the agitator. f) CAI AME IIIBCIIX.AKHCPB tFeUaboro. Wednesday, Aprli-18, 1866.. New Advertisements. ciAmond l! ottrs—o. Ballard, ' : Sltke to Oalltctors— A, M. Spencer, Treasurer. J ol „ to Teachers and Woodmen— l. L, Kingsbury, e to Teachers— lsrael Stone, See’y. V r*ndee—P. P- Uaryott. . . fftee '™ h Bime-Iloy’s Drag Store. The arrival of late news from the seat of War crowds out much local matter, including a communication from the Soldiers’ Aid Society, calling for renewed effort in the work of fu’iD ijjjitjg and forwarding supplies for the'hospit j,. Do any need urging? .-.i Jlr. 3. W. Tro'l writes us from Hatrisburg, that John P- Miller and Lewis Elliott, of Pel bWi an d Porter Sherman, of Weilsboro, pEt" oled prisoners, all of 00. I, 45th P. V., arein Capital at that place, waiting for the repair of die railroad on their way home. They arp do ing well. - fixUSBOEO Academy —This institution has entered upon its Spring term under the suf Intendence of Mr, J. B. Ghieb, whose oond jo t of the School for the past six months has hi eo attended with great success. Mr. Grier has earned the confidence and.eleteem of the. public and ought to receive a liberal patronage, j With Mimiae? Hokobs.—As we go to pte»s tbs funeral of young Wesley Petesso#, , victim of rebel barbarism, is being witnessed in our streets. He will be buried with mlliia jj honors. p This reminds ns that the time to prepare' fir s battle monument to grace the Public Sqtfa;’e ii near at hand. We have only deferred ren ting the project that riotory and peace • might become co-workers. The fall of Richmond was the subject of an able and patriotic discourse by Rev. Me. Shaw, Sunday morning, at the Methodist Church. The discourse was from the text: “ Thanks be lo God who giveth us the victory 1” The tendance was very general, and the sermon ex cellently well received. - _ We shall next week publish an interesting narrative of the escape of Capt. Bees G. Rich ards, 00. Q. 45th P. V,, from the Salisbury prison. We are under obligations -to Contain E., for the narrative. - - We have very imperfect news from the boys since the late battles before Richmond. Some letters have been received by individuals, from vtich we learn something of the 207tb. Louis Dumaux, two floeh wounds in the ieg ; Darius L. Deane, lost an arm, and was wound ed in the side and shoulderßenj. Vaiiborn, reported wounded in the arm; Lyman Hart, reported wounded. ' The lastftwo are rumors a they reach us. , ' - WiLLfßoao Petroleum Company. Sojfie etil-disposed person having circulated 'reports intended to prejudice the uninformed against this Company—in effect thatit has abandoned the object for which it was organized—we this seek publish the names of the- Directors land ofioers of the Company with the ProspeJtus. We need not tell our readers that the Directors and Treasurer of the Company are among our most enterprising and upright business men. They will be recognized as men who fulfil their contraots, phy their debts, and mind their own business. None of them are dags in the roan • per. ' 1 _ _ Ip addition we are glad to sav that ihe ag. pta of the Company have, tajten leases of Several hundred acres of valuable land during tie (last week, and will continue to lease until tlje best lands are secured. And further, that thi stock will be taken and the work of boring ooiomen-L ced in a few weeks. The ten per cent; celled for should be paid in at once, and every fdfliii ity afforded the Company to prosecute the En terprise. r . , Obiicaet.—Now thtft the whole country ie electrified by the news of successive victories for the Union, and the promise of peace illu mines every loyal heart, it is proper to recite the 11 short and simple annals” of the • heroes who departed their homes when the cloud of war was “ no bigger than a man’s hand,*? and v>ll not, r.iaa I—return to ne now that our hearts nre overflowing with joy, gratitude, and welcome. ‘ Among the very first of- those -who took the fi eld, was Mr. Albert Christens.?, son"of sr. Rudolph Christenat, of this Village. .He en- Refed in Co. E, let Rifle*, Capt. Jfiles, and ierved faithfully through all the campaigns of •he first three years of the -war. In 1861, he re-enlisted for three years, and was taken prisoner on the 19th of August, last, and ! sntto Libby. Being removed to Salisbury, *''■ C-, he received each barbarous treatment there as resulted in bis death on the Btb of February, 1855. • Aibeex Christenat, was a frank, geiierons htsrted, upright young mam, a thorough sol" Bitt, and a favorite with 4ue comparisons in wmi. j g tb Q seoon( j qf the same .family vhohas perished that his country migh^live. Thing.— We have examined i bean. “ ifnmetrieal map of the Gettysburg Bat. Field,” published by Batohelder of-Pbila delphia. The map takes in nn area of 25 riffles, gmng the exact topography of the country, the entire minutiae of the plan of'tlje battle, ff Uh the positions of every regiment,:bdttery, corps, of bath armies. It is is one ooked upon the scene itself from a bftllt on. — Ibe tide of battle is just as faithfully indicated, the whole is beautifully colored. Sir. A. Sowknd, of this borough, is the general a'gent w the sale of this map in Tioga County. He ' T >thes to enlist the services of some three or our men of character and enterprise to onn vass e county. It cannot fail to be a profitable “■•mes*. ; A i- The News.—Victoet I—The news of the fall of Kichmond and Petersburg"was the" oc casion of great rejoicing on the part-of the loyal folk of Weilsboro and vicinity. It was an occasion not lo be forgotten in a lifetime, yet decorous and within reason. There was a deep, thankful, all pervading joy visible in the faces of those who have made this war their own quarrel for four years. The night wasra-, diant with bonfires and resonant with cheers and exploding powder. There was little ex cess, and the crowd dispersed early. ■ Saturday night news of the capture of the rebel general Ewell and his corps, once more fired the hearts of the loyal, and the ringing of bells, the firing "of guns, and the kindling of bonfires soon emptied half the beds in the vil lage and for a mil9.ftrp.ufld.....Suoh an avalanoh of victories created the wildest enthusiasm. This occasion, we are, glad to be able to say, was marked by an absence of that excess that sometimes mars seasons of great enthusiasm. Monday’s stage brought official confirmation of the surrender of Gen. Lee. with his army. -The enthusiasm rekindled, spread from heart to heart, and cuinTinkted'in ‘a continuous vol ley oT cheers, which-rolled along the streets and awaked the echoes of the surrounding hills. The enthusiasm became contagious ; and even one or two heretofore sympathizers with rebel lion, swallowed their grief with a great gulp, and flung up their bats as high as the highest. Ah, well-a-day I that is one prediction fulfilled. But the evening ushered in a brilliant dis play. A great crowd gathered on the square ; a huge bonfire was kindled, bells rang out, the anvils thunderedj fireworks exploded and fire balls flew, and finally a barrel of kerosene woe given to the flames. Several.songs were song, and rapturously cheered, and the crowd dis persed at an early hour, and in good condition. Mr. John Fischleb, has removed his Shoe Shop to the building next Barber Shop, where be will be glad to meet his old friends and customers. , H. C. Parsons begs leave to assure the tra ding public that though Gen, Lee has surrend ered to Gen. Grant, he (Parsons) still remains at his post in Boy’s,Building, to prosecute the war against high prices to,the last ditch. He. is receiving new goods to be sold at great