the glariettian. I REIMeO: SO 4 -44 t - ‘t. - 1• - ?:. 46 \lf( MARIETTA. PA : F-4 .160 Voci) N, !SOO. Tut SUBWEEIANWA. FISLIERIES.—The bill itrovidinyforthe restoration of the fisheries in the Susquehanna river . and its tilbutaties, and which passed the 13011A13 by a decided' vote, is now before the Se,nate ; . The arrisburg Telegraph says that no measure of this session in valves a the're importatit• principle of el zlit, or is bought with greater blessings to the peoPle than that proposing to re store-these-fisheries. The discussion of this bill in 'the• [foes° established the ease willt Which the Suicpaeliacua could be ono more made to 'ab a llind with all the varhAles.of fish; by which , cheap and . healthylood would, be provided for the people,:taridlliat the cOrporation 'whose dutyit arkild become to alter the ilams to allow 110,, pass 'ge of fish in these strealnli, could'acoMpfish their work at little expense. With 'this clear under ,-and If; of the subject, a bill was _pliki ed, it rernembered 4 by the House. and this hill is now before "the Senate . . That it = will pass that body ure have no NevertheleSi, much anxiety is felt on this eubject, and until the bill has' been adopted add approved,thO people will watch its progress with jeal ous intereet. ar- Mr. Owen ~1 116Ctie,.ta native of Fermanagh county; Ireland, wbci emigra ted to. this conntry -vben* - eighty-7Cars old, and engaged in thetlousinesii of a cattle drover in Philadelphia, in . which he acquired a comktency, died on last Monday evening, agad'one•hundred 'end ten years, apparently from Sheer old age without uOdergoing sichn4s. lie was a hale, aethie, bearty man to the last.— Mr. Nrceilii Was'well 'known in Lancas ter county': • They.tave a.blood-hound at• Me mphis that muet- have been worth some thing if helrad only come ,into existence before the war. It is a= -" Siberian," seven feet eight inches in length; thirty three inches in height ; -sateen inches across the chest, and weighs one hund red and, eighty_ pounds j probably the largest dog , in theiTnitEbd States, M Albert artn is expected . in Chicago next week, for the purpose of presontingjo Mrs. Lincoln the gold , medal in honor of her late husband--tbe result of the sous" subicription which at one limo, threatened to create Bach a palliation in the dominions of his Imperial 'Majesty, th 4 Eniperor of France. fur At' Kenosha, tWisededia, there is a Menominee squaw, by the name Of Wha-Notto-Meediet, wtio - was for. sever al years the Indian OA Of Jeff Davis. She is abaut fict-Bve years - or age, and in her youthful days was- reported good_ 1 ookicg.She' emunieneacl . to - live''with Jeffild the yeas' 1826, While that hero was etatiOued at Fort-Winnebago. ga• Worth continues to be,,tle great ladisa'.tailor of Paris, and , n , -, ,when ladiei3';are dressed for a ball, they go to him to be inspected, and he puts the Sn iihing tonchepipon their toilette, they walking before him while he, sits on a sofa and offers saggestions and amend ments. - , , Thirty • years *ago theig whs not one hundred miles' of 'railroad in opera tion in Pennsylvania, except 'those 'in connection . ivi,th - the - canalsi now there are aboUt thine thousand five huadred miles in Operation:. eir A. factory ,has.beeneatabliebed in Springfiald.,( idaps.:) - for .the,:manufac tnre of vegoable ivory pcatobe; the• m terial being a kind of nut• wbich , bardons Upon.aspokure3o 4 the Air and! wbich . obtained frogs. Grenada. •••- atilt There ;re , tiwar thlrt ptt,l eatablisiment r one handrail yar-da—frOrn the-Cgokfe of what s known a rtntin H New York Cit. g PuBe • jar A Mr 'Herrman, of Nei .York city, was robbed last - avfiek "of' S2I),QOU, taken' fteninider Olio*" ~ w hon In a sleei•ag'car, on ber'(i tg an Central • • ger The TreastrY - Dsportmeot, by mottos of detettiveti,•his kot; ifold of the plate from whiib eihoterfeit gimo pom poundlnieteetblerbafelideri priot ed. F . A ini.t.haS Ileca,..fkrtPointed post mistress in .Hightewm-Virginia, because ehe is the onlyspersdn.inltla place who can tithe' theabath. • - War MA , j,..tien. li t: Wilson the captur er of JetrDaviii: has been givto.a'year's absence. from tintt; as 'a comtilitneneefoi• nd that Beetc: ow A wotnancin this State his pet!.: lioned fortratenrcrtr ' brcanee she... and not Ogee 'on petitice.", Wl77l3islitt;lff*WrEramll 11 natty., V a ri a n . 