Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1843-1859, June 17, 1852, Image 2

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    soil than they do while imported from Ert- l io fifty, forty, thirty, or oven twenty-five
rope. For to make them, whether in En- ' years ago. On the contrary, Permsylva- ,
rope or America, requires Pubstantially ilia and Kentucky, then ranked among the
the same amount of labor, which, in either most 'Democratic' States, were the car-
ease, must be paid for by our farmers, &c., liest and most decided champions of Pro
with the fruits of their labor; but so long tection, throughout the earlier decades of
as they are made in and imported from the struggle. Gen. Jackson, when caudi-
Europe, another large amount of labor will date for President, and oven after he had
be required from sae class or both classes been transformed from a 'Federal' into the
of producers, to pay the heavy cost of ' Denteratie' candidate, was vaunted by his
transportation from producer to consumer, friends a sturdy Protectionist. His letter
and to carry back our heavy stamps, in to Dr. Coleman, of North Carolina, was
which the payment must mainly be made. !repeatedly pabished to sustain the claim.
It may easily be, that the nominal or neon- The Tariff of 1828 (the highest and most
ey price of our wares and fabrics shall be Protective we have ever had) was framed
lower, while they are mainly produced ,by a Jackson Committee ' passed by a
abroad, and yet their real cost be far Jackson Congress, and boasted of as a
higher. We say, the farmer pays so many :Jackson measure. Party exigencies, and
dollass for his Cloths,•his Wares, his Tea the supposed necessity of retaining the
and Coffee; but practically ho clues not good-will of the Cotton-growing interest,
pay money, but grain or meat, even though i have since veered 'the Party' completely
he sell the latter for cash, and hands that off the Protective track, bin it is none the
over for his goods. The vital question , less essentially 'Democratic' on that ac
with hint is, 'Hider which policy can 1 ; count. Men are mutable, but Principles
buy what I need, not for the least money, ' arc eternal. Protection is just as Demo
but for the least aggregate of my own la- , cratio to-day, as if it had been endorsed
bor, as applied to the improving and till-, and commended by five regiments of raven
ing of my land?' and this question the ens office-seekers, styling themselves Dem
money-test does not conclusively answer. I ocratic National Conventions.
Suppose an Illinois or Wisconsin farmer 4. There underlies the practical polities
could supply his anual needs of Cloths, of our time and country a radical diversi-
Wares, and Groceries, for eighty dollars' ty of sentiment respecting the appropriate
while we buy them mainly abroad, while' sphere. of Government. On the one hand,
it would cost him one hundred to buy ; Republican Government is regarded as the
them if produced (under stringent Protec- ! natural friend and servant of the People,
tion) at home—what then? 'Then lie saves' whose proper function it is to lighten their
twenty dollars by sticking to Free Trade,' I burdens, to increase their facilities of in
says an advocate of that policy. Alt no,' tercourse or intelligence, and to contrbute
sir! You have answered quite too hastily.:, in all placticaltle ways to their progress,
For the change from Free Track to Pro-' comfort, and happiness., On the other,
tection inevitably brings markets for his.' Government is regarded with jealousy and
own products nearer and nearer to his !distrust, as an enemy to be watched,
farm, increasing their cash value, Mid ex-' au evil to he restricted within the narrow
tending his range of profitable production.! est limits. The mottoes of this latter
With Free Trade and 'our workshops in school are significant: 'The world is govs
Europe,' he had no choice but to grow' ernes too inueb,'--‘The best Government
wheat and cattle for exportation, and take 'is that which governs least,'—'Laissez
such prices for thew as the competition of 'pare' ('Let us alone'), &e., &c. Now
all the world in the open markets of Great these maxims seem to me unwisely transfer-
Britain would allow, less the cost of true- !red from Governments directed by despots
sportation front his farm to Liverpood; but ' to Governments controlled by and existing
let Protection supplant Free Trade, and for the People. They are no where recog
now he begins to feel the situulus of near ' sized by the Democracy of Europe, which
and nearer markets urging him to produce I plainly contemplates the institution of
other articles • far more profitable than Governments more pervasive and efficient
wheat-growing for the English market.— than the world has yet known. Free
Should a inauufactory of any kind be es- Education, Insurance by the State, the
tablished within a few miles of him, he . Right to Labor,—these are but a part of
finds there a market for Wood, Vegeta- the ideas of like tendency, which the Eu
bles, Poultry, Veal, Fresh Butter, Hay, ropean Democracy stands ready to realize
&0., &e., at prices much better than he whebever it shall have the power. Its
could have obtained while we were buying, policy is constructive, creative, and bene
our goods in Europe; his labor produces' ficent, while that of our self-styled 'Demo
more annual value; his farm is worth more' cracy' is repulsive, chilling, nugatory,—a
than it was or coud be while we were de- bundle of negations, restrictions, and oh-
pendent on Europe for a market. .N:any jurations. Can there be a rational doubt
things are now turned off from his farm at to which of these is the true Democra
good prices, which had no money value . cyl Who does not see that the fundamen
while an ocean rolled between bite and his tal ideas of our party Democracy are as
market; he becomes thrifty, and buys more, radically hostile to Common Schools, and
far more, titan formerly, because he is, to tax-sustained Common Roads, as to a
able to buy far wore. Instead of one or !Protective Tariff, a National Bank, or to
two hundred dollars' worth of Wheat or I, the National improvement of our Rivers,
Pork to sell at one particular season, 'he ! and Harbors, if it dare but follow where
is turuing off a hundred dollars' worth of ' its principles lead?
