=ma FARM AND, HOU_SPDLET, Farm Work Poi Jpno. Hoeing and weeding will be the all im portant work of this month with most farmers and gardeners. If taken early, brit little trouble Will •be experienced in keeping down the weeds. bat if -you pro crastinate until the weeds get the start-of you . ,they will be found very difficult to sa in the garden the work of transplan ting tomatoes and other plants that were started in but beds of,. cold frameada , the Mite Moving . 'Planis much care' is neceiitry; atid'we 'have alwdys found it a good plan to set a few dozen according to their size, in a pail with just water en opgh'to thdronghli wet•llie roots` and dirt adhering to them, and then taking them out one at a time as we go along in the row, set, them in freshly prepared holes and cover immediately with dry fine soil, while the roots are pt dripping. In this way the dry earth adheresmore close• Iy to the roots, sad the plants will. stAr t i ranch 'atiortei:and with lessthan 4 . 41 in sOiltoptigliip to Crumble. The prob able reason of this is that the roots. ond soil come more closely iu contact,. thus obviating little air holes around the roots to cease their decay, and perhaps - the death of the plant. When but few plants are to be moved. they may be watered as soon asset sufficiently to pack and settle the earth around the roots, taking care however to cover the surface with dry earth to prevent evaporation and baking. have always found the best time for transplauting49 be just before a.raill aud the poorest time immediately after. Evergreens should he found in every garden and they may be moved it cure is taken to keep the roots from drying. Tur nips of the late variety should go in the last of the month if at. all. The ;turnip needs warm, sandy land, and some kind Of special fertilizer, if one could only know where to buy it. We have much faith in roots, in place of hay, but would feed them ia small quantities more as a kind of dessert or appetizer than to save hay, and to make our stock eat and digest more. Orchard grass and clorer will be in prime condition this month and if cut then and well cured will afford excellent hay for winter, Tithothy will probably be ready to cut the latter part ofs the month. Do not let grass get ton ripe or too dry. Mowing machines, horse rakes and all other haying tools should be re paired and put in, order early. As a peo ple, we have not yet begun to realizP how much of the value of our hay crop is an nually lust for the want of earlier and-bet ter curing. Butter is apt to be plenty in market this mouth, and any surplus should be laid down and kept till the •`short spell" that always comes in August, sooner or later. It is folly to crowd our produce on a glutted market, when by proper management - we may take advantage of a good market—Cl/atm/gag Farmer. • GroViing and Fattening Hog•, The hog is accustomed to a great vari ety of food. He will eat animal and her baceous food alike—there is nothing that comes amiss to him, and he thri&e upon all. To select food fur him, then, is not the thing. Though you can fatten them on one kind of food, you cannot do it economically. Take what breed yon and it is economy in producing the great est result from a given amount of food— that is the point that gives the profit in husbandry. The cheapest food, thou is to be sought if it answers the. purpose. By the cheapest we mean also that which accords with his nature, and which he relishes and thrives upon. Corn alone, though the great hog feed—made a speci alty—is not the most advantageous. The exception to this in in the West, vrhere corn is very cheap. But even there,other grain and feed added, will produce a bet ter growth of muscle and fat. All ani mals require a variety of food, and the hog is no exception. the appetite then will be satisfied, and all the wants of his system supplied. Grass in summer snits him; he revels in a clover field. Milk suits him the whole year round, and !W -aists a rapid growth. Milk coutdins a great variety of elements in solution, and is an aid to the digestion of the more sot= id food. lie likes vegetables—they stim ulate his appetite, not only for the vege tables, but for the more concentrated and richer food. Though a "hog," he is gov erned by the same physiological princi ples as other animals, and is, therefore, liable to disease—to many ailments ; but most of these are caused by abuses is management. Where he is well'attentled to, and supplied with a variety of good food, he seldom suffers from disease. The Beat Breed' of Coin , a. -0- Much diversity of opinion exists among agriculturists as to the beet breed of cows for the production of milk. It is only by making careful tests, that a satisfactory conclusion can be arrived at. In ordina ry dairies, iweire' quarts of milk to one pound of butter is considered a fair aver age. A test made between the milk of several grades of cows, shows that 18 quartsof milk from a grade Durham cow will produce one pound of butter ; while GI quarts of milk taken from a thorough bred Guernsey cow, produced the same amount of butter. The above test shows that the milk of the Guernsey cow was almost three times as rich in butter as that of the Durham. In this respect, however, different cows of the same breed may, and doubtless do, vary much. The quantity of milk given by each cow should also be taken into account. A Durham cow 'that would give three times as much wia Guernsey, even though not so tidi, would be more valuable. Tito Potato Bug. —O-- All steconnts agree that the potato bug movement this •sea son is unusually early-and formidable. Mr. Joseph Bennett informed its on Sat urday that on a field of potatoes un the island, 'which he planted in April, there are an avenige of nine bags to each pota-. so. in a patch belias on the bluff" they are tot - quite so bad. Mr. W. P. Fiasier estimates the number of bugs on his at half a dozen to each plant. lie has no ticed many of them on the wing, and they invariably fiy eastward. Of course, un less the bugs come to a premature and unexpected end, they svillcompletely de. strop the potato crop this season. It is said, however, that a certain species.of ant Ivis appeared and is destroying them in great numbers. The propagation of the anti potafo bug aut should be en couraged by all means.--Iftescafiine(lo.) Jocrital• ti. Lt' HUMOROUS. A Slight NOlstakel. Chubb's PIA( got out of order one day about Christmas time; and began to strike wrong. That was the cause of the fear ful excitement in his house one night. They were all - in bed sound asleep at mid night when elle clock suddenly struck five. The new hired girl, happening to wake just as it began,heard it i and bounced out. of bed, tinder the impression, that morning had come ; and as it is dark at five a. in., just at that seasonois at mid night, she did not perceive her mistake, but went down into the kitchen and be gan to get breakfast. While she was bustling about in a pretty lively manner, Chubb happened to wake, and he beard the noise. He opened his room door cau tiously, and 'crept softly to the head of the stairs to listen, He could distinctly hear some one moving about the kitchen and dining room, and apparently packing up the china. Accordingly be went back to his room and woke Mrs. Chubb, and gave her orders to Boring the rattle out of the front window the moment. she beard his gun go off. Then Chubb seiz ed his {Cowling piece, and going down to the dining room door, where he could hear the burglars at work, he cocked the gun, aimed it, pushed the door open with the muzzle and fired. Instantly Mrs. Chubb sprang the rattle and before Chubb could .pick up the lacerated hired girl the door was burst open by two po licemen. who came into the dining room. Seeing Chubb with a gun, and a bleeding woman on the floor, they ima g ined at a murder had been committed , and one of them trotted Chubb off to the station house while the other remained to inves tigate things. Just then the clock struck six. An explanation ensiled from the girl, who had only a few bird shot in her leg, and the policeman left to bring Chubb home:'-He arrived at about three in the morning, just as the clock was striking eight. When the situation was unfolded to him, his first action was to jam the butt of his gun through the clock, whereupon it immediately struck two hundred and forty three, and Chubb pitchrd it over the fence. He has a new clock now, and things are working better. _ The shirt that opened Behind A man in Greenfield, whom re will call William, got up the other morning and proceeded to put on a shirt which his wife had just made fur him after a new pattern. As she stood at the mirror, curling her hair, she heard a suppressed sound, half way between a groin and an oath, and turning round said, laughing, " why my dear :" " Shut up:" he ejacu lated, " you are a born fool. Never let a woman attempt to fit a shirt ; she can't do it ; it is one of the impossibilities." "But, William?" depricatingly. " Don't !ou talk—let me talk. Do you think I'm going down in this rig ? A pretty dis position you've got ; just because I hap pened to find a little fault last week, with your ironing, you must go and make me a shirt without a bosom : Such mali cious conduct. madame, is unpardonable. Shut up, I say, I won't hear a word ; I when a starched shirt front is the only I finery tbst a man indulges in, is he not excusable for being particular in regard ito that, I should like to know ? And this think sets like the devil. Look how 1 baggy it is here ;n front, and it feels be hind as if there was a board bound across one;" walking, np and looking in the glass hitching up first one shoulder and then the other, after the indescribable macner ,of men trying a new garment. His wife dared not speak, hut bringing a . good erred mirror from the next room, she held it op behind him for a moment and per ceived by his chop fallen expression that he saw tha point, and the front, she run down stairs to settle the coffee, and See 1 that Bridget had set the table geometri -1 cally. , As William- walked, _down to his offix that morning he said to the first i friend that he met, " I telt you Tom, that little wife of mine is a born genius. Inok at this shirt now ; she cut and made it I all herself. Do you see, it's open behind; no CDU !down tied button boles to botherta fellow. Just send your wife up for the pattern." And it was by the way of Tom's wife that Lizzie first . knew that William was pleased with his shirts. The English Anti-Tobacco Society wanted evidence of the evil effects of the weed,took into their services Professor Newman. Ile hat never used the stuff in any form ; and the argument was that he should take a good smoke, get sick, and then describe his horrible sensation is a course of lectures. The Professor got his pipe and smoked half an hour, but singularly enough he did not get sick at all ; and, so far• from being ut terly disgusted,he just keeps on smoking, and the Society folks are a little disgus ted. Some days ago a letter was received in New Orleans,' directed "to the biggest fool in New Orleans." The Post-master was absent, and on hie return one of the young clerks informed him of the receipt of the letter. 'And what became of ite" inquired the post-master. "Wby," replied the clerk, "I did not know who the biggest fool in New Orleans was, so I opened it myself." "And what did you find in it ?" inquired the Post-master. "Wby," replied the clerk, nothing but these words, "Thou art the man I" A young student has written a twelve verse poem,entitled "we kissed each other by the sea." "Well, what. of it?" asks a Western journalist; "the seaside is no bet ter for such practice than any other local ity." In fact we have put in some very sweet work of that kind on the tow path of a,canal in our time, but did not say anything about it in print." The Titusville Herald put it thins : Our doctors end surgeons begin to feel happy again, now that the base ball sea son bas opened. The sawbones always calculate on a harvest of broken noses and fractured skulls from this manly pas time. . `,"l can't pass you to night," said the doorkeeper of a courtroom to an invete rate deadhead. "Well," responded the veteran, "I don't want you to pass me ; you just stay where you are, and I'll pass you,' and be paned. "I say,”said a rough fellow to p fop with conspicuous bow-legs—"l say, don't you have to hare your pantaloons cut with a circular. 63W ?" Oh; bother. cremation I We 'earn our lir:Lig—and we ~don't want to be compel le4,,to urn our dead., "And so we go," said a member of a Boston School' , OotnraithWr "our great Men are - fast departing—first Greeley, then Masi' and now Sumner—and I don't geel very well myself." An Ohio husband sold his oxen to get money for his wife to elope with, bat he doesn't want any sympathy. He says he'd have thrown in horse or two if she had demanded it. "Gasoozline is a new Debuque slang word, meaning to "houeyfugle." If any one shouldn't know what"honeyfagling any one we explain that it is the Kansas syno nym for "hornswoggle." The tarriff on snuffis fifty cts. a pound. This makes it mighty expensive to sneeze It seems as if a fellow couldn't blow his nose without paying a tax upon the perform ance. " like crying children," said an old bachelor to a friend. '•flow extraordi nary. Why." "Because they are taken dint of the room'+ was the hard-hearted r ply. The editor of the. Leavenworth Argus remarks :in the obituary of his pa per.—"We went into the bulginess deter mined to ran it or bust. &have busted.' A three•year-old child down east re cently said,"There's two things I 'spier-- Sundays and dyin'." IMscellaneons TRE MONTROSE DEMOCRAT For 18'74 CONTAINS MORE LOCAL SEWS, MORE GENERAL NEWS, BETTER STORIES, BETTER FAMILY READING, MORE CHOICE POETRY, MORE FARM MATTERS, AND NJ • Batter Paper TITAN EVER BEFORE. Subscribe for It Totirscif Ask Tour Sclebbors to Subscribe El per Year in Advance FLC:)33INCDPZIS' Southern Tier FURNITURE EMPORIUM! 88 Washington Street, =lsiah/a:zest <>lca., 2g". "N".. Yon NT ill Find the LAItOEST AND ZEST ASSORTMENT OF Prl73El.lq IT ICTPLM =l2 At the Lowest Prices of any Store in Southern New York. WI Goode Sold m WARRATILD as Iteprmated. E. D. ROBINSON M "1 111.1 . 22..it1ar301 AT WILLIA.M. SMITH'S. . nittenalva Furniture iiVaseroom you find the larges starlet FIRST CLASS AND COMMON vrapura arrcrprom To be found in thla election-of the conntry, of bis own manufacture, and at mites tbst cannot Milt* give satin faction. lie makes tlassery best EXTENSION TABLES In the Country, and WAIIIIANTS them. UPHOLSTERY WORK Of all kind. done to the neatest manner. laS ra. rx fa. 33 3o 33 ea • OF VAUTOCTI PURE .NO.I MATRASSES, COMMON MATRASSES. UNDERTAKING The subscriber will hereafter make to...Wen:acing a *ecialty to his business. fierier le it completed a lOW and the emit e trgant In the, State, all needing his sereir . wlll Beetle tied topromptly and a• eathAci W. gnirrii ff. BOW. liontrosa,ll. 19:t—no6-Ir. • - Clothing, etc THE BOTTOM Hag Fallon Out of rs -*# G *JO c 8 C. B. PERRY'S, BINGIIAMTON, N. Y. An Immense Stock Just Bought from THE GREAT FAILURES of New England, at prices CHEAPER THAN EVER BEFORE KNOWN 13Ine1funton. Nor. 12. um. Miscellaneous PAINTS AND OILS A FINE STOCK AT R. R. LYONS & Co.'s Montrose, May 14. 1173. C WETS. CARPETS AT 30 CENTS AND PPWARDS —Less than N. Y. Prices— m., 14,'71. For Sale by B. 11. LYONS & Co SUGAR, TEA, COFFEE, and other ~-z•c:ocerleisi At Low Flowee et B. R. LYONS & CO.*B WALL AND WINDOW PAPERS. A Largo Stock, And Now Pattern■ Bereaved Elcry Week Direct Crow the ?Manufactory. B. B. LYONS & CO spool Tl2.lroikci. and John Clark's Spool Thread. White Blark. and Co..tred— from No. 8 to No. Val. at 75 ants per dust... N or sale by B. R. LTONS & CO I.4ontrose, May 14, 111 - 4 Z. --tf p ROCLAMATION IlEAll YE! 17F,A1l YE! All yc good people having anything to do be fore the Honorable Jude,. ut vi hat is good to eat and drink conic forth and give your attend ance, and your w•:mts shall he supplied ; and all men and a...mien who are summoned as ✓nr,,rr to try the good qualities of our goods please an swer to your nauns at first call and save your fines. And know ye all that A. Y. BULLARD is constantly meek ing large ialditions to his stock of Choice Grocerim and ProvLsion, soil; as Wheat and Buckwheat, Flour, Corn and Oat Meal, crushed Wheat and Oraham Flour,Hams. lard, and fish, dried fruit. and berriesfresh fruits and vegetables of all kinds, (in their season.) •ngurs, (manle,) also molasses and syrup, teas and coffee, of the very best qualities, spices, soaps, salt, crackers, and cheese, raisins, figs, gelatine candles, candies and nuts, books and stationery•, yankee notions, tobacco and cigars, canned goods, a rely large stock of the very best qualities, and all at extremely low prices for cash or ready pay. A. N. BULLARD Montrose, Jan. 7th Int A NEW AItitA.NG=EBTT ! PIANOS & ORGANS, At L. B.LEsbell'e Jewelry Stadfl, Vrhere■ larger and hotter stock of the following goods will he found than elsewhere In Northern Pentuyivanth: PINE AMERICAN \WATCHER; JEWELRY & CLOCKS SOLID SILVER & PLATED WARE, 'DIAMOND SPECTACLES, and a general assortment of Vusical Merchandise, Meet Music, Violin String., etc.. etc. All Fine Watch Repairingl Sawing Machine. and Or done, ( ts local.) by gans Repaired by L. B. Isbell. F. McMillian. & Vlelhnish. Mmltroso, Pa Sept. 10. 1873.-1• 11UNT BROTHERS, AORANTON, PA. Wholersle a Rota Peale:sin HARDWARE, IRON, STEEL, NAILS, SPIKES, SHOVELS, MITLDER'S HARDWARE, MINE RAIL, COUNTERSUNK .t T RAIL SPIKES RAILROAD it MINING SUPPLIES. CARRIAGE SPRINGS, AXLES, SKEINS AND BOXES, HOLM NUTS and WASHERS, PLATED BANDS, MALLEABLE IRONS, DUBS, SPORES, FELLOES, SEAT SPINDLES, BOWS, Se. ANVILS, VICES, STOCKS and DIES, BELLOWS', HAMMERS, SLEDGES . FILM &e. CIRCULAR AND MILL SA.WS, BFLTING, PACKING TACKLE BLOCKS, PLASTER PARIS CEMENT, HAIR A GRINDSTONES. FRENCH WINDOW GLASS.LEATHERd FINDINGS PAIRBANICS SCALES. V . RECEBOW & BROTIISR, General Undertakers DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF COF FINS, CASKETS, ETC., CIrMILXII.ELT EIMINT", .taerazt'aa ALL ORDERS PILOMPTLY ATTENDED TO /mil 23.1873.-tf S. S. CAMPBELL & CO WROISIILLI 11.1327WM1ZE1 OP FINE, PLAIN AND MOLASSES CANDY. Importer s and Dazes in FOICEIGN FRUITS NOTS,&t. Fire Works Constantly on -Hand. Ws. 422 Yarket Br. and 4/7Xtrchant Mach 16,1874.-Iy. w. 3 Drugs and Xedlthres. Dr. J. 'Walker's California Vinegar Bitters area purely Vegetable pripantion, made chiefly from the native herbs found on the lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains of California, the medicinal pro pertiei of which are extracted therefrom without the use of Alcohol. The question is almost daily naked, " What is the cane of the unparalleled successof Vorga...n Btr- Xmasl" Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the patient recov ers his health. They are the great blood purifier and n life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the system.. Never before in the history of the world has a medicine been compounded possessing the remarkable qualities of VINECiAII Brrnars in healing the tuck of every disease man is heir to. They ere a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic, relieving Congestion or In flammation of the lAver and V isceral Organs, in Bilious Diseases. If men will enjoy good health, la them use VmzoAn BrrrEns as a medicine, and avoid the use of alcoholic stimulants in every form. No Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not de stroyeo by mineral poison or other means, and vital organs wasted beyond repair. GrafPflti Ti10118:111d9 proclaim Vt.:moss Brmun the most wonderful lovigerant that ever =stained tho sinking system. Unions, Remittent, arid Intermit• tent Fevers, which are so prevalent in the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Mire , sissippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkansas, Bed, Colorado, Bra zos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah,Roanoke,James,and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country during the Sommer and Atu• tome, and remarkably so during seasons of untutnal beat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a powerful let:teepee upon these various organs, is essentially nee nary, There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dr.. J. WALKER ' S YINEGATI BITTERS, SS they will speedily remove the dark-colored viscid matter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restor ing the healthy functions of the digestive organs. Dyspepsia or In ah-, , esti On, Besdaoho, Pain in tie Shoulders, Coughs, Tightuesi of the fleet, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of S I the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bib. ions A thie ice Palpitation ef tie eart, Inflam mafiosi of the Lunge Pain in the region of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful s y m pt om ., mm th e efe.pringe of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. ;Scrofula, or MHz's Evil, White Swel lings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, St . voLlett Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous le t beemations, Indolent '.Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin e ure Eyes, etc., etc. In the?e, as in all other constitu! rioted Disco:me, \\. leererS Viszoeu Barrens have shown their great carative powers in the most Ole simile and intractable cases. For lit Umlaut ory and Chronic Rheumatism, Gent, Bilious, Remittent and Intermittent l'evere, Diseases of the Bleed, Leer, liednieei, and Bladder, these Bitters have no equal. Such D . /seam:a are caw, , ,1 by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases.—Persona en gaged in Paints and Minerals, stitch as Pitunbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and MISSES" as they advance in life, aro subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against this, take a dose of NV+ , v.u's \PLY LAJAS' P.lrrrais occasionally. For Shin Diseases, Eruptions, Totter, Salt Elieute, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pus ' tale,, Boa-3, Carbuncles, 'Ringworms, Scald Brad, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Seurfs, Discoloration, of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally due up and carried out of the system in a short time by the use of these Bitters. Pin, Tape, and oilier Worms, lurk ing in the system of so many thousands, aro effectually destroyed ancleremoved. Nu sys tem of medicine, no vermifuges, no anthel rail:Utica, will free the system Len worms like these Bitters. For Female Complaints, in young or old, married or single, at the dawn of wom anhood or the turn of life, these Tonic Bit ters display so decided an influence that improvement is soon perceptible. Jaundice.—ln all cases.of jaundice, rest easnred that your liver is not doing its work. The only sensible treatment is to promote the secretion of the bile and favor its re moval. For this purpose use VINEGAR B/T -ZERS. Cleanse the Vitiated Rlood when ever you find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when you ind it obstructed and sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is foul; your feelings will tell yeti when. Beep the blood pure, ante the health of the system will follow. D. DIcDONALD & CO.. Druggists and General ogonta, Ban Frauds., California. and tor. Washlnaton sod Charlton Ma., Saw York. Sold by 1.11 Druggists and Dealers. Sent. 10th,151-11. (OF ALL KINDS 3 ABEL TURRELL, DRUGGIST, 3314 - 03EIRT ChM 0 el:k3f3..Zifis • fa continually receiving NEW 1101tRti, and beeps con. thornily on hand ti full and dvvil rabbi i,ortnient of cen• time DREGS, 'MEDICINES, CHEMICALS, Putuis.lills Dr:studs, TEAS, Spicer, ann other grocerte, ware. liene- Il paper, glare-ware, fruit Jars, minors, lamps, chimneys, kerosene, machinery oils, tanners' oil, heats foot nil, refined Whale Oil, 011 for lanterns, oil for erwinti machines, 011ve 011,Sperm Oil bpirits Turpetv. ilne.'t tarnisher, Canarybeed. Vinegar Ylil3.h Conerb (rated Lye. Axle Tracer., huppnrrerr.lliedical Instruments, Shoulder Braces, Whit.., Hoer, Firm). Cartridges,. Powder, Shot, Lead, Caps, Illeattou Pow doe add Fuse, Violita.Strinita llowiLeic. Fluter. Fires.ctc.,Ftsh !looks and Linre.Bar and TolletSospe filar Ode, Hair lteetarert, and Hair Dyes. Brusher, Pocket Knives, Spectacles. Silver and ;laver rated S sumo, Forks, Eni•es, ,itc.,l)eutlst Articles. a Caner. al assortment of FANCY WIC 75, JEWELRY. and PERFI.73I Ear All thcleading amid beat kind. of PATENT .AIELleaNEti. The people are invited to call at the Drag and Variety Slide of ABEL T iIItELL. Feb. 1.1573. Eatablietted 1818 FIRE, LIFE, AND ACCIDENI Insurance Agency. capita. REPazarrED OVER 820,000.009 V. Rarsztov .4 Bno Dee. 1.1. 1R72. Jon WORK` 300 WOIIK AT TUN 0101. CE, CUE-LP! miscellaneous. C.II. SMITII, Mantroso. Pa, Drugs azui Mediclues, Iron in the Bicsk3 MAKES THE WEAK STROM The Peruvian Sprup,a Prefect. ed Solution of the Protozide of Iron. is PO combined as to have easilyte of an tdinsent,as digested and assimilated with the blood as the simplest food. It increases the quantity of Natures Oton Vitalizing Agent, Iron in the bloisd, and cures •.0 thousand ills," simply byToningup,lnvigorating and Vitalizing the System. The en-. Tidied and vitalized blood per. mealcs every pert of the body, repairing danatges and waste, searching out morbid seere.• tams, and leaving nothing for disease to feed upon. This is the secret of the.tvon derful success of this remedy in curing Dyspepsia, Liver Com plaint, Dropsy, Chronic Dior rhcca, Boils, NervousAffectlons, Chills anti Fevers, Humors, Loss of Constitutional Vigor, Diseases of the Ichlneys and Bladder, Fornab3 Complaints, and all diseases originating its a bad state of the blood, or ac-. companied by debility or a Imo state of the RySICM. Briny free from Alcohol, in any form, its energizing effects are not fol lowed by corresponding reac tion , but are permanent, in fis