The Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1876-1878, April 11, 1877, Image 7

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MONTpPSE,.PA, APRIL 11,E1877.
arm and fivuotheld.
Saud'or (twirler, Cricks.
These cracks consist of openings of
greater or lesser extent in any part of the
hoots of horses' feet, commencing at the
coronet, that is at the- juncture of the
hoot and hair, and are generally found in
the inner quarter or sides of the fore, and
at the toe of the hind , foot.' Regarding
its mode of appearance, writers and teach
ers differ ; some affirming that "a
crack may may happen in an Matsu t from a
false step; andlence a horse, though he
may spring a sand-crack Within an hour
after purchase, cannot , be returned on
that account to the seller." 'Whilst by
others this Opinion is said to be incorrect
except in rare instancep, but that it pro
ceeds slowly, and that prior to its appear
ance the horn is:,:dry and brittle, and is
imperfectly secreted' from some cause or
other; this latter view 'is undoabtedly
the inore•correct one. "Horn is built up
of tubes matted together. These tubes
are similar to hair, and Are secreted by
the same kind of, cells, and the same cell
. which forms the scaly epithelium epider
mis," (the outer and insensible covering
of the skin,) "and hair is utilized in
building up.the horny structures.
The special history of horny append-.
ag es consists, therefore, in the description
of the form and disposition of the stir
faces from which they spring ; wheareas
hairs have roots imbedded in follicles,
the horn tubes spriog from papillte, which
stud a surface extended over bony orfi
bro-elastic prominences. The horn tubes
are united together by an inter-tubular
substance composed of cells, and pro
duced from the surface between the pap
illa). The wall of the hoof, consisting
of horn-tubes and agglutinating inter-tu
bular substance, is secreted by the coron
ary substance, and is naturally' tough,
but breaks into fibres , if it grows beyond
its natural length. This is due to the
crumbling of the in tet•tubular substance.
In order that so i und horn be secreted,
therefore it is necessary that the papillte
and intermediate 'spaces in the coronary,
band as well as the sensitive lamina), be
in a healthy condition ; for it is found
that the very tough and natural state of
the wall is maintained and preserved by
the continual addition to it of horny ag
glutinating cells, secreted by' the sensi
tive laminae, as it (the wall) descends
the foot."
Having thus seen the manner in which
horn - is grown, and its integrity main
the'reader will easily understand
that the dry, brittle state of the wall
• leading to the occurence of these.cracks,
is dne to an unhealthy condition of the
parts from which it is secreted, that it is
secreted, that is the papillm, and inter- .
papillary substance ; when the sole of
the foot is weakened by an injudicious
use of the drawing knife and that abom
ination known as a seated shoe, applied,
almost the entire force of the treadl4
given to and taken' by - the wall alone;
thus it is over strained, and although it
is of itself an insensible material, the
shock as the blow is'cOnveyed through it
to the highly sensitive bodies from which
it is secreted, and to which it is attached;
their perfect action is thus prevented, and
the result is an imperfectly formed brittle
horn, which becomes less and less able to
withstand the strain ,ppt upon it, and
soon a crack commences at the upper
margin of the wall usually small and in
significant at first, but gradually extend
ing downwards and inwards until it has
penetrated through the horny structures;
lameness becomes apparent, inflaniation
of the sensitive tissues beneath the crack
is set up, the part is very -painful, the up
per edge of the wound gapes as the tis
sues swell, and when the animal is
made to move it will be seen that the
crack opens .a nd shuts as he steps onto
or off from the foot. • •
The first step of the treatment , will be
to have a level good shoe applied to the
foot, (a bar shoe ,I have-never yet found
to be necessary,) and this - is often all that
is required; if the parts are much swolfen
it will behest to have a V shapo piece.
of the hornlremoved from the wall; this
will prevent all further squeezing of the
sore parts and all that will -be required
further will be to dresi as a simple wOund
until the wall grows down sufficiently to
, allow the animal to be put to work, or it
B, i
may be that a simple .claspingt e crack
together with small iron claspsi . made for
the ,purpose, or with a horse= oe 'nail
carefully driven an clinched bt a com
petent man, will be all that is required.
Cracks never unite, and therefore it,will
be well to urge on the down growth of
the wall by gently stimulating the Oro
net.—Scientific ,anner.
-----...-..m. , ip-----
,
Talking about the solution of the prob
lem of fence or p 9 fence, let 'me tell you
that the matter has been settled in cer
tain townships in this county. and no
fence has become the order of, the day.—
Driving north from Champaign City, 111.,
by the time you have gone two miles
fences have disappeared, notWi.thstand
ing , hundreds of town ,cows wandering
on the streets not two miles -ff. And
this has been going an for three or four
year:l, without any : reasonable chance for
a return'to the'old lencingfaihion. Town
people havelearned to Care for their cows'
or take the consequences, and flip shod
farmers to herd. their vagabonding stock,
or it goeo tollie tu potddr--Pririe Farmer.
.
:: -. ':! - _itiotii# :.'fftillt'
Tpt7 . olng, Into Cats.
, Once there iirtll3 a law that, on a certain
day, when the meeting 'house bcll rang
fOr noon, everyhody should turn into a
cat..``
Somo,.peopledon't.believe this is true ;
but you ask the children and the barn
swallows !
Well, and so you ~ m ay. be sure it was
great fun to sit, up 'on , the big granite,
rock on the side..:of Deer Hilt and see
them turn, just -where they were and
whatever they:were doing, at .
.that very
minute
The minister's Son had come into the
study, with his hat in his hand, and said:
"Shall. Cornelius . and I, sir, take our
scythes, sir, - and go out and•moir a little
while. air ?", • j
And then -Mr. Fadyon's fool caught
hold of the bell•rope.‘
Mr. Fadyon's fool knew .some things as
well as anybody.; and< he knew how to
ring the . bell exactly when the sunklial
and the noon mark and his grandmoth-
e_ is eight-day clock said it was noon.
"So "ding, dong," went the bell, and—
it was only a Maltese kitten that had
hold Of the rope. . .
&tat at that hour, "Aunt Patt y was out
in the garden hoeing weedi, with an'old
hat' f Uncle Rodney's tied - on her head ;
and she began to turn, first her nose and
then her chin. .They were i very long and
sharp when they were Aunt Patty, and
they grew short and snubby, and whisk
ers grew, aid her ears pricked up as
though she heard something, and , then,
quicker than you can say "scat I" she was
a spotted kitten chasing Deacon Davis'
liens, that were trying to sneak through
the garden fence with the old rooster's
spurs on. After scaring them half out
of their feathers, she kept on through
Deacon Davis' cat hole, and up in the
back chamber, where -she Prowled about
and sniffedin all the dark corners and
behind the old tea-chests and barrels.
!When sbe was Aunt Petty she had al:
ways mistrusted whether or no Mrs. Dea
con Davis hadn't some"cobwebs and poke
holes out of sight, for all that she kept
everything looking neat as wax on the
outside.
And then the minister's son jumped
with one spring on the' miniAter's shoul
der, and began to bite the minister's hair.
and claw off his glasses, for he liked
rough ways and mischief as well as any
boy, only he had to be ,proper because he
was the minister's son.
The ininister looked around solemn
and dignified, a good, deal astonished ;
and then his glasses grew rounder and
rounder, and his arms-grew slenderer and
slenderer ; and then he , seemed to wink
all over; and then there . was a great black
cat, with a white spot on his throat and
a white face and four white feet, sitting
in the , study-chair, snapping at the flies,
with .one paw , onn - a volume of Johnathan
Edward's, sermons.
It was a great change for. the - minister.
But' as for Mrs. Deacon Davis, she didn't
seem to. alter hardly a bit. Her eyes were
the mildest skim-milk before, much more
faded, than an old cat's eyes ; and her
hair was pale buff and sort 01 furry. And
she had a way of rubbing herself against
the side of her chair as she talked along
in a kind :of purr-purrits.g. tone. She
stopped work for the first time in her life,
though, and taking her yellow paws out
of :the wash-tub, went to chasing dande
lion down.
.
But as soon as ten clocks anywhere in
town struck one at the same second, all
the cats turned back to people again ;
and you ought to have seen how surprised
they were to catch themselves doing such
odd things.
Aunt Patty was rumaging through the
minieter's wile's bureau•drawer among
her best'ciothes; and, bad as it ,looked in
a cat, it looked a thousand times worse in
Annt Patty, with Uncle Rodney's hat
still on her head and a hoe under Ifer
arm.
Mrs. Deacon Davis was curled up
asleep in the roeking-chair, and she rub
bed her - eyes and put her hands in the
svas,h4ub again, and didn't • know any.
thing had happened. She wouldn't be
lieve now if you should tell her. Only
when her clock struck one (it was always
a little slow), she felt grieved to see a few
.cat's hairs on her chair•cushion, and to
find she had lost so much good .time
right out of the heart of the day. "But
then ; " she thought, "my nap has rested'
me up completely and, with such poor
health as'l enjoy, A do suppose I needed
it. And, all is 1 must work the smarter
to makeup.
The minister looked most astonished to
find himself--playing with a large brown,
limp rat. "It is very extraordinary 1
3lost renairka.ble 1" said he:. ‘_‘Gloriana
he continued, turning to the black serv
ing -maid, .1 uo . was swinging herself down
from the ,cherry•tree, where, a moment .
before, she had been a black.kitten, elm=
ing a squirrel. '"Gloriana I you may take
this dead animal out and bury the crea
ture in the garden. It will act as a fer
tilizer." ,- •
And then he,_ began to walk up and
down the footpath, from the door to the
gate. with his hands behind him,.and to
think over the heath of his next Sermon.
On the whole, it. was funnier when the
cats became people than when the pect
:Ple became catsl they were so surrnised
and:ShOcked to find .where .they were and
what they were , dolng.-67. Nicholas for
April
- T:' , lfel h4t . ciii . - red: . : Ail (1:-.:...ipt4itge :11,,.c , : ii
no ~h.i.o..,t,4o.: . y ei:q!igq lgioi :' '-.:::- '';:: - -.ii-_ : - ,:',
...
'A FABLE;
-db-4141 ,
VIERCANTILE APPRAISEM EN rs.
111. DEALERS TN 31ERCITANDISE, &C., in SEM
quehaima County. take notice, 'that, in pursuance of
the several Acts o' Assembly of this Commonwealth
to provide . , revenue to meet , the demands upon the
Troasury and for °liter purposes. the , ntidersigned Ap
praiser of Mercantile taxes for said County, has pre
pared a list•of traders in said , County. and piacedeach
in that class which to him appears just and right; tc
wit
AUBITAN.
Ar Lacey 14
Carter & Place ' • 12
Tewksbury,& Son p m 4 p
E A Lett •14
E L Adams _ 14
P C Bushnell
0 Roberts
AR;ARAT. •
14
Paine
GP Tiffany
A Ely
Kent 4t, Eldridge
o Dolaway ' 14
ft F AettlAy 19
B Very 14
Perry Sweet l4
D C & F 11 Fordhara 18
Tiffany, t Cramer , 14
BRIDGEWATED.
Wm Corah
Perry Marcy
HT Lake
CLIYPOBD.
T J Wells 14
H W Johnson p uk 4 18
H W Johnson 14
II W Johnson
M A Gardner
J N Baker_ L. 14
Halste.aci & Finn 19
Weatherby & Burdick • 19
Q Wells
_'l4
.
1)1.11101M.
Stevens & Leebody 14
A H Moody 14
Hiram Biikeaie e 14
Hiram Titus
IN Stripier
DUWWI?.
Isaac E Davis p m 4 'l3
A Richardson 18
E P uhambers
FOREST LAKE.
B T Glidden
BRLyonedcCo
L
7111ENDSVILIX.
Robert Winters • - 18
F Heenan 14
Wm Buff= p m 4 12
Mrs M AicNamara 14
John H. Matthews 19
John O'Donnell
mum= .
Joshua Boyd
J 'Merriman
Smith Bros p m 4
Berjamiu Todd
GREAT BEND VILLAGE.
J B McCreary, Jr 13
Lewis & Langley 13,
S D Ross & Co . 131
H S Hanna 14
A T Benjamin 14
T J &,g D %rues 14
J B Brown 141
Mrs C J Clifford 14 i
GREAT BEND BOROUGH.
Thomas Cusack 14
P H Lines 11
T D Estabrook & Sou p
m4'l2
George L Lenheim 8
Belden Brothers - . 11
W A Col*ten 14
George MuNamara 18
M A Paintsin 14
G Newman 11
D C Brunson 141
H V Colsten & Co 14
Ferguson& Skinner 13
Judd & Day 14
D 0 Hollon p m 4 14
Sackett & Depue Billiard
Tables $3O
P Sullivan ' 19
P Winters 14
Stephen Kistler 13
Preston Brothers ' 1
14
GREAT BEND Towssinr.
11 A & ST Clark 18
Daniel Vanar.twerp 14
GIBSON.
Williams Brothers 131
Botm(s 131
James Fuller . 121
Bennett 14
T H Davis -• .14
Mitchell & Curtis pm 4 12
J G Stiles • 13
George IEI Wells pm 4 11
D B Tait 14
EMSIONY.
Lyons & McNiel 121
J &, J E Taylor 19
Noah Bisbee 14
A Young 19
JSchlager&Copm4 11'
Edgar Thomas _ 19
John Grabb . 14
Brant, Lang & Co 13
J B Stephens 14
'James Connelly 14
Ward & Co 14
nannicx.
C H Ellis p m 4 12
Thomas & Morgan 12
Allen & Patterson p m 4 12
'Fowler it, Co 14
. James A Munyon 14
L Curtis 14
HARPORD.
A T Tiffanyp m 4 . 121
HMJonespm4 12
J A Williams ' 13
Fowler Pcck 14
Oliver Payne 14
TJ Carr 14
P Carpenter 14
H Watterman 14
J ES BIM.
J W & E Granger 14
J H Rosencrans pm 4 14
WW&SB McCain p
m 4 ", 12
T 8 Wheatcroft 10
JACKSON.
W Benson
Delos Roberts
Arnold Baich'
Win D Bymer
&.0 Huglos 14.
John O'Brien & Son 14
M D Mattoon , 14
W iiir.,Messenger ' 14
0 Lewis .14
George A Stcddard 14
12 A_ll Crosier 4!0 Co .. . 14
14 A Shyer - ,- 13
Classification. of Von deri of Merchandise.
Bales less than $5,000 class 14
Sales $ 5,000, less than $lO,OOO, class 13 •
.alga $lO,OOO, lees than , sls,ooo, class 12 -
Sales $15.000, lees than $29,000, class 11
Bag% $20,000, less thans3o.ooo, class 10
Sales 430,000, lees than $40,000. class 9
Bales $40,000, lesit than $50,000, class • 8
LTPIXIXT r.
T Hanitirick • •
ltinnaou Knight
Classification of Patent Medicine Dealers.
-
Sale $lOO, and not exceeding $ 250. class 4:
Sales $2:60, and not exceeding $ 500, class 8
Salez ;GOO and rot exceeding $l,OOO, class 2 •
And the , Judges of the Court of Common Pleas of
said county will hold a Court of. Appeal at the. Court
Rouse in Montrose, in and for said, county, on Thurs
day. April 26,1877, at which time and place nny of the
Merchants described,,deflned and classed as Aforesaid,
or their agents or attorneys. may appear and appeal
from said assessment if they think proper, ,
A. GRAVES. Ja.,
Mercantile Appraiser.
March 14,1847.
A SSIGNEE'S SALE
OP AN EXTRA PAM.
..On Thursday. April, . 5,.1377. •at 10 o'clock a.*
•; • tn.: an the premises, by virtue eau order of tt e,
Cohrt or Common Pleas of Stisquehanna county,.
to me directed, as assignee• ^t S. P. Lane. : irt trust, for
. the benefit of his creditors. I will offer, for sale•nt pubs
lie auction, the farm of said Lane, viz ; •
• All that piece of lAiti ettutte la New • Milford toWn
,•ship,:bounded and described .as follomts. to - wit .On
tho north by inad, of Mrs. James Sherman and =Ella
Park.' east bpi:tads-Of D. 0, Ainey and W. C. Handriek,
south by holds or Ezr't Beebe; nod on - the west - by lands
'at M. Moffart and David Summers, contait,ing about
ISO an! es. 350 i mproved. Said fit-in is In a fin.: state of
cultivation, with first class tuildings, Alwelling house;
barn:te., ail new Withinsix years and - in good order ;
an abundance of - excellent- 'welt watered '• • handl
to maikq. in a goad neighborhood, and-- hae . allthe - aos..-
vantages to 'make it one er the best told most desirable
farms in,the county.- • •
TERMS :-4,l)odawn . on d;ty of fate; "Veo on • final
coati/a:nation, and.. the. balance 1 year thereafter with_
int crest. le' be.se_eured by first' Hen ort-retirestate other
*bit estate sold-
TllOlO.B RODets4g• f 4.ke.flifPlee 0 . 1 .F, Lane.: - . ,-
14.titia. .rell . 14 .. . , •
- - • •
Legal.
LENOX.
Black & Clearwater p
• m
Grow Brothers p -4
J Decker pm 4
Ws:o4lller p m 4
Silas _Bartley , •
G W Mapes .
LA THUCP.
F A Jeffers I
flail Brothers
8 Wright .'
•
M Tiffany
f 3 W Reote pm 8 -
Jeffers & Blakeslee p
N Finn'
LITTLE NzAmowe.
E H BlutEdslee
• niwnwrowzr.
Patri.Fk Wilde
- 7[0NT11013.11.
J R DeWitt 18
J R Raynsford• • 14
R Lyons & Co. 12
F B C
J Wbb
Ch Chandler ' e
4114
Lyons & Drake , 12
B C Sayre 14
A. N Bullard 19
B Warner 2 Bullard
Tables ' $4O
0 D Sebbins i 14
W J Mwtord
W W Smith & Son
W B Babcock
W Hewitt'
W JTurrelt 14
Weeks.lM eihnish & CO 12
ilip Hahn 14
M g - um 14
B Thatcher 14
F Zerlass 14'
WII Boyd &Co - 12
C N Stoddard 14
C G Miner 18
IN C B alls p
m 4 12 • 14
I Ballard
W B De.ans 14
Griffis & Sayre l4
M A Lyon p m "18
CO Fordham
J S Talbot 14
Read & Stroud 4.1
J F Bronson 13
A SBurnspm3
F R Stevens 14
E.P Stamp 12
Guttenberg, Rosenbaum
& Co 10
RIM RILIOILD BORO.
H W Decker ,
ltii 111 Williams p m 4 1 3
William Hayden 12
Hayden & Clements. 14
H 4 tiarmtt &on . 10
H Burritt p m 4 14
J 11 Bartle 1 Table $3014
J Dickerman m 4 .• 13
H& W T Dickerman 12
Leroy Decker
Pierce Barnes
D W Hagar
NEW MILFORD TOWNSHIP.
Benjamin Sabina pm 4 12
r k
OAKLAND.
F D Munson
0' F Church
J.S Hi llis . - 14
.
• SIISQUEHANNA DEPOT •
John Donley . - . 'l4
I hire Idabamin . i . 14
G L Adams
F D Lyons •12
1J H Archer • - 14
J 0 Kane 9
ldrs McDonald 13
II C Leep m 3 13
James Bell & Son 1.2
Guttopberg, Rosenbaum
& Co
R P . Doran
W H Langford
D A Lyons
J C Cook
Lewis Freeman 14
Doolittle Bros 14
G_M Doolittle 12
Thomas McDonald 11
Edward Vanaken 14
Osborn Newman 14
A C Vangorder 14
Coleman & Swallow 13
E Carlisle 14
A Miller 14
J Pendergast
R F Smith - • 13
W H Birdsall 14
W 11 Strachen 13
B Cook 12
D Casey 14
F 13 * Tbayre 12
W S Mitchell p m 8, 13
W tralkenbury 14
,
G & 8 IV Smith 13
Thus 'Fenian , 14
J Allen % .4 - , 14
Dooley Bios. ' 18
11 Furey 14
Michael Williams 13
A B Tarbox = 14
Hobert Wallace 11
G Drake ; 14
James Taylor 14
& Vanakoa 2 Billiard
Tables s4o
r 4
Wm Banll ' 14
Thomas Kelley ' 14
Sthith & Sheapp , 11
SPRINGTtLLE.
Minbt Riley 13
linngerford & Stessrole 10
Smith & Son 11
0 T Spetmer 14
SILVER LANE.
W& F Inderlied pm 4 12
E Meeker .14
T Sullivan
THOMSON.
NEW FIRM,
NEW GOODS;.
givi . * ) ; - -:• - ig.;:.13.Q.7:p : ,;: E .4,- . : : .20 . 4
ttucoz6Bo4,--irollot*:0 -,C,iii*OljY. :: i
,-.:::;.-- -. . Dif4LERS IN.
Coi*StOeS - 0 . - Itangoti,: - Hea4!
ing Stove 9.
ON TIME,
Is the name of a new ook Stove, just out, containing
a new principle In eking, and is destined to make a
revolution in the .onstruction of Cook Stoves. Come
in and see it. •
THE ARGAND,.
As si heating stove 'stands .without a rival, in beauty,
durability and economy. Come and satisfy yourself,
andget names of parties now using them.
TINWARE.
We take special plearare in offering to the Wholesale
and Retail Trade, our desirable supply of Tinware.. We
use none but the best of charcoal plates.
OUR WORICIIING EXPEBIEMCID
OUR STYLES ABE FAULTLESS
GOODS 'ABE WAILBANTED !
And we defy any .to proanee better goods for less
money.
LAMPS. • .
A fall line of Lamps of beautiful design. Also Chim
nays of every description.
STONE WARE.
Flower Jars, Hanging Pots, Churns, Batter Jar
Preserve Ja rs, Jars.
Jugs, Stove Tubes, /be.
itILDERS HARDWARE.
Butte and Screws, Locks and Knobs. Latches, Catches,
Doors. Bash, Blinds. Glass, Building Paper, White
Lead, Zinc. Oils, Varnisttes. Paint Brushes. Spirits of
Turpentine, Paint cf any shade desired. Also colors
for mixing paint.
A full assortment of Philadelphia Carriage Bolts,und a
full line.of Iron Axles, Bar Iron, Horse Shoes, Hails.
Rode, &c. •
We purchase in Car-load lots, therefore can sell to tht
trade in , less quantities as cheap as any house in the
city.
W3ll. H. BOYD, 3. H. CORWIN, J COOLEY
Montrose, 'March 16, 18'16.
glarbit or .s
•
eWauld call the attention of the Public wanting
ANYTHING IN THE MARBLE LINF
to OUR WORKS at
SUSQUEHANNA DEPOT, PA.,
ga'Being the only MerbleWorks inthe County,io
All Work Warranted as Itcpresented
YOI T A CAN . SAVE`MONE.1 7 .
Bi calling on no.
WILLIS DeLONG.
- •
Sneq'a Depot, Pa:. April 14,1876. 1.
TITNIRAII.II4OCII
.
MARBLE WORKS.
BURNS* , & WHITE
•
Manufacturers of and Deilero in
ITALIAN - AgERII A.N. MARBLE,
mmumi Arm SLUTS MAN3LES.
SoOTOff & AMERICAN eItANItE,
- A Specialty.
IStreeinstery Lots EnolosedLAS
•
P.C. BURNS; r - - WHIT"
Tunktiannock. Pa. Jan. it. 1876:--17
COACH Br, - CAIMIAGE" •
- . PAINTING! ',,
Theinulersign wishes to - literal the 'public that he
"prepared to do all kinds of
COACH; WAGON
PAINFING t ,
on-ishoit notice, in , the bed kflek laid at , reae°nabi
prices. _
s t rops I At Bor' Carriage Faetombliehanitti"elliie
At tack 'e Wagon Shop, irtitnpilte trce .
4. RICK.
Montrose, Sept. Oaro. -1 7- : ;.-
JoB woR4"
AT -17/4077/0/ *WWI
NEW PRICKS,
BOLTS.
NAILS.
ON NO SALE:
M. A.. COLVIN,/ gent.
Goops,i
" EXEL3ritterk.
fias Ant received an
• , •
ENTIRE 'NEM( STOCK OF MEWS',
BOYS' Itl%/1) - YOUTHS'
•
- ,At prices trl,smit 'the hard tizaee.'
MIME
011' ,1 -....'5111 1 5 1 ':•- 1 =',.::.,:.5'1 - 1525
BOTS!):&:i0i1THS!:'.:$510310
DRY GODS, _
& GAPS
BOOTS ANDJ SHOES, YANHEE
NOTIONS FANCY 4901)5,
Cheap for cub. No ichargea- for abowb4g our goods
• WM. -HAYDEN.
New Milford: May 841.11378.-If. • '
IMPORTAN
C. & A. CORTESva
MptCllANtr' . - - '.TAU,ORING,
THE GREAT CAUSE OF4 HUMAN
MISERY.
just Published, in. Sealed Envelope. Price six cents
' A Leetnre on the Fature, Treatment l md
ry , Radical calreof Seminal Weakness, or spar
• matorrhoea, induced by Self-A buss, Invol•
untary Emissions . lmwatency, Nervous be
bilify, and impediments to Marriage generally ; Con
sumption, Epilepsy. and Fits ; Mental and Physical In•
capacity, &c.—by ROBERT J. CULVERWELI., M.D.,
author of the "Green Book." &c.
• The world-renowned author, in this admirably lec
ture, clearly proves from his own experience Mt. the
awftil consequences cif Self-Abuse may be effectually re
moved without medicine, and without dangeriins surgi
cal operations. boogies, instramentsaings, or cordials;
pointing out a mode of cure at once certain and effeo
trial, by which every 'sufferer, no matter what his con
dition may be, may ctire himself cheaply, privately and
radically.
tlirThisTActure rill prove a boon to thousands and
thousanos.
Sent ander seal, Ina plain envelope,•to any address
on receipt of six cents r or two post stamps.
Address
THE CULVEIMELL MEDICAL CO.,
41 Ann St., New York ; Post Office Box, 4586.
Oct. 11, 1816.
ArTf
B RIAGES Y v. OU
EILTAIIIONS, CAR
OP '
W. OUSTER
,OUT, HA.II,FORIi,
. .
Repairing done o short notice, cheaper than the
cheapest,
Piret-class Phaetons - .; t - 1? 228
" " Buggies - - - 180
Lnin s ber wagons. - - - 115
" " Pirtfo P from $l4O to - - 100
i
h 44 Swell b y Sleighs, . - -IS 1 5
t •
• BLA i ICSMITHING. . 1
. ;
To shoe per span nw, - -! - 1 - $2 .50
corkand set - , - . - ; - ~40
set per Span 1 - • - : , -, ' - , 11.00
All work warrabtcid, call and examine my stock
beforepurchasing ,1- ewhere. 1 '
Hnrford, 'April 26,
Z.H.BARNIIS. I
Barnes,
Puble a
MANUFACT
MARBLE AND
IMPORTERS.'
260 h
March 8. tBl6.
I:3C. 1137 CT, 13.1:1,3E"rir,
Would call attention to his New Stock of
FALL - AND WINTER !GOODS
/yr on axle, in new
,10.1?Zi SOO
LADIES' DRESS GOODS, BLACK
AND COLORED ALPACAS,
NEW STYLE OF PRINTS,
SHAWLS, %ATER-PROOFS, FLAN
NELS, BA MORAL, AND HOOP
SKIRTS,
V ELVETS, HOSIERY,
HEAVY WOO GOODS, CARPETS, OH
CLOTHS,' PAPER HANGINGS, BMA-.
.LO AND LAP ROBES, MK,' HATS,
• min CAMBOOTS AND 8/10ES:
- HARD W - ARRIRON,NAILS,
STEEL, STOVES AND
GROCERIES, ETC.'
In great variety:and will be sold- on thp,moat
favorable torfaN and lowest priLee;
.
, DURUM. I
New - Milford, May114;1875.
Ro9uEsriTAl SEEDS.
Reld's Floral Tributes book of !Nimes with Colnrh
ed Plates, describe:6 500 varieties of flowers, v4etabirli
bulbs e. W 1 6,
Prices 10 cents. This work Wit. ,
R. 1.1 st ID'S S'ID'S :FLOWER SEEDS ,
ineluding Pansy, alld Vr bine. for .15 cents,
14 choice veriftle* and The Trlbute. 50 cents. WS";
table aeeds substitutes! 11:preterrtil.
Mention this paper.. W. L 14.11), '
_Feb. 28, 1677. O‘.S2 , Rothester. N. T.
c .
1- 7 iIVI LIVINGSTON. orrY ,
BILL
1 • Pottier end Distributor, Be bee the only Ito*
tOtbceirde Se the- otomb. 'fence very reasoluittlih.
'atoutrote. Fob. ' IWI7. ett - ' •
OVSI
Alsi, a Arlo line of
ANNOUNCEMENT
1
•--.AND•••••
AT 01AI NSW' STOBI4
kRICE
W. OUSTERHOIIT.
ors.—tr.
G. BIANDING N• CONGDON
131 anding Co.,
4 Granite Minks,
MILD:4Mb IN 1840.1
RENS OF ALL KINDS OF
GRANITE MONUMENTS.
NILES, &C.
ALSO,
OF SCOTCH. GRANITE,
tanan go St., Near Depot,'
• srpiaitAarroN. N. Y