Q ..tf.gooluto . titittts, • PUBLISHED / I /MIMI. MD CO.,7PrietOrS. , . D. PENNIMAN, JOBl/1.11 tirffe. Ts is DOUBTOE. Big, P. ED. 841 tors and PrciPrietor • 071101: IiZEITE BUILDING, 84 AND 86 FIFTH AV. OFFICIAL PAPER Of. Pl Uhlman, Allegheny a d All*. • gheny County.' : 1 ^ 76112158-IDat ifiessfoWealy. One year...sso . One 2051.12.50 Single 00PYOLIO Om w month 75151 x e.. 1.50 5441105, ml 1.25 /Ai: week 15:Three mos 76 10 I .' • •• 1.15 carrier.) I ana one to Agent. THURSDAY, SEPT. 16, 1669. UNION . REPUBLICAN TICKET. STATE. FOR GOVERNOR JOHN W. GEARY. JUDGE OP BC PRERE COURT: ItElitY W. WILLIAM& COUIV'MY. ASSOCIATE JUDGE DISTEICT COURT. JOHN 31. EIEtKPA.TRICK, ASSISTANT LAW COMMON PLEAS, FRED , K. H. COLLIER. ,STATE EiszTATA—THOMAS HOWARD. "' Assirma4—MlLEB 8. FITIMTHREYs, ALEXANDER MILLAR, JOSEPH WALTON. . JAMES TAYLOR, D. N. WHITE. JOHN H. KERR. eamarts HUGH S. 71.5". 1 4rge. TasAsuaara-108. F. DENNISTON. CLERK or couRTB—JOSEPH.BROWNE. iticSaDau—raomes H. HUNTER. COmiasszoxia — )HAUNCEY B. BOSTWICK. Measure—JOSEPH H. GRAY. CLERK ORPHANS' Coma— ALEX. MILAN'S. DMICTOP. or roou—ABDIEL McOLIIRE. • WE PlitfiT on the inside pages of lAis morning's Gezzrrs—Second Page: -Poetry, "Daybreak;" Crimss and Casual. Ifes, State News, Personal, 'General Intel ligence. Third and Sixth pages: linance and Trade, Markets,'lmporte, River News. Seventh page: The Avondale Calamity, Pernicious Influence of Byron's Poetry, Oil Regions Items, Last Moments of Sec retary Batedins. PETROLEUM at Antwerp, 5611 11. B. Borros at Frankfort, 87i. G3LD closed yesterday in New York at i3eq@l36l. THE Baptist Church at Avondale lost all its male members but .three by the ter- Tilde mine disaster. THE larns.lis who lost their lives at Avondale were nearly all Welshmen, and nearly all Republicans. Tam Chinese mission is said to have been , tendered to, and declined by, Es- Senator Frelinghnysen, of New Jersey. GOV. HOFFILUI has certified the ratifi •cation of the XYth Article by New York, in compliance with a direct request made to him by the State Department. Tun English Government are not in ed to renew the Alabama negotia tions, so long as there is any prospect that our own Goveinment will concede the British position on that question, by recognizing the belligerency of Cuba. In this connection, we may remark that if Minister Sicxr,zs has given to the au thorities at Madrid any intimation of our intention to recognize that belligerency, he has done so wholly without instruc tions from Washington. Taa:Aßegherly Valley Railroad bake stt, Oil City is rapidly approaching cora pletlon. By the first of next January trains Will pass over and make connec tion with the roads penetrating the up per Allegheny districts and reaching all the important lake shoie points, and at *a same timese - wiring new outlets to theieast and west. The bridge will be a 'Superior specimen of workmanship and !in keeping with the ; general appoint ments of this well managed railway. Ax AsstraD report comes from the Pa vitlc coast announcing the diseovery of a paper upon the sat,beach, purporting to he a memorandum;from the Franklin ex pedition, thesurviiors of which, desert ing -the ships, had then made their way to a point in latitude 69 i north and longitude 98 West, where "the y thiew into the sea the vessel containing ' this document. Trafortunately, iteppears that this point ielnuidreds of Miles in the interior of the Arctic , Continent. Otherwise, the Story= would be plausible: GREAT. ACTIVITY prevails in the oil • regions. and operations:are going on vig orously both in producing and develop ing. -TO fears entiTtained a few weeks ago tiu*the region, was, well nigh ex imust.ed of its rich uleaganions deposits, are now effectually dissipated, as the yield is on the increase and new wells are con . stantly awarding explorers. • Experi ments are going forward in the region peal Tidionte to discover a new oil belt - 'tinting northeast from the ,present line, And If successful fresh life Will be given to the tra4e,in that region. OiThiernr has been honored this week with he convening together in Conven• tendon of all the master mechanics of the leading railways of thecountry. The aldeat of the meeting was to enable the Inembers, by an interchange of views and opinions, to profit by each others wisdom and experience in the construction and operation of roads and of rolling stock. We have seldom seen together any body of mechanics so conspicuous for learning and intelligence, and doubtless much prac tical good will result from the meeting. • With commendable good taste the leading iron and steel manufactirers of the city have tendered the Isiociation a grand complimentary banquet, which will be held tonight at the Monongahela House. Ottn PEOPLE will not fail to' Son- tribute their just