Eke tarot and thwack._ Batter from Devonstdre Cream There is a custom of scalding cream prevailing in Devonshire, England, which is worthy of a wider extension. The pro duct "clouted" cream, also called " De vonshire" cream is exceedingly rich, thick and palatable, and is' accounted a luxury wherever obtainable. The process is the following: The milk is allowed to stand in the dairy, which must be too cool to allow it to sour, from twelve to twenty, : four hours—that is, the milk of one day is attended to on the following morning., It is set in tin pans about seven inches deep; these have a good handle at each side as a help to careful moving. Most of the cream will hare risen at the time of the preparation, which consists in scalding simply, care being taken not to allow the milk to reach a boiling point. The best way would be to set the pan in gently boiling water. The heat must be kept ui until becomes very hot, and the cream thoroughly "crinkled" or clotted ; the pan should then be removed careftilly to a cool place, and allowed to stand un disturbed for twenty-four hours. Th e cream may then be removed, and either fresh or salted, it is an excellent substitute for, many think a great. improvement upon butter. It is especially important that there should be no smoke in the depart ment where the scalding is done. This is Devonshire cream, a, delicious article for home consumption, but one for which there exists no market demand in this country. The chief value of the process, for American farmers, lies in the fact that it is an excellenrpreparatory step in the making of butter. It secures all the cream, gives it such a consistency. that skimming is much easier and much cleaner—that is, there is less m;lk taken, 1 Which enables it to give up its butter I with remarkable ease. Indeed, it is only necessary to rub the cream with the hand for few minutes in a smooth wooden bowl to separate the butter entirely, ready for washing. For each pound of butter there remains not to exceed a half pint of buttermilk. This does away, almost en tirely, with the labor of churning, and with the handling of an immense bulk of buttermilk, and its difficult removal from the butter by washing or otherwise. When properly made, the quality of the butter is excellent; and there is the advantage, that the skim milk remains sweet and fit for use, or for the manufacture of "lean cheese." We do not pretend that the foregoing is a complete description of this mode of making butter; and we mum all readers not to blame us if they fail, to get good results from their first experiments. We have merely sketched out-a process that is in succeesful use in many purt6 of England c... 1 iscottand, and that promis es advantage for us, and ire must leave the details of manipulation to be learned by experience. It is an exceedingly sim ple system, but it needs practice to teach the exact point to which the milk should be scalded, and to settle the question of temperature, frequency of churning, etc. Since the above was written, we have had a talk with an English lady Who has had experience in the matter. She says the two great things to begnanled agains are : (L) agitation - of the milk in hand ling the pans ; and (2) too rapid heating. for too long - a time. The pan should be set over a slow tire, or oven, or in boiling water, and watched until the cream begins to contract so as to leave the sides of the pan; then the centre of the cream should be punctured by a sharpened stick (wood is better than metal for this purpose;) if the hole made become larger, showing a contraction of the cream in the centre as well as at the sides, then it is finis• to re move the pan from the tire. she also says the knack of the thing is easily learn ed by a careful person; but that it should not be left to ordinary hired help.—Agri culluri.st. How to Protect Horses from Flies The newspapers have published over and over again, that an infusion of black walnut leaves applied to the skin of tr• horse would keep off horse-flies. Now if this is true it is worth knowing. for flies are a terrible annoyance in summer. Sev eral years ago I gave this dhing a trial, but I was not then very favorably impress ed with tine result, and did not continue it. Two yeais ago 1 read in the newspa pers that a celebrated surgeon in :New York had discovered that if sliced onions are steeped in cold water for a few hours, and the water applied to the horse, that would repel the flies. I gave this discov ery a trial, because I have great respect forcelebrated eurgeons, and particularly for those of New York. The result con- - cloned me that flies appreciate the whole someness of that valuable esculent, the onion. The walnut leaves had been kept before my mind by repeated publications of their usefulness, or I would, mostlike ly, have rested on the result of my first experiment with them, but I had some doubt about giving them a perfectly fair teal„ and resolved to give them another. I filled the front of my buggy with leaves from a thrifty young tree by the roadside, and to give them the benefit of a fair trial, half of them were soaked in cold water for several days, and the other half were boiled, and a very strong decotion made. My mare is a lightish gray. I tried the cold infusion on one side of her neck and over her shoulder, and the de coction over her body and rump on the same side. To make the experiment a test nothing was applied to the other side. Just here allow me to suggest that whoever wishes to profit by my experience, will use a pair of gum elastic gloves to make the application, or will allow his j colored man to make the application for him. The first noticeable result of the application was the color of my grey mare. She looked as if she bad rolled in a wet place in the barnyard, and all the washing that could be done in the leisure ' intervals for a month did not restore a cleanly appearance. That stain came off when she shed her coat in the fall. In the use of this remedy its value might seem to be somewhat dependent on the original color of the horse, but it is not. ICo matter what your horse's color, the value is the same. The newspapers fre- quently give us account of what betel men who did not read the newspapers. I have given:you an account of a man who did read the newspapers. Ido not know which is the best side to be on. Perhaps, as with the'flies, after my evperiment, it makes no difference which side. I ,have tried petroleum, and that will do' for a few hours. I think it might be a pretty good thing to rub on the legs of a horse that -halo stand about the streets, to keephim from pounding Ins feet on the atones. The best protection I have found is a fly net. If it 313 a good leather net, and covers the horse be - hind the harness saddle, and answers a very good purpose. For protectiug the ears, head and neck, nothing that I know of is equal to a leafy bush stuck in the top of the bridle. ft not only protects the part covered, but all th&-surrounding parts. It satires the flies away, end makes them less troublesome on all other parts. The bush may not suit the taste of city horsemen,. but the flies that attack the ears and neck are not so very bad in the city I think. I beg leave to say that I bare no interest in any fly-net factory, but if anybody who is in that line wishes to show his appreciation of my views, he may send a first-rate pair of leather nets to E. 11.—Turf, Field and Farm. Agrieulture is Freud. A writer in the . Cincinnati Times, hav ing perused Ilorace Greelefs book abput farming with immediate effect of becom ing muddled, indites the following; which he is careful to explain is "not by H. G." The basest frauds. of earth is agricul ture. The deadliest /*pis futtrus that ev er glittered to beguile, and dazzle • to be tray, is agriculture._ I speak with feeling on this subject., for I've beenglittered and beguiled, and dazzled and destroyed by this same arch deceiver. She has made me a thousand promises, and broken every one of them. She has promised me early potatoes and the rain has drowned them; late potatoes, and the drought has withered them. She has promised me summer squashes, and the worms have• eaten them; winter squashes, and the bugs have devoured them. She has promised cherries, and the cumuli() has stung them, and they contain living things uncomely to the eye all un- savory to the taste. She has promised strawberries, and the young chickens have enveloped them and the eye cannot see them. She has promised tomatoes, and the old hens have encompassed them. No wonder Cain killed his brother. He ' was a tiller of the ground. The wonder is that he didn't kill his father, and then weep because he hadn't a grandfather to kill. No doubt his Early Rose potato?s for which he paid Adam seven dollars a ' barrel, had been cut down by bugs, from the head watergt ot the Euphrates. the Pennsyliania wheat had been winter killed and wasn't worth cutting, His Norway oats had gone to straw, and would not yield five pecks per acre, and his black Spanish water-melons had been stolen by boys, who bad pulled up . the vines, broken down his patent picket fence, and written scurrilous doggerel all ovir his back gate. No wonder he felt mad when he saw Abel whistling along with his fine French Nlerinoes, worth eight d,iliars a }wad, nod wool going up every day. No wonder he wanted to kit! somebody and thought he'd practice on Abel. And Noah's getting drunk was not at all surprising. Ho had become an hus bandman. He had thrown away magnif icent opportunities. He might have had a monopoly of any profession or business. Had he studied medicine there would not have been another doctor within a thous- aril miles to cull him "Quack," and every • family would have bought a bottle of "Noah's Compound Extract of Gopher •Wood and Anti Deluge Syrup." Asa po litician, he might have carried his own ward solid, and controlled two-thirds of the delegates in every convention. As a lawyer, he would have been retained in every case tried at the Araret Quarter Session, or the old Ark High Court of Admiralty. But he threw away all these advantages and took to agriculture. For a long time the ground was so wet he could raise nothing but sweet flags and bulrushes, and these at last became a drug in the market. What wonder that when at last he did get half a peck of grapes that were not stung to death by Japhet's honey bees he should have made wine and drowned his sorrows in a "flowing howl." • The fact is, agriculture would demora lize a saint I was almost a saint when I went into it. I'm a demon now. I'm at war with everything. I fight my self out of bed at four o'clock, when all my better nature tells me to lie still till seven. I fight myself into the garden to work like a brute, when reason and in stinct tell me to stay in the house and en joy myself like a man. I fight the the chickens, the moles, the birds, the bugs, the worms—everything in which is the breath of life. I fight the docks, I the burdocks, the mullens, the thistle, the grapes, the weeds, the roots—the whole vegetable kingdom. I fight the heat, the frost, the rain, the hail—in short, I fight the universe and get whipped in every battle. I have no more admiration to waste on the father of George Washing ton fur forgiving the destruction of his 1 cherry tree. A cherry tree is only a cur culio nursery, and the grandfather of his country knew it: I have half a dozen cherry trees, and the day my young George Washington is six years 1 - 11 give him a hatchet and tell him to down with every cherry tree on the place. Not to be Beaten. A New Hampshire mart and a man from Ohio chanced to meet, at a public dinner in New York. The man from Ohio suggested to him of the Granite State that it might be advantageous to him to remove to the West, especially if he proposed to follow the pursuit of a farmer. The Yankee could not see it; ' there was no State in the Union equal to New Hampshire. He of the Buckeye State could not agree to this. Ohio was inferior to New Hampshire in no respect, u bile in many respects she was superior. The Yankee demanded to know asnperior feature. The Buckey commenced to enn inmate ; but as fast as he presented his claims of superiority, his antagonist un hesitatingly swept them away by bold and vigorous declarations to the contrary. At length, when all other sources of argu ment had been exhausted, the Buckeye confidently observed : " You will at least allow that Ohio I justly claims superiority over New Ramp shire in point of the extent of the terri tory "No, sir!" promptly and emphatically responded the Yankee. , "Your State spreads out because it is flat. Look at the mountains of New Hampshire! Good ness mercy! Just roll'em out fiat and they'd make territory enough to cover up tho whole cf Ohio and fill up a big, slice of Lake Erie." —At a Sunday school in Ripon, a teach er asked a little boy_ if he knew that the expression "sowing tare? meant. Courth I does," said he pulling the seat of his little trowsers round in front. "There's a tear my ma sewed ; I teared it sliding down the hill." getil Adartiumento. B .ED WtI sTFEMA • Asthma, Rose tbhl, !boy Frt.,. rfe. "Nothitut so socrossrol."—T. ML TV r. Drupg4l, IteColumenileilbr Pr W• tolines. It away. rcliert, JOG. 1171..17ETT 0., CO., 1:coion, Muss. : , 01.1 by all e.rul,,-„,cists. Tuscarora Academy, ACADEMIA, PA. The 96th School-year begins September 6th. Location healthful. attract lee and well adated to physical devel opment. Free from loafin plac e s and saloons, the in fluences are moral. Mare titan 3 1 ? no young men have here been prepared for Col eke or einem. Tema moderato. Apply for circular, to D. D. STONE, A. 31. .1. .1. PATTERSON, A. 31. COLLEGIATE and Commercial Institute, New Raven, Connecticut. Preparatory to College, Bust. nese, Scientific Schools, U. S. Military and Naval Acad. emcee. Fall PeSSIOII, thirtyoilmb year, begins September 1.1. For catalogues, address the Principal "ri----IGHTOTOWN Classical Inutitut e.—A. good and 11-saro Boarding School ior young men and boys.— Terms moderate. Send for a circular. Het. J. E. Afr Baaamm, Prlnclpal,lllgbtatown, LEMALE COLLEGE. Horde:down, N. J..., Purnieh a: • the best educational advantages, toget h er with a pleasant home. Board and Tuition, inh/8 peryear. For Catalogues, address Rev. J. U. DRAKELF.Y, Ph. D. SCHOOLEY'S MOUNTAIN SEMINARY For both s ees. A thorough and imperil)? School to sit Its appointments. Thirteenth session opens Septem ber sth. Rev. L. I STOUTP.NBURGIL Principal, School ey's Mountain Springs, Now Jersey. _ EBILNON Valley College, Annttlla, Pa. For nata l.logaea, addrcas L. U. Ileattionit, A. M., President. VIRGINIA_ FARMS, d F &C. / A ffdWe F s l o ve w il jet e 1,0 Cary btrcot, Richman, N'lrginta. U. HEN UDoneß C HASES, , oing e of FAMILY LIQ Each Case coma! Old Pale Brandy. Holland Gin, Old Aye Whiskey% I Old Pale Bborry. Fine Old Port Old Bourbon. Guaranteed Pare and of the very Beet quality. PRICE SEVEN DOLLARS. Seat by Express C. 0. 0., or Post-office order, L. LIENDLESUN, 13 Broad St., New York eGENTS WANED for the L 7L•TC16.13.4512:13.1119151.1.4=1/Xll. of l.aifo COUNSELS oN Tits NATURE •No IlyedaNE or Tile MescP LINE rtsticstou. Ile Do Sinters, notbor of " fhe Physical Life of Oilman." It relates to the male sex; Is Itul of new facts ; delicate but ontspoken ; practical and poisulur, Itighly endortod; sells rapidly Sold by subscription only. Exclusive territory. Term• liberal Price V.l. Address for "Intents, &c., J. O. FERGUS 1 CO., Publishers, Philadelphia. Pu. Agents Read This ! WE WILL PAY Agents a oalary of $3O Per Week and Espouse., or alma . a large Commleadon to toll Oor liew and wooderral Invrotions. Addrees M. WAGNER & CO., Marshall, Mich. $BO. We, "vgiTl-11 Pay $l3O. Agents $3O per week to s,ll our great and saluable covenes. It you want permanent, honorable and lieu:, ant work. a pply for part kola rm. Addrees DYER & CO., Jackson, NI Ichlgan. I MILLION HMS Shrewd but quiet teen can mat, a fortune by re‘ canny the reeret of the had nenn to ne tale, Addrend EDGAR. SINS, 688 Broadway, uF , N29616.1 Now 'York OSHA'S THE INGREDIENTS THAT COMPOSE ROSADALIS are published on ovary package, there ' fore tis not a secret preparation, consequently PIIISICLINS PRESCRIBE IT It is a certain cure for Scrofula; Syphilis in all its forms, Rhouea• time, Skin Diseases, Liver Com plaint and ell diseases of the Blood. 1 ONE BOTTLE OF aosAimus 1 will do mom:good than ten bottles of the Syrup of Sarsaparilla. THE UNDERSIGNED PHYSICIANS have used Rosadalis in their practice for the past three years and freely ors() it as a reliable Alterative `and Blood Puriber. DR. T. C. PM: FI of Baltimore. DR. T. J.BOYKIN, IDR. R. W. C ARR. DLF. O. DANNELLY, . 4 SPARKS, of Nlchohrrille t K. 'DEL McCARTHA, Columbia, • S. C. DB. A. B. NOIRES, Edgeeomb, N. C. USED AND ENDORSED BY J. B. FRENCH £ SONS, Fall River, Mass. F. W. SMITH, Jackson, Mich. 0 , A. F. NV la./ILE:B., Lima, Ohio. B. HALL, Lima, Ohm. CRAVEN it CO., Gordonsville, Va. , SOM. G. BIeFADDEN, Nlurfrees• born, Tenn. Onr simee will not allow of any ex. tended remarks In relation to the virtues of Romdalia. Toth° Medical Profession wo guarantee a Fluid Er. tract superior to any they have over used in the treatment of diseased Blood ; and to the afflicted we say try Randall,. and yon will be restored to heath. . , , Eau&ll. is told by all Droggistr prim 61.80 per bottle. Address CLEILENTS iz CO. ) Ittanuforturing BALTixOI2X, ii) Baltimore. July 19.1,71 $20,000 Worth of Goods in store for the opening o the Fall Tradeof l 70, In a full and general assortment of and Gear Brea, and Furnishing, and Fancy Gods In Empress Cwt . 's. Dsane.s, Calcas,gltawls. Corsets, embossed Felts, and !Lev Slim /adios and Gen!, Arm Buffalo Rohm Fancy Lap Sok& afull assortment of Cloths. Cassirnerce. Ladle... Cloths, Flannels, Ilwiery, Lomestie Cottons, hc, de. with a general assortment of Bats and Caps, Boots & Shoes, Oils and Paints, Groceries, Crockery, Hardware. Stoves, Iron, &c— furnish ing a superior opportunity for selections, and will be sold on the most favorable terms, by i3. - critrtx.r.r. cw Milford. Sior, 7G. IE7O Good fleorrto the Boldte:e of The War of 1812 A ;CD THEIR WIDOWS ~ —Coogreas hoe recentlypneo• /16A. ed a Law Gratatmt Yetteione of light Dolbre par month, where there wag a Service of Sixty Days or c or . For maxy of yea 1 procured Land Warranta, from luso to 1856, and my records and paper'. then made, furnish now the important facts neceraary in Procuring Pen alont,and peroune bringing or eendlog their claims to my °Mee can have the floc benefit of my record', and their business will be pronlptly attended to at rater as tablfeed by the tatt , L. P. FITC II Montroac. ItLarth 1671. Iw VALUABLE FARM FOR SALE.—The subscriber offers his farm at Silver Lake, Susquehanna Co., Pa., contr4.s over 130 acres 100 or 10,5`0f which are cleared and under cultiva tion the land is well watered and good for either grain or grassohere are between two and three hundred grafted Apple trees on the place besides peach, plum, and pear trees, the farm is conveni ent for churches and schools with good build ings, 130 rods south of Quaker lake, the farm is a good one and 4dr/cal-ably located. Address or ap ph' to MAURICE M. DONNELL. Silver Lake, Susua. Co. Pa., March 8 '7l. Bin. 238xtc+.41.xxix19 : BEST BARGAINS IN 'TOWN IN CHOICE FAMILY OROCEEITIS, FLOOR I PRO visions, Dried and Canned Fruit, Vegetables Ac. theat Hood of Navirttox A. N. DULLARD. YoatmesPebruar Orr PEBBLE SPECTACLES—aIso com mon Spectacles, a riewlroppfy, for WO by IL ' Waitron, Nov. 10, um ABEL TUBBS& CALL AT ROBINSON'S SOUTHERN' TIER FI - ETZLTIT'ET's - IM EMPORIUM, 88 Washington Street, Binghamton, N. Y. Wheie you will find The Largest Stock, the Best Assortment, and the Lowest Prices of any house in the city. N. 8.-411 Goods sold warranted LIS represen Binghamton, Aug. 94, 1870.—1 y Ayer's Cathartic Pills, Far en- the purposes of s Laxative Medialna. ;T s kye 4 ._„ Perhaps no ono medi cine is so Imiversally re. =everybody as nor WU ever any before so universal ly adopted into use. In every eountryand among all el so -a, as tins mild but efficient purgative PM. Tbo obvious rca. son Is, that It is a more ro• liable and thr more Oros. tual remedy than any other. Those who have tried It, know that it cured them; those who have not, know that it cures their neighbors and friends, and all know that what It does once it does always —that it never fails through any Malt or neglectof its composition. We have thousands upon thou sands of certificates of their remarkable cures of the following complaints, but such cures are known In every ndatiborbood, and wo need not publish them. Adapted to all ages and conditions in all climates; containing neither calomel or any deleterious drug, they may be taken with safety by anybody. Thdr sugar coating preserves them ever flesh and makes them pleasant to take, whilebehruj i tuarely vegetable no harm can arise from their use any quantity. They operate by their powerful Influence on the internal viscera to purify the blood and stimulate it Into healthy action—remove the obstructions of the stomach, bowels, liver, and other organs of the body, restoring their irregular action to health, and by correcting, wherever they exist, such derange. meats as am the first origin of disease. Minute directions are given in the wrapper on the box, for the following complaints, which these Pills rapidly curie:— For Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Listless. sea, Languor and Loss of Appetite, they should be taken moderately to stimulate the stom ach and restore Its healthy tone and action. For Liver Complaint and its various symp. toms, Dillon. Headache, Sick Headache, Jaundice or Green Sickness, Dillon" Colic and Dillon. Fevers, they should be Ju diciously taken for each case, to correct the diseased notion or remove the obstructions which cause it. For Dysentery or Diarrhasa, but one mild dose is generally required. For Iltheumattsm, Gout. Gravel, IPalpll. gallon of the Heart, Pain In the Side, Slack and Loins, they shouhl be continuously taken, as required. to change the diseased action of the system. With such change these complaints disappear. For Dropsy and Dropsical OW4Plillaga they should be taken in large and frequent doses to pro duce the effect of a drastic purge. For Suppression a largo dose should be taken as it produces the desired effect by sympathy. As a Dinner pub lake one or two Pills to pro mote digestion and relieve the stomach. An occasional dose stimulates the stomach and bowels into healthy action, restores tee appetite, and invigorates the system. Hence it In often ad vantageous where no serious derangement exists. One who feels tolerably well, often finds that a dose of these Pills makes him feel decidedly better, from their cleansing and renovating effect on the diges tive apparatus. DR. J. C. AYER & CO., Practical Chenstsb LOWELL. MASS.. rr. S. A. Sold by Abel Terrell, and Burns S: Nichols 31.yetrose, and all druggists and dealers every where- [Dec. 21, 1870--3, Dr C. W.. 33.R.C)12{7140"13 YOUNG AMERICAN 3c_. x rq x Jur_ ENT in offering this Liniment to the public, as we do In fill coofidenre. that it most supereede.all othere now in ere. as an internal remedy. for Oa cart of all diseases In the reach of that clams of medicines. we can safely assert, without the least fear of contradiction. that it stands on ri, lied in the ifid of medical camp rode externally ap plied for the cure of disease, Feeling therefore that It is tinecerwal - V to pod a remed so eminently wonderful In its effects, mysteriously Infallible In Its powers of relief, canning the deaf to hear, the blind to eon, the per. cons. drawn and crippled rheumatic to walk erect and re joice again in the power and rigor of manhood, this pre paralton le offered to tho public on known merit.. ans claim. , no volcanic origin or 'essential oils - of the Arabi an deserts ; but on the contrary le what its imports, ant is a rare conabinatlon of the powers of North Amery can products. Nrw Your., Dm. 14, 1870. Thia notice to to inform all dealers In proprietary medicine., that we have eatahliahed a Depot In Sample- Imam county at Meatroac. Pa., for the rale of Dr. C. F. Brown's Young American Liniment, and that Mr. A. BALDWLN I. our a•ec,. nt for that purpoae. WARD, SOUTIIP.ItLAND & 130 William Street, New York Agencies will peon be estabilehed at central places In every township, and published In the Het below, lam reedy to furnish it et wholesale pricce to agents. Post ers and clreulare rent free epee application to the sub- The Liniment In now for relent retail by the follow ing egente, to w : Borne & Nichols, Montroec. A. Turrell. " L. Adaine, Auburn 4 Conners Noah Baldwin, South Auburn. • Waltman & Voriburg,Skinnee• Eddy. D. C. & F. 11. Farnham, Franklin. J. Burrows & tone, Steven... l n°' L. B. Sberwood, Rushville. R. T. Hendrick. Sprln•vvilie. William Thayer, Dimock. N. B. Etruirdslem. Little Meadows. Robert Winter. prieensville. M. L. Ball. Birelaniville. D. A. &.Titeworth. Brooklyn, Fe. L. B. Hinds, Factor - rale. W, IL Curtis, Bailey Hollow. Tiffany, Ilopbottom. - J. B. Very. Montrose Depot. O. H. Hawley, New Nilford. T. D.'Eneterbrook, Great Bend. Tewksbury Brothers, Anburn Centre. Avery & Beaumont, Camptown. Steven. & Lecbudy, llk Lake. N. Granger, Bush. 8. IL Stevens, Lacyvtile. A. J. Sllvara. Eaet J. L. 'Merriman, L'peunvilie. J. W. Rueencrante, Fairdale. Any persons In townships not above named, 'desiring an agency, may obtain It by addressing A. BALDWIN, General Agenk jaa.1.1,1811-3m Nontnase. Pa. ABEL TURRELL F L E , N 3 ,=: z uj , 4 ) n hand one of the most stamen DRUGS & MEDICINES in the country, and bestows especial attention to lut" lect i lng and buying articles in this department that are pure and genuine. lie also keeps a great rariety of LIQUORS AND AVEREII, bought either direct from the distiller, or Importer, and warranted strictly pare. _ Also, a fedi assortment of Paints, Of., VsiniahaS, Brashest, Lain - lasting Oils and Dye Stuffs. Groceries. Wall Paper, Glaea, Kerosene, Violins, Pistols, Guns and ammunition. fine Ttuiety of Gold and other JEWELRY. Perron al. Yankee NOTIONS, to., and other goods too no. mercers to mention. During several years past persons have been In the habit of forming clubs,snd sending Lathe Great Am att est Tea Company, New York, fortheir supplies of Tee and Coffee, for family„nse. Abel Tunell is now envying the people with these Teal and Coffees. at Ms store to Montrose, at the same prices that these clubs and other persona pay at the store of the Company In New York. Thus, purchasers will save the mrees charge, trouble of clubbing and elekot sending, bl buying of :UINM t'llitlfilllVS - G.O.IIPOUND/ flilllD EXTRACT CA.TA.WIIA GRAPE PILLS. Component Parts—Fluid Er-tract Rheu barb and Fluid Extract Oataw ba Grape Juice. FOR Liver Complaint. Jaundice, MMus Affections, Sick or Nervous Um"ache. Costiveness, etc. Pure ly Vegeta , 'lo, eontolnin no Mercury, Minerals or Del eterious Drags. These pills are the most delightfully pleasent ergs tier, superseding castor ail, salts. magnesia, etc Tare is nothing more wieptible to the stomach. They give v.. g e tone, and cause neither emote nor ping pains. They are composed of the goad ingredients Alter a few days' use of them. such an in ration of the entire system lakes place as to appear m raeulous, to the weak and enervated, whether arising from imprudence or di.- ease. IL T. lielmbold's Compound Fluid Katsina Ca tawba Grape Pills are not sugar coated, from the fact that sugar coated Pills do not dissolve. but pass through the stomach without dissolving,_ consequently do not produce the desired erect. TUE CATAWBA GRAPE PILLS beingpieneant lo taste and odor, do not neces 'Mate t' sir being sugar coated. PRICE FIFTY CENTS l'Elt BOX. HENRY T. RELMBOLD'S 11101ILY CONCENTRATED COMPOCNT, FLUID EXTRACT SARSAPARILLA Will radically exterminate from the system Scrofula, Syphilis. Freer Sores, %leers. Sore Eyes. Sore Legs, Sore Mouth, Sore Head, Bronchitis, Skin Disease, Salt Rheum. Cancers, Rimuings Iron the Ear, White Swell ings, Tumors, Crineerous Affections, Nodes, Rickets, Glandular Swellings, Nig ht g 8 Rash Tetker, tin more of all kinds, chronic Ithematirm, Drpepild' and all diseases that have been established In the spite. fur Jean. Being prepared expressly for t greater he above than an cosnyffalnts. iters bfood-parifyttig properties are y oth preparation of Sarsaparilla. It given the complexion a dear and healthy cnior, and restores the patient to a state of health and purity, for purifying the blood, re moving all chronic eonstitutional diseaseis arising from an impure state of the blood. and the only reliable and effectual known remedy for the cure of pains anti swell ing of the bones, Ulcerations of the throat and legs. Blotches, Pimples on the Face, Ea7elpelas and all scaly eruptions of the skin, and beatiWy'log the complexion. Price $1 50 per bottle. HENRY T. lIELMBOLD'S Tlusici Zl-7c.itr (Lot guohu. TIIE GREAT DIURETIC, Ilas cured every ease of Diabetes I which It has been given, Irritation of the Neck o th eßladder and inflatn- MALMO of the Kidneys, Ulceration of the Kidneys and Bladder, Retention of Urine, Diseases of the Prostrate Gland, Stone to the Bladder. Calculus Gravel, Brick dust Deposit, and Uncut:m or Milky dhcharn s, nod for en• feeble(' and delicate coustltutions of both 'axes. attcmi• ed with the following synapd met Indisposition to ex ertion, loss of power. lota of memory. difficulty of breathing, weak nerves, trembling. horro; of disease, wakefulness, dimness of vision, pain in the hack, hot hands, dashing of the body, dryness of the skin. eruption on the face, pallid countenance, universal lassitude of the muscular system, etc. Used by persons from the ages of eighteen to twenty ti e, and feom thirty-lice to tiftydlve or to the decline t,t. change ,4 life ,• after confinement or labor pains; bed s% eat ng In children. I.lclmbold's Extract Rocha Is Dinretic end Blood Pu ril)-imr. and cures ali diseases arising from habits of dis- O i rtt i ll e o n 47 l eZ„ on rH e ?rt i eTit r r i c e . " prit l l r io li f :rk i •c m So u n ri s t for tes which It is used. and Syphibtic affections—ln those dis cs., used connection with llclmbours Rose Wash. LADIES. In many affections peculiar to ladies, the Extraet De- Bache la unequalled by soy other remedy—as In Odom. *is or Retenliell. Irregularity, painfulness or supprestrion or-ex:ttoman . oracuattane. ulcerated or &Mints elate of the Uterus, Incoribern or Whites. sterility, and for all complaints ncid to the *ex., whether en diserction o r heb ueof dissipation. It is pr es c r ibed ex tensively by the most eminent physicians and midwives. for enfeebled and delicate constitut'ons, of both sexes and all Lees (attended with any of the above diseases or symptoms). 11. T. DELIiBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCIIII Cures diseases arising from imprudence, habita of dis sipation. ate., In all their stages, at little expense, little or no change In diet. no Inconvenience, and no exposure. It causes a frequent desire. and gives strength to urinate thereby rot-roving obstructions, preventing and curing strictures of the Urethra, allaying pain and inflammation, no frequent In this class of disease, and expelling all poisonous matter. Thousands who have been the victims of incompetent persons. and who have paid heavy fees to be eared in a short time. have found they have been deceived, and that the "poison" has. by the are of ".powerfnl as ringents. - been deed up In the system, to break out In more ag,- gravated fnrra, and pedlar , atter marrisge. USE lIELMBOLD'S EXTRAC T BUCRU for all lace. thin! , and diseases of thelltinaryOrgans, whether existing In Male or Female. from whatever cause onating. and no mutter of how long standing. Price, One Dollar and Fifty Centeper Bottle. HENRY T. HEMBOLD'S HIPEOVED HOSE WASH cannot be twassea as a Face Wash, and wall be found the only spe..e remedy in every species of Cutaneous Affection. It speedily ennlimitcs Pimples, Spots, Scrobutic Dryness, Induration* of the Cutaneous Mem brane, etc ,dispels Redness at d Incipient Innammation, Mires. Rash, Moth Patches, Dryness of Scalp or Skin, Frost Bites, and all purposes for which Salves or Dint mends are used; restores the skin to a state of purity and softness, and Whites continued healthy action to its vessels, on which depends the agreeable clecrams and vivarity of complexion so much sought and ad mired. But however valuable as a remedy for existing defects of the skin, 11. T. RembolVe Roes Wash has long sustained its principle claim to unbounded patron age, by possessing qualities which render it a toilet ap pendage of the most Roperlative and congenial cham ber, combining in an elegant formals prominent re quisites, safety and efficacy—the invariable accompani ments or Its use ass Preservative and Refresher of the complexion. It lean excellent Lotion for diseases of a Syphilitic Nature, and as an injection for diseases of the Urinary Organs, arising from habits of dissipation, used in connection with the extracts Ductal. Sarsaps- Win- sod ottawba Grape Pills, in inch diseases as ro. commended, =MOS bo stupsssed. Price, One Dollar Per Bogle. Full and explicit directions accompany the medicines. Evidence of the meet responsible and reliable char =ter ihrnisbed on application, with bundtrds of thou- Bands of witneues, and upward of 30,000 unso licited certificates and reawnmendatou letters, many of watch are from the highest . sources. including. emi nent Phyeicians, clergymen, Statesmen, etc. The pro prietor has carer resorted to their publication - In the newspapers ;bb does not do this from the fact that his articles rank as Standard Preparations, and do not used to be propped up by certificates,, Etenry T. Eielmbo mane Delivered to any address. Secure from obserfatleti. Betabllehed upward of Twenty Teen. Sold by Bre este everywhere. Address letters for information, in confidence to HENRY T. lIBLIEBOLD'S, 'Draggisiand Chemist. Only Depot:—H. T. Iluunuonn's Drag and chemical Warehouse, 140 SA Broadway, Now Totk, or 11. T UsulzaWit WOW' Depot, NS South Tenth' Steed, Philadelphia. - SWIMS nl 01P I COlab UNTERMIS! Ann Ibt fain Litnionn no ARM VIIRELL. Mosinee. Pa. CONCENTItATED Preparation. A GREAT MEDICAL DISCOVERY 47 Dr. viewrzirs mtlarausaa VINEGAR BITTERS .• _ 1 Hundreds of Thomas .- 013 Bear %fp tory' tr t, ci u r c l a r . ondan• i l 111 WHAT ARE THEY? o t i g .. g 8a .5 ii I; ~ • t• .." t t .12 rii 1 Zi 0 P o g g ; gii; p, P n o P., sit ;It 1 an Ez. , a ; : 14 i 0 . 611 i r:, Q a-a al z , &3C ta • ol .1. 7 S li y lig ff g r bil t i— ... P. 'r hi V, Ss e g 2 11 FANCV N OT DRA ' INK PILE 141 woof Poor Uam, liVtdaker, Proof Spirits and Rens° Llnnern doctored. 11Pietd sad 'acct. mad to please Me taste. caned" Tonics,"" Appetiz ers," "IL:storm ^ •0., that lead the tippler on to drinitatonian and min, PM aro a moo Igstimae, rondo Dom the NOLUTO Roots and hubs of California, frero Tram all Alcoholic Stimulants. Thor am tho GREAT BLOOD PUUIPIP.U. and A LIFE GIVING PttiNCIPLE. paled Desolator and Invigorator of the System, waning MT all poisonous matter and restoring the blood to a healthy condition. No person can take theta Dinars according to 02=- U= and remain tone valrelL 8100 will be given for an Meurable case, provided Use bona are not destroyed by mineral poison or Other means, and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of repair. Far Indanimistery and Chronic Rheuma tism sod Gout, Dyspepsia, or Indigestion, Dillon% Remittent and intermittent Fevers Disuses of the Blood, Liver, ILidneys, and Madder, these Bitters hsve been mast esteem. fill. Bach Dioceses are canted by Vitiated Blood, which to generally produced by derangement Of the Digestive Organs. DYSPEPSIA OIL INDIGESTION, Read ache, Pain in the Gladden, Coughs, Tightness of the Gust, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad taste in the Month, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Mart, to vv , ation of the Lungs. Pain in the regions of the Kidneys, and shundred other painful symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. They invigorate the Stomach and stimulate the tor pill Bear and bowels, which renderthem of unegualled efficacy In cleauzing the blood of all Irepasitics, mid imparting now life sod rigor to the whole system. BOIL SKIN DISEASES, Eruptions, Team, Salt libeurri,plotches, Spots, Pimples, Tostides.Bolls, Can Mamba, Bing• Worms, Scald-Bead. Sore Eyes, Erysip elas, Itch, Scarfs, Discelkastions of the Skin, Ehtmore mal Diseases of the bkin, of whatever sumac or nature, are literally dug op and carried out of the Tun= In a short time by the use of these Bitten. One bottle to such tams will tonslatie the =et trumsdnioessit their =relive effect. Cleanse tho Vitiated Blood Theories . you gad Its tmpurines busting hrough tho skin barlaspies. Essig lions or Bares; cleanse it Than you gad T. obstructed sad sluggish in the wins; cleanse It when It Ls foul. sod your facings will tell Toned:lam Stop tho blood rue and the health of the trim will follov. Ply, TA PE and other WORM, larklisg la the nava of so many thousands. aro ace:Wally destroy ed and removed. For Gull directions, road etuTaillY the circular around each bottle, printed Co four tau gnaccs—Engllah,liermaa. French and Spanish. J. WALKER. rropricter. U. 3- 3IcDOSALD 6 CO., Prdal433 and Gen. Agents, Eau rnalcbco. Cal, and 89 and 34 Coduaerso Street, New York. Pr SOLD BT ALL DrtUGGISTS AND Drainilii Oct. 26-7 cm pctc SIGN OF TEE GCLDEN MORTAR 3313 - Mt.MCES cfb IVICISCOLES, DRUGGISTS, Would.retpectfolly say to the publte, that In addition t their aeon] assorunent of PORE DRUGS AND MEDICLNES they have Paint• and Oils Varni.h. Dye-Stuffs. Wines and Liquors, Patent NietHeines, Spectacle., Eye Cilapees, Prirket Razors. Violin . GultarString.. Aloo. Just n..ceired a tine lot of Revolver., Gun Cap.. Gun Wadding, Cartridge., de. We keep always on hand and for 'aisle. Blastinr, Powder, Gnu Powder. Rifle Powder. Toba go and (11:ars of • sn pertor quality, god a general assortment of Yankee No tions. la'Remember ILe ("REAP CASH DRUG STORE o Darns &..I,7lcSole. A. R. BURNS, Montrose, Dee. 14, 1670. AllOB 14;14110LS STROUD it BROWN'S Fire, Life, and Accident GENERAL INSURANCE AGENCY, nittcsatz-corso. wi,,cs. CAPITAL REPRESENTED, over Home Insurance Co, of N. Y., Capital and Surplus, t 4.000,040 Insurance Co,. of North America, Phil's.. Capital sold Surplus, 9.000,000 Franklin Fire Insurance Co., Phila. Pa., Capitaland Surplus, 0,000,000 Lycoming County Mutual Insurance Coot Mutiny, Penn'a. Capital and Surplus, 4,000,000 Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Hartford. Conn.. Capital. 13. 000,000 American Life insurance Co., Philadel phis. Capital. 1,000,000 Travelers'lnanntoce Co. Hartford, C00n.% lllSUringtgainst all kinds of accidents Capital, 700,000 Hartford Fire Insurance Company, Hart ford. Coon.. Capital and Surplus, 5e.000,000 nr — All business entrusted to our care will be attend ed to on fair terms, and all losses promptly adjusted. - 121rOfflce ilrst door east from Banking_OfElpe of W. EL Cooper & Co., ToroPiko er. Montrose. Pa. STROUD tr. BROWN, Agents, M. e..Enrrros. Esq., Frlendsville, Soli d elfpr. Clue. H. 8:rot, MoDITOSG. BILLINGS Srnottn, Montrose, Pa. ,350. 11, tsn - Lu S,J - 000 WILL BE PA/D. rany person prfametng any metticino showleg half is many living. permanent coma as Dr. TITLED'S V ETABLD RHEUMATIC REMEDY. Used Inward -1 y only, A pleasant medicine, free from injurious dings. Warranted under oath, to bare permanently cured Oh io - every 100 patients treated In the past ten years. (Sea tuthanajj, It is the aelentific prescription of Profess. or Jos. P. puler, M. „ S graduate of the University of I Pennsylvania. it. D.. 1000,—now one of Philadelphia's to regular physician* and Profeasor of Chemistry and Toalsolooy.—Who ha s toads Neuralgia. Chronic and Ingemstory Rheumatism the speciality of his entire prfesabanal life—• fact vouched for by signatures 1111, I coMpanyisg each bottle of many promtnent venom= I physicians, clergymen, and other testrmontals, Tomer feet sufferers from poisonous quack nostrums • and use lees expenditure of money, s legal signed guarantee, stating exact number of bottles warranted to cure , will be forwarded gratis to any sufferer sending by letter • Nil description of affiction, In cue of failure to cure, amount paid positively refunded. Medicine sent sop where by express, collect on delivery. Afflicted invited 'to write for advice; all information and medical advice sent by letter gratis. Principal office, ID South Fourth street, Pbfladuiphis, Penne, The remedy is fold or oto talned by Druggists. April 10,11-Iy. for Bale by . AIIEL MULL, Montrose Pa. W. VANAWEB, 11. D.. ituteesulft l lll WWI all clam . of Cbro antaininzott and Aorta Distputs. Bawl • stamp Ibt einulartg pluticalus IMO =Walk addttseMoZ 6120, - How Yost. ADDITOR'S NOTICE. THE UNDERSIGNED, in Auditor. appointed by the Court of Common Plea of Susquehanna county, to make distribution of the fend arising from So eria's ate of the.real estate of Elton E. Smith and Harry Smith, hereby give. Dotter, that he will attend to the duties of his spixdulinent at bin office, In Montrose, on Monday the 19th day °Liana., 1811, at 1 o'clock, p. m., at which Unto and place, all persons Interested are requested to present their anima or be forever debarred from coining'a in upon add hied_ , May a, 1871.-41/ A. W. BERTLIOLF. Auditor. HOWARD SANITARY AID ASSOCI ATION, Pa Monition:ad curs of the Errikl zoO Cnitnizinatems Principles of Christian Philanthropy. Essays on the Connor Tooth and the Follies a Apt to relation to Marriage and Social Evils, with saaltar aid for the aMictcd. Sent free. in rested enrelopft. Ad deem 110 WARD ASSOCIATION, Nos P. Philadelplda. TALBOT & STAMP, GROCERIES & PROVISIONS Flcnur,&dt, Batter, Pork, Lard, Hans, Salt Flab, Tallow Candles, Crackers, Cheese, Coffee, Spices, Choice - Teas, Sagan, Rice, Drledluld Cianed' , Fruit. Tobacco, Cigars. Snuff, and ail otherartlcles usnally kept In a first class Grocery and Prorislon Store. we will mark our Goods as km as ire can 'afford, awl sell tor cash, or ezetrauge for produce, PATAUNAGE SOLICITED Mcairose, Sept. 20, 1810.—tt ABEL TURRELL, DRUGGIST, MONTROSE, PA Ir continually receiving And keeps constantly on hand a fall and desirable a sortment 01 seaming DRUGS, 3IBIACINES, eIIE3IICALS, i4clVolts, nattily, OIL, Dye-Stnif a, Teas. ft pieta, and other Oro eerie., Stone, V. Wall and V. Indira , Paper, Olau ware, Fruit Jars. Mirrors, Lamps: Chimneys, Ken, gene, Machinery Oil, Tanners' Oil, ?implant OIL He lloed Whale Oil, Sperni Otl, Olive Oli, Spirits Turiwn tlite.lllllllollCa. Cynary Seed. Vinegar.Potamh. Cosecs, iruied Lye. Ask mireare, Trusses. Supporters, Medium- Instraments, 'Moabite Bracer, While., 011py , P Cartridges, owder, Shot. Lend. Gen Caps, Blasting Powder and Pose, V lobes. Strings, Bows. etc. File er, Pike. rte., Fish Boob/. ana Lln.,Bar and Toilet Sospr, Harr 00r, Bair Remoter,. and Bair Dyes. Drumbeat Pocket Mitre, Specific-47,80,er Pitied Spoottr.Forks, Knives. Le, Dertlet Attielca, a general astarilaestof FANCY GOODS, JEWELRY, nod PERYVVERT All tbalendin: and best kinds of In short. nearly every thirty to redllire the Oak, to please the Leek.. to delight the eye, to gvatlfy the ratios, sod alto to conduce to the real sad substantial contort. of life. Entoricrution is Impracticable, as It would ILL a new►poper. Call at the Doug and Variety Store of ABM. TIIREILL.U. ItostroosoTax.i,l.M. p ITRE LIQUORS. SEELY'S NATIVE GRAPE Rif.kliri:rr, distftlrell etrictly pure; and a variety of other Braleidea, including Merry , 'Brandy. Cider Brandy. Cr. 'Nearly aliLthe dtfter , vent tr:lnda of Rom. Holland - Gin. old Rve and remrbon Whlakey. Alcohol. Pore Spirit. Bay Roth, /be., madam ly on hand and for male by Montrose,. March 24th. 16d9, w... 5. 1.1.73 73 .7-.1-a X JOHN S. TA4IIIELL. Proprietor. Eight Stages leave thin Honee daily, conneett■rvith the D. 1... k, W., the Erie, and the ',highlley Eail a, [July G. - GOLD JEWELRY A New and large supply, Montrose. Nov. 24. IMU ABEL TBIBLEI,Le WATCHMAKER ANDJEWELY.R, Susquehanna Depot., Pa., Dealer in Watches, Clocks "eweley, &c. Re pairing promptly done and warranted. FINE SILVER GOODS!' $G0.000,000 made a speciality; Silver Detached Levers for $l2 00. American Watches, at Companies re duced prices. 'Goods ordered for parties, Sore New York, at less profits than if kept constantly on - hand. Solid 18 caret Rings for $1 75 per penny weight.. A. B. TARBOX.. ; Susquehanna Depot, Jan. 25. 1871. tf. TEA !, Every kind area In market, Just airtsed.aad or saes at Now York wholesale prise.. Also a gaga* rortfoent Of COFFEE. Bay of Ine and sawar g chars. ABEL TO —At Sher-Wood's, the Watch-Maker,' Mule street, Montrose, Pa, . . CONGRESS WATER. at TURRELL'& ROAD LETTING—The l‘apelflsors of Bridgewater will meet at the house of Jimot O'Brien.. In North Bridgewater, April Rate, at I o'lock p. m.. to let the building of a road leading hem Jae. O'Brien ' . to Thomas Hickey's. To be let to the IoJAM westES C biddeAr. LPH. Crunuts L. Baolni HORACE. BREWSTER. Montrose., April 19.'11. Z. M. BREWSTER. Sw NEW WALL PAPER, Just arrived, and selling chespby _ Montroso.AprlM ABEL TW=LL. Agricultural College, of Pennsylvania. rim INSTITUTION will reopen for the SPRING TERM OF 24 WFFIKS, For galled Circular, catalogue and other in. formation, Address, THO& H. BURROWS, President, Agricultural College, P. 0., Jan. 25, 1870.—tf. Centro Co., Pa, BLOOMINGTON. (ILL.) NURSMay: ocn Year. 000 Acta. 18 Greenhouses, Lupo As, ihntment , All sixes. Best Blockt Low Merit— Weald )04 know what. I rooll. bow U s aalki I E____ es :11E. ,Lade, evergreen tr .rer. MOD', Krudi , int in vin• Oblate. apple seed, early Rose potato, stun row greeuhausa and garden plants. Ac., FLOW VEGETABLE SEEDS I guest, best eolleetton--snrtiM Quality. Bend 10 eclat for New. Blastratearßorrripure Catalogne-00 pages ' Send stamp. amp for aktairgues of Seals, with pubs directions-04 pagesr DedilLog spa Garden Plants-9A pea, Wholesale 1110.1AV-14 pages. AddreselA: E:PBEENIE. Bloomington, BMWS. CORMAM l TV l AttariMatrig i 11.4halligto.111.Tit Weal cosaelli_4_lla. 51.14•5 — goir WWI, April WI, 18V. TALBOT I ST.talr NEW GOODS PATE3I' lIIDICT:iLS, ABEL TERRELL OPPO.ITE TQE COVET LlOtitt, xionToste.„ PE'N'A A. B. TARBOX, On Friday, February 10, 1871.