Cite allttSburgij & Az rff t . 1 _ Far tae Piturelte lch Nanette, lof those by whom we are surrounded • NEW 4 ,, ~„___ INVESTIGATION--NO. 2. •-• - 4 -- . "Z''"'' , .I.N; ; should be insidiously eaten out and the mental !waders goidually and almost ini-,, DO" LOWT . - - StraYs•ri or Stolen. . ------ on voyese, Jane ...b. Gray Terrle ng. Simffis simaibur rummer to the car- perceptibly undermined, sad ihe (-mere enewer.en to the omen( -hie, • • ea, and LA, never raised, is all this Futferine a eon. •ta revs ennt.t. •oy person trove/rent to the din.l maxim of the ItniDen PSTIJEI, a - her. dilion i s mortality. Mid Mc only means L.;.....'r.l..ii'ril7l7.:iiiir?..:rar"lea'll7rloti:,:4,, fore the presumption la fully raised. and by which we can reach the portals of ire ..i.i doe aryl, tols nonce will no des,• eetto • areordlne to yawl correctly, that poisons effect all the die- eternity'? or does it proceed from meth."-- -- bin lir thrbed movements of ,the g..r., system, cased food and drink, detrimental to ARAWRERRY FESTlVALorganized in stir brothel Those silents.- ; 'rigor of mind and body, and which will "t be mid at bed movements are the diseases, and eventuate in the destruction of life? • sirs aura,. culateu. Rob." Shall we continue to receive these on Thaeastay, Jane 07111. 1%67. sans which are called medicines, similar , superstitious traditionary' dogmas and • Tee platen. by Invited to parletpate. to those Which. vistaed the diseases, are j I and Permit them to be entailed'on ns. ; _ism:,.! the only remedies. The first branch of . All We food . pronounced common tense of mar:Moll Is nounced wholesome AN traißstaD3El. , y th • the proposition Is unquestionably true; wholesome, and has been so established ALL PERSONS RAVINE elaltna the second might be controverted. That by the concurrent testimony of all sal- iooriesio'on:torL' 0f.c.41-I'.;:arer.it'•oten7s's!rj. is ant my purpose. All legitimate prac- ' once devoted to the subject. Their very tham lt . t,ntee, to ' nature and designls that after mastica- ' E. N. Won no w, tie. ''"elete In expelling from the ! Y e ' ' tion and degluon they shall be re• lls . 72 r'e'"lsl'''' A"'"l'r"''''"b. tom all polsonspreelously introduced, r I °- solved into a pure chyle, 'which, being c, e ,,,,. ' ~.... ue,smns. ',e.t.a , in neutralirlng their effects, and until I incorporated with bile, will, by the Url - • t:3-i;;-s-,,to-e-s7i;t7iixit117:riiP,I.taAke.-, :hills accomplished, disease and derange, ! erring laws of life,- pass into the chetah- : =as= 01. 4 the best ment of functions must continue. }When i lion a healthful fountain of pure arterial ICE mita st. coNramst via. , , them snhatances are clandestinely. intro. ' , blood. These laws of life are thiyond At the loweet eneennaos taesliorte•t notice... 4 our control, and can only be deranged 2-,_,_,,i10r ire:T.:32am. duced, and the physical powers are sun!. Iby violence pqison. Th ' is is the Irre- - - —,,,,-,, jill -- -7, - 3alza. elent to sustain the shock, , one or more aistible conc o l r usidr, and any other con. , . -- - - 1-113"""'. kil' h"' entire revoltitlOns of thecircujallon may , elusion is in violation' of all science on ''''„,'"'.,. „ z. elapse before the deleterious matter ,is • the subject. Iry the whole range of the '' "' '''''''''' - a I. la' ass passed off; either by the skin or the com- ' fotiti we cat, either vegetable or animal, HUTCHINSON & HEPBURN. mon excrementitious channel. Many : there is nothing incompatibie with the nom, SIGN ANS OIiNDILITAL PAISMS; have passed to their graves who could i most perfect sanitary condition. nor can UNA/NEES AND tiLAZIEIM. not have been healed, even though the ' any matter be resolved, generated or No. Na PENN•A AVENUE, Vlttab h. cause were fully tuaderstood, for the.vital ', produced by any process, analysis or ' .. %II orders by mall promptly sit id ed to. thtletfollll bad been ao . far impaired that I combination, nor any substance be ex- ' ' the physical poweriMiuld not redress the, traded or compounded In the st mach . ' amiss or l e gltt.Z."' 1 injury. So long si the lungs have sum- 'or alitnentsry canal detrimental t the ' THE AS 4 lEstatrIENT for the t:ra.. cleat elastic power to inhale a pure at- ; very best condition of health. Ti; gao ' I. Moe, Pollan and Curbing or BUY.. =spheric air, and exhale the carbonic : trim joie°s elicited from the glands of the ;',W,,Et.,ek g' , ,,.Z1,,:?:;',;,:,,,,, • •,r,;„1 . ,„ ) ;,"'„,7:, 1 ct , acid gas, the resultant of respiration, and j mouth by the working of the jaws, de- ; re...slain this Oben, West Market Boadlor. us. transmit to thethcart a pore revivifying I emends into the atomach and is designed : 4114V,:iri b ,„.„1 " . 7 Ar,,,:,7, 2 ,,„,",1 05 e t ,''' '''' ' h. ' fountain of arterial blood, the healthy j as a solvent of the food and the nutri• It. J. MOORE, action of all the ft:me:ions of vitality " meat derived therefrom passes into the ' _!sire . • accordion Iteaulator . will be restored. In the general circa-'; circulation. - I ation, the hepatic cirettlation is involved.." : p1a.,,),!;,°....,p,..ri,:gr.E.,E..-orn . nat. orneols dlon of a Colored I t, esbyterlen When all the poisons are removed from ' GENERAL NEWS. Chureb. twe livened tomeet st MOINE, ff •LI.. the eirculatiort,.the brain and the soft sot- I oo Ito. ,tea r &Me of 11, Diamond, Allenby's , . no AIMS" it AYTlf.N.n.n, at o'clock. st Ws of the body which they have . portae- I area, nature, the grand restorer, pre- condition. errs! ,n . Mown . . aro /net, den did ; ..,, --The iAI - ' I . d•d :moo How sermon veal to presonrd. and on o hems fur tutor. sere,ce will be made. EnLlifr E. SWIFy. ceeds by the ever true laws of life, with Th ,, ~,,i„,,k t0 „'„,,,,, h us in „,li, lts • ..g.ii! d as AL i, s ,r,: .• her functions unimpaired, And health is an - pn„„, - ,,,,,,.. - ,,„„„ gi t - u , „, i; th, i n tv0.,5,,,, ! ' JAMES n:r.i. , lo:tlS, almost instantly restored. • Although the j tnitotty, t;eorgia. ~, sr. eunc.lol.or, vigor of life may not be fully regained, t -The ••C it 10 _ew oven ./,),, rut,/ has loom : jeto,b-s•WS T. H • MIN. Commltt. of Presbytery. i( is to be observed that when the roil- I presented with It etratt berry, of tha Wil- i - tine fraIICAIVIhy science has eradicated , son variety, sin he in einnlinfrreace. every vestige of disease,' how clearly the j -The oilleers of the Eng-hall army, it intellectual powers shine through . MiYal- . is anuotinetsi, aril to Ira dm...hummer cat clouds, prostration and depression. l granted spovil leavcs• of almence to visit Through the circulation only Is disease 1 the Paris Exhibit!on and death or health and life communica- I -A Ritualistic riddle: Why seas Eve ted. If food and drink have none of I the first Ihttlalist. votiVert . . Inman. she the seeds of aeath incorporated with it, 1 inscan by being eve-one - elk.), end end health throughout life will be uninter- : 0.1 by taking to ventenents. rup_ted. -The Now York Notion thinks truly However, in the detailsof the practice, 1 that "ato political °famous, however either of the. Homeopithiat or the Alio. I sound, can make knaves and elmrinums pathist, neither the canna nor the dingo- " anything but a curse to the country.' coils of disease is fully presented. The ! -The Black. Crook-. pays. Nlblo's , New York The returned $47-1,7.14grce. cause of all disease being - introduced receipts in ISdil, or nearly fear times as through food and drink, the diagonosis or I ,ss, oth . any similar camera ill the that endless roll must be studied under ' ; eit differerft rules and sympathies than those 1 L Y ' A sharp d riven of thn At eat has in s delineated by either. veinal a insehine far killing te'potuto We meet study the effect on the living I bug. Two wheels drive a fan, winch system laboring under disease of all des ; ouc h, * ure thi, i,e,,,, ~,,,i ,i,L.,1," - am,. leterious substances introduced into the .! agninit tl, board. stomach, whether or not with an inten- Th ee i s „„ „n„.,- Lorne in Virginia lion to waste away and prematurely wear I which °attains the meat emphatic iwer- oat life. Not until the causes of disease , aims in ••bluir colors. Ile will not allow are made fully to appear will their ding.. any one to approach him inn blue matt i jOTICE IS HERERT GIVEN noels or their-cures be tally understood. I orjacket; gets frantic and wants to tear.' •' ' tow •me ALLIGHENy FEIITILtnEff It is a well established fact that small , it off. I COMPANY b or toe present rellropflobed 'pox was not known to the Aborigines of 1 -The papers. is Sparta. Wivconsin rn- , 'Mulness, sod ca l f leased Its property - In rinse this continent until subsequently to its' port that the crops around there, of 'all ' Sarah to mut.. T. Byword and Henry Cowl, discovery by Columbus. This ' loath- j kinds, are 'oohing well. Wheat olden- , bell, partners under tae finanante of SEWAHH some disease is introduced into the Bye- I did, tort fair , 'auto go . ed; strawberri, ; a CAM en ELL. who art nano theft awn insp.... . roil pron.- . sibllay, bone the name f . •TH ALLEGHENY IBM, Ad all others foody the virus being ; :"" e hotter . " r el. the -e v ' . es an immenoe yield. rein mixxit COMPANY,.• to carry en th e incorporated - withand drink. Vac- I • In some par: of 11 . 1iode i s i„„,i i t , i s , .00 .. . r in , ess „ ...r . ta , zur_ tiar , laa sod .d sol u l i lan or e t oln . -' tine matter Is frequently transmilied by I - mail hy the regular practitioner, and is I eeuremeett ';'?' " re ” I '''''' - ' 1 '" i'""p 1 " I .. " • - • ‘ 7.1,4 w ii ' :...• o't tb:5L0":',:„.c,,,,1.:,,',..1. , starting In lite on weekly •or munthlv I ". :to easily procured by such men as Dr. : i ,„,,,,, u ,,,,. „ nt h tht , ~.1 „ ,;„r the pm. ,,,,. 1 a n As said Company ass heretofore dove. Slodd. and they arc found anywhere, 1 ts i,,, pa id, a i „,,,,, ~,,.„.4,,,,h,,,„,,, In ~ TIM ALLEGHENY PlettrlLlEnt COll fANY. and by them furniahei to 'inch men as I persona of limited Means. 1 By Jogs B. nervneot. it. Prreaterii. Booth and Payne: Abernathy was once __A suit „,,,, begun lust work i n Mem. ', , f_ s". .._—LH'PeL .. " F. , Y±.1 . 1. n. ... ' '. l2._''.___ asked .by a pupil why the small pox was i phis against two doctors , wile, it hp al- : ' Ws S. HAVEN only taken once, to which he replied, ; I , , egi ..., trivo to nun rlevutniviont by 0111- , Pi "Tell me why it is taken once, and I j tug the plaintiff's arms'initil thoy broke , win answer your quest - tom!' Ile might, ' one of the tendons, since which time die . ; arm earilbe used at .0. Ilcavy Muria- ; . I apprehend, without circumlocution, .have answered the question that the ! St' are deielest structure of an Ma soft solids of the'' -teL Forney, speaking, of the "p orn 1 Job Printer, Stationer, body undergo a change in their atomic in London, ,aays r ••The priees of ad .:ts- ; Irtangement by the Jinn infection of the j O u titi m ur o i; , t e s , s . !h vo e !It ,. abou t , twid. .aqua! to Ii t ri o rtf a c: , i . virus that renders itimpossible to mani- I pi ' try ' Uette - f.L our Availe j :::v, ' Alinnt three • Cost itself in the - smite way again upon , dollars o r ou r mom., ,i./,iis th e 1„,,,,, i . the surface. Is that more paradoxical 1 range from ten to thirty dollars. A . . . than the fact generally admitted that igiance at these tigures motheielltiv proven j . BUNK BOOK MANUFACTURER, where death has resulted from the than- I the imi vasfiality of the ref.,rter crldosee 1,, derbolt The' blood will - not coagulate. : England enjoying °pinata harem:ilea.' Hence some of those who have previous. ; ..........„,,„,,,„„,_„„„,,,,.. • Iy had the small pox and have partaken ; DO NOT of the same food with-;others been in wherein ' , Let LILTS; MICE. BOACIIn, EEL, BOGS or the virus has corporated are only affected with beat , sickness, others with I ANTS .....Y Too Rhea yen can Metro, there varioloid, and others still, who have not I cm, been previously affected, will have the I 33 171 . 1... T 'RS virus displayed in its 'moat manifest' ' . form. Can it be that any of the faculty I Never-Palling Exterminator, are so blindly led by ancient routine and I - pretended scientific rules as to suppose I The ant sea oidy ',merest prey...ton in a.s. , !,',T;,.?,1,,!.;;',=:,r '''"``''.°- "'" '''sr ' - ' d that all the matter appears on the , surfacein a case of sman pox is genera- I _ ted or existed In the human system by ! HOLE atiarir Foe romancutot. natural laws and wag so' aecumulited and stored in violation of the same laws JOSEPH PLEATING'S until every capillary shall be fully' charged and ovary pore of the surface ' Drug and Patent Medicine Depot , ' obell spew forth simultaneously a full Mscharge of the entire contents of the . „ 4 . No. ell MANKEY Bruner. system. 1 ''' '''''": - ' - Complete Sunday School Librarier, . The proposition ts too absurd to admit : What Swarne , e Ointment Will a priori. and too ridiculous to he address. i Du„,,,,,ena, fro m to nYbooy. vd by reasoning. It is the production of I rummers. me easel osatinate ea..* orr et. the virus incorporated, with food and j, ";11, ',in eta", caeonte Eryrlpelas of tae Mee. --- drink, and which had vitiated the chyme I * .•: - tl""',.. u. ” ..e it o t ' Le l'', • ''''''''t e v' t ..""n'',.... JO HN - ILONEIit, and chyle of the stomach, lad this pus is 1 i_lio,"iff ;.:.,T,l44%;,roeto'rolii,':-.4.7.• taken tip in the circulation by:every duct I. 7 - C. EVA.E I4 . 0... L. ., sad , ....,. .'.' HECLi FOUNDRY, and vessel and conveyed by them and i IP',:kt. H ., Dr. r „,,,,,,,,,, ~,„,,,,,-,.,.. ~,,T x ! , .. the .capilliaries over the whole surface , :;1143 1 P,',•CV. ...r .. ‘ e'''''''''' V rl atil:: Carson SG, Otb Ward, near A. V. IL IL from head to foot. The high and excited ' brrra ts maven nauwat rrwrren% action of all poisons gives a force to the ; ; e ld.E. :: To 7,,,u, ' ,413: 7 411:. * MANCI.WITII ZS or cirenlatian that send most of their effects I -mu it• - ••rrrrza•• ' to p r ewarzta a 4 .1 f. I- ; Harmer Dies, Steel Moulds, to the extrernitles. ' There is nothing in ' . wort_ Ca or I . CLAItItAN /1 - M . KIN- • the whole corporation of ion, or in food, ' NA. as sites. sm.,. usu. A. km.a.v. 31 iron which this pea could be generated ! l'it'. r i titutt,s,l,r -- ,,,j t ,',1L L 1 . 71,",,,..„"„ . ,',.,""1„,' 'ti n t' : loll * El Fein Cushy" r."1111' without the action of poison'. Recol- j borsht KANE A DMA/T. Athehtme. • ' •------ lent, dear, reader, that this pus or 'VIM _...'''''''''''- , _ ... ~.. . .. . _ RECIFIE.'4I)AIr, at*NE 26, 1687. C O - OPRATIVE LABOR - • The Pyramids of Egypt. have two as. pee's. They are ordinarily presented to the mind as speCimene of ancient 'art, and as such justly excite astonishment 'E rid. admiration. Hieing in gloomy udeur oat of the plain, they ithpress • - holders as gigantic sentinels, keeping rs silent and,perpetual ward over the ashes of a great . nation. Under the other as _ - pect they 4tlsmally abadow forth the .• *reiched condition of the laboring 'pop illation which made their construction POssible. }tile: 5 , 455 5 . . widow, man, an DMA. 55,Aird . 1 . 05 bulsithis of that l'An.: sod sonny a M 0.% Worn out Witt Lotl.d slaverso.sss?..,‘A • TA. P-..cr ma'. God to sweep It free the earth, Aad, Spurs his ahlldt•A lb. det.sced Ink • Meg taste on noon, ay., p0.. 5 . 15 A • ebolesst,days of .115. . 1 %55. • • dotard's vistl/." . ' ' Doubt/ma the monarchs who ordered those erection s eperienced a glow of • self-satisfaction in\ contemplatipg their ostentatious sepulchres, but the poor - - men who laboriously piled .brick on VI brick till the summit seemed to pierce •-''' the clouds, must have been reduced to abject slavery. , • From that day to this, at keit, the re lations of Leber to" Capital have often .been decidedly unsatisfactory' to . the - 7 - • former. `All the feverish' unrest that has been felt has not been lustihni`by the • . facts, but there has been sufficient cause of complain; to furnish plausible excretes fur chronic repieinga. For ages the I feeling has been prevalent among work- ingmen, and mores() now than 'at any formbr peribd, that they received much less than a fair proportion of thetrultiof their toil. They ace mimpeiepeles, and even opulent furter:Ate, garnered up by the men for whom they work, 1 114',..tbey feel that most, if not all, of this hen been wrongfully withheld from them. If they are correct in this conclusion why do they not breathe proprietors them seluna? Most of the men for whom they work started, as theydid, without a dol lar. The differentresults attained would Teem to Indicate a difference in the men. IndUidualsare rated, and necessarily 50, according to what he - can ' do, and the . value of the things done. If only one man In five hundred has that particular cast of mind - which Ma hint to man age the details ' of extensiye, and Complicated affairs so, as to ensure a , prosperous issue, the advantage belongs to him in the same absolitteseuse • ae his capacity to toil withitta bands. This 'spot a new . principle, but a very old one, recognized everywhere, -from the first dawn of abe.lety. It lies at the basis of all distinction between skilled and rthskilled labor. When a • skilled workman has need to hire a helper, he does not feel 14 equity bound to pay that ;Lelper as much as he demands for his own work. 'The helper may lay out much the most strength, may toil some hours the most, may have the largest family to maintain, and yet the skilled workman knows he ought not to pay that man as much as the proprietor pays him. He recognizes the fact that it is not altogether, or mainly, Muscular • 'Myer that counts, but experience, dex- ', terity, judgment, intellect. And this is . 43^ all round.. The iiroviding and direct- • ing mind is o finoteniableaupentor value I to common botie and muscle; . ' • All men are endowed with reason; but ri really gi,tat philosopher, statesman: general, Orator, poet, machinist,or me zonal% cannot be fduud In a Million. Tesler(' very rare commodities; and are 'rated according to their rareness Mee like Geones Law, COnITEI.Ina VALNDER: ;tux and A.. T. Srsw.urr, are about as upusual ea philosophers. Gionos Lew started ass stone mason, woilhog for a dollar a day. COltatLll7B VANDEttnitt as a bargeinan in New York, and felt elated when be become owner of a boat. - A. T. Prriweez came over from Ireland shout as poor es anybody! ] ever came. They did not 'waste time grumbling, but - went to wGrk and made each many mil lions. If any workingman in Pitts burr., feels he hoiste' enough in him for that, the way stands its wide open for 1 • Lim as it did for them. ,There la, and can be, no exclusive privilege here; no , private road; no special patent. All de penile on superior foresight, comprehen sion, adroitneek energy. persistency. He who has (Wese is not band to 'divide ' the glans accrning from them. They are his as rightfully is ttte dollar and 9 ball or two dollars a day made by a common laborer belong to him. A. system Of co-operative Industry has, however, been introduced which has many features to recommend it. The ' design is to organize labor under its own • control, and for hi own Interest. TUC main excellence of tills system consists In encouraging workmen to do something for themselves, Instead of resting eon. tent to belinelingt Three kinds of co-operative societies have been tried. The lint is designed to save the profits which middlemen neces sarily' make on provisions and other fem. 11Y supplies. This has been tried in England, in some , instances with a high decree of success. Tho second is In Mantlacturlng associations, all the work /nett being stockholders, receiving wages under establithed' rates, and dividing whatever piofitarony be malt in proper . Ceti to the capital invested. ldany 355 e. elations of this sort exist try Europe- Several have recently been started in ' the United States, and so far with good regatta The third kind la that in which - the proprietors retain the ownership ea.l control of the haziness, ..admitting the eattdoyes to a share of the profits, If any are made, lb oddities to regular 'wages. Of these three aorta of association the first two are completely !within the con trol of the Workmen. ' , lf number of men reel competent to the 'undertaking, and are willing to take the risk, nothing 'hinders them from starting. Very niuch, • • of course, will depend upon the capacity of the general manager. Whenever an • efficient matt can be obtained Ibr, that • position, there ought to be lit tie dillieulty', beyond. In the third sort of amOcia— than, the consent of proprietors has 'to be obtained. Wherein this would nisc iicallY differ from graduating `wages on a gliding scale, according to, the prices Obtained for the product in market, as la done by soma of the anthracite cool 'companies, Is not apparent. One serious detriment to mechanical employments is the breaking up:oll the old apprenticeship system. Under that system apprentices were ordinarily taken into the families of the masters, their morals were superviited, and bathe of study encouraged.. At the end of their .respective terms they started Wit good workmen and with settled habits. Now, large' part of the journeymen of Amer 'lcon birth, never served w regaler np. prentieeship,- and are not, in any lust sense, skilled workmen. In our owls craft this is pro-eminently true. 'lt would be well to restorel a old yitti'm in Ulla particular.. But% whatever system .may obtain, workingmen will continue to End to tlin end, u thri have fiom the beginning or ihe world,.that the chief rellume mint be, opon - thetrh2dlvidualexertions. It let Int4rzianlng drinis alone, spend their spare , hoars in study so as to make =2tl increuethelr knowledge and aptness in • their particular callings, arrive to obtain a preper comprehension' of the art of baying and selling, sod so deport them sett es Si to be CODOCAOIIII of telbreopect, and io command tba, raved of Other!, they ought to have little dialcultrin obtaining a fair degree of socceu. 411 • men are not destined to be jieh. Wiz t tomtit:lx rata are indispensable neither to ntspeatabilitic nor !laminas. There 'Jai bony medium beitieen pirvarrty and .t.itiehei,'inti temporize*, Industry, good MMME;E • . , •arrics with it throoglahe entire length ! NO NAME. • •111%.,..•41 of the circulation lo poisonous power, ! staay, sway people. Weer trom thy). Imam 1 ( . IEIEAPEST PASSAGE and of whith the regular practitioner ..,,,„,,_ ~, , . - ' `-' furnishes himself with the virus for vac- -:- ..-- - - -.1 '" ''''''—‘l4l" .'" 7". TO THY. I , Is s hauls creak Cass— eination. A condition somewhat similar : '"`" b "°!" r. ' l l - OLD COUNTY. is,seen in jaundice, but the circulatiodis i • Pr.aktas 40 .• •[ i.. •/‘• 2 ha... in.. , t , Isa causes. (arid tbey ere lenum e reblr.) les .rap- .4. not driven with such force to the ex • : t..... ~.- , ...t h, ,,..,,,,c r. ~,,,,,, .. ?Macrae , Pacsage to LIVEUIVOL • QUlZNS tremitics and the surface does not ex.' •—• , ToWN, ulbitynstules and eruptions. It is elm- i r r "'T` l ""' `.. 1 "." '"" l " , !°'` o r "P`' ' • ply nee product of the gastric juice, the chyle and bile, and if no poisMt had been tntroduced would have been animalized - in the stomach, conveyed to the lungs and heart a pure arterial blood and sus tained the whole system la health. .Like . other • diseases, it is sometimes called sporadic, and at others called endemic, and We brightest geniuses of the faculty have never been able to ass one plans thie reason why it is effht*, or why it should be, infectious or contagious. This view of the origin of small,pox, as of all other diseases to which man issnbjected, will elucidate the: principal point con tended for, that their origin is to be found in; deleterious substances intro duced by stealth into food and drink, and to which every , interruptlon 'in his sanitary condition, mental or physical, Most always be inscribed. . This fiend practice for the destruction of health and life is perpetrated by as . well ascertained rules and with•as much precision as the honest practitioner ob. serzes in his presseriptions for his pa tients. • . . Every one who:twill attetitively watch will be surprised at the extent and the uniformity to which the system of pois oning has been brought. We cannot suppose it Is front dishonest motives or from a desire for a lucrative practice that the legitimate practitioner does .not ex pose the systematized wholesale destruc tion of human life,• but his better judg ment is overruled: by the superstition and imposture that surrounds Ms rules of practice. The veneration for tradition and custom which originated in barbs. rola systems of religion, bid defiance to his desire for reform .and improvement. No regret or mortification will arise from a well grounded distrust, bet infinite pleasure will be derived when the cartel of all disease is folly 'understood. The security and happiness which will flow I from the disclosure will amply repay the vigilante and watchfulness bestowed to protect from sickness anti to avert a coriP signment to a premature grave. The exposure of the criminal purposes and the schemen . devised by those without i • nierit,.who cannot endure the adverse contrast they continually bear with those around them, will: teach new lessons of caution and pmection. Let no one sup. Pose that they will wait long for 'conclu sive evidence., or that their patience will weary for instances that will surprise, and where yoti will have supposed the most cordial good will existed. It issuch ; confiding security that always suffers first. Those engaged in the !lend prac. I lice, be it remembered, are only the in-' strnments of those who, by plausible represettadons, remove the appearance of criminality, and represent themselves as principals to whom all blame would attach if overtaken intddisintvered. The 1 first attempts may not be intended far ther than toothache, until anbotinded confidence Is inspired from the ease and 'facility with which they succeed under the instruction of their principals. What at Drat was viewed with horror, now, from the perfect knoll:tits . th at attends them, they revive with pit - aware instruel ; tiontrom Welt principals in a system which they are taught to believe is on& venal, and that the knowledge , of the system will enable them to protect them. 'selves It does appear incredible that pOlien',l ing should - 64 so . generally practiced: without suspicion, and the inquirVj never starta4 from what aoes all 111/suf.,' feting proceed? Is it to be continued ' and no certain remedy ever to be 'ace,- Mined? That health. and hapoinees' 1 thould be entrained to those to whom we VOUNH LADIES, BEWARE of would not entrust our peraefor onehour,'l us Wart.as aft , etc er rs,, rowdy" and among ly __. the,_MMY a bsurdities frequent. (or ;TerfiteiaTri h titre * Zut ° 7 7,": P* " . ! witnessed In'gnavate life. It noes sm , I Vest.. t nroald bans • heat,. kaa.til7 and pus human credence that the 'vitals . PM11211:4, aid Fliza9Oizo'n s t ars...ex, aglnAtlar • tatat •ZI _ 1111E1 • - ' _.. . ". l 6" " n.• • • • ~,,, . 1•1 " •• • f1 " . ' • •• I y t wENTY-TWO DOLLIRS 1 CURRECY. 1.14..t.10ta itnel a utotssel Cm , eth are afso tee.' .Dratl y coneoefits n , s of tole dist re .sieg elate or ! ../.1 . 1 . 1.T1V b..dy •pd 1 1.4. Tbe sofoneen remark In rte-' WM. BINCHAM, JR., Con to per•ons In such a eosd et •ie is. that they ' are •ost tan V1 ,,, 0• No, ... ,,bo.. .i;To' , •°•"• •ulowt Express Co., 1,4 roll. Sit.. Plttelfefsh. ready Iseult Unsure. relied • ,,. ..nusle, had •µ je.fefan tertafalyu dawn en-cerds de; ..... .; they ea. , re.../re •te Ms/ o er•r•• and ~0 ., • I' 'lc. , . The Highest Market Prke beano by reset-Clue to bleat - crig,t, CELT. ; ' RR. - 1E1) HITT/telt II fa asiclesr that a ilte. ; • PAID 105 • I . . reviving !onto le netrlret In tan rarer. fle that • ' ~,,, ....... I I the dr ds dude o r du rmttr Irrrr , rdrirr..