share to the A4on dale relief fund. It is proposed that this fund shall be permanent, and that it shall reach $250,000. We find a list oq the victims by this terrible calamity in the Luzerne journals. These are 108 in number. Of these 67 were married, 22 of them having each one child, 10 of them each having two children, 11 of them midi three children, 7 of them 4 chil dren and 3 of them each 5 children or_ more. Saty•seren widows and one hun dred and twenty.two orphans! We hope each reader of this paragraph will try to form a correct idea of what his or her feelings or impulses would be, if that stricken and Mourning congregation were grouped standing in the visible presence of our pitying eyes Ix a recent protracted and extended journey through the northwestern coun ties of the State we were enabled to judge correctly of the very decided popularity of Goy. Geary, and of the disfavor in which the Democratic millionaire is held. There is now not the least doubt but Geary will be • re-elected by an over whelming majority. Everywhere the ranks ; are closely cemented together and the greatest harmony prevails even in sections where local causes combined to insure dissension. - We can safely assure our readers that other counties will . do their accustomed share of the work in securing the desired result and it only remains in Allegheny to look to her own laurels and sustain the reputation she has made of furnishing Republican majorities which would do credit to States. TOE Jamestown and Franklin Railroad is now recognized as the Franklin Pi vision of the Lake Shore Railroad, a con solidation having beetr - recently effected. GEORGE H. 31cIrrntz. Esq., one of the most efficient and thoroughly skilled rail road men of the country, we are glad to state, retains his position under the new order of things, as Superintendent. He is the right man in the right place, and eminently worthy the large share of con fidence and respect reposed in him. The work of extending the road to Oil City is being rapidly pushed forward'and will be completed by the incoming of the next year. The route follows the Allegheny river and is parallel with the line of the Valley Railroad on the opposite bank. When finished, the extension will prove an important feeder to the great road which it is now parcel and part. AVONDALE-WHAT ter's inquest at .r.ate the hdrri- L gun to whis ally s whole itively deelar re originated 1 of the shaft. videnee upon de up, 'it is apparent that the enquiry The verdict of the Corou Avondale does not corrobo ble suspicion which had s', per that the disaster was sale murder. The jury ro ed their - opinion that the from the furnace at the foo So far as we have seen the which this finding is ducted with care and with view only to revealing th.l upon whom this might. ' fore inclined to regard the jury as the most enlightene. udgment upon ''the facts Nevertheless, if murder L here, it may have baffled, an baffle, any possible investig men tell no tales; not one the public knowledge, who he saw the fire break out witnesses who could have' story, were those who perished in the pit. The Coroner's evidence has been almost wholly conjecture, hypothesis 'and a pos teriori argument. If better proof be ex tant, it hides away in the con clone guilt of murder; time alone will d sclose it to the world. It is true that the snspicio to which we refer largely rests upon the hostile feeling known to exist between the Av ondale operatives and the other members of the Miners' Union from which they had seceded. It is also known that these operators were' Welshmen almost to a man. Of the 108 names of the vic. time here before us, the ful hundred bear the familiarly known We sh names. The anthracite country is full f the re cords of national ill-will between the Welsh and Irish miners. It is ut a few I ra years since an armed mob of the tter sur rounded a Welsh church at Archbald, in this Luzerne county, on a quiet\ Sunday morning, forced the congregation to leave the building, and then set it on fire, burning it to the ground before the eyes of the men, women and chlAten who had been worshipping there. The same spirit was constantly betrayed. ~The mu. tual jealousies of the two classes have been the chionic basis for constant turbu lence in 'those districts. Here is, we hope, tfie only real foundation for the Ithocklag susPlcionitbat this tirti WU the work of an incendiary. ' And with pnaufis wail status always existing, it would be strange if this suspicion had not found a public utterance now. j We must hope that there was really dthing more is It. i'nUIB'CTRG.II GAZETTE :‘ Tilt ItSDAY, SEFIEMBER 16, 1869, - THE AVONDALE DISASTER. Men who are regularly engaged in hazardous employments almost univer sally become reckless and disregard the ordinary suggestions of prudence. This was strongly illustrated in the case of the Luzern county miners when they com menced the long strike sixteen weeks ago: The Companies were anxious to continue the engineers at their posts, pumping out water and pumping in air. The miners knew that sooner or later they would re sume work in the old places, but they drove the engineers away, in some in. stances breaking the pumping machinery The same indifference to. danger was evinced by this class in going into the Avondale mine before its ventilation had been fully, accomplished. Nor was this a solitary instance of this species of indiscre tion. A. day or two before the Avondale catastrophe work was resumed in an old mine which had a - ventilating shaft. The foreman pointedly cautioned the miners to extinguish their lamps before beginning the ascent to the outer world. This order was disregarded by all of them. What was the consequence? The fresh air forced in to the "breast," where the men were engaged in taking out coal, naturally caused the foul air to eeek egress by both shafts. As the workmen ascen• ded their lamps set the as on fire, and but for the self-possession of a workman outside _ a terrible tragedy would have resulted. lie instantly covered the mouth of the piL with plank, and these with_ old blankets, which he saturated with water, -thus speedily \smothering the flame, which had not reached down into the mine. _ We make these statements in order to show that while a law is needed to compel proprietors to take all due precautions for the safety of miners employed by them, legal provision is jo i st as much re. quired for constraining " miners not to meddle with the measures adopted for their own safety, and to punish them for disobeying the orders of their foremen in this regard. That not a little of the mining in the anthracite counties is conducted without proper reference to the security of either life or property, is evident enough. But many of the averments of the New York journals, on this head, are simply in ac cordance with the ignorance usually evinced in that quarter touching all Penn sylvania affairs. Take for illustration, the complaint that no, ventilating shaft had been provided or this Avondale mine. This is a new mine, haying been worked only a few months. Two shafts, side by side, one for working and the other. for air, would have been of no practical utility. A mine must progress to a certain distance before a ventilating shaft becomes necessary or of special value. Such a shaft would have un doubtedly, according to the rules per veiling in the county, have been put into the mine, when it had been run far enough; It is possible that if as air shaft had been sunk in this mine witlin a hun dred feet of the working - shaft, the men might have escaped; but this is hardly probable. Of course, the laws should determine how far a mine may be pushed before a ventilating shaft mast be put in. But to assume that neglect of ordinary and fair precaution was evinced by the absence of such a shaft in this mine, shows a total lack of knowledge of the whole subject. We have long felt that the "cracker" ought not to be built over the pit month. whether the mine is worked by shaft or plane. A "cracker" is an immense wood en structure, an hundred feet high, the machinery in it driven by esteem engine. This fabric is liable to at least all the or dinary risks of fire, and in case of con flagration, while the miners are at work, peculiar hazards are incurred. The propo sition to substitute iron frames for wooden ones in these structures, is not sufficient. Nothing short of constructing entirely of iron will answer the purpose, provided the "cracker" is built over tie pit mouth. * The A.vondale mine adjoins the Union mine owned by the Delaware and Hud son Canal Company. The distance through from one of these mines to the other does not exceed fifty feet. Opera tions in either mine can be heard distinct ly in the other. If the Avondale propri etors had run a tunnel into the Union mine, which has more than one outlet, their miners would not have been hope lessly imprisoned. The usage which prevails sanctions this procedure. The objection to it, on the part of the owners of the Avondale mine was that thejr mine being lower than the other the running of a common tunnel would have let the water of the Union mine in upon them,l.hus forcing them to do the water pumping for both mines. This might have been avoided by giving the tunnel the form of an arch or siphon; but the ex peCtation was to complete an independent air-shaft at as early a day as possible. No motive, except that of economy, exists for building the "cracker'? over the pit. It' costs less, while hoisting the coal out of the mine, to send it di rectly to the top of the "cracker," than to stop , it midway, dump it into cgs, run it : five hundred or more feet, and then lift it to the head of the "cracker." But se curity demands that the "clacker" should be r',eintlyed tO, such distance silts no case to obstruct egfese from the mines. • • The ventilating apparatus used is often defective. Septetimell common tin pipes are Put lu, Which are soon corroded and destroyed by the acids of the mines. Even these pipes are frequently not ex tended u the coal is taken out, so that the pure air does not reach the Ardor WAS let been con • erve, with a . truth, reflect e are there. • erdlct of the and reliable s been done . may always • tion. Dead .an lives, in can say that The only old the true parts of the mine, to refresh the laborers and help expel the had air. If an iron pipe, such as is ordinarily used to conduct water, and twelve inches in diameter, should be put in, and this divided into several smaller ones on reaching the points where mining is going on, such a volume of air would be forced in as to expel to the desired - degree all impurities, and would be secure, for long periods, against corrosion pr breaking. Bat, it is useless, here and now, to con sider all the points in the case. This matter is destined to come before the next Legislature. It is, therefore, desirable that as many of the gentlemen who may be elected to either of the two Houses as can shall visit the anthracite counties be. fore Jantiry shall come in, talk with both r c proprieto and miners, go into the mines and exa 'ne everything !or themselves. Legislati n accomplished . under excite ment is 11 enough, provided the agita tion leads to a careful scrutiny of all the essential acts pertaining to the subjects. Mining is a dangerous employment, and cannot be reduced to the risks of ag riculture. This - presents no reason why the dangers should not be brought to the lowest practicable point. But it happens that the wages of the miners are much higher than in ordinary departments of industry; so that the miners are paid abundantly for the hazards they run. Besides, we apprehend that, taking a con. siderable series of years, deaths In the mines, in proportion to numbers, are scarcely more than on railroads in the general system of the country. However this may be, whatever can be done to avert dangers and suffering 'among the miners should be done, and without reference to the money cost. The expense will fall at first on the proprietors, but will ultimate. ly be diffused over the whole population consuming anthracite, the price of coal being made to cover the increased cost of sanding it to market SKIES stucur. Pennsylvania and Ohio are, in this year of grace 1869, as soundly and faithfully Republican as in any year past. Aye, and more so! Ohio promises to us a larger majority than she gave to GRAFT last year, while 'the relative strength of par ties was never so favorable, as now, to Re publicanism in our own Commonwealth. We have none but encouraging tidings from every quarter of Pennsylvania. Governor GEARY strengthens himself daily with the people. Every meeting which he addresses is a local triumph, and his audiences are enthusiastic for the soldier of Lookout Mountain, and the up right and fearless Executive. Almost daily, the Governor meets his constitu ents face to face, and talk to them so ef fectively to the purpose, that hundreds of his old opponents whd come to scoff, remain, regretting their injustice. The soldiers who never dodged their country's call to arms, the taxpayers who don't dodge their just obligations to the State, the Republican masses of the peo ple who don't mean to dodge their duty at the polls—these are rallying, every man of them, to the support of the loyal and taxpaying ticket of a party which is steadily and rapidly cancelling the Dem ocratic debt of the Commonwealth. Partisan slander has recoiled from our candidate, who stands the stronger, to day, for the malignant but exploded fab rications of his and our enemies. This is so evident that the libellers of Republi canism find it expedient to let GEARY alone, and are just now firing away at Judge WILLIAMS, with about as much effect as if they were dogs barking at the moon. While the Republican ranks are every where closed up, and every man has eyes front at attention, the opposite organi zation is crumbling away in all parts of the State. While Gov. GEARY grows stronger with our friends, Mr. PACKER grows every day weaker with the Democ racy. The one represents living princi ples which a free people love, and what the other represents no two Democratic editors or orators can agree upon defin ing. The signs are auspicious for a larger majority to GEARY in 1869, than we gave to President GRANT in 1808. Our Gover nor is safe beyond a contingency. Let our friends look now to their Legislative tickets! MINOR TOPICS. Mr.- SEWARD, In his recent speech at . Sitka, predicted that Alaska would some day become the ship yard foi the world. Formerly, American statesmen were in the' habit of predicting that America must become the source from which the rest of the world should draw her ship ping. A favorite idea, some score or two of years ago, was that, in the event of a foreign war, our navy could speedily be rendered irresistible and the enemy's commerce annihilated by the innumera ble vessels which could be constructed upon the Mississippi river and its branches and sent from•thence out into the oceans. Yet the little island of Great Britain does most of the ship-building; iron war ships have rendered the idea of our impromptu navy obsolete. The for eats have been out down fro nearlyall the acceseible parti of the conntiY. new ones are not planted, and we are fast be coining s treelciiilt.conntry.' Tgls:an' nlbi latioi of the woods naturally affects the waters;and the rivers have dedreticed In voltime:% l The _tipper 'Ohio' is no longer navigable for the beats which 'formerly plowed its waters, and it lathe someway with all the other great streams. So if Mr. Sewall's northern continent of Wal rods out be allowed to keep Its tress, the time may come when it shall fulfill the prophecy of the ex-Secretary. OUR SCHOOL TEACHERS are exercising a potent influence upon the future men of this country. For hours each day the minds of our youth are spread out be fore them as ready for impressions, more or less lasting, as so many sheets of wax. Is it not through-W i se teachers that any great reform must i be operated? Year by year crime increases and immorality becomes more prevalent, although the pulpit and the press have been working with much of their great weight thrown against the rising tide; but this work has been directed mainly through the pa rents and it has not succeeded. Why not now try what can be done through the teachers? The one particular crime which seems to increase most alarmingly is that of embezzlement or false appropri ation. In most cases the sad history is the same. A young man, anxious to be come rich and with cotifused notions as to right and wrong, borrows ;money with out informing the lender of the fact, and in a short time the money is gone and cannot be replaced; then follows ex posure and disgrace. Corrupt and thoughtless parents cannot be depended upon, but if every teacher would exert himself to impress his pupils constantly with the idea that surreptitious borrow ing, for whatever purpose, is stealing, is it not possible that a few might take it to heart who otherwise would become the heroes of one of those romances of de falcation which people our State prisons? And if so, is not the experiment worth trying? SOME PERSONS are beginning to doubt whether politeness demands that a man should give up his seat in a car as eoon as a woman makes her appearance. To_ our mind there is, in the premises, room for the exercise of a good deal of judg ment. The cars are public conveyances, and are legally unable to take more pas sengers on board than they can supply with seats. A man gets in, pays six cents for his seat and occupies it; a woman comes in when the seats are full, and has no more right to that man's six cents' worth of accommodation than she would havl in the market to your . carefully selected delicacy, the supply of which had become exhausted. It is not, then, as some women seem to think, one of a woman's rights; it is simply a question of amiability. We have seen young men who allowed an old man to stand, but sprang up, as if propelled from a needle•gun, if a pretty girl came in, who, possibly, was stronger and better able to stand than they were themselves. Our advice is that each man should first decide that he has a right to_ the seat, and then decide solely upon the merits of each case, whether he will give it up or not. Remembering that a weary man or a tired woman. even though she be neither young nor pretty, is often really worthy of consideration in street-care. STATE POLITICS. THE Atloona Vindicator, Democratic, of the most virulent species, doesn't pay and is offered for sale. HON. R. M. BEATTY presided at, and Hon. T. J. Bigham addressed. a large Re- publican meeting at Kittanning on the 7th inst. Tme Republican County Executive Committee of Armstrong Is working that county well this campaign. Mr. Alex ander Reynolds is the energetic chairman. A is - EW Democratic paper has been established at Ridgway, Elk county, in the interest of a faction of the party in that county known as the Ridgway ring. Tim Republican conference, which met at Lewistown on the 10th inst., nomina. ted as candidates for Assembly, General T. F, McCoy, of Lewistown, and John N. Swoope, of Huntingdon. Pubiie Opinion says that the Republi can ticket in Franklin county was never =imposed of better men than the present candidates. In point of ability and gen eral merit they are unexceptionable. THE Mauch Chunk Gazette' "has it on the best authority that Judge Packer re marked the other day that he believed his chances for election poor." Packer's opinion on Packer's chances ought to carry weight. GEN. D. B. McOußeav, of Erie, late Adjutant General of - the State, and C. 0. Bowman, Esq., of Corry, have been nominated for the Assembly by the Re publicans of Erie county. This will give that county an able representation in the Legislature. Tnn Lehigh Register says: When Dr. Cattell, the energetic President at Lafay ette College at Easton, sought assistance from the men of wealth of this valley . to save that venerable institution from ruin, he appealed to Asa Packer, but got from him no assistance. He next applied to Mr. Ario Pardee, of Hazleton, whose generosity immediately` responded by a handsome endowment. The personal pride of Asa Packer was aroused upon this, and then he endowed Lehigh Uni versity, IT is confidently predicted in Carbon county . that Mr. Packer will fun behind his ticket. He is. decidedly unpopular with the workingmen. He has never, with all his wealth, done aught to allevi ate the sufferings of the poor. Where he is best known, people laugh at the idea of his being ch aritable. His corruption fund, in this canvass, is to be used in buy ing up men of supposed influence with workingmen. The bone and sinew should be on the look-out and distrust all who suddenly become convinced that Packer is a great friend to the cause of , labor. ' • In Memoriam. At a special meeting of the Board of Inspectors of the Western Penitentiary, held September 15th, 1869, to take action on the death of our late colleague, James Pdanhall,.Esq., the following redolutions were adopted and ordered to be pub. Winans& 'The death of James Mir shall, Faq., our colleague and friend, which occurred suddenly on the 9th inst, is an impressive dispensation of Provi dence which we dare not misinterpret, and cannot misunderstand. God has spoken to us, almost in an audible voice; that while five of us were in this field to gether, the ono is When and tat others left; watch therefore, for ye know not what Sour your Lord doth come. Resolv ed therefore: lat. That as a Christian James Mar shall was an honest npright man, and feared God and eschewed evil. • 2nd, As a Busines., man, he was full of integrity, prompt in his engagements, and successful in his undertakings. Sd. As a public citizen, he was enter prising in his character, liberal in his views, and willing to expend his strength for the public good. 4th. As a patriot, although an adopted citizen of this young republic, he was pre-eminently a lover of his country. In the dark days or the late rebellion he planted himself as a rock on the side of the Union and never faltered; and ever since in the bestowment of any office hie stern and unyielding judgment must first be satisfied that the applicant was honest and loyal. sth. As an in.spector of this institution, he was brought into more intimate con tact with us. In the management of the Penitentiary, his judgment was iv mid and his conclusions Just. Economy, honesty, and a rigid obedience to law, were the cardinal principles of his official life; and in his last intercourse with the prisoners, while he taught them to ex pect that the inflexible law of . justice would be meted out, yet, underlying this seeming severity, he made them also feel that he was not insensible of their infirmities, that ho pitied their mis fortunes and was willing to devote much of his time to alleviate their condition and win them back to an honest and vir tuous life. Resolved, That in recognition of his memory and his worth, the Warden be requested to drape the office of the insti tution in mourning. Resolved, That a copy of this minute be sent to the family of our deceased friend, with the assurance that in this death they have our unfeigned sympa thy. [Signed] THEODORE H. NEVIN, ORMSBV PHILLIPS, JAMES A. LOWRIE, ROBERT H. DAVIS, Inspectors. Obituary, At his residence in Jackson townshig t Venango county, on Friday last, Mr. John Bleakley, father of Col. James Bleakley, President of the International Bank of Franklin, departed this life. The deceaSed was widely known and universally respected. He was born near Iniskillen, county Tyrone, Ireland, in 1.788, and was one of the Bleakley's who, with a single exception, made up the entire population of MarphY town ship. The deceased came to America in 1819, and was married a short time sub sequently to an accomplished lady of Pottsville, who preceded him to the grave. He was a zealous, devoted and consistent member of the Presbyterian church and passed through a long life of usefulness with a record unsullied and a name associated with no discreditable act. He was buried with Masonic hon. ors on Sunday last. The funeral cortege was one of the largest ever witnessed in the section. A very large delegation of Masons were in attendance from Frank lin, the deceased being a member of the order for over half a century, having been initiated in Ireland as early as 1819. THOU BRINGEST LUNG-WORT. One of the truest and most suggestive ideart can be obtained from the caption at the head, of this article; for of all diseases which impair human health and t bur ten human life, note are More prevalent than those which arreCt the lungs and pulmonary tissues. 'Whether we regard lung Mae - uses in the light of a merely slight cough, which is but the Ore-runner of amore serious malady. or as a deep lesion corroding and dis solving the pulmonary structure, It is alwayst pregnant wi.h evil and foreboding of disaster. In no doss of maladies should the plmiciatt or the friends and family of the patient be more seriously forewarned than in those of the lar Rs. for R h in them that early and efflelent treat- meat Is most desirable, and it is then that danger can be warded off and a core effected. In DR. KEYSER'S LUNG CURE you have a medicine of the greatest value in all these conditions. An alterative, a tonic. a nutrient and resolvent, succoring nature and sustaining the recupera- live powers of the system, Its beautiful work— Inge, in harmony with the regular functions, can be readily observed by the use of one or two bot tles: it will soon break up the chain of morbid rvnipalhies that disturb the harmonious work lugs of the animal economy. The harrassing sough, the painful respiration, the sputum streaked with blood, will soon give blue to the normal and proper workings of health and vigor. An aggregated experience of over thirty years has enabled Dr. Keyser, In the componading of his LUNG CURL to give new hone to-the eon europtive invalid and at the same time speedy relief in those now prevalent, catarrhal and throat affections, so distressing in their effects , and so almost certainly fatal in their tendenCies,. ;Wm cured by some appropriate remedy. DR. KEISER'S LUNG CURE is a o thorough and ef- Eclent, that any one who has ever used it, writ never be without It in the house. It will otters cure when everything elsa fails, and in simple cases will cure oftentimes in a few days. . The attention of patlants, as well as medical men. Ii respectfully Invited to %Ms new and calttable addition to the pharmacy of the corm- DR. SEYeER may be consulted every day natal 1 O'clock P. 3f. at his Great lildicine Store, 161 Liberty street, and from 4 to 6 sad 7 to 9 at night THE FEVER AND AGUE SEASON, When the leaves begin to change, remittent and intermittent L.vers make their appearance. From the surface of the earth, bathed nightly in heavy dews. from marshes and. swamps fur charged with moisture, froM the dying foliage of the woods, from festering Pools and sluggish streams, the sun of Beistember evolves clouds of miasmatic vapor perilous to health and life: The body, deprived by the burning temperature of July. and August of much of its vigor and elas ticity, is not in a proper plight to resist malaria, and hence all diseases that are ;produced by a de praved condition of the atmosphere are partlen . lady prevalent to the Fall. • - • ' There 111 no reason why the health 6f thousands of people sumac' be thus sacridoed. A prepara tory course of HOSTIO sTortIA.CH itIT TEA'S is a ce. taro prott ellen against the enldem les and endemics which Autumn brings in 11l train.. Let all dwellers in unhealthy localities, liable to such visttations, give heed to the warn: tog and advice conveyed in this advert!, meat, ant they may bid defiance totheloutea halationa which are now dolma, night, and day, Rum the soil around them. No firmhoulte to the land should be without this invaluable exhllerant and it:itinerant at any period of the year, bat tape. maity In the Fall. It la not safe to go forth into 'the Chill. Misty atmosphere of it denten:thee morning or evening with the stomach onnutified ,a toulevall4 of the tonics which medical chemistry has yet given to the world, IiOnTET" BITTERS are admitted tote theDuren. the most wholesome and the most beneficial. Let ell who desire to escape the talons attacks. bowel complaints and malaripus fevers, take the BiTtitite ai least twice a •day throughout the present season. It Is as wholesome as it is in.. fallible Look to the trade-mark, "HOnTET- T it% littddAtat 111TTS an, en graved on the label and embossed en the bottle, and their rev. anus stain" timing. the Ctork, aa .coaniartelli latfl atenaG.