fitrat Ntrotkoitis. Selected from the American Agriculturist. NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS. eAFE PIPE FOR DRINKING WATER. Lead poisoning from water brought in lead pipe is the often unsuspected cause of disease and death. Galvanized iron pipe, wood, and cement pipe, are expensive and inconvenient substitutes, so that people will risk their lives and use lead. The Leaden;'. eased Block Tin pipe is even cheaper than lead, and we believe perfectly safo..OurTaith in it has led us recently to lay Borne E 39 feet of it, through which ultour.drinkiht water is drawn. THE EUROPEAN ROOK FOR TNSECTS Is there any objection to the introduction of, this bird into this country? With all our warfare up_on insects, they are increasing. " Aliquis,"•%f a Michitian writes: "I think that a remedy,, (far insects), is to be found in the English rook. This bird may be con idered entirely insectivorous. The only ex- Iption I ever. knew was in a severe- and tg continued snow-storm, when some of 1m paid 'a visit to a solitary wheat-stack. ,m aware that they are badly accused, and ny a day I have kept wateh with a gun keep them off the.newly sowed grain,.and ny of them I have dissected, but I never nd anything but insects in their crops. ,33,- are constantly in attendance en new stirred land, and hundreds may be--seen lowing the plow and harrow within two three yards of the plowman's heels. In d, if they were graiu:•en.ting bird, no •ain could be raised in the'neighborhood of Aeries, where millions are congregated. believe the intelligent part of Scotchmen ) not believe they eat grain, and . they won't uch carrion. I was told. by a -- relation at, (it must now'be - 80 or •100' yars ago,) was one of those employed to kill off the ,ks, which they nearly effectually accom ished, but ere many.years they were glad get them back, the land having. become itirely overrun with grubs and wire orms." . COAL TAR FOR FENCE POSTS. Immerse them in coal tar, as far as they ) in tho ground, and sand afterwards; it 11 make them much more durable. . COAL ASLIES ill pay for carting a short distance. They rntain the mineral constituents of the plants •om which the coal was made, and as they -0 usually found in cities and villages, nail quantities of potash and dime from the cod and charcoal used in kindling. Judg g from the rapid ;disappearance, of kind- Lgs in our kitchen, this must be an impor t, item. We have often used them for i dressing for moist _grass lands. They .0 particularly good ior Intrek—rands—ana • heavy clays, serving to make the soil ire rri awe. STITOTE FOR STABLE MANURE IN MARKET GARDENING, . • You can probably, by exercising reasona vigi lance,- pick up many fertilizers which • go to waste in your vicinity. The oak and ashes compost with guano would good, but no doubt you can secure the itents of priv g y vaults for the trouble of !wring them out, and perhaps even be paid • doing it. Then, too, there is probably a 3wery, paper-mill, tannery, or some simi establishment near, in the wastes of ich you may strike a mine. The first last have each peculiarly fertilizing 3tes which must be used wits care. Mahe ends with the butcher for blood and offal ;less to him, and so before you buy much .ano, exhaust home resonrces.,,' DRJNOING UP k!ANDY LAND You say your sandy land has a red clay broil. The means of renovation are then Ise at hand, provided you can teach the ay with the plow. All you have to do is bring it up and mingle it with. the sur, ;e. If the clay lieS too deep, then try ;..en manures. Sow rye now and plow it der in the spring, then sow Indian corn it plow that under after about three months. you cannot trust corn after the ryo, sow ckwheat. Lime alone would probably be Hale or no benefit, unless the clay comes SHORT-11611.N8 110411EWAiltD.BOUND. Eight of these animals, from the herd of les 0. Sheldon, of Geneva, N. Y., were ently shipped from this port to England. n Bull cannot resist the temptation of cattle even in America. Third Duke of .eva, who heads the list,•will be heard m across the water. ROW TO GET RID OF BRIARS. Blackberry bushes, both the high' and the 'fling kinds, wild rose bushes, and other, rs, are, when young, very palatable to ) , and if they are cut close in the ,win or in the,, spring, and sheep are turned to the land before the thorns beedine stiff woody, a single season will nearly era ate them. This will of do upon very land, for the sheep will not thrive. On ground mowing in August must be irted to in ~'sidslition to the winter or ng cutting. VALUE OF BONES. Ground bones are worth about $4O a ton. uncrushed article various prices. sn bones and some other pieces are used the arts, and bring high prices. Such as thrown out from the kitchen bring what boys can get for them. We have paid .ity-five cents a barrel for a great many rels, delivered at the barn, and should , e considered them cheap at twice the ;e. We would rather pay 610 a ton for bones than be without them. They indispensable in planting fruit trees in, older parts of the country, and are for all crops. A pile of them should THE AMERICAN PRLSBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1868. be kept constantly tinder the shed, an if a bone-mill is not handy, break them with a sledge or stone hammer on rainy days. Such rainy days, we think, winpay the farmer better than clear ones. AS OLD - 7)44114EWS SLAM. Writing about imfrrovements - remindS me that a farmer•ckits not - -alwayilliinkof - what is needful andmay be done - *heir ltisure times occur, and it recalls to my mind the practice -of a large and successful farmer, who at his death left his affairs in a prosperous condi tion, and his premises in complete order. His neighbors often wondered at the ease with which he conducted his operations; he never hurried, but the right thing was always done at the right time and his work never lagged. Much of the improvement he made was in odd spells when the routine of regular farm work,. was broken by rainy weather, or after finishing the work on a cra m end while waiting for another to get . .to the proper .stage. Ife kept a large slate hanging in the kitchen where all his work men could see it, and whenever a. job, oe, curred to. hini was noted on the slate. li`or instance some of his entries ran_thus,— " Make a gate 'for the brook lot." " Olean' out the open ;-ditch in the wheaVfield-;'! "Lay a new . floor on the scaffold over the, barn floor;" "Bury the large stage-in the middie lot;" " Clet some'.whitewo.od trees to mill for making garden feriae pickets;" "Plant shade, trees along the, road ,side ;" "Dig the alders' out of the fence - corners and look after the wild mustard that came up where the thrashing machine stood in the field last year:" In thiw •way-his slate ivas' filled, and if aleisure halfday occurred his men all had plenty of work ; and if the Master happened to be absent the slate told , the workmen what to do: After a time it Was his custom to lay out the days work on the slate each evening previous and when a job was finished the record was erased. To get the slate ,clean ,was the ambition of the workmen. • HOW SHEEP DRINK There has been some discussion among writers as to how sheep get water in winter. A writer-in one of the Patent'Office Reports says when sheep come up to the water in coal weather, and they stand by it and do not drink, it is beeaUse they are afraid of getting their wool wet around their jaws, and be says he put a plank over the water,. with holes ,in it, and then they would drink But he is mistaken. I claim that Provi dence bas provided - a way for the sheep as well as the horse. The horse breaks the ice with ,Ais fe,:t, and the sheep gets water through. as thick ice as the horse can. The sheep melts a hole through the ice with its breath. I have seen thorn melt it throigh t saw them stand, by the water and Would- - not -arm tc; -- Ctle "sfie-eir - 'vPe-te — gui riy, through the process of getting water in cold Weather: They' will stand by good running water and go through the same operation} a, though the water was frozen over. I observed them seven years before' I knew why they would stand by running water when they w re dry and did net drink., This may be new to.some r —but it is true.-, Cor. Rural New Yorker. .. B,iotftlaitrotto, MAN'S' POWER AND COURAGE UNFOLDED BY GOD'S APPOINTMENT OF DANGER. About the, highest exhibition'of power ob tained or obtainable by man; is diiiceVered in the command or, „sovereign rnind-grapple he learns how to maintain. over causes infi nitely above him ; as respects their: physical efficiency. He is not only riot .coWed be fore the tremendoue forces of - the creation of God, but he steals their secret, and by means of it he actually takes - them:Trite ser vice. Arid in doing it he is . often moved, by_ the stimulation' of danger, going directly into the chambers where the b danger lurks,. and working in close precinct with it. . His most striking contrivances, Combinations-, tools, machineS„,operations; discoVerie‘s,' are ways found .out by his intelligence fer keep ing at bay, or reducing to subserviency, for ces that would otherwise crush him. As ha must go mining Underground, in halls that are filled with combustible, oXplosiVe gas, he learns by,a little experiment he* to.fenee about, his light with a fide wire gauze, when he has a safety-lamp that commands the gas to be harniless; and walking there under ground, through the valley of the shadow of death' with it in hand he fears no evil. Beset by a dreadful plague, that breathes infection round him year by yea:r,.g carrying off a third part of the world's cildren, he learns to steal a poison froin one' of his do mesticated animals, and, vaccinated with a totich . of this, he *goes, and lets them go, di : reetly.into.the bad exposure, d,oing, it as se : caretk' its if the plagne-inteetien : Were wholly at his bidding. The wild, half-de moniacal tAlrrera of alchemy - =attract search• instead of repelling it, and cliernfitry is the result. The sea is a terrible deVour ing.element, and the mariner goes coasting cautiously along the- frightful shores: for long ages, fearing not only the rocks andwinds, wins, but vastly more that he shall wander into unknown regions, and 'be never able to I find where he is, or by what coarse to reach his home.. By and by it is discovered, by' explorative genius groping far away among the stars, that by angle and distance, and calculated tables and observations, the ran dom ship that was, can find her place .at almost any time, within a mile, and set her course with reliable precision, for any country or harbor on t the globe • The sea again he finds a'yaWning gulf betWeen`him and" the World; he searches it out with_ 'his mind, as the fish cannot with their fins, maps Le still bottom, draws his wire a!ong it, an(l t6-.n sits down to think and tallf se renely tl'vengh three thousand miles of Have and storm. Still more sublime, bOnse vastly more eomplex,is that wonderful tom- Inflation of study and experience by mhich human society learns to organize itsek in law and government, so as to keep in'safe control those worst infestations of dger that are created by social wrung an pas- fsion. The problem is, how to dist ute selfishness and set bad power in balaree, so as to keep it safe in the maintenaneof or derit and justice. ' A very cheap, smal thing it is to make out, navigation table even, though we go to the stars for our da; but to make out safe navigations for ociety, .and steer the ark of liberty thro gh the perilous seas of wrong and passi r—this, alas: is an art that conies more slo ly; and yet it comes ! 'We shall h:.ve it b . and by i l the world over.--Dr. Bushnell inkours at Home. FEAR AS A MOTIVE - TG RIGHT ONDUOT. And why ,should there be an,so, great t jealousy of fear as a check to 1 edlesstiess and bad living, and-as a cautionary motive to the considerationiolduty ? Isiit weak to be alive and thoroughly attest to evils about our path? Who is more',distinetively wise than the man who cair,h - e'cautious enough to foresee dangers, provide a way of safety- through them, and; *intain ' —as it were, in this great-sea:of perilsoi. firmly, balanced prudence? Who, in',!fact, do, we.• all agree to • copsider more incurably doltish and thick headed, than the man who can not see any thunderbolt of danger before - it strikes him, and then cannot see it ,after;. ward because it has struck him ? What.ist. fear in this view, but one of the. best ! funa tions of intelligence? And when we take note of the:fact that - every human being is' organized for - the' 'apprehension:of danger and pain,-the whole skin woven through with nerves of sensibility, to keep'it ap= prised. of .damage from exposures to fire, and frost and violence; the eye made quick to apprehend and shut its gates against every 'sort of invasion ; the very fingers'- ends . reticulated with nerves of touch', to make them sensitive to the approaches of pain—when, I say, we note this tempering of the . whole body to a mood of precaution, or of quickened sensibility to, danger, shall we take it as the Creator's plan to make us weak, organize it into weakness, humble is to a 'pitiful, dejected way of living under the sway of fear ? txactly contrary to this, he is making us quick to fear, that he may put ue, on our intelligence ; train us to a nobler and ere capable prudence; lift •us into.a wisdom more completely sovereign over - the bad liabilities. that beset us.,lbid. -Ntrtio-t-utfutz. Moffat's Life Pills and Pluenix Bitters. Tlie wonderful effects of Moffat's Life.Pllis to cases of mental de pression of physical weakness,' proceeding from indigestion; Costive nese, or bilious secretions, are certified by millions of persons who have been benefited by them. They are . the Most effeOtive cathartic and purifier ever before the public, and have been in use over sines 1825: They are cheap, safe and reliable. Scid by all, respectable dealers everywhere. . _ . , . =MIL A ikitin etaterizent of.facts. inherited Scrofula, atal many,. of "o:relation!' have died of it; In 1839 My Mire was friglAinl. To more and ulcers spread until in 1842, under the advice of my clans I went to Avon Springs. received no benefit—tried every ;medicine and-didnvery thing I-could. I bit/barest-my arm- on a cushion, and had not been able to Mile it to my head 'for over ,year. The - discharge from two ulcers was nearly -a pint a day: Amputation was recommended; •lart pronounced dangerous. / could not sleep, and my sufferings-Were intolerable.% &Ale& brought me an English physician who applied a salve, with ivli k h, he said he had accomplished extraordinary cures in the. hospitalegi England. rs It commenced to relieve: rpersistediu its ust ; easily effected and entire cyre. now 1848: It is live years 'since I had the appearance of a scrofulous sore, and my health has. been good ever since. I procured the recipe of,-this wonderful ar ticle—this bleas:ng of humanity—and have called it "PAGE'S CLI .x.A.T. Sums," .and allow the, public to use it or not as they choore, This is ;a brief:but - candid etatement, given more fully in my circu lar. -J. M. PAGE. "I have known J. 11.. Page, Each of Geneva, N. Y. , for man y years. Re is ono of the first. citizens of Weabsrn New York. I saw him last week in good healtli. Ina case was a most remarkable one, but actually true in in every particular. (Signed.) D.EXAS BARNES." We lavewatehed the unaided but growing favor Of " PAGE'S CLI MAX SALVE,' and availing ourselvis of the knowledge of its Wonder ful curative powers, have become proprietors of the earn.. It Is a sure cure for Burns, Scalds, Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Broken Breasts, Frost Bites, Chilblains; Stings, Bruises, Cuts. Swellings, &c., whether upon man or beast. It subdues pain and.. inflammation with surprising celerity, and heals burns without. a scar. No family should be without it. It is alWays wanted, and is always ready. We will forfeita doien boxes for any single fai - tire: We believe there was never any thing like it in the world. It is put up ill tin boxei;sUrtohnded_br a full circular giving facts, directions, testimonials &c., and can be t rdcred through any re spectable Biliggist throughout the world. Pece only 25 cents. Wllll% .& 'LOWLAND, SUCERS2OII3 to J. M. PART, 121 LIBERTY STREEL,'NEW YOWL JAM'E'S VLCII, IMPORTER AND GROWER OF FLOWER AND VEGETABLE SEEDS, ROCHESTR7e, VICK'S ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE SEEDS AND FLORAL GUIDE FOR 1868, Is now published and featly id seed out. It makes a work of about one hundred large pages, containing full descriptions of the Choicest Flowers and Vegetables Grown, with plain directions for Sowing Seed, ulture, Sc. It is Beauti fully Illustrated, with more tlan ONE HUNDRED FINE - WOOD ENOILAVINUS of Flowers and Vegetables, and a . . Beautiful Colored Plate, of Flowers_ Well printed, on the finest paper, and one of the most beautiful as woll as the most instructive works of the klild pUblished. Air Sent to all who apply, ,by mail, postpaid,-for Ten Cent; which is not half the cost. Address JAMES VlVNTehester, N. Y. 26,077 FREDERICK. MD., Possensing fall Collegiate Power, will commence its TWENTY-FIFTH SCHOLASTIC YEAR The First Monday in September. For Colaforma, address July 25—lyr Roy. THOMAS M, CANN, A. M., President. FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS A Classical, English, Mathematical anti Commercial School, di signed to tit its pupils thoroughly for College or Businms. The Corps of Instructors is large, able and experienced ; the enure. of Instruction m stematic, thorough and extensive. Modern Lan guages--+Perionn. French and Spanish, taught by native resider' teachera. InstrUmeutal apt Vocal Music, Drawing and. Painting. The a holasticlear of ten months , begins on Wednesday, the sth of September next. Circulars, can be obtained at the office of this paper, or by appli cation to 4 IMPORTERS, cc? 4.4° 1 4t4 s ‘ ti 2" lit zfacturers & DeaW V. 1 rids seaa'ain' we 'after a laic% varied and well . eeleede4 Stook PORTE PIIONNAIE, POCKET BOOK AND SATCHEL SURE CURE FOR DYSPEPSIA. LIVER CONPL..AINT. DR.P. C. .A.BMSTRONG- 5 6 CELEBR,ATED SPANISH BITTERS, j-KIVIES MOORS ;.. - COATI DEALER.. Ragle Vein, Shamokin - and other Coale„ Froni the most approv'ed Mines, constantly kept on hand YARD, '747 SOUTH BROAD STREET. Otdern left at 91SPINE STREET, or N. W, CORNER of TENTH arid WHARTON STREETS, promptly - attended to. MIME! COLTON DENTAL ASSOCIATION. Origfuators of Nitrous Oxide, or Laugh ' ing Gas; For the rainless , Extraction of Teeth. [From the Kew York Evangelist] We are slow to believe in' theeffmacy of new remedies offered t.- the public, but the frequent testimony of clergymen and others e. our slcquaintance,,has assured us.that Dr. Colton has at last founa a, means of extracting teeth absolute/y withoutpain. Nair Yotts, Oct. i 6, 1866 FREDERICK FEMALE SEMINARY, WYERS' BOARDING SCHOOL FORMERLY A. BOLMARIS, AT WEST CHESTER, PA WILLIAM F. WPERS, A. M., Principal and Propriet White and'Red Cheek tt , el , Ig ' • . • at rednoed prices No. 43 Strawberry Street, rust Street west of Second, CHARLES RUMPP, MANUFACTURER, No. IV .21Torth. Sixth. SI., below Arch, PHILADELPHIA. Porte. Monnaies, Cigar Cases, - Pocket Books, Port, Folios, Cabas, Satchels, Dressing Cases Money Belts, Work Boxes, Banker's Case% Purse% Etuies, &c. , of 0 .L.ESaLLE 37.E.71411.. ARMSTRONG & WALTON, 21.1 North Ninth St., Philadelphia. Send for Circular octl7-8m [Froth J. M. Carnoclian, Surgebn in - Chief to the N: Y. State Emi grant's Hospital:) , DR. COLTON : To you is due the credit of reviving the use Of _this most important agent—nitrous oxide—in the practice of dentistry• Osmoa - - 737 WALNUT ;ST., PHILADELPHIA. SMYTH ilk ADAIR, Practical Illnannfacturers of -P ir 0 It SILVER - PLATED WARE, - 'FACTORY AND SALES ROOMS, No. 35 So4th Third Street, Up Stairs, AND 1126 Chestnut Street,.Secontl Floor. 10rAly • Elliptic -Hooky LOCK-STITCH SEWING MACHINE MANUFACTURED BY Wheeler & Wilson:Manufacturing Co. Embraces all the attachments of their other well-known Ma chine, with many peculiar to itself, and. in all the requirements Family Sewing Machine, Is the most perfect of any in use The following extract from the report of the Committee on Sew ing Machines at the New York State Fair, 1860, gives a condensed statement of the merits and excellencies claimed for this machine: , "WE,' the Committee' on Sewing Machines, titter a careful and thorough investigation into the respective merits of .the various machines submitted for examination, find the EllipticAuck-Stitch Sewing Machine to by superior to all others in the following points, amply Simplicity and Thoroughness of Mechanical Construction. Ease of Operation and Management. ' Noiselessness and Rapidity of Movement. Beauty, Strength. and Elasticity of Stitch. 'Variety and Perfection of Attachment, :Led Range of Rork. Compactnessand Beauty of Model and Finish. Adaptation to material of any thiekness, by an Adjiistable - Feed Bar, and in the Unequalled Precision with which it executes the Lock-Stitch, bt means of the Elliptic Hook: and we therefore award it the FIRS' PREMIUM, as the BEST FAMILY SEWING-MACHINE, and also, for the above re , sons, the FIRST PREMIUM as the BEST DOUBLE:Tit READ SEWING-MACHI N E." • ' C. It.P TERS, HECTOR lIDIFFATT, Centinittee. Agents wanted wherever not already established. Send for cir cular to ILEEN & NVALIISLEY, - ' General Agents for Elliptic Sewing Machine Co, For Pennsylvania, Delaware and New Jersey: may2-ly 920 Arch Street, Philadelphia. PHIIkADIELKOO4. DROVER & BAKER'S HIGHEST PREMIUM ELASTIC.: STITCH 'En A 111 I r. 'V S;EWIN Tie•ITII srz ST I.WP It REJV'T d. They Stitch, Hem, Fell, Cord, Bind, Tuck, Quilt, Gather. Braid and Embroider. No other Mschine Embroi ders as well and sews as perfectly. INSTRUCTION GRATIS, TO ALL WHO APPLY. Circulars Containing Samples Post Free. Tau VERY HIGHEST PRIZE, TEE CROSS OF THE LEGION OF HONOR, was conferred on the representative of the Grover Baker Sewing Machines at the Exposition Universellv, Paris, 1867, thus attesting their great superiority over all other Sewing Machines. OFFICE, 730 CHESTNUT STREET, SMIT.H & DREER, TBJYTIr .R.M.D &Bell STRE.RTH, PHILADELPHIA, THEODORE slarra WADS OW WAND A FINE ASSORTMENT OF WATOHB3, JEWELRY, AHD SILVER. WARE, apt26-1y _ Of, the must tishiouable styles. 'S CHOCOIATEAND COCOA. PARIS EXPOSITION, 1867. . 40‘W. BAKER & CO.'S American, French, Homeopathic .. and VANILLA CHOCOLATE, II I _At.,.. PREPARED COCOA, :::,.. 4 .:z ......e .•:.. --, 1 BROM Al., z . v ., no,„, asd p hia Cocoa Paste. Homeopathic of the Cocoa, willA s Cocoa, Cocoa Shells, pod wed. Cracked Cocoa, 4c. TMESE Manuhretures, to which FIRST rgrumitreur have been awarded by the chief Institutes and Fairs of the Union, and at the PAWS EXPOSITION OF 1867, are an excellent diet for children, invalids and persona in health, allay rather than indbee the nervous excitement attendant upon the use of tea or coffee, and are recommended by the most eminent physicians. For sale by the principal Grocers in the United States. WALTER BAKER & CO., Dorchester, . . . Mass. E. 0, THOMPSON, FASHIONABLE SEVENTH AND WALNUT STS., PHILADELPHIA. Samples to order from, and instructions for measurement, sent to Gentlemen residing out of the City, and satisfaction guaranteed. Those visiting the City are invited to lease their Measures for present or future orders_ pon+~ln..,, ....+' o_~_~ annnialite ! rarer twauvrianna in siring good•fitting pantaloons to give him a trial. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, Tor Diseases of the Throat and Lungs, such as Coughs, Colds, Whooping Cough, Bronchi tis, Asthma and Consumption, Probably never before in the whole history of medicine, has any thing won so widely and so deeply upon the confidence of niankitm, as this excellent remedy for pulmonary complaints. Through a long series of - years, and among most of the races of men it hit. , risen nigher and high - r in their estimation, as it has become bet ter known. Its uniform character and power to cure the varime, affections of the lungs and throat, have Mftda it known sea reliable protector against them. While adapted to milder forms id discos° and to young children, it is at the same time the most effectual re medy that can he given for incipient consumption. and the dan gerous affections of the throat and lungs. As a provision against sudden attacks of CROUP, it should be kept on hand in every family. and indeed as all are subj,ct to colds and coughs, all should L. provided with this antido's for them. Although settled CONSUMPTION is thought incurable, still gre numbers of cases where the disease seemed settled, have been com pletely 'cured. and the patient restored to sound health by it., CHERRY PECTORAL. So complete is its mastery over the disorder of the Lungs and Throat, that the most obstinate of them yield t•a it. When nothing' else could reach them, under the CHERRY r- TORAL they subside and disappear. SINGERS AND Poetic SPEAKERS find great protection from it. ASTHMA is always relieved and often ado Ily cured by it. BitoNceirrts is generally cured by taking - the CHERRY PEPTOR tr. :a Sinai' and frequent doses. So generally are its virtues known that we need not pubitli certificates of them here, or do more than assure the public lir. t qualities are fully maintained. Ayer's Ague Cure, For Fever and Ague, Intermittent Fever, Chill Fev•-r, Remittent Fever, Dumb Ague, Periodical or Bilio•:-; Fever, &c., and indeed all the affections which arise from malarious, marsh, or miasmatic poisons. • As its , name implies, it d es Conn, and does not fail Cmitnin'n neither Arsenic, Quinine, Bismuth, Zinc, nor any 'other mineral •.r poisonous substance whatever, it in nowise injures any patio' L. The number and importance of its cures in the ague districts, are literally beyond account, and we believe without a parallel in the history of Ague medicine. Our. pride is gratified by the ackne , - edgments we receive of the radical cures ffected hi obstinate cas,s, and where other remedies had Wholly failed. Linacciimated person-, either resident in. or travelling through missmasic localities, will be protected by taking the AGUE cult daily. For Lyra COMPLAINTS, arising . from torpidity .. of the Liver. it is an excellent remedy, stimulating the Liver into healthy activity. For Bilious Disorders and Liver Complaints, it is an exe.ell apt remedy, producing many truly remarkable cures, where other - dicines had failed. Prepared by DR.J.C. AYER k Co., Practical and Analytical Chtmt ists, Lowell, Mass., and sold all round the world. PRIME, $l.OO PEA BOTTLE. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. jan'2-Int _KENNEDY'S Salt Rhuem Ointment The only Ointment for the cure of all eruptions and cutaneous affections. It is wholly A VEGETABLE COMPOUND EOM= Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Scald Head, Pies, Felons, Ulcers, Pci. Byes, Chilblains, Shingles, Boils, Cuts, Womets, Blis ters, Ringworms, Pimples, Burns, Chap - ped Bands, Scalds. Kennedy's Salt Rheum Ointment CONTAINS NO NERCITRY, or other mineral substance. One trial is ,sufficient to crinvMcc most sceptical that its efficacy in allaying inflammation and I, during swelling's is wonderful. FIFTY CENTS PER BOTTLE. by Druggists. Slio A. DAY MADE-EN ANY ONE, with my ratnnt. Stencil Tools. I prepay samples free. Beware of infringers. 3I circulars will explain. Address A. J. FULLAM, gfield, l't Philadelphia FERDINAND J. DEENA
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers