Sljc 3cffcvsoninn. JglgRSDAY, U0VEHBEBJ17, 1859, . HT Since the late insane Insurrection .t. flarpar'd Ferry, headed by Jab" Brown, all kind of imaginable Hack iil.ebood& and gross, wilful porvor.-Jon-sha3ye been set afloat by the AdmiuUra tiqn Dmocratt; and as absurd as it may Mre.ni, they have made stronuou and per-i-iltuht efforts to oonnect the Republican Vwrttte iiriiK fhis crnrv affair, which filled Wall (except the Administration Demo .vralf) with surprise as well as sorrow, Hnd i.oni) could have more seriously regretted jt than the Republicans, for wo, buovrin bow hard run the Administration Demo crat!- were for political capital, believed thst -a any of theui would prove to be baSfVraeau and cowardly enough to try to .make us responsible for it, and this too without a shadow of evidence, ssvo that "wbtch their lying minds have invented , , The Monroe Democrat after having cowardly copied several articles intima ting and charging on the Republicans the authorship of the Harper's berry Insur rection, has, it would appear, come to the. .conclusion that his Adajiuistration broth er Democrat are rather out-doing him 'in ptaanncss, and in order to be equal with : them he published last week the following article, and by failing to credit it to any other source, assumed its authorship, and thereby gives in leave to" hold him re frponsible for it, w hich we accordingly do: "A Few Questions. What was 0-a ..watomie Bi0wu, the leader of the Harp er's Ferry Laurreetion, while iu Kansas? Ans. A R- publican. . What was this same man Brown ince, in Ohio, Massachusetts and Virginia I Ans. A Republican. Who have been the aiders and abet tors of the schemes of Brown and bis reb elsrl Ans Republican1 to wit Jo.-hua R. Giddings, Fred. Douglass, Gerrit Smith eud others. ' Wlnt wore the intentions of lirown 2 Ans. The overturning of the Govern ment of the United States, 3nd the frec uu'of the Slave of the South. Who pave him money aud means - to 3dfft?et 14s object I An. Members of the Republican par- Ar, , - Were uv Democrats connected with "tin? attempt T ' Ans. NOT ONE.' " Dohu BrowTn is not nor never va- a Re publican in theory or practice, But he ihos always been a professed bitter Abo 1litio:iit ; and while iu Kaunas, he fought tit-' Democrat-, who w,'re trying with all 'ileir isriffht to make Kansas a Slave State -Jtiy li-r'OQri voted. becaue he was oppos oil to sluvciy in any fbape or. form. At other times and place he voted against t!he Democratic party for precit-ely th Vntne reason. While iu Kan-as he fought the pro-Slavery Democrat on his own responsibility, and pr rernptorily refused, ito bo goTerued by tbo order of the Frcei State party, rrecpt wbeu it pleased hh fatiey to do so. Ivcxt the Republican ore charged gen erally with being &iders aud abetters o Blown and bis rebel, and to clinch tbi cbarge the name of Joshua R. Giddints fEred. Douglass and Geriit Smith, are 'mentioned as eoaolusite proof of the fact. A year or f-o ago John Brown was ma Ring's lecturing tour through Ohio, aud dqiivcred a lecture iu.A-htabula Gopnty, nearitho residence of Jir. Giddings, and ?:'titbe conolu'ion of the lecture the bat was passed around, as it usually is at frce lectures, and Mr GiJdings gave three dol ors, as any other man would to another 'for-whom he folt any sympathy. Brown k,ju,thia lecture nsid nothing about an In surrection or anything' of -the kiud. This is all the money .Mr. Giddius eTcr gave ibio, and be never baw him before nor since that time uor beard of him till the . '-late Insurrection. -Tbee facts clear Mr Giddiugs. Next, ss to Douglass and Smith. TJouglassisa well known bitter Abolition jisl,;sud therefore uo Republican; Siuith lis aleo an unflinching Abolitiouist aud never voted the Republican ticket, as be distinctly Ftatcdin a letter a few days a go to the New York Tribune. Nest, the Democrat says it was the intention of Brown to overthrow the United State Government, and free the Slares of the South. Does this not clearly show the man to lernsane ou the Slavery question. at'dast. What sane man cannot see this? ;And if insane, does it seem reasonable to the Monroe Democrat, that the Republi cans would have engaged him to carry out such astupendous enterprise? Which, in the light of reason, appears to be the more eauc, Brown for committing the act, or the Monroe Democrat in attributing it to the deliberate action or intention of the Republican party. Reader tell us whether it is not Drown I The nest .question as to who furnished the juoucy ilneuweans to Jirown, we bay,o answered by showing that it must have omc from some source entirely indepeudent of the! Republicans; and,' therefore, must have been furnished by such of Brown's broth er Abolitionists aa had not aufiicieut brains to comprehend the crazincs", the wildness, the iusanitj, and the utter impracticabili ty of thccon.-'ummation of such a eeheme. The last question as to not one of the Democrats being connected with tho at- trmpt. J his is entirely a miriaue, ior one Democrat testified that the Democrats succeeded in shooting several of those de luded men, and after they had fuccceded in shooting one fo badly that he could no longer hold his gun, four or Gvc of those Democrats -charged upon him and carried him on the bridge, and there fif teen brave Democrats fired fifteen bullets iuto his- prostrate abolition soul case; and then those bravo Democrats seized hi dead body and threw it over tho bridge. Such is tho connection Mr. Democrnt, of your .party with the Insurrection. So much for the question directly now for a little philosophising in general, and we arc done. Notwithstanding the acute arid, abuud- ant rea&on and knowledge that sit enthron ed in the substantial oraniua of the Mou roe Democrat, be yet, in order to be a per fect man, poems to laok just one thing, and that is to comprehend the difference bo tween the Republican. Democratic and Afc olitioo doctrine. But in order that ho may be entirely accomplished or finished nfif m nrncf-ed to enlighten him: 1. The , t Republicans olaim, with Thomas Jefferson and with all the great statesman of hi nd down to 1550. that it is the j , , right and duty of Congress to prohibit laverv in all the Territories that were free at the time they came into the pos sestion of the U. S. Government. But iu all places wherein Slavery is established by local legal law, the Republicans do not claim to have any right, claim or ju risdiction over it whatever. 2. While the Administration Democrats claim that in all Territories over which the con.-titutio'n extends, that there slavery is carried bj virtue of that document. 3. While the abolition doctrine is. that slavery is a po litical curse and moral etil, and that it is the imperative duty of the Government to iske the necessary steps to aV olish it "mid tho most of them contend that it is their duty to freo-'ffie slaves whenever an opportunity offers, and a duty too, which thev usuallv tut in nraetic-e. Can the Democrat now see of which doctrine the Harper's Ferry raid is the most logica consequence. If he cannot, let him a-k his ull-wi-:e man on the other ?ide of his er-tbli-hinciiti But suppose Gidding? knew of the in -urruction, and that Douglass and Smitl xcrc Republicans, which we emphatically deny end challenge proof to the contra ry, would this in tho slightest degree con nect the Republican party with that in -one enterprise The Republican prrsa throughout the country universally de nounco the act of Brown snd his coufed crates as a foolish, visionary and crazy transaction. But 1)07? was it when Atch idn, the Democratic United States Sena .lor, invaded Kansas with about two thou -and Democrats to force slavery on the people of that Territory, and murdered scores of free State men because tbev were orposed to slavery 7 The Demo cratlc press throughout the country eith .T openly applauded it by attributing the fault to the Emigrant Aid Society, or said nothing against it; and consequently thereby became parties to the foul aud blackening murder of those men. Again, how was it. when Bully Brooks assaulted Senator Sumner with a blud goon, for depicting iu glowing colors an with unanswerable logical force, the big crime the Democratic party wa guilty o towards Kanas T Wiiy the Democratic prcris a I a, os t universally cried out all right for it was ungentlonanly in Sumner to mention those glaring truths in the pros enec of those who were guilty of aidin and abetting the perpcirators of those disgraceful and damniug crimes. The apostles of the Democratic party sent out by the Democratic high priests to preac Democracy, would frequently draw them selves up iu sarcastic shape aud exulting ly ask us whether "we did uot think Sum aers sore head would be all right after tho elotioo." Now in both those cafes wc find the printr-ipais, aiders and abettors were Dem ocrats iu full i-tauding, and we also find that they were almost utm ersally applau ded for what they did fcy the Democratic press; end this ot course made the Deni ocratio pany a party to the crimes of which the r,rincipals were ruiltv. But - bow widely different is tho Harper's Fer ry insurrection I not one of tho instiga tors or perpetrators of that deplorable ni.me, is a member of the Republican party of any standing whatever. But if every one were Republican?, wLieb wo in toto deny, this would not make the Re publicans responsible for their acts, unless they were to cry out all right as the Democracy did in the Kansas ulavery establishing-Freo State-murdering, and Sumner-bludgeoniog cases. But the Re publican party is entirely free, for they universally, by the press aud otherwise, denounce the act as a visionary and in sane raid. .We regret tie necessity that hupc'tled us to the writings of this article, but wc would be recreant to'our duty! were we to fail to brand this base slander, set afloat by those cowardly Administra- tion demagogues for political enact. Ana in conclusion, we would remind them that alehoods of tbitt character must eome homo to rest with crushing effect upon the ahoulders of their authors. Honor to Great Men's Relatives. A paragraph ha been going the rounds of the papers stating that a sister of Ro bert Fulton was an inmate o! the poor house of a town in Pennsylvania. Upon r i n IT eeinir tins, air. uuaries v. morion, ui Mortonville, New York, whose father had been an intimate friend of Fulton's, wrote to tho place n-imed, requesting informa- ; : 1 1, n ..ttn Mm nt mnH lorn rnuinrf of a fund for tho relief of any such rela tive. M. Morton sends us the following copy of the spirited reply: 'Stroudsbuug Mouroe coM Pa., "August 30th, 1859. "Dear Sir: Yours of the 23d in-t, di rectcd to the superintendent of the Mou roe couuty poorhouse,4 Pennsylvania, i rnm'ivpd There id a mistake in the printer somewhere. We havo no 'poor iouse' in Monroe county, consequently we have no superintendent of sueh an m stitutton. Uur postmaster uanueu ilc letter to me, and requested me to answer it. "I recollect reading tho same intclli gence in some paper a few days ago, aud I think it was in Monroe couuty, Virginia the printer may have taken ' Va for Fa , There is no person by th" name of Fulton in our couuty, and 1 assure you that if there were ( within the limits of our couuty) a sister to the immortal lul ton. she never would become an inmate of a poorhoue! She would be taken in- to one or our best tamuies, ana ircaiea as a ister. Respectfully your, M. II. Dreher. "0. F. Morton. Esq." There is a creditable expression o Pennsylvania spirit, and it accords well with what we read of the feeling of the Oniker State in a recent paper. it ran thus: a x Honors to Dr. Franklin's Daughter "When Miss Sallie Franklin, the only daughter of the great printer.was marriec to Mr. Richard Baehc, in Philadelphia in 1707, all the shipping iu the harbor displajcd their colors on the happy ooca son.' Home Journal. The General Result. The general result of the elections held ou Tuesday, which were the lat to occur this year, is favorable to the Republican In New York the Republicans have pro bably elected their whole State ticket snd have maionties in both Houses the Lenifdature. In Massachusetts the Republicans have, as was anticipated swept everything, and re-elected Gov Banks by an increased majority. To New Jersey Charles S. Olden, the Opposition candidate for Governor, is ejected. The Republican? have elected their Governor in Wisconsio by an increased majority Iu Illinois the election was for local ofn cers and one member of Congress tc fill a vacancv occasioned by the death of the Hon. T. L. Harris. Mr. McCIeliaiid Doulas, Democrat, is no doubt elected Louisiana on Tuesday cleoted the Demo cratie State ticket, with three of the four members of Congress Edward Boulignv (Opposition) being cho?en in the first dis met, lately represenieu uy ucorge jiusu (Amerioan.) Tree Negroes on Railroads. One of the results of the Browu foray i the South may bo observed iu the in creased rertrictiou upou free colored peo pie. A bill has been introduced in the Tennessee Legislature to prevrut free ne tiroes travelling on the railroads in that State, which passed at the first reading The Bill provides that tho President who shall permit a free negro to travel on any road withm the jurisdiction of the State under his supervision, shall pay a fine o 8500; any conductor permitting a viola tion of the act shall pay a fine ot tdou provided such free negro U not under tin control and care of a free white citizen of Tennessee, who vouches for the cbaracte of said free negro in a penal bond o 81000. Mill and Distillery Destroyed. - A fire broke out iu the mill property of Mr. David W.JIowell, of Lower Mouut Bethel, about Eis miles above Eas.ton on Friday morning last, and con-umcd the entire property. How the fire on uated is not known. At three o'clock tho flames burst out, destroying in a hort time the interior of the mill and distille ry, with all their contebtH, the whole es timated to be worth about twelve thous and dollars: There was a large quantity tf coru, otne wheat and other grain iu in the mill. The fire caused a great light aud was distinctly seen in Eaeton. There is an insurance on the property of about 9,000 dollars in tho Easton and Saucon Companies. Journal. New Counterfeit. New counterfeit 85 bills ou the Citizens' Bank of Pittsburg are in circulation. They have a medal lion on each lower corner, a large 5 in the centre, and tho face of the note is pink. JB-Mr. John Amey, of Portsmouth 11. I., has a couple of wolves, which h keeps chained near his house. On Mon day one of tbcm got loose and siezed a young son of Mr. Amey, about ten yeans old, by the thigh and was shaking him pretty roughly, when Mr. William Sisaon ran to the rescue, and by one blow on the head with the butt of a heavy whip bau ble, laid the savage animal dead. Tho boy' wounds were quite ecvere. A Clergyman in Erie county, Pa., recently married a y-ouug man who was" under age, of which fact-he nijjbieter was ignorant. Afterwardjbe father of the young man compelled ,Ba -Reverence to pay $35, on pain, of pnjapution, ITEMS. j A largo colony of Danes is settling in Western Missouri. Reason can tell you love affects us, but cannot' tell what love, is. Intelligence has been received, at Bos ton of the death of Mrs. Marsh, one of the Missionaries of the. American Board at Mosul. Where is there an older woman than Mr. Martha Reynolds, of Coffee count v. Tennessee? She has completed ber 118th year. The Slaveocrata in Southern California iave voted to establish a uow State, there, to te called Colorado. How few adopt the good rule ofBi-hop Boveridge, not to speak in dispraise of one who is absent, or in praise of one who is present. The cloudy weather molts at length in to beauty, aud the brightest smiles o: the heart are born of its tcarsl A Dublin correspondent of the Irish American, anuouuees the probability of the speedy pardou of Daniel O Sullivan, tbo last of tho patriots remaiuing in con finement. Let a man do bis work; the fruit of it is tue care or anotucr man ne. ua - J . t A t t hjle. The London Post says tho Americans calculate too much and too constantly on tho forbearance of England. "Among all my boy?,"- said an old man, "l uever nau dui one Doy wuo cook after mo, and that was my sou Aaron he took after me with a club.". Two thirds of the suicides in the cities of the United States this last pummer have been occaisoncd by delirium trc mens. Omnibusses, tho first seen in Syria have begun to run at Boyrout. Crowd) of natives stood gazing at them for hours with wonder and admiration. Mr. Dougla9, is the father of tho Kan sas bill, the father of Squatter Sovereign ty. and the father of a fine little girl born on Saturday week. JLouisvzfle Journal. The little girl is tho only one of this progeny that will be likely to do her fath er any good. A fellow last week stole two slaves from New Orleans. He was pursued by the owners of the property who, on overtak in him. hun? him from a tree, and tied a stone to his feet. Four hundred and fifty clergyman o the Chureh of England haro signed a pe tition to the Queen for a revision of the Church liturgy and an abbreviation the services. Poor men of all men should not under take to drown their sorrow in strong drink. It doesn't pay. Misfortune may drive a man to the cup, but it takes a for tunc to keep him there. Duting Ootober there were coined at the Uuitcd States Miut, 3.433,652 peice.-i valued at S340.6K1. Three millions o the pieces wcro cents, aud two hundred and eighty thousand half dimes. It is said that a dog of African breed which belonged to Gen. Espinasse, who fell at Magenta; still lurks about the spot where his master fell, and though often taken away, even to4ftome distance, oon stantly returns. Gov. Wise Guilty of Treason. Governor Wi-e, it will be recollected on one ooeaaiou, in a epeech before the last Presidential election, recommended that fh case of Frumout'a success, the South should se ze on the arsenal at Har per's Ferry, raise an army, and march to Washinton, take possession of the city and dissolve the Union. Capt.Brown. it will be noticed, has only made the atternp ted to carry out this programme marked out by Gov. Wise, who proposed high treason iu favor of slavery, is to bo reward ed with tho Presidency, while old Gap tain Brown, who attempted it in favor o freedom, will probably, be hung. Harris burg relegraph. light Taxes. Georgia is probably the lightest taxed State in the Union. lt State tax is on ly two-thirds of u mill on the dollar. A man owing 810,000 of proporty pays on ly S0.G6 taxes. Guess that's so. A man, who don't believe the world is growing better, Pays the time may come when the lion and lamb shall ho down together, but if it does, the lamb will be inside of the. lion. New-Jersey Election. Trenton, N. J., Nov. 12, 1859. The final result makes tho Legislature ocrats, eight Opposition, one straight A mcrican. House Thirty democrats twenty-eight Opposition, two straigh Americans. Tho Democratic majority on joint ballot is three. Killed by a Bear. Tho Prairie, du Chlen (Wisconsin Leader states that two young ladies, Mi Hiskill and Miss Pool, wSen walking in the vicimty of Fancy Creek, Riahland county, wcro pursued by two bears, one of which struck Miss Pool with bis pw, tearing her breast to the bone and caus ing her death in a few hours. Misa Has kill escaped with a few scratches. Tbo be ?ir a were shot soon after. JO3 A- Golden Eaglo was killed last week on tho Lower St. Pawrenos, and brought to Quebec, which was shot while endeavoring to carry off a child about three years of ago. This is the only bird iu America that will attack tho human (species. They breed in the North, fol ing at this season the birds and animals that seek a milder climate, jgOne thousand three hundred and n.rht em -rant arrived at tue pori oi New York during the week endine No vombej 2d, making a total of bb,?y: since the 1st of January, against iv,ao during tho same period last year. TTPThe National Democratic Com mittee is to meet at Washington on the 7th of December, to fix upou the time for holding their National Convention at Chnrleslon. yA company has been formed at Allentown, for the erection at that place of a largo Rolling Mill, the capital stock bein? 8120,000, nil of which has been subscribed 840,000 in Allentown, 840, 000 in Poltaville, and 40,000 m Phila delphia. T O i i " Hew York Markets; Wednesday, November 10,1859. FLOUR AND MEAL Wheat flour; the sales are 0,()0 bbls. at 84 95ag5 ior Superfine State; S5aS5 05 for Superfine Western; " 85 45 a So 00 for-shipping brands of round-hoop Extra Ohio; and $5 40aS7 for Extra Genesse and St.Lou- i. Rye; sales of 190 bbl. at S3 50aS4 35. Corn Meal; sales of 100 bbls. Jersey at 84 10. Buckwheat Flour is iu fair re duest at S2aS2 25 per 100 pounds. GRAIN Wheat; the sales are l.uuu bushels prime Red Southern at 81 40; 500 bushels White Michigan at 81 47; lnO bushels prime White Kentucky at SI 50. Rye is better, Bnd in tair de mand; soles of 3,700 bushels at 85a5Gs Oat; sales of 37.000 bushels at 44a45i c. for Western, aud 45a45ic. for State and-Canadian. Corn; sales of 11,000 at 90a91o. for New Yellow Jersey; 81 03 PROVISIONS Pork; sales of 1,00 bbls. at SI 5 10aSl5 12 A for Mes-;S15 i(l for Prime Mess; 817a817 10 for Clear - IIo";S are very scarce aud have advanced with sales of 600 head at 7$a7o. Green Hams are. firm and in good demand: sales of 2,200 from the block at So. Butter is in fair demand and plenty at llalSc for Ohio, and I4u21c. for State, and Choice do. at '2u24o. Cheese is sales ble at 0al0$a. OBITUARY. Little uTiUie." "Bui now deatii is over, and all the while Her cherub face may wear a smile; For she never will know, or do what is wrong, And the lovinsr angels will teach her their song Matilda Evans died, at Delaware Water Gap, on the morning of Thursday Nov. 10tb. She wis uot quite six yearn old, a swoet little girl, beloved not only by foud parents but by all that kuew her both old and young. She was a constan attendant at the Sabbath School, nud dearly loved to have the sweet little books read to her that she miht tell her teach er the little stories her book contained. " Tillie" was ouo of those few children who are always good, and beinr pood a! ways are always loved. So gentle, quirt smiling, kind and happy, she was iike little sun shedding its cheerful radiance over every one who came within reach o its heaven-like rays. Yes, "Tillie" wa one of those children that seem born for Heaven, and who aro not permitted to stay long enough in this world of sqjyow and siu to feel its blighting influence. We are sorry to lo-e such children, tbo we know our loss is their gain. And uow we deeply sympathise with the bereaved parents and children, for we do know, in fact, how great their loss aud how deej their sorrow. Not only will " Tillie" be missed froa the home she has just left but she will be aissed by tho members of every family in this vicinity. Aud oh 1 how ihe will be missed from tho Sunday School, an especially in that cla of sweet little girl to which ?he beJouaed ! She-has cone 4 W but she baa left swet t mebiories not soou to be forgotteu. Her illness was short and painful, yet with more patience thau is usually exhibited by persons of ripr years, she bore it all with wonderful meekness and submission. Death laid a faet hold upon hie victim, aud she foil asleep before the Destroyer had time to emaciate her form so beautiful in life and so oomely in death. So punvso good, so beautiful we now Can well imagine the slight change to make An angel of her ! The leave had fallen, aud the fioivcrs which "Tillie" lovod so well had withered aud died ; even the beautiful and hardy da'.liahs htood seared and brown, whilst the landscape every-where showed that the summer was ended, then "Tillie" fell asleep too. Fit time to die, and espe cially ho for her. Sho hnd sported amid flowers of spring and summer and when they had died she soon followod. Whilst they are left to he awakened by tho gen tle touch of the breath of Spring to bloom aud die again, she ha but fallon asleep to be awakened at tho Spring of the res urrection to be an angel forever, where there is no mora sickness, no more sor row, and uo more death. Sleep on, Tillie", short thy journey Through this world, to thee so fair; Thou hast left us ere its sorrows Taught thee 'tis a world of care! We will not forget thee, Tillie", Whilst this world we journey through, And when we are called to follow We will hope to meet thee too ! A. B. B. Del. Water Gap, Nov. 12, 1850. In Chosnuthill, on tho 1 1th inst. Frank lin, son of Col. 0, D. & Rachel C. Brod hoad, agod 7 years. In Hamilton, on tho 1 lth' .inst.. Eliza beth Mansfield, aged 27 yoars and'7 mos, LUTES. 1 BY THE HARD OF THE EASTON HALL OF FASHION 'Men are but children fully grown," And therefore, they pursue The objects oft which in thcir-youth, The future held to view. Jubble-blowing which will givo The urchin fond delight. s game attractive still, when he las reached to manhood's height. The bubbles too of after years A htrong resemblance bear- "j To those of early times, and burst As quickly into air. , 4tjF In golden dreams some sec thcmsefvcs'.v The heroes of their time. ? ; Crowned with the guerdon Fame, cro the y Have scarcely reached their prime. Some havo by speculation, gained Mouey and lands untold. itd fairy scenes of happiness Will fa'uey's glass unfold. Vision's of glory wealth and fame,' . Manhoods and youths gay droam, " Will vanish, a? tbo dazzling hues Which in soap-bubbles gleam. Come all who seek some precious timer Most pleasantly to while, 'ome down from airy castles To the store of R. C. Pyle. View bis large stock of clothing For Fall and Winter wear; You ll fiud here goods of real worth, Aud fashions neat and rare. Pyle's store is opposite the Old Enston Hank, where those who want fine clothing made in th-- very best manner arc invited to Call. All work warranted equal to the best customer work and sold at the lowest prices. THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY. SIR JAMES CLARKE'S CJcfcrulc! Fosisiile Pills. pitOTrcrnn LETTTRff DY ROYAL g5 PATENT. Prejmred from a presriplion of Sir J. Clarke f M. D. Physician ExirttordhiurTj lo the Queen. This invaluable meOiiine is unfailing in the cure of nil tlms.e pitiiiful and dangerous diseases lo which Ih female constitution is subject. It moderates all excess and removes all obstructions, and a speedy cure may be relied on. To 7f3arritrtJ Jjadics it is- peculiarly suited. It will, in a short time, bring ob Ail- monthly period with regularity. Each bottle, price One Dollar, bears the Gorernmeut tamp of Great Urilsin, to prevent counterfeits. Those Tilte should not bctaKcn by fctnMes dining tho FIRST '1 11H EE MONTHS of Pregnancy, as they arc sure to bring on Miscarriage, but at any other time they are safe. t In all cases of Nervous and Spinal Affections, pain in the back and limbs, fitiguc on slight exertion, palpita lon of the heat t, hysterics and whites, these Pills will effect a cure w hen all other means have failed; and al though a powerful remedy, do not contain iron, oal mel, antimony, or anything hurtful tot e constitution. Full direct -ins in the pamphlet atound each package, which shun j heeuieiully preserved. Sole Agci; for the United States and Canada, JOB MOSES (Latel. C. H i.dwin fc Co..) Koches'er, N. T. X. B. $1 W) and C f ostagc stamps enclosed to any nuthunze.I Ateni, will insure n bottle, containg 50 pills bv return tuiol For sale in Stroud- uig. by July l. lc-30 ly. J. N- IttJIU.ING, Agent HAIR D YE HAIR D YE II AIR DYE Wm. A. Batclielor's Hair Dye ! The Original and Best in the World t All others aic mere imitations, and should be aroid ed, it you ish to escape ridienle. Gray, Red, or Rusty H.iir Dyed instantly to a beauti jul and Niit'inil Brown or Bluck, without the least ia luty to Ilnu or skin. Fifteen Meifals ad Diplomas have been avt arded to U'm. A. B.itrhc!er since 1330. and over n.DGO applica tions have been made to the Ilaii of his patrons of hi minnus Dye. Wm. A. BATHELOR'S HAIR DYE produces a color not to he distinguished from nature, and is warranted, nt to injure in the least, how ever long it may be con tinued, aid the ill effects .t Red Byes remedied, tm Pair imigiagcd for Life fcy this splendid Dye. Made, sold or applied (in !l private rooms) at tha Wig Factor v, 2C1 Broadway, New York. PoW in all cities ;in. town of the United States, by Druggists mul Kancv Goods Dealers. ;: I'ne genuine has the name and address upon a Vtccl plate engraving on four sides of each bor.of WILLIAM A. BATCIIELOR, -3J Bn ailwav. New-York. Sold by IIOLI.INSIiEAD & DETRIi;lt, Strousburg. WSCS WIGS. BAOTflEl.OR'S WIGS and 1 OUPEES surpasses all Thev re eieg.mt. light, easy ami durable. Fistu.Klo a ch- rm uo turning up behind no shrink ing off thr- heall ; Hide tl. this is the only Establishment vliere these things ar" propeny understood aud made.. 233 Broadway, iNo-.-TorK. (Dec 9, lfifci It- f V 1 ubitov's 2foticc. The undersignod appointed by the Or phans Court of Monroe County, auditor to adjust aud re-cttlo tho 3d account of the Executors of tho last will and testa ment of Adaui IIuhMiiith, dee'd., hereby gives notice that ho will attend to the du ties of his appointment at his office in the Borough of Stroudsburg, on Tuosday tho 13th day of December next, at 2 o' clock, in the afternoon of aid dayr when and where all persous interested may air tend if they think proper. Wm. K. IIAVILAND, Auditor. Stroudsbun Nov. 10 ISn9. . Caution. I hereby caution all persons against hunting, tithing, or going through grass, grain or orchards upon my premises, as I nui determined to prosecute trespassers to tho full extent of the law. ELIJAH SCHUG. Stroud tsp. Sept. 22, 1859. GUNSMITH. The undersigned rcspeotfully in forms the citizens of Stroudsburg and vicinity, that he has commenced the GUftSMBTHSNC; BUSINESS, near Kautz's Blacksmith shop, on William at., and is fully prepared to do all kinds of work in his line, with neatness and des patch. Having had twenty years ex perience in this business, he hopes will no an inducement ior tne people to givo, him a trial. Repairing of all kinds promptly attends ed to. HiQes made to order. LEWIS KEINEST, Stroudsburg, June 14, 1855. For sale al this Office
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