tilt pariettiatt. MARIETTA. PA. SATURDAY, AUGUST 8, 1863. WHO SHOULD PRUMBLE ?—The Buffa lo Express very - truthfully answers this question as .follows : Que'him—How much does a substi tute cost at the south ? Answer—From $l5OO to $2OOO. Q —Why? - n .S.—Becatise the confederate goyern ment did not designate a moderate itiiciunt, the paYment of which should exempt any person drafted. Q.—How' much, at present, would a man drafted at the north have to pay for a substitute ? A.—About $6OO or $7OO. Q.—How do you know this ? A.—From the fact that the govern ment now offers $552 bounty, and still fails to procure soldiers sufficient at that rate. Q.—,How much has a drafted man to pay our government instead of procu ring a substitute ? A.—s3oo. Q.—How much does the drafted man gain by this arrangement? 'A.—safi() or $4OO. Q.—Who is the loser in this busi nees3 .A.—The government. Q.—Who makes up the loss to the government ? A.—The tax payers—the rich people. Q.—Who, then, sho,uid grumble ? A—Not the poor people. RETALTATION.—The President has au _ Thoriged the issuing of an order deular ing that it will be the policy and inten tion of the Government to retaliate in kind for every case Of ill treatment of our officers and men, black or white, by the rebiil anthorities—hanging for hang ing, shooting for shooting, and imprison ment for imprisonment. In every in stance where a black man in the milita ry service of the Government is taken priioner and sold into slavery, our mili tary authorities will be instructed to select a rebel prisoner and confine him to hard labor in some prison, there to remain until the black man is libera ted. The Government maintains, and Will exact promptly to the letter, that the Federal uniform, like the flag, must and shall be respected.— Washington Re publican.. ear Governor Curtin was re-nomina ted on the first ballot. The vote stood as follows ; Curtin, 95; Henry. D. Moore, 18 ; I. P. Penny, 14; F. Car roll Brewster, 3; J. K. Moorehead, 1. Covode having withdrawn before the ballotting commenced. David Agnew of Beaver county was nominated by ac clamation for Jndge of the Supreme Bench. Ai - In consequence of, the threat of Jeff. - Davis to execute Captains Sawyer and Flynn in revenge for Gen. Burn. side's execution of two Confederate-of beers Who 'were recruiting within his lines, the United States Government hive set apart tha rebel General Fitz hugh Lee and Capt. Winder (son of the notorious jailor .of, Libby Prison) as hostages of our men. As Davis does by Sawyer and Flynn so shall we do by 'Lea and Winder. 4ir John Morgan, the notorious rebel guerrilla, and his party, have been taken to the Ohio Penitentiary, at Columbus, where their heads and beards were shaved, and the striped garments of the convicts were placed on them, They are to be put to some useful employment in the jail, at which they can earn their own bread. ear A New Orleans . lettor says : "On Saturday, the 4th ult., General Emory issued a call for three or four regiments of men to serve for sixty days in the de fence of the, city. In just three days four full negro regiments were raised organized, clothed, armed, and equip ped." Sr Mr. Colfax, of Indiana, was a Re publican member of the last Congress, and opposed to the $3OO clause. He moved to strike it out, and says that he Would:hive succeeded, if twenty Demo cratic members, who voted against dtriking it out, had voted with him. fair The wife of General Michael Cor coran is dead. , William L. Yancey is also dead, and 'tis, said John Buchanan Bloy,d, is about breathing hie last in Richmond.. 41rBesr:'Williarn Jackson, a colored t1ei4793 an pf New Bedford, Mass., has commissioned chaplain of the Massachusetts regiment, (colored.) • ~fari E ion.• Edward Everett has paid tinoninption - fee of $3OO, in the case of bottk , of his sons who were recently drafted in Boston. rstur'ts removal of dead from the ba .".' ttle: li fiL Of, „Gettysbu:rg is forbidden diriog:t!ie montlis of August and Sep tember.. MORGAN IN THE PENITENTIARY.---A de spatch from Columbus, Ohio, 30th ult., says : "Morgan was incarcerated this after noon in the Ohio Penitentiary. Him self and men were delivered over to Captain Merion by the military author ities, and immediately put through the same motions as other criminals, having their persons searched, hair and beards shaved, bathed and clad in clean suits. Morgan and Cluke submitted very quiet ly, but some of the young thieves de murred bitterly, until told they must submit. Morgan had his belt filled with gold, greenbacks, and Confederate notes. One who had before broken his parole refused to strip, when it was instantly done for him, Cluke begged for bis moustache, but it was in vain—it was razored. They will be compelled to submit to prison discipline, be,confined apart from the - convicts, and guarded day and night by the military. One or two talked about retaliation, but the rule against speaking was instantly en forced. " A negro convict did the barbering for the chivalry." lir The Atrocious riots in New York, the murders, the robberies, the burning of an Orphan's Asylum are passed over very gently by Democratic newspapers. This is not surprising. Why should they denounce the men who carry the city of New York for the Democratic party? The persons they murdered had no votes and the only printing of fices, they mobbed were those of Repub lican journals. How can the editors who write three columns against aboli tionists to three lines against traitors find fault with men who only assail abo lition printing offices, who hurrah for Jeff. Davis And cheer for Gen. McClel lan ? No wonder Governor Seymour ad dressed them as "friends." He expects their votes on future occasions. It was right that he should be tender of their lives and feelings. The absurdity of the story does not prevent the currency among the newspapers of the report set a going by some Washington "Jenkins," that the Secretary of the Treasury and his daugh ters are on their way to Newport, there to meet a Rhode Island Senator, who, at that fashionable watering place, is to marry , one of them. Miss Chase is betrothed to Senator Sprague, but it is not likely that they will be married in such a way as "Jenkins" describes.— The lady's father has a house in Wash ington, and when his daughter is mar ried, it will probably be under his roof. (Er Mr. Brutes J. Clay, who has been nominated for Congress in the Lexington (Kentucky) district, in place of the late John J. Crittenden, is an unconditional Union man, without an "if" or "but" hampering his loyalty, and he will, it is believed, make a record in Congress of which his Union constitu ents will have no cause at all to be ashanied, In the last Kentucky Legis lature, Mr, Clay was prominent in every movement looking to the good of his State, and the maintenance of the . . na tional integrity. ar Colonel Shaw, of a Massachusetts colored regiment, whose death was one of the results of the last assaults upon Fort Wagner, was as brave and loyal a man as ever raised an arm in his coun try's defence. When the place was tendered him by Governor Andrew, he consulted his mother—" Mother, ttccept ?" "Go, my son," said she, "and though death should overtake you in doing what your country ask; I shall still be proud of my boy.!" sr A fatal blunder occurred at Law renceburg, Indiana, on Tuesday night, the 14th ult. A report was started that Lorgan's forces were returning and ap proaching the place, Whereupon two companies belonging to Colonel Shy - - rock's Indiana regiment were sent out to reconnoitre in different directions.-- When two Miles distant they met, and each took the other for the enemy, and began firing. The result was, that be fore they discovered their mistake, seven were killed and twenty wounded. Ca- Benjamin Johnston, a colored man, was drafted from the town of Scio, Alleghany county. Mr. Johnston re ported at the 'Provost Marshal's office in that village, on the 31st inst., and offered an able-bodied white man as a substitute. He was examined and ac cepted—has been sworn into the ser vice, and is now in the barracks the substitute for Mr. Johnston. Ifir Mr. Stable, editor of the Gettys burg (Pa.) Compiler, has been dischargd from Fort McHenry. Be took the oath of allegiance to the Gevernment, and gave his parole of honor to appear at any time to answer charges, Should any be preferred against him sufficiently grave to demand the cognizance of a Court. ear The New York riot cases were before the courts in that city on hist Wednesday. Some fifteen were post poned, including the nv r irderers of the negro, through the dilatory motions on the part of the counsel: Two were sen tenced for robbery, one to