THE JOURNAL. „ A ~....il f ... -- 2... t - - •-, 'lSt ~.:4 - ; . ~,, ...- ........,--.4,., (- ~',.,.....,,A1aPA.., - .. 0... . ....,............zip t , G . t :,. - - HUNTINGDON, PA, Thursday Morning, June 21, 1452. BY STEWART & 11A L L FOR PRESIIENI, WINFIELD SCOTT, OF NEW JERSEY 1 , 01: VICE PRESIDENT, WM. A. GRAHAM, OF NORTH CAROLINA, WHIG ELECTORAL TICKET GENERAL ELCTORS, A. E. BROWN, J. POLLOCK, S. A. Prnvt.txcE, DlsTiticTs. 13.—Ncr Middlcsw•arth, 14.—Jas. 11. Campbel. 15.—Jas. D. l'axton. 16.—J.ts. K. Davidson. 17.—Dr. J. McCulloch. 'lB.—lialph.Drukc. DISTRICTS. I.—W In. F. Hughes, 2.—James Traquair. 3.—John W. Stokes. 4.—John I'. Verree. 5.—S. Mel 6.—Jas. W. Fuller. 7.—Jaa. Penrose, B.—John Shaeffer. 9.-Jacob Marshall. 10.—Chas. P. Weller. 1.-I)aris Alton. 12.—M. C. Mercur. 19.—Joli;t Linton. 20.—.kreli. It ,b•rt 2t.-'l • hns. J. Bighorn, 22.-I,rnvis L. Lord. Moyers 24.—D. Phelps. FOR CANAL C , JACOB F )MMISSIONEII, [OFFMAN, OF BERKS COUNTY SUPREME COURT, JOS. BUFFINGTON, OF ARMSTRONG. ~.,.._ „,49.405•,..v., .5* ....., 1 4 iit::.-2 -- Ifr ,--- ~,,...,$,,,,...,,,„..____: _ ---k riz) ...z..-.E. , -.-,.., 4 0- -: ,i.•;:-4 , .., , - SCOPI'T RATIFICATION MEETING AND FORMATION OF A CHIPPEWA CLUB ! To take place on next Saturday evening at 8 o'clock, at Alex. Carillon's. Let all the friends of Gen. Scott turn out to put the ball in motion. Now is the time to strike, and the last armed foe must expire ! Locoforo Platfaral. The series of resolutions passed at the late Locofoco Baltimore Convention is one i of the rarest productions in the history of political villainy. Except probably the Iwo or three in relation to the compromise measures, every one in the whole string looks like a thief, and carries in its coun tenance the conscious guilt of the convict ed felon. Those that dont look every way have their eyes prone to the earth to hide the reflection of perdition which gluon's on their brows. Sneak, thief and deceit are as plainly impressed on them as they would be on the human carcass that might be 1 ! caught issuing at midnight, with his booty from a hen-roost. They appeal entirely to the gullibility and humbuggible character of the persons for whom they were intend ed, and fail to present practical ideas and measures for the consideration of the Amer ican people. Professing a hypocritical de votion to popular rights, the party that made them is willing to favor any thing which can curse a progressive age and country, if by such means sufficient strength I could be gained to enable the leaders to thrust their anus into the public treasury. !, There is one resolution in the batch which may be intended to refer to the tariff, the I principal ingredient of which is, that jus- ' 117 — During the storm which passed over ties and policy forbid the Federal Govern- this place ou Monday after noon, hail fell ment to foster one branch of industry to •• at McConnellstown and up Woodcock Val the detriment of another. The object of ley, in great quantity, and some of it more this one is to leave the impression that the than an inch and a quarter in diameter. ----....4,... 19higs are the special friends of one brunch of industry and the enemies of others; when 1 ltr At two o'clock on Monday, one the fact is that we demand protection for hundred guns were fired in the city of the purpose of making all interests equal. Baltimore, in honor of the nominations of It has probably another object snore in ' the Convention, consonance with its paternity; and that is, I ______.."•,...,--. to say something on the general subject ' Err The ", d.swistown Gazette says :—A e i r i elt i e i t t l o o n v thec a r bo ut a Ju ,e ss a i- r without meaning any thing—a mere fly-trap a suspensiont sa , neas .l Newtown ge' to catch fools in. It indicates uo line of ago, we think, on the Remington plan, policy, but creates a phantom and then ' gave way on Thursday of last week, while fi g ht s i t . It i s a porcupine reso l u ti on , , a four horse team, heavily laden, was pus- Anothersing over it, precipitating the horses, wag one declares that government we, . :l -t z o ti o ta t t t e h m eLe t ts intotie men and The has no power to- commence and carry on a two of general system of internal improvements.' the horses were saved. No bridge of this This is another porcupine resolution. It kind has thu.s