The Huntingdon Journal, PM anti NuotbDia. Feeding a Variety of Fodder. Most farmers need line upon line, pre cept upon precept, in regard to-the care required fur their domestic animals during the foddering season. Many persist in ad hering to the old practice of feeding only one kind of fodder for a given period, and then changing to another for a few weeks No practice can be attended with more un satisfactory results than this. Sheep, for example, are frequently confined to straw and a little grain daily. Then for a few weeks, hay is substitucd and the grain omitted. Sheep are exceedingly fond of a variety of feed. Therefore a far better practice would be to feed a small quantity of hay every day, and not quite as much grain, letting the stock have free access to good straw, day and night. All kinds of domestic animals will thrive far more satisfactorily when a variety of food is provided than when only one kind is dealt out without change. Even hor ses become excessively tired of cut feed at every meal; they need a change. Therefore, it will always be better to change the feed so as to afford the animal any advantage that may rise from feeding a variety of hay, straw, cornstock, grain, meal, or roots. Another consideration of no little import ance is the quanity of cut feed which a animal requires. There is such a thing, for examble, as compelling a horse to eat much more straw than he really needs, when at hard work. A team requires grain or meal. Straw will not furnish much nourishment. It is better to give an horse not more than a peck of cut straw with the meal, than to mingle the same quantity of meal with half a bushel of straw. Too much bulk is quite a objectionable as too little. This fact will hold good in feeding any kind of stock. Feeding too much straw with a little meal, is like com pelling a person to eat a quart of diluted soup, when, if the nourishment were con tained in a pint dish, it would be much more palatable.—N. I . Observer. Large Farms. One of the rocks on which many fail, is to have too much land. It is much safer to be crowded for room—to have no room to plant anything, as is often remarked— than to be spread out to the extent we commonly see. This is true of rented land ; but more pirticularly so of ground which we buy. It is a very common thing for one who has a thousend dollars to buy land worth two, mortgaging half, and leaving littlo spare cash to work on. The land is but half cultivated, and the resulting crops but one-half what they ought to be, while the labor is double what half the ground would have called for. Here there is a four fold waste; and instead of paying but six or seven per cent. for money, it brings up the actual cost to near twenty, under which one soon fails. For our part, we are in favor of young men starting in life with but little cash capital, buying a farm with sonic mortgage on it, providing he has a determination to pay that mortgage off as soon as he can turn round. Thousands of men now own property who never would have done so but for the necssity of thus exerting them selves. Their earnings would have went some how away. It is hard to resist family importunities when everything is dear; but when there is something which must be met, the disposition to save receives strong support from the glaring fact.—Weekly Press. To Clean a Rusty Plow, Take a quart of water and pour slowly into it a half a pint of sulphuric acid. (The mixture will become quite warm from chemical action, and this is the reason why the acid should be poured slowly into the watekrather than the water into the acid.) Wrsh the mould-board (or any other iron that is rusty) with this weak acid, and let it remain on the iron until it evaporates. Then wash it again. The object is to give time for the acid to dissolve the rest. Then wash with water and you will see where the worst rusty spots are. Apply some more acid and rub these spots with a brick The acid and the scouring will remove all the rest and rub it dry. Brush it over with petroleum or other oil, and let it be until spring. When you go to plowing take a bottle of acid-water to the field and apply it every bout to any spot of rust that may remain. The acid and the scouring of the earth will soon make it perfectly bright smooth. If all iron work hs wash ed over with petroleum as soon as we put our tools, implements and machines aside for the winter, it will keep them from rusting, and save a grate deal of trouble and annoyance, to say nothing of depreciation and loss.—American Agriculturist. Farming from the Cities, It is often asserted that no one can farm successfully without considerable practical knowledge, and that it is not well to en courage people who have been brought up in cities to locate upon the land with any hope of making money thereby. There is no one values practical experience more than we do, and we are ready to admit that many have left tolerably comfortable homes in towns to starve rot country places. But it is by no means always so. We know of many instances where men utterly ignorant of soil culture have gone to farming, gar dening, or fruit growing, and have made themselves rich thereby. We know one, especially, who was a journeyman tailor, and who settled in Illinois, with no knowl edge of the business, but a natural love for it. He is at this time the most successful cultivator in that part of the country, and one whom the whole region looks up to for his general intelligence. He has told the writer that his success was all owing to reading agricultural jonrnals, and then ex perimenting cautiously, until by practice he thoroughly understood the idea. We do not recommend citizens to go to the country. Only let them not forget that reading is not experience. With a little thought and judgment they will succeed well, and hundreds live to bless the day they settled on the land n — Weekly Press. MAKE hay while the sun shines. pading (DT the Home Weddings. What scene on earth is fairer than a wedding in the house ? There are no weddings like home weddings. The church is well enough for those who cannot do better. But to. a child no cathedral can be like that chief and foremost church of the heart, the father's house ! This is the church within the church. There, where the daughter was reared, and taught in all womanly grace, and equipped with house wifely habits, ought she to be married.— Around her are all the tender associations of childhood, of lave, and happiness. Her new life should date from the nest in which her old Eli) was bred. When, as in Europe, marriage is regarded as a sacrament, and as requiring, at least in a moral point of view, the special grace of which the priest is held to be the divine depository, to make it sacred and safe, we can understand why the young applicants for domestic life-hap piness should repair to the church. And when, for centuries, generation after gen eration have been married in the village church, we can understand how a thousand associations would surround that charmed spot, and make it sacred to love as it is to devotion. But in America there are no such rea sons for resorting to the church. And if there is an act in one's whole life that be longs to home, it is marriage. If one has no home, there is good reason why, next to that, she should repair to a" church. But we never could understand the feeling that leads a child, tendeely reared in an ample mansion, surrounded by endeared objects, to leave the roof under which life has been spent, and repair for the marriage service to that most unhomelike place, a church. It is true that, to a devout Mature, the as sociations connected with a church are many and precious. But they are not do mestic. They are solemn, away from com mon life, almost the antithesis of that social and summary atmosphere in which two hearts ripen into marriage. Without uncharitableness, it may be feared that too many persons have regard to the show, the brilliant impression made upon the admiring public. If so, the most sacred act of life is bribed by vanity, to serve in its mongrel service. But these censures are not to apply to the houseless creatures that in marriage seek a home; nor to those of big hearts and small houses, who have troops of friends without room to receive them ; nor, in short, to any whose hearts do not bound at the name of home, as the dearst and most sacred place on earth. Happy are they who are mar ried under the roof where they were born, and who, when in their own house, can see the smoke from their father's house, the home of childhood, the paradise mem cry ! The Doctor, He. should be a man of the strictest honor and integrity, fur to him are .confided the secrets of ilunilies, the honor of wives and daughters—social trusts that are com mitted to no other. Every medical man should feel the responsibility of these trusts, or he is unworthy of being a physican. The physician who practices his profession merely as a trade, i;.r the amount of money that can be made by it is unworthy of hi s calling. The higher and nobler motive of doing good to others, of relieving human suffering, of prolonging human life, is the only incentive—that ever has or ever will make the great physician. In proportion to the weight of his responsibility shall be the honor and the integrity of his character. How easy it is for the physician to control the destiny of his patients. On him they trust, and confide in his knowledge and truth. pe decides for them questions of life and death. Happiness or unhappiness it is in his power to give, and why? The greater his knowledge, the greater his power. He has knowledge of how to do good, and consequently the power to do ! evil, and therefore the necessity of his being governed by the strictest honor andintegri ty in order to use that knowledge rightly. Dust Under the Microscope. Among specimens of dust from various localities which we have recently examined under the microscope, one was procured at the Springfield Armory. With a Tolles 14 inch objective, the impalpable dust :wear ed to be composed mostly of fragments of iron and steel, but under the power of a 1-5, the dust was seen to be made up of particles of emery, as well as various kinds of metals. This came from the polishing wheels used in the works. The fragments, too small to be distinguished by the naked eye, and floating about in the rooms occu pied by the workmen, have sharp, cutting edges and jagged points, frightful to look at under a high magnifying power. Wepre-- sume that but few, if any, find their way far into the respiratory organs, as the bar riers which nature has interposed afford almost complete protection against injury from this source. If it were otherwise, litany of our industrial pursuits would be fatal to life. The dust from shoe factories affords much that is interesting to study. The fragments, are all from organized sub stances, principally from leather. The fil aments are twisted and convoluted in a curious manner, and some of them appear like snakes and lizards. The air in shoe factories is constantryoadled with these in finitesimal particles.—Boston Journal of Chemistry. DISCOVERIES OF TILE 3licaoscoPE. Lewenboeck tells us of an insect seen with the microscope, of which twenty-seven millions would only equal a mite. Insects of various kinds may be seen in the cavi ties of a grain of sand. Mould is a forest of beautiful trees, with the branches, leaves, flowers and fruit. Butterflies are fully feathered. Hairs are hollow tubes. The surface of our bodies is covered with scales like fish ; a single grain of sand would cover one hundred and fifty of these scales, and yet a single one covers five hundred pores. Through these narrow openings the sweat forces itself out like water through a sieve. The mites make five hundred steps a sec ond. Each drop of stagnant water con tains a world of animated beings, swimming with as much liberty as whales in the sea. Each leaf has a colony of insects grazing on it, like oxen on a meadow.—American Journal of Microscopy. Miscellaneous. DRUGS!! DRUGS!! DRUGS!! (Stock New and perfectly Pure,) J. R. PATTON Near the Depot. Huntingdon. Pa. PATENT MEDICINES, .PI , IItI'I:3IERY, NOTIONS, PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES, TOBACCO ! SEGARS, AND PIPES, FAMILY GROCERIES. Crackers, Nuts. Fruits, &c., &c., Choice Wines, Brandy, Gin. &c., &c. and pure old Monongahela Rye whisky for family medicinal use. Special care given to filling Prescriptions. Call at the Depot Drug Store for any and everything you may need in our line. MEDICINES. MEDICINES. Jan. 4, '7l. Clothing. I TIOEADY-MADE CLOTHING ! 4-I, 0 0 P '0 P The Larg e:tl We have made) Steek; the Finest lu u r Establish -1 (Goods; the New -I w Iment "THE lest styles ; thef A FLEA D QUAR IERS 0 Best Workman -1 ship; the Great- ICOUNTItY (TRADE" in lest Variety, ati (Clothing, and we MARKET and (SIXTH Streets.? K lean assure friends from out i i i .-- of town that they need look no !further than OAK HALL, for satisfactory In BOYS Clothing and sat- (WEAR we have: isfactory Prices. every kind of ma terial and every! Full Stock all the lyear round. variety of styled it MARKET and !suitable f-.r! ! SIXTH Streets. YOUTH from 16' to 20, BOYS 'from 9 to 16. `P IandCHILDREN Our CUSTOM (from 5 to 9 years .WORK is of the lull durable andl 0 very best charae-1 strong, made A with special ref- Terence to rough Iter. Easy rules for measurement, prices, &c., sent usage. In thk free to any part department o u r lof America, and 'PRICES are as -1 (good fits guaran- tonishingly low. MARKET and; t.,eed. MARKET andS TXTH Sts. 'SIXTH Streets. k k i • lA, PA. PHILADELP] janlB REMOVAL. READ, PAUSE AND REFLECT. SEEK NO FURTHER FOR A CHEAPER, BETTER SELEC TED AND MORE FASHIONABLE STOCK OF CLOTHING, Than that at GEORGE P. MARSH'S. in the second story of Read's new building, on. Mill street, cannot be found, besides a fine assort ment of ItEADY-3IADE CLOTHING, he tE prepared to offer to the public the finest line of AMERICAN, ENGLISH & FRENCH CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, VESTINGS, ever brought to town, which will be MADE TO ORDER - IN TIIE LATEST AND MOST FASHIONABLE STYLES, at rates never before equalled since the war. Those in want of Clothing will consult their own interest by examining my goods and learning my prices before purchasing elsewhere. Thankful for past patronage and being deter mined to guard his customer's interests, he solicits a continuance of the same. GEO. F. 2.IARSII. 4, '7l 1871 CLOTHING FOR MEN AND BOYS. H. ROMAN NEW CLOTHING, FOR FALL AND WINTER JUST RECEIVED AT 11. ROMAN'S CHEAP CLOTHING STORE For Gentlemen's Clothing of the best material and made in thc.best workmanlike manner, call a 11. ROMAN'S, opposite the Franklin Mouse, in Market Square, 11untingdon, Pa. Jan. 4, '7l. Boots, Shoes and leather. REMOVED _ EMOVED TO THE ORTH EAST Corner of the Diamond. CAN'T NE 1311ATE3 ! JOHN 11. WL•STIBROOK Respectfully informs the citizens of Huntingdon and vicinity that he has just rewired from the city a new and splendid stock of LEATHERS. BOOTS AND SHOES, FIATS AND CAPS, llo.iery, Shoe Finding'', Co'pct Sarb,, T run k., &r., All of which he is prepared to sell at greatly re duced prices. Don't forget the new stand in the Diamond. Old customers and the public generally are invited to cal!. Jan. 4, '7l. DOWN WITH PRIpES. WILLIAM AFRICA has just opened up a large and varied assortment of BOOTS, . SHOES, LADIES' GAITERS. and a large supply of heavy work, suitable for men and boys, at very low prices. I have at all times an assortment of HANDSOME BOOTS AND SHOES on hand, which will he disposed of at its reasona ble rates as the market will admit of. My stock a...selected with great care, and I can confidently recommend all articles in my establishment. Particular attention paid to the manufacture of customer work, and orders solicited. Sktisfaction guaranteed in all orders. WILLIAM AFRICA Jan. 4, 'L LOOK WELL TO YOUR FEET. Ladies wishing to be supplied with neat and good shoes, will find it to their advantage to call on DANIEL HEI:TZLA & BRO., at their shop, on Railroad street, opposite the Broad Top Depot, where they can he supplied with almost every style, at moderate prices. Gentlemen having repairing they wish durably and neatly executed. will be promptly attended to by giving them a call. Terms CASII. HERTZLER dc BRO, Jan. 4, '7l JOHN C. }TILLER. (Successor to C. IL Miller & Son.) DEALER IN EVERY LEATHER AND SHOE FINDINGS, HILL STREET HUNTINGDON, PENN'A. Jan. 4, 1871 Planing Mills, Furniture, &c. FURNITURE ! FURNITURE ! SELLING OFF AT COST ! The undersigned now offers to - the public his en tire stock of Plain and Fancy Furniture, consist ing of BURR\ I'B. 11,,.DSTEATIS, WASH AND CANDLE STANDS, CHAIRS, MATTRESSES, Spring Bed Bottoms, and a great variety of PARLOR & KITCHEN FURNITURE, and Chamber suits of every pric - c and description. llome-made work of the best workmanship offered t city prices. Several different kinds of Spring Bcd bottoms constantly on hand. Bargains are of fered to all who need furniture, as he is closing out at cost. Work and sale rooms on Hill street, opposite the Monitor office. JAMES HIAIGINS. jan2s;7l. IMPORTANT TO BUILDERS. BURCIIINELLS' NEW PLANING MILL T. Barchinell k. Son having just completed the erection of a first-class Planing Mill at Hunting don, Pa., arc prepared to fill all orders for Build ing Materials of all kinds, such as yellow and white pine flooring, Weather boarding, Door and Window Frames, Blinds, Sash, Shutters, Doers, Brackets and Scroll Work at shortest notice and on reasona ble terms. Wood Mouldings of every description, and turned work in all its varieties. Their mill being situated on the main line of the Penna. Rail road and Canal, they enjoy superior facilities for the shipment of material to all sections of the State. The senior proprietor of the firm being a practi cal builder and architect is prepared to furnish plans, specifications and detailed drawings fur buildings in whole or in part as may be desired. All orders promptly and faithfully filled. Address T. BURCHINELL tt SON. Huntingdon, Pa. Jan. 4, '7l T HE HUNTINGDON MANUFAU TURING COMPANY - Is now prepared to fill orders for FLOORING, WEATITERIIOARDINO, DOORS, and, in short, to do all kin& or CARPEXTER WORK. to furnish Hubs, Spokes, and FeHoes, in qaantities and receive orders for FURNITURE A large supply of Lumber of all kinds constant. ly on hand. All orders should be addressed to D. W. ARTLEY, President. Ifuntingdon, Pa. Jan. 4, '7l. Tobacco. TOBACCO, SNUFF SEGARS, JACKSON LAMBERSON, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in TOBACCO. SEGARS, SNUFFS, POUCHES, Segar Cases, Notions, and a general variety of ar ticles usually found in first-class stores, two doors south of the "Bee Hive." Country merchants supplied with all kinds of Tobacco, Segars, &c., at lowest possible rates. I respectfully ask a liberal share of public pa tronage. jan.4/71. 1871 T UMBER, SHINGLES, LATH, Hemlock and Pino Bill Stuff, Boards, Plank, Shingling, Plastering and Shingling Lath, con stantly on hand, or furnished on short notice, at lowest cash prices. Worked Flooring, Sash, Blinds, Doors, Door and •Window Frames furnished at manufacturer's prices. Grain and Country pro duce generally bought at market prices. WAGONER & BRO. Phillipsburg, Centre county, Po. Jan. 4, '7l LIME, From the Kiln of George Taylor, Markks burg, proven by chemical analysis to be of the best quality, constantly kept and for sale in any quan tity, at the depot of the B. T. Railroad. Apply to Henry Leister, "Broad Top House." Jan. 4, '7l. 1871 A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. NOW IS THE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE PITTSBURGH DAILY DISPATCH, One of the LARGEST, LIVLIEST and most WIDELY CIRCULATED PAPERS IN TILE UNITED STATES. THE DAILY DISPATCH Is printed from new type, on fine white paper is in dependent in politics, and contains TIIIRTY•SIX COLUMNS of matter, embracing The Latest News by Telegraph, The Most Reliable Market Reports, The Latest Cable Telegrams, The Fullest Local Redorts, With the Latest News by mail. including the most interesting Personal and Political Items, full 'lrk graph Market Reports from all Points of Import ance. East and West, and much other matter of an entertaining and instructive character. • The I)ISY'ATCII is furnished by mail at $8 00 a year, or may be had from our agents every morn dig in any town or village within one hundred and Ifty miles of Pittsburgh at Fifteen Cents a Week. SEND FOR A SPECIMEN COPY. GLOVE KID SIIOES, THE WEEKLY DISPATCH. A PAPER FOR TILE FAMILY ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR In issuing their Prospectus for 1871, it affords the Publishers gratification to be able to state that their WEEKLY, like their DAILY, enters upon the new year under flattering auspices. It has been enlarged to more than double its former size, and now contains THIRTY-SIX COLUMNS Of matter, printed on clear new type, makin, it one of the handsomest, as it long has been one of the cheapest, if not the cheapest, Weeklies in the country. - . It contains all the Latest News of the day—Po litical, Commercial and General, and as an enter taining and rceeptable FAMILY NEWSPAPER, Is not excelled by any paper in the State. The WEEKLY DISPATCH is furnished to single sub scribers at $1 50, or in clubs of 10 to one address at Si each, with a free paperlo the party getting up the club. Subscribers may remit us by mail, either in bills or by PostoCice order, which is the safer mode. Postmasters receiving subscriptions fur the DIS PATCH, either Daily or Weekly. are authorized to retain 20 per cent. on our published rafts, for sin gle subscribers, or 10 per cent. on our club rates of ten papers for $lO. THE SUNDAY DISPATCH A CHOICE FAMILY PAPER, DEVOTED TO NEWS, LITERATURE, PERSONAL • AND POLITICAL GOSSIP, &c. Is published every Sunday morning, and is oue of the most entertaining, instruetive and readable journals published. VARIETY OF THE SUNDAY DISPATCH Is furnished to single subscribers, by mail, at $2 00 and to clubs of ten or over, at $1 50 each per an num. Address O'NEILL & ROOK. Dubin,hers of Daily, Weekly and Sunday Dispatch. (DISPATCH IRON BUILDINGS.) 67 AND 69 FIFTH AVENUE, jan.lF.lS7l. THE STATE JOURNAL. THE WEEKLY STATE JOURNAL Was established at Harrisburg to supply-a want long felt in all parts of the State. No effort will be spared to make it an acceptable weekly visitor to the intelligent families of l'enusyl, ant:, It will be devoted to Independent Journalism, will defend and advocate the rights and interests of the people and will assist every effort to advance the religious educational, moral and social condition of humani ty. So long as the Republican party continues to be, as it now is, more than any other political or ganization, the enactor and defender of liberal and impartial laws, the protector of American Labor, the promoter of American Manufactures, and the leader in all great reforms, the Journal will advo cate its principles and defend its policies. The mining and manufacturing interests of the State, and the rights of the laboring men employed therein, shall always find favor in these columns. National and State measures proposed and enacted for the protection of American industry will ever be urged, advocated, and defended. The latest .news, political, commercial, agricultural and social from all parts of the world, will be published weekly. Thu proceedings of the Legislature throughout the session will be reported fatty and promptly, so that the readers of the- Journal may know what is transpiring at the State Capital. The Weekly Journal, like the Daily, is a first-class newspaper, thoroughly sound in politics, education, temperance and religion. It is a good agricultural paper, a good educational paper, a good temperance paper, a good religious paper, a good family newspaper. The Journal is published by the "Harrisburg Printing Association," a corporation charteled by the Legislature, and composed of gentlemen of am ple means, whose sole purpose is to publish a first class newspaper for Pennsylvania. The hest talent and the ablest writers• have been employed to con duct the affairs, and contribUte to the columns of The Journal. Send for specimen copies of Daily and Weekly. The club rates have been placed low, so that all may secure the paper at the smallest possible cost. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION FOR WEEKLY. (Invariably in advance.) I copy, one yFir, 5 copies, " 10 `• " to one address l5 00 10 " " to names of subscribers IC 00 20 " to one address 20 " " to names of subscribers, same P. 027 00 50 " '• to ono address OO 00 20 " " to names of subscribe., same P. 055 00 An extra copy will, in every case, be sent to the person who gets up the club. SUBSCRIPTION TO DAILY One copy, one year Address all communication to STATE JOURNAL. ifarrishurg, Pa. SASH, FARM ERS AND CATTLE DEALERS (h,ly nn' tri:l! is nsked f.r, after which you trill 21, r be without it: The greatest and only warranted Cattle Medi— cine in the market, you tied in Wittieb's Radi cal liinderpest Remedy, in three DIFFERENT PREPAR,ATIONS. N. 1, Agntnvt nuy sickness of the Cattle, like Cold, Cough, Hardening of the Udder, ltotten Hoof ete. Every Fanner should keep it always on band. No. •l, Against Lung disease, etc., and No. 3, against the horrible Itinderpest or Cattle plague. The No. I, used in time will prevent any outbreak of the pestilence. Full directions on each bottle, and by using it affinity unreeling to them, the cure ie warranted! Price $2 per bottle. Manufiictured only by the Inventor. Dr. Fr. WITTICII, 964. North Bth Street Philadelphia. Fur sole nt S. S. Smith's Drug Store Hunt irgdon, Agent for Huntingdon Co., Penn's. Dec. 14-2m-* USE THE RED HORSE POWDERS. Horses cured of Glanders.—Aaron Sny der, U. S. Assistant Assessor, Mount .2Etna, Pa. C. Bacon, Livery Stable, Sunbury. Horses cured of Founder.—Wolf & Wilhelm, Danville, Pa.; A. Ellis, Merchant, Washingtonvitle, Pa.; A. Sloanaker, Jersey. Horses cured of Lung Fever.—Hess & Brother. Lewisburg. Pa. Hors es cured of Colic.—Thomas Clingan, Union county, Pa. Ilogs cured of Cholera.—ll. Barr, H. &A. Cadwallader. Cows cured.—Dr. J. M'Cleery, H. M'Cormick, Milton, Pa. Chick ens cured of Cholera and Gapes.—Dr. U. Q. Davis, Dr. D T. Kreps, C. W. Sticker, John & James Finney. Hundreds more could be cited whose Stock was saved by using the Red Horse Powder. Send for circulars of the wonderful cures performed. Prepared by Cyrus Brown, Druggist, Chemist and Horseman, Broadway, Milton, Pa. Dec. 7, MO. Miscellaneous TO TIIE PITTSBURGH, PA. $ 2 00 SLEIGH RUNNERS AND FENDERS, SLEIGH ROBES, SENECA FALLS AND READLNG THIMBLE SKEINS, R PIPE BOXES Ever before offered in this part of the State. Wharton & Maguire's Column H. S. WHARTON. J. M. MAOUIRE. WHARTON MAGUIRE, 'Wholesale and Retail Dealers in FOREIGN AND AMERICAN HARDWARE AND CUTLERY, MUSTER'S NEW LIT LDING, HUNTINGDON, PA, OFFER VERY GREAT INDUCE• 3IENTS TO BUILDERS, GLASS, GLASS, GLASS, GLASS, WHITE LEAD, PAINTS 01? ALL KINDS, OILS, NAILS, LOCKS, HINGES, OILS, NAILS, LOCKS, HINGES, OILS, NAILS, LOCKS, HINGES, OILS, NAILS, LOCKS, HINGES, And Everything Pertaining to Builders, -ALSO DOTY'S PATENT WASHING MACHINE UNIVERSAL CLOTHES WRINGERS, TORRY'S PATENT ICE CREAM FREEZERS, OF ALL SIZES WE ALSO OFFER THE FAMOUS "NIAGARA" "NIAGARA" "NIAGARA" "NIAGARA" "NIAGARA" COOK STOVE, COOK STOVE, COOK STOVE, COOK STOVE, COOK STOVE, So highly recommended by every person using the same. CALL AND EXAMINE OUR HEATING AND COOK STOVES, Of all deseriptionc, including the POPULAR MORNING-GtORY -ALSO REAPERS AND MOWERS, HORSE HAY-RAKES, GUM SPRING GRAIN DRILLS, PLOUGHS, SHOVEL MOULDL, HARROW TEMII HORSE SHOES, IRON, &c., &e. HUBS, SPOKES, FELLOES, SHAFTS, TONGUES, STEEL TYRE, NONE ARE GENUINE UNLESS done up in steel engraved wrapper, with fac-simile of my Chemical Warehouse and signed 11. T. HELMBOLD. SEND FOR OUR PRICES I Medical. THE KIDNEYS, Thu Kidneys are two in number, situated at the upper part of the lion, surrounded by fat, and con sisting of three parts. viz: the Anterior, the In terior, and the Exterior. GLASS, The' anterior absorbs. Interior consists of tis sues or veins, which serve as a deposit for the urine and convey it to the exterior. The exterior is a conductor-also, terminating in a single tube, and called the Ureter. The ureters are connected with the bladder. The bladder is composed of Various coverings or tissues. divided into parts, viz: the Upper, the Lower, the Nervous and the Mucous. The upper expels, the lower retains. Many have a desiae to urinate without the ability; others urinate without the ability to retain. This frequently occurs in children. To cure these affections, we must bring into ac tion the muscles, which are engaged in their var ious functions. If they are neglected, Gravel or Dropsy may ensue. The reader must also be made aware, that how ever slight may be the attack, it is sure to effect the bodily health and mental powers, as our flesh and blood arc supported from these sources. Gorr. on RnentArissr.—Pain occurring in the loins is indicative of the above diseases. They oc cur in persona disposed to acid stomach and chalky concretions. THE GRAVEL.—The gravel ensues from neglect or improper treatment of the kidneys. These or gani being weak, the water is not expelled from the bladder, but allowed to remain; it becomes feverish, and sediment forms. It is from this de posit that the stone is formed, and gravel ensues. . . _ Dnoesr is a collection of water in some parts of the body, and bears different names, according to the parts affected, viz: when generally diffused over the body, it is called Anasarea ; when of the abdomen. Ascites : when of the chest, Hydrothorax. TREATMENT.—lfelmbold's highly concentrated compound Extract Duebu is decidedly one of the best remedies for diseases of the bladder, kidneys, gravel, dropsical swellings, rheumatism and gout affections. Under this head we have arranged Dysurin, or difficulty and pain in passing water, Scanty Secretion, or small and frequent discharges of water: Strangury, or stopping of water; Hems turia, or bloody urine; Gout and Rheumatism of the kidneys, without any change in quantity, but increase in color, or dark water. It was always highly recommended by the late Dr. Pbysiek, in these affections. This medicine increases the power of digestion, and excites the absorbents into healty exercise by which the watery or calcareous depositions, and all unnatural enlargements, as well as pain and in flammation, are reduced, and it is taken by men, women and children. Directions for use and diet accompany. PUILADELPIITA, PA., Feb. 25, ISC7. 11. T. lIELMISOLD, Druggist: Dear .Sir:—l have been a sufferer, for upward of twenty years, with gravel bladder and kidney affections, during which time I have used various medicinal preparations, and have been under the treatment of the mast eminent Physicians, expert encinglittle relief. Itaving seen your preparations extensively ad vertised, I consulted with my family physician in regard to using your Extract Buehu. I did this because I had used all kinds of ad vertised remedies, and had found them worthless, and, some quite injurious ; in fact, I despaired of ever getting well, and determined to use no reme. dins hereafter unless I knew of the ingredients. It was this that prompted me to use your remedy. As you advertised that it was composed of huchu, cubebs and juniper berries, it occurred to me and my physician as an excellent combination, and, with his advice after an examination of the article and consulting again with the druggist, I conclud ed to try it. I commenced its use about eight months ago, at which time I was confined to my room. From the first bottle I was astonished and gratified at the beneficial effect, and after using it three weeks, was able to walk out. I felt much like writing you a full statement of my case at that time. but thought my improvement might only be a temporary, and therefore concluded to defer and see if it would effect a perfect cure, knowing then it would be of greater value to you, and more satisfactory to me. . _ . I am now able to report that a cure is effected after using the remedy for fiive months. I have not used any now for three months, and fell as well in all respects, as I ever did. Your Buchu being devoid of any unpleasant taste and odor—n nice tonic and invigorator of the system. Ido not mean to be without it whenever occasion may require its use in such affections. M. McCORMICK. Should any doubt Mr. McCormick's statement, be refenns to the following gentlemen : lion. Wm. Bigler ' ex-Gtzvernor, Pennsylvania. Hon. Thos. B. Fl orence, Philadelphia. lion. J. C. Knox, Judge, Philadelphia. lion. J. S. Black, Judge. Philadelphia. Lion. D. R. Porter. ex-Governor, Philadelphia. lion, Ellis Lewis, Judge, U. S. Court lion. G. W. Woodward, Judge, Philadelphia. Hon. W. A. Porter. City Solicitor. Philadelphia. lion. John Bigler. ex-Govt.nor, California. lion. E. Banks, Auditor General, Washington, D. C., and many others. if necessary. Sold by Druggist and Deeiesrs everywhere. Be ware of counterfeits. Ask for llelmbold's. Take no other. Price—sl 25 per bottle. or 6 bottles for $6 50. Delivered to any address. Describe symp toms in all communications. Address U. T. lIELMBOLD, Drug and Chemi• cal Warehouse, 591 Broadway, N. Y. Medical. A GREAT MEDICAL DIS9OI Dr. 'WALKER'S VINEGAR, BITTE o Hundreds of Thousands De " ` Pora'',U,Ve .= .; WHAT ARE THEY ? t C sf ao 11 m:2 '4.; 1 1 O 7:* g 7, 6 1. Orz g TREY ARE NOT A VILE g a FANCY DRINK Bade of Poor Bum, Whisker, Proof and Beinao Liquors doctor; d, sgced an coed to please the taste, cr:led •• Tonics, - ern," " Cestorers," cc., that Iczal the tipple drunkenness and rata, but aro n trtipletticin from the Nativo Loots and herbs of Californ from all Alcoholic Stlinnlanic. Thc7 GREAT BLOOD PUDIFIZ:II. and A GIVING PBANCIPLE a perfect Remove Invigorator of the System, cnrrying off all po matter and restoring the blood to a healthy C.O No person can take three Bitters recording t lion and remain long unveil. sum wlllbo given forme incurable case, p the bones are not destroyed by mineral po other means, and the vital organs wasted bey point of retch, Per Infinninzut cry glue Chronic Bb• Clem and Goat, Dyspepsia, or lodine Bilious, Itemit teat and Intermit tent I Disc sacs of tho Blood, Liver, Kidney Bladder, there Bitters hare boon most fol. Stich Diseases are carted ty TI Blood. 171,,,ch is generally produced by demo of the Digeetivo Organ.. DYSPEPSIA Olt INDIGESTION, ache, fain in the E hook:arc, Conchs, Tightness Chest, Dizninese, :lour tree:attercs of the Et End Lute la the Mouth, Dino. Attaels, r:zr of the near:, li.flamsatlon of :Le Lump, Pall regions of the Kidneys, and n imndrcd other symptoms, ere the GC:springs of Dyspepsia. They invigorate the Stomach and stimulate t yid liver mad bowels, which render them of one, eLicacy is cleansing the blood of ell Imporith imparting new life and vigor to Vao whe:e ryste FOIL SKIN DISEASES, Eruptions, Tett, Meant, Blotches. Spots, Maple., fustalea.Bot boucles, Dino- :Toros, Zeolibilead, Sore Lye, eine, Itch, Scarfs, Olscolorations of the Skin, L encl./XS...WS of tho 1.,::1n, of whatever sense or ore literally clog op and carried out of the sync short time by the use of these Bitters. One be such cases will convince the most Le. - ednloue o Curative effcet. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you Impurities bursting through the skin In Pimples, dons or Sores ; cleanse it when you and it obet and sluggish to the veins; cleanse 11 when It and your feelings will tell you when. Keep the pure and the health of the system will follow. 3 'IN, TAPE and other wonms, lurking system of so many thousands, aro effectually de cd and removed. For full directions, rand r• the circular around each bottle, printed In fa; goagea—Ez.glish, German. French and Spanish. J. WAl.trll. rroprietor. IL U. McDOSALD 4 Druggists and Cen. Agents. San Francisco. and ea and Si Commerce Street, New Yoe; PTSOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEA] Ayer's Cherry Pecto: For Diseases of the Throat and Lu such as Coughs, Colds, Whoopin Cough, Bronchitis, Asthma, and Consumption. Probablynever before in the whole hist medicine, has anything won so widely and so. upon the confidence of mankind, as this es, remedy for pulmonary complaints. Through series of years, and among most of the ra men it has risen higher and higher in their e Lion, as it has become better known. Its m character and power to cure the various alfe of the lungs and throat, have made it known a liable protector against them. While adap milder forms of sli..,sso and to young c hijd re at the same time the most effectual remedy th be given for incipient consumption, and thi germs affections of the throat and lungs. As vision against sudden attacks of Croup, it E be kept on hand in every family, and indeed are sometimes subject to colds and cougt should be provided with this antidote for thei Although settled Consumption is thong curable, still great numbers of cases where a case seemed settled, have been completely and the patient restored to sound health t Cherry Pectoral. So complete is its nif over the disorders of the Lungs and Throa the most obstinate of them yield to it. When ing else could reach them, under the Cherry Loral they subside and disappear. Singers and Public Speakers find grea tection from it. . _ — Asthma ii always relieved and often cured by it. Bronchitis is generally cured by Whin Cherril Pectoral in small and frequent dos. So generally are its virtues known that we not publish the certificates of them he - ^ rdo than assure the public, that its coal . arc maintained. Ayer's Ague Cu] For Fever and Ague, Intermittent Fi Chill Fever, Remittent Fever, I/ Ague, Periodical or Bilious Fever, and indeed all the affections which from malarious, marsh, or mitt= poisons. As its name implies, it does Cure, and doe fail. Containing neither Arsenic, Quinine, Bin Zinc, nor any other mineral or poisonous aubsi whatever, it in nowise injures any patient. number and importance of its cures In the alto tricts, are literally beyond account, and we be without a parallel in the history of Ague inedi Our pride is gratified by the aCknowledgmeni receive of the radical cures effected in abet cases, and where other remedies had wholly ft tinacclimated persons, either resident ir travelling through miasmatic localities, will be tested by tatting the AGUE CURE daily. For Liver Complaints, arising from torp of the Liver, it is an excellent remedy, stimuli the Liver into healthy activity. For Bilious Disorders and Liver Complaints, an excellent remedy, producing many trail markable cures, where other medicines bad fai Prepared by DR. J. C. Artie & CO., Prac and Analytical/ Chemists, Lowell, Mass., and all round the world. raga., *2,00 ?mar -21.01M1111.4 Ayer's Sarsaparillt The reputation this cellent medicine enjo /OPis derived from its c. ni m anY efl r ou7 : s hich la7 M r ; / •-.- cases of Scrofulous o case, where the systi A i t. .' d r j . seemed saturated w 4 _ _ . ... ~. corruption , bare be ----• R u rci ri nas affections andCn cored ea __:.-- .-'' ...:__. disorders which were , , - - - ' gravateeby the tern -- - lout contamination un they were painfully afflicting, hare been radica cured in such great numbers in almost every s. bon of the country, that the public scarcely need be informed of its virtues or uses. Scrofulous poison is one of the most destructi enemies of our race. Often, this unseen and unf tenant of the organism undermines the constitutii and invites the attack of enfeebling or fatal diseast without exciting a suspicion of its presence. Aga it seems to breed infection throughout the body, a, then, on some favorable occasion, rapidly devel , into one or other of its hideous forms, either on t surface or among the vitals. In the latter, tubs Iles may be stuldmilv deposited in the lungs heart, or tumors formed in the liver, or it shot its presence by era tion s on the skin, or foul alet ations on some of the bad,. U.». a...a atonal use of abottle of this Sarsaparilla is a visable, even when no active symptoms of dines appear. Persons afflicted with the following cot bunts generally find immediate relief, and, length, cure, by the use of this SARSA.PARII LA: Bt. Anthony's Fire Rose or Erysipela Titter Salt Rheum, Scald Read, Rim:worn Bore Eyes, Bore Ears, and other eruptions visible forms of Scrofulous disease. Also in U more concealed forms, as Dyspepsia. Drops' Heart Disease, Fits, _Epilepsy, Neu . t and the various llerrous affections of the masc . tar and nervous systems. Syphilis or Venereal and Mercurial Dismal are cured by it, though a long time is required fi subduing these obstinate maladies by any mod kin. But long continued use of this medicine will cut the complaint. Leueerrhcea or Whites, Uteri,, Ulcerations, and Female Diseases, are con wooly soon relieved and ultimately cured by it puri4lng and invigorating effect. Minute Dl-et bons for each ease are found in our Almanac, sul plied gratis. _Rheumatism and Gout, whe caused by accumulations of extraneous matter in the blood, yield quickly to it, as also Live Complaints, rapidity, Congestion orlinflam marten of the ltrer, and Jaundice, when arising as they often do, from the rankling poisons in th blood. This SARSAPARILLA is a great re scorer for the strength and vigor of the system Those who are Languid and listless, Despots. dent, Sleepless, and troubled with Nervous Ap prehensions or Fears, or any of the affection: symptomatic of Weakness, will And immedlatt relief and convincing evidence of its restoratit t Power upon trial. PREPARED B Y Dr. 7. C. AYER £ CO., Merrell, MIMI Practical and Analytical Chemins. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS RNA= waABIL SELF BASTING SEWING MACHIN. A Patent Self-Banter has been attached to the CELEBRATED GROVER & BAKE] SEWLNG MACHINE. The above machine make either the chain t lock Ptitch, or stitch alike on both surfaces. Ca and see them work. For further information write to, or call u GREEN .t BRO., Leibter's Building, (up Maim) Jan. 4, '7l. Huntingdon, Ps.