five and-the other to ten years' iraprisoirinenfikkthe State Prison. " 49, ' IMM 'I UM1rIMI=SA. • ,„ General sews items. A lady has been drafted in Lewiston, Md. The enrolling officer, in visiting a boarding-house, asked for the list of names of the boarders. One of them was Frances Parker, signed Frank Parker. Frank wes accordingly en rolled, and is now drafted. Louis . Napoleon is carrying things with a high hand in Mexico. He has declared that country an Empire, and has offered the throne to Maxamilian of Austria. In case of his non-acceptance, Napoleon is to choose another Emperor. Brutus J. Clay, of Bourbon county, has been nominated for Congress, in the Ashland, Ky., district, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. John J. Crittenden. The reward for arresting deserters from the army, heretofore five dollars, has been increased, by order of the Sec retary of War, to ten dollars. In Chicago, recently, a young man was passing a corner, near to which a bundle of fire crackers was exploding, when cne of these missiles entered his mouth, cutting his tongue in two. -Ile lived only a day or two. It now takes eight and a half paper dollars of Confederate money to buy a gold- dollar, or a gold dollar's worth, of provisions at Richmond. In Doylestown, out of eleven printers liable to conscription as being "first class" men, six have been drafted. Of these six, three are of the Intelligencer establishment, two fiem . "the DemoCrat office, and one from the Express office. Jacob Strawn, the great Illinois farm er of Jacksonville, has collected one hundred cows, donated by himself and neighbors, which are . intended for our hospitals at Memphis. The matron 'of the hospitals asked for these one hun dred cows, and one farmer has collected and will forward them. The oldest living graduate of Yale college is Joshua Dewey . of Brooklyn, N. Y., who was graduated in 1787, sev enty-six years ago. He is ninety-six years old. The next is Rev. Daniel Waldo, 1788, now 100 years old ; he re sides in Syracuse. The death of Major McCook furnish es some melancholy coincidences in the history of his family in connection with the war. His youngest son, Charles, was killed at the first' battle of Bull Run, on the 21st day of July, 1861 ; his son; Colonel Robert McCook. was killed on the 21st day of July, 1862, and the father Was himself killed on the 21st day of July, 1863. One of the Roman Catholic priests of Newark, N. J., told hiS flock, some days since, that if he should at any time hear of the perpetration by an Irishman of any outrage whatever upon any coloi:ed citizen, he should immediately seek out and protect in his own house the per son so assailed. Jeff. Davis resided when at home at Jackson, Miss. When our army last visited that town, his house was over hauled by some of the soldiers. Among other things found there were letters showing that the conspiracy to disrupt the Union had been in existence years before the election of Mr. Lincoln.— Letters from Presidents Buchanan and Pierce were discovered. They showed no small obsequiousness toward the mighty Jeff. General Burnside has declared mar tial law in Kentucky, in consequence of the raid into that State, made, it is be lieved, to control these elections. By an act.of the Kentucky Legislature, no person will be allowed to vote who was in rebellion on the 10th of April; 1862. Any person challenged as disloyal to the State may purge himself of the charge by an oath. The election was to take place on Monday last. The military power will give every assistance in having the clection legally conducted. While the bells were ringing at Ports mouth, N. H., for the fall of Vicksburg, a diiloyal man asked sneeringly of a Unionist, "Where's the fire ?" The lat ter quickly responded, "In the heart of every patriotic citizen, you cursed cop perhead." 7 The greatest capture of men men tioned in modern history was made by Bonaparte at Austerlitz, when he took 20,000 men. Gen. Grant took nearly 31,000 at Vicksburg. Napoleon's spoil at Austerlitz was 150 pieces of artillery; Gen. Grant's at Vicksburg is stated to be 218—embracing nine siege guns and 209 pieces of light artillery. Seven young and likely negroes were sold a few days since, near Rockville Md., at eighteen dollars a head, or one hundred and twentysia dollars for the lot. Slave property in many parts of Maryland, is regarded_ as almost worth less by slave-holders themselies. A young lady of 17, in Chicopee, re. cently fell from the roof of her fathers's house to the ground without injury.— Crinoline saved her. The Eleventh Army Corps, composed mostly as Germans,fias been broken up. This is the corps that lost the battle of Chancellorville, - and altiost that of Get • . • .tyaburg. ' JOHN JORDAN CRITTENDEN.—This die• tioguished statesman and patriot died at his residence in Frankfort, lientuky on Sunday the 26th ult., aged '77 years. Mr. Crittenden was a cotemporary of Webster, Clay, Cass, and a host of others who have illustrated the past age of our country's history with their ora tory and statesmanship ; and although his talents were for the greater part of his life outshone by those of his compe titors, he has left his mark upon the times, and will not easily be forgotten. He has been repeatedly a member of the two Houses of Congress, and was Attorney General in the Cabinet of President Fillmore. NAPOLEONTC.—Persons searching to know a good thing done by the General in. Chief, can be gratified in at least one particular. During the hesitancy to at tack Lee. while the latter was escaping , General Meade telegraped tri 'General Halleck.the divided opinion of his coma cil'of war. The following is the sub stance of Gen. HaHeck's reply : "It is proverbial that councils of war never fight. Attack the enemy at once, and hold your council of war afterwards." It was a plagiarism from Napoleon; but we ought to be thankful for any thing Napoleonic. CAPT. SAWYER'S WIFE.—The . Rich mond Examiner of the 25th ult., sap : Mrs. Sawyer, wife of Capt. Henry W. Sawyer, of New Jersey, one of the pris oners held for retaliatory execution, on arriving at City Point, on the flag of truce boat, made application to the re bel authorities to be permitted to visit Richmond for the purpose of having. an interview with her husband before his execution ; but the authorities denied her permission, and she returned on the same boat. Cr Adjutant Gen. Thomas is again going West to complete the organiza tion of the regiments of the freed ne groes along, the Mississippi. He ex pects, the Washington Chronicle says, to have a hundred thousand colored troops under arms in a. few months.— This is outside of the draft, and will be that much more added to the strength .of the . Union army which the rebellion will have to encounter. Cr A firm in Bridgewater, Mass., arc making a gun from wrought iron, which will weigh, when completed, about seventeen tons. It is forged sol id; in an octagonal form, with the cavity bored out thirteen inches in diameter, and will be hooped with strong bands of iron put on by hydraulic pressure:— The lathe on which the metal is being turned is one of the largest in the world. ar Mr. Blackburn°, now well known in Europe as a remarkable blind-fold chess player, has exceeded all his pre vious performances by playing twelve games . at once against as many players. The exhibition recently took place at Manchester, England, before a 'Urge number of spectators. Six of the games were won by Mr. Blackburn°, four by his opponents and two were drawn. CZ- The editors of the Scientific American have received from California a piece of wood from a tree 30 feet in diameter, the annual rings upon which indiCate the age of the tree to be 63,00 years! This leaves the saplings of our ancient friends, Nebuchadnezzar and Socrates, standing out in the cold, and carries our mind back to the period when Eve,ate the stolen fruit. rfir In penmark the Mormons are having great success, having lately ta ken 1,000 converts to Utah. and left many more behind. The fact that so many of them are raised to the priest hood operates as a bait to their: vanity, and thus facilitates conversions. Thus false religion has its Popagaridism 'as well as'the true. Cr General John Morgan's band. of thieves was routed and a large portion taken prisoners, nearly opposite Cincin natit where they attempted to cross the river to get into Ohio. Among the prisoners was Col. Dick Morgan, John's brother. Cr A Madame de Civry has sued the Duke of Brunswick, (King of Hanover, and who, in default of heirs to Queen Victoria, would have been King of Eng land), foras,ooo francs, the lady claim ing to be his " natural Child." ilar The churches