CURRENT NEWS. The democracy of Maine are making large gains at their spring elections. The new locomotive "Advance," recently ran from Allentown to Bethlehem, a distance of six miles in five minutes. A negro undergoing bis examination as a witness, when asked if his master was a Christain, replied, "No, sir,he is a member of Congress." Major E. D, Juhnson, elected jury Com* nmsioner in Montgomery county, by the Radicals, attended and voted at the Demo cratic delegate election last week. The wife of a retired soldier, living at Nunns' Ilill, near Valparwsio, has recently brought forth, at one birth, four boye and two girls, and is suckling her children her* self. Ameng ths recently announced patedfk is one for a watch case that is both dust and water proof. They can be left laying in wa ter all night without injury. A man in Illinois last week threw a buck - et full of buckwheat batter at his wife, but hit and plastered another woman who has aued him for battery. Somebody says a baby laughing in its dreams is conversing with angels. Perhaps •o ; but we have seeD them crying in their waking hours as though they were having a spat with the devil. A Mormon exchange announces the death of a bishop thus : lie wat thirty-seven years old, aud leaves an interesting family of eleven wives and forty-seven small children to mourn his death." If the Southern Slates are not in the Union. Why do the treason mongers want them to pass the Constitutional amendment ? Do Slates outside the Uuion amend the Consti tution ? The WorUl gives election returns from 52 towns in New York, which, in 1866, gave a Radical majority of 3,044 ; in 1867 they re turned a Democratic majority of 77, which at the town elections was increased to 791. Similar gains throughout the State would add 20.000 to the Democratic majority of last fall. One of the black-and-tan organs thinks the "Democratic victories was only a straw."— But it was a straw which broke the back of Mongrel ass. How sweet to recline in the lapse of ages say about eighteen. A forlorn editor says it i hard to live without a wife, no gentle heart to get up mornings to build a fire. The grashoppers sre beginning to hatch out by millions on the Texas plains. A lad in a Fronch prison has made a watch, that keeps perfect time, out of straw. An effort is to be made to secure his freedom. There are young women who will lay their heads upon the bosom of one lover to I gaze and wink at another. Whatever may be said of an extravagant j wife, she undonbtedly does her beat to make home tbe dearest spot on earth. Artemus Ward's old agent is to serve Olive Logan in tbe same capacity. A square in Philadelphia now worth mil- j lions of dollars, was oDce sold because the rents did not pay the taxes. Weston, the pedestrian, lately passed through Cleveland in disguise to avoid dia- ; tasteful attention. Such are tbe misfortunes . of greatness. • Arthur Helps, Viclora's editor, is a wid- , ower of fifty-four, short, aod spare in person and has one daughter. Sickles' speech in New Haven was inter- j rupted by three cheers for Gov. English. There is a colt in Montpefier, Vt., with two perfect heads. There are three Shakespears in Michigan— | one Yankee, one Irish, and the other Scotch. | Massachusetts has 53,000 more women than men. "Old Ad Interim" is the name now given 1 to Gen. Lorenzo Thomas. John 11. Surratt is said to be in very poor health. Two of Brigham Young's daughters have married Eldet 11. B. Clawson. Not a stick or stone marks tbe last rest- j ing place of Zach. Taylor. A favorite dish of tbe Chinese is balls ol : cotton fried in oil and stuffed with beetles. Philadelphia is full of young men from the country seeking employment. Kissing a factory girl may be called a "mill privilege," particularly if there be a bigh water-fall on the premises. The Kansas Democracy has elected a Pendleton delegation to the nationol conven tion. Capital punishment in Arkansas—to bo locked up two days with eleven pretty girls in a jury box. Oh !my ! Who would evor find a verdict ? A Parisian has paid 500 000 francs for the privilege of hanging framed advertisements in the Grand Hotel and the Hotel du Louvre, for five years. The word "flirt" is said te be a corruption of "ma fleurette" (my little flower,) a term applied to their young lady friends by the gallants of Louis XlV's court. There is a curious rumor in Washington that Mrs. Senator Sprague, who is quite a politician, sympathize* strongly with the President, represents to her husband and ber father (Chief Justice Chase) that it is an act of tyranny, and that Mr. Johnson has only stood up for hia rigbta. During the month of February there were loaaea by fire to the amount of nearly four and a halt million, not counting any fire where the lota waa under 620.000. Cjje pemocrat. HARVEY OICKLER, Editor. TV It KHAN NOCK., PA. Wednesday, Mar. 18, 1868. jpcmocratic it Auditor General, CHARLES E. BOYLE, of Fayette. Surveyor General, Gen. WELLINGTON ENT, of Columbia. Protest of Democratic Members Against the Arbitrary Course of the Majority. " The undersigned, members of the for tieth Congress of the United States, repre senting directly or in principle more than one half of the whole people of the United States, do hereby, in the name of law and justice an<* in behalf of those they repre sent, most solemnly protest against the tyr anny and injustice practiced by a majority of the House in violating the sacred rights of free debate and unconstrained delibera tion upon the greatest questions ever bro't before an American Congress. "The rules of the house, made for the protection of minorities, and by a strict adherence to which the weaker party can only he protected from those irregularities and abuses which the wantonness of pow er is but too often apt to suggest to large and successful majorities, have been dur ing this entire Congress, in violation of their true spirit and interest wantonly and unprecedcntly suspended and set aside, not upon a particulary and pressing mat ter, but upon all pending subjects of legis lation, so that by this reckless and arbi trary suspension of the rules, and the wanton abuse of the previous question, the rights of the minority havo been utterly disregarded. "The House of Representatives has ceased to be a deliverative body, and the minority have been compelled to vote up on the most important questions without any proper or reasonable time for debate or consideration. To such an extent has the dangerous and oppressive practice ob tained, that measures affecting vitally the whole country, and the dearest interests of our constituents tending, as we believe to the subversion of our republican form of government, in their very nature de manding of the people's representatives the most careful examination aud scruti ny— have been hurried through the forms of legislation without being printed, with out one word of debate or one moment's consideration —without, indeed, the oppor tunity for the undersigned to protest, ex cept in violation of the then operating or der, enforced by the majority as the order of the House. "These alarming abuses of power might Dot seem to demand this formal protest if we were not forced to the be lief that a determination exists with the majority to revolutionize this government by dostioying the other co-ordinate bran ches, and vesting all the powers of the ! government in Congres*. In the steps I taken to depose the President of the Uni | ted States, wc are admonished that there |is no end to these oppressive measures to cripple the power and silence (be voice of ! the minority, "The resolution was rushed through ! the house under the operation of the pre | vious question, referring the matter to the Committee on reconstruction. The 1 committee, in hot haste, sitting while the house was in session, considered, and by a strict party vote, adopted and presented it again to the house for its action, and then was exhibited one of the most ex traordinary spectacles ever witnessed in a deliberative parliamentary body. "Members were allowed, some thirty J minutes, some twenty, some ten, some five, and some one minute only, to discuss the most momentous questions ever pre sented m Congress. Many Could not even get one minute under the arbitrary rule of the majority : and more than halt' of those I even of the party voting to enforce the previous <|iiestion who desired to be heard were permitted only to print speeches in the Glohc, after the question upon the resolution wis decided, and which were never delivered in the house. No com ment can demonstrate more completely than the facts themselves the viciousnesa and illegality of such proceedings. Uut this wanton and excessived use of the power of the majority does not stop here. "While the committee wore in session upon the further proceedings to remove the President, and in anticipation oi its action, under the operation of the previ ous question, without debate, m violation of an express rule, new special and most extraordinary rules for the conJuct of this proceeding, changing, without previous notice, the standing rules cf the house were adopted, to further limit debate, and 1 more completely to place the minority in i the power and at the mercy of the major >y- '1 bus, while the majority of Congress is warring upon the other co ordinate de partments, the executive and the judicial, endeavoring to subjugate and bring them both under the will and control of Con* grcss, the minority of the house of Rep resentatives are steadily and surely being j stripped of all power, and their constitu ! ents deprived of all representative voice in the councils cf the nation. We do, therefore, most solemnly protest against the indecorous and undignified haste with which the majority of this house inaugur j ated, presented and rushed through, by 1 a strict party vote, in plain and palpable I violation of one of the standing rules of the house, a resolution demanding im peachment of the Chief Magistrate of the people for alleged high crimes and mis demeanors in office, when the gravity of the charge, the character of the high office against which the attack was directed, and the unforseen and tremendous conse quences which might result therefrom to the peace and prosperity of the people, called for the exercise of the calirest and wisest judgment, the most unprejudiced and impartial deliberation on the part of those who had such proceedings in charge. "We do also most solemnly protest against this thrice repeated attempt to degrade and break down one of the great co ordinate branches of the government, through the spirit of party hatred and vengeance against the person who, by the Constitution, is in the rightful and conscientious discharge of its functions, thus consuming the precious time which ought to be faithfully devoted to an earn est effort to relieve the pressing wants of the people, a restoration of a torn and dis tracted country to union and good order, and to lightening the burden of a taxation which is pressing down all the energies of trade and commerce to the point of uni versal bankruptcy and ruin. "We do again most solemnly piotest against, and profoundly deprecate and de plore any and all attempts to array in hos tile antagonism to each other, any of the Hcpartments of the government upou the mere question of the constitutionality or construction of a law of Congress, the proper jurisdiction and final adjudication of which belong exclusively to the judi cial tribunals, and we hereby warn the people of the United Slates, that the pub lic liberty and the existence of free instilu tions are involved in this suicidal struggle, and that they are in imminent peril of utter overthrow. "We do fuither mo9t solemnly protest against that wild and radical spirit of in novation upon the early and well settled practice of the government —a practice established by the men who framed the Constitution, and who best understood its spirit and meaning—which puts the Chief Magistrate of the republic, the representa tive of the dignity and power of the peo ple, at the mercy of one of his subordi nates, assuming to be the Secretary of War, in violation of his own pronounced convictions of the law, and who has the unblushing effrontery to place himself iu the unwarranted position of communicat ing directly with Congress in utter con tempt of the authority of his superior, and with the deliberate purpose of resisting his authority. "The undersigned, therefore, in their character of representatives of the people, being deprived, by the despotic power of an inexorable majority, of the high privi leges of debate, that great instrument in the discovery of truth, and the most cher ished heritage of a free people, do hereby solemnly and earnestly protest against these infractions of the tights of the peo ple, and respectfully asked that this their protest may l>e spread upon the journal of the House.—[Signed by 45 members. THE TBOSI'ECTB.—The N. Y. World of Wednesday, in an editorial on tbe New Hampshire election, says : "Assuming that the total vote of each party in the election in New Hampshire, as printed in yesterday's World, to be substantially correct,the gain of each party upon its vote of 1867 is, Democratic 11 per cent, and Republican 5$ per cent.— Should the vote at the Presidential elec tion next fall show the same change, the following States (taking for a basis of cal culation their vote at their last general elections) would be carried by the Demo cratic party : States. Dem maj. Elect, vote. California 12817 5 Connecticut 3,877 6 Delaware 1,841 2 Indiana 5,415 13 Kentucky 64.430 11 Maryland 47,479 7 Nebraska 74 3 New Jersey 21,091 7 New York 71,89G 33 Ohio..- 10,681 21 Oregon r 228 3 Pennsylvania 16,371 26 Total 256,210 137 There arc 274 votes in the eleclorial college without the votes of Southern States, of which a majority is 124 ; with them the number ot votes is 317, of which a majsrity is 159. It is clear, from the above tables, that the Democrats have every prospect of obtaining a majority of the eleotoral votes of the Northern States, and if a fair vote is allowed in the South em States and they take part in the Pres idential election, their vote will be cast for the Democratic candidate, thus insuiing his election by a triumphant majority. Stanton has not a particle of self re spect and wanting in Manhood and Honor. When the question was before the Sen- I ate of including Cabinet officers in the Tenure of office bill, Mr. Williams, ( Rad.) of Oregon said ; " I have no doubt that any Cabint t Minister who has a PARTICLE OF SELF RESPFCT would decline to re main in the Cabinet after the President had signified to him that his presence was no longer needed. " Mr. Howard ( Rad. )of Michigan, had no doubt the practical working of the bill would be as the Senator from Orejon had intimated. Mr. Sherman ( Rad. ) of Ohio said; " I take it that no case can arise or is ! likely to arise, where a Cabinet Minister will attempt to hold on to his office after his chief desires his removal. I can scarcely conceive a case. I think that NO GENTLEMAN, NO MAN WITII ANY SENSE OF HONOR would hold a position as t.'abinet officer after his ch'ef desired his removal. And again he said ; " If I supposed either of these gentlemen [ referring to the Cabinet of Mr. Johnson ] was SO WANTING IN MANHOOD IN HONOR, as to hold his place after the politest intimation by the President of the United States that his services were no longer needed, I certainly as a Senator, would consent to his removal at any time, I and so would we all. " • Among th one hundred and four convicts in the State Penitentiary of South Carolina are eight negro preachers, m The Senate Cannot Convict. A furious partisan majority in the House of Representatives has presented the Pres ident of the United States for trial before a fiercely partisan Senate remarks the Lan- j caster Inttlligencer. The authors of the movement are confident of success, be cause they have staked upon the issue the fate of the party to which four fifths of \ the unscrupulous Senate belong. Yet we hazard the prediction that the scheme will come to grief, and bring ruin upon its con trivers. There are some things which even a Radical Senate DARE NOT DO. It dare not convict of an offence when the offence does not exist. It dare not convict of violation of law when there is no law.— j There is nothing in the Tenure of Offiae j Act which forbade the removal of Stanton. ] By the terms of that act itself his case is 1 expressly excepted from its operation.— j This was purposely done by the very Sen ators before whom the President will come for trial. The lattei's recent message to the Senate lias annihilated every pretext i for the prosecution. But this was super- ! fluous, because all who understood the language can read the plain words of the PROVISO. We doubt not that the Senate is prepar ed to disregard the clear intent of the Constitution, and its interpretation by those who framed it. We have no doubt that the Senate would disregard the usage I of the government ftom its creation to the present day. We have also, no doubt that S the Senate would insist upon the power of Congress to thrust a War Secretary upon the constitutional Commander-in-Chief, against his will. And we are persuaded j that the Senate would spurn a unanimous decision of the Supreme Court against the constitutionality of the act. But wc shall see that even the Senate dare not F.AT LIS OWN WORDS. Thetc are acts so repugnant to common sense —so revolting to the natural instincts j of human justice—that even a debauched i Senate dare not commit th. m. Aftei Con gress declared in equivalent terms .that Andrew Johnson should have power to re move Stanton, notwithstanding the tenure- | of-office act; for, excepting names, this was the precise and intended effect of its language ; even our degraded Senate dare i not venture to condemn the President for doing what Congress expressly authorized him to do. And it WILL NOT. Removal of Cabinet Officers In 1864 when the Republicans wanted Mr. Blair put out of the Cabinet, the fol lowing paper was presented to President Lincolu ; "The theory of our Government, the early and uniform practical construction therefore, is that the President should be aided by a Cabinet council agree no with ■ him in ftolitical principle and general poll ' cy, and that all important measures and appointments should be the results of their ■ combined wisdom and deliberation. The ! most obvious and necessary conditions of I things, without which nu administration \ can succeed, we and the public believe does not exist, and therefore sucli selec- j tions and changes in its members should be made as will secure to the country unity of purpose and action in all material and 1 essential respects." This paper was signed by 25 Republi- 1 can Senators, among whom will be found \ a number who are certain to vote ° for conviction. They are about to punish j in Mr. Johnson as a crime what 'hey urged j upon Mr. Lincoln as a duty. A great part of the signers w ill unite in passing sentence on Mr. Johnson, and wriil thus demonstrate to the whole world, that he is the victim of malicious persecution by reckless and desperate partisan ene mies. These unscrupulous partisans hold one doctrine when they wish to get a member of the Cabinet out, Bnd they fact right about and hold the exactly opposite doctrine when they desire to keep a Cabi- i net officer in. OBITCART—MA JOB-GENERAL GROEGK A. MCCALL.— In announcing the death of this officer we have to record the loss of one of the most useful and least ostenta tious working soldiers that his State fur nished during the late war. General McCall died at his farm near West Ches ter, Delaware County, Pennsylvania, day before yesterday morning. Ilis family has always been of considerable note for three or four generations in Eastern Penn sylvania, with the interests of which dis trict the late General had been ir dentified for many years. lie was born in 1804, and graduated at West Point in 1824. He served under Jackson in the Florida war. and subsequently served under Scott and Taylor in the Mexican war. In the latter lie was brevet ted Colonel for disting uished bravery at Cbcrubusco. He mar ried in 1851. and from that time till the outbreak ot the civil war, devoted himself to literary and agricultural pursuits. II! health compelled him to resign the com mand of the Pennsylvania Reserves at the close of the Peninsular campaign. A large concourse of those wh > esteemed him in Philadelphia will follow his remains from I Christ Church to the grave this Saturday. 1 —Ex. INFAMOUS. —The Democrats in Con gress disapproving of the impeachment measures of that body, attempt ad to offer a proteat, which was refused. This is one of the infamous acts of the infamous body. They seem to think that minori ties have no rights, that they are bound to respect. Tliey may some day be in a position when these precedents may return to plague them. It is currently reported in official eircles that Judge Chase was heard to remark that the impeachment movement was simply absurd as a legal procedure, and politically considered, must seriously effect the party pressing it. While we do not believe that Judge Chase would so far for- j get what is due to his position as presiding j officer in the coming impeachment trial as ! to express himself in this wise, we have no doubt that the rumor correctly represents , hit sentiment*. WHAT THE FREEDMEN'S BUREAU COSTS Us.—ln a recent speech in Congress..!udge Woodward made the following remarks on the keeping up the rotten " Freedmen's Bureau," in all the Southern States: "We have a Freedmen's Bureau as part of the furniture of " reconstruction." And that we may see to what objects our mon ey is appropriated through that machine. I tHke from the last report of the Secre tary of War, ad interim, the following items: For schools and school build ings, 5J53,915 For subsistence stores, 1,450,326 23 For transportation of refugees, frecdmen, teachers and ag ts 22<,.4 03 For agents' salaries, clerks,ice. 521,42! 44 For medical department, 331,001 21 For quarters and fuel, 135,098 64 For clothing, 116,688 80 For printing, postage, and other contingencies, 251,190 86 Total, ' $5,596,397 65 - 4 - HIMSELF AUAI.V. —The Republicans have been exultant circulating the report that a Democratic member of the Kentucky LegisturP, named Brooks, had written a letter to the Speaker of the House, resign ing his seat, and giving as a reason for so doing the conviction which had been forced upon him, that the " principles and course of the Democratic party, with which he ha 9 always acted, were hostile to the ex istence of our social fabric. " The Repub lican press have highly eulogized Mr. Biooks for his course. Mr. Brooks has since sent a letter to the Democratic members of the Legislature, stating that he was ill and a little insane when he wrote the first letter, and that he is now himself again, and a true Democrat. From Washington to Lincoln, every , President lias exercised the right to re more members of their Cabinet, whenever they thought such a course right and pro per. No one ever doubted or denied their j authority to do so under the Constitution, or talked of impeaching them for preferr- j ing one man to ai.other for Secretary of War or Postmaster-General. Yet now j Andrew Johnson is to be impeached for doing this very act. The New York Tribune Commenting upon the probable nomination of General j Grant as the Radical candidate for Presi-; dency says: It would suit us exactly, if the President could beat once a scholar, a statesman, and a gentleman. In a period j of famine, however, the coarsest food seems delicate. " If this means anything, it; nv ans that the Tribune's opinions of Gen- j eral Grant is, that he is neither "a scholar, a statesman, nor a gentleman. " The Johnstown Democrat "goes for" Geary after this style : " The cowardly wbelp Why don't he offer the traitors ttiat Harper's I'Yrry cannon. What a spectacle ! The Government of this com monwealth Using* his official position to excite civil war and bloodshed I A little "Buckshot war " at IJarrishurg would sve him leaving the Capital faster than he left Snicker's Gap." This country is likely to bare plen ty of impeachment on i's hands. Besides the approaching trial at Washington. and the threatened impeachment of the New York commissioner, it is reported ihat there is a movement tn ihe Massachusetts Legislature (or the impeachment of (h-v. Bullock, for the veto of the bdl to :tho!ts!i the Constab ulary In West Yugitiia the Legislature has tiken measures to impeach Judge llindtnan. of that State, charged with admitting attor neys from the Southern States to practice law without taking the " iron clad test oath " The New York Board of Aldermen have be fore them a resolution urging the legislature to impeach (1 •*. Foot on for " high crimes and misdemeanor*," for not enforcing a law rela live to New York City affaire, passed by the Legislature of that State. is reported that the old Mr. lieimehofl, the | has been adjudged Bankrupt rn his own petition ; that the payment->f any debts and delivery of any property belonging to such Bankrupt, tu his, or for ; his use, and the transfer of any property by him are forbidden by law ; that a meeting of the Creditors of : the said Bankrupt, to prove their Debts, and to choose one er more Assignees of his Estate, will be | held at a Court of Bankruptcy, to beholden at Wall's ' Hotel in Tunkbannock. Pa., before Edward Overton, ; Jr.. Register, on tha 'i"2d day of April A. D, IBgS, at ! It o'clock A. M. Tnos. A ROWLEY, U. 8 Marshal, 32w4 By E. E. fWbangh. Deputy. INTRODUCED INTO AMERICA FROM GERMANY", in 1835. KOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS, HOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC, PRKPA RED BY I>K. C. M. J A CK3OX, PHU.SDII.PUIA, PS. The greatest known remedies for Liver Complaint, DYSPEPSIA, Nervous Debility, JAUNDICE, j Diseases of the Kidneys, EEUPTIONS of the SKIN, and all Ulttiiti arising from a Oil* ordered l.lver, Stomach, or jMPVMiTr or the moon. Read th* ftdlowimg tym/Jom,, and if you find that four tyrtnn it affctnd by any of throl. you may rejt auurril that ditrai' htu ennmrued its attack on the wvort important organs of your body, and urdtn soon checked by th' us* of powerful remedies, a miserable bfe, toon terminating in death, unit be the result. Constipation, Flatulence, Inward Piles, Fulness of Blood to the Head, Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea. Heart burn, DISK list for Food. Fulness or Weight in the Stomach, Sour Eructations, Sink ing or Fluttering at the Pit ol the Stomach, Swimming of the Head, Hurried or Difficult Breathing. Fluttering at the Heart, Choking or Suffocating Sensations when in a Lying Posture, Dimness of Vision, Dots or Webs before the Sight, Dull Pain in the Head, Defi ciency of Perspiration, Yel lowness of the Skin and Eyes, Pain in the Side, Back, Chest, Limbs, etc.. Sud den Flushes of Heat, Burning in the Flesh, Constant Imaginings of Evil, and Great Depression of Spirits. AU these indicate disease of the Liter or Ihgtstsss Organs, combined Icilh impure blood. fjooflrtitiTs ©crmau Cillers • ■.entirely vegetable, and contains BO liquor. It Is a compound of El utd Ki tracts. The ltovii, Herbs, and Barks from wlilelt llior extracts are mads are gathered in Germany. All the medicinal virtues are rilracltd from 1 them by a scientific chemist. These extracts arc then forwarded to this country to be used expressly for Hi# mauiifnclurc sf these Bitters. There Is no alcoholic substance of any kind used In compounding the Bitters, hence It Is the only Bitters that ran be used In eases 11 here nlcoholic stim ulants are not advisable. Coofliinb's ©crman (Tonic is a combination of all th' ingredients of the Bitters, %cith PL KK Santa '.VA z Hum, (Grange, etc It it tstedferr ; the tam" distant* as the Hitter *. in fast 3 where f>mt pure alcoholic stimulus is required, Yem will hear in mind that these remedies are entirely different from any others advertised far the cur* of the diseases named, these being scientific preparations of medicinal detracts, while, the t>thcrs are mere decoctions of rum t* tome form. The T IC is decidedly one of the most pleasant and agrreahte remedies ever offered to the puhhr. Its taste is exquisite. Jt is a pleasure to take 11, while its life-giving, exhilarating, and medtanal qualities have caused it to he known a# the greatest of all lonics. CONSUMPTION. Thousands of cases, when the pa tient supposed lie was afflicted with this terrible disease, have been cured by the nse of these remedies. Extreme emaciation, debility, and cough are the usual attendants upon severe eases of dyspepsia or disease of the digestive organs. Even in rases of genuine Consumption, these remedies will he found of the greatest benefit, ' strengthening and ins igoratiug. DEBILITY. JJirrg is no equtil to HooflaiuTs German BtUcrs or Tonic m cats* "f Debility. Thry impart a ton* and vigor to Vic whole system, strengthen the, an. petite, cause an enjoyment of the food, enable the Stomach to digest it. purify the blood, give a good, sound, healthy complexion, eradicate, the. yUuw tinge from the eye. impart a Uom to the cheeks, and change the pat-efU from a short-breathed, emaciated. i wak, and nerrous invalid, to a full-faced, stout, and vigors out person. Weak and Delicate Children ■re matle strong by using the Bitters or Tonic. In tart, thry are Fain II y Medicines. Tlicycau be administered with perfect safety to a child thrsa months old. the most delicate female, •r a man of ninety. These Rcnudiet are the best lilootl I*ti riIlor wer known, and will curt ail diseases rtsult+ig /ram | bad blood. Keep your blood pure : keep your Liver in order ; keep your digestir' or pans in a lound, healthy eaudi tion, Sy the us' "J these rem tries, and no J titan will over assail you. TH3 SCHPLSSXCIT. Ladles who wish a fair skin and f;ood complexion, free from a yellow sh tinge and all other disfigurement, should use these remedies occasion ally. The Liver In perfect order, and the blood pure, will result In spark ling ayes and blooming cbiskt. CAt'TIOS. TlocfMufs German Remedies art counter feeted. Vie genuine hate the sign-litre of C. St. .laelesof* on the front of the outside wrapper of each bottle, aet the name of the article blown in each bottle. Ail others art counterfeit. Thousands of letters hare baen re act ved, testify Ing to the v Ir toe of these remedies. BEAD THE RECOMMENDATTONB. FROM HON. GKO..W. WOODWARD. Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Pennsvlvanis. Puu.Ai'K!.rHi. >1 ia<"H 16th, 1567. IJlnd "Hoofian lin'nes, but regarding the practice at out of my appropriate sphere, I hare in alt cases de clined ; hut with a clear proof in various instances, and particularly inmy men family, of the usefulness of Dr. jToofUtneTs German Hitters, I d. jxirtfor nuce from my usual course, to express my full conviction that for general debility of tbe system, and especially for Liver Complaint, it is a safe and valuable preparation. In some cases it may fait; but usually, I doubt not, it will be very benejirial to those who suffer from the abov* causes. l'ours, very respectfully, J. 11. KI.X.XA RD, Eighth, below Coatee St. Price of the Bitters, $l.OO per bottle j Or, a half dozen for $5.00. Price of the Tonic, $1.50 per bottle | Or, a half dozen for $7.50. The Tonic is put up in quart bottles. Recollect that it is Dr. Hoqflanets German Remedies that are so universally used and so highly recommend ed ; and do not allow the Druggist to induce you to take any thing else, that he may say is just as good, be cause he makes a larger profit on it. These Remedies will be sent by express to any locality upon application to the PRINCIPAL OFFICE, AT THE GERMAN MEDICINE STORE, Jfo. 631 ARCn STREET, Philadelphia. CHAB. M. EVANS, Proprietor, Formerly 0. M. JACKSON & CO. These Remedies are for sale by Druggists, Storekeepers, and Medi cine Dealer* everywhere. Do not forget to examine well the article you buy, in order to gel the genuine. JsIIUIMKNA IN DIVORCE, Porlina S. Thompson, by lln the Court of Com ber next friend Elijah Bull -Pleas of Wyoming Co. vs. Henry W. Thoinpsua. jNo 104 Nov. Term,' 67 Libel Jar Dirorce from the bonds of Matrimony. I, M W. Hewitt, High Sheriff oi said County of Wyoming, hereby makes known unto the above nauiod lieniy W, Thompson, lhat he be and appear at a Court of Common l'leas, to be hetd at Tunk hannock in the county aforesaid on Monday the 2Cih day of April A D. 1869, then and there to answer jhe complaint, and show cause, if any he hath, why (be bonds of matrimony between the said Henry W. Thompson and his wife, Perlina S. Thompson, shall not bo dissolved. M. W DEW ITT. Sheriff. > ffMff's Offba, tab.. Pe Mat* 1 Pi X*nBTVI7" ABOUT APRIL, IST. UNDERIIILL & CAMPBELL, WILL. REMOVE TO THEIR NEW STORE, Wo, 414 Lackawanna Avenue, Scranton, Penn'a. Look Out for ]Vew Goods cCb.eap Wall Paper. glims Iff TI EMSSIIHEWISS, Having made arrangements to go out of trade we offer our extensive and varied Stock ofGoods, exclusively for CASH or READY PAY AT UKTHEJAR-D OF LOW PRICES. BUNNELL & BANNTAYNE. N. B. /.II persons indebted to us by note or book account are requested to make prompt payment.