tial* foritt gaits. A•FiTtEgii - *0 VOUNfi WOMEN. ME By 7.IINTIDTay Ar.9 f ig the. more. tomdy and post es, emi - t.44 apecmplisbineets :of a young wo pap is thet of housewifery. There are, pinny things at the present day to inter fere with its Acquisition, but the fact that it is essential sherto lead you to -subor dinate to it"those Which are not. We hear a great deal about the laziness of the present generation of girls. I think the' accusation is unjust. Girls who acquire really good education now, accomplish ;mph Wove genuine hard work than those ip !the good old times,' who only learned, to read and write, and occupied most of their time in the kitchen and the dairy. Nething that can be, called education can be achieved withogt great labor; and in my (minion, the principal reasee why goad housewifery is so much neglected, ps an accomplishment, is, that the time is go "mush eecupied in study. Laziness isi very apt to come with wealth, and there' Ere undoubtedly a great many more lazy girls now than fifty yeS,rs ago. They are pertainty a very undesirable article to have eheut, and I pity the poor fellow who gets Rue of them for a companion; but I say paudidly that I do not think there are more naturally lazy girls in the world than usual. I I • You expect, one of these days, tIY be the mistress of a house. Your comfort and happiness, and the comfort and hap-1 piness of your husband, will depend very , lunch upon pig ability to order that house well. If your emnpanion be in• hum tile circumstances, you will very likely be, obliged to do the most of your work your-I self. In , this case thorough knowledge 0, and taste for, housewifery will be very peeessary to you. • If you marry a man pf, competence or wealth, a knowledge of good housewifery is quite as essential to you es if you were required to do your own work. The expenses of your house will be large or small, as you area good i en a bad housekeeper. If you do not i know how to do the work of the hogs° ;1 if you have no practical knowledge of all . the offices and economies of an establish agent, you will be dependent. So far from being the mistress of your house, you will be only its guest. Your serveuts will' circumvent you, they will cheat you, they, will make you miserable. If they do not perform their work properly, through willfulness or ignorance, you cannot tell! them better. You will scold them for I things which you cannot tell them how to mend; you will be unjust, and yen, will pot keep them. Many a really good set.-1 leant is constantly suffering from grieV prices growing directly from the ignorance pf her unatress. Unless you are willing to-take up for life with a boarding house place for people to vegetate in—you must be a good housewife. It . matters pot whether you are rich or poor. You peed a practical knowledge of cookery, ofi the laundry, of the prices and qualities'. of provisions, of chamber work—of eve-' ',thing that enters into the details of borne life. ,Qf course, if yoa have no mother who is- capable of teaching you these things, you are in a measure excusable for not learning them..° I pity a family of girls whose mother is !:a know-nothing and a do-nothing. Ido not blame girls for not wishing to put themselves under the tui- ' tion of the cook and the maid-of-all-work. But even when you find yourselves under -disadvantages like, these, you cannot af ford to become a woman without knowiug pomething of the homely utilities of life. Your own aptness of mind—your own good sense and ready ingenuity—will give you a clue to the mysteries which metre° *ill ultimately make plain. Your comfort, your independence, your reputa tion, your husband's respect for you, de- doend co much upon your ability to keep use well that I cannot leave the sub-1 feet without insisting upon the import -1 pace of your learning to do it while you' have a chance. There are few higher' compliments that can be paid to a young Inman, than that she is an excellent ;louse-keeper.- There is no reputation which will more, thoroughly tend to eon- I firma young woman in the esteem oft hyottng men, or more forcibly commendj er, to their esteem than that of being acquainted, practically, with the - detail Of the kitchen and economies of house keeping. , This of introduces me to a dis ct:ission Of the benefits of physical indus try, and the assumption of regular house hold duties. There is uo better relief to Study• than the regular performance of ppecial duties in the house. To feel that pne is really doing something every day, that the 'muse is_the tidier for one's ef forts, and flits comfort of the family en hanced;is the 'surest warrant of content and oheerfulneas. .There is something ,a' !Nut this lOW of daily : work--this reg ilitar Performance of duty—which tends ,to regnlate the passiges, to: give ca l mness lend vigor to the mind, to impart a healthy ;Pone to the'hody, and to diminish the de ah-n for life in the street, * and for resort to. gosaipping, companions, Were las rich' as °teem, my girls should have eoinithinclo de regularly; jipt pssoqu. as. they" should become' old enough to ad . • anything. They . should, in the first place make theit qwn bed, and take care their own room. • They 'Should dress pelt other. - l'hey shonhi sweep a portion efthe Imiso, They should learn; above Ell tbirp,''help themselves, and thus to, tit .*dePentlent in all eircumstpripes. wonlati r -helpless from any other cause ste#B rs a aentialt t y s nuisance: There is nothing 'Womanly and ladylihe in, helplessness; - My-policy wOulti=be, .as -girls grow up, tb_assigu.ta them special duties, firstin.ono part of house; then in another, nntill they shOld - become ac quainted with all the houSPwifely-oiftees; and I should Jaye an object iu this be yond the simple 'acquisition of a,l noll edge of housewifery.. It' should be .for, the acquisition of habits' of physical in dustry—,of habits that conduce to . the health of body and mitnli--of habits that give them au insight into the nature of labor, a i ud inspire within 'them a genuine sympathy with those whose lot it is to labor. All young mind is uneasy, if it is good for anything. There is of the genuine , human 1 stuff in a girl w ci. is habitually . and by naturepoisive, placid and inactive. The body and the mind niust both be in motion: If this; tendency to activity be left to run 'lotiseutidirected into chan nels of 'usefuluess—a . 'spoiled child is' the' result. i A girl growing up to womanhood, is, when unemployed, habitually uneasy. The mind Itches and chafes because it wants action, fora motive. Now a mind in this condition is not. benefitted by the command to stay at horhe, or the :with drawal from companions.' It must be set to trork. This vital enemy that is strug gling to find relief, in! demonstration, should he so directed that habits may be formed-=- habits Of 'industry that obviate the wish for change and Unnecessary play, and form a regular drain upon it, Oth erwise, the . Mind becomes dissipated, the will irresolute, and conariement irksome. Girls will never be happy, except in the company of. their plOymates, unless home becomes to them a scene of regular duty, and personal usefulness, .There iO.atioth er obvious advantage to be derived from the habit of engagin7 daily upon.special household duties.. '''The . imagination of girls is apt to become active to an un healthy dearee, when no corrective is employed. False views of life are engen dered, and labor is regarded as menial.— ease cornea- to he looked upon as a su premely desirable . thing, so that when the real, unavoidable cares of life come, there is to preparation ;for them, and weak . complainings, or ill-natured discon tent are the result,- . . And here' I am naturally introduced to another subject, Young woman, the I glory of your life is to do something and Ito be something. Yiau very possibly ma have formed the idea that ease and per !sonal enjoyment arc the ends of.yourlife. This is a terrible mistake. Development, in the broadest sense, and in the highest direction, is the end of your life. You may possibly find ease with it, and a I dneat deal of precious personal enjoyment, or your life may be one long experience of self-denial. If you wish to be some- I thing more than the pet and plaything, of a wan ; if you ;would rise above the po sition of a pretty toy, .or the ornamental 1 fixture of an establishment, you have got a work, to do. You have got a position to maintain iu society; You have got the I poor and the siok to visit; you may pos sibly-have a fatuity, to rear and train ; you have got to take a load of care upon your , shoulders and bear it through life. You have got a character to sustain; and I I hope you will have the heart of a husband to cheer and strengthen yon. • Ease is not tiff you. ' Selfish enjoyment is not for I you, The world is to be made better by I you. You have got te suffer and to work land if the're be a spark of the true fire in you, -your hearts trill respond to these words. - The time will come when you shall see that all your toil and care your pain acid sorrow and practical sympathy fur others has built you up into a strength of'.womanhood which will iespise ease as ':,n end of lite, and pity those who are! • content with. it. Get this idea that your great business is simply to live at ease, I got of your head at once. There is uoth ing noble and ennobling in it. Your mental and physical powers can only give you worthy happiness in the using. They were made for use; and a lazy woman is inevitably miserable.. Ido not put this matter of enjuytnent" before you as the motive for action. I simply state the fact that it is the result, of action—an in cident of a life worthily, spent. When you hare properly comprehended and received this idea, the recreation of life and the pleasures of social intercourse will take - their appropriate positions with relation to the business of life- r its staple duties. Recreation will become recreation—simply the renewal of your powers, that they may all the better per form the work which you, have undertaken, or which circumstances have devolved upon you. Social pleasures will rise. into a sympathetic communion with natures lives earnest to your hearts, and it will give yob strength and guid.. once. The pleasures of life will become the wells, scattered along the way, where you lay down your burdens for the moment, wipe your brows, and driuk, that you may go into the work before you, refreshed in body and mind. In these quiet hours, you will feel a healthy thrill of happiness which those who seek plea sure for its own,sake never know. There are few objects in this World more repulsive to ma than a selfish woman—a woman who selfishly consults her own enjoyments, her own ease, her own pleasure, tlf yen; have the slightest desire" to be loved ; ;if you would have your presence-a welcomti one in palace and cottage alike; if you would adMired, respected, re vered'; if you Would have all sweet human sympathies clustering around you while you live, and the tears of a multittide of friends shed upon your grave when you die, you must be a working -woman—living and working for others, and building up for yourself a charac ter, strong, symmetrical, hsautifel, If I were yiou, I would rather fie that insensate and qui etly gliding Andel* which' the wounded sol- . Bier kissed as the noble Florence Nightengale passed his weary pillow, than the pampered creature of liatity p wlio has no thought above her personal ease ankfpersonal adornment. Do not 'se* ottt par yourselves any promi nent field of service, where you will attract the attention of the world. Remain where "God pi.icetiyoti. - &One of the noblest heroisms of oho world hive !heft fichiev,ed in humble life,,. The poor yo? have always with fon. The miserable, nick'" , a you; lighten your father's binelens. ,Yon ens re. strain your brothers fooM,viscions society, You can relieve your failing and fading mother . of much' care: You can _Other the ragged and ignorant - children toour knee, and teach them something of a betterlife,then they hive seen. ,:You can become angels .of light and goodndaitd many striaten hearts. you . can read to the -ag,ed. You can do many things which twillbe changed toiblessings upon your own soul. Florence Nighttingale did her work in her place; do your work in yours, and yo . fir . Fatliet who seeth in secret shall- reward you openly. I would be the last one to casts shadowon your brow's, but I would undeceive you at the first, so that you - May begin life with right ideas. Life is a real and earnest - thing.. It has homely details, painful passages, and a crown of mire fu- every brow. I seek to in spire you with a wish and a will to meet it with a womanly spirit. I seek to point you to its nobler meanings and• its higher results. The tinsel with which yulit imagination has invested it Will all fall off itself, so soon as yoit fairly enter Upon- its experiences. ' Theu if these ideas have no place in you, yoU will be obliged to nequire them slowly and paitkfully;l or you will sink , into a poor, selfish, discon tented creature—and be, so Tar as others are' concerned, either a nonentity, or a disagreea ble hanger-on. •So I say, begin to take up life's duties now.. •Learn something of what life is before you take upou ynurselt' Its graver responsibilities. So • shall you seoere your own peace, and gladden, among other hearts, . , that of 41310T11V TqCOMIL Tap BLUE STOCEING.—ThIs term. Is applied to a lady of some literaty taste. Mills, in- his " History of Chivalry," traces it to the Society de la Colza, formed at Venice in 1400. The members, at their meetings. were distinguish ed tty the colors of their stockings, which at times were fantastically blended; and some times one color, particularly blue, prevailed. N la Colza lasted until 1590, when Italian literature took some other symbol. Then the rejected title crossed the Alps, finding a con genial soil in Parisian society, and particu larly branded female pedantry. Next it di viverted from Prence.to England, marking for a while the vanity of smallscholaralkiP in fe male coteries. The blue stocking of the last. century, however, is of English growth. Bos well, in his "Life of J4ilinson," (1781,) record-a the origin of the Blue-stocking Clubs "One of the most eminent member of these societies, when they first commenced, was Mr. Stillinga fleet, (grandson of the Bishop,) whose dress was remarkably grave ; and inl:Articular it was observed that he word blue stockings.— Such was the excellence of - his conversation, that his absence was felt so great a loss that it used to be said,. 'We can do nothing without the Mai strecitiv e and albs, degrees, the title was established." Miss Hannah More-has admirably described a Blue stocking. Club in her "alas-Blue." The last of this club was the lively Miss Moncton, (afterwards Countess of Cork,) Who used to. have the finest hit of blue at the house of her mother, Lady Galway, In the early Greek comedy of the "Banquet of Plutarch," there is a specimen of a Blue-stocking or "Bas-Blue." Y. Eve Post. .11cAmir or Sori..--A boy with his sled, in coasting down bill, ran against a lady's dress and damaged it. Springing to his feet, he ex pressed his regret fur• ilko .accident, when the lady kindly remarked : " There is no great harm done, my boy ; you feel worse about it than I do " " But your dress is ruined," said the lac}; "I supposed you would be very angry." "Better have a spoiled dress than a ruffled temper," the lady replied ; and as she passed on, the boy exclaimed to his companions ; " Isn't she a beauty? " "Call her a beauty?" said ono of them; " she's more than forty, and got wrinkles." "I don't care for that," retorted the lad; "her soul is handsome, anyhow." A ROMANTIC lICRCLAR.—Thieves of the Claude Duval and Paul Clifford school are gradually becoming "played out," hut taxa-. sionally we hear of one. For instance, a gen tleman of this order entered the house of Wil liam Eciltols, Esq., Huntsville, Ala., and not ending any money, he scorned all such trifles as watches. &c., and contented himself with stealing a ring from. the finger of a sleeping young lady. IT Ist Said that a man marrying now-a-days, gets n great deal more than he, bargained for. Ile not only weds a woman but i, laboratory of prepared chalk, a quintle of Whalebone, light coffee-bags, four baskets of novels, one poodle dog, and a system of weak nerves, that will keep four servants and three doctors ar , saud your house. ONE of the newspapers inquires, with much seeming innocence, if it is any harm to sit in the lap of ages? Somebody . answera that it probably depends on the kinds of ages selected —those from eighteen to twenty-five being ratheehasardous. "Wu have the most religions hens that ever you saw," said a little girl. "They never drink the least drop of water without looking up to the sky between every swallow. I sup pose they thank God. I am sure such hens are an example to us all." CRILISTIANITY, said the eloquent Chapin, in a recent lecture at Boston, teaches us that woman has a soul ; but a good many men act as if they had not accepted the evidence, and a goad many women as if they had none to offer. NEW (OODS, Low Prices and Ready Pay, AT SHARON CENTSR. MBE SUBSCRIBERS are offering for sale, an entirely new stoc4, consiatierr pf DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, HARDIVARE, 1 CQOCKERY, GLASS WARE, BOOTS & SHOES, HATS & CAPS, UM BRELLAS, PARASOLS, • WINDOW SHADES, WAIL PAPER,. READY MADE CLOTHING, YANKEE NOTIONS, &c., &c. 4, our selections the wants of all have been remembered. The Gentlemea can find in our stock of Ready Made Clothing an elegant Fashionable suit, or a : substantial Business suit, and we have Bats Cars and Boots & Shoes to match. The Ladies can find Fashionable Bonnets beautifully trimmed, or bonnets and trimming . ; a good asst/rtp,ient of Dress goo*, atld trim mings; dloves, Mitts, Ykosiery - and: Graiteis:— And, last but not least, corded and skeleton Skirts; also, Rattans, Skirt-Whalebone and Brass gliirt-lbriops • beautiful Jet Necklaces and Bracelets, Corals, Funs, and too many other things to enumerate,—all of Which we are selling.low' for Cash, Lumber, er any kind of Prodtice.. FLOUR, ME4, FISH &0., eqp scantly on hand. . • W. B. & J. IL GRATES. Sharon Center, Potter Po., :Pa.,- hrie 18.57.-10. 1 M - • Iwo &TAW DIS 00 VERY. • CON SUMPT ANA ALL : DISEAtti3OF TH. , -LUNGS:4itio..Toota •- - • • yoUrptirlit-.;. • _ . .CIMAIME' I iIIiniLATICON,. • . I• , wawa coneys t he iemedles to the' eavi4 I V V ties in thelungs, through the airspasii ges, and coming in direct:contitei with the disease,- neutralizes the tubercular Matter, aI lays the cough, causes a free and easy expec- I toration, heals the lungs, purifies the blood, imparts renewed vitality to theriervous system, giving that tone and .energy - So indispensable for the restoration of health. To be-able to. state confidently that Consumption is curable by inhalation, is to tue a source of unalloyed pleasure. ,It is -as much under the control of medical treatment us any Other formidable disease; ninety -out of every' hundred • cases can be cured in the first stages, and fifty per cent.-in the second; but in the third stage it is impossible to save more than five per cent., for the Lungs are so cut up by the disease as to bid defiance to medical skill. Even, how ever, in the last stages, Inhalation affords ei -traordinary relief to the . 'inffering attending this fearful scourge, Avhich:annually destroys ninety-five thousand . persons in the United States alone; and a correct calculation showS that of the present. population of the earth, I eighty •ntillion's are destined .to fill - the Ccin sumptive's graves... Truly the quiver of death has no arrow•so fatal as Cnnsimaption. In nli ages it has been the great enemy of. life, for it spares . neither age nor sex, .but sweeps off alike the brave, I tha beautiful, the grneeful and the gifted. By the help of that Supreme Being from whom I cometh every good and perfect gift, I am en ahbled to offer to the afflicted a permanent and speedy cure in Consumption. The first cause of tubercles is front impure blood, and the immediate effect produced - by their depo sition in the lungs is to prevent the free ad mission ef air into the air .cells, which causes '. a Weakened vitality through the entire system. Then surely it is more rational to expect great er good from medicines entering the cavities of the lungs than from those administered throngh the Stomach ; the patient will always find the lungs free and the brenthing easy, af ter Inhaling remedies. Thu, Inhalation is a local, remedy, nevertheless it nets constitution ally, and with more power and certainty than remedies administered by the stomach. To praVe the powerful and preet influence of this this mode of administration, chloroform inhaled will entirely deStroy sensibility in a few minutes, paralyzing the entire nervous system, so that a limb may be amputated with out the slightest pain;' Inhaling the ordinary burning as will destroy life in a few hours. The inhalation of ammonia will rouse the system when fainting or apparently dead. The odor ofmany of the medicines is perceptible in the skin a fete minutesafter being inhaled, and may be immediately deteotetl in the blood. A convincing proof of the constitutional effects of inhalation, is the fact that sickness Is ttl ways produced by breathing foul air , —is not this positive evidence that prayer remedies, carefully prepared and judiciously adraiois.. tercd through the lungs should produce the happiest results? During eighteen years' . practice, many thousands suffering from dis eases of the lungs and throat, have been un der my care, and I have effected many remark able cures, even after the- sufferers had been pronounced in the last stages, which fully sat isfies me that consumption is no longer a fatal disease. My treatment of consumption is original, and founded on long ,experience and a thorough' investigation. My perfect acquain tance with the nature of tubercles, &c., ena bles me to distinguish, readily, the various forms of disease that simulate consumption, and apply the proper remedies, rarely being mistaken even in a single case. This famil iarity, in connection with certain pathological and microscopic discoveries, enables me to re lieve the hulas from the effects of contracted chests, to enlarge the chest, purify the blood, I impart to it renewed vitality, giving energy and tone to the entire system. Medicinestwitit full directing sent to ate part of the. United States and Canadas by pa tients communicating their sytoptonis by letter. But the cure would be more certain if the patient should pay me a visit, which would give me an opportunity to examine the lungs and enable me to prescribe with much greater certainty, and then the cure could be .effectcil without My seeing the patient again. G, W. GRAHAM, M. D., Office I,UI. Filbert Street, (Old No. 109,) below Twelfth, PHILADELPHIA. PA. PROVISION STORE. E, K. SPENCER, Offers Great Inducements TO BUYERS OF 411ROCERIES, PROVISIONS hce., at IA the store formerly occupied by Di, W . SPENCSII, en 3d Street, North side of Public Square, GROCERIES A good assortment constantly on hand, from which I will enumerate a few of the leading articles, such as Sugar, Mustard, Candy, Coffee, Cinnamon, Nuts Illtilasses, Pepper Sauce, Crackers, Syrups, Catsup, Soap, Pepper, Yeast; Candles, Spico, Oils, Shot, Ginger, Tobacco, Lead, Cloves, Snuff; "O." Caps, Carb. Soda, Segars, C. Tartar, and many othr things too numerous to men tion, will be found in this department, ,which will be sold at a trifling advance from cost, • for ready pay. PROVISIONS Constantly on hand, snch as PORK, HAMS, SHOULDERS, FISH, SALT, BUTTER, CHEESE, LAID, BEANS, OATS, FLOUR, Colls NE ,l', • BUCKWHEAT FLOUR, DRIED APPLES, DRIED PLUMS, • and many other articles in the line 41 Provi sions not necessary totnention.. Also, WOODEN WARE, - such as Brooms, Wash-Tubs and Boards, Mops, Dinner Boxes, &c., which be sold low for cash or.ready pay. Oats, Potatoes, Butter, Eggs, Cheese, and in fact.almost everything a farmer raises, will. be takeu in exchange for Goods, at their cash value. , I invite the at tention of ,Villagers, Farmers and Lumbermen who desire to make purchases in the above articles, and solicit them to call before pur chasing elsewhere. E. SPENCER. CoOersport, June 9, 1135,7..—.19;3, Executors' N otice. Letters testamentary having been granted to the ondersigned.en the last Mill and Taste ; mont of Lumen Srao:io, late •of Hebron Township ; Potter County, Pa,, deed, allthese indebted to the estate, will maltp ipmediate payment, and those having claims against the same will present them immediately to ABAGAIL STRONG, r i xgpttix. • WM. IL DIETZGETI, .Uzeenicir. Hebron, APri149,18613.-3D- 6t. ItILUMORT BEADMIAILTERS;'' Tirstibscribers take this method of brming their friends that they are In re ceipt of, add ara.now . opeaing, - a choice' aid desirable stools of !" STAPLE iAIiD PARL'Y DRY GOODS, to which . they invite the attention of all'who desire to make purchases. .Our stock is large has been selected with great care, and is par ticidarly adapted to the wants of this section of our country.. Our stock of Dry Goods con sists of • DRESS G 0 ODS, TRISIMPIiGS ; RIBBONS,I EMBROIDERIES, PARASOLS . - CLOTHS, CASSIMERES . , • VESTINGS. DO- , . . 1 MESTICS, . I - : SHIRTINGS, . , LINENS, PRINTS, . . HOSIERY, SHAWLS, ' I and a variety oother articles, too numerous to mention. W 4 have also a co m plete assort ment of GROCERIES HARDWARE AND i; I.O( . ,IKERk: - i t i all of which will be sold uncommonly cheap for ready pay, ail fur approved credit on as reasonable terms s any other establlshtnent. • . Aug{ MANN ZINICIIOLS. Ilillport, l 1,1 185t1.4-9:13 ly. 11 • . DL i. • KING & SON. • • 6 ' PATENT, CHAIR h 11JFACTIVR ERS, 438 13 °arab Sreet, r lll of f One DoorTnst o roadway, [Late 468 Broad- NMI I /• - 1 • Vara lished A. D. 1833,1 INVITE an ex ru l iaatlon of their great yari- JIL ety and sup rr assortment of CHAIRS, it Manufactured a their own establishment; and under their immelate observation and direc tion, including PIVOT REV SELP-ACTD CllAilltS, IMPROVED MAJOR SEA CHAIR. • [ ,i 11. SPANISH $ ING AND SQ I CAII CRAMS. RIIEUMATI , sTINAL AND ASTIIM.,4,IIC INVALID CH_ ,IS, &C., &C., &C., vi ca&uts, EXTENSION RECUMBENT VALID WHEEL CHAIRS, E'S TRAVELING INVALID Embracing . must complete assortment, and choicest ki . s for Parlors, Drawing Rooms, Chambers, Gar a, Libraries ) counting Houses, Oftiees, Public I lautions, Dentists, Ear togetheuntith 4ery desirable Sort adapted to the comfort, rivettienee and luxury of the Sick, the Aged, the /lira:, the Lame and Lazy. F In point of i , enuity of design, elegance of finish, quality, faith fulness of exema icm,durability and cheapness, ) these chairs a lel unsurpassed: Far Ahem. M. W .LUNG &'S ~INI, were awarded the first awl only Prime Me al, aud the fac i ulty recommend, them as far prtrable to beds or couches for patients afflic. d with Spizial Asa:eat& or Bronchial atre tions. 1 To either arm of the chair may be atta4ed a ooaveaieut ;leitilittg or -.TyitingDzsK, and any eetabitatiork deired will be manufa.ctared to to order. 1 A Cireularlxith explanatory cuts, will be sent by mail itl requested, and orders [with .Ire mittances,) pr mptly forwarded to any part of the world: 1 - _,ITXTJ Y & ECONOMY! KING'S NOT ,. CHAR "AS YOU LIKE if." ' An Arm Ch ir, Reclining Chair, Couch and Bedstead, r cortnix n IN ox a is susceptible of twelve different positions or changes t to meet the varied reuirements for comfort, conveni ence, luxury nd economy, [in space as well as price.) 