I)c 3cffcrconian THURSD A Y, OCTOBER 25, 18G6. FIt is rumored that Judge Ie Young has sold the Monroe Democrat office, to A. O. Greenawald, Esq., of Allcntown. The new proprietor will take poscesion oa the 1st of January. Ed. The directors of the Stroudsburg Eank are about bringing to market, the valuable Tannery and Farm property of Dupue S. Miller, in Middle SmithGcld township. The sale is advertised to take place at the Couit-llouse, in this bor ough, at three o'clock P. M., on Thurs ilay, the 15th of November. Capitalists should attend the sale. In a notice of the trial of lluth Ann Starcer, vibicli wc copied from the Eelvi dere Intelligencer, a couple of weeks ago, J. G. Shipman was the only attorney named iu connection with the defeucc. The Warren Journal says : "The accused wa3 ably defended by Gen. U. Burnett, of ctroudsburg. and J Shipman, Esq , of Eelvidere. We bear Oen. lurnett s argument highly spoken oi by those who were present. Protecting the toes of childrens Shoes from wear by Metal Tips, has prov d a most important and useful invention Put until lately a great mistake has been made in applying them chiefly to the coarser grades of shoes, l or the higher the cost of the shoes the more there is tared by protecting the tee from wear, which can only be done by a Metal-Tip. Geutcel Metal-Tipped shoes are now be ing made and worn by the best families ia this city. Manufacturers could not have conferred a greater publio favor than by supplying this want. Boston Journal. CiScial Yots for Congress in this District. The return judges of this Congression al District met at b'troudsburg, oa Mon day, for the purpose of summing up the ote cast in the 11th Congressional Dis trict, on the Oth inst., for Member of Con gress. The following is the result; Counties Vaii Auken, Lilly. CS72 2SG7 1C07 2710 GTS 10S4 340 Northampton, Cuibcn Monro?, Pike, Wayne, 2003 lo007 Van Auken's majority, C,7SC. 0121 The four chief corner-stones of tbe Democratic Sanhedrim of Monroe, lu-comp.inied by two horse.-?, a carriage ud any quantity of brains all dressed up with best " bib and tucker," left town, un Tuesday, for the " Jarsejs," where they went to enlighten the Democracy of flhat State. Wc should not wonder ii vjheir efforts were seriously felt, in there uit of the election in November. A ni tier has it that a consultation with Van Aukenuin reference to the appointment of revenue oScers in this county, and the scaring of the press and material of the Lajle cGce at Milford, form additional -objects of the journey. The four form a -quartette of discordant spirits personally, but when political devilment is to be ad Tanced they are in most wonderful ac cord. Ths Omeial Election Returns Daisy of county Prothonctaries Geary's Ma jority Seventeen Thousand One Hun dred and Eighty-live. Special Despatch to the Inquirer. IlARiuscuiiG, Oct. 25. -The publish ed election returns, purporting to be oQ rtial, profess to give the majority of Gen eral Geary within a hundred vote?, but -the returns received here, in the office of the Commonwealth, differ materially from the tables generally furnished to the news papers. We have the official return? ircia all the couutie3 except Erie, Mon tour, Pike and Luzerne, and it is doubt i'ul when these counties will make returns, though the county prothonotaric3 were telegraphed to in regard to the matter by the Deputy Secretary or the Commou wealth, this morning. Taking into con sideration the frauds alleged in Lnzerne .county, and the heavy rewards- offered tfbr their detection, there ia some reason lo believe that the Return Judges for that county have eome hesitation in aigniti" the returns published in the Wilkesbarre papers, but if thev forward the fi .ready published io the county papers as iuciai, ana allowing tiic accuracy oi the published returns lrom Erie, Pike, and Montour, which is irenerallr rnnroilo.! we have a complete table, which gives to general Geary a majority io exact figures or serenteen tuousaud one hundrp.i r,A ibty five (17,185") taking the Luzerne county figures for granted, the certified returns, when finally complete, will not change the figures fire votes one way or xne omer, it .at an. It is estimated that the crop of dried pp!es, blackberies and other fruit, which will he shipped from North Carolina the present season will amount to more then 1,000,000 pounds; worth, at the North, over 300,000. At High Point Depot alone, 575,000 worth of dried blackberries Jiave already been shipped. The Vagaries cf the Democrat An article in last week's Democrat met our gaze a few days ngo, and proved itself so intensely interesting, that we thought we could not better show our appreciation of it, than by taking some notice of its contents. A few mistakes were visible, but we can easily understand how they were made, and we take great pleasure in setting our friend, the "Dem ocrat," on the right track, pointing out his errors aud teaching him how to cor rect them. lie gives the majority for Clymer, in this county, 1001, which we believe is correct: but, in connection therewith, be states, that owing to the fact that some oth er counties did uot do their duty to De mocracy, General Geary was " elected by a trifling majority, prubably about 0,000. Yes, " probably" it was " about G.000, but really, it was about 10,000! That little priuter's devil, w see officiating about the office cf the " Democrat," for got to put a " 1" before the " 0,000." Another line says, " showing a Demo cratic gain of over 13,000 on the vote of 186 1." Well, well, we understand it now, the little rascal got the " 1" be fore the " 3,000" (the real Democratic gain, over Lincoln's election there was a Democratic loss on the Governor's elec tion since. 18G3) instead of having it be fore the " G,000" where it should have been, making " about" the true majority for Geary. 17,102, we believe is the true maioritv. A triflinir mistake. but our friend, the " Democrat," will find that printing such mistakes won't help the circulation of hi3 paper any. The truth will out. Iu this advanced age of civilization, the people of Monroe, are not satisfied with only one paper, even if that cne should be the inestimable nev-er-to bc-matched " Monroe Democrat' and some of the ether par era they take will tell the truth. Another line in the article we allude to, says, " We are beat by unfair means." Now this may be so. We will not pre tend to deny that there is curruption iu the Republican party, as there is in all parties, but it is our humble opinion, that the less Democrats say about brib ery and corruption at elections, the fur ther they will keep from treading on their own toes. It is a proverbial saying, that a Democrat can't be trusted, and if they were beatqn by unfair means it was not their fault. The declaration that " the Republicans are disappointed with the result of the election themselves," is very easily made but not so easily proved. It doe3 not look reasonable that they should be dis appointed in Peuuvlvania, at least, when they have elected, their candidate for Governor, and gained two Congressmen, since 1SG1. .The Republicans are not disappointed with the result of the elec tion, the Democrat's assertion to the con trary, notwithstanding. More than this, they do not doubt, that, when the vail of Ignorance and Prejudice shall have been lifted from the eyes of our Democratic friends, they to, will joia the ranks of the great Union party, and help swell the votes that proclaim " Liberty throughout the land and to all the inhabitants there of," and that then Ignorance and De mocracy (what is left of it) will go down; hand in hand together, in perdition. Do you, our Democratic friends, care fully study the returns from the various townships in this county, and note the re sult. At such a thriving village as Stroudsburg, we would expect to find in telligent business men, who arc well ac quainted with the issues at sta-ke in our country, and who, consequently, vote in accordance with what they know to be right (we mean all those who don't eel! their votes for office). And in Strouds burg, the vote stands 119 for Clymer 1G3 for Geary. Observe the effects of education on the election here. This is the way intelligent, educated men vote. Now observe the returns from some other townships Eldrcd, for example, where the inhabitants have never enjoyed the privileges of education, and where they take uo paper but the " Democrat' which dcs not even make their ignorance visi ble, and we find the vote standing 104 for Clymer, aud 4 for Geary. This is the way ignorant, prejudiced Democrats vote. Does it not speak for itself? Here we would gladly Etop, but must notice one thing more. We never yet heard a Democratic speech, unless it had " Abolition" and " Nigger" in it, and our friend, the " Democrat," has, as is usual, yelled " Nigger" with the rest of his par ty, aud prohesies that wc, the Republi cans, who elected Geary, " will now have continue! disunion, continued agitation, continued war, continued tyranny, and the 'Nigger (observe the 'Nigger' must come in) to the end of the chapter." These are great evils to bo sure, par ticularly the last, but we think we can stand them. The " Democrat" further says, " We give you joy over your bargain, and hope you may get enough of it, to last you the balance of your miserable lives." We tender our thanks fur the "joy" not withstanding, we believe that Feutcnce to be a lie. We would say in reference to the expression, "your miserable lives," that the man who advocates Justice, Hu manity, Equality, Freedom, " Equal Rights to all Men," is not miserable, but the wretch, who would trample on one of God's meanest creatures, wantonlv. is perfect, by the side of him who would en deavor to debase, degrade, enslave, or de prive God's noblest effort, Man, of any of his rights, whether he be. black or white. GENERAL NEWS. We are enjoying delightful weather. At the north pole, every direction is south Ottawa, Illinois, has voted $100,000 for a I ail road. There are one thousand telegraph offices in Europe. Upwards of two thousand different kinds of iiai's are manufactured. The manufacture of pottery in England employs 110,01)0. Vessels across the Atlantic just now have long anJ stormy passages. It is found that the dry substance of eggs conta ins forty per cent, of pure fat. Six missionaries have opened 225 "nurse ries of piety". in Missouri. John I. Dillon, M. P., who was concern ed in the Irish outbreak of 1813, is dead. The taxable banking capital of Cincinna ti is $2,700,000, held by twenty-two firms. General Mntt, of New Jejsey, his declin ed the offer of a colonelcy in the regular ar my. Alexander II. Stephens is in unusualljr good health, and intends devoting himself to the law. One million of dollars have already Icon subscribed for the Centenary of American Methodism. A knife and fork which can be used by a one-handtd man has been patented by a Buf fulonian. S. F. Cary, of Ohio, a federal office hold er, is baring his neck to the axe by writing radical letters. A man in Alexandria, Va.,hid four thou sand dollars when drunk, and couldn't find it when sober. The method of blowing fires by means of the fcteam-jet in tne chimney or fire, was known to the ancients. There are more hogs than humans in the United States. England has but one pig for every nine persons. A young German, of St. Loui, recently few his brains out to get rid of a headache. A sovereign remedy that. Two young ladies, expelled from the Wcs Ieyan Academy, at Wiibraham, Ma;3., took laudanum and nearly died. A negro arrested in Savannih, is accused of murdering n white man and then putting up the dead body as a target. Join Pope is going to establish a branch of Agricultural Newton's Department in the Rocky Mountains. A lady's 1 lighted affections were healed in a New York Court, by a judgment of ioOO against the "brute she sued. A publishing house in Chicago has issued 1,500,000 almanacs for the coming year, at a cost of forty thousand dollars. A horse thief, arrested at EJJyville, Iowa, recently took strychnine while i:: the officers' hands and died immediately. A little girl, only twelve years of age, daughter of a" Virginia fienJ nime1 Rutlede has been made the victim of her father's lust. S-mU Anna is a confirmed and reckless gambler. lie will stake thousands upon the tight ng qualities of an unki.own rooster. The Tennessee Democratic Convention tion will meet atNashviile on the 27th. It hid been pjstponcd on account of the chol era. A London negro writes, with heaviness of heart, that "RnIand the England that is heard t-j speak and seen to act is pro-slavery. The Rxhmond "Whig advises the country genth men of Virginia to forsake politics lor questions more nearly affecting their livelihood. The divisibility of copper is so great that a single grain of it dissolved in alkali will give a sensible color to 500,000 times it3 weight in water. The heat which would raise 14 lbs. of water through any number of degrees of temperature would heat 9 lbs. of iron to the same extent. The manufacture of the wire for the At lantic cab!? kept nearly 250 hands employed for eleven months'. Over G0.O00 miles were supplied. Sc tland, with one-half of the population of Ireland, consumes annually 2,304,000 gal lons of whiskey, while Ireland drinks only 2.2G0.C00 gallons. A co'ored man has been arrested in Wash ington for catling down trees in the grounds eou'h of the White House. He said he wanted tliern for firewood. The tanners in Bewdley, England, have bern fined for turning a white liquid into the river Severn, whereby one hundred thou sand ol the fish were destroyed. It is thought that Judge Paschal, an ex treme radical, will bo elected to Congress from the Fourth District of Texts, owing to divisions in his adversary's ranks. A ball of iron weighing one thousand pounds at the level of the sea, would be per ceived to have lost two pounds c.f its weight if taken to the top of u mountain four miles high. The greatest elevation yet attained by man, without leaving the surface in n baloon, is nineteen thousand feet. M. Iloussingault and Col. Hall ascenJcd Chimborazo to that height. John Morrisy say, in a publishrd card, that although he has just taken out his natu ralization pipers in obedience to law, he ha voted for fourteen years having come io tins country with his father thirty three years ago, when two years ot age. A Mormon Eishop recently deceased leaves eleven wives and forty seven child em to mourn his loss. A single cornGeld in North Carolina produces this season ten thousand bush els. The assessed value of Chicago this year is 501,000,000 since last year. It has been ascertained by Mr. L. C. Denny, an English surgeon, that the op plication of citric acid to cancer affords complete relief from pain. lie uses one drachm of tho acid to eight ounces of the water. Tt must be used for two days be fore much effect can be exr-ected, BOLD BURGLARY IN CINCINNATI A Han Kidnapped in his Store, and Forc ed to Open his Safe. From the Cincinnati Gazette, Oct. 17. About seven o'clock, Mr. Thomas Ken nedy, .book-keeper for Messrs. Austin & Smith, Main street, locked up the store, and proceeded to the Mercantile Library rooms, to spend an hour or two in read ing. At half-past eight o'clock, Mr. Ken nedy lelt the library aud went to the store, where he has been in tho habit of sleeping, lie unlocked the front door, passed iu and locked it after him. Just as he reached the staircase leading to the second story, he was accosted by a man. who said, " Hold on. wc want you." Just then three others camo down stairs, and the four stood together. One of the rob bers, who seemed to be the spokesman ol the party, then said to Mr. Kennedy: s " We've been all over the building,, and there is no one iu it except us four. - You're the only man that can open the safe, and wc want you to do it quick." Mr. Kennedy knew that remonstrance was useless, and he told the three men to follow him to the office. Ou opening the office door, Mr Kennedy gave a very low whistle for his dog, a very large and fe rocious animal, which he had locked up in the room when he left the store. On hearing the whistle, one of th men asked him, " Arc you whistling for your dog?" oa receiving a reply in the affirmative, he said, "O, be is dead lonv; ago: we put an end to hiui." And sure enough, the dog was dead, bis throat haviiiir been cut from ear to ear. One of the men then said to Mr. Kennedy, " Now open that sale in a hurry, or I'll blow your brains out, at the same time drawing a revolver One of the others said, " No, don't shoot, we'll serve him as wc served the dog, cut his throat." No alternative being left Mr. Kennedy, he was compelled to open the safe, the robbers taking therefrom about three hundred dollars in currency Having obtained the money, oue o them took from Mr. Kennedy a fine gold watch and a chaiu aud what money he hud iu his pocket-book. Having pock cted all the valuables tbey could find they gagged Mr. Kennedy by means o a slick and a leather strap. They then tied his arms behind his back, his legs to gcther, and laying him on a sofa, tied Lim to a post which supports the third story Having completed their work, they bit him " Good night," and retired through the back door into an alley. Mr. Kennedy, after struggling for near ly halt an hour, succeeded in extncatins him.tlf from the lore aud gave the alarm Dilligcnt search was made for the villains but up to one o'clock this morning no clue had been obtained to them. This is certainly the boldest affair o the kind en record. Distressing Accident This Horning Fal of a Derrick One Man Almost Killed and Several Others Severely Hurt. Quite a serious accident occurred about half past niue o'clock this morning on Section 19, of the Morris and Essex 11 T I ' . . t t it., near eiewartsviuc, whicn came very near proving fatal to a number of men employed on the works. Upon heariuz of the accident, which had been consid erably exaggerated, we hastened to the spot. It appears that a car, in the deep cut at that place, which ha 1 been loaded with heavy stone, got off the track, and an attempt had been made to raise the rear end by means of a derrick which stood close by. In doing so one of the guy ropes broke end the derrick fell, striking several of the men to the ground The following arc the names of those hurt: James Duffy had his skull broken in just above the right eye, by being struck by the pully-block of the derrick, aud i so seriously hurt that ho cannot possibly recover. He was unconscious si nee the accident and during our stay there. He is a single man of about thirty-one years of age, and a native of Danagowa, Ire land. Wm. McDcrmont, a young man of about twentv-eitrht years of ac. was struck on the shoulder, and sustained sc verc injurica, although not dangerous. John tarr, who is also a young man received a severe cash on the forebear and a slight scratch of the tongue. Michael Canty, head cut but not sc- vcrely, and other slight bruizes.. Michael Lee, received a blight wound on the leg. This is the first accident of a seriou? nature that has occurred since the works were in progress. No blame can be at tached to any one. IJastun JJxpnss. Oct. '12nd. One Step from the Alter to the Grave. One week ago Mr. Tony LaukolT was married to Miss Agnes Krieft, both of Newport, Kentucky. Tho young and happy couplo enjoyed their honeymoon on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, deter mining that on Monday morning they would settle down to a commencement ol their new life with all its business, res ponsibilities, trials, &c. On Monday morning they rose at an early hour, and robing themselves in their evcry-day at tire, went to breakfast. Each complained of feeling seriously ill, and neither could cat. The husbaud was compelled almost immediately to retire to bed, and in a few minutes his wife followed him. A phy sician was sent for, who, upon arriving in the sick chamber, and after examina tion of the sick patients, pronounced their disease the cholera. Immediate atten tion was given to them, but during the day they continued to grow worse, and" at four and a half o'clock the husband died. His body was removed to an adjoining room. His wife was also iu a collapse condition, and at eight and a half o'clock she too followed her husband iuto the dark valley and fchadow of death. The bridegroom and bride wcro robed in their wedding -clothes, and on Tuesday both were buried in the samo grave. Cin. Enquirer. . . A snow storm at tho White Mountains, on Tuesday uight, covered the summit of Mount Washington and the neighboring peaks to the depth of several inches. A Female Candidata. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, one of the stronjrminded women who adorn the so ciety of New York, presents hercsclf as a candidate for Congress iu the Eighth Congressional District of that State. She announces as her platftrm '-free speech, free press, free men and free trade, and says that as neither party agrees with her up on all these piiuciples, it is necessary for her to go to Congress at au independent woman. Mrs. Stanton docs uot explain how she intends to get round that provis ion of the Consitution which says that re presentatives iu Congress "shall have same (lualications reipisite for electors of the most numerous brancli oi me oiaie jcg islature." As the Constitution of New York confines the ritrht of voting to male?, it would seen that Elizabeth is ineligible. But this, we presume, will be a small dif ficulty, the mo.-t serious obstacle being the election. In her card Mrs. Stanton is eloquent about the wrongs of women, of which one of the most serious is being taxed without representation. All these matters will be set right when she gels iuto Cougres., and probably not before. The New York Seventh Itegimcnt (fan cy) is uoiug to Europe to make a "splurge.1 One New lorkcr has offered 10,000, and a number of others have offered one thousand each. The cost of taking the band alone, it is said, will not be less than 815,000. About 10,000 have al ready been raised for the eutcrtainment of the regiment in London. This visit, it is supposed, will give foreigners a "bet ter understanding and higher apprecia tion of the American people," and " the comparison of our citizen soldiers with the professional soldiers of Europe will be very gratifying to our citizens abroad." Of courfe the regiment will leave its bat tle record at home. Commodore llobert F. Stockton, lute of the United States Navy, died at his home in Princeton, New Jersey, on Sun day, 7th inst. He was born in 17D0, and when only eighteeu years of age was commissioned a -junior lieutenant in the United States Navy, for his gallant ser vices as a midshipman in several engage ment.'. After a long and distinguished career, he resigned his commission in the Navy in ISIS, and in 1851 was elec ted to tho Uuitcd States Senate, to fill an unexpired terra of two years. Indian Hemains Tonnd. Workmen engaged in making the ex cavations for the Lehigh Company's new railroad at Siegfried's Bridge, last week dup up the remains of three Indian?, at from two to three feet under the surface. Deads, nice.lv wronaht, of new material, pipes, some filled with tobacco, were found deposited with the remains. Numerous pipes have been fouud in the prosecution of the work some 10 feet under ground. Siegfried's Bridge belongs to the region embraced in which is known a3 " Indian Lands." Fas ton Fxj-rcts. Arrival of Welshmen. A party of Welshmen, some thirty in number, arrived in Easton on Saturday ni;ht last, and remained over Sunday. They go up the Lehigh Vallev Ead to Chapman's Slate Quarries. They are a thrifty looking set of people, and just the kind of folks t help make this country a great and prosperous cne. Some of them are accompanied by their wives and chil dren. Faston Frprc.s. LAI f Special Hotices. CONSUMPTION CUEAELE BY DR. SCHENC3CS MEDICINES. TO CURE CONSUMPTION, the system must l.c prepared s- that the lungs will hca!. To accomplish tiji, t;e liver and stomach must first bo cleansed and n appetite crea tod for goo;!, wholesome food, . hich, ly thc?r medicines will be digested prooerlv, anJ good healthy Ll.;od made; 1 tins building up the constitution. SCH LACK'S MAN DRAKE PILLS cieanso the to.nach of all bilious or mucous accumulations; and, by using the S 'a Weed Tonic ia connection, the appetite is restored SCIlENCIvS PULMONIC SYRUP is nutricious s well as medicinal, and, by us ing the three remedies, all impurities are e.p I!cd from the system, and good, whole some Mood made, which will re;el ail dis-ci;-e. If piticnts will take these medicines aceordin to dirtctions, .Consumption very frequently in its last stage yields readily to their action. Take tho pills frequently, to cleans the liver and stomach. It docs not f dlow that because the b iwels are not costive th.-y are nol required, for somr times in diarrhoea they nre necessary. The stomach must b kept healthy, and an appe tite created to allow the Pulmonic Syrup to act on the respiratory organs propeily and alia) any irritation. Then all lli-.it is re quired to perform a permanent cure is-, to prevent taking cold. Exercise about the room as much as possible, eat nil the richest food fat meal, game, and, in fact, anything tho appetite craves; but be particular and masticate well. J w. ca. mo. 1 yr. ALLCOCK'S rOEOUS PLASTERS. - DESTSTil EXa Til EM NO PLASTER I. THE WORLD ALLCOCKS porous plasters resolve and assaugc pain by calling forth the acrid humors from parts inturnalto the skin and general circulation thus, in wia ny cases, positively evaporating the disease. JAMES LULL, M. I). There is nothing equal, in tho way of a plaster, to the Porous Plaster of Mr. ALL COCK. Everything is pleasant about them. They are tho plaster of the day, and a fit type of our present advancement in science and art. In Asthma, Cough, Kidney Affec tions, Gout, Rheumatism, and local deep seated pains they afford permanent relief. J. F. JOHNSON', M. I)., on "Top cal Remedies." From a peasonal knowledge of these plas ters, wo can state that they are decidedly preferable to any other in use. Wherever relief is to be obtained by tha uso of a plas ter, v"e bhould recommend them. A. INC RAH AM, M. I)., EJitpr yew. York Mentor. Agency, Brandreth House, A'ew York. SolJ by all Druggists. Oct. 11, 18G0.-lm. Cftft A MONTH ! A-ents wanted fOJ V'w six entirclu netn articles, just out Address O. T. CAREY. City Ruildinrr Rid- delord, Maine, January 4, lPfiG.-ly. ICTPersons afflicted with Chronic Diseas- ' es, of every name and nature, should not fail to consult Dr. Gansevoort. He ia practical and scientific Physician and treati all kinds of chronic and acute disease?,-which have been pronouncod incurable by many of the- Physicians of this country, such as Asth ma, Consumption, Salt Rheum, Nervous I)e. bi lily, Epilepsy,' Si. Vitus' Dance, CatarrL', Melancholy, Liver Complaints, Iiicketa, Bloody Urine, Headache, Dyspepsia, and all dWc:iscs that men, women and children are suhjpct to. His practice ia founded on the truths of twenty-five years experience, dif fcring fron all ethers. lie knows when he examines a p itienl the cause of the disease" and the rerredy to remove it not by gues sing, but by knowledge. He does notclaim to know everything, nor to cure everything, but does curu seven out of ten pronounced in curable. Dr. Gansctoorl is the aothor of popular lectures on the pithology, treatment and etire of chronic dUeases- Ho proposes to visit you once in three months for two or three years. He particularly requests those who have tried this Doctor and that Doctor, and all the boasted and advertised medicines, til! worn out and discouraged, to call upon hirn. It will cost you nothing. Consulta tions free to all. Terms from four to five dollars-for treatment one month. Difficult and tedins cases, from seven to ten dollars per month. All medicines to be paid for when delivered. Can be consulted, free of charge, at the Washington Hotel, Strouds burg, P.1., on Tuesday and Wednesday, Oc tober 20th and 31t. nEDUCTEOH IN PHICE OF THE AMERICAS WATCHES, ' KADS AT WALTHAM, EIASS. In consequent of the recent great decline ia gold and silver and all the materials used in the manufacture of our gods, and in an ticipation of a still further decline, we have reduced our prices to as low a point as they can be placed . With Gold at Par, bo that no one need hesitate to buy a watch now from tho expectation that it will be cheaper at E..me future time. The test of ten years and the manufacture and sale of Hero tbin 200,000 Watckes, have given our productions the very highest rank amonir time keepers. Commencing with the detei mination to make thoroughly excel lent watches, our business has steadily in creased as the puUic became acquainted with their value, u-.til for months together, we have been u::able to supply the demand. We have repeatedly nlarged our factory buildings until they now cover over three acres of ground, and gvn accommodation to more than e j-Iit hundred workmen. We arc fui'y iastified in stating that we now mnke MORE 111 AN ONE-HALF OF ALL TIU: WATCHES SOLD IN THE UNITED STATES. '1 he different grades are distinguished by the following trade marks tngracd cn the plate: 1. "American Vatch Co." Waltham, Mass. 2. "App eton, Tracy & Co." Waliham,. Ma.-s 3. "P S. Rirtlett," Wnltham, 5Ias?.- 4. '-Win Ellen-." 5. 'OUR LADIES' WATCH ofthefirsr qu-ility is n mo ! A ppleton, Tracy &. Co." Walthim, Mass. G. ''Our ncs: quality of Lidies Watrfi is named : P. S. "U.irtltU," Waltham, ilass. Tiise welches are furnished in a crcit variety of sizes and styles of cases. Tho American Watch Co , of Waltham, Mass., authorize us to state that without dibtincti' ii of trade maiks or price, ALL THE PRODUCTS OF THEIR FAC TORY ARE FULLY WA RENTED to be the best time-keepers of their class ev er ti.ade in this or any oilier country. Buy ers siiould remember that unlike the guar antee of a foreign maker who can never be reached, t It is warrantee is god at all times against the Company or their agents, and lhat if afer the most thorough trial, any watch Ehould prove defective in any partic ular, it m y always Le exchanged fcr anoth er. As the Amer can Watches made tt Walilnm, are for sale by dealers generally throughout the country, we do not solicit cr ders for single watches. CAUTION. The public are cautioned to buy t.rdy of respectable dealers. All persons selling counterfeits will be prosecuted. E0BBIN3 APPLET0N, AGENTS FOR THE AMERICAN WATCH C031PA5T ists isiioadway, nr. IV A HCJMBUG. TOW OFTEN WE HEAR EXPRE3-!.jS- son from persons reading advertise mcntsof Pitent .Medicines', and in nine casef out often they may be right. It is over 13 years since I introduced my medicine, tie Venetian Liniment, to the public. I had no money to advertise it, so I ft it for sala w i t h a fe w d r ugg i st s a n d store kee pe rg i hrough a small section of the country, many taking it with great reluctance ; but I told them to let any one have it, and if it did not do alt I stated on my pamphlet, no one need pay for it. In some stoit s two or three tattles were taken o.i trial by persons present I was, by many, thought cr;zy, and tint would be the last they wcu'd see of me. Cut I knew my medicine was no humbug. In about two months I began to receive orders for more L'niment, some calling it my valuable Liniment, 1m hud refused to sign a receipt when I left it at their store. Now my i-aki are millions of bottles yearly, and all for cash. I warrant it superior to any other medicine for the cure of Croup, Diarrhcea, Dy sentery, Colic, Vomiting, Sp;sms, and Se& sickness, as an intermit remedy. It is per fecily innocent to take internally, see oath) accompanying each bottle. and externally for Chronic Rheumatism, Headache, Mumps Frosted Feet. B irises, Sprains, Old Sorces, Swcl ings. Sore Throats. &c, &c. Sold by all tho Druggists. Depot, 5G CcrtlanJt Street, New York. Oct. ll.-7w. x:i:e:ci:s or youth. . A Gentleman who suffered for years from orrvous Debility, Premature Decay, and alL the effects ot youthful indiscretion, will, for iho take of suffering humanity, send freo to all who need it, the recipe and directions for making the tdmple remedy by v.-hi.;h he w3 cured. Sufferers wishing to profit by the adverriser's experience, aa do so by ad dressing JOJIN R. OGDRN, No. 13 Chambers St., New York.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers