Jfarmft's ©alumn. TWO PHASES OF FARM LIFE. Farming, like every other calling, has its advant ages. The fanner is the most independent and the nsoet dependentjnan in existence. With farming, as with every other branch of business, judgment, pru dence, and economy are requisite to success. To the man who posses these, an agricultural life brinps tho pleasure of independence with all the charms of variety. To such, the fluctuations of trade, the rise and fall of stocks, the rumored protests, or rumored bank suspen sions, have little or no terror. Life has charms for • him which it has not for men of other professions. Ho welcomes the change of the seasons at their approach; hb is not afraid of being bebind-band with his crops —being overtaken by an early frost, or disconcerted by a premature spring. He welcomes every change of the seasons, being always well prepared for their coming. But with some it is far different—they are never at ease —everything around them goes wrong. With thfem it is too hot or too cold—too wet or too dry. No matter whether the sun shines, or whether the clouds drop rain, snow, or hail—the weather is always wrong No matter whether the market price of wheat is 50 cents, or $1.50 per bushel—it is always too low, and the higher it goes up, the less inclined .are they te sell Their cattle and hogs are helping themselves to corn at home, or plundering their neighbors. In this way they are continually in trouble, and lead a reckless, unsatisfied life. There is nothing more important on the farm than system and order. Never undertake to do too much —do one thing at a time, and do it well. Bay down a plan of the work to be done, and do that first which needs doing the most, and finish it before you leave it. Never put off till to-morrow what can be done to day ; delays are proverbially dangerous, and to none more so than to the farmer. Never exceed your means by attempting to cultivato more than you can do well, and in due season. Keep a memorandum of your work, household expenses, cost of labor, Ac., and bal ance with the income of your business. Under such management, you will at all times understand the exact state of affairs. Tho farmer should know his profit and loss just as much as the merchant. Observe these few biuts, and you will find less rough corners in the routine of your farm operations. VARNISH FOR BOOTS AND SHOES. Many people oil and grease, and grease and oil their boots with a view to render them impervious to wnter, until the oil may be pressed out of the leather Oil alone, or oil and soft grease is poor stuff to exclude water from passing through the pores of the leather, and if the pores be filled with oil, water will drain the oil through on to one's stockings, making cold and un comfortable feet. For a few years post, I have used a kind of leather varnish for excluding moisture from boots and shoes, which is a very valuable article for excluding moisture The way to make it: Procure a quart bottle or jug, and put in it a half pound of gum shellac or shellac, which may be obtained at the drug store. The shellac should be broken up fine. Now pour in good alcohol enough to cover it, and place it on a shelf in a warm place, and cork the bottle tight, or the alcohol will soon evaporate. Shake it well several times daily.— To this add a piece of gam camphor, as largo as a hen's egg, and then add about one onco of good lamp black, and shake it well. If the alcohol is good the shellac will be dissolved in about three days, when it will be ready for use. Let the bottle be well shaken before using any op it. Should ifc ever appear to be too thick, add more alcoholj and if too thin, add shellac. I grease my boots and shoes lightly, when they ap pear to need it, and then give them a good coat of varnish. Pour out two or throe spoonfuls in o a little dsh, and with a small paint brush varnish the boots. If it is good, it will dry in six minutes ; and will lit erally sear off befbre it can be removed ; and it will form a gloss almost equal to patent leather. The great excellence of it is it does not strike into the leather, so as to render it hard and brittle; but remains on the surface, and excludes the water most effectually. Besides using this varnish for boots and shoes for several years past with good satisfaction, T have used it for varnishing harness, after they had been oiled, for which purpose I always found it a choice article, as it would keep a barnesg in good condition for a long period of time, when nothing but oil and lamp black would black everything that touched it. Now to have warm feet in cold weather, take care of boots in this way ; and just before going out in the cold ; remove the stockings and dry the feet and get them warm, and they will remain warm for several hours. It is the moisture on the feet that often makes them very cold. I frequently, before going to bed, run twenty rods or so, in the cold snow barefoot, or pump eoWwater on my feet, for a minute or so; and I know this to be a good remedy for cold feet.— S. EDWARD TODDI ia Country Gent. ► USE OF SWEET APPLES. A sweet apple, sound and fair, has a deal of sugar or saccharine in its composition. It is therefore, nu tritious; for sweet apples, raw, will fatten cattle, horses, pigs, sheep and poultry. Cooked sweet apples will fatten children, and make grown people fleshy— "■fat" not a polite word as applied to grown persons. Children being more of the animal than grown folks we are not so fastidious in their classifica tien. But to the matter in question. In every good farmer's house who has an orchard, baked sweet ap ples are on institution in their season. Everybody, from tho toddling baby holding up by its father's knee—children are decidedly a household commodity —away back to our reverend grandmother in her recking chair, loves them. No [sweetmeat smothered in sugar is half so good; no aroma or dissolved con festionery is half so simple os the soft, pulpy flesh oft a well baked apple of the right kind. It is good in milk, with bread. It is good on your plate with breakfast, dinner or supper—we don't " take tea ''at our house. It is good, every way " vehemently good" —as an enthusiastic friend of ours once said of toma toes.—lV. Y. World. WASHING MADE EASY. The "crazy folks " in the asylum at Hartford, Ct, mix a gill of alcohol with a gallon of soft soap, jushas they are going to rub it on the elothes, which they then souk two or three hours, and then merely rinse out in clear water, and all the dirt is out as effectual ly as good sense is out of a fellow afterdrinking the same quantity of the " poison stuff." Just tell the women that this is the easiest way to make washing easy, and urge them to try it, and you will hereafter lteve no reason to run away on washing day. In washing stairs and passages, always use a sponge instead of a cloth when washing the space between the earpet and wall, and you will not soil the edges. Sponge is cheap, aad this information is cheap, but it is valuable to all housekeepers.— Tht Plough. CKMSKT FOR Woon A*D Gtass.-Diasolve common flue in a carpenter'a glue pot, and add to it finely sifted wod ashes, until it becomes somewhat thicker but still pasty. Aplly it while hot, a o d press the glued article firmly together. ' Pise anil ftjietfrise. ARTEMIJS WARD'S TOATS. Artemus Ward, being present at acelebration and i expedition, was called upon for a speech, when be re i plied in 44 a toast to the phair sex Ladies, ses I turnin to the beantiful femails whoee presents was perphumin the fare growned I hope you're enjoyin yourselves on this occashun, and that lemin&id and ioe water ov which yon air drinking, may not go agin ' yon. May yon alfers be as fare as the son, as bright as the moon, and as butiful as any army with Union • flags—also plenty of good close to ware. Tu ynre sex—commonly kawled the phair sex, we are indetted for our bornin, as well as many uther i blessins in these lo growns of sorro. Sum poor sper roted fools blaim yure sex for the diffikulty in the i garden; but I know men are a deseteful set, and when the appel had bekum plum ripe I have no dowt but Adam would have rigged a cyder press, and like as not went onto a big bust and been drivorf unaware Yure Ist muthcr was a lady and all her dawters is , ditto, and non but a lafin kuss will say a word agin i yu. Hopin that no waive of troublo mav ever ride . akross your pioceful breasts, I konklude these re- I marks with the follerin centyment; i Woman—She is a good egg. * AN IMMENSE SPEECH. The following " immense" speech of a " feller," at a debating club in Jersey, comes to us well vouched 1 for: "The subject to be scussed is 'Whether ardent sperits does any good or not ?' I confirm that it don't. J A long pause.] Jist think of our ancestors in futur days—they lived to a numerious and antiqnrian ago —so I don't think whisky or sperits does any good or not—that I conclude it don't. [Another pause.] I don't think—l don't—l—l can't —don't git hold on the darned thing." .. Evidently the "denied thing" had "hold on" him—we mean the dcmijug of alcorhorn, which was being so eloquently and powerfully " scussed." *► 53P* An Irishman, driven to desperation by the stringency of the monej- market and the high price of provisions, produced a pistol and took the road.— Meeting a traveler, he stopped him with: "Your money or your life." Seeing Pat was keen he said : "I'll tell you what I'll do; I'll give you all my mo ney for that pistol." " Agreed." Pat received the money and handel over the putol. '• Now,' said the traveler, " hand back that money or I'll blow your brains out." " Blaze away my hearty," said Pat, "never a dhrep of powthers there's in it." . \~ff~ A saloon keeper in Cleveland, Ohio, in the scarcity of change, conceived the idea of issuing tick ets "good for one drink " to regular customers, when he couldn't change their money. In printing the tickets, the printer made a mistake, as the saloon keeper discovered to his cost, after distributing a large amount of them. The tickets read " good for one drunk " A number of two-fasted drinkors, who got hold of some of the tickets, have indulging in a a series of drunks ever since, greatly to the pecuniary loss of the " saloouor." "Would you like me to give you a dollar?" asked a boy of a genleman he met in the street. " Certainly," was the reply. "Very well, then," said the boy, " do unto other? as you would that others should do unto you." . A verdant country girl, who was at a party, had just received a glas? of wine from her lover, when a friend said: " What kind of win i are you drink ing, Mary, is it Madeira?" " I guess so, said she, for my deary gave it to me !" IT "ft seems to mc I have seen your physiogno my somewhere before," said a swell to a stranger whom he met the other day, " but I cannot imagine where." "Very likely," was the reply, "I have been the keeper of a prison for the la3t twenty years.') ... Talking of Sidney Smith's cool Idea of "tak ing off his flesh and sitting in his bones," as bring the highest imaginable degree of comfort now-a-days ' I can better that," said Copperton, gravely, "I'd knock the marrow out and have a draft through." K3T Tell me, angel host, yu messengers of love, shall swindled printers here below have no redress above ? The shining angel band replied : 4 Tons is knowledge given ; delinquents on the printers' book can never enter heaven!" E3T" " I have a good ear, a wonderful ear," said a conseited musician, in the course of conversation. "So has a jackass!" replied a bystander. The cut of patience is carved by angelic hands, set round with diamonds from the mines of Eden, and filled at an eternal fount of goodness. 53 r A smile may be bright while the heart is sad The rainbow is beautiful in the air, while beneath is the moaning of the sea. - --► Value the friendship of him who stands by you in the storm ; swarms of insects will surround you in the sunshine. E An honest Hibernian, upon reading his physi cian's bill, replied that he had no objections to pay bim for his- medicine, but his visits he would return. " Among all my boys," said an old man, 4 * I never had but one who took after me and that was my son Jake, who took after me with a club." UfT Sleep is called " death's counterfeit," and this is a case in which the counterfeit is gcnorally preferred to the genuine. For one half of the human race, says Mrs Reed, the highest:end of civilization ia to cling like a weed to a wall. The difference between a miller and a sexton the one tolls for a living, and tHe other for a death. KTA man full of compliments is a dedication— a man full of learning is a register. JIT Some malignant slanderer fays, " "Woman needs no eulogist—for she speaks for herself.'.' TIISIIKI, —No one learns to think by getting rules for thinking, but by getting materials for thoughts What fruit does a newly, married couple re semble 1 A green pear. tw At what time of the day was Adam created ? ] A little before Eve. I3T Maids want nothing but husbands* then they 1 want everything. bis mAm m BUY BEST AUG CHEAPEST. IS AT G. H. EASTMAN S BOOT AIO SHOE SHOP, as ha intends for the future to sell exclusively for CASH OR READY PAY; thus making every man pay for bis own work, with out taxing him for the debts of those that never pay. He will sell all kinds of the best custom made work at a lower figure than the slop work usually found in country stores can be bought at. He is constantly adding to his large stock of THE BEST MATERIAL, and will keep on hand and make to order all kinds o BOOTS, SHOES, BUSKINS, GAITERS, SLIPPERS, GLOVE-KfD SHOES, Ae., Ac. Tlic Best Workinen . nil are employed in his manufacturing establishment, and he feels confident of his ability to give the most perfect satisfaction. G. H. EASTMAN is noted for making the BEST and CHEAPEST Boots and Shoes ever offered to the public, and in order to sustain his reputation, ho will spare neither care nor oxpenge. His shop is first door below R. R. Little's Law Of fice, where he is prepared to make to ordei, and do repairing on short notice. My motto is, to use none but coon LEATHER — not to purchase that which is boiled or rotten. P. S. Orders for fine Sewed Boots particularly so licited. G. n. EASTMAN- Tunkhannock, Aug 14, 1861 TO TRAVELERS. " DAILY LINE OF STAGES! FROM Tunkhannock to Pittston, CONNECTING with STAGES running to and from Wtlkes-Barre, and all other points, from Pittston. Also, with stages running to and from To wanda. Laeeyville, Meshoppen, Montrose and other oints, from Tunkhannock. NONE BUT GOOD HORSES, ASD CAREFUL AND OBLIGING DRIVERS are engaged on this Line. Extra Horses and Carriages constantly on hand, FORWARD PASSENGERS from Tunkhannock to SpringvilJe, Mehoopany and all other points off the line of regular Stage route. J. KIT TERSPAUGH, Proprietor. Tunkhannock, September, 18, 1861. DEL. LACK. & WESTERN RAILROAD. C33A3NTOE OP TIME ON and after Monday, November 25th 1861, Trains will run as follows: EXPRESS PASSENGER TRAINS Leave Gie't Bend at 7:20 A. M. New Milford 7:39 " Montrose 8:00 " Hopbottom w---P:?3 " Nicholson ---8:4 l) " Factory ville •••• 9 04 " Abington 9-20 " SCRANTON 10-00 Moscow 10:41 " Gouldsboro 11 ; 07 Tobjhunna - 11:20 " Stroudsburg 12.32 P. M- Water Gap 12:46 •' Columbia 1:00 Delaware 1:25 .< Hope (Philadelphia connection) • -1:35 " Oxford-•••• J.-53 Washington 2:10 " Junction 2:32 " Arrive at New York 5:30 " Philadelphia 6-50 " MOVING NORTH. Leave New York frotp footcf Courtland Street 8.00 A M. Pier No. 2, North River, 7.00 " Philadelphia, from Kensington Depot 7:10 " Leave Junction J : 15 i W ash ington - 11:33 Oxford 11.50 " Hope (Philadelphia connection) •• 12:14 P. M. Delaware 12:43 " Columbia 1:00 Water Gap 1:16 " Stroudsburg 1:30 " Tobyhanna 2:42 •' Gouldsboro- •• • • 2:55 " Moscow 3,17 " SCRANTON 4:10 " Abington--••• • - -4:40 " Factoryville 4:56 " Nicholson 5:16 i Hopbottom 5:38 " Montrose- 6:00 " New Milford 6:21 " Arrive ft Great Bend 6:40 " tW These Trains connect at Great Bend with the Night Express Trains both East and West on the New York and Erie, and at Scranton with Trains on Lacknwanna and Bloomsburg Railroad, for Pittston, Kingston and Wilkesbarre; and the Train moving South connects at Junction aith Trains tor Bethle hem, Mauch Chunk, Reading and Harrisburg. Passengers to and from New York change cars a Junction. To and From Philadelphia, via. B. D. R. R., leave or take cars at Hope. Foi Pittston, Kingston and Wilkes-Barre, take L. A B. R. R. cars at Scranton. For Jessup, Arehbald and Carbondale, take Omni bus at Scranton. ACCOMODATION TRAIN. MOVJXG NORTH Leaves Scranton 9:50 " Abington 10.-35 " Factory ville 11 ;00 ' Nicholson 11:30 " Hopbottom 12:05 P. M Montrose -12:45 '• New Milford- i 1:20 " Arrives at Great Bend 1.45 " MOVING SOUTH Leaves Great Bend 2:10 P. M. New Milford 2:35 " Montrosem • Hopbotto 3:45 •< Nicholson 4:15 < Factory ville 5:13 Abington 5:40 " Arrives at Scranton 6:30 " This Train leaves Scranton after the arrival of the Train from Kingston, and connects at Great Bend with the Day Express Trains both East and West on New York and Erie. JOHN BRISBIN, Sup't. Superintendent's Office, ) Scranton, Nov. 25, 1861. \ WANTED -A RESPECTABLE PERSON OF EITHER SEX in every neighborhood to sell J R. STAFFORD'S OI.TVK TAR, and also J.R. STAFFORD'S IRON AND SULPHUR POWDERS. Olive tar is a thin transparent fluid r it is the best remedy known for diseases of the Throat, Lungs, or Catarrh. Also for Diptheria, Croup, Whooping Cough, Ac. My Iron and Sulphur Powders strengthen the system, aid the digestion, and purify the blood. I have al6 page pamphlet containing fall explanations, and over 100 testimonials from well known prominent persons which I will send to any one free by mail. J. R. STAFFORD, Chemist, 442 Broadway, New York.' New Arrangement, ——————- \ AT THE ( Farmer's Store, • I NICHOLSON, WYOMING CO. PA. J JVew •Arrangements j ® fff - " 0 1 AND - 55 85 | 3XTEW GOODS ! $ © j TERMS: POSITIVELY READY PAY. 1 P"* ' L. HARDING & CO, have on hand and are m CY \ receiving a large Stock of : Si FALL, & WINTER ~ | j ?s © J > W j which they will sell for CASH OR I $ if At least 20 PER CENT LESS - than those selling on the OLD CREDIT SY^STEM, Z Our Jflotto: > Z SMALL PROFITS & READY PAY t £> 9 j ■E 1 I WANTED.—AII kinds of Grain Produce, Lumber, good '^3 ; Hemlock Shingles, Wool Socks, Sheep Pelts, Beef Hides, i n c fact everything that will sell, for which the highest market ( o ; price will be paid. k* - L. HARDING & CO. jP" j Nicholson Depot, ! Oct. 30th, 1861. COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, HINGH.'.MTON, N. Y. An Institution to Qualify Young Men for Business. D. W. LOWELL, Princijml, Professor of the Science of Accounts, Practical Accountant, Author of Lowell's Treatise upon Book-Keepmg, Diagrams illustrat ing the same, Ac. JNO. RANKIN, Commercial Accountant, Professor o! Book-Keeping and Practical Mathematics. A. J. WARNER, Professor of Practical and Ornament al Penmanship, Commercial Calculations and Cor respjndence. J. J. CITRTIL, Assistant Teacher in Bookkeeping Department. LECTURERS. Hon. DANIBL S. DICKINSON, LL, D Lecturer on Com mercial Law and Political Economy. Hon. RANSOM BAI.COM, Lecturer on Contracts, Prom isary Notes and Bills of Exchange. Rev. Dr. E. ANDREWS, Lecturer on Commercial Ethics. t Studcntg can enter at any time; no vacation. Graduates are presented with an elegantly engraved Diploma. Usual time required to complete full com mercial course, from Bto I' 2 weeks. Every student is guarantaed to be compcteut to take chnrgo of the books of any business firm, and qualified to earn a salary from $BOO to §l5OO per annum. Assistance rendered to graduates in obtaining situations. Board 82 00 to 82 50 per week. For particulars send fbr Circular, enclosing stamp. n5-ly. IFfoTTiuiTtTtJ. ~ /flsl)ionaiilc Sfyatnng, flair cutting, AND SHAMPOOING SALOON. Shop Opposite May nard's Hotel. Ladies' hair cat in the most fashionable style, ei ther at his Saloon, or their residence, if desirable. Mr. Berlinghof is recently from New York city, where he was employed in the best establishments, and consequently feels warrnnted in guaranteeing satisfaction to all who may favor him with their eus oin. ~~ *OLADIES NEW SPRING AND SUMMER MILLINERY! ! AT MRS. BARD WELL'S, Opposite the Post-Oflice. WnERE may be found a general assort ment of Ribbons, Bonnet Material, Flowers, Ruches, Straw and Fancy Bonnets, Misses' and Chil dren's llats and Shakers, and all other articles in the millinery lino, which will be offered at the market prices. Please call and examine before purchasing else where. Bleaching and repairing done in good order, and at the shortest notice. 36—3m FRUIT CANS, for preserving fruit, for sale by MILLS A ROSS. Tunkhaonoek, September 11, 1861. STOVE & TIN-WARE MANUFACTORY, TUSK II AXXOC K, Pa. MILLS •& ROSS, MANUFACTURE AND DEAL IX EVERY DESCRIPTION OF TIN, SHEET-IRON, AND (L r opr (tiarc, COOKING, PARLOR, AND BOX STOVES STO YE PIPE d FURNITURE, Heaters and Registers, PUMPS, ZINC, LEAD PIPE, JAPANNED AND BRITANIA WARE, And, indeed, everything pertaining to their business which they offer at PANIC PRICES, ROOFING, GUTTERS and CONDUCTORS, put up, at short notice. JOBBINu and REPAIRING of all kinds, prompt ly and neatly done. Give them a call. Tunkhanmck, Sept. 11, 1861. ] v TRYTHE NICHOLSON MILLS!! (NEAR BACON'S OLD STAND.) THIS Mill has been lately re-fitted and all the modern improvements added and is now in charge of MR. WINT, of Proviaenee, Luzerne county, ono of the best Mil ler :h country. Particular attention paid to Custom Work, which will be done on short notioo. ALL WORK WARRANTED, and if not satisfac torily done may be returned at the expense of the subscribers. FLO I R of all kinds, MEAL and FEED, constant ly on hand and for sale, at the Lowest Cash prices IW Cash or Flour paid fbr grain at tho Highest Cash prices. N. It. WINT, P. B BALDWIN, Millet. Proprietor. AVER'S jaov PUIS. FOE ALL THE PURPOSES OP A I FAMILY PHYSIC There has long existed a public demand for jj ' effective purgative pill which could be relied on j, sure and perfectly safe in its operation. This hy been prepared to meet that demand, and an exten sive trial of its virtues has conclusively shown wit); what success it accomplishes the purpose It is easy to make a physical pill, but not easy to make the best of all pills one which should hate none of the objections, but all the advantages, of ■ every other. This has been attempted here, and with what success we would respectfully submit to I the public decision. It has been unfortunate for the patient hitherto that almost every purgative mcdicii... is acrimonious and irritating to the bow els. This is not. Many of them produce so muct griping pain and revulsion in the system as to more than counterbalance the good to be derived fro® thom. These pills produce no irritation or pain unless it arise from a previously existing obstruc tion or derangement in the bowels. Being purely vegetable, no harm can arise from their use m any quantity; but it is better that any medicine should be taken judiciously. Minute directions for their use in the several diseases to which they art tp. plicable -are given on the box. Among the com plaints which have been speedily cured by them, we mav mention Liver Complaint, in its various fo'nry of Jaundice, Indigestion, Languor and Loss of Ap petite, Listlessness, Irritability, Bilious Headache, Bilious Ftver. Fever and Ague, Pain in the Side | and Loins ; for, in truth, all these are but the cot sequence of diseased action in the liver. As ai aperient they afford prompt and sure relief in Co*, tiveness, Piles, Colic, Dysentery, Humors, Scrofuu and Scurvy, Colds with soreness of the body, Cleen and impurity of the blood, Irregularities; in short, any and every case where a purgative is required. They have also produced some singularly JEJ. cessful cures in Rheumatism, Gout, Dropsy, Gravel. Erysipelas, Palpitation of the Heart, Pains in tb $J Back. Stomach, and Side. They should be freelv taken in the spring of the year, to purify the blood j and prepare the system for the change of season An occasional dose stimulates the stomach cy bowels into healthy action, and restores the app. titc and vigor. They purify the blood, and, by the stimulant action on the circulatory system, rcr> vate the strength of the body, and restore th wasted or diseased energies of the whole organism. Hence an'occasional dose is advantageous, eret though no serious derangement exists: but un necessary dosing should never be carried too fa, j" as every purgative medicine reduces the strength whe u taken to excess. The thousand cases in which a physic is required cannot be enumerated here, be: they suggest themselves to the reason of even body; and it is confidently believed this pi'j will answer a better purpose than any thing which haj hitherto been available to mankind. "When thei virtues are once known, the public will no longa doubt what remedy to employ when in need of e cathartic medicine. Being sugar-wrapped, they an pleasant to take, and being purely vegetable, nc harm ean arise from tlieir use in any quantity. For minute directions, see wrapper on the P '-_ PREPARED IJV DII. JAMES C. AYER, Fi'sictipal and Analytical Cliciiiist LOWELL, MASS. Price 25 Cents per Eos. Five Boxes for $l. AYEII'S CHERRY PECTORAL, For llic rapid Cure of COIGIfS, (OLDS, lIOARSEXESS. BRONC HITIS. M HOOI'ING-COMiH, CROC P. ASTHMA, AND CONSUMPTION. This remedy has won for itself such notorie" from its cures of every variety of pulmonary diseau that it is entirely unnecessary to recount the cv: dences of its virtues in any community whore ' | has been employed. So wide is the field of its ns* fulness, and so suxr-r.vjs the cases of its cure, that almost ever 5 ...en of the country abounds | in persons publicly known, who have been restore: 1 from alarming and ev en desperate diseases of r; •' lungs by its use. When once tvied its superiorim-i j over every other medicine of its kind is too appam rent to escape observation, and where its virtues known, the public no longer hesitate what anttd vsj to employ for the distresf'ng and dangerous arfe-jl tions of the pulmonary organs which arc ineidu: to our climate. Not only in formidable attaint upon the lungs, but for the milder varieties c Colds, Coughs, Hoarseness, Ac. ; and for CM: drfn it is the pleasantest and safest medicine thr can be obtained. As it has long been in constant use throuaho. this section, we need not do more than assure t: -a Eeople its quality is kept up to the best that it ev f as been, and that the genuine article is sold by- S.Stark, Tunkhannock; T D. Spring, Laceyvil. Harding A Co., Nicholson; E & J Frear, Fact, ville, and by dealers in Medicines everywhere. MRS. WOOD'S S TIMIL ATI NB V llTs lEIT FOR WHISKERS AND HAIR. J THE STIMPLATING OXC.I EXT AND IJfVI ORATOR will restore hair to the bald head, gi new life and restore to original color gray h cause red hair to grow dark. Is warranted to bri: - : out a thick sot of WHISKERS OR A MUSTACHE ! in from three to six weeks. This article is the oc f one of the kind used by the French, and in Loiu and Paris it is in universal use. It is a beautiful economical, soothing, yet stimu. ting compound, acting as it by magic upon the r>* causing a beautiful growth of luxuriant lmir. If v plied to the scalp it will cure baldness, and c:m spring up in place of the bald spots a fine growth new hair Applied (recording to directions, it * turu red or light hair dark, and restore gray h; to its original color, leaving it soft, smooth, and f ible. The " Onguent "is an indispensable arf' in every gentleman's toilet, and after one week's t they would not {of any consideration be without i' The subscribers are the only Agents for the ar: in the I'nitcd States, to whom all orders must be dressed. Price One Dollar a box—for sale by all Prngz andJJealers —or a box of the " onguent," warrut to have the desired effect, will be sent to any, wh. | sire it, by mail, (direct) securely packed, on ro of price and postage, SI.Id. Apply to or address HORACE WOO Id- South ?th St., cor Grand,.Williamsburth. HOWARD ASSOCIATION. ' HHILADELPHIA. For (he Relief of the Sick- \ Distressed, Virulent and Chronic Diseases, and esp-cnOn for the Cure of Diseases t flhe Sexual Organ Medical advice given gratis, by the Acting >rg* Valuable Reports on Spermatorrhoea or Sennr Weakness, and other Diseases of the Sexual Orp and on the New Remedies employed in the PUi-ee- , ry, sent to the afflicted in seated letter envelopes'" of charge. Two or three stamps for postage wW acceptable. Address, i'r J. SkILLIN" JlOl"i' : t TON, Acting Surgeon, Howard Association, No. • Ninth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. [vlnsol. v sjgjjjjp| dukts mill BE ' This preparation, made from the best Java Cofr is recommended bv physicians as a sujierior N'l T" 1 TIOUS BEVERAGE for General Debility, IJ-T sia, and allFillious disorders. Thousands who to M been compelled to abandon tha use of coffee will *-' this without injurious effects. One can contains strength of two pounds of ordinary coffee. Price • cents. .KOLLOCK'S LEVAIN, The purest and best BAKING POWDER W* I | for makiDg light, sweet and nutritious Bread * a cakes. Price 15 cents I MANUFACTURED BV | M. H. KOLLOCK, Chemist, Corner of Broad and Chestnut Streets, PM 1 I And sold by all Druggists and jtjli