■anoe,lf, then, for a common Chjoct, jjhU property ie to fie sacrificed, is it nof’just tlftit it by done at a com (non charge? And. ifigitb. lass money, or money more easily pgitV-welian preserve the benefits of the - Dnif'n liy Jwiis means, than vra pan b? the. war slope, is it.phot algo economics! to da it? ibonsidSjr it 'then. Let ns aoertain the. ium we'./ hate ! I ex pended in the vrar sinoe odmpensaled emftrici ■pation was proposed last March, a|d whether if that measure had boej> ptbi&|tlj accepted by .even some of the sUve' sta.tesJths same sum would not*bava dope mere to close the war than hag otherwise done. . ’ Iftso, the measnre would, save money, and, in lib at view would be a prudent and economical sure. Certainly it is not so easy to pay thing, as it is to pay nothing ; but it is-easier to pay a largo sum, thah.it is to pay a larger one, and it is' easier to pay any sum :*rben, we are able, than it ia to pay it before grelbre able. The war requires them at bpb'e ; gragata snm necessary for “Compensated Ewan cipation,” of course, would, be large, butt if would requite ho r&djf cash nor bondsmen any faster than the emancipation ' progresses. This might not, and probably woujd ho\ dote before'the end of the, thirty-seven yearfl-Bj At tiattimewe shall probably havq IOO.OTOOOO of people to share thp burden, instead bn -Si, - 000,000 as now; 'and'hot only but thjj;in-' crease of our population 'may ‘ha expected to continue for a long time after the pel-.iudiiWßap idly as bqfore, because our. torrifory wOlijhot have become full. ; ( . ’ Ido not state this inconsiderably. At/flhe same ratio of increase which we l ave tpikin tainedon an average from our .first 1 nati|nal census, in 1790, Wil’jhat of 1860, ; 'we'shluld in 1900 have a population of 103,20},4l5'||knd why may we pot.continue that ratioy , ar > beyond that period? Our abundant, room,,bur Mpad national homestead, our ample resources. 'Mere our territory ns limited ns are, the Jlritish'Sles, very certainly, bur population could hot expand as stated. Instead of receiving ‘the follign born as now, we, should fie compelled to; pend part of the native-born away ; bn* such il'not our condition. We have-two tiiUiiong mine hundred thousand square 01es. Europe’has millions'and eight hundred thousand, with a population averaging seventy three and one.-third pe/aons to the 'square,Spile. Why may not odt country at some time .’fjver age as many ? Is it lees fertile ?’ .Has itiljtore waste surface by mountains, rivers; I«ke|;deB - or other causes? Is it inferiorytpijEu rope in any natural advantage?' fid tlif|l w« are at eome-time : ,tb ba as -populous/ how soon f As to wheh this may.he w*dean judge by the past and the present. ijiAs taivhen it will, if ever, depends muoh on fehethw we m&intaia the ijnion. Several of. ot|| are above the average European po;i|iTatpj)h of seventy-three and a third- to the a.juare; Massachusetts has one hundred and’fifty-.sdven, Rhode Island one hundred and thfHy-ti^ree.— _ New York and New Jersey -each fctghtyp also two other great states, Pennsylvanjj ftmj Ohio, are not far below—the and the-later fifty-nine. The stiyetv' 1 ufready above the European average, exoejpNewjjfork, have increased toils rapid ratio efnctj posing that point ss ever before, while no? oivi o| them is equal to some other parts of our courjiiry in national capacity, for sustaining, a!: dense popu lation. ' '1- ji’ Taking the nation in the aggregate, nMfi we, find its population and ratio of jqcreaae ffer the several decennial periods to be as follower , 17/90-5.927,827. ' '■ | , J ■ 1800—5,305,937—35.20 per cent, ratmof in crease. ‘ i ' ’ tf- 1 - 1810—7,!J39,815— 36.45 per oenj, ratiMpf in crease. ■ . //' r 1820—.9,638,131—33.13 per cent, tatlojof in crease. ■ ft 1830—13,866,020-33.49 per «nt. r*o of increase. .... . *|.i JS 1840—17,069,453—32.67 per dent, ratio of increase. ’ V- ‘ ;! 1850—23,161.875—35-.57 per bjjnl.i wjtio of increase. ' ‘ / .Sh 1860—31,442,790—35.58 per cent. r|tio of[ national authority would be accepted without increase. ■... ' '' -j ' its adoption, not will the war or proasedinge This shows an average decennial increase of under the proclamation of September 22.1862, 34.50 per cent, in population throughout,ttje sev- be stayed because of the recommendation of enty years,yfronj our first to our last cehl'us tn- this plan. Its timely adoption, would, I doubt v hen. It is Teen that the ratio of iqcreaSfr at no not, bring restoration, and thereby stay both ' one of tbesfe seven periods, is either -tSyp. pCr And notwithstanding this plan, the recommend cant, below, or two per cent, above th||;aver- ing tlr.it Congress provide by Taw for oompen age' thus showing how inflexible, an'dij-conae- sating any State which m-iy adopt emancipiv quentiy how reliable the law of increas|iin our tion before this plan shall have been anted upon case is. Assuming that it- will oonHpuc, it is hereby earnestly renewed. Such would only gives the following : 187,0, 42,3^5.341; ; »n advance of part of the -plan, and the same 1880, 55,957,218,; 1890, 76,677,872; 1900,103.- arguments apply to both. This pi,in is reoom -208,415 ; 1910, 138,518,526; 1920,. 1@8,984,- mended as a means additional to all others for 335’; 1930, 25L680.94L Thcsij figurlksbow , restoring and preserving the rightful authority that out country may he as populous ass£urope of the nation, now is, at some point between'l92o aif| 1930, The subject,is presented exclusively in its say about 1925, our territory at 73i .perhone to economical aspect. The plan \vould r I am eon the square mile, being of ,the capadicy’l£ Con- fi'lent, secure peace more speedily than can be tain.217,i85,000; and we will reach; sjjs too; , dime by force alone; while it would cost, oon if we dp not ourselves relinquish the chances ( sidering amounts and manner of payments, and by the folly and evils of disunion, qr ijyjong i times of payment, less, and the amount would and exhausting, wpc-springing from ;t&B only | he easier paid than will ha the additional cost great element of national discord ataoqai us.— jof the war if wo rely solely upon force. It is While it cannot be fore'seeu exactly hoHl much' most likely—very likely—that it would cost no one hugo example of secession, ies-' blood at ail.' The plan is proposed as pertna ser ones,-indefinitely would retard tbSj|iopula- nent Constitutional law. . It cannot become ' lion, civilisation and prosperity, no Me' can Bu ch without, the concurrence-of—first, two doubt thatdhe ejtsnt of it would be.vfe* great thirds of Congress, and afterwards three-fourth* aad injurious. - ’ ■' »&« - the States. The requisite three-fourths of The proposed emancipation would-'Shorten. the Suites, will necessarily include seven of the war. perpetuate peace, insure this;iporeasß the slave States. Their conctrrrdnce, if ob of populariiib, end proportionately lhe|wealth tained, will give assurance of their severally «f the country.:, . With tbis all adopting emancipation at no distant-day, upon the emancipation would cost, together.v||th our the new Constitutional jerms. This assurance other debts;-easier .than, we should pay siar nth- would end the struggle now, and save the et debts without,it; If we had allowerpour old Union forever. : - national debt to run at 6 per centum, wimpte Ido not forget the gravity which should interest frora-the end of dJirrevDlutio»ar||gtrug- characterise a paper-addressed to the Congress gle till to-day,witbom paying any thing lon ei- of the nation, by the Chief Magistrate of the ther principal or interest, each man of;u|iwould. nation, nor do I forget that some of you are my owe less upon that debt now than-eJ man seniors, or that many of you have more expe- Wed upon it tben. and; this because bur in-’ lienee than I, in the conduct of public Affairs, crease of men through: the whole .per|id has Tat I trust that in view uf the great responei-1 been greater than 6 per centum and- has run hility resting upon me, you will perceive no faster than .the interest- upon the Tbnp want of respect to yourselves in any undue time alone relieves a dehtuy nation aorjpng as earnestness I may seem to display. Is it doubt •its population increases faster than unpj>id., in- ad that the plan I "propose, if adopted, would terest socumulates on its debt.. This faq|',would shorten the war. and thus lessen its expondi be no excuse for delaying the pay meat qfwhal turerof .money and of blood? is justly due, but it shows the great importance I* it doubted that it would restore, the nation of time in this connection the great mintage al authority aad national prosperity,-ap'd per of a policy by which we shall not bavdfio pay petuate both indefinitely ? Is it doubted that until we number a hundred %aiilioM||[Whal we here—Congress and Executive—can secure by a different policy we could have to Any now its adoption ? Will the good people respond to when the number is but thirty-onemiii|wiB. In a united and earnest appeal from us? a word, it shows that a dollar will bejnach har- Can we—can they, by any other means, so der to pay fur the war, than will be a dollar, fur certainly and so speedily assure these vital ob emancipation on the proposed plan. Aftdthen jects? We cannot succeed only by concert, the latter will cost no- blood, nq pr.ocjofjft life. It is not—can any of us imagine, better; but It will be a earing of both. Aq to th'q|sejjond can we ail do better? No pbject whatsoever is article, I think it would beimpfiwfica.l* to re- p '.'sibio. Still the question-.recurs, can we do hum to bondage the class of therein better? The dogmas nf the quiet past are in '-'nnlated.-. Si "e qf them doubtle' m.tiie, adco” the -my present. The occasion liificullies, and we must rise As our tftee is » nsw one, T 1 pensatieg such. The third'article relates to the ! iuture of the freed people. ' It does not oblige; -but merely authorises Congress to aid in colon--: . iiing.such-0* may. qonsont. . This ought not' to'' he regarded as objectionable oh the one hand, nr-on tbeotlier, in soiuucb as it comes to noth ■ing, unless by mutual consent of the people to be deported and the,American voters, through their representatives in Congress. I cannot make it better known than it‘already is that 1- strougly favor colonisation; and yet 1 wish to say. ther.e is an objection urged against the col- i ured persons remaining in the country which je ! ■largely imaginary, if uut sometimes malicious. It is insisted that their presence would injure and displace white labor and white laborers. — ,If there ever could be a proper time for mere arguments, that time is surely not now. In timer like the present, men should utter noth ing for which-they would willingly be n spon sible through time and eternity. Is it true, then, that colored people can displace any more white labor, by being free than remaining slaves? If they stay in their old places, they jostle no white laborers. If they leave their old places, they leave them open to white laborers. Logi-. cally, there is neither more nor less of it. , Emancipation even, \ without deportation, would probably enhance the wages of white la borers, ami very Surely. would not reduce them. ■ Thus the /'customary amount of labor would still have to be performed. The freed people would surely not domore than their old pro portion' of it, and very probably for a lime would.do less, leaving an increased part to white laborers, bringing their labor into great er. demand and (mnsequcntly enhancing the wages of it. With deportation, even to a lim ited-extent, enhancing wages to while labor is mathematically certain. Labor is like any other commodity in the market. Increase the de.mand for.it and you increase, the price for it. Reduce the supply of black' labor by colonising the black laborer out of the country, and by precisely so much you inoreas* the demand fur, and wages of white labcor. But It is declared that the freed people will swarm forth and cover the whole land. Will liberation make them nny more numerous.— Equally distributed among the whites of the whole country; and there would be blit one colored to seven while.' Could the one, in any case greatly disturb the seven ? There are many communities now wbo have-more than one free colored person to seven whiles, and this without apparent consciousness of evil from.it. The District of Columbia and the States of Maryland and. Delaware, are all in this condition. , The District has more than one free colored to six whites, and yet, in its frequent petitions to Congress, I believe it never has presented the presence of free col ored people as one of its grievances. ' But why should emancipation south send the freed people north ? People" of any color seldom run unless there is something to run from. Heretofore, colored people have fled north, to someWtent, from bondage, and now, , perhaps, from bondage and ’ destitution ; but if gradual emancipation -and' deportation be adopted, they will have neither to flee from. Their old master will give them wages, at least until new laborers can be-procured, and th— freed men, in turn, will gladly give labor for the wages until new homes can be found for them in congenial climes, and with people of their own blood and race. proposition can be trusted on the mutual interest involved, and, in' nny event, cannot the North decide for itself whether tu receive them? Again,'as practice proves more than theory, in- any case has there been any irruption north wards tfeca use of the abolishment of slavery in the District of Columbia last spring? What 1 have said" of the proportion •of free tfblored persons to the whites in the District of Columbia is from the census of 1860, having no reference to person* called contrabands, nor of those made free by the act of Congress abolishing slavery hero. ■ The plan consisting of these articles is rec ommended, not that but a restoration of the THE TIOGA COE STY A G I.T ATO R. so we must think nod aot r anew. Disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our country, Fellow-chiseiis—we cannot escape history. Wo in thU Congress will be remembered in spite orbureSKes. 'No personal- significance or insignificance can spare one jnr another of us. The fiery trial through which we pass, will light us down in honor or dishonor, to the, latest generation. The world will not forget that while we say this, war do, know how to save thoUniyn. . . The world knows we do know how to save it. We—even we' here, hold the power and bear the responsibility, In giving freedom to the slave, we assure freedom to the free—-honorable alike in what' we give, and what we preserve. We.shall ino hly save or rooanly lose the . best hope of the earth. ... Other moans may 'succeed.. Tine, could not fail. The, way is plain, peaceful, generous, and just j a way which, if followed, the world will forever applaud, and 1 . God must forever ble*s. (Signed) Abuaua M Lincoln. Washington, D. C-, Dec. 1,1862. Th(i Case in Short Hand, A good deal of ingenuity has been lavished on the,question—’"was slavery the cause of the Southern Rebellion?" Some say not, but that uncliastened ambition, p'aying upon the natur al jealousy and apprehension of the slavehold ing caste, precipiiated the ; convulsion. This seems to us a distinction where them is no real difference. Xou may say that the final cause was the depravity of human nature: but. that does not, any more than uaybaslened ambition show why there should he rebellion in the South and none iq the North'. In deciding-lho main question, these cardinal truths can 1 nei ther he ignored or denied: 1. The Rebellion has broken out in the slave states. 2. It commenced in South Carolina, the most intensely Pro Slavery of them all, and master ed State after State in exact proportion to their interert and devotion to Slavery. 3. That portion of tlwtse States wherein sla very was the weakest—East Tennesee Western Texas, NorthiAhibuma, &e., stood out firmest aod lougest against, the prevailing epidemic ; while West Virginia, wherein slavery was sarcely mure than nominal, never rebelled at all. . 4. The four slave Suites wherein slavery is the weakest^—Delaware, Maryland, Missouri, and Kentucky—never revolted at aj!. 5. Yet in these States the sections and coun ties wherein slavery is relatively strong have steadfast by and strongly sympathised with the Rebellion, and have continually dispatched men and means to its aid, _ 6. In the free States, the sympathisers with the rebellion are, without 'exception partisans of slavery, while every earnest anti-slavery man bolds it in unmeasured abhorrence. 7. Every member of Congress, whether from .the free or from the slave States, who has acted or voted so as to embarrass the government and please time rebels is a champion of slavery. 8. Every one in or out of Congress who wants the rebels conciliated rather than put Uovrn, ns open-mouthed jo, resistance to the Presidents proclamation of freedom. 9. Eyery European advocate of the Rebell ion Condemns and assails that Proclamation mu>t venemoosly.- And 10. Every Old-World champion of rim Onion commends and rejoices over that Proclamation as the most:damaging blow yot given to the Rebellion. , If any man, in view of these undeniable facta, does not realise that stnveiy is the cause of the Rebellion and the rebellion tbe oonsequeiviib of slavery, he vnuai be one wbone prejudices defy the powers of demonstration. Burnside and McClellan.— From a letter dated "9*h Army Corps, opposite Fredricksburg Nov, we make the following extracts. The contrast is Btgniiioant.- 1 cannotidosa this short letter w ithout speak ing; of a point of difference between Gene. Burnside ahd McClellan that even the private soldiers notice and talk of. When wo made our slow marches and tardy advances under the regime, the commanding General's head quarters were alw.ijs from six to ten miles in the rear. , All is changed now. Gen. Burn-iJc leads the van. His headquarters are among the most advanced (,)t pqesem they me nut a half mile from where 1 write). lie sen-.s his men no where that he dare not himself go with them. Not that I suppose he will needlessly expose himself. He is 100 good an officer for that. But he is eeer with the advance. Ho watered his horse in the Rappahannock on the 19th— the first, man to reach the river. Had the ene my’s pickets—not a stone’s throw from him on the further 1 shore—known who the large man in the slooched hat wa«, they might have tried a shot at liim. Of course he kpt-w this but doubtless he relied on, the probable fact that they have become so nccuatumfd to Union commanding General who kept beyond long range eanlton shot, they never imagine for a moment that the leader of our army would put himself within reach of smooth bore musket, He was.sage enough no doubt. Ben nut of the, New York Herald, the old defender of Buck while President, thus speaks of Buchanan for United States Senator; "The movements to make ex-President Buchanan the next United States Senator from Pennsyl vania is most ridiculous and imprudent. The imbecility iof Buchanan involved us in this war. Had he but possessed-as touch courage in bis.whole body as General. Jackson bad in | one hair of hia head be would have taken the < adviea of Qeneral Scott, and served the ‘South ; Carolina secessionists ns Jackson served- the nullifiers, and we should have had no further trouble. Buchanan is unfit fur any office of responsibility and trust, and. especially tor so honorable tin .office, as that 6f Senator of the United Siajtes. We would-sooner see old Si mon Cameron occupy this position -, for unlike the imbecile and treacherous Buchanan, he has tome pluck, some capacity, some frankness, and some fidelity to his fiiends." We stioingly suspect that Bonnet mill see ' what he would “sooner” see I — Lancaster Uh iyn. ■' “ Srft&aon m Tows.—We Lave been gratified by a call' from Frederick Ayer, B«nrjing bay, with awhile stripe in his face, with one white hind foot a sucking colt, color, ?or rol. Any one giving. informniinn where they can be found, Will Imj fiberully rewarded. GEORGE 51. HALL. FurmlogtonTlill, Dec. 10, lSi>2.* * IMPORTANT NATIONAL wokks, PCBtiISHED BY D. API’LKTOJS k CO. 346 & 348 Broadway, New York. 'TUIB, following work* aroint to Subscribe** in any part J. uf tbe cuuuUy. (.upon receipt of retail piko,; by uuiil or express, propaifl; i ' The New American Cyclopedia, a pojnt.u Dictiv>uar> ul General Knowledge biiiieu b> George Uipby and Charles A. Dana, Aided by auumsrmuitvlsct corps of «ri* Urs in All brandies uf acifnc»*. Art. and ihie work is hdng published'in about Ifi large octnvo volume*, evij cuntMinittg .76u two-column, page*. Vole J< 11. 111, IV. V\VI f. Vfjf, IX. X, XI,XII,XIU kio now ready, each contain ing: near ‘2.SOO\>riginal articles. An additional volume will be published once in about three month*. Price, in Cloth; $3; Sheep, $3,50; UalfMorfoceo,s4; HaH Russia. $4,60 each The r,ew Ami-ricivd Cyclopedia is popular without befog Mipcrftcial. loarncrt. bat not pedantic. compr*hvn«ivebut>nl* ficientfy dawdled. free from personal piqut- jiud parly pnjn* Oicu, fresh and ypt accurate. It is a complete statement of all that h knofvn upon avery important, topic vriilrin the kcojic of hunjeiii intelligence. Every important article Jn it has boen jwriiten tor it* page* by men who urc an* thorities npfjil tlv* topics of t wbUUi they f peak. Tboyarcre qmreti to bring the subject np to the present moment ; to. sut«* ju*t how it stand* n'me. All the statistic** totormntlon i'c from the latest report*; 1 tho geographical accounts keep pace with the latent explorations; bialoiitfal matters include the frt*hfM\jns{ view*; the’ biographical notice* botonlv spwtk ol thetiead but of,lbu living, ft is alibvarv.of ABRIDGMENT OF TH£ DERATES OF*COM3RF&S- Doing ft Political History ol the TJofteh Stall-*, from the or* gartizacton of the first t'edoral Congress io 17h9 to IBs6* Ed ited and compiled hy Hon.fhuma* 11, Benton, from the of ficial Records of Congress. The work will bv completed in 16 royal octavo volnme* of 750 patre* each. 14 of which ore nowrfefldy. An additional volume will I>a Issued oner in three mouth*. L WAT OP PROCCr.ISO tBB CTCLOPACDU Ok DEBAWS. Form a club of four, afitf remit the price of fbur book* and five copies will besent at the remittar’s oxpeuie for car ringe; oi for-ten subscriber*, eleven ceyifcß mil besontato'm expense for carilugc. TO AGENTS. No other work* will *of liberally reward the exertion* Agents, an Agent Wantsp Iq this Oonaty. Term* made known un application to the Publisher*. [Jan, 11, *W. The and Experience of aiPoor, foutig ITlaii. ' AO ENTILE. VI AN having been cured of the result* of early error and disease, will, from motives of buutfvuleuce, send to tfyose who request, a copy of the above interesting narrative, published by himself.— This little book is designed a* a warning and canton to young men and those-who suffer from Nb Ryots Dkbimtt, 'Loss op Mfmoiit, PfcEjiATUftß Decaf, Ac., Ac., supplying at' the same tithe the mean* of self-cure. Single copies will be sent under seal in n plain envelope,— without charge,-rto any who request it, by addressing the author. ; CH£S. A LAMBERT'Esq., ’ , Qreenpoint, Long Isjaiid, York.-• SPRING i FASHIONS, s. Pi QC-WK, HATTER; Jo. 13* Wsilvt Streci, Elmira, keeps constantly on hand a general assortment of FASBIOS Silk A.\D CASS!i!ERE BATS. ' Also all kinds of Soft Hats and Cops, Furs for Ladle,, Jto. Hats made to order. Cali 1 and leave-your meas ure, nod then you can have »Hat to fit yon. Prices to salt the; times. Quality warranted, R|uxir&,.March It), IHS'J. - ' Corning Sewing MifclUne j)«poi. TUB best Sewing Machines in the United States • GroVcr;4 Bakeris New Family Machine, making the Lock Stitch, acknowledged to bo' superior to all others. Price $4O. " GROVER t BAKER’S FAMILY MACHINE, so much admired by those who have usod them. Price $4O. . .... - - • GROVER * BAKES’S' LARGE BfIVTTL&iMA CHINE for sewing Leather and Tailor work. Price *4O. tyheler sod Wilson $45.’ Fiokle A Lyon's $4O, ' Binders, |5O. Empire, g4O. ~ Willeox i Gibbs, 130, .1 > , Persons baying or. ordering machines of as eaa roly no getting, one adapted, to their business. Every Machine warranted to give satisfaction for one year. Machines on Mahogany, Black Weliiht, and Rose Wood cases advanced prices. 'par ticulars send fur Circulars. C. Q. HOWELL, Proprietor of the Corning Bag Factory. Corning, Hi Y„ Sept. 10, 1862. , A CURIOSITY-—Quite a curiosity in the ihepe of a new patent Ernit Jar far preserving’ Fruit, can he seen at Roy’s Drag Store! Call and examine Keren if yoa da not wish to boy. GOXCSm ATI® LYE, for sale at ' * ' ; ; : J»Y*B lt«Wk WOft*. DR. SWEET’S INFALLIBLE L. I. If I M E Jf x j THE GREAT R E M*Dy - K» BHECMATISK, GOUT, NEDRAUn, BTIMTNBCK AND JOINTS. CUTS AND WOONHB ft E AND Att RHEDM Am AND NEK? 8, VOHS DISORDERS. - For all of which it ia a aptcdy and certain j, and never fail,., Thu Liniment it prepared WY r recipe of Dr. Stephen Sweet,«f Conneeticnt t 5, mona bone setter; and has been need in bis «««?' for more than twenty yean with the most Jt»id log *ucce««. ■*»»«»- AS AN‘ ALLEVIATOR OF PAIN, it i. on rivaled M any preparatfon before the public, of wK.v the be Conrincod by a tin t l» Thu Liniment will cure rapidly and radically ‘Meutpatte Diurittt of every kind, and. if thociaodi of cases whore it has been. . Used rj hi never kliT known to fail, ■ • ■ " - NEURALGIA, it will afford immediate relief in every caae, however 1 It will relieve the worn casta of HEADACHE in three minutes and it warranted to do it. TOOTHACHE alio will it cure Initially, ‘ FOR NERVOUS DEBILITY AND GENE RAR LASSITUDE ariiing from imprudence of«, cere, this Liniment i« a moat happy and cnfaiHor remedy. Acting directly upon the nerront tißin. it atrengthenaand revmfiea the ajalem, and tenoral ft to elasticity and rigor. , , FOR PILES.—As an external remedy, wr claim that it is the bat known, and we challenge tie world to produce an equal. Every victim of thu dis tressing complaint should give it a trial, for it will not fail to afford immediate relief, and in a majority of cases will effect a radical cure. QUINSY AND SORE TIJROAT are sons times oatremely malignant and dangerous, hut a timely application of this Liniment will never fail t» cure. SPRAINS are sometimes very obstinate, sad en largement of the joinis ie liable to occur if ntgltclid. The worst ciiao may be conquered by this Linimmt in two or three days, i . , BRUISES, CUTS. WOUNDS. SORES. UL CHRS, BURNS AND SCALDS, yield readily to the wonderful healing properties of Dr.-Swkbt’i lisle Lr.MMtt.Ht, when used according to directieM. Also, ®bi]fakiu»y Floated Fee t, nod inject Rites tad Stings. ' DR. STEPHEN SWEET* OF CONNECT!- CUT, the Great Natural Boi.e Sator. PR STEPHEN SWEET. OF CONNECTI CUT, is known ail over the United Stale* PR .SWEET'S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT Cures RlituoiaUsm and nerer fails. DU SWEET'S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT Is n certain roinedj for Kuuialgia. DR SWEET’S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT Cure:; Bums aud.Scald* Immediately.- > DR. SWEET'S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT Is the be*t known remedy for Sprains and Bruiic*. DR. INFALLIBLE LINIMENT Cures Headache immediately and was never know* to fail. DR. SWEETS INFALLIBLE LINIMENT Affurda immediate relief, lor end seldom fails to cure. DR SWEET'S- INFALLIBLE LINIMENT Cures (Toothache in one minute* DU. SWEET'S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT Cures Cuts and Wounds immediately; and leaves a* scar. ' DR. SWEET’S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT Is tbe best remedy for Sords 'ia the known world. DR. SWEET S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT Has been used by more than a mjlUup people, and all praise it. DR. SWEET S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT Taken internally cures Colic, Cholera Mortal aid Cholera. , - DR. SWEET’S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT I» truly n "friend in need," and ever, family should bare it at band. DR. SWEET’S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT Is for sale by all Druggists. Prion 25 and 50 oeati. A Friend In Weed. Try 11. Dr. Sweet’s Infallible liniment, as nn ex ternal remedy, is without a’ rival, and- will, alleviate pain mure apetdily than an, other preparation. For ali .Rheumatic and Nervous Disorders it is truly in fallible, and as a curative for Sorea/Wonnds, Sprains, lirni.-es. ic., its loathing,’ "healing aid powerful strengthening, proper!!**, excite the juet woedef and astonishment of all who bare ever given it a trial. Over one ihonsanj certificates of remarkable Ceres, performed by it within the last two years, attest the fact. "5 To,, Horse Otvncri! Dr. Sweet'* Infallible Liniment Hoittl is ueuruied by any, and in • all cases of Lamen***»- arising From- Sprint, Bruises or Wrenching, its effect* U ma'giinl and certain. Hemes* or Saddle Scratches;'"Mange, Ac., It will also core »p##dilj** Spavin and'Ringhone-may be e«»i!y prevented and' cured Co their incipient stages, but confirmed caw*- arc beyond ih© possibility of a radteul cure. No csss* of the kind, however, is so desperate or -hopeleis it may be alleviated by this Liniment, nnd its laithfot application will always remove the Lameness, so® enable the horses to travel irith comparative e*w. EVERY HORSE OWNER ahonlilbare this rcnedy at hend/Tor its tunalr 0,1 the first appearance ul hamenaga will aSaataaily pH*- vent those formidable diseases, to which all hortesaf* liable, and which render n m any otberwUe rah*®*, horaea.nearlj worthiest. ... ' ~ OR., SWEET’S, Infallible Liniment* 1(1 B S lO.IiDIER’B FVlElilß And thfinaanda bars found It TRULY A FRIBNR IN .WEBPt, CAUTION. To avoid imposition, obserra the Slgnatura •*“ Ljkenesa of Dr. Stephen Sweeten every label, alto f< Stephen Swdet’s Infcllihlh Hwmeat' «»»»» the class of each hot tie, wUhoat ethieh pent ass gee ninja. : , BrICHARpSOS i CO., • • Sole PTbprleloTf, Norwieß, vfc . MOKSAJT £ fleneral ■ 40 -Cliff Street, Jvf* Mr* Sold by all dealer* '