far stood the test of thou. is not in favor of any thing, but is still I I playing the Ishmaelite. There is not a! PRIZE CONCERT. word said about the improvement of rivers ' 'i he Aeolians will will give one of their and harbors. If the convention had spo- inimitable prize Concerts in Huntingdon on ken in favor of these improvements, South ' Friday evening, Juno 25th. Tickets 25 Caroline would have been deeply offended, cents, to be had at the Jewelry Store'of as also other china-still Southern Lorofoeo l E. Snare, whore the prizes assay be seen Muir,. . !and examined. The resolutions go on to state that the I general government should not assume the debts of the States; that the most rigid economy should be practised; that Con gress has no power to charter a National Bank; that there should be no attempt to abridge the privilege of becoming citizens and owners of property; that the proceeds of the public lands should not be distribu ted among the States; that the veto power is necessary to guard the public interests; that the party will abide by the Kentucky and Virginia resolutions of 1792 and 1798; that the war with Mexico was just and ne cessary; that the restoration of friendly re lations with Mexico is a subject of con gratulation; and that in view of the condi tion of popular institutions in the old world, it is necessary to maintain the rights of the States and thereby Union. We have heard that it was proposed to pass a resolution in favor of the Christian religion, but some fellow swore that if that was done he would leave the party. We are rather surprised that one was not pass ed in-favor of the American revolution or against the expulsion of Adam from the garden of Eden. They would have been about as appropriate to the times as those which were passed. The whole platform shows that the locofocos are unable to give one sensible reason why they should be permitted to regain power. Their whole effort will be a scramble for the spoils, to secure which, they would willingly blight the industrial prospects of the country.— Such a desolate, skulking, sneaking pro gramme of principles was never presented to an intelligent public. There is not a bold open expression in ono of them, noi - a measure proposed which has any necessary connection with the progressive times in which we live. They have not even the conservative character of inertness, but like the crab, they are moving tail fore most. Several of them contain cminon place truth, which nobody denies, but there is not one except those on the compromise, which dares to face any living subject, that is, one which is agitated at the piesent day. They are as silent as death on Kossuth, down-trodden Hungary and Intervention. If the party platform is any indication of , the party, it is full of reasons, why such political old maids as Pierce and King should not receive the vote of the Ameri can confederation. Gen. Pierce is very much like the Baltimore resolutions, for his legislative life shows him to be opposed to every thing and in favor of .nothing.— He uniformly voted in Congress against the right of petition on the subject of Slavery. He always voted against all and every im provement of rivers and hurbors. lie voted against appropriations to the Delaware Breakwater. He voted against extending the Cumberland road into Ohio and Indi -1 ass which Jackson approved. Ile opposed in the Senate with deadly venom, the bill I for the relief of Mrs. Harrison, the widow of General Harrison. The locofoco party ! could not have found in its ranks, a more oppose-everything, do-nothing, snapping ! turtle character than Gen. Pierce. UT" The absence of the senior. editor will account for any deficiency in the po litical department of this week's Journal, as also any omission of political correspon dence. A MisTAKE.—The call for a Ratifica tion Meeting at Cannon's on Monday even ing, was intended for Saturday as announ ced in to-day's paper. The error was committed by some ardent Scott men, in the absence of the editors. WHIG NATIONAL CONVENTION. The proceedings, at large, of this body have reached us, but too late for insertion in this week's Journal. We shall lay Third 133 131 29 Fourth 134 130 29 them before our' gratified readers in our Fifa , 130 133 .. 30 next issue. At present we have only time Sixth 131 133 29 Senth, and space for the strong, clearly defined, E evighth 131 133 29 , 133 131 29 national, unexceptionable Platform of Niefl., 133 131 29 Tenth, principles adopted by the Convention; E1e ,,,,b, 134 131 135 130 28 28 and the protracted ballotings which have Tw Thi..llllh 134 190 28 , resulted In the choice of the glorious hero- 1,„„ rtee nthrtee 134 130 28 „ t i,, 133 130 29 statesman, WINFIELD SCOTT, as the 133 130 29 Sixteenth, 135 129 28 Fifteenth, Whig standard-bearer in the important s eseilt „„ t h, 132 131 29 presidential contest before us. On the fil- l',llllleeetb, 132 131 28 Nineteenth, 132 131 29 ty-third ballot, it will be seen, the na- Twentieth, 132 131 29 tiou's favorite received the nation's sane- 'l'weet -First, 133 131 28 TWellty-Second, 132 130 30 tion, through her representatives in counc il . Twenty-Third, 132 130 30 30 The child of military renown is born to 1 "I: , , , , L enty4: t ttirth, 133 1 1 2 2 5 9 31 civic fame. In November next itwill 1-, silty-111th, 133 -e ' Twenty-Sixth, 134 128 30 adopted by the votes of a nation of free- I ~., , , i ec l l ) 3 :- . 8 ,,,e ni11, 135 128 29 Eighth, 135 128 28 men, and on the 4th of March '53 1,0 installed 1 Twenty-Ninth, 134 128 30 in the White House amid the rejoicing of ; Thirtieth 7 134 128 29 ! Thirty-First, 135 129 28 jubelant multitudes. . Thirty-Seeend, 134 128 30 PLATFOHNI. !Thirty-Third, 134 128 29 Thirty-Fourth, 134 126 28 The Whigs of the United States, in ! Thirt•y_Fifth, 134 128 28 Convention assembled, firmly adhere to the Thirty-Sixth, 133 128 28 great conservative principles by which they Thirty-Seventh, 130 127 28 127 29 are controlled and govelted; and flirts, as :fl ' , l l ; . l,• ‘ ,..it l i g ,? ; ll l ', 1 3 3 4 6 128 30 over, relying on the intelligence of the ; Forth;th, 134 128 29 American people, with abiding confidence Forty-Met, 132 128 32 in their capacity for self-government, and , Forty-Second, 134 128 30 their continued devotion to the constitution !li.,(;°:;tte'fir,ohil;ctili, 134 • 128 30 133 129 30 and the Union, do proclaim the following I.,,,,,;._Fiftii 133 127 32 as their political sentiments and determi- 1 Forty-sixth, 134 187 31 nation fur the establishment and urainten- Forty-Seventh, 135 128 29 /wee of which their national organization 11?"")-1Fil-qh, 137 124 30 Forty-Ninth, 139 122 30 as a party is effected : Fiftieth, 142 122 28 Resolved, That the Government of the Fifty-First, 142 120 29 United States is of a limited character, IFifiY-Seeond, 148 118 26 and it is confined to the exercise of powers I Fifty-Third, 159 112 21 expressly granted by the Constitution, and; At the close of the fifty-third ballot, such as may be necessary and proper for the Chair announced that Winfield Scott carrying the granted powers into full erre- was duly nominated as the candidate of cution, and, that all powers not thus grant- __ ~, . the it Ing party of the United States for ed or necessarily implied aro expressly re to the States respectively and to the the Presidency, After the protracted people. I cheering subsided, the Convention proceed- Resolved ) That the State governments ed immediately to ratify the action of the should be held secure in their reserved ' majority, which they did by unanimous ac rights, and the General Government sus tamed in its constitutional powers, and that , emulation. the Union should be revered and watched 1 William A. Graham, of North Carolina, as the palladium of our liberties, I was then on the second ballot duly nomin- Resolved, That while struggling free- ated as the Whig candidate for Vice Fre d= everywhere, enlists the warmest gym sident. Glory enough for one day. pathy of the Whig party, we still adhere teethe doctrines of the Father of his Coun- 1 ...-14---- . try, as announced in his Farewell Address, ; The Stick of Candy. of keeping ourselves free from all entang- ' General Pierce was first spoken of in ling alliances with foreign countries, and connexion with the Presidency c at the Lo of never quitting our own to stand upon cofoco State Convention in New Hemp fureiun ground. That our mission as a ; . shire, some time last winter, and that body Republic is not to propagate our opinions, resolution requesting their &le or impose on other countries our form of adopted a government, by artifice or force, but to gates to bring him forward as a candidate. , Gov. Steele in addressing the convention, teach by example, and show by our success moderation and justice, the blessing of self- expressed his gratification at the selection, Government, and the advantages of free , and related the following anecdote to "ex institutions. Resolved, That where the people make hibit the character of the man." Wo give and control the Government, they should . it in the Governor's own words : , obey its Constitution, laws and treaties, as "Sir," said Governor Steele "I know the they would retain their self-respect, and the ! career of General Pierce from the day he first took his seat in this Hall. I have ad respect, which they claim and will enforce from foreign powers. • mired his exploits in Congress, in Mexico. Resolved, That the Government should But I have an incident in my mind which be conducted on principles of strict econo- I will relate, which in my humble judg my,: wont exhibits the character of the man in cient for the expenses of an economical ad and that the revenue should be setil a more illustrious light than all his efforts , , 1 ministration of the Government in time of in the forum or the field, peace, ought to be derived from a duty on I "It was more than twenty years ago and ; General Pierce was then somewhat youn imports, and not from direct taxation; in laying such duties, sound policy requires ger than he is now was travelling through one of the western towns df this State, and a just discrimination, ivhereby suitable en- . eouragement may be afforded to American : as he entered the principal village be be . industry, equally to all classes and to all' held three boys eating candy. At a brief parts of the country. I distance he beheld another boy sitting Resolved, That the Constitution vests alone and not eating, but he was crying.— : in Congress the power to open and repair ; Gen e ral Pierce feeling interested in so strange an occurence, inquired into the harbors, and it is expedient that Govern ment should exercise its power, and remove ! ease, and ascertained that he was cry. , obstructions from navigable rivers, when - I ins because he had no money to buy can over such improvements are necessary for I d y , the common defence, and for the protec- I No sooner had he learned the facts in don and facility of commerce with foreign the case, than with that noble generosity nations or among the States; said improve- ; which has ever distinguished Pierce thro'gh moms being, in every instance, national 1 his whole life, he put his hand in his and general iti their character. I pocket, drew forth a cent, bought a slick Resolved, That the Federal and State ;of candy, and gave it to the boy although Governments are parts of one system, alike the boy was a total stranger to Gen. necessary for the common prosperity, peace 1 pi erce. ” and security, and ought to be regarded 1 His nomination for the Presidency, taken alike with cordial, habitual and immovable in connexion with such a remarkable in attachment. Respect for the authority of I stance of benevolence and unbounded lib each, and acquiescence in the just consti- erality towards au entire stranger, must tutional measures of each, are duties re- I be another illustration of the proverb "that (inked by the plainest considerations of 1 good actions meet with their reward,"— National, of State, and of individual wol- ; Hartford Courant. fare. I .............---- Resolved, That the series of acts of the ar The Pennsylvanian, the organ of thirty-first Congress, known as the Com- loeofocoism in this State, says, "No man promise measures, including the act known except he who is grossly ignorant, need as the Fugitive Slave law, are received cud I ask 'Who is Franklin Pierce?"' If the acquiesced in by the Whig party of the ! Pennsylvanian is right in this wholesale United States, as a settlement in principle assertion, there aro lots of the democracy and in substance, of the dangerous and iu this region who, in its estimation, must exciting questions which they embrace, and be GROSSLY IGNORANT, as not one in fifty so far as they are concerned, we will main- who could have answered the question of tain them, and insist upon their strict en- who is Franklin Pierce on the day he was forcement, until time and experience shall nominated. demonstrate the necessity of further legis- I The nomination of Gen. Pierce was first !talon to guard against the evasion of the . seriously supported by Virginia. What laws on the ono baud, and the abuse of ;could have been more natural/ The same their powers on the other, not impairing ! intolerant and proscriptive feeling are char their present efficiency; and we deprecate 1 aoteristic .A these two States. In New all further agitation of the questions thus I Hampshire men are disfranchised for their settled as dangerous to our peace, and will ! religious opinions, and in Virginia a man discountenance all efforts to continue or must be the owner of a certain amount of renew such agitation, whenever, wherever property before he can vote. Pretty or however the attempt may be made, and, Democratic States, aint they? wo will maintain this system as essential to the nationality of the Whig party and the ; 'Lr_r Foreign small notes circulate free• integrity of the Union. ; ly in Philadelphia. RECAPITULATION, The following is in recapitulation of the severa: ballottingss Scott. Fillmore. Webster. 131 133 29 133 131 29 Ballots First Second Triumphant Refutation. I Tho National Intellizencer thus cuts up into mince meat the charges made against the Whigs of New Hampshire by Geo. M. Dallas at the late Ratification meeting. Ever since Mr. Dallas told the people at Reading, as he did in 1844, that they must elect Mr. Polk if they were in fa vor of the Tariff, wo have been satisfied that he will not hesitate to tell a fib when he is snaking a political speech; but we really did not suppose that lie would ven ture upon such an unqualified falsehood as the Intelligences proves his statement to be: We regret that we have to correct an error of fact coming from an authority so eminet as Mr. Dallas, who, in defending the candidate of his own party from poli tical usperison—if the charge referred to be such, for we do not know what position Mr. Pierce occupied on that vestion— has been greatly misled in casting upon the Whig party of New Hampshire the responsibility of an odious decision, made by the populai voice of that State, in which it is notorious that the Whigs have always been in a minority. The facts in the case are widely differ ent from what is stated by Mr. Dallas.— The very day (in March, 1851,) when the people of New Hampshire rejected the amendment to their Constitution which proposed to abolish the property qualifica tion and the religious test, an election was held for GovernOr f at which the Whig can didate received only. eighteen thousand totes nut of a poll of fifty-seven thousand. Tho vote was as follows: For Mr. Sawyer, Whig, 18,431 For Mr. Dio,otoor, Detn., 17,123 For Mr. Atwood, Free Soil Dem., 12,083 Mr. Atwood was the regularly homing.. led Democratic candidate until within a few days of the election, when, owing to his Free-soil predilections, he was thrust aside, and Mr. Dinstnoor substituted in his place. It is not probable, therefore ) that Mr. A. received the support of many Whigs; indeed ) it is rendered certain that he did not receive their support, from the fact that on this occasion Mr. Sawyer's, vote was nearly the same in amount as the Whig candidate for Governor had received at the several annual elections immediate ly preceding that of 1851. Now, in contrast with the above vote, we insert from our own columns of the 31st March, 1851, the returns of the vote on the several constitutional amendments sub mitted to the people. These returns were originally copied from the New Hampshire Patriot, and professed to give the com plete vote of the State, with the except. tion of one town : Yeas. 'Says. On adopting the Bill of rights 10,134 16,753 Relating to House of Represents- tives 4.714 22,546 Do do Senate • 6,015 21,333 Do do Governor C Lt. Gov. 8,013 18,802 1)o do Biennial Elections, &e. 5,552 22,959 Do do Election of Co'ty Judge 7,440 17,916 Do do Trial Justices, &o. 10,111 17,221 Do . do Test and property qualffi mtions . 9,862 17,122 Do do rutaire Amendments' 9,023 17,687 Do do Election of.' edges C. 7.,310. 