D . E PUBLD3KED DAILY, BY - • PENNIMAN, NEED .IE CO., Proprietors. P. R. nonrairAN. 1 JogrAn limo, T. P. HOUSTON, IR. 1.. REED, • Editor* and idannsrens„ GAZETTE BUILDING. NOS. 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST - OFFICIAL PAPER Of Plteseargh, Allegh en y and Allegheny Cotuaty. -- Taixs—Dally. I Semi-Week hr. i meekly.. . - ove r year-4SM One year.V.3o,Blngle c0py....5.60 One month. 15 Slx mos.. 1.50! 5 copies, each. 1.25 By the week, lb Three num '73,10 • ,•• 1.15 1 : (b'onl - Carrier. 1 and one to Agent. SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1668 TIIE WEEKLY GAZETTE, Issued on Wed— niedays and Saturdays," is the beatamtcheap est family neispaper in Pennsylvania. . It presents each week forty-eighi columns of solid reading matter. it glees Use fullest •as Iva as the most reliable market repots of any paper in the State. Its files are used mitt sirely bythe Cicil Courts of ..41kgheny county for referentoin important issues to determine the ruling prime in the markets at the time of the business transaction in dispute. Terme : Single copy, one year, sl.4p ; in clubs office, $1,25; in clulat of ten, $1,15, and one free to the getter up of the club. Specimen copies sent free aillay cairns. WE PRINT Ori the (nude' pages or this morning's GAZETTE : Second page, Ephem eris,Corutensed Yew s Third page, Markets, Financial and :Ricer News. Third page, Some Markets. Seventh page, Interesting Miscellaneous Reading Hatter. Goth dosed in. New York ydsterday at 1391. ' RE RESULTS of the elections in Georgia and North Carolina are still in doubt, at this writing. The defeat of the Constitution in the former State is claimed by the Demo crats, Who boast, nevertheless, that they have elected a Governor under itsprovisions. We must wait a few days to know the truth. The Associated Press reports frem the South I are remarkably uniform in their rebel lean ings, suppressing as far as practicable any , news which could gratify Republican& The majorities of 10,000 to 20,000 in Louisiana and of 43,000 In South Carolina place Re construction in these States oat of danger. Tun REPORT that Messrs. Groesbeck, Evarts and Stanbery are yet to make speeches in defense of their client, and that Messrs" Williams, Stevens and Bingham are severally to be heard for the managers of int peachment, is very likely to be correct. Of • course this Will delay the final submission of the case to the latter part of the coming week. If the Senate concurs in the propo sition for an official report of its secret dis . cessions, the delay in the vote will be still longer protracted.. Very few of the Sen ators will bp able to resist the temptation to spread their individual views upon a record .of such.general interest, and we may look for at least three days to elapse before the first decisive vote is taken. We have an ticipated this vote as early - as May AV, but the country will be fortunate if it be reach "ed even in the very last hours of the week. Washington advices sustain our estimate that thirty-nine Senators will vote for Mr. Johnson's conviction. The proposition that the discussions be taken down by the ottela reikerters, is very significant of - the _ _ opinions of &IWO'S, who would not court such publicity in the interest of the accused. El Flamm of the President, who have fill, ed the Democratic newspapers of late with confident. predictions that impeachment will fail :of a constitutional majority of the Senate, may succeed in deceiving die credu lous for a'few days longer. But the course which events will take is plainly, enough foreseen by Mr. Johnson himself, and by all the leading 'Democratic politicians. It is understood that he is already engaged in, his "personal preparations for leaving the White /inure ; that.the members of his Cab inet are occupied in the same way ; that all efforts to anticipate the order_ of, the public business in the Biecutive departments, or even to dispose of such matters arising in . its ordinary course as can be left °vet with out serious inconvenience, have been re cently discontinued, and that the spetidy close of, the present administration is re garded by all concerned, whether superior or subordinate, as a certainty.with the close o: the present month. It has even been proposed, among the opponents of the Re publican party,.to urge Jefferson Davis to leave the country before the :new adminis tration goes into power, the apprehension being that he will be hung,' irhe___Comes fairly wfttin the Republican clutch: COuld, riva have ?froncer indirect evidence. of the PeIIM9MUC, bell 4 in MP iaPvitilltle results Qr titg impel:lament"? ' IF TILE latest. advicesfrom Japan, are be credited, tie government of that empire has been radically refolutionized; "c: The off . hifiq supremeal?tlitni'4 - Of thy Ali.w2 7 --which was in thedity tirAi only apinttial but temporal, but which, in fact, has been,. beyond the memory of foreigners,mere; sbadownider the usurpations of the great-, est of thersemi-independent princes holding the power successively as Taicoons---has been at last re-established, by the comPlete defeat of the present claimant of the' latter title and his retirement 'tram any _flintier contest. The war has been brief but Ban . raillery, until:tits couree; the treaty privi leges of foreigners have been frequently in fringed upon. The 1440, itieguniug pow; the undivided authority, promises.that these wrongs shall be atoned 'for, and titer:6ls good reason for wnfiding in the sincerity of his pledge • The restoration in this myste rious empire;of a responsible gbiernment, with a altigte head,4lll be a long step for wan, to the etitablishinent of, those pe neatly amicable rehltione with the Christian world which;. of 'Mclean, it has been' clearly the Japanese' poilcy 'to cultivate. To no fordigrirration has this fact more important signlflcaace than to our own widch, upon its Pacific folnt, is established as their,near est neighbeind with regular steam coni zmunicatoitir - - .. OFFICE In Pennsylvania two Asylums for the Insane,. mainly endowed from - the public _treasury, have existed for a series of years. In them about six hundred patients are steadily under treatment. It is not pre tended that this department of medical science has attained unto perfection. Such a condition can rationally be affirmed of no science, or of any department thereof. Whatever may be said of the comparative certainty or positivity of surgery, as much cannot with truthfulness be said of medi cine; much less of that department of it which undertakes "to minister to mind diseased." Mental philosophy is confessedly the most intricate and perplexing' of all studies. This was wily Coleridge affirmed that "metaphysics is the science, the evil spirits in hell delight to discuss." Its sub tleties and intervolutions, he assumed, sharpened their wits, afforded the wildest play to their faculties, and left them after all in teasing uncertainty. But the medi cation of insanity involves more. It neces sarily takes cognizance of that intricate point at which the intellectual and physical —the spiritual and the material—touch and blend, so that it is the most difficult of all prOlems to tell where the one ends and the other begins. Nevertheless, the modern treatment of the insane has reached such pitch of excellence that vast advantages steadily result therefrom. Ameliorations are not only numerous, but a very large proportion of all the patients who are brought proMptly under treatment upon the first manifestation of the malady are re stored to the normal use of their faculties. Nor has an end been reached in the line of improiements. But these two establiShMents have been found inadequate to the proper detention and treatment of that portion of the.insane for whose welfare the Vommonwealth, ac cording to the prevailing conception of its duty, onghtlo make provision. Not that insanity has increased in larger ratio than the Population; but that numerous classes of insane persons who were formerly nn- cared for, and_ either allowed, to roam at pleasure or else were confined in out - buildings, are now brought under beneficent su -pervision and treatment. Nor is this all. A better understanding otmental diseases has revealed the fact thatmany intellectual :conditions, once rated as annoying idiosyn crasies, or something of that sort, es sentially abnormal and unhealthy, and are amenable to remedial instrumentalities. In consequence, a bill was brought before the late Legislature to provide forthe eree tion of a new asylum, especially intended to accommodate a score of the northern and north-eastern counties. It was felt that the location of this additional house ought not to be determined with a view to-aggrandiz ing this or that borough, but SO to be , • reached most speedily and cheaply by pa tients frinn the respeCtive counties directly to,,he benefited; and therefore'corrimissioners were named in the hill, who represented the best medical idea's bearing on • the 'subject, , find altogether disinterested in other pp- - • culaxs. .In this form the bill tree passed inte-'it law; the locati;: a 101 l be. fi xed, and the Houle m . lll .in Olitibl as the State shall furnish the Indippensable maticy. But, tho.bill did. 'not go through Without serltiii~ opposition.,. Some .of, the 'members were -resolved to strpngle it, if they could: Thei did nothesitate to aVowthe belief that ,the insane were better off with no treatment, ,than, with such care as the , best medical knowledge of the age can furmsh. ln fact, they seemed to halt hetween two opinions ; the first regarding Lnnatic Asylums as a sort of inquisitional lock-up, where unfortu nate men and women were imprisoned and plagued to gratify mischievous. curiosity or mistaken benevolence; the second, regard ing such establishments as palaces where a species of profeSsional dilittanteism, luitiri ously pampered at pablic cost, displayed a frivolous or mischievous activity. Rather than this, they did not hesitate to avow that It was better to turn the inmates of all Alsy. luins into the highways, . or drive, them out' to consort with wild beasts. When the high civilization. of the present is spoken of , itwill not age, Ja.thia . ,aaltPtryt do to infer that . ell the popilition shain-in that advancement. But from our popula tibb can be picked specimenk:of;all,the Civi lhations that are Or arkirq',44o.;:•Tliknoie• - i , o• - MEM ~ '' .~ , ~?c: : t:in- , so~~ .~~uJs7s +IV i I LUNATIC HOSPITA e„, .44. tarqrtrt. In few particulars does the civilization of thq present age stand in, stronger or, more favorable contrast to that of ancient times than in the treatment of the insane. The great nations of antiquity made small ac count of what are now known as the hu manities. Citizens thereof made famous repuiations by acts now esteemed of ordi nary' decency and morality. Individuals, and nations were hard, exacting, imperious, unfeeling, blood-thirsts The animal in their nature was not even measurably tamed. Wild beasts not nnfrequently fall upon such of their kind as suffer physical misfor tunes; and either drown or drive them into solitude. In like mariner, men and women smitten with insanity were anciently driven from among their fellows, into desert places, as frowned upon by the Alirdghty and possessed of unclean spirits. Afterwards, as the notion of demoniacal possession dis appeared, the insane, instead of being driven into "Wildernesses, were shut up, manacled, _starved, scourged, and subjected to the most revolting barbarities. At length civil ization rose so high, in advanced and ex ceptional individuals, that a wiser and better system was conceive.' and introduced. By these, insanity was pronounced a mental disease, and treated accordingly: Now, conunonwealths build palaces for the custody and treatment . of those whose minds are disordered. Communities have risen to the plane occupied only by the foremost among them a half or quarter of a century ago. How vast the change! Formerly forts, cas tles, dungeons, amphitheatres, highways and acqueducts; these, and such as these, only. Now, they erect and' sustain schools for the ignorant, hospitals for the sick, homes for the destitute, and asylums for the deaf and dumb, the blind and the insane. Civilization never attained this altitude beforte. 11111 ~"47P1.7,11`,9-4.."-,, 73.; - ,Iz*,,,""ZrEal An article entitled, "The Morality, of Hop-raising," in the Advance, (a Congrega tional paper) of Chicago, presents the obli gations of professing Christians in rather a new light, and will be unsavory to tlMse Christians who believe in making money r at the expense of correct morals. Hops being moderately - narcotic, they have a tendency to quiet the nerves and Induce sleep. This „Element enters into beer manufiictured from hops, and produces more or less effect on the nervous system, and classes with tb- liacco and epium. Hops are not used for food, clothing and fuel. They are not needed for the support, comfort and elcva- Ition of human life. Their culture not only works against the interests of the beer drinking poor, but the teMperate and indus trious poor. Every acre put to hop raising enhances the prices of progucts by pre venting the -raising ofgrain or corn and other useful articles. Hops are needed for yeast, but' very little yeast is ' needed. Many Christians and temperance men have been induced to raise them because it is said they are good for tanning, but this is denied, as tanners cannot afford to pay over six to eight cents per pound for such purposes, and they are not used. The assertion is a mere trick of the trade to induce rood men to . Iraise them. Their commercial value and profit arise solely from their use in the man ufacture of beer, and beer drinking being on the increase in the !United States, their value is enhanced accordingly. Hop raising for commercial purposes is a labor promo tive of intemperance. The duty of Chris tians and temperance men is plain not to I raise them, as there is a responsibility in volved that will work to their spiritual det. I riment. Some persons attempt to justify hop raising, 'by classing hops with corn. Corn is made into whisky—hops into beer. But corn constitutes food, and is mainly cultivated and used for it,- Probably nine teen-twentieths is thus consumed by man or beast. But hops do not constitute food, and every "hop-raiser must know that nine teen-twentieths of his hops go to swell the tide of drunkenness." The great pecuni ary profit, is the source of temptation to raise hops. and professing Christians and temperance men are induced to hush the throbbings of ‘ conscience, by imaginary arguments, without any real foundation for them. iQuite a number of distinguished ministers and educators have been removed by death Within a short time past. Rev. Dr. Baugh man, for forty years cOnnected with the Pennsylvania Lutheran College, at Gettys burg, has been suddenly cut off. For, eigh teen years he was its Proident, - tilling the position with signal ability. Nearly abbut the same tinie,.Rev.- Dr. Johnson, President of Dickinson College, under the care of the Methodist Episcopal Church, died after a brief illness. Scarcely more than: a month ago we sat near Lim in Exeter street Church, Baltimore, during the Session of the East Baltimore Conference, while he WaS arrang ing work connected with the College, for the ensuing summer. Little .did we think he would be called away suddenly and so soop. Intelligence has just reached us of the death of Bishop Hawks, of the Protes tant Episcopal Diocese of Missouri. For twenty years he has filled the office of Bishop, during which, time the Episcopal Church in Missouri greiv to large propor tions in numbers and wealth. Ho was very popular and fraternal with the clergy of St. Louis, of every Emme. It is not a great while since Dr, Maclean, President of. Princeton College, passed away from earth to the better land. His loss was keenly felt._ . ' I. Five years figo the Liltiiatith -Synod of 31 -, a uef..bta.tvas cot posed of two English had two German ministers. It has now twenty-two ordained ministers anti about fifty congregations. Rev. Dr. Henry—Kendal, , formerly ipas= tor of iThird Presbyterian church in this city, now Secretary of Homo -Missions of the New School bodY, sailedfoi,:Europe:mt the 11th, to have rest from the ardent labors in which he has bectc•gngaged ! • -: .` The discourse of Rev. Joseph H, Pressly, of Erie,'Pa., to, the Afunini of the United'.Presbyterian Theological Seminary, Alio gheny, Pa., Wednesday, of last week, 14 represented by the Banner as an able ond, but its purport, as was evident from its con! clusiop, may be comprehensively stated "as a plea for the divisions j eitisting in - tile . ' Church, and a protest against present tif. forts at re-onion.": ' ' ' There are fifty Methodist Churches In Philadelphia, valued at over'a million'pr dollars, and with sixteen thousand otli . membership.' The pastor of-the Second Presbyterhin Church; at ,New Albany, ladian a , a s h n i p it f i, the ordinance of baptism by immoral44' We believe this is lluuslJal• . i At the recent session of the Allegheny Npiled PresbyterlaniPresb*r T ßi ry i i:,R.' Itiii, of Allegheny City; *ached a:4)er.t . , mon on oath-bound societies, founder, -On' Pird Thesssionlans;, filth''CllSPtei and titeiz! ty-Secead verse. :Dr. I B. Clark femictid d MI • •k • - Maa..f-ek PITTSBURGH. GAZETTE : SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 18 numerous specimens are not of the higher types, but of the. lower; ,nten. and, women who 'contrive to live, holding 'on to all the ignorance, Passion; prejndfce; and of the darkest ages, and yet fancYinethey are bright ensauiples of . the best thll-orbed mental enlightenment and moral cultivation can produce. It will not do to judge the age by these. No age has been known but would be utterly discredited by such a test. To illustrate—when the Elizabethian age in England is spoken of, the design is to mag: nify, not the mass of the people, but the com paratively few choice spirits o y made the age illustrious. The bulk of h the population were of another sort, who would have found a congenial social and civic atmosph re thousand years before. Those members of the Legislature I could find no good; but only harm, in L n tic. Asylums, may properly be regarded specimens from remote antiquity, who hal come down to these times to retard as fa i r possible the progress of society. RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. =EI =1 MI ___ ... _..... that he Lad organised, iu' February last, the .congregation of Etna, consisting of . forty four 'members. Sdnieeirelitifakellthe' 'tioribletiiimik - throUgh the list of the:: Episcopal Churches in. this country, and reports that there ire 287 St. John's churches and 270 St. Paul's; while St. Cyprian, St. Augustine, St. Am brose, St. Polycarp, St. Cornelius, St. Thad deus, St. Columba, St. Margaret, St. Wil fred, St. Sylvauus and St. Chrysostom have one church each. The time 43 near at hand for the usual May anniversaries at New York. We find an nounced that the anniversary of the Amed , can Bible Society will take place on Thurs o day, the 14th, the business meeting at the Bible House at 9 - A. - 31., and the public . (0 meeting at Steinway Hall at 10 o'clock: i. The American and Foreign Christian Union is will hold its anniversary the same evening 8 - at Steinway Hall. -Dr. Joseph Duryea, Dr. 8 Lachlin Taylor, of -- Canada, and Rev;Mr.. .Pilatte, of F ' nce, W 11 address the meeting. Dr. J. P. Th imson will preach the annual sermon befo a the merican 'Home Mis sionary Sod ty on Sunday evening, the . . 10th. The P otestan Episcopal Children's- Missionary S ciety will convene at Stein way Hall, Sa rday, 3Oth, Dia. Tyng and Newton, and . ther clergymen, will speak. The American Tract Society Meets on Wed nesday, 13th, at Dr.lHall's church. Dr. Hall, ; Dr. Jessup, Of Syria and other speakers are engaged. Th6H annual re union of the American 'Congregational Union will occur at the Academy of Miele in Brooklyn. Senator Wilson will preside. A number of addtesses will be delivered,- Dr. John Hall, Rev. S. 11, Tyng,- Jr., and Others. Dodsworth's Band will .discourse sweet music. : The twenty-fifth anniversary of Rev. Dr. Spear's settlement over Pie South Presbyte rian Church, in Brooklyn, will be observed with appropriate servic6s to-morrow. The church then consisted of but seventy-two members. The additions since that time have been about sixteen hundred ; the pres ent membership is about seven hundred. According to reports of exchanges re ceived by the Independent, there have been eight thousand accessions during last week: Of these thirty-seven hundred: are among the Methodists, thirteen hundred among the Baptists, and twelve hundred among the two branches of Presbyterians. During Lent an Episcopal Lenten service was held daily, at Library Hall, Chicago, at quarter before one o'clock. The Seventh Day Baptist MisSionary So ciety supports sixteen missionaries in the home field, and has a single mission .church in China of twenty members, with a native pastor. Among the translations of the Lather n Obserrer from its German exchanges we learn the Episcopalians after various efforts. have at last established (place not mention ed) an Institution for training German Ministers, whose mission will be to organ ise and supply Episcopal congregations among the Germans. 'pier Mater anniversary of the Sunday, School of St. James Chuich, corner of Penn and Mechanic streets, will be held Sunday afternoon (to-morrow) at 31 o'clock, when the children and congregation will be addressed by Rev. Mr. Allen of Christ Church, Allegheny City, Rev. Mr. Wil son of Calvary Church, East Liberty, and Mr. P. it Brunet. A cordial invitation is extended to all. 1 Rev. Elbert S. Porter, D. D., who has had editorial charge of the Christian Intel ligeneer for the past sixteen years, in com pliance with the earnest wishes of his con gregation in Brooklyn, has <returned from the editorial chair, to devote himself wholly to the pastoral charge. Dr. Porter proved himself to be one of the most accomplished, graceful and vigorous writers connected with the religious press. Under -his admin istration, the paper, has attained a high and honerable position. We welcome Rev. Mr. Atwater, formerly associated 'with him as office editor, to the place so well filled by Dr. Porten Mr. Van Wyck, the capable publisher, announces that the paper will be conducted upon the same principles and pol icy as heretofore. RAILWAY ITEMS. , The New York Eveatng Post save: The capitalists of Pittsburgh are beginning to take a lively interest in a new railroad pro jected to connect that city with Newborn, N. 0. The route of this road is despribed asalong the Idonongrihela river to its source in West Virginia;' distantie Of one hundred and fifty rniles; thence tieniss,ti table land of , five miles to the -head *nters of the Elk td'Ver, and then to-a gip in the Greenbrier Mountain, ten-miles beyond.- - :From-this 1 point it strikes to Greenbrier river,. and fol itiws it to its juncliiiii with. 'Nefi: river. fifty miles further. Thence the line. Pre, co e ds southeast to - Newbern, o n the Vir ,iginin and Tenneksee railroad .- .- - • . This road meuldnot , only*ig'itl y .benetit; Pittsburgh, but would' epen ppst vidiugitez 'and important section of country„, to Meet: the 'requirements of 3i-filch the' lialthnifre 'titicl, , Ohlo Radroad IA Inadequate. Pasaing, through•ifrich iiiiiittil kiigion-,‘.it Wiiii l d' . be of invaluable - assistance in sußlybig• the Pittsburgh forges and furnaCea with a supe ,rlorquality of oreolevelopingat the-szune time a section of 'country w h escogricultnral i resources aro,necessailly great] If the pea- 1 plc of Pittsburgh are able to build t id e road, 1 „it would grolitly.conduce follieilltereetikand add largely to tilts impottancii bftliat that lolling city. The desirability of opening -di rect communication with Ilk, iionifietnAV /antic ports is recognized in all ot-the Fon. ofml cities of the Ohio' Valley, arid the ben, eat that .would arise,. from- traveling; soutlui ward instead ofnorthward to 'the licatiorti duilagthe winter months is tally apprecia. ted. Pittsburgh is certidnlywealthy enough io o,oristruct such a road, panicularly as it would soon become the lnineipakeinninet threngh which 'her extensive rob works WOold receiver-their i mpplks.. .-''' -,` . • The same journal says : 'A.nunig - other sequences of the passage of the Eri e hill is th e pronipt finishing Of theAlhany mid Bus gtiehanna Railroad, now destined to become virtually a branch of the Erie Rallway_lead ing limo Binghamton to Allankf . It is also. ontemplated to ]ay steel rails and .a double (tiatic on the DelaWara divisloi of the Erie road. The ; Mil Jost. Passed.. reques .the money received frortt.the recent Issues of hoods to bo exiimided onthcroadinbelishes the RehelYerablP t j?' 4.yelli.,woblipl7-tenol nato the - Rowing in li- - ThePhiladelphfit says liedford; is mbViog:stltefloollsky, pjay thetwenty-I, 0 i... 41.3 The Action of Senate, - The senate, after the close of the argu ments, will go Into secret session for con sultation. A proposition will be offered by Judge Edmunds to admit the official report ers, so that the speeches of Senators may -be taken down and printed with the report of the trial, and half a dozen members are already known to be in favor of such pro cedure, while several will oppose it strongly. The vote on the separate articles of im peachment will be taken in open Senate on Wednesday or Thursday, probably, of next week. When the question arises of pro nouncing judgments, in case one or more articles is sustained, the Managers will make the usual demand, and the Senate may possibly then retire again for consultation. At this point an interesting law qUestion is likely to be raised. The .Constitution says a two-thirds, vote shall be necessary to con viction. but is silent as to the vote on the judgment, and the question is whether the majority or two-thirds must agree to the sentence. Some of the lawyers in the Sen ate are looking up authorities on this head- The majority sr,: doubtless in favor of dis qualifying Mr. Johnson from ever holding office again ,in case lie is convicted, but it is not certain that two-thirds- would agree to this sentence. When judgment has been determined it will be pronounced by the. Chief Justice. It is not necessary that the :President should be prigent when this is done. Here the ffinctions of the Court will cease, and the Chief Justice will not appear in any further proceedings-- Wash. Lette - BEWARE Of that remormdc.s and Insidious destroyer of the human race, C ONSUMPTION. Check and conquer its advaneffS, lest you fall the victim., When attacked with any of its prellniinary symptoms no matter how alight, be on your guard and pforaptly use the remedy ere too-late. . DR. SARGENT'S COUG R.STRER ' Is an old, well tried, certain and standard remedy for Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Croup, Difficulty of Breathing, rain or Oppression In the Chest or Lungs, and all ,Dlseases of the Pulmonary Organs. its sure and certain efficacy has been fully tested and endorsed for many years by numbers or well known citizens In our midst, and their certificates are on record. Rave you a Cough which has grad ually increased from a slight one to one of Derma nent standing? Lose no time- but procure a bottle of DR. SARGENT'S COUGH SYRUP. which will surely relict's you of the dangerous premonitory symptoms and effect a permanent enre. Dp vou spend miserable days and long sleet:dell Itichts of torture and Pain from attacks of Asthma or Ditilcui ty of Breathing? Dr. SARGENT'S Conch Syrup will act promptly. relieve you, and gradually re store you to your freedom of pain. and sound, pleas ant aleep. Are your lungs sore and irritateda ndi eating inflammation? This la one of the y most dan gerous symptoms, and should be promptl removed. Dr. SARGLNT'S Cough Syrup will heal the sore -1105.4, allay the Inflammation, and restore the lungs to, their preatine health and vigor. This Cough Syru_p Is pleasant and agreeable to take. while pow erful and sure in Its action. 'For sale by all TT" gists in the country. LT-- Wl' NOt YOUR PREJIUDICE USURP YOUR REASON. • It.it a fact that, in the !rands of many persons, a prejudice exists against what are called Patent Medicines; but why should .this prevent you resort . ing to an article that has such an array of testimony .to support It as lIOSTETTER'S sTo3recti BIT TERS? Physicians prescribe It; why should you discard it r grudges, usually considered men or tal-. 'eat, have. need and do use It In their Wallies: why should you reject SY Let not Sour prejudice nsutlr your reason to the ererliudinn Injury of Your health. If vou are' sick, and require a' medicine, try , these "% hen the bodily energies are worn out by anxiety and' needn 'stimulant, this Is. the best that eau be taken., It -Is tempered and modified bp hyglenie 'rectal and reets, ,'whicit prevent It from revering tbe Wed; and hence It draw not- produce a mere tempo rary excitement, to be followed by Injurious tene ..tlou; but'cottitnunleates a permanent potency to the entire vital organisation. Some of its herbal cote: - stituents are s lightly,soporifte, so thatlu case.swhere. ...ilitsmiessnesslir ode of the'ancempaulments , gif der t,,,..in.7.w.4 49.,. tilt: tadk,...towd,s.tilitiv. Izoritiniitaron oiltww.6,T. gstelcs,'llthrt; Ins tag g et tetaltestleasness and thecanscless fears mid istrearthightneJes to which g latlies are especially tehialit. Miller - certain Morbid conditions or thine, . eiv i„he.....dY-Itettillar to: their Sea', the -Bitleri wall be “urAmg w e l postAgtektoge and,certaln of all counter -1 . 14 0, 11 ,_.___ ;2 ' TiWAion id) f " m en . n's may readily . 4 , ...' 4 `' l4 a eurth htliteenitant oli j eck - br the dilly. ustrof thisteal t h ralvesetabl:tontet audthose whor rave: .'sbattered thenierrell,”rie by Itapnidebtind4l neeettindu PhYideill arse ; leetnak is will, tet -01 Phrete.i her rid,';ilt -Vita - vitalizing . elixir a prompt reiterative. ' ' ' ,---__ ANOTHeir CuRE or . I E.A.FNEste. I iosc m„*.4*/#i during the -last -year.- ran Of the:time YW4tiatiajr" . *deill:lc April of thisYear.i a 4 i ertYemeutv ( "",m ak B aPT' latelitttitt ilit..%)Dirtelinv/$lO Penn street+ Tittl" ,btittgh. Aftkihayiiig tried *Minim Medicines from doctorst'lvithont inibenefit. tiMie - been under Dr.. e/sCre treatment hate for nearly two months, and . ant entirely restored to my hearing, so thatir eau_ pe4r a .JOHN SCANLAN, Coal MUM; Velliiptroh . Co.; pa. ' AliYlllEn CURE. , • • A teen coiled to-day at Dr. Keyser4 odic° to la form him of a great cure Made by histirgo &Vim, or PULtIONAIII7 RNSTORATIVE. Mat . f these, „cares c ,a are with the Doctor's preparations, he desires It to be distinctly Understood that moss of his tri;at' `-egrfs &remade in accordance with . the established invis that govern the science of medicine, in which be has been engaged for the pasti tiCenty-five 'yew. Last he w!a.NAQ in receipt*/ a letter froze a clergyinan In thetjtjkig. f.. Q o g ...detailing another most wonderful cure. _ xErßtit;s:Eastrizrit toxsirvitissi OF. FILE FORLIINGEIW9wA.TXONS AND TREAT MEN't OF CHRONIC DISEASES, No. 159 PENN STEEET,.7II,OIB 9 A. M. TYM"PIT, BP. M. • ,, NEttr.e , ,i( 1 1 . V 2 '3l al miles of railwty that are needed to connect Bit with the Pittsburgh and Connellsville alkoail, at Bridgeport, and many are the _ e. v edien ts.ped—wbereby..to _obtain the_ money to - dolt°. The question with Bed- - ford now is, Can it be done without outside help? The Lancaster and Delaware Railroad bill having been passed by the Legislature, the citizens of the Old Guard county are also busy devising ways and means to avail themselyes of the franchises conferred by this last charter. The ultimate connec tions of this _proposed road are exten sive. • From • Lancaster, via Hinkletown and Morgantown, it can connect with the Wilmington and Reading Railroad at _or near Springfield; and thence via French Creek _to Pficenixville, there to connect with the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad; and thence proceed the Perkiomen and its east branch, to the Dela ware river at or near Point Pleasant. From the Schuylkill, at the mouth .of French Creek, to the Susqueluinna,- at the mouth of Swatara, there is a fair ground .for a oheap freight line. While speaking of the' rail road interests of this section of the Sate, we observe that Hon. Henry L Cak6 has introduced into the House of Representa tives at Washington a bill "authorizing the construction of a new railroad from Wash ington to the Schuylkill river, Schuylkill county, in this State. It is provided that the road shall run from Washington to the Northern Central Railroad, and thence by way of Marietta, in Lancaster county, to Lebanon and Pine Grove, and thence to a' point on the Schuylkill river, in Schuylkill county. The title of the company is 'The Washington y and Pennsylvania Railroad Compan. The route, as above designated, needs but a very little piecing to make it out at once, a link from 3 1anheirn to Pine Grove being nearly all, and that is already assured under a Pennsylvania charter. Forty-five miles of steel rails are laid on the Lehigh and Susquehanna Railroad, con necting with the North Penniylvania at Bethlehem. There was not a broken rail caused by the trains between Mauch Chunk and Easton during the winter. One hun dred and forty four-wheeled coal cars, car rying 770 tons of coal, have been hauleti over eighty-five miles of the Lehigh and Susquehanna Railroad by a single engine. 3 F. , . , ~Z_%t }a ,k , ,pmempsfmAttalMgn NEW AD p.TISEMENTEL _TONAS WHITCOMB'S r-1 For Asthma, Rose Hay Fever, Etc ~ Prepared from a German! recipe obtained by the I , te JONAS WIIITC03.11( 1 , In Europe, it is well nown to bate alleviated tips disorder In his case, irt al hen all other appliances pt medical Alit bad been ndoned by him in rlipsilii„, In no ease of 01114 s. thy:lane character has It killed to ere Immediate r lief, and it has effected any permanent cures. It contains no , polacmons ' i o,r Inkirious properties wAtts•rtr, st: Infant may teen It with perfect safety. .:Nit* f/staber 2S, isoe..„ Osaffrme”;l hstst solel s 4nsideratile quantity of' JONAS WHIT/3)311PS linfil ' Erry FOB AMTiI3IA, in this city, and to custouiars from lbe country towns, and while I often recajrc information of its complete SOCCCSS in rellerinki, and curltiOhe worst forms of that disease, /hate /rtt pet hearaltr the first caße jn which ithas ay this for the benefit of those who - are afflicted, arq who hace not tested the power of this .Temeily.':i.! Truly yours, SAMUEL A, 3311T11, Apothecary 3fesers, Btauczrr & Co.. Ma. Itunxttr: I take pleasure instating the won derful effects of "WHITCOMBIS 'REMEDY FOR THE ASTHMA" on my wife: had suffered for years more than my pen can deserlbe, with the spas modie form of that terrible disf:ise. • As often as ten or twelve times a year she wag renght to the very gates of death, requiring twoj or three watchers sometimes for several days and tights in succession. At times, for hours, It would sefizu as if every breath must be the last. We were oblia,bd to open the doors and windows in mld-winter, sql to resort to every expedient that affection eoultl l devise to keep her alive. At one time she was so fait gone that her phy sician could not count her pulse:;] At length I heard of "WHITCOMB'S REIIEDY4 , It , acted like a charm. It enabled her to sleep qUictly in a minutes. lam a Methodist Clergyman, stationed. • I shall be happy to answer any inquiries respecting her case, and you are at liberty to make Oly use of • the fore going facts that will benefit the a:filleted. Yours truly, KIMEI.r.LL TIADLEY. SACO csii l tpril 16, 1868. MESSRS. JOSEPII Bcnasrr Sr, o. — Gentlemen: I have tried everything that has been recommended to me . for the Asthma, ' with no suCiess, until I met with a bottle of "JONAS WHITi7O3[B,I3 REMEDY FOR THE ASTHMA." The iirstose relieved me within fifteen minutes,' and I haVe never known It . to fall relleylng me. Have bad tit.sit up seventeen nights in succession, and now 40, always able to sleep, after taking it. I feel tha toy comfort de pends upon it. :roars • " ...!, ASTHMA i-CI7RED. ' ' '.l•' ' ' ' • Eni)Vfoivx. Yates Co., N. Y., ay 15, 1860. EDITORS iitn-11. NEW TORKEB:inquiry In the Rural for a cure for that dist' siting diseaSei the Asthma, I write to let the Inn ~ r*now what kas almost cared me. I have hadjlthe spasm:Leslie lin asthma fifteen years, and never fonid any medicine that would prevent an attack when it was coming ok mall I commenced taking "JONAS, 01113715 REXEDY FOR . ASTIIMA.". I cottlenced taltini , i this remedy eighteen months ago, at i have not had a severe paroxysm since. "NVIIITOOME'S RESIE,. DY" has done for me all that It Is .re. =mended' to. do. BAR 11 SEELY. . . . - • • , :1 Ns-President MARTIN VAN .1 3 11P.E.N13 -suffer , 1 lugs In his last illness were greatly alleyiated by the use of "JONAS WIIITCOMB,S ASTIVAIA , as proved In letters In our.peaseasion front his physician, and front Mr. Van Buret Idnlselt, Pressing much gratification with thelresults 91' its • a•I Drug . ; . Extract from the, Lifo orWashingto , . Irving, by his .Wephesr, Pierre - 3f. Irving, vol. Itl., page 272: The doctor prescribed, as an expOhoent—What had been suggested by Doctor (O IV.F : Holmes, on his late visit— ": Jonas Whitcomb's f . Remedy ;for 13 Asthma, "a teaspooriPall. inn wine gltuis of water, i to beraken_every four hours. A good til .ht was the • BURNETT'S cocoiiNE, .2 4-:,Componnd orteioit.-Ntit 04, la., 1 FOR THE HAIR , ul 4 elite Wished a srorld4lde reputatioti upon Its merits.. Its natural adaptation s 44 re . cobire.. siess,'and freene.ss from all Injurious or , iodlnti pro:. periles, together wlth'itS ;chea 'Messltt-!'s4aiteet to durability and size of hottle, render it *quailed- Ity nay other preparation in the yorld o other , olli; 'neither pomades or alcoholic- srashetaforeima or , • domestle—nart eomPare with it as is HAIR 'DRESSINQ. anehous the har drop,: In the sealp*yes'Ah new We and. lustre—and rangers it the }`ate , gloms of both ilexes, old and young. , The itietintit :Coioitlne la h ea Vneetwed i f by a ciethistoo:jr,,::heihre. lte a pidientlod.'of the Lind map, A:tend-11th Puri/ogle BURNETTPS KAPiLLISTON In operati gici443l44`) {2{l.' lle voliglpieln t he C9r:ipait‘;): 4 ' SOLD lit ALL 10#rtititim, •-• IMI ?...1 REMEDY, 111 MEI BEI WAlthimotco, yr., )lay 12,1857. OILY cm 4,w- ~ 'tl ~''!'. n: IN iPI t -, Y6r ?a' 4 1 0 4 gt 4. • -)t NEI3 ~ ---z~~~ D? i”ir •Art ME MI
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