of. New Grenada were closed.lately, in consequence of ri decree prohibiting priests from celebra ting divine service unless they take an oath to - Confiscate all church property to the Government. Or Hon. Caleb Cushing maintains that the payment of $3OO exempts a man for three . years. This certainly' is the law as it stands, and was, no doubt, the intention of Congress, whatever the Provost Marshal may say about it. ar There are now some twenty va. cancies in the West Point Military Academy, in consequence of the failure of some of the members of the present classes to stand the last examination. SW The late Viscountess d'Alte, a Portuguese lady, has left in her will sixteen - thousand =pounds sterling, to the Society for the =Preventi on of Cruelty to Animals. Cr A few evenings ago, the porter of a Broadway bank closed the vault, and shut in the cashier. The imprisoned man - at once set up an outcry, and a clerk, fancying that he heard a stifled voice like the intonation of a ventrilo quist, from the wall opposite the vault, listened. The voice, still fainter, "Let me out," was heard in several parts of the room, and finally traced •to the vault. The doors were opened, and the horror-stricken cashier, nearly helpless, pale and weak from fear, exertion, and want of air, tottered forth. The five minutes incarceration, and the terrible thought that he was left to die a miser able death, so changed him that the clerk could scarcely recognize biM. 'He now shudders at the sight of the vault, and has not recovered from the effects of the fright. He says the five minutes seemed days to him, while the rush of thought was inconceivable and indescri bable. gir A personal friend and fellow-sol dier of Gen. Hooker writes home ; give you my word that, the stories about his drunkenness are utterly false. So far from being drunk at Chancellorville, the fact is that when he was made in sensible by the concussion of a cannon shot against a column upon which he was leaning, and spirits were wanted for his use by the surgeon, not a drop could be found at his quarters, and it was long before it could be obtained." ilEr Some of the Episcopal Clergy of Baltimore have resolved not to regard the recommendation of their Bishop for the observance of the day of thanksgiv ing appointed by the President. Gen. Sehneck required them to appear at his head-quarters and say whether they in tend to adhere to their resolution. Thus far, no response has been given to the General. I= Cr A "Field Officer" writes to the London, Star, that in the Crimean war, the 2d West India Regiment (black) vol unteered to fight against Russia. The British Government is raising a black corps to substitute for the white St. Helena regiment.' The officer speaks favorably of the colored troops he has seen in Barbadoes, Grenada, and Trini dad. eir Judge Advocate General Holt is preparing the documents for a court martial in the case of Gen. Milroy, charged with evacuating Winchester with cowardly precipitation, leaving millions of dollars' worth of arms and munitions, which fell into the hands of the enemy. Hon. Cuthbert Bullitt, collector of the port of New Orleans, raised in front of his -residence, on St. Charles street, in that city, on the Fourth, the identical flag which was left flying du ring the attempt to illuminate the city in honor of the secession of Louisiana, in January, 1861. ar The President has removed from active service; and placed on the retired list, Gen. Wool, Gen. Harney, General Harvy Brown, Col. Chas. S. Merchant, and Col. Martin Burke, the order to take effect on the Ist of August. Col. -Burke is the- present-commandant at Fort Hamilton. er Sabre cuts, gunshot wounds, and all other kinds of wounds, also sores, ulcers and scurvy, heal safely and quick ly under the soothing influence of Hol loway's Ointment. It heals to the bone, so that the wound never opens again.-- Soldiers, supply yourselves. Only 25 cents per pot. elFr Jefferson Davis has ordered out every white man under forty•five within the limits of the Confederacy, to serve in the rebel army, This looks like war, We wonder if Mr. Davis intends to.wait for a decision of the courts before he compels the conscripts to take up arms ? gar 'One of the incidents of the late battle was the shelling of a farm-honse by a rebel battery, commanded by the son of the occupant. During a charge of the Union troops the son was killed, but the father refused to look upon the remains of his ungrateful child. air The Louisville Democrat, refer ring to the rebel General Morgan, says.: "We stated a few days ago that John Morgan had climbed the North pole and greased it under him. It is now generally supposed that he has pulled the pole up after him." 45F The Governor of Rhode Island has issued a proclamation recommending all the cities and towns to make imme diate provision for the support of the families of the men drafted from that State. Of several hundred men who were drafted recently in Providence, R. 1., but one, it is said, has thus far been mustered in. All the _rest paid the ex emption fee of $3OO and got off. Mayor Opdyke has offered a re ward of $5OO for the arrest and convic tion of each of the rioters who cominit ted murder or arson during the recent riots in New York. • eir The London Patriot states that, since the - Rev. Henry Ward Beecher has been in Euglanq, he 'has expressed his intention not:to undertake any pub lic engagements. - Cr Hon. Sherrard Clemens, of Vir ginia, still suffers from the wound he re ceived in his duel with young Wise. T HE EARLY PHYSICAL DEGENERACY OF AMERICAN PEOPLE I=l JUST PUBLISHED BY DR. A. STONE, Physician to the 'Troy Lung and Hygienic Institute. A TREATISE on the causes of early Phys ical decline of America n people : The cause of Nervous Debility, Consumption and Marasmus. This work is one of high moral tone, written in chaste, yet,thnliing language, and appeals direct to the moral consciousness of ALL PARENTS and 'guardians especially, de tailing scieLtific and reliable aids and treat ment for cure. It will be sent by mail on the receipt. of two three cent postage stamps. Kr Parents and Guardians! Fail nut to send and obtain this book: 151' Young men ! Fail not to send and get this book. Ladies you should at once secure a copy of this book. - A word of solemn conscientious advice to thoSe who will reflect. A class of maladies prevail to a fearful ex tent in the community, dooming at least 100,- 000 youth of both sexes annually, to an early grave: Those diseases are very imperfectly understood. Their external manifestation, or symptoms are Nervous Debility Relaxation and Exhaustion ; Marasmus or wasting and consumption of the tissues of the whole body ; shortness of breathing or hurried breathing on ascending a bill or flight of stairs; great pal pitation of the Heart; Asthma, Bronchitis and sore Throat ; shaking of the Hands and Limbs ; aversion to society and to business or study; dimness of eyesight, loss of Memory, dizziness of the Head, Neuralgia. Pain in 'rations parts of the body; Pains in the back or limbs, Lum bago, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, irregularity o the bowels,.deranged secretions of the Kid neys and other glands of the body, as Leuchor rhmr of Fleur Albus, &c. Likewise Epilepsy, Hysteria and Nervous Spasms. . Now in ninety-nine cases out of every one hundred, all the above named disorders, and host of others not named, as Consumption of the Lungs and that most insidious and wily form of Consumption of the Spinal Nerves, known as Tubes Dorsales, and Tabes mesen teries, have their seat and origin in diseases Ed the Pelvic Viscera. Hence the want of success on the part of old school practices in treating symptoms only. Dr. Andrew Stone, Physician to the Troy Lung and Hygienic institution, is now en gaged in treating this class of modern maia dtes with the most astonished success. The treatment adopted by the institution is new; it is based upon ic'entifie principles, .with new discovered remedies, without minerals or poi sons. The facilities of cure are such that pa tients can be cured at their homes, in any part of the country, from accurate descriptions of their case, by letter; and have the medicines sent by mail or express. Printed interrogato ries will be forwarded on application. Consumption, Catarrh and- diseases of the throat cured as well at the Home of the Patients as at the Institution,by sending the Cold Medicated Inhaling alsamie Vapors, with inhaler and ample directions for their use, and direct correspondence. Patients applying for_ interrogatives or advice, must enclose return stamps, to meet attention.- ilZr The attending Physician will be found at the Institution' for consultation, from 9 a. ni. to 9 p. m., each day. Sunday in the forenoon. Address DR. ANDREW STONE, Physician to the Troy Lung and Hygienic In stitute,. and Physician for Diseases of the Heart, Throat. and Lungs, 96 Fifth Street, Troy, N. Y. D R. LACROIX'S PRIVATE - MEDICAL TREATISE. On the Physiological Views of Marriage 250 PAGES AND 130 ENGRAVINGS -0_ PRICE only 25 cen,ts. Sent free of postage to all parts of the Union. On the infirmities of youth and maturity, disclosing the secret fol lies of both sexes of ages, causing debility, nervousness, depression of spirit, palpitation of the heart, suicidal imaginings, invo'initary emissions, blushings, defective memory, indi gestion and lassitude, with confessions of thrilling interest of a Boarding School Miss, a College Student, and a Youug Alarmed Lady, 4-c., 4-c. It is a truthful adviser to the married and those contemplating mairiage, who enter tain secret doubts of their physical condition, and who are conscious Of having hazarded the health, happiness, and privileges to which every human being is entitled. YOUNG MEN who are troubled with weakness, generally caused by a bad habit in youth, the effect's of which are dizziness, pains, forgetfulness, sometimes a ringing in the ears, weak eyes, weakness of the back and lower extremities, confusion of ideas, loss of memory, with melancholy, may be cured by the author's new Parts and London Treat ment. We have, recently devoted much of oui time in visiting the European Hospitals, avail ing ourselves of the knowledge and researches uf the most skillful Physicians and Surgeons in - Europe and the Continent. Those who place themselves .under our care will now have the full benefit of the many new and ef ficacious Remedies which we are enabled to introduce into our practice, and the public may rest assured of the same zeal, assiduity, SECRECY and attention being paid to their cases, which has so successfully distinguished us heretofore, as a Physician in our rECULIAR department of professional Praetice, for the past twenty-five years. . FR ERCIX FEMALE •Prm.s.—Ladies who wish for Medicines, the efficacy of which has been tested in thousands of cases, and never failed to effect speedy cures without any bad re sults, will use none hut Dr. DeLaney's Fe male Periodical Pills. The; only precaution necessary to be observed is, ladies should not take them if they have reason to believe they are in certain situations (the particulars of which will be found on the wrapper accom panying each box,) though always safe and healthy, so gentle; yet so active are they. Price $1 per box. They can be mailed to any pact of the United States or Canada. To THE LADIES—Who need a 'confidential medical adviser with regard to any of those interesting complaints to which their delicate organization renders thein liable, are particu larly invited to consult us. - • THE ELECTRO-GALVA RIO PROTECTIVE." For mauled ladies whose health will not-ad- - mit, or who have no desire to increase their families, may be obtained as above. It is a perfectly safe preventive to couception, and has been extensively used during the last 20 years. Pric, reduced to $lO. • THE SECRET OF YOUTH UNVEILED. A Treatise on the Cause of Premature De cay— A solemn warning. Jusitpublished, a book showing the insidious progress and pre valence among schools, [With male and fe male.] .of this fatal habit, pointing out the fatality that invariably attends its victims, and developing the whole progress of, the disease, from the commencement to the end. • It will be sent by .Ifail on receipt of two [3 cent 'Stamps. Atteddance daily, from 8 in the morning til 9 at night, and on Sundays from 2 till 5 r. sr. Medicines with full directions sent to .apy part of the United Statets or Cs.nadas, by pa tients "Communicating their symptoms by letter. Business correspondence strictly confidential. r.r" Dr. L's Office is still located as establish ed under the name of DR. LACROIX, at No: 13 Maiden Lane, Albany, N. Y. DAVID H. MELLINGER, House 6- Sign Painter e• Paper Hanger. 11101 r JIVING returned to Marietta and ream -1.1 ed his old business, is preparectto do All kinds of Plain and Fancy Painting Suck as China glossing, imitation of woods and marble, house and sign painting, paperlhang ing, &c. - For the pre sent he can be found at liPpold's 'Eagle Hotel.