bar gains, and is so entrenched that bis'eommuni cations cannot be ent off. He has more of those cheap goods which go off like hot cakes. ■ We call attention to the new advertisement of 0. Bullard. He basjjuet returned from the city with fi fine assortment of Spring and Slimmer Goods, purebreed in a .falling market, and to be sold at the greatly reduced, prices. MARRIED. In Elkland, on the 18th nit., by Rev. B. B. Bene dict, Doct. A. M. LOOP, to Min SOPHIA J. TRE MAINE, both, of Nelson. • In Wei is boro, on tfao sth Inst., by Rev; Jno. Shaw, J. D. STRAIT, of Co. 145th P. V. and Miss ANNIE.' BARNHART, of Gaines. 'ln Wolisboro, by the same, on the Bth hist., Lieut. JAS. E. CATLIN, of Co. I, 45th P. V., and Miss ELIZA MILLS, of Charleston, Pa. ! In iliddiebnry, on the 2d iust., at the residence-of the bride, by Thomas Keeney, -Esq., ALBERT W. ELLIS, of Townsend township, Schuyler county, N. Y., and SARAH A, KEENEY, of Middlebury, In Salisbury Prison Hospital, N. C., ,of inflamma tion ef- the Ivngs, JOHN S., eldest ion of J. and S.' Beach, of Elk township, Tioga county. Pa., aged 27 years. He enlisted in Co. 1,46 th Beg’t P. V. Oot. 16,1861, wes taken prisoner near Richmond and- Petersburg Sept. SO, 1864. He was robbed of nearly all that be had ■necessary for bis comfort, hence together with the want of proper after care he.died Jan. 12, 1866. John was a good religious bo;, and his loss la deep); felt b; bis aged and on him dependent parents; he ailso had the reputation of being a good soldier. Also, OSCAR F. ALEXANDER, (cousin of J. S.) of Co. S, 64th N.'T. V., at the same time and place, aged 23 years. Jehial Be ACII. Elk, March 28,1865. In Weilsboro, April 8, 1865, GEORGE H., infant ion of Hugh and L. A. Young. Editor of The Agitator; Dele Era:—With yont permission I wish to say to.the readers of your paper that I will send,by return mall, to ati who wish it (free) A Recipe, with full directions for making and using a simple Vegetable Balm that will effectually re move, in ten days, Pimples,-Blotches, Ton, freckles, ami all Impurities of the Skin, leaving the same soft, clear, smooth and Beantifol. I will also mail free to those having Bald Heads, or Bare Faces, simple dlrections-and information that-will ,enable them to start a foil growth of Luxuriant Hair, Whiskers, or a Moustache, in less than thirty days. - All applications answered by return mail without charge. ■ '' ' 'Respectfully yours, THOS.F. CHAPMAN, Chemist, Feb.22,1865-3m. 831 Broadway, New York. efsrwm. MANHOOD: MSlSJfmr HOW LOST, HOW RESTORED. Just published, a new edition of Dr. Culverwell's Celebrated Essay on the radical cure (without medicine) of Spermatorrhoea,-or seminal -weakness, Involuntary Seminal ‘Losses, Impotency, ■Mental and Physical Incapacity, Impediments to Marriage, etc.: also, Consumption, Epilepsy, and Pits, induced by self-indulgence or sexual extrava gance. Price in a sealed envelope, only six cents. The celebrated author in this admirable essay cloarly demonstrates, from a thirty- years* successful practice, that the alarming consequences of self-abuse may be radically cared without the dangerous use of internal medicine *or the application of the knife— pointing oat a mode of- care at once simple, certain, and effectual, by means of which every sufferer, ho matter what his condition may be, may cure himself cheaply, privately, and radically. SSST This Lecture should be inghe hands of'every youth and every man in the land. . ~ a~p!alir envelops;-to anjrad dress, post-paid, on receipt of sis cents, or two post stamps, by addressing CHAS. J. C. KLINE, A.CO., 127 Bowery, Now York, Post-Office Box, 4586. April 1, 1866. 1 [June 15, 1864-3y.] _ TO the FARMERS of DELHAR & CHARLES. TON.—I am now telling my ttock of Dry- Goods, Groceries, etc,, at rcdoced prices. Call soon, as this sale is to close out the stock. Wcllsboro, Mar. 22, 1866-3 t INFORMATION FREE 1 ! To Nervous Sufferers.— A Gentleman, cared of,Nervons Debility, Inoom. petcncy, Premature Decay, and Youthful Error, actu ated by a desire to benefit others, will be happy to fumUh to all who need it, charge,) the recipe and directions for making the simple remedy used in his* case*. Sufferers jrishing-to profit hy_~the. adverti sers bad experience, and possess a sure and valuable remedy, can do so by addressing him at once at his place of business. The Recipe and fall information —of vital importance—will Ije cheerfully sent byre turn mail. Address, JOHN H. OCDBN, . No. 60 Nassau Street, New York. P. B*—Nervous Sufferers of both sexes will find this information invaluable. Dec. 7,1564-3 mos. Wflxsmtn I—Tbow.wiehfng a fine set ofwirfskerv, arrfee moustache, or a baantlfal head of glossy hair* will ntease rsad the card of XHOS« P» OHAFMiK in another part of this paper. ‘ r* * v, P§b.22.1M6-«£] - DI BD . ~C.~L.-WILCOX. - THE TIOGA AG ITATOK. IT. S.: 7-30 Loan. By authority of the Secretary of the Treasury, the undersigned has aE'Umed the General Subscription Agency for the sale of United States Treasury Notes, bearing seven and three-tenths per cent, interest, per annum, known ds the . ; SEVEN-THIRTY 1 LOAN. These Notes are issued under date of June 15th, 1865, and arc payable throe years from tbat time,in currency, or are convertible at the option of the hol der into If. S. 5-30 Six per cent. (SOLD-BJEARING BOtfBS. These bonds aro worth a premium which increases the actual profit on tho 7-30 loan, and its exemption from State and municipal taxation adds from one to three per cent, more, according to the rate levied on other property. The interest is payable in currency semt-annnally by coupons attached to each note, which may be cut off and sold to any bank or banker. The interest amounts to One - cent per day on a §5O note. Two cents ** « - « SlOO « Ten « " . « $5OO « 20 :. “ $lOOO “ $i « " " $5OOO " Notes of all the denominations named will bp promptly furnished upon receipt of subscriptions, and the nptes forwarded at once. The interest to' 15th June next will be paid in advance* This is THE ONLY LOAN IN MARKET now offered by the Government, and it is confidently expected that its superior advantages-wlil.maka it the Great Popular Loan of the People. Less than $300,000,000 of -the Loan authorized by the last Congress are now on the market. The amount, at the rate at which it is being absorbed, will all be subscribed for within four months, when the notes will undoubtedly command a premium, as has uni formly been the case on closing the subssripticns to other Loans. “ - - - - In order that citizens of every town and section of the country maybe afforded facilities for taking the loan, the National Banks, Stats Banks; and Private Bankers throughout thecountry have generally agreed to receive subscriptions at par, , Subscribers will se lect their own agents, in whom they have confidence, and who only are to bo responsible for .the delivery of the notes for which they receive orders. •- ~ -- T •' :‘ ' . JAT COOKE,'.. ' . SoBSCEtPTIOS AOEXT, Philadelphia. Sdbsciuptioks will be MCEiVEi) by the FIRST NATIONAL BANK of'Wollsborb; March 25, 1865. . . ~T ~ . .. THE MIITH JtATIOJfAL BANK or THE CITY OE* NEW TOBK. CAPITAL, $1,000,000, Paid in. Fiscal Agent of the United Slates, and Special Agent for Jay Cooke) Subscription Agent. "WILL DELIVER 7-30 NOTES, fret of charge, by express, in all parts of tho country, and receive In payment checks on New York, Philadelphia and Bos ton, current bills, and all five per cent, interestaotes, withnnterest to dato of -subscription. -Orders sent by mall will be promptly filled. V This Bank receives the accounts of Banks and Bankers on favorable terms; also of individuals keep* iug New York accounts. J. T. mtL, Catfhier, J. U. OHVIS, PretidtnU Mar 8-3 ms - ‘" . . - 0 ONSTITDTION JLIBE SYRtfR— ' - . Prepared by WJLLIAM H. GEEGG, M. D., - Graduate of the College of Physicians and SurgeonsiNew -¥er&7fonnei4y AMlatßTvfr-Pt>yaieian-ln.-tho Blackwell’s Island Hospitals, late Medical Inspector of the New York State Volunteer Depot*, under Go\*. Edwin DJ4lorgan. CONSTITUTION TJFE SYRUP HAS PRODUCED A REV OLUTION IN MEDICINE, , What may seem almost incredible, is that many peases hitherto eonsldered. hopelessly incurable, ate frequently 'cared In a few days or weeks; and wo cheerfully Invito the Investigations of the liberal-minded and scientific to cures which have no parallel at the present day. Daring the last five years wo bare contended with obsta- : cles, and overcome opposition, as herculean as were ever' encountered by any reformers. CONSTITUTION LIFE SYRUP Is a positive and specific remedy for all diseases originating from an Impure State op the Blood, and for all (hereditary) Dlseqpes transmitted from Parent to Child. PARALYSIS It is so universally admitted that Constitution Life Syrup is the only effective means of restoration In the Various forms of Paralysis, that wo need not reiterate that It is em phatically the Great. Life-giving Power. DYSPEPSIA. Indigestion, Weight at Stomach, Flatulence, Liver Com plaint. Want of Appetite, Bod Breath,. ~ ; .*. . Constipation, Biliousness, SCROFULA. Struma, Sing’s Evl), Glandular Swellings, > Erysipelas Cl Deration, Salt Rheum. This talnt{hereditAry and acquired) filling Ufa with un told misery, U, by all-usual medidal remedies, Incurable.* RHEUMATISM. [Arthritis], Lumbago, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Gout, Tic Doloreaux. If there Is any disease In which the Constltutlen Life Syrnp is a sovereign, it is in Rheumatism and its kindred affections. The most intense pains are almost Instantly alleviated—enormous swellings aroredoced. Cases,-chronic or vicarious, of twenty or forty years’ standing, have been cured by us. CONSTITUTION LIFE BYEUP Purges tho system entirely-from all the evil effects or Mer* cury.removing the Bed Breath,and curing the Weak Joints and Rheumatic Faina which the use of Calomel is sure to produce. -It hardens Spongy Gums, and secures, the Teeth as firmly as ever. CONSTITUTION LIFE SYRUP . Eradlcatei,rootand branch,all Eruptive■ Diseases of the Skin, like Ulcers, Pimples,'Blotches, andAirbther^difficulties of this kind, whlch-ao much disfigures the outward appear* ance of both males and females,.'often making theta a dis gusting object to themselves and their friends. Foe ajx Forms or Ulcerative Diseases, Either of the Nose, Throat, Tongue, Splao, Forehead, or goaty' no remedy haa-tver proved ita-equal. Moth Patches upon the female face, depending upon a' diseased action of the Liver, are very unpleasant to tho young wife and mother. A few bottles of Constitution Life Syrup will correct .the secretion and remove'the de posit, which ia directly under the skin. Diseases of the Liver, giving rise to Languor, Dizziness, Indigestion. Weak Stomach, or an ulcerated or cancerous condition of that organ, accompanied with burning or other unpleasant symptoms, will be relieved by. the use of Constl* - tutfeu Life Syrup. ‘ As a~Gehefal Btc^d-Purifymg r ~Agent.~tbe Life' Syrnp, stands unrfvaled by.any preparation In the world. . THE RICH AND POUR are liable to the same diseases. Narturo and Science havomado the Constitution Life Syrup, for the benefit of ail.' : • PURE BLOOD produces healthy men and women; and if the constitution Is neglected in youth, disease and early d?fttb is tho result.. Do not delay when the means are so near ut hand; and within the reach of all. CONSTITUTION LIFE SYRUP Is the Poor Man’s Friend, 'antrfhfiTElchTlan’fßlessing. —' moROAPJ & Atissr. ; WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, AGENTS,' ■ : ' 46 Cliff Street, New York, Sold by J. A. Eor, Welbboro, Pa.; S. S; Pim». OotJoic 1 ton. Pa.; Remsotos & Co. Troy, Pa., March'29; 1855-ir-.- - - TO CONSUMPTIVES.—The haying been restored to health its a few weeks, by a very simple remedy, after having snffered several years with n severe lung affection, and that dread disease, Consumption—is 1 anxious to make known to his' fellow-gufferers the means of cure. : To.all who desire, he will send a copy of the pre scription used, (free of ohargo,) with tho directions for preparing and using the same, which- they' wifi find a eure cure for- Consumption—Asthma,"Bronbltl tis, Coughs, Colds, <fec. The only object of the ad vertiser in sending the Prescription is to benefit the afflicted, and spread information which ho conceives to be invaluable; and he hopes every sufferer will try his remedy, as it will cost them nothing, and may procure a blessing. .. 1 Parties wishing tho prescription will please address -• Rev. EDWARD A. WILSON, Williamsburg, Kings County, New York Fob. 22, 1866-3 m. Flour coming downwithtgqld WRIGHT A BAILSra 1 WelUbord, Apia 6,1866. - .“ii jjj"KW thbak With NEW PRICES ! •GOINtt - OM - AT J. A. ROSE & GO’S CHEAP GASH STORE! ’ SEW 9.00DS + AN D NEW STYLES! GOODS HAVE FALLEN! GOODS ABE CHEAPER! The only question among Ladle. ia, where can I get .omething handiome in the ihspe of a Good Stylish Dress, Cloaking, &c., and at the lame time CHEAP ? On walking into the Store of - Ste - • 1,1 . J* A. ROSE & CO’S the Lsdiei will find this difficult qnsstlon IMMEDIATELY ANSWERED. HE BUYS CHEAP! HE SELES CHEAP-! PRESS GOODS. Corded Poplins, Merinoos, Alapaooaz, Ooborgf, Bep Delaines, Pacific DcLaines, Ac., Ac. FANCY GOODS. Hair-Boils, Head Nets, Frenoh and American. Co rsets, Breakfast Shawls, ■ Splendid Nubias, Skating Caps, Hoods, Hood Nubios, press Trimmings, Collar and Sleeve everything. - LADIES’ CLOTHS, FLANNELS, ' SOLFERINOES, figured- and plain, every color, and quality. ... . Gentlemen say before leaving home, “ Wherodo: you want to go to trado.Wlfo V' .** I don't know." “ Well, I will tell you. Yoa . • STOP AT ROSE’S. HE KEEPS THE LARGEST AN| v : ' . BEST StIoCK OF RMDF MM CLOTHING, AND I WANT A -FAIR OF PANTS, - SO LET’S STOP THEBE." ; ~~ N r TOU r EU~BIGST. J. A. ROSE A CO. I - KEEP .HOOP, SKIRTS, ■ V ANB sue H'AN' A SS O R TU ENT! WHY, I i)0 BELIEVE . ; , . > T’ •' • ■ ~r . be has ononghto balld a telegraph aorou the Atlan tic Ocean; ■„ AND I WANT ONE, TBS,. - i.wiiii YES, We wm Stop There, FOB BE SELLS WOMEN’S SHOES, for .11,25 BALMORALSKIRTS, (fall 5ize)......... 3.25 25 HQOP SKIRTS, (wide tapes) 1.25 BEST, KIP BOOTS, (shop made).......... 6.00 BESIDES ALL THESE , HE HAS ALL KINDS OP BOOTS and SHOES I AND ALL PRICES, AMD THEY ABE CHEAP, TOO, : POR T HAVE TRIED, THEM, . r, -• i AND- I I know they are Right and Oheap> 1 DON’T KNOW HOW HE GETS HIS GOODS, ‘j- - • (probahly-stsals them or hays-than and oarer pay, for them) , ... ; . . .r' ; BUT WE WON’T ASK HIM, AS LONG AS. THEY ABB CHEAP, WE WELL EOT." MIPS & GENTLEMEN, - WE HAVE EVERYTHING; Ye*,.l «ay we have everything except wagon track, and poit hole, and these you can buy at the Hard, ware Stores. IT IS WORTH WHILE TO STEP IN - AND SEE WHAT HE HAB. J Don't buy—only sdb. Come and examine.' The Good, are to your taste. And remember the place. ROSE’S CHEAP CASH STORE, MANSFIELD, Tioga County, Pa., IIEXT DQOp TQ MANSFIELD HOTEL. Mansfield, January 11,*1866Jy, «■ THE INHERENT DISPOSITION OF MANKIND, LEADS HIIH TO PURCHASE THE NECESSARIES, AS WELL AS THE LUXURIES OF LIFE. AT THE Lowest Possible Prices!; i and SINCE; j THE “ Almighty Dollar 99 HAS BEEN STYLED THE SOUL OF MAN, IT TAKES Bat Ordinary Understanding TO COMPREHEND THE TRUE VALUE OF AN ESTABLISHMENT. THAT FURNISHES A COMMUNITY with a large, variety of SEASONABLE MERCHANDIZE, - AT UNIFORM LOW RATES. When Ferine A Co, located their establishment in Troy. it was for the express purpose of furnishing the public with goods at » SUCH PRICES AS COULD .NOT FAIL ATTRACTING PURCHASERS. We will allow the public to judge of their sacoesi, Mr* E. P. FERINE, WHILE THANKING THE PUBLIC FOR PAST FAVORS, WOULD SAT, THAT IO EFFORT SHALL BE WANTING ON HIS PART, TO {Merit a Continuance OF SAID FAVOR. s HE NOW r * HAS A LARGE STOCK MERCHANDIZE FOB THE PM AND WINTER TRW PROBABLY LARGER THAN CAN BE FOUND - '"iN THIS OB Adjoining Counties, WHICH THE PUBLIC ARE INVITED ■EXAMINE AT SUCH PRICES „ ~ AS CANNOT, . (we hava the boldness to.affirm) BE FOUND ELSEWHERE. he sura ms oooss FOR CASH, AND SELLS * FO R OAS H, and the eontumer geU the worth of his money. With qnick Sales and light Profits, both Fartie, are enabled to realise tho value of the NIMBLE SIXPENCE. TROT, Got. 6, 1864. “TO BOWEN’S I” SEEING a big crowd on Main Street, hurry ing toward a common center, somebody asked Where Are Ton Going? The answer was “To Bowen’s, No. 1, Union Block 1” To look at that splendid stock of NEW FAU & WINTER ROODS! ust arriving from New York, “ VERY SENSIBLE PEOPLE,” thought I to myself; you know who bays at a bar gain, and sella so as to give the purchaser a bargain too. ' Therefore, if yon want anything in the Una of DRY GOODS, LADIES’ GOODS, READY MADE CLOTHING, BOOTS, SHOES, *o., GO TO BOWEN’S, and If yon want HARDWARE, QDEENSWARE, WOODEN-WARB, and GROCERIES, at prices yon can afford to pay * GO TO BOWEN’S. If yon hare Cash, or Butter, or Cheese, or Grain to exchange for this SPLENDID STOCK OF GOODS, bring them along, and yon will get Satisfactory Bargains; and if yon come onoe,yon wUI he snre to come twise —yea, thrice, or half-a-dozen times. Don't forget the place; NO. 1, UNION BLOCK, r Welliboro, Nov. 1,1864. JOHN B. BOWEN. used by mercurial dis ease, low living, disordered digestion from un healthy food, impure air, filth and filthy habits, the depressing vices, and, above all, by the vene real infection. Whatever be its origin, it is hered itary in the constitution, descending “ from parents to children unto the third-end fourth, generation; ” indeed, it seems to ho the rod of Him who says, “ I will visit the iniquities of the fathers upon thais children.” The diseases it originates take .various names, according to the organs it attacks. In the lungs, Scrofula produces tubercles, and finally Consumption; in the glands, swellings which sup purate and become ulcerous sores; in the stomach and bowels, derangements which produce indi gestion, dyspepsia, and liver complaints; on the skin, eruptive and cutaneous affections. These, nil having the same origin, require the same rem edy, viz., purification and invigoration of th» blood. Purify the blood, and these dangerous dis tempers leave you. With feeble, foul, or corrupted blood, you cannot have health; with that “life of the fiesh” healthy, you cannot have scrofulous disease. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is compounded from the most effectual antidotes that medical science has discovered for this afflict ing distemper, and for the cure of the disorders it entails. That it is far superior to any other remedy yet devised, Is known by all who have given it a trial. That it does combine virtues truly extraordinary in their effect upon this class! of complaints, is indisputably proven by the great multitude of publicly known and remarkable cures it has made of the following diseases: Eng’s Evil, or Glandular Swellings, Tumors, Erup tions, Pimples, Blotches and Sores, Erysipelas, Sosa or St Anthony’s Eire, Salt Eheum, Scald JHead, Coughs from tuberculous deposits in. the lungs, White Swellings, Debility, Dropsy, Neuralgia, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Syphilis and Syphilitic Infections, Mercurial Diseases, Female Weaknesses, and, indeed, the whole series of complaints that arise from impurity of the blood. Minute reports of individual cases may be found in Aveb’s American Almanac, wWch is furnished to the druggists for gratuitous distribution, wherein may be learned the directions for its use, and aoma of the remarkable cures which it has made when all other remedies had failed to afford relief. •’ Those cases are purposely taken from all sections of the country, in order that every reader may have ac cess to some one who can speak to him of its bene fits from personal experience. Scrofula depresses the vital energies, and thus leaves its victims far more subject to disease and its fatal results than are healthy constitutions. Hence it tends to shorten, and does greatly shorten, the average duration of human life. The vast importance of these con siderations has led us to spend years in perfecting a remedy which is adequate to its cure. This we now offer to the public under the name of Ater’» Sarsaparilla, although it is composed of ingre dients, some of which exceed the best of Sarsa parilla in alterative power. By its aid you may protectyourself from the suffering and danger of these disorders. Purge out the foul corruption* that rot and fester in the blood, purge out the causes of disease, and vigorous health will follow. By its peculiar virtues this remedy stimulate* tha vital functions, and thus expels the distemper* which lurk within the system or burst out on any part of it. 1 Wo know the public hare been deceived by many compounds of Sarsaparilla, that promised much apd did nothing; but they will neither be deceivednor disappointed in this. Its virtues have been proven by abundant trial, and there remain* no question of its surpassing excellence for the cure of the afflicting diseases it is intended to reach. Although under the same name, it is a very different medicine from any other which has been before the people, and is far more effectual than any other which has ever been -available to them. AYER’S CHERRY PECTORAL, The World’s Great Eemedy for Coughs, Colds, Incipient Consumption, and for the relief of Consumptive patients in advanced sta ges of the disease. This has been so long used and so universally known, that we need do no more tlian assure the public that its quality is kept up to the best it ever has been, and that it may bo relied on to do all it has ever done. Prepared by Dr. .T. C. Aveb 4 Co., Practical and Analytical ChemizU, Lowell, Mass. Sold by all druggists every where, and by Sold by J. A. Boy and P. E. Williams, Wellsboro'; Dr. H. H. Berdan, Tioga; S. 8. Packard, Covington; 0. V. Elliott, Mansfield ; S. X. Billings, Gaines; and by Dealers everywhere. [Nov. 23, 1894-ly.} TO THE NERVOUS, DEBILITATED AND DES PONDENT op BOTH SEXES—A great suffer er baying been restored to health is a few days, after many years of. misery, is willing to assist his suffer ing fellow.oreatnres by sending (free), on the receipt of a postpaid addressed envelope, a copy of the formula of cure employed. Direct to JOHN ST. DAQNALL, Box 133 Post Office, Jan. 4, 1865-dm. Brooklyn, N, P, OLD EYES MADE NEW.—A pamphlet direct ing hoie to speedily restore sight and glee np spectacles, without aid of doctor or medicine. Sent by mail, free, on receipt of 10 cents. Address - B. B. FOOTE, M. D.,^ 1180 Broadway, New York, 7«b. 8, M. ib peculiar taint or infec m which we call Scsor ,a lurks in the conatitu ms of multitudes of men. either produces or is •oduced by an enfeebled, tinted state of the blood, icrein that fluid becomes ;ompetent to sustain the ial forces in their vigorous ;tion, and leaves the sys >m to fall into disorder id decay. The scrofulous mlamination is variously
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