THE DRILOCATt: HA IVIE} a CO., Editors. .1 il 741'14 40; TWA New York Express declanis "a ,prominent Radical official admitted to its reporter that in vestigations are continual ly going on in uses of inspectors; who iare being discharged for wilful neglect of duty, for intoxication, and, beyond doubt stnne•for receiving bribes, and suit half commenced against an importer to re co.e_r 1700,000 for alleged madetvaluition of invoices." Tom Mnrphy nine the New York Custom-house under the eye and for the interests of President Brant and, this is the result. _Everything is'anb ordineted to political considerations, and a man who can imagine a wild is liePt int, place, no matter what his official con duct may be. This Is the New York Grant-Murphy programme, and 'it will lint be disturbed, by so-called "official in vestigations.." SAPS the World: It is a noted fiset that the most corrupt men in the Re publican party are its foremost managers and leaders in their respective localities, There is Cameron, of Pennsylvania, who was once censured by a Republican Con gress and recognised as the leader of the corrupt ring of Pennsylvania, and yet he is the leader of the Republican party in that'State. There is Ilarlan,whopnta up the pretence of Christain statesman, bad ly mixed up with corrupt jobs in'lowa, yet is now the recognized mouthpiece of the Republican Administration. Then 'we halm Bingham, of Ohio, irbn, ie ,be asineared from head to heels with the Credit Jfobilier swindle And grahiind the doubling of the PAY :et the President, not only occupying the posi tutu of Administration leader in Massa- Clitts. but the Administration eandi doyte for Governor of that State. Tom Murphy, whose deeds have from time to time been exposed, has the ear of the Administration, and is at the head of the stag. which shapes the policy of the party in this State. So it is everywhere. Not amen loses the confidence of the Ad ministration or hie position in the 'Re• publichti party by corruption. The giy.it er the rascal—the higher the rositiou in that party. At Lee, the candidate of:the democracy of Ohio for governor, inns defines democracy: "Democracy is a sentiment: not to be amilled, corruntki or pompromised. It knows no baseness; it 'Cowers to'ho 'danger ; it optimises no weakness. Fearless,. generous ,and bo nriuq, it rebukes the arrogant; cherishes honor, and sympathizes with the hum ble. It asks nothing but whet. it con cedes; it concedes nothing but irliatit detris.nds. Destrnctive only of .desPot iimi;cit is the sole conservator of liberty,. kiho'r and property. It is' the sentinzenk, or freedom, of equal rights, of ettnial ob. llgations. It-is the law of ,Inittire . per vadinithe law of the land. The stupid, the selfish and the base in spirit may de- nonage it as'a. vulgar thing ;' but` is the History of our race the democratic pion: mple has developed and illustrated the highest Moral intellectual attributes of otir nature. Yed-=that is a noble, mug-' naninions, a sublime Sentiment, which expands our affections, enlarges the , enisympathiee, and elevates the soul of, man, until ) claiming an equality. with the best, he rt. ecta, as unworthy of his dignity, any poytical immunities over the hamolesi of hie. fellows. Yes-4t.is ao":iennobling principle—and may that spfilitwhieu animated one fatliersin'the reynlationary contest for its eitabliihtnent e,Mliiine' to animate us, their sons, in the impending struggle for its preseryn trtM.' I=lM "Sauna Grant Then." rPnam thatisislestaa (Mass..) Chromicls, AdadalMsm• ❑on and Hales Osman.) The anti-Butler papers are in an awk ward Gs when they join in the hue and, ery about the increase of Congressional salaries. They want • that • sr:spelt/at ; bvt still more, they want that acape-goat to he Butler. If they could only 'make Geberal Butler responsible for what they call the "back-pay