lltt 3Vt]for2, General Shepley at New Or leans., "The Negro should have the right to vote in the Northern States and I will come into this Congressional dis trict and help elect Mr. Cessna to Con gress on this issue."— Tom Marshall at the Radical Meetiny, in presence of Cess na, who dared not repudiate the senti ment. Who boasted that they would not vote a man nor a dollar to put down the Rebellion ? The Democratic Par ty.—Mew York Tribune. "You lie, you villain, you lie!" Had it not been for Democratic soldiers and Democratic contributions of mon ey, the rebellion could not have been sutnlued, and you know it, yon white faced hypocrite. Put who declared that if the Cotton States choose to ceed, it would be criminal to coerce them back into the Union? Horace Greehj, who dares not deny it. The White Hovs in Blue are all a glow with enthusiasm. They declare that they will have the Union for which they fought, and nothing less. This they say they can secure only by the election of Seymour and Blair, j. and they are going to elect him. "Let Bab life us have peace." Ik. ABE YOU AT WORK? Democrats of the several election districts of Bedford county! The time for work is at hand. If you are active, uutiring, a great victory awaits you. From all parts of the county comes the most cheering news. Connecticut, Oregon, Kentucky and Montana, have spoken in tones oft bonder in favorofthe ! Democracy. Think of 90,000 Democrat ie majority in old Kentucky! Shall we not strive toimitatethisgloriousexam j pie? Yes, let every one of us put our ■ shoulder to the wheel! Let each Dem ocrat resolve to make one concert to the cause, and if but one in a dozen succeeds, Bedford county will give 1,000 Demo cratic majority. Come, let all go to | work in earnest, and let us see what we can do in old Bedford when we j try. i ■■■"■■ ■■ -A Is the Union restored ? Not accord ing to the Grant Reconstruction plat ! form. ■"■, Tite Inquirer says that Tom. Mar , shall, "though possessing a genial life," (he must possess a charmed life to stand such plastering with bovine excre ment) "had been stigmatized in coar sest language, in a public journal." This means that we called him "a clown." Well, he is not only a clown, but a brutal blackguard. Besides, he threw the first stone. He said in his I first speech in Bedford, that the Demo crats had sent tollarrisburg for the.*!- I I itorof this paper for the purpose of | having him "fix up" some young Deiu ; crats who were dissatisfied, and that ; 1 when he could not do it otherwise, he I made them drunk ! Now, this was not ' only an atrocious falsehood, but it was ! • uttered in regard to one who was, at the time, an utter stranger to Mr. Mar shall. A man who could do so ungen tlemanly a thing, must not complain when he gets rough usage. But noth ing else could be expected of a fellow who prefers the society of a negro boot j black to that of decent white men. "The Negro should have the right to vote in the Northern (States and I will come into this Congressional dis trict and help elect Mr. Cessna to Con ' gress on this issue."— Tom Marshall at , the Radical Meeting, in presence of Cess na, who dared not repudiate the senti- I ment. A KAI)I( Vl. KEKEM.IOV THKEVTEY "• JoliliKtin. ol XiKMOiiri. ID clarus ili.il Sey mour'* Inauguration Shall lie PrpvcntHl By Frve! The Radicals are preparing to rebel in case any of the Southern States are needed to elect the Democratic candi date. Johnson, their candidate for At torney General of Missouri, made a speech at Saline, in that State, a few days since, in which he said, repeating the sentiment several times: "There could and should be but one ! result to the election this fall—that General Grant, backed by the army and supported by the whole Radical j party, would prevent, with the bayo net, tiie inauguration of a Democratic administration at Washington, and that the Radical State Government at Jefferson would resist and put down in the same way any attempt to inaugu rate the Democratic party into power in this State.-' Such is the revolutionary and bloody purpose of these desperate Radicals. The only way to settle them, is, for the i people of the Northern States to over whelm them at the polls. Conserva tive Republicans should understand that if they would prevent the threat | ened Radical Revolution, the vote for ! Seymour and Blair must be made de j cisire in the Northern States. Moder ate thinking men of Pennsylvania! Is not your duty clear in the premi - - V Is the Union restored ? Not accord ing to the Grant Reconstruction plat i form. MOKE MEN. The Inquirer of last week is brim | full of such lies as the more respectable j Republican journals think ita disgrace to print. We copy : The "I.ON( Cause" to he :■■<•<]. "What the Confederacy fought for will he won by the election of Seymour and Blair—[Gov. Z. B. Vance. SeeesNion not !><*il. "I do not care for the platform. It | tells a lie in its first resolution. It says 'secession is dead.' Secession is not dead. It is more alive than ev j er."—[Gov. Wise. Ilie Confederacy M;INS Triumph. The cause for which Stonewall Jack son fell cannot be in vain ; hut in some form, will yet triumph." [Wade Hamp ton. Npymoiir i'rcfi'rri'il Confederate Consti tution. Iloratio Seymour, after the adoption of the Confederate Constitution, said to Judge Charles H. Ruggles: "It is better than ours, (the Federal.) Then , why not obviate all difficulty, by simp ly adopting that (Confederate) Consti ; tutiou ?" These are specimen bricks. There | is not one word of truth in the .state ment that either Vance, Wise or Hampton ever made use of the lan guage attributed to them. They have all publicly denied that they have said ; anything of the kind. As for Sey | mour preferring the "Confederate Con stitution," he certainly had a queer way | ofshowing his preference for it, ichen he issued 15,000 commissions to Union offi- I cers, organized over 300,000 troops, anil sent 17,000 emergency men to Gettysburg, |to help put down that Constitution. How easy a thing it is to squelch a j liar! ©Kj? iscafutti tS/iyrur, sErSifJorti > pa* NOW, YOU CAN SEE: i The mouth-piece of the Radicals, > Tom Marshall, at their meeting on Saturday night of last week, declared that his party is in favor of compelling the people of eleven States to have Negro Suffrage, and that it must also be established in the Northern States. ! Now, Republicans, you can see what ' your leaders are driving at! They have riveted their odious policy upon the Southern States, and now, with I Grant as an instrument to deceive you, they want to fasten it upon you ! They j are getting bolder. They imagine the j people will tolerate any thing they | choose to do. They think Grant's j military cloak will cover their infa mous purposes from your sight. Even now, there is snugly filed away in one ' of the committee rooms of Congress, | Sumner's bill to legislate Xegro Suffrage into all the States. Elect men like John Cessna, or, in fact, any Radical, i to Congress, and they will pass this bill at once. Should Grant he elected and veto it, they will pass it over his | veto. If they carry the election, they will say the people endorsed Xegro j Suffrage at the polls and demand such a law from Congress. This is plainly . foreshadowed in the speech of Tom. Marshall. The Radical party is openly committed to this purpose. Grant stands upon their platform and accepts their doctrines. He is tarred with the same stick as Sumner, Kelley, Wade and the rest. Let every Republican who is opposed to Universal Negro 1 Suffrage act out his principles, and J either not vote at all, or vote for Sey i mour and Blair. - "The Republican party has been la boring since the close of the war to es tablish firm an 1 stable civil govern ments in the Southern States and re store them, to peace and prosperity." | —lnquirer. A deliberate, naked and shameless falsehood! In 1865, there were "firm and. stable governments" erected in those States, upon the plan of A. Lin coln, carried into effect by Andrew Johnson. [See testimony of U. S. Grant before the Military Committee of Congress.] The people of the South elected representatives to Congress, the same year, and asked to be recognized as in the Union. The "Republican" party, the infamous, devilish Radicals into whose control that party had fall en, refused admission to those repre sentatives, turned them away from the doors of Congress, passed the Recon struction Acts, divided the South into military districts, established an armed despotism over the Southern people, and forced Negro Suffrage and Negro Supremacy upon them at the point of the bayonet. They banded the blacks together in sworn leagues, and, as Sena tor Doolittle aptly and truthfully ex ! pressed it, "organized hell in the South." They "labor to establish firm and stable governments in theSouth !" They "labor to restore to those States peace and prosperity!" So Lucifer "labored to establish a firm and stable government" in Heaven! So the wolf "labors to restore peace and pros perity" to the sheep-fold ! Out upon the mendacious knave who thinks to palm off such a bald and tawdry lie upon his readers! Why, if the "Re publican'' party "labored" so hard to establish firm and stable governments in the Southern States and restore them to peace and prosperity, how comes it that their labor lias been unsuccessful ? j Nobody hindered them. Nobody could hinder them. They rode rough shod over all opposition to their policy. They handcuffed the President with their two-thirds vote in Congress, they gagged the Supreme Court, and they had their bayonets constantly at the throats of the Southern people. Now, whose fault was it that they have not succeeded? Nobody's but their own. Their policy is unequal, unjust, corrupt, wicked and diabolical and cannot be carried out. They have failed because they are wrong. Let them not complain when they bring ruin upon their own heads. "My nigger that blacks my boots is as good as any Democrat in the land." Tom Marshal/, John Cessna's right bow- Cr. THE gushing love for the soldier that fills the soul of John Cessna, prompted him togotoChambersburgon thedaybe fore the meeting of the Franklin coun ty convention, to lay the ropes that would slaughter the gallant Col. Whist ling, in the house of his friends. — What arguments Cessna used to con vince the delegates that he was more entitled to the conferees than the sol dier who was clearly the choice of that county, has not yet come to light. But he succeeded. John's motto is,—and in fact it is the motto of the i radicals everywhere—never sacrifice your own interests to enhance those of the sol dier. Thus we have another instance of the great love which that party pro fesses to have for the soldiers. One after another they are crushed as they lay themselves down before this Juggernaut of Radicalism. First, Capt. Stuckey, now Col. Weistling, both had to be slaughtered to appease this new god who has set himself up to be worship ped by the Radical party in this district. Bring along the next victim ! Will it be Lieut. Longenecker? DKAIII or KTEVEMH. , Thaddeus Stevens died at his resi -1 donee in Washington, 011 Teusday 1 night, the 10th inst., at 12o'clock, aged ; 70 years, liis remains were taken to • Lancaster, where the funeral took place > j on Monday afternoon of this week.— . 1 He was the acknowledged leader of the t Radicals, and in his death that party ' has sustained an irreparable loss. , "The Negroes should have the right to vote in the Northern States and 1 will eonie into this Congressional dis . triet and help elect Mr. Cessna to (.'Oll - gross on this issue."— Tom Marshall at the Radical Meet tut;, in presence of Cess na, who dared not repudiate the senti ! meat. . . Foruey says, "We anxiously await : Seymour's third letter." lie will have his wants supplied on the fourth of i March next. The document was pre ! pared some time ago and is as follows: j "I do solemnly swear that I will faith- ; fully execute the office of President of the \ \ United States, and will to the best of my ability preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United Slates." 1 Almost as short as Grant's speech at j i St. Ixmis, and a little more to the | point. — 1 1 1 1 "The Negro should have the right to vote in the Northern States and I will come into this Congressional dis trict and help elect Mr. Cessna to Con gress on this issue."— Tom Marsha// at j the liudieal Meetimj, in presence of Cess- j na, who dared not repudiate the senti | meat. JOII.V t'F.SSX\'H MODFXTi'. Seldom have we witnessed, says the | Chambersburg Valley Spirit , such an outrageous violation of all the rules of decency as that of which the Itadical County Convention was guilty last week. Col. George I>. Weistling had heen announced by his friends as a can didate for Congress. No other person was named for the position from this county. It was supposed by Democrats, ! who are accustomed to the observance j of the rules of etiquette in their Con ventions as well as in social life, that the Conferees from this county would be conceded to Col. Weistling. But not so. For weeks prior to the assem bling of the Convention, the Colonel was subjected to the most virulent a buse published in tiie columns of the j ' party organ. He was bitterly tie- j nounced for presuming to claim the re commendation of this county. The ; | Repository gave all the space that was asked for to those whoseemed to delight in traducing Col. Weistling and bis friends. But when his friends rallied j to his support and sought to defend him against the attacks of an anony mous scribbler, they wore denied the opportunity. "All our columns to traduce, but not one square to defend," was the magnanimous motto of the ; Editors of the Radical organ, who seem to have fallen in love with little John ! Cessna. When the delegate election in the j North Ward of this Borough resulted ! in the choice of Weistling delegates, the Cessna men got up a small secession : movement, and bolted. They threat ened to elect other delegates.—ln some way, however, the matter was arranged and the Convention was spared the an noyance of a contest between rival sets of delegates for seats in the Conven j tion. On the night before the Convention ; assembled, John Cessna, with his char | aeteristic modesty, appeared upon the j ground, brought here by invitation, j to assist in slaughtering Colonel Weist ; ling in his own County. His friends j ' had been active and had succeeded in J having the Convention "set up." And j on the ballot being taken, Cessna was declared to be the choice of this Coun- j j ty for Congress. Then came the riehsst part of the | ! whole performance. Mr. Adams, one ; of the avowed friends of Cessna, intro , duced a resolution which was intended as a healing salve for Colonel Weist ; ling. It eulogized him in glowing language, complimented him upon his services in the field, commended his fidelity to his party and gave him credit for commanding talents. But Colonel Weistling was not in a humor |to be "soft-soddered." With the in stinct of a gentleman he spurned the proffered compliment, knowing well the hollownessof the friendship which prompted it. Eloquently, earnestly, and with masterly skill, he dissected the resolution and exhibited its total inconsistency with the former action of the Convention. The Cessna dele gates, who evidently felt that they had been guilty of a mean trick quailed under the manly words that fell from his lips. Another effort was made to press the resolution, but, with an ear nestness and significance that could not be mistaken, the Colonel uttered another vigorous protest, and it was withdrawn. John Cessna regards it as a crime for any one to oppose him. Possessed of more impudence and self conceit than it would be safe to entrust any | ten men with, he supposes that people everywhere have the same opinion of him that lie has of himself. It would be a mistake too, to charge him with having any keen sense of honor, or any of the notions of propriety which would have kept a man of refined sen sibilities away from Chambersburg during the session of this Con vention. He came here to ride rough shod over Colonel Weistling, to crush his opponents beneath his feet and to teach them that they must never be come refractory on his hands hereaf ter. But the Convention was not satis fied with slaughtering the only candi date from this County for Congress in order to satisfy the demands of the little Bedford God, but it must needs add insult to injury. Out of all the gentlemen of the Radical party in this County, the President selected two con- ferees who must be specially obnoxi ous to Colonel Weistling, one of them being the reputed author of the articles which assailed him so bitterly, and the other, one of our neighbors of the JieposUury who refused to let the Col onel in to a defence. This is a Radical quarrel and of course with it we have nothing to do. But we have felt it our duty as journal ists lo thus publicly call attention to the shabby treatment which the sup porters of that little demagogue, John Cessna, extended to Colonel Weistling, who, however Radical he may be in polities, is nevertheless a thorough gentleman. John Cessna has thus succeeded in securing the conferees from this Coun ty. We congratulate him on his suc cess. We have been wishing for him to run at a time when it would be in the power of the Democracy to "lay him out" and we opine that he has hit | the right time. We propose to move immediately upon his works. To the deep mortification of being \ misrepresented in Congress by illiter- I ate, nasal-tongued. carpet-bag adven turers, there is yet a heavier weight of humiliation for the Boi#hern people to bear in the election of their Presiden- j | tial electors by the pretty carpet-bag gers and Freedmen's Bureau clerks, who comprise their Legislatures. The negro and scallawag members of the Texas Convention have voted themselves fifteen dollars a day for their valuable services in making a con ; stitution. Thus, says the Louisville Journal, they have out-niggered and 1 out-seallnwaged even the niggers and seal la wags of the other Southern con ventions. WE Polked them once, We Pierced them well, And then we Buckedthein sore; And with Frank Blair We'll make them stare, | That they may all Sey-inour. j Nearly every Conservative meeting in the South has been interrupted by negroes, instigated by the cowardly , Yankee carpet-baggers. "Let us have j peace." The Radical Governor of Louisiana ! demands military aid, and Brownlow wants negro troops to help carry the State. "Let us have peace." The Radicals want to organize cam-, paign choirs, but out of regard for Grant, they will have 110 Jevvsharps. 1 1 - ■■■ If the Radicals want impartial suf ; frage, what does their platform say I one suffrage North and another South for? The Connecticut Legislature, Radi- I cal, is accused of filching seven dollars per day. It is a Radical characteristic. it impartial suffrage to enfran chise the black and disfranchise the white man ? The Radical party is staggering, and j Prentice thinks it is from having swal ! lowed Grant. The Black Test—see it at the head of this paper and read it to your neigh : bor. Ex-President Pierce writes that ! New Hampshire will go for Seymour. • If the Radicals want peace, what are j they arming the negroes for? The next inaugural address will be ! an flotation. The Inquirer propose to "fight it out j on this lying if it takes all summer." I JA I'VV. I lllooil.i Itittl.-s: Murder* ol' Christians. Elf.: One-Half of Jeddo (turned. i SAX FRANCISCO, Aug. I(s.—The j | steamship Colorado, with advices j ! from China dated at Shanghae and i I llong Kong to July 15, and from Yo- j kohama, Japan, to July 20, arrived j hereto-day. The Colorado landed a I number of passengers for New York, j | Foreigners were prospecting at the I gold diggings in China. American fog j horns were likely to be placed on the Yangt.se river. The United States squadron was for the most part in Ja pan. Several Chinese pirates have been punished. It was said that one hun dred and fifty Christian natives of Ja pan had been taken to sea and drown ed near Nagasaki in defiance of a pro test of the foreign Consuls. Severe battles had been fought be tween the contending forces in Japan, j with varying results. Half of the city j of Jeddo, including two temples, has j been burned. 11 is said that the North- ; ern princes wish to refer all matters of j home difference to England, France, I and the United States, for final settle- | mcnt. A new port had been partially I opened in the west of Japan. Otorrnl J.-icKson's Opinion of "No I'oli* f3" CniHliUntfs. "I shall have no policy of my own to interfere against the people. U. S. GRANT." I say again, fellow citizens, remem ber the fate of ancient Rome, and vote for no candidate who will not tell you with the frankness of an independent freeman, the principles upon which, if elected, he will administer your Government. That man deserves to he a slave who would vote for a mum candidate when his liberties are at stake. ANDREW JACKSON. Pertinent Questions. The New York World propounds the following pertinent questions. What Radical can answer them ? If reconstruction is a success, why isn't the army withdrawn? If the Radicals mean to economize, why didn't they begin three years ago? If the negroes can vote of them selves, why pay the Bureau to teach them ? If the Radicals want peace, what j are they running their candidate 011 his military morits for? If the Radicals mean equal rights, why one currency for capital aud an other for labor ? If the Radicals want impartial suff rage, what does their platform say one suffrage North and another South for ? If the Radicals want peace, what are they arming the negroes for ? Is it impartial suffrage to enfranchise the black and disfranchise the white man? " The War bet weent he State*, its Cause*, Character, Conduct and results, by Hon. i Alexander 11. Stevens, is (lie title of a valuable work just issued by The Na tional Publishing Co., Philadelphia. | Pa. Histories of the late civil war have sprung up like mushrooms, and they ' can now be numbered almost by hun dreds, but all who are desirous of arri ! ving at a correct understanding of the causes, and a clear history of the events i of the lamentable war, have felt the want of a reliable history of the same | from a Southern standpoint, by some representative man of the South. This : want is about to be supplied by Alex ander 11. Stevens. Mr. Stevens was a most earnest protestnnt against re i hellion, and only succumbed at the last I moment, when his State, in spite of his warning committed the great error. The bare announcement that this distinguished Statesman had deter mined to write a book, would, of itself, | be sufficient to kindle a lively and | wide-spread interest in all sections of ; the country ; but when it is known | that he has chosen as his theme the one so fruitful as the late American War, the absorbing interest of the | subject, together with the evident and | singular fitness of the author for its | treatment, unite in awakening a curi j osity entirely unparalleled in the an ' nals of American literature. It presents a careful political analy sis of the past, separating real from ap parent causes of the late unhappy con flict, and gives those interior lights and shadows of the Great War, only I known to those high officers, who watched the flood-tide of Revolution from its fountain-springs, and which | Were so accessible to Mr. Step hens from his position as second officer of the Con federacy. To a public that has been surfeited | with apjmrently simitar product km*, it presents a change of fare, both a greeable and salutary, and an intellec | tual treat of the highest order. The ; Great American War has at last found a historian worthy of its importance, and at whose hands it receives that ; , moderate, candid and impartial treat ment which truth and justice so ur- I gently demand. This most valuable work issold only I by subscription, and the publishers ; want an agent in every County. TBI LADY'S FRIEND, FOR SEPTKM ISER. —A spirited Steel Engraving call ed "The Attack," leads off the Sep tember number of tliis "Queen of the ' Monthlies." This is followed by the usual elegant Stell Fashion Plate and by a fine Wood Engraving, suited to to the seaside season, called "On the | Cliff." Thencomenumerousengravings of the Fashions, interesting to ladies, with a piece of Music. The literary matter of this number is unusually inter esting. We can safely recommend "TI IV. I.a i i\'!g EN D." as occupy ing the very front rank among the fa- ! dies' magazines. It is published by 1 Deacon & Peterson, 319 Walnut street, Philadelphia, at $2.50 a year. SEE ADVERTISEMENT, in another col- ; unin, of "Agents Wanted" for the standard and official lives of Seymour and Blair, by James D. MeCabe, Jr. This work is endorsed by the leading Democrats and Conservatives of the ; Union. No friend of constitution- ! al liberty should fail to read it. Pub lished by the United States Publish ing Company, 111 Broome street, New j York. THE GALAXY for September is on our table. It is replete with excellent literary articles. The Galaxy is a wel come visitor. Published by Sheldon ' & Co., New York. __ THE NEW POST OFFICE LAW. —The j post office law just passed by Congress contains some important changes in the mode of conducting the business of the department, and as all our readers i are more or less interested iu sending j and receiving letters and newspapers, j we publish some of the provisions of ■ the new law for their information.— ; The law provides that all letters on 1 which the name of the sender isendors- ; ed shall be returned to him if not call- \ for within thirty days; it doubles the j compensation of postmasters for the payment of money orders, but reduces the fees on the same. It permits weekly newspapers sent to regular subscribers in the county where pub lished to he delivered free of postage from the post office nearest the place of publication ; it also authorizes the issue of duplicate money orders. This law also makes it a felony of high charac ter to use postage stamps a second time knowingly and authorises the Post master General to prescribe a uniform for letter carriers, and makes it a misde meanor for any one else to wear the same. ______________ "'Tis the penalty of nature that all must fade and wither." The first in road upon our personal charms is gen erally denoted by the hair, and in most cases prematurely. Let all who would preserve their natural capillary ' adornments make haste to apply that j never-failing potency, "Barrett's Veg etable llair Restorer.— Hartford Cour ant. AGENT WANTKU FOR BEDFORD | COUNTY.— A good live man can receive j ■ remunerative employment as agent j for the Hartford Livestock Insurance : Company. Address J. F. EATON, j Harrisburg, Pa., for particulars. 2\v\ i Mr. Seth Boyden, the strawberry j eulturist of Newark, believes that in the course of twenty years he could raise strawberries as large as pineap ples, and of equal delicacy with those now grown. New York seems determined to beat the Kentucky majority of ninety thousand. The Democrats of that State claim only a hundred thousand for Seymour. Judge Potter, who died in Michigan last week, was a brother-in-law of ex- President Pierce. New England is said to now rival Chicago in the matter of divorces. The Cuban ladies at Saratoga display some very costly and beautiful toilettes. : Campaign Gazette! ■ j REPUBLICAN GOVERNMENT. Civil Liberty and Coißtitu tiony^ghts! "Light, - lingeryof tin*' , - constantly between the in the dark nee i | more light!" w HBEBT, Prop'r. > | payer, bendingTjßL.—The uu* •i Umlicit fv,,. charge of the Bed j a Radical Uingr, ol / ohn Hafcr an . ' him. "Light, moll be able toaf ■ | pleading cry that oSt: i j those who earnestly seek a renifTl the disease that is tugging at the vi i ; tals of the nation. Look and ye shall • j see! Read and ye shall know! The BEDFORD GAZETTE, for the Presi p; dential Campaign, will be a complete compendiumof|>olitica] news,speech*-, i ; documents and every thing that per i tains toa political canvass in the coi i umns of a weekly newspaper. It will be published from the 7th of Augu-t until the seventh of November, next, at the following low terms, cash in a12.00 Penna. and West'n fancy, 12.00( 13.00 Rye flour, 9.25(3 9.50 GRAIN.—We quote— , Pennsylvania red, per bus., £2.30(5 2.35 Southern " California, " White, ' Rye, " O.OO@I.GU ! Corn, for yel., " 1.18(1.20 j Oat, " (5,88 c PR()VISI< )N'S. —We quote— | Mess Pork, per bbl., s2§.sote 29.00 j Bacon Hams, per lb., 20(521e | Salt Shoulders, " 12c i Prime Lard, " 17c j SEEDS. —We quote | Cloverseed, per bus., at $8.50@9.0<> j Timothy, " 2.50( 2.G0 I Flaxseed, " 2.85(5.2.85 SPECIAL NOTICES. I ~ • DR. TOBIAS' Celebrated Venetian Liniment whose wonderful cures, sure and instan j taneous action in cases of Chronic Rheumatism, I Headache, Toothache, Cuts, Burns, Colic, Cramps, i Dysentery, etc., have astonished the civilized : world. It is no new catch-penny, but an article i that has stood the test of twenty years. The enor mous sale and rapidly increasing demand is at once the surest evidence of its usefulness aud pop . ularity. Try it and be convinced. No family I should be without a bottle in the house—hundreds : of dollars, and many hours of suffering may be j saved by its timely use. Colic, Cramp, and Dys j eniery yield at once to its pain-curative propcr i ties. It is perfectly innocent, and can be given jto the oldest person or youngest child. No mat ; ter, if you have no confidence in Patent Mcdi j ciues—try this, and you will be sure to buy again | and recommend to your friends. Hundreds ot ! Physicians recommend it in their practice. None | genuine unless signed, "S. L Tobias.Price 50 ! cents ber bottle. Sold by all the Druggists. De | pot, 56 Cortlandt Street, New York. jul2iw4 FIFTY THOUSAND HEADS now j clothed with masses of rich black and brown hair i would, if thoy were unfortunately Cut Off \ from a supply of CRISTADORO'S DYE, begin to Turn White, red. sandy, and gray. Manhood and beauty, with tho one defect in their personal appearance remedied by CRISTADORO'S HAIR DYE, rejoice in their good fortune, and recommend it to all who require a perfect dye. Manufactured by J. CRISTADOKO, fib Maiden Lane. New York. Sold by ail Druggists. Applied by all Hair Dross crs. jul24w4 A NEW REMEDY IN CONSUMPTION. - A Physician who had Consumption for several years, with frequent bleedings of the lungs, cured himself with a medicine unknown to the profes sion, when his case appeared hopeless. He is the only physician who has used it in his own person, or who has any knowledge of its virtues ; and he can ascribe the degree of health he now enjoys to nothing but ihe use of his medicine ; and nothing but utter despair and entire extinction of all hope of recovery, together with a want of confidence in all others induced him to hazard the experiment To those suffering with any disease of the Lungs he proffers a treatment he confidently believes ; will eradicate the disease. Medicine sent by ex ! press. Send for a circular or call ou DR E BOYLSTON JACKSON, No. 250 North Tenth Street, Phil'a. mayS'fiSyl. ITCH ! ITCH ! ! ITCH !!!— Scratch ! Scratch Scratch ! ! ! —ln from 10 48 hours WH BATON'S OINTMENT cures THE ITCH. j WHEATON'S OINTMENT cures SALT RHEUM. | WHEATON'S OINTMENT cures TETTER. | WHEATON'S OINTMENT cures Barbers' Itch. \ WHEATON'S OINTMENT cures Old Sores. S WHEATON'S OINTMENT cures Every It ml of llumor like Magic. Price, 50 cents a box ; by mail, 60 cents. Ad- I dress WEEKS A POTTER, NO. 170 Washington Street, Boston, Mass. For sale by all Druggists. 50p20,'67yl DEAFNESS, BLINDNESS, and CA TARRH treated with the utmost success by J. ISAACS, M D., aud professor of Diseases of the Eye anil Eat in the Medical College of Penn sylvanii. 12 years experience , (formerly of Lcyden, Holland), No. 805 Arch Street Phila. Testimonials can be soen at his office. The medi cal tacuity are invited to accompany their pa tients, as he has no secrets in his practice. Arti ficial eyes inserted without pain No charge for examination. july3, IWyl READ WEEKLY "SHARP-SHOOT ! KK." —Novel, Practical and awfully Sharp on Fo gies, Quacks, Pharisees and Politicians, '•boring them right through Only 50 Cents a year in advance. Send 3 ot. Stamp lor Sample. Address Dr. S. M. Landis, Philadelphia, Pa. aug2lml