c=i E 0 riettiatt. - cam` F. L. Baker, Editor. MARIETTA. PA : SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1863. • A careful collection of reports from diffirent well-informed quarters shows the entire strength of the rebel ariny, on this side of the frliseissippi (that is of all that is of any use); to be, in round numbers, as follows ; Bragg's army, 75,000 ; Lee's army, 40,000 ; Beanregard's army, 20,000; Jonhston's army, (in the rear of Vicksburg and Memphis), 18,000; at Wilmington, 10,- 000 ; at Mobile, 6,000 ; scattering (1000 at Savannah, small forces at Lynch burg, Gordonsville, and at different ar senals and at other points in the inte rior, in all not over), 20,000. Practi cally, then, we are confronted to-day by not over one hundred and ninety thou sand men. We can meet them with an effective mobile force of, at the very least, three hundred and fifty thousand. Or The Columbus, Ohio, Express, says : "We understand that Wray Thomas, Mayor of this city, and John Peter Ambos, Esq., made the following bet If Brough should be elected Go vernor, Mayor Thomas was to turn a grindstone in the public square for two consecutive days, on which the Union men were to grind their knives. If Vallandigham should be elected, Mr. Amboy was to turn the stone for Val landigham men to grind. Vallandig ham is beaten, and we are told the May or has already commenced training and sweatingoffhis staples fat to get ready." Or We learn from authentic corres pondence that Jeff. Davis has signed a large number of blank commissions, and the rebel Secretary of War has caused them to be boxed up, and commissioned a colonel to visit Missouri to fill up the blanks with the names of such despera does as will engage to raise guerrilla companies to murder the Union men of that State. The agent and messenger, with these documents, passed through Little Rock, on his way to Missouri, a few days before that city fell into the bands of Gen. Steele. ifir Recent accounts from Wilming ton, N. C.. the rendezvous of the block ade-runners, state that all the wealthy inhabitants have removed to Augusta, the lower classes and the merchants re maining. Beyond the arrival and de parture of blockade runners, there is no indication of 14e in the city. The streets ore deserted, and the poorer classes re maining all express themselves as tired of the war. Or The Mobile Register says "the negro is no longer an object of small talk in the South. The people have found a place for them, and that . is in the army. There should be no distinc tion of color when men are willing to fight for home." So, murder will out at last. The negro is to go into the re bel army. Northern sympathizers will be horrified at this.' sr A negro woman in Providence lately tied a string round the tongue of a child seven years of age. After pla cing the little one on tip toe, she tied the string round a nail, causing the suf ferer to stand in this position all night. The monster is to be propeeded against, and should have the severest penalty the law admits inflicted on her. gar The officials connected with the conscription department of the Govern. leant have finally conceded that , con ' scripts in the late draft who have paid $3OO for exemption, will be exempted `from any other draft for three years.— The former decision that they would be held liable to the next draft has been • abandoned. in the Year 700 the Lord's Pray er emnineneed% "Erre fader thie are in • beifnas ;" in 900, "Thee ure fader the beofum •" in 1100 it was rendered, "Fa der.thou art in heaven blisse ;" in 1300, "llre Fader in heaven ;" in 1400, "Fader oar in heaven ;" and in 1537, "0, our father who art in heaven." sr It does one good to hear of a well-preserved old lady like widow Lunt, of Litchfield, who, the Gardiner Journal says, is eighty-six years old, has. all of her teeth sound and good, has never worn spectacles, can Tee to thread her otedle by candlelight, and is in every way smart and active. A., Wilmington, N. C., paper cap tured oU the Cornubia states that Fer nando Wood was a partner in a Liver pool firm engaged in supplying war ma terials to the confederacy. The an nouncement will cause surprise to many —not to us. Or The oild proposal has been made in England to turn , the Great Eastern into a floating hotel, and anchor off dowse, to 'wake occasional sea emir alone. W The Prince of Wales is tolerably comfortable for a young man just com mencing the world. One million dol lars of the accumulation of his Cornwall estate has been paid for au estate in Norfolk ; two millions and a half re