'l-ItrttO PEVSSYLVANIA. Since the establishment ot the Press Me have Seized 'cv9 - ry opportunity which ;We could liina:Ch frOin editorial occupation ? to visit the interior otour grand old Com pionwealtn. -Born in it, and disposed attaehtnent' and taste to :serve c ai r Egirtal -term in it, and re „gently,. inol-Jover; by the providential dis csition 'of circumstances, put into the "closet and Most permanent relations to its peeple,',the whole . current,ofour . esistence /Sets in tile directiofi of hs interests, hon "tir, and happiness."l'enusyluaniais our jioine, the Borne of of r dearest friends; :the hoMe of our ineutory, and of all that 'remains or our hopes—the yeTy borne ot our heart ; and we are concerned to jus tify, to our undeistandinst;the instinctive judgment of Out affccition. The natural .bias of strong feelings and absorbing in terests ulit - be allowed for, and largely L>>; but still, the observation and race ions of every day strengthen cunvie tion that the coldest impartiality ofjuda-- ;sent abundantly justifies all our pride in Air native State? Without travelling far, w,e have with in the gist few years saeu the men' and manners of other commulihies, the repre sentative men of every region 'o'f our vast and vastly -diversilled country, and in these reflected lights we have seer and studied the lileptone , State, and still our 'pride stands well vii...rraiited by the ,cow- parison. The notion exists that because Penn itylvania has ne daziling reputation, she an haveuothing marke'd or grand in her character. But it is just because 'her character' is so even-balanced, 'rounded and complete, that she is not it,rikingly distinguished in the common appiehension. She is net spoken of as Ntmr England is for her shrewdness ; 74N e w York for its commercial enterprise; 4he extreme South fir its chivalry: the West for its progressiveness, simply be cause she has every excelleney of each of these, her sisters, which are compatible with each gyre :, and lois them all so t.m.- fiend and blended that she exaggerates none of them, but holds them in the bast balance for her character and-well-being. In the map of the sisterlitiod of State, which have grown up to maturity. Penn, evlvania is centrally situated; and in eli ttate, productions, popqlation, character, piaci movement, she leis a eel-responding centrality. Her people are made up of Ail the nationalities which history knows in modern times. Her agri cultural productions ceinprise all the varieties of the tentperate climates; her minerals all that are fundamental to civ ilization and innep Table from its growth; her rivers and mountains, her plains and table-lauds, of medium rank, give her all possible variety within the imits of prac tical utility ; and'her industry, like every Other quality and condition, is happily 'diversified and symmetrical. The , muly State in 'the :Union, except , Virginia, Which stretches quite- across the great Appalachian system of mountains, she reaches from the Atlantic slope to the val hty of the -Mississippi, haying equal ae 'pess to the Ocean on the East and the Hie heart of the continent on the West, Muth an outlet to' the Northwest, into which Cote new world is spreading by the Way of the great lakes. Here again her natural liberties are limited, while they Ore secured iu such a manner that she is peither centralized within herself nor de nationalized bylhe attractions which bear ;so forcibly upon purely maritime States. The magnitude of the State gives am lle room ler all this variety, und the nice y mingled diversities all Conspire to pro duce a harutonioui unity. Indeed, all 'these phySical 'characteristics are so com plete and so well adjusted, that if circutn• stances have any influence, the peoPle pan scarcely fail to 'be an integral and 'self-sustained community. For foreign trade she is near enough to the coast, yet not se near as to be tempted into indus- Ttal dependency upon foreign nations.-- he agricultural capabilities of the State, alone, might be made able to sustain a 'tolerably dense population ; but she is rescued from such slairery to trade by the .empting abundance 'of her minerals,ln siting to all the forms of manufacturing production. Per the transportation of her own surplus commodities and the importation of the products oiother cli piates, she has just sufficient natural fa 'flities, and her people'are, by all her nat qral conditions, persuaded to industrial 'iedependence. Take a good road, river, artd canal map, and leek at what the State has done for her ow,n internaicom., putter and for all uecestary trade with Trace States and the. world at large.— Trace first the network of artificial roads rld . navigation which: traverse the Cum foonwealth ; then notice he campletemeis, e her-railroad routes finished and in pro. press to an 'early completion. If the map !s of the right size, and Yet; lay your hand Outspread *l it, the thumb will cover] 'he route to -New yolk from Philadel- 1 plhia, the little finger that which, border- In the southeastern limit, connects it! with Baltimore . ; the fore-finger indieate.s! the road by Easton and the Delaware Water Gap to Western s New York ; the ;Piddle finger widens-et-111c track through : Reading to Erie; the ring-finger the grand 'Central route to Pittsburgh, by Which the_ Keystone, is married. to the Buckeye State; and all these grand thrfrough fares ' are, by th&-ivay, pretty fairly-represeeted, ! in the ratio of their Tattle, length, and Importauce, by the 'medium of this illus. lraion. To these must be added the atelwriog crms-tbreads of iron road high - -trmtse the-lading routes_auga; larly, patting the North and South into direct relations with, each other, and as numerals as a.necessary intercourse of trade and trirellieinaids. In "this enterprise _of intyrnal improve ment, neither= mo.uptio phains,' rivet courses, nor the rizr,,e4 delijes :Of the nu merous MO phial roughen the surface of the State; have hindered a successful achievnient, and,t4e..interest of the 4.bt contracted -in the ponstruction of vaunts and railways; large as it is, is over prompt ly met by the,Siate treasury. But we are running into statistics,_ thong:). we bean with 'the. purpose only of glancing ac',tF4 growl& of the warm approbation viith Viticl we regard the character, natural and moral, of the State and iks peoplei and it is hest to close this hastily scribbled leaf of What threatens t'' be an editorial treatise upon a subject which demands 'the talent and time ora dozen variously qualified autlpArs, and for which we have searpely any fitness except, such impressions An 4 impulses as spur us to the ensl i ewvgr, pr mht.erials 'extlept the crude and nndigested knowledge which one gains by every-day ohseryation, lacking, as is Usual With the most experiences, the SYStein and the logic required' for Preseutipent - and demon stratiun. r • We May Again resume our subject.-- Our fullness if feeling seeks for express ion, however much it may and must ne r cessarily fall below the requir9ments_of our theme. • TRCE S•rrte floors. writer in the :iewburypart *raid says; " So, we will sap a few words on hoops.— Don't call us a bear, fair readers, nor throw away this paper in di , gust, fur ere are not to join our brother hnig,lits of the quill in their crusades ag.ainst'crincdine; bra, Don Qui4otte like, we will espouse the cause of distreSsed damsels..theugd we •face a frowniog We hereby ;add inn article to our Confession of frith. houiis. Mind, we say : 0 0 0 •• pl4nl tultubi4. us from thet abominable. single, hogshead hoop many ladies wear about knee high. shonidrig its entire shape thoin.qh iaole flinisakirt,draggi'n , r dawn ii; its weight the. (ire,: to :he , pe 'of'a cone. while the pat of the 'skirt below th.", hoop daps, winds' andieels' around it in every win&that Not lunch huprOvemeut is the addition of tine or two other holips, ',tale,: they are gradated according to the height of the wearer, and covered by sufficient skirts to hide the Fkeleton, than which nothing coil.' be more hideous, unless it was a vcritaloe skeleton frqui 'the grtireyard. " The o ily skirf that looks nnifermly grace ! fnl, is that made of a series of rattan, whale ' hMie or bras' boruls, extending from the waist to the feet, ki-Adtwlly increasing in siye with that graceful s.vell that gives to the dress the ' airy contour of a blue-bell ; preServing that golden mien in regard to circumference that Modesty and good taste will ever dictate. The hoops in this skirt so, near together that they 1611' 10.7.. e , the;r individuality, and make no, cuderneatb the • t4inrieSt um user dres.; ; for herein lies the advantages and !whole philo=opliy'of the hoop movement, in ; asmuchas it allows - one skirt to give that full ! nes: and grace which has hitli - erto been at tainable only' by 'a half dozen. . 't After all, the genuine crinoline Is the thing, which, as its name imports, is a kind of hair cloth. 11.111'cli by its own innate virtue, without the 'did 'lof hoops, will preserve its elasticity and inflated character without the awkward ness that at tirri^s is inseparable from its hum ble imitator. Tice ez ; pense is the' only obj,,c tion to general adoptiop, rhich, for the ladies' sake, we hope may soon be removed." .„ TUE - WEIM,ING . LUNG r rspEtt.—This :is the fourth finger on the left hand. Why I this 'particular dig it should have received such a ,token of rionor and trust beyond all its Congeners, both in l'agan and . Chris tian tithes, has been variously iotwpreted. I The most common explanation is, accord- I ing to Sir Thoma 3,, Browne, (f presuming ;therein that -a particnlar ye.tSel, nerve, vein or artery, is conferred thereto froth the heart ;" whiCh direct vascular corn, munication Browne shows to be • anatomi cally incorrect. Mai:robins gives another reason, which may perhaps satisfy those anatomists who are not satisfied with the I above. '' Voller„" he says, "cir daunt/ (whose offices and general usefulness are I sufficiently indicated from its Latin deri vative pale°, and from its Greek equiva lent, anticheir, which means. 'as good as 4 hand') is too busy to be set apart for any such special employment; the next linger to the thumbl being but half pro tected On that 4*, besides having other' s work to do, is also ineligible; the oppro brium attac4ing to the middle finger. call ed ntedicus, puts. it iorltireiy out of the duestiOn.; and as tlit;l little finger stands - I exposed, and is Mar-cover too puny to en -I ter the lists in such a contest, the spou sal honors devolve Naturally onpronubus, Ole weddino7fingerr ' I fn the British Ai). polio, 1183'; it urged that the fourth linger was chosen Ifiviii its being not only less used than eithr of the rest, but wore capable of preservl 0.,4 ring from bruises; having this one qu lity particular to it il vlf, that it cannot], be elacilded but in eainpaly with soma ;other finger, wlereaS', the rest' may be stletehed out their full; 'calla), and stimiali fi tness. -7—rortkr 4T- 1 ror . i Z.-rambled; LAina mcAsuur —4 snryuries elp,i4 is 4 poles, or 76 feet, tlisr l cieti lute 10(1 liuka qr 701 inches. A square chin is 16 square poles, and 1Q sqtrtra eilaias are a. acre. Four roods are of acre. each containing 1,210 square yards, 3,4,787 feet, or 24 yards '8 inches On each side.l . polo is 5.1 yar.l.p each way. An acre is 4,540 square yards, or. 79 yards, 1 foot. Si incheS ea ii Way; anti three acres tiro 120,1 yards each' way. A, square mile, 1,760 yards each way, is 640 acres; half a Nile, Or 880 yards each way, is 160 acres ; a quarte'r mile, or 490 yards each way, is a parlelor fitreof 40 acres; and a furldiig, or 220 yards etch way, is 10 . acres. FILEACHED M USLIN I_l9 tides la tha line low for each 10.4 S arid a few other ai of Staple Dry Good/. K. SPENCER'S, D. w. S.; A$ PIANOSi'MELODEONS:triFITIng ..TEM CASH STE= ADOPTED. Ppices Ccrea.tly, Reduced, . HORACE IVATERR;I- _,No. 333 Broadway,' N. Y., AGENT FOR - THR BEST -ROFfOX - yistr_tun44 . ts. rpIIE LArgest`,4l4.4.oitment 'of 1 3 i.apos, deone, alusi&al Instruments, and, Musical Merchandise of all kinds, in the United §mtes. Pianos from Ten tllffeient MantActofies,e9n prisingthok of every variety of style, from the plain, neat `and sustantial t octaves, in Walnut or Rosewood Cases,from 5150 p? $2OO, to those of the'mos't elegapt finish up to. s qne Thousand Dollar's . , 11 . 0 house in , the Union can comPcfe with' the,above the numl.:•6r, variety and celehrity.of its instruments,- nor in the }4trstnely low prices at whiQh figy arc sell. lIORA.CE WATERS' MOPERN IMPItOVED PIANOS, with 'or vit'l:ctiyt Troia Fra,6s, sessing in fi;eir.4-4pFnvinents of ,over-strings and action, a "jeugt.l; of :scale and compass of tone equ'al: to the grand Piaui; united with the beaiitYipil fjurnbility of structure of the Square Piap9. They are luitly pronounced by the PreSs af; g 4 t.,y the first. Musical Masters, to be equal ttq it one of apy other cpapufacturer They are built'of the best ancl - mos thoropgh ly seasoned,coateriai, apd guarantee 4 to stand t4e action of every pinnate. Elopb jostrunicot guarapteed to give satifaction, or pox-chase money refunded. irMACE WATERS' )fELODF,ONS.,„aus penor Instruments in touch And ciuralqilitv of make. ( raneil the equal temperament.) ..le lodeons of all other styleS.arid makes. price $45, $6O, s7s: ' $lOO, $125, sl.lo—double Reeds and two banks of Kepi, SD:A—less p liberal discount. Clergymen nn Churches, an extra discount. 3LA, RT I N'S G ITA HQ, 13,110WN'S FLUTES, 4.CCORDEONS, VIOLIN/3, and Musical Instruments of all i . inds, ai lower prices than ever hefore offered tp the public. /t large discount to Teachers and Scnools. The trade supplied on the most liberal terms. SZCOND-114N1.) PIANQ.S, at great, bar gains, constantli to store,- price from PO to $l4O. MUSIC.Cine of the largest and best ?e -lected catalogues of Music now published, Compri•sing, m my of the clictice and mast pop ular airs of the day, and will he sold at one: third olf from the regular prices. Music sent by mail to till rafts of the cnun, try; post-paid. Particular apd personal atten tion paid to all orders received by mail. Sat isfa,:tion guaranteed in every instance. Pianos and Metcaleaus for rent and rent allowed QII puncle,se. Pianos and Melodeons for sale or monthly pa:meats. Second-hard Piar i gs ta ken in exchange for new. Gutertlln4 select Catalogues and Seliedule of prices forwarded to all parts of lie comp.' y by 10,4 : Ci.V•C_lreat'iridi:ceinents ceitppfl to ACENTS in all parts of the country, to sell the Horace Waters! Pianos, Melodeons, and Catalogue of Music. •• • 8:46 1 10 VV 441) ASS( )CIA'n.ON, PHILADELPHIA.. _4 Ber r erolent . lactihttion, established by special .ekdowment for the relief of the tick and diz trersed,-afflicted with Virulent and Epidemic diseases. MO all persons afflicted with Sexual Diseas es, such as SPERMATORMICEA, SEMI SAL WEAKNESS, IMPOTENCE, GONOIts RIICEA, GLEET, .SYPHILIS, the Vice of ONANISM, or SELF ABUSE, &c., &c. The HOWARD ASSOCIATION, in view of the awful destruction of human life, caused by Sexual diseases, and t'e deceptions prac tbied upon the unfortunate victims of such diseases by Quacks, several yea.rs ago directed their Consulting Surgeon, us a CIIA RITA BIZ ACT worthy of their name, to open a Dispen sury for the treatment of this class of diseases, in all their forms, and to give MEDICAL AD VICE GRATIS, to all who apply by letter, ty:th a description of their condition, (age, gectipation, habits of life,, &c..) and in pises of creme poverty, to FURNISH MEDICLNES FREE OF CIIA.B:GF,. It is needless to add that the A,ssociatien commands the highest M'edittal skill of the age, and will furnish the most approved toodepn treatment. . The Directors, oil u review of the past, feel assured that their labors fu this sphere of he m-COM (Arun, have been of great benefit to the afflicted. especially to the young, and the.) have resolved to devote themselves, with re newed zeal, to tills vcry impartaut but much despised cause. Just Publit.bed by the Association, a Re port on Spermatorrhica, or Seminal Weaknes.3, the Vice of Onanism, Masturbation or. Self- Abuse, and other Di•easea of the Sexual Or gans, by the Consulting Surgeon, which will he sent by raail,•(in a sealed enyclope,) FREE 'OF CHARGE, on receipt of TWO 81, 1 4.4 PS for postage. Address, for Report or treatment, Dr, GEORGE R. CALHOUN ; Consulting Surgeon, Howard Association, No. 2 South Niuth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. IV order of the Directors. EZRA D. HEART \VELE, President. 4EO. 'PAItICFIII. I D, Ser.retary. o: NJW (100.1)S. Low Prices and VomdY Pay, 4T SILVWX CPtiTEli, TiHE SUBSCRIBERS are °glaring for gale - an entirely new stuck, consisting of ItY GOODS, GROCERIES, HARDWARE, CQOCKERy, GLASS WARE, BOOTS 4 SHOES, HATS & CAPS; UM BRELLAS, PARASOLS, I - WINDOW SHADES, WALL PAPER, READY lIIDE CLOTIITKG, YANKEE !COTTONS, &0., &a, In our selections the wants of all have been remembered. The Gentlemen oan find in our' stock of Ready Made Clothing •an elegant nisilionahle suit, or a substantial Business suit, and We have Hats & Daps altd 140ots 4ii' Shwa to,match. pie Ladies can gml Fa(hilariable Bonnets beamingly trimmed. or honnets and triniughg; a pod assortment cif Dress grinds, and trim ; filings ; Ginves, Mitts, lloslery and Qaiters.•:,-, Awl, lai-t:blit nut feast, pril'ed and skele,ton Skirts t also, Rattans, Skirt4lThalebone and Brass Skirt-Iloops f beautiful' Jet Necklaces and _Bracelets, Corals, Fans,- and too many other things to enumerate, ,all of-which we - 1 are selling low for Cash,Lumber, or any kind of Produce. FLOUR, MEAL, 'FISH &c., con smutty' on hand. ' : W. B. & J. H. GRAVES. Sharon Center, Potter Co., Pa., June 5, 155-7.-10:3—tf. M ARK GILLON, DRAPER and TAILOR, late from the City of Liverpool, England. Shop opposite Court Mum! ) Coudefsport, Potter Co. Pa. B.—PArtienlar attention paid to CUT- Twq. 10:3&4y, gtyp:ap*ilyt - acom COPT.SVMRTION #NP .?‘I,L j P„-15EliSES OF TN liitiGS'Atitl" THROAT - • • • .. kag-TOSITIV47-: - . - FIIII4P,T4F. PY skvsx4.l4 Tpxy.,: - - 1-grniorT carzteys the remedies it? the'earl-; -,y y ties in the lungs through thepy.passa ges, and cowing cOuttc,t, vitly the Ilieettse, jogtralips the tuloer . C'tilar natter;6 co Jays , ugh, ewes et...trqe and easylexpp 'toratkon, heals the lungs, tiurifies the, blood, imparts renewed vitality td the nervous Systeica, ititiog, pat tone' and energy:so indispensable for the ies.t9ration of h'ealll. 'To - be able to state co4fidently that •Upn.uiliptiou is curable 1 by inlialettip,is a.mc a 'source of unalloyed pleasure. lt is as n7i'zielt under the coptroi of medical- treatment as any other formidable 'isease ; ninety ,out of - every hundred cases can Ise cured. in the first, stapes, and fifty per I cent. in the second - ; but in the thirct'stagy it is inaPasSible to save more than five per ecut, ar the Lungs are so cut Up by the disetise as to bfa 'defiance to mediCal skill. Even, how 4rer, in the last stages, inhalation affords ex ' traordinary. relief to the suffering - attending this fearful scourge, Which annually.destroys ninety-five thousand ' persons in the United States alore ; and a correct calculation shows that of the'present population of the earth, eighty millions are destined to fill the Con satnptive's grayes. Truly the. (Nicer of death has no arrow so fatal as Consumption. fp ap ages it has been the great enemy of life, for it spares - neither age nor sex, but sweeps off alike - the brave, the beautiful, the graceful and the gifted. By the help of that ~S'npreme Being from whom corned' every good and perfect gift, T am en ahbled to offer to the afflicted a permanent and speedy care in Consumption. The first cause of tubercles is from impure blood, and the immediate effect produced by their depo sition in the lungs is to prevent the free ad mission of air into the air cells, which causes a weakened' N itelity 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 , through the stomach; the patient will always] find the lungs free and the breathing easy, al ter Inhaling remedies. Thus, Inhalation is a local remedy, nevertheless it acts constitution ally, and with more power and certainty than remedies administered by the stomach. To . , prove the powerful and direct influence of this this mode of. administration, chloroform inhaled will entirely destroy sensibility in a few minutes, paralyzing- the entire nervous system. so that alimb may be amputated with- out the slightest pain; Inhaling the orelinazy burning gas will destroy life in a few hours. The mila!atipn of ammonia wall rouse the system when fainting or apparently odor of many of the medicines is percev.,t,l e in the skin a few minutes after being 'ithaletd. and may be immediately.deteeted 1% the blood. A convincing pi oofoi tnc consti:utional of inhalation, is the fact that sielsness i; al ways produced by breatl - .ing foul air—is no" this positive evidence that proper remediel, carefully prepared and judiciOusly adniiuia tered through the hags should produce the happiest results? During eighteen years' practice, many thousands suffering flout dis eases of the lungs and throat, have been on, der my care, and I have effected man; 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 flaai disease. Mr treatment of consumption original, and founded on long expezience and a thorough investigation. My perfect acquain tance with the nature of tubercles, tz.e.. ena bles me to distinguish, readily, the various forms of disease that simulate consumption. and apply the proper remedies, rarely being mistaken even to a single case. This famil iarity, in connection with certain pathological and microscopic dispnveris, enables me to re lieve the lungs frnfi/ the effects of contracted chests, to enlarge the chest, purify the blood. itnimrt to it renewed vitality, giving energy and tone to the entire system. Medicines with full directions 'sent to any part of the United States and Canadas by pa tients communicating their symptoms 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 lung— and enable me to prescribe with much greaten certainty, and then the cure could be effected without my seeing the patient again. G, W. GRAHAM, M. D., Office 1131 Filbert Street, {_Old No. 109,) below Twelfth, PHILADELPHIA. Ty'A PROVISION STORE. E. R. SPENCER, Offers Great Inducements TO BUYERS OF rtOOERIES, PROVISIONS &c., IA the store formerly oecui , ied by D. W SPENCER, eu 3rj Street, North side of Public Sluare GROCERIES 4 good assortment constantly on hand, from which - I will enumerate a few of the leading articles, siva as Sugar, Mustard, Candy, Coilbe,• Cinuctpfon, ;tints Molasses ) Pepper Sallee, Crackers, Syrups, Catsup, . Soap. Pepper, Yeast, Caudles, Spice, Oils, Shot, Ginger, Tobacco, Lead, cloves, Salta; . f.G," Caps, Carl>, Soda, Segurs, C. Tartar, and•niany other things too numerous to men tion, Will be foinut in this department, which will he eglil at a trilling adv.ance from Cost, for ready pay, :. . PROVISION - Constantly on hand, such as PORK, HAAIS, SHOULDERS, FISH, SALT, BUTTER, CHEESE; LARD, BEANS,- OATS, FLOUR, CuICJ MEAL, BUCKWHEAT FLOUR, DRIED APPLES, DRIED PLUMS, and many other articles in the line of Provi sions not necessary to mention. Also, WOODEN 'WARE ; such as liroorns, Wash-Tubs and Boards,llops, Dinner Jinxes, which will be sold low for cash or Temly - Oats, Potatoes, Butter. ()bees°, au4 in fact almost everything a farmer raises, will be taken in exchange for gooits i at their cash value, 1-invite the at tentioll Yiflagers, Farmers and Lumbermen who desire',to 9alce pt rphosas in the above articles; and solicit them to cull before -pur chasing elsewhere. E. K. SPENCER. Coudersport; June 9, 1857.19.:3. Executors' Notice. Letters testamentary having beeiigrz•pted to the undersigned on the last Will and Tpsta ment of Lurnsit STRONG, late of Ifsbron Township, Potter eminty l Pa., dec'd, all time irdehted to•the; estate, *ill make immediate payment, and those having claims against the same will present them immediately to ABAGAEL STRONG, Executrix. WM. H. METZGER, Executor. 13•bcop,'April, 9,1958.-89- Gt. RTlMita-QIIMMMt.-: ,, 51 Irriii . E.iiiiticiribers tate thia „riethsta , cif i n _ Forming_t4eir.frie44.33 tAla!;itey z eye eeipiFit; a re . o. 4)*Rsr a . c/ 2 9 1 c4, 4 !!" ) .4esumb,le stin.k of , 4T4PIit:4ND RAN.NCY:D.RY GOODS, ~ !Itich they;lnvite gm attention of alt who e to:Ml:like pnrchiMcs, - s.)ur stock lalerge een soteetetr with great care, anal, par: 'ilyik . attaittea. to th.6-wants or this AeCtion r country. Our stock of,Dry.Gooti con: of l i ::.; -- . • _•: -: -. , .:1 t i ) rESSGOCiDS,TRIMMINGS,IIIBI3OIO, E3IRROIDERIES, 'PARASOLS ~ CLOTHS, C4S-SIMERES 1 TESTINGS, DO: . MESTICS, r SHIRTING'S, ~. LINENS', PRINTS, I , * HOSIERY, SHAWLS, I . and,a variety ofof other articles, too numerous to Mention, We have also a complete aisort :limt of - - ; • desy Xas tien T of O sits GROCERIES, HARDWARE AND', . CROCKERY ; • • , f 011 he.sold uncommonly cheap eady pay, and For approved credit on as !qble terms as anv other establishment. - * MANN &NICHOLS. illport, Aug. 11, 1856.-9:13 ly. E. W. KING- Et SON, PATENT CEIAIR MANUFACTURERS, r i 408 13roO - rne Street,,. One Dopr East of 17. roadway, fLate 466 Broad ay,] - - [Established A, j3#11833,,1 • 11,1 VITE an examination of their great Nl:tri ll. ety and superior assortment of (HAIRS, mahufaetured at their own establislimept. and under their immediate olSServatiou and direc tion, i4outtipg. VIVIII REVOLVING EiTAIRS, SELF-.4XTING EXTENSION -RECUMBENT CI ~1115, IMPROVED INVALID WHEEL CIIAIRS, ;11. - AJOR SEARLICS. TRAVELING INVALID 5 . 1 1 4 . N1511 SPRING AND SQUAB CBAIRS, B.IIEL . MATIC, SPINAL AND ASTIII:AIR, INIVALID l If llitS , SC., &C., &C., • Embracing the most comidele assortment, and choicest kinds for Par/are, .th awing Rooni.s, C...inabers, Gardens, Libraries. Counting (Oces, Public Ineitutib,is, I:116es, Beerbers, together with every des'.Alible sort arlapted to the comfort, conve'....ienee and luxury 4.f the Si the. 'l g.d, tt e Infirm, the Lame and Lazy. n taint of ingenuity ofdesign, el..gance of f: i''..l, quality and richness of niat?ria!, faith f d lICSS U: CXeelltitAl. durability fttifyyllearfies,, :hese u'iairs are uniurpassed. .1.% - .T them, M. Irk. II:\ li tt - . St-L . ..., Wine awarded the i...rst and o 1,. Prize Medal, and the fttgu/ty recommend them as far preferable to beds or couches for patients Mil i oted with Spina/ Astionwic or 3,••naciiia/ affections: To either arm of the chair real- be atiached II c [ .onvenient ref - Wiry , or writing :DESK, and any c mbination desire ; ; ‘rill be naartufactured. to to order. A Circular with explanatory . etas, will be se.,t by Mai/ if requested. and orders [with re mittances.] prowptly forwarded to any part of tle world. LUXUItY 11; - C , ONOINTY! I KM'S NEW CHAIR. n AS YCU LIKE I 1)" An Arm Chair. Reclin;rig Chair, Couch itud BP I IZ I tead, [counts n is os d is susceptible of tw i elve different positions or changes, to mee: the varied requirements for comfort, conveni edee, luxury and economy, [in space as well price. 3 Whether in sickness or healh, this celebrated CHAIR "AS LIKE IT," excels in mitny respects, any chair perhaps ever mann i;ittured in this or any other country, The price varies from IV/an to :/Ydrty Dol lars, according to finish. To Public lusiitutions, as well as to individ adl4, this CHAIR is a vefy tlesirable article. :Lod will be supplied in soy number on th, nitist liberal terms. Apply to or adilroi.ts 34. KING 4: 80N, 438 Broome st.. One door east of Broad*ny, :17 YORK, (Late 368 Broadway. 9:44-Iy. ';!TEW GOODS-'--A Fine received pt Ass9rtutent, just ODISTED'6. GREAT REVOLUTIGN iN MEMIAL KIENQE. The hest Therapeutic As - out ever Introduced. PR, DICKINSON'S `-. ,A - r. - . - Pr.:6 - .- • MAGNETO ELEC ct..,A!,:i,,,&‘-,...?:-. ..',W ,„ TRIO' MACII IN E k, ,:e.43,54..,... -7, , k:: : ::.1-1?"4.4 is exciting ' the .. ti ;,. 0 7,;"',*v ... 4%- i % absorbing, ntten ktZ,•:,..A.--;;;:i ,:i., 4, .'k.... 7 )_..:V.-. 1 ..i0n qf the .;-- a 44 calProfesjon nd -,.-4„ -: v ,.-F-_E_c- . 74: n. large portion of 110 P". 11111-0 .1~ --- the intelligent lay men of the land. It is now clearly demon strated that the lancet, mercury, and nil other intrraal " drug medication" may he laid aside with perfect safety to the patient and abid ing benefit to posterity. 'Wherever those ma chines have been introduced, they excite the, highest wonder and praise. The apparatus is.ridapted to prevent, relieve and cure every disease incident to humanity,—more pa'rticu larty all those painful and formidable diseas es which have for centuries battled the pro foundest learnin r and skill of physicians. From whatever cause there may be an ex cess or deficiency of the nervous • fluidpro -7 ducing an excess or deficiency of the acids lan4 alkaline secretions—the magnetic princi ple, of the system are deranged, and can on ly he safely restored to their nornial condition by an applioation of magneto-electricity, by meatus of DR. DICKINSON'S 'MAGNETO i.I.FCTRIC MACHINE. This apparatus will t TP., .r vu li l livel y prevent, and speedily relieve and Consumption, Scrofula, Rhennwtism, Palsics, Neuralgia, Spinal Diseases, and all other painful maladies, however hopeless - and of lOng standing. They.are eminently useful in all sexual and urinary disorders, particu larly where the Constitution, has been broken down and ruined by unnatural solitary habits to Allhich too many of the young of both sexes ireso lamentably prone. DR. DICKINSON'S MAGNETO ELECTRIC MA 'HINE is without the dangerous compli cath nsof batteriesand acids—which fact alone :•enders it superior to all others on the score 4 neatness, cleanliness, safety and utility.— ft is, in fact, a handsome parlor ornament; maYlbe applied by a child ; mid will last a ;Ife-tine, t. 3 the -great saving of Doctor's bills, se. ' PRICE OP THE, M4I,EHINE $lO. It will be safely packed and sent to any part la the United States. Sold whole Sale amid -etail at the Medical Oilice,No, 38NORTH SEVENTH Street,. Philadelphia. Address, A. C. ,DICKINSON, M.D. lOrl—ly. •I - 9 orrA"-- VO (MARGE TOR SHOWING THE NEW 1.11 Goods just received-at OLMSTED'S. 9, and step e articles In the Dru p line tot I.le by. e s : - E. K. S. • The gandsitht . *IW/4 I 2N. wyrld • ' = ,PPOOfk:-: • ; ItI,S ELEG.Wf D 4 • ASPINAtI ii LITErtARY - AND;TAMILY MONTIILy 31AGAZESE eloses' its .oist - sOlUme next. During the few brief months of its ei tenee'it has attained a poptilariti• unequalled in the annals of, the Pre24... -; The publishers having, offered liberal Pre: miums for . choice efferts; the;Vories, Romances, "gss,ays, Poetry , and. other-sPark t ling . alid interesting .reatl.'ng was conaitenced 'in January last, and arq being ed in the Visitor. . . i , The Ncw yolurac will be commenced in'Ju. ly 1837, greatb -- . - intproied . - and . enlarged.-- Each number, will 'containtbirty-two"extra large sized royal octavo pages, making ivtuag. nificent volume of nearly 400 lieges . - for. the year—or presenting an erhount Of the Choi. cent reading on all shhjbcts, .equal lo.tilae •would cost in the book stores at least fifty cents, Payable.invariahly in advace: , ' ISQlne of the mostpnpu r awl brilliant male and eetnnle contributors. arc regular contri butors and the pulAish will spare .- no pain or expense to render the "Welconie , Visitor'r every way acceptable to . refined awl intelli gent community. - ' - The publication is adapted to . all classes of people—the young and the old—and where- . ever seen and perused, meets-ti - ith 'unh'eisitt acceptation. ete . Now is the time to stthscribe to ttt, New I"ulu 4 ,e. ** The back nnuthe*-- Le back numbpis may - be complete sets) for $ cent eao, or the wbolf, series of I; numbers for Tirtvrv-fici. cents. Lieritl inducements to • Clubs and Cal, VISSCrS, . .. sarßemember,—oar tirms. are Fifty. cents for one vear, fur a single copy, or three cop, ies will be sent under one 'cover or address fur One Dollar._ Address, COSDkiii & COMPANVi . . . PubliAers No. 28 North Sevq}lh ?.4 . 4t, !up stairs) Philadeipliia -10;1-;-Iy 4 :if all disease ; dmt , reat; first cause Springs from neglee of Nature's laiirs. - . SU.I I-I FER NOT 1 i• , • ' When a CURE - s guaranteed I IN ALL ST.P.OF.SI OF ' SECRET DISEASES, • &I -Abase, Nervous Debirty, Strictures, Gleetv, Urartl, Diabetes, Distil: es oft the Kidneys end Wader, Xemtrial 11 ,clunatistn, Seraftda, Pains in do! Boars and -InT4s ; '.Diseases of the Lungs, Throat, Vase anEy . s, Ulcers upon the Body or limbs, Catierrs,Dromy,Epillptie Fits, ~. St. lit-,'s Dabre, earl ay diseases anisiny from a deragment v . the Sesaal Organs, Qt.:CU as Nervon, TreMbling, Loss of Bern ory, Lo , s of VOWC7j General Weakness, Dimness of Vision with lieettliar spots appear- ' ing.bcfore the ( yes, Loss of - Sight, Wakeful ness, Dyspepsia, Liver DhlesE ' 'Eruptions upoa the face, l':.in in the hack a d head, Female irregularities and all 41111 - 41,e .tliseh.Arges from firth sexes. It matters not troll) libel cause Ithe, dise9se originated, hbweVer.long'standing or obstitet 4e o.le case, reiprer* is certain, and in a shorter time. th se a pc rtnaneo t cure can be if, fected by any other treatment, even after the 1 disease has I : ,affled the skill of, eminent physt clans aod resisted all theirtneans of cure. The medicines are pleasant wit It mit odor, end 'sing ed. sickness and free froMlmeecury .or balsam. During t wenty years of plactite, I have rescued front the jaws of Death many theuSands, whe t in the last stages of the above mentioned dis eases had been given up to die by theitpbysi, clans, which w arrants Me in promising to the afflicted, who may place ithemseli is under my care, a perfect sod emit speedy cure.: Secret Diseases are the greatest eicFcties to'health, as they arc the first ca.ll,:e of Consiimpiledi, !Scrof ula, nod man v other - diseases, and should be a terror to the human fixtily,. As ii‘permartent cure is scarcely ever effeCted, a majority of the cases f.,lling into the hands cf. incotopetent person , , who not only fail to cure the diseases but ruin the eanstituticu, filling the. system with mercury, which, with the disease, has, tens the sufferer into a rapid Consumption. But should the dis•Ntse and the treatment . not cause death speedily and the victim mar, ries, the disease is entaNd upon the children, who are born with feeble constitutions, and the current of life corrupted by a vfrtis which betrays itself in Strofula, 'I etteri Ulcers, Erup, don's an other liffect'oss of the shim Eyes, Throat and Longs, entailing upon them a brief existence of suflering and consigning them to an early grave. . SELF ABUSE is another formidable enemy to health, for nothing else in the 'dread cats, logue of human diseases causes'so destructive • a drain upon the system; drawing its thousands of victims through a few years df Suffering down to au untimely grave. It destrOys the Nervous system, rapidly wastes away the en-. ergies of life:, causes mental derangement, prevents the proper development of the system,. disqualifies for marriage, society, bitsittessk and nil earthly happiness, and leaves the suf.. ferer wrecked in body and mind,' predisposed to consumption and a train of evils more to be dreaded than death itself. With the fulleill confidence I assure the unfortunate victims of Self.A.busc that a permanent and speedy cure can. be affected, nod with the abandonment of ruinous practices _my_ patietit4 cpu be , restore 4 to robust, vigorous health, • .. The ufflicted,nre cautioned' against the use of Patent Medicines, for there are so malty ingenious snares in the colunins of the publics prints to catch and rob the Univary sufferers that millions have their coittitutions ruine4 by the vile compound; of q quack doctors, -or, the equally poisonous nostrums vended us -Patent 317 dicioes.•' I have carefully annlyzeyt many of the ,o called Paten Medicines an 4. fiad tihit nearly all of them c.ntain Corrosive Sublinlitte, which is one of te strongest pre. parations of mercury and • deadly poison,. which instead of curing the diseasc d4eut4l the sv!•itern for life. • Three-fourths of the pate in übe - 11. e put up by unpi•inci person, who do not underst phabeq of the materia as deatitute of any know led 6 syste4 having one object o that to make money regardle ces. Irreiularities and all diseases of males and is femaleS treated on' principle established by twenty years of practice, n d. sanctioned ,by thousands of the most reuanf able cures. Ned-. icines with fall directions seat to any part of the niited StxsteS •pr Caradas, by . patients communicating their symptoms by letter.—.— Business correspondence strictly confidential. AddrOs. , J. SVMME,RV.IIitE, M. D. Off,.ce NO. 1131 Filbert St., (Old No. 11P,) - BELOW TWELF 11, . . • PHILADELPIIIIA-. 10:6-1r i NE* GOODS—A Largo nil Splendid AS kirtment just received • t 10:1! inmersive.. nostrums neat. .led and ignorank Ind even the and are equally. c of the buratto, elf in view., 'Palk s: of cciphequea-.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers