Rensselaer Union, Volume 1, Number 22, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 February 1869 — Page 2

Cfce jHtttsschfr fttiuon. Thursday, February 26, 1869- | liyATA’ ft JAMKS, EDITORS.

The Tenure of Office Law.

’Chert sfcinit to be a disposition ♦*« tlrt part of a f* w extremist; in tKe tTuited States Senate, under the leadership of Mr. SfMjncn, to oppose the repeal of the Tenure of Office law. The law wa- enacted for an especial purpose, to prevent the occurrence of eertain contingencies. — ; The danger which the law was created to meet ceased to threaten, with the election of President Grant, and they will have been completely dispelled upon hisinauguration, next week. The law will then have become a dead letter, so far as Its original object was concerned. It then will be, in fact, and now is in effect, a useless incumbrance upon the statute books, 'conducive of nothing but embarassment and contention. The purest of motives may have moved the framers of the law and some good may have resulted from, and some evils been prevented by its workings ; but that it has worked unsatisfactorily in too many ease* will not be denied. How ever pure were the motives yhieh made it a law, it is certain that it hn6 been Poly too successfully made use of by bad men, who were pillaging the public moneys, to protect them from removal. It may have protected valuable officers from arbitrary and unmerited removal; but it alao extended its protection over the most unblushing knaves and consummate scoundrels. It not, only circumscribed the pow ers of a perverse Executive in his revenge, preventing the commission of possible evils; but it also completely shielded the worst villains- from merited punishment. And the evils it shields more than balances the evils it is likely tb present.

General Grant is pledged to retrenchment, economy, and the faithful collection of our national revenues, that his pledges are sineer his record is evidence; but how ran he fulfill his pledges if he can not remove corrupt men from office? Wherein will General Gkast's administration be an improvement upon t.J»e unpopular one he succeeds if be is not permitted to introduce reforms? and how are reforms to be attained without the power to remove wicked and incompetent men from office? The burthens ol taxation are Tery heavy and grievious to be , borne, but the intelligence of the ! American masses teaches them to I mdure with patience those evils which there is a prospect of curing within a reasonable period of time. All classes demand retrenchment, and economy in the administration of the Government. Then let this useless and harmful law be repealO.f Tot the -new—AdininUtrationbegin at once the measures of reform, retrenchment and economy, without the unnecessary embarassmenl of a law which only serves to cast an unmerited distrust upon the Presidential office. J2s*”Hon. James N. Tyner was elected to Congress in the Eighth District at the special election on last'Saturday, by a larger majority tKun was given Hon. D. 1). Pratt in October lust. The democracy tried to get up a division in the republican ranks, by pretending to support Judge Biddle of Logansport, as an independent candidate, while at the aame time they were secretly circulating tickets with S. A. Hall’s name on theme The pretty little scheme wis divulged, and 8. A. Hall did not sneak into Congress on Judge Biddle's popularity. Lfudge Biddle was not a candidate and the democracy used bis name without his knowledge or consent. 13T tJcnfett, Messrs. DiC«»oX and Tbusleb, who were sending circulars to county officers asking them to submit to a liberal assessment, to be U6cd as a fund to defeat certain bills before the Legislature regulating the fees of county officers, have a smelling committee of .seven from the House after them to find out who gare them “assurances”* that the bills would lm defeated if “a sufficient fvmd was raised.” We trust that the committee will do its work thoroughly and put a slop to these corrupt barque being made to defeat bill*. . —Senator Saulabury of Delaware fell and broke hie leg last Saturday evening. It is supposed be was sober. —.«,*»» roost UX&tu body in

LEGISLATIVE SUMMARY.

XLVI GENERAL ASSEMBLY j Krtnlsr Tuesday, February 18. Skn' avk.—The Senate soM'ion was j consumed in Committee of the Whole, in (liacussiou of the “Omnibus Educational bill.” Noconclu- ; sion readied, when the Senate adJ Jeuroed. Hoi '-r. —Messrs. Welbodi. Admire, Thderwond and Hamilton, ! submitted petitions representing i that there are 120 Homeopathic J physicians in tho State, and have thousands of patrons, and that any bill looking to the erection of a Medical College should, in justice, provide for a Department of Homeopathy. Messrs. Stewart, Furnass, Vatcr, Admire, McFadinand Milliken, presented petitions praying for retrenchment, and as n step in that direction asking a reduction in the fee* of county officers. Petitions were received asking for a prohibitory liquor law, to prePbnt railroad extortions, on gravel roads, on the education of colored children, for teaching German in our common schools, and in refererence to our common schools. House Bill No. 230, an act abolishing the office of Prosecuting Attorney for the Court of Common Pleas, and transferring the criminal business to the Circuit Courts, wrs indefinitely postponed, t • ■ -■■■■- Wkonesday, Feb. 17. Senate. — A number of petitions were presented for a Homeopathic Department in the proposed Medical College. The claim of W illiam Hannntuan for $2,700 for services as Military Claim Agent. The Senate voted Aaron Houghton, the sitting member from the counties of Pike, Dubois and Martin, is not, and that Win. 11. Montgomery is, omitted to the seat Mr. Montgomery was sworn in. Senate hill No. 256, was introduced and passed. Tho afternoon session was consumed in the discussion ol the “Omnibus Educational” bill.

Hoisk.—A number'bf petitions were presented -for a prohibitory liquor law; fora chair of Homeopathy in connection with any Medical College that may be erected by the State; for a reformatory for girls and women; for Morgan raid claims. House bills introduced: No. 253, to amend section 1 of the artble for the incorporation of cities and towns. No. 254, to establish the 26th Common Pleas Court. No. 255, to save pending suits, affected, by the act to repeal sections 43 and 44 of the act prescribing who may make a will, etc. No. 256, to so re-district the State as to admit of the election of five Supremo Judges. No. 257, to amend section 1 of the Supervisors’ act. No. 258, to amend section 20 of the Supervisors’, act. —[relative to road assessments.] No. 259, to amend section l of the act to provide for the protection of fish, so as to extend the time. No. 260, to provide for the publication of the proceedings of County Commissioners, Township Trustees and Grand Juries, in two papers representing two political parties. No. 261, to make a special appropriation tor tiie House of Refuge. No. 2C2, to amend sections 3 & 8, of the act regulating PetroleumolL . No. 263, to repeal the act of March 11, 1867, to amend the Evansville City Charter. No. 264, fur the repeal of the death penalty, and to promote the cause of humanity in the Stale. No. 265, to repeal the act to provide for the protection of fish. No. 266, creating a Board of Immigration. defining their duties, and declaring the time when the same shall take effect. Mr. McFadin, of Cass, submitted a resolution in favor of attaching two townships ol Carrol county to the county of Cass. No. 267, to authorize the Auditor of State to adopt a uniform system of book-keeping, such as now in use by the Township Trustees. No. 268, for the preservation of the Indiana battle flags? military relics, trophies, etc. No. 269, declaratory of the common law, as to the duty of railroads and other commou carriers, in relation to the transportation of freights, and to prevent exorbitant rates, etc. House Bills passed — No. 3, 293, 244. House bills 175 and2£3».w«*vrtiidefinitelvpostponetf:"' . The 1 louse devoted the afternoon to the discussion of the bill appropriating for the construction of a Normal School building at Terre Haute, and to the amendment of the Registry law*. The House refused to order the former bill engrossed. The latter was engrossed. J Thursday, February 18. Senate. —A resolution to print one thousand copies of tbe address of Professor Daniel Read, made before the members ot the legislature jpn Wednesday evening, was adopted.' Senate bill No. 178, to fix the time, for holding the courts in the First Judicial Circuit, was amended and passed. Senate bill 13$, to amend the lawconcerning the relocation of county seats, was passed. The afternoon session was consumed in committee of the whole in discussing the Omnibus Educational Bill. Horde. —Bill* paased— House bill ld», for the relief of u/jririkJL- J® - -ari. ‘Y A JJ!*>N , • ft<fi Eli

