••••• IlaNll2 & t' ll- itulturat, .3' MI /11Like,Fariner shoald be More an Otelieetiial Worker. • To wake the following extract from an article entitled "Farming Life in New pu g land," in the August number of ,the arit.bnat'c illantitty; and commend it to ~the attention of Potter county Farmers : * * "There dwells in every - mind, .Ihrough and all pkriessions, She idea that the farmer's life is, or may be, is. or should be, the truest and sweet est life that man can live. The merchant mayavin all the prizes of trade, the pro feasional wain may achieve tritonphs lend- his hopes, the author may find his,, "mime upon every lip, and his works ae-i pinuted among the nation's treasures', and all may ulnae amid the whirl and din of -the must inspiring life, yet there will cothel: to every one, in quiet evening hours, Well viali,n of tho old homestead, long since;l forsaken ; or the imagination will weaved picture of its Own,—a picture of rural. life, so homely, yet so beautiful, that the;. heart will breathe a sigh upon it, the eye; will drop a- tear upon it, and the voicel 'aril[ say, It were better so!' " In a city like Boston there are farmS enough imagined every year to niche an' .other New ifaigland. 'Could the fairestil fancies ,of that congeries of minds be cm- , bodied and exhibited, we should see green' , tueadows sparkling with morning dew r ea , silver-slippered rivulets skipping into inti sisal abysses,----tjuiet pasture-lands shin= liaering so sleepily iu the sun that the lazy flocks and herds forget to graze, and he; winking and ruminating under the ,trees, —and yellow fields of grain, along the. hill-sides, billoWy in the breeze, and bend ing before the shadows of the clouds that sail above - them. And mingling and hal:- munizing with these visions, we should hear the lowing of the kite, and the tin kle of the bell that leads the flock, and the shout of the boy behind the creepingl plough, and the echoes of the axe, and the fall of the tree in the distant forest, and the rythwical clangor, softened into a me - Mine whisperby the distance. of the mow-1 ers whetting their scythes. Within these visions and these soiluds there would come to the minds which give them birth con-1 vietions that rural life is the best life, and / resolutions that, by-artd-by, in soave gold en hour, when the Sun of life begins -to lengthen the eastward shadows, that life shall be enjoyed, and that soul shall pass' ' at last from the quiet scenes of Nature into those higher scenes which they sym bolize. There is a thought in all this that the farm is nearer heaven than the street, —a reminiscence of the first estate, when man was lord of Eden; cad this thought, old as art and artificial life, cannot be root ed out of the mind. It has a life of its! own, iadependent of reason, above instinct,'' among the quickest intuitions of the soul. l " Now this idea, so universal, so.identi cal in millions of minds, springing with such spontaneity in the rol.lat o f i n e e ir e ly varied circumstances; abiding with such tenacity in every soul, can have its basis nowhere save in a Divine intention and a human possibility. The cultivation of the farm is the natural employment of man. It is upon the farm that virtue should thrive the best, that. the body and the mind should be developed the most health - fully, that temptation's should be the weakest, that. social intercourse should be the simplest and sweetest, that beauty should thrill the soul with the finest rap turesaand that life should be tranquillest in its flow, longest in its period, and hap piest in its passage and its issues. This is the general and the first ideal of the farmer's life, based upon the nature of the farmer's calling and a universally recog nized human want. Why does the actual differ so widely from the ideal ? It is not because the farmer's labor is bard and • constant, alone, There is no fact better -established than that it is through tire ha hitual use both of the physical and men tal powers that the soul achieves, or re ceives, its mast healthful enjoyment, and acquires that tone which responds most musically to the touch of the opportuni ties of leisure. Why, then, we repeat, does the actual differ so widely from the ideal? . _ . . "A general answer to this question is, that that is made au end of life which should be but an incident oij a 'nears. tife is confounded with labor and thrift with progress; and material success is the Aim to which all other aims are made sub ordinate. There is no, fact in physiology!, better established .than that hard labor,' followed. from day to day and year to year, Absorbing evez, thought and every phys ical energy, - the direct tendency to de press the intellect, blunt the . sensibilities, And animalize the man. In such a life, All the energies of the brain and nervous system are directed to the support of nu trition and the stimulation of the ruuseu iar system. Man thus becomes a beast of burden,—the creature of his calling • and! though he may add barn to barn an - dacre I to acre, he does not lead a life which rises in dignity above that of the beasts which ; drag his plough. He eats, be works, .lie sleeps. Surely, there is no dignity in a 'ife like this ; there is nothing attractive and beautiful and good in it. It is a ;mean and.. contemptible life; and all its ma=ims, economies, associations, and ob jects are repulsiVe to, a mind which ap• 'prelim:Os life's true enjoyments and - ends. - We say that it is a pestilent perversion. ;itre say that it is the sale of the soul to: the bxly ; it is turning.the back upon life, upon growth, upon God, and descend ing intols unualisw. "The true ideal of the farmer's life—of pay iife--contemplates something outside pf l A!111 above, the calling which is its in- !al:run - tent. - • The farmer's life is no better! than the life of a street-sweeper, if it rise ho higher , than thafaiimer's work. If the' Farmer, standing tinder the broad sky, j o• breathing the . puie air, .listening to the; .ISon of, birds, watching the progress of I .; • Tne great miracle that still goes on,' I *work the transforMation of the brown iaeeds Which he drops into - the soil Into ' , fields Of green and. gold, and gazing upim ; land.scapes shifting with the seasons and; !flushed with new ;tints through every sun ' ;lit and motplit hour, does not apprehend 'that his farm has higher uses' for him Ithan those of feeding his person and his i • parse.,;he might as well dwell in a coal- Above we present you with a likeness of! Dl4 MORSE—the inventor of MORSE'S IN DIAN ROOT PILLS: This philanthropist has; spent the greater part of his life-in traveling, having visited . Europe, Asia,'and Africa, as' well as North Atnerica—haS spent three years) among the Indians of our Western country—. it Via 3 in this way that the Indian Root:Pills wera first discovered. Dr. Morse was the first man to establish the fact that all disear , es arise from IMPURITY OF TILE BLOOD—that marl strength, health and life depended upon this vital fluid. - When tha various passages become clogged, and do - not act in perfect harmony with the 1 differe et functions of the body, thelloodlose-s I its action, becomes thici:, corrupted and dis ' eaFed i thus causing all pains, sickness and distress of every name ; our strength is ex hausted, our health we are deprived of, and if ' nature is not assisted in throwing MI the stag-. i naut hunrbrs, the blood will become choked and cease to act. and thus oar light of life will ' forever be blown out. How important then that we should keep the various passages of the body free and open. And how pleaseut The Palpit Against. Slavery. to us that we have it in our power to put a I !medicine in your reach, nausAy. Morse's In- And what is die , A•ost,cl, with its infi divan Hoot Pills,m mulac I tured from plants nite majesty of thought, and its burning and roots which grow aroun I the moulitain motives, and its countless applications, ors clilfs in Nature's garden, for the health and and its sublime couthinations of thunder-! recovery of diseased men. One of :the roots in's mi and hallehijahs, and its compass of I fro which these Pills are made is a Sudorific, ! which opens the pores of the skin, anal assists i all sounds reverberating from , heaven to Nature in throwing out the finer parts of the I hell ? Is it a tiddlci with only one string, corruption w.thm. The second is a plant I or a harp Of infinite harmonies ? Is it whieb is an Expectorant, that opens and- un-' an organ with only one note—a monoto- .•logs the passage to the lungs, and thus, in al non?, anodyne of repeated truisms, so ad- i soothing manner, performs its duty by throw I mitred, that they are cradled-in the dor- tog "if PhiegTh, and other humors from the lungs be copious spitting. The third is a Di nutury of the soul, as lifeless and explod- 1 nretic, which gives ease and double strength ied errors ? Is it. a treadmill of orthodoxy ,to the kidneys : thus encouraged, the; draw ' and conservatism, where men that would • large amounts of impurity from the blood, be Sit:upset - is anywhere else, must grind : which is then thrown out bountifully by the urinary- or water passage, and which could' ! bliniiUded, crushed beneath the fear of ' not have been discharge :1 in any other way. i man, terrified from the fear of a blast.from . The fourth is a Cathartic, and acconyanies the 'political newspapers, afraid of every- the other properties of the Pills while engaged thing exciting, their only object to keep; in ponfying um blood ; the coarser pnrticles: thimTs quiet, and the watchword of their, of . impuroy ~ chick cannot_pass by the other ou lets, are thus toted up and conveyed oil in milionium, first raeeal:de, then pure: — 'real quart:dies oy the howet.:. Such an idea of the gospel is preposter- I From th•• ahove7, it is siiown thnt.Dr. Morse's • Otis ;it reminds us of our school-day dcc- ladi.m Root Ir.ds e-m'. or ly ewer , ho stom.wh, lamation3 . I but - be. , :m:• united to its the Inocd. ti ,- ,7 tif'l lied lied waY to :iv: ry part no I comp. ..Icily rout out "My name is Norval ! on the GrampiAn hills - , and cleansi• 'he sv , tyrn is-inn .“I min, ILLy, and • 11,- father feeds his flocks a frugal swain I the life of tae blr ,. ! t" I I ie.l is th e bh ,d, 1.,.. Whose only aim was to increase his store, o, c mes perfectl • :.eiLltliv : cr ns• 0 ' , nth all And keep his . only son, myselt, at home :'' F.' ',.ness and pain is dri•en from the sy - stem, -I tell you, no wonder that the modern , foi :hey cairn ' remain when the body I , c - come:Sl pulpit. has lost its power, when- men are ' so ~ : ire and ciear. i afraid - of the application of that power, 1 'the reast-n why people are so distressed' The when sick, and why so many die, is because: and tremble at the consepunices. 4 : ' , they do not get a medicine wh:ch will puss gospel is not'to be perverted as a political, to the - afilict.-mi parts, and which will open the. lullaby, and shall not be muzzled at a, natural passages fur the disease to be cast out; I mandate of intriguing politicians and op- : hence, a large quantity of food and other mat-I pressors. There is nothing„, from the be-. ter is lodged, and the stomach and intestines' con-' Ire f_ li . te t r i d t ly- v ov , er r fl , o r in , g ,r xv ,, ith L. the b, c o f i t ru pt, , ed : ginning to the end of the alphabet, ucetcd with the moral i , - - sue -, , and bearing taiion. coistaial ' e Mixing with the blood.whie! ' i ou men's duty, which may not, atl2 hthrows e ! corrupted matter ttirotign every ri-in proper time, be made the subject of hives- . and artery, until life is talcs tirom the b y'y Dr2;ation in the pulpit, and the proper' by disoa-e. Dr. Morse's PILL's 'lame added to th millionse. m sil e o i f vi l et , orvictory k u 1, 0 , , ,I h :N i , i; t ri o l i r: : ~. hyrtm healths n t; . sic „ i i „ and : tiute for the consideration of any sin, is the very time; and the proper place, the happinc. , s. Yes, thousands who have been, ver-y place, where the sin is practised,, racked•or tonneau] w'th sick. , o, , s. ps'a iiinl, where its lawfulness, expediency, an d:anguish. and whose feeble frames have been righteousness are maintained, and where s f . e " reh ' i t h y , the , 1 """, 1 " 4 e l l '"" c '." - " f . r "q";: : : . csr,il..ceml•licsoivit =thud'. , its disastrous, demoraliziog, destructive' w :;' , ,Z' n ' ''. l , l `,,, ‘ ,, v l l , l° ,,,! `' t t , ` : ~,..u i ' m a r ‘ l r ,', influence is felt, and not at the Antipodes,' ready to testify thait they wouhl have hen where sins are o! rei o rmin of an entirely op.' numbered, with the dead, hail it not been :for: posite n . i character. The properL i ine and' tins great and wonderful medicine. Morse's Indian Root Pills. After one or two doses had I y nlaco for the consideration of idolatr is !l' ' ' !been taken ;her were astonished,and aliso-I !in the presence of the idol-worship, and , le , - ,. 1 , „.„,1,;.,•;,,f, in witnessing their'elninning! lin the community where such an atmin-: i e:..01.,:. ~,,t. only do they giv; immediate ease 1 !illation prevails, or where it is defended ;: and strengt4. and take away all sickness, I and no matter what laws or usages and pain and anguish, hut they at oime go to work at ti:e Mmolaiion of the :d is ens e., authorities of the State and custom sus : which is the bloc (1. Therefore, it will: be tain the iniquity, that makes no differ- 1 shown, especially be those who use these Pills, enee in the duty of the preacher. The' that they will so cl2anse and purify, Mat Ai: - .... application of the; gospel must be made, I en-4,--iimt deadly enemy—will take its flight, !nor is there any time to be lost ; since and the flush of youth aud beauty Will again .1, and, life and th•• prospect of a long and happy I toe argument or possession, custom, m will cherish and brighten your daye. law, is every day growing stionger.