L: E Sze Mariettiatt. MARIETTA. PA : saitoraij woroilig, "Agou# . )l, wfi.q. FOIL GOVERNOR; Maj.-Gen'l John 10'. Geary, OF CUMBERLAND COUNTY. POSTAL CHANGES.—The law of Con gress, approved JIM; 12th, 1866, and which went into operation on the Ist inst., makes several prominent changes, which we , note , below : 1. Letters sent in which there is an order to return, if not called for,,are re turned to the writer free of charge— such letters have been Charged three cents postage heretofore. 2. Letters forwarded from one post office to another are not charged addl. : Lionel rates of postage, and are returned to the writer from the . dead letter office free of charge—heretofpre letters for warded were charged a single rate of postage from each post office froni which they were forwarded, and a single rate charged to the writer when forwarded to him from the Dead Letter Office. 3. The snm for which money orders can be issued has been raised from s3o to $5O, and the rate hereafter charged will be 10 cents for all orders under $2O and 20 cents for all ever $2O, and under $5O. Also, that a money order shall be valid and payable when presented to the deputy postmaster on whom- it is drawn within one year.afteg its date, but for no longer period ; and in case of the loss of a money order, a duplicate there of shall ba issued without charge, on, the application of the remitter or payee, who shall make the required proofs ; and postmasters at all money order offs: ces are hereby authorized and required to administer to the applicant or appli cants, in such cases, the required oath or affirmation free of charge. ear A lady was out walking a feti , days ago, in Syracuse, accompanied by' her servant, who was drawing an infant in one of the little carriages made for the purpose, when, unnoticed by mother or servant, the child fell'out 'upon' the walk. The couple had paieed - afong and gone some.distance from the babY,'When they were accosted'by a•gentleman Who had witnessed the whole transic,tiOe, with " Madam, you've drop'Ped' semi thing," at the same time pointing to the infant on the walk in the distance. The sequel can ba imagined. Gir Acting on the advicesif the new . Attorney Gensral e the Presidentis busi- . ly engaged in displacing all-the officials who either oppose or fail to be enthusi astic in support . of My Policy.'" In the Post Office department whichnis:una der the control of the original chief of the " Bread-and.bntter Brigade," the work is prosecuted very vigerously: It is confidently predicted that after the adjournment of the- Philadelphia.; Cop perhead Convention.: there' will- be a clean sweep .made of all' who sympathize with the Radicals. fir The irrepressible Llarnum has be come associated with Van Amburg and hereafter the great showman will be identified with the "Barnum and Val Amburg Museum and Menagerie Com pany," organized with a Capital of two millions of dollars, for the purpose of providing a mammoth establishment to be filled with curiosities and animals from all parts of the world : ..- gir The Queen of the Sandwich Islands arrived in New York on 1.1147 th instant. She is on a visit to this pima try, having visited Londen and Paris. Queen Emma who visits us is, a woman and a widow. She is the descendant of a race who have been civilized and Christianized mainly through the efforts of Great Britain and the Cnite'dStatee. gar In Savannah, we learn, the - Fourth of July was celebrated as the annivers ary of the Battle of Bull Run,- the- rebel flag was displayed and ebeered loudly by the crowd. In New Orleans, during the massacre, the rebel flag, it is said, was run up in various quarters, and cheers for Jeff Davis'were frequent. tir The bloody riot in , New (Means is but the echo-bf s Mbntgomery Blales speech at Reading. The* spirit which he shoived in the peaceful county of Barks, is the same , Which actuated the furious rioters in... Louisiana. air Dixon, of Connecticut, Norton of Minnesota, Doolittle . of Wisconsin, Guthrie and qacret, Davie of Kentucky and Hendricks of Indiana ; are delegates to the Bread and Butter Convention in Philadelphia. Cr The habitual use of onions as ;an frciele of food, is,said to,bw.ainiest ,cer- Jain protection kens l eholeya, even when 'n immediate contact with it. isr At his own reqaest, General-Piky id A, ter, After over. forty years of ser 7 vica , has been placed on the retired list o. Were. 