19,709 Do do Supt. Public Instruc tion 5,553 , 21,177 Do do-Commissioner Agricul two 5,182 21,447 Do do Election by plurality 6,291 20,901 Do do Abolishing the Council 8,993 18,209 Do do Other alterations 7,040 18,698 That the Whigs were not accountable for the defeat of the amendment abolishing the religious test and property qualifica tion was olearly demonstrated by the press of the State at the time, which gave pub licity to the following facts, in contrasting the votes given in the strongholds of both parties in favor of the amendment. The comparison is made between fifteen towns of each party, as follows : DEMOCAATIC TOWNS. WIUG TOWNS. Yeas. Nays, Yeas. Nays. llarnstend, 53 330 Merrimack, 139. 69 1 Centre Harbor, 19 91 Nashua,647 16 Gilmanton, 61 494 Nashvile. 255 95 Effingham, 1 136 New Ipswreh,'94 53 ... ..... . .. ... 91 14 Fitzwillimn, 94 1 Ossii r iec, 12 281 Tuitonboro,' 42 149 e tirey, 1 212 Wakefield, \Vonorotigli, 11 :303 Bow, 20 130 chichemr, II 172 NVarner, 30 235 Wilmot, 43 151 iCeetie: 233 6 MarlbotoBl4ll, SI 32 Troy, 61 13 Winchester, 203 6 t • laremcnt, 245 186 Bath, 107 34 Lit detail) 100 50 Lyrae, 88 57 AAexanilria, 12 196 Ellswordi, 1 72 11 148 360 3,186 This table shows that the above namcd Democratic towns gave•almost ten votes to one against the amendment, whilst the Whin. b towns gave nearly four to one in fa vor of it. The town of Concord, in which Mr. Pierce resides, gave 122 votes in fa vor of the amendment, to 509 against it. These facts contradict the statement attributed to Mr.' Dallas, and exhibit the liberality of tho Whigs of the Granite State in a much more favorable light than that of tho Democrats. "iiON. JOSIAH Q UINCY, Jtt., of Boston, it is said, has been compelled to avail him self of the insolvent law. His liabilities are reported at one million one hundred and fifty thousand dollars." Bo says an exchange. Yet, if, at any time within fifteen years preceding the last six months, we had been asked to say, who, of all the Bostonians, was the least likely to go into bankruptcy we should probably have pronounced the name of Josiah Quincy, Jr. Alas for the uncer tainties of traffic!—Cleavland True Demo crat. A Snow:lsm INcTnEm—The Mobile Tribune says :—"A terrible incident occur= red a few days ago, which in"'fraLca the sanguinary nature of the Indian. A mem- . ber of the Choctaw tribe, which has an en campment on the line of railroad near Citronelle, recently murdered another. The deed, we believe, was committed in Mobile. The victim was a son of "Billy" a drunken Choctaw, whom, doubtless, the reader has frequently encountered in the streets begging, and exhibiting written tes.; timonials of his claims on public charity.— The body of the dead man was born on the railroad ears and buried according to Indina rites. Billy, it is stated, subse quently threatened to shoot and skin the slayer of his son; and it seems that he and his friends in the tribe have literally fulfilled the oath. We learn that the of fender was seized, tied in the woods near Beaver meadow, and there deliberately shot. The body was then taken and skin ned, as hunters skin a deer, and the skin was stretched and hung up on the limbs of a tree. The flesh was cut into pieces, born about on sticks and afterwards burn ed. The skeleton, as we are told, was absolutely brought afterwards to town and offered for sale." MAItRIAGE, HAPPINESS AND COMPETENCE. WII If ini IT 1 That we behold ma.ty frontlet, sewer in the meridian of life broken in health and spirits with a complication of diseases and ailment, depriving them of the power for the enjoyment of life at auage when tohysical health, buoyancy of spirits, and hen y serenity of mind, arising from a condition of health, horny o e f r oll=e • Of her sufferings at firsprhaps yews before, perhaps during osi Minot!, or the fi rst years of marriage— were is their migh t so light as to raw eonootic , do and or c 0... neglected. IN AFTER TEARS, When too late to he benefitted by our knowledge, we look back and mourn, and regret the 11111 consequences of our ig `l=t e Woud we not often gite to possess, in early life, the knowledge vre obtain in after years And whet days and nights of anguish we might not have been spared, if the knowledge w. timelYlm..e...d. It it MELANCHOLY AND STARTLING 'To behold the sickness and suffering endured by many fo for many years, from 1,1.11..3 simple and cotrollsble, easily remedied—or better still,—not incurred, if every WIFE AND MOTHER Possessed lie information contained in a little 1. Ohlllit. iu the resell of ell) vtliielt woold spare to herself YEARS OF MISERY. Arid to her husband the constant toil and anxiety of mind, nrcessar4 devolving upon him Irom sickness of the wife, without giving him the opportunity of acquiring that com petence his eseui.o.: are entitled. and te sssss of which whic wou h ld soeuro the happiness of himse h po lf, wife, and children. SECUREI THE MEANS OF lIAPPINESS by becoming in titneposspued of the ki,cwledge, the want hl which has caused the witness and poverty et !Ittotanda. In view of such consequence, no wife La mother is ezeu gable if she neglect. t . o . Rl,ll . herself of that . knov/ledge iu tein'eCt to herself, winch would spitt . /ler Innen WWI... 1111 PillVlT;ll,? l e! ' l l itiTrertP l igsrA i lio: ' ; r p i rl u ce i2 re ' KlTril nouiev: That Knowledge id contained iu a little work entitled THE MARRIED WOMAN'S NI ate Medical Companion. IIY MI. A. M. DIAURICEAU, 011 e IlundrediA Edition. 1Pni0..pp.0.50. Price, 50 de. ton ring rArica, $1 00.) First publi.hed iii 1817, mai it is mot St/RPRIZUVO OR WONDERFUL, • • Coarlderlag that EVERY FEMALE, 124/DETDER MARRIED OR NOT, can here acquire n full knowledge of the nature. character and ratters of her complaints, with the varlet*e eymptonte, and that nearly II ALP` A MILLION COPIES slpolallaye hp!. 1,914. I;l:l;a7tieailiaiit convey fully the various aubJects treated ot, as they are of a 3111111IC strictly ioteueled for tits married,' 'those coutringistind marriages, but so female thwirrs ttflarjoling hellt . t. and that braut Pt awn r, coasequen d usz ' ett:..h7 a.",71.:4 1Z to° every o r who has the lot e and .1 - action of his wife at heart, or ilkat of ilia own t•ecwtiary immurement. VPWARDS OF °NI,: MINDELILD TOOt. iAiii&ii.iicii Ilive been SENT BY MAIL within the last few months 4 . '4 r -1 - Base and Shameful Fraud!! CAUTION TO BOOKSELLERS. VIOLATION OF COPYRIGHT A SPURIOUS EDITION Flagrant and barefaced, has been suriemition.ly issued, as lilt the same fume and size, exactly the IA Ti I,lc rant, awl exactly the same TYPOCIRAPIIICAL ARRANGERINNT, t:,1.!"A",17.17 , IZltZ: l iTgArna",r‘'e ~ M "'"'"*" . " Er. according to Act of Col ""' 1071, hY JOSEPH T VIV" the ."" In the Clerk's o:lice of the District 4' I District or N. York, " s""thu." OMITTED. The contents, the subject matter, and reading ern ENTIRELY DIFFERENT, 74 92 Printed no poor, brownish, dirt,' rarer. will. a pn yr covo, It can be koown also from the miserable and illealbie wood• cum scattered throughout its rages. Ths eOpYrigne edition contains non. If there are a, in the trade en last to shame and common honesty as to be willing 'malts IN DEFRAUDING THEIR CUSTOBIZRII, then e r° 4 l 74ll t t e lielii to each bookseller Or firm (frith lly teintalem wfileli they will he fernished.) upon' receipt frig or their blames. crad of address. 2,512 574 CAUTION TO THE PUBLIC. BE NOT DEFRAUDED: tiny on bank nob. Dr. A. M. !Mauriceau 111 Liberty et , N. Y., is on the title page, and the entry in Clerk'. OM.. the back or the title page coriesptmds as heroin, and boy eel or respectable alai hilllomble dealers, or seint by mall, and a dress to Dr. A. M. Maurice.. Full title page, with contents, together with e row mat treating nr important sithjecus to es cry married female, will be sent, to.e nrCil,e, to Ally nne enclosing a NU. stamp in a ',sod letter, ethliesseil as Imam. rr on receipt of Fifty Cents, (or One Dollar for the line Eention extra binding ' ) TIIIC MARRIED WOMAN'S PRIVATU DIEDICAU COMPANION" Is sent (malhd fro.) to any port of the United States. All lettere must he post-pal& and addressed to DR. A. DI. DIAUIDUEAU, Boa IAA4, New York City. MOM ..... %Office, No.lAttl.lborty Street, New York., For Sole by—Blanch & Crap, Harrisburg; J. Stearns, Bloomsburg; J. S. Worth, iamittion; C. W. De Witt, Milford; J. W. EtisnOwer. Man. helm; 11. W. Sink!, Huntingdon; S. McDonald. Uniontown; .1. M. Baum, New Berlin; 11. A. Lame, Heading; E I'. Morse, Craitesville; N. Y. It. P. Crocker, Brownsville; Wents & Stark, Car bondale; Eldred & Wright, Williamsport; S. Tuck, Wilkeabarre; Geo. W. Earle, Waynesboro; Crosky, Mercer; S. Leader, Hanover; S. W. Tay lor, Utica; R. P. Cummings, Sommerset; T. B. Peterson, Philadolphia—Penn, TRAVELLING AGENTS WANTED. Competent persons will be supplied upon the most favorable terms. A few more only will be engaged. Address, post paid, Dr. A. 11f . Maori'