r I 1 THE WILMINGTON POST. I i WILMINGTON, N. C. MAY 12, 1870, t Or the leopard his Spots." . Aa wo forgtre we can anora iopyfinire8 The Standard mm i We see ia the Con- narrow minds andwarfed sonl wtahaTo Bermtive address to the people of tbls State, been eo iree to find "fault with this paper,' NEW . ' ADTEnTISHUENTS. NEW DVEItTISESIENTS. niSCELLANEOVS. ye. as welUas -the the- General As signed by the Conservati Democratic, members of aembly, the following paragraph : " The colored man now eDjoys the samo political and civil rights. as the white man. We accept.his status as fixed by the Consti tution of this State and 1 the United , States 7 The Campaign. : The campaign has. opened, and on. all sides do we hear the rattling of drums and the blowing of partizan bugles. A very liberal spirit has developed itself among liberal .minded men of both Parties and the in good faith.' We regard it as a final set- article we corned in our 1 issue ,from the "neiu u mc 4 . article we copiea in our u , our duty as good citizens to, ele' Tarboro Tfortt Carolirfn one, of many maUyJanduUtuaUvy we might quote, slewing mat pcaa ua The ab0ve would deceive- almost -any been made in te right : direction, ana tne Post policy f bringing forth good fruits in tcm Qt deception rpraicpd by the ; scalla for its even coursjs of fair : mindednesst&3 between man andlman; tor its just appre ciation 6t the rights of those whose notions arenot all in accord with it, as, well as for tho extraordinary and reprehensible con duct of this" Editor in .admitting into his columns - arguments of Republican gentle men. i ... y . . . . ' I As to political integrity, established by ITI7E T. a journalistic career of mow than fouijyears; NE PLUS ULTBlAJ. ' i TO 1 THE PUBLIC : 5 GENERAL; IN TAKE INFINITE PLEASURE IN AN- nn-ntiPlne' that we have on we challenge record with any man in North J reiving a large and select stock of eriedandare still re? -v-iori to our ranks of the better cla5rof our opponents. ,KNo really conservative man can stomach the insane virulence of Joe Turner or the small try of journals following J his 4v.leader: ; ship. ' A Christian cannot . be, a ; blackguard . neither can la gentleman or true conseifva tiyr, .fellowship with men. who, have no '"higher idea of political discussion than to rillify opponents. , Editors are very much like . other men, rand although exalted into a position where r the use of the royal u we" is freely' used ; still personally they are to be seen in their various organs all eager for popular favor 'just as the trader or dealer in . small wares shows avidity to please the: customer who i. shows a disposition ' to purchase. We believe in an impersonal journalism where the editor is lost in his paper, but we j do not believe in the style pursued ' by the i mass of the opposition press in keeping at the head of party organs men who are i mere dummies and who do not write but i offer their columns to the crowd or clique' i controlling the supposed owner and who is s no more responsible for the articles appear i ing in its columns'; than the man in ,the 1 moon, j -Thus we see the Star, of this city man, who was not- conversant wift Jfafeijs - 7 wo wilJ Udi merely .because mm rT ft nr n-rY inn TiTanrinnri i nu i iih :-'mi-h m i -l . ... - it is bo, ..that na man m-the country naa sacrificed more of pecuniary interest to po litical principle than has the Editor of this A: JT-i.sV"? wags" of Legislature iBut it-is plain. They promise to aid and elevate the colored man "morally and intellectually but not politically.' " Ay,-there's the rub.'V . 'They elevate bim morally by burning his churches and ehcouracinr 'the kuklux to j w i hang and shoot him. T- . -. - They eleyate Jiim intellectually by tear- ing down or otuerwise aestroyiDg ms school-houses, and by encouraging the ku klux to mutilate or scourge him. Yet the Journal declares :' , . - , , We have frequently wondered, and it is a subject of special wonder, how long this unnatural and unreasonable prejudice shall overcome the promptings of interest and sympathy. , All questions which-may? have given just grounds for the political separa tion, of the races in the past have been set- tied. Those which howl agitate the coun try affect the interests of Southern 'whites and blacks alike. . : . This spirit, of " moral and intellectual de velopment" will be made' still plainer by the following article, which has gone the rounds of the Southern press; and which we clip from the Richmond Enquirer, - After reading it, further comment is unnecessary : From the Lexington Mo.) Caucasian. , Down !" Down ! ! Down III During the whole nine years of Radical rule 1 The daily publishing articles treasonable in their proudest, freest, most enlightened prosper- nature and so revolting to every; principle of common sense, that the inference is plain that Mr. Bernard a shrewd business man- never saw the vile production. ' So with the Journal,i Sentinel, &nd MessengeryZjof Goldsboro, which last takes us to task for calling upon our people to unite and - keep , cut the disorganizes called democrats. Says the Messenger : The cry of alarm and despair comes from every quarter of the radical camp. They : go back to days of slavery days that, haye : long since passed to hunt up themes, for ; subjects, in hopes to win , back .i the ;many :. colored men that have already and are fast Jeaving their rotten, conupt, thieving ranks. ; They go back to days of the war, to. speak of outrages committed by the " rebels,'.? to win so-called " Union" men back to : their bosoms. But they fail to speak of : them selves I They fail to speak ot their , acts - both during and since the war!. They fail to tell the people how they have robbed them how jthey have' stolen the public moneys and gambled it away;- and then taxed the over-burdened population . to rc ce it. , 7 . -ovthe people need not now, be told they it, TmOt .orrrt They are advised to a sense of their, present situation to a dancer of the future and tT3J7n i ' " - 1 Tlemocrats and Conservatives take cour age when you see such words as the follow ing being uttered by the V radical ? leaders, ,and especially those papers published'; and 'employed by the Government 1 The Post says : " The enemy i united, bold, and de fiant, we .are' disorganized, and vacillating." Yes,. brother scribbler, we know the Post diJ say " we are disorganized and vacillat ing." We were, but are so" no longer. Let us remove the veil from the eyes of the contributing editor of the - Messenger. Let him read carefully the columns of the Re publican journals published in this State, and then turn to those of his own. party. Verily the shoe is on the other foot, and the disorganization appears only among" the demon-ocracy who are like blind leaders of the blind" they go about like' a drunken man" wandering ; helpless; forlorn! On ll.r. ! J- i a. 1 i I '- " " " me omer siue let out me Messenger man turn his eyes to the Z: Republicans and point to one difference now existing in our ranks; whether as regards policy to be pur sued or men to be selected to bear, our ban - ner. All unimportant issues have been . sunk, and the host of little men with little minds have been snowed under so that only the giants lead us in the fray. Holden wilJ remain Governor, Abbott and Pool will continue Senators,- and most of our represen tatives will be permitted two terms, as this is the right thing when a man . has proved himself worthy. Our Sheriffs will gener ally continue in office, as they ' have f proved i themselves worthy, and as for the lcgisla tare most men arc willing to stay homo that have served a term in that turbulent "body, , and those who want a second term are of a most Bingularly self-sacrificing disposition. ;f -5 ---- .-. - j . 1 ... 7i-v : I ; - . Advice. ' 77 j Already do the dogs commence to howl f around our independent neighbor of the Tarboro Carolinian: We teU him . to keep on and right the good fight of JournaUstic independence. If the sham .conservatives tend you out of your party, come and ; join I th'e Nation's party which is the true iipi ; Ikcui and you will be saved. Like another Noah we call to our brother CarohlnaJtT t ' come in to the Republican : ark,l an d keep out of the wet." No stcrms -can , drive us to any other coast than that .of safety an though the foolish bray and wag, their i big chins, and long ears; the free writers will al ways prevail over the loose talkers. ' TiiB stern necessities of partisan journal ism are illustrated by the Terre Haute Ex pressf 'which TpatheticaUy ::exclaims?i'If you don't wantj the ? rate of taxation in creased five cents for every ' thrce-quartefa of a million of wealth added to the city,' turn out lo-day and defeat the party that made this needle? increase' in the tlast tr paper; V1 It would be rather late in the day to de sert principle now, in the absence of any hope, of gain or preferment, and after every inducement to) abandon ' the Democratic party 7 haVbeeVrejected; and,eyery7 argu ment for the ' Conseryatiye course of policy and expediency hopelessly exploded. Tar font Carolinian. ' - 7:..r " ' - " ' Robert Hablan, a colored man, struck the right key in his speech at the Fifteenth Amendment. Jubilee in Cincinnati, recently, when he said ; .7 '7 .. hr" - i ' r : ; : ..Knowledge is power ; and those who know the most, and not those who have the most, will govern this country: Let us com bine and associate and organize for this end. In the pulpit, , in the . press, in the streetj everywhere let our theme be ed uca tion ; education; until there can not be found anywhere a child of us that is' not at the school. , With this endeavor , carried out, who can measure the progress that may be made in a ' single generation of freedom by a poor, despised,-and enslaved race ? Then, indeed,1 would vanish prejudice; then would the noble martyrs to our cause not have died in vain, and human slavery would evermore be an impossibility. : Colonel Galloway has withdrawn from the Memphis Avalandie, because the chief stockholders of that paper did not believe, as he did, that the ; old secession leaders were best for. the Democracy. The remain ing editors very emphatically say : "Save us from the supremacy of the old secession leaders, who Jid all they could to plunge the South into war. A young lady married a man by the name fifDust, against the wish of her parents. After the honeymoon they ; lived unhappily together, and she returned to her father's house, but he - refused to receive her, say ing i uDust thou art, and unto Dust shalt thou return." ous and happy nation on the globe, in 1860. The lowest, basest, poorest, most utterly brutalized and enslaved, tin 1870 ! Cotton field niggeis legislating for the descendants of the Washingtons, Randolphs, ;Hamptons and Lees ! A Pennsylvania nigger befoul ing the seat of Pickens and Pinckney, on the Supreme Bench of South Carolina ! A nigger barber scrawling his boorish X mark to the legislative enactments of Louisiana, as Lieutenant Governor . and President oi the State Senate 1 A nigger cabin bpy signing the commission: of Congressmen. Sheriffs;and Circuit Judges,4 as Secretary of State of Mississippi 1 And a thicTiaU nig ger preacher grinning and , combing his lousy wool, jri the place once filled by the hero, statesman and patriot, Jefferson Davis, in the United States Senate, so-called. j- IlIig Chicago P?3i gets off the ;- following : The devil is dead ! -He idied in Indiana, Thq facts , presented below, by a lady in where the soil seems to have been congenial. Texas, will not be read with any very pleas He was buried in the unpaved precincts of yrahle emotions: There is as much passion , ,r .,, , r Ar . ,. , for display and dress, perhaps, as any where rustic Mooresville, by some grateful friend else ; for tight lacing and pinching shoes ; -r-probably .Dan. Yoorhees and his well tor beauty in form and features, but gener preserved skeleton has just been dug up by ally the "belle of the village" is regarded an unhappy spadist. The frame is said to -ujruc uu u .marivaDiy piam which is likely enough, SPRING AND SUUEIEB-C00DS," . I m , conalstinof PRINTS BLEACHED . . ,. AND UNBLEACHED, STRIPED AND CHECKED DOMESTICS, WHITE GOODS, LINENS,, - PANTINGS, , . . DRESS GOODS, .TRIMMINGS, ; i HOOPSKIRTS, FANCY GOODS, HANDKERCHIEFS, I ' RIBBONS, PARASOLS, LADIES AND GENTS' UNDERWEAR, CLOTHING, ; . boots, ':. SHOES,. --7'-; HATS, GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, and other.artlcles too numerous to mention, which we offer at low prices. 1 -MERCHANTS wHl find it to their advantage to examine our Stock before purchasing else where, as We will guarantee to sell our Goods lower than the lowest. 1 1 ' In taking the liberty to refer you to the Card nf onr Asrent. Mr. A WEILL, we teg ton to be stow your liberal patronage upon us, which would be highly appreciated by ' Yours, Respectfully, . B. & L. WEILL, No. H Market Street -i Old Stand of A WeUl & Co. ST!ilSHIPLINB, ' , HiBTWEEN' . HEY YOnf AflD VILLlllldTOn, AND ALL P01nT3 ON BAILKOADSiLEAD ing out of Wilmington. . .-:!, ... l. . ..... .. .. LV '. ;; -s --.'3 (. : TO PHYSICIANS. . Nkw Yobk,' August 15th, 180a. Allow me to call your attention to my . i - PR E PAR ATI 0 iTdf COHP 0 U Si D EXTRACT DUCIIU. 1 - The component parts LEAF, CUBEBS parts, are isuuuu, ung , JUNIPER BERRIES. ! FAIRBANKS,' .. Cabtain HOWES, , 1; k Will leave our Wharf ior New York on ; THURSDAY MORNING, : MAY 2i For Freight apply to ' : rr-. "; 7 . CARRY BROTHERS, ji, april 7 AGENTS. ' 366-tf NOTICE: THE REPUBLICAN VOTERS OF HOLDEN Township will meet at French's ; School House Thursday, the 26th day of May, to select delegates to the County Convention,: which meets in Wilmington June 1st, 1870, - . 1 J. A." BROWN, j - U Chairman E Cora. , May 12 2-lt! ' " Mods of Prepabjltiok. Buchu, in i vacuo. Juniper Berries, by distillation, to form a line gin, Cubebs extracted by displacement with spirits - obtained from' Juniper Berries ; very little augar is usedts and a small -proportion or spirit, vlt is more palatable than any now iu use. . : -';7 .-77"-. 'a7.7-:- -Buchu. as prepared by Drugrffists' is Of a dart. color. . It is a plant that ' emits its fragrance; the action of a flame destroys this (its active principle) leaving a dark and glutinous decoc tion. Mine is the color of ingredients Tkc iBuchu in my preparation predominates ; tbc smallest quantity of the other InarreUcns arc added; to prevent fermentation ; upon inspec tion, it will bo found not to be a, Tincture, as made in Pharmaeopcea, nor is it a Syrup and therefore can be used in cases where fever or in flammation exist. In this, you have the 'knowl edge of the ingredients and the mode oi prepa ration. - ' .. " Hoping that you will favor it with a trial, and that upon inspection it will meet with your ap: probation, . ! ' . ' With a feeling of confidence, . I am, very respectfully, ' H. T. HELMBOLD, , 1 Chemist and DrUggist, , , , . ,-.-v T '0fiQ Years' Experience. THE REPUBLICAN VOTERS OF LINCOLN Township will meet at the Court House Thursday, the 26th day of May, to select dele gates to the County Convention, .which ; meets in Wilmington June,ist, i0 li BiN j ; 7 (7 Chairman Ex; Com. p. 7 may 12 j U-k , ;!7 -" 7;S;f! rpHE REPUBLICAN VOTERS OF FRANK- rF om the Largest anufacturin "; lin IQWQbUlU Will uicci at nun" " 1 in T11H ' VvOrltl. 1 rThussday, tneotn aay oi may, ; w sciecb uwc- gates to the County uonveniion,, wmcu. iueeis fn Wilmington Janclst. UORRtLf ' Chairman Ex. Com. Chemifcls mav 12 THE REPUBLICAN. -.VOTlSlvo VP UAO well Township will meet at Moored Creek School House Thursday, the 29th day i of May, to select delegates ' to the county convention, which meets in Wilmington June 1st, 1870. Vj . HENRY HALL, v " ? . Chairman Ex Com. -; !mavl2 i F: - m4lV- - THE REPUBLICAN VOTERS OF COLtrM bia Township will meet at Pincy Woods Thursday, the 26th day of May,! to select dele gates to the County Conventiop, whihj meets in YYlimiUKl'OU O uuc isi, . , i 1 1 JOSEPH Hi WALKER,' . ' . Chairman Ex, Com. : may i: . J I 2-lt . I- ' I TUE REPUBLICAN VOTERS OF $ HOLLY Township wiU meet .at Shaking Creek Thursdav. the 26th dav of May. to sciect dele gates to' the County Convention, which meets at Wilminsrton June 1st, 1870. i F it 7 i GEORGE PAGE; , Chairman Exi. Com. I may 12 , . jLi-Sit- T HE REPUBLICAN VOTERS OF UNION Township will meet at South Washington Switches Thursday, the 26th day of May, to ; se lect delegates to the County Convention, which meets in Wilmington June 1st, 1870. j 2 It vigilant and the telegrapher goes on to say: "It measures e feet; ten inches in height ; the skull is depressed in front, having two protuber ances or horns lust above the forehead. curving backward ; the .arms are long ; the spinal bone is of remarkable length, and termipates in a tail about a feet in length." ThatVthe fellow we have read about ! Nothing is missing but the cloven hoofs, and some mean Hoosier had probably. 'dug into the grave and got thdse out to make glue of.' This proof of his. demise will be received as a full explanation of the rapid decay of the Democratic party. Gen. Jordan, Commander-in-Chief of the Cuban army, arrived in New York orr Friday, The object of his visit is to pro cure munitions of war for the patriots, and he will return to Cuba after a brief stay. He represents the Cuban cause in a better condition than at any. previous stage, and the. success of the revolution depends only on time. The Cuban army now numbers about 10,000 men, we'll equipped and sup plied with artillery. . The season is now in favor of the revolutionists!; giving them what they most need time for organization and collection of supplies.! There are not fifty foreigners in the Cuban army. Gen. Jordan says the Cubans are; in no way dis couraged at the prospect j and that the Spaniards have lost their Opportunity for putting down the revolution. Gen. Jordan left Cuba in a small sloop; and when three days out was chased by five steam gunboats, but a storm arisincr: succeeded in making R"rt unattractive. There ia . , nawLfeo n - Ldre-fthOtJrj-tHtrTs norault of nature. I . , i j .j .. A CARD. , To my Friends in the City and the Conn try : i i . ; ; 7 - ! Owine to circumstances beyond my control, and under the pressure of the sudden decline in all clas es of dry goods, I was forced tosuspend and rendered unable to carry on business for myself and un der my own name. 1 Those to whom 1 owe the most have proved my best friends, and through them, I am placed fn the position of an active Agent for the new firm 01B. de L. Weill. 1 promise to give sat isfaction to all who may deal with them ; their goods have been careiully selected by myself in New York! and Philadelphia, and they, offer them at a small advance above the first cost: I respectfully ask all who rnay desire to pur chase goods to call axftl examine their stock now offered at unprecedented low prices, .and oblige If Your obedient servant, WEILL. - K I Agent of B- & L. Weill. P. S. All goods warranted as represented. 7 A. WEILL, Agent, may 12 7 . . i- 2-tf have seen young 'adies of twenty, whose features and symmetry of form would make New England ladies the admired of all ad mirers, who absolutely are repulsive to the lover of true beauty, so expressionless and lifeless are they. This is one of the pro ducts of excessive snuff ' dipping," to which every Texan woman is enslaved ; go where you will, and this disgusting custom greets you.! YouQ girls of ten- years make a broom of one end of a stick, by chewin -L of the Court House door June 8th, 1870, the din it into thP. familv Snnff.hAri,;ni, lonowing property : j no nUn ftfr7 rpemV Ta-T i ' interest of H. H. Robinson in Lot 415, no mean size restore it to its place in one Block 205, as per Turner's plan of the City of corner of the mouth, then chew and spit, Wilmingtob. 7 i i and there is no cessation of this vile nran. ChariPR nftWpir Ainn0 ; , r w.&ww, ! U. S. Marshal's Sale. : EXKCIJTIOJVS. ST.WILL EXPOSE FOR SALE IN FRONT r 7 . 7 i-UNovEMUEii 4, 154. ' "I am acquainted with Mr. II T. Helm bold- ; he occupied the Drug. Store oijposite myjrcsi dence, and was successfulin : conducting the business where others had not beeu equally so before him. j I have been favorably impressed with his character and enterprise." , ! WILLI AM WEIGHTMAN, 1 Firm of Powers &-Weightman, . Manufacturing Chemists, Ninth and Brown streets, Philadelphia. UELSIBOLU'S . FLUID . BUCHU EXTRACT may 12 Chairman Ex Corn. "2-lt MUSIC. MUSIC. NEW MUSIC! I ! - . . , . - 7 Is the great specific for Universal Lassitude;, Prostration, &c. ; . ' ' ri ( The constitution, once affected with .Ofanif WA.taroairi"equires xneaa 01 Medicine to strengthen and invigorate the system, which HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCHU invariably docs. If no treatment is submitted to, Con sumption or insanity ensues. . HELMBOLD'S FLUID EXTRACT OF BUCHU, tice till the end ol hie. After continued and careful observation, I am convinced tuat this wholly lorbids the existence of ! beauty in a woman' indulging in it : the skin is made unnatural, the lips and mouth are injured, and the whole constitution of the woman is undermined. VS. j. W. Zimmerman, ' E. D. HalLTj 7 i The interest of E. D. Hall lying in Holly Township. ; Charles Dewey, Assignee, I : -vs.1 1. n E. D. Hall.' . ! The interest of Ed. D. Hall in tract of land in tract of land SPECIALS. lying in Holly Township. . IV C ARROW. U. S. Marshall. his escape. ... Admiral Porter has written a letter in which; he says that the Delaware is the most defensible river in the world, and that Chester, Pennsylvania, is the very best lo cation in 'the United States for building iron ships. He . adds ; -There is going to be an f immense business done in the next tea years in ifonshipsl ' OurTGovernrnent is awakening to the necessity of rescuing oiii; commerce; from the hands or the En glish, and must . necessarily, 1 from year to year, grant liberal drawback? and subsidies until wo can stand on bur legs. again." 77 - To the Totcrs oi Kew Man over County. WE OFFER THE NAME OF STACEY VAN t AMRINGE, Esq., to fill .the office of Register of Deeds, subject to the Republican ' v;oumy convention, wnicu meets in June. Mant Voters. may 1 373 te CITY REAL PERSONAL TAXES, FOR' 1869, rp.IIE CITY REAL AND PERSONAL TAX X es for the Year-186 Q Were due and payable on the 1st January 1870 All property upon which the Taxes shall re main unpaid on the ,7 1 15th Day of May 1870. Will be advertised according to law and sold. . kl ... . . T. C SERVOSS, 7 ' ' ' ;-Y-':- Collector. : , apnf 17 ; t, . f:.. , 369-4w Treasurer's and Collector's iJ. H may 7th, 1870. NEFF, Deputy. 1-lrn WILL SELL . T7ERY CHEAP, OUR STOCK OF y '. - fi..-.7 ..!i-7 -.. I Elegant Glotning, ! RENTS; FURNISHING GOODS, j LATEST STYLES OF HATS, umbkelas, ; 7 I i ; TRUNKS, 7 7 71? j: ,:!!!: '-.CANES, &c. ! At .7 MUNSON & CO., rt i ! - City Clothiers. i may 13 ; ; ,7 ... -. 2-tf FAMILY GROCERIES. 1 1, THE BEST. FAMILY GROCERIES, LOWEST PRICES; FAMILY GROCERIES, THE FRESHEST. s rr-i. Office: NOTOIf. J. C.. 1 April lith, 1870. - f r i Cur of Wilmington. rN, C.V IN ACCORDANCE WITH EXISTING LAW8. ' V I shall expose for sale, in lront of the City I B5nd to family groceries delivered in any part ol the city. t : : Hv: 7 fU7 tfT i FAMILY SUPPLIES- FOR kATjLSBUBT,1 who runs the State oLDela ware, and generally finds himself high and still dry) has issued a?-powerful appeal to the people ,of that wonderfal State to or ganize ; a "white man's party," as against the opetation of the Fif teeathlAmendment, A negro sober, is certainly as good as Sauls buryrunkrJV J-: TiN t7:;.77 v 1'' ' ; & January, 1870; we imported 37,000,000 and exported 43,000,000 ot products. Dur ing the past six . months our exports' but kltMh i in am An a a ma mm. .-m J . - Unit .V 1i) 5 1 W r ; a-. . uBii, au x u uuc&, mt on me out uay 01 May. 1870, the following property, to satisfy the taxea vi uo kucicuu uuu rcuiaimns unpaia, witn char ges : j-'X :'?; ' - .. ":;)v" 4..-' Name of owner ;'rTNd?' of Deswiption supposed owner Thos.! M. Gardner Thosj M. Gardner , april U. J Block 1J3 194 oflotsorpts 01 iota ptsl, 2, 3 ; 4 '.. Amount Taxes & charges. may 13 GEORGE MYERS'. II and 13 Front street, 7 -7"; 4 . iVfi W HATS. rIffB V7CIAS. 1158 52 H,VJ!aii o1 Au UJKJCmPTION. ;TrcBERVOSS,;CoUector. ' H? 1 ; ; 7 7j7' . uw 1 n 1 ri. vv , .... .j.- ISTOTICE. vm and npHERE WILL BE A MEETING OF THE -X. Republican Voters of Cape Fear Township at Thosi Williams old place in said Townshirn SILK HATS, JJECEIVED to -Day:, a '.Ir-iv.;' BY EXPRESS LARGE LOT OF In affections peculiar to Females, is uuciuallcd by any other preparation, as in ' Chlorosis, or Retention, Painfulness, or Suppression of Cus tomary Evacuations, Ulcerated or Schirrus State ol the Uterus, and all complamta?incident to the sex, or the decline or change of life. ! The very latest out from Oliver Ditsop, New York, i , . 1 j For jsale at may 1 HEINSBERGER'S it'.:' I f Lire Book Store, 39 Market Street. H ' 373 HELMBOLD'S FLUID EXTRACT IUf CHU AND IMPROVED ROSE WASH H0TTEND0RF: y&HASHAGlN'S TTTILL BE FOUND FINE FAMILY IgRO YV CERIES, as I HICE, : 7 .. . ; FLOUR,' ; v '-ill;' - COFFEE, . - . X : - 'H SUGAR, ; BACON, . '." CANNED FRUITS. . Udolpho Wolfe's celebrated Wines and Li quors, for medical use. i " . AT HO. 10 SOUTH FRONT STREET. ; mays .; , ; . ,,: --l) ,; . 6t . ;- RElflARKABfcE-!!-! -r, -1 , i'"1 - ' it-:.ii R'.,- v s THAT NOTWITliSTAtfmNG TME EARLY LOW PItlCES THIS ! J Jit JtX. K3 is jm Will radically exterminate from the system idiseases, arising from habits of dissipation, at little expense, little or no-change in diet, no in convenience or exposure ; completely superceu ing those unpleasant and dangerous remedies, Copaiva and Mercury, in all these diseases. r DRY GOOD Si 4- ARE STILL USE HELMBOLD'S .FLUID EXTRACT ; ; BUCHU . " : . , 7: - ; :-,r ;7'-- .-.,! In all diseases of these organs, whether existing In male or female, from whatever cause prigi nating, and no matter of how . long standing It is pleasand in taste and odor, 'immediate" in action, and more strengthening than any oi the preparations of Bark or iron. Those Buffering from brokeurdown or delicate constitutions, procure the remedy at once. howevei AS" CAN, BE SHOWN AT 36ma?re:tH .7 f STREET.." The reader must . be aware 1 that. slight may be the attack of the above diseases, it is certain to affect the bodily health and men- m powers, 3iii,mA' 7:1: " 7 v;.7 3M r2- l'' ' "P6MARKET :"---6TREiET;'7r 4?y !,w7-Md P$f iji77 M.M.J5ATZ'S. ' AH the above diseases Diuretic. ; HELMBOLD'S is the great Diuretic y the .aid of reauire EXTRACT BUCHU 4 ' GOODS 4J1 X A rli K A N n V4WV TTtV O SHAWLS and Ice Poited? botUe; or 6 bottles for $6.50. i Deliv Millinery. Men's and Boy's Wean Notlan.k aii I ercd to any address. : Describe symptoms m all kinds of 4 7 :7 -7 X t . v 4 f communications. Sold by Druggists' everywhere; ; " Pkice ;:To be sure of huyini'p-l !'; i't- .r . , GOOD QUALITIES AXDGREAT BAfc t- GAINSfi TRY AT Ji..ii,KAma?Sj;- 35 MARKET STREET. Address '"' . ' 7 ; ' H. T, HELMBOLD, 7 f Drug and Chemical Warehouse, 594 BROADWAY, New York. ,: ".",-t 7 . , NONE ABE. GENUINE