Re slatiettian. MARIETTA. PA : Saturday_ Morning, April 20, 1867. isw d . tra „ orivs.xxxos.—At. a meeting of the Union • State'Ceneral Committee helfist Ilarrisburgen„Tnetdayafternoon, the 26th day of J une was fixed as the day for holding , the Union State Convention It will meet on ,that day at Williamsport. gar The Legislature has passed a bill ftbolishing fermi r State taxes upon money and other personal property, and substituting in their place a levy of 6300, 000 upon the county autharities. This sum is to be apportioned among the res pective counties according to the assess ed value of the property therein, and will be paid out of the county tax._ The State tax upon real estate was removed a year or two ago, and now' the whole system of direct taxation for State pur poses is a thing of the past. Sufficient revenue to pay current expenses and in_ West is obtained from banks railroad companies, and other money-making hi etitutions. Cr One day last week five men were crossing the Susquehanna in a small boat, below Bioghampton, N. Y., when one of them jumped overboard, exclaim ing that be was not going to cross in a boat when he could swim as well. The boat was capsized in the efforts of his comrades to return the man to the boat, and four of the five men were drowned. Gr An abandoned woman of Chicago, named Mary Brandon, on Tuesday after noon murdered the little daughter of one of her neighbors, by drowning her in a cistern. She also tried to destroy the daughter of another neighbor. The on ly reason assigned for the crime is the fact that these neighbors had refused to recognize or associate with the wretch ed woman. Among the bills just signed by the Governor of Pennsylvania is one incor porating a society for "the prevention of cruelty to animals." Similar societies have been instituted in many places, and their object must•ealist the sympathies of the residents of large cities, where the sad spectacle of over driven and worn out animals of draught is of too frequent occurrence. ®" The Democratic papers _through out the State allege that among the many sine of - the late Legislature, the Republican majority increased the pay of mbere. This is not so. The Rouse passed a section iucreasing the pay, but the Senate very properly struck it out of the appropriation bill, leaving the pay as heretofore at $lOOO for the session. Thomas A. Stirling, of New York city, was arrested on Wednesday last at his residence in Hamilton street, Brook lyn, by the United States detectives, on a charge of forgery. His modus operan di was to send, letters to prominent mer chant?, and in. this way. to 'obtain their signatures to be used to forged checks. .11 - Lion. George Evans, died in Port land, Me., on Friday night. The dizeas ed represented hie State eighteen years in the lions 2 of Representatives, and six years in the United States Senate, with credit to himself and State. He was a man of distinguished ability, especially in financial matters. air it is understood that the Senate has postponed the consideration, of the Damination.of Colonel Capron as Com missioner of Agriculture nettil next De cember. The .friends of the present in cumbent, Isaac Newton, say that he will then be prepared to resign. shT A nuinber of clubs are being formed in various parts of ,the connt.y to go to the Paris Exposition. It is stated that a company of two hundrid is organizing in Chicago, and intend to chirter a steamer to convey them to Paris. shir Among the items in the General Appropriation hill passed by the Penn sylvania Legislature, were $3OO "For Prayers for the Senate," and $3OO "For Prayers for the House"—in other words for ChOplain's services. er The President, for some time past, harVbeen granting but very- few pardon& to those who were engSged in the rebellion, although there are a very 1 /rge number of petitions for pardon be fore hid: • Sr The Chinese women wbo will wait on the Chinese restaurant in the Paris Eihibition were purchased in Canton; they coati $5O apiece. The pick of Chi nese women-4est.onl t ysl2a apiece. ilirkbp &typos Newt is informed that liire.,: s laarriet 14eicher . Stowe .is de lighted with r the climate of Florida, and has pnrchased.a,place,on St. John's riv er, whore she. intends to reside. lar Ottioikd...two vent grrl few days after died of the lockjew, ----- - ----- -- • fed' A fatal accileuttof a infigulat De , ' tore occurred stp° north aft "of the Eloosick Tunnel on Sit i'-urday..,, The"bell man," who stuodPat t e bottem4f the shaft and gives the signal for the plat form to rise, was standing in his position almost directly under the platform, which was at that time at the mouth of the shaft, when"a" riiimber or drills" were thrown upon the platform to be taken down for use. One of these about five feet in length, rolled off the platform. and fall ing a distance of- three lundred_ and seventy feet, its sharp end struck the "bell man" in the side, and the instru. ment passed entirely through his body and then ..soine, * eistance lot°. a. heavy. plank, completely impaling the unfortu nate man. The plank had to be split with an axe before the drill could . be loosened. The injured man lived about twenty : four hours after the occurrence. ear The New York Herald makes the silly proposition to run Grant for Presi dent and Lee for Vice President in 1868. Such a proposition is scarcely worth se rious mention, for we know the loyal people of the country would not for a moment harbor it. How tong does any one suppose Grant would live as Presi dent with Lee as Vice President? We have had sole experienca of the danger of having a national man for President and a tool of the South for Vice Preei d int. The man who runs for Vice Pres id.mt on the Union ticket next time must be above suspfcion. We want no more Tylers, Fillmores or Johnsons. fir Some weeks since an account of the blowing up of Table Rock by the Canadkn authorities was published, the object being to prevent any accidents from future falls of the rock. A bole was drilled and a charge of powder pla ced in it, but it seems the usual packing was omitted or wrongly arranged. The natural consequence is that though the powder burned very pr ettily, Table Rock still stands unharmed. A few pieces were detached and fell, which probably led to the belief that the whole mass was blown off. igo - The late Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Mr. Fox, while crossing the Atlantic in a monitor last year, threw overboard each day at noon a bottle containing 'the date, the latitude, the longitude, and a request that the finder would endorse the date . and place of dis covery, and forward to the nearest goy eniment official. The Minister of the United,Sl 4 tes at ?aria _ has forwarded to the State Departnieut the contests of three of these bottles pidsed up on the coast of France, after traveliiog more than a thousand mi'es. ter Among the applications for par don now on file with Major F. U. Stitt, pardon clerk in the Attorney General's office, are 97 from ex-United States Na vy officers. The naval service seems to have been the favorite with the F. F. V.'s, no less than 52 out of the 97 being from - Virginia: Of the others 8 are from South Carolina, 6 from North Carolina, 6 from Georgia, 6 from Maryland, 4 from Mississippi, 4 from Alabama, 3 from Louisiana, 3 from District of Columbia, 1 from Texas, 1 from New York and 1 from Nova Scotia. G s- Messrs. Clark & Co., Chemists, Syracuse, N. Y., would call attention to their advertisements in another column, headed "Reparator Capilli," Crisper Coma," and "Circassian Balm." These undoubtedly,‘ are the moat perfect and efficacious articles of the kind ever offer ei the American people. To unbeliev ers, we would say, "try them and be con vinced." Mrs. Major Green, a resident of the South, was kilted at the Columbus, Ohio, Depot, on Wednesday while trying to get' on a train of cars. She witi -in the eating saloon, and hearing a train start, and supposing it•to be the train she wished to take, tried to get on while the train was in motion and wie run 111:13 eir Johanna Reading, a servant in the employ ofJohn Minium, residing in 13 43- 'boken, was committed to the county jail, charged with having so cruelly beaten' Mr. Mintnrn's daughter, aged two 'and a half years, as to seriously endanger her life. • Milk-and-water men, three in num ber, have been fined for extending their business illegally—that is by diluting their milk with water, and then selling it for "country milk." Sr A burglary was committed in New York Thursday morning on Canal street —530,000 worth of jewelry being stolen. The thieves were captured and the val. . • uablds recovered. sir Wendell Phillips has written a letter to a Muscatine, lowa paper, in which be likens President Johnson to a Tennessee mule, and opposes Grant as a candidate for the Presidency because he has no political ideas of his Own. A physician of Goshen, Ohio, named Hanker, sixty years old, commit ted suicide last week because his chil dren opposed his marrying again. . UrThe Uorigrekitional- Chtirelf West Brogkfield, Maas., which' is 165 years old, has had bnt roar pastors. c - THE . MARIETTIAN . ~— '~ or A ne E r andstrange - nisdcase o el ity t&nuptilil vows as just come blight in Chicago . The w ife die wealth) , re tired"New;Yorkenierchint with:, " his, consent, started for New Orleans winter before last, and last winter, to spend the cold season there with his parents, and return to New York in the spring. Last spring she returned- accOrding 'to the previous arrangement,; but last Feb ruary the husband went'unexpectedly to New Orleans, and fonEd his wife had not been there, eitherthat o winter or the previous one. lie also ascertained that she bad passed the previouewinter with a Inver in St' touis,"and the present one with hinjn,Chicago, He went to the latter place after her, but she heard of it, and eluded hiifpiirsuit. Her strategy was to send letters to New Orleans, where they were post-marked and for warded to him. He, sent her money, upon which she and her lover lived. Failing to find his erring spouse, the husband returned to New York. The woman and her paramour are still in Chicago. The husband is about fifty years of age ; the wife twenty-one. ilksf Mrs. W. G Brain, who lives neap Ernst Station, Ohio, went on Sunday morning to the residence of her father, on Pleasant Hill, taking with her two of her four children, a blind girl of three years and an infant of eight months. In the kitchen oiler father's house then) i 3 a cistern with a trap door, and into this the blind child accidentally fell. Her screams immediately attracted the Mother to the spot, and she, in the delir urn of her fright and grief, is supposed to have fallen in, head first, withlheln fact in her arms, in her offorts to rescue the other child. When thi people of the house reached the scene the Mother and her two children were dead. A wise enactment was passed by the Legislature, which may not be_ gen,- erally known. It provides that any per son "who shall receive from minors, on known or irresponsible parties, any scrap iron, load or metal, shall be sentended to pay a due not exceeding $5OO, and undergo an imprisonment of not more than one year, or both, or either." This makes it criminal to buy or receive from such parties, irrespective whether it was stolen or not, and removes from children the temptation to pilfer. gar The attention of our readers is called to the advertisements in another column of Messrs. Berger, Shuttle & Co., Chemists, Troy, N. Y. They are man ufacturers of, and agents for, some of the most valuable toilet" preparations in nee By their use all may possess a clear, smooth skin, or a healthy and luxuriant krowth of hair upon the head or face. Those of our readers having use for any thing of the bind, would . do well to pat ronize them. ar A Milwaukee raper tells a story of a terrier which attacked a rat at a gr'ain warehouse in that city, a few days since ; the Tat'squealed, the alarm was repeated by other rats near by, and in a moment a large swarm of rats surround ed the unfortunate dog, gave him !male, and, although be made terrible havoc among them, ultimately killed and past.. ly devoured him. * skr In Kentucky lives a min, the head of a very respectable family, who, during one week in each month, about the first quarter of the moon, imagines himself a woman, dons the hoops" rind balMoral, and sits in his parlor waiting for his bean. This strange amduet was first noticed in him whin he was about seventeen years of age. Ile is now fif ty-one. t ir Female suffrage is probably to be tried ib Wisconsin. The lower, House of the Legislature of that State, by a vote of 63 to 22, has adopted u'resolutinn to submit to the people the question of extending suffrage to women. The State Senate, it is reported, will concur iu the resolution. - gar Petitions are being circulated by the 1403111611 of St. Louis, asking the Leg islature to strike the word male fromibe State constitution. Preparations are also being made for a mass meeting or women for tho_pu.pose of bringing the question of.female suffrage prominently before the people. ea- A brother and sister, who had not met for lifty-five years, had a reunion dinner at New London, Ohio, recen•ly. Everything on the table—excepting tie turkey and other eatablei— wereabout hall a century- old, knives, forks, dishes, etc., being of antiquated pattern.. gir The town of Marshfield Me has neither minister, doctor, lawyer, town. farm, nor tavern,.consequently the ma jority do not go to church, are not sick, du not become involved in - laW s suite, have no poor tax to pay, and have no .public drunkards. ow Hole-in the-bay, an Indian chief has arrived in St. Paul, Minnesota. with his white wife which' he - selected 'from the liundry of a, Washington hotel whilst in that city, lately. sir Miss Eller, of Hamilton contity. Ind., who was treated witl2 bromide of potassium foi hydroPkobia, ie convales cent: la• Turkish baths in Boston have be come popular with the ladies. Ntb3s in Britt It- is said a little girl eight years of tag,!