• 0 0 % 4 3. 0.". ii ontrok .4g*trat, A. S. MaiILITSON, ; TUESDAY, JAN. 9, •486(f.:. Brno negro equality organs are afraid'of thelate..apeeial .vuessago_of the President, and - 'the report a- General Grant . I - find - although they oontain mat ten 'o f vitalimpurtan -antufgretit-in ter4iie tfiB people, moiii-of those papers in tlia country iefuse to print diens; as thti indnence would tend to induce the, reader to favor a restoration of the Union upon a white basis. far During the past four years about $70;000 has been given to the President to.buy furniture, for the " White House," but - as Mr. Johnson took possession of the building it is said to be so destitute of furniture that $30,000 are now . required furnish it! In the face of these shameful facts $25,000 have been given to Mrs. Lin coln, who is now worth $lOO,OOO saved at Washington ; and the union league is demailding that the treasury be robbed to the• extent of $75,000 more to enable her children to spend their lives in riehes and-indolence, while the people are taxed almost beyond endurance. The law pro vides that 'the President's salary shall be only $lOO,OOO for four years but the late President will cost the treasury nearer $300,000, besides an immense amount of extras. Nan. Lloyd Garrison has suspenaidthe publication of the Liberator, which he bag conducted for the last thirty-five yr's. The old'standing motto of the paper was: "The Constitution of the United States is a League with , Death and a Cov enant with Hell," and doubtless Garrison think& that his war against it bas been so far sumssful that this Congress will finish the party work without further effort on his part. Oongreniongl Proceedings. Congreigs re-assembled on the 6th.— Sumner offered a resolution, which was adopted', calling upon the President for information in regard to the Provisional Governors—hOw they were paid, and whether they took the oath. He also of fered petitions for negro suffrage, and a protest from negroes against allowing Colorado to be recognized as a State be cause negro equality is not permitted by its new Constitution. A Union League petition, was read, asking that Mrs. Lin coln be paid the salary of President for the next three years. (She is now worth 11100,000.) Propoiitions were made to add several more amendments to the Constitution, to create more races, and to secure negro rights. In the House, the documents relating to the case of Hon. Mr. Harris were present ed and sent to committee; a statement of numbefof troops furnished was present ed; arrlogoiry was instituted as to the present state of the army ; the President was invited to state the condition of the Spath ; an inquiry was made as to the muster out of troops at a distance from their place of enlistment ; an inquiry was directed to know .what measures were ne cpssary to suppress polygamy ; a bill was offered to equalize naval pensions; bills were read to regulate Indian a fairs, and to improve western river navi gation ; and after various other matters of little importance, Rufus P. Spaulding made a negro speech. Pennsylvania Legislature. -The Legislature of this State met at Harrisburg last Tuesday. Both branches being largely Hopublican, of course there Wu but little trouble in organizing. ' In the Senate Hon. David Fleming, of Harrisburg, was elected Speaker, and G. W. H,stamersly, of Philadelphia, Clerk. In the House, James R. Kelly, of Washington, was chosen Speaker, and A. W. Benedict, of Huntingdon, Clerk. Both branches adjourned until Wed nesday of this week, and after a session of a few days at that time it is understood tha&-it will again adjourn and await the Governor's return from Cuba. As it is sot at all probable that the real interests of the Commonwealth suffer from Mach action on the part of the Legislature, axone will complain. ". The Governor is still absent in Cuba. The new extension of the Capitol is so nearly. completed that the first story is really for use. There has been some al terations in the Senate and House cham bers which add considerably to their con venience. —The Maine State. Prison during the year ending Nov. 30, paid its own expen ses, and had a balance of $B5. The Ver mont State Prison, with the same number of inmates, ran in debt 86,446. —lt is noticeable, that the heaviest force negroes ever it one time in:the army, is reported' for July 15; 1865, three monthaufter the fighting was all over - —Every tax payer, Democrat or Re publican; Conservative or.Badical, should remember that over thirty million dol. **have been -already spent to support the Freedmen's Bureau -tbroughont The United States, and still more is demanded 4* w, WZr@fer 1 4 62 104gg.idatfive tikaMi. .tr- - .# 411 / 4 403 ."° rot' , upon sieir own V.:.lotsek..:9krood, Southern agent in . hskagjacted - a iite for toi",n, gethei With 8,000;000 , acres of._goirein mentihod;for ex-rebel emigrants. r `t -gefore qmgreas adjourned fer the heydnyer,tthe Quakers 'of •Baltiinre sent in a petition asking the me 'tubers " to do something for the freedmen." This was .ratty cool sarcasm-Congress- •having spent the whole of -its two weeks sitting is doifig nothing else. —There is destructive ice freshet in the Susquehanna: - "A• Williamsport des patch of last week states that over a mill ion dollars worth of logs had been swept past that place within twenty four hours. —Orderly Sergeant Joseph Bulens, of Gen. Augur's headquarters, at Washing- Sou, was shot in tho head as ho was pass ing along Fourteenth street, near Wil lard's, on Sunday evening, by one of a gang of negroes. The ball carried away a piece of the skull. A negro named Ly ons was identified as the guilty party. —The vote of Washington City, upon the subject of negro suffrage was 35 for and 6,639 against—nearly two hundred to one. The vote in favor was heretofore incorrectly stated to be 75. —Stanton has set aside ground at Fort Pillow for anegro monument. The white heroes who fell on a hundred Southern battle fields may perhaps be thought of hereafter, when each " colored brave" has secured a memorial stone. —The Mobile Advertiser says that John Scott, cotton loan agent for the Confed eracy, turned over to Gen. Canby 120,000 bales of cotton, and it will be surprising if the Government has received or ever will receive 10,000 bales of that amount. The rest, it says, has been stolen—stolen by the bale, by the plantation lot, and by the steamboat load. —At Memphis, last week, a respecta ble citizen named Roland was going home at night, when he was shot through the body by a negro. Tim ruffian then attempted to beat out the brains of his victim with his musket, but was fright ened away by the approach of other per sons. —A few days ago the 6th IT. S. Color ed Cavalry arrived at Helena, Arkansas, where a mutiny occurred and the com mander, Col. Brown, was killed. The " colored troops" always " bear off the palm" when it comes to a mutiny. —The receipts from customs at the ports of New York, Boston, Philadelphia and Baltimore, during the week ending 16th December, amounted in the aggre gate, to over two and a half millions in gold. —A young lad sent to the Reform school in Michigan was discovered to be a girl who had worn boy's clothes for seven years without being suspected. —Early this month, at Jefierson, Tex as, the military rescued, by force, in open District Court, from the sheriff, two Treasury agents who were indicted by the grand jury for swindling. The of ficer in command ordered the Provisional Judge of the Court to release the agents, under a threat of punishment if he diso beyed, and the judge declined obeying the order. —" It is only a few years since Robert Toombs boasted that he could yet call the rool of his slaves on Bunker Hill." This paragraph is constantly traveling the rounds of the papers, notwithstanding Toombs denied its truth, over his own signature, six or eight years ago, in a let ter to the late Hon. B. F. Hallet. —The Southern Provisional Governors have been paid out of the War Depart. ment fund, at the rate of $3,000 per an num, for their services. —Six thonsaod six hundred and sixteen patents have been issued daring the year exceeding by 1,600 the largest issue of previous years. —Jaeger & Co.'s distillery at Dubuque, lowa, was blown to pieces by a boiler explosion,_ on the 26th. One man was killed. Loss $60,000. —The friends of Juarez in Washington are much dissatisfied with the appoint ment of Hon. Lewis D. Campbell as Min ister to Mexico. They say he is " not positive enough." A young Lady in Westboro, ' Mass., was married on Thanksgiving ay to a returned soldier whom she had never seen before, the courtship having been conducted by letter. On the following morning she put on her cloak and bonnet and ran away, and has not since returned. —Gerrit Smith has commenced his threatened libel suit against the Chicago Tribune, laying his damages at $50,000. —The New Orleans negroes were riot ous on Christmas day, and three police men were severely wounded by them. .About forty of the freedmen, mostly arm ed were arrested. —Hon. Henry Winter Davis, of 3iary land died on Saturday in Baltimore. —The New York Court of General Sessions has sentenced Edward B. Ketch um to four years and six months impris onment. t , —General Gregory is making the tour of central Texas, trying to persuade the freedmen to make labor contracts for the year. —On Christmas morning, at Ports mouth, Virginia, a large number of ne groes gathered for a riot, but the milita ry guard promptly suppressed their dem onstrations. A white man and boy were shot and one negro. —The loss of the steamer Constitution, with forty lives, off . the North Carolina I coast, is.confirmed. The Constitution had a cargo - of .seven hundred and twenty balesof ootton--tshe was valued at one hundred and fifty, 'thousand dollars. —,Ool.RobeitZ., tee bas been twine pardoned iont:OftiiiipOrtiteo44. 0301.611 ' he had been sentenced:by' cotirt: mania(" for.comp4oi7with triuduliit claitpa.4- 0.4 4 ,.49veniti1ut,1: 'l:4ysatr triustiqt inter: —A whole family were suffocated by coal gas in a room in a tenement.house in. New York, ou Sunday last. Two of then i were dead when discovered: • • over the Southern • States ther e are feara. of ari• uprising of the liberated slaves. This is a fearful state• or :X' fairs, and all • the doings •of the radical Abolitionists, who have instilled into the minds of the easily duped blacks that - they should have presented to them as Christ mas gifts the lands of the whites. —Daniel Fiester.and Riley Steenback killed, near Hunter's Lake in Sullivan county, three deer- in one day, and one the next, which brought thern But the' best of the whole is, Fiester kill ed two ax, one l shot. —During the last two years thu gov ernment has received over $6,000, from the sale of confiscated property in Missis sippi. —The 'Paraguayan leaders having fail edin thei,r invasion of the Argentine ter ritory, now act entirely on the defi•usive. —Thursday's internal revenue receipts were one million seven hundred thousand dollars. —A call for a public meeting to favor the Monroe doctrine, has been issued in New York. —The archives of Missouri which were taken from the State by the rebel Gover nor Jackson, have been found, together with the rebel records, at Northall, Tex as. —There are fourteen large gambling houses in operation in Boston, the annual profits of which a-re about $500,000. —lt is announced authoritatively thit: both Mr. Stanton and Judge Holt refus•3 to pronounce a eulogy on Mr. Lincoln, and that the committee "find great diffi culty in procuring a proper person.' fhis is a painful state of things. Hallock, the founder and fry many years proprietor of the New York Journal of Commerce, died on Thursday a: New Haven. —Thirteen dead bodies were talfer from the surf at Nantucket list week, ten of which belonged to the ship Newton, lately wrecked there. —Wednesday's Internal revenue re ceipts were $1,594,788. —A petroleum fire in Boston, Friday, destroyed fifty thousand dollars worth of property. A colored man was shockitig ly burned by the explosion of oil. —Secretary Stanion and Judge Holt have both declined to deliver the eulogy on President Lincoln. —Joseph H. Maddir has brought suit against Secretary Stanton, in the Supreme Court at New York, for false imprison ment. He claims $lOO,OOO damages. —Niue million five hundred thousand dollars prize money has already been paid. Five million five hundred thousand do,j 7 , lars remain unpaid. —Secretary McCulloch is about to is sue proposals for funding $100,000,000 certificates of indebtedness and compound interest notes into 5-20's. —The Supreme Court of the United States has decided that biddings at auc tion sales are not binding unless both parties consent. —Georgetown, in the District of Co lumbia, held an election on Thursday up on the subject of negro suffrage. There were 704 against and one in favor of ne groes voting. The correspondent of the Baltimore Sun says that that' vote was ca r t by a drunken man. Alas, for the. grand moral idea party in Georgetown ! How ever, it may mitigate the " loyal" morti fication here to know that their party there voted " as one man"—in " solid column"—tight. Freedman's Bureau . Inisclalef. Recently, a party of owners of lands on James Island, South Caralina, started out from Charleston in a boat for the island, accompanied by two officers of Gem Sick les' staff, but were unable to effect a land ing—some sixty armed negroes having appeared on the shore and threatened to, fire on the first man whoshould attempt to land. The negroes refused to listen to the officers, and threatened to kill the ne gro oarsmen if the boat:should not imnr diately leave. The boat was followed for two miles along the shore. Two compal nies of the 6th Regulars have been ordered over to arrest all who offer resistance. These are some of the results of Gen. Sexton's freedman's bureau incendiary teachings. To those, and others •of the same kind of lawless blacks, Senator-Sum ner proposes to donate all the coast islands and the fertile lands along the rivers for thirty miles inland. A pretty paradise they would make. Boiler Explosion. On the evening of the 29th three of the' four boilers of Cordelia Furnace, two miles from Columbia, Pa., exploded, lay ing the entire furnace in ruins, killing John Lutz, and severely injuring Jeremi ah Conkling, George Sbiffer and Daiiief Neff. Lutz was blown over the casting house, striking and carrying the bell with him, into a run about a hundred yards. distant. His head and one arm were torn off. The uninjured boiler was carried about one hundred yards, and half of one of the others was found five hUndred yards away. No cause is assigned for the explosion. - WThe chief organ of the Methodist Church in the north, the Christian Advo. cate and Journal, has raised the black flag of negro equality. It says: - "This godless prejudice against negro equality deserves divine .punishment. She (the-Church) must -cease to loathe and -dissociate men on account' of color. - She utult . give her brethieu - 'of the • despised" -lifteiter cordial fellowship; in horichoolf; Jelftwohes, ler counting toorne,:tdoSt ilk we:l'm:ay and tienoticiodY.- Statement of Number of Volunteers Called from Each State. The Secretary of War, in compliance with a resolution of the House of Repre sentatives, has furnished a statement of the number of volunteers'called forby the President at various periods. (The right hand column shows the ag gregates when reduced to three years standard ; but the left hand column gives the actual number of men called for, for the various terms of service.) Maine, 71,745 New Hampshire, 34,605 Vermont, 35,246 Massachusetts, 131,785 Rhode Island, 23,711 Connecticut, 57,270 New York, 455,568 New Jersey, 79,511 Pennsylvania, 366,326 Delaware, 13,651 Marylsnd, 49,730 West. Virginia, - 30,003 District of Columbia, 16,872 Ohio, 317,133 Indiana, 195,147 Illinois, 258,217 Michigan, 90,119 Wis3onsiii, 96,118 Minnesota, 23,034 lowa, 7 . 5,860 Missouri, 108,773 Kentucky, 78,540 Kansas, 20,097 Total, Tale of an Involuntary Aeronaut. In 1852 a famous teronaut advertised that be would make an ascension from Oakland, California. It was s, total nov elty to nine tenths of those he addressed, and the public rushed to see him in , l crowds. In the ceuter of the space from which the ascent was to be made, the huge sphere floated, held down to vulgar earth by a dozen ropes grasped by as ma ny persons elected from among the by standers. The navigator of the heavens had not yet made his appearance, and the audience were growing impatient, as manifested by their shouts and curses. He was probably playing freeze out poker with some hush miner, in some adjoining tavern, a la Artemus Ward, and could not be choked offi In a few minutes more the " machine" would have been torn into threads, when a gust of wind arising, the balloon was suddenly wrench e;l from the hands that held it, and rushed like a rocket straight towards the clouds. Did we say wrenched from all ? No, not 'from all ! A cry of horror rose from the lately turbulent crowd; for there, clinging to a slight wooden cross piece, attached to one of the cords, was a small dark ob ject which every one pronounced' to be a human being. A lad who had been selling papers among the crowd was one of those who had voiunteored to hold the guys, and not being sufficiently alert, had been carried off with the balloon. The specta tors were appalled, and every observer momentarily expected to see him drop. But the young adventurer had no such idea, and those who had ;lasses saw him clamber up the cord, and seat himself astride the cross piece. The balloon as cended upwards in the glowing rays of the sun, and seemed like a speck; then ' vanished all together. It would have been difficult just then to have insured the life of that boy at any premium. As for the involuntary rero naut, what must have been his feelings as he found himself thus severed from the firm earth to which he had been accus tomed. At first his little heart was in his throat, and ho seemed to have sud denly fallen from some vast height into an abyss of fathomless air. The world vanished instantaneously from his sight. The boy had unfortunately wound the' cord about his hand in such a manner that it was impossible to let go at once. Yet knowing the fate that awaited him, should he fall, he had, by the exertion of an amount of strength wonderful in one so young, contrived to assume the posi tion of comparative safety already noted. There he saw the wind driven clouds of different strata rush past him with fright ful velocity, and looking down, could dim ly discern the landscape, and the ocean with its ships, spread out on a map. Du ring the afternoon the people of Benicia .saw the car dash by, and little thought of the throbbing heart that from that awful eminence awaited in cold and anxiety the coming night. The blood began to con geal in the veins of the little traveler; the act of breathing grew difficult; his nuts , des, increased to such a fearful tension, were beginning to relax; a numbness was seizing on his fingers that grasped the cord. A feW minutes more must evident ly terminate the terrible ride through space. All at ohce the rope attached to the valve was thrown against the boy. He clutched it in his despair as an addi tional bold upon life. Joy ! The Valve opens ! The gas rapidly escapes 1 The balloon is once more nearing the earth ! It rushes into the leafy embrace of a grove of trees, and after a violent strug gle, rests.. hen some ranchman, who had been watching the descent, reached the spot, he found the young adventurer seated on the ground at the foot of an oak, looking the picture of astonishment, but none the worse for his journey, ex cept a few scratches. We have heard of persons whose hair from terror turned gray in a single night. The hair of the lad, on coming down, was a bright red, but as it was red be fore he went up, we do not know that this was anything remarkable. We meet him --the boy then, the man. now—daily; be looks like .nnotler mortal, and seems . to have forgotten all the circumstances to • bich be was•indebted for his elevation. .-4---eatiforniu Sunday Afereargit..., • . • 56,595 30,827 29,052 123.844 17,878 50,514 360,980 35,785 267,558 l 0,303 40,692 27,653 I I 506 239,976 152,283 212,694 H),865 7R,985 19,675 68,183 86,192 70,348 18,644 2,653,062 2,129,011 —A fire at Yonkers, N. Y., Friday, de stroyed property valued at $50,000. —Tuesday's internal revenue receipts were over $4,000,000. —The number of American vessel lost and missing during December is 58. —An old man was brutally murdered and his wife severely ,womided by color ed soldiers at 'Doctertown, Ga., on the 24th ult. —The store of Benedict dc Co., in Cleveland, Ohio, was robbed on Tuesday night of several thousand dollars. worth of furs. C 0 IV' ... 17 11.2 X:' rr I IT3IIII JO i, READ WHAT DR. SCHENCH IS DOING. DR, T.H. DEAR :-1 feel it a duty I owe tv you, and to all who are suffering under the diseases known as Con• sumption and Liver Complaint, to let them know what great belied lb I have received from your Pultuo nlc Syrup and Seaweed Tonic in so short a limo. by the blessin: of Got it has cured me thus far. lir. Schenck:, I will now make my statement to you, as foflou a :—A bout eighteen months ago 1 was attack ed with a severs cough, and it settled on my lungs; I could not retain anything I ate, and suffered with ev ening fevers and night sweats. I was very much re duced. The whites of my eyes were very yellow: Me wine my skin; Lay appetite all cone, and unable to di gest what I did eat; bowels swollen. Irregular and cos tive, I was vt•ry low spirited, and had such violent spells of caughing when I laid down at night and when I arose In the morning that they would lust one or two hours. I then would be nearly exhausted, and was entirely unable to Ile on my left side. 1 cannot describe my wit etched sotering as I would wish to do. Every or gan in my body was diseased or deranged Such was my situation at this time, and I was confined to my bed irum the lust ut February. 15119 to :lane. 1852, not able to sit up. I had the beet of medical attendance the whole of the time My cough was so very had that it racked we e. ry much. lat this time raised a large quantity of thick, ytl low offensive matter. sometimes with blood, and it was generatly itemu panted by nau sea and a furred and th.ek touted tongue. !tithe time of coughing PO badly 1. would have sharp, shooting pains in Inv left side and heart, night sweats. and soreness all through my whole chest; had mneh in ward ie.% or, pain in my back and„under m v shoelder mad, and in the small of my back, and at times ym se vere that it would throw me into spastns. Now Ml' ph ysi. {tilts gave me tip to die. Others I had, and the nest of them. but they could do nothing for me. and at that time I was nothing but skin and bones. I then. was in the western part of Missouri in June list we left there for the hest, and in Angust last we came to New York. and I was so reduced that I could only walk a little with my husband's help. Atter I had been here a short time the a it water breeze made me feel much better for a time and then I had again to call a plivsician for aid. We had our of the best physicians of New York ou the disea es of the lungs. and doctors of all kinds, but of no avail. They said I was past cure, and that my lungewere too far gone lorany one to cure me, But at this time I was kin my feet about the house, not able to do much of nothing, In November last I "Irein worse, and the consumption diarrhea set in Imo. lasted about eight weeks. We had tried all and every thing that I could grasp at like a dying person for my disease—cououmptiou and liver complaint—but of no avail. In January,lB63, I was brought down again on my bed. and was not expected to live the night out. lily husband stayed at my side, nod other friends, and they all give me up to die: At this time every one who saw me did not think I would ever leave my bed a living, wo man. The first night I was attacked with spasms, and was deranged most of the time. A friend, Mrs. Harris, came to see me the last of the week. and brought the Sunday Mercury. In it was an account of a great cure performed by Dr. Schenck. She read it to me, and it was so much like my disease that ' , asked my husband to go and see him for me. At this time I had given up all hopes of ever hie well again, and made my peace with God. to he ready whenever he to led for me. On the 27th of January, 18,13, my husband called on Dr Schenck, 32 Bond street. New "York, and stated to him my case, with a .equest for him to call and see me, which he did, and examined me with the respimmeter. When he was about to go I asked him if he could cure me t Ills reply was: •• I cannot tell, both lungs are diseased, and tqc bronchial tubes are affected on both side'." And yet he set mcd to think there were lungs enough left to effect a cure if the diarrhea could he stopped. He said In order to do this, he woad have to give me Mandrake Pills in small doses at first, to carry off the morbid ma ter, and then, with striments ,be hoped to check it. which he did, but the constant coughing, night sweets, and diarrhea bad prostrated me so that he was afraid my strut powers were too-much prostrated everto rally, and vet he seemed to think if I could lice to get enough Pnimonic Syrup through my system to cause expectoration there were lungs enough let for me to recover. Ile wished me to try the ruhno• nic Syrup and Seaweed Tonic at once. saying it would do me no harm. If It did me no good. The first week it seemed to give me strength, so that on Sunday after I Bat up in bed and ate hearty for a sick woman; but the next week I lost all hope and wished my husband n-t to give me any more medicine. But the doctor warned him of this, and when themedicine was clearing out the system it made them feel somewhat restless. and to persevere; and he insisted on me taking it: and now I feel the benefit of it. For after eight days I began to gain my strength. and, with the exc'eption of a cold thst cut me hack some, I have been gaining strength of body, my cough is going away. and all my pains are gone; no sureness of the body. my bowels are regular, and my breath is aweet,and I thank God that lam now going about. and sew and rend as well as ever I could i have taken sixteen bottles of the medicine, eight of each I now have a good appetite and rest well at night: my cough does not troulde me in getting up or lying down. I would here any to the afflicted with con sumption or liver complaint, that Dr. Schenck is no humbug. You can rely on what he says. Delay not: it Is dangerous to trifle with these diseases. If you would he cured, go at once; and sty one wishing to know the facts as herein stated can call at my residence 117 Went Houston street, Nest . York city. MRS MARYS% PARLOW. We. the undersigned. residents of New York, are ac (minted with Mrs. Farlow. and know her statement t he true. We also know that she nsed Dr. Schenck - . Pn!manic Syrup and Seaweed Tonic, and have realm. to believe that to this medicine she owes her present - tion from a premature grave. B. Farlow, 117 West Houston et. Enrzene4Tnderhill, f37n Greenwich t. T.ln. Engenc Underhill, c7rl Greenwich et. A nzneta Underhill. trni Greenwich st. A. V. Harris. 117 West Houston st. .T. L. COLE. al Cottage pl. M. A. Leighton. 483 Broadway. Mrs. Benjamin Clapp, 19 Amity pl. I nm well acquainted with Mrs, Mary F. Farinyr. and with her lmahand, Mr. B. Farlon-, they haring, ifrlt a few mouths past. 3ttonded at my church. and I am cOnYinc ed that any statement which They mieht make/may be relied on as true. JOHN DOWLING. 130, Jan) Pastor of Bedford St. Baptist Churco, N. Y. Dr. Schenck will he professionally at his principal of flee No. 15 North Sixth street. corner of Commerce, Philadelphia, evOry Sal urdny. from 9 a. in. until 4 p. No. 32 Bond Street, New York, every Tuesday, from 9 to 8: No. 1 Summer street Boston. !Hoes_ every Wed. ueeduy, from 9 to 3. and every other Friday at 108 Balti , more street Baltimore. Md. All advice free, but for thorough examination of the lungs with his Respiro ter. the charge is _sire° dollars. Price of the Pulmonic Syrnp and Seaweed Tonle, eh pt 50 per bottle. or $7 50 per half dozen. Mont ke Pills, 95 cents per box Jana Iy, w For axle by all Druggists and dealers. MEXICO ! MEXICO ! s.3o,cocoa,cococo Lo 'as OF THE REPUBLIC OF ME/ICO:' TWEKTT-TILAII COUPON BONDS Ili SUNS/50, 8/CO, $5OO AND $l,OOO. Interest Seven per cc in the City of No Principal & Inter in Gold. $10,000,000 to be sold IM lar In U. S. Currency, tht per cent. in Geld, or 17 p , present ruts of premium ( The first year's Ini The most desirable 1 provided. offered. Immense Tracts or and Agr cultural Lands ; Sixty per cent. of Port I/6es, Impos s, and Taxes, to the States of Tematillpy and San L is Potosi ; and the Plighted Faith of the sa d States a d the GeneratGov ernment, are all pleded for the edemptlon of these Bonds and payment o interest. • The Seomity Ample. $9) • In U. 8. CorrencFy buys a T er et. Gold Bond of $5O '" 4 t. 100 $300 " $6OO " ".E $l,OOO . Let every lover of Re e -- least ONE BOND. Circulars forwarded a i JOB j rirlflUel J .-' • libsuipttoirt P kefeEß;t!trYl Jilt rid eubscriptione received by /IN W. CORIJRB & Co., and TIFT, ,CAkiinta of the Republic or Wes Icci, ai Broadway, N. Y. .: ; received by Bankp end. saokefa t Ate United Stattto- Homeinannineo Co. of N. Y., Capital and Surplus, f13,000,,000 Insurance Co. of North Arrkerica, Capital and Surplus, International Fire Insurance Co. of N. Y., Capital and Surplus, 1,54,000 Girard Fire and Marine Insurance Co. of Phil`a, Capital and Surplus, tao,cra Lycoming County Mutual Insurance Co.of Mune), Ferin'a, capital and Surplus, • 9,1 00,030 Security Insurance Co. of N. Y. Capital To the Brava Soldiers of Susq'a Clo.r TT is contemplated by the Union Claim Agency att Washington to ark of Conzressi tlt itti neat minden; the passage of a law authorizing the paynient— -Ist. To all Soldiers the bounties promised to thein,rtte. matter for what ressoa or reasons they may have been' discharged, provided szeh‘discharges were not for diva: bilitles existing prior 'to enlistment, or were not or dered as punishment. 2d. To three months' Men one-eighth of $100—VS.00;:i M. To six months' mcln one quarter of 11109—54.- 4th. To nine months, men three•eighthe Ot 5300-r7 $37 " S orvibe Dol- interest of 12 rent'', at the iinblinn Institutions bay at FM, LIFE & ACCIDENTAL GENERAL INSURANCE AGENCY, ATCO=LtrOll3O 9 Pa. and Surplus, Farmer's Mutual Inatome° Co. York, 'Capital and Surplus, Enterprise Insurance Company, Mira, Capital and Surplus, Insurance Co. State of Pennsylvania, Phil. Capital and Surplus, Kensington Fire and M. Insurance Co., Phi l'a, Capital and Surplus, Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Hartford, Conn., paying :Al per cent. dividends to the assured, Capital. American Life Insurance Co., naiad- phia, Capital. Travelers' Insurance Co. Hartford, Conn.. Insuring against all kinds of accidents Capital, 500.000 business entrusted to our tare willbe attend ed to on fair terms, and all losses promptly Adjusted. ' STROUD Er. BROWN, Agents. 017 — Office over the Post Office, Foot of Public 4venue. BILLUIOII STROUD, CrIARLISS L. priors: . Montrose. Jan. Ist. 18f1G. ly DO, FOR THE 11011 D IS THE FLORENC ttuirtg axe WITH REVERSIBLE FE THE BEST RIACHID.TE MAKING FOUR DISTINCT caxi.e , for 3;ro A 'Written Warranty Giv READ ITS VIRT ES We claim for the FLOIIENCE the; following ndroat•*s • over any 111/1; another Sewing 51o0hines : - . .. . . 07ril makes four different inches — the lock, knot, double lock. end double knot, oil one and the - same ma chine. Each stitch being elite on both sides of the fab ric. re - Every machine has the, reversible feed motion, whi, h ena hies the operator, 1, ,- .imply turning a thumb tiCre,V, to have the work run e,der to the right or left, to stay auy part of the seam, orjaston the el:4100MM. w thuct turning the fabric. / VP — The only machine having a oelf-adinetlng shuttle , tehrion—the amount of teu.tion always being - in exact ppi;lort ion to the qiste of the bobbin. nv — Changitig the length f.f stitch, and from one klia4 of .hitch to another, can :cattily be done while the MA. chine is in motion. ir-l'.r - Tits needle is ensl`y ndjust ed. t. It 15 almo s t Lloi94:le 43, and can be wed where qui et is necessary. motions are all positive there are no sprlnes to get out of order, soil its simplicity enables the most inexperienced to operate it. rNrlt close not re wire liner thread on the tinder thaw for the upper aide. nd will sew across the heaviest. 600.1116, or from one u snore thicknesses of cloth, With , " out chr.nge of needl . tension, or breaking thread. Fir The Hemme is eaoily adjusted and will turn any width ofhem desir rt. gs7 — No other ma lane will do go ; t reat a range of work as the Florence. rs — lt will he , fell. bind, gather, braid, guilt, and gather and sew o a ruffle at the same time.. , r , • The taking u of the slack thread is not perfortntd.br, the irregular co traction of a wire coil or uncertain op eration of wi e levers. The precision and Acturaey with which th Florence draws the thread into the cloth is unnpproac il In any Sewing Machine hitherto offered in the market. We furn is each machine with ”Rarnurn'sSetfiSew... Cr." which g des the work Itself. and !La incalentabh: I Vilne, espec ally to inexperienced operators. rAff -1t : . Ilv protected and licensed by Ries 80we,.. i t Jr.. and his ssoctates, and one Letters Patent. While p esessing the above, and many other attest tlWel.. the lorence Is sold at corresponding prices with other fire clues Machines, and a caretnl examinatfon will fully substantiate all that we have claimed for It, ift and jest' y the a.sertion we now make, that it it the best Se ing Machine in the world. We w rrant every Machine to he all that we claim for. it. and ill give a written waranty if reqnired. I..th al arrangements made with those who buy to sell again Furl he reference wily be had by addressing 3=. C. TYLER, . IVicost.ti-cssio, Per.„ , i AC FNT FOR SUSQUEHANNA COUNTY. Pee. la. 1555. am THE REGULATOR ! Al , AD QUARTERS for BARGAINS Great Inducements for 1866. C4-Mo, 13.41.1iTTIMIV, NEW MILFORD, PA. DEALER IN STAPLE it, FANCY DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, BOOTS .t, SitORP, RDA DY li t A DE CLOTHLSG, FANCY GOODS, TA:NICE NOTIONS, Amara, TRAVELING-BAGS, And lots of Goods too numerous to melotice,st the Tory lowest market prices. Call and axan l / 4 ine—no charge for showidr Gooda—an ery article warranted as represented, lad will sell Cheaper, than the Cheapest , - A , GEO. HAYDEN. New Milford, Pa. • 401E31,1362. .ALg822.03r 437 50. sth. To one years' men Sioo bounty, &ewe/nisei. 6th. To all men discharged within two peon by rest.- son of disabilities ton tmer \ ed while in the• service' (not/ alone on account of wonnt. received in actlenjthe Inli bounty to be given them b the act of Congress ander , which they were enlisted. . 7th. To all men discharg 41 by reason of promotions I pro rata bounty according tO the act under which they enlisted for the time they coved as enlisted men. , . .., 6th. Of $lOO bounty to all tioldiersof the regular army who enlisted in 1859, '6O, or '8.4, (prior to the act ofJuly 1861,) and who served their lull ter-m.Ol give . years, or who were discharged after kW° yean front tiliktllin nine of the war, or who were disetagedbrreason of 5..., abilities contracted In the war sinccJonttl s ib./ 8150 i '' t .;* . oth Of $lOO bounty to all dererterawborglOlnedteelt . regiments and served two years eXcluilve •of the draw, they were absent without learn. 10th. Of three months pay prer to All officers who have been discharged by reason ofdisabilities contract. ed in the service, by reason of. expiration of ,term., , t service. or by becoming sopenittinerarits ori . ,OiM rutt . t • consolidation of regiments. , \ ' - ',_ ~, 13th. Also a grant of lfie neves' or land tpalitildlittOr .' men who only received the $lOO 'U. S. Dewar slid 'ls. similar gru..t to officers in proportion to theiriat'prO- Th ~. - . per. \ e above nre.the different Imun iesilyfftritil as alletosi-1 antes which we propose to have brat:offal thollisr i above referred to. Our greatalm.l to oectiranstiee to. W the soldiers. e believe time, thol e / a ro entit dby the plainest rules of the sternest jturtt to ail we shall ask_ In order to secure this, all those co lug within any of • the above-named classes, - ,,shouldwis*a r pplholloo,.lllk mediateltto our Agent' witairill• Ili ' it artiklar,ol the necessary papers. '• - , •• • kgae.lP. , lialeirnlieri , tote Aifat In ging..444f fitViiirf 13 1 OliigiAsryst.' MlLk s Mout - vise, Sopt„lithvififilif-.. -- t::'-..:... ic' ' Al. ,- N 1 0 . 4 " 1 r.." : ".- ". ". 0"-*Wr.i.,- 1,70f),003 1",'560;000 600,000 10,000,0 x, 1,000,0t4 Hill I USE! TrTcuus. MOE HATS 4 CAPS,