. • .V.1 , 11.1)1if .E ittatt. Pt. , 14 , 44 ..-I . 42i . pef a iyugagine for , September. . IFI e 11 7 .4n111T lVeWspaper. TIM progroSs of licteaety constantly ten& .- ,to iticrte the distinctness and iridepen: . 'demo 'Of faratilY, Consiilered itt the light of a Clonie..,s: - -tic' 'filen are better governed; as 'trade and gotta:Wren are couforined to 'natural. latts, .sis!the various interests Of Citizenship in hearing on the business and gerteral of the community are more fully . appFeet:Yled;•th priVaci and sacredness of tine'beoOuld" afore' essential to the sta lility 'and growth of siniiety.. At the 'mine tilde, the:outward World Acts with 'greater influence - On the fireside. Civil itiseitittiOns; prespe'rods industry, niephan- ; Ical,imprpinniits, diffusing intelligence, 'tintributt to therstrctigth and Happiness -; o rthe family. And, in turn, the' Madly ptinnotes the advanceinent. of the state. bOilicent interchange Of good offices maintained, each 'working in its p -.r‘piovidential Sphere: for the good of e other, and both combining their ' re- Opective agencies in the onward March of `ever has ham - occupied its own ground more completely than at present; and ipvtir has the external life of society more closely connected with its 'character and condition. 4. model* huif3elh)l,l is a miniature ‘rorld, lusidated I 'within its own realm, exercising its own! prerogati:e and enjoyino•" ' its privilezes; 1 without disturbance, Amidst this se; elusion, it is intimately identified with, ! i t, le Mays:mews of the riae; 'it is., more. I than e. e a part of the brotherhood of, niankittil ; and uotlitng can happen o-, tile: I glebe, that does not affect its circuaistati. I :ces. Every day places its pri:a e fur-I tunes at the mercy of those changes are always going on in mercantile I , end' national affairs. A. storm on the 'actual sieks its treasures, and.a battle in India covers its 'walls with the shadow of death. 'Rut it is equally open to the nid liorating influences of civilization. The great world takes no Step forward that home does not feel • aid - as nations act- I 7.ince in the tilts of peace. there is it deep. si g nificancecr ^ ,g'ivuii to marriage, child 'hoo rivesto a 'happier destiny, and da atitic piety utters a palm of devouter thanksgiving, • Among those ties which bind the ex ternalslife of society to the family we may mime literature as one of the strongest andtnost important. ',_.Every man of ob servation bows how. much the domes:tie idea has entered into modern writing, and what a Marked change in the modes 'nianifestatioos of creative thought W been produced since authors became eonseious of the kind of patronage they were to receive. Indeed, the spirit of; eriticism which has been developed oft late years in the private circle of the faro- I Tly has done . more to elevate literature than all our deginatiti reviets._ And what Is' 4 - s.ll'l:Mire' it riking, the Vast increase in 'the number of those books written for the quiet hours of home, and especially for ;he hands of women and children,' their :rapid gain, both in quality, and quantity. ;over selector works of science, shows us . that the intellect of the world is enlarging I is relations and coming into nearer con tact with household mind. We rank this tact among the.most hopeful signs of the age. Whenever literature draws its in 4ipiration from such a source, it, must gather' the best of wisdom as well as the noblest of aspirations into itself. I But our present concern is with the, riettspaper_ in the family. The period, has not-long passed when the newspaper vas almost exclusively an organ for such, thoughts and communications as were understood to have reference to men and their pursuits. Business, politics, and such other distinct interests as specially appertained to professional and inercan file tifa; kic'olipied its colamns. One see r. twin of the world, and it'extromely limit cd, was under the watchful eye of the editor, and his vocation was restricted to n jealous oversight of its affairs. A man 'among men, he had no other standard than manly intercourse prescribes. His range.was narrow, and often his temper, narrower. But when the free spirit of an awakened and enthusiastic era penetrated Into the operations of society; when. *tame all, mind, as mind, received an hon. ' ca and liberal recognition; when iota.; led was liberated from its inthrallment to classes and factitiOus associations 'and taught to think and speak for kindred Intellect, whereverit had its