-1 Sold by SMITH & JONES. Coudersport ;also (.7ft:ever's God ..lajoi:ist Sictuery. Iby all Medicine Dealers in the county. A. J. ' 'WHITE, ,S: CO., No. 501.eonard St., :Nfew York, Proprietors; WM. BUDGE mk CO., (proprithors of Dr. A. Trash's Mamrietic Ointment,) Earl ville, Madison Co., N. Y., General Agents, f0:48--1-. " Our soil sterile, our modes of farm ing have been rude until within a few! years ; and under the circunistrnees,— with the Yankee notion that the getting of m 6 icy is the chief end of nian,—exclu sive devotion. to labor has been deemed, indispensable to sueeess. The maxims of have been literally received and adopted as divine truth.• We have be lieved that to labor is•to be thrifty, that Ito be thrifty is to be respectable; that to `be respectable is to afford facilities for be ing still more thrifty ; and our experience is, that with increased thrift comes in creased labor. This is the circle of our ambi ions and rewards. All begins and i onds in labor. The natural and inevita ble result of this is both physical and I mental deterioration." Ask a woman to a tea-party in the GArden of Eden, and she'd he sure to draw up her eye-lids and scream ; "I can't go without a new gown." COIIDERSPORT ACADEMY, 1857 - '5B. REV. J. HENDRICK, Principal. TAIIIE Academic Year is divided into three sessions of thirteen weeks each : Tile Winter Term commences, Tuesday, D‘..sc. 15, iS37. The Spring Term commences, Tuesday, April 13, 1859. The Fall Term commences, Tuesday, Aug, 24, 1859. Competent Teachers have been secured. for every branch of Study. Classes will be so arranged ., that students may enter to advantage at any time. A Teachers Class will he organized, in which due attention will be paid to the studies usually taught in Coramh Schools, and the best meth od of imparting Instruction. EXPENS".S PER TERM Primary Brtnches,• $2,50 Common English, 3,50 Higher English. with Algebra, 4,75 higher Mathematics, 0,i30 Latin and Greek, 6,00 Drawing, (extra) 2,50 Music, with use of Piano, (extra) 10,00 French, (extra) . 3,00 Without other studies, 5,00 Room Rcut,.each, 1,00 The past success. of this Institution under th Preeeptorsbip of Mr. I.l.Exnatott has indtti:- ed the Trustees to secure a continaation of his services. We trust an intelligent pubic will Bice it that supportwhit_h,,seerns to be duo to sueli an Institution. ELI REES, Presl.. G. B. OVERTON, See'y. LEWIS MANN, AMOS FRENCH, SOBIESKI ROSS. CAUTION . ; Iterohentil and Traders will benn their - guard and not be Imposed upon bra Counterteit of Norse's Indian Root Pills, signed A. B. Moore. All genuine Indian Root Pills bare the name and signature of 4. J. Whits 4 Co., on each box. NEW Goons:, Low Prices and Ready Pair, AT SIIARON CENTERi FINITE SUBSCRIBERS are offering for isale an entirely new stock, consisting of DRY GOODS. GROCERIES, HARDWARE, CQOCKERY, GLASS WARE, )3OOTS .k SHOES, HATS k CAPS,; UM BRELLAS, PARASOLS, WINDOW SHADES, WALL PAPER. READY MADE CLOTHING, YA.NKEE • In our selections ;he wank- iif rU baveibeen rememhered. The Gentlemen cao livid in our stock of Ready Made Clothing an elegant Fashionable suit, or a'-substantial Business suit, and' we have Hats & Caps and BoOts do Shoes to match. The Ladies can find Fashionahie Bonnets beautifully trimmed, or bonnet:: and a imtiiing; a good assortment of Dress Goods, and 'triini mings ; Gloves, Mitts, Hosiery end Gaiters.— And, last but not least, corded and sktileton Skirts ; also, Rattans, Skirt-Whalehoue and Br.tss Skirt-Hoops; beautiful- Jet Necklaces and BraCelets, Corals, Fans, and too Many other things to enumerate ' —all of whicib lye I are selling low for Cash, Lumber, or auy kind of Produce. FLOUR, MEAL, FISH .k,e4 con stantly on hand. 1 , 1 W. B. fi J. H. CRAVES. Sharon Center, Potter Co., Pa., Jule 5, 1857.-10:3-tf. :1 A UN DRAPER and TAILOR, .ate iron the (',pity of Liverrool. England. Shp oppoite 11.2 , ,0rt. Boas.-, Couderspor, Potter Co. P. - • N. B.—Partieular ett.nlion TING. 10:33=1 c. XTEW,GOODS . --A Fine Assert:lie:lf f just received at ITIP ORT-.04,T - bit-411U, CO.T.s.TSUMPTION I AND.ALL r,. , . '•1 - , , .. . . ; DISEASES VP TIVE"LUNGSAND I . !-,- : . AILS _POSITIVELY ,: : - 1 CURAIIME lir. 1 4 1111ALAT ON, . i ItArkli ie ciitiVeys the remedies to tl e mitt- . Y . l ties in the langs through the ai passa ges, and coning in direct contact ith the i disease, neutralizes the tubercular ma ter,' al ilays the cough, causes a free•and:eas expec toration, heals -the lungs, Purifies th blood, imparts renewed vitality to the nervou system, giving that tone said energy so indis.lensable 'or the restoration of health. TO be able to state confidently that Consumption is curahle by inhalation, is tome a source of n alloyed pleasure. It is as much under the c ntrol .oi medical treatment as any other fo midable i. disease; ninety out of every hundr d cases can be cured hr the first ,stages, and feyper cent. in the second; but in the third stage it is impossible to save more than five er cent., for the Lungs are so cat up by the disease as to bid defiance to medical skill. EVrn, howr ever, in the last stages, Inhalation at ords ex traordinary relief to the snaring attending this fearful scourge, which annpallydestroys ninety-five thousand persons in thk United states alone ; and a correct calculati n shows that of the present population of tl e earth, eighty millions are destined to fill the Con sumptive's graves. • ' . - Truly the quiver of death has no' arrow So fatal as Consumption. In alfages i has been the great enemy of lice, fur it spars neitleer age nor sex, but sweeps off alike tie brave, tits beautiful, the graceful and the ifted. By the help of that Supreme Being from whom corneal every good and perfect gift, I ant en alibied to curer to the afflicted a permanent and speedy cure 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, N% Ilich causes a weakened vitality through the en: re syst em. Then surely it is more rational to ex Ject great er good front medicines entering the cavities of the lungs than from these administered through the stomach ; the patient Will always find the lungs tree and the breathing easy,:af- ' ter Inhaling remedies. Thus, Inhalation is a local remedy, nevertheless it acts cnstitution ally, and with more power and cetjtailify than remedies administered by the sttfrutch. To prove the powerful and direct influence of titre this mode of admin i st re. tion,l chloroform inimled will entirely destroy sensibility-in a few minutes, paralyzing the entire nervous system, so that a limb maybe amp tinted wall out the slightest pain; Inhaling tie ordinary burning gas will destroy life iu a few hears. The inhalation of ammonia will rouse the system when thint Mg or apparent y deacl. The odor of ra my of the medicines hi perceptible in the skin a few m:netcs after In, in- inhaled, and nety be i itinediatcly detectedlit. • ue blood. .1 eons - ..•-ing proof of ti,e constittion tl e:fee's ..t . inhalation, is the Met that siCkness is e•- w Iv= pr utneed in breathing foul air— no-. tioe posithei e' Mere. , that proper remit:die- • 'etrei illy prepared end je.liciotisly admir',- iered !et tech the lengs =hot,ldl produc'e the liaTee et i •ults? . L , irite; eigibteen years' mace.. e, many tnonemtds :eic'ering front di,- czues o:' tar lunge and throat. have been un der ray care, and I hay,- effected many. remark able cures, even after we stiffeners had been pronounced in to , last etag,s, Which fully sat ieti-s me that eomump•ion is r.q hanger a fatal disease. Me treatment of elesumption is original, and founded on long experir. nee and a thorough investigation. My perfect acquain tance with the nature of tuber C les &c., ena bles me to dittingiiish, readil , the vnrioas forms of disease ::,et simulate consnmption ' and apply the pi,•i,i-r remedies rarely beine mistaken even in e single vas '. This land.- iarity, in connection silli en ta. n pathological and microscopic discoveries. e shies me to re lieve the lungs seam the elfeet_ of contracted s.:iests, to enlarge the chest, purify the blood, impart to it renewed vitality,l giving energy and tone to the entire system. Medicines Ni Rh litil directions scut to any part of the United Settee, and Canailas by pa tients comMunical ing their symptoms by letter. Bat the cure would be morel cermim if the patient eliould pay me a visit, : which would give me an opportunity to exit nine the lunge and enable mu to prescribe wi h much greater certainty; and then the cure could be effected without my seeing the patient again. Or, w. GRAHAA , AI. D., Office 1131 Filbert Sitreeti (Old lio. 109,) below Twelfth, • P PHILADELPHIA, A. . ~ IffILLPORT HEAD-Q 1 IZS subscribers take thii forming - their friends tha ceipt of, and are now openin, desirable stock of STAPLE AND FANCY D!ftY GOODS, to which they invite the attention of all who desire to make purchases. Our stock is large has been selectod with great Care. and is par ticularly- adapted to .the watilis of this section of our country. Uur stock of Dry Goods MAl sists of DRESS GOODS. TRIMMIN S. RIBBONS, EMBROIDERIES, PARASOLS CLOTHS. CASSIMERES VESTINGS. DO MESTICS. 1 SHIRTINOSt LINENS, P R HOSIERY, SIIA and a variety of other artiel/ to mention. We have also a meat of GROCERIES, HARDIN CROCKERY! all - of which will be .cold un I for ready pay, and for appro reasonable terms as any oth. nA_N! .ommonly cheap, •ed credit on as establishment. &NICHOLS. 'Nlillport, Aug. 11, 1856.-3:13 ly. igfebTO COUNTRY .mER, D, Si WILL - - , - ~.. LATE 11 ILLIAMS & CC' Having removed tb the spa i CARS' 13UIL 105 and 107 CHAMBERS S'l . 91 READE STREET, . ] Is no4v offering for cash or e a large and well-assorted st HATS, CAPS, STR UMBRELLAS Of all the styles, qualities at i ally found in market.• est sale-roonacl in the city, tcita ample facilities, mid user. ye,: in the loti :nay f-cl a;sure:l, of bring this house as at 1.14 i from the co r.nre ne, S(3I.S AND ON .10:3 0 CHARGE FOR SHO L Goods just received at rthitos,-7 feleibie THE CASH SYSTEM ADOPTED. Prices Greatly Reduced, 'RI: - noRActwATERS • ,•••_ - No; - 333 - ':Broculltay,.. N.' .1 1 ";, AGENT.FOR THE BEST - 111/STON & N. Y. -• Instruments. YOFIE Largest Assortnient of Fianos, deous, Musicablnstrunients, and' Musical Merchandise of all kinds, in the United States. Pianos from Ten different Manufactories, com prising those „Of,er..ery Variety of style, from the plain, neat•and substantial t octaves, ir. Walnut or Rosewood cases; from $l5O to $2OO, to those of the niost elegant finish up to One Thousand Dollarsi No house in ,the Union can compete with! the above in the number, variety and celebrity of its instruments; nor l in the Extrentely low prices at which they are sold. I HORACE WATERS' MODERN IMPROVED PIANOS, with oi without Iron, Frames, - 1 pos sessing in their improvements of over-strings and action, a leulth of scale and compass of tone equal to thei Grand Piano, united with the beauty and ditrability of structure of the Square Piano. Tiley are justly pronounced by the Press and bythe first Musical Masters, to be equal to thoselof any other manufacturer They are built of the best add most thorough 1Y seasoned material, and guaranteed to aitnd the action of every climate. Each Instrument guaranteed to giVe satifaction, or purchaie -1 money refunded. HORACE WATERS' MELODEONS.—Su perior Idstruments in touch and durability of make.. (Tuned the equal temperament.) •Me loileons of-all other styles and makes. Price $l5, 500, $l5, Isloo,. $125, sl4o—clotibli, Reeds and two hanks of Keys, 5200-less liberal discount. 1 Clergymen and Churches, lau extra discount. • MARTIN'S GUITARS, • • - BROWN'S HARPS, FLUTES. FLUTINAS, • • ACCORDEONS. • VIOLINS, and Musical Instruments of all kinds. at lower price's than ever before offered to the public A large discount to Teachers and Schools. The trade supplied on tile most liberal terms. SECOND-HAND PIANOS. at great bar gains, constantly, iu store,—price from $3O to ROAT •il4u. 311ErSIC...One , of the largest and hest se lected catalogues of ,Music now_poblished, comprising mans of the choice , and most pop ular airs of the day, and will be sold at one third off from the regular prices. Mimic sent by; mail to all parts of the coon try, post-paid. Particular and personal atten tion paid to all brdcrs,reeeived by mail. Sat isfaction guaranteed in every instance. Pianos and Melodeons for rent and rent allowed on puttchase. Pianos and Melodeons for sale on 01 it payineics. Second-hand Pinner' in s.clit.ge for new. Gent oil and t Catit! , ign(.s and i-cheduM of priets forwarded to aii - pirds of the cmantry l - ty ge i rtGreat hutheements offered to AGENTS in all 1 -arts of 1,11. country, to sell the Horace Waters' Pianos Melodeons, and Catalogue of I • Mas.c. b:46 A ritIZI; FOR EVERYBODY WHO SUBSCRIBES FOR THE New York Weekly Press{ A BEAUTIFITLLY li,LusTitATET) FALILY ! rirunj NEW Vur K IVEEKLY Pi - ZESS is ore I of ale best literary popecs of the (lily. A large Quarto (tont:fining TwENTY PAGES. or SIXTY COLUMNS. iifemertaiMug. matter: and ELEGANTLY ILIA ST RAT ED evkr:. week. A OIET WORTH FROM 50 CENTS To .310 no otr,WILL BE SENT TO) EACH SFR- S(•RIBER ON RECEIPT OF THE SVii SCRIPTION MONEY. TERMS—IN ADVANCE One copy for one year, and 1 gift, Three copies one year, and 3 gifts, 5 un Tice cdpies one year, and 5 gins, S 01 t Ten copies one year, and 10 gifts, 15 eu Twenty-one copies one year. and 21 gifts, 30 00 The articles to he distributed are comprised in the following list:- 1 United States Treasury Note, $lOOO 00, 2 do do do 500 00, each. 5 do do do 200 00, each-. 10 do do do 100 00, each. 10 Patent Lever Hunting' Cased Watches, 100 00, each, 20 Gold Watches, 75 00, each. 50 . do CO 00, each: 100 -do 50 00, each. ARTERS. method of in- It they are in re, , a ehOik:e and 300 Ladies' Gold Watches, 200 Silver. Hunting Cased Watches, 30 00, each . 500 Silver Watches, $l5 00 to 25 00, each 1000 Gold Guard, Vest and Fob Chains, 1.0 00 to 30 00, each 1.000 Gold Pens .and Gold Lockets, Bracelets, Brooches, Ear Drops, Breast Pins, Cull Pins, Sleeve Buttons, Rings, Shirt Studs, Watch Keys, Gold and Silver Thimbles, and a variety of other arti cles. worth from 50 cents to $l5 00 each. TS, \I? LS, too numerous complete assort- On receipt of the subscription money, the sub:criber's name \Nil! be entered upon our Looks opposite a number, and the gift COITCS 7 . ponding with that number will be forwarded ) within one week to him, by mail or exprcr,B, post paid. • There is neither humbug ner.lottery about the above, ns every subscriber it sure of a prize of value. We prefer to make this lib eral distribution among them instead of giv ing a large commission to Agents, giving to the subserilrer the amount that would go to the Agent and in many cases a hundred-fold More. z , .rAll communications should be ad dressed to DANIEL ADEE, PuimrsuEn, (10:43] 2/1 Centre street, ficw York. VRE AND-, HANTS A hi S 1 EEO ions IdftS in the ING, REST, and 89 & ENV,. I'aK, apPro, - ed credit, ck„ of I .W GOODS, iIitASOLS, t d mm-trials usu t g one pc th , : lrg,- 50 byf 150 feat;‘ . to experience 61 1 be.:34 purch;isp= s svell serve.' o the tride. rr,ry 'tilled . with [elf 2 __ • KEDZIE'S PATENT WATER FILTER, 'TIE BEST- FILTER. KNOWN for Family *uSe ; has given the highest. satifaction for many years ; is scientific in construction, port able, durable t , ud cheap. It renders rain wa te7 perfectly rare and sweet, reteking cisterns na re eronom cal 01/ - 111 wells, :lild avoiding th, dizc.ases arising from the hard water of lime-. stone regions. Five sizes; xetall from $8 to . Wholesnle to the trade at the usual dis count. Can he fr.rwarded sefeiy any 411 stance. Form , ray merle 1)y J. E. CheneY & Co.; made uStv j by JAMES TEP.It? & CO., at the rbl. stand of J. E & Co., Shoe Street, Roches ter, \..Y. For descriptive circulars address [L10:47-3m.] •• JAMES TERRY & CO. just !;,:c2ivecl, ily 11. ORA YES. LNG iTHE Nr:W OLLSTED'S. 5 00 to 15 00, each Pencils, itOSVAtt lfASS ( Teini PHILADELPHIA. .. . .. le - tiara( faititution, ittaldked 15q =meat for the relief of the sirk and tressed, a f flicted with Virntent no I..:pdeniie diseases. . : . - . . . all persons ailliclted with Serail; es;:slich to SPERMATORREREA,.!„,, NAL .-WEAKNESS, 'IM:POTENCE, -BON I Itli ~ A, 'GLEET, - -SYPHILIS, the Il i ONA 'ISM, or SELF. ABUSE, &c, k, Th .. HOWARD ASSOCIATION', i o T i e sr a ful destruction of- hiimaii life,' cA 'theby Slxual di caws, And tic deception s i tised uron the unfortunate victims d t et' di sco - es by . Quaeks,•several years ego i t i , their ConstiltingSt.rgeon,aS a eftAliiT) ACT worthy,of.their name, to open an : sary for the treatmentof this doss of di ; in all their forms, and to give MELICAL i VICE GRATIS, to ,all who apply. by i i withli , description of Dick co s dir,6 occu ation, habits of life, Id:c.,) and in of of eitreme povertv,'to FUlliNlfSli lilli• FREE OF CHARGE. It Is Ileolli‘, l that the Assad:akin con:fin:aids the 1 Med cal skill of the age..and will furnifi mos approved modern treatnient. TI e Directors, on a review of the pat assued that their labors in this sphetec nee lent effort, have been of grit itnel the fflieted.•especially to 93e young • and hay resolved to devote thcm , elves wi t h viewd 'zeal, to tb.r:s. very in!ipi.srtlut ' but • i. des iced cause. .J: st . Published by the Association, a tor' on Sperinatorrlicea. or Seinkal,\Ve ; k a , he 'ice of Quauism, .I:4turimtion or 1) se, and other Disease of the Semi i tn , n b t 3, by - mail, the Tl sea ltiu s g,4 ci e utgt: i o w n e ;4l e. i l F dl R I ~ 'ICHARGE, on receipt cif TWO ST.tl' '3ostage. . . . - _ ddress, for Deprt or treatment, )RGE R. CALIIOh7N, Cnisuiting Stage: -ard AssoeiatiOu, No: 2 1 Ssouth Ninth Stre adelphia, Pa. • I By order of the Directors. . ' F.ZR A 1). IiEAL:I I WELL, Prejkt. -Eo'. niI:CHB - D. .) . ;:wr,r . i. fi0.2.;_1. EEE T° GDI Phi; Of all dis:Tase ; the •,,,,,y....,t, .„ : ., 1 edu4 - - Springs freidneglect 1,1:•;.t ..art.'s laws— oi.cui-FER NOr t 1... ., .1. - I Ili iaen 4, CURE is goat:tut , . ~ IN ALL STAGES OF SECRET DISEASES, Se . .douse,. Nrrro Debiltly, SH,rtnria. G:? - t irarti, DiaLties,-iiiscal , i'A of tit( litdi,, T , _Madder, _Mercurial R 4, , lor i 1 1 . ...n , , &n Pains , in 14,2 Brines and A . ,.; , ,it. ,, ,./A,.faiu, ay., Threat, .lose and E , ' f,, Cictr: lipu; ...Italy or Dog 8., CahCe.r3, I i T(1, , ,!,, Fret fp:i Virde Dam , . al," on dmeuzr,scri , ing, It derilgoiten, of (Ae Sezti:d Ury,w, 4,...L UCH ii:-. NerVl.lll , Ticu.Y.:42. Lot ef ?It 1,71 ory. 1,,,s - of Power, tiA tura! Wea;;:a I Yifunt.. , of Vis .on w :tit p. cubs :Tots :, i , t . d: in:4 la hue : di 'cyt s, Lc-s ot Sq:.lit-, IV:•:. liqs. Dysl 4:.ps i.l, Liver 1:: ,. e .e, Eruption:ol; 'thl• ta.;e. l': in Ilf the back at.c., head. Fr . ivi I ~, s a lat i , ie..; :-• nil ail imptupt r lischatge.! b th sexes. I. millers riot fri ni what ill tb iease originated, however long sic, Or ~I .)i t ;nate the case, I"(COrertf I r!.11:/, = a shorter time than a permar.r: • i u:' cant' tested by any other treatment. e\ ea after di,ease has baffled the shill of et:lint:a pii cams and resisted all their means of cute utdicines are pleasant without odor,eauch :.i•iatess and free from mercury , or LL. Dbring t wenty ye:it , of practice. I' Itave res Itin the jaws of Leath many thoneraii , % in the last stages of the above mourn:, eiit..es h-td been given up to die ct their ii cm US, I\lll6l Wni rants me ;n ret.d.,ingt -11:lett-if, who may place thrra,•i \ e;ul:4 c ire, a peitect 1111 d most speedy cute. Or DI. iseases are the greatest enende. , to healt taey are the first cause of Consumptioa, Sr Oa, and many other di,:jases, asti should terror to the human family, As a Fran: cure is scarcely-ever effected, a majority: em,es falling into the hands of incont 0 - 2rsons,.who not only fail to cries the die but ruin the COir titration, tilling the syi W: , II nil i ctl!y, s`.li , .1., \......1. 111 - l:'. Ore, r tie s' the sti fl er;-: it:: •,- , I. 1 . .1 pi a coo,ual lit But should the di,:e . . - .se and the trot riot cause death speedily - and the victim ries, the dise.l:,C L cute iie . i.i apon.the chi! who are burn with feeble constitutiow ble current of life cotrupted liy a viius • etrays itself in :-'ernfula, 'I tater. l'hers, tp.oras an other affections of the skin, Throat and Lungs, entailing upon then: existence of sullering and cousigniagn.: tin early gravel 1 SELF ABUSE is another formidablees tp health, for nothing else in' the dreid e lhgue of human diseases cause's so !:strut v drain upon the system, drawing its thous of victims through a few years of se (town to an untimely. grave. It destroys :servaus system ) rapidly AN - tistO away the' rgies of life, causes mental der:gager keventSthe prOper development of the sy. disqualifies for marriage, society, bus i nd all earthly happiness, sodlcavcs the ft-rer wrecked in body and mind, predh . , -to consumption and a train of evils more treaded than death itself. ,With the f confidence I assure the unfertunate vier elf-Abuse that a Wynn aent and speeth tan be affected, ar.d -with the ilbandotzt ruinous practices 'my patients can be ref to robust, vigorous health. The afflicted are cautioned against a of Patent Medicines, for there are so ii)geuious• snares in the column:_ of the r• 'prints to catch and rob the unwary izire that millions have their con , titations.r ol 1..;c the vile compounds of quack docir the equally poisonous Bost. 1/11), .vend` •:IPritent Me.liciues." I l i ncsaleltilly.: . lo many of the so calle&PateLt 3ieUicaei fi l ed that nearly all of thi)ncott.dri Corr. Llublimate, which is One of the ~trent parations of mercury and a tiredly ft ihich instead . of curing the - dis•esse? : the system for life. Three-fourths.of the patent nosuctns in - use are put up by unprincipled and.igc, pi.•rsons, tvtiii: do not understand even• phabet - of the . ntaterirt meg'iro, anti ore a ~, 'destitute of any knowledge, of the . Ts:steni, having one object only is Wic ic !,,: that to make money regardless ofeollws : T . . Irregularities and all diseases of nrle s f males treated' on- principles estilblisho.i t.,) - enty years of practige, and stinctiotl„ thousands of the -most remarkable cures%l4.• ieines with full directions sent to atlY P", the United - States or Came:las, .by l'.. t ' e conanunicatink their .symPtoms hY,..l e ` ,• BuSiness correspondence strictly Cenci . ' le Ell 35 00, each L , ddrus • . SUIVC.NTERVILLE, M.. °ace No. 115'1 Filbert 6t, (Old No. 103fs*,) LETA)AV TWETSTII, - PRILKDELTIIIA ZS JEW GUQDS—A Large an d r-d;i sortment just receivril at -- 10:1 OVISTD
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers