SELECT .3LES'CE.L.L4NI''. QUEEN ISA In the year 1807, WRS seated upon the throne of Spain it 'debauched and gluttonous old man—Charles IV . , feeble In mind and body, impotent in action, and dissolute to the utmost extreme in his habits. . His wife—Louisa Maria—a Neapo , . litan prineess, was,perhaps,as shame less a profligate as could be found in her whole dominions. Their union was harmonious in degradation, con' genial in vice ; not enough sense of honor being left in the bosom of eith er of these wretched creatures to feel , the degradation each was inflicting on the other. handsome the body - guard of the king was a handsome yoang Godoy. soldier —Manuel H e sang beautifully; the queen heard his warbling voice, ac companied by the silvery tents of the lute, as they floated in theair around the moonlit angles of the Esearlai. Luxuriating in that soft clime of love, she joyfully surrendered herself to the faseivat ion. tiodoy was received into her palace, and loa d ed with wealth and honors. Both king and qUeen were wholly under his control, —the degraded eld monarch being only too glad to be relieved from the cares •of state, and to be left undis turbed in his hunting and his amours. Charleshad three sons—Ferdinand. Cams, and Francisco. Ferdinand married .first,—his cousin Maria, a . princess of Naples, who was a person of great accomplishments. possessing a warm, Confiding heart, an elevated spirit, and large independence of character. But Ferdinand soon wearied of his wife, and treated her with the grossest insults and abuse. After five years ormisery,the wretch ed woman died by poison, probably administered by her nusband's own hand. in. three months from her death, Ferdinand married Maria Isabel, a . princess of Portugal, who one year after her unhappy union, died miserably in a St. Only a few months after her death, the king again took to himself a wife—Maria Amelia, of Saxony. After enduring him for ten long years—weary of life --she, too, sunk into the grave. Fer dinand,however,inunediatety sought another wile, and married Christina, daughter of the king of Naples. In the king's guard was a young and handsome private by the name of Munw.. Ferdinand was old and ugly. The queen fixed her eye uptin this dragoon, and following the example of Louisa—made Munoz her ( ;o,loy ; received him into the palace, lavishing upon him wealth and titles 6t nobility. Great was the excite talent throughout Europe when it was announced, on the 10th of Octo ber, IS3O, that a daughter was born to the queen, of whom the wretch. Munoz was the father. This child was isabella, last queen of is'pain. Ferdinand still lived, though trem bl i ng on the borders of the grave, and when Isabella was three years of age, he assembled the Cortes to take the oath of allegiance to her as their fu ture sovereign. This ceremony took place, on the 20th of June, 1803. Mad rid had net witnessed, for man years, a scene so brilliant and imposing. The ,Spanish grandees exhibited themselves with .every possible dis play of pomp .and ostentation, and the city was resplendent with gor geous equipages, satin robes, and nodding plumes. Not only through. out the day, but night overtook the vast assemblage in the midst of their festivities, when suddenly the flash of millions of torches illuminating every dwelling; and every suire, threw noonday light upon the ca rousing multitude The pale and feeble Isabella gazed with childish wonder upon this scene of barbaric enchantment. As she listened to theoatl* of allegiance which rent the air when she was pre sented as future queen of Spain, little could she imagine the oceans of blood with which the nation was, in conse quence, to he deluged, and the woes with which her own heart was to be lacerated. Behold ! the dying hour of Ferdin an•i has come,—presenting such a scene as has rarely t if ever before, been presented on earth. In the in terior of the palace, on the royal couch, lay, moaning.and paralyzed, the dying king. All the epplianc,es of wealth em bellished the royal apartment, but haggard Death was there, pronounc ing its sentence of vanity and mock ery on all earthly splendor. A wretch ed life has arrived near its mournful termination, and the pitiable old man —old in infirmity and vice, tortured by pain, lashed by the cruel cords of an avenging conscience—trembles as he approaches his last hour. Angry disputants surrounded the death-bed, and the groans of the dy ing man are drowned by the vocifer ation, of enraged relatives. The crown is falling...from: the brow of Ferdinand, and his death-struggles are unheeded as those around him grasp at the glittering prize. As the storue swelk into the louder and more vehement language of vituper ation and ithuNe, the king —lured by the unearthly clamor—turns upon his thorny bed, and groans.with inex pressiblo agony. Oaths' are rolled forth, blows interchanged,and knives gleam over the bed of death. In the tierce struggle, they reel to and fro through the room, stagger against the couch, and utmost upon the body of the dying king. The combatants are finally separated, and, furious, almost foaming with rage, leave the room, when the expiring monarch apparently falls asleep. Some one to wake him, but Ferdinand is deal! 1 Such was death in the palace. How the mind shrinks traek appalled from contemplating the gloom that envelops suck a-soul as it enters upon futurity. Amid such ,venes was Isabella's infancy nurtured. 'The elatnor of tar was the lullaby of her cradle, and during these years of strife tie young queen dwelt, an unhappy nil i, in the palaces ofSpain, against , which the storms of civil dissension we-e incessantly and mercilessly sat ine. The most itnplavahle ha :red of each other rankled in the bo ,eus of theslifferent members of the )yal family, and one half of the .na .i,mlvislied theiyouug queen dead. rl mother ollimbella was a selfish nd unnatural ikOMEM, !I:insusceptible ~f any emotionOf -pure affection for :ter child, and seeking only her own aggrandizement and, sensual gratifi ,ntion. Thus nurtured, hardly a pure. thought or a kindly emotion was ever excited in her heart. Un loving and unloved, neither sunribe nor twilight brought one peaceful ray across the heart of the wretched princess; neither the summer morn ing nor the winter evening brought any ,lop to the palaces of Spain. There were scenes of crime, war and woe. In the midst of these scene, Christina and the courts of Europe were intriguing for a husband for the helpless Isabella. England, France and Austria each had u bridegroom to urge upon the passive 'prince..; and yet neither of these powers would consent that either of the other two should have the benefit of such an al liance. At last it Was decided to coin proinise.lhe question ; all abandoned their claims, and agreed to force ir husband upon her so weak and im potent that none need fear his influ enee. Francisco, Isabella's yemigest ' uncle ( had two sons, Enrique and Francisco. • The difference between them was, that,while the elder was coarse, brutal,eirergetie, and unblush ing in atheism and vice, the youneer was imbecile, silly and mean in his besotted temper. Isabella preferred Enrique, if site must take one of the two., It was, however, decided that Francisco should be her husband.— His imbecile mind and feeble person excited her utter contempt;and ter a time she flatly refused to surrender herself to one whom her soul loathed. She weapt and stormed, declaring that she would sooner die than wed Francisco. But one night her nn natural mother and a crafty priest took the weeping, agonized child of sixteen into the inner apartment of the palace to constrain her consent. The Imperious mother with her eon. spiring counsellor, first teed the eth racy of threats upon the unprotected child ; finding they unavallingL she resorted to entreaties and tears. Thus with expostulations, solicitations d ii l tnenacesythe long hours of the ni t wore away, and the day .dawned la 1 the Palecheek of Isabella belbre4, would consent to receive the dispiso Francisco as her husband. At laSt, worn uut with exhaustion, despair ing, she resisted - no longer, but sith mitted herself to the outrage. Fear ing lest she might again summon res olution to rebel, the marriage was hastily consummated. But hardly was the irrevocable tiiformed, when Isabella's repugnance to her_ spouse was so absolutely Insupportable that she could not ~even endure his press euce. They quarrelled, separated; again attempted to liVe with each other; but the total want of congeni ality, and the invincible disgust on the part of Isabella, drove them again asunder. Isabella had magnificent mansions among which to choose her resident.* —her own fortune and the revenues of her kingdom enabling her to live in a styleof great magnificence. The Escurial—finest of all—is, perhaps, the most celebrated palace mall the continent of Europe. Situated in the wild and sombre scenery ,of the old . Ws - tinier/ mountains , about - 2- 9 miles Own Mao , `d, for nearly three hund red years/the domes turd towers of this monument of Spanish - .grandeur' and' superstition have Withstood the storms that have swept'the summer's and &Interred the winter's sky. Many generations of kings, with the ir accu mulated throng of, courtiers, have, like ocean-tides, elibed and flowed through tlise. halls. It is now but a memorial of the past, neglected and forgotten. Two hundred monks, like spiritsof the dead ages,creep noislessly through its cloisters, and the pensive melody of their matins and vespepf fronts Through the deserted halls: Here have been witnessed scenes of revel ry and fascination, the spirit of sin- ' cere though misguided piety, and the spirit and reckless and heaven-defy ing crime, such as few` earthly abodes have ever exhibited. The fountains still throw up their beautiful jets; but the haughty cavaliers, the high-born dames and maidens who once throng ed them , have disappeared ; and the pensive friar, in sackcloth - and hemp en girdle, sits in solitude upon the moss-grown stones. The blaze of splendid illumknations once gleamed from those windows and coridors, turning night into day, es merry feet threaded the mazy dance, and glad songs resounded throng!' hall. and bower and groves. Now midnight comes with midnight's silence, soli tude and gloom; and naught is to be seen crave here and there the glimmer of some faint taper from the mil where the lonely monk keeps his painful vigils. The jewelry, the flaunting robes of fashion, and the merry Deals which once ushered in gay bridal parties have passed away, and the convent bell but calls world renouncing, joylt i hearts to the hour of prayer, or tolls the knell, as in the dusky shades of night, the remains of some departed brother are borne, with twinkling torches and funeral Chants to their burial. Such is now the Escurial. And what is Isabella ? Dethroned ; a wretched outcast from her country ; despised and hated. Our sympathies strongly incline us to regard her as an amiable, gentle person, crushed by accumulated sorrows, but truth compels the admission that she islm perious, irritable and The child of almost ungovernable pas; sions, wrecked,both iu body and soul, by a life of sin and consequent un happiness, having no regard for her marriage vows, and following the example of her mother and grand mother, she made the court of Spain the most profligate in all Europe. Her father was one of the most worth- wretches that ever d.sgraced throne; her mother, an intriguing, unprinciWed and abandoned woman; and from infancy Isabella breathed a vile, Deleting atmosphere. Would it not be almost a miracle were one born of such parents, and reared in such a home, to posses the graces of a refined and lovely character? The wreck and ruin of her own heart are more desolating and more to be corn miserateAl than the external calami- ties which have enveloped her in gloom and unhappiness. She has no inward resourecs of happiness or con solation. Isabella never has been and never mut be Need. Earth has no heav ier doom,thati this. WOMEN VIP OLD. Their Attempts to .Elerate their Sex— The Pioneers in the muse-7'heir Sueeess—Sonie Ancient Advertise ments. Women are now after their rights. They want to he put on an equality with men. But this is no new move ment ; it dates back for several cen turies. •Prize fighting is considered one of the peniliar "rights" of inan --one of the tokens of his elevation above the gentler sex. By some of the following advertisements, how ever, taken from a paper published in we bee that the "movement" is not only not new, but that so long ago it had prt;gressed, even into this. fighting prerogative of the ''lords" of creation: " Elrrabectiz Wilkett .soh, ut Claiki ow ell, hat mg hatl borne words with Hannah fylieltl, and recoil' jag satisfactiim, fill invite her to meet hie ell a the sta_/• and box . me fur three guilt as : 1 aell Wolllllla bolding half a crown mu each hand, the first ‘‘iintau that drie r s the money 1.. 10-e uu• battle..• Now, this thing of holding A niece of money in the hand requires a little explanation. It appears that women in those days hail a penchant for scratching in their boxing matches; hence used coins, to keep the hands closed. Women since then have lust this propensity.. But here we have the answer, couched in language which proves Hannah llytield as God-fearing a woman as some of our modern mas culine ladies, and shows what free dom women - pissfteied even hi those remote chiya. "1.-Hannah Hydeld, of Newgate Mar ket, bearing of the resoluteness of Eliza beth Wilkenson will not lid!, God wilting, to give her more blows than words, tie .ferving home blows and from her no fa vor; she may expect a good thumping." And theSe two met, and exercised their rights. Here are a brace of others, showing that the enstom,,was pretty general, and that over a century ago women drove asses, asinany married viragos do now : "Whereas, I. Ann Field, of Stoke, ass driver, well known for my abilities in boxing, ste.,- havrng been affronted by Mrs. IStokes, !slits] the European ,Chan. pion, challenge her, a7e." She has not long to await a reply .1, Elizabeth Stokes, ~ 1 London, have not fought it: this way since I knight the lambus boxing woman of Ililling,sgate twentx.mne minutes, and gained a com plete victory, (which is six years ago,) but as the famous Stoke Newington Acs drivingAVoatan dares me, &c., I doubt no: the blows I shall give her will be more difficult to digest than any she ever gave her asses." And the valiant stokes did. Fie! upon our Women, that they should be thus anticipated in bring ing their sex up to 'an equality with male men. —Great snow storms have recently prevailed in the mining regions of Utah, and itt some localities the snow is ten and fifteen feet on a level.— Whole settlements aro buried in the snow, and great distress prevails among the inhabitants. —The Table Talk " of the Louis ville Cbnamerciat tells us that " light of friendship is like the light of phosphorus—nicrst plainly seen when all around is dark." This Is the po etical view of it. In reality, It is like a 'black cat or a lump of charcoal—t 4 darker everything is mound, the less you see of it. ~~.;u~:.:;:~.?3.i:.:E it~fs9fsr : k~apb ' at`-'.i: :Yae ¢' ~J ° b'ki tires ~ -...-,. THE OLD ANLE D N EW lERViiIA If the traveler 'hopes to find in Pal estine an ideal of natural beauty, it be better for the good name of the land and, perhaps, better for him if he omitted his purposed -visit. For, with theexCeption of Damascus, and one view'nefir the source of the Jerdan, the scenery is without a par allel in dullnesi. Mad- monotony. Some have foiled• grandeur in the heights' of Lebanon, sweetness in Simi% valleys, arid.'bettuty in the olive-dotted plate?. or Bethany and Hebron, but it has always appeared hi-me probable that-the real -land scapes which_ these soieurners saw were highly ColOrW by their ituag inetiens.— TI Hely Laud hei two separate spheres - Of , existence,—the preseht and past, To' him who visits ltofor 7 the, purpose of exploring the present wilds, mid of painting its insii , „inpes as they now aptear, there is 'lto attraction save sue as may c9Joe front the seoßthing sun, the titisty plains, the leprous beggars, the thieves and robbers; the vermin, and thd barren hills of sand and scrubs, But to him who, for the love of his tory and a desire to awaken associa tions which nothing but an actual presence tan'arouse, there is a lovely 1 , Palestine, bearing mighty treeri; 10V6- ly flowers, and a cultiyateci;-race of ' men. The land of the, igurginary past is laden with the eholeeit fruits of earth. Its embiiivered hills and 'thin:in:Wring Welting are such as evert the preeen_t Chainotinix or Ye Semite venni:lt-beteg. 'All the glory of earth, all thieiiility 'of the deepest soil, and all the exciting phenomena of the world's most hidden laws, en chant, startle orastonish the wander er in the Syria of the past. When we stand upon the double aunamit of the Mount of Olives, filled with the reviving inspiration which the touch of the foot wilt give, you can shut your eyes and sec such a landscape and such a City-of-our-God as no oth er land can furnii4h. The old Jerusa lem wines back again to adorn the hills of Zion and Sloriah. The hosts of artisans, teachers, philosophers, priests, kings and scholars, come thronging back, until, from Jerico to Hebrtm, the land is alive with cara vans., procsionsand pilgrims, all the work of a new resurrection. The Ileitis bloom again, the distant oceans of waving.grain ripen as of old, the Kidron and tiihou sing to gether as they dance their sea-ward polkas, and the mighty olives bow prOfoundly to the breezes, tilling their leaves with the sweetest odors of the blooming hill-side. The pon derous wall which enclaupas.seu the Holy City raises its embattled tow ers and lofty gateways • .the old ro ulade pathways embed the fields arotuid, while overall-44h, mighty and glorious—the shafts, domes, pil lars and walls of Solomon's golden temple rise, relleetlng skyward from its shining towerA a thousand sum for every ray of heaven's light. Gethsetneue! What flowers, arbors, vines and olives ! Mount Zion ! What palaces and gardenS! Mizpeh I What glades, cnigs s forests, inouutains and valleys does not the • verdure-lined landscape exhibit ! Everywhere are the highest types of natural and arti ficial beauty. It is the Garden of the Lord, the favorite resting-place of the seraphs and angels. Happy indeed i 8 he before whole tutored wind the glories of the past arise, with no jotor title changed, awl be hind whose closed eyelids cri„%,„ep no realizationS of the present to tnar and destroy the picture of the past. Open now your eyes, and look once more upon the Jerusalem of to-tidy. Of all its glories none remain, Bro ken walls of mud and cobble stones, rubbish-choked pathways, dilapida ted houses, narrow and filthy streets, barren fields, besmeared and naked beggars, flail-starved floods, and mud- • dy streams,—are all that Jerusalem can boast. Deerepid Monks guard: the dmiyed olives of Liethseinene, suppliants fur charity occupy the seats of the money enangers. The weather-worn morgue covers the, ruins of Solomon's Temple. Wild grass and scraggy bushes grow where the grain once flourished. The people are as much a ruin es the city, and the prophetic tigers that howl in the ruins of Babylon and Ninevah betoken a change lees sad than that from the enlightened people of Christ's time to the paupers and ii , z-zsitis of to-day. Other cities have their ruins. Athens its Acropolis and Parthenon ; Rome its muss-cov ered triumphal arches, coloseuni and beautiful columns; Thebes her migh ty shafts and stone-cut labyrinths ; Persepolis her palace-walls ; and even, Baalbec is grand in its desolation. But Jerusalem, as if God had deter mined that the old city should be wholly lost, has broken every col; unin to fragments, and has covered every, holy spot with 'monastic churches or squalid hovels. They showed us Solomon's Pool, and what purported to be the aquaduct which once:"supplied the city with water, but',..more than these could not be shown with certainty. The monks pretend to exhibit the cleft in the rock for the cross, His footstep as He as(!endel from-the rock, and a thous ane other things which serve to con- hrm that all but the general outline are lost. No one an visit Jerusalem without being filisaphointed, if he hopes for beauty and conifolt; while it awa kens the most gloomy thoughts and emotions. And, to-day, us I sit down to write these lines about it, those two pictures of the past and the present, wine before me—the one in radiant glory, the other in sackcloth of Sable hue, suggesting. 0, °eel lily, those words of Jesus : -Oh Jerusalem! Jerusalem! How often would 1 have gathered thy children together even us n hen g,ath ereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not. Behold your house frft unto you desolate." Twenty Vent's In n Cave .For the last twenty years has Ii veil In a cave in Saline county,Kentacky, entirely alone, a singular character named Franklin .Elliott, of whose past nothing was known, only it was surmised trout his commanding; proud face, and cultivated expression'. which his wretchedness was unable entirely-to conceal, that he "was the wreck of a once-envied manhood. Once or twice in a year he would come into town, and, with as few words as possible, barter game or pelts foi powder, shot and salt— nothing Inure. When he saw people approaching he would always avoid them. A short time ago two gentle men were hunting in the forest near the cave where he lived, and, a storm coining up, they knocked for adtuission. Hearing noanswer,they opened the iron-bound door, and saw upon a heaPof skins and blankets the hermet lying dead. The cave vas commodious, having been enlarged hy himself from a small hole to an apartment twenty-tine feet square, and ten or twelve feet high, but quite void of furniture. Pieces of stone and niches In the rocky wal!s served as chairs, tabltes and shelved. A rifle and fowling piece were found, a long, broad bowie-knife, fishing tackle, cooking utensils, and a num beruf books. Among the latter were copies of Sitakspeare, Sterne, Addi son, Schiller, Southey, and Spencer. Besides these bare necessities of his existence something, of vastly more interest was found: i tin box filled with papers which revealed his past history and the secrets of his strange life. It was the same old story of .disappointed love, a story - stale and barren of interest to every one but the sufferer. He had been well-horn, well-educated and ailment. In early lifelie was a ,member of the-Ken tucky Legislature. There the blight fell upon him. He became dissipa ted and desperate, and his next mis fortune was to fight a duel with a man named Bailey to whom tfie re sult w•as fatal. The laws of ; Ken tucky were lax against dueling, and he had no trouble in going abroad, staying in Europe for two' or three years. At the end of that time re =EI Morse and despair brought him back to the solitude of woods and caves, which he never afterward • bad the courage to desert. TUE PETTICOAT BANNER. _ Now, that there are indications thatwomen will be marshaled incur next war, and as a distinguishing banner sh ould be vouchsafed them, ve should advise the adoption of that 'Of Mrs. Bailey, under which the gal lants of Groton fought in 1814: ' In 1814, , when Commodore Dem• turs squadron was blockaded by CommOorellardy, Btonington was attacked by the enemy, and gained Immortal honor by repulsing them. Attacks were also threatened on New London and Decatur; daily, nightly, and hourly, either in earnest or by way of harassing diversion. On one occasion, the hostile ships were within half an hour's sail of New London. The forts and lines were manned there and at Groton, half a mile, distant 'on the opposite side of the river. In the urgency of the case, twoeighteen or twenty-four pounders, which were unoccupied, up", ~. ;, by the citizens not on ifu a . - mounted on a, breastwork, and: t - • rep-taken to furnish am m tie rn • r them. . In the constant irtat that existed, the dry goods' been removed from the Stores, and the clothing from the houses in the village, for, fear of a repetition of Its fate in 1781, when It 'was burnt and plundered. Paper being found insufficient for car tridges, flannel was sought for and 'very little found. In this critical erriergency with the enemy almost in gunshot, Mrs. Bai ley, wife of Captain Elijah Bailey, postmaster—a genuine daughter of '76,—who had remained firm at her pest, loosened her flannel, bidding them take it in defence of their coun try, and it other garments would 'be of service they might have them also. The petticoat however was not made into cartridges by the gallant volun teers, who made a standard of it, de claring they would fight under it to the last drop of their blood rather than strike it to the enemy, Presi dent Monroe, on his tour through Connecticut, was introduced to Mrs. Bailey, and told the story, whlci\was repeated to Lafayette on his visit to that place and seeing the heroine \ of the anecdote. s - —Not many notable things hav, occurred on New Year's Day. Four, however, may be mentioned : On the first of January, 1808, Wm. Tell associated himself with a band, of his countrymen against the ty ranny of their oppressors. For three hundred and forty years the opposi tion was carried on, and terminated by the treaty of Westphalia, In 1648, declaring the independence of Switz erland. Thanks to the apple busi ness and the opera, W. T.'s name is kept pretty green. On the Ist of January, 16.51, Charles 11. was crowned at Scone, king of the Scots; and On the Ist of January, 1800,• was formally consummated the union of Great Britain and Ireland; and On the Ist of January, 1801, Piazza, the astronomer at Palermo, discover ed a new primary planet, the first of the asteriods, which he called Ceres. —An Indiana county clerk has found in his office a certificate which reads: "This is to certify that I, William Smith, is agreed that Jim Brown shell hey mi Daughter Pat sey to wife this 17th day of genewer• ry, 1F111." —The man that said that 'the Lord made the moon to encourage court ing, was not far from the truth. There is a voluptuous all-overishness creeps over one, while basking be neath tho influerce of a silver-plated night, that leads us as naturally to lov:L...ns law does to trouble, --ZA Connecticut Democrat sent his son to New York to complete hisedu cation. . After a short time his sou wrote to his father that he was study ing "Horace." On learningthis, the paternal parent replied, "Clime home; I don't want Greeley to make 'a Re publican of my son." THE WORLD'S INTERNAL REMEDY. .TOIEINSCON'tiI Rheumatic Compound DM EI.LCI OEI PURIFI ER. Quick in its Action, Permanent in its Cure. This medicine is hie prescription of a world-re‘ Downed French Physician, who ivied It in his extensive practice many years before offering it to the public in Its present form. but fin ally becoming convinced or its great cura tive properties, and desiring to proilt tho.e. suffericg from this terrible disease, consented to have it put np In bottles and sold at the low price of ONE DOLLAR. 1r necessary, we might offer thecertidcate.e; of thous ands who have been cured by it. but the hest recommendation we ran give ft la, a trial of one, two or three bottle., which will certainly rt. , bear the most difficult care. Try it and be convinced. W have adrertireri this medicine for sale by George C. Goodwin .t or ito-ton. A cure or the money refunded, and out of near 5110 bottles sold at retail, they. have had but bottles returned. 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A ICOMBIIkiIf,D MACHINE for turning wagon and bum, spokes, all Am, front one Inch to three Inches in Om Also, all kinds of handles, inch at ate, dirt-picit„ coalptck, sledge. hatchet, and hammer handles. It will also dicate any patterns that may be put In the mac hine. Also, a machine with two sand belts for finishing. Also ktaachlne far tenanting spoke., and a circular saw, frame, Mug and Mi the patterns with it. All will N. old for less than half the original covt. Aty I t by wanting • machine of this kind can see It by Wiry On the subscriber at Boa ester, where . work will also beerhibited. It la in good rpn tug order, and nearly Es good as new. J. WOODIWIPP, deefi:fw , - GOLDEI itibtrwum Pas.—SomethAng new and non!. Bo sure and read the advertisement to oar paper beaded, " Greatest Invention of the Age." We believe the Golden Fountain Pen Ia flume gassed. • A good pe” Is • neeetwlty to every man, arca= and - child. Agents, Is we-tante to make money in Introducing a g oo d - and saleable ankle. jan2s;ly S. J. Cross & Co.'s Column. DRY - GOODS, New Fall Stock • JUST RECEIVED BY S. J. Cross k Co., ROCHESTER. OM STOCK OF biEW b$ SEASONABLE DRY • ocipps • IS LARGER corzsisTii,oF CLOTH, CASSIMERE, JEANS, WA TER-PROOF, PLAIN FLANNELS, IIAttRED FLANNELS, CANTON FLANNELS, CLOAKING. PRINTS, DELAINES, PLAIDS, ALPACAS, DIERINOS, GINGHAM , CHECKS, --rowELING, DENIM, DRILL, PAPER MUSLIN, BLEACH ED AND BROWN MUSLIN, COTTON BATTING, SHAWLS, SHIRTS, WOOLEN YARN, HOSIERY GLOVES, 1V 0 9C° I 0 N' IN GREAT VARIETY Ready-Made Clothing: COATS, PANTS, VESTS, SHIRTS, DRAW Eitf3, &c., &c., &c., Hats and Caps, A VERY LARGE and NEW STOCK BOOTS & SHOES ) r Men's, Youths' and Boys' BOOTS_ TORN'S, MISSES' and CHILDREN'S SHOES AND OCM SHOES, ALL PeRCHAsED LOW AND WILL BE SOLD AT A SMALL ADVANCE ON' COST, WE ALso uuNTINUE To KEEP UP OUR USUAL STOCK OF GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, FLOUR GRAIN, MILL-FEEL), SALT, LIME CEMENT. HARDWARK: `'N - AILS, HORSE SHOES, HORSE NAILS, Window' Glass• Paints'in all Colors, DRY and IN OIL : WHITE LEAD, LINSEED OIL PUTTY, TURPENTINE, VARNISH ALCOHOL, GUM SHILLAC, A:( Wooden Pumps FOR WELLS AND CISTERNS. ALL HEAVY GOODS, DELIVERED WITHIN A REASONABLE DISTANCE, FREE OF CHARGE. ` WE ALSO FURNISH OUR CUSTOMERS WITH COAL AT THE MARKET PRICE. Rochester. Oct. 200,1, 1571. Dvelling Houses, TENEMENTS, IMPROVED AND UNIMPROVED REAL ESTATE IN AND NE.A.I3. THE Borough of Rochester, FOR SALE AND RENT BY a". CMCOSS• MayB-Iy:chd my81•nov?. =EI Advt4tkemenb: 'PREZ TO BOOK AGENTS. or. will genera Inashomq Mopeds; of oar New ltinstrated Family Bib's. coetsWC wfor $ lOO floe Scripture Illuittatlons to any Soot Agent tree et china National/Willett/v. th.. Pa. Boots & Shoes &do With CARR MO SEW Will not Rip nor Look. Great Chance to Make Money. By taking an agency for The Some of God's The mos; aucoestra I new book out, neatly MI Magnideent Bogruloga. One agent took 11l orders In ten days, others are doing equally as stall. SAG Dollars pczsnnnm can b& made by any male or, female agent taking orders Uir this popular work. The best chance to make money offered. Bend for circulars with terms, dm Batts large inducements offered. • 4ddresa WORTHINGTON, DUSTLN i'CO.. Dartford, Ct. HISTORY OF The Great Fires In CHIO/400 and the WEST, by the Rev. R. J. Goodspted, D. D., of Chicago. Only complete tLatory. 7008vo pugm• GO smgravinga. 70.000 al ready sold.. Price G 2.151.1. NW agents made in 20 days. Profice go to eurerere. Agents Wanted. B. S. GOODSPEED & CO., ST Park Rnsr, New York. BRIGGS & BROTHERS Catalogue of Flower and Vegetable 1513311313130151, Summer Flowering Bulbs. for 1872; Now ready Consisting of over MO pages, on rose tinted paper, with upwards of 400 separate cuts, and Six Beautirul Cetored Boles/ Cover, a beautiful design In colors. The richest Catalogue ever published. Send 23 cents for copy, not one half the vale. of the colored plates. In the t one half amounting to not less than the pr!ee of Catalogue, 25c, will be refunded In seeds. New customers placed on the same footing with old. Free to old customers. quality of seeds, size of packets, prices aid prennams offered, make it to the advantage of all to purchase seeds of us. :See Catalogue for extraordinary inducements. Ton will miss it If yodilo not see oar Catalogue before &tiering Seeds. Either of our two Chromos for 1671, size 19x2I— one a flower plate of Bulbous Plants, consisting of Links, ac,—the other of Annual, Biennial and Perennial Plants, guaranteed the Most Elegant Floral Chronios ever issued In this country. A superb parlor Or nament; mailed, post-nald, on receipt of DSc.; also rrce on conditions specified In Cala!oar. Ad dress BRIGGS & BROTHER. (Established 1815) ilochzater, New York. WANTED, ACTIVE AGENTS to sell the Finkle & Lyon manufacturing Co's. Improved New Family Sew-. ing Machine. VICTOR. General aloe tor Penrusylvanla. New Jersey_ and Delaware. No:' 1221 Chestnut Itt. Plana& J. L. FERGUSON, Manager. FROFITABLE BUSINESS VIII be given one or tyro pens pez, &CALYCES. Pa" and adjoining towtui, by which they may realize from Lien to SUM a year. with but little Interference with ordinary. occupation, in selling Household Artle:es of rea: merit and universal, use. If the whole time la devoted a much larger mum may be realized. Circulant free„ _giving complete that of articles and commissions allowed. T. B. COOK £ CO., Iluboken, N. J. (Ineorpo Columbia Fire Insurance Company. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS: S. 8. Detwiler, Preel, Robert Crane, U. Wilson, Vtco Pres't. William Patton, Herbert Thomas, 'C'reas. Jamul, Schroeder, J. F. Frueauft, Sec 'y J. S. Striae. J. B. Rachpaau, al, Di. Strickler, George Bogle, li, T. Ryon. For Insunuice or Agencies, address J. F FRPEAUFF, Columbia, Pa . SILVER TIPPED BOOTS & SHOES . Last as Long Again as Any Other Kind. AGENTS Wan t ed.—Agents make more money at work for cn. than at anythina , Gusineva light and permanent. Purlieulam (rye. G. IsTINISON .t CO., Fine .4rt Publishers, Port land. Maine. $4_25 :mit!: paid. o h. 11"ZariAlftd, " $2O t ItllLy° l l3lnE.4fr aPcgrlSV g CANCERS, TUMORS, ULCERS. Astuniahing curer by Drs. Kline and Lindley, at the Philadelphia Cancer Institute, 931 Arch st , Philadelphia, Pa. At Branch Offices, by Dr. Mc- Bichsel. 94 Niagara at., Buffalo, N. Y.; and by Dr. Evans, over 39 Genesee at., Auburn, N. Y. WON I)ERFU I. CANCER ANTI DOTES No Knit's. No Caustic Neaten.... No Blood. /tan. For further particulars, call on or ad dress either of the above. I MPOTENCY.— Victims of earls Indiscretion, se Itabuse, causing nevems debility, peel:satiate decay, am_ will tiC'd a most effectual, safe and per manent cure by addressing, confidentially Dr. W Post-Oillice, Philadelphia. .1111310;3w T Dry Goods r.'" o ...1 era , n em- O ' n Pr = , E .00 0 row' \ SZ. et , • - G ems,- JOB PUINTINO neatly and expeditiously executed at this office. Fir Manic", Litti.beads, Cards, Posters, natty exeenetd at this °thee. EEO ted 1800.) 5 C. . k , 0 '- 0 0. Ct T sit tt til "A - cll tk , T PX A 0 I = 4 M el* et PI ot v ==l=M ' Miscellaneous. .' NEW., *. DRY-VOIR:',BAZAAA. When you visit the city, do not fall - to call and ace the New Dry-Goods Bazaar Or A. IV. ERWIN & CO. 1272 Sr. 1274 FEDERAL STitEET, ALLEGHENY CITY The .Handeomeit4Dry-Goode Empap . v rium Inthe State. OUR MOTTO, Good Goods at Low Prioees. Through the season we ere in receipt of NEW GOODS EVERY DAY Oar stock Is always 11 , 111, trash and complete We respectfully ask the attention of WHOLESALE BUYERS To our stock, as our Wholesale Department Is at all times, fully supplied with goods which we of fer, either by the piece or package, at the lowest New York or Philadelphia Prices. REMEMBER THE PLACE, Erwin's Dry-Goods Baza Nos. 172 & 174 Federal St., ALLEGIIENY'' CITY, PA nov. 29 ty Boggs & Buhl OFFER SPECIAL BARGAINS IN DRY•GOODS IN EACH DEPARTMENT. One case American Poplins, all colors, a 25 cents less than former whole- sale prices. .111-Wool Grey.mlzed, Double Shawls At $3 00 25 PIECES VERY HEAVY & EXTRA Wide Serge Plaids, at 15 cents. EXTRA INDUCEMENTS OFFERED TO CUSTOMERS IN BLACK ALPACA , ;, Satin Cloths, Silk Poplins, AND ALL STYLES OF DRESS GOODS IN OUR WI - LOLLS ALE DEPARTMENT Extra god value in Casssimers, Flannels Wuter-Prof., Jentri, and a lull stock o liotnestics. BOGGh BUM" 1? FEDERAL STREET ALLEG AENY CITY, PA oprs- ly;ell my 17 jel'l altg9;oct I 1 mov:22. DE= W DOLD I', IVI. 31.1.L.1_,E11. lir. COQ Contractors and Builders; PLANING - MILL EMI a •13 ; r,Sara *3. a ma, Doors: Stash AND, SHINGLES ( . 011st:intly un hand., and maf s .c t.. iirdur 11.0clieKter, Onli•rs by inail will rmeivii prompt at tention. I%tar÷t:ll-1v 1.•.1111ETI FOIL SALE,2IIton tp Beaver county. Pa_ live weet of INetiVl.l . , Ibree iDlleo from Potter'i. .tat ion nit the C R . li. Thl4 farm contain. one hundred and lIX scree The Improvement. are Prventy acre, cleared and in rood order; the balance mell timbered, !ratite hour(' 1 Li ham. very ;rood orchard of all kinde of fruit. For enquire of E. P, K Mi. esq., Bea ver; nr Wm. C. If tinter,. Bridtewater. C., OF THE \PA Decsreaa 711 H, 1/34. OUR CELEBRATED GOLDEN FOUNTAIN PEN. /Leics.:owleased by.all have aet s tr =elate. Pea made wheal la tile ewe. 071 WM NW ~rads Sixty Awe written , - with ewe skillehl Wlll eaterear a dose* a. • baa steel Pat up twat...tads berms c) 00111 ONL BY of 111, 1.„. seals* aay eau realise r: it*oo peesa= l =ll=4ooJsereeat4 • Two swage Peso. 10 email Pre. east% • agates * MOO. A liv e levee. 01.00 twelve bates, r 4. sllseas., ti) WESTERN PUBLISHING CO. litanufactuxere Agents, Pittsburgh, Pa. 44eA -- Ni c. 5 _ 17110111.-.Tatoirrest•Mmiss- t a , rats bas led is Nui=7 Ism • hdt `C rrraiamr ts tresemidsaotrx. 51 1 Compaity. Is ire. Miliva M re y is. Zrdtrar Nrzr i ra i glal7, sad pt ausiM with prom &ath Jam: I 11ANIC.INICZ-110I:t.?412:. THOMAS M'CREE•RY & CO THOS. 111 9 CREHUV, Cashier. J. S. ANGIEL, J. F. ....... . . J. U. ArCREERY Interest paid on time deposits; Prompt attention given to collections. Also. hemlines Agents tor good and reliable Portmanlea. tmaylfitr POINT PLANING MILLS, WATER ST., ROCHESTER, PA HENRY WHITEFIELD, MANUFACTURER. OF Sash, Doors,Jlouldings,l•'loor-boards, Ifreallier,boards, Palings ..Brack els, &c., &e. Also, DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF.LUM BER, LATH, SILINGLEs AND BUILDING TIMBER Having purchased the the territorial in terest of Mr .1. C. Anderson, owner of the several patents covering certain improve ments in the constr;:etion and joining ~f weatherboards and linings 1--r houses and other buildings, we are the only persons authorized to make and sell Ike same within the limits of Beaver county. Par ties Interested will please observe this. atrpenters' ,S'applies Cbnstantly Kept on Rand. Every manner of Shop-Work made to order, oettlx . STAIR BUILDING AND Wood s Turning Shop, WILLIAM PEOPLES, Allegheny City. Pa., Is prepared to do all kinds of Wood. Turning, Scroll-Sawing and S^roll 3loul ding. Nowell'ellalustera and Hand Rails, WITH ALL JOINTS •CUT, READY TO HANG, furnished on short notice. Orders br mall promptly attended to. or may be loft trltit Gloster & Co.. 59, 4th Av.. pittebnrga, Pa:, end at the Kill, corner of Webster street and (ks Alley. ' tetetti TIM Chas. - B. Hurst's INSURANCE General Agertcy Office, ROCHESTER, PENNA Notary Public and Conveyancer; FIRE, LIFE, and ACQIDENT INSUR ANCE; "Amami"' and "National" Lines of Ocean Steamers; "'Adams" and "Un ion" Express Agent. AU kinds Mf Insurance at fair rates and liberal (elms. -Real Estate bought and sold. Deeds, Mortgages, Articles, Sze., written ; Depositions and Acknowledge ments taken, tfte., &c. Goods and Money forwarded to all parts of the United States and Canada. Passengers booked to and frpm England, littland, Swtiand, Franca and Germany. ,ETNA FIRE INS. CO., Ot Hartford, Conn., Cash assetts $0,000,000 " Ity their fruits ye know them." Losst.s paid to Jan. 1,4871....528,000,000 One of the oldest and wealthiest Compa nies in the worl4 NIAGARA Insurance Co., Cast) assetts, ANDES I . IRE INS, CO., Of Cincinnati, Cash tissetls , • " ENTERPRISE INS. CO., Of Philadelphia. Cush assetts over... $600,000 LANCASTER Fire Ins. Co Cmli o.ssetts ALPS .LYSITRANCE CO., Cash capital, HOME LIFE INS. CO, Cash assets, Travelers' Life 40 Accident insurance Co., Of Hartford, Coun. Cash assetts over 51,500,000 iitepreipenting the above first class Insurance Companies, acknowledged to be amongst the hest and moat reliable in the world, and representing a gross cash capital of neatly $16,000,000, I am en abled to take Insurance to any amount desired. Applications promptly attended to, and Pblictes written w ithout delay, and at fair rates and liberal terms. Losses aberstily adjusted and promptly aid. INSURE Tr 1%/11 - 1 By one day's delay you may lose the savings of years. Delays are dan ,, erous, and iirsullcertairt; therefore. Insure to day. " Ons to-day, is wortli fro to-morroms."— ttuality, also, is Of the utmost importance. The low priced, worthless article, always proves the dearest. The-above companies are known to be amongst Ins hest and wealthiest in the world.— " As ye FOW that shall you reap." Grateful for the very liberal pat.onne already bestowed, I hope—by a strict attention to a leg,it• imate business—not only to merit a conthmence of the sante, but a large increase the pnatent year. Mr. hTP,PIIR , N A. CRAIG is duly authorized 0, take applications (or Insurance and receis. the premium for the same In adjoining townships. eIIAIS. H. III:11ST. - Near Depot, Rochester, Pa 1:ly =I W I L LI A M_ MILLER, JACOB- TRAX, PLANING _MILL. MILLER & TRAX Dressed Lumber, SASH, DooRS, SHUTTERS, SIDING ,FLOORING, MoULDINGs, (tc• Scroll Sawing and Turning DONE TO ORDER, ORDERS BY MAIL. RESPECTFULLY SOLICIITD, AND PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. Mill Opposite the Railroad Station ROCHESTER, PENN'A. uuril 111 ly ( noct2 •2111 BAmtn. R. Joints-my, '' .. JOSEPH EMI:MAUI' JouNrroN, Established by Eichbatim &Jolmstoll,lBl6. 1 4 1 /,. ,4,.. f OA, - v AGES William G. Johnston & Co., PRINTERS, STATIONERS 57 and 59 Wood Street, PITT.S . BURGH, PENS' A rnyi4-ly J. B. SNEAD SAW AND PLANING MIL IN FRI:EDO - AL PA., faring the West, hnpruvill machinery for the matmih•ture SIDING, LATH, &(1. Id is pow prepared In attend to the ' building and repairing or camboats, Baru; Flats, &c., &c.. Keeping constantly on hand a superior quality of Lulu licr. The pat ronaux of the public is revert fully coliciletl. MI orders prooi:itly rxccute,l. ang2-]y THE OLD ORIGINAL BOTTLING HOUSE. H. W. 131 - IF - VI7M & CO. 22 and 24 Market Street, PITTSBURG, PA. Established in 1844, by H. W. Bennie This oldest nod largest Bottling liouse west of the mountains, has made extensive preparations fur supplying their friends and the wiblrE with their celebrated 211fiteral if titers, Ales, Porter, (C.c., &C. For the Spring Trade, at the following prices: Sarsaparilla ,$ 31•4 per doz. Mineral Water , Vli " itaspberey - :175j " Champagne cider,• • • • • • • 3 - ill - Porter, 0) - Ale, small bottles, GO '6 Kennet Wlnterton, Imported London Porter grid bottles, Imported Scarkti Ales and bit tlee, ..... ..... . Crub Cider . 5yrup5.............. Bottles 75 cents per poz. extra. Money refund ed when returned. Goods delivered free 3 and freight paid to rail road stall and steamboat landfill: A. febtliir J• .1. ANDERSON, having- taken bold of J hls old Foundry again, In lioeheater, will be pleased to meet his old customers and Mend* who may want either the BEST COOK. ING STOVE, Beating Stoye, or any other kind of Castings of best material and workmanship. T& bmdttess will be conducted by PIM!) J. J. ANDERSON &EONS. ; riaceudi&eoiist AND NEAR •THE DEPOT Of New York. Of Lancuster; Pa. OfErie, Yenna Of New York. Manufacturers and Dealers in And Blank Book Makers, Hag nolo in operation a new 1 2.) 1 1 00 3 00 •• 3 ( 1 0 Yl per gallon • o 00 Iftrisedloneous. MENRAN & Si/rice:4Bora to lieinarnari, DrEN4iAN Sr, EimIDLE 42 3TII AVE,.., PITTSBURGH, PA. GOLD AND SILVERS3IITII3, DEALERS IN FINE JEIVELRI wataes, „ Diamonds, Silver R Plated. Ware, Seth Thorium' Cock. -0, Fine , Table Cutlery, French clocio, REGULATORS, BRONZES, FINE SWISS WATritEs AMERICAN 'WATCHES JULES JERGENsEN, WALTHAM WATCfJ C O- 31PAS y. EDWARD PEREY - GAUX, ELvlic WATCH C 031 1 1 , 10 y VACIIESON & CoNsTANTINE UNITED sTATEs w A TCH.(.I) CHARLES E. .JACOT , 111 ) 4 ",JAI-4) “TIE ZLlf ERMAN WATCH, - mal e by t a h ZIALRIEAN. Liverpool. 6 full, eTial at,y offered to the public. both to tin and tinl,-.1.i. Ing knot excepttnu the FrodAlutn. YIEV RAN At - - - SEIDF:L, nor29-ty'l soLE ALES ; . . - - ROBADAL•IS ' 'TILE INGREDIENTS THAT 0 i ; COMPOSE ROSADALIS at; ; .published on every package, th.e:t i'foro it is not a secret prcparattor. .1 consequently s: IPIITSICIANS PRESCRIBE II It is a certain cure for Scr:oh,.. Syphilis in all its forms, Rheum ; tism, Skin Diseases, Liver C 0..:, Blood. and: all diseases of t:i Blood. A'ONE BOTTLE OP BOSABAL3 : will do more good than ten lActets of the Syrups of Sarsaronik. THE UNDERSIGNED PHYSICIAN& have used It osadalui in theu pra cta D- for the past three years and. irre.y ' endorse it as R reliable AltemiTe and Blood Purifier. Eig-,T. C. PUGH of Baltoa rze DR. V. J. BOYKIN, ~ DR. R. W. CARA. DR. V. 0. DANNELLY .' ' _ DIL k 3 —S. SPARKS, of Nlehoturilk, •A . DR. J. y L. McCARTHA, Columhu Tilt A. D. NOBLES, Edgeeemb, N C. USED AND EEDO2SED BY L, J. D. FRENCH & SONS, Fall Rae, 'F. 14'...5.111FH, Jackson, Mirh. .k. F. w HEELER, Lima„ Qh,o. B HALL, lanza,o , 10. CRA VE...N ,k, CO., Gordonsville, YL • ' S.l3l'L. G. McFADDEN, Murfrees• ibons, Tenn. Our spare will not allow of any en. Itewled remarks in relation to the ',irtuesof Biosailalis. T„ the Nfetlical Profession we guarantee a Fluid Ex ; t:',l`,; superioratie t ',:'tl:,• h n'il,,''f .vite.easvee,i ' Blood ; and to the afflieted we say try `osadal is, and you will he restore,, ealth. 5 $1,500,000 $240,000 $250,000 -.43,500,000 Black and Gold Front, GEORGE W. BIGGS No. 1119 SYIITLIFTELIII ST. Fonr doort, above Sixth Ave. FINE VikTCHES, CLOCKS, JEWEIE Optical and Fancy Gorid4; dr TSI.3 L7 . l',G 11, P.l. FINE WATCH REPAIRING rut this advertisetii,nt ott:4t..; briug it with yini. Hair Vigor, For restoring to Gray Hair its natural Vitality and Color.' /or, gloss:, and freshness of vita I - - hair is thickened, falling hair f ~, g r;. and baldness often, though not cured by its use. Nothing rna r.-: the hair where the fulli I,s stroyed, or the glands atrophii!ii decayed; but such as remain saved by this application - , and ; .stin lated into activity, so that growth of hair is produc , (l. ln,•• of fouling the hair with a pasty ment, it will keep it clean and vigor iTli o f Its occasional use will provilit from turning gray or falling consequently prevent balde,.. - I'' restoration of vitality it give s to scalp arrests and prevents the firth: tion of dandruff, which is often cleanly and offensive. Fre° fttila_th deleterious substances mak' some preparations dangerous anal:if:: rious to the hair, the Vig.)r can benefit but not harm it. If w•i:: merely for a HAIR DRESSIN: nothing else can be found so Containing neither oil not (lye. not soil white cambric, and yet long on the hair, giving it a rich. gili lustre, and a grateful perfume. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co, At Practical and Analytical Cheml. l4 , LOWELp, MASS. _ Cherry Pectoral For Diseases of the Throat -and Lurx& such as Coughs, Colds, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis, Asthma; and Consu.mption. Among the discoveries of In..:t sciena,.. few more . -real va:;:c mankind than tly• fectual remedy a-r diseases of the Pins , tuid Lung , . A •- • trial of its vLY. ' throughout tho, other countries, shown that a .:•• surely and etTectt.s.' ontrol. them. The testimony - of our 1 , 01 lens, of all classes, establishes the fact. *--" CHERRY PECTORAL will and does rein- , cure the afflicting disorders of the Throat Lungs beyond any other Medicine. .1'•;'• dangerous affections of the Pulmonary or:: yield to tat power; and cases a consuls? tion, cured by this preparation, arc d" - ' lv known, so remarkable as hardly to h' tiered, were they not proven beyond As a remedy it is adequate, on which tdc •,• • may rely for full protection. By curing ('oath s the forerunners of more serious disease. It unnumbered lives, and an amount of silt r' not to be cominite:l. It challenges trial, st I•• vinces the most sceptical. Every family 'h keep it on hand as a protection tga dud the and unperceived attack of Pulmonary Affe'.. 3 ' l. which are easily inet at first, but whic tec''' h , bacurable, and too often fatal, if neglected. der lungs need this defence; and it ti unary be without it, As a safeguard to children , tho distressing diseases which beat the rid and Chest of childhood, C11E111:11 is Invaluable; for, by its timely u'e. 'n u tildes are rescued from premature gravt'''. saved to the love and affection centred on the It acts speedily and surely against er.boary securing sOutid and health-rectorinz, ,I"r ' rine will suffer troublesome Influents aL , fill Bronchitis, when they knoY. they can he (lured. Originally the product of long, successful chemical investigation, n., c , v-t is spared in making every bottle in the up , Possible perfection. It may be coatideW lied upon as possessings/I the virtues a has er: exhibited arid capable of ['reducing cur e ; tnememblo as the greatest it has ever ‘AfecteL6 Dr. J. C. AVER 04 CO., Lowell, Mass.! Practical mad Analytical Chemists. EfOLD BY ALL DRUMM OT.HrOogg sadalis is 'ld Ty all Drurn,ts, , 81.30 per bottle. Address Dl. CLEI2IIT3 & CO. Manufactur”.l7 chemist:, BAL - uxott, Yn Ayer's A dres',ir. Inch i s a SEMI .11. th, "ettual esernmz 112 !stores gray its Ayer's PREPARED UT II VI