L,~e ~Cicthl a.rzctfian. Impartial—but not Neutral.', ~/tLasidia, Oct SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1861 A gentleman who saw ex-Presi dent Buchanan, a few days ago, repre sents that be is in a most feeble condi tion, greatly depressed at the situation of public affairs, and yet earnestly in favor of the course of the present Ad ministration. He gives it as his opinion that no foreign Government will recog nize the Southern Confederacy, and declares, with great emphasis, that those in the lead of that movement Should be put down if it led to a seven years' war and to the expenditure of huntlreds of millions of dollars. He should have thought of all this a year ago. Cr James A. Hamilton, son of Alex ander Hamilton, of revolutionary mem ory, publishes a card in the New York Evening Post, to the effect that he call ed upon the President on Saturday last, who assured him that he was resolved to prosecute the war with the rebels with all the vigor in his power, and on a scale of such magnitude as should drive trea son to cry for quarter. It cannot be doubted that the Goverment at Wash ington will obey the imperative demand of the country for a permanent settle ment of the controversy with the South. ar Governor Hicks, in reply to the 'resolution of inquiry by the Legislature asking whether he consented to or au thorized the burning of the bridges on. the Northern Central and Philadelphia roads, says he neither authorized nor consented to the destruction of the said bridges, but left the whole matter in the hands of the Mayor of Baltimore, with the declaration that he had no authority in the premises, and that he was a lover of law and order, and could not partici- pate in such proceedings. The position of ex-Vice President Breckinridge, now a Senator in the Con gress of the United States, will be most embarrasing, and the same may be said of all who co-operate with him. If he intends to visit Washington merely for the purpose of embarrassing the Admin istration, and of repeating the Disunion sentiment of his friends in South Caroli na, Georgia, and Alabama, or the utter ances of Gov. 14Iagollin, of Kentucky, would it not be better for him to resign and run his chances in the Southern Uoafederacy ? tar l'he War Department has inform ed the Governors of the States which have ordered out their quotas of militia under the first proclamation of the President. that it is desirable that those who have not been marched forward shall be mustered in for three years under the subsequent proclamation. ar The newspapers having circulated numerous reports affecting the loyality of General HARNEY, that officer has pub lished to the world a bold and manly letter defining his position. Ile declares that he has followed the flag of the Union for forty years, and that he will serve the Government which has cher ished and honored him as long as he draws breath. lar 'HIM car loads of lead for bullets left Chidgo for 1A ashington on Friday. - The leado-is drawn out into wire of the thicknesi of about half an inch, and coiled. At-the Washington navy yard it will be, I ti - sed through a machine which turns'.,....; is by the bushel. The Commander of the Rhode Island brigade tout =buy the estate of every officer in tWlabama army with out oierdrawinglikbank account, while his men are able OS purchase a southern soldier spice, at the price of a Mississip pi negro,to take his knapsack. jgr Persons from Richmond state that President Davis had notified the Gov ernors ot-au the Border Slave States who are aching with the Confederate Government, t‘repair immediately to Montgomery, to 'consult upon the mo mentous issue before them, gar A negro panic has ; seized the peo ple of New Orleans. The4rwro church es have been closed by of of the Mayor, and all assemblages of ndkoes, slave nr free, have been forbidden. !Fir The Boston Atlas has sent font editors and eight printers to the wars. Massaohnsetts people are in earnest. -, itr The war demand for cloth is so great that the Lowell mills are running night and day, Sunday included. • Major Anderson will be promoted to the position of Brigadier General in the army. so _I •41 v A. • A . To OUR VOLUNTEERS.—An old soldier adds the following to his suggeitions to new recruits for the war : 1 Remember that in a campaign more men die from sickness than by the bull- 2. Line your blanket with one thick ness of brown drilling. This adds but four ounces in weight and doubles the warmth 3. Buy a small India rubber blanket (only $1.50) to lay on the ground to throw over your shoulders when on guard duty during a rain storm. Most of the Eastern troops are provided with these. Straw to lie upon is not always to be had. 4. The best military hat in use is the light colored soft felt, the crown being sufficiently high to allow space for air over the brain.—You can fasten it up as a continental in fair weather, or turn it down when it is wet or very sunny. 5. Let your beard grow, so as to pro tect the throat and lungs. 6. Keep your entire person clean ; this prevents fevers and bowel com plaints in warm climates. Wash your body each day if possible.' Avoid strong coffee and city meat. General Scott said that the too free use of these, to gether with neglect in keeping the skin clean, cost many a soldier his life in Mexico. 7. A sudden check of prespiration by chilly or night air often causes fever and death. When thus exposed do not for get your .blanket. Do not wear cotton. stockings ; your feet will be blistered by a six hours' march. Wear wollen stockings, and if you can find the means to dip the soles in melted tallow before starting, your feet will not . be blistered at all. PATRIOTIC INCIDENT.-At the Boston meeting to summon recruits for Fletcher Webster's regiment, the following telling incident occurred : The chairman noti fied the meeting that subscriptions would be received, when a little boy promptly came forward and said, " This is from Stephen Decatur, sir." It proved to be a check for $lOO. The father stood by and proved to be blind. He is an officer of the navy who lost his sight in the service, and a nephew of Commodore Decatur of the last war. Nine cheers were given which made the halls ring. Five thousand dollars were immediately subscribed for the regiment, which is to leave this week. One hundred young ladies were making garments for the Mil ARLINGTON . HElGHTS.—Opposite Wash ington, on the Virginia side of the Po tomac, the adopted son of Washington, (the son of Mrs. Washington by her first husband,) Ceo. Washington Park Curtis, dwelt in a fine mansion, which he graced with gentlemanly hospitality. Arlington House was in the centre of his estate of one thousand acres. He died in 1857, at the advanced age of 86. it is from his house and grounds, so often visited by the curious and patriot ic—a pilgrim shrine second only to Mount Vernon—that the attack on the Capital is expected. THE NEW ORLEANS MINT.—In regard to the reported debasement of coin at the New Orleans Mint, the New Or leans Crescent declares that " not one single new coin, of any kind or denomi nation whatever, has been issued from the mint at New Orleans since its seiz ure by the order of the Louisana Con vention, and we presume none will be issued until after the devices for a new set of coins, to compose the currency of the Confederate States, are ordered by the Montgomery Congress." fir The re-enforcement of Fort Pick ens was mostely accomplished on the night of April 16, but the landing of horses, artillery, ammunition, provisions, and all kinds of supplies, occupied the fleet till the 23d. The fort is now in a good condition for defence if attacked. tar Hon. EMERSON ETHERIDGE, of Ten_ nessee, appears to be still a sound and brave outspoken Uniou man—at least the Memphis papers denounce him bit terly, and declare that he should be ar rested. Commissioners from Western Virginia visited Washington on Wednesday, and told the President that if he would supply them with arms the Unionists would take care of that part of the State. ear"' am very much troubled, madam, with cold feet and hands," said a fop.— "I should suppose, sir, was the reply, 'that a young gentleman who had so many mittens given him by the ladies might at least keep his hands warm. rfir In England ladies don't allow them-selves to be put on the shelf quite so soon as ours. They are not supposed to reach the full bloom of maturity until forty years of age. INF Three grandsons of ex-President rison have entered in the service under the nder present call. Two of them „ are sons of Col. W. H. H. Taylor, and one a son of Hon. Scott Harrison. Wonder 'whether Jeff. Davis will continue to pay ,rett; for the pew he re served in one of /he , •Washington city • churches, and which he eipected to Oc cupy on the Ist of May. NEWS IN BRIEF Thomas H. Clay, of Kentucky, a son of Henry Clay, has addressed a letter to the citizens of Fayette county, review ing the action of the conferates and de nouncing secession. He says Kentucky has one hundred millions in slave pro perty, which would be destroyed by se cession and the establishment of a foreign border on the north. It is said to be the intention of a Mr. Charles Smith in New York to come for ward to the aid of the country with a regiment of Smiths. He thinks that there are enough men of that name in New York alone to establish a right of way through Baltimore at once. In Missouri the St. Louis Democrat refuses to raise the rebel standard, and Frank. P. Blait, Jr., not only denounces the secessionists, but accepts the com mand of a company of Germans who have offered their services to the gov ernment. There is a great scarcity of percussion caps in the Southern Confederacy, and a heavy bonus is said to have been offer ed by the state authorities of Virginia to any one who will establish a percus sion cap manufactory in that state. Twiggs, after sacrificing his honor and his conscience, has been contemptuously thrown aside with a commission of Sri gader General, which Davis knew he could not accept. He has sunk too low for scorn. His degradation can excite no feeling but pity. Panic stricken Washington has been a good place for carpenters of late.— They have used up 50,000 feet of lumber in making boxes for carrying away fur niture, in addition to all those ready made which had been bought up at the dry goods shops. The colored ,men throughout the free States are said to be organizing a force of several assorted regiments, for the purpose of invading the slave States, liberating the slaves and wreking ven geance upon the slaveholders without stint or mercy. ....... Justic John A. Campell, of tho Su preme Court of the United States, has sent in his resignation. Judge Campell resides at Mobile, Ala., and was ap pointed in 1853. A Frenchman named Denny, in Cin cinnati, became troubled because a fa vorite son had enlisted, and on last Fri day evening blew out his brains with_ a pistol. A letter from Montgomery to the Charleston Mercury speaks of it as high ly probable that the Confederate capital will be removed to Richmond. Norfolk is effectually blockaded by a fleet of ten ships of war. So is the whole Chesapeake bay. Brilliant open ing for Virginian independence! Ohio has 'offered for the war 81,000 volunteers since the Presidents procla mation t wo weeks ago, and of that num ber 31,000 have been accepted. The Virginians are said to be forming a large military camp at Dumfries,on the Potomac, about 25 miles below Wash ington. The Mayor of Phiadelphia, has issued a proclamation that he will put down any attempt to organize a Vigilance Com mittee there. Rev. John Pierpont, the poet offers himself as an army chaplain, provided he will not have to go AROUND Baltimore. A U. S. Recruiting office has been opened on Baltimore street, and the Stars and Stripes displayed. BROWNLOW, the famous fighting parson, is pouring the most effective batteries of hot shot into the ranks of the secessionists, a specimen of which we give in the following; THE FIRST SECEDER.—The Devil was the first secesSionist, ever known, and he seceded from a better government than the leaders of our cotton states did, but from the same motives. " Rule or ruin," was the platform of both. Here, for the most part, the people have been fifed and drummed out of the Union, and denied a voice upon the subject. The same spirit, actuate secessionists wherever they 'may be found. Had Bell or Doug las been elected, the same state of things would now be upon us. These southern conspirators intended all this mischief, and they have brought it about. The southern Democracy are to blame for all this thing. MAURY'S TREASON.—An examination of the records at the Observatory dis closes the fact that Lieutenant Maury has for several months past impressed upon the minds of scientific bodies abroad that this country was destined to disruption, and that the Government would not last three months after the inaugeration of Mr. Lincoln. fir The " Washington Sunday Morn ing Chronicle" is one of the neatest and most valuable papers published in the District of Columbia. See prospectus in another column. Ca - Messrs. J. B. Lippincott & Co., have for sale, four of the most valtable military works issued: Pei3Advertise ment in annother colunin. WAR ITEMS There is still an uneasy feeling here regarding the safety of the Capital, and more troops are thought to be necessary to plaCe it in a proper position of de fence. From tha most reliable accounts southern troops are rapidly concentra ting in North Carolina and Virginia, and from the extreme caution, displayed in the soutbers Traders, ,it is believed that they are preparing for a bold stroke in the direction of the Capital. The reports of a spreading Union sen timent in Virginia are now believed to have been pure inventions. Certain it is the State is arming vigorously, and should Federal troops be thrown into it, the struggle _could not fail to be both warm and bitter. Senator Johnson will soon make a tour of Tennessee, in hopes of saving that State from the whirlpool of seces- 8100 Ohio, has now in the field over and above her quota of troops, eleven ad ditional regimints, all under instruction. It is stated that Hon. A. H. Reeder, of Pennsylvania, will be appointed one of the Brigadier Generals of the Army of the United States, about being raised in accordance with the Persident's late proclamation. The western Virginia counties, bor dering on Maryland and Pennsylvania, will never agree to the Secession ordi nance. A report prevails that, if they cannot form a State of their own, they will ask to be attached to the old Key stone. A board of medical officers will con vene at the Naval Hospital, New York, on the Ist of June, for the examination of candidates for admission to the medi cal corps for the navy. General Butler tried the range of his battery on the . heights, taking for a tar get' an old, unoccupied shanty, two thirds of a mile distant, which was struck with great precision. The Massachusetts Regiment are still without tents, sleeping in booths made of fence-rails, tree-boughs and planks.— A. laughable incident is told of one of them, who, roused by the rain beating upon him, shouted to his comrade to " put down the window." C. J. INGERSOLL, of Philadelphia, who many years ago remarked that "he would have been a Tory had he lived in the days of the Revolution," is evi dence that he has not changed his prin ciples in this hour of his country's peril. The old man, who uow is in his dotage, has written to Ex-Presidents Buchanan, Pierce, Tyler, Fillmore and Van Buren, to come to Philadelphia and settle the national difficulties 1 Pretty settlement that would be f Every one of these Presidents, except Van Buren, is wed ded to the slave power, and even the lat ter is doubtful. Mr. Ingersoll need not trouble himself about the settlement of this gneston. The loyal people of the country "settled" the Tories in the days of the Revolution, and they intend to settle them now. "No compromise with Traitors" is the watchword. Let them be taught, once for all, that the Union and Constitution must and shall be preserved. A DEAD PAPER.—The only paper ID Washington City that has in any way countenanced Secession, since the Con stitution went out of existence, is now defunct. It was called Tie States and Union. It never had much force, and of late months, its Secessionism had been of a very mild type. Still it obtained the poor support of the limited number of Southern clerks, disloyal army and navy officers and other conspirators against the Government, and managed to make a show of life. But it died last Saturday evening from sheer inanition. The Government never molested it or threatened it in any way. A SPURIOUS JACKSON.—The Southern papers are publishing the following para graph with quite a flourish "Jackson, of the United States Caval ry, grandson of old Hickory, has resigned his commission, and is now on - his way to Montgomery, to wield his sword in defence of Southern soil." Now everybody knows that General Andrew Jackson and his wife never had any children, and consequently there can be no grand-children of theirs. If any of the blood of " Old Hickory" flows in the veins of ,this young traitor, it must be "minglid with baser blood, which fully accounts for his treason. AVENGED HIS MOTHER. A man na med Peter Smith was shot in Louisville on the 20th of April, by his illigitimate son, Francis Marion Smith. The young man states that the former had seduced his mother forty years ago, and brought her to a career of prostitution.. He says that his mother on her death bed, about a year ago; told him of these facts, and told him to avenge her. The young man first stabbed him, and then shot him in the back of the head, the ball coming out above the eye, literally blowing his brains out. He died immediately. Pe ter Smith was well known as a wine grow er, and resided near Utica, Indiana, and was connected by marriage with highly respectable Tamilies in Louisville, Ky. Some.queer fellow who has tried says, - "There are two sorts of wine iu gtattgard; to drink one is like swal lowing an angry cat; the other like pul ling the animal back again by the tail.' HOLLOWAY'S PILLS AND OINTMENT.—A word to our fair readers.—Health the basis of beauty—Pimples, blotches, and all skin di seases—A clear complexion is not only essen tial to female loveliness, but it is equally an external evidence of health—while sallownzss, pimples, and all cutaneous eruptions are indi cative of a disturbed condition of the stomach and liver. Upon these orgabs the famous ape rient and tonic, known as Holloway's Pills, act with a directness, precision and rapidity, unparalleled in medical science, while the Ointment purges the vesicles of the skin, and imparts a brilliancy and roseate tint to that delicate envelope. All who value health and beauty should beware of tampering with cos metics, as they are not only pernicious, but highly dangerous to health. PROF. DE GR ATH'S ELECTRIC OIL has per formed some miraculous cures in our city, at the Union Hall. One gentleman, deaf for twenty years, has been restored to his hearing. Another, afflict ed with Rheumatism, unable to raise his hands to his head, was cured in presence of a large audience. We will, therefore, recommend to all afflicted with Rheumatism, Deafness, Neu ralgia, Sores, Pains, Burns, Frosted Hands and Feet, to get a bottle of De Grath's Electric Oil, as we saw his Oil perform cures which the me dical faculty has been unable to make.—Hart ford (Con.) Daily Post. Ask Mr. John A. Perry, of Manchester, what he knows about my Electric Oil. Ask all oth ers present at the City Hall, if not 100 invalids were cured instantly by the application of the Electric Oil. Rheumatism, Neuralgia, in gen eral, every thing sore or painful, has lost its terror. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers in the United States and Canada. Price 25 cents, 50 cents, and $1 per bottle. See advertisement. EMPLOYMENT: The Erie Sewing Machine Company desire to secure a few Traveling Agents, upon a :wary of 25 to $6O per month and expenses, or a commission. This is an opportunity se!dcm offered, and those who choose a constant business, can rely on con stant employment for a term of years. .Con fidential Circulars sent free. Address Erie Sewing Machine Company. R. JAMES, Gen eral Agent, Mrt..a lc, 01110. [34-6m r3=- We lake pleasure in calling attention to the advertisement of R. Newell's Gallery of Art. The testimonials are of the first charac ter. See advertisment of Prof. L. Miller Hair Invigorator, and Liquid flair Dye, in an other column. ARK THESE FACTS ! THE TESTIMONY of the WHOLE WORLD H OLLO WAY'S OINTMENT. Bad Legs, Bad Breasts,Sores and Ulcers All description of sores are remediable by the proper and diligent use of this inestimable preparation. To attempt to cure bad legs by plastering the edges of the wound together is a folly ; for should the skin unite, a boggy dis eased condition remains underneath to break out with tenfold fury in a few days. The only rational and successful treatment, as indicated by nature, is to reduce the inflammation in and about the wound and to soothe the neighboring parts by rubbing in plenty of the Ointment as salt is forced into meat. J)iptheria, Ulcerated Sore 7'hroat, and Scarlet and other Fevers Any of the above diseases may be cured by well rubbing the Ointment three times a day into the chest, throat and neck of the patient; it will soon penetrate, and give immediate re lief. Medicine taken by the mouth must oper ate upon the whole system ere its influence can be felt in any local part, whereas the Oint ment will do its work at once. Whoever tries the unguedin the above manner for the dis eases named, or any similar disorders affecting the chest and throat, will find themselves re lieved as by a charm. Piles, Fistulas, Strictures. The above class of complaints will be removed by nightly fomenting the parts with warm water, and then by most effectually subbing in the Ointment. Persons suffering from these direful complaints should lose not a moment in arresting their progress It should be Under stood that it is not suffident merely to smear the Ointment on the affected parts, but it must be well rubbed in for some considerable time two of three times a day, that it may be taken into the system, whence it will remove any hidden sore or wound as effectually as though palpable to the eye. There again bread and water poultices, after the rubbing in of the Ointment, will do great service. This is the only sure treatment for female cases of cancer in the stomach, or where there may be a gen eral bearing down. Indiscretions of Youth; Sores and Ulcers. Blotches, as also swellings, can, with cer tainty, be radically cured ii the Ointment be used freely, and the Pills be taken night and morning as recommended in the printed in structions. When treated in any othor way they only dry up in one place to break out in another; whereas this Ointment will remove the humour from the system, and leave the pa tient a vigorous and healthy being. It will require time with the use of the Pills to ensure a lasting cure. Dropsical Swellings, Paralysis and Stiff NEM Although the above complaints differ widely iu their origin and nature, yet they all require local treatment. Many of the worst cases, of such diseases, will yield in a comparatively short space of time when this Ointment is dili gently rubbed into the parts affected, even after every other means have failed. In all serious maladies the Pills should be taken according to the printed directions accompanying each box. Both the Ointment and Pills should be used in the following cases : Bad Legs, Chiego-foot, Fistulas, Bad Breasts, Chilblains, Gout, Burns, Chapped Hands,Glandular Bunions, Corns (Soft) Swellings, Bite of Mos- Cancers, Lumbago, chetoes and Contracted and Piles. Saud-Flies, Stiff Joints, Rheumatism, Coco bay, Elephantiasis, Scalds, Skin Diseases, Scurvy, Sore Nipples, Tumors, Ulcers, Sore-throates, Wounds, Yaws, Sore-heads. CAUTION !—None are genuine unless the words " HOLLOWAY, NEW YORK AND LON DON," are discernable as a Water-mark in every leaf of the book of directions, around each pot or• box ; the same may be plainly seen by holding the !ea/ to the light. A hand some reward will be given to any one rendering such information as may lead to the detection of any party or parties counterfeiting the med icines or vending the same, knowing them to be spurious. Sold at the Manufactory of Professor HOL LOWAY, SO Maiden Lane, New York and by all respectable Druggists and Dealers in Medi cine throughout the civilized world, in pots, at 25c.,62c. and $1 each. 11There is a considerable saving by taking the larger sizes. N. B.—Directions .for the guidance of. pa tients, in every disorder, are affixed to each box EMBOSSED PAPER COLARS- 7 "-Ten for a Quarter, at Diffenbaeli's. PO 'dims male easll! Goo ilars for iite , tineopioDeV. 1000 Xhances to make MONEY! ONE MILLION DOLLARS WORTH OF N7Cret,tal:Less, Te - VcrOlr3r AND SILVER-PLATED W ARE, TO BE DISPOSED OF ON AN ENTIRELY NE W AND PLAN 2,500 ReigifiS lerfiED ALL PERSONS DESIROUS OF Securing an Agency in this NEW ENTERPRISE Should send on their Names at once, enclo- sing a 3 cent Stamp to pay Postage, and receive by return mail a Premium Catalogue CONTAINING OUR INDUCEMENTS, WHICH AFFORD A RARE CIIE-M_ENL.7 II IIW - 11C - 11E TO MAKE MOAT WITHOUT RISK, TOGETHER WITH FLJIJ. RELATIVE TO THIS NOVEL FLAT! 7n insure prompt and satisfactory deal- into, direct all orders to GEO. G-. EVANS, .09 The NI!) TPePetation Mat bat slooa THE TEST OF YEARS, And grows more and more popular erery Duy. AND grows more and more popular every day ! and testimonials : new, and almost without number, might be given from ladies and gentlemen in all grades of society, whose united testimony none could resist, that Prof. Wood's flair Restorative will restore the bal.f and gray, and pieserve the hair of the youth to old age, in all its youthful beauty. Battle Creek, Mich., Dec. 21st, 1853. PROF. WOOD: Thee whin please accept a line to inform thee that the hair on my head all fell off over twenty years ago, caused by a COM.- pl icated chronic disease, attended - with an erup tion on the head. A coatin eal -course of au ffer ing- through life having reduced me to a state of dependence, I have not been able to obtain stud for caps, neither have ',been able to do them up, in consequence of which my head has suffered extremely from cold. This induced me to pay Briggs & Hodges almost the last cent I had on earth for a two dollar bottle of thy Hair Restorative about the first of August lag. 1 have faithfully followed the directions and he bald spot is now covered with hair thick and black, though short, it is also corning in all over my head. Feeling confident that another large bottle would restore it entirely and per manently, I feel anxious to persevere in its use, and being destitute of means to purchase any more, I would ask thee if thee wouldst not be willing to send ive an order on thine agents for a 'Cottle, and receive to thyself the scripture declaration—"the reward is to those who are kind to the widow and the fatherless." Thy friend, SUSANOTA EL KIRBY. Ligonier Noble Co., Indiana, Feb. 5, 1859. Poor. 0. J. Woon : Dear Sir:—in the latter part of the year 1852, while attending the State and National Law School of the State of New York, my hair, from a cause unknown to me, commenced falling off very rapidly, so that in the short space of six months the whole upper part of my scalp was almost entirely bereft of its covering, and much of the remaining por tion upon the side and back part of my head shortly after became gray, so that you will not be : urprised when I tell you that upon my re turn to the State of Indiana, my mere casual acquaintances were not so much at a loss to discover the cause of the change in my appear ance, as my more intimate acquaintances were to recognise me at all. I at once made application to the most skill ful physician in the country, but, receiving no assurance from them that my hair could again be restored, I was forced to become reconciled to my fate, until, fortunately, in the latter part of the year 1857, your Restorative was recom mended to me by a druggist, as being the most reliable Hair Restorative in use. I tried one bottle, and found to my great satisfaction that it was producing tht desired effect. Since that time, I have used seven dollars' worth. of your Restorative, and as a result, have a rich coat of very soft black hair, which no money can buy. As a mark of my gratitude for your labor and skill in the production of so wonderful an article, I have recommended its use to many of my friends and acquaintances, who, I am hap py to inform you, are using it with like effect. Very respectfully yours, A. M. LATTA, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. THE RESTORATIVE is put up in bottles of three sizes, viz : large, medium, and small ; the small holds 1-a-pint, and retails for $1 a bottle, the media in holds at least twenty per cent more in proportion than the small, retails for $2 per bottle; the large holds a quart, 40 pet cent more in proportion, and retails for $3. 0. J. WOOD & CO., Proprietors, No. 444 Broadway, New-York, and 114 Market Street, St. Louis, Mo. r3 - And sold by all good druggists and fancy goods dealers. [v7-7- 4-3 st. pHOTOGRA.PHY IN ALL ITS SNANCUES, executed in the best style known in the art, AT C. G. CRANE'S GALLERY, No. 532 Arch st., east of Sixth, Philadelphia. 11.1.ife size in Oil and Nail, Stereoscopic Portraits, Anwrotypes, Daguerreotypes, 4T., for Cases, Medalions, Pins, Rings, &c. [ly