Nicholas Morcback and his sureties from the payment of a judgment J against them for public moneys that were stolen from said Morehack while acting as, a township officer. House hill 05, to amend section 15 of an act to incorporate manufacturing and mining feoippanics. House hill 45, to amend sec. 351 of an net to revise, simplify and abridge the rules of practice in civil eases. House bill 83, to amend sections Isl, 17 and IS of tbe act regulating the fees of officers, with an amendment increasing ihft pay of jurors from $1,25 to $2,00 per Jiem. House bill 34, to enable incorporated towns to lav out streets and alleys, and to make improvements, etc. House bill 56. prohibiting prize fighting, prescribing penalties, ftc. House bill 18, to amend sections 2 and 4 of the act for the incorporation of building and loan associations. House bill 94, to amend section 29 of an act defining felonies, prescribing penalties for officers accepting undue rewards or bribes. Friday, Feb. 19. Senate. —The following Senate bills were introduced: No. 257, provides for the erection of a Governor's residence. i No. 268, to allow parties to a partnership to bring suit in tbe name of the firm in pertain cases. No. 259, to authorize the Governor to issue a patent to Samuel Cooper for certain Michigan road lands in St Joseph county. The biU passed. No. 260, to increase the fees of County Treasurers for collecting delinquent taxes, and providing a penalty for a failure to collect when they could have done so l>y duo diligence. No. 261, to allow incorporated cities and towns to erect buildings for fire and other purposes on the docks or banks of canals. No. 262, to provide tor the verification of certain facts concerning hills of exchange or promissory notes. No. 263, to authorize Notaries Public, Clerks, Justice*, and other officers to administer oaths connected with claims for pensions free of charge, and providing a penalty for violation. No. 264, supplemental to the act requiring surviving partners to file inventories and appraisements. No. 265, to amend section 16 of the Supervisors’ act. No. 266, to amend section 68 of the Civil Practice act. No. 267, to prevent the destruction or larceny of mortar or stone. No. 268, to fix tho times for holdingcourts in the Filtli Common Picas District, Bill passed. Severn! House bills were read a first time and referred to committees. House bills No. 59 and 244 were passed." The resolutions reported from the Committee of the \V hole, upon the financial features of tho Governor s message, were discussed. A resolution was referred to the Committee on Rights and Privileges, instructing them to inquire into tbe authorship of a certain letter published in the Cincinnati Commercial , signed “Jargo.” A proposition from W. Henderson and J. S. Bradley, to pay SBO,OOO for University Square, was laid before the Senate. A discussion upon the proposed constitutional amendment, to prevent the assumption of any of the Wabash and Erie Internal improvement bond; was pending when the Senate adjourned. House.—Petitions were presented praying for a chair of Homeopathy in the proposed Medical College; for a prohibitory liquor law; for the reduction of salaries of county officers ; for damages sustained by the Morgan raid; for opening of public highways; for tbe repeal of the Gravel Road law. A communication from the State Board of Agriculture, recommending the purchase by tho State of the geological collection left by the late David Dale Owen at 830,000. Bills passed. —Senate bill 133, authorizing the removal of county seats on the petition of forty-five percent, of the inhabitants of a county. Senate bill 81, House bill 256, Senate bills 268, 178, 259, 222; joint resolution No. 10; Senate bills 56, 138, 27, and 119. House Bills Indefinitely Postponed.—No. 141, 207, 81, 7 26 Willard asking an appropriation of $5,000 for his relief, was reported against and disallowed. House adjourned until Monday. Saturday, February 20. Skxatk.—The resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution with reference to the old Internal Improvement bonds was laid over until Tuesday next. The following bills were introduced: Senate bill 269, to amend section 5 of the act regulating the lees of officers. ! Senate bill 270, : to provide 'for certain claims for ditching, out of the general swamp land funds. Senate bill 271, to prevent drunkenness; providing for the registration of habitual drunkards, and providing a penalty for selling intoxicating liquors. Senate bill 272, to incorporate the Indiana Homestead Company. Senate bill 273, to authorize the issuing of arm's and accoutrements j to regularly organized military j companies. a MoxdajTV Feb. 22, j Senate. —The following Senate

bills were intrpduced: No. 274, regulating the fees of County Clerks in relation to Administrator and Guardians. No. 275, to amend the act for the the Incorporation of Insurance Companies. No. 276, for the relief of the heira of Richard Donovan, deceased. Senate bill No. 6, to amend sco. 1 of the act declaring abandoned certain unfinished railroads, waa passed. ! Senate bill No. 174, to provide for : the measurement of corn and hay in 1 bulk, was indefinitely postponed. ! The Senate then adjourned in honor of {he birthday of Washing- ' ton. Monday, Fob. 22. House.— Mr.-Wildman, of Howard, by consent, submitted a claim Of the Lafayette ft Indianapolis Railroad, amounting to $496, which waa referred to the Committee on Claims | without reading. Senate joint resolution No. 7, instructing our Senators and requesting our RepresenUtives to use their influence and votes for the repeal of the Tenure-of-Office act, waa rend a third tirno and passed. Ayes 59, nocs 8. Senate bill No. 123, to amend seotion 17 of the act M the organization of County Boards, etc., failed for want of a constitutional majority. Senate bill No. 94, touching the consolidation of railroads, and declaring tho effect ol the same, with amendments, was passed. Senate bill No. 96, prohibiting certain officers of courts and counties from practicing law, failed for want of a constitutional majority. The House thon adjourned in resucot to the memory of Washington, of whose birthday this was the anniversary.

MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. Breckinridge is in W ashingtor. The South American allies offer Lopez a truce. Dana has been presented with a $250 velocipede. *» If' Commodore Vanderbilt made $lO,000,000 in one day recently. England is now paying $75,000,000 a year for her standing army. Within the last six months, 2,000 persons have died of small-pox in San Francisco alone. It is stated that the Rothschilds i purchased two millions of United ! States bonds recently, i George W. Bazin is a Boston | printer who has worked 60 years nt j the case and is still at it. ! The news from Cuba indicates that i the insurrection is becoming more and more formidable daily. The very latest is velocipede candy. The maker suggests that it is not worked with the feet. Private letters from Paris state that General Dix will resign the Ministry to France in tie spring. Fred Douglas says, in his lecture, that if the nigger can stand Congress, Congress ought to be ablo to stand, him. —The French government has ordered a frigate to Cuba, to protect the interests of French citizens I there. . , —On the 2tfth the President signed the patent granting James F. Joy ,113,478 acres of the Cherokee neutral lands. * Twelve years ago a Ncwburg, New York, brewer commenced business with a peck of malt. He is now worth $200,000. Joseph Medill has earned a delicate and appropriate compliment. Somebody calls him the George Francis Train of the West. The members of the Rhode Island Legislature are paid one dollar per day. They all walk home every night, and back in tho morning. It is estimated that a million ol francs art cards every ' P«rU. The oards eight thousand franos per The Independent says that Miss Susan D. Anthony is a masculine woman, tall, musqplar, with a strong jaw, a sharp tongue, and a kindly smile. One hundred and twenty velocipede pateuts have been applied for already in this country. One hundred caveats, in addition to the above, are also on file. The Richmond (Va ) papers complain of the city authorities for having leased one of the principal pub*, lie square's of that city at $125 a year “for a cornfield and a hog pen.” Governor Holden, of North Carolina, on behalf of the loyalists of that State, has telegraphed to the North Carolina Senators to oppose any bill reducing the Federal army, which may result in a reduction of the garrison in that State. Here is the verdict ol a Coroner’s jury near Pittsburg: ‘’That the said Catharine Reamer, being seduced, and moved by the devil, at Shalertown aforesaid, did feloniously and of malice forethought, strangle and murder herseli; against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,”

—The proclamation of Governor DroWnlow, declaring martial law in tb« counties of Ovorton, Jaekaon, Maury, Giles, Lawrence, Gibspn, Madison and Haywood, and ord'eringTGcneral Cooper to send militia to them, excites much uneasiness among the so-called consevatives, who profess to fear that it is tho beginning of serious trouble in Tennessee. —Just as the westward bound train started from Fort Wayne on Saturday evening, some roughs provoked a fight with the conductor, who made a vigorous application of his lantern to their heads. The police arrested tho offending individuals and took them to the lock-up. —Marion county makes the largest bid for the Agricultural College. The commissioners agree to donate SIOO,OOO, and the heirs of jthe late ‘Calvin Flecher agree to donate twenty-seven acres of valuable real estate, to the College, if it is located at Indianapolis or within three miles of it. —A Detroit paper says: “During the greatest excitement in the female convention at Chicago, a hairmattress maker offered SIOO for the privilege of sweeping out the hall after the meeting,-*,— That fellow ought to have his head swept with the but end of a broom. The Wisconsin Senate voted to assent to the formation of the State of Superior from Northern Wisconsin and Michigan. A dashing youngster of 79 summers took unto himself a blushing bride of sweet 72, last week, in St. Joseph county. Mr. and Mr 9. A. P. Andrews, of LaPorte, celebrated their golden wedding on the 15th inat. The Honse of Representatives has passed the Copper Tariff bill over the President’s veto. [From the Cincinnati Commercial, February 14th.]

Good Policy in Advertising.

The real estate dealers ~bT Chicago have been holding a meeting ami fixing up an organization that they call a union. The main thing under discussion at the meeting was the price of advertising in the Chicago newspapers. It is very curious that the dealers seemed to think that one newspaper was as good as. another to advertise i and that they should discriminate against those that charged high prices. The fact that an advertisement in a paper that charged twelve and one-half cents per line might be worth ten limes as much to the advertiser as if it were in a paper charging four cents a line, did not. seem to occur to the dealers. And several of them-were so idiotic as to talk of running up the circulation of a newspaper with cheap advertising. There is nothing that kills a newspaper as fast at cheap advertisements. They fill up the space in which the paper could "be made interesting, an<L being unprofitable, the whole concern sinks. The only healthy policy it to charge a good price for advertisements in proportion to circulation —that is, the number of papers circulated, and the classes es persons among whom they are circulated—and thue obtain a loros revenue out of a small space , and use the larger portion of the paper for reading matter of general interest, keeping up the circulation and increasing it, and with mantaining and advancing the value of space. The sickliest and most hopeless printed sheets, by mistake called newspapers, are those in which there arc great masses of advertising, cheap and nasty, tumbled in without order, cared for by no one, and therefore worthless

;^MW! KNtSEUERTIMmrmE —■ 1 ■ iwpuicr — GOOD BARGAINS. J. W COATS takes pleasure in announelog to the citisensof Rensselaer andsurronnding etior *ry that he le prepared to fnrnUh all kinds of FIRST QUALITY CIGARS of the beet mannfactnre,and at low prieee. My Pine Cut Cnewlng, Plug and Smoking TOBACCOS, MOUNTAIN DEW, NATURAL LEAF, NAVY, TEN 8, TWENTIES, 4.C., &C. are all Select Brands, of the Best Qnality, atad wiil be sold as low as in any market in the West ! MY ENTIRE ATTENTION IS GIVEN, TO THE TRADE, and I flatter myself that I can g giro eaiiefaetioo ‘ ■ Remember the place and gl** ms a enlist LIBERAL CORNER— sign of the 810 INDIAN. I W. COATS

fioofWs IfitbiciitM. hoofum’s oeriax bittehsT „ AXD !„ Hoofland’s German Tonic. fht Crs*t leatdin for ill Ditcaiet of tha j Ilf MR, STOMACH, OB DIOBSTirB * OBOAXS, HOOFLAND’S GERMAN BITTERS U eomyomi o t ths par. Jalesi (or. U ‘bay «™ Udracte) of ' L l Horbo, and B.rk., —-n-. . preparefrom at *MK odmidurt of any kind. HOOFLAND’S GERMAN TONIO, U . mUutloi of .11 tho lngrodlonU of tho Bilim, with tho purMt quality of Santa Crut Orun, to., making ono of tho moot plamaanl nog afraaabU remadlau avar ofcrad to the public. Thooo prufbrrlnf a Medicine ft*, from AlrohoH# ndatutara, *UI uae Hoofland’s German Bitters. Theta who htn no objection to tho eombinotion of the BUtorOp M stated, will nor HOOFLAND’S GERMAN TONIO. Thor or. both equally good, aad contain tho Minn medicinal Tlrtnoo, tho eholee between tho two being n men matter of taoto, tho Tonlo being the mom ftlittHf. The Motaaob, from a variety of oaniea, oa.h aa Indignation, Dyapopula, Nottoui DabilUy, ate., la nary apt to h. t It. fafcoMoan deranged. The Llr.r, sympathising a. Ms .. M ioaa with tha Sloomab. than haaoaaa aSbat *«h lh « r “°U •f whlah la that tho patlant aah bn from NTtral or more of tho folia #lng dlooaooa > Constipation, Flatulence, Inward Hlm Fulnnaa of Blood to the of the Btoiuaoh, Nan sea, Heartburn. Disgust for Food, Fulnene or weight in the Stomach, Sour Eructations, Sinking or Fluttering at the Pl* of the Stomaoh, Swimming of the Head, Hurried or Difficult Breathing. Fluttering at the Heart. Choking er Suffocating Sensations when in a Dying Posture, DimneisofViitlon, Dots or Webs before the Bight, Dull Pain in the Head, Deficiency of Perspiration, Yellowness of the Skin and Dree, Pain in the Bide, Back, Chest, Limbs, etc., Bud- . ... den Flushes of Heat, Burning in the Flesh, Constant Imaginings of Bril, and Great Depreaaf-'m of Splrite. Tha anfarar from thaaa dla ■—» .hould exersM* tha graalaat .autlon in tha selection of a remedy f<U bis was, par sharing only that whlth ha i. aa.urad from hi. lnvasttgu»( WTtloni. and i»qalriM powa.. JWI •« true merit. is ill folly com ponndad, la fraa from Injurious ingradtauu, and ha. established for ItMlf a raputatlon for tha aura of Ibaas diseases. In ihia conneetion wa would submit thoas wall-known r.medl.c—- . Hoofland’s German Bitters, AND HOOFLAND’S GERMAN TONIO. rXIPARID BT Dr. C. AT. JACK.SOX, % PHILADELPHIA, PA Tw.nly-»wo rears ei nee thay were Bral Introduced late thtc country from Germany, daring which Mine they hare undoubtedly performed more enree, aed benefited enfferfag humanity to a greater exieot, than say other remedies known to the public. Thee# remedies will effectually sore Liver Oe«a plalnt, Jana d, **> ela. Chronic or Nerron, r>e billty, Chron !• Dterrhma. Dleeaae of the Kldnaya, end all Dlseaiea MAta arising fr.m a Disordered "-J Liver, Stem ash, er intestines. DEBILITY, XMUlting from any Causa whatever FBOSTBATION OFTHE SYSTEM, induced bp Severe Labor, Hardships. Exposure, Fevers, do. Mere Is so medicine extaat equal lo the., r.a. dlaa If anch eaeee. A tone end rigor 1. Imparted to tha whole syatem, the appetite la streugthaned. food la enjoyed, the stomach digests promptly, tbs bleed la purified, tbs complexion becomes sound and healthy, the yellow tlage It eradicated from the eyes, a bloom 1< given to the cheeks, and the week aad asrvons Invalid becomes a strong aud healthy being. rxßSOxa adtaxckd ixntrs, Aad feeling the hand of time weighing heavily ape* them, wtth all Its attendant lilt, will Ind In the sac as this BITTERS, or tha TONIC, aa elixir that will) lnaill naw Ilfs into thair veins, restore In ■ mee.nre the eaerry and ardor of more youthful day*, bail* ' up thair ahruakan forma, and give health aud happiness to their remaining years. NOTICE. It Is a well-eatabltahed fact that fully eae-halfef the female portion amMmnMW, ofonr pnpnlaMon are eel J doin in the enjoyment of f good health: »r, to me thair ffiRV. M) own expi re “ never feel They are lan B nld. devoid as all snargy, axtramaly nervous, and hara aa appetite. To this elast of peraons the BITTERS, er the : TONIC, la aapcelally recommended. • WEAK AND DELICATE CHILDREN Are made strong by the use es either of the*, remedies. They wilt euro every ease of if XRXffXtTfi, |. without fail. I Thonaauda of certificates have accumulated in tha | hand, of tha proprietor, but apace will allow es the publication of bat afew. Those, It will be observed, i are mea of note and of each standing that they must ha believed. TESTIMONIALS. Hon. Geo. W. Woodward, CUM Justus es tht Supreme Court of Pa., writesi Philadelphia, March 18,1S«T. "1 find‘Hoof JBBv land's German BUtere' AU It a good lonic, useful In diaeaeea of the digeatire organa, and of great bene flt ln '“•** °f debility, and want of nerrena nation In tha ayatam. Yonra, truly, GEO. W. WOODWARD.* Hon. James Thompson, Judge of tha Supreme Court of Ptnneylvanlee. Philadelphia, April 38,1868. "1 consider ‘Hooltnd'a German Bitters' a *ol volte medicine lu caaa of attacks of Indigestion or Dyspepsia. I eaa certify this from my experience •fit. Tonre, with respect, JAMBS THOMPSON. * From Rev. Joseph H. Kennard, D.D., raster of the Tenth Baptlet Church, Philadelphia. Mr. Jackson—Dear Sir: I have bean frequently requested to connect my name with rccommsadatlons of different kinds of medlelnm, but regarding tha practice 11 °* l of my appro p r ‘ a t e aphere, I ■( have lu all names de MA rllnrEbot With n clear various in atanceannd partlenlarly ln my own family, of ihe naefnloaaa of Dr. Hoofland'a German Blttera, I depart for once from my nanal coarse, to express my rail conrlctlon last, for general debility of the eyetem, and eepedotty far Liver Complaint, Hie a east ami valuable preparation. In some cams It may fktl; bill usually, I doubt act, It will be very beneficial to jhoae who suffer from the above causes. / Teur*c.ryrj.,toctfn!lv ' * J. U. KKnNAHD, . . Eighth, b«low CoAtM 9L . From Rev. E. 0. Fendall, Aeetetant Editor Christian Chronicle, Philada. 1 have derived decided benefit from the nae 01 Booland’a German Bittern, and feel It my privilege fio recommend them aa a moat valuable toale, to all Who are coffering from general debility-or from dismiss arising from derangement of the liver. Tout* traly. X. S. FENDALL

CAUTION. ■eodand'a O.rman Rrmedies ere eeunterfelled. ' ■ae thst tbs slnetere es C. M. JACK EON Ison the BaagManulhetoVe st the Onaaa Medidoeßtote, Ho. «1 AKCH Street, FblUdal phis, re. i CBAMLMB M. XTJJTB, Proprietor, Formerly C. M. JACKSOH A Co. PRICES. Ihlul'i Oensee Bitten, perbottle, . fit OS •« “ “ belt deiee, . *OO ■eoSead'o Honors Toale, pet ap le nil botOse, fit M poT bottU, or e hafidMM for «T SO •L Do sot forgot to examine woll the srtMs haw. la erdes to get the geaaiae FOR SALE BY Druggists and Storekeepers in Etirt Town m tb« Writ** Sxatm 3 « iy. '4

Ufij SbtifriigfmtnfH. . • • 4 y eur can 1,6 m " de ky ~' , e «Nen*u, | qpeJUUU ueltiug my U«w »ml rtutali In. i vonlion. Addrenn J. AIIEARN, 8.1 Second Street, Baltimore, Md. 1-SI.4 W 150 TimchfrgWmiU^rr' S7.'.TOSI2OrER MONTH ; lorfull pn r . T nulura addrrM “Tlia Peoplo'n Jmironl," Pliil.idplphla, Pn. • 1 nn T 0 , U9nn' ,,r r v'i ! SIUU qpZUUto pood Agent! ic\v i onr Patent Non-corrosive While Wire C tfA. it lints. State ago and pant oct upntlon, aud add rent (lie American Wire Oey, 75'W|||| al rf St., N. Y., or 16 Dearbon St .Chicago, 111 l-#l-4w-Aficntu Wanted,—Fo« the only Cte-l engraving of Gen Grunt and hla family pub- ] Halted with thrlr approval. Engraved hr | Sartain. -fM*» 15 by 19. J 2 00. 100 per ceuf. to ngenU. Adlrcan GOODSPEED dr. C 0,," Chicago, or No. 37 Park Row, N. Y.'^r - ' 1 21 -IV NEW BOOK—2OO ENGRAVINGS. THE FARMER’S AND MECHANtp'N MANDAf,-Edited bv Gr.o. E. Wagfico, Jr-, Anlltor of “Draining for Profit,” “KlemenU of Agriculture,” die, A book of great value to working men of all trados and occupations. 500 pages. Agents wanted.*—' Send for 16 page Circular. TREAT dr CO,,' Publisltera, 654 Broadway, N. Y. 1-21-41? Agents wanted to 3ell the “PENH LETTER BOOK,” For Copying Letter* Without Preaa or Water This great Time, Labor and Money Saving Invention fills a long-felt WHUt, Bringing a really indlapcnsible feature of business within the reach of all. — Price $2,25 and vpxeard. None see it but to praise its simplicity and convenience, as It secommicnds itself, and sells at sight.. Adapted to every kind of business. It does not play ont, us (he first ual* is only abegiuiting. For testimonials, term, Sic., address P. GARRETT# CO., 122 S. Clark St., Chicago, 111. 1-21 it Wanted! Wanted! A GENTS of either sex, In every tovfn and f\ village, for tho largest ONE DOLLAR SALE In the country. The mnnllest aMt-, clea sold cun lie exchanged fur a Silver-PtM-ed five-bottled Revolving Castor, or your choice cf 200 uriicles upon our exchange list. Commissions to Agents larger limn ever.— Send for Clrcolnr. 8, «!. TUOHPHO* A t!»„ l-21-4t 116 Feceral Street, Boston, Mass. We are < oni\« fg-fl OHRtiMHAIICffiIWR, H jwUSA. laCfcvk’ff OKm ot Dit’t buliiM’tlflbMfeMMa i HRKSRNT TO .ANY PKKBOH .B«ndlng u» a One Hundred Club in our One Dollar Sale of Dry and FtMuy G-OODB, A WATCH, 00 vds. SHEETING, SEWING WA CHINK, Ac-, die.. Free of Cost, Kmslier fluhein the eame ratio, ifi. : 60 Clnb, 40 yds. Sheeting, At a. dee. 30 “ 20 “ " &o. Ac. Mrssrs.S. Hrwcr di To. take plcaaur* nouncinf, heiiiK and largest Houm lo tht " jiolUr TrtJle* that They h«Tp bPtt«*n«hied by ihtir long experience and rxtrnvive revovre*# this prr«cn.t Reason, many important importtiten* ami contracts with manufacturer*, which, with these additions to their Wlut<*iMocka. ha# an* bled them to greatly enlarge thair rate# a .d change List, Send fer AVir L'iifuUr. i ;. Catalogue of (iooU*atiU Sample sent tttjasy adh dress frea. TTTPlfa*? he very particular and *«rd hWiybj reeislcreS letter. , .Addres* all orders to J. 8. HAWES & CO, 15 Federal Et, Beaton, Kara P.O. B«7. »*ur

\3)r. m. V. BOSTON’S/' TOBACCO mthote; WAUXirtmofUnmaweu m suaijpniaToaiw .* ewfr’rfffir MWfnb/a Xd kormtsai I}-*—; u u ajffuMl tax end alran*ihonlut>>w«r. Jriii axeaUset lonia asd am pettier, enables the sudUchrio dlxesl tbs besntista( makes riaap swaOllabca Smahere ou ehnaara fir SaguMra cvevd. —l —alfifi ceau par bon, post frp*T An IntoSwlaz traatiea no Hto ha jurionnsOaeu of jMaeee, with IlnrtlQaa I I dais iff! eacoe, ate., urtAix Aaanu wMtoJ\A<ldraas _ / Dn. T. B. Ahott, JanqaCity, K/. rptr BALE BY ALL QRUOGIfftt fi^/Cxution.— Bevxre of hnmbng tmltaMM J / [Trademark X Copyrighted.)

THK GREAT Zingari Bitters. A MFC 111,00 It PI RiriEU, A SPLKItDIDTONII'i A PLEASANT BEVERiM. A CERTAIN CURE AMO Preventative of Diseases

The ZING t RI BITTdRHsre comtMMiaASd a ) reacription of the celebrated Hgyptlsn phyelcleu. Us. (.'nsonra, wbo. after jeare of trial sod experiment, (Uncovered the Zisgorinf Htrt— the moot remarkable vegetable production, the earth, perhaps, hen ever yielded—certalnly the meet effective in the cure ol disease. It. In combination with tho other vebuoble properties of which the ZINGARI BITTERS ia compoied, will cure Dyopcpela, Fever and Arm, HililouM Fever, Cholic, CsMs, llronchttlH, OosenmpUwlD Its first stnfie, Flatnle*«y, Terras* PoMUMr, FwMs Complaints, 11 heat an** tlemo, Dj'oentepy. AcnW —a chronic »lnr rhoett, Cholera Mtp ~ has, Cholera, Typhoid and Tj phna ' Vever, fierofula,. *>*•■ eases of the Kidneys, Habitant ■ Costive - ■ >««, Ac c. «, ’ In the PaavaaTtoa and Cca* of the afesve diseases. it has never been known to fail, a* tkoesands of out moot prominent *iUaen« throughout all parts of the country, will teetiig. Let that afflicted send for circdlar containing testlmonl als and certificate* oi those who hare baas aagsA after tbelr cases hsro been pronounced kiyamt by our best physicisr.*. , PRINCIPAL DEPOT, PRAHTBRAWa, Wo# Of Wo FpovtSCtf RECOMMENCED by KX. Gor. Darld R. Portsr. ol Psansylesßlt Hon. Robert J. Fisher. " " Hoa. Edward McPherson, « Hon. Joel B. Danner, ** * .... . Hon. tVm. Mcßberry. *« "asAvthßK Send far Cimiai* UMT ' *