_is performing the duties of an engi neer at a well on Benneboff run. She is paid $3 a day, the salary of the beet engineers. A shoemaker of Dayton, Ohio, has surprised the natives by abstaining from all food and drink for more than forty days. He is still alive, and the Journal says'is "doing well." • -Minors can marry in Louisiana the legal age for bridegrooms is fourteee the • bride_ twelve. • Jeff Davis' plantation, with that of his brollffeiliikiitivei been said to a former slave of Jeff's for $400.000, on ten years lease, and the colored man, it is said, will make $30,000 this year. There are thirty eight thousand Bri tish tro,ops in Ireland. The National Democratic Convention which was to have met at Louisville in NI ay, has been postponed to the 4th of July. The Leavenworth Times says grasshop pers are being hatched by thousands on dry sandy slopes, and no I.t' le trouble is anticipated 'From them. The Insurrection in Hayti has finally been-suppressed by President Garrard, after a desper.tte conflict with the insur gants, in which many lives were lost. 'Phis is the fifth revolution Gefrrard has had to contend against. Recruiting in the regular army is said to be more brisk than it has been at any previous time since the war. The dull ness of business is leading many men Who were in the volunteer service dar ing the war to now enter the regular ser vice. At Albany, last week, a lady who had been in ill health for some time, narrow ly escaped, being strangled by a huge worm that made its way op her throat. The neighbors were called in, when they succeeded in removing the obstruction and saving her life California 20 years ago had no news papers. Now there are 12 - dailies, 1 tri weekly. and 41 weeklies in San Francisco alone. In the remainder of the State there are 12 dailies, 1 tri-weekly and 73 weeklies, Californians are a reading people, and their newspapers are quite up to the average of our best Eastern papers. A Memphis "Tom Thump" is selling his protograpbs in Chicago. He is de scribed as nineteen years of age—thirty one inches high—weighs forty-five pomade—and is "every inch a gentle man." The Republican Senators and Repre senatives have subscribed over nine thousand dollars to the fund for sending Radical speakers and documents into the South. Amelia Lee, a young girl while prac"- tising eioging in Spalding Church, Eng land, was so frightened by a bat which alighted on her face and bit her, that she is suffering from paralysis of the brain, which induces long fits of sleep, lasting for weeks. A New York city missionary avers that in a eiugle block in an , np-town ward there are more occupants than there are dwellers on Fifth avenue from Washington Square to the Central Park. The St,. Paul Press thinks that the coming season is destined to witness the greatest , immigration into Itionesota of any year iu its history. An exchange says pointedly : "It seems= that the roll of Robert Toombs' slaves will be called at a Georgia ballot box instead of at Banker Hill." Robert Bonner, of Ledger fame, is about to build a splendid marble build in; at the corner of William and .proce stree4s, New. York. The Louisiana papers call attention to the :act - that one hundred and fifty steamers liefotting in the Rod river, and declares that unless New Orleans builds a road to the head of Red river naviga: tioq she must '"go under" commercially. The fate of Dr. Livingstone is settled. A letter from Sir Roderick Murchispn, dated March 16th, announees that there i 4 to longer room for doubt that the Doctor was murdered by the savages in &fries. .. _ Strawberries, grown in the open air, were selling at, San, prancisco on the 14th, of last month at 75 cents a quart, A letter . from. Liberty, Texas, to the New Orleans Picayune, says "everything indicates the beginning of a prosperity , that promises to be permanent,". • The Dome Journal says white muslin cravats, for ladies, are coming into fash ion again, and are worn in the morning, in place of collars, being embroidered and trimmed with lace. Benjamin Beath, a Boston detective, is going to the Paris Exposition to look after American thieves there. The recent cold snap has killed the peach budkirLFla‘tern KanPa..3. Unicin "I4tglkes are etod to be rapidly organ iztag,titirth Alabamit. WWI The New Jersey Legislature defeated the prohibitory liquor law. Sprzfal Notitzz To TEE MARTYRS OF LIVER CO LAIN?. —Among the wonderful medical properties which have rendered flostetter's Stomach Bitters pre-eminent among the health-restor ing preparations of the age, its anti-bilious 'dance are not the least remarkable. No words can do justice to its marvelous effect upon the diseased liver. Perhaps the simple words of a convalescent - sufferer, who de scribes it as "going to the right spot," tells it as clearly as may be. It does go right to the spot. It operates directly upon the dis ordered organ, and whether unduly active or in a irate oTiirtfalysis, restores it to - a - condi tion of health. The sickness at the Stomach, pain between the shoulders and in the- right, side, yellow. suffusion of the skin, costiveness, arowsineas and languor, dimness of sight, colicz-palpitatiou of the heart, dry. eough,'low fever, and other symptoms whic:i indicate the various phases of acute and chronic liver com plaint, are and all promptly relieved, and fi nally removed, by the action of this famous preparation which is at once the best of cor rectives, the gentlest and most genial of ape rients, an infallible regulator, and a powerful restorative. Persons of a bilious habit, who use the bitters as a protective medicine, will never suffer the pains and penalties of Liver disease or Bilious Remittent Fever. A. To OWNERS OF HORSES.—TbOIIBII23dS Of horses die yearly from Colic. This need not be. Dr. Tobias' Venetian Horse Liniment will positively cure every case, it given when first taken. The cost is only one dollar. Every owner of a horst. should have a bottle in his stable, ready for use. It is warranted superior to anything else for the cure of Cut's Wind Galls, Swellings, Sore Throat, Sprains, Bruises, Old Sores, Ste. This Liniment it no new remedy. It has been used and approved of for 19 years by the first horsemen in the country. Given to an overdriven horse, it acts like a magic. erders ale constantly re ceived from the racing stables of England for it. The celebrated flitain Woodruff, of trot ting fame, lies' used it for years, and says it is far superior to any other he has tried. He kindly perm.ts me to refer to bim. His ad dress is East New York, Long Island. Re collect, Dr. Tobias' Venetian Horse Liniment is put up-in pint bottles. Take no other. Sold by all the Druggists and Saddlers. Depot 56 Cortlandt street, New York. [3l-7t ItP A CalIVII;d8 of the Cnion Noyes that the most successful candidate for general favor ever placed before the people, is that pure and salubrious vegetable beautifier, C4ISTADORO'S HAIR DYE, far and wide, throughout the restored public, in defiance of rivalry and competition, it ap peals to the polls, of all who design to clothe the same with the magnificent black or brown hues which nature has denied, or age stolen away, Manufactured by J. CRISr ADORN 6 Aitor House, New York. Sold by all drug gists. Applied by all hair-dressers. A. lt3— Deafness, Blindness and Catarrh, trea ted with the utmost success, by J. ISAACS, 31. D., Oculist and Auriht, (formerly of Ley den, Holland,) No. 519 PINE st., Philadel phia. Testimonials from the most relitible sources in the city and country can be seen at his office. The medical faculty ere invited tc accompany thelrpatients, b as he has no secrets in his practice. Artificial Lyes inserted with out No charge for examination. FREE TO EVERY BODY .—A large 6 pp. Circu lar, giving information of the greatest import time to the young of both sexes. It teaches how the homely may become beautiful, the despised respected, and the for saken loved. No young lady or gentleman should fail to send their address, a.. 43 receive a copy post-paid, by return mail. Address P. 0. Drawer, 21, Troy, N. Y MARRIAGE AND Cactancr.—An essay of warning and instruction for young men : also, Diseases and Abuses which .prematurely pros trate the Vital Powers, with sure means of releif. Sent frve of charge, in sealed letter envelopes. Address, Da. J. &main Honor' - Tort, Howard Association, No. 2 South Ninth Street, Pniladelphia, Pa. [july 1,'66-Iy. 11:3- ITCH !--ITCH ! !—ITCII ! ! ! Scratch Scratch 1 !—Scratch ! ! WH EATON'S OINT MENT the ITCH in 43 hours. Also cures Salt Rheum, Ulcers, Chilbrains and al cr iptions of the skin. Price 50 cents. For sale by all-druggists. By sending so. cents to WEEKS Sic POTTER,SOIe ageilts, 170 Washing ton-st., Bdston, it will be forwarded by mail, free of pottage, to any part of the Union. FOR Non-retention or Incontinence of Urine, irri'ation, inflammation or ulceration of the bladder, or kidneys, diseases of the pros tate glands, stone in the bladder, calculus, gravLl or brick dust deposits, and all diseases of the bladder, kidneys and dropsical swellings USE HELHBOLD'S FLUID EXTRACT BUCHU EMPIRE' S/-1 - ThrLE .11ACIIINEd are superior to all others for family and manufacturing purposes ; contain all the latest improvements are speedy, noisless, durable and easy to work. Illustrated Circulars sent free. Agents want ed. Liberal discount allowed. 'l,o consign ments made. Address EMPIRE S. M. CO, 16 Broadway, N. Y. HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT Buchu and Im proved Rose Wash cures secret - and delicate disorders in all their stages, at little expense, little or no change of diet, no inconvenience, and no exposure. ' It is pleasant in taste and odor, immediate in its action., and free from all: inj urious Ave-tries. Brandretti''S fills are safe and sure. They are 'prepared by a process which secures all the best qualities of the herbs of which they are,composed, without any of their bad. They benefit cases, and do harm in none. See B Brandreth in white letters on the Gov ernment stamp. iC HEE,MBOL WSxiract Buchu gives health and vigor to the frame and bloom to he pallid cheek. Debility is accompanied by many alarming syrnptointi, and if no treatment is submitted to, consumption, insanity or epi leptic fits ensue. la- EN FEE.BLECv tied delicate constitu tions, of both sexes, use Helmbuld's Extract Buchu. It will give brisk and energetic feel ings, and enable you to sleep well. E 3— TAKE no more unpleasant and unsafe remedies tor unpleasant and' dangerous dis eases. Use llelmbold's Extract Buchu and Improved Rose Wash. HELMIFILD'S Fluid Extract Euclid is pleasant in taste and odor, , free from .injurious propertiriciiirinilifidisite in its action. . SiIATTERLD _COMlltitlaiollll reitORIGNI Helzabohi's Extrad Botha.. KNOW MT DESTINT.--MfidaMe E. Thornton, the Great English Astrologist P. , Clai r . voyant and Psychometrician, who ham asta. ished the szientific classes of the Old World, has cow located herself at Hudson, y Madame Thornton Possesses such wonderful powers of second sight, aa to enable tier to kn. part knowledge of the greatest importance to tb a single or a state of trance, married oi ci her sea, whil e i n turea of the erson she delineates the very fea p you are to marry,. and b y g u arantees to the aid cf an instrument of intense Power, known as the Ps) chomotrooc, produce a life-like picture of the future hus band or wife of the ap,dicant,, together \cab date of marriage, position in life, leading. traits of character, &C. This is no humbug, a, thousands of testimonials can assert. sh e kill send w hen desired, a certified certificate Or written guarantee, that the picture is what it purports to be. B enclosing a email to of hair, and stating place of birth, age, 6 90 . sitton and complexion, and enclosing flay cents and stamped envelope addressed to your• self, you will receive the picture and desired informatimi by return mail. All communict• lions sacredly confidential. Address in ma. donee, MADABIE E. F. THORNTON, P. O. po x 223, liUdSOll, Pl. Y. ..lincsomerzow curable by Dr. Schenck7l Medicines. To cure Consumption, the system must be prepared so that the lungs will heal. To accomplish this, the liver and stomach must first be cleansed and an appetite created for good wholesome food, which, by then medicines, will be digested properly, andgovd healthy blood made; thus building up the constitution. Schenck's Mandrake Pills cleanse the gloated' of all bilious or mucous accumulations; and, by using the Sea Weed Tonic in connection, the appetite is restored. Schenck's Puhnonic Syrup is nutricious as well as medicinal, and, by using the three remedies, all impurities are expelled from the system, and good, wholesome blood mode, which will repel all disease. If patients will take these medicines according to directions, Consumption very frequently in its last stages yields readily to their action. Take the pills frequently, to cleanse the liver and stomach. It does noefollow that because the bowels are not costive they are not required, for some. times in diarrhea they bre necessary. The stomach must be kept health), and an apps. tite created to allow the PUIIIIOUIC Syrup to act on the respirat cry organs properly nodality any irritation. Then all that is required to perform a permanent cure is, to prevent taking cola; exercise about the rooms as much saps. sible, eat all the richest fool—fat meat, name, and, in fact, anything the appetite craves: but be particular and masticate well. lt•• Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry cures Coughs, colds, bronchitis, asthma, croup, whooping cough, qul.-sy, and the numerous as well as dangerous diseases oft e throat, chest and lungs, prevailing in our changeable cl.m. ate at all seaso,,s of the year ; few are fortu nate enough to escape their baneful influence. How important then to have at hand a cer tain antidote to all these complaints. Expe rience proves that this exists in Wistar's Bal sam to an extent not found in any other rem edy; however severe the suffering, the appli cation of this soothing, _healing and wonder ful Balsam at once vanquishes the disease and restores the sufferer to wonted health. MR. JOHN BUNTO, Of BALDWIN, CHEMING COUNTY: N. T.— writes : " I was urged by a neighbor to get one hot. tle of the Balsam for my wife, being smiled by him that in case it did not produce good effects be would pay for the bode himself. On the strength of such practical evidence of its merits, I procured a bottle : My wife at this time was so low with what the physicians termed. Seated Consumption, as to be linable to raise herself from the bed, coughing con stantly, and raining more or less blood. I commenced giving the Balsam as directed, and was so much pleased with its operation that I obtained another bottle, and continued giving it. Before this bottle was entirely used, she ceased coughing and was strong enough to sit up. The fifth bottle entirely restored her to health : doing that which sett. eral PhYsiciana had trt d to do but had failed?' Prepared by Seth W. Forte & Son, 18 Tre• mont St., Boston, and fur sale by druggist' generally. A IrvUNG LA or returning to her country home. after a sojourn of a few months in the city, was hardly recognized by her friends, In place of a coarse, rustic, Bushed face, she had a soft ruby complexion of almost !rouble smoothness, and instead of twenty-three she really appeared but eighteen. Upon inquiry as to the cause of sr great a change, plain• ly told them that she used the CIRCASSIAII an LM, and considered it an invaluable acqui sition to any Lady's toilet. By its use 8 " Lady or Gentleman can improve their perma al appearance an hundred fold. It is simple in its combination, as Nature herself is simple , yet unsurpassed in its efficacy in drawing im purities from, AlBO healing, cleansing and beautifying the skin and complexion. BY its diract action ou the cuticle it draws from it ell its impurities, kindly healing the sam e ' " d leaving the surface as Nature Welted it should be, clear , soft, smooth and beautiful. Price sl,.sent by mail or express, on receipt of an order, by IV. L. CLARK Si Co., Chartists, No. 3 West Fayette St. : tcylacuse, N• Y. The only American Agents for the sale of the same WONDERFUL BUT TRUE.---Idlidatile gem' ington, the wcrld renowned Astrologist an Somnambulistic Clairvoyant, while in a clan , voyant state, delineates the very features of the person you are to marry, .and by the aid of an instrument of intense power, known as the Psy chomotrope, guarantees to produce a perfect and life-like picture of the future hus band or wife 'of' the applicant, with date of marriage, occupation. leading traits of charac ter, &c. This is no imposition, as testimon ials without number can assert. BY stating place of birth, age, disposition, color of sTes and A hair, and enclosing fifty cents, and 6 ll illIPe " envelope addressed to yourself,_vou will le"ih ceive the picture by return mail, together w desired information. !Cr Address in confidence, MaDans W est TRUDE REMINGTON, P. O. Box 227, Troy, N. It H ELM BOLD'S CONCENTRATED EXTRACT • Burka is the Crest Diuretic. .13ELNBOLD'S CONCENTRATED r•xriaci anusAreuttrA Is the Great Bt ad Purifier. Both are Pharmacy and Chemistry, and are the Preparad recording to rules of active that can be made. ------------ Er THE Glory of man is strength-4 We: fore the nervous and