I HALL REPORTER. fe hay CENTRE IIALL PA, May, Tih 1869. 0D iA CEN] POOR GEARY. One of the radieal organs of Bellefonte, the National, has taken to whining, be- : the radical county commitiee has an anti-Geary delegate to the state convention. The National goes for Geary beean the state to support, and hints at trickery 1 » YG y { ide m, as representative delegate, simply because he 1 LA eX 3} faarirantt. of Snickerville and prefers Gen. shes 't on Bishop street” being one out of on- 1v thrae radical papers in the state opposed to the re-nomination of Geary. for it mey be swallowed up by the tors cau Behave, you chaps on Spring ereek, or the swallow sixteen apple dumpiings, of the party will pull the nigger strings in to their piping, you will be eount- ink off the yi Y MEL AlUA Tey a3. Yniaans x 2 nigger hoe-down commences, OTAIE 3 cu poor Lary, LUoaty vord for hina—the National to the contrary, notwithstanding, we say Geary is Lr 4 not the choice ef the Centra county rads, ER i, S—— SIMON GETS A DIG. Ex-Governor Curttn was 3 serenaded on . ~ z ay ota Siiids evening, of (ast week, at iis resi ri Phill ig 1 aida tha Yara ¥ “ AC he Wal. mn, the Governor said: “ln ence to-nizht I declare that in my ofli- “al connection with the people of ’enn- v2 Vaili six yeurs, I am not ashamed to say that 1 i hes to cool in the have no b oo 'ey vidas i 4 X No hL nahes to coud in the : > + us snows of Ps {lay roy! LogMmaron havo of 2 ution « | he lefi the war office in dis G§ Ny AL - * }..4 wa “ to St. Petersburg, seo he might Yeool in the snows of Russia)’ Very in, Andy cm ea men Gh ee REWARDING THE SOLDIER. have hoon zs) hiave been sl Union how promptly he wi Be up Grant's love in puts the crippled soldier—his comrades A's 1 Yi¢3 1 in abolition sneaks who remained at Meo- ] “ro hove”! Gen. - heme and bawled { wounded 1 . 1088 sroarth, who was has collector of the 2nd di-- ies, incinding the of an arm, 3 HON Teinoved as * i President Johnson never dealt thus with the of Union d for Grant to be guilty of * Generals to office in place mon, it remain: h radical hy po ip fo A ProeaBLY the silliest exhibition that two Renators ever made of them- that which in the case of Abbott and Sprague. grue’s story about the two dogs was as old as the the time of Sir E. lastrated it in a well-known picture. The happy way in which Sprague made use of this fact to g of the serape, 1s shown in the Sprague Abbott correspondence, of which the subjoined is an accurate, although not quite liberal, translation : : brine a ey SeIVes, Is appears ABBOTT TO SPRAGUF. about a dorg and a purp. distinetly if you did, or did not, mean me. SPRAGUE TO ABBOTT. plying with your very reasonable de- mand by saying that the story you alluded to was written and in print be- gore vou was born. You areat liber- y, therefore, to conclude that you were not either of the heroes of that £ipry, a 1's SPRAGUE AELMOTT TO SPRAGUE. Your remgrkably perspicacious let- ter convinees gue that I was mistaken. 1 feel hettor, pid forgive you. ABBOT. hry Ch w 47 1 ied rn MORE LAND WANTED. LV ” 4 days session of the Forty-first Con. gress, bills were dntrodueed to give to railreads, wagon roads, and eanals no less thau 181,949,643 acres of the pub. lic lands. Ceugress has already given land, er say, gs much land as there is in ali New Eagland and New Jersey, Ohio, Marylaud, Virginia and Dela- ware put together, aud mow another away, With this gift it is proposed to hand over aso $114,300,603 worth of bonds, At this rote, we shall soon need Canada, Mexico and the whale deficiencies alone. Go an, gentlemen! There is plenty nsore land out west. It cheerful eoincidence the railroad com- panies seem to get it at about the same price, The directors of the Mount Cenis tunnel company have reported that having passed the strata of quartz and come upon soft stone, they will be able to advance the opening by six mouths, and, therefore the railroad through the mountain will be opened. on the Ist of January 1871. Th | Naturalized-citizens will be annoyed ; : Je | hy prying assessors coming to their i ling to see their naturalization papers, | semi-monthly return of this species of corrupt legislature which ever assem. | ble at the State capitol.” Mechanics and laboring men, native naturalized, all who work for | others, are required to furnish the as- { 1 i ana sessors with the names of their employ- The mechanics and laboring serfs, whether they mutter aught against the The radicals are intro- ducing the same policy in Penusylva- nia, The name of no employee goes It will not do the against his own name, to trust American freemen, and ideas must be sustained at any sacri- citizen, have fled {rom the oppressions of the old world, witness what radicalism has Have your papers ready, and be prepared to in store for you in the new, give to the assessor the name of your employer by the first day of June next. all about you before the day of voting comes, not for the purpose of detect- ing fraud, but to bend you to thoir pur poses, Native born Pennsylvanians, the great party of freedom, as it boasting- y styles itself, is preparing some novel experiences for you, been accustomed to come and go at are to be put under the supervision ofa You are to be driven into the herd of voting eattle, your individual- I master. destroyed, and you are to be represen- opposite your own on the registry lists. [his registry bill is but the begining of It the opening of the sapping and mining => 18 | operations of the radicals against popu- rirats. now, it will be encouragement for stil further encroachments when another radi power the corrupt party which insults you in this infamous registry bill. | Every naturalized citizen is assailed in for insulted by being | thiract. Every man who works another is grossly ‘name of an employer opposite his own as if he were a thrall.— Patriot { | FROM \ RTE VASHINGTON., | The Monthly Public Debt Statement. Washington, May 1.—~The public debt statement issued to-day shows the | total debt, including principal and in- | terest to be $2,615,032 888 12, The amount of coin in the treasury belonging to the government is $92. 1031,732 96. The amonnt of enrrency in the treas- ry is $7,896,564, 07. °° General Lee arrived here this morn- ing from Baltimore at eleven o'clock. He visited the White House, and was immediately admitted to see the President, who was at the time enga ged in receiving Senators and mem- bers by cards. When General Lee's card came in he requested all those | present to excuse him, as he had im- | portant business with Lee. The inter- view lasted a long time, and related | not only to macters in Virginia, but to affairs in other Southern States, ep to pee firmed as Governor of New Mexico. His political disabilities have never been removed, and therefore he cannot take the oath and enter on the duties of his office. The President has asked the Attorney General if he can make i an appointment ad interim, or if there is {any way in which Crowe can assume his office. Ifthisis decided in the negative, General Mitchell, the present Governor will probably remain until | Congress can act on Crowe's case next winter. Crowe was a Confederate and Mitchell a Union officer. & li lie lee Isaac Harden and Jesse Williams and fur horses were instandly kiljed by a stroke of lightning on the farm of William A. Cunningham, three miles from Martinsville, in Morgan county, Indiana, during the storm of Wednes- day evening. Six teams were plowing’ in the same fiald, and when the crash came all the horses ran away from fright, £0 that those who. escaped the bolt of lightning were more or less in- jured in their flight, NO MORE SPRING ELECTIONS. | The people of this Commonwealth are not generally avaie that the infa- mous legislature of last winter has ab- olished the spring elections, and has | compelled the people to hold all their municipal elections on the same day on wich the general elections take places This is doe ina scetion of the registry law, which reads as follows: Soe, 1), All elections for city, ward, borough, township and election | officers shall hereafter be held on the | second Tuesday of Oct ber, 8 thject to | all the provisions of the laws regulas ting the election of such officers not in- | consistent with this act; the persons elected to such offices at that time shall | take their places at the expiration of the terms of the persons holding the same at the time of such election ; but | no election for the office of assossor or | assistant assessor shall be held, under | this act, until the year one thousand | eight hundred an | seven'y. Without petition from any portion | of the citizens of the State; in spite, | indeed, of remonstrances from some. | counties against any change in the | time of holding their municipal elee- tious, the legislature has made this vio- | lent change in the usages of the people. | The township officers elected last | spring will continue to discharge their | duties until the end of the terms for | which they were chosen. But the peo- | | ple are required by this law to elect | ' new township officers on the second | | Tuesday of October to take the places | of those elected in the Spring, and to | | hold until the October election in 1870 | ! This applies to all townships and bor ‘ough o licers except the assessors and | | assst no assessors who will not be | | elected under this act until 1870. i : slit | The Pennsy!vania appointments, it | is said, are made in this wise. The Lapplicant is first asked, “Are you a relative of Gen. Grant, o* connected | Cin any way with any member of his | | family *’ He is tle: interrogated, | “Are you connected, c¢ither by blood or by marriage, with a party by the | name of Scott, who was chosen by the | republican legislature of Penusylva- | | nia, to help to fix up the appointments | of the States?” Finally he is catechi | sed thus: “Have you at any time, or i any of your family, lver rendered any | j olitical assistance to Simon Cameron, Lor used any of youror their influence | to promote his political success 7?’ If an affimative answer can be given to any one of the aheve questions, there | is som: hope for the pa ty a lying; | but if not, the com a tee a: once al- | vise him to to take his earpe:-bag and ‘mmediately retire from the san ofae- | | ton. This is the new systein ado ted | to ramove politics from the machinery of the g vernment.— Carbon Domoerat — it The Imporiance of Diversity. There is no doubt that a man of | genius and talent, with an equally | strong body, would make a better la | bo than the stupid hind who only knew enouch to use his physical strength to break the store shovel the earth. possessed of vention and philosophi | cal reasoning talent, many mast contented to perforin the simnler ope- rations of labor ; and ha py 's the man who has the wid sn ard 0: sty toac- | cept cheerfully any pursu tin which | he canserve the world and hims»if the to the | world’s estimat high or low. To be a good an 1 fiithf il d er, an | to secure wws:8 In the doing, should be the great object of eff rt. It does not re- quire great sagacity to understand | that it 1s better for a man to be a first | class lumberman than a third-class | cabinet maker. He who can fell the | trees, float the logs to marked and cut them into boards, and do it well, is far i | more useful in i "oar il Or But since all men are not | best whether it be according | SUCH his suecess | partiatly spoils good lumber in the | construction of indifferent houses poor furniture, its sense, isthe measure of merit. Success, in It is world pays him for poor sorvices—"ut itis how much good serv'e the world! When aman has render- ed excellent service, him remuneration, compensation ; no- thing less than this should he receive, nor has he a right to anything more than his just desert.—Irom “What can I do best?” in Phrenological Jour- nal. HE rm tf tll Mosman Mogse'sINprax Root trams. They are made from simple Roots, and are the best medicine in the world for all Billious diseases, Female Itrdularities, Headaches, Indigestion Liver Complaints, &e. They purify the blood, remove all obstructions, cleanse the skin of all pimples and blotches, and are perfectly sure and safe in their operation. We ask vou to use them because we know their vir- tues. Trial is the Touchstone by which to prove them worthy. Use Morse’s Indian Root Pills. For sale hy all Dealers. ap2:69,2m. > oo A few wezks agy a colored brother induced a young white girl, aged about seventeen, to elope with hin from Pe. troleum Center. They went to Titus ville, where, by directions of her moth- er, the girl was arrested, but after- wards escaped. The negro eluded the officers, stole a horse anl made off, but was pursued and captured, and is now in jail at I'ranklin. On Friday afternoon last, as three boys were playing with a pistol at Oakdale Station, about twelve miles from Pittsburg, on the Panhandle rail- road, the third boy accidentally shot his companions—two brothers named Leickley—killing one and severely wounding the other. The pistol was charged withthere large shot, each of The Illness of the Empress Char- lotte, This princess it is stated by the Aus- trian journals to have been for the last fortnight unable to leave her bed. Her mental faculties are ina state of the most painful excitement, while slow fe- ver 18 wearing away her bodily strength. Her eyes have a fix ud and She speaks constantly of Mexico, describes the habits and customs of the inhabitants, the beauty and original aspect of the towns and haciendas, with considerable beauty of language. She addresses her hushand as thoueh he were alive, producing the her sleep, vet her eyes are opan, The impression that she is in danger of bo- ing poisoned, and will only swallow of Belgium, her sister-in-law. For the last tow months tha princess appeared to have completely recovered hor res son. For days together, and even for weeks, no sign of mental abberration could be discovered. She wrote let- ters in which the lucidity of her ideas and the delicacy and tact of her son- timents were remarkable. She devo- ted herself to the young Prince Royal with the most tender solicitude, and after his death exclaimed, “Poor child, at last you have gone to rejoin my mother. Soon it will be my turn to re- join you.” ———————— The Navy Department received dis- patches from Rear Admiral T. T Craven, dated Mare Island, March 31, reports from Commander Maud, of the United States steamer Saganaw, of his oporations in Alaska, where that vessel hal been stationed several mmths. Among the reports is one relating to the destruction of of two Am rican tradars—Ladwig Mule and William Walker. These tw) man left S.tka on a trading expe- dition in Dee nhor last, andl wer: kil- led in raven zs fora conca la killed by a United States soldier. Major Gen. Davis, his chiefof stat, Coot. M'Intire and ten soldiers, accompanied the ex- Toa Saginaw arrival at Saginaw bay on the 14th of February and destroyed a settlemnt on Kon slanl, leaving bat one house b:long- eral occasions aided the whites by acts or AA ———— A Soa Monster. | We learn that Captain Perry, of the Light Horse schooner, who has charge of the buoys in this district, discover- ed on the 5th inst, off St Simons, what he supposes to be a dead see monster floating on the surface of the water. He says that the portion above tho water was som: twenty- five feet in length, and five feet six inches in height, He estimated the length of the head to ba twelve feet. The upper jaw was thrown back presenting a mouth of extraordinary dim:nsions, How many feet of the body was con- cealed beneath the surface of the waves the Captain could not pretend to form an estimate. In its back were three or four grooves running, the eotire length of that part of th: body which was visible. It had fins similar to those of a whale, Tae Captain states that he saw the same monster again off Camberland Sound, and that the Light house kaeep:r at Cumberland Island reported to him that it had floated in and out on thres or four tides, and that he had “pulled” for it, but upon a near approach he became fearful that it was not dead, and there- fore thought it best to give it a wide berth. It is further alleged that a dis- tinguished naturalist, now in this city, has offered a reward of one thousand "dollars for the head of the monster, and that Captain Perry, with his vessel, is now in active pursuit, and expects to be able to claim the reward in the | course of a few days. If h» should succeed he will not only gain a han l- som» reward, bat be the means of'al- ding an interesting chapter to som? valuable work on natural histrry.— Swanah (G1) Rp. April 2). pr ne Mental Apprehension. The brain is an organized medium | through which the mind receives and inaparts knowle Ize, and is the organ of thought and feeling. The particular | function of the brain is to genr rate thou sht; and as thouzht is tha natural food of tha mind, it follows that accor- ding to the ad>quacy or inadsquaey of this etherial nutrim:nt furnishal the minl for its nourishm nt, will be its vicor anl geowin, Taus we em readily understand how aa inferior mind can grasp the tho ughts of the giant intellect,» [az thoasht on ce elab- orated and presented to the in ferior mind through the median of the por Oa the 16th of Febrawy they d destroyed the villa on Kien Island: on the bo * xay el Oa towa aal threo vil about thirty-five houses, eirht canoes an l two forts were destroyed in all. It was belizved that the baraing of the villazs would be a punish nt than the arrest curity bay. lares, ¢orraating ol - Indians in that region are said to piace little value on life, and frequent- blankets in their wars with each other. The houses canaot be replaced witavat great labor an timo, or I LK a } a bad trib, and their mareder of Me. Libby, United States collector, and tae crew of Roval Charlis, hal asver been Che Labians had abw baal Lntils upou tae approach ol SOLdIErs, mts Aa Execution Another rar: sveeiii ee to jastios o> curred raceatly in a straet naar Ak oral. Ta2vistim ia this oa; a Mas:sulman Atbuiay, nun who a'vntafortnisirar violate lanl then murdered a wrnia al Satan He had enered the house in a ony | quarter of the Asinstic subarb in tho day time, and fio finzth: wr aa alon perpetrated his doable eeina, anl af terwards decamped with what light valuables he erald carry olf. The po- lice, for a wondoar, suzeez led in track- ing him, and as he was identifizl by ' Wis ‘some one who had seen him enter the house, he finally eoatessel the crime | during his secon 1 or third examination at the zaptiech. From the first there was no chance of his escaping capital usual, concealed from him until the | Inst. The execution had been delayed | for rome days owing to the difficulty of | finding a gipsy— the usual finisher of | the law in Stamboul—to undertake the job for the modest fee offered by the authorities. The Zingaree, however, holding out for better pay. A police- man was at length induced to” do the work, and without previous hint of his fate the murderer was roused from his sleep at sunrise to g) dowa, as he was told, to a steamer for exile to Trebi zond. Oa reaching the spot selected the party of police cseorting him hal- ted, and the first intimation the wretch had of his fate was the question if he desired to say his prayers. He replied in the negative, and the executioner then advanced an | attempted to throw a looped cord over his head. Mana- cled though he was, he resisted for some minutes, struggling fiercely, and screaming in a manner which, early as the hour was, speedily gathered a crowd into the previously emty street. At length the cord was got round his neck, and, after a further short resis- tance, he was strangled into insensibil- ity. This done the body was hitched up toa door post of a neighboring butcher’s shop, with the fest barely off’ the ground, and left to die thus uader watch of a single zaptich. As usual, there was no excitement anong the spectators, and in less thaa htt an hour after the murderer was dead only soma three or four loiterers lingered near the spot. About 1 p. m. the body was cut down and carried off in a sack for burial. It is jocosely remarked that every appointment made by Grant takes away fram Washington a train load of 500 passengars—the appointee and 400 which took effect. applicants, centive orzanisn, is exactly the same | as if it had been tae prodact of its own | brain, and is readily taken up and de- | vource by that mind. Thus, men wich | large organs of perception, but defic ent | refl setion, readily become good schuol- | ars. Taey get their ideas by perce; - tion aloe : they do not reason tiem out, and they never oriz nie anvth ng | new, but always followin tle beau | path —=From “Loequalities of Mind,” 1a Pharendlogical Jouradl. | —————r———— | “Tis True, ’tis pity, pity ’tis true, | that mankind will pass by unheedid | the warning symptoms of disease and | 1 1s often impossible to obtain relief | We have been shown the formula of Judson’s Mountain Herb Pills and be- | lieve them to be the best and simplest of medicines for DBillious disorders, { | ties &e. They ave perpared with great | caution and will save many a doctor's bill if used in time. As an universal family medicine, they are unsurpassed. | Give the Mountain Herb Pill a fair trial and we warrant you will never be without them. Sold by all dealers. ap2'69,2m i > | Oa Thur; lay last as »astahle Wit. kins of Mahanoy city wat conveying a prisoner, num: 1 Edvard Beveridge, to prison, the lasterate noted to es | caps, wan he was shot by the consta | ble and diad fron thy effesis thereof | the same eveniz, | tp { . | Alady passen ser on the train ging t wast, on the 29th ult., gave birth to an | infant batween Maney anl Willia ns. | port. The chill diel before reaching ‘the latier place, anl th mother, her hasband bainz w.th her, was ta ken to the Hoerdie House anl properly cared for. . ain A ane ian A carpet-bag school teacher in Tal- ladega, Alabama, sentenced a negro girl, one of his pupils, to ten days cook- ing at his private residence, for a vio- lation of the rules of his school. His pupils are rather refractory, and he manager to get all his house-hold work done by them. iam thoes sms An able-bodied negro died of starva- tion at Columbus, Ga., recently, the evidence at the inquest showing that he starved rather than work. Con- gress should apyrint an investigating eommittee to inquire into this Ku Klux outrage. ———— Farmer's Read! THE CELEBRATED Hoffheins Mower & Reaper! and the well-known Pratt Rake, AND THE '] : » » Clipper Rake, are now on exhibition, and for sale, at Spangler’s Hot], Centre Hall. The Hoffhoins' Mowers and Self Raking Reapers have all the latest and most per- fect improvements now known; no weight Upon the horses’ necks; easily controlled; adapted te all kinds of work; a complete self rake. The Clipper Rake is a rake with less ma- chinery than any rake now in use, and ea- sily managed. Also—the well-known Pratt Rake, one of the bes: now in use—light, durable, steel wire teeth, and easily worked. Farmers, by all means, come first and see these machines before purchasing others. Sold at reduced ratos—Cash accepted, but also sold on long credit. F. Grass, Agent, Centre Hall, my7, 6t Helmbold’s Concentrated Fluid Extract Sarsaparilla. Eradicates Eruptive and Ulcerative Dis- . eases of the Throat, Nose, Eyes, Eyelids, Scalp, Which si dist and Skin, ich so disfigure the appearance TR- GING the evil effects or Tn FI re- moving all taints, the remnants of DISK A- SES, hereditary o= otherwise, and is taken by ADULTS and CHILDREN with per fecy safely. Two Table-Spooiifuls of the Extract of Sarsaparilla, ad.ed to a pint cf water, is equal to the Lisbon Diet Drink, and one bottle is qual to a gallon of the Syrup of Sarsaparilla, or the decoctions as “usually made, : An interesting letter i# published in the Medico-Chirurgical Review, on the sub- ject of the Extract of Sarsaparilla in cer- tain affections, by Benjamin Travers, F R. 8. &c. Speaking of those diseases wri- sing from the excess of mercury, he stutos that no remedy is equal to the Extract of Sarsaparilla; its power is extraordinary, more so than any other drug I am acquain- ted with. It is, in the strictest sense, a to- nie with this invaluable attribute, that it is epplicable to s state of the system so sun- ken, and vet so irritable as renders other substances of the tonic class unavailable or injurious, HELMBOLD'S CONCENTRATED EXTRACT SAR- SAPARILLA, Established upwards of 18 years, Prepared by H.T. Helmbold, 694 Broadway, N. Y. sees sunans ~Hermporn's CoNceENTRATED Extract Sursaparilla, is the great Blood Purifier. EN BTN LOW PRICES, The Finest Stock of Spring Goods Ever Opened in these Parts. At The Old Stand at Centre Hall. apd-nd LADIES AND GENTS DRESS GOODS. DRY GOODS, AND GROCERIES HARDWARE, QUEENSWARE, Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, FLANNELS, MUSLINS, CALICOES, AND SIHAWLS, ALSO, A GOOD ASSORTMENT OF NOTIONS, "YRUPS, COFFEES. also a large stock of FISH, the best, ait kinds, MACKEREL and HERRING. the best and cheapest in the market. Wolf's Old Stand. WESHALL TAXE PARTICULAR CRAETO MAKE IT AN OBJECT FOR New Customers, . AS WELL AS INVITE OUR OLD FRIENDS, TO GIVE US A CALL. api os y. WM. WOLF. Philadelphia Store! in Brockerif « block, Bishop Street, Bellefonte, where KELLER & MUSSER, have just opened the best, cheapest, largest as well asthe best assorted stock of Good, n Bellefonte, HERE LADIES, Is the place to buy your Silks, Mohair: Mozambiques, Reps, Alpacas, Delain‘, Lans, Brillinnts, Muslins, Calicoes, Tick ings, Flanels, Opera Flanels, Ladies Coat. ing, Gents’ Cloths, Ladies Sacques, White Pekay, Linen Table Cloths, Counterpanes Crib Counterpanes, White and Coloreé Tarlton, Napkins, Incertings and Edgings, White Lace Curtins, Zephyr & Zephyr Pat. terns, Tidy Cotton, Shawls, Work Baskets SUNDOWNS, Notions of every kind, White Goods of every description, Perfumery, Ribbons- Velvet, Taffeta and Bonnet, Cords anc Braid, Veils, Buttons, Trimmings, Ladies and Misses Skirts, HOOP SKIRTS, at Thread Hosiery, Fans, Beads, Sewing Silks LADIES AND MISSES SHOEg and in fact every thing that ean be thought of, detired or used in the 8 FANCY GOODS OR NOTION LINK FOR GENTLEMEN, they have black and blue cloths,, black and fancy cassimeres, sattinetts, tweeds, mel orns, silk, satin and common vestings, in short, every thing imaginable in the line of gentlemens wear. Readymade Clothing of Every Dis- scription, for Men and Boys. Boots and Shoos, in endless variety, Hats and Cups, CARPETS, Oileloth, Rugs, Brown Muslins, Bleached Mus- lins, Drillings, Sheetings, Tablecloths, cheaper than elsewhere, &e. Their stock of QUEENSW ARE & GRO. CERIES cannot be excelled in quality or rice. I Call in at the Philadelphia Store and con- vince yourselves that KELLER & MUS- SER have any thing you want, and do bu- siness on the principle of *‘Cuick Sales and Small Profits.” GRAIN AND PRODUCE ARE TAKEN. ap30,69 ——— COE'SCOUGH BALSAM This long tried and lar Remedy is again called to the attention of the otic. As often as the year rolls around, {Be pro- prietors annually make their bow to the people, and remind them that t the many things required for the health, eom- fort and sustenance of the family through the long and tedious months of win Coe's Cough Balsam should not be forget- ten. For years it has been a household medicine—and mothers anxious for the safety of their children, and all who s from any disease of the throat, chest and lungs, cannot afford to be without it. Ia addition to the ordinary four ounce so long in the market, we now furnish our mam. moth family size bottles, whieh will, in common with the other size, be found at all Drug Stores” FOR CROUP The Balsam will be found invaluable, and may always be relied upon in the mest ex- treine cases, WHOOPING COUGH. The testimony of all who have used it for this terrible disease during the last ten years, is, that it invariably relieves and cures it, SORE THROAT. Keep your throat wet with the balsam—ta- king little and often—and you will very soon find relief. HARD COLDS AND COUGHS Yield at once to a steady use of this grest remedy. - It will suce in giving reliel where all other remedies have failed. SORENESS OF THE THROAT, CHEST AND LUNGS. Do not delay procuring and immediate! raking Coe's Cough Balsam, when troubl with any of the above named difficulties, They are all premonitery symptoms of Consumption, and if not arrested, will son. ner or Inter sweep you away into the valley of shallows from which none can ever re- turn. IN CON:-UMPTION, Many a enre-worn sutferer has found relief and to-day rejoices that her life has been made easy and prolonged by the use of Doe's Cough Balsam. IN SHORT, The people kno x the article, and it needs no comment from us. It is for sale by eve ery Druggist and Dealer in Medicines in the United States. THE C. G. CLARK CO. Sole Proprietors, Ne'v Haven, Ct. Read! Read !! Nead!!! THE ATTENTION OF THE PEOPLE IS CALLED TO THE World's Great Remedy, COE'S DYSPEPSIA CURE. This Prepastion is pronounced by Dys- pepties as the only known remedy that will surely cure that aggravating and fatal mal- ady. For years it swept on its fearful tide, carrying before it to an untimely grave, its milliens of sufferers. Coe's Dyspepsia Cure has Come to the Rescue. Indigestion, Sick Headache, Sourness er Acidaty of Stomach, Rising of Feed, Flatulency, Lassitude, Weariness, Biliousness, Liver Complaint, finally terminating Death Are as surely cured by this potent remedy, as the patient takes it. Although but five vears before the people, what isthe verdiet of the masses ? Hear what Lester Sexton, of Milwaukee, says: Milwaukee, Wis., Jan. 24, 1868, 3 vans C. G. Clark & Co., New Haven, onn. > Both myself and wife have used Cee’s Dep spa Cure, andit has proved PER- FECTLY satisfactory as a remedy I have no hesitation in saying that we have re« ceived GREAT BENEFIT from its use Very respectfully. (Signed) LESTER SEXTON, -_— A GREAT BLESSING. aa Ree. L. F. Ward, Avon, Lera’s 0,, WU Messrs. Strong & Armstrong, Gentlemen, —It gives me great pleasure o state that my wife has derived great bene from the use of Coe’s Dyspepsia Cure, She has been for a number of years great! troubled with Dyspepsia, accompanicd with violent paroxysms of constipatiim which so prostrated her that she was all the while for months, unable to do : anything, She took, at your instance, Coe's D : pein Cure, and has derived GREAT BENE. iT 1 FROM IT, and is now comparativel i She regards this medicine pa a rs 7 bles: 8 Truly yours, 3 L. F. WAKD ing. Bans 13th, 1868, CLERGYMEN. The Rev. Isaac Aiken, of Al testifies that it has cured him, after er remedies had failed. DRUGGISTS. Any druggist in the country will tell yon, if you take the trouble to en uire, "we ery one that buys a bottle of Coe’s sia Cure from them, speaks in the mest un. qualified praise of its great medical virtues, COE’S DYSPEPSIA CURE Will also be found invaluable in all of Diarrhea, Dysentery, Colic, Summge Complaints, Griping and in fact every di« ordered condition of the stomach, Sold by Druggists in city or count. ¢ everywhere at $1 per Bottle, or by appliens tion to THE C. C. CLARK CO. Sole Proprietors, New Haven, Ct hany, all eth ad June, 26,eow,l,y