steal," they -think they would , be sure to defeat hint. Bet; viewed as a scups -goal ? Butler mu/ hardly be.p.alled a brilliant emce e s& Akia bait. friends must admit sumach. Eicapeoloat i lig it, somehow, does-not seem ta be his for,* He lacks the genius for ttott sort of thing. The efforts of the .Boston rings to , Etsten on him the respontibility of the increase of the payof Congressnirn arid the pre'sident, hove thuS tar beet/ decided' failures. One Republican journal insists that oue man shall tie stamped with the' itatic4ey of it. 4?enp artint nen!: there is all otie persoo responsible above all others, (fur, that measure, let these pthichers of "righteousness righteousness shout 'Blond and spare not: 4 ‘Thoir President!",l'he President' conld hale killed the bill; yet be did not veto Rd.; He profited vastly erase by its pale than. any other man in America; yet be did tior y eto it He therefore, more than anfote 'trizip; mpre,"thistrlbe - 11orrse oft B4ireSentitti,:ig f i riialtiore than. th 4 Sen• at; is ,tl;Cnrttbor iiCeoe pp-called; "salary. grab." Bat he Ins /to canto to be Ashamed I of it It wain ilglo sttid . Just nteriosesti It pays our publie'ieriantrino Mose than ie.- t ßepresentatives,Sepatorth Judgcs,and l• Prodsleas of a greaßepulilic ought to Te. The outcry againkl) it is the iltovrFot klettelOif demagogues. . But if soniecine inttiebe tbroien into the pack, let President Grunt be - chosen as the vic tim. It is his right. Ile has earned the honor of the martyrdom. He got the chief benefit of the bill, he alone could .Nave defeated-it, and he, therefore, is its beet representative. It was a Republican cseasumisaased-brattrnitthenti-votes-and approved by a Republican President. The Party, as each, is as much responsible for it as forany act that they claim the credit of passing since Lincoln was elected.— Face the music, gentlemen! Only—if you are too cowardly to do so=don't im agine that you can swim Grant and sink Butler. They are in the some boat,—aud so is the Republican party. More Grabbing. The country swarms with grabbers, says the Patriot, from the credit mobilier grab bens who grabbed millions of acres of the public lamb and millionti of dollars of Uncle Sam's, down to the Lillipnt mi - nicipal grabbers, who put into their pockets all the city and borough takes they can possibly grab! To the nomenclature of multitudinous grabs'of high and low degree, which, un der Republican auspices, drain the pock ets of a long suffering people, we are en abled to add the State printer's grab ! It appears that Mr. Benjamin Singerly, the State printer, found weighty reasons for presenting to the- reform convention his little bill for work done, amounting to $21,835.90, which, under the public print ing laws and the terms of his contract, the committee on accounts and expendi tures, appointed by the reform conven tion, felt themselves obliged to rednce to the modest sum of $9,338.27. The at tempted grab of the State printer amounts - merely to $1,,487.63 ! a mere drop in the ocean,. compared with the magnificent grabs which have lined the pockets of so many distinguished Republican officials! Although ifr.Singerly has, for the mo ment, failed to'clptch his prey. be will no doubt End a way to avoid the argue eyes of the reform convention committee, and will succeed in submitting, his claims to a more congenial committee who go, on principle, for the grab game! "Addition, insision, and Silence" Convention. . , The *Publican ,State ) mvention has met.and adjourned. says the Pittsburg Posti.after having nominated the Hon. Isaac G. Gordorr, of Brookville, Jefferson minty, for Sapreme 'and 'Hon. Robert W. Mackey, of Allegheny county, the,presea t incumbent, for State Treasur er.: hale°, es it has done niany times be fore, adopted,o string of riesdlutions for troneombe. 0 / pitting to atent'on the fact that`the RePuhlican party is alone respon sible for ail the_ corruption and 'bad man agement iuthcted anew.. and Nation since-IB6o.—The Convention, among other-thing& deal:nil:WS special legislation. Everybody knows that that Party'alorie baslgiven ' de till 'the special legislation'wp love beeri"inllicted with 4FV 6 4,the past do z en years. It declares in favor of the public lands being reserv ed for, actrialsettlOrs, when• it is clear that most of the public domain (the New York BAjirrottristradye all) has 'been voted away ft l 44it#P:mident. The increase of rotaries is -deemed unwise and the act should be repealed, but no allusion is niade hi.the recnids which Show that the Radicals in Congress tutilllreindeet Grant are the eldPi#l; betides, oeinvitation is &maths President to seturn his extra grab of dee handled thousand dollars.— The ttsfatiatioisti of the administration in resi44,t9 taidalinaiind the South are en. dousettand the farmers and ~miners are sytapatbithd with. All of which looks very willoa paper ;andmight avail, pro vided,the People - had not been failed by 1164.4-traps° often before.and if the Credit. Hobilier and other steals and wrung doing's were not so fresh In their memories; %ranch for theldatform to witith we shall make farther allusion during the progress of the Campaign. Air. Gordon, the candidate for Supreme Judger, who was nominated on the tenth ballnk hrbut little known outside the lo cality which he resides. His record is riot now at band, but...will be examined In ample, time to give the people a chance to judge of his ability,ond fitness for the high position. to Which he aspires. Mr. !lackey is so well known in this Ifxiality pi* there is little . use lit going tnto lengthy remarks concerning his biography. Heis. prominently connected witb.Penusylvarties must corrupt ring— tool of Biatotrearneron, and if success- Stil; thepeople need expect no . improve in4he isairageinentof. affair' s to his Apartment of the . State government.— Altogether we lewd the' ticket as weak and one that shrewd management on the part of their onaotienTi can defeat. I thistramocraticrOotiviention Which hi to artiCiable atlYilkesbarre on the 27th, ' Ar* 4iiety if it ignores localites atthgetfr grin the selection of .candidates. Let the , mild,' Popular then anti thtise "thbwing ' the beat: itiord'orilY tunitinated.'and Tr ibrvilitbiral of an outspolieri.Plat fortad tbs.Nirreamtio masses enforced by •the whey, hattest4biukin g, -but disgusted *caw thoivisteitiorr, will not hesitate' tolatlyirrtheir support. And ticittrithstandia,g:the majority promised to be arann*tored for _the op , positioUie s wi do look ape err our prospects as exce edinglyedingly and that wisdom and , slisereticir on our .part will'bring' same. , iatrour actions be such as to deserve victory,. even if 'we are again swindled out irof it,. Sooner or istar sr day retsthatiou - is .sate 'to mime. , e,Quel4lon . s .. for Tre!leurors When atnan holding , the responsible office of - Custodian of the people's money askEs4 re-election, It, is his first duty to give ii'`clear and circumstantial explana nation of grave suspicious existing as to his mode or exifoi.tiug It will be in Urdet nian , 'for City Treas urer, Widener, or any one of his ninny organs, to explain' how two women hav ing no legitilhate access to the City Trees dry, Caiird attain titian - Ili hires overhien - tY thousand dollars worth of city bonds. and after being bound over and a true bill found against them fur larceny, es cape trial. The smothering np of this affair in violation of law, which makes the compounding of a felony a high of fence, increases the suspicion which at taches to it of which no explanation has yet been attempted to the public; on the contrary, every public officer whose duty it was to expose and prosecute the crime seems to have been anxious to bash it up. State Treasurer Mackey 'will also do well to explain the deficit exhibited with minute particularity by Mr. John H. Or vis, of Centre county, in the last, Legit , - lature. His exposition of the facts has been thus condensed : Taking Governor Curtin's last message for authority it appears that on the Ist day of December, 1866, the State debt amounted to 835,622,052 16, the items of which are furnished in that officiel paper. These figures of Governor Curtin are borne out by the official reports of John F. Hartranft, the then Auditor-General and of Wm. H. Kemble, the State Treas urer. In FebruarT, 1867, the new Governor, Geary, signed an act of Assembly authori zing a six per cent, loan of 823,000,000 in order to take op over-due bonds bear ing live per cent. interest—tlins increas• ing the liabilities of the State 8230,000 a year—one per cent. upon the 823,000,000. During that year the sum of 820,918,829- 89 was paid on the public debt, 181,794,- 744 50 of which was paid out of the sink ing fund, and 819,i24,185 39 out of the $23,000,000 loan—leaving of that loan 8,886,814 68 still to be applied. Governor Geary in his message of Jan uary, 1868, states the debt to be 837,- 704,409, 77, and be repeats this us tau sum of the debt in his third annual mes sage; and follows this by the statement that np to November 30, 1869, 84.899.- 86882 bad been paid, and that the total debt on that day was 832,814.550 95. Iu his fourth Message Geary sa - ,s that on January 15, 1867, the debt was 237,704,- 409 77 ; that $6,592,784 87 had been paid ,up to November 30, 1870, and in Ills List message he says that during his siv year, the payments had amounted to *10.602 622 64, or 29 per cent. nit the debt as crai on December 1, 1866-837,704_40;1, _ •• - ‘ ,12 m 2 "--4- '- found the debt to be e 37,764,409 77 when he began his first term; when cnriin, and:thirtranft, and Kemble—the Gover nor, the Auditor-General and the titai, Treasmer—all unite in offlei illy statin l . it to have been 835,622,152.16. Geary re pOrhirtliat 810,092,662:44 bad be-ii paid wring hie sis years ; which, if Curtin aad Hartranft and Kein4le wet,. oirreer. should have made the debt ,tow €t24,c19.. 388.62, instead of 827,303.594.64, as h reports it. What has become of the 82,- 674405.02 L-the difference in tb,..se La . " sums? - These are very pertinent questions tv Treasnrers who have been able both to obtain re-nominations—which is intend ed to exclude the inquiry that follows a change in office. The questions have been asked often, and•the press, whose function it is to an : ewer, seems to have been enjoined to Bit leoce. It is time for them to break it, now.—Age. Special Notices. RONTON FLIRTATION SIGNALS, Sent on receipt of M cents. Culgoe Printnig Ind - Pon! linking House, ZG Vesey Street, Sew Yott. .4 GENTS everywhere to iron our new non novel Ern. brolderinv ' Machine. Sri d for illostrated WAY?ED Circular. to MalEro Manufactoriog Com Pohl. Mroddovtr. New York. THE PARLOR COMPA-TION. Every Lady wants one! Every Man ought to have one I Sent on receipt of Ten Cente. Addreva L. 1. lIIME 1U Seventh Avenue, N. Y ME BECRWITE BM Portable Family Readily 'Machine on 81 Day? Trial. Mao, wdrantages orer Qt. Sadder:flop_guaranteed, or $2O refunded. Seat complete, with fall dlreetiona.. Beckwith Sawing Illtehine Co., ball Broadway, N. Y. 77/E FEW ELASTIC =CRS. An Ittiportonflnrention. It retains the Iluptnre at ail ttromand ander the hardest exeicire or itererestotrain. It In .on with =that, and If kept on night and ilsyr effatts a permanent care In a few week.. told cheap. and lent by Mali when requerted. Circulars free, when ordered by leurr sent to The Elastic Truro Co.. No. Q 33 Broadway. Now York City. Nobody urea ?dotal Ogling Theses; too Wont); Flip MT too frequently. WAGER , FIT ALLSTIO AdB WILLITIO *worm. Antyper son. old pr young. of either sex. no make from 10 to per week , at home day or setning. 'Wanted' ell: Suitable to either city, or country. and any seinen of the 'rat. This It a raja oppottiwlty for time who are out of work, sod ma of money, to make an inda. pendent living, no myna] beingrequired. oarpatnuh let. "NOW TO MANE A LIYINO," giving full !intent. oeS o t to receipt or ten cents. Addnue. A. BURTON At CO.. Morris/um, Wenteleater Co., N.Y. Apra 23, ]EA.-arorly. • TIM CORPE4IOI7B OF AN INF...ILIA . • - Pcfitotiii) •s • slung's:nand for the Delwin Of IMMO Mat saw arnsits who staler from NERYOUSLEBILI. TY, LOSS OF MANUOIL/D. etc.,•eopplying fds Maze of 6{/teirro. 'Written by one who cured himself after undergoing eonsiderable quackery, and sent Wei:dire; airing a port.paid directed. envelope, ' stdfcrers are invited - to Andres/ the antbor, NATIIANULL 114.6.7YA11t. • Btlx,l,s4.llroOlilytt. iota! IStiv,lB73.—mer ' • • ' Z&3 1 24E 4N) TgA4 OF 'JIM The mires, Anxieties and misfortunes of life Lave as much to, do with shortening it 26 die essa: They are in feet the source of many ail ments Skid physical disabilities. Nervous weak ness,ltlyspesis, aflectlons of the liver,disturban snots of, the bowels, headache, :hypochondria and monomania are-. among these distressiug fruits. It is, therefore, of great importance that persons whose minds aretapprmstsi with heayy business responsibilities,, or harassed by, family troubles, or excited by speculation, or perplexed, by* multiplicity of enterprises, or in anyway overtaxed oroverworked, should keep up their Mamba by the daily use of a wholesome tonic. ThOusands of persons. thus .circurnstanced are enabled to bear up against the . difficulties in which they are - Involved, and to retain their strength, health and mental clearness, ' by the raptilar.,use of flostetter's.,,Stontacb -.Pew Advertisements. tseWeir are proud- to atter„,k the body , '-• , - wheat del:tith e d andlmiken down by over-much nem AT: TIM" rs - 11- STATES TEA 00., braitrwoik or.-exhansting physical labor - ;':are • kept at blv lot the repLstant power with which' this ineoMparable tdnic 'endows the nervoult BURA'S NICIIOLS,Ag'ts tht , sl;al organs. At thls Season, when the heat is evaporating the elements of strength from every pore, an invigornnt is nit soluiviV essen litilJ , .tire s.ifety !nut ,coniliwkof the and Ls 'required peen by the 'w e're robust if they desire to keep their athletic ea liabilities in status quo. Ilemv n course of s Bitters is itarticularly.usectil at this pt..rletl4of the year ttS a fierencp against.the in. visible disease afloat in a sultry atmosphere.— Itits-timmnsit-potent ofiti-mrmenuttive medi eines, and liar all complaints which tared the I stomach, the liver and the bowels and inter fere with the perfect digestion and assimilation of flash it is the standard remedy , Aug. fl.-w 4 New Advertisements. FURNINTIIIIE WARE! EvERYTIIING NEW AND STYLI:44 .1 3 1. m. eT 31:3 em , "mx_sElniEs 60 Washington. St., Binghaniton, Consiming ut everything 'mineable that .busiuess. Repairing praiiiptly done. UNDER rttf.o - ? HMG 43. !Eirier.olo.ltlr e PRICES lINASON ABLE. tirrtl•ractinn cuaranteed. llisc;liamtun, N Y., Aogu4t SIINITEHASNA COM./ INSURANCE AGENCY, 31/Ircb iii. it z. crepe, Pa. Oamranies Itsopre anted, all atastaah sad Bailable. C.CIII. Friniuln Fire In,. Co., Phil ,t-89r1i.7. 16 Cnnt loontnl. Nev. York.. .. :nem . -. • i• oitara Faroirrie • `tint Int .• York. Po Win.takloo And the [titer n'e In ‘, CO., of Liverpool and London. I write Colicle• in [he above, Coranontra. and liowire property nzato-t In,. and Wonoma Orr err lightntwd. thank prople of oar romily for so t oorh of their patron/ITc in he pion, tool proollir that all hnrininoi en. tromi•vi 10 nto will receive ddireful unit prompt attention All 10n.... fairly and promptly. ndinwed I am also agent for the North Amerie r Motto Life Insurance Company of Novii York wkirti ;tikes a p they quarlol, ,, i—f,m,, ao National Rank !Cot.. 00Ice [Am. Wanton's llrrdw•re S[orr. Nrty rennet:tinily, Aug. NI. /873.-4, lIENRY C. TYLER. Public Sale, The. mhwrrlber, havin: nold his Firm,mill ni public wale, on Tuesday, Sept. ed, 11471, nn the form late'' , nectiplitzt ty Altn. In Ilrldgiewater Town strip, the fotiowino PrOLowti ‘ontt: ONE PAIR OF lIRAVY TRAM lIORSEM, 5 choir, CO. 3 yearling heifer., 2 calve, *bruits, breedinmir. I loather u 1 ilemuccat Prokmn. I g amber rleign. I iigid nieldh. sled, filition2 I Fete doable h 2 puree hay !lurk-, and pul. Mr., mowing machine, bump., rah., Inrk•, - coke.rrosr.mr• rook am 010. V. lekrlvr ..i ..•.1.111.1ng . room Mo. e,lioreall, loonna hnLrz.. berNte4d, bed.. et , en lorn ;Ale. 1.11 Irnf Inn crock. cry. J .klii;; carpet., •Lraml• fere, charnirm machme.•eltenm. pnly , . 10g0 . .., rail.. •1.100. bout. and man, other thin, ton mlamron. to mention it... •I the semr tm e end ;eat e, I I; ~ rte, loin; reo, butta T6IX6 ,5% yr bo , . rash ; minor $l. and lefeettbm ffwm. pic mointo , rtedit ; OSr Vat. our yLar'• crmlit, wills Intore , t and appmerrot me unity M. .1. 11.% liIiINGTON. lIIMMIMIECIIM optrnre. A nd. . _ Iron in the Blood MAKES Tilt illgAK STRONG. Vic Peruvian, iritrzep, a Protect ed Solution of the Protozide of Iron, is so combined as to have the character of an aliment, as easily ingot - led and assimilated with the blood MI the simplest food. It increases the quantity of Nature's Olen Vitalizing -Agent, Iron in the blood, and cures "a thousand ills," simply by Toning tr p, Invigorating anti Vitalizing the System. The en riched and Matta:ea blood per meates every part of the body, repairing da»iages and waste, searching out morbid secre tions, and leaving nothing for disease to feed upon. This Is the secret of the won• derful success of this remedy in curing Dyspepsia, Liver Com plaint, Dropsy, Chronic Mar rhcea, Bons; Verve= Affections, C' ills and 'Pevers, Rumors, Legs of CoUstitational Vigor, Diseases of the Tiitlneys and Bladder, Female Complaints, and all diseases efrriyhuding its a bad stale of the b lo od, or ac, teatipattied by debility or a lam state of the gffSgellt. Being five .from Alcohol, in any form e its imetwizing , effects are not fol. inoed by corresponding recto- Bon, but are permanent, in/U -sing strength, vigor, and new life into all parts of the system, and building up an Iron Con. stilution, Thousands have been changed by the useof this remedy, from weak, sickly,offering crea tures, to stron g, 'smithy, and happy men and women/ and invalids cannot reasonably hes. Bate to glue it a trial. See that each bottle has PERU VIAN SYRUP Moro► in the glass. letunpblOto Free. SETH W. FOWLS & SONS, Proprietors. Ra 110Iton Place, Barton. BOLD DT DRUGGISTS GLILYRALLT. Igilaq AL LI Persons Indebted to the late Jinn of Bend. GrlVls t Co. AIM hereby notriled that our "I . 4I3CSITIES require an lIINGEDLan settlement. We Trill attend psrsuts•lly for Inst purpose loan the fifteenth of September After that date.wer snsll be compelled Id place .X..Xa accocuts In other hands fur culleMloo. READ, ORIFFIE, lb CO Montrose. Actg. Ctn. 1871-2 w.• A ..TIMINISTR ATOM'S NO - tlE.—ln tar, estates .11ti Anastasia_ Maddock.. tate or Middletown, deed. letters of AdmlrdateatlonOn the said ..Nate baying b6rit granted to - She' undersigned, all persons ow. fag told estate. - am requested to make Mello:snare Psfruent. and person.. basing claims aralnot lord maws car rev:mite* to present them without delay. . 7 ' JOHN O. MADDOCIL t fl aw,. Middletown. June MAW.' MADDOCK. '- lath, IStd—wr. Dlllinfrmw eort;ra-ors. T . Wegtcra, the Erna of 11V7 STpCK,fr. 1 IlAWLKIC•cremi. eilet. • The =manta of the late arta are trlth thy indent:rot ed: lead MUST TIE s 6't TLEU without drlny. .Minarae.:Aug. ste,:usta: ' .• N. HAWLEY. MU. 1 3 41 6 1..1P.11air.).; will continue the 31Cat:Anrketi.and . will he glad ,to see all the old patrons of thC.,Slarket, as well as new ones. Ilustrose, Aog. 13 , 073.-ir4 . . • IVlnntrose Reduction in Fare, fro/I'4o cts. to 25 ctn. TO AND FROM. MON;FRI:151 RORO.: „ .On and trftr August 4th, Pamentrew a lIONTROSE ITALWAY will dud • comhatable I'our•tloree Couch 'saltbox . at all times. Lome Tartmir Ilchtsn'at4:ls a. la.. and Itls p. m Fare, Twenty-Fiie Cents. RAYNNTOUD, Prcer. 314min:we, Atig.l2l.-w*. Montrose, Pa. TAIs Tea Is pat rdi In AIR TIGHT TIN CANISTERS 03 ".14 SlrClnth, which Is certainly a EMS.' desldrndum7 arCall and act a can and try Its meritr. 74oUtrpte, July pl. 1873.—tf. . _ ~§t.._. M.._~ . w~ THE MOST POPULAR MEDICINE EXTANT. i 1840 Over thirty Twirls 1873 ESilzuoc. 'glum Xxxtricociszcsticsaa. Off}' PEE .rulr x).e.-criErsei PAIN-KILLER. THE PAIR-KILLER lo ld rqcmlly applicable and efficacious to young or THE PAIN-KILLER To both an internal and external remedy. r•IN.KILLEH will care Fever and Agne When other remedies have faller . rri. PAIN KILLER Should he n.ed at the first manifestations of a Vold or Caregh. THE PAIN•KILLKIT To the (treat Pamily Medicine of the Age. "T Colic. T HE PAIN.KILLEII in good for maids and Borne. T HE r i. A . IN th . , KIT.L Verdict lt of the People to its favor. THE PAIN KILLER (liven Unmet...al Satisfaction. THE PAIN-KIII.F.:R A o i moot a certain cure for CIIOL ERA, and ha. without doubt, been more pm :resign! In coring thrs ter rible disc:tee than any other boo wn remedy. ear cores Ilk nowt eminent and elollfui physirlaus. to India. Atria, And Chios, where thin terrible dirtier Is erer more or lets pram-silent, the P tIN-KILLKIt Is eonvidered by the natives. as well a. European residents In those el.• Mal Co. a sure remedy. fruit i l i l..l r l b N l i t4 ll l ., , l.n rmpred with hill dirhaihwit for triC PAIN•KILLE.II I• sold by all druggists and dealer, In Family tonIICP. Aug W.1,4:9 73 1 .302,1 )48 TO TJIX PUBLIC. Tug Pam-Km:3oc manufactured by Penn ' s DA% is k. Sus has won for itaelf n reputation unsurpassed in medical preparations. 77ic of the dew.,nd for the Pain - Killet lan novel, interesting, and surprising -feature in the hismr) of this medicine. The Pain-Killer is now regularly sold iu large and onviday iArron , ing quantities, nut only to general agents in ever) State and Ten - hory of the Union, mid every Provinee in British America, lint to BIM,. Ayres, Iliazil, l ' oigtniv, Peru. Chili. 5:01 other South Anirrii - an States, to the 'sandwich Isle., 111 Cuba and other \Vest India IsLouis, to England and (;omit en MI Europe, to Mimani - liique, Mit:imisear Za d. ni her Alri can land. In .‘11.41 r lia,nnd lidrnna , Bangiam 01 other:Mir - es in India. It has also lasal trill lo tint vie it there is nny Inert or any inland Lit) . in Africa or Asia. which is Ireton - Myst lir A inerimin :0111 Eurt prat nth-- -binaries , . Ira\ viers or traders, into the Pain-K.oler has not been introduced. Ihr nt rt. ;mother trrtiint el 01+ natiorhalili• tuctlit me It 1% not nil, the thing et as ter% bfltby ill cvnfv.a. fir lit it I.IA. fir., but rir rholert, or nnc ...rt t I • rim pi mit. It n n Ille I:sr Ole nunln the event irii ' i ” :11::; 1 „;, ". . 17:, ;hr"'Lew' orrl In, I.lr ail curb rent pin inM nc well i ts its iTettt.t, lane (-mop? lint and other kindred ,11,,,,rdera. r :mil (elan, r.th• ker,iro hub, and r tltlbLullteiii,tt has beim prole,' be the in4.l. :11111,1(14M and eonvincmg •rill. and' t•. I, In Inyaluttlite tried) int- The tit lire in po.sesion of let- Iron roin. of 111.• hiyhrst eit:ll,elPr and ing in 111101111VOIVII fermi: the corm+ etTemoil and the niiii.famory remilts , thderrel, viiriviy of ranen by the of CAA gr-it medicine. That the Pain Killer in of nil itn proprietor claim 'l.r I wooly iirovval by the nrimirnllell pop triti lllrnallaint,l. II I.l