Jus themselves, The lady who took everybody's tof eyes, must bbom. : The wo der--a hollo © tooth that J ne ' h insignificant, energy, Juvineible Fh ley As a man drinks, he generally grows reckless; in his case, the more, drams the r scruples. Shrewd enquirers have asked whetlier the cup of sorrow has a sau: cer? Oun any one tell us, Many institutions are improperly led semi-naries, for they do not half teach anything. The more honesty a man has, the leas he affects the air of a saint, Why do women like stays? Be cause they feel so-laced by them. Because it militates against the scearity of the crown. ik 'Why should the British Govern - ment strive to abolish the use of the sla in Ireland ? > is with a word as with an arrow ~--the arrow onec donsed docs not retarn to the bow, or a word to the lips. What was it besides 'energy, ge- nis, invincible determination,' that made these great pefsonages among thé mest renowned of the world. The childrin are said to be so dirty in a place on Cape Cod, that a mother fequently goes into the street and washes the faces of half 'a dozen children before she finds her own, Dr. Nettleton addopted the follow- ing as a maxim for the government of this life. * Do all the good yon can in the world, and make as little noise as possible. A genius down east intends ap- plying for a machine which he says, when wound np andset in motion, will chase a hog over a ten acre lot, catch, yoke and ring himjor Ly a slight change of gearing it will chop him into satsages, work his bristles into shoe brushes, and manufacture his tail into a cork screw. A slopkeeper purchased of an Irish woman a qnautity of bmiter, tie lamps of which, intended for pounds he weighed in the balance and found wanling. 'Sure it's yonr own fanlt if they are light," in reply to the com- nlaints of the buyer; "it's your own fault, sir for wasn't it with a pound of your own soap, T bonght here my- self, that [ weighed them with? The shopkeeper had nothing more to say on that sulject. To some pungent remarks of «| professional brother, an American barrister commenced his reply as foliows :--* May it please the court, resting on the couch of Republican equality as I do --covored by the Lianket of constitutional panoply as | 1 am--and protected by the standard | of American liberty as I fecl myself! to be, 1 despise the buzzing of the | political insect who has just sat | down, and despise his futile attempts | to penctrate with his puny sting the crstices of my impervious covering.' The Japanese are in New York, This will 'afford the New Yorkers another opportunity for the display «of their favorite flunkeyism. Metrop- olitan Jenkinses, who haye been sad. | ly in want of a sensation since the iniroduction of Ristori by J. Gran, can again' brush up their rhieorie, and find use for dictionary words, of which they are full to overflowing. We will be furnished with a gnantum of pointless anecdotes about what poother " Tommy" has said or done, and the new fishions will all Le called. Tycoon. The occasion for a grand ball should not be missed, nor any opportunity to annoy the Japan. esc in such a way as to make them appréciate the comparative quiet of their own country. Dox Staxp Stier.--If you do, you will be run over. Motion, action, progress--these are the words which wow fill the vault of heaven with their stirring demands, and make humanity's heart pulsate with a stronger bound. Advauee, or stand aside ; do not block up the way and | ADiinder the career of others; there is too much to do now to allow of inac- | tion anywhere or inany one. There 1s something for all to do ; the world is becoming more 23d more known widet in magnitude; closer in 1aterest more loving and eventful than of old, Not in deeds of daring, not in the en- anguined field, notin chains and ter- | gloom | rors, not in bicod and tears, and but in leapipg, vevifying, exhilirat- ing impulses ofa better birth of soul. ow 10 GET Eanry Tomators,--Mrs. Lrought before him when he ex, ble New Tale "BIRDS OF PREY," and EL. D. Kendall, of Maryland, thus wriles to the Ficld and Fireside. * A" gallows His-joke has been told in Ie good large tarnip is far better than any botbed for propagating early tomatoes. Cut off the top, and senop ont to a shell three quarters of an inch thick. sFill the cavity + with rich mould, plant half a dozen sceds and place the tarnip in 2 box of loam, Keep warm, sprinkle with tepid waler every day, til there.is no longer any danger fiom the frost then: remove the turnip to the out- door bed, and thin out all but one plant, Should the turnip send ont roots, pinch them off and the shell + will soon rot, affording a fertilizer to. +he tomato plant that will oon send "it a-head wonderfully. A dozen tor- nips. tomatoized "would afford an abundant supply of early tomatoes Aor an ordinary fi % ¥ Tt inGuetlio, wel ieve, who says, "Po longer I live in the world the more certain I am that the great dif - ference between men, the great and nd st purpose, fetory | That : d lived asa awany ; and even Rimself was a menial. peare » should be full {the dull, heavy, constant roaring of} | trank up to the fifth story, or toss i if th Street Life in Paris. - ' Catleton' writer from Paris to the Boston Journal:--* The streets of | this capital of fashion and. pleasure are alive with people, There is not London ; there is wanting the heavy traffic of New York, but: light vohi- cles roll along by the thousand. Tt requires twenty thousand cabs to do the light viding of this people. Riding is so cheap that you cannot afford to walk. Thirty cents will carry you enywhere in side of the city walls in a cab, But cheapor than caps are the ommibuses--not running helter skelter, but under a system, all owned by one company, with some six hundred omnibuses and seven thousand horses, carrying eighty million passengers per annum Tho cast and west lines intersect with those running north and sontl, s) that you can reach almost any section of the gicat city for six cents! 'Stand anywhere yon please and watch the never ceasing tide of life sweep by. Om#ibuses, always full, cabs jogging at a regular pace, great loads of hay not pitched on in fork- falls, but done up in wisps, loads of wood done up in litle bundles, brush for kindling tied up by 'the peasant woman. Now a great wagon filled with calves, going to market, all of which had inspection at the city gate pto ensure health, in the metropolis : now a procession of, wine trucks: here comes the great stone crusher, weighing several tons, grinding the | broken stone to powder beneath its ponderous pressure; soldiers from Algeria, swarthy Turcos with Zonave - Wao's Arram.--A brilliant writer of sentences says : ' I have seen wo- men so delicate that they were afraid to ride, for fear of the horses running away--afraid to gail, for. fear the boat might. npset--afraid to walk for fear that the dew might fall-- but I neyer saw one afraid to be mar: ried. Peemington & Sons. MANUFACTURERS OF REVOLVERS RIFLES. Huskets and Carbines, For tbe United States Service. Also Pocket and Delt Revolvers, Repeating Bifles, Rifle and Shot Gun Barrels, and Gun' Materials, sold by Gun Dealers aud the Trade gererally. In these days of Housebreaking and Rol- bery, every House, Store, Bank, and Office should have one of Reéemington's Revolvers, 'Parties desirons to avail themselves of the late improvements in Pistols, and su- | perior workmanship and form, will find all | | | combined in the new Reemington Revolver, Circulars containing cuts and descrip- tion of our arms will be furnished upon application. BE. REMINGTON, & SONS, Tllion, N.Y. ' ; Moorx x Nicuors, Agents, No. 40 Courtland St. N.Y. 1 1867. IROSPECTUS 1867 J oF . "THE GLOB: NEWSPAPER. OR year 1867 will prob the most.oventful year in the of the British North American Pr Nees. is every reason to believe that im- costume ; soldiers of the ling in {rim uniform of the Imperial Guard, top heavy with bear skin cap 3 workmen | in wooden shoes--such shoes as wonld inake a sensation in Boston, clamp, clamp they go upon the side- walk, worn here in Paris and throngh- ont France by those too poor to wear anything as soft as leather, 'And now the workwomen in coarse dress, bat every one wearing a white ruffled cap. -It is their only] {dress. Never a bonnet have they tely after the assembling of the Tai- | Parliament fa. London, on or about | bof February next, an Act will be sed ging effect to the petitions of the gislative Updies of Canada, Nova Scotia, v Brunswick and Newfoundland uniting all the British 'North A provinces under one Government Legislature. On the pas and | ge of that Act, a Governor-General or Viceroy will be ap- | pointed by the Queen to preside over the | United Provinees be issued for the ele to the Ie April nc nd writs will at o ion of Representat) ral and Local Legislatures, ce | | i In t, it is therefore probable that the rowned, or will {At home or abroad it is ever the same white cay. Look at that space | {around the tower of St. James and you behold it filled with servants and | young children, and every little | | toddling creature; every infant every | chubby checked girl, tambling on' | the grass or making dirt pies, wears | a white rafiled cap." A workwoman | jor servant girl appearing without n | | cap would ba out of her sphere, And | | what strong crealures these servant girls are | They will carry a great it } thoy ever own one | from the ground to thie top of as if it was the easiest task world. a cab | in the MRL MA NE | Sydney Smith. i | TIOW HE LOOKED AND TALKED | Sydney Smith was of portly figure, | stout, indeed clumbsy, with a healthy | look and a self-enjoying aspect. Ile | 'was rapid in movements as wpll ns in words, end evidently studied ease | more than dignity. In his' youth | | college friend used to say to him j| f Sydney, your sense, wit, and clum-| siness always give me the idea of an Athenian carter; and certainly in { his age those who saw or conversed | with him asa stranger would have | had little idea that he was a dirnity | of the ehurchand a canon of St.| Paul. ! It will be easy to imagine that by | commonplace people' he was much | { misunderstood. The buoyancy of| his great heart. was mistaken for levi- ty, and the odd manner in which he Sometimes put things for reverence. | As illustrations, - I may quote the | words which it is said, gave offence to a ¢ serious' and venerable old lady | | one fice morning; 'Open the shut. | ters and let us glorify the room: tl: [sudden shock sustained by a se i- | {tive woman of uncertain age, when | | the month of June made the noonday | {sultry : «Let us take off our flesh and | [sit in our bones; the terror of another | {old woman when Ire told her he! {chained up his Newfoundland dog | | because he had a passion ~ for bres | fasting an, parish Dboys. Reading) ! memories of him, oie clmost ceases | to wonder at the alarm expressed ju | the features of the simple gentleman | who actually heard from Mr. Smith { himself that he had an'intense desire | [to ¢ roast a Quaker," and may fancy | {the terror = juvemle delinquents | | + | elaimed, ' John bring me vy private {many ways of the advice he sent to {the Bishop of New Zealand, 'Not to| {object to the cold curate and roasted rector "on the'sieboard, hoping he would disagree with 'the man who ate himself." It is not difficult to | picture his face of broad hamor lit by | an eternal laugh, when the man who { Was compounding a history of Som I'ertehire families applied to him for | information concerning the Smith's arms, received this answer = * I regret, sir, I cannot contribute in so valuable a work, but the Smiths never bad any arms, and invariably scaled their letters with their thumbs." GETTING Manniep.--Every young irl, now-a-days expects.a rich hus- d. Rich men ought to be abun- dant? In the country, girls are some- times brought up with an idea of twork, and a suspicion that euch may chance to wed a steady, industrious young man, who will be compelled to earn the subsistence of himself and family. Such girls as these learn jow to become worthy. helpmates. ut in town it is different. --From the highest to the lowest class in life, the evailing idea is, thit marriage is to em, at once, above all necessity for exertion'; and "even the servant girl dresses and reasons ns if she en- derlained a romantic confidence in ber. Cinderells he destination of marying a prince, or, at least of being Allen ines with and' married by tie z ,and- will not have been injured by having possessed Jers self of those fitting a station below | the Atlantie Cable, and a special commis- 1 SIX DOLLARS per annum for the Daily t by ito oo 4 people of Upper Can to elect eighty-two r resent Local Legislatures of Upper In, | would be difficult to over-rate the influence | that these elections may exercise on 'the | General Blacksmithii future well-being of the Province. The | Local Government and Legislature of Up- | per_£€anada, to be established in Toronto, | Ww, ave the control of all Crown Lands, | Timber and Minerals within the P of all local Pahlic Works --of Ed of the promotion of Agriculture --ar aH personal rights and rights of property. | The cighty=two men first elected, will be | charged with the duty of placing in opera- | tion the machinery necessary 'for the ad- ministration of these and many other impor- tant public interests; and in their hands may rest the decision whether the future vernment of-our Province shall be as it been for years past, or shall Le or, $0 a3 to secure y and economy | nghout the public service, and the pro- | motion 'of the industrial interests of the country. % The. Federal Government and Legislature will also belargely affeéted by the charac- ter of the eighty-two Represenlatives sent by Upper Canada to the Federal House of | | |i | Commoys. Whether the long reign of lav- | apeeiall ish expenditure and i'l eonsidered legisla- | 1 tion is to be continued, or a better state of | things to be innugurated, will much depend | on the choice of Representatives made by the electors of Upper Canada at the coming election. | Fully alive to the importance of ara ! the public mind to an earnest and candid | consideration. of the numerous important questions shortly coming up for de and obtaining from the Le to be elected a judicious s the publisher of Tire Grong arrangements which will secure inercazed efficiency in every department of the paper. The Editorial staff is being strengthened, and a large corps of short-hand reporters is now being formed for reporting daily, in a style surpassing that 'herétofore i Ton | isl zisla the proceedings of the .Federal and Local Legi res. Arrangements have heen made for securing every night ths European | news and prices current of the same dey | sioner for Tor Groue will attend the coming on. of the Imperial Parhament, and atch tlic debates on the Confederation Bill In the general conduct of the paper fresh efforts will be made in the cpming year to secure that prominence among the journals of the Province which Tue Grong has here tofore maintained. The telegraph wires will be still more largely availed of than in the past; and no expense will be spared in the employment of able correspondents at important points, aud in despatching Re- porters to 'distant places whenever their ser- vices may be required. 'A special commis- sioner for Tum Grone will attend the Paris Exhibition next spring. Arrangements are being made for reporting more systematical- ly than heretofore the proceedings of the Law and Chazcery Courts, and trials at Nisi Prius throughout the Province. On the 7th of December, the *epuliication was commenced of Miss Braddon's Admira- will be continued from week to week as it | ppears ues year: Tn the mechanical excention of the jour- nal very 'great improvements are shortly contemplated. From the commencement of the year, the paper used on the Duily, as well as the Weekly edition, will be of "very superior. quality to that. heretofore used-- and in the course of the coming Spring the paper %ill be printed from a new and bean- tiful fount of type, from the celebrated [* foundry of Milier & Richards, Edinburg. For some months past, the largely increased circulation of Tue Grose has more than equalled the capacity of the presses, and rendered it difficult to publish the news coming in by telegraph and otherwise up to a late hour after midnight, and work off the nécessary number of copies in time for the morning mails. To meet this difficulty, and enable all the 'readers of the pager to be supplied at an early hour of the morning, new Lightning Presses, capabie of working off ten thousand impressions per hour, are about to be added to the establishment, and will place the office in a position of efficiency unsurpassed by any printing office on this continent, - y in Bugland, Other intercsting | will also be published during the ! THE TERMS of subscription will remain as heretofore: edition, and TWO DOLLARS per annum for the Weekly edition, both payable strictly in advance. No paper sent out of the office until the money is paid. A Clubs for the Weskly Globe. The Club rates for the coming year will be as follows : : ~ x sharpened, &e. Griggs, M.D., Port Hope ; and and J. Bolster, M.B., Uxbridge. o [e] nd over | BS erg, and 'the public generally, that he still prepared to do all kinds of Black- { smith work on the shortest notice. Horse Sheeing. Tools, Mill-Picks All work warranted, HENRY. JOHNSTON. Port Perry,8th Aug 1866. il jumped apd tempered. , whether Wood, i-th 7 = ro 4 m tn = PERRY, HARRISON MAW § SON. k done, will do well to give them a call, Plans and PORT RE prepared to contract for and put up Bui Contractors & Builders, Ali the Most Modern Improvements. Brick, or Stone, and to finish them olf in the latest styles, with Port Perry August Ttk, 1866. HARRISON MAW & SON, Parties requiring First Class worl specifications made to order. JOHN NOTT, CABINET WAKER, UNDERTAKER! 4C, BORELIA, C. W. Port Perry, Sept. 5, 1866, 4. GOOD NEWS! Gams, Producing Local Anwsthesie, For NARCOTIC SPRAY Applied to the Extracting Teeth Without Pain, as Invented by Dr. Richardson of London, England, AT C. D. WAID'S DENTAL ROOMS, BROCK STREET, UXBRIDGE! JIL Operations Warranted to give Satisfuc- tion or no Charge, and af Prices which Defy Competition. wv Rerenexces :--Rev. Dr. Shortt and H. P. v. J. T. Byrne r. Carson, Whitby ; Jos. Gould, Esq., Uxbridge, Nov. 23, 1866. 16-tf SIX COI'IES, one yoar TEN do do TWENTY do And an extra opy of The Weekly Globe who gets up Jub of , one 6 i ass copy of The Daily Globe to the { n who gets up the Club of Fifty. EIGHTY COPIES, one gear, for. 100.00 and a copy of The Daily to the. person who gets up the Club. "Fach paper is addressed separately, 'and may be sent to any Post Office. GEORGE BROWN, Publisher and Proprietor. Toronto, 1867. ay ? } ~~ List of Letters April 20d, 1807, not previously advertised, Boynton, Wm R - Lawscn Wm J. Cameron, A W * McGreggor Robt | Qooley A, O'Brien Wm Corbman Dan'l Purdy Jacob Emes Luther Powers J Elliott R Rose Daniel Hoge J HE Snyder S. Hill [len Sharp Peter | Hirtson ; Zwickey John . Kreider John B Zwickey Mra Mafg't tei Karr Solomon. ¢ Persons calling for the above will please ak for advertised letters. ; H, GORDON, Postmaster, | {[ UYsER MERCH {| | WHITBY, CARTWRIGHT, REACH, SCUGOG, MARIPOSA, aud SEVERAL LOTS hie subscriber would say to his custom- | of Wild Land in Mara and Rama; also a number of Village Lots in the Village 8 Port Derry, | | Remaining in the Port Perry: Post-Office] Land for Sale PORT PERRY MILLS, THOMAS PAXTON & Co., ANTS AND DEALERS IN BOARD AND BUNDLE LATHS, Pickets, etc, ete. , ALSO | SEVERAL FIRST CLASS FARMS FOR SALE With Improvements, in tle following Townships, viz. WITH PORT PERRY, August, 1866. AND WITHOUT BUILDINGS, y attended to, 73" Axes; and Bdge | All of which wil be sold on reasonable terms. T. PAXTON, & C 0. 1-tf NEW ARRANGEMENTS ! NO COMPETITION! Defying all Opposition! He again renewed my contracts with' the Toronto Nurseries, T am prepared to supply my patrons with the best article of FRUIT AND ORNAMERTAL TREES, SHRUBS, VINES, AND PLANTS! Ever offered for gale in this Province. NO EUMBUTG!, The Toronto Nurseries have taken the diplomas for display of Fruit Trees since the establisiment of Provincial Exhibitions in this Province. represented the Toronto Nurseries in this and adjoining Counties, and I that when the selection is left to me the trees will give<entire satisfaction. This is the fourth yea am ¢ RE®R Mr. T. Mulcahy, 400 apple trees, 14th Concession Broek; 9th Concession Reach; Mr. Henry Bickle, Brooklin; Clinton Cook, Reach; Mr Taylor Orillia ; Mr. Trull & Mr. Warden, Darlington, and Mr. Jas. Ferguson, Cartwright. I will replace all trees 'that do not grow if planted aceording to my directicne and properly cared for, Port Perry, Ang. 10, 1855. ERENCES. Mr. Wm. J. H. E. HOGG Wholesale and Retail Agent, Box 75, Port Pe McGregor r I have onfident ry. 1-tf HARMONIUMS. » .S. WILLIAMS, i ov Nos. 143, 135, & 147, YONGE Sr, TORONTO. - at the Manufactory. O Port Perry, Nov. 21st, 1866. 0G- Musical Instruments of All Kinds, Can be had, by applying at this Office, the same in Price as rders respectfully solicited. = MAUFACTURER ! a 16-8m JOSEPH BIGELO . MANUFACTURER AND DEALER id : Lumber, Sawed Shingles, Fiour Barrel Heading and Flour Barrel Staves. = gs STOCK ON HANDS AT ALL TIMES! In Sawed A LARGE STC . Also Proprieror of Face planing, Matching, Scroll Sawing, Turning, M etc, etc., doue on the shortest notice ; Port Perry ugust, 10th, 1866. . Part Perry Sash and Door Fagtors: 1 a oulding,| Foundry to DAVID GIBSON. Port Perry, March 28th, 1857. 1 | copy till forbid. w the next. - ; Se hats pias A PELICATION wlio sats h i; NW 4 J § / session of ) eat fi 'OREXCHANGE. for lai ia Cosi alos sive fo TEL He iE \e pol e On i e | "VW ILD AND IMPROVED LAND in the Westarn limits of the Townships of West State of Michigan, opposite Goderich, | ywhithy, and the Eastern limit o oTown- C. W. Will take Machinery or Town pro- ship of East Whitby to Port Perry, 03 perty in exchange, . SSE Fo Sougog. Riis Biss FRSA _ Terms easy. Apply-at the Port Perry October, 17, 1866. 11 3m Oshawa Vindicator, and Whitby Chronicle "SNOT AOTAIN vik k [[1€INE. f) 0 LYN JAVA H L di tld 0 CHVANLS, 0 0 S00) INLINTE SSVI) IS Jlid if . qug nok Keg IOS pues}, of) 03 word zs pag ¢ ul, pue 'eourApe SJU3D (OC 9A®S 'nue sod oe (Aro the 'vous membrane of the bowels, i | pee mt re ™ PORN % T re Sanative Ha Toy MAIN STREET, UXBRIDGE, J. L. MARGACH, - Chemist and Druggist, | Dealer in first-class English DRUGS and CHEMICALS, PATENT MEDICINES, DYE STUFFS, PAINTS, OILS, PUTTY, VARNISHES, TUBE-PAINTS PAINT BRUSHES, cfc., ele. | {BOOKS & STATIONERY, Slates, Pens, Ink, Pencils, Per- famery, Combs, Hair Brushes Toilet and Fancy articles. A x Maroacn's Pun Marcacw's Coven Owryest and Pine Mixture has never Prunsare warranted to/failed to cure coughs cure the most obsti-land colds. It eases nate cases of this dis-|Asthmaand prevents tressing, mala d y.-- consumption, Ointment, 50cts, per|25c. per Bottle. pot ; pills 25¢. HORSE AND CATTLE MEDICINES constantly on hand. Family Receipts and 'Physician's Drceskiiitions carefully prepared on the shortest notice. 6 2 HARGACH'S Are conslgntly increasing in public favor. Essences of a superiof quality sold wholesale or retail. Every article sold warranted to be of the prige. There have been added from time to time such articles as are generally required in the trade, and the Stock will be' found as varied as the demand, XG Terms invariably Cash, Uxbridge, Aug. 22, 1866. DR, RADWAY'S PILLS, 4 YARE THE BEST PURGATIVE FILLS. ARE THE BEST PURGATIVE PILLS. ARE THE BEST PURGATIVE FILLS, Xo STRAINING. Li \ No GRIPING. NO FALSE CALLS TO THE WATER CLOSET. BUT A BRISK AND THOROUGH EVACUATION FROM THE BOWELS IS ALWAYS SECURED. ' Newly Discovered Principles in Purgatives, "Dr. Radway's Pills are tho best Pargativo Pills in tie world, and the only Vegetable Substitute for Calomel or Mercury ever discovered. They are composed of VEGETABLE EXTRACTS FROM ROOTS, HERBS, PLANTS, GUMS, SEEDS, FLOWERS, BARKS, FRUITS AND WEEDS, PRE- PARED IN VACUO. One grain of the extrast of the medicinal propor. ties ofRadway's Pills, possoss a greater curative power | over disease than a thousand of the crude and inert materials that enter inte all other pills in use. These Pills are compounded of the active medicinal proper- Lies bf the Roots, Herbs, Plants, Flowers, Gums, &o. of which they arc composed. Ono dose will prove their superiority to all other pills. They PURGE, CLEANSF, PURIFY, HEAL, SOOTHE, CALM, STRENGTHEN, QYVIGORATE, And REGULATE THE SYSTEM." | Their Great Combinations. { They are Aperient, Tonic, Laxative, Alterative, Stim- ulant, Counter Irritant, Sudorific. AS EVACUANTS, I _ The; | Pills A loes, or Croton or Harlem Oil, or Elaterjum ; and more soothing and héaling than Senna, or Rheu? i barb, or Tamaginds, or Castor O1l. | IN SUDDEN ATTACKS OF | Ini of the Bowels or Stomach, 1. | Pancreas or Kidneys, Bilious Cholic or. Bi Fever, Erysipelas or Congestive Fever, Small Pox, Measles, or Bearlet Fever, : SIX TO EIGHT OF DR. RADWAY'S REGU- LATING PILLS! WILL PURGE THE PRIMA. RY CAUSE OF QHESE FROM JHE SYS IX IIOURS. One dose of Dr. Radway's Pills will cleanse the tinal canal; and purge from the bowels nll off: and retained humors, as thoroughly as lobelia or tho | best approved emetic will cleanso the stomach, with- out producing' inflammation, irritation, weakness, RAINING, or othor unpléasant symptoms.® There are no «thor purgative plils in the world that will secure this desi- deratum. Spleen, BETTER THAN CALOMTI, OR BLUE PILI. BETTER THAN. CALOMEL OR BLU ~ BETTER THAN CALOMEL OR BLUE PiLL AS ALTERATIVES, They exercise a more powerful influence over tho liver and its secretions than calomel, mercury, blue pill, dence their importance In cases of Liver Com) and Spleen Difficulties, Jaundice, Dyspepsia, tacks, Headache, &c. In the treatment of | Dilious, Yellow, Typheid, and other reducing I } thoy are superior to quinine, Their influence ex over the entire system, controlling, strengthening bracing up the relaxed and wasting energies, an | Iating nll the gecretions to the natural performance of | their duties, cleansing and purifying the blood, and | purging'from the system all diseased deposits and ime pure humors. DR. RADWAY'S PILLS. ONE TO SIX BOXES WILL.CURR | Costivencss, = |Jaundice, Rush of Blood Constipation, |Congst've, Fe-| tothe Head, Congestion, ver, Obstructions, Heart Disease, Sleepiness, Dropsy, Disease of Kid-| Gen' Debility,| Acute rysipe- ney & Bladder,| Dimness of §'t| las, Disease of Li-|Fits, Headache, + ver, Lown'sof Spir-| Bad Breath, Biliousness, its, Inflamation of '| Typhus Fever, |Quinscy, the Intestines, Ship Fever, |Dyspepsia, Apoplexy, A) Fe-| Measles, Enlargement ;_ ver, Melancholy, | of the Spiven, Loss of Appe-|Hysterics, Scurvy, tite, Amenorrhea, | Whooping I Fainting, Cough, Inflammation, | Dizziness, Worms, Palpitations, |Retention of {Bad Dreams, Scarlet Fever, rine, Pleurisy. Bilious Fever, I AM CURED. #1 have taken six dose} of Radway's Pills, of threo pills each, in six days ; they cured mo of Constipation. ivhecy and Dyspepeta. 1 bave taken Pet's, Amery; and for years, wid could temporar) TET stopped the use of those pills for a week my-old complaint would appear. 7s Pills cured me. HEN LENNEIT, U.5.C.S» "I havo suffired with Dyspepsia and. Liver C m. for seven i J all sorts of pills 'would give] Msianjerary comfort, but was com- lied to tako them ail the time, bye used one box . Radway's Pills ; 3m caret. 1 have not takeu of medicine in six mouths, Pusticle C. M. CHILDS, Roxbury, Mass, STRAINING AND TENTSNTS, PIR NING AN TENE, results of Inflammation or irritation , Induced by. dra-tia dmperfect pills, Instead of being \lssolved tho chile, are carried to the lower bowels, and in- duce a peristaltic movement or evacuation by their 5 = Nene iL Hraintug, Sn, Yipunig fenesmus, aj requent se cn Bia fate closet, (hat patiens underg wih. take these . you would avoid theso annoy inces, whenever a , tako a dose of 3 RAD 1ING PLS. WILL PURGE THOROUGHLY AND LEAVE THE BOWZLS REGULAR. tho me oF : i dc. ater fed ie ml : Oil, ections alethor mets com: Tulod. A Goya of Radway 4401s wi rte De 3 As os Directoy Ba =t3, Medieino No DomBvery Agent has b mid new made Pits A ated! Engraved Let Fk: ion 1a seroro cases Bowols, Faia an Price, per box. ler Prico - ANTI-BILLIOUS PILLS best quality and at the lowest remuncrative® ate more certain and thorough than the Drastio "PILES, may roly on A posjive 3 Bg fen ¢