!h tftilfcvd ttJ Kriiay Merßtßg, Bwemlwr 4. IW. TIIK (;A/,;TTK. What earthly use is there In display, 1 noise, crowds, "fuss and feathers," if , th * reason of men it* not convinced there by? We address this question to in telligent men in every election district in this county, with the observation that if one half the money that is usu- . ally spent in the heat of political cam paigns, were raised now and applh-d to the payment of subscription to good Democratic journals to be placed in the hands of intelligent and reflecting "Re publicans," there would be much more favorable results at the polls. The "Radicals" all over the country have for years pursued the plan of paying for their papers to be sent to Democrats. This has been a powerful weapon in their hands. Will Democrats take the hint? Cannot some of our friends in each school district club together and : furnish wholesome political reading to their "Republican" neighbors? Nev er mind the scalawags who have no minds of their own or who are "catch 1 votes." Direct your attention to the in telligent and thinking men among your political opponents. Have your county paper sent them regularly and begin sending it as soon as possible. Do not wait until they have commit ted themselves, in their own mind", to the policy or candidates of their par ty. .Voir is the accepted time. Next year there will be an election of great importance to the people of the State, and especially to the people of this county. A Governor and Judge of the Supreme Court, a State Senator a id two members of the Legislature, a Prothonotary, Sheriff, Treasurer, Com- i : niissioner, etc., are to be elected. Of course we shall have lots of candidates for the county nominations. Will these gentlemen, for once, forego a lit tle of the bitter persbnal electioneering which has so often injured the party, J and strive, in generous emulation with each other, to do what they can for a common cause? Will they turn in and help us circulate the GAZETTE, SO that, if nominated, they may the more easily be elected ? We shall see. TKOI'BEE IX THE IUIIK 41. KAX'KN. The mutations of parties are strange indeed. The ups ano downs of politi cians are not less wonderful. Nine years ago, the so-called "Republican" party was but a weak and sickly baby, mewling and puling in the arms of its nurse, W.H.Seward, i.ike the toad that fills itself with vapor and expands • to twice its natnral size, this political suckling drank in the fumes of anti s'.avery agitation and was soon pulled up into a full-blown and overgrown existence. Then came a diet of human flesh and blood,upon which the appe tite of the party was glutted and upon which it grew fat and strong. lJut when the people had made an end of sacrificing to the god of war, the party j which had subsisted upon what the war produced, began to weaken and decay Even its faithful nurse gave it up. Soon, however, its dried up veins were filled with new blood, drawn from the victims of a riot gotten up specially to serve this purpose. Again it became vigorous and mighty. Like all convalescents, it grew fearfully vo racious and threatened todevourevery thing that stood in its pa h. It soon overloaded its stomach with a big : "reconstruction" dinner and the year 1807 found it very low and feeble.— Only one remedy remained, and that was to use the golden pills of the bond holders and permit a butcher who was something of a home-doctor to admin ister them. The physic barely saved the life of the party, and it is even now questionable whether a rupture be tween the physician and his patient will not yet end in death to the latier. Dropping the metaphor, it seems quite probable that the bond question is about to cause a serious quarrel in the itadical party. Gen. liutler clings , to his position with great pertinacity, and is fiercely antagonized by Greeley and most of the eastern Radicals. The western inea generally said with But ler. Grant's cabinet, in all probabili ty, will be divided on this question. As this is an issue that cannot be post poned, or evaded, we shall, doubtless, see lis'ely times in (Congress very .soon. There can be but one coram >n ground j upon which all the factious of the Rad ical party can stand, so far as this Issue is concerned, and that is a consolidation of the pttWc debt. But if they da unite upon this basis, they will be driven , from power, because the people will i then be able to perceive that it is the policy of Radicalism to fasten the debt j upon the country without any design or hope of eventual cancellation. Hence, in the height of their success, in the very flush of victory, the Radi cals stand upon the verge of defeat.— The A word of Damocles is suspended above their heads and the hair that do- I tains the sharp and fatal blow is brittle a glass. Will it not be snapped ere j lour years more of the history of the party shall be written ? Co.vVicTED.—Henry Bear a resident of St. Clair Township, was last week convicted of fraudulent voting and sen tenced to three months imprisonment in thecounty jail and a fineof fifty dol lars. His offence was voting twice, once in Napier township and after ward in St. Clair. He seems to have l>een intoxicated and made the tool of certain over zealous eopi-erhead-, but itdidn't -ave Seymour nor Kimmell either. We ho|>e when the real offen ders and responsible parlies in theca-e are found that they may get the full benefit of the law. There is no great er danger threatening our free institu tions to day than the frauds |>erpetra ted at the ballot Itox, and wherever the instigators of such crimes are found they should be more severely punish ed than their ignorant dupes. Quite a number of fraudulent copperhead votes were polled at the last election and we hojie every one of the offenders may be made to feel the rigors of the law.— Bedford Inquirer. As several persons are under bond to appear in the courts to answer the charge of procuring the above-named Bear to vote fraudulently, we had not intended to print anything upon the subject. But the foregoing requires a few words of explanation. The Inquirer says that Bear was "in toxicated" at the time he duplicated his vote. We have no doubt of it. Drunken men are said to "see double," and naturally are inclined to vote , double. Bear, however, was not "convicted." j He plead guilty. He did this contrary to the advice of his counsel, and as it is generally believed, at the instance of one of the counsel for the Common wealth, who asked the court to make the sentence as light as possible. Why this sudden affection of the prosecuting counsel for this self-eonfessed criminal Bear? Why this anxiety of the coun sel, i the fir-t letters of whose name are John Cessna,) to have this horrid trans gressor of the law so lightly punished ? "Thereby hangs a tale." Bear had turned State's evidence! He had made information against Bur ton Edsall ar.d Adam Earnest, who, he alleges, procured him to go to St. Clair tp., to vote, after he had already voted in Napier. As he had, under the ad vice of Itadical politicians, agreed to swear these parties into trouble, he was no longer a "tool of over zealous copperheads," but, if a tool of anybody, that of malignant and vindictive Radi cals. Of course, front that time for ward he was all right with the "trooly loiI," and deserved only "the lightest punishment tiie court can inflict." But if this man was drunk when he committed the fraud which he has confessed, how can he swear, with any degree of accuracy, as to what occurred between him and Edsall or Earnest? — Is such a man's evidence to destroy the good name of a reputable citizen V Is such a man the witness upon whom the great apostle of Temperance, John Cessna, relies for evidence to destroy the good name of his neighbors? We fully agree with the Inquirer that Bear's duplicated vote did not "save Kiuttnell or Seymour." It was not at all calculated to serve so good a pur pose. It amounted to just two votes for Cessna and Grant, as can easily he proved. There is not a well-posted Democrat in St. Ciair tp.. who does not know that Bear voted the Radical ticket. He may have been intoxicated, as the Inquirer says ai d may not have known what tie was doing, but he did that very thing, nevertheless. We hope, however, that our Radical friends will not get ali their "repeaters" to come forward and plead guilty, as Bear has done, for in that case the jail would have to be enlarged and an additional tax laid to pay for the boarding of such gentry. We are, therefore, inclined to believe that the Inquirer is only joking when it hopes that "every one of the offenders may be made to bear the rig ors of the law." W> would, however, advise our Democratic friend- through out the county to report some of the most flagrant casesof fraudulent voting, to the chairman of the County Com mittee, J. W. Dickerson, Esq., so that an example may l>e made in behalf ot justice and the purity of the ballot-oox. Look them up, friends, and let justice, not vengeance, have its full and unim peded sway. KI-KOXUEIt! After the election of 1864 the Demo crats had the Governor of hut a single State in the Union, Delaware. Braru lette, of Kentucky, was not then a Democrat, having been elected by what was called the "Union" party. After the election of 1868, we have the Governors of Connecticut, New York, New Jersey. Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky and California. We have also recovered the state of Oregon, which east its vote for Seymour, and the states of Georgia ami Louisiana, by immense mojorities. These three states will have Democratic Governors in another year, which will give us the control of the executive power in ten states. This shows the recuperative energy of the Iteiuocracy. Next year we shall defeat Geary, which will bring Pennsylvania once more into line. We are growing stronger. Courage, Democrats! Forward in the good cause! Now is the time for effect i ve wort. Your neighbors' beads are eool at pres ent. Talk with them. Some eager sight-seers or office-hun ter* are already engagtug rooms .u Washington for inauguration week. m)t stfrTifo23nrftirTr, C4NT UfANII OE.tKY. There is growing up in the Radical party, quite a spirited opposition to the re-nomination of Gov. Geary. We find * the following in a recent number of Fitzgerald's Philadelphia City Item, a Radical Journal of high standing : "Poor Geary is traveling and begging day and night to secure a re nomina tion. He coaxes, implores, f promi.-es, threatens, whines and cries. Never before has such a spectacle been seen in this .State. Mr. W. W. Ketchum and Gen. Harry White, of Indiana, are his competitors—both abler and better men, and neither of them liars." That is pretty plain talk. Brother Radicals should not thus wash each other's dirty linen in public. Let us have peace! PERIODICALS. THE DAILY MORNING PATRIOT.— This is the largest morning daily pub lished in central Pennsylvania. It is , decidedly the Inst news journal that comes to our office. It receives not only the Associated Press despatches, but also special reports front ali parts j of the country. The latest foreign news, by the Atlantic cable, is regular ly reported for its columns. The markets are made a specialty, and we hazard nothing in saying that its re ports of lite cattle markets of New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Pitts burg and Chicago, are fuller than those of any other daily paper. It is served . here by carrier at 75 cents per month, and sent to subscribers by mail at £7.1X1 per annum. The carrier serves the PATRIOT printed in the morning at noon of the same day. No other daily paper reaches here on the day upon which it is printed; hence the news of the PATRIOT is always a day later to subscribers here than that of other dailies. THE OI.L GUARD, FOR 1869.— The Old Guard is about to enter upon its j Seventh Volume, with a redoubled zeal in the cause of American liberty and American civilization. The field for such a Magazine is wider now than ever before. Political incompetency, and treachery te the fundamental prin ciples of our government, on the part of journals professing to be Democrat ic, call now for an un-paring pen on the side of truth aud justice. No quar ter shall be given, no mercy shown to monstrous political crimes whose flood-gates are now hoisted for anothi r four years. Several literary novelties will be presented in this new volume, among which will be a series of original sketches of Indian life and character, by William Gilmore Simms, the a blest of all the surviving representatives of i the best and brightest period of Ameri can literature. Terms, cash in advance. One copy, one year S3.een it partv to the robbery of Mr. Cross, a messenger of Adams Express, who was robbed of seven thousand dollars. Johnson was engaged in a similar robbery of a mes senger of the United States Express, three years ago, and sent to the peni tentiary for it, and pardoned before his time expired. It is believed that the right man has been captured. Albany, Novetnlier 2t>.—Elisha B. Foro, the husband of the woman who was murdered at West Davenport, Delaware County, on Tuesday morn ing, as supposed by a burglar, has been held by a unanimous verdict of the coroner's jury to answer the charge of murder. There were two severe fractures on the skull of the victim, besides pistol wounds. An examina tion of the prisoner will commence to day. It is rumored that John Slhlell in tends to make an effort to recover Ids property in New Orleans, and for this purpose has executed a power of attor ney to two New Orleans gentlemen. This was acknowledged before Genera! l>ix, American Minister in Paris, by John Slidell and his daughter, and in Frankfort by his son, before the Uni ted States Consul there. Young Slidell is a clerk in Erlanger's hank. The most sensible election bet yet recorded was that between a genth inan and lady in New Albany, Indi ana. In case of Grant's election he agreed to marry her, and in case of Seymour's success she was to marry h.in. At last accounts the parti-s were very well satisfied with the man ner in which the wager had been de cided. The Charleston Courier of the 14th ult., states that on the previous day, a lady who was passing down Weut worth street, met on her way two col colored girls who rudely pushed a gainst her, and when remonstrahd with, was told by them that she shou d have taken theoutside, and ought to have known better since tlit* election was o ver. A trivial matter, but an exempli fication of the old proverb—"Coming events ea-t their shadow- before." Some ten miles north of Salt Lake Ci ty isa iKjilingstilpher Spring. It gush es OUt 111 II gJ'i'.lt Vltrutc at the olodgings were furnish ed, 10,470 meals given, and 317 cared for. The Itev. I)r. Boynton, who converts his prayers into stump speeches, threatened to flog General Howard, a member of his Church, an 1 the G. uer al told him lie had better try it. The Langdon Mills, Manchester, are being doubled in their working capaci ty. The Locomotive Works have also been doubled within the la-t few years. Thr 10,000 visitors at Congress Hall, Saratoga, during the season, averaged each three dozen eggs and four chick ens, besides other heavy feeding. Ail the available troops at Carlisle Barracks will be shipped to the West to operate against the Indians, in ac cordance with the late order issued by G.-n. Grant. Governor Hoffman, of New York, re ceived the largest vote ever cast for any candidate in that State, viz: 4:18,459, and the largest vote ever cast for any candidate in any State in the Union since the foundation of thegoveruinent. Eight fish-hooks of a French pat tern- were recently taken from the stomach of a codfish at Boston. More than $->OO,OOO worth of property has been sold to actual set lers within a radius often mi les around Warrenton, Va., siuce the war. Pittsburgh, November 27.—James S. Paliner, of the firm of Palmer A Shields, auctioneer-, of thin city, com mittcd suicide this morning by taking laudanum. No cause is assigned for the act. Richmond, Novemlier 27.—James i Grant, who, it is alleged, shot 11. It. Pollard, was examined this morning, ami bailed in SI OIU to answer at the February term of court. A daughter of Mr. Miles Rice, of liu venswood, West V.rgi jia, was hurtled to death in his dwelling, which was consumed by fire a few nights ago. The child was locked up in a room and could not m ike its escape. Miss Eleanor Caruthers, of Lawrence, Mass., a young wo u m of tw -nty years old, fell dead fro at cx-item* it while going fve the enormous quantity of freight uow waiting transportation West. Bom k of our rt-a swinditni. A dollar is a dollar, and oftentimes represents har work, and it is not plea-ant to have it stolen by sharpers. Well, in the first place, we have no reiuembrantr of any l.ife Insurance company ever failing. It there wi re -ucha danger it certainly cannot !■ with n company managed by such men a- Jiij* Cooke, with a ps.id up capital ef a million dollar-, and managed by mtli of natiouai reputa tion. Tii- we have in the National Life Insurance Company, recce dy or ganized uinler as act of Congia--. Li e Insurance is rerl;ui*d tt a sci< ore and the ripest results of that science are embraced in this new company. The directors have adopted the simplot and safest plan. They mean to eon duet the hushes legitimately, to in sure at the lowe-t rates, ami to adopt j ever., method of doing the greatest good to irs patrons eosisteut with the rules of a sound insurance business. — The National Life Insurance Company, as it stands to-lay, is one of the best and safest in tfce country. llow often do you hear the coin- ' plaint from mother and father that iiitir non .7o("(i.00 Northwest extra, 6.50; 10AO Penna. and West'n fancy, 11.00.".13J00 Rye flour, 8.00(u8AO GRAIN.—We quote— Pennsylvania red, per bus., $1,900? 2.10 Southern 44 California, 44 White, 44 Rye, 44 0.00(a,1.50 Corn, for vel., 44 1.2tpa1.21 Oats, * 44 (??70c PR()VISIONS. —We quote— Mess Pork, per bbl., $28.50,? 20.00 Bacon Hams, per lb., 20 "21c Salt Shoulders, 44 12c Prime Lard, 44 17c SEEDS. —W quote Cloversced, per bus., at $7.25*3 7.75 Timothy, 44 2.50(ai2.00 Flaxseetl, 44 2.85(0?2.85 | SPE( 1.1 L SO Til K.V. eu-styles of Foil Clothing. Wfe li.vile special attention to our assortment of clothing 'or the FALL AND WINTER SEASON We have an unusu ally full aud complete assortment now in . store, to which we are making large addi tions eHcb day "f new styles, as they re received. We have also a CHOICE AND COMI-LETE ASSORTMENT OP PIECE GOODS, wbieh will be made up to order in our CUSTOM DEPARTMENT in unsurpassed style. SPECI L NOTICE. —StyIe, fit, and workmanship of our garments surpassed by none—equalled by few. All priees guaranteed lower than i the lowest elsewhere, and full satisfaction guaranteed every purchaser in all cases, or the sale canceled and money refunded. Ha/Juiy between t BENNETT A Co., ! Ft tih and '• To WEE HALL. Sixth Street*, J 518 MARKET ST., J PHILADELPHIA, AND 600 BROADWAY. NEW YORK. OctlSyl ! DEAFNESS, BLINDNESS, and CA TARRH treated with the utmost success by J. ! ISAACS. M D.. and professor of Disease* of the Ry' and Ear in the Medical College of Penn sylvania. 12 years experience, jforiuerly °f I Leyden. Holland), No. 805 Arch Street Pbila. Testimonials can be seen at his office. The medi cal faculty are invited to accompany their pa tients, as he has no secrets in his practice. Arti ficial eye.- inserted without pain. No charge for j examination. july3,'6Byl * A CAKD.—A Clergyman, while re- ; siding in South America as a missionary, discover- j ed a sate aud simple remedy for the cure of Ner vous Weakness. Early Decay, Diseases of the Uri- ! nary and Seminal Organs, and the whole train of disorders brought ou by baneful and vicious hab its Great numbers have been cured by this noble j remedy. Prompted by a desire to benefit the af flicted aud unfortunate, I will send the recipe for ! preparing and using this medicine, in a sealed ; envelope, to any one who needs it. FREE OF CHARGE. Address, JOSEPH. T INMAN, Station D, Bible House, seplSm3* Sew- York City. itotircs, Ac. VJ"OTICE T<) TRESPASS BIDS.- No- X T tice is hereby given, by the undersigned, to all persons, not to trespass on any of their respec- ' live properties, or any property iu tlieir care or possession, by lease or otherwise, by hunting, fishing, pilfering, or in any manner whatever, a (ifeaught.) tfcey will be prosecuted to the fullesi extent df the law . without respect to persons. Any person, or persons, caught on any of the shove named properties, witb gun, dog, gameor anything j whatever, pertaining to trespass, shall be taken a.- j evidonce. fboui.is Rose. Sr., Daniel Swaruwelder, Jacob Pennell, John Peuuetl, Isaac Blankley. P. V Rediuger. George W. Shaffer. Joseph Morse, B. B Stockman, 11. J Vleans, G. W. Means, Jomithaii ! Periu, A.J. stectuian A ti. F Pennell, 1). Means ; and John Morris seplSm.T* Ij'dTBAY NOTICE. —(Jnoie to thtrl _j premises of the undersigned in Bedfird tp. ■ abu the first otOctober, last, one dirk briudit i BL EL. with whiu face, two fore feet white to j the knees and t > white hind ieet ; one while an I • red spotted HEIFER, left earcrop., about J yeai old ; one re 1 8 IE Eli, wi h left ear erupt, about 3 years old The oir is requested to come for ward. prove property, pay cu rges and take (hem away oilier vise tley will be iisposed oi accord ing to law. no, 20w3 J ( 'HN B. AMOS. itotiifs. IAXEL'UTOKS' NOTlCE.—Ntilke i* j hereby given tbat lettersTestementary hav. been grained by the Kigis'er of Bedford Couniv ! on Ihe Estate of Abmh tin Blaekbum. latent N i pier Township, in Slid C unty, to the undersigned ! residi g in sai l Ttwuship, that those having ! claims on said Esta t are notified to present theui j for settlement, aud those indebted to same to ! make immediate payment. GEJKGEW BLACKBURN. I „ „ AUJUSTUS F BLACKBURN, oet3ow6 Bzeoutow. \IJ P. SCHELL. F V GENERAL AGENT OP THE National Life Insurance Company of the United \ States of America, ftr Blatr, Bedford. Cambria i Huntingdon and Son rset counties. Xj/'Reliable and iffiuent local agents wanted I in every town and tcwuship. Apply to W. P. SCHELL, Bedford. Pa I Sales. VALUABLE REAL ESTATE AT \ PRIVATE SALE No. 1 contains ft! acre- in Kits: Providence tp t •ve'l timbered mile troin the Pike at Rays Hill. So. 2. 2IM) acres. 75 acre* cultivated, balance well timbered, good milt e, 6 miles south ot Bloody Run No. 3. 112 acres, wi a-'res in go'd Hate of culti vation. good builJing-. 3 miles sou h of Bloody Ron No 4 134 acres, 86 acres clear d, 2 miles from Bloody Hun. No 5 123 a-'rea nil a re cleared balance well li'ubcr-d. J ierlaid WNB Iron or> 1 miles south of >•' X'Oll N ■ 6 H -u-o and lot on Main street, Jj| jj K • in i g"'i bu -'uess part of the town No 7 '1 lor h i Spring dree - .. Bloody Rui . near Hnil Ri.n i 8-Jition All of the above are v.luaWe pr- p-r-i.-s and will be so 1 or, re i-or. abb- terms, or will be traded tor 'o-. d > rircjriv nercor in t , we-' t roi the Oij bin s Couit of Bedford County, the undersigned will offer at public sal,, on the premises, ou Friday, the is b uay of De ceriiber i vo, the following valuabl. Real Estate, viz: A tract uf land, in Juniata township, ad joining lands of Franci.- Hainan. George Walker. John Liiiian aud Daniel Harrier, eouiainiug ICU acres, near measure, ab >ut Kit) acres cleared and under fence, about 15 acres of which is goo 1 mead ow. The improvements area story-aud-a-halflog house, spring bouse, double log barn and other necessary buildings A'so an apple orchard thereon Also the one undivided half of the f Blowing de scribed tract of land, adjoining lands of Francis Human. Daniel Harrier and Daniel Shroyer, con taining 70 acres, neat measure, having a saw mill thereor, erected. Sale to commence at 10 o'clock of said day NATHAN KEGJ, Trustee for the sale of the Real Estate of John Kegg. dee'd MVllt4 \RA KG AIN ! —A Farm of 1-5 acres one mile northeast of Bedford, with So acres cleared, balance iu good timber. 20 acres recently limed, 25 acres of fine clover sod. two n> v -r-fail ing springs and an abundance of other running water, a good fruit orchard, new barn, log bous and outbuildings, well adapted to grazing or grain growing will b-- sold at a bargain Enquire o{ JOHN S. SPROAT or J W DICKER ON, lovl3vr:*> Bedford. Pa INARM FOR SALE.—We offer for Sale, a farm in Napier p . containing ibis acres. 60 cleared, uuderfenee end in 11 good "tateof cultivation, the balan te is well timbered with good bark timber The improvements are a new two gtory house, (weather-boar led), a good loz house, stable and o'her outbuilding*. There if an orchard of choice Fruit Trees on the farm. 7 fail farm adjoins land 4 of John t-hartzor. David Bor der and Asa Stuekey. This farm must be -old between this and the first of January. Terms one third in hand, arid the balance in two < ral annual payments. METER - * A MENGEL novl3rf P*OR SALE OR TRADE. 2 iracts. of 160 acres each, within three miles a depot on the Union Pacific Railroad, bar k of Omaha. 1 tract of bottom land, timbered and praire. two miles fr-on Omaha city. One-third of 7.1)00 acres in Fulton county. Ps , including valuable ore. mineral and timber laads. near Fort Littleton. Over 4,001.' acres of valuable ore, coal and tins bcr lands in West Virginia. Also —320 acres "f land in Woodbury co.. Towi ALSO—Twen'y-five one acre lots, adjoining the borough of Bedford, with limestone rock for kiln or quarry, on the upper end of each ALSO 80 acres in Franklin Co.. lowa. ALSO. 5 lots of ground, in Bedford, 60 by 240 ft . former ly part of the Lyons' estate. 0. E. SHANNON, jun2l. 67yl Bedford. Pa ITALI'AHLE LAND FOR HALE \ —The undersigned offers for sale the follow ing valuable bodies ot land : THERE CHOICE TRACTS OF LAXD, containing 160 acres each, situated on the Illinois Central Railroad, in Champaign county. State of Illinois. 8 miles from the city of Urbana, aud <,ne mile f|,,tn Kentual Station on said Railroad. Two <,t' the tracts adjoin and one of ibem has a never Doling pond of waterupouit Thecityof L rbana coutauis about 4.000 in' abitants. Ciiampuign the greatest wheal grow ing county in Illinoi-. ALSO — One-fourth of a tract of land, situated iu Broad Top township. Bedford county, con.sin ing ab.ut 45 acres, with all iheceal veins of Brand Top running through ; t. ALSO — Three Lot* in the town of Coalman'.- Huntingdon county. Jan 2', '66-tf F C. REAMER VTATURE'S GtiEAl HEsTOREIL HC 11 E E 1 Z' H CtLEBBATED BITTER CORDIAL This medical preparation is now offered to the public as a reliable substitute for the many wottr ies- compounds which now flood the market It is purely vegetable, composed of various herb?, gathered from the great storehouse of n.vure, and selected with the utmost care. It is in i recommended as a Ct'RE ALL. but by its direct and salutary influence upon (be Heart, Liver. Kidneys, Lungs, Stomach and Bowels, it ao both as a preventive and cure for many of the diseases to wbieh those organs are subject. It • a reliable Family Medicine, and can be taken ly either iutaut or adult with the same beneficial re sults It is a certain, prompt and speedy reinedv tor DIARRHtEA. DYSENTERY. BOWEL COM PLAINT. DYSPEPSIA, LOWNESSOFSPIRITS FAIN ITNGS. SICK-HEADACHE, Ac. For Chills and Fevers of all kiuds, it is far better and safer than quinine, without any of its pernicious efl'eet- It creates an appetite, proves a powerful digesier of food, and will counteract the effects of liquor in a few minutes. PREPARED BY JACOB SCHEETZ, .Sole Proprietor, N. W Cor. Fifth and Race Sts., Phiiad'a. Pa SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS n0v13.'66.yl ff*HE CHAMPION. I HICKOK'S PATENT PORTABLE Keysione Citler anil Wine Mill OVER 16,000 I. Y USE AXD APPROVED This admirable machine is now ready for ti;e fruit harvest of 1366, is made in the most perfec; manner, with two tubs, and is worthy the atten tion of all persons wanting such a machine it oas no superior in the market, and is the only mill ihat will pruperly grind grapes. This is ttie original mill, much improved and the best in the United Status. FOR SALE BY ALL RESPECTABLE DEALERS I also make two sizes "fsuperior Dresses ior Kernes. est and cheapest suoserlp tioa book ever publisl e 1, ami en dorsed by all Literajy People in Europe ami America. As well to supply a much needed want in our own country by diffusing correct information iu a form best adapted to our people as to gratify re peated solicitations from friends to issue an Amer ican edition of this valuable work, the Publishers have undertaken the enterprise. The vast amount of illustrated trash tbat iiu flooded the com :r;. for some years past demands a book of this char icter. for the beuefi' of those who wish to readier tn ttrnction and entertainment, instead of chep pictures and sensational newspaper clippinK* b mud up is form of ami sold for books Tbi- ureal work is of itself a complete ao.l - leel librmy tor every family Containing cg r .1 tM( closely printed pages, on all subj v:s i l ular inteiesi, from the best authors, and esp.ci y adapted to the wants ol the people. Tilt* da ; i (juries reeeivtd as to date of isue give u.cts of an ex raord nary sale. By applying a •nee ageing wnl se-aie ruleas> t -ed party, or section. Scud to circulars, and see our terms aud a lull d' sci ipiion i this eiairui ' work A I dross UNITED .-T WES PI I!LI*IKNG C 411 Broom Bi. New lira nuv2t)w6 \UCTIO EE It.- 1 l.t- until i.aict •t! having renewed his license as an auciie <* for Young Men on the interesting relation "t Bridegroom to Bride, in the institution of ll ' riago,—a Guide to matrimonial felicity, and true happiness Sent by mail in sealed letter en* •* opes free "f charge Address, H a, v aKD ASSO CIATION, ll.jP, Philudeip ..a, P. Rug2rt'6vl