'HORRIBLE I -It 18 stated that an en- tire family of four persons died in suc cession from cholera in the course of last week in a tenement house -in New York. The members of the family, it is reported, buried each other until the father succumbed to the disease. He had none to attend him while laboring under the. symptoms -.peculiar to the Asiatic Cholera. When the residents of the immediate neighborhood became aware of his death, it is alleged that messwers were dispatched to the Board of Health, tint that no action •was taken by that body for three. days after the report was made, duriig which time the remains had become quite de composedAo-the great •danger of the • health.of the other inmates of the house and the inhabitants of that quarter of the city generally. WEIO HAS CHANOEO.-1116 'MOW] Argus said in 1861 "We should like to see Andrew Johnson's lying. tpngue torn from his foul Mouth, and his miserable carcass ihrown out topoison mad dogs, or hung upon a gihbet as high as Haman, to feed the carrion buzzards." The same paper says, in 1866,: "The iron firmness, the undismayed ,soul of a single man (Andrew Johnsea , ) is all qsatstands between us and the fearfurvortex of anarchy and resultant despotism which has engulfed the lives and foitunes of many millions before us. Let us rally' to the side of that man, de termined. to, save or perish with the Re public." The Argus must consider Andrew as pretty thoroughly reconstructed.—Erie Gazette. Car Forney's Press entered upon its tenth year a few days since. Of its re matkable successi - the editor says: "The' business of the Press during the past nine years, we are happy to state, has been very prosperous. We have spent nearly two millions of dollars to make it a first class newspaper: How well we have succeeded thh - public have determ ined by giving us• their liberal support. Since the commencement of the fifth Volume our receipts liaie been increas ed over ten per cent annually. Our advertisiri4 patronage and circulation with but a single exception, are greater than any other , newspaper published in Pennsylvania. Since our advent in the quarto form, scarcely nine Months ago, our dirculation has increased over fifty per cent . ..It is still increasing rapidly, ittid 4 bids fair to donble itself within the IMM as At an inquest held at Bath, Car low, a-few weeks ago, on the body of a childi . the medical man who conducted the postmortem examination said .that each hand of the child had an extra fin ger ;,that one foot had six toes, the oth er seven; •on opening the cavity of the chest be found the heart on the right side, both.lobes of the lang encircling it, while all were surrounded by the in testines.; the liver, very large, nearly filled. the entire abdominal cavity ;. the brain and. other organs-normal. as The Elan. 'Obediah Brown and Mrs., Cora Brown, were re married a `short time since,at blew,Haven.. Thoy were first married nearly a quarter of a century ago. Trouble came and they, were divorced. ,Mr. Brown married again, and after living with his second 'wifii for a number of years was divorced from her. He finally renewed the _ac quaintance of his first wife, and has noiv led her to the altar for the second time. i t a- The= following are the designs on the backs of the several denominations of National Bank Notesrviz : On'the $1000:n otos, M - ashington . resigning his commission ; $5OO notes, surrender of General ;,$lOO notes, Decla , ration of independence ; $5O, Embarks .tieti of the Pilgrime ; $2O, Baptism of Pocahontes ; $lO, DeSOto Discovering the Misiissippi ; $5, Landing of Commu 'bus.; $l, Landing of the Pilgrims: er A lady , named Desserts, of St: Amend (Yrance ) has just lost her life by crinoline in , a singular manner. , In going up stairs her foot became en tangled in_ the hoops of that garment, and she fell back.on her head with such force that the teeth .of her comb was driven into bar skull. She died shortly after. gir Illinois contains over 500,000 fo reigners. These,. with their children born in this country, constitute nearly, a million of the population. In-,the pub lic schools of Chicago more than forty, nationalities, are represented. People from almost every civilized country .on the globe are found there. eir A o,hicago paper referring ie President Johnson's proposed, presence at „the. inauguration of the . Douglas monument, hopes that be will stay away lest from force of habit he should veto the monument, and its friends should be compelled to ".pass it over his head." fir A Union Reputilicnn Maas Meet ing will lie held in 'Reading on Wednes: day, Aniinst 224. lie The total number of deaths, from chnleio, in New York city, during last - week, was 946, is said to be quite a deorease ; from the week precehding.' Q Six U. S. Senators are delegates to the Bread•and•Bntter convention, L-Ar%(aTIIE M.A.RIETTIA.N.@' -3 THE Itnemano ur..—When Vice-Pres ident John Tyler . became President by 'the accident of the death of Harrison,- he was riccepted by the .party - that had elected him with an abiding contidencui in his official and personal integrity. At the first session of Congress after his inauguration, he soon placed himself in opposition to his party. He vetoed all the great party measures, even those , sobinitted to and approved. by him be fore their enactment. Be' defioniiced the Congress as a cabal, and its caucus es as a self-cOnstituted despotism. His Cabinet,- protesting -earnestly against his treachery; to ; tke party _that haiteleated him and to the principles which they sustained. before- - the people, - remained with, him, as long Ss it was Ipsaittlw for them ta do an with honor to themselves . .or justice L to an outraged people. : At ,the close of the sessioa of Congress,-the - Whig party, with; not. Over hajf , a dozen exceptions, .united in a potilici,adibess reptidiating.all political „relations with tbe ,presidept„, The gabipat, • ,with the exception,of *r. ,Wabster,.then, reeign. ad, and John Tyler was left desolate. He had neither party nor, . friends. He resorted to the. policy of removing Whigs from,office and appointing. Dem, •ocrata, but he made no real friends by thechatige. The Democrats accepted the treason, but greeted with contempt the idea of making the traitor their . leader. ; . History is but repeating itself in the case of Piesident Johnson.: While we would have preferred the retirement of the Cabinet in a body, its dissolution is now an ascertained fact. Mr. Seward will remain, as;Mr. Webster did, in the -vain hope that the Democratic - disgust for, the President will, not reach him., Father Welles, who never had. public life before, will probably follow Johnson as he would follow anyother .President, as long as he is allowed to dietribute the patronage of the Naval Departmenti and Mr. Mc.Culloch mill continue as the head of the Treasury Department. The others will follow the .example of Post master General Dennison, and leave An drew Johnson where the Cabinet of 1841., left John Tyler, without 'a ,party, and, in the estimation of the whole country, - a political Pariah. There is no• longer the least hope.of a 'union between the Prekident - and' the people. The, breach between the - Pres ident and tbe Union party is lidarrbroad and deep. 'lt•is not to be bridged , over. Be has abandoned the . holiseliold:info which be came'svith a.damaged, chaise , .ter, and where his previous faults were kindly covered with the mantle of char ity, and where he was hcpnoted as.helad never been honored -befote. gar The Smith, family ,have had, 49 members in Congress, while r the eons number . 29, the ,prowns, 26, ,the Whites 22, the Thompson§ 31, the 4 To,o§ r sea 20, the, Wilsons 30, .004111w:08,, the Moores 18, and the Taylors 16. the 232 members in both houses, 70 were, born in New. England, 40 in . • New ,York, while the remainder are about equally.divided between the Middle and western states, except two born la- Ire : . land, one in Scotland, one in, 13a,varia and ono in,Caneda. , gar Herr Louis Staab., formerly teach er of music in St 'Louis, took out pro tection papers dtiring the war, t;o escape the service. A little while ago he-went to Europe. There ho ' applied to • the American Consublor proteetion papers as an American citizen, but the latter being posted, Staab could•not get the protection from the stars and stripes, so he had to enter the Prussian army and fight for fatherlaod. sir The Springs are assuming 'yearty more and more the waist . features of Badeb-Baden.- Under the attractive name'of the Club House, Morriie'y keeps the " tiger," where. men, able and not able, go to have a round with the fero cious beast. This'Club House has' two aspects. The one is that of an orderly house, Very quiet, with the best table in the place, - the most delicious wines - ,• - and faultless attendants. • fir Anonymous circulars are being ,sentto the Union men of. Louisiana, warning ; them , that longer to ,rernain in that State than a given period will-:sub ject them to the danger of assassination. Gen., Sheridan is endeavoring to ferret out the chivalric gentlemen.; engaged in , issuing these circulars, whom,-if caught and convicted, he will 800; out of, that State by a road not described on, any ,of the mape thereof.,- • , lur Antiirticith voal was first "used in this country in the . Wyoming Valiey, by two 'Connecticut blacksmiths 'in 1768 69, but it was not till . 1808 that itwes used for domestic purposes in the common grate. In that, year Judge Fell, of Wilkeebarre, redorded the fact that he had made the experiment of burning tibe com Mon stove coal , of the valley in a common fire-PlaCe, - andfound it itrisiter ing all the purposes of fuel. siar• An exchange notices that one af ter-another the negro minstrel troupes are breaking up. 'Phis class c(f pirform ers have hed'their dayi, but' the people no lo'nger patronize : them. _ er The rouf of the 'Michigan central . Railroad station l in Detroit , will cove s , three hundred thousand square feet, or over seven acres. ' A -Wome.res Ruitultoz,—A •young kirl, belonging to one of ours ; best . families, says -the Indiana Journal, fancying that she had been badly treated by an' vider sister, took a terrible retreige: Procur ing a stick of nitrate of eilver.st a drug store, she dissolved it"in 'her 'Miter's wash pitcher. The young lady perform ed her morning -ablutions, and was hor rified in the course of the morning to `find that.her , hands had turneffas-hrowi as those of a - mulatto. A 'fool In the' glass revealed the alarming fact that , her (sae was the Same color. The younger sisternow heartily repents her criminal' folly and would 'do anything id the ithild to remedy the evil she has caused. Time only can'efface the triarktf — drthe terrible batti, - and - in the.theantime - i - the _affair is being kept quiet. Callers are told that the young-lady is ill of a con tagions disease, and she keeps - her room :impatiently awaiting the tedious 'process ,of growing white-again. THE POPE.-It is announced -that for some,time past the health of the, Pope hat( appeared to be failing, and hie con dition nausea no little anxiety_ to Cardinals, with whop; he speaks fre quently of approaching death. Pius PC.. the present Pope, was born in May, 1792 and is 74years old. He ascended the Papal throne in 1846, and has occupied it twenty years. A correspondent writes that there is, a general feeling in Rome that no Pope will hold his office longer than did St. Peter, who is said to' have governedthe church for 25 years. Adri an 1, was Pope nearly 21 years; Pius VI, 24 years: 6 Months and 14 days; 'Pius VII, 23 years 5 months and 6 days, whilst several Other'Popes governa the church for 21 years. It is generally agreed that thewhole number of - Popee was 259. fir A London correspondent says Dickens is very careful about the ar rangements idade" for his - readings, ha.v ing invariably' a:little red velvet table, with a shelf on one side for handkerchief and water, and 'on the other a little block fOr the - tiook, to which he . alrriost never 'refers: He dresses ratter' "a conspicdous way; flourishing . a'big watch chain, 'with charms. He . - also wears large jeweled shirt'studi, and a little bou 'quet in the lappel "of a dress coat. Gir Cholera Morbns and all• disorders of •the. stomach.. and bowels, are .speed.ily , cured by the. use' of Coe's .Dyspepsia. Cure, whilst indigestion:orzonstipation. are equally well governed-by-its use,for it - is a perfecC regulator oflthe stomach. and.bowels. Dyspepsia,Ahe. most hor. rible otall-diseai3es, yields atAncelto its .curative powers.,A It is a - yaluable medi cine, very, popular,. and should:_be :'kept on band in every household. gar Beware or summer complaint amongst the children: Thon4anda of the - little ones annualli'die . from disor. der — of the stomach and bowels, and 'many, ah! too many hothesare - render-. en desolate by the hands 'Of this pr'eva:' lent disorder, Coe's Dyspepsia bare is a reliable ' remedy in 'all such cages, as . well as for dyspepsia, indikeition, sick' headache, song stomach, - Avant of appe titti•atid swr A French paper ..says that,; in a coinnsune near Ayranches an owl ,has taken terrible, vengeance for, the loss : of her young, which had been killed by, a farmer's led.. ,For four days tlie owl was: on the watch for-the destroyer,.'anil on. the,fiftb,npon the boy, leaving the farm house, the injured bird, which had been perched upon. _tree, p,ounced dowpr upon him, and ; with one ettoke of its claws destroyed his left eye. ~ liar A Puebla journal states that imilian has established - a post-CM-6'6oh sorship in that city, requiring all leitere froin the United States to be ' oPennd and read at the post office, by the'per, Bonito whom they are addrested, in the •presence' of his agehts. The - impish mardinflinted citizens' for receiving letters containing objectionable .matter is, unfortunately, not anted. ' Or The. great organ in -Vlyrnonth Church, Brooklyn, •was- on ' exhibition on Friday night. It is the largefit gan yet built in. America. , It is ani-iin mense.michiee, having four .manuals; of forty-eight keyi each. The- bellows• -is in, the cellar, an Lis worked.by a hydren lic- engine. The entire number of pipes is 3,442; thirty of which. ;are thirty-two .feet in length. • - ' sr One hundr( 4 d , barrels of, illicit whiskey. were recently seized in, Rew Yorh bY the 'revenue officers. The li• quor was duly sold by auction, but the purchaser, on tasting it, fOund that foTty of the barrels had been filled withiater by, the ingenious ,proprietor, whin ,had quie i tly removed the whiskey after the se• fir A .band of seventy or eighty `gyp. sies, - encaroped On the ontskirts-orPhil -adelptda, and 'procuring •an uncertain livelihood by 'stealing and' telling. for tunes, hcive been driven away by , thoi police, in answer to -the ieseon'strances of owners of-poultry. or The Bohemian peasants have era. warm wny:‘,vith thpm, in .receiving their adversaries, t he ,Prusidari soldiery. They poor warm, water, fioiling, pitch, and scalding oil upon their devoted heads, i~ltln~f in. ~sitf_ Jno. B. Goughjeturna an income of $12,982. - • . The dove, recollect, did not return to Noah with the branch till the second time of he'r^going forth ; why, then, should you despond at the failure of a Met-attempt.- - Gen. Chalmers, a notorious fighting rebel, whose bands are yet red with the blood . of the slaughtered patriots of Fort Pillow,•-ie one of the delegates to the Philadelphia convention from Ten nessee. Two young Breckinridgee were born ,at Niagara, Falls, Canadian aide, ,a -few days since. John : c. is Alia father. Hiram Powers.- the sculptor, is .a Swedeoborgiao, and proposes to exe cute a statwor Swedenborg. • United States a Senator Ross, of Ban eas, is only thirty-seyen years of age. When a boy he was an: apprentice in the :office of the Sandaskyl(Ohio) Mirror, a Democratic ,paper rfliblished by. his brother. . Among the guests ' atone of the hotels ;at Cape May; :a few days since, were 'General Herbert, who led the rebel charge at Cemetery hill Hiester Clym er, a son of Williaiu B.' Reed, Charles 'J.. Ingersoll, and George Northrop, .Esqs. Commodore Vanderbilt recently pur chased a $2,500 gelding of a respectable young man in New., York, whose cir 'cumstances were very moderate. Being highly gratified with the' purchase be , gave the seller a "corner" in Harlem railroad stock, and the yeung man .real ized $600,000 upon which he has retired. A little girl.nemed Mary; Anios, fell into the Delaware.on Monday, and Pat rick Campbell, a. young :man,..-nobly jumped into the river to -her rescue. Sad to relate they,weri3 both droxned. A. man tied his horse to one of the posts of the market house in Harrisburg on Saturday, andit being against the law, loaned; the city five dollars. Barnuarhas t;een appointed one of the CointniesiontCre to the " World's 'Fair " atParis in 1867. ' This is au intimation to Napoleon that•We look upon his big show as a haMbUg, an,i send him our best specimen of the article to match the , collection. .; ?_re. Mary, Auu Lynch, of Bingham , ton, N., Y.., took_adose ofmorpkine "to prevent ber hcad from , aching," which placedhcr kleyond, the reach of her, drunken, cruet husbands ` Gilder IVeltzel,' an Alabama - nee°, was arrested,for choking. his wife, and the forgiving, partner of Gilder's bosom attempted to excrkipate . the Weazel by saying, :"Pat's de way we plays." A negjo in King William county, Va. killed a tripoli _snake eight feet long, whose stomach contained.ayoung rabbit, five partridge eggs,' two frogs, two : hen:3 eggs, CI lizard, and a small 'chicken. A. woman in , Anamosit, lowa, last week got a decree of divorce on ,account; of her husband's intimacy with' `a^ certain. ?ado*, The lusband.procdred CI certi ficate the'eame.day and married, the gay widow. The, delegates . , twenty,ln number, who Were appointed to the Philad4hia Convention, from'Tennessee, have, with= out an exception; a straight out rebel record. There is said to be a growing among the Liberals in. Mexico in favor of an nexation to the United States. Mrs. Moore; of , Saco; Maine, vife.of a physician,-and member of a church, has been stealing finery from fancy sticores. The fashionable churches in New York, it is announced, will be closed oliiing the rnonth.bf August. Even re• ligioo ie silent where fashion miles ; God's house is'ciosed and the voice of prayer is hushed. The parents of a Columbus (Ohici) young lady furnished her with a splen did wardroba for a trip to New York, in order to BaVe her from the addresses of an objectionable, young man, MISS packed up;the dtesses and afterwardspacked off with the young man. Henry Ward - litiecher's church. in Brodklyn:N..Y., has•been tendered to the sanitary authorities of .that e.ity , for a cholera hospital in case it should be re quired.. :• • : ,t;., A.-shop in Baltimori was set on .fire last week by the agency of a warped pane of glaps in a window, which, act,e4l as a. convex lens, and concentrating-the suin'A,rays upon „a _pile of ,combustible` material, caused it to take fire. erhere has , been a fight betwe'en the• ' California Indians and The U. s.,trciopp.- - - - - 'Women earn elevan' cents per day' in Neii York; mnking shirts. It is said 1000 Union men have ,fled from New Orleans since the massacre. - L St: Louis girl married a MUD to-win a bet, and afterwards sued for a divorce. They ere . to,have a ,colored. Catholic chnr.chin - .; The peach crop in Delaware willbe a failure. , ' • False Ualves ( ladies' definition )7—de ceitful lovers. 56pttimI Notitts A BROKEN-DOWN Sysrms.—There is ease to which the doctors e ma n y also frequently r /lat h. but which few of themenderstad it,' simply weakness—a breaking down of Use vital forces. Whatever its causes (and rh o are innumerable), its symptoms are i n t i' l main the same. Among the most promnnalt are extreme lassitude, loss of a ppetite, in, of fl es h , and great mental depression. Indigel, tion and a Stomach Cough are concomitants of this distressing state of body and of mind. The common remark si tion to persons in such a condition 115 hot 'they are fortunates consumptive. Now, What these us. really want is vigor—riteiatrtnA; and as certainly as dawn succeeds darkness they can - recupirate their systems and regain perfect health by resorting to HOSTETTER,s CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS It is as clear that a lite-reviving Tonic is requn.. ed in such cases, as that the dying flame ofaa empty limp requires to be revived With lk ne v supply of oil. Perfectly pure and innocuous, containing nothing but the most genial vn ga table extracts, and combining the three Dun elements of a stomachic, an alterative, and a genial invigorant.—Hostetter's titters ar e suitable to all constitutions, and are as &no, cable to the diseases and disabilities of the feebler sex as to those of men. LYON'S PERIODICA L DROPS: —The great. male Remedy for Irregularities.—The se Bro i , are a scientifically compounded fluid prepare. tion, and better than any Pills, Burden 0. Nost;ums. Being liquid, their actio is dine; and positive, rendering Them a reliable, spic. dy and certain specific for the cure of all ob structions and suppressions of nature. Th e i r popularity is indicated by the fact that over 100,000 bottles are annually sold and comm. edby the ladies of the United States, every one of whom speak in the strongest terms of p else of their good merits. They are rapidly taking the place of every other Female keg,. edy, and are considered by all who know aught of Dieno;as the surest, safest and most infallible preparation in the world, for tie cure of all 'female complaints, the remorelof all obstructions of nature, and the promotion of health, regularity and strength. Explicit directions stating when they may be used, nil expliiiiiing• when they should not, nor could not be used without producing effects contra. ry- to nature's chosen laws, will be found cue fully folded around each bottle, with the writ. ten signature of ;lows L. LYON, without which none are genuine. Prepared by Dr. JOHN L. LYON, 195 Chapel street, New-Haven, Conn., who can be con sulted either personally or by mail, (enchain; stamp) concerning all private diseases and fe male weaknesses. Sold by Druggists creep where. C. G. CLARK & Co., Geld' Agts for U. S. and Canadas. Iv To CONSUPIPTIVES.—The advertiser har ing been restored to health in a few week! by a very simple remedy, after having sunned several years, with a severe lung affection, .and that .dread disease, Consumption, is an. -xieue.to make known to his fellow-sufferers the means of cure. To all who desire if, be -will send a copy of the prescription, free of charge, With the directions far prepanng and 'useing the same, which they will find a sure "cure for Consumption, Asthma, Coughs, Bro. chitis, Colds, a ndall throat and lung alfectiom. The only object of the advertiser in sending the prescription is to benefit the afflicted sod spread information which he conceives to be invaluable, and he hopes every sufferer still try his remedy, as it will cost them nothing, and may prove a blessing. Parties wishing the prescription, FREE,b; return mail, will please address Rev. EDWARD A. WILSON, Williamsburg, Kings County, New-York. IIY PURIFY THE. BLOVD.—If the blood impute the --body, which is formed from and by the blood cannot be diseased. But if there be is any part of the body an affection, such es s boil or ulcer, even a bruise, the bled circa's• ting thyoug 4 h thal part takes up impure me ters from the local effection and curio it tato the gs neral system. This is the came often Of sudden death to persem of full habit,afllls• ted with boils and u leers. and who use no flied ichr ; the matter gets into the ciiculatim'W• 'tecri and chokes up the fine blood vessels which supply the brain with vitality, and life ceases as if bereft by lightning. Now this eau be le• alizcd. BRA XD VIETH'S PILLS take all impute matters from the circulation, and save tit general health, soon curing local affections also. Brandreth's Pills protect from tedious times of sickness and often save life. Sold by all respectable Dealers in Medicines. THE GREATEST DISCOVERY OF IRE AGE. Farmers, Families and others can purchase s remedy equal to Dr. TOBIAS' Venetian Iment for dysentery, collc,croup, chronic rkm matism, sore throat, toothache, Sea A GiGlK be cuts, burns , sweelings, bruises, old sores, at ache, mosquito bites, pains in the limbs, brat chest, &c. If it does not give relief the no. ey will be refunded. All that is asked it° trial, and use it according to directions. Di... Tobias. Dear Sir : I have used ya w Venetian Liniment in my faintly fora raigo o f years, and believe it to be the bestarride for what it is recommended that I hate erel used. For sudden attack of croup, ins uable. I have no hesitation in recoromen d4 it for all the uses it professes to cure. I b5l sold - ir for many years, and it gives entire tit' isfaction. CHAS. a TRINSE.I. Quakertown, N. J., May 8, 1566. Price 40 and 80 cents. Sold by all Dat e Depot, 56 Courtlandt•st., N. Y. r 10-n 5 SPIKE THE OF HITDIEUG• la/Pr ters are in the field with deadly hair dyes,ual gerous to health and 'utterly destructive to Ol t hair. Do not submit to have your hes , / bar tized with liquid fire, when that cooling legs' table ,prePaiation, CHILISTADORO'S gadsbsg DY,e ' will, in five minutes, impart any desre.°4 from light brown to jet black, withoutiojnlf the . fibres, staining the skin or poiso ning , t i : system through the pores. Beware Of d e ' i , k rious dYes! Manufactured by J. CO IS ` b , 12 DOO, 6 Astok Frouse New-York. soia Druggists. Applied by all Hair-dressers. timbres or Yourn.—A gentleman r fe red for years from Nervous Debilitb teal mature Decay, and all the effects of I; indiscretion, will, for the sake of humanity, send free to all who need it, the remedy by recipe and directions for making' the_:,,.1.05 which he .was c ured. S wishingll4n profit by the advertiser's :06. ence, can, do so by addressing, JOO D.F.,r, No: 18 Chamber St., New-York. ,cure eirtl Kr The real Velpau Fremch Pihs Mgt° n j. need' t thestomach , stomach, : and ..1a yettal See notice. Sold by Dr. F. klinlle , and by all geed druggists.