abode ; then I the newspaper. first to herald the dawn ing age and first to shine with its early, light,. spread its irradiatiog beams over the broad surface of human life. , The 'change so effected, amounting to a revo lution, proved niost beneficial. If it did ilnt restore the days of chivalry, it created moral and social knighthood that refined sentiment and improved character, It I made the editor something more of a man by bringing the conventional rules of so ..iety to bear upon him, and by aubstitort- I bug public "opinion' for class-opinion (or, etter said, Six•opiaon), it lifted him. Several grades higher in the scale of in tellectual and moral being. The niodern 'newspaper owea a large proportion- of its .power to t'ie fact that it has hzeonie the exponent of society—society as coiastit , l, ted by men and -women—and it dies this Ctihancement of its authority 114 t . .finenat to - the time when it entered' the househelty as a guest of accredited ,re nability:nnd reliable worth.' • Without -the iighte3t sympathy with what I termed Woman's Rights mote. inents; wi may remark that a mivement other than that which is technhially ad ertised in 'platform speeches has ,';long E been progressing - -with the - .happiest - re.: suit's. • The: last honor accorded to 'wo man was milid;:lmit if delayed by strange obtuseness of thOnglit';'end yet more Lit gardly breadth - Ofientimeat, i 6 has fidelry been yielded with sufficient to Make amends for, past Mins ties. The returning sense of truth has `wrduglit this noble - work. - It has been dune Without the rickety ruacliiherY of cuiVelitions. and the hypocritiCal Spri t) !ism .of 'creeds that exag..crate a truth 'Until it sivelis into a lie, ail'. intensify a virtue into the fanatiCd fury. of a vice. = It has beer; dOne silently, but surely ;'and vrJ ureborilvittiesses' of the fact that the grOwth of generLqii and sympathetic feel ings are -able, at themselves, to remedy abiises and rectiiv errors. We have learn ed that woman is wedded to - Man in all relations; tier.' iei4 his counterpart ev erywhere and in every position; and be cause Lf -this tendeney in all things to folin an alliance With her, .we have conic to feel that, sae is thebeart of business no titan the heart of bowc. But—to! take up the stitch we dropped i in I this. -sentence-km ting—.-let us return Iti Ithe newspaper. We say, then, that the idea of a family : . newspaper ought to li:we especial reference to woman, Not eXclusive reference, however, for that I would be an extreme almost as nnfayora !MC to her true milture in the affairs or 1 I daily life as her 'entire neglect. What Islip needs in a newspaper is such inform ! ation, such forms of thought sub ii-e.el - moral, and 'social action on he:. I nature, rather than on her intellect, as I shall expand her Mind and mature her character in that experience which is s caininon both to woman and man. Corn, pelled as ishe is to have, in sothe things, her own exclusive range of- ideas and I I emotions, there is danger that .she may confine herself too much and too intense., ly to this separate field ;.and hence the ini- I . . . portanee ot enlistmg her attention and sytn, I 1 pathyin behalf of tYnise objects that appeal to us outside of 'the peculiarities.' of sex. Side by side with man she may thus he educated in all that concerns real life.' She may remain "aikeeper at home," and I yet go abroad; may - acquire a full know-1 ledge of the - world, and not pay the pen-1 alty of too much intercourse -with it. By I this means she may be fitted to supply a i want that men often express, viz., intel- i lectual and social companionship in rnat--I tens that are above routine, etiquette, and 1 drawing-ioom gossip. ' The positions oft the two Sexes, viewed in relation to the interchanges of 'Mind, are certainly not linked together as they should be fur mu- tnal improvement, nor are they as syni- I pathetic in kindred OfileeS of sentiment as I their 'happiness demands. Every intelli- I gent pesot of both sexes, has often felt , this painfully. ' But how shall it be im proved ? 'Host many men as men, and tome women, meet .on common groun without abatement of facility, each rethpg his and her endowments, both! tlives in nature's best sense, and yet opening their minds to each other's influ ence in hearty fellowship of thought and feeling? How may those sympathies I which now so frequently weaken the in t:creourse of mind between the sexes be converted into. agencies of strength and vigor? But one method has ever occurred to us, viz., to put them both in possession of the same sources' of intelligeuoe—to train them, after- attaining mature life, under the influence of the same master.' thoughts, and through the same general' instrumentalities—to give them a com mon property in the intellectual life of the world, and let their hearts throb alike beneath its inspiriting energy. A family newspaper meets this necessity. It offers a woman precisely the sort of information and discipline which she requires for con versational charms. The spirit of a first rate newspaper is the spirit of active, en ergetic, daily life, with mind to give it dignity and ready tact fcr versatile adapt ation; and this is just the spirit which our better class of women demand, to en able them to! fulfill their intellectual and social relatidns with beeciniug propriety and effect. A family newspaper, then, 'lust report the world every week, as far as it can and ought to repOrt it, for the instruction, en livenment, and happiness of the family. It should bee a biography of life, a history of action. All that is attractive in sci ence, beautiful in art, inviting in letters, with whatever else, may invigorate and refresh mind by' carefnl devotion to what is good, and 'hearty homage for what is great, it should command in sufficient measure for its paegs. It must be a newspaper in every meaning of the word —one that' shall faithfully depict the great surfade of the world as .the restless ness of passion, the mutations of opinion, the changes of mighty events speed over it; and one,: too, that shall look deeper than the surface, and contemplate those principles in which the order of society and the welfare of existence have their roots: KissiNG,_liarlly any two females kiss alike There is as much variety in the manner of do ing it, as in the faces and manners of the sex. Some delicate little ,ereatures merely give a slight brush cif the lip. This is a sad aggra vation.. We seem to be about to "have a good time," but aetually get nothing. Others ga into us like a! hungry man into a beef-steak, and seem to Chew up our countenances. This, which is i notn common case. is too min:alike the Cannibal Islands, and soon drives away a delicate lover. Others struggle like hens when burying theniseli - es in dry dirt. The 'kiss is won by great. exertions, and is not worth as much as the ;trouble - it costs, Now, we are l:: favor Of a certain shynesS when a kiss is pro ' posed,but it Should not be continued too long : and, whew the fair one gives in, let her ad minister the kiss with warmth and enot D- Lit there be soul in it. y.she cio-es her eyes and sighs deeply immediately after it, the ef fect is'greater. She should be careful not to "spread" tls kisi, but ((ice it.as. a. humining tbird :roils Ibis hilt info = n licineysticidderif.. but delicately. There is much virt.ll , y in a kiss I when . ltell •delii - ered. ' We have lial_the inein•.-1 cry of one the reeeii - ed. last oi:—..---. ! ' . • itErTbe :4VI Y. Poet, calls atttsntion' to the flia that the word Baby does nut appear in tlui new Oyelopdia, and supplies a definition ; j 00, jury and sentence of eve. 'y-well regulated fiiuily. A thing that squeaks at midnight, and will -not' be comforted by.any quantity of saps. 11 biped called by its moth el.:" de Jittle rosey posey, pinkum pink, bless its Mile heart," and very frequently " trotted " to 'the tune of "Here - we go Up, up, up-se, and here w go down. down. down-e." By bach elors called "brat,!' and by Tupper, the phil osopher, delicately alluded to as• a ' 6 well spring." CAUT . .Merchante and Traders will be on their guard and not be imposed upon by a Counterteit cf Morse Indian Root Yilla, signed A. B. Moore. All genuine: ludhu Root rills hare the name and aigaatare of What E Co., on each-box. ' Atore we present you wire h llicenes,-; of DR. MORSE—the inrentor of MORSE'S IN-. DIAN ROOT PILLS. This'philanthmpiqt has spent the greater part of his life in tiaveling,. Racing visaed Europe, A.,:a, and Africa, a, Well as North America—has spent three years among the Indians bf our Western conutry— it this way that the Indian Root Pills were tst discovered. Dr. Morse was the brit man to establish the filet that all diseases arise from IMPUT.Tri OF THE BLOOD—that our streng"th. health and life depended upon this vital fluid. -i. 'When the various passa,ges,become clogged, I and do not act in perthet harmony with the! 1 differe t Functions of the body, the blood loses I its actitin, becomes thick, corrupted and. dis- I eased ; thus eausing7all pains. sickness and ; distress of every Maine; our strength is ,ex-' hausted, one health we are deprived of, and if i nature is not assisted in throwingptf thestag nant humors, the blood will become choked- I and cease to.act, and thus our light of life will Ilbrever 'be blown out. 116 w important then i i that we should keep the various passages of! the body free and open. And how pleasant I ito us that we have it in our power td' put a Itiedicine in your reach, namely, Morse's In- than toot Pills, manufactured from plants 1 and rootsethich grow around the mountain e 1 oils cliffs in Nature's garden, for.the health anti" 1 recovery of diseased man. One of the roots 1 from which these Pills are made is a Sudorific, I which opens the pores of the skin. and assists :.Cature in throwing out the finer parts of the corruption within. , The second is a plant which is an Expectorant, that opens and un.,l Iclogs the passage to the lungs, rind - thus, in al !Soothing manner, perform; its duns by throw,. 1 lug off phlegm, and other humor) . from the I lungs by copious spitting. The third is a Di tretic, which gives ease and double steehgth to the . kidneys ; ties encouraged, they draw large amounts of impurity from the blood, -which is then thrown out bountifully by the I urinary or water passage, and which could! not have been discharged in any other way. i ! The fourth is a Cathartic, and accompanies the other properties of the Pills while engaged 1 in purifying the blood ; the coarser particles f of impurity which cannot pass by the other! outlets, are thus taken up and conveyed off irk! great quantities by:the bowels, . 1 From the above, it is shewn that Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills not or ly enter the stomach, bat become united with the blood. for they) fiat way to every part. and eampletely rout out 1 and cleanse the system from all impurity, and' the life of the body, which is the blood, be- l I comes ' perfectly healthy ; consequently all j I sickness and pain is driven from the system. 1 for they cannot remain when the body becomes 1 SO pure and clear. : i The reason why people "are so distressed ( when sick, and wiry so many die, is because : ; they do not get )2( medicine which will pass! "to the afflicted parts, and Ny':ich will open the' I natural passages for the disease to he cast out; hence, a large quantity of food and other mat -1 ter is lodged, and the stomach and intestines are literally overflowing with the corrupted; mass; thus undergoing disagreeable fermen tation. constantly mixing with-the blood,which throws corrupted Matter through every vein. and artery, until life is taken .from the body I by disease. Dr. Morse's PILLS have added 101 themselves victory upon victory, by restoring I millions of the sick to blooming health and I Ihappiness. Yes, thousands who have .been i racked or tormented with sickness, pain and i anguish. and whose feeble frames have been scorched by the burning elements of raging fever, and who have been brought, us it were, within a step of .the silent grave, now stand; ready to testify that they would nave been numbered with the dead. had it not been for this great and wonderful medicine, Morse's t Indian Root Pills: After one or two:doses had been taken, thee Were astonished. alid abso. I lately surprised, in wimessing their charming effects. Not only do they give immediate ease and strength, and take away all sickness, pain and anguish. bet they .at care go to Iwork at the fiuudation of the ! disc .is e. I which :a the bloc":. T herefore, it will 1-ie shown, espec - I;1); be tho. , ,e who tiFe these PiP,, that they *1:1 socie.-ose an , l purify, that dis ci. thtadly take its flight : and the ilash o . t. :youth and be;:try will again return, and the prospect of a long ,and happy life - will cherish and brightel, you? da.e. So!r1 by SMITH & JONES, Coudersport ;jaigtif by nil Medicine Dealers in the coutitr. A. J. WHITE CO., No. 50 Leonard St.; Sew York, Proprietors; WM. kiJDGE al . 00., (proprietors of Dr, A. Trask's Ma 4 -netic Ointment) Earl rine, Madison Co., General:Age"4. Z. j. THOMPSON, CARRIAGE S WAGON lf and! RE PAIRER, Cendersport;Potter %0., Pa.; takes this method of iuterming the pub,- t; ;generaf that he is prepared -- 17 .77:.-Aq to do all worli i•: his line with pron.ptue.s. in a workman-like •manner, and upon the most accommodating terms. Payment - for Repairing ini•ariably required undelivery - of the work. 113.. A.ll kinds of "PRODUCE taken on account of work. - A. U. C. BROCK'N, 22 Cliff Street, New-York, MANDFACTCRER OF ' GLASS ,STREIGES, 4014EOPATEIC VIALS, UP4DUATETI .NE4SURES, , Nuns, BOTTVES, ETC, Glass Ware for Chemists, Druggists, Per fumers, Photographers, etc. Green Glassware. ,v the p tckage. A liberal discount made to -he trade. Oitlers front Coqntry Drqggists and Dealers - Soliciled, ;Price Lies sent on appli cation. ' 1141-am-o,c/too.' PIP ORTA-PIT- -, DI S OD VERT:' , ~ CONSUMPTION • ' :: : . . AND ALL RISEASES:OF 'Ilt,E LUNGS AND THROAT ~. Abe POSITIVELY cuB4BLptslc- vultikLA.TioN, WIIICH conveys the remedies to the cil,vl - in the lungs through - the air pa Sa ges; and Coming, in direct - contact with 'the. j disease, neutralizes the tubercular matter, 41- lays the cough, causes a free and easy e ec toration, heals the lungs, purifies the blend, impartarenewed vitality to the nervous 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 me a source of unalloyed pleastifie.. If, is-as much under the control. of medical treatment as any other formidable disease; ninety out of every- hundred cases can he 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 cuts up by the disease as . to bid defiance to Medical skill.- ben, how ever, in limiest stages, Inhalation 4fforda ex traordinary relief to the- suffering attending this fearful scourge, which annually destroys ninety-five thousand persons in the United ' States alone ; and a-correct calculation shows that of the present population of the -carat, - i ' eighty millions are, destined to-- fill the 'con ' sumptive's graves. l Truly the quiver of,death has no arrow so fatal as Consumption. In all ages it has been i the greatenerny of life, for it.-spares neither age nor sex, hut sweeps off alike the -breve, I thi. beautifal, the gracefill and the gifted.' By the help of that Supreme Beitig from whom cometh every good and perfiict gift, I am en ; alibied Id oiler to the "Milicted a permanent. ::nil spicily mire .in Consumption. The:first ; sause:of tubercles is from impure blood; and the immediate etfect produced by their depo sition in the lungs is to prevent the free al- mission of air. into the air tells, 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 Chose administered through the stomach; the patient will always find the lungs tree and=the breathing easy, af ter luhaling remedies. Thus, Inhalation 'is a local remedy, n cvert.heless it acts constitution ally, and 'with more power and certainty, than rent dies administered by the stomach.' To prove -the powerful and direct influence of this this mode of ad w ini s trati on, chloroform inhaled will-entirely destroy sensibility in a few minutus, paralyzing the entire nervous system, so that a limb tnay be ampntated with - - out the slightest pain ;.Inlialing the ordinary burning gas will destroy life-in a few bohrs. The inhalation of am nonia will rouse the system when fainting 0: apparently dead, The odor of many Of the' medicines is perceptible in the skin a few minutes after being inhaled, and may be immediately detected - in the plood. A convincing proof of the constitutional effects of inhalation, is the fact that sickmos ,is al ways produced by breathing foul air=is not this positive evidence that proper remedies, carefully 'prepared and judiciously adminis laud through the lungs should produce they happiest results? During eighteen ; years' practioe,' many thofisauds suffering- frorn dis eases of the lur,gs and throat, have been un der My care,- aal I have Orwell ninny re:Marl:- able cures, even after the sufferers had been pronounced in the last stages, which I'l/83-sat isfies me that 'consumption is no longer a fatal disease. My treatment of consumption i original, and founded on long experience ant a thorough investigation. My perfectacourtim: tance with the nature of tubercles, Sus, ena bles me to distinguish, readily, the Various forms of disease that simulate consumption. and apply the proper rerit6dies„ 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 lungs from the effects of contracted Chests, to enlarge the chest. purify the blood. iinrart 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 Canada's by.pa ien ts 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 On lungs and 'enable me to prescribe with much greater 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, PA. I DIILLFORT MAD-QUARTERS, wolf. subscribers take this ruethodof in -forming' their friends that they are in re ceipt of,arid are now opening, a choide and desirable stock of STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOOD , to which they invite the attention of al who desire to make' purchases. Our stock isiarge has been seiectud with great care, and is par , ticularly ridapted-to the wants of this section of our country. Our stock a Dry Goods con n;sts of • DRESS GOODS. TRIMMINGS. RIBBONS, EMRROIDERIES, PARASOLS' GLOTIIS, CASSIMERES I VESTINGS, DO- • I MESTIGS, SHIRTINGS, LINENS, PRINTS. • j . • HOSIERY; SHAWLS, sad a variety of other articles, too nnrnerons to mention. We hate - also a complet a.lsort - • meat of GROCERIES, HARDWARE AND CROCKERY ; ali of which will be F. 6ld uncommonly cheap for ready pay, End for approved credit On as reasonable terms as 'any other establishinent. MANN &NICHOLS. aug. 11, 1856.—b:13 ly. ii" TO COUNTRY MERCHANTS I;sa D. S. wiLLlalap, LATE WILLIAMS & CUNNINGHAM, I [laving removed to the spacious lofts in the CARY BUILIDING -105 and 'lO7 CHAMBERS STREET, and S 9 & 91 READE STREET, NEW YORK, Is now offering for cash or on approved Credit, a large and well-assorted stock of HAS, CAPS, STRAW GOODS, • inmitZLLAs &T.mtisoLs. 1 Qf all the styles, qualities and piaterirds nsu ally found itt market. Having oneofthle larg est saleqoenns in the city, (50 by 150 feet,) with ample facilities, and an experience of near twenty years ip the business, pucJeheser may feel assured of being as well serves a this house as,at any other in the trade. ftee,fgrderX ,from the country fille i cl care and promptness. [op 3_ nRANGES AND LEMONS just received by kJ 10:3 f WBJAGJ. H. GRA S. lu-,4ta-ly 0 CHARGE 'FOR SHOWING TH. /A Goods put received at .OIAISI PIANOS, -MELODEONS'IL iresp3 THE CASH SYSTEM .ADQPTEP. /, ;Prices Greatly Reduced, HORACE WATERS. No. 833 Broadioay, N. Y, AGENT FOR THE BEST BOSTON dr N.. Y instruments. rlLargest -Assortment of Pianos,-elo eons, M Musical Instruments, and litusical Merchandise of all kinds, in the United States. Pianos from Ten different Manufactories, com prising those , of every variety of style, from the plain, neat and substantial 6i octaves, in Walnut or Rose Wood Ctises, from $l5O to $2OO, to those of the most elegant finish up to One Thousand Dollars. No house in the Unidn can compete 'With the above in the number, variety and celebrity of its ,instruments, nor in the Extremely low prices at which they arc sold. • . ' uortAcE WATERS' MODERN IMPROVED PIANOS,•with or without Iron Frames, pits sessing in their improvements of over-;strings and• action, u length of scale and compass of tone equal to the Grind Piano, .united with the beauty and durability of structure of the Square Piano: They are justly pronounced by the Press and by the first Musical Masters, to be equal to those of any other manufacturer They are built of the best and most thorough ly seasoned material, and guaranteed to stand the action of every climate. Each Instrument guaranteed to give satifaction, or purchase money refunded. HORACE WATERS' MELODEONS.—Su. perior Instruments in touch-and durability of make. (Timed the equal temperament.) Me lodeons of all other styles and makes. Price $45, )3411, $75, $lOO, $125, $l4O--doublt- Reeds and two banks of Keys,.s2oo—less zs liberal discount. Clergymen and Churches, an extra discount. • LA.IITI.X'S GUITARS, 4 BROWN'S WARPS,' FLUTES, FLUTINAS,. ACCORDEONS, " VIOLINS, and Musical Instruments of all kinds, at lower prices than-ever before offered to the public A large discount to Teathers and Schools. The trade supplied on the tnost liberal terms. SECOND-HAND PIANOS, at great bar gains, constantly in store,, --price from $3O to $l4-0. 1111rSIC..;.iOne of the largest and best se lected catalogues of MuSic now published, cumPrisiu , many of the choice and most pop alar ;tars of the day, and :Will be sold at one third off from the regular' prices. Music sent by mail to all parts of the coun try, post-paid. Particular and personal atten tion paid to all orders received by mail. Sat isfaction guaranteed in every instance. Pianos und.Melodeons for rent : and rent allowed on puachase. Pianos and Melodeons for sale on monthly payments. Second-hand Pianos ta ten in exchange for new. General and select Catalogues and Schedule of prices .forwarded to all parts of the country by mail. - -11 Great inducements otfured to AGENTS in all parts of the country, to sell the Horace Waters' Pianos, Melodeons, and Catalogue of Music. B:4G AL PRIZE FOR EVERYBODY! W/10 SUBSCRIBES FOIL TBEI Kew York Weekly Press, A BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED FAMILY( NtWSPAPER! . TFIE NEW YORK WEEKLY PRESS is one of the best literary papers of the day. A large Quarto containing TWENTY PAGES. ar SIXTY COLUMNS. Of entertaining matter; anal ELEGANTLY ILLUSTRATED ever week. • A GIFT WORTH FROM 50 CENTS TO $lOOO 00 WILL BE SENT TO EACH SUB SCRIBER ON RECEIPT OF THE SUB SCRIPTION MONEY. TERNS-IN ADVANCE One copy fOr otie year, and 1 gift, $2 00 Three copies one yeariand 3 gifts, - • 500 Five copies one; year, and 5 gifts,. 8 00 Ten copies one year, and, 10 gifts, 15 00 Twenty-one copies one year, and 21 gifts, 30 00 The articles to be distributed are comprised in the following list : I United States Treasury Note, ' $lOOO 00, . 2 do do . do 500 00, each. 5 do ;db Ido 200 00, each. 10 do Ido ' do 'lOO 00, each. 10 Patent Lever Hunting • Cased Watches,' , 100 00, each. 20 Gold Watches, 75 00, each. 50 rdo CO 00, each. 100 do i 50 00, each. 300 Ladies' Gold Watches, 35 00, each. 200 Silver Hunting ! Cased Watches, 30 00, each. 500 Silver Watches,l , sls 00 to 25 Oh, each. 1000 Gold Guard, Vest and Fo} Chains, . 10 00 to 30 00, each 1000 Gold Pens and • Pencils, 5 60 to 15 00, each. Gold Lockets, Bracelets, Brooches, Ear Drops, Breast Pins, Gidf Pius, Sle.eve Buttons, Rings. Shirt Studs, Watch Keys ' Gold and Silyer.Thimbles, and a 'variety of other arti cles, worth from 50 cents to $l5 00 each. On receipt of sdbscription money, the subscriber's Larne will i be entered upon our books opposite a number, and the gift corres ponding with that number will be forwarded within one week to him, by ;nail or express, post paid. There'is neither huMbug nor lottery about the above, as every subscriber is sure of a prize of value. We prefer to make this lib era! distribution among'them instead of giv.: ing a large commission, to Agents, giving to the subscriber the ambunt that wOlild go to the Agent and in mancases a hundred-fold more. raie - All communications should be ad-, dressed to DANIEL ADZE, Puntrsucri, [10:43] 211 Centre street, New York. g - KEDZIE'S PATENT WATER FILTER. MBE BEST FILTER KNOWN for Family use; has given the highest satifaction fur many years ; is scientifte.in construction, port able, durable and cheap: It renders rain *a ter perfectly pure and sweet, making cisterns more economical than wells, and avoiding the diseases arising from the hard water of lime stone regions. Five sizes; retail from $8 to $l2. Wholesale to the, trade at the usual dis count Can be forwarded safely any distance: Formerly made by J. E. Cheney .t Co.- made now only by JAMES TERRY I CO., at old stand of J. E. C. & Co., State-Street, Roches ter, N. Y. For descriptive circulars address 11.10:47-3nia - JAMES TERRY ICO E NEW . vs. I. . ItOWATt-DWASOUTAT__ , IO• '- - • _. , ;PVII , ADALPIIIA. ' • ,4 ' A Becyzemleni.lniiituOcm, established 4 . 0a ,•,.., - • ~endittemenefor the relief of the.siek-aQ;C:7 tressed, afilicte4 with _Virulent and -Epidemic, diseases. - - mo an personslifflieted with Sexual . ft. .1. e s, such as SPERMATORRIICEA, Dis, SEE 1,1--A.II-: iva r EAKNESS,, IMPOTENCE, CND. MBA, GLEET, 'SYPHILIS.- the-Ni g , ONANISM; or SELF ABUSE, kc. ,t- t . The HOWARD ASSOCIATION, in vi e , the - awful destruction of.'human life, er by Sexual diseases, and tie deceptions p ra tised - -Upon the' unfortunate victims ,o(' , It t diseases by Quacks, several years ago ditto, thole Consulting Surgenn,_as a CliAllitaL ACT worthy of their name; ° open a Dip, salTfor the treatment of this class ofdii ez in; all their 'forms, and to give-3IEDICAL . VICE GRATIS,' to all who apply li i f et i t: witty a deseripticti of their ..condition, N odeupationi•habitsof life, &c.,) a n d,,j,, ta, of extreme poverty, to FURNJSII MEDICIT FREE OF -CHARGE. - It -ire nee - dleil to Dist the ',Association - commands .the,higi Medical skill of the age, and will furutsit I. most approved 'modern treatment, The Directors, own review of the flst, 4 a'shred that their labors" in this sphere Oh, 1 u r o en t difort, have been of great head: to elle afflicted, espeeialky to the young; an %d O } litre resolved to devote themselves, with ie. newed zeal, to 'Fie very in cant Ina 6, 4 despised canse. . . . ! , ) Just Published by the Assneinti4. e port on Spermatorrhum, or Seminal Weaknes the Vice of Onanism,- Masturbatiori or S.el Abuse - ,. and other Diseases of the Sexual Or Bans, by - the Consulting - Surgeon, *hire r Le sent by mail, (in a sealed onvelave,)ll, OF' CHARGE, pc - receipt of - TWO -STAIII for-postage. , - - Address, for Report or, treat , mer4, GEORGE R. CALHOUN, Cons,idoc4 6.,e•g.e Howard Association, No. 2- Suuth Noah k'r6 Philadelphia, Pa. . •. - -13 s bider of the Directors. EZRA D. IJEARTWELL, President. GEO.. lALRCIIILD, Secretary. 1.10124-h. Of all disease ;- the great, first , cause Springs from neglect of N.nuie's .STIVFER.NOT! When a CURE is guaiviiii IN ALL STAGEN SECRET DISEASES, Self-Abuse, Nervous DeZiluy, reS: Gravel, .Diabetes, Diseases of the 'Kidneys, Blander, Mercurial llheunialicni, Pains in the hones and Ankles, Diseqses kr fl Lungs, Throat, Nose and Byes, Cleto upo Body or Linibs, easacers, Dropsy, Byi!tplie, St. Vita's 11:hce, and alliseasei anpin 2ft - a d-i, ~ , -ient of the 'Sexual Cryan's, O s UCH. as Nervous Trembttn, Logs of Y? ory, Loss of Power, General teaktee ijimlleSS of Vision with peculiar. s'pota appear. hug before the eves, Loss of ,Sight, jlllkett !less, Dyspepsia:Liver-Disease, Ernotons the face, Pain in the Lack and head, it regufarities and all holdover disehtergel both sexes.. It matters not from what the disease originated, however l'ong.stam or obstinate the case, recovery isiertvin, a :shorter time than"apermanertcprecunl reeved by any other treatment, even after disease has (Milled the skill of eiltinentpll3 chins and resisted nil-their means; of eat. medicines are pletisantwithout odhr,eausi sickness • and lice from . niercury or During twenty years of practice„il have or from the jaws of Death many thousand 3, in the last stages-Mille above ulentiane eases had been giVen up to die lir theirpt chins, which warrants - me iu-pru r misiugtt J . :Mimed, who may plat.e themselves' cadf care, a perfect and most speedy Diseases are the greatest euemle's to heal they arethe flr.est causebfeengetaption,! ula, and many other diseases, acd shank terror to the human -family, Ai a pernit: cure is sea reetl,y ever effected. a majority cases falling into the hands of itiComt persons, who not only fail to cure dirt: but resist the constitution, tilting the s - ; .with mercury - , which, Witt th*isease, tens the sufferer into a rapid Contnruptie But should the disease and 'the tees not cause death - speedily and the victir ries, the disease is entailed upon the cl who are -born with feeble constitution: the current of life corrupted bye virus betrays .it self in Scrofula - , 'Fetter, Ulcers, liens an other attecticens of the slim, Throat and Lungs, entailing anon tante exigence of suffering and con Signing the: an early grave. , SELF ABUSE is another forinidabli to health, for nothing else in the distal logue of human diseases causes so dest a drain upon the system, drawing its thot of victims through a few years. of EUI down to an untimely- grave. it - destro! Nervous system,' rapidly wastes away ti ergies of life, causes mental - deranges prevents the proper development of the eye disqualifies t'or :marriage, soCiety, but and all earthly happiness, andilearestbf fever wrecked in body and mitud, Kai!' to consumption and a train of tevils mon dreaded than death itself. With the c - ontidence . l assure the Illifort#llHte Viet Self-Abuse that a perniar,ent and speed! can-be affected; and with the ;ibandonre: ruinous practices my patients t.trn be rest to robust, vigorous health. The afflicted are-eautioned against the of Patent Medicines, for theri are CO ingenious snares in the coltir4s of the prints to cnteh and rob the unwnryir millions have their conqtitutiores by the vile compounds of quack do 6 the equally poisonous -nostrums Ten( "Patent Medicines." Illave carefully at many of the so called Patent Medici' find that nearly all . of them - cOntain r Sublimate, ,which is one of the strong( parations of mercury and a! deadly which instead of curing the !dise: - ..se the system for life. Three-fourths of the patedt nostruess in use are put up by unprincipled and iga persons, who do not understand even pluthet of the materig medial.; and are as destitute of 'any knowledge of the system, having one ci)ject only in *- that to make money r gardl4ss.of COW Irregularities and all disedses of rob females treated on principl4s • establish ( twenty years df practied i and senctioat thousands of the most remarkable cults. icines with full directions sent to any' the United States or :CanOas: by communicating their symptoms by Business-correspondence strictly to Address. _ ~. J. SUMMERITIt.LE , - Offioe4l.o. 1131 Filbert (Old No.. 110. 9 1) i.DELOW TWELTITUt PHILADELPHIA. 10:6-4y. STEW GOODS--A Large: std SP /A sortmeat just toceive4 1.0:1 4000