THE DEMOCRAT PeMAIO= HTIIII2 WILIMITTIDAT 3101131310 AT liarvinis, IStrwszazza Co., PA, sr f. B. HAWLEY & CO. UV's' mini to same*. ow WM at the *ad aim. LT= OP ADVERZUMItO arllitdbl todrof spice. or lea. lades equsn'''.) One slum, 8 weeks or less, $l.OOO month LIS i 8 months X5.60 ;' el months S4ZO i 1 year, 1111. Quarterly. ttalf-yesaly and yearly adver t eats hooted at a liberal reduction on the above rates When sent without any length of thee welded for publrestion they will bo con tinual Mil °ratted out anti charged according- 1 7. Auditor's Notles, $2.80: Executor's and Ad ministrators' Notices, 113.00. AU communica• Mons of limited or individual Interest, 10 cents ppaarr Una Obituary Notices, 10 cents per line.— satl•Destll Notices fem. • JOB PRINTING emoted neatly and promptly and at fair prim SLAMS. tdelMMaximal, Note, Justice', Coasts atool and other Dlsnlu tor sale. piortuantouo. The Mr of IL There is no more tonchinestory in re cent police annals than that of Mrs. Ln cetta Meyer, arrested as a witness in the Lantr'of S teady Habits, phe has been twice married, and twice left a widow b• death. While yet on what ought to he the sunny side of thirty, she found her self forced to become the sole bread-win ner for en aged father and mother, a son of five years, and a nephew of eight, as well as herself. To support five persons. she worked from early morning till night earning only from $3150 to $4.00 a week.' The woman for whom she served testified that she brought only a piece of dry bread for lunch, and that her clothes were "poor but neat." Seventy-two hours of hard la bor were paid at the rate of five cents an hour, and she was a skilled work-woman tool Pressed by the wants of 'Others, watching nightly by the sick body of an aged mother, whose constant reply to i questionings s, "she was a good girl—a good girl, air," is it a wonder that she kept the wolf from the door by means which those who are well fed and defiant in their virtue deem unlawful? Who, of her brothers and sisters that have not been so tempted, shall be the first to cast a stone at her? This is one of the cases which society is more creel than the grave. Women especially are }Milers to this class Or sins in their se; but the crime of the man who tempts is not condemned. Yet if one of those who are blessed with happy homes and plenty were thrust into a ppor widow's garret, to work for a pit tance in a daily treadmill and to be tor mented night and morning by the cry of her nearest and dearest ones for bread. would she do better than the woman held up to the public scorn as " the mistress" of Charles Goodrich? The picture cry heart pray, "lead us not into tempts- Clone of the poor who have others de pendant upon them, than the stone steeples that call the rich to cemfortabl thanksgivings. There is .a "Song of the Shirt" set to homely but (most touching music, that can scarcely be read with the same intonation as the fancy sketch im mortalized by Hood. And the people of the City of Ohurchee will flock to their sanctuaries, perhaps to thank God that they are not such as Lucetta Meyer.— Will they think of the throng of sewing girls who flock across their ferries day and night,sed pray that they may be kept from the temptations of rich and hon ored citizens. Will they think of a young girl kept in custody because she bartered a caress for a loaf of bread for her child, and think tenderly of her one fault? Among the faces of apocryphal saints and angels, the pallid face of Lucetta Meyer will , peer and plead for justice-I.h not it vain. The President of ide French As- .cmbly. ——o— The National Assembly of France pro ceeded to elect a President of the Assem bly in succession to M. Grevy, yesterday. M. Louis Joseph Buffet was chosen by three hundred and four votes, against two hundred and eighty-five, which were cast for Mr. Martel. M. Buffet is an eminent statesman and an able financier. He is very wealthy, exceedingly influential and and quite indepenent both in manner and address. He succeeded M. Mngne as Minister of Finance. He belongs to the party of the Right, and was, piles since, one of the leaders in the Corps Legisla tif. He retired temporarily from public life after the perpetration of the coup d' etai—an act which excited his deepest detestation--and, on hie reappearance in the electoral arena, defeated one of Na poleon's chosen candidates for a seat in the Legislature after a very violent con test. M. Buffet's election constitutes an important parliamentary event for France. The end of the Provisional Government is almost in sight. The national territo ry will soon be liberated from foreign military occupation. The present Assem bly must remit its power to the people at an early day. A Constituent Assembly will follow. The complexion of its repre sentation canrotle devised, but it iscer tabu that M. Louis Joseph Buffet, will ex ercise a very decided influence io the striking of the tint.—[From the N. Y. Herald, April 5. Tra coloney of the Amanes,. on the lowa river. seventy miles froan- the Mis sissippi, new number 1,300 and owns 30, 000 acres of land. They ,hold the prop erty in common. Those. who join the community contribute all their property to the common stock ; if any one wishes to leave he sets what he put in, without interest. .they have put up extensive factories; ect. The cwlony consists of Germans and was started sixteen years ago. -The total number of lost on - the Atlan tic was 562. 390 saved. 113 of the lost were female& 200 persor. • were crushed by the sbip's boom swinging around. The crew—mostly Liverpool dock loatets.... were brutal and tautonoas, arid robbedthe dead bodies. Tamar him little eau- pais all; biro Ise id* mum all; mod hila ]pet who ie Asia! ali bldingrnib farm and fireside. The Forty-Acre Farm. -0- BY JOHN IL TATE& -0- rm thlalinarwile. maighb.or .19ne 8 , Oat man with stalwart tirm He lieu in perm and plenty on a forty-acre farm ; Mine men are all around us.. ndth. bands and heals a sore, Who own two hundred acres, and still are wanting more. lib is a pretty little farm ; a pretty little house; He has a loving wife within , u quiet al a mouse; His children play around the door—their ildb er's life to charm— Looking as neat and tidy as the tidy littlethrut. No weeds are In the cornfield. no thietles In the 0318, The horses show good keeping by their dna and glossy coats; The cows within the meadow, resting 'tomtit the heaehen shade, Learn all their gentle manners of the gentle milking maid. • Within the field—on Saturday—ho leaves no cradled grain • To Ito gathered on the morrow for tear of com ing rain ; He keeps the Sabbath holy—his children learn his ways— And plenty tills hie barn and bin after the har vest days, Ha never has a lawsuit to take him to the town, For the very simple reason, there are no line fences down ; The bar-room in the village does not have for him a charm ; I can always find my neighbor on his forty-acre farm. His acres are so very few, he plows them very ee dwnp ; 'Tis his own bands that turns the sod—'lll his own hands that reap ; He has a place for everything, and things aro in their place ; The sunshine smiles upon his fields, content meat In his face, May we not learn a lesson, wife, from prudent neighbor Jones, And not—for what we haven't got—give vent to sighs and moans? The rich ain't always happy, nor free from life's alarms ; Blest are they who live content, though small • may be their farms. Bathing Calves --a— The following experience of a Western Farmer correspondent may be of value where cheese are made: I have had eon- I sideruble experience in feeding whey to calves and pigs, and have raised some very fine ones tno. Three years ago I milked, I think, twelve COW!, and raised seven calves, which had nothing but whey during cheese making season, except the grass on about a half acre of pasture, in which they ran all summer. '1 hey drank about two pails full each per day, of sweet whey. These calves were admired by all who saw them. One yoke were sold, at three years, for 8100; one do., at two years, for $66. In other wears I have kept hogs growing; and in goCid order up- on nothing but sweet whey. Ten years agog was through the State of Vermont, "among the cheese makers," and observed they were raising the finest grade stock I ev, r saw, feeding the calves exclusively on whey while making cheese lasted. Upon the whole, my experience teaches me that with plenty of sweet whey I can raise as good calves as I can with sour milk, though I always feed mord whey than Graham Bread. —o__ Make a sponge by boiling fonrgood size potatoes; when soft, mash fine ; then stir in a cup of flour ; pour on the water in which the potatoes were boiled scald ing hot, and if not sufficient to make three pints of the mixture, add cold wa ter. When the milk is warm put in a teacup of soft yeast, and set in a moder ate warm place to rise. After it becomes light, put In a teacup of good brown su gar (white is not good) and stir in Gia ham float until thick enough to drop heavily into the greased baking pans. Set it to rise again, and bake in a moderately hot oven forty minutes. This quantity will make two largo loaves, and when taken from the oven should be allowed to stand five minutes before removal from the pans. Sheet-iron pans are much to be referred to tin for any bread, but es pecially for Graham, baking more slowly, but more evenly. If the sponge seems at all sour, add a little soda. Charooul for Poultry. -0-- The benefit which fowls derive from eating charcoal is, I believe, acknowledg ed. The method of putting it before them is, however, not well understood.— Pounded charcoal is not in the shape in which fowls usually find their food, and consequently is not very enticing to them. I have found that corn burnt on the cob and the refuse—which consists almost entirely of the grains reduced to char coal, and still retaining their perfect sh xpe placed before them, is greedily eaten by them, with • marked improvement in their health, as is shown by the brighter color of their combs, and their sooner producing a greater average of eugs to the flocks than before—[St. Rufus Mason in the Poultry World. Curing fool Rot. -0- Mr. Randall. pares the foot and uses bine vitro!. Ile describes the application as follows; "sever were tho feet of a flock more throughly pared. Into a large washing tab, in which two sheep can convenient ly stand, I pour a concentrated solutionof blue vitrobas hot as amid be endured by the hand even for a moment. As soon as a sheep's feet were pared, it was placed in the tube and held there. A second was prepared and placed.heside it. When the third was ready, the first was taken out and so on. Each sheep remained in the tub about five ruinuth. The hot liquid penetrated every part of the foot, and the cure was perfect." Sawingeoyerbeed. ——o— Where land was seeded down late in the Fall, clover seed ought* to be sown en the surface as coon, now, as the snow is off, or the land is fit to travel over. It is a con venient way to take advantage of some light snow and sow it directly upon that. It enables one to see to row it uniformly, and the meltingsnow helPscarry the seed down into the toil. We like to Mix in a little alsike clover seed. Bnt if red clover is sown alone use ten pounds oflieed at least, and fifteen pounds is better. As Irish advertisement : If the gen tleman who Burps a shoe store with a red head, will return the undireile.of a young Ludy with the ivory handle, he will hear of iomithing to her ukuptsge, !dating• THE "MONTROSE DEMOCRAT" TICE ONLY DEMOCRATIC PAPER IN SUSQUEHANNA COUNTY. JOB PRINTING. We have made large addition to oar ales in type and material of all kinds, which enable no to do all kinds of Job Printing at the Lowest Fttkes Bill Heads, Letter Heads, Statements, Printed Envelopes, Business Cards, - Visiting Cards, Wedding Cards, Posters, Horse Bills, Sale Bills, Slip Bills, Programmes, Circulars, Labels, Receipts, Rotes, Tags. .Paper Book', Piusphlots, Catalogues, Cortificatos, Bonds, De►ds, We Wive ea heed ROTINS, JIIIITICSW An/ CONSTABLES' BLANKS Printed and for mile. Mee we a eaTI and try ca, and yaa will be eon rimed that we do nor work well, cheap, and with dispatch. All inlets, by nail or other wise, ptemptly attended to. The =Pomo car at Ls published wieldy la the boreal* at Mormons, SUSQVIRAXIA COUNTY, PA., Oa a large folio sheet, and eesasins TWICITT MGM COLLIINIin READMOMILITIN Its ctroukstian is , Incsasstag wary day AS AN ADVERTISING MEDIUM It offers rare dierlitisa t• KESCHANIT, MANC74CITANDI, DZALZILI IN PAR. I mrptintrors. AtAcm-vaRY, PIINTILIZZLS, di., to rcnth a dealrablo clam of customers. Advertise's will consult their Interests by making Readapt= the medium through whirrs to address the public, as the paper reaches all classis of people— Farmers, Mechanics, Merchants, Prefer sigma, Jim sic., sic. Terms—,Loo Pa You la drugs. ♦ll ecialmaniiiittrasaboald loo . addreued to E. ■. zuwizardie co. t'ritaximp, _ . Dniga and medicines WISMT'S PINE TREE Tar Cordial, NATURE'S GREAT *IIEDY Throat and Lungs. IL is gratifying to u' to inform the public tha Dr. L. Q. C. 'Wishart's Pine Tree Tar Cordial, for Throat and Lung Diseases, Las gained nu enviable reputation thou the Atlantic to the Pa cific coast, and from thence to some of the first amities of Europe, not through the press slime, but by persons actually benetitted and cured at his Mike. While be publishes (ma. so asy our reporters, he i 9 unable to supply the demand.— It gains and holds its reputation— First. Not by stopping congli,but by loosen , irg and assisting nature to throw off the un healthy matter collected about the throat and bronchial tubes, trhvh caner., irritation. Second. It remove~ the cause of irritation (which produces cough) of the mucus membrane pad bronchial tubes, insists the lungs to act and throw off the unhealthy secretions, and purifies the blood. Third. It In Irce from squills, lobelia, Ipc • ae, and opium, of which most throat and lung re. medics are composed, which allay congh only, and disorganize tho stomach. It has a soothit4T effect nn the stninttch, nets on the liver and kid neys, and lymphatic and nervous regions, thus reaching to every part of the system, and in its invigorating and purifying eff,cts it loot canted a reputatlnit which It must held above all others in the market. -'INI*C>r3E° I C 3al PRE TREE TAR CORDIAL Great American Dyspepsia Pills, AND WORM SUGAR DROPS Reingunder my immediate: direction, they sie' not lose their curative• qualities by the Übe el cheap nod impure articles. HENRY R. WISHART, PROPRIETOR FREE OF CHARGE. Dr L. Q. C. Wislinrt%i Parlor: are open on )tnnd .tyw, Tiurtlays and \lit,lnt,tirn. (pun t t 4. M., to sp. ut., (~r ,ons.ultat ion by 1)r. Wm. T. Magee. Willi hint are st,.oni.iit..l two t on. suiting phvgiviant• of :tc.l,nowlelgT , l This opportunity 14 not oiterea by um v other in stitution in this city. ALL LETTERS MUST BE AADBk : eiKD TO L Q. G. WISHART, M. D, NO 232 N. SECOND STREET Nor. 1::, IR;2--m6 n.:1) p NEW DISCOVERY Cbeanteal and Iliadlcsil Science. Dr. GARVIN'S TAB REMEDIES Cure Incipient Consumption. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Cure Catarrh. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Cure Asthma. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Cure Heart Disease. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Cure Skin Diseases. Dr. GARVIN'S TAU REMEDIES Regulate the Liver. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Regulate theStomachand Bowels Dr. GAR VIN'S TAR . REMEDIES Cure ell Female Weaknesses. Dr. GARVIN'S TAB REMEDIES Purity the Blood. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES - em Diseases of the Throat. Dr. GARVIN'S TAU REMEDIES Cure Bronchitis. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR IMIEDIES I Clue "Bose Cold,"orglayFever" Dr. GARVIN'S TAU REMEDIES I Caro Lung Diseases. Dr. GARVIN'S TAU REMEDIES Core Constipation. Dr. (ARVIN'S TAB REMEDIES Clue Salt Rheum. Dr. GenvErs TAB REMEDIES Cure Kidney Diseases. Dr. GARVIN'S TAB REMEDIES PowcatCholera&Yellowirever Dr. GABYLVS TAB. REMEDIES Prewet Malarious Fevers. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Roam Pain In the Breast. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Ream. Pain in the Side or Back. Dr. GAMIN'S TAB REMEDIES Ara • Superior Tonic. Dr. GARVIN'S TAB REMEDIES Beaton the Appetite. Dr. (ARVIN'S TAU REMEDIES Ckume the Food to Digest. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES RestotetheWeak end Debilitated Dr. GAWYIPPS TAB REMEDIES Hue Tone to Your System. L. 1 1 . HTDE & CO., BOLE PBOPRIETORI. !IDS Seventh Ave., New York. January It, lea MONTAN"! TA" HOUSE BILLS I Every Mee. Style. and Variety CURAPLT PRINTkit, AT Tl7lri Orricr FOR TUE Dr . ugs and Medicines. R. R■ .R■ RADWAY'S READY RELIEF CURES TILE WOUST PAINS In from Ono to Twenty hiinutos. NOT ONE NOUN Te.v2IIK 1141.4 Mverthinrivnt t.,1 0.111 ene . 6C FIER WITH 111=1 ZULDWATS TIEADj EVERY PA IN. It sax the OM and Is 'rho Only Yaln llemedy that Mann!ty 140(4 the most rscruclailug pa or. :m.,.. t. a,,,. w.:. slut cunt etmreetteme, whrthrr the LoNr, 5tm0..1., Morel, or giauds or 0r5....e, I y ayplo.s. tluty. IN FROM O!TE TO TWENTY MINCTE.S. No !Touter )sodWolirot or esmnteLatinj the pub, the 11.1.71 C. Dort.riddeN Cetppletl.:imluoa. 2stuz-440c. or prostrated dlrmee may rult,r. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF %TILL ',From)ANST,CIT TrFLAMMATION OF Toe. KIONEY't. INFLAMMATION OF TILE IILADIMIL INTLAIrMATION OF TIII: DOWP.I a. . - . • - • CONOLSTILIN - OF THE LUNGS CORE TIITIOST, DIFFICULT DIIFATHING I'ILLP/TATION OF TILE IiF.AnT nrsTEracs, DirigrittniA. CATA10:11. IXFLURNIA 11Z11)ACIII!, TOUTIT.4rnt. RAI.6 lA, RILLCUATIII.II COLT) CITTT.T.A, AcrE t'IULLv , eppl,c.uan th.s Rawls Relic( tn parlor inrta.l,,:e the paln or diculty util zdronl ems. and comfort. Tlrent7 ArnyA h Li f a tumbler of Int... will 10 fwer HE rorrme AßTlllll. cure : PIMA ll . li. ANIt Scaal frromicu, 1, CF. DYSENTERY. COLN!, ViLND LN Tat. IIoWELS, and CI INTERNAL YAINA, • . . Trarel••• &bray, Iran" , a hottla 17.A411r11, • • Brady Relief them. A fr., 1110, .11 • -ler • I:I promo alcan.... or pains from aanaa vratar. It ls tte tel Ittawty or llMtn a. a athoula.M. GETEM for rEctrt AND ACD . if sandfilt, mut, Tllere Is not sr:zed:al sge:.tmid l l ,sl I cum ur nud Apm, urd all Ober Ilatari•ma. tlllnns. Scar., TI Tall", and r revs, ra,1,1 1: A 1 Al - Al'll I' rplek as It A 1/W A I'a IiKADY ISLLII.F. In botsla. bold LT Druul.m, HEALTH! BEAUTY!! FrIIIDNO As:11 rtrtF: r. 1 ,11 nt,oon-TN , TINANr PF 11.1:.D AND WkluDT— , LEAlt ARiti AND EI:AL • TIFUL coIipLETION ,E TILED TO ALL. DR. RAWAY'S SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT nks MADE TU E MOST A.ToNI , IIING f•I'111:3160 yri , K, MAPIM AIM TAM I•IIANI.ES TIM 11; WY UNDEItmoK4, I:Nm6!,' TIM I:NFIATMS , •6 ICY TOW TnuLa' WONDEI - MTL THAT Every Day an Incroass In Flosh and Weight Is Soon and Felt. THE CREAT BLOOD PURIFIER. /rep of the Silts 11 . .1r,1LT Alz ILErSeII.V ENT fnnlnsilttit.,• • 11.1,140 Me Itheel, Sate., talwr nnA juleea of We eastern We vt,or 111. for It repal-• to meter of t:3o louts valth !kr...fa!, Sephllia, Conalimptlon. filandular In th• Throat. Montt, Tn.nora 'Nodes In 1 , andi other part. of th e sperm, Rose F.f eltromena from the F..s, a... 1 the woe, forms of 3..133 deenbc, Krop. planes,, Fever ft-res, Seahl Wad. fl:ng worn, Salt . .en, , , Ervelpelaa, Acne, Mae. Sp.da, Worno, In Ili. Flesh, TALC,' o, Caisears II We Wanta, aud all weakening nod palnful harge, lileht Sweat+, Lima of Sperm. and • I ...Ica 1,3 s hre principle, bra within We coratlveraure or Mil wonder of Mralern Olea/n..7. and a fir Anti oae 8111 pro, le An, , Vl 11.11 j It f.w. either of these fort a of ease.: Its ent power to cure tnem. If the patient, daily hemming rerlnerd by We wastes and deconapoiltlon that Is contlnually pn/grealing. no, In serenalne three lever; and reealr. the woo, will, lnnre r al made Iron healthy blood--aud tale the lialtroal'Altll, L I A N eatl end do, seen,. . . Nut mar doea the Sae.uraarhupor Rmohrityrr reed all tunwn remedial ut.ents In the ewe of cronic, licrorn,,.. I onAltultousi, and hicl33 discuses; but It La IW ouly posit I, tura f .r Kidney & Bladder Complaints and dlanasta, Grave /I,4fet. Stoopago of Wm.., Ineont 'nen,* of C'l'O. firlales Allmodnorm. mat In aII allero Ihrra nr. , .e.ck•lost do 1 , 1,1ta or tl Is thick, .1 , ..0b, n.lsol a 'oh rut.o,, , s 4to tho a Idt , of an ot threads IlLe arhlle ad .or I. a morl.M. dart. 141,.. , ts atn.tare” 4, .. ,,, alsand when tbrra Is a 1,61,, 1.n0“.g when ~. rate, and pain La the of 11.0 Illat and alons (b. G:iM811;=E111111 Tumor of 12 Tears' Grown Cured by Radwny's Resolvent fterentn, %rue , J•ly re, r.. R.....:-[ treys heel rhenrtst. Tent, Ile the onnthre . 4... t.. nilN. Iherttre reld •' ten,. ter help rnr rr., ono, thing Outs wen ..... ,, mended: but eteattnt ert• nte I re'. ftwelvent. wed meta her et( Retina:. le It., wee to t. titre et , Ready Itannf t and Own re ewe • et, err ta • ttr te v., et PI, weer f foal bater, smart, n 4 hattprer tb., I I et.. ft, ...et-. ver., fl Innen 4.ntee nes In the lett tete a the towel, a-or eh. gee.. rite I. r• far L. heetel.l•( I it Arr. DR. RADWAY'S PERFECT PURCATIVE PILLS, perfoelly Mediu, elrtyantlr rotttel lth Kt - ..t mtnL‘ta. purify, c eat..., an . lt oto le Is. ttr thy core DUI gtartolet•.. , the !Korn .. I, I ..er. sttlhotmal Inn of the llocryle. Kate. r.. 1 el: Dee rar t eenyrota •.f tho I otertal roe, I proott e retry. Ports r. g ((Urn tattoo - 0, or 41tout tiret, tlr Mort - roll, I,llna tog introptroala ter.illyg from PL. erden of Ii OrKatta t,••••1 t%. 110. P ite.Ps, Natta.,. /Imrii.Lre, 1 , 1,,5t 41.4.1,11' *tts \C{-}t fn t\. rano , Ir; at day Pll P..r.twring 61 0.4 Ihrallthts. .1 44. lima, r 13344, 5. , 10.134 1 , -•••t:••• wty.e. l• • L.,. •9 0.1. *1 y a r_Z - 11 . 1 . 1 - • 1 , 4, nm, •••I ..dd., 1,11.4 11.1, Miming to IS. .1 6^ , ti•••• of P 7 77 ...'rl to, Ihn • ar.Nau . Pr:, 25 an:4 la W. 1.111'10:1ST., V %LSE .1%1 , Tnri:• sen 4 s•cmy In II s DA' AY & 10, I.lne. Kws wen 1. A.malt.“. '4,14 son. April i1.,1A7.2 -31 ;Thle Cat lautratee the maw of Using 141 f 1.3:F.e1ACM 3 19 Fountain Nasal Injector, p on 11,-4 Thls in.trocnent is especially designed for the wit feet applica, lon of DR. CACE•B CATARRH REMEDY,. It is the only tom of instrument yet Invented with whirr dnid medicine can Ire carried Ugh op and paV',:ll applied toed arts of the affected tinsel pas al 4.1 , 1hl chambe rs or cavities communirating thercir4.l, In which sure, old ulcers frequently exist. and !coo the martini dischart,ro generally pro ceeds. Tee metal of eliCeese in treating Catarrh here tofore his arisen I:sr.:el . , from the impossibility of applying reeneJlea to these cavities and chambers by any of the ordinary methods. This obsmede In the way of effecting cares le entirely ervertome by lb. invention of the Douche. la using Me Instrument, the Fluid Is carried by Its own weight) no sanding, feti ng or pumping being required,) np one nostril In a full ~ntly flowing Strvin to the highest portion of the Mutt pasiages. passes Into and %beret:Tidy eteamise all the Labe. and chambers connected therewith. and loss out of theoppositenedril. Its nea to pleasant end so olnple that 1% drll , l Can understand It. Eon and explicit dtrectlous accompany each Instrument When need with this instrnment.Dr, Sallie Catarrh Remedy cores recent attacks of !`Cold let the lira& ' , bye few applications. symptoms of Catarrh. Frequent bred. 'ache. discharge falling Into throat, sometimes pro fuse. watery, thick morns, purulent, offensive, &e. In other* a dryness, dry. watery, weak or fell:mai oyes, stopping op or obstruction at nasal 1111...,.. ringing in ears. deafness, hawking and coughing to clear threat, Ulcerations, scabs from ulcers. voles alte-el, nasal twang, offensive breath. Impaired or total deprivation of ammo of smell and Unite, died. pest, mental depression. loss of appetite, Indiges tion, enlarged tonsils. tickling cones, dec. Only a few of these symptoms are likely to be present is any cave at one time. Dr. Sages Catarrh Remedy, whoa lased with Dr. Pierce, Nlll4ll Donchoond ILCCOM panted with the constitutional treatment which le recommended in the pamphlet that wrens each het. tle of the Remedy. is a perfect Fpecifle for this loath. 1 10 . d *ea.. and the proprietor offers. in good faith. 9500 reward for a ease be can Din core. The Bawdy Is mild and pleasant to we, containing Do strong or candle drags or polemist. The Catarrh Remedy Is sold at 50 cents, Douche at GO cents, by all Druidism, or either will be nulled by pip printer on receipt of 60 cents. It. V. PIEIICE, R. D.. Bole Proprietor. BUFFALO. N, lI . UNT BROTHERS, SCRANTON, PA. Wholesale A Retail Ragouts HARDWARE, IRON, STEEL, NAILS, SHOVELS, :rJILDEIVS HARDWARE, • M INC RAIL, 00EN7ERSUNIC d T „RAIL SPINES RAILROAD R. MINING SUPPLIES. CARRIAGE 'SPRINGS, AXLE'S, SKEINS AND BOXES, BOLTS. NUTS and WASIIERS, ['LAMP lIA.VDS. ItALLEADLE IRONS. HUBS, SPOKES, PELLOES, SEAT A PINDLEs, BOWS, de. ANVILS. VICES, STOCKS and DIES, BELLOWS II AMMERS.I LKbgEF. FILFM, OIRCULAR AND NULL SAWS. BeLTIN O. PACKING TACKLE {WICKS. PLASTER PARIS CEMENT. HAIR A GHINIISTONEB. FRENCH WINDOW GLASS. LEATHER .% FINDINGS PAIRBANK'S SCALES. SCr&titilo. March a1...1W A. ALL KINDS py JoB WORK, ETD., NEATLY PAINTED AT THE DELIOCTAT urncrE Drugs and Medicines s taxa Spirits and axons. w rot. t irCiirrd: - Spiced, - and Sweetened to please the taste, called "Tonto,' .- Appetiors . " Rotate.," doe., that lead the tippler on to drunkenness and off% but am a true Methcine, made from the native roots and herbs of California, free front •Il Alcoholic Stimulants. They are the Groat Blood Purifier and a Life.giving Principle, • Perfect Renovator and invi gorator of the System, Carrying o if all polsono. motet and restoring the blood to a healthy conditi enrictung it. we. Crashing and invigorafang both mind and on, body. They ars easy of adnumsuation, prompt in their actin n, certain in their results, safe and reliable in all forms of tfisetase. No Person eau take obese Hitters =arches te directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by mmeral poison mother mean., and the coal °r g7.7. " ,s ed gl 'y o7 d P ars g a l • a n ti, " eia eh • Pain to the iihoulders Coughs Tightness ottbe Dasi Sour Ernotations of the Stemach, Bad Tents in the Month Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Heap. Inflammatton oat the Lungs, Pain to the regmns of the Isidnea and a hun dred other painful symptom , . am the p' t' f DOPtTeitt.' In these complaints it has no equal, and one bottle will prose a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. For Female Complaints, m you= or old, mooed sr single, at the &to of womanhood, or the turn of life, du.. Tome Bitters display so decided an influence that a muted improvement Is soon penieptilde. For Inflammatory mad atronle Rhenma tlsm and Goof, DTsPePsi• inffiZasiiant Bitinus, Remit- tent and Intermittent levers, Disuses of the Blood Liver. Kidneys end Bladder, these Bitters have been most ineiteseul. Such Diseases am caused by Vitiated Blood which is gen erally proisterd by derangement of the Digestive o*Pne They area Gentle Pergative ea well as a Tonic, posse..inc . also the peculiar merit of acting as poi "ill agent In re.scrint Conpstlnn or ntlarnnytion cd the LtZr r' and Visceral Organs, and en Btlions Douses. Skin Diseases, Emotions, Teeter, Sala Rheum, ,Blotches, Spats Pimples Pustules, Buds, Carbuncles, RAl ran., SoM-Head. Sore Eyes, I , :rysipt!as Itch, Scent% Discolorations of the Skin, Bunion and Disuses of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of thesyttent in a short time by the use of these Ilittert_ One bottle in such eases will convince the most incredulous of their mutative effects. Cleanse the Vitiated Mood when•ver too find its imparines bursting through the skin in Pimp!e , . Erup tions, or Sores: cleanse it when yet find it &rammed and slu,unit in the veins; cleanse it when it is foul ; your feeling. will tell out wham. Keep the blood pure and the health of the system and follow. Gratetkal thousands proclaim VINFC,II Brrrena the most wonderful I nogorant that ever entrained the eankmg system. Pin, 'lave, and other Worms. letting io the sTai ton of so many thousands, at effectually destroyed and rectos ed. Say, a distmenished physiologist There is scarce:2r an individul upon the faced the rub whose body Ise:erupt from the presence of worms. It is not upon the healthy ele ments noire body that Wen. mist, btu tapes the diseased humors and dun, deposits that breed these hying monster% f d t ,esse sratcen of Medicine. no vcrtnifuges.., no as. theinunitica, will 'free the system from wars. like these Bitten. Dlerhanlext Dl . Persons enrace.l in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumber., Type-setters, I lold.beatms and Miners, as they adranee 'Et life, will be sidteet to parslyttot of the Bowels To guard against min mho a dose of Wu es za's VINSGAM Lioness once or twice week. es • rn 'entire Dillon, Remittent, and Intermittent Fe. seers, which arc so prevalent in the valless of our great rim" throughout the Grated States, especially those of the Mt...pot Ohio, Ill.a.,Tenneseee„ Cumberland, Arkanms,Red. Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Ala bama, Mobile, Sam with their vast tributaries, throughout our enttre country &tong the Summer and Althorns, and ternarkably be during seasons of unusual heat and MT..% am .-- r.nied by extensive derangements of the stomach mid liver, and ether abdominal fresco, There are attars more or less obstructions of the Leer, a wraknew and irritable state of the stomach, and great tonsor of the bowels, being chinkd up with vitiated accumulations In their treatment, a tut gative, exerting a powerful influence upon these 'A or pr.., Is essenually PCCUS.II7. There ts no eathame foe the purpose equal to Da. W....aria Voter.. llm-rres.„ ea airy will ',seedily remove the dark-colored cocci matter an% winch the bowels me loaded, at the sane tone sonsulattng the secretions of she liver, and easel-ally =mein the healthy functions of the digestive organs Scrofula, or King's Evil, Wide lim . en. Erympelac, Swelled Scrofula. Inflammations, Indotent Inflammations, blerenrial Affections, Old Soon, Enioti.ins of Me Skin, toe In :hese, as in all other .nstituctowal Dra. eones, Wal esx's Bustin have shown their treat rr tore pavers on the host olestirrate and Intm.able cases. A Woman's Ailments. her Berronsneas, and Headaches, although they seem trifling to men. an" real d' dens For CCM.V