A :burghbath SIM T z Diapatek - on Saturday, advanced nothing pertinent to the matter under disenadon. As we haTe CO iacllnatlon to 'compete with it in billingsgate,. we Warts the Presbyterian General As embly (Old , School) at Cincinnati, came to' a vote on . re-union, the result was , such as to checkprecipitancy; The vete stoodfl for, and 14A 'against re-union: Seventy members were absent. Had Ilit7 been present the proportion, It to estimated, *otaa have been about the rime, Still, It mu resolved to continue thit tam totisisltie.e; - ant the churches, - to continue.the matter for another year without being embarrassed orte:way or another by the expression from the As , ienbly,sad to send dm - results, through ' 1 " 81" ding Committee, to ihe next As. • nimbly': The latter may then act defi nitelten Alfa proposition. If the next Assembly stud] adopt the measure, th e adoption will have to be ratified by three.fourths of all the Preabyteries. UNION OF THE ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC. No grander enterprise was ever-un dertaken by man than the connection:af the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of this continent by railroad. The mein line 4 designed to run from Omaha to Bac , .ramento, and never was work pursued with grader energy or skill. On the western side, the road is in running or. . der nearly or qulteto the summit ,of the filerra Nevada. On the eastern aide it is rapidly reaching the longitude of Den : Ter, which it will Rags above one bun , dyed and •fifty miles to the North, but Timehing It by means of a branch. On • the plam of Utah the two lines will join hands and mare one. Of • course there SIC serious nsturel obeaclesto overcome.' But engineering ability will trittreph. • The unprecedented good of this Spring occasioned a tempo ,rary interruption in the, valley of the 'Platte, sttch'as roads anywheresre liable to; but no more. The Indians are Jost now, 'Ay their warlike movements, la ' teetering somewhat. But attll thework pea 'On.' Whatever may befall, it is safe to conclude the Whole -line • will be completed inside years. :- The road from Sacramento down to San PM:Mike is progroult3g finely, and' will be in operation long before the mid land leetions are united; so that within five years at the outside, the transit from liew.lork to 05n Premise° will be - Our venerable friend Gate. Ronissos; of Allegheny, was the Met 'Anglo-Saxon Mate child born west of the Ohio. Hie stately mansion in the heart of the City occupies the site otitis father'slog He liourishei in a vigorous old age... 'lt is marvellous to think that an ihe devel opment of pilgulatlon, wealth and com ' fort,. between the Allegheny, river and the Pacific coast has happened eleuhte the life of this man! This prodigy mounts almost to the proportions of a miracle. There is nei counterpart to It to :be,. found - L in the tide of time. God speed the retort Pacific Railroad! THE LUMBER 'REGION OF THE . - .ALLEGHENT. The Allegheny Valley Railroad is now finished to Brady's Bend, and will sOory be completedto Franklin, at which place •it will be brought into connection with the nylons roads that traverse the Oil Region, This will be of immense ad yardage to tills cl{y. and to the entire country through which•. the Allegheny floWs. --. That road will give 1/3 a connection with the oil' legion, and with much of 1 - the iron' region; bui not with the Limber region: From Fretch Creek, which en ' ters the river at Finnklin, to Pittsburgh, ' not stditgle navllable stream flows in from .Ibe west side. For the greater part of its contsze Allegheny : limes teti m near to the wen border of its own I • , *they, receiving ost ill lii tributary streams. from broad watershed ', stretching from itto the dividing ridge that separates its waters from those of 1 the flurinehanini. ':'Tfte - , -- prllicipal - or these streams are '' 1. The Teonista, which enters the Al • legbeey elute thirty - 'miles above 011 2: The Clarion, which rises 111 Potter . . eocmty; and, kfter • course of nearly Om' ' hundred - . miles, enters. the Allegheny about mldivai between Kittanning and 'Frankllti:„ This river is good for de- Beading navigation for upwards of a kupdred Miles. On the upper' waters there are , immense tracts of pine' forest. ' ' 8. Resitsuik creekl—This tine naviga ble stream rises in,Clearfield county, and ; - thence flows across allot Jeffenion coun • . ' ty, and for some twenty miles forms hie boundary line benison: Armstrong and - Clarion, and unites with the A.llegbeny . about. twenti_miles above litlX9Ming. ' Its upper waters, like those of the Cll . sion, flow thlough a fine lumber region, - Tint eputittillet OT•which bee been cut • - andloited Own to nearkit.7 - Vhe Indian name of this stream was Molinlbuctstrun. • 'A. Theltaltoning.—This stream, thich Is bet little smaller than the Redbank, , drains the southern part of Jefferson ',. eouny ; and the northern part of liidi ' axis, flows through Armstrong, anti en : t e r. the Allegheny two miles above Klt tanning. ' It, too, is navigable, and large nesettititte of lumber WO floated 'down • .. : Rom its upper streams. • . '5.. cowanshannocir. This stream • ', cameain hoot the western border of La i duns county, and after a course of some ' leletty lades tionsugh Armetiong, meets : :' . the river three Miles above ; Kittanning. . I' . Aided three sties above Its month it •; 7 comes'within about smile o Net. etas, . i I. '. frouterhich it to separated hy a low and , I Itartow ridge. Th is' dream is not nal+ ... , seble,rna are thereany pine forests on its head watent. 6. Crooked Creek—id named because ' - i i t , to yefy crooked. Maisel/ilia stream, 1 -. bed is not navigable. • 1 , 7 The Slskimlnetas.—This 4 the ' '.\ Coodeaugh, ilong•Alur:,indlks of which , the Pennsylvania Canal runs so; many , • sties , 11 the mouthot Nis Loyalban. ;;nab ; at, Baltabiug.„the . dime changes OoDentstlah ur*lskts'illue . tss. Be -:_f .. tterretomileiteiital Was mats II ilatboats,-,1 - pecaddnallt dedended _. f er ..rohnstentti,„dming dawn Iron . . 1 . . the forges , that, used to be there. I Was in the edit, part of the can ' 'ln :It Is naturally a rdhgh and "rapid imM. 'No .lumber lumber was aver floated . Own either ifferaftk. - or .•boats...ElCol4 clarion, this is. probably the largest iu Dietary of the Allegheny. _ • The pine foe-cats, for which- the Alle • . hear is famous, awl from which each ... esedia quarititles of tubber are an. ' - y floated down, are ill fated from :tweinly to upwards of a hundred mites - . 'mist of thermaln river. The best are on .. the ripper branches of the drat four trit..,.. • 6taries we have named. 'Near the nevi _table waters the, quantify, of white pine - timber *di ..Iden greatlYAcKitulet :liui .-2t6orwitreanapy ticrediedils,Afaeres COT. 1 ' - :,fired with the; fined quality of that mod • 1. widultwe of our timber too remote from I '..' ileastahla streams ,to warrant the cost of . • . ' %ilea mode of conveyance to market: _ . The common roads are bed In thateouri• - , „, try, and nothing but railroad transports- '' doh la adequate to the wink of carrying ~,.... • . '''?=•.;;;,,.';, . tide lumber .to , market. It Is greatly a ce g e d evekiew, loid the. itiadeviacy of .: • .-'' '''''ywarely afforded by water tvansPoTtl ,- .. !.. Jr . 4 . - . •••• more and' more .fell from _ . 3 ggit6r ud, ( ha.. ~ the jar of tlei - n lintss .through the jd r..terstifee 4 . lacik As of the Mahon . • I'. '. Ipealieh or tt th e it -- k i tn . 4 Clarion, and thl ''• r ..- -4•l444as4l7ittellish°e_i ' c dfig 4en" thi l e i' J '..,,2 ' '..";,•' ' ....- : il V-TillielliC-6-4,4--".1-‘2611:101.4,7s1 the •::::i ; ' . P. , ,.-.- . . ,:.- *',:4 .1 ;;;‘,::, , ',::'...-.., ' ' '''": . '''!''''' : ,''' - :=.:q.''. , • serves of pine lumber • can bc:reached. The Allegheny Valley Road, as origin- I ally surveyed, beyond the mouth of the ILahoning, would, with some irariations . i —a more eastern bearing beyond Brook ville —meet . all the requirenOts here spoken of ; but the newly projected road ; from Kittanning to Walnut Bend, vie j the valley of the Cowanshannock,: and. thence diagonally /11/2205.5 the headwater , of Ifahoning, Redbank and Clarion, into the valley of the Susquehetuaa — e P/ 11 1 region all the way exceptthe first twenty= five miles beyond Kittanning—meets Ws great want still better thin the other. good charter for this roadies author ized at the last session of the Legislature, and some stock has been :subscribed. Whether sufficient mama to build this road gun be obtained at present remains Our object at present iamerely to draw 'attention to the facts here stated, so that our men of- capital - may be Induced to think of that', region and its enormous undeieloPed wealth, and maculate 'whether the enterprios of which we speak would be 'likely to pay. ,Tax. Stunnocoviii.i Herald miscon ceives our position. 'Phe course neither of the President nor of ,puratsv, touching the cue of Mr. DAVIS. 12 Wow mind. But.We insist that the motives of! each of those gentlemen - shill' be infer: red from his genail charaCter and con- ' dent. Furthermore, that however much censure may be awarded Ur. GSI;IILEY, those who administer It ought to have some respect to theleewn personal dig-. nity, as Rell u to his long and valuable services.. To twit' hissi,lts our contem porary did, of dressing in: old clothes, picked upat a second hand..slep, is nei *ther wit nor fail, but =adulterated, blackguanitism. • We have known Mr. Gauss! ninny years, 'estul have never seen him when he Ina not attired be coming his state as a gentleman. But, if the fact Was otherwise, Wait has his clOthes to'do with views of public spies: thins? Pickpockets ordinarily dress in the most: fashionable style, and many en honest gentian= is cohrtrained to wear such garments as be can get.. The dirty assaults of the Republican press, which Mr. GIBEILLYT properlY character ized as "a shower of mud," have done more to disgrace journalisni in this noun.' try, than the bailment of Mr. DAVIS has done daniage to.tlie national cause. r Tun Memphis Foot illnatratee a good deal of the professedantipathy to colored people, by , relating that :.the Sheriff, of Henry county, in , - Tennessee, lately 'arrested a party ofj high- toned chivalry : - by calling to his ald a posse of colored Men. , The chivalry objected toutly such denu des, and felt the yea disgraced by the colored manbeing ViiPon to ea 1n their errese. But It turned out that the crime foi 'Which they. were sr- Jested was going to a dance of colored people and conszoittiOg crime upon the colored women. TODAY la the , municipal election at Washington. One of tbedeniocratio or- Mon .of that city, 'on Me 20th ult., made th4i vulgar reference to the colored voters: • • "Congress has seen Bt, is the cumuli of Its power, to introduce a new class of voters Into our community, the princtpat part of whom have no more Identifica tion-with to than the Altic.an thatls, a large woisthet. •' It is not protableinany.Of themwlllbs won by that style of conetibin. Tun salaries of the Corresponding Secretaries and Treasurer of the Ameri can Baptist Missionary lJnionwere fixed at the anniversary • meeting it Chicago, at 12,600 each, perannturi. Bather res pectable wages ont of Peter's penixt. A sa►o'runt. stenos of Thoipa s s Benton is to . be erected in Lafayette Park, Bt. Louis. ' e." 7 tinders—prom= of Practical Skill In applying, iindnfeetaote Dr. Hurls, in a Vetter to the President or the Board or Health, gives many in teresting feet" relating to the prevalence of cholera and the means devised to cheek its ravage'. Ile says • The employment of 'specific . dish:Sec- tants of cholera excrement was cons menced by us Id this, country at the quarantine hospitals on Staten Island in 186.5. The Ant great lessons on the sub- Ject witee - Witt by Pt Wm. II d,' the reilitery.lorrects in Bristol, Eug land, and by Professor, Pettenkotee at ' the Koteheim prawn In Bever* in 16.54. Dr. Lander Lindsey, in a c.holeaa hot Pitor end in certain 'lunatic asylums in . , Scotland; added "aural acts to the "me e = ce. soful7e salts of 11011, yja; the . ealplestes and chlorides yid= possaasl the poker of arresting certain kinds of fermentation,,== of destroying certain gums and products of Warnecke% con tinue to be the roost topiwortliy&d. cal& for the general purposes of ec• don. Ire grit employed them in 1855 and 1856, toceuie of their cliamlcal goal hies, and pertimlarly became of the ectri• ceu that seemed to attend thew employ ment by the greet chemist, Prof. Pekes'. toter, Bat these iron rata, and au= other metallic salty Cannot well to used I . on the wiled clothing and nor ' do they act very permanently, for they may soak away; or may readily be changed into Insoluble and inert sub- stances. lisps, and meet the necessity for a powerfel and =Oil petmanent and unchangeable antiseptic, roost Is bad to carbonic add and the coal-tar =Wixom= , &lentil° demists end experimenter', and all iellinforsted 'sanitary officers, now agree . that saturated solutions of onPPbestcas and carbonic ,acid ere e ca t 0= e end chespest disinn be need against cholera.fectants th at The Itatifotwolitart Board.' of nealth iv= as I bellows, the fret sanitary body to provide for disinfeelon se an 'essential end distinct branch or. mites* tetvim. Glasgow soon followed, and in Bough-, acupton . and Bristol, in Englend, the twine= was, in inly hod, done by train- ed land', and with marvelous success. EA. Louis less just organized system of disinfecting depots sir rd. WY care to thA/ twelve wards of that ranch threatened - 4y. At New Orleans, Nashville, Memp i lt Chleaglanflpeveral other cities ;ha tar!' actbMitice ass organizing the musky good soggested system. This =stern wee by the Coun cil of Hygie fi ne, rst in ,c.Us.city, in &lobes, 1865. - - - BUPPOSIXO that Lieut. General Ban. xax wcruldbe at hfliw 'fork to embark for Europe, gentlemen of that citf tender. edhlin public ieception. In reply he HIDLPJA!MIIIyi.iLIvTL,ILMY a M yMaatyt' l, S Loa a Gentlemen I have had the honor to receive your valued letter of the. Bth Inst., Invitnignieto meet my. friends in New York on the eye of my intended departure for Europe.' As circumstsm , em have occerred to prevent the fol. Ailment of that Intention, it will not be myrerer-to soempt.the Ealwed hem! or, an it ls fur that t swum Indicate in general terms why I have cm:hided 3 0 to remainatmy post of duty. • Youdonbtleas know that m military cotormaidambrices ;Least sor orwild coantrYs-Whielsis being by Grit Pe°Ple acroesw gg Wilt two railways detained. In years W . span the wide space Maven's the Atlantioand Pacific etatu. • This country has been from time im• memorial the homes MA Minting noon.] II of various tribes of Indians, eitwi still number. some three hundred tho illaz d souls, and who, beinspreiied fromevary I oftener, have become nervous. cwt.& and, is some mses, positively hostile: At this moment theta ire fears that they - may combine and do infinite mischief; and 'lain daily calls for protection al a handfedPkims hundreds of miles from each Ohm_ 44 It requires our con. stanYattention so to apportion our Ent. lied military Ilnce as to protect op: molt If I should leaps oty. .dlyision at thls and an respo ttl i r t rat ili mf a s y b o sil oat , , on soma other oril w eer alreedy.oirarbasi 1 dened; and after a metal - eonaiderailen of the wrbolet. question; I feel tound s fa duty and homer, to - stand by My poet,' and to defer witil mmio 'Marc opportune ocessicp the graiirleation of a natural de sire to see other and older countries than otu own. thilleol4 bet that you will excuse me for su*ocepUng ytmr o n tian at the pretent- on some more propitiate In ka the Uwe It will aßordnis pride att4Ple•sure to meet you all in each Manton' as Tram kindness' may indkata. With sentlmentealphisfrol4 o . truly yours,. W. L .1.-13 LientotOolt LI =I NEW JEnsav,-With the c'cception of the damage dor.e by the recent rains to the potato crop, which Is r,robahly not I very serious, all reports i . eora ‘the agri- • cultural regions of New Jersey are very favorable. At one time it was thought that the fruit crop had been nearly all destroyed by the severe cold, but this seems not to be the' fact. Some of the peach buds have been killed, but an unit 'really good crop is anticipated, notwith• standing. In some of the lower per- Boni ot the Stat.t, The early strawber ries were killed, but a good crop of this fine fruit is still promised. Each year ' additional land 111 aprnropriated to the culture of strti*bevries and the business proves to be quite remunerative. KENvercs.v.-!-A. correspondent of the. Louisville Courier, in Jessamine county, rePortaihst the corn that in up looks yelloW and sickly, the oats short and nale,smd' la thought will be a failure. The wheat is still flourishing, and the fruit bide fair to be abundant, It has been rather dry and cold for oats; the corn will .come out with • favorable weather. • VISGINIA.—The Richmond Whig gives the following satisfactory account of the condition of farming and businessaffairs in. Virginia: • Crops and heathen prospects are more cheering than any we /We. had for the past two years. Labor is better organ • iced than it has been since emancipation has been effected—the desolations oPwat have been repaired, and agricultural op erations have, after much uncertainty, I become adjusted to the extingencies and and necessities of the newera. The old rut has been abandoned, and , a new rut has been opened. All accounts from every quarter of the State represent that the wheat prospect hi in the highest degree flattering. A. large area of land is now green with it; the weather has been unusually favora ble to Its growth' and exemption from ' 'Lease and insects.; and its present con dition is such so to inspire the most san guine hopes of an abundant yield. The oat, corn, tobacco and root crops are 'expected to be large, and, barring contingencies, &tunr and profitable. e The fruit crop has pest the frost, and promises .a rich yield. .The cool and unieasonable weather may crirtail some crop*, but upon the whole, as far as hu man foresight extends, it may be assu med that agricultural prospects are more ' than usually encouraging. Tot Wirdri•,—A. correspondent of the Toledo Made who has traveled exten sively in. the West, says: The grasshoppers 'are working very lively in. portions of Kansas, and north and west side of Missouri river,: in /die wart. It will be some time before they fly, and no one. =tell how far they will "invade" the country until they make's ' "strike"by their numerous' "presences." Destructionlo green truck Is their watchword, iind slowly, but surely, they sadden the prospects of many farmers. The Broadcastof Spring wheat is very large in Illinois, and it is looking well. The favorite' corn crop will be exterialve:, ly cultivated through Mined.. Neuter one fields of wheat—from Keokuk, lowa, traveling up the ..111.1asisatppl—look very flattering indeed. lowa can also boast of a very large area of spring wheat sown, and preparations for coextensive corn crop are going on. The timbered pdrtlon of lowa can claim having some fine fields of winter wheat. Nebraska needs rain, and like unto her sister, Kansas, will receive a grasshop per benefit. One hundred and eighty miles west of St. Louis, along the Pa cific Railroad, is the best winter wheat the! have seen. Eastward, over the. Terre Haute Railroad, tic winter .wheat leeks very promising, aft much spring wheat has been sowe d.' The corn crop will he extensively cultivated. - Nearing home, over the Dayton and Michigan Railroad, same very fair fields of winter wheat may bisect'. "r- - A Veritable Enoch Arden—A Domestic Epis:dnin England. An English paper—the Durham Ad- rerriser—tells this story. "Mr. Tennyson lOW Portrayed in len gunge graphic and beautiful the vicissi- 1 nubs and-noble struggles of Enoch Ar- den oh behalf of his wife, and the deep sorrow felt' by that hero on .his return home after an absenoe of years, on die covering that she had taken to herself I 1 - another husband. A shriller charm stance had transpired in this neighbor. hood, but the subjects of our story ore not of the same high and lofty character as those depleted bythe poet. It appears that about eleven years ago the husband ' of a Mrs. Watts, living at Dragon Villa, Gilesgate 'Moor, near thiacity, sailed for America in search of that wealth - tibial -, he had failed W meet with in this ecnitt.. try; and after gaining it he promisedto ' return, so that he- might live open the fruits of his labors. However from some unexplained masa or other, 'ho for got on his arrival among our go-ahead consintacross the Atlantic to communi cate with his wife whom he had left be hind, and the coffers of wealth - which she had expected to hear of,- it wasfeared, had sunk with her husband in the ocean. - leer after yea! passed away,, and no tidings of Waite Wadi's bratri,sind WS, wife and his two children bad to snug ' gle on en best they could. At the end of seven or eight years all hire of his be leg, in the fisah were Ten up, and a hereon by the name ofWallace turned . up taut wooed and won a the neglected - dame. , They lived happlif Mather for four years, and the partner of tier drat love was entirety, forgotten. • One day , 1 last week, however, Watts returned to ] his native plane, hiptienlike Enoch 4tr.! den, after ascertaining the' change that had befell= his wife, did not cry for , help to prevent him 'breaking in upon I her rom..T..' . Ile rent - boldly to the i house and ma de hitaselfOloyrn, •but his ,appearance, it would seem, did not im press, her very favorably. and the re ception hornet with was not of the kind which might have barn expected . . "His wife, now Mrs . IYallace; aa pas 1 natind;felt greatly startled at his ap. pearance, but the interview which took ' 1 place between them did not awaken any ; of the old feelings which end capsed them to be guide one. and the preferred.: Irfal ling on with the new love and duo carding the old. ' She had, however, scene alight compassion for her dello- IToast lord, and told him that she would give him a meal of rum, s night's lodg ing. and set him o ff with a obifting in his pocket, which, said she, "Is more than then bast done for too for the last eleven yearsin Wm having gained too mucb of this world's goods hi hie urenderings, be , accepted her generous offer and took I shelter under her roof for the night. st, C° 6 " d i O n ugtlrs 4 wo h uld t l y r i e la se n n i t alTl id „Terp: but whether be got any or net, wehave not beard—be appears to bare resolved not to part with his wife without en effort, for on rising next morning be strongly asserted his ; claim which, ter minate-4.m his summary ejection from the domicile, ending.with a polite kick from behind, from which, like the Irish man, he gathered.the hint that his cont. pesky was not wanted. - , , - "We era Informed, however;-' that Watts's unwilling to stpsupt this intone. moutons proceeding as a settlement of hisclalm, and, as both husbands are said „,, have consulted tne lawyers upon the matter, we %ay pet hear of the tidiest. .ment of the' dispute , in a , more legal form!" ' -', ' ' • Panel baa grown malicious and Boni- cal too In ha alarm, or the great lion has tun the fat Mec f klenburg woman, i who posseues ao other merit than that of being the stater-in-4w of the servant of a waystde idn whose master played a merry trick upon the Pruden General just after th Wad of Radowa. Crowds gather routul e this woman, who h lug remarkable in bee appearaue, being as homely comtortabp.lookitig a farm serva nt its on.' might, ish to Bite hu naught to do but pour out the 1 , 4 , mkalenbabeer for the -winos ante bran who d it; but per atrniction does sot . hers , hat In MO t0M911 1 4% courplica relationship , C i i ii i t ird „ I below. 0 The Prnasian 0 -.' t the bend IM.bre trao":**ltor . 4 'MAI& ", 'taw, vrut meant:l' -avast° for Ott glght. The faltdjdfd 0 tligilittio village inn dtspetebed & mes senger to the town to tiring-heck as mint' oolOrto An be could findready•mado to band. -By the time - the general had attired at the village, the order had tott laccutth, and the coffins bad keen piled ,up again* the inn Pot "Good -bea t - I Oust what is tha titeoelflS of Oil then comas?" exclaimed the General u• he i rode up to the spot. "Ah, your Excel hum the cholera is raging here, and Peon' ire dying off so* fast that we are , commlled to percher* cedieti by the wholesale from the town.", The (Unmet returned; untouched, the glass of-beer 1 ho wu about to take frdm the landlord's I hand , -be turned his horan'i - beed, and I galloped off without. a word, and own theWsouts sent oat try the townefolich- petted that the troops had bee'n_scem marching in quite another direction. Now,/ such la they state of sardonic sen. sthilitgrto which Bismark gad .the. 'ph l is .. o hare driven Frenchmen: GA; is they satinet conveniently Let hew. of the King of Prussia himaelf, , they• vent their malicifuglee upon the sister. law of Cho at Al,theylthigo lon who played Qe :louden General:Ude very • funny trick.—[Paris correspondent Bos ton Post . . , —,Tehn•Hat , formerly ?thm , Beere , tary too Rrest eat ban been lip. foolatad et* . de attalmatifleruat, Arm. aria, toilLthe . Tammy ceased by the ' PHTSBURGH DAILY GAZETTE : MONDAY, JU NE 3; 1367 =9 • The London Times, in commenting on a recent report of the Orthopedic Boa pita of London, says thatln no branch of sm-pical science has greater advance been made within our own. time than in the treatment of cases of deformity. Byron piney! and chafed under a deform ity which' Might have -been removed in his childhoOd if his parents.had had ad. vantages which, happily, may now be enjoyed by the moat. huirible of the com munity. !Sir Walter „Scott, though less deformed than Byron, was also afflicted by a malformation of the foot, which marred his enjoyment of life, and of which the medical faculty of his- time could not relieve him. Since vaccina tion has become the rule, there la a sen sible diminution in the number of per sons marked with small-pox; and among the young adults of. tKe present day there are fenier cases of club-foot than were to be found in a similar portion of the population half seentury ago. The old system of treating cases of club-foot , was that of stretching the tendon Achil les, which stretches down the back of the led to the heel, by mechanical con- trivances. it was sometimes-successful; but in the majority of instances,espec ially when the patient has advaced be yond the age of infancy; the result was unsatisfactory. A" few years so the experiment of cutting the tendon was tried, and so -successful was the remit ting .this method is now generally adopted. When ,the case is treated In infancy, about twelve weeks generally suffice for a cure, if due attention Ispaid to the patient. After the tendon has been cqt instramenti are applied to keep the foot In the proper position, and aain this case "natitthabhora a vacuum," the, sinew is united by a new growth of ten .don. It hak been- found that, up to the age of thirty, club-foot is more or less a:treble. . The Orthopmdtc - llospital of London was founded to treat cases of this and other kinds, of deformity, and since Its establishment; in 18.38,-lusa af folded relief -to 39,014 patients. CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED Ltd L. being cured ever? 4.1 by peeler. .10 ass the See. Z. A. WILSON% ORMAN SIBIIDT 70/1 CUNNUMPTION. Those who here used It = I=l when their ease was considered bopeleu Bold only m Pltlaborsh al, 40£11Pol YU= IDtu `0 L) and Patent Mediate Depot, No Fl 'TTT I=l = I;=MZ:C=MMgg GRAIFILGIRMALDNESS. DA.YD! Burr ANY. 181.5). OP THE SCALP.—ht• DItiCOVXRTCAN CUNHA). WITH `LONDON !lA. COLON ILESTOttekt AND IntISSINt.." "London Hest Ilan Color Restorer" "London Hair Color Intetorer" "London . rhysklasks Hsu Color Hanson"' "London Ilan Color itastorer" "London Use and Hair Odor rtestorrr" "London hair Color !restorer" "London Seconnosnd M. Hair Co lor ilettorrei Inlayer fails Wittman life, groth,. and Hen to the venni hair, fastens and stops Its Mink. I nod is warn to hoodoos' a new growth of non, .nlOllll jroll . lig (l and stns.. On/T 76 00 1:11 5 .1 5 4 ° letbtaktgenf ket721674.11. P 3 I Itaritet • net. Oita LXLLY. 3) Wood st.. and Joe. FLAIL.% Ili Market street, Mt. burgh. AAA II • HAUIIT. ahattlfhwww ' RE ON YOUR GUARD • I Unhurt thwimitations and conntergalts of BUS- TTWTTEiIIe iffOllnCil BITTIIIb, with ',Mk ['the VIWIMMI who imam npruconntan r.l Melon. . by Prey Pa( upon the rit.t and suffsriug. gra now I entlewmlng_ter good the machete of thlt country. W hvitever thevelrolognerluono.li are discovers 1 !]tests! Immediately prosecuted IT the pro. prleto es, who expand *omen - lab! dollers Annus : ally in treeing theta out and bringing them to 'lactic*. Iblettlit a abort. MM. lidimattoto have : beta °Metered le the Conceded Um Vatted Slates 1 Llama a camber of Indbrid.la and Iran. and mate are now In progress against several endue s allot whose' names will be given to The Public• Bat la elate of the inmost Vigna mania netiviir of their deleCtive wants. the nederaigned are of Chttrea tumble he protect thd nubile entirely 1 iagnin.t ; plratimi haltadosebt a Standen] Oa- Ulnae Tbnic. evelywhere . In rePuest, lied as riertily. convenible IMO cashed, Cattnel Mates • Bonds or Treasury bolts. They. Therefore. au a measups of pcasinos, air,' athenilu• to the bet That • Ily entraved lahal. v•prssrating a- evolve so ot e Dragon, ad inn orw grimarv, stamp. baartmg Um Glacial Cabot sensual 1 of the 0. 1 , 74472 ,•...., r x on even tsaufwat tee CA:IMb by a eel heat:eV= 1r tutees wl re • the signatu• or • • Hostetter a tornith." to toss. sernris Whi r lc le' a Oats riga erfac• The true I Dallis...we told (*Punks only, runt In to. 1 hulk. . , csObTxrr.ll • OMITS. pays CANADENSIS. I tree blob 00 atauidadt to Canada, Nora Sootla,Land Marlon norillutraaarti of Um Saw Catiladd Mania and It also foand w lb. eterated and stoonlations regions of tbo Middle drama and aluianda In diedlernal vittatr. W. Inrelt, of 80300, has Driparad Inr4latai trona irreiti 1.00 tar% uf tenpin. knee, endue PO. LarOD , S.WIII2Z ro COYLY/CAD, *Win Is Opo Of we raw., la all dantlitatsd 1110000 of th. kidney.. 11 sale aka .ors le 017