Milk, Fruit, Timber, Vegetables, &c., 5. These is another point on which I'
each month, keeping out of debt at the , must speak frankly ; and I ask you not to
store and elsewhere and laying up money. , take offence at, but earnestly ponder it.—
He improves his buildings and thus gives You and I prefer the society and counsel
a job to his neighbor, the carpenter; he of those who walk, so far as we may judge,
fills up his house with furniture, to the iu the ways of Virtue, to that of the reek
satisfaction of his neighbor, the cabinet-ma- less, ostentatious servitors of Vice. You,
ker; he sends his children to a seminary, Imo confident, will not stigmatize this pret
end thus increases the income of the teach- • creuce us Aristocratic, nor seek to cott
er. On every side, the farmer's prosperi- found Poverty with Vice, in the paltry
ty overflows, and conduces to the prosperi- hope of makiug capital out of the natural
ty of his townsmen, because by a beuig- indignation of the former. The great city
sant policy, adequate markets have been of my residence is, perhaps, a fair sample
brought nearer his doors, whereby lie re- I politically of the whole country—its per
ceives eighty or ninety instead of forty or ties almost equal in numbers, and each cum
fifty per cent, of what the consumer of his posed of rich and poor, native and foreign
products pays for them, and is enabled ad- born, informed and ignorant. Doubtless,
vantageously to grow many articles which, the great mass, of whatever party, sincere
with our workshops in Europe, must have ly desire the public welfare; doubtless,
rotted ou his hands, had he grown them. rogues and libertines arc to be found in the
Every dollar thus saved in the expensmof ranks of each of the .great parties. Bnt
needless transportation, by drawing the point wherever you please to an election
manufacturers nearer and nearer to the district which you will pronounce morally
side of the farmer, is a new stimulus to pro- rotten—given up in great part to debauch
duction; and the hundred acres which gave cry and vice—whose voters subsist mainly
scanty employment as herdsmenand wheat- by keeping policy-offices, gambling-house,
growers to two or' three hands, afford ant- grog-shop and darker dens of infamy,—and
pie employment for a dozen to twenty, that district will be found at nearly or
when, by reason of the neighborhood of quite every election giving a large mayori
manufactories, wheat and grass have been, ty for that which styles itself the 'Demise
in great part supplanted by gardens, fruit, ! ratio' party. Thus, the 'Five Points' is
and vegetables. There is no more mystery ' the most 'Democratic' district of our City ;
in the increase of Production and Pospori- 'The Hook' follows not very far behind it,
ty under a judiciously-directed Protective and so on. Take all the haunts of de-
Policy, than in the fact that a team juntas- bauchery in the laud, and you will find
diately before a wagon will draw a heavier nine-tenths of their master-spirits active
load than it would if fastened forty rods partisans of that same 'Democracy.' What
ahead of the load. Protection diverts is the instinct, the sympathetic chord,,
Labor from non-productive to produc- which attaches them so uniformly to this
live employments—that is the whole story. party ? Will you consider?
By diver sifying industry, it call into ac- —Democracy is, I know full well, a word
tive exercise a wider range of capacities, of power. I know that it has a charm for
and developo powers which would other- the hopeful, the generous, the lowly, and
wise have lain dormant and unsuspected. the aspiring, as well as for many darker
Thousands, who, in a community wholly ag- spirits. .1. know that he who aspires to in
rioultural or wholly manufacturing, would tluence, office, and honors, rather than to
find nothing to do, are satisfactorily em- usefulness and an approving conscience,
ployed and remunerated where diverse pur- will naturally be led to enlist under its
suits aro being prosecuted all around them. banner, often drugging his moral sense
Protection anti Internal Improvement work with the sophistry that he who would do
from opposite directions to ono counnou good must put himself its a position where
end—namely, the diminution of expense in the pricer to do good will most probably
the transportation front producer to cousu- attach to him. But I know also that
users Protection aims to bring the consu- names must lose their potency as intelli
user, wherever this may be practicable, to pilot, shall *he diffused more and more
the side of the. producer; Internal Improve- widely. I know that to be truly Demo
maent essays, where that is not practicable, eratic is of more iMportance than to win
to bring the product from the ,latter to the and wear the advantages connected with
former at the least possible cost. the moue. Of that Democracy which la
- Now there was a tune when, out of bora to protect the feeble and uplift the
the narrow circle of Itnporting influence, fallen I will endeavor not to be wholly des
these truths were admitted anti acted upon tituto, while of that which claims a monop
by the whole American People—at least, oly of office and honors as the duo reward
thrAghout the Free States. Nobody pre- of its devotion to equality, I ant content to
tended that Protection was anti-Democrat- be adjudged lacking. Of that Democracy
.- .......
—,-....
which robs the effeminate Mexican of half
his broad domains, and regards with a cov
etous eye the last of declining Spain's val
uable possessions—which plants its heel on
the neck of the abject and powerless negro,
and hurls its axe after the flying form of
the plundered, homeless, and desolate In
dian,—may it be written on my grave that
I never was a follower, and lived and died
in nothing its debtor!
—3ly friend, I think you now under
' stand what are my political convictions, and
why I cherish them. If they differ wide
ly from yours, I can but hope that time
and reflection may bring us nearer togeth
er, and that in whatever your views are
humaner, more conducive to general well
' being, snore truly Democratic than mine,
I shall learn of you, and become filled with
your wisdom and imbude with your spirit.
That our common country may discern and
follow that path which leads through Truth
and Eight to Prosperity and enduring
Greatness, is over the prayer of Yours
truly.
lIORACE GREELEY
Aew Yolk, October Ist, 1851.
No PROSPECTS OF A CLIANOE IN TON
TARIFF.— The Washington correspondent
of the North .Imeridan, alluding to the fact
that no proposition has yet been brought
forward for the modification of the Tariff,
says:— , 4l consider it lost for this session,
and lost, too,
by the treachery of its pro
fessed friends on the Democratic side.—
They hold the power and organization of
both houses, and they must take the res
ponsibility. The political influence which
was promised on the part of Gov. Bigler
and his friends, and which misled the peo
ple of the mining and manufacturing dis
tricts of Pennsylvania, has not been exer ,
ted here, or, if attempted has been utterly
repudiated. It has been said that a good
understanding had been effected between
the manufacturing interests and the West,
by which the latter were to be aided in
carrying their land bills and the former as
sisted in the proposed alteration in the act
of 1840, already referred to in this cor
respondence. The grant to Missouri pas ,
sed the Bowie yesterday, with an amend
ment requiring the concurrence of the
Senate, which is regarded as a hook in the
nose of the West. With all deference to
the superior tactics of the managers in this
matter, I must be permitted to say Penn
sylvania has been again "sold." When a
similar combination was formed in the last
Congress, by which Illinois filled her
pockets with millions of dollars by an ap
propriation from the public domain, the
friends of domestic industry were then
warned they would be betrayed, if confi
dence in 'Western support was their only
reliance. They did not heed the admoni
tion, and were cheated, as was anticipated.
Now, they are about to be caught in a
trap of the sauna contrivance. Reciprocal
justice, if the dictates of practical policy
did not, should have required the West to
make the first advance of confidence in the
present instsaee, by manifesting some tau
glide disposition to modify or to allow the
tariff to be modified before expecting "ma
terial aid from the States needing encour
agement in their manufacturing pursuits.
A great mistake was committed in giving
support on trust unless
"The pleasure i 4 at great
Of being cheated as to cheat."
A Good IVitness.
General Leslie Coombs has recently
written a letter which after enumerating
some evidence of General Scott's adher
ence to the compromise "when it was in
doubt and friends were scarce and timid,"
ho adds:
But ho did not stop here. Messrs.
Mangum, Stanly and Cabell all assert, and
I personally know the fact for I was at
Washington part of the time during the
debate, that ho exerted all his influence
with his friends to induce them to sustain
and vote for the whole adjustment.
He occupies still, to my knowledge,
exactly the same position he then so
promptly assumed.
And yet he is now doubted and de
nounced by men who fled from the field
during the heat of the battle, and hid in
the rear-ward ditches, or consorted with
the enemy. Had he been a member of
the United States Senate at the time, he
would as soon have been found with the
baggage train, out of sight of danger at
Verra Cruz, Cerro Gordo, Contretras, or
Chepultepec, as to have abandoned his
seat, or fail to record his vote on any ono
of the compromise measures. He would
have helped to heal every bleeding wound
of his country, though he had died in the
patriotic act.
One word more. The idea that one ac
customed to command all his life will be
content to occupy the degrading position
of second fiddler to any man on earth,
should he bo elected President is perfoot
ly ridiculous. No, never. Friend and
foe may rest assured that if ever he is in
stalled in the Chief Executive office of the
nation, he will be captain all the time and
nothing less.
Thus much I have felt to be a solemn
duty to say in justice to an old brother
soldier, whose body is scarred all over with
wounds received in victorious battle fields
for his country.
ft?" A boy residing near Pittsburg, who
had been very deaf for years, recently re
ceived a kick from a horse which fractured
his skull, since which time he hears as
acutely as ordinary persons. But we pre
sume few deaf persons will resort to the
THE JOURNAL.
--4 -
• •~-• t.„.„ err.--
wriernera,....";•
HUNTINGDON, PA
Thursday Horning, Juno 17, 1552.
BY STEWART & HALL
V. IL PAIMEIt
Is our authorized agent in Philadelphia, New
York and Baltimore, to receive advertisements,
and any persons in those to adver
tise in our rolitearis, will Please rail on him.
FOR TUE PRESIDENCY IN 1852,
WINFIELD SCOTT,
OF NEW JERSEY
FOR VICE PRESIDENT IN 180,
JAMES C. JONES,
OF TENNESSEF
li , )1i CANAL COMMISSIONER,
JACOB HOFFMAN,
OF BEIUCS CoUNTY
WHIG STATE CONVENTION.
At a locating of the Whig State Cantral
Committee, held at Harrisburg on Tues
day the 4th instant, it was resolved that
the Delegates to the late Whig State Con
vention be requested to assemble in Phila . -
TH].
delphia on the NINETEEN DAY OF
JUNE next, at 9 o'clock, A. H., for the
purpose of nominating a candidate for
Judge of the Supreme Court, to fill the va
cancy occasioned by the Death of Hon.
Richard Coulter.
D. TAGGART, Chairman
C. THOMPSON JONES, Secretary.
We request the Whigs of this bo
rough and vicinity to met at the home of
Alexander Carmon, on Saturday evening
next: Should the nomination for Presi
dent, which will be - made this week, be the
ono which we expect and demand, we ex
pect to greet it with a burning zeal.—
Should it be otherwise, we can then con
sult with one another what is best to be
done. Let the whig soldiers report them
selves at head-quarters.
lX To the exclusion of our usual vari
ety, we this week publish an admirable let
ter from the prolific pen of HORACE GREE 4
LT, to which we earnestly invite the at
tention of our readers. It is a treasury of
sound political doctrine, and substantial
reasons for our party predilections: Eve
ry Whig. must find his faith refreshed and
strengthened by its perusal; and, if care
fully considered by the honest, thinking
portion of our democratic friends, though
it might not convert many from the long
indulged error of their ways, it would
doubtless do much to disarm their preju
dices, and prepare their minds for right
reasoning on the true interests and duties
of American citizens.
Broad Top Railroad.
Books were opened in this borough on
the 10th inst. for subscriptions to the cap
ital stock of the Broadtop Mountain Rail
road and Coal Company, and up to this
thee between tweutylve and twenty-six
thousand dollars have been subscribed.—
The citizens of this place and vicinity have
exhibited a commendable interest and zeal,
in this contemplated improvement, which,
we doubt not, will amply repay the invest
ment. A continued effort with the same
comparative success, will insure the build
ing of the road. It is to be hoped that
those owning property or residing on the
route of the road, will subscribe liberally,
on account of the collateral advantages
which must result to them by increasing
the value of their property and throwing
an active business in their midst; and that
capitalists may be directed to it as a pro
fitable investment of their surplus funds.
If coal can be mined and transported, any
place at a profit, it must be here.
[tr . TILE NORTH BRITISH REVIEW,
republished by Leonard Scott & Co., N.
Y., for May is on our table. The con
tents are, Prospects of British Steamships
and Policy; Phrenology—its place and re
lations; Village life in England; Roman
ism and European Civilization; Life and
Chemistry; King Alfred; Binocular Vision
and Stereascope; Memories of Dr. Chal
mers. Price $3,00 a year. _
Erg" TIIE EDINBURO REVIEW fiom the
same press is at hand. The Contents are
Some estimat — e - May be formed of
—Trouson do Coudry; National Education; th e n ive frequency with which the
Parini State Romano; Athenian Arohitec- various letters of the English language
ture; Investments for the working Classes; uro used, from knowing that printers' cases
John Knox's Liturgy; Mallet du Pan; are
a lt tug a s
follows:re ar For
every
30 1 00
Nicaragua; a nd
Roobuk's Whig Ministry of 1830; Squier's kf ,
800 of b, 1 5 00 of c, 4000 each , of o n,
Lord Derby's Ministry and Lc. and s. 4250 of 0. AVID
THE "JUNIATA FIRE ENGINE COMPA
NY."..—The meeting held last week in the
Town Hall . for the purpose of forming a
Fire Company, manifested the right spirit,
and, what is still better, reduced it to im
mediate practice. A constitution was pre
pared, adopted by the meeting, and signed
by about thirty active young men of the
borough. On Saturday the gallant fellows
gave our citizens a practical illustration of
their zeal in the good Cause, by parading,
in full muster, and performing some very
creditable evolutions with the "Engine."
They meet again on Friday evening, when
we hope to see their organization comple
ted with largely increased numbers.
PENNSYLVANIA FARM JOURNAL.-
This is the title of a monthly publication of
some thirty pages, edited by llaldon►an &
Spangler, Lancaster city, Pa. It is devo
ted to Agriculture, Horticulture, and Ru
ral Economy. Every Farmer and Garden
er should avail himself of the rich stores
of practical inforuu►tion contained in this
and other similar publications.
11, - We have received copies of the
"Monthly Jubilee," a neat pamphlet of
48 pages, published in Philadelphia, by an
association of Working men and women,
and devoted principally to the interests
of the laboring classes. Price—One dol
lar per anumn in advance.
. _
A Wnro bra ' THE MORT STRIPE.—
James C. Jones, Esq., of Tennessee—
whose nomination for the Vice Presidency
on the Whig ticket, is being urged with
much earnestness—is a Whig of the true
grit.—The sentiments with which he closes
a recent letter to a friend at Nashville,
will meet the approbation of every Whig in
the land who desires the triumph of the
principles of his party. They are as fol
lows :
seek no' new alliances--no new affili
ations—l am still a Whig. The old Whig
party is good enough for sue. I want no
third party, composed of fragments torn
from other parties, bound together by no
bond, united by no creed or code of princi
ples—no principle of adhesion but that of
a name. I repeat that the Whig party is
good enough for me. I have thought it a
Union party. I believe in its principles—
am content to abide its fortunes—sin ready
to follow it through gloom to glory or the
grave."
A Goon STORY--The Now York
Tri-
Lune relates the following story of the
Hon. John 'McKeon. It says :—Our
friend John McKeon, was down at Balti
more last week, 'going it,' after his impul
sive and whole-souled fashion,:for Cass, and
nothing shorter, when a by-stander remar
ked, "MoKeon you had better take things
more quietly—you may get "into trouble if
you talk so freely." John scanned the
large crowd of New Yorkers present with
the practiced eye of an Ex-District Attor
ney, and replied, "No, Sir, I think I know
"where I am, and who aro about use.—
, ;There, for example, is J. S., whom I once
"convicted of aggrieve ted assult and batte
ry, resulting in homicide; there is M. M.,
"whom I tried for a felony; there is I. R.,
"whom I tried for conspiracy, and convic
ted of riot; there is J. A., whom I tried
"for murder—and so on for a score or two.
"I don't believe there is another man pre
"sent, who has so many tried friends
"about Linn as I have, and I shall say
"just what I please.
FIRST RESPONSE TO TILE BALTIMORE
NOMINATIONS.—The 10th district of Maine
was carved: out expressly to send Loeofo
cos to Congress. It is known as the Toni
et' on account of its erratic and unparal
leled shape. In 1850 it chose Charles
Andrews, (Loeofoco) by 60 majority; but
he dying a short tiniesinee, a special elec
tion was held last Monday to fill the vacan
cy. The result is that Isaac Reed, a good
and true Whig, who was beaten by An
drews two years ago, is now elected by
some 500 majority. This election took
place in the midst of the Locofoco rejoic
ings, cannonades, Ste., &e., over the har
monious issue of their Baltimore Conven
tion, and may be taken as the first sub
stantial response from .IVeur England to
the nomination of Pierce and King.
N. B.—The Whigs of that district go
the entire for Winfield Scott for Presi
dent.
Irr A Woman's Rights convention was
held at West Chester last week, and was
well attended from different parts of the
country. Resolutions were adopted setting
forth, that as taxation without representa
tion is unjust, therefore, women should
be allowed to participate in political institu
tions and vote ; that every party which
claims to respect the humanity, civilization
and progess of the ago, must inscribe on its
banners, "Equality before the law without
distinction of sox."
• ,
MR. CLAY'S Srmiqn . s.—The New York
Express makes this statement, illustrating
the very frail tenure by which Mr. Clay
now retains his life. Tho editor derives
the statement from Dr. Jackson : •
"One feature of his febleness is that he
cannot support himself alone, and is not
allowed to walk, even with the support of
others. Dr. Jackson told him that if lie
stood erect lie would faint, and that if lie
should faint he would breath no more. =
"Why is this Stilted Mr. Clay. "'Be
cause tlAre is not enough vitality in the
heart to give circulation to the blood."—
"Has it then come to this l" said Mr. Cl 4;
and fora moment, sorrowfully. And, see
ina.e' the necessity; he has suffered himself
to be borne like a child to and from his
bed. Mr. Clay, throughout, has studied
his disease, if disease it be, critically, and
thoughtfully, and even physically. He
has watched the gradual wasting away of
life, until there isnot the•faintest pulkatidn
left to tannin that the spirit still survives
within its emaciated tenement of flesh.—
Ho will die cattily and beautifully, as ho
has lived, and his spirit will depart full of
the Christian hope of a blessed immortal
ity."
1J A Dancing Master, on being oast
away on a desolate island, lived six months
without any food than that which he de
rived from cutting "pigeon wings" and
stewing them.
MARRIAGE,
HAPPINESS AND COMPETENCE.
win to rri
amain in
oin
cmn
and ilmens, depriving them of toe power ior t ine enjoyment
of life at an age when
. physical health, buoyancy of spirits,
and' happy seren amend, arising from condition of health,
should bepredommant.
Many oldie calms of her sufferings at first—perhaps years
before, perhaps during girlhood, or the first years of marriage—
were in their origin so light as to Pass unnoticed. cud of court.
neglected.
IN ANTEIt YEARS,
When too late to be locnefitted by our knowledge, we look
back and mourn, and regret the full consequences of our
ignorance.
What womb] we not often give to possess. in early life, the
knowledge we obtain in after years! And whatla>l end
nights of anguish we might toot have been spared, of the
knowledge was timely possessed. It is
MELANCHOLY AND STARTLING
To beholff the sickness and suffering endured by many a wife
for limy year., from eausei siMple rind controllable, easily
remedied--or better still,—not lectured, if dvery
WIFE AND MOTHER
Possessed the information contained in a little lolumo, (Aids
io the reads °fall) which ssould spare to herself
YEARS OF MISERY,
And to her husband the Constant toil and ansiet, of ming,
necesrmily tlevolvimr ttron him Irontlicanesx of the *ite,
:e i t t r i :=l:in ' lrt i gt i e l t i- Ti„2 " X " ::•irtre r tl,Tird " t f t% l lVe c T:;
.1 which would secure the haptittess of hitmcg, wire,
children.
SECURE THE MEANS OF HAPPINESS
Ay becoming in time possessed of the kilo, ledge, the main
of which has calsed the sickness and poverty of thousands.
In view of such consequences, no wile or mother is earn
sable if she neglect to arra herself of that knontledge itt
resrect to herself, which would spare Der much. stilfering, be
the means of happiness and prosperity to her husband, and
confer upon her children that blessing above all price—healthy
bodies, witiclrealthy minds. That keno ledge is contained in
a little work entitled
THE MARRIED WC/lAN'S
Private - Medical Companion,.
BY DR. A. IR. NALIRICEAU,
One Hundredth Edition. 18mo., pp. 050. Price, 50 M.
CON PINE PAPER, EXTRA DININNO, $1 00.1
Firm pliblislml in 1547, awl it is not
SURPRIZING OR WONDERFUL,
Considering that EVERT FEMALE,
'WHETHER MA RRIED,OR NOT, can here
acquire. it fall knowledge of the nature,
character and causes of het compliant.,
with the verlens symptom., and that
nearly
CULP A lIIILLION COPIES
shpoll tonve brfli p9lll.
i;;11, - ra - tAie . aliTe — to convey full,' lhe suhieSes
vented of? as they are of nature atrietly int,e oded for the
married, or those contemplating 11141111,1", hltt use female
desirous or rojoying health, and that beauty, consequent nom
health. which is so conducive to her own happiness, mid diet
of her Intabanol, lint either has or I% ill Obtain it, as has or will
every husband who hna the love 6.nd affection of his wife at
heart, or that of his own pecuniary improvement.
UPWARDS OF' ONE 'HUNDRED TID3U.
SAND COPIES
Ilave been SENT HT MAIL within the but fuw months
_ 4 4
til - Base and Sliamefid Fraud!!
CAUTION TO BOOKSELLERS,
VIOLATION OF COPYRIGHT
A SPURIOUS EDIT/ON
same mid barefaced, has been stirreptiiioush• iestied, wit%
i e lL:z . .xid size, exdoly the slAtz TITLE PAtIK,
TYPOGRAPiLIVAL ARRANGEMENT,
ENTEFIND aceoulhmu s irn r sg f;rrgs \ ju the Year 1811. by
In ll, e Clerk's Mike of the District C, na't of I. Sou th ern
thatriet of New P ork,
OMITTED.
The contents, the subject matter, anti reading nro
ENTIRELY DIFFERENT,
Nu"Vuel„V,nu%'.lC7rnol,t;,:lch,=sn with a pa ur cover
cuts scattered thronehont its pages. Ms copyright *Men
contain. none.
If there are any in the [redo so lost tu shame and common
honesty ns to be willing
IN DEFRAUDING THEIR CUSTOMERS,
so Imo than the !col owner of the prop...). in copyright
they Is w
ill be prima:ed, and steps will be taken to exi 4
them to the politic.
A ropy Ile sent to
w earl, bookseller or firm, (with Ile
terms opon whielt they ill be foroislied I olllow
his or their liminess card of address.
CAUTION TO THE PUBLIC.
BE NOT DENRAUDEDI
Ihri no book unless Dr. A. M. Nlanriceati, 129 Liberty it .
N. Y., is 013 the title 'ewe, and the retry in Clerk's Office on
the back oldie title paw enrreitontls ss herein, and buy only
of respectable eV kz.ition,ble dealers, ur send by mail, and sel•
dtua to Dr. A. Full title Inge, with ennirnu, tolollter with, • Ow.
frosting of itopo,toot mthiot,ot to every num. femme, MAU
bu sent It nordut e. toe o enclosingu abetter stamp in
s Mesh! relier,sd g e;ard:, Y lieeis .
rrOn receipt or Fifty Ceuta, (or One
Dollar for the flue Edition extra bindino,,)
"THE MARRIED 'WOMAN'S PRIVAT'M
MEDICAL COMPANION" Is sent (mulled
free) to oily part of the ' , lilted States. All
letters must he post-punt. and addressed to
DR. A. M. MAURICEAU, Box 1334, New
York City. Publishing Olney, No. ISO Liberty
Street, New York.
Fur Sale by—Blanch & Crap, Harrisburg; J.
Swarts, Bloomsburg; J. S. Worth, Lebanon; C.
W. Do Witt, Milford; J. W. Ensmiuger, Man
beim; H. W. Smith, Huntingdon; S. McDonald,
Uniontown; J. M. Baum, New Berlin; H. A.
Lantz, Rending; E T. Morse, Cranesville; N. Y.
R. P. Crocker, Brownsville; Wente & Stark, Car
bondale; Eldred & Wright, Williamsport; S. Tuck.
Wilkesburre; Geo. W. Earle, Waynesboro; E.
Croskv. Mauer. S. Load,. c ur rr--