4is; J Via. le DOW 0 11 0 Off 44;04804 1 1111041 1 44.0108 414, int Mot:ls in a N:it-Zbzil Several busies:is:failures at Norfolk and Portsmouth, VI., in cqnsequence of high store rentl,strt reported. At Marton,l4., recently, tlie'punisb ment of a boy in a seool gave rise to a fight, in which 60 pupils took part for and against the teacher. One pupil was shot, and the teacher was severely -stabbed. Governor Brownlow, of Tennessee, has received a despatch from Mississippi, telling him "to beware of assassination." Resolutions demanding the speedy trial of Jeffeison Davis have passed b nth branches of the lowa Legislature. The New York Legislature has re jected a resolution in favor of the vight hour labor system. The ex-rebel General .N. B. Forrest i 9 ill of the small pox. R. Rousseau,. brother of General L. H. Rousseau, of Kentucky, Elan been appointed' Minister to Honduras. Some twenty'distilleriee were seized in New York, on Friday, for: alleged frauds upon the revenue. William Withal, a revenue officer, while taking an inventory of one of the _ . aeized distilleries in New .York, on Saturday, fell into a vat of . liquor cud was drowned.. The proprietor of La Farge-Potel. Broadway, New-York, has been held liable for articles stolen - from one of his boarders. Six citizens of Melrose, Mass., who were fined $3OO for tarring and feather ing a Orson who rejoiced at 'Mr, Lin coln's assassination, have received par don' and Ihe remittance of their fine. A thorough cleaning of every house io New Orleans has been ordered by the Mayor, id anticipation of the cholera:, Four It:ennui 'wdre'efrested on' NI ou day morning, in Louisitle, Kentucky, with fourteen thousand dollars in coun terfeit bills in their posse3sfon. A correspondent who has made" inqui ry of-Governor. Fenton in reglird to the matter, says there is no foundation for the story of a probable pardon of Ketch urn. "Conscienee-money " of large and small amounts is daily received by the Treasury department at Washington. A freight train. 4 on the Erie railroad ran of the track on Wednesday, near Binghampton, N. Y. The cars were loa,dedlwitty-petroleum,-and one of-the barrels .wa+3' bur-0 by the concussion. The fluid,sPread,over ,the graund, ands a little boy touched a match to it "only for fun,” Result—four cars df petrole um 'and two barns burnt. • - The Georgia Legislature has passed the stay law over the liovernor's and a law punishing horse stealing and burglary with death. ' Thewife of as policeman in Detroit, while dressing a codfish, recently, found a diamond inside her purchase, worth $25. The new penal code of Alabama makes no dietinOtion on account of color, only marriages between white persons and negroes are prohibited. It forbids whip. ping andtranding as a punishment for crime, but provides that convicts may be put to work npon thet . iloads:or hired out to corpuraticsns' or individuals. * The President has vetoed 'the Civil -Eights Sill • The veto message it - is said was written by,a copperhead lawyer of Ohio.- • ' The conspirators Spangler, Mudd and O'Laughlin, at last accounts horn the Dry Tertngas, were- taking their impris onment very philosophically; and con . dinted-thetnselves so as to get released from the heavy irons they, have been wearing The, colcred.children stolen in Louis lane, and sold into Cuba, have been re claimed_and recovered by the Secretary of State. A Parisian letter says that the latest Styte in gentleman's dress is to appear without a waistcoat, and the coat very open, with an eiposure .of elegant em broidered linen cambric, lined with rose colored silk. A queer organization , for Paris is the club of St. Mousseline, formed by a num ber of ladies who forswear .all costly fabrics and mean to make cheep. muslin fashionable. A child was born- in the city prison at Pitt borgh • one day last week. Its motE l er bad heed committed 'for"vagran _ The Salt -Lake' Vedette says.-that Brigham Young has given orders that every Mormon mist have a plurality of *ries °Chu casl Out of Aural: During the investigation into the lig . uor frattds upon the Internal,,Revepue Departme'nt, in one, of tha_eastern cities it transpired ,that 1?-rench -Biancly was manutabture&out - of the molases which had served a usefulbut dirty purl pose in printers' rollers. lir The Wisccinarir Senateitaa - ado p. tifd-'a.rasoldtien 'at riking'-out°'t Ife wore • white" from the section in regied fi.d ctgaitlikaptof Otkriiiby c & of 17 1° 11. AU: opcl/4-tvtirise r• - • r IA:1. I I Alm! air Col. E'i Parhor, an Indian, and one:of the most trusted aids of Ge6eral Grant, has just returned from a length ened tour of inspet.tion at the S4pth, undertaiten'to aikiehain what further re duction of the army could be sAfely He, wearing his uniform, was strut'; by the redundant professions of loyal sub mission which everywhere greeted him. These were so frequent as at last to jx• cite his suspicions. He clothed hiniself in citizen's garb, and thereafter passed as a member of the Choctaw nation, we*s.nown to the South as a rich, well educated, and intensely pro-slavery tribe of the South west. This disgu - ise un looled the latch strings to their secret thoughts, and thereafter he heard not one loyal word, except when, in our ance'of his duty, lie.wris s 'with our own officers. The most malignant disloyalty the mcst vindictive hatre.d, the florCest, though suppressed, determinallon to bide their time, yet wreck vangeauce, was everywhere made visible to the man - whose coior and assumed relation "Made 'them confident of sympathy. • tom' B. Rush Petriketi, who ferzatly died at Lock Haven_ weirs° well' known throughout the State that his den?ise demands-notice. Ho was born , in.lJo• lambic county, in June, 1815, the sou of lion. David Petriken, AL. D. He. 'was educated with Governor Curtin, and-Was early admitted to the Bar.-:. lie reraoy ed to Burlington, lowa, iu 1836, and was appointed Register of-the Land Office at Dubuque, by President .Folk. Geo• eral Harrison removed him, and he :re turned to Pennsylvania and settled at Bellefout. In 1854 he started an an successful coal company near Farrands ville,:and in 1859 removed to Lock Ha ven. He was defeated as a candidate for the Legislature in 1859, - And for Con gress in 1862. In 1864 hirwas. made a member of the .Union State Cential Committee, and.discharged many impel. : mut duties in thliicapticity. It is rumored_that Gov. Fenian has at length succumbed before the tq menduous presstire, which has been brought to bear in behalf of young chum, the forger, and that the Sing. Sing prison is soon.to lose its most ac complished hook-keeper: Ketchum elec ted to become a disciple of St. Crispin when he entered.upou his captivity, but the prison keepers knew a way to make him more useful, so they. gave-- him the keeping of certain sets of books. It is alleged ( and the alliggation was made by counsel in urging a stay of sentence on the last day of 186 o:) that many in nocent merchaute must suffer serious lossesit they fail to get his testimony in law suits which have grown out of his forgeries, and if the Governor has con sented to pardon him, it is to save them and not because his relatives and friends are men of wealth and influence. *0 - The extortionate price of paper continues. An effort will. be made in Congress to reduce the linty on import ed paper, but it will probably fail as it has heretofore, not because it is unwise in principle or that it is not onerous upon the publishers of the United States but because it will, it is feared, open the door for a raid upon individual articles of the tariff. To show to the readers R 1 this paper the serious effect which the price of paper continues to have upon newspOer.publishers, the proprietor . of. the Public Ledger announced .a fei . eays ago that the loss upon leis subscription was one hundred dollars per day. .I.3ir S. R Mallory, the rebel Secretary of the Navy, has finally been released from confinement by order' of the Presi 'dent,and has gone to join bis family,. who are tempo.rarily residing in Connec ticut- The oily prisoners of- the cate gory to which Mallory belongs, who are still held in custodv, are Jefferson Davis. C. C. Clay, jr., and avid L. Yulee. In the course of that rigorous process: by which conspicuous traitors are punished auc tieason made oboious, their restora tion to thcir afflicted families and their lonesome. friends may also soon be ex pentad: _ ar iss Torrnce, an American young lady, at one of themasketi balls in Paris, appeared as a South American Ine4an princess, in a feather dress, with a long feather h - angiog from the top of .her hair, which was done up in genuine Indian :style, and a .n gren.t ring in her nose. ea- judge lielley, NI. C., has received a letter from Gov. Brownlow, in which he " talks out in meeting'" concerning Certain Men and measures. The Parson thinks•the only true friends loyal' Ten nesseans have to rely upon are the 'Fedi oil men in the 'Thirtysnintli-Oengr'ess. ~Ca" At St. Louis, on , the 10th, Gect , ae Starr, und,er , sentence of death for the killing of William Smith, was taken put of his cell in - the county jail for the pur pose of heing baptized by immersion, 'was` performed at the Ogriitiaa gid3tist 4liir The last thing out in,bontiets for the street.,•is said to be a " frown velvet dice box, with .a. little,dead "woodcock perched-over the- Iread- of the wearer trying' to peat - trtrrireriighroyo" ' or E. W. Green, the. Malden niurdetc er hasaftnitralftKithilir . IVF:TVTit w ro rt op 01 aeouriwew tr AN E3TRAORDINARY April number of the American Agri culturist contains 44 pages ( 30x10 inch es) instead of the standard 32, and each of the- previous three numbers of this, the quarter-century tol - unre, has contain ed ~t least 40 psgee, with a prospect of • continuing at this size. Over 150 en gravings have already appeared in the first one-third of the volume. The pres ent (April ) number opens with a splen did bead engraving of "Baron of Ox ford," one of the most valuable (tamale of the cattle kind in this country, or in the world. Next are foim pages of 1 ‘ Hints about work " to be done during the month, in the field, orchard,:gardeo,. apiary, etc., giving some hundreds of practical suggestions, especially valu able for the opening Spring work. Next aro 5 pages of " Basket matter," or some 90 or more shorter items on vari ous topics of general interest, answers to queries, useful hints-from correspon dents, etc., including-an onslaught upon humbugs. Next are 12 pages of topics pertaining to general field and farm work, animals, buildings, etc., with sev *rat engravings, including a full .page one of a barn cu fire, and hints as to what is to be done. Following - this •is the liorticuitural..or fruit, flower, and garden department, also finely , Blows tQd. The household Peparttnenteotnes ,_next, including an illustrated descrip tion of the " Pork Worm," or , Wickiria, and an important article on silVer "Pla ted Ware," showing the deceptions practised. The Youths' Department is' certainly admirable for the little folks, and includq a very fine engraving of " The Y °wig runaway," about shot mak ing ; also a' capital - puzzl'e picture of "An enemy in the Camp," and other puzzles, and instructive items. The whole number is supplied for 15, cents, and the whole volume for the : year at e 1.50, or four copies for S5,(1)0, which writ . hardly pay for the printing : paper used, and the press work. Every, family will find it . advantageous to take the Agriculturist. The April number is alone worth the whole yeafil :stibecrip tint] price, while the previous' three numbers are scarcely Ives valuable, and the future eight months promise to. be even more valuable. Send the subscrip tion price to the Publishers, Orange Judd & Co., 41 Park Row, New York city, and get the whole volume. ' Abet ter investment of, the money cannot well be made. "CONSCIENCE MoNs:v."—Rev. G. A. Watsou has depo.4ited with the :United, States Treasurer, through the pastor of the St Aloyiius, Church, this ciityi'ar6 "which was received from au unkaown source." Tho assistant treasurer at Philadel phia has transmitted to the department "which amount was forwarded to ;this office, accompanied by a note sign ed 'Conscience.'" General Spinner on Saturday received through the mail, from an unknown cor respondent, enclosed in a note,in which the writer represented that 'f..laat amount is due the United States Gov• erament." sir. Some time ago a Man who lost \an arm in the service as a private sol ilier; and was promoted to a captaincy for gallantry, made application 'to the Pension Office for a pension,. and was informed that having been an enliste.d 'man when wounded he was 'not entitled to be pensioned as an officer. Finding; 'that in the matter of privileges he was regarded as au enlisted man, hethen ap plied to the S-irgeon General' for an ar tificial arm, as artificial limbs are furs -1 ished by theUovernmPut.to all enlisted men maimed in the service, and was in formed that having beau ticommisSioned officer he was not entitled to an artificial limb: The Surgeon • G'erteral, however, when informed of the Pension Office de cision, granted the order for an arm. The Treasury ilepartment, is con sidering the - propriety of placing': the vignettes of Grant, Sherman ; McCul loch and others on con pons. The object in making such additions to Govarriment bonds, is to interfere with the counter feiter'S business, as it is admitted that. the most successful means. of detecting mAtterfeitsis by comparing the genuine vignettes a iththe spurious: - .Mr. tSethern, the actor; has brought suit -in London for libel against the writer of a' letter in the ,Spiritual Magazine. In his examination, before the--magistrate, Mr.•Sothero made revelations us to the way„ in which, as sisted by Judges almonds. and Tall. : madge, he humbugged a circle of spiritualists of both sexes,. in New York. co - Thirty distilleries have been f seiz ' , l eta in Neiw 'Fork for evading the rpv 4i toue; laws. As sif loter - esting face drinkers, it i 9 idte d that at °lie' . of theseE establishinebte the proprietors *; I:kosily engaged- ioitDll faetuiii4;lsltitia cly; aut.of the material 'used for printers' o lir Gen. Williams, ot the ,second ,hus band of, Mrs: Tenglas, was a •stauncli Douglasite In 1860. 11 aving_stippeite4 the husband, it4si t ttite..natural, that he shnuld- wish, tp , emiiport the • Ex-Jutigarzannisistarof,Cham ;beriburg,,died.dn-t.B.ntiday •laat, ~ residence Arooti S CHENCK'S AIXIIDRAKE PILLS PAPER.-The FOR LIVER COMP L AINT. A SUBSTITLITE FOR CALOMEL If your bowels arecobtive TRY' EM If you hare worme r TRY THEM If your breath is bad, ..TAY THEM if you feel drowsy, TRY THEM. If you are low spirited, TRY THEM. If you have a sick headache, TRY THEM. If you hare taken a drop too much, TARE A FULL DOSE. They only cost 25 cents a box THEM. Blue Mass, and other preparations of Mer e.ury, actually prooece more suffering and death than the diseases which they prciffas to , cure. And vet this corrosive mineral so de ,nounce t4e., allopatke.dnews.AL,Kmk, bed by them almost universally in Liver Com plaint, ConsUmption of Lungs, &c. THE:MANtiIIAKP. PILLS' are coinposed entitely of roots and herbi, tamed from the . great storehouse of Nature, and their salutary effects will appear as soon as the medicine is b,rought to the test of a fair experiment, SCH2.NCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS do not produce at y nausea or sickness of the stornaoh ; but when given for Dyspep bia, it may belirdreft6 Also them - in connee-' tion with SCHENCK'S SEAWEED TONIC. By this judicious treatment the digestive rsc "ulties'are speedily' restored to their full vigor, and the worst cases of indigestion may be cured. 'when we reflect that the liver is the largest internal orgad ofthe body, that to it is assign ed the important auty7o filteting the blood and preparing the'bile, that it is 'subject to many. disorders, and that when it is diseased or inactive - the whole body suffers sympathet. ically, it is not surprising that a medicine which can restore the healthy operations of the Liver aiould produce wonderful Changes in the general health; .an I effect cures which may appear to be almost tniraculou4. Head ache of Tong continuance, severe pains in the side, breast and'ahoulders, aching of the lambs, •rfeeling-ofsgeneral tsveakness^ and -,wretched ness, and other alarming arid distressing sy MP tolls, indicative ofirifpetfect or disordered ac tion of the liver, are speedily removed by the use of SCHENCK'S - MANDRAKE PILLS. Costiveness, pile's, bitter or sour eructations, and tharindeseribable feeling of eppression' mental anxiety, languor, lethargyy and de pression of spirits, which unfit a man,for that management of business and the enjoyment of life, arc all relieved try the use of SCHEHCIVS MANDRAKE PILLS. DD. See= saw.—Dear , ir : I take pleasure in sending you a certificate in addition to many you have' already received from suffer- Mg humanity. I can scarcely find language sufficiently strong - to expiess my heartfelt gratification ef" the wonderful cures your MAN DRAKE PILLS and St AW RED TON IC have effected in the entire cure of one of :the moat-stubborn cases of the affection of the liver. For three years I.sufireil beyond de. acription ; all my friends as well as myself, catne,,to the.conclusion thatl my time in this lite was 'Mott. Such was,the terrible condi tion to which I was reduced that life- to me had becmie a burtheo ; my whole system was hi a etate.of inflaminationt• I could not eat, I could not sleep ; whole body was filled with pain ; swelling would arise in my wrists and antiles refidertag , tnetti totally - us4ess. On several occasions I was attacked with a rush of blood to the head, which would fell me to the ground, and I would be carried away for dead. 1 applied to several eminent physicians of our city, - who administered all the medicines. that they thought would reach ,i.y case, but of no avail.. One of Glint said he could do no mote • for me, and advised me, as a hitt resort, to drink cod liver oil. Not relishing the horrid trash I declined to take it. .Accident put your adver tisement in my hands. I called on you ; you examined me and:told me the nature. of my disease. You, then ordered me die Pills and Tonic With an bbservince of diet; pledging your word that in one week' I' would find my self another man. I followed your.advice, and, as yeti predicted, an astonishing cure was effected. I continued your- Pills and Tonic for some time, and_ now thank- God for his goodness, and Your invaluable - medicine ; am once mote restored-to 'perfect.health. I most earnestly reccommend those who are sufferint from affection of tpe liver to ,give your Pills and Tonic a lair trial, and O : cure will be effeoted.- 1 l=ave sent Many 'persons 'to you, ancilhay t . huebeen cured. Any information my fellow-citizens may requi will be freefrgiVen by the' subscriber, ar h residence; No: Sl ,Federal street,hetween-5.:.. street and Passyunk road. - CH4IIiLES . JOHNSON, Sa" Formerly, rinters' Ink Manufacture:' Dn. SCHENCK Will be. - profe.ssionally at hi principal office, No. 15 North Sixth street, col nor of Cominerce; Philadelehia, every Satur day, from 9 a. m.; until 4p. m. ; N 0.32 Bond street, Nevi York, every Tuesday, from 7 to 3 ; No. 38 Sumner street,. Boston, Mass., every Wednesday., from 9 to 3 ; and every other PridaV at 108 saitiinore street, Bolti more, Md. All advie'es hitt flir a thor ough exaininatiOn - of the rungs with his 'Res pirometer the-chargeaelhree-_dollarst . Price of the Pulmonic Syru and Seavireed Tonic, each $1:50 perbotile, or *7.50 per half dozen. Mandrake , Pas, 25-cents:per 'box. Fomsale by. all DrUggists,& Dealers. [2l a rS t s - ojr7y: . WILLCOX 8 Gins, • NOISELESS r galnll . 4: Ldar-kUL C. The most simple complete'and'easily man aged Sewing Machine now in use. It does every description of work—never stops at or melts to behelped over `Seiiins,' but itoes all its work rapidly and well. The-needle re quires no adjustmeot 7 -yon . cannot .get,,it in wrong—it makes any `width of hem 'you "Wish —does'braiding beautifully. The . Braider is in the foot of every machine,.end pArt of it, and is always adjusted, iiever gets out of place. and'exatainel 'theta before'-purchasing, any other, at H• L. & E:J. ZAFINPS4 Corner North queen street, and Centre Nquare a . 'Sole Agents for-Dowager. County. Lancastdr, February 17, 1866:-tf. R. J. H. GROVE, Atter.serving 'as Siarr. • URGE/DI , / in the United , Statee SeimiceJor over:four yeti*. and during the Fbole of the, itebellion,,has• again located in this litrough;atid' taker( his former rviiilenceAorr Malket street..-„;H Ails associated •w4tti DK. ,H.ENRYJ..A,NRES in. Siiitayt. Dr. GoovEb.najle'sßeoisl„attentio:ntt.o..Suray in all its t var,i.usb :ncbe-• 1113 E MASON &Emb HAMLIN, i4oi.icAigta . , Forty different styles, aoanted to sacred and aecalar music; for"$80‘to'1600 each-. FIFTY ONE Gold or sitper,Afedals, , ,or ; other, firstilre - rniums awarded them. Illustrated patalogues sentFfree: ''AddreasrM'aidlli Ei'l-fltirins;Bes ton,or MASON . .BROTJ:WRS, :New -Yark. Septcm`ier 9, 180d-Iy.j LA! 11G,R LOT i r O,F 713T.T4F , twirni9iw SHADES-at remarkably low prices o.olose out. 140 GER' S rio,,,RaajAijirttjandi Oil Fas t acl i rg A t 4401411 oar „-mmlowen— Q. c tit,ut 1 44. Is a pr,itectid soil) ion of the I'ROTUXIDE OF IROX, a new discovery in medicine ratii6 Strikes at the root of disease, by supplying the blood with ne vital pr,,, or life element—tßON. -1!1 This is the secret of the wonderful sire curing th is reined ) in -4cl Dyspepsia, Liner Comp/cunt, inem, ath l rhsea, Boils, ,Yrreeus Affea Chills and Fevers. Humors, c ,, lstittitiunal Vigor, inseesei The Kidneys and Bladder reaction, but sad new life Female Complaints, luctiljahre°l l i r;rr a is n o Y e. t . ;7 l Z: and all diseases originatin g in e bad p e Blood or accompanied by dehilny f ' 5 i state' It the systern. tl f e r c o t ri s l are A b not followed t en ß ei e gi ir z )g ur f g re e e s of tne system, and building up ~n i p tl o g nli t u ft g eg re th a stitution. DYSPEPSIA AND DElitLity, From the venerable archdeacon Dunham, Canada •• • lam an rovetprat, muse Iha,n 25 years btan.im 4 ,- , • • * • " I have bete so ‘,...:l'.erf.j, fitted in the three short weeks have used the Peruvian 53,2, scarcely perbuade in33C.11 - ~t the People why have iino cn me sie at the change. lam widely known„ but recommend to others tll4l -, do much for me." • • • A Case of 27 Years' Standing rui E d From Insley Jewett, No. 13 ton. " I have suffered and soinCtiliel for 27 years, front iJyt,pt-p.a. 1 taking the Peruvian Syrup, diate uenefit float it. In the co:;e: .:; or four weeks L was entirely sufferings, and have enSoyvti health ever since.?' .in Eminent Pivine of Boston " I have been using the Per¢ , e , some time past; it gives tne nea• alley of spirits, elasticity of 71),:sc e. Thousands have been ClanKed b: t this remedy from weak, rieV4.4u,jr,i'.:,l tures, to strong, healthy, and h'2.,apy women; and invalids cannot real.., tate to give it a trial, A pamphlet of 32 pw,ea, nr.ta:7:ta 4 cp cotes of cures an.. recom,len.6l... some of the most eminent physician, tr,:n men, and others, will be sent rsEiZ,: dress. ri• See that each bottle has PE:ir:l.l SYRUP blown in the gTam. FOR CALL BY J. P. Dinsmore, Proprietor, 36 Dry :.:!:tc; New York. AND BY ALL DilUGGiqs. S C 0 L. .1! All Medical Men agree that 101)1:.;t: best remedy fot Scrofula and ail tiloiT.N:,!, eases ever discovered. The (nil:wait:, AIM., to obtain a pure solution of it. DR. D. ANDKRS' lODINE WATER. Ia a Pura Solution of lolne, with,n! 'vent ! ! Containing A rim. GRAIN LJ CM!: of water. A moat Powerful Vasilzing Agyit rsi Re:Locative. It sea cured and W/LL CUFF: SCROFULA a all its mautf.ild forms. 171.c . E.R5, CANC . F;RS,SYPII.II/S, 6.ltr FHLOSit, Circulars will be Beat 9.11 i t so ug their address. Price $l.OO a bottle; or 6 for 85 1') Prepared by . Dr. 11. Anders, pllyskin srl Chem*. „ FOR SALE DY J: P. DINSMORE, 36 Dey Street, Nto*Yrk AND DY ALL DRUGGISTS. aiislaFs Bqisqlll of lIJU Olgri! FIAS BEEN USED FOR NEARLY HALF A"CENTURY,. WITH THE MOST ASTONISHING Bt7CCD 3 IM 611:1C3 Coughs. Colds, Hoarseness, Sore•Tnroat, h fluenza, Whooping Cough, Croup, Lim Complaint, Bronchitio Difficulty of Breathing, Asthina, and every affection of The Throat, Lungs, and ant. CONSUMPTION! which carries off more victims than any atlas disease, and which bellies the akin of the Physicians to a greater extent than any aim malady„ often YIDLDS TO THIS'ILEXEDY! when all others prove ineffectual. r , .AS A MEDICINE, SAPID IN RELIEF, SOOTY INO IN EFTECT, UTZ ' ITS °VENATION, :4 U S P A SSED! while as a _preparation, free fro© noxiousin• gredients, poisons, or minerals ; uniting ikin: .science, and medical knowledge ;" combnang all that is .valuable in the vegetable kingdom for this class of disease it is INCOMPARABLE : and is entitled merits and receives the go eral confidence of the public. SEYMOUR THATCHER, M. R, of Herman, N. Y., writes as follows: -- ”Wimar's Balsam. of Wild Cherry 0 0 :universal satisfaction. It seems to cure `i:Okh by loosening and cleansing the Ju g!. and allaying irritation, thus removing 1 1 cause, instead of drying itp the collz 4 leaving the cause behind. conoidir the Balsam as good as any, if not the beet, NO :medicine with which I am acrprainted.” The - Rev. J A COB SECI I II,ER, of Hanever,Ps• Well-known and . miich , respected smog Gerinan 'popnlaticia'in this country, resni the following statement for the lielieSierr • the afflicted. ' • Divan Sins :---Elavingrealized in raY l ‘ s , ll , / , imp:hum t benefits , from' the use of your wh' t . able preparation—Wzirian's Bats." ° • ie WILD CHERRY—it affords me pleasure 113 conamenilit - tb - ilfe rialilic• Some eight Ye' ri , ago one of - my daughters 'seemed to be is -decline, and little Wipes of-her recovery 11 .... % entertained. I't,ben procured a bottle of Y" . . excelletiellalsam;,-and before she - had the wholb 'of the'coritents of the bottle WI was-a -great "improvement in her heultb. ; have, in my individual case made llequ e l use tifyottelirllifible medicine, and lioce o ways.heewhenefitted,by it. .T.h.cos SICK' PRIIoE 41"11. DOLLAR A BOTTLE , . 11. FOIL SALR BY O s ik, 56 treet, New Y° ll •y S . .SETIU W. V9WLE Smei Proprietors , rtnetol. ;Ind by a Druggists. CILEIMATEI3 SALT ,O±I44IAWyrB,..B.UANS, SCALIA :Grtedels. Celebrated Salve .44,4457170uNve, EBIIIBEB, BMW!' , . r#CeS.Celeb:Vated--;gaiVe 65.12.'co,,Celelirgtefit Salve. CIUILMECCHAPI7II:I HANDS, CHILPIAIIO. Grqoe'l eelebiated Solve • HEALS. OLD BORE4.lling woorme). CQ It is prompt in .action; removegpsin: st oA ,and reduces the most 'angry -looking ewe :and inflammations, keit' by , m sgicr-go', ...fording relief ands ociiiplete &AV 45 elf/1071330J f *leerily ii n)~fo r fr e "! For=sale by J. P. INIAIOREn 3 B- 80 .. -s. Few. iew l% r e* W: FOWEVICSONarPeerin end Sol , by allPigists, _~`.