(Concitidedfrom gration anktbe flbw of much-needed espital into - the States lately-in rebell ion. It will be a happy condition of the country when the old 'citizens of these States , will take interest in pub tic affairs, promulgate ideas hones* entertained; vote for men represent ing their„ ,Views, and,tolerate the same freed On of expression and bal lot iin those , entertaining ; different political convictions: mmatter OF COLUMBIA. • 'Under !be provisions of the act o Congress approved February 21,1871, a territorial government was organ ized in . the. District of Columbia—its resnlis have- thusfarrealized the. ex pectations I 'of its advocates. Under the:.directiOn of the territorial officers a system...of improvement has been inaugurated, by means of which • WashingtOn is rapidly becoming a city-worthy of the nation's capital. The citizens of the District having I voluntarily taxed theniselves to a large amount for the purpose of con tributing to the well arrangement of theseat of government, rrecommend several appropriations on the part of Congress, in order that the govern ment May bear its due share of the I expense or carrying out a judicious SySt#IIII of improvements TIIE CHICAGO FIRE. By the great tire in Chicago, 'the nio,t important of the government buildings Were consumed,. Those already burped had become itfa' de (late to the demands of the gorn ment in that growing city, and, looking to the' near future, were to tally inadequate. I recommend, therefore, that ati appropriation be made immediately to purchase the remainder of the square on which the burned buildings stood, provided it can be purchased at a fair valua tion, or provided that the Legislature of Illinois will pass a law authoriz ing its condemnation for government purposes, and also an appropriation of as much money as can be properly expended toward the erection of new buildings-during the fiscal year. I M 311GBANTS The number of immigrants igno rant of our laws, habits, etc., coming i iitttuur country annually has become ,u great, and the impositions prac ticed upon theta sb numerous and fla grant, that I suggest Congressional action fur their protection. It seetns to me a fair subject for legislation by 'ungress. I cannot now state, as ful ly as i desire, the nature of the.com plitint, made by itranig;rams of the treatment they receive, but will try to do rno during the session of Con gress, particularly if the subject sl add receive your attention. TILE PUBLIC - SZRVICE It has been the aim of the admin istration to enforee honesty and effi ciency in all; public offices, and every public serVant who has, Violated the trust plated in him; has been pro; seeded against with all the rigor of the law. if bad men have secured places, it has been the fault of the syStem established by law, the cus tom for itiakini4 appointments, or the .fault of those ,r;ho recommend for government positions persons not sullipientlY well known to them per )/ sonall, or who give letters indors ing, 't e character of office-scekers with( ut a proper sense of the grave n-sphnsibility which such a course devOlVes upon them. , A civil service reform, which can correct this abuse, i—inneli needed. In mercantile pur suit 4 the business man who gives a lette: of recommendation to a friend t. , Aahic hint tyobtain credit from a sit - .tager is re4tlrded as morally res ,p-,10=11,10 fur the integrity of his friend atal his ability to make his obliga -1 ion. A reformatory law \vhich Would enforce this privilege against all indorsers of persons for public places would insure great caution in Making recommendations:- A salu tary lesson has been taught careless anal dishonest public servants in the great autolwr - of prosecutions and con \let ions of the last two years. It tnc- nu% ornnic elnite;e which is mking place thro . - oat the country, in bring,ing to pun ishment those who halve proven rec rt•:uit to the trusts \ confideil to them, tina in elevating to public *Alice none but tho* who possess the confide:ice of the nom-4 and virtuou-;, who will always be !bond to comprise the ma , I,rity of the community in winch tl,•%y live . , CI V :-1.-.C.V1(1-: uses to' Congress one ear ago I urgently recommended a rolorm in the civil service of - the ci;iuntry. Di conformity with that recommendation ('ingress in the 9th section of the act making appropria tiOns for sundry civil expenses of the government, and tar other purposes. approved March ;3d, IS7I, gave the lit , ct-ssAry authority to the executive to inatigurate a civil service reform, and:placed bpon hint the responsi -I,i.ity ojdaiing.so undo the authork.- ty of said act. 1 convened a hoard elf eminently qualified far the work, to make rules and atiguia-_ to ii. to effect the needed reform.— Their hthors are not yet -complete, but tt i, lieheved that they will sue coctlin devising a plan which can be adopted to the great relief of the ex qllit I ve, the heads of departmen ts and toctiliter, of l'ongres.'s, and redound to the true interest of the public ser vi-e. At all events. the experiment -hall have 41 fair trial. 1 have thus hastily summed up the operations of the government during the Irst year, nil made such suggestion, as occur to ine to tie proper tur your eonside rit ion-. I suit-wit them with confi dence that y.)tir combined action will he wise, statesman-like and in the be-4 interest, of the whole country. 1". S. ( ;RANT. Evecutive Mansion, Dec. 4, 1571. Mansard Roofs. n In article on the Fire Depart mei' of Nev York, the Jutowal of tat ld'entions the tact that fireman utterly detest wooden Man nu rd roofs. It nayS: "They consider them abut equal to a lumberyard on too of a house. The slate is no protection whatever against tire. It iiropri - O - tizouil after the heat strikes it...ilia the frame work is et insidered a wrist excellent medium for. kind ling aid communicating tire.- Be sides, whim - a tire originates in one of them it—is almost impossible to get at it, etii4ecially when the house is high. When the Catholic llrphan Asylum, on Thirty-uinth street, took tire in the Mansard roof, it burned a long time ... before the firemair-could do anything to :leek the fire. Ft- natty they got a hose up inside. Be ing a public building, and almost va cant in the top Jory, it was saved ; but.had it been a store filled with. dry goods or other combustible material, it would have been gutted, despite she strenuous efforts -of the fireman. It is the opinion of experts tlpit if all large .buildings on our narrow busi iii•s-, slreels had - wuudea—Mrto.ard roofs, no human agency could pre vent a tire front leaping the streets if it gut the least headway on one side." - —From all that has been' seen of the Grand Duke Alexis it isievident that he is not a "lady's man." While arting as an escort he is always po lite and occasionally. gay. But he nog er dirt.. As soon as the ceremo ny of dancing is ovig ;7 -for it is little more than a ekrirOv to him—he relieves his patitief'or his company and goes his way, leaving her to go hers, If he -ran steaLaway he will walk off alone, get in a back room, roll a:cigarette, and smoke it. While Alex is attracts everybody's attention his brother officers are improving the opportunity to put themselves on good terms with the ladies, in which they succeed adtnirahly, being all fine looking -and well educated men. _ =CZ =A sick man wins told that his wife would probably marry again. -"All right,'' said he, ' , there will be one man to lament my death !" - - - [From the New Yak Nereid.] "PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH." Iffstorkal Sketchy' the "Pennsylva nia Dulch"—Whav They Live— Their- Polities—Some Of Their Il lustrious Men,4:c. WHERE DID TilIE HIGH DUTCH ORIGINATE • - - To make a long story short, the Pennsylvania Dutch emigrated to Atnerica, usually In a very needy condition, from both banks of the Rhine, from Saxony, Northern Ba varia, German Switzerland and Hesse, almost immediately after Peron.procmle&to his province on the Delaware. Penn went to work to get peaceable, frugal. honest to° buy his lands and raise the value of the tracts unsold, pretty much as the Northern Pacific Rail road and the Western State emigra tion societies are proceeding at pres ent. A considerable number of Ger-. man Protestants had sought asylum in England during the religious wars on the continent, and Penn,took pains to , make these his - Correspondents with the immense bulk of their dis satisfied neighborsstill in Germany. The itatuPo of his lands, and the equal and protecting laws of the new prov ince, were duly noised abroad, and liberal considerations for those days were offered toemigrants. - For ex ample, a family 'bight get passage free to Pennsylvania from Bremer haven, Delft, Lubeck, Hamburg, or Amsterdam, .provided they would submit to be sold out for a term of years to do service on their arrival. A very large , percentage, probably one-third of what are now called Pennsylvania Dutch ,(who can not number less than three-quarters of a million souls), are derived from these voluntary slaves of the reign of Jas. 11, Queens Mary and Anne, and the early Georges. . Penn and his executors also turned to good use the universal disposition among the more ignorant Protes tants of German blood in those times to settle in sects and found missions in the New York World. Between Lutherans and Calvinist a gmit num ber of new interpreters and - theolo gians had sprung up in Germany. Some of these, like the Dunkers and Sever, Day Baptists, were conscien tious about 'the precise day of the week for Sunday-1' others were av erse to ethication and inventions, and thought that a holy life ought to be calm and conventual; some, like the new school of Moravins, as revised by Count Lutzendorf, iwSa.xotty, be• lieVed in education under certain semi-monastic restrictions and su pervisions, and,_finally, even thous ands of plain orthodox Lutherans and Calvinists took the fever far a Wes tern home, and packed themselves away on board slow sailing vessels %%Inch delivered them up at New castle, Bristol. and s when6e they passed opt beyond the limits of the Quaker and Welsh farms and settlements, but kept in the rear of those hardy Indian fight ers, the border Scotch Irish. Thus the Germans had speedily taken up the best land at-the foot of the Blue Ridge, and by a quiet system of ex pansion their descendants have spread out ow the limestone lands. and some of them may now be founsi even in the valleys of the Ceritild Allegheny range. They have wan dered less than any of the original colonizing, elements of the thirteen colonies, andthe 'Germans of the O hio Valley and the Northyest,are al together a different people; the pro duct of a wore modern civilization and without the quaintness and pe culiarities of these ancient l'ennsyl• .anions. Such, tersely expressed, was- the origin of the Pennsylvania Dutch, who rank among the olth-st native Americans in our country, if airy of them vote for Andrew Jackson, as is comically :dived, they do it upon long naturalization papers, covering at least five generations. CHIEF TOWNS OF THE DUTCH 'The chlt!f conlers: of popuhlti”o ink the hutch country, are. Allentown, Reading, Lant.uster and York. The city of Frederick, Maryland, audio' idealized and brightened by a mix ture of Scotch and Eng fish, also a true Dutch town, and its ►narket days are nearly as characteristk as those of towns which lie along the same general valley to the northwestulird. Anybody can remember that one of the coo picuous points on the 'Alary land battle-field of Antietam was an old Dunker church., a worshipping place for these same Dutch. \\ hen John Brown desce`<►ded upon Virgin ia, one of the first prisoners and hos tages lie took, selecting him simulta neously with Col. Louis Washington, was a Mr. ALstadt, who was also of this blood. lit-mt A retrospect of the politics of the Dutch country will show that, next to Governor Shunk, the most popular politicians who have ever gained and retained itsaffections have tieen Benj. Franklin and Thaddeus Stevens, both Yankees—one from Boston and the other from Vermong. Latauster ('o. always went against Buchanan, and Thaddeus Stevens could carry it whenever he liked; for the Dutch gave him in that district a clear majority of 7,000 all the time. Even at this day, a very popular campaign paper published at Lancas ter, in the Dutch dialect, is named Father 4brahmn,after President Lin coln. As a getr.ral rule the Scotch rish carry off alt the best offices by latch votes; as witness the cases of Buchanan,Jerry Black,Glancy Jones, Curtin, Cameron, Judge Woodward, \Vin. 1). Kelly, McPherson, Clerk of the house; Geary and McClure. For ney, however, the celebrated John Cesna, of Cborpenning faille, and Mr Getz, how the member from Read ing, are of pure German blood. ursT tous PENN'A. DUTCHMEN. \ good Must, ation Of the docility of the llut-c•he population is afforded in the . widely known fact that the two great counties in this region go directly contrariwiseat every election —Berks taking the I iemocratic shoot, and Lancaster the Whig—and there is no way of accounting for this sin gular difference, except by the fact that the best English politicians of Lancaster county were .Henry ('lay men, while the vorresponding politi cians of Berks were allies of Jackson. Thus the saying goes that in Berks county they vote for Andrew Jack son to this day; but it will be quite a.; proper to say that the Lancaster Dutch vote as ignorantly for Henry Clay, bcxuuse Lancaster is even more of an agricultural county than Berk'S, —it has less manufactures, and it pro cfuunctis for tariff taxation, neverthe -IG-N: 'ln the heart of the Dutch country was born Robert Fulton, the renown:- ed inventor of steam navigation; and here, up to nearly' the period of his 'With, lived the parents of John Calhoun. General lik.ytiolds, liars tuff 'and Hartranft, who figured in the }ate war, were Pennsylvania Dutcli, but Andrew and Horace Por ter, and W. ti.. Hancock, though born here, were pf different origin, Conressmen Myers and Haldeman, the only prononunced free traders who can be elected iu Pennsylvania, are of the Dutch blood. 'l'lie country on the northern side of tne Blue Mountains, separated by the anthracite coal region from the Dutch, owes its settlement to a rare of far more drivino. character. The Connecticut Yankees peopled the \V pining Valley ancrthe upper wa ters Of the Susquehanna before the Revalution,and the flourishing towns of Scranton, Wilkesbarre. and Wil liamsport are almost destitute of Pennsylvania traits. Pennsylvania persecuted t hese Connecticut thapsso ferociously that they scarcely, felt in jured:when the British and Indians massacred them at ,Wyoming. It Was one of these Yankee Penn 'Obediah Gore, who- dis covered the first anthracite coal in the :State, and used it in _his forge. Judge Jesse Pell, also a Connecticut chapi set up the first "stone coal" fire grate in America, at his dwelling in _ Wilkesbarre, iBOB,and the chimney place is IAIII one of the sights of the town., The first considerable coal snippingrfOrtS in the United_States were Mu etta and Colembia r in the. Susquehanna Dutch country. _Jacob Tomemominated by the Republicans for the Governor of Maryland, who is also Mr. Secretary Creswell 's un cle, was originally a Pennsylvania coal and lumber merchant on the Susquehanna. The Lehigh coal, which ban made Asa Packer the richest man in the Slate, was discovered by a Dutch forester—Philip Ginter—in 1791, and the great Lehigh Coal Company, at its incorporation in 1793, contained the names of two native Germans among the five 'organizers. The first boatsaid to have descend ed the Mississippi valley from Pitts burgh to New Orleans, was a Lan caster county Dutchman's venture. Many of these Germans are very ex pert and antique bargemen, as, for. example, on the Lower Susquehana, Conestoga, Union, and other canals. The Susquehanna and its tributaries are generally dammed so as to afford slackwater navigation from the main stream up the deeper creeks to towns like Lancaster. 13enninghoff, the owner of the most valuable petroleum wells in the Un ion, is of thiayace. ' Dr. Constantine Hering opened the first school to teach homcepathy in the world, at Allentown, is 1834; he, is now Dean of the Hahnemann led ical College in Philadelphia. David Rittenhofise, of regular Du tsche stock, was born on the ‘l42lt hickey Creek, near Germantown, in 1732, and became probably the most eminent Pennsylvania Gerunm: He was the successor of Franklin in the Presidency of the American Philo sophical Society, discovered indepen dently the science of fluicions, and constructed a celebrated orrery. From his astronomical platforna, in Jude pendenceSquare,PkiladelPhia,where he had made observations. on the oc cultation of-Venus, was read the Dec leration of Independence, soon after its adoption. He died in 1793. Conrad Weiser; the Indian inter.' preter of the Revolution, whose ad-' ventures form a large partlot the his tory of the New York proVinee, was . a Dutch burgher of Itmding. John W. Forney, 'Collector of the , port of Philadelphia,ls of Pennsyl vania Dutch stock, am near Lan caster. John IV. Garrett, President of the Baltimore and Ohio Railrtad, is, on his maternal side, PennsyLvania cierman. Geddes, the originator of the Erie canal, and George Lauman, a cele brated railway contractor in the Uni ted States and Carkada.s, were of this MCC. General Peter A. Muhlenberg,who led his congregation to battle, prea ching in full uniform, was a revolu tionAry Deittscher, and his son, Hen ry Muhlenburg, was a Minister to Austria under Jackson. The . first great turnpike road in America was built through the Dutch country from Philadelphia to Lan caster in 1792, and In 1762 Ritten house surveyed and projected the Union One of the earliest glass and iron furnaces in the country, was erected nett' Manheim, in 1756, by Baron Henry William Steigle, a queer fel low, of much local renown in the Dutch country. The stock farmers of this region are celebrated through the country; they make trips through Ohio lndi ana and Northern Kentucky in search of mares for draught stock, and pro duce foals from Hainbletonian sires. They supply the Boston and great milling markets of the East with the strongest and heartiest of horses, and make direct importations of Channel, Devon Shire, and Yorkshire sheep rams and cattle. The Coleman farm, at Cornwall, is 9W acres lu dimen sions, and about 150 Immures from all parts of the country pasture upon it_ Itsgpeethvell Hambletonian 1.1,1 - Luca:ft S''-'olutl- • rhe trotting track is a featurk! of ovary agricultural society's grounds lu 2.1/VS region, but the old-failiioneli fakrs, like that of Reatostown have been discontinued. Simon Sayder, Joseph Ileister, Joint Andrew Shulz, ,, (;eorg,e Wolf, Jp.,eph F. Packer and William Bigler, seven out of the sixteen tiovernors of Pennsylvania elected sinee 1791, when the state conz.litution went into operation, have heen of Dutch blood and name. -Governor Wolf who died• in WA served six years... was Controller of the United Statets Treasury under,. Jackson, member of Congress and Collector of the port of Philadelphia. lie began life a school teacher. Governor Ritzier was a Berks coun ty man. uneducated but strong will ed ; he was living a year or two ago in the western Dart of the State. lie and Thaddeus Stevens cou►pelled tire . Gerinans to pay their school taxes and support education. Governor Snyder was a queer stick, who kept the Commonwealth in a good deal of ansusen►ent and tor moll. He held the gubernatorial office for nine years. Horace Gree ley is in the habit of quoting him on politiCal economy, but the people of the State hardly know that he ex isted. —There is no instance in' history where one individual has given so much money for philanthropic pur poses to the suffering of other coun tries as Mr. A. T. Stewart. Soon af ter the breaking out of the rebellion he sent $lll,OOO to the distressed cot ton weavers of Lancashire, in Eng land. soon after he sent out a ship freighted with provisions for the re lief of the starving people of Ireland. At the outbreA of our war Writh the South, he subscribed for the govern ment $:30,000. The year previous to the German-Franco war there wits great dearth of provisions in South eastern Prussia, and to the sufferers Mr. Stewart sent $lO,OOO, gold, for which Bismarck, sent him an auto graph letter of thanks. Toward the end of the war between France and Germany, Mr. Stewart sint a ship with $.;0,000 worth of flour to Havre, to be distributed among the suffering and the poor. Afterward he sent 100,000 francs to Paris for the benefit of disabled French soldiers, and a like ampunt to klerlin for the Ger mans. IHs $50,000 to Chicago appro priately crowns the column. THE WORLD'S INTERNAL REMEDY. .TOLINSON's Rheumatic Compound AND BLOOD 1"U Quick In its Action, Permanent in its Cure This medicine is the prescription of a world-re, ndwned French Physician, who used It in his extensive practice maay years before iitlerkt it to the public in its present form. but hr.- ally beromln7 convinced of Its great cura tive Proffernes, and de s iring to profit thio.e sufferic.g from this ternhle disease. consented to have it put up in bottles and sold at the low price of ONE DOLLAR. If necessary, we Mizid. *rifrer the certificates or thous ands; who have been cared by it, tint the best recommendation we ran give it is, a trial or one, taro or three bottles, which will certainly re lieve the most difficult case. Try it and be convinced. We Nine advertised this medicine for sale by George C. Goodwin ,t C o _ of Boston. 'A cute or the money refunded, and out or near MO bottles sold at retail, they have had but s bottbs returned. Sellers% Imperial Cough Syrup, The Imperial ('ouph Syrup COllialliS no spirituous ingredient whattner, and may be used In a leases , not requlrtng active medical treatment. The Imperial etifige Syr.:p been used for the last thirty }ears. Prepared only by R. E. SELLERS & CO. WHOUESALE DRUGGISTS, 7% %Vonn STREET, PIrTBB(FGIT, PA And fold by druggists Orurywhere I,`XECUTORS' NOTICE,-Letters testnmentary I'4 having been granted to the snhscriber on the lest wits ofJames Crawford, deceased, late of Bea ver Falls, Beaver county. Pm. this Is to notify all persons indebted to said (elate to make Immediate paymen t: and those havng claims against the same will present Ihem the settlement without de lay Mrs. M AitY CRAWFORD, bEfMOUR CRAWFORD. •, oc=tlw Err's. S.l. Crois & Co.'s Column: DRY - GOODS, New Fall Stock JUST RECEIVUD BY S. J. Cross k Co., ROC~-IF~,STER. OM STOCK OF NEW AND ,E.3iiAPONABLE DRY' - GOODS IS LARGER THAN EVERBEFORE. CONSISTING OF CLOTH, CASSI3IERE, JEANS, WA TER-PROOF, PLAIN FLANNELS, , BARRED FLANNELS, •-'! 4,1 , 1 , CANTON FLANNELS::: _CLOAKING, PRINTS] DELAINES.; PLAIDS, ALVApAS, MERINOS, '• TOWELING, 4:OENIM, , . . DRILL, PAPER "iIUSLIN„ BLEACH ED AND BROWN MIILIINI, COTTON BATTING, SHAWLS, SHIRTS, WOOLEN YARN., HOSIERY, GLOVES, 4., &c•; NO TI cD•'W. - IN GREAT ARIEiI Ready-Made Cl4hing: COATS, PANTS, VESTS, IXIZA.WJERS, Ike., c., , Hats and Caps, A VERY LARGE anal NEW STOCK BOOTS 4 SIIOES : Men's, Youths' and. Boys' 130975.. WELTS : MEET and CHILDREN'S SHOl.>; AND GLM :+IIOES ALL PURCITASED L4)W AND WILL BE SOLD AT A SMALI ADVANCE ON COST. WE A Lso CoNTINCE To KEEP Oti: s - roci: 01. GRO C It 1 - E.' S , PROVISIONS, F1.01:1t, (Ht MILL-PEED. MALT, LIME CEMENT. HARDWAER : noRsE snoEs, 11011: , E AV) ndow Glass Paints in all Colors, DRY and IN OIL : wiIITE LEAD, LINSEED OIL, VUTTV, TURPENTINE, VARNISH, ALCOHOL, GUM SHELLAC, .CC - Wooden Pumps FOR WELLS AND CISTERNS. ALL HEAVY CooDs, DELIVERED WITHIN A REASONABLE DISTANCE, FREE OF CHARGE. WE ALSO FURNIS' OUR CUSTOMERS WITH COAL