main as a balance with his banker, and he has besides an income of $125,000 a year from his landed property, with $500,000 voted by Parliament, while his mother lives, and $250,000 pin money for his bride. A young gentleman, with no present family, may manage to keep house very comfortably on this amount, and not deny himself any of the usual comforts of a household. Cr The ditlbrent counties of Indiana are outvying each other in endeavoring to make soldiers' families comfortable, and helping the Sanitary Commission. A soldiers' supper, at Lafayette, the other. night, netted three hundred and thirty dollars. Carroll county has giv en two hundred and - thirty-five dollars in cash, and four hundred wagon-loads of provisions ; one gentleman in. Rich mond has given one thousand dollars, and these are only examples of what is going on all over the state. ter Thirty-seven hundred new books have recently been added to the Con gressional library, embracing every va riety in politics and history. The vol umes now on band number eighty-two thousand. An estimate of $160,000 has been made for the enlargement of the library so as to include the rooms for merly occupied by the Clerk of the Flouse,and those vacant chambers which abut upon the present chamber of the Supreme Court. It seems the one grand study in London, is how to make money; and if a person happens to live in a house one side of which has no windows, you'll find it all covered with show-bills of every description, for which be is to be liber ally paid by the advertisers. Dead walls and fences are "let out" at so much a week for this purpose, and it's quite a business, too, many having got rich by this means alone. glif Foreign correspondence reports that the Austrian Government is busily preparing land and naval forces, in the event of a war with Denmark. It is thought, however, that Austria can spare but a small fleet from the Adriat ic to cope with 1,100 Danish guns.— The marriage of the English Prince Al fred with a princess of Altenburg is in prbspect. Ur Gordon, just returned from a cer tain district in the country, says that ploughs have no sale there. The hogs are so long-snouted that the farmers plant a corn cob on one side of the field and pigmy at the other, and by the time the latter reaches the cob there is a splendid furrow. If a stump happens in the way it is split. ar It is estimated that the mineral wealth of Nevada Territory will be suf ficient to pay a national debt of $20,- 000,000,000, to give every returning sol dier a musket of silver, and to furnish all our iron-clads with a plating of sil ver thicker than their present covering of iron. At that rate bankruptcy does not seem imminent. fir One of the Philadelphia city roads has put on the track a steam dun. my passenger car which the Inquirer says succeeded admirably. The dummy cars have the front platform enclosed, and are a little longer and higher than the horse cars, and are heated by pipes set in the floor. A curious observation respecting the rapidity of eagles in their flight has just been made by a traveler crossing the Grison alps. Au eagle, .in flying from one mountain peak t% another, at a Night of 8000 or 9000 feet, performed the distance of five miles in five min utes. sir The days of wooden freight cars appear to be numbured. For the past two years, iron freight cars have been built at Albany for the New York Cen tral Railroad, thin iron plate being used. Such cars are lighter and more durable. tr The number of fire-arms manufac tured at Colt's armory in Hartford, du ring OR.tober, averaged one a minute through ten hours of each day in the weeh i Sundays excepted. sir Senator Cowan, of this State, has purchased a mansion •on Capitol Hill, in Washington, and it is understood that he intends to practice in the Su preme Court. far Captain Eli S. Parker, of Gener al. Grant's staff, is said to be a full blooded Indian, and grandson of• the celebrated Red Jacket. ar The male agricultural population of England and Wales, of twenty years and upward, declined from 1,129,469 in 1851, to 1,126,104 in 1861. Gar Marion township, in Mercer coun ty, Ohio, gave Vallandigham three hun dred and fifty-nine votes and Brough none. er Mr. N. P. Willis is preparing a history of his literary life, which the public will look for with interest. sr Our National- debt at Ousel:it amounts to $1,222,750,000. k c j --- General News Items. Russia has in its regular and irregular armies 36,614 officers, and 1,161.958 privates, A call has been issued for a meeting of Conservative men at Cincinnati, on the 3d of December next. The War Department has decided not to permit the raising of colored cavalry regiments, although applications have been received from various quarters. The great seal of the new common wealth of West Virginia has represen tatives which symbolize agriculture and mining. The motto is, "Moutani sem per liberiL-mountaineers always free. The Tennessee river has attained such a height that it is navigable for craft of nearly the heaviest tonnage. Vessels are daily arriving at Nashville, laden with stores for the army, and merchan dise. The rebel Gen. Wheeler's report of the raid upon the communications of the Army of the Cumberland, admits a loss of one thousand men • and three pieces of artillery. We hear more distressing facts of the starvation of our prisoners in Richmond, and the terrible sufferings of those who have returned and died in the Annapo lis hospitals. The rebel prisoner Fitz- Hugh Lee has been sent to Fort Lafay ette. The Democrat's footing, in Missouri, as far as heard from, gives a radical ma jority of 294, including the soldiers' vote. The Republican's footing, inclu ding the soldiers' vote, gives a conserva tive majority of three. The rebels are reported again busy at their strong line of fortifications on the Rapidan. General Meade, it is under stood, implicitly obeyed orders in en deavoring to force the army under Gen. Lee to give him battle. Lee,_in his late retrogade movement, was manoeuv ring to gain advantage of position for the same purpose. Up to the Ist instant, according to the Cambridge (Md.) Intelligencer, Col. Burney bad enlisted 1738 colored sol diers in that State. Enlistments are taking place with increasing rapidity; and the fact that colored soldiers count for the quota of Maryland, exactly as if they were white soldiers, removes the objections of many of the Marylanders to their enlistment. A great codfish bank, as productive as the Newfoundland backs, has just been discovered in the Pacific off the coast of •Russian Tartary. The fish are being imported into California, wkere they arrive in better c(indition than those from the coast. A fiourisliing trade will doubtless spring up. At Muscatine, . lowa, recently, two hundred persons turned out and worked two days in digging potatoes for the benefit of the soldiers' families in that vicinity. The enterprise was directed by the women of the town, who had planted and "weeded" the crop in a twenty acre "patch" given for the pur pose. • The receipts at the Internal Revenue Bureau for October are fifty per cent. in excess of those for September, and include about one million of dollars as the tax on deposits and circulation of banks. The entire receipts since the Bureau went into operation are sixty three millions, including newhly ten mil• lions for the past month. There is such a scarcity of labor on the sugar plantations in Louisiana, par ticularly in Plaquemines parish, that the planters'estimate their prospective loss at not less than ten thousand hogs heads. In the meantime the people in several parts of the State of Connecti cut are engaging in the culture of sorg hum to a considerable extent and their labors thus far have been extremely successful. Gen. Butler has been formally assign. ed to command the Department of East Virginia and North Carolina, General Foster reporting to Washington. It is impossible to say at this writing, wheth er or not there is any truth in the rumor that Foster will supersede Meade ; it is generally supposed that the rumor is without the least foundation. It is said that the prairie fires during the hth winds of Saturday, October 17, did more damage in Kansas by burning fences, crops, and hay, than all the taxes elevi din the state daring the last year will amount to. The fences on the road between Big Spring and Lawrence are mostly destroyed. A large amount of corn in the fields, hay in the stacks, sheds, barns, etc., were burned up.-- Most of the farmers lost from $3OO to $6OO. The Rev. Mr. BuSsey, of the Christian Commission, was taken prisoner while aiding the wounded in the . late battles in Tennessee, and was delivered to Judge Terry, of the rebel army—the same Terry who shot Senator Broder ick. On receiving the prisoner he et claimed : " Elere's a Abolition preacher. Boys, hang him 1" Mr. Bus se.y's name does not appear in the list of prisoners sent } in 4)7l3ragg to the Provost M.arshal; ap - d, it is feared the Judge has carried - his brutal threat into effect. AMERICAN AND ENG USN WOMEN :- An English critic takes in ill part Mr. Hawthorne's comments on the personal appearance of English women. He ventilates his wrath in not over choice language: "As to Mr. Hawthorne's criticism of English female beauty, it can only be accounted for by supposing that he has a deliberate preference for paleness of complexion, and scragginess of form.— Every man to his taste. It may be ob served, however, that English girls of the highest type have a roseate flush which is quite as healthy yet more deli cate than the milkmaid's—and an ex quisite elegance of form which is as far removed from rustic plumpness as from the superb American scragginess de lightful to Mr. Hawthorne's msthetic eyes. We should not think of quarrel ing with a man though he preferred a skeleton to the Venus de Medici; but when Mr. Hawthorne, one of the most popular of cotemporary Americans, goes out of his way to depreciate the loveli est race of women the world ever saw, a slight protest is requisite. Let him, by all means, admire the bony charmers of his native land, with complexions ex quisitely pale as that of the well-boiled turnip, and ribs that tear your coat sleeve if you clasp them too roughly in the waltz ; but let him not expect that Englishmen will be induced to join in the admiration." Cr Among the novelties of the age is a seedless apple. A tree has been found in Duchess county, New York, bearing this fruit. There are no blos soms ; the bud forms and, without any show of petals, the fruit sets and grows, entirely destitute of seeds. In outward appearance, the apple resembles Rhode Island Greenings. air Bishop Colenso, who has so dis turbed the Church of England by his historical doubts, is described as "al most seven feet high, slender but well formed, remarkably erect and hand some, with clear cut, features and eyes fall of light." re• On Sunday week a horse attached to a cart used io hauling hot cinders from Lucinda Furnace, near Norristown, was backed over an embankment on the cinders which had just been dumped, and was burned to death before he could be rescued. • or The supreme tribunal of Madrid has just given final judgment in it suit which had been under litigation 240 years, and which involved the succession to the inheritance of Francis Pizarro, the famous invader and conqueror of Peru in 1532. Ce Niagara county, N. Y., produces a perfect cataract of apples this year. SPECIAL NOTICES, DZ= QUERY :-Why' is it that Cristadoro's Hair. Dye is•the best in the world Because eminent Chemists say so ! Because.it contains no caustic compounds! Betause it weares longer than any other ! Becauve in operates instantaneously! 'Because it does not stain the skin ! [hair ! BecaliSe it nourishes and strengthens the Because it corrects the bad effects of other ' dyes ! Because its presence cannot be detected ! Because it never fails Cristadoro's Hair Preservative, is invaluable With his Dye, as it imparts the u:niost softness and the most beautiful gloss and great vitality to the hair. Manufactured by J. CH/STADORO, No. 6 Astor House, New-York. Sold every: where, and applied. by all Hair Dressers. - Price $l, $1:50, and $3 per box, according to size. [N-no. 3. DR. TOBIAS' Venetian Horse Liniment, Pint bottles at 50c each, for the cure of lame ness, cuts, galls, colic, &c. Read the follow ing: Bonotr, July 7, 1360. Dr. Tobtas: We have used for the past year your Horse Liniment for lameness, bruises, col ic, kick's and cuts, and in evely instance found it the best article I ever tried in . this Circus co. Please send six dozen, as it is the only lini ment we now use. We have 108 horses, some very valuable, and we do not want to leave town without it. HYATT FROST, Manager, Van Anaburgh & Co's Managerie Sold by all druggists. Office, 56 Courtlandt street, New-York, [N-lm. Shake and Burn ! Shake and Burn !! Shake and Burn ! ! !—This is the life of agony endured by the sufferer from Fever and Ague. He wanders like an uncertain shadovr, never knowing what moment he may be prostrated, and therefore disinclined to give any serious attention to business. This is the condition of thousands in town and country. It is no ex ageration to say.that Fever and Ague kills more people than any twenty other diseases in America. Fora sure and speedy cure of this terrible atllction, we take great pleasure in recommending Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which have alreadnachieved a wide reputa tion for rapid and powerful effects in renova ting the system prostrated by this disease. For sale by Druggists and dealers generally, everyw here. It A. Gentleman, cured of Nervous De bility, Incompetency, Premature Decay, and Youthful Error, actuated by a desire to benefit others, will be happy to furnish to all who need it, (free of charge) the recipe and direc tions for making the simple Remedy used in his case. Those wishing to profit by his ex perience—and possess a Valuable Remedy— will receive the same, by return mail,, (care fully sealed,) by addressing JOHN B. OGDEN, No. 60 Nassau Street, New YOrk. Aug.l2-3m.J Measles are prostrating the Volunteers by hundreds, the hospitals are crowded with them. Soldiers, be warned in time. way's Pills are positively infallible in the cure of this disease ; occasional doses of them will preserve health even under the greatest expo sures. Only 25c per box or pot. [224 CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS. A PURE AND POWERFUL TONIC, Corrective aml alternative of wonderful effica cy in disease of the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. reeDyspepsia, Liver Complaint, Headache, General Debility, Nervousness, Depression of Spirits, Constipation, Colic, Intermittent Fevers, Cramps and Spasms, and all com plaints of either sex, arising from bod ily wealc,iess whetner inherent in the system or produced by special causes. Nothing that is not wholesome, genial and restorative in its nature enters into the compo sition of Hostettees Stomach Bitters. This popular preparation contains no mineral of any kind, no deadly botanical element ; no fi ery excitant, but ii is a combination of the ex tracts of rare balsamic herbs and plants with the purest and mildest of all diffusive stimu lants. It is well to be forearmed against disease, and so far as the human system can be protec ted by human means against maladies en gendered by an unwholesome atmosphere, im pure water and other external causes, HOSTETTER'S BITTERS • may, be relied, on as a safegnaid.. . . In districts infested with Fever and Ague, it has been found infallible as a preventative and irresistible as a remedy. and thousands who resort to it under apprehension of an attaek, escape the scourge ; and theusands who ne glect ro avail themselves of its protective qual ities in advance, are cured by a very brief course of this marvelous medicine. Fever and Ague patients, after being plied with quinine for months in vain, until fairly saturated with that dangmous alkaloid, are not unfrequently restored to health within a few days by the use of Hostetter's Bitters. The weak stomach is rapidly invigorated and the appetite restored by this agreeable to nic, and hence it works wonders in eases of Dyspepsia and in less confirmed forms of indi gestion. Acting as a gentle and painless appe rient, as well as upon the liver, it also invari ably relieves the Constipation supelinduced by irregular action of the digestive and secretive organs. Persons of feeble habit, liable to ner vous attackS, lowness of spirits and tits of lan gour, find prompt and permanent relief from the Bitters. The testimony on this point is most conclusive, and from both sexes. The ugony of Bilious Colic is immediately assuaged by a single dose of the stimulant, and by occasionally resorting to it, the return of the complaint may be prevented. As a general tunic, HOSTETTER'S BITTERS produce effects which must be experienced or witnessed before they can be tully'appreciated. In cases of Constitutional Weakness, Prema ture Decay and Debility and Decrepitude aris ing from Old Age, it exercises the electric in fluence. in the convalescent stages of all diseaseS it operateS as a delightful in vigorant. When the powers of nature are relaxed, it operates to re-enforce and re-establish them; Last, but not least, it is Time 'Only Safe Stint ulant, being manufactured from sound and innocuous materials, and entirely flee frem the acid elf ments present more or less in all the ordinary tonics and stomachics of the day. No family medicine has been so universally, and, it may be truly added, deservedly popular with the intelligent portion of the community, as II OST ETT ER'S 'BITTERS. Prepared by HOSTETTER & SMITH, Pittsburg, Pa. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Store keepers everywhere. GENUINE PREPARATIONS COMPOUND FLUID EXTRACT DUCHU, A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC RE3IEDY For diseases of the Bladdnr, Kidneys, Crave!, and Dropsical Swellings. . . This Medicine increases the power of Di,vs flan, and excites the Absorbents into healthy action, by which the Watery or Colcareoua de positions, and all unnatural enlargements' are reduced, as well as pain and inliamation. HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCHU For weakness arising from excesses, habits of dissipation, early indiscretion of abuse, at tended with the following symptoms Indisposition ti excition, Loss of Power, Difficulty of breating, Loss of Memory, Weak Nerves Trembling, Horror of Disease, Wakefulness, Dimness of Vision, Pain in the Back, Universal lassitude of the muscular system, Flushing of the body, Hot Hands, Eruptions on the Face, Dryness of the skin. Palid Countenance These symptoms, if allowed to go on, which this medicine invariably removes, soon follows Impotency, Fatuity, Epileptic Fats, in one of which the patient may expire. Who can say that they are not frequently fol lowed by those " Direful Diseases," "Insanity and Consumption." Many are aware of the cause of their suffer ing, but none will confess the records of the Insane Asylums. Melancholy deaths by ConSumglan bear am ple witness to the truth of the assertion. The Constitution once effected with Organic weakness requires the aid of medicine to strengthen and invigorate the system, which HELMBOLD'' EXTRACT BUCHU invariabl ydoes. A trial will convince the most skeptical. FEMALES—FEMALES—FEMALES. In many affections peculiar to females the Extract Buchu is uneaqualed by any other remedy, as in Chlorosis or RPtention, Irregu larity, Painfulness or suppression of customa ry evacuations, Ulcerated or Scirrhous state of the Uterus, Leuchorrhoea or Whites, Ster rility, and for all complaints incident to the sex, whether arising from indiscretion, habits cf dissipation, or in the decline or CHANGE OF LIFE Take no more Balsam, Mercury, or unpleas ant medicines, for unpleasant and dangerous diseases. HERMBOLD'S EXTRACT Bucnu and IMPROVED ROSE WASH. CURES SECRET , DISEASES In all their stages, . At little expense, Little or no change in diet, No inconvenience, AND NO XXPOSILTLE. It causes a frequent desire and gives strength to urinate, thereby removing obstructions, pre venting and curing Strictures of the Urethra, allaying pain and mflamation, so frequent in the class of diseases, and expelling all potson ous, diseased and wornout matter. Thousands upon thousands who have been the victims of quacks, and who have paid heavy , fees to be cured in a short time, have found' they were deceived, and that the "Poison" has, by the use of "polverivi astringents," been dned up in the system, to break out in an aggravated form, and "perhaps 'after Mar riage. Use Hembold's Extract Buchu for all affec tions' and diseases of 'the Urinary Organs, whether existing in Male or Female, from whatever cause originating and no matter of how tong standing. Diseases-of these Organs requires the aid of a Diuretic,. Helinbold's Extract Buchu is the great _Diuretic, and is certain to have,the de sired 'effect in all Diseases for which 'Qs Rec ommended. Evidence of the most reliable and respousi b!e character will accompany the medicine. PRICE $l.OO PER BOTTLE,or SIX for $5.00. Delivered to any Address, securely packed from observation. Describe Symptoms in all Commanifatirms. Cures Guaranteed Advice Gratis II Address letters for information to 11. T. DELMI3OLD, Chemist. 104 South Tenth-st., bel. Chestnut, Phila. HELX BOLD'S Medical Depot, HEL.3II3OLD'S Drug and Chemical Warehouse. 594 Broadway. New York. Beware of Counterfeits sod Unprincipled Dealers who endeavor to -dispose "of their own" and "other" articles, on the reputation attained by Helmbold's Genuine Preperations. cc " Extract Bucbu. cc ec " Sarsaparilla. cc " Improved Bose Wash. Sold by all Druggists everywhere. Ask for Heinbold's. Take no other. Cut out the'adyartisetneutand. send for It. _And avoid imposition and, eip'oiture. A."; • D R. SWEET'S INFALLI'BLE LINIMENT. • THE GREAT REMEDY, For Rheumatism, Gout, Neuraigia,-.4an bago, Stiff Neck and Joints, Sprain's, Bruises, Cuts and IVounds, Piles, Headache, and all Rheumatic and Nervous disorders. 110 R all of which it is a speedy and certain remedy, and never tails. his Liniment is prepared from the recipe of Doctor Stephen Sweet, of Connecticut, the famous bone setter, and has been used in his practice for more than twee ty years with the most astonishing success. As an Alleviator of Pain, it is unrivaled by any preparation before the public, orwhich the most skeptical may be convinced by a single trial. This Liniment will cure rapidly and radical ly, Rheumatic Disorders of every kind, and ln thousands of cases where it has been used has never known to fail. For New algid, it will afford immediate rel lief in every case, however distressing. It will relieve the worst cases of Headache in three minutes and is warranted to do it. Toothache also will it cure instantly.' For Nervous Debility and General Lassitud e arising from imprudence or excess, this Lini ment is a most hanpy and unfailing remedy. Acting directly upon the nervous tissues, it strengthens and revivifies the system, andie stores it to elasticity and vigor. For Piles.—as an external remedy;- we claim that it is the best known, and we chal lenge the world to produce an equal. Every victim of this distressing complaint should give it a trial. for it will not fail to afford• immedi ate relief. and in a majority of calks will ef fect a radical mere. Quisny and Sore Throat are- so4ettmes are tremely malignant and dangerous, ,but a time • y application of this Liniment will'neve fail to cure. Sprains are sometimes very obstinate, and enlargement of the joints is liable *i! . • occur if neglected. The worst case may be - eonquered by this Liniment in two or three day's. Bru',e,,, ruts, Wouri•fs, .tiores. VIA* Burns and Sea dv. moilly to ~the uptiderful healing properties of ' a. SW EF:TSIN FALLIBLE Lenin nrir, when used according to directions. Nal. chilblains Frosted Feet, and InsiTt Rites and .slings. DR SIEYIIKV JVI of Connecticut the Great Natural Bone Setter. DR. STEP if EN sWEET, of Connecticut Fs known 'lli over the linitpd States DR. STEM EN SWEET, of Connecticut, Is the autlwr Jt - Dr. Sweet's Infallible Lini ment.” DR SWEET'S INFA LI. I T.E 1, INT ewes Itheionatisin and never fails. DR. 8 I VER. 7" 8 INFALLIBLE Li/VIM-ENT Is a certain remedy for Neuralgin. INFA L L L E LINIMF:NT Cures Burris a d scalds immediately. DR . wE E r IN FA Lt. //ILE LINIMENT is the best known remedy for Sprains and Bruises. DR. SWEET S IN PA LLIBLE LINIMENT uros Headache immediately and was never known to fail. DR. SWEET'S Infallible Liniment strinids immediate relief for Piles, and seldom fails to cure. DR. SIVEET'S Infallible Liniment Cure Toothache in one minute. DR. SWDE7"R Infallible Liniment Cures Cuts arid Wounds immediately and leaves Bo scar. DR. SWEET'S Infallible Liniment 13 the beet remedy. for Soreq in the known world. DR. SWEET'S Infallible Liniment has been used by more than a million people, and all praise it. DR. SWEET'S Infallible Liniment taken internaly cures Colic, Cholera, Morbus and Cholera. DR. SWEET'S Infallible Liniment is truly a "friend in need," and every family should have it at hand. DR. SWEET'S Infallible Litrimetit is for sale by all Druggists.. Price.2.s and 50 cents. A FRIEND IN IV EE D. TRY IT. DR. A_ SWEET'S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT as an external remedy, is without a rival, and will alleviate pain more speedily than any oth er preperation. For all Rheumatic and Noz vous Disorders it is truly infallible, and as .a curative for Sores, Wounds, Sprains, Braises, Sm., its soothing, healing and powerful strengt en ing properties, excite the just wonder slid astonishment of all who have ever given it a trial. Over one thousand certificates of re markable cures, performed by it Within the last two years, attest the fact. rr 0 HORSE OWNERS DR. SWEEP)" _I INFALLIBLE LINIMENT FOR BOR. SES is unrivaled by any, and in all casea.ni Lameness, arising froth' Sprains, Bruises •or Wrentching, its effect is magical and certain. Harness or Saddle Galls, . Scratches, Mange, &c., it will also cure speedily. Spavine:and Riugbone may be easily prevented and cured in their incipient stages, but confirme&cases are beyond the possibility of a radical . cure. No case of the kind, however, is so desperate or hopeless but it may be adeviated=by 'this Liniment, and its faithful application will al ways remove the Lameness, and enable the horses to travel with comparative ease. -9EVERY HORSE OWNER &tad have 1 -1 this remedy at hand, for its timely use at the first appearance of Lameness will effectu ally prevent those formidable diseases, to which all horses are liable, and which render so many otherwise 'valuable horsek nearly worthless. DR. SWEEPS 14 ' IBIFALLIBLE Is THE SOLDIER'S FRIFNT, AND. THOUSANDS HAVE,. FOUND IT TRULY A FRIEND IN NEEtikt CAUTION. 1, To avoid imposition, obsespe the signatures and likenesses of DR. STEPHEN SWEET ON EVERY LABEL,AND ALBCP, "! Stephen Sweet's infalible Linitx.ent " blown in the glass of each bottle,i.:Fithout which none are genuine. RICHARDSON it CO., SOLE PROBE/ ETA i,., Norwich, Cimfilicut. MEGAN i!,- ALLEN, <.' GENERAL Ni No. tOlff Street, , • EW-YORIC. ill sigisla everywhere. Il e 1802.- ty .1 Sold ..by November 2
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers