MISCELI,ANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS, . _ . . ;EFPCOiIetraRIT CONSUMPTION And all Diseases of the lungs and Throat, CURABLE K INHALATION. Which conveys the remedies to the ciwitics in the lungs through the air passages, and coming in direct contact with the disease, neutralises the tubercular matter, allays the cough, causes u free and easy expectoration, heals the lungs, purifies the blood, imparts renewed vitality to the nervous system, giving that tone and energy so indispensable tor the restoration of health. To he able to state confidently that Consumption is curable by inhalation. is to men sburce of until lo3ed pleasure. it is as much under the cdn trol of medical treatment as any other formid able discaso ; ninety out of every hundred ca ses can he cured in the first stages, and fifty per cent. in the second ; but in the third stage it is impossible to save More than five per cent.. tor' the Lungs are so cut up by the disease as to bid defiance to medical skill. Even, however, in the last stages, Inhalation affords extraordinary re lief to the suffering attending this fearful scourge which annually destroys ninety-five thousand persons in the United States alone ; and a cor rect calculation shows that of the present popu lation of the earth, eighty millions are destined to fill die Consumptive's graves. Truly the quiver of death has no arrow so fa tal as Consumption. In all ages it has been the great enemy of life, for it spares neither age nor sex, but sweeps oil alike the brave, the beauti ful, the graceful and the gifted. By the help of that Supreme Being from whom cometh every good and perfect gilt, I am enabled to offer to the afflicted a permanent and speedy cure in Consumption. The first cause of tubercles is from impure blood, and the immediate effect pro duced by their deposition in the lungs is to pre vent the free admission of air into the air cells, which causes a weakened vitality through the entire system. Then surely it is more rational to expect greater good from medicines entering the cavities of the lungs than those administered through the stomach; the patient will always find the lungs free and the breathing easy, after Inhaling remedies. Titus, lithalation is a local remedy, nevertheless it acts constitutionally and With more power and Certainty titan remedies administered by the stomach. To prose the pow- erful and direct influence of this mode of admin istration, chloroform inhaled will entirely de- stroy ,ensibility in a few minutes, paralyzing the entire uervotts system, so that a limb may be , amputated without the slightest pain ; inhaling the urdinery taunting gas will destroy life in a few Imo, The inhalation of ammonia will roast, the sys tem when ;hinting or It paarently dead. The o dor of many of the utedicints in puce mita in the tAttn n few minates after being inhaled, and may be immediately detected in the blood. A convincing proof of the tunstitational effects of inhalation, is the feet that sickness is always pro • , and all kinds of 11.utuwAto, utal building materials in proportion, at the "Bard nare Stare" ut :l. A. BROWN 8c Co. Huntingdon, Apr.s;s7.-tt, pvi. keg. 340 L EADPIPE nale at the ffnrilwat, Story : JAMES A. BROWN CO. of • .i y H F 7.'117Z1 5/Vl.tri! 111ZACT.:2Car23 iS an Improvel amat.l4., las., a Ft LI, lt . lrC 4JC Ir to CVCI'y veto N. thlei.,Leat st,nles ars: in, lleci•tnlicr 1. ) , 1,, SiV - VIIG- .t'LN I) NATION,, SA F 'ii Ed UST CON PA N V 111 :upge duy Vi HEI.I , INI,I;E, Vi., •J Secretorv. ~, . , !wit .!, -zJ1:1 • ' 7 - '--1 ' VIII . . ~ 4)1 SAS,V4, — tJ . A AI) IIN nAT ii)X I N AASAS I,e.e. 348 pe,es. 11 complc, turd Lhe l'ereitory, mud .Iteet, Ere Ineeinv a 11411 tteo/1111L lor ire liiSVlPVery,,eo;, raphy., eijiwi s t, proline, RS I I,llsllCiii .11. WO 11!1 , 1 C .I:ceder and Shannon. non tieal .111,101tS, personal eneututters,viertion Laub, abtl outrages, with por!raiti sit prttini tient t . .tiort therein, sill hilly tutthentieate'l by J(/11N i ' rivttte See:, CUrCIIINS cut n pilcrl from the °nichtl dochtneut on the in the department of State at Washing ton mid other paprrs in the possession of the author, with a full account of The Inva,ion Karn.tts from Missouri the capture, trial and treatment ul the Free State prisoners, the character and movements a the Mas,ouri liar. der Itutlians, the murder of Bonnie and other,. 'The Controversy between tiovernor fleary and Judge Lecompte. The proceedings of the arc, at the pro-,lnvuy erni • t!t I ..alliAlllillll at the Demoeta ;. . : ••:•1 •1,• , ,n during it. • and wanted. CIIAELES (l. RHODES, Publisher, Inquirer liuiluing , Phibuielphia, WAR Ild rouNnnw L11,06M . N1 , 011.M oLD and the paddle generally, that•they latt.te the above Foundry in lull blast, t+ r . awl are pre pared to furnish castings atl every descrtption. Stoves of :all kind, • for wood or mel. Inarroved Ploughs, l'lncshing Machines, and everything in the ea.r• ling line neatly made. cue linimh all work that revives turning, having a good Turning. Lola. All work done cheap for mill or try produce. Old mete! taken liar castings. Ra• hag pea tt ita! and ex peril need we hope by strict attent',l to trainees to rceeire a liberal shore tot patronage. Mt:GILL CHOSn. .I!,,tutdria, April 25, 1857. I A (IK SON 'S 1 - 10 TEL HUNTINGDON, PA.: .";'/.. On AI leghei;,,, ixtwel: Pa. R. & &B. T. It. R. Depo:,.. WM. U. Proprietor. IMltich :25, 1857, KOTIC,X. is hereby, given that Jonathan M' Esti., Trustee of the estate of Wii. ham Ingrain, bus filed hie acconnt in the office f the Prothouutarrof the Court of (~union tins of litintingdon (unity, and that the same will he presentid to the said Court en . thu first Meadny awl 10th day of August term, item, l'or confirmation and allowance. M. F. CAMPBELL, July r, ls3i• Pror y tutiplalogistic ,clehtitted medicine is for ax le at the ,fout . Fur ull intianfluatory disease, it u ceriaiti ctire. Gat a has ted try it, se who arc afflicted.