Rensselaer Union, Volume 5, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 February 1873 — Page 4

CURRENT ITEMS.

s=t f®nrlNMplre«, aspires and empires." Flat falsehood—lying on your back. No chain is stronger than its weakest link. The office of Btate Printer has been abolished in Kentucky. Thk Danbury Kem says the great need of the times is copper-toed pants. V In what caac-ie-it absolutely impossible to be slow and sure? In the case of a watch. It takes two boys to go to school nowadays. One to study and the other to carry the books. Pocket pincers for young men to feel of their moustaches wiih, are a new and valuable invention. A clue has been formed in Baltimore for the “purification and preservation of the moral man.” ———t. It is kindly said of a Rochester corpse that, although a married man, he was not addicted to profanity. A Danbury man wears a ten cent silver piece on his shirt bosom, and calls it a dime and pin, which it certainly is. Old Lady— “l see you recover umbrellas.” Shopman—‘-Yes, m’m, lots of’em.” Old Lady--“I want the one Host last Monday.” A ship Captain, in the China tradi i. reports that on his last outward passage he saw serpents fifty feet in length disporting themselves about his vessel. People in Texas are talking about a grand celebration, when they expect a railroad train, made up in Nefct York, to go through to their State without, break m the connection. The Congregationalixt states that a popular Boston pastor, on a recent Sabbath, wound upa prayer as follows: “And give grace, we beseech Thee, to the deacons, that they may be able to set a godly example to us common people.” A pensive man, with a basket full of new hats, was passing the "Wooster House, Friday, when a quarter of a ton of beautiful snow slid from the roof into his basket. Not being a profane man, liis suffering was intense.—/Ai'nftUry Kelts. CHASKcniule-eafed rabbits is a favorite sport of the Stockdale neighborhood in Washington County, Texas. The mule-ear and the genuine grey hound make a beautiful race on the prairies. Both ladies and gentlemen join in the sport.

The Jacksonville Journal tells of a young raaa in that city taking the beefsteak that was given him at breakfast, the other morning, aud having his boots half solpd with it. He now declares that the.old things will wear better than ever. In a San Francisco court, the other day, a little dialogue ran thus: Counsel to Witness—“ You say yon were at his house every night?’’ “Yes, sir.” “Were you his partner?” “No, sir.” “Any'relative of his?” “No.” “What were you doing at his house every night ?” “I was sparking his wife’s sister. ” The Italians who have been of Late pouring into New York make excellent navvies. They have developed unexpected energy in the labor of cleaning the streets of that city;, an importation of them has been carried to Virginia, where they have done well, and the contractors having charge of a large force of them have applied to the Superintendent of the Underground Railway In New York for work. Planeth states that when a tuning-fork in vibration is brought near a flame, a loud tone is suddenly perceived, which in ‘the case of a rapidly-burning gas-flame is quite as loud as that produced by placing the foot of the fork upon a soundingboard. The loudest tone is produced by bringing the flame between the prongs of the vibrating fork.— Scribner's Monthly. A Californian claims that the people of his State are better those from other, parts of the Union. Hear him: “ This fact is most remarkable v, T ith the young people who have been born here. Their ruddy cheeks are not scorched and blistered by the ferocioUß August suns of the Mississippi Valley; their full round limbs are not. shriveled and shrunken by the savage frosts of the northwestern winters, and they' grow up in all the strength and symmetry of nature unabridged. There is probably no place on this continent where the proportion of pretty children is as large as in Califoraia.” - : '

In France the roastingof coflee is quite a science, the roaster being required to i study the properties of the different kinds of berry, since eaeh sort must be roasted for a certain period of time. The operation i 3 conducted in a hollow iron sphere, j by the rotation of which all the berries i are equally exposed to the heat. During j the roasting the hall is closed and the : gases confined, but at the close of the operation the valve is opened and the gases allowed to escape. The roasted berries are then quickly transferred to carefully closed vessels, A pooh seamstress was arrested the other day in Brooklyn, X. V., on a charge j of stealing garments which she had taken home to sew. Upon her examination, it appeared that she was employed by a certain Miss Pillsbury, of New York City, i who paid her seventeen cents for making four pairs of pantaloons, fifty cents for making twelve pairs of drawers, and twenty five cents for making six shirts. ] She did not finieh the pants as soon as 1 she agreed to, and the gentle Pillsbury . refused to pay her; whereunon she pawn- j ed the articles to keep her family from starving. It is well known that from time to time warious cases of poisoning from the use of vanilla ice have been noticed and published in Paris, Munich, Vidnna, and other places. The most careful investi- i gations, however, have failed to discover the cause. In a few cases traces of lead, ; iron and tin, from the vessel's used, have been found in the ice, but as no poisoning has ever resulted from fruit ices prepared 1 in the same vessels, it cannot be due to that. The learned M. Scbroff is of the opinion that vanilla beans are poisoned bv the natives of South America and Mexico, who rub them witli acajou oil to make them smooth and soft. This oil is i not seldom contaminated with a sharp ! substance which acts like cantbarides. i He thinks it less probable that the injurious effects are due to small crystals found in the outer skin of the vanilla beans—benzoic acid. A family in Sullivan, Me , consisting of a father, mother and four children, ; have suddenly gone crazy. They were a steady, industrious people until a short time ago, when they suddenly ceased to work and declared their house haunted. Numerous nocturnal visitors perambulated about their house and threw some soporific substance into the windows, causing them to fall asleep at any moment. Subsequently the devil entered the house and took possession of the various articles of furniture, whereupon they destroyed nearly all the furniture and dishes. All these assertions each member of the family will make and Awear to. They armed themselves with revolvers, and rendered the* whole vicinity dangerous by shooting at imaginary witches who were in apple trees in front of-the house. These witches they declare to bo their neighbors and relations. A writes in the Rural Hon ie says: J Cows usually become addicted to kicking when heifers, from being milked by ; abusive milkers. I havUnever seen an old cow become a kicker unless abused, j Instead of cows being Averse to being milked when giving a large quantity, I 1

have found it to be the reverse. When pastnrgge is good, and cows come home at night with uddirs distended with milk, they seem grateful to have it removed. Milking a heifer for tho first time requires patience, for they will almost invariably kick. In such a case put a broad strap around her body, just in front of the udder, and buckle it up moderately tight, and as soon as she gets quiet (for she may kick around a little at first) take your pail, Bit down and go to milking, and she is as helpless as a kitten; Do not attempt to use a rope instead of a strap, for it will not answer. This is a much better method than tying the legs, etc., as it does not hurt the animal in the least. A few applications of the strap, with plenty of patience and kindness, will cure the most obstinate case. An exceedingly eccentric man recently died at Hlnesburg, Vt., in the person of Augustus McEwen, aged eigntyfour. He had his grave dug twenty years ago, and stoned up and filled with earth, that it might bp in perfect conditionwhenever needed. Last fall he had the earth dug out of it, saying he expected to be laid there before winter was over, pis coffin was in readiness seven years ago, and so arranged that he could lie on his side with his knees drawn up, as he said he siept in this condition in life, and wanted to sleep so in death. All liis plans fqr the funeral were made in advance, and among the rest ho selected four colored boys, who had worked for him more Or less, as bad their father before them, for pall bearers. They were to carryMbe-body to the grave, which was on his own farm, lower it to its last resting:place, till the grave with earth, and then, walk back to the. house, where they were to find each a letter, sealed and directed, tetihem, in which was the money to pay for this'last service required of them. ,His friends took good care to carry out his peculiar wishes.

The People and Leaders.

Mr. Oglesby is elected Senator from Illinois to fill the seat of Mr. Trumbull, and Mr. Bogy, from Missouri, to replace Mr. Blair, So disappear from public life two more of the conspicuous figures of the Cincinnati Convention. There was, indeed, something dramatic in the part of Senator Blair upon that occasion. It was not unknown that Senator Schurz left Washington favorably disposed to the nomination of Mr. Trumbull, but his opening speech seemed to indicate Mr. Adams. Then through the cloud and confusion Mr. Fenton was seen silently slipping off, and Mr. Blair, the colleague of Mr. Schurz, having tried a Brodhead letter in 1868, tried a new departure in 1873, and was loitering about hotels aud the outer rooms of the Convention. The nomination of Mr. Greeley was very welcome to Mr. Blair ; anckhis brother Montgomery, having previously suggested Mr. Tiryant as a candidate, was yet very warm for Mr. Greeley. The whirlwind followed. And it is now seen, among other purifications, to have—swept away the Blairs. But while it is the Republicans who have declined to return Mr. Trumbull, it is the Democrats who have rejected Mr. Blair. It is another illustration of the hollowness of the coalition. The Democrats were willing to use Liberal Republicans as cat’s-paws, but when they could not rake out a single chestnut; they spurned even their own leaders who advised them to try. The party will reckon strictly with those who persuaded them to nominate a life-long antagonist, and to suffer in consequence an unprecedented defeat. The fate of Mr. Trumbull will not, of course, surprise him. His separation from his party was deliberate and well-eonsiderect. with Mr. Fenton, lie did what he could to restore the old enemies of the party and of the country to power, and the country and hia own State pronounced his. sentence at the polls. Mr. Trumbull has served long and with great ability. He has been sometimes vehemently partisan, sometimes violently recusant under the party policy. Recently he has been bitter in his hostility to what he called the Senatorial ring, and was counted one of the most powerful and dangbrous of the Cincinnati leaders.

A year ago, in the Senate of the United States, there was a singular spectacle. Mr. Sumner, Mr. Trumbull and Mr. Schurz, all of them among the chief Republican • Senators, sat near each other, among their Republican.colleagues, and often in the height of debate they clustered together as if to show how hearty was their concert. Undoubtedly the spectacle of that union of the Eastern and Western and the German born Senators, men of character, ability, experience and power, seemed to Democratic Senators opposite representative of a great movement. Beihind thdse three tub Democrats saw an imposing schism in the dominant party, a secession, an inevitable defeat and dissolution. Many person? iq. the country thought that they saw the same thing. Are there bettef men, are there truer Republicans? they asked, and some of them followed that leading. But the spectator in the Senate to-day, as he looks toward the seats of those Senators,' reflects that he has again been, taught the* lesson that in this country there is no following of leaders in the old sense. The Philadelphia Convention met within a fortnight of Mr. Sumner’s denunciation of Grant, and its reply was the eager and enthusiastic renomination of the President, and the uprising of the Republican people to repel the slanders of the campaign against a man whose services had been so illustrious and inestimable to the country. Senator Morton truly said in the Convention that the feost honored party chief would’find that a party founded in the best instincts and intrenched in the noblest traditions would not dissolve at his dictation. It would distrust his judgment rather than its own impulse. The Senator’s words have been amply vindicated. The Republican party has sustained itself, and once more saved the peace and prosperity of the country; while the departure from public life of Mr. Trumbull and of Mr. Blair, in the light;of the events of the lastyear, again points the truth of the wise saying, All men know better than any man.— Harper's 11 eddy.

Across the Atlantic in a Balloon.

According to the New York Sun, an aeronaut by the name of Donaldson is now* Constructing a series of balloons with which he purposes to cross the Atlantic next summer, starting from Union Square in this city. He claims that a flying machine is within the range of possibility, and is not discouraged by the many failures in this field. His theory is plausible. He remarks that when Fulton built the steamboat to run in water he aid not imi- , tate the action" of Jjje fish, and then he 1 expresses the opinion that to navigate the air it is not necessary to comply too closely with.the movements of birds. Theflyi ing bird represents aerial locomotion in its primitive state. The idea is to im- . prove upon this, just as the steam engine ; is an, improvement upon the power and : speed of the horse. Having had large experiencp in ballooning, Mr. Donaldson ! is earcc-st in the belief that he can travel from the. setting sun at all times, “fqr at a certain height, say two and a half miles, there is a constant current of air blowing toward the East.” JBy ascending to the required altitude, he is confident that .this strong current will safely bear his ship , from New) York to the shores of England. He is also of the opinion that, when on The other side, he will find another current which will waft him home again.

We may pronounce the attempt to cross the ocean in a balloon foolhardy; but let us not -forger that “such “foolhardy” efforts heretofore have led to tho most important discoveries. Science requires her sacrifices. If we never ventured out of the old grooves wc -Would make no progress. If we ever succeed in constructing machines which will navigate the air, it will be through that spirit of daring which animates the bosom of Mr. Donaldson! If he attempts the proposed feat and perishes in thc,juidertaking, we hope that his failure will not deter others from making dangerous experiments in the same direction.— Turf , Field and Farm.

Hanging Wall Paper.

Many persons living in remote places , defer re-papering their apartments on account of the difficulty of procuring skilled labor in that branch of industry; but it is really such a simple task that there is no reason why any person of ordinary qapacity should not do it with as little tremble as whitewashing. The here given are the result of practical experience and, if’observed, will enable any one to hang paper as well as an expert. Supposing you have decided to paper your apartmentt anew: the first thing to be done is to remove the old paper; if there is but one thickness on the it is not necessary, as this will not do any harm. It is only where layer after layer is put on that the apartment becomes offensive from the condensation of vapors, accumulating with -years until at last they become dangerous sources of disease. This is a well established fact, as recent investigation by a Board of Health in London disclosed that the several layers or thicknesses of wall paper, in homes in the crowded part of Jthc city, were absolutely damp with noisome deposits accruing from defective ventilation.

To remove the old paper, take a common whitewash brush and pail of water. Wash the wall all over and you can easily tear the paper off in long sheets and so render the surface clean again. Care must be taken not to remove or break the surface of the under layer, or ground; for if 4his-4s-done, 4here will be a ridge or seam wherever it is torn that will show badly if your new paper has a light ground; if it is dark and the pattern is in arabesque, it matters little, as it will not show. Having cleaned or removed the old paper, take a roll of the new that you desire to apply and hold it up to the wall; arrange it so that the pattern will show evenly at top and bottom, if possible, and then cut off one length. Have ready a table or a board long enough to take the whole piece; then use the first strip cut as a guide, and match all the rest to it. You may cut all the paper up for the straight part of the wall, leaving the intervals over the door and windows to be done at leisure, or with the waste pieces that always accumulate. In cutting the length, be careful to cut the bottoms and tops perfectly square across, and not zjgzag, or at hap-hazard, for it looks badly to see the pattern mismatched, or a ragged end where it meets the wash board. There are two white edges or selvages on wall paper, one of which must be cut off. Be sure and cut off the right one, or the one that you intend to papei 1 from, and cut all the others at one time. In applying the paper, you will doubtless find that between the doors and wjndows the pattern will not come out right, leaving a hand’s breadth or so to fill up between the frame and the last piece applied. This is of no consequence, as it can be easily filled up by a piece specially cut for it. Be careful and see that, you do not reverse the paper or get it upside down in hanging. You easily tell the right side up if the pattern is in vines, leaves, or geometrical shapes, by noticing which side the shading of the figures is on. Having cut all fhejmper ready to apply, roll it up and lay each piece on one side, or lay them all in a pile. Have ready a smooth boiled paste of wheat flour (sound flour, not sour)', a whitewash brush, and a board, or tabic, long enough to take the whole sheet in one length. Make the paste quite~thin, not thicker than molasses, and as smooth as a custard. Have a chair, step-ladder, or table ready, on which you can stand and reach to the top of the wall. Then take your first piece of paper, lay it on the table and apply the paste, not 100 thickly, being particular to touch the edges and (op aud bottom well. Then take the sheet by the top, raise it off of the table and support it by one arm (on the right or, dry side, of course), and put it up to the wall. Keep it entirely clear of the wall until you fasteiqAbe head of the sheet, but previous to this, run your eye down and see if it hangs square with the door-fnme. If it does, have a clean towel or cloth ready, and move it horizontally in wavy- strokes over the sheet until the bottom is reached, but do not in any case rub up and down or draw the paper in folds; if you do, there wili be . ridges and wrinkles in —it,— which destroy the ap» pearance and can never be got out. Hang the sheet properly at first and then follow it down from the top, rubbing accross it; and there will not be a wrinkle in it. Apply the second sheet in the same way, and be careful tbat you match the figures properly. Success depends on this, for nothing looks worse than to see the continuity brokefiroff or a white seam shown between the pattern, up and down the wall where the sheets do not meet, When the corner is reached, if the sheet does not come evenly to the opposite wall, it is better t 6 cut it lengthwise and paste it-on; then take the fellow to the piece and apply it also, matching the figures of course. If you endeavor to make the sheet reach round, you will mal e a bad job of it. Always clean well the table where you paste, so that no paste will get on the pattern; if it does, the colors will run or smudge, and soil the sheet. Gilt papers with delicate lavender grounds require great care in this respect, as the least spot shows badly. This is all there is to be observed in hanging paper, and there is nothing that any one cannot do with a little practice. Some career, discretion must be taken in selecting papers for the purposes they are intended to be put in. Rectangular geometrical patterns do not look well in a bed room or a sitting room, as they impart a severe apd formal appearance that is especially wearisome after a few weeks. .Neither-is a paper wi(h ffark -stripes -at frequent intervals desirable; the stripes give the effect of battens nailed over boards or rough carpenters work, and divide a' room off with hard lines that tire the eyewhenever it rests upon the'm. All paper ought to impart a clean, cheerful aspect to a room, adding to the homelike appearance and bearing" evidence of the taste of the occupants. Never put bordering on the bottom of walls, as it takes from the heightwmd makes a boundary for the eye to rest upon where none is desirable. Dark grounds in papers render rooms not fully lighted darker still, and give a somber eflect which is very depressing; while open chambers with white hangings have a cold and chilly aspect which is equally desirable to avoid. No rule?, can be given for selecting papers; what- seems desirable in one ease or to one person is objectionable to others, and every one will of course stiff themselves in this respect. —Scientific American, —A contest between five pancake Caters took place at Newton, N. J., recently. The successful competitor demolished sixty-eight, and hfs nearest rival sixty.

FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.

—lndelible Ink.— Four drachms nitrate of silver, four ounces of rain-water, six drops solution ot nut-galls, and one half a drachm 'glim Arabic. This.will make an ink which will not fade, and costs very little. — Cor. Western Rural. —Alum and plaster of Paris well mixed with water, and used in a liquid state, will form a very useful cement. It will be found quite handy for many purposes. It forms a very hard composition, and for fixing the brasses, etc., on lamps, nothing' could be better. —How to Fit Collars to Horses’ Shoulders.—The collar should be purchased of the proper size ; just before putting it on the first time, immerse it in water, letting it remain about a minute, and immediately put it on the horse, being careful to have the hames so adjusted at the top and bottom as to. fit the shoulder-, and then put the horse to work. The collar by being wet will adapt itself to the shoulder, and should dry on the horse. When taken off it should be left in the shape-it occupied on the horse, and ever after you will have a snug-fitting collar and no wounds.— Valley Farmer.

—Mr. Charles White, of 'White’s Station, Mich., has devised a method for packing butter to keep for long periods, which he claims has proved entirely successful. His pian eonsists in putting the buffer in a sack fitted to a peculiar-shaped tub, and so arranged that when the packing is completed, and the tub turned so as to rest on the large end, the butter will drop down an inch or so, leaving a clear space between the tub and the butter. Strong brine is now poured through a hole in the small end of the tub to fill this completely. The brine floats the buffer and wholly surrounds it, excluding the air. The ofificfeAS then closed up and the butter set away in a cool place. Butter packed in this way has been found fresh and good at the end of ten months. —Water may be preserved pure and wholesome in rainwater cisterns by letting the supply-pipe connect at the bottom of the cistern. The fresh water being heavier than that already in the cistern, will force the stale water to the top so that it can be used before it becomes offensive. It is well known, however, that cistern water becomes impure from the organic matter it contains, and if this can begot rid of by destroying its vitality and precipitating it to the bottom, it wilfleare the water pure. It is claimed that there is nothing better to effect this than permanganate of potassa, used in the proportion of about an ounce to fifty gallons of water. This causes the inorganic matter to sink to the bottom an innoxious sediment. But the permanganate must be continued as long as the water has a purplish appearance, indicating that the offensive matter has not all been precipitated. Though this is not a poisonous drug, and is, we believe, in no way hurtful, still no more should be used than necessary. Every druggist lias it for sale. — Care must be taken to have—tire cistern thoroughly cleaned atieast- twice a year, as well as the troughs upon the buildings supplying the yf&ter.—Cincinnati Times. The Country Seems to hk Filled with Specific —For the cure of. Lung Diseases, that one scarcely knows which to use, for want of confidence in their medical properties; but from the remarkable cures and the high order and extraordinary efficacy of Allen’s Lungi Balsam, that we are compelled to regard the evidences of our senses, and confidently state for Cough and Cold, and that Hydra-headed Monster Consumption, we think that preparation a safe and certain cure that is now before the public. For sale by all Medicine Dealers.

The New World’s Grand Remedy.— The Old World has played its part in vegetable medication. Bat the botany of the New World is, as yet, imperfectly explored. One new and most important revelation from that land of wonders— California—has astonished the scientific, and accomplished such cures of diseases of the stomach and bowels, bilious complaints, malarious fevers, nervous affections, and all diseases proceeding from a vitiated condition of the blood, as have never before been witnessed. Before Walker’s California Vinegar Bitters all the alcoholic and mineral medicines are rapidly falling into disuse, They cannot resist the overpowering evidence brought forward every day, of the immense superiority of this medicine. Not a drop of any variety of distilled or fermented liquor or mineral poison enters into its composition. It is a gentle aperient, a tonic, derived from entirely new vegetable sources, an unrivaled stomachic, admirable in ail pulmonary diseases ; and, in fact, as near to universal remedy as botanical discovery and scientific skill can hope to attain. Dr. Walker considers it a cure for all diseases not organic, and really the great variety of diseases in which it issuccesstul seems to warrant the opinion. Every family needs such a remedy. It saves pain, anxiety and doctor’s bills. We know what trouble it is to keep the bowels of children in order, and any remedy that ■will strengthen and regulate their weak and variable digestion must be a domestic blessing. - - - _ pN the death of one of England’s most eminent physicians, all his effects were sold by auction, and among other things was a sealed packet, marked “Advice to Physicians,” which brought a great price. The purchaser, on opening the packet read as follows: “Keep the head cool, the bowels open, and the feet warm.” If physic is necessary, use Parsons' Purgative Pill's; they are the most scientifically prepared pill that has appeared in the last hundred years. We received a very pleasant letter- of thanks from our old friend Kendall, since his return home, for a bottle of Johnson's Anodyne Liniment which we gave him, and which he says has entirely cured him of the troublesome and dangerous cough he had when here. An Article of True Merit.—“ Brown’s Bronchial Troches” are the most popular article in this country or Europe for Throat Diseases and Coughs, andtjhis popularity is based upon real merit. \ As Quick as a Flash of I.HiHTXING (in.’s Ckistahoko’s Excelsior Hair Dye act .upon t he hair, whiskers and moustaches ; no chameleon tints, but tlic purest Raven or the most exquisite Browns will he evolved. In- One to Five Minutes, Headache, Earache, Neuralgia. Lame Back, Diarrhoea, Croups, Sprains, and all similar complaints, are v> /itcAJ, by Flagg’s Luxury, Health. Economy insured by using Dooley’s Yeast Powder. Elegant Light Rolls, Biscuits, etc., prepared in ten minutes. Try it." - n-..., ■

THE WEEKLY SI'S • Only SI & Year. 8 Page*. The Best 'Family Paper.— The Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. £1 a year. Send your'Dollar. The Best Agricultural Paper —The Weekly N. Y. Sun. S pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Political Paper.— The Weekly N. Y. Sun. Independent and Faithful. Against Public Plunder. 8 pages. £1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Newspaper. Weekly New York Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. Has All the NEws.—Thc Weekly New YorkSnn. 8 pages, f 1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Story Paper.—The Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send yoftr Dollar. The Best Fashion Reports in the Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 ppges. £1 a year, Send your Dollar, The Best Market Reports in the Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. SendVour Dollar, The Best Cattu Retorts in the Weekly N. Y-. Snn. 8 pagee. fl a year Send yonr Dollar. TnE Best Paper in Every Respect.—The Weekly N. V. Sun. 8 pages. £1 a year.. Send y our Dollar, j Address THE SUN, New York City. I

TnE Science of Health for February is w excellent uumber, -containing Popular fhra-_ oiogy, with Illustrations; The Scientific Bra in Medical Systems; What a Bachelor Thinks of Bailies; Dress of Children; Seasonable Dishes; Christiaii Agriculture; What to do with Old Tin Cans; Business Women of Washington; Matrimonial Incompatibility; A Test of Vegetarianism; An 800 MHob’Walk by a Man 66 years old; Howto Cure without Medicine; Causes of Sudden Death?, etc., j etc. The information here given must be worth many timeß the cost, which Is only 20 cents. Subscription price, $2 a year,, and a fine Chromo given to each new subscriber who adds 30 cents for mailing and mounting. Address 8. R. Wells, Publisher, 330 Broadway, N. Y. * The Phrenological Journal.—'The contents oT the January number are varied, inter-, esting and instructive. The following are the titles of a few of the leading articles:- ' Shakespeare and his Dramatic/ Characters,” with" portrait and illustrations; “Will and Mind—Their Identity;” "Cause and Effect,” with illustrations; "Pauline Lucca,” with portrait; “A stiff Upper Lipl” “The Late General Meade,” with portrait; “Agra and the Taj,” with Illustrations; “Curiosities of Human Life;” etc., etc. $3 a year; 30 cents a single number. A beautiful Chromo, “The Anxious Mother," Is given to new subscribers. For 30 cents extra the Chromo will be mounted, varnished, and sent post-paid. Address 8. R. Wells, 389 Broadway, Sew York. , *

Prostration Practice.

■ Luckily for the sick, the ideaTSatiUa necessary to reduce their bodily strength in order to cure them, is fast dying out ’ Modern science recognizes the fact that disease is of itself more than sufficiently depressing to body and mind, and does not need to be assisted In its tnrouds upon the vit-al enorgy of the sy.t.m by_ vloient purgations and other debilitating mixtures. Prostration is in short, “ played out,’ and the practitioners who still cling to it are so few and far between tha* they cannot, like their predecessors of the same fata] school who nourished half a century ago, till thegravoyard with their victims. The introduction of liostetter's Stomach Bitters in 1352 was the heaviest blow that.the old practice of depletion had ever received and from that time to the present, as the celebrity of the great vegetable invigorant has Increased, file purging, blistering, bleeding, water-gruel practice has declined. The effect of tills famous preventive and remedy is to strengthen, build up, regulate, and tranquilize, not to weaken, break down and violently disturb the system. It is a tonic, alterative and nervino, with a pure stimulant ns its propelling and distributing agent Tills stimulant diffuses the curative and life-sustaining elements of the medicine through thewholefttsapliation, and brings them info contact -with the souths of-disease. Hence Tjs cures of indigestion, constipation, bilious complaints, nervousness, languor, debility, low spirits, malarious disorders, &c., are complete and thorough, and as a protection against.tlie ailments caused or aggravated by cold or damp it lias no equal. Sooner ok later, a neglected Cold will develop a constant Cough, Shortness of Breath, Failing Strength and Wasting of Flesh, all symptomatic ot some serious Lung Affection, which may be avoided or palliated by using iir time Dr. Jayne’s Expectorant. ■ j- ' - - .. Ask yonr grocer for Pressing's Celebrated Cider Vinegar. Warranted pure. Preserves Pickles.

THE MARKETS.

NEW YORK, January 29. 1878. BEEF CATTIiK... ;-;.f9.r>C) @5!4,00 HOGS—Live.l—..:..;'..'.... 5.00- © 5.37 SHEEP—Live . . 5.75 .© 7.75 COTTON—Middling.. .21 0 ,21V FLOUR—Good to Choice..... ... 8.00 © 8.50 WHEAT—No. 2 Spring 1.65 © 1.70 , CORN Western Mixed....- 64 © .67 OATS—Western, New .51 © .54J4 ' RYE-Western 90 © .95 PORK-Mess 14 00 © 14.50 LARD .oS>fa .08% WOOL—DomesticFleecte .65 ® .69 Tubbed .45 © .60 Unwashed .30 © .37 CHICAGO. BEKVES-Choice $5.75 ©s6 00 Good 5.00 © 5.50 Medium.. 4.50 © 4.75 Butchers’ Stock 3.50 © 4.25 HOGS—Live 3.75 © 4.00 SHEEP—Good to Choice 5.00 © 600 BUTTER-ChOice 22 © .25 EGGS—Fresh .30 0 .34 FLOUR—White Winter Extra... 7.50 @10.12 Spring Extra 6.00 © 7.00 GRAlN—Wheat—Spring, No. 2 , 1,21 © 1.24 K Corn—No. 2... .30 @ .SOM Oats 25 @ .25% Rye-No. 2 ......... .. .68 © .69 Barley—No. 2 77 @ .79 PORK-Mess 11.80 @11.85 LARD 07 © .0714 WOOL—Tub-washed 55 © .65 Fleece, washed .45 © .58 “ unwashed........ .30 © .40 Pulled .48 © .50 CINCINNATI. ’ FLOUR—Family, New $8.25 © 850 WHEAT—Red 1.73 © 1.77 CORN.; .« 40 © .41 OATS * .32 © .38 RYE 86 © .88 PORK-Mess 12.75 © 13.00 LARD 07M© .18 HOGS-Live 43i © 4.60 ST. LOUIS* BEEF CATTLE—Choice $4.50 © $6,00 GoodtoPrlme 3.00 © 4.25 HOGS—Live 3.85 © 4.25 FLOUR —Fall XX 6.75 © 7.25 WIIEAT-No. 3 Rad Winter..,..-1.83 ® 1.88 CORN—No. 2 Mixed .33 @ .40 OATS—No. 2 . .29 © .32 RYE-,-No. 2 73 0 .75 PORK—MesB 12.00 © 12.50 LARD ..... 07 © .67 MILWAUKEE. FLOUR—Spring XX $6.25 © $6.87 WHEAT-Spring, No. 1......... 1.31 © 1.32 No. 2.. 1.24 © 1.25 k CORN—No. 2 36 @ .39 ' OATS—No. 2 ; 26 © .27 RYK-.No. 1 ...... .68 © .70 BARLEY-No. 2 84 © .88 CLEVELAND. WHEAT—No. 2 Red .....$1.68 @51.70 CORN .45 © .46 OATS-No. 1 36 © .37 DETROIT. WIIEAT—No. 1 $1.93 ©51.9.5 Amber 1,72 © 1.74 CORN—No. 1 :.. .41 © .43 OATS .35 © ,36)0 TOLEDO. WHEAT—Amber Mich SI.BO © 1.81 No. 2 Red 1.77 © 1.78 CORN-Mlxed .38 © .59 OATS—No. 2 34 4T .’5

WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS pli'ukc way you saw (lie advertisement In thin paper. 10,000 FARMS. 16 hours from Chicago—with no change ot cars—all in the “Middle Region of Western lowa.” A. rich, well-drained prairie soil of natural meadow and plow land, evenly distributed: pure running water abundant; climate unsurpassed (fever and ague being unknown). Compact bodies of land to be had to any deßirable extent. 1,700,000 ACHES OF BAILBOAD LANDS, Free from mortgage granted to build, and all adjacent to the lowa lines or the Chicago & North western, Hit-, nols Central, and 8. C. & P. Railways, for sale, in tracts to suit purchasers, by the IffWA RAILROAD LAND CO. Lands of the best quality, and near stations, only cost from $7 to $lO per acre, the more distant $4 to $& on time, with 6 per cent, interest. * Agents at Railroad Stations are provided with plats, prices and teams to show landsj free to purchasers Land Exploring Ticlvetsrreceivable for land purchased, can be had at the Chicago Branch Office, 65 S. Canal st.; at the Railroad-Offices hi Clinton and Dubuque, and at our main office as below. Land binttrs should call or sand and obtain a guide. It costs nothing, and gives descriptions, locations, prices, terms, and all needful information. County mans, showine ™ Commissioner, Cedar Rapids, lowa,-. M J fl Hfl REWARD Lf*! I|| |i ft ot 1 i £ I H prc.ssJy tt'cnve the'F lit*. SW fii a V Bn< J BofaiSg’ els*. Sold by S f all Druggists. price tI.OU 10,000 Copies Sold in 10 Weeks! Greatest Success Ever Known! OP DITBOKT db CO.’B CiMS OF STRAUSS. ,xdw contains: Telegraph, V Academic, Publisher, Consortien. 1.001 Nights, Burgersinn, Manhattan, Royal Songs, Vienna Woods, New Vienna, Illustration, German Hearts, Blue Danube, ArtistlsLL Love & Pleasure, Marriage Bells, Wine. Women, Life Let Us GherWiCner Freshen, and Song. ish Waltzes, And 30 other of his Best Waltzes, rizztearo POlfea. Clear the Tnick Gnlcft Tritech-Tritsch. One Heart, One Soul, Kata Morgana, Mazurka, Lob der Frauen. Mazurka, Belle Helene, QuadrHle, Orpheus, Quadrille, And 20 other polkas, Mazurkas and Quadrilles, ‘.‘ Embellished with a fine portrait of Strauss, and ' ftlllr.g 250 targe music pages—it is a musical gem—tori <*penßtbte to all lovers of Strauss’s dance music.” Mail, . -—-r —- Price, in board coverli cloth; $4 in gilt. Sold by all Bodk and Music Dealers. Now Ready, Straas«* Diace Music for Violin and .Pjap.O, $1 00. i > tiHlisl;c«l by differ Difson k so.. Boston.-

A CHALLENGE Is extended to the World To place before the public a better Cough or Lang 1 Remedy than ALLEN’S LUNG BALSAM. It Is warranted to break up the most troublesome Cough in an Incredibly short time. There ia no remedy that can show more evidence of real merit than this BALSAM for curing Consumption, Coughs, Golds, Asthma, Croup, etc. It Acta on the Kidneys! It Acta on the Liver! f3T- Which makes It moro than a Cough Rcmody. LATEST EVIDENCE. What well known Druggists of Tennessee . say about Allen’s Lung Balsam, Sl’ltlN'OFlKT.D, Tcnn., Sept. 13,1872. OKNTI.EMKX: Please ship us six doz. Allan's Lung Balsam. We .'have not a Untie In the store. It has more reputation than any Cough Medicine wo have ever sold. Have been In the drug Tnisiuess'27 years. We mean Just what-we say. Ven'.ru^ What the Doctors Soy, Drs. Wilson -A Ward, Physicians and Druggists, writivfroinCentrevillo, TYnn.: “ Wgßunrhwca AUimi’m l.mifrßalsanv and It sells rapidlyf \Ve arc practicing iVhyslciana. an- -welll n; druggists, and take pleasure in rcconimundlng .1 great remedy, Much a» \vc. know this tp pc. . I; . w Physicians do not recommend a medicine utilch has no merit i what they say about ALLEN’S LUNG BALSAM Can he taken as a fact. Let all afflicted tertUstooee and he convinced of its real merits. It is harmless to the most delicate child. It Contain** no Opium in Any Form. Be not deceived. for ALLEN'S LUNG BALfSr- Directions accompany each bottle. J.N. HARRIS & CO., Cincinnati, 0., PROPRIETORS. gar gold by all Medicine Dealers.

MOTHERS!!! nou’t fall to procure MllS. WINS* v.yW’g SOOTHIN'© SYIMJI* FOR ottinllKEN TEETHING}. This valuable preparation has been used with NEV-ER-FAILING SUCCESS IN THOUSANDS OF Cases, It not only relieves the child from pain, but hi vie orat”. the stomach and bowels, corrects acidity, and gives tone and energv to tfto whole system. _lt_wUJ also Instantly reliove =-- ' " : = J? = Griping ia tie Bowels and Wind Colic,— We believe It the BEST and SUREST REMEDV I TIIR WOULD. In all cases of D 5 SENTEI.S AND lUARRIKEA IN CHILDREN, whether arising I row teething or any other cause. Depend upon it, mothers. It will give rest to yo.d selves, and Relief and Health to Your Infants. Bo sure and call for 1 J * “MRS, •WINSLOWS fiOOTHING SYRDF,’* Having the fac-slmlle of * CURTIS A PF.RKIXS" OB the-outside wrapper.— , .- v by druggists throughout thewjQtuL

LARGEST ORGAN ESTABLISHMENT IN THE WORLD! 7 Extensive Factories. J. ESTEY & COMPANY, Br Attleboro, Vt., U. S, A. THE CKL.KIJRATKD Estey Cottage Organs. The latest and best Improvements. Everything that is new and novel. The leading improvements m orguns were introduced ftrat>lu this esla^d ighmcht. ESTABLISHED IMiS. Send for Illustrated CntF oguo. IN EVERY PIECE. |BogisJ OTHER GENUIITE. A NEW BOOK. Just published, a second edition, revised and considerably enlarged, of Mr Wm. 8 Huntington's work on Track-Laying: THE ROADMASTER’S ASSISTANT —AND— Sectionniaster’s Guide. A manual of reference for all having to do with tlio permanent way-of American Railroads, containing the best results of experience * and minute directions for Track-Laying, Ballasting, and Keeping the Track in Good Repair. Mr. Huntington has had long experience as a roadmaster, and has an especially happy way of telling what he knows. His directions for laying track and keeping it In good order are most carefully given, and involve the minutest details. The hook Is exeeedingr ly interesting and profitable reading for all who are in any way connected with railroad work, though it is particularly Intended to give to road and section masters information which they cannot otherwise obtain except through long experience, costly to themsclve/i and their companies It is for the best Interest of every Railroad company that their employees be supplied with copies of this book. Sent, post paid, for $1.00; twelve copies, SIO.OO. Orders must be accompanied by the cash. A. N. KEEEOGG, 63 South Canal Street, Chicago, 111.

“AMERICAN SAWS.” BEST IN THE WORLD-MOVABLE-TOOTHKI> CIRCULARS, PERFORATED CROSS CUTS. Send for Pamphlet to AMERICAN SAW CO., >EW YORK. THE LATEST INVENTION. PARCHMENT COLLAR Twice the Strength of Cloth-Lined. PATENT APPLIED FOR. METROPOLITAN OOLLAR CO., 346 A 348 Broadway, N. Y. Works—Jay, Washington and Greenwich Sts., N. Y. Capacity, 110,000,000 per annum. KELLOGG. Parties bearing the above name will-be interested Atttaimibiii » work S*.injw.in. j2orrjss«jlion.nivlnß iba genealogy of the family In this country from the middle of the 17th ventury to the present time. All Interested will confer a favor by communicating with the publisher RUFUS B. KELLOGG, Oaklnnd, California, who will send, to any address, circulars containing the early history ot the family, with outline of the Information desired. DDNT wear that Spring Truss, which Is killing yon, but send for circular for HOWE’S ELASTIC BELT TRUSS, which is as easy to wear as a garter, and has cured patient* In from Sto 25 weeks. Address Box 758, HENRY HOWE, Council Bluffs, lowa. C 27 Onn EACH WEEK-aGENTS WANTED O • Zi.UU Business legitimate. Particulars free. _ J. WORTH, St. Lonis, Mo. Box 2481. Uwill never regret {2 for pl, fve n, r a rxK e S°]P 1 dozen of our unloue * UUlUgl ttJlU»p lr ii Sample 3a cts. LEED& C 0,., B(ix 79,.Chicago, 11lCultivator Rake at SI.OO, for root crops. free. .1. T. VAN AVTCK, Wappinger’s Falls, N. Y. DR. WHITTIER, Longest engaged. and most BUfccAnful physician oC tbs age. Todbußation or pamphlet free. Coll t*f .write. p* ft 1/ of Medical Won dorp. Should be read by Fkl II IM all. .Sen: fr«*e for 2 stamps. Address^ D U Ull DU. BONAPA RTK, Cincinnati, O. NECTAR black tea i fe^WElcWHPfTEAl*with 1 lr? trrcctt Tea flavor. War mn>etl t o *■ »iit all, taste*. For s.tle J&JftXSSffa T- everywhere. And fofbale whole' by the Great All.ifiM*: *t

W

Vinegar Bitter* are not a vile Fancy Drink, made of Poor Rum, Whiskey, Proof Spirits and Refuse Liquors, doctored, spiced, and sweetened to please the taste, called “Tonics,” “ Appetizers,” “ Restorers,” &c., that lead the tipplfer on to drunkenness and ruin, but are a true Medicine, made from the native roots and herbs of California, free from all Alcoholic Stimulants They are the Great Blood Purifier and a Life-giving Principle, a Perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the System, carrying oil all poisonous matter and restoring the blood to a healthy condition, enriching ity refreshing and invigorating both mind and body. They are easy of administration, prompt in their action, certain in their results, safe and reliable in all forms of disease. No Pei Hon can take thcMC Hitter* according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by nvneral poison orotlwi means, and the vital organs wasted beyond the. point of repair. Dyfipep*ta or linllgestloit. Headache, Pain 1 in the Shoulders, Coughs,-Tightness of the Chest, J)izr.ine’ss, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad 'Paste 4n-4Ue—Mouth,-Bilious Attacks,—Palpitation of tlW—Heart, Inflammation of the laings, Pain in the regions o£ the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symp*‘ *.% are the ■.offsprings of Dyspepsia. In these compi«,.iUs it has no equal, and one bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement* For Female Complaint*** m ybung or old, married or single, at the dawn of or the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an influence that a marked improvement is soon perceptible. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rh«nmutirtiu and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Bilious, • Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood, Which is generally produced by derangement of the Digestive Organs. They arc a Gentle Purgative a* well ns a Tonic, possessing also the pccul.hr mi nt of acting as a powerful agent in relieving Congestion or Tnflanw mavkuCor-the--L»ver awl Visceral Organs, aiTd ih PTjlout— Diseases. 1_ For Skin Disease** Eruptions, letter, SaltRheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring-worms, Scald-Head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas. Itch, Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of The Skm, of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system in n short time by the use of these Bitters. One bottle in such cases will convince the most incredulous of their curative effects. \ Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, • Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse--it--w.hcn .you-fiml it -ob*— structed and r,htggisb in the veins ; cleanse it when it is foul; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, anti the'health o's the system will fidiow. —" Grateful IlioitHnudK proclaim Vjnkgak Bittkrs the most wonderful I nvigyirant that ever .sustained the sinking syste*ri. Fin, Tape, and other Worm*, lurking in. the system of so maivv thousands, arg effectually destroyed and removed Savs a distmguislvMl physiologist: There is scarcely an individual upon the face of the earth whose body is exempt from the presence of worms. It is not upon the healthy elements of the body that - worins cxist r but upoq the diseased hmnors and slimy deposits that breed those living monsters of disease. No system of Medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelminitic% -will free the system horn worms, like these Bitters. Mechanical Dlaeasca. Persons engaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance m life, will he subiect to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against this take a dose of Wai.kkr's Vjnkgar Bittkrs once or twice a week, as a Preventive. Bilious* Remittent* and Intermittent Fe v era, which arc so prevalent iu.tiui vaUey-3.0f,-oun sgreat rivers throughout the United States, esj>ecially those, of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkansas. Red, Colorado, Braros, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile Savannah, Roanoke, James, anti many others, with their vast frilnrtaries, throughout our entire Tjamntry during the Sn.ir|mer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat and dryness, afe invariably accmnpanied by extensive derangements of arid fi ,i, 'r, and other abdominal viscera. There arc always more or Less obstructions of the liver, a weakness and irritable state of the stomach, and great torpor iff the bowels, being c’cigged up with vitiated accumulations. In their treatment, a purgafive, exerting a powerful influence upon these various organs, is essentially necessary. There is —no-ca t bar tic for l -Ui-D-H J ’IV-ill ViNKr.AK Bittkrs, as they will speedily aeiiiove the dark-colored viscid matter with which the bowels are lo: U tl. at the same time stimulating the secretions of. the ii"u r , and generally lestoring the healthy tunctionj of the digestive organs.

ut urn vuyc willin'. .Scrofula, RtS. While-Swellings, Ulcers, KrysipeUs, Swelled Neck, Holler, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent 1 nthunoiathns, Myrcmial Allections, O.d Soics Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Kvi etc, etc. In these*, as in nil nth tun ■'itu'ionnl D’seisc >, Wiw Ki'k’s Vinkc uc I'.i r rKKs luve shown their great curative powers iu th: most obstinate and intractable cases. Dr. Walker** California Vlrießar Bltlrr* act on all these cases in a similar manner. By purifying the Blood they remove the cause, and brrcsolvmg away the effects of the inflammation (the tubercular deposits) the affected parts receive health, 1 and a permanent cure is effected. The propertle* of Dit. Wai.kiw’s Vinrc.ar BiT i kHs Sie Apeiienf, Diaphoretic amrUanmnative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic,'Sedative, Counter-Irri-taut. Sudorific, Alterative, and Anti-Bilious. -Tire Aperient and mild Laxative properties of Dn. Wat.krk’s Vi.vkgak Bittkrs are the best safeguard in all cases of eruptions And malignant fevers, their balsanpe, healing, and soothing properties protect the humors of live sauces, Their Sedaiive-properties allay pain in the nervous system, stomach, hmi bowels, either from inflammation, wind, colic, cramps, etc. Their Counter-Irritant influence exten ,s throughout the system. Their Diuretic properties act on the Kidnevs, correcting and regulating the flow of urine. Their Anti-Bilious properties stimulate the liver, in the secretion of bile*, and it s discharges through the biliary ducts, and are superior to all remedial agents, for the cure of Bilious Fever', Fever, and Ague, etc. Fortify tl»©-body ngnliiHt dhense by-puri-fying all its fluids with Vinkgar Bitttcrs. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus forearmed. The liver, the stomach, the bowels, the kidneys, and the nerves are rendered disease-proof by this great invigor, mt. Direction*.—Take of the Bitters on going to bed at night from a half to one and one-ha 1 f wine-glassfull iSat good nourishing food, such as beef steak, mutton chop, venison, roast beef, and vegetables, and take out-door exercise. They are composed of purely vegetable ingred'vnts, and contain no spirit. J WALK K in, Prop’r. It. H. McDONALD & CO., Druggists and Gen. Agts.. San Francisco and New York. tar SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS & DEALERS.

CASH PREMIUMS FREE l OVHH. Twenty-One Thousand Dollars Distributed next April, Free, among the $2.00 subscribers ot the 4 WBEKIiY SHNQUIUam. Inclose $2.00 for a year’s subscription, or send for foil particulars. Extrapremiums for Agents. Address FAKAN & MoLKAN. fclnelnnatl, Ohio. TWO 6RAND PRIZE BOOKS. For which a premium of SI,OOO and SSOO w r cre given. Striking for the Right, $1.75. - - Silent Tom. $1.75. powerful, fascinating, and dealing with practical questions of the day, they Will charm and profit both old and .young. Other volumes of the SI,OOO Prize series will be issued during December. They^are Eronounced by the Examining Committee, Rev Drs. Incoln, Rankin and Day, superior to any similar Berles; j>rlce $1.50 each. Please send for full Illustrated Catalogue. ; D. LOTHROP A CO., Publishers, 38 and 40 Cornhlll, Boston. BCB Q f t j lo Kidneys and Uri- hi IJSI9 iSHiSiSS hi In -Jli*l no superior. Tones up the hr IS wljjf system alter Ague- Phy- |*l K PMTJ it. Bold 1* Write for Large Illustrated Dcscrlruve Prb c List In f)ouble single. Muzzle tnd Breech-Loading RlCea, Shot (lUns.lievolvers, l*!idoD.Ac..of every kina, formen or beye ,at very low prices.Guiii ,$3 to sßoo;Pistols,sl tos2s K ft! A WANTED^ a B u o r „M« Wl W*V BUFFALO LAND, by Hon. W.E.W ebb. i |||l., like Agents are clearing A I’L'MTV 8»»0A »200 per Mo. Tiewf/or thr A)iirr« HIT [j j, I A icml secure Tn-filory at ollOe. Addt'-ss, Hvllti I M E. IIxNNXjuBI) A Co., C'inJJ., or Chicago. A 1,1. KINDS OF COLLECTION Or advisory Foreign La* 1 ir ls j?KUi!'AUF?’^ attended *° at Law, Columbia, Lancaster Co., Pa. (t!K +„ (tlOfl per day! A gents wanted! Al! classes of U)J X 0 ipziU wOrkitigpcOplc, of eitli-i scx.yontjgor old,- Unite more money M work for us la their spare moments or all tlie time than at anything ilse. Panic-, ulurs free, Aitdrcas ti.jsU««rtriv Co., rortl ind, MidwCT A. S. K 388 - R XDR. WHITTIER, 817 I.oofeft engaged, atid saowt sucevs fnl pbviiiolaaar Uw a*a Coo«uU*Uoa or ( ajlorwrkt, V