'heater in sickness or heath. this celebrated CI AIR "AS YOU LINZ IT," excels in many respcc s, any chair perhaps ever manu factured in 1 this or any other country. The price f :tries from F I VUeI to Thirty Dol lars, aecordirkg to fiAlsh. To Public irnstitutioes, as well as to individ uals,lk this CI IR is a very desirable article, and will be npplied in any number on the most liberal erms. Apply to or address ~ I - • Ids W, KINQ 4; SOS, • e st., One door east of Broadway, I..t.aie 468 Broadtray. . 9:44-Iy. 1- , , 438 Broo NSW 'roux, ODS—A Fine Assortment just i ll at ()WISTED.*, I'ENV GO rceeir, OLUTION IN MEDICAL SCIENCE. :t Therapeutic Ageat I 'er Introduced. EMI I The be • DR. DICKINSON'S -7-TY ......A tt, 4,p - ,;.„ . TRIG 'MACHINE 1--, o l4it a is eiciting the K • absorbing Mien tion of the Medi cal Profession and a large portion of ""... - the intelligent lay ind. It is now clearly demon t the lancet, mercury, and. all other . r i ng medication" may be laid aside II safety to the patient and ttbid o posterity. Wherever these ma- been introduced, they excite the nider and 'praise. The apparatus to prevent, relieve and cure every dent to 'humanity,—more particn -30 paiisul and fcrrnidable diseas iiie. for centuries balliedthe pro, r ani' altd skill of physicians. atevet cause there may be an ox, ciency of the nervous fluid—pro eicess or deficiency of the acids a secretions—.the magnetic princi. srtem are deranged, and can on f estored to their normal condition cation of magneto-electricity, by DR. DICKINSON'S! MAGNETO ~.t VACIILNK. 'This apparatus will event, and speedily relieve and iption, Scrofula, Rheumatism, ralgia, Spinal Diseases, and all • maladies, however hopeless and ing. They are eminently useful and urinary disorders, partici', he Constitution has been broken fined by unnatural solitary habits Anaily of the young of both sexes stably pSne, .NSON'S 'MAGNETO ELECTRIC i without the dangerous cOmpli itches an dacids--which fact alone erior to all-Others on the score leanliness, safety and utility.— t' a handsome parlor ornament; ied by a 'child ; and will last a , the great saving of Doctor's PRICE Q It VIIIIo part of th and retail . t SEVENTRI ' —l7 TUB MACHEIF. $lO [safely 'packed and sent to any United States. Sold wholesale the Medical Office, Yo, 38 NORTH ,treet,yhiladelphia. Address, \ A. C. DICKINSON, M.D. 40-I. FOR SHOWING THE NEW st reicived at OLMSTED'S. p e Artie' -a is the pline toi E. s. - , Vie lied and 1/ml4:finest Per4xii4 ea/ the :relic! - Circulation 100 9 000 . - Mills ELEGANT AND FASCINATING 1 LITERARY -AND FAMILY MONTHLY. MAGAZINE closes its first volume in - Jun, next. During the few brief months of its ex tones it has attaineda 'popularity- unequalled in the'annals of the' Press. • The publishers haring offered liberal Pre— miums for choice literary efforts, the Stories, Romances, Essays, Poetry, and other spark— ling and interesting rending was commenced: in January last, and are being still publish:— ed in the Visitor. - The New Volume will be commenced in ,lr. ly 1857, greatly improved, rind enlarged.— Each number will contain thirty-two extra lar g e sized royal octavo pages, making a mag nicent volume of nearly 400_ pages for. the rear—or presenting an amount, 4 the choi cest reading on, all subjects,, equal to whet would cost in the book, stores at least fifty. cents, payable invariably in advance: . • Some of the most popular and brilliant male and female contributors are regular ,Contri. butors and the publishers will spite no pains or expense to render the "Welcome Visitor". every way acceptable to a refined_and gent community. . i The publication is adapted to all classes of people—the young and the old—and where. ever, seen and perused, meets with universal acceptation. gegi= Now is the time to subscribe to th* New Volume. - - *** The back numbers ; may had complete seta) for 3 cents each, of the velibbi series of 12 numbers for TWENTT-FIVF: cents. Liberal inducements to Clubs and .Can. vassers. ser-Reraeraher, our terms are Fifty eettlS for one year, for a single copy, or three cop. ies will be sent under one cover or address for One Dollar. - Addreis, - COSDEN k COMPANY, Publishers, No. 38 North Seventh Street, (up stairs,) Phuirdelphia. 10:1—ly Of alI disease; the great. first cause Springs from neglect of itiature's laws. SUFFER NOT ! When a CITTLE is guaranteed IN ALL STAGES ,OF 1 . _ SECRET DISEASES, 1 Self-Abuse f Nervous Debility, AS':,trietures, Gleets. (Travel, Diabetic, Diseases of ' the IfidneYs and Bladder, Mercurial. ithstrin yam, . ' Scrofula, • Pains in the Bones and Ankles, Diseases of the Lungs, Throat, Nose and Eyes, 'Ulcers upon the Body or Limbs ) , di:lacers, Drol!sy, EpileylicEits, St. Vita's Dance, and all diseases arising ,frons a derugement of the Sexual Organs, Q VCE its :Nervous Trembling; Loss of Mem ° ory, Loss of 'Power, General Weakness,, Dimness of Vision with peculiar-spots appear; lug before the eyes, Loss;of Sight, Wakeful ness, Diyspepsia, Liver Disease', Eruptions npeiri.' the face, Pain in the back aid head, FeMale irregularities and all improper discharges from, both sexes. It-matters not from what corns the disease originated, 11Mo:1:Ter - long standing or obstinate the case, recovery is certain, and in - a shorter time than a permanent cure can be cf-. fected by any other treatment, even after the disease has baffled the skill of cid:lent physi cians and resisted all their means el-cure. The medicines are pleasant without odor, Causing no sickness and free from mercury' or- balsam. During twenty years oflpractice,l have rescuedi from. the jaws of Death ninny thousands, *he,, in the last stages of the nbov'e mentioned dis eases had been given up to die by their physi... Mans, which warrants me in promising to the - afflicted, who may place therriselv.es under my.- care, a perfect and most speedy: cure. Suave Diseases are the greatest enemies.to health, as,. they are the first cause of Consumption; Sirof ula; and many other diseases, and should ben terror to the human family,. As a permanent ; cure is scarcely ever effected, a majcwity elf the cases falling into 'rile' haials of incompetent persons, who not only full to-cure the iliscasps but ruin the constitution, - filling the system with mercury, which; with the disesso, ltd. tens the sufferer into a rapid Consumption.; • But should the disease and the treatment kot cause death speedily and the victim Mar ries, the disease is 'entailed "upon the childreh, who are born with feeble constitutions, and . the current of life corrupted by a-virus whi/ , h betrays itself in Scrofula, Toter, Ulcers, Eru - Lions an other Affections of the skin,. Eyes, Throat and Lungs, entailingupon them a brief existence of suffering and consigning them to an early grave.' 1 I ' SELF ABUSE is qtother formidable enemy to health, for nothing-else in the dread cata logue of human diseases causes so destructive a drain upon the system, drawing its thousands of victims thruur,li a few years of suffering down to an untimely; grave. It destroys the Nervous system, raplffly wastes away the en ergies of 'life, causes mental derangement, prevents the proper development of the system, disqualifies - for marriage, society, business'' and all earthly happiness, and leaves the suf- : ferer wrecked in body and mind, predisposed' to consumption and A - train of evils more to he dreaded .than ,deathl itself. With the fullest confidence I as - Awe the unfortunate victims of Self-Abuse that a permanent.and speedy cure. can be affected, itt.iLwith the abandonment of ruinous practice& my patients can be restored to robust, vigorous health: The afflicted are mullioned against the use of Patent :Medicines; for there are so many ' ingenious snare's in the columns of. the public prints to catch and rob, Ike unwary suffereisi: that millions have their Constitutions - ruined by the vile compounds of quack doctors, Or. the equally poisonous nostrn* vended a§ "Patent Medicines." I licie carefully analyzed many of the SO called Patent: 'Medicines end. find that nearly. all of then contain, elirrosiise Subliinate, which is one of the strongest nrea , parations of mercury and a deadly poison % which instead 'of curing the diseiie disabl4 .... ._ the system fdr life.._ , Three-fourths of the patent 'mamma nor , in use are put.up by unprincipled and ignorant persons, wh9 do not understand - even the all Phabet of the inateria maim, and are equally as destitute of any Icrowledge of the huinan, - system, having one.*object . only iii.vieW; and that to make money regardleSs of consequen ces. . . . _ : - . Irregularities and -ail diseases of males and, females treated bn principles..established by twenty years of practice, and sanctioned by thousands of the most remarkable cures. Med icines with full directions sent to any part of the United Slates or Cariadas, by.-patient's communicating their symptoms by: lc Business correspondence ~strictly_ confidential. Address: J. SUMMERVILLE, M. D.- Officmi N. 1131 - Filbert - St., • ( Old No. 109,) - 10;6 7 1y, nurow TWELinI, . -\ P . ll II D g -L P IA . EST' GOODS—A Largo and Splendid A 5 1.1 sortrnent just recoirea 10:1' — OLMSTDD'S Si
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers