CURRENT NEWS. Soarl *t fever is raging in Luzerne county. Olive Lo-.a-i l-ctuivd in Washington Hall, Ck-raiilon, last Friday. Fifty live business house in Chicago have just tailed—Radical" good times. " One million sacks of wheat are stored in the warehouse of San Francisco. Horace Grady's salary on the New York Tribune is sai l to be a year. The Erie Canal is to be closed December 7 th. Baron James Bothschild was ill but ten days. The Detroit river is to IK I tunnelled at Detn nt. Mrs Lincoln ua. last heard from at Frunk fort-on-the-Main. * The prince of Wales was twenty-seven years old November Hth Highway robbery is said to be again prev alent in the lamdon streets. Boston claims to have woven the tirat flan nel in America, ninety years ago. A •"tflOo.iXKI fi-e" has lately been given a New Y'ork lawyer in an important cose. Washington w ants to have a geueral exhi bition of American paintings this Winter They say Bonner has given Dexter to Grant. A Philadelphia druggist allowed his son to put up a prescription. The patient died in two hours. S. I#. Chase is the G. W. C. T. f (what ever that may lie). of the order of Good Templars of this State. At Brimingham, Engl *d . recently a me teor was seen at 3P. M., while the sun was shining. We mourn with Brigham Young, lie has lost a wife, and is one seventy fifth of a widower. An aged citizen of Troy, N. Y\, died there last week whilst reading in the Bible in family worship. The new insane asylum in Pennsylvania is to bo built at Danville, and is to accom modate Sower goes. Where there are few ne j groes or none ut a!!, their votes will change nothing—effect nothing. It is not intend | ed by Kelly and his co-workers that it should affect the Northern States. The object is only to give the Negro the reins of govern ment in the South—to give to the Gospel of Hate a practical application and a field I upon which its banner may lie erected, i Even this scheme to prop the failing dy i nasty of Radicalism will lie abortive. It could succeed only by attaching a proviso to Kelley's amendment that the Negro must vote the Radical ticket. For the in stincts of his race will teach him to shun the carpet-baggers and scalawag who ask his suffrages, and who now represent the Radi cal party in the South. AmenAnent or Ino amendment, tlie more respectable and i refined of the Southern negroes will vote | the Democratic ticket. There is to them nothing lovely in the lantern-jawed carpet baggers who roum over the South hunting j for Congressional vacancies and Guberna torial cluiirs under the presnt bayonet rule. ! The old masters of tlie negroes, if they I were harsh and exacting, were at least gen | tlemeu. Under the new regime, the negro knows that his lot is cast with the white people who have grow nup with liini; that as they prosper he will prosper ; that eveu equality does not consist in making him the j master of liis late master ; but that a recon struction which takes aw ay bayonet rule and restores confidence lie twee n the ovo races is as beneficial to him as to the white man. Knowing ull this, the negro in Geor gia, or in any,other Southern State, is not j going to fuse with the 'first Massachusetts J yankee that comes into his neigliliorhood j ' and wants to represent hh, district iu Con gress.—Llr | The Future of Radicalism. Gen. Grant will have in hi- power, dur ing the succeeding four .wars after tlie fourtli of March. to give totln- party which elected him a prrjietiiitv of power or to consign it t-> d -fe.it and ohlivioii. By ta king the Federal Constitution as his chart, and adapting his policy nnd act* strictly in accordance with it, exacting from all liis snl M intimites a rigid adherence to the re quirement.-. <>f honesty, civilization and Christianity, and keeping the malignants, the eormptionists, and the demagogues at ami's h-ngtli from power, he eau render his party almost immortal. The good of all parties would flock to his support, thereby streiiglitcuiughiui lieyoml overthrow whilst the bail only would desert him. The whites of the south, now antagonistic to his party, would hail him as their deliverer, and strike hands with him in eternal friendship. The lands of the south would again teem with harvests, and from jipitation to planta tion would resound the song of gladness From the ashes of the war would spring up all the lost industries, and amid the gener al prosperity of that section, tin- Northern people would come in for an abundant share. Besides this, instead of the national debt increasing and weighing like a mill stone upon labor, it would decrease and uot lie felt as a burden. On the other hand by tiding outside the Constitution ; surrounding himself with the harpies who have already so greatly injured the country ; and making himself the mere agent of the Rump fanatics in carrying out their des picable plans for individual aggrandize ment. lie will assuredly dofmi his party to dissolution and himself to everlasting infa- It remains to bo seen whether General Grant will have the nerve to do right and go eounter to Li* political associates, or whether he will prove so w< uk or so basely biased as to carry out their behests and sink the country still deeper in rnin. As a partisan we should desire io see him out- Herod his baekers in Radicalism, so as to kill his infernal party, but. as a patriot and humanitarian, we must pray that he will not do so. It is yet too soon to prognosti cate as to his course, but the best augury, in favor of the supposition that he will not play the devil generally, ;us liis party lead ers have leen doing for so long, is that a | tremor of suspense and fear seems to per ] vade the Radical ranks throughout the ] country, interfering very materially with i their loyal work of dividing up the pro ; speetive spoils. Under the circumstances i we can only hope for the Iwst, an I. as good citizens labor to save the country against any sort of itadical rascality that may come after. U o/r/o/em. Ihe Negro to Have a Vote, When Democrats have charged that it was the purpose of the Radicals, as soon as they obtained another lease of "power, to establish universal negro sullVage through j out the I liited States, it was denounced as a "Copperhead lie." Let us sec what the Radicals now say about it themselves.— Since the eiectiou the N. Y. TKIBCXE has i contained the following announcement : '•One <>f the first measures that will be introduced into Congress on its iu-><*nibling jin lh :cember. will be a constitutional amendment providing for the regulation of Sllffoige throughout tlie United States. A bill will go through without a doubt, and ; the Legislatures of two-thirds of the States being Republican, the amendment will he i ratified, and the question of suffrage settled forever. V prominent memberf Congress has already prepared such an amendment in the sliajie of a bill, which lie will intro duce on the first day of the session." Forney, in his Press, sounds the bugle eull as follows : "The colored man holds the bonds and pledge of this country. Under the furnace blast of war we promised him freedom.— We owe not the hollow promise, to the ear and broken to the hope ; but the substan tial tiling—good me.usuve, full, pressed down, and mi'. fling out. Let us give it now. and let the Fortieth Congress snatch : the honor. ('ommon justice, common hu manity. and common gratitude eull on us j now to enfranchise with the ballot the col ored man in every State. It can he done safely and successfully. We have 110 Pres ] idtatial election to imperil now. We are jon the wave of success. Let us use it to float the ship of state into quiet waters— ! quiet because they are the great deep of justice and of right. Let the Fortieth Congress, in December, jas their tirst and main work, propose an amendment to the Constitution conferring the jmwer to vote for national purposes and I officers, on colored men, under equal con -1 ditions with white, and submit to the peo ■ pie, under, the fifth article. Three-fourths |of the States would rush to ratify it. and i another laurel, ever green and glorious, would lie added to tlie enduring honors of our great party." When it is remembered that this very party announced in their platform that in the North the question of sifro-je belonged of right to the Stoles e.ec/itsicell/, it w ill be seen how honestly their profession corn pan's with their practice. Well, we did our duty. We warned the people not to be deceived by the specious declarations of the Cliicngo platform, and if they can stand negro suffrage we guess we can.—Kt. &?&" Geary's refusal to award a commis | siou to Hon. Henry* 1). Foster, the regu larly and fairly elected member of Congress from the 23d district is one of his charac teristically small ones, and he perform abont as small an act as any public man in the State. Mr. Foster had a majority of the votes of the district and received his certificate of election from two of the three return judges. The other judge, no doubt {•rompted by the great "alligator," or lxis riends, refused to put his name to the cer tificate, but refused to give Covode a sep arate certificate. Geary takes advantage of the captiousucss or rascality of this return judge and plays soanip also by withholding Mr. F's commission. Covode, it is said, will contest before the ltump House, where he knows JDumocraey and honesty never had the giiost of a chance against any ras cally scalawag of his negro party. Hester Vaughan. The case of Hester Vaughan, a young English woman, now, and for the past ten months dying in prison at Philadelphia, and since June last, under sentence of death for infanticide, is exciting considera ble interest in all parts of the country and especially among the women of N. Y. City; where, on Wednesday evening last, a large public meeting wus hud, which was presid ed over hv Horace Grcely, and, addressed by several prominent Ladies and Gentle men. Resolutions were passed bondemn ing her execution on the vague and unsat isfactory evidence adduced against her and asking her unconditional pardon by the Governor of Pennsylvania. A Committee was appointed to present these, in person, to Governor Geary. This ease has given rise to considerable criticism on the course of the sympathies of the citizens of Philadelphia, who, it seems hud much of this precious commodi ty to expnd in behalf of a negro murderer, who was tried and convicted about the same time and by the same court before whom Hester was tried. We extract the following summary of the facts of these two cases from the N..Y. IIVW. THE C ASE OK THE WHITE (lIBL. It seems she came to this country in 1865 a young Englishwoman of twenty, with a man to whom she was married, but who was really married to another woman and who deserted H ESTF.J i at Pottsville, PENN - SYLVANIA. Whereupon the deserted wo man became a (lairywonian, and while in this service was the victim of what she al leges to be a nq>e, though she persistently refuses to give the name of her ravisher, declaring that he is the husband of a wo man anil the father of a child upon whom great sorrow would fall with the revalation, and that misery enough has come from the matter now . As indeed there has, seeing that a child was the result of a rape, that the child did not remain long in the land of the living, and thut the child's mother is pronounced to be the child's murderer. What suffering as well as sorrow HESTER VAI'OIIAN endured appeunt iu the narrative that, when she found herself to be preg nant, she went to Philadelphia, where she worked hard and lived miserably in a room renting for #3 a month. Last Febuary the child was born. The mother says she was three days in labor, suffering her agony and shame alone in her wretched room, without friends or tire or food, or a single comfort or comforter. At last she was un conscious, and then some German women found her and a dead child together. There was a puncture in the soft part of the child's skull, made, according to testimony before the coroner, by some blunt instru ment, and this is the tirst shred of testimo ny against HESTER. Then the women say that HESTER offered them all she had in the world to take the child away, which she de nies, saving that she could not speak Ger man and they not understand English, and that she only asked for assistance she sore -Ilv needed. Rut this is shred two in the testimony, and these simple shreds have been twisted into a rope strong enough to hang HESTER YACOHAN. After HESTER VAIOHAN hail been speedi ■ lv tried, poorly defended, and summarily ' sentenced, for the first time one woman in Philadelphia went to call on the unfortu nate, though HESTER had been lying in prison full live months ! Only one woman iu all of Philadelphia, which is full of phi lanthropic women who will do anything for the negro brother, and who cry aloud for boiled chickens and home-made cakes to support the .1 n!i-S!>treeu constructed of marble at an immense exjiense, and to it, as to a List refuge, fled thousands of the hapless inhabitants. Without u moment's warning, the earth suddenly opened to receive it, and after sucking in the mass closed over it, as not a single body of all the thousands thut went down, nor the least spar or ark from any of the ships near by that were sucked into the cliasm, ever came to the top. The weter there is near six hundred fathoms deep, at an unknown distance beneath the bottom repose the hapless Lisbonese. This Lisbon earthquake, Humboldt estimates, affected a portion of the earth four tithes as large as Europe, and was felt in the Alps, on the coast of Sweden, in the West Indies, on lake Ontario, anil along the coast of Massachusetts. 1811, the earthquakes of the Mississippi, severest at New Madrid, Missouri, shook the ground fo many days, and alternately raised and tlepressed it here and there, the latter sections forming a section called the sunken country to this day. On the 26th March, 1812, a violent thun der storm, with incessant flashes, was de served by the people of New Madrid, and at the same time the city of Carracas, in South America, was laid in ruins, twelve thousand of its people perishing. The great eruption of Vesuvius, in 1857, with accompanying earthquakes, will also be remembered as taking human life, vari ously estimated at from 22,000 to 46,000 lives. In 1858, June 19th, the Valley of Mexico was also devastated by one of these visita tions demolishing houses through its length and destroying the costly acqueduet supplying the city with water. March 22, 1859, Quito, in Equador, was nearly destroyed by an earthquake, and thousamls of lives were lost. A Negro Office-Holder. It seems that Gov. Geary has determined not only to carry the load which his Dep uty Secretary of the Commonwealth, Gara, Laid upon his shoulders in his letter to the recent African convention in this city, but to weight himself even more heavily by is suing a commission of office to a negro, in defiance of the constitution which he is sworn to support. One Peter Smith, an African, has recently been commissioned by the Governor, as a con s/able, or policeman, for the loim of Helf en stein, Schuylkill county. The Governor, l>v this action, has set at naught the constitution of Pennsylvania, which, as every one knows, does not recog nize the negro as qualified either to vote or hold office. He has deliberately broken his solemn oath to maintain that constitu tion, as well insulted every white man in the State by issuing that commission.— Doubtless the Governor imagines that the course he has seen fit to pursue, will rec ommend him to the radical party for re nomination. But we are much mistaken if there l>e not men, even in that party, to whom such a bid for the favor of the ultra radicals will bring nothing but disgust.— Perhaps the Governor will find out, some day, that the white men of Pennsylvania are not, after all, so very anxious to take the negro into political partnership. If the coming Legislature dare to cheat the people out of the right to settle the suffrage question for themselves, the Governor will learn, to his heart's content, what it is to stand upon a Negro Suffrage Platform in the Keystone Stat e.—Harrisburg Patriot. ' AaTlu Brownlow's little kingdom the "loy al"' have a fine way of disposing of Demo crats who are elected in spite of the dis franchisement of 114,860 white citizens.— They just throw out Democratic precincts enough to elect the Radical and it is all right. Sheafe, Democrat, who was elected to Congress by 500 majority, was served in this way, and the certificate given to his op ponent by the scoundrelly Governor. We never see a word about these "stupendous frauds," in Radical papers. Oh, no ! that's the other side. DO yon want Spring, or Out Beds, you can find them at Buck A Sterlings', anl they won't charge you such priest for them that you can't af ford to buy. IF there is any article in (be line ol Furniture you want, Buck A Sterling will supply you at prices that will leave no cbanoe to grumble. ONE reaeon why people go to Back A Sterling*' to buy their furniture i because they tell first class goods at about half the price they have usually been told for iu this oountry. t DON'T fail to go to Buck A Sterlings', to look et their large stock of Looking Glasses, the largest ever kept in the place, and then the price* can't help but suit. wTERESCOPES, Visws. Picture Frames, Pictures, O Brackets Ac., for the Bollideys, for sale at Buck A Sterling*', at your own price*. IT will pay you to call at Buck A Sterlings', and look overthair Stock of goods, the sasortment ia as good as can be found in Northern Pennsylvania- SELECT SCHOOL. Notice is hereby given to the citiieoe ef Tunkhan noek and vioinity that a Select School will com mence in the Brick School House, io Tunkhannock, on Menduy, Dec. 14th 1665. No pains will be spar ed to make the teuie both interesting and profitable to all. RATES OF TUITION Primary Department, 93.00 Common English, 4,10 Higher. " 7 00 Una half Tuition payable in advance, remainder at middle of term JAS W. GUERNSEY, nl9-w3 Teacher. SILVER PLATED WARE. D McKown respectfully announces to the people of Wyoming County, that he baa made a specialty of HEAVY SILVER PLATING, tor years. Heavy plaiting is muck more economical than light. The more Silver put ou the g-ods, the cheaper it is done in proportion to the amount of Silver used. Spoons and Forks, should not be ot less than 16 ot plate 36 or 48 ox. would be far more economical. Yet 4ox plate is called a good plate by the trade , and. poor ar it is, but a small portion of all the goods made come up to this standard. "Ounce plate," in platers language means the number of ouDces of silver, UMhe gross of table spoons. All other sur faces are estimated by these. For example, des serts are estimated at 3-4 ; and tea siskids at 1-2 tbe surface of table-spoons. Sixteen ox. plate is 16 ots. of fine silver to the gross of t.ible-spoons or dining forks. 12 ox. to the gross of dessert spoons or forks and 8 ox- to the gross of tea-spoons This quality of plate will cost, on tbe axe rage, twice as much as 4 ox and will have fonr times the amount ot silver on it. Thirty-six ox- plate will cost about three times as much as 4ox , and will contain nine times the amount of silver on it. Thirty-six ot- plate is tbe lightest that will allow the engraving on it, of name or initials, without cutting through into the plata beneath. Forty-eight ox plate will cost about four times as much as 4 ox. plate, end will contain 12 times the amonnt of silver. This plate costs about one-half as much as solid silverware of ordi d.narv weight, and for every day use will be more durable than light, solid silverware Most ot tbe solid silverware is made much too light to be dura ble in constant use. The terms "double." "treble" Ac. Ido not use to designate qualities—there being too much ambiguity io their use. All goods, made by me, having my name and fig ures denoting the ox. plate, stamped on them, will be guaranteed to bare tbe full amount of first qual ity of silver on them. I will plate to order, goods of any thick jess of plating desired, from 4 to 43 or j 01 i goods, (Ist quality of rnotat) plated any thick ! nets required. j P- C. BURNS 4k BRO, Jewelers, at Tuakhannock, I Pa., are ageDts for the sale of these goods All orders left at their Store, will receire proper 1 attention. DAVID McKOWN. Pittstoo, Pa., Dec. Ist 1869, TO PHYSICIANS. NEW YORK, August 15th, 1667. Allow me to call your attention to my PREPA RATION OP COMPOUND EXTRACT BUCHU.— j The compouant parts are BUCHU, LOAO LEAP. j CUBEBS, JUNIPER BERRIES. MODE OP PREPARATION Buchu, iu v.uoo Ju | niper Berries, by distillation, to forin a fiue gin.— Cubebs extracted by displacein jut by liquor obtain ed from Juniper Berries, containing very little su gar, a small proportion of spirit, an 1 more palata ble than any now in use. The active properties are by this mode extracted Buchu, as prepared by Druggists, generally, it of a dark color. It is a plant that emits its fragrance the action of a flame destroys this (its active princi | ple.) leaving a dark and glutinous decucUon. Mine is the color of ingredients. The Buchu in my prep aration predominates ; the smallest quantity of the other ingredients are added, to prevent fermenta tion; upon inspection, it will be found not to be a Tincture, as made in Phi rtnacopcea, nor is it a Syr up—and therefore can be used in cases where fever or inflammation exists. In this, you have tho knowledge of the ingredients, and the mode of prep aration. Hoping that yon will favor it with a trial, and ! that upon inspection it will meet with your appro j bation, With a feeling of confidence, I am, v ry respectfully, U. T HBLMBOLD, Chemist aad Druggist of 16 Y'eare' Experi ence iu Philadelphia, and now located at his Drug and Chemical Warehouse, 594 Broadway, New York. [Prom the largest Manufacturing Chemists in the World ] "I am acquainted with Mr. 11. T. llelmbold; he occupied the Drug"store opposite mv residence, and was successful in conductiug the business where j others had not been equally so b"fore him I bare ! been favorably impressed with his character and | enterprise. WILLIAM WEIGH IMAN, Firm of Powers and Weigbtmao, Manuf.ic turing Chemists. Ninth and Brown Streets, Philadelphia HBLMBOLD'S FLUID EXTRACT BUCHU, for weak i uess arising from indiscretion. The exhausted pow j ers of Nature which arc accompanied by so many ! alarming symptons. among which will be found, In disposition to Exertion, Loss of Memory, Wakeful ness, Horror of Disease, or forebodings of Evil, in fact, Universal Lassitude, Prostration, and inability to enter into the enjoyments of society. The Constitution, once affected with Organic Weakness, requires the aid of Medicine to strenglh | en and invigorate the system, which UKLMBOLD'b i EXTRACT BLCHL invariably does It no treat , ment is submitted to, Consumption or losautity en - j sues. j HBLMBOLD'S FLUID EXTRACT BUCHU, in affoc i tions peculiar to Females, is uoequuled by any oth jer preparation, as in Chlorosis or Retention, Puin fulness, or Suppression of Customary Evaluations, Ulcerated or Scbirrus State of the Uterus, and all complaints incident to the sex, whether arising from the habits of dissipation, imprudence in, or the de cline or change of ltfe. HBLMBOLD'S FLUID EXTRACT BUCHU AKD IMPROV ED ROSE WASH will radically extoriainate from the system diseases arising from habits of dissipation, at little expense, little or no change in diet, no in conrenieDce or exposure ; completely superseding thoee unpleasant and dangerous remedies, Copaiva and Mercury, in all these diseases. Use HBLMBOLD'S FLUID EXTRACT BUCHU in all diseases of these ergans, whether existing in male or female, from whatever cause originating, and no matter of how long standing. It is pleasant in taste and odor, "iuimediata'' in action, and more strengthening than any of the preparations of Bark or ' ton. Those suffering from broken-down or delicate con stitutions. procure the remedy at once. The reader must be aware that however slight may be the attack ol the above disease, it is cealian to affect tho bodily health and mental powers- All the above diseases require the aij of a Diur etic HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCHU is the I great diuretic. ( Sold by Druggists everywhere. PUCK— $1,25 per bottle, or 6 bottles for $6,50, Delivered to any address* Describe symptoms in all communications. Address H. T. HELMBOLD, Drug and Chemical Warehouse, 594 Broadway, N- Y. ARK GENUINE unless done up in steel i. e engraved wrapper, with fao-similee of my Chemical Warehouse, and signed H. T. HELMBOLD. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Notice Is hereby given that Letters of Adminis tration of the estate of Daniel Trelble, late or Wash ington township, deceased, have been granted to W P® RSONS indebted to eald estate t0 make payment to the subscribers ; and all persons having claims against said estate MS 10 P re,ent Ihe same, duly anthentlca ted fer settlement, to the subscribers, or either of them, at their residences In said tovnshlD JOHN C. ACE, J P ' * AdmlnlsttttQrs j Ayer's Cathartic Pills, Fop all the purposes of a Lexativ. Medicine. C\ Perhaps no one me ,i, £** cine is so universally re ' J¥ quired by everybody u I // * cathartic, nor *. #v £ I r|j every country and anion* I i\ YW' all classes, as this mud LAWfilB but efficient purgativ. r A J G& *W Mr. The obvious rej! V. |[| -YgMr son ia, that it is a more re. ' ViflTHiMMfc liable aud far more tier, tual remedy thau any tjpcir j,tt . rm ot her. Those who have tried it, know that it cured them : those who h ave not. know that it cures their neighbors and friend* and ail knowr that what it does once it does alwayi that it never fails through any fault or neglen„f its composition. We have thousands upon thou sands o* certificates of their remarkable cures of the following complaints, l>ut such cures are known m every neighborhood, and we need not publish them. Adapted to all ages and conditions in all climate, containing neither calomel or any deleterious drug' they may lie taken with safety by anylKsiy. Their sugar coating preserves them ever fresh and makes i them pleasant to take, while being purely vegetable ; no harm can arise front their use in any quantity. ' They operate by tlicir powerful influence on'the internal viscera to purify the blood and stimulate it into healthy action remove the obstructions of the [ stomach, bowels, liver, and other organs of the body, restoring their irregular action to health, and by correcting, wherever they exist, su'h derange ments as are the first origin of disease. Minute directions are given in the wrapiier on the box, for the following complaints, which the, Pills rapidly cure: — For Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Listless ins. Languor and Loss of Appetite, they j should bo taken moderately to stimulafe the stom ach and restore it .* healthy tone and action. For Liver Complaint and its various symp toms, 111 lions Headache, flick Headache, Jaundice or Cireen Wfcfcnesa, Bilious Colic and Billons Fevers, they should be ju ; diciously taken for each case, to correct the diseased action or remove the obstructions which cause it. For Dysentery or Diarrhsea, but one mild dose is generally required. For Hhennialisis, (ioul. Ciravel, Palp* Station of the Heart, Pain In tke hi&. Back aud Loins, they should be continuously taken, as required, to change the diseased action of the system. Willi such chaDge those complaints I disapjH-tir. For Drspsy and Dropsical Strolling* they shoujd be taken in large aud frequent doses to pre du'-e the elect of a drastic purge. For Mupiiresaion a large dose should be taken is it produces the desired effect by sympathy. As a Uinnrr Pill, take one or two PUU to pro mote digestion and relieve the stomach. ! An occasional dose stimulates the stomach and bowels into healthy action, restores the appetite, hid invigorates the system. Hence it is often ad vantageous where no serious derangement exists. One who feels tolerably well, often finds that a dose of these Pill a makes him feel decidedly better, from their cleansing and renovating effect on the diges tive apparatus. DR. J. C. AVER A CO., Practical Chemists, LO WELL. MASS., V. S. A. Sold by C. Detrick, Tunkhannock, Fa. Sterling k Son, Sterllngvllle, C. C. Berge. Nicholson, Frear, Dean k Co., Factoryrllle, and all Druggists and Dealers everywhere. MiHtm. A LECTCRE to lEST YOUNG MEN i (Jast Published, in a Sealed Envelope. Pries 6 ets ) A Lecture mi the Nature, Treatment and Rsdical Cure of Spermatorrhoea or Sentinel Weak ness, Involuntary Emissions, Sexual Debility and Impediments to Marriage generally ; Nervousness, Consumption, Epilepsy, and Fits ; Mental aud Phys- * ical Incapacity, resulting from Self-Abuse, Ac , -By ROBERT J. CULVERWELL. M D . Author of the I -'Green Book," Ac. The world-renowned author, in this admirable Lecture, clearly proves from his own experience that the awful consequences of Self-Abuse may be effect, ually removed without medicine, and without dan gerous surgical operations, boogies, instruments, rings, or cordials, pointing out a mode of cure at once certain and effectual, by which every sufferer, no matter what his condition may be, may cure himself cheaply, privately, and radically. This LECTURE WILL PROVE A BOON TO THOUS ANDS AND THOUSANDS. Sent, under seal, in a plain enveio e, to any ad dress, postpaid, on receipt of six cents, or two post stamps. Also, Dr. Oulverwell's "Marriage Guide," price 25 cents. Address the Publishers. CHAS J C. KLINE A CO.. . 12T Bowery, New York, Post-Offiseßox 4, 5W> eesilg- EXECUTORS NOTICE Whereas, letters testamentary on the estate of John Wright, late of Monroe Tp , deceased, have been granted to the subscriber. All persons indebt ed to said estate are requested to make payment, and those having claims or deinanis against the estate of said deceased, will make known the same without delay. D D. DEW ITT. Kx'r. nls 5000 Yards Best Prints, for l?t<-tsper sard, at C; DETRICK'S U'ASTMAN manufactures every variety of Boots El and Sb>es and retails at wholesale prices lie member the place, Tioga street, near corierof Warren Water-proof Boots are warranted J not to rip. crack, ruu over. They are just tie thing tor teameters, lumbermen and o'hers who are subject to uut-door exposure. (gjiy WILL purchase a pair of Eastman's watet <4*l proof Boots, certain to keep any man's feet try who trear* tfiera, fbr a twtflve month. Jhurial lotifts. ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE. Whereas, letters of Administration to the estate of John F. Wlntermute, late of Forkston tp., dee'd, have been granted to the subscriber. All persons in debted to the said estate are requested to make Im mediate payment, and those having claims or de mands against the estate of the said decedent, will make known the same duly authenticated without delay to JULIA A. WINTER MUTE, Forkston, Dec. Ist '6B—nlß-6w. Administratrix. NOTICE. The Stockholders of the Wyoming National Bank, are hereby notified that there will be a meeting held et their Banking house,in the Boro. of Tunkhannock on the 12th day of Jan 1869. at 10 o'clock A. -V for the purpose of electing directors to serve for the ensuing year. SAM'L STARK, Cashier. Tunk., Dee 7, '63- n!9-tf AUDITOR'S NOTICE The undersigned having been appointed by tke Orphans' Court, for the County of Wyoming, an Auditor, in the matter of exceptions to the acciur.t of C. M. Manvilie. executor of the estate of A. K. Peckham, dec d, will atteod to the daties of his ap pointment at hie office in Tunkhannock Boro., oa the eixti day of Jan. A. D-, 1869, at one o'clock ia the afternoon, at which time and place all persoci interested therein may appear and present their claims or be forever after debarred. JOHN A. SITTSER, Auditor. nl94w. CORPORATION NOTICE. Whereas, application hat been made to the Court of Commou Pltae of Wyoming County,lor the grant ing of a Charter of Incorporation to the Meshoppen Water Company of Meshoppen, in said County, the •erne htving been filed in the office of the Prothooo tary of said Court. Notice is heteby given, that it no sufficient reason to the contrary is shown, it shall be lawful for the eaid court, at the Dext term there of to declare that the persons so associated shall ac cording to the articles and conditions set forth in eaid Charter become end be a corqioration or body politio in law and iu fact, and the court will mike aueh other directions as the case mny require. K.J KEKNEY, Proth'.v Tunk. Dec. 8, '68.-nl9-w4. NOTICE. Meetiug of Stockholders of the Tunkhan nock Bridge Co. The stockholders of the Tunkbauuock Bridge Com pany, will meet stthe office of the Secretary, in tbs Borough of Tunkhannock oo MONDAY, JANUARY 4th-, 1969, for the purpoee of chosing One President, Six Man agers, a Treasurer and such other officers as may M required under the Act of Incorporation and th* by-laws of the company A full attendance ia requested HARVEY SICKI.RU. 0. E. Pate*' Secl'y Pre'- vl94w i."* ASTMAX selii goou Hsmloek half-double s.-lyd J Kip Boots at 1d,75 ; French calf pegged Boot' et 96 ; Imported French Calf, Fair Stitched. Fa* Toss, Rt 910, and svsry other article in his lin* " low jfrijM.