burns oe he's *Wont It salting sou. raw.e and not your. I rvuldlo4 over • thousand tot. lira rf It in (h. vklulty of Ituton I know It. efforts to resit- ea., It Am airutS7 done some .4 Id. MAIAIA , AAA. seer 4000 in Muuchosetta. I gars It to ehlldnen • Teas chi: to obi punts cf ;arty. I bass woo v.v. • any. rani' looking 4411412.. ohms garb won soft and flabby. reetatoti to • perfnetstut. of health by en. IMO.. To Moo wkn ars ruhrset In A Ida boarlsabw. moo bottle 0111 ahriyi cars It. It Ores wrest yeller to easarsh nod dlututst. &duo who have been rrestly• far you; have In. bow and boon regnialed by It Wt., the teely is sornal. It Work gone easy. lent ober. there is any denustomout ' of the nu:llto= crouton,. II will mono very singular WA togs. but Ton crust sot to alarsoe4• they always dims year ru from Las days to • week. Viers Is nirr.7 abed roe snit !mu It. On th. fluently.. when that feeling I. gone ion will Got yourself 4f. • now person. I ,heard Jew. Of Ilt the moot AaLtSTACAn I onentllpAo of It tbat mar . 11. tans:lto. No am:User dint Is over neeorrary--.1 the t sou mons& I Ina. liasuins 0i Inut.. oak-h. 0h... In warred in RAno nil. assslrse Scrofulous meninx Of pout and wider the emu Prix. to mac. TO. of - lastioni Disrovery 11 per NAGA. DiIIItr7TIONY Y 44. LO44.—Adult. onn u/4ovrteunful day. Children or.4r eight you, 4...1 orowofot , hit• . than fl oe toritht years, t0wn...4b1. •suc 4lnction la mat • asyllsal• ts all ...Outlaw, lAlt. ftlatl 42 OpOrSt. oh th.l IXIVe4.I tote. a dor. . Ur. KANN CD? .0v" prratAAl WAAL.... IA but of sen,fula. 6;11;W...t0 and retail, at Dr. It CpiEtrix, Iso treat. acme[ of V Ingle atkr. Dsda • A Special .Bulletin for the Atones Ikriporalwg Orrehel nttlevee with pon.lartal Ity every Meant. Ituttblent to the dientlreePnerater. dont," the appall,. renerethe WWI b*rl.nath.m • ale*. brae+ the nertee. Oren elartleity to the etthite. • matte the mental ...sub.. tattlebes.l"poruk s ot7,lntpe to lb. attenuated frame a cone robust &nominal:tr. all, IrrilaUon. ealen• the ithttorlerl intattlnation, both. op .Mitered eonstltallont and may to taken with:ea • by the fterbleet maiden. ilfe or mother. as It In atm • . eolaly of the iWort a rare Oriental belle. potent only 11.11Z(.4, eXidilitltolllll4 pater•. Into litter spasm Las beam. r•lazi.4l by barroom. Instal rm. Um Cordial I,llllllra/o a mos* rlstrrnas vitality late, '- assents°. Tba Issaltails raralblas tram lat. boars o r ekes applkaUoa to Labor °ran? kind, Is quickly man by Its astlan, and ladles savage! la swalratary gamma a and Stay st to losonveateasa theralrom. sill Ana It a safa sod boaltby stlaulant. Whew, tba sire Walks:tor 1.64 Woad la al Mae Isb, or any or tbs functions or Molnar apt surpraa• id or Impsirselly perlbstaal, ltoslll restos', the natural gyp. Wm sad soma %Mosta pernstosat surrar to U. ..Hat! o a, andalstrilsallva MEW& Thaw who are based down by physical d.ENIt7 , and So feeble aa to despair of ever ZeOlccorikii the rigor and Won nyinsuboad. are Invited to sire tido woadoriel 1.4101144 ,• Utah it erahAdke the eletaentstr their restoratloni Before they have runnuced the Drat bottle, they will in conaciont that the recuperative principle la at work In eY. CI debilitated onetime of their frames, and ham soon to he roe/J.llu their thorough muyary. will orlon np to .their heart. The Cordial le pat op, hi y concentratod. In pint ha tics. Price Li per bode, ter 45, els Mr 112. Ng, KINN. Preprietor. No. adiray. New York. Aliirrili—Pittelezrah: /WM, s.. No. r4lYno.l stret; (Ito. 11. Karsis, lid Wood st: IL N. 8.1./tes. 67 Wood et.— A linicheo City: 3,ll..PLUnan. !told by Dresslets throughout the Unltod Kates, Cana de, and the West Indies. Beet Known when Tried.—'lloBe gen o wen take pleasure In tedlping la marl to B. @stock's Vera:alba, bplseaupy two of the Min have used It In their prltate prsuldoeits physicians for • trim of yeare.and they have known It, by ootornaloo. to be d. Now duller. July dth, 18G3 Nam. It. A. tahnettodel.A.: oClltililll:—Harlast sold your valuable Yermlgrit for OM, (boo, and having small used for snarly yews, v. would reentsmrad ft to all tea is and ellldent renselly for all rases of worm* lit no Instate. hare we era men any roll results fallowing It. administration. but• &wart has It answered the pureness ter whIWA It was Intended. awl been entirely saUsfertory. _ ludlerlng that ever/ thloß that lint hunt lat.anth.lnia• Curd tons vtrtues Is strictly In ...ord.oe• ItlOur 0b lervallons, not only as practitioners. but an Inn qf tot. nuts, Ira would untlellllllllllol NV 10 ill who tam th e, that Ills the hest Verallfutre rloW In use, and that l 4 T toes it, best known when tried. 1100VIfft Prepared and sold by 11. A.„YA LNESTOCK 011 corner Mtynod and First sts. &TX Dr. Pitch's Ommon of my Muss. Do. Osmium IL Hums—Derr 81r. In npir yaur . the 13th Inst.. requesting no opinion of Tout BUM / fronid my that I ooludder It owl of the hot of deflfed, Ind would add Matthaei inifolf boon lotus In halt of employing a somewhat phase Beam with th. Rusted adrantase In tam of contrnetion of the dust stooping, whether from ludg‘oooiniallon ordeldilty. ltmin eepeeistry whfro them Ii oakum at initatlon. Shutt the unda.luid mon orlon predbpodttontooonfuldtdon—with .. trio thlioniph rot Its strode In thole Wes. Yon tee of anzifie obluslntod: Dime terms of hood Mows. or mom Died luitemmt of that Man. I hate also found this Shoulder Dtasti of lodvantaso. Ida not hesitate to worn. mend your Broca In 111.akeetithatelkEtrace lf refrohod. one of the meet efumasid eekdostlet. in no. • • • CALVIN 14. MOIL Floti irliol:aie t inlgtilTaf Di KrOntan. attest. Ditistonub. Po 4 attn, reonittleto amostitient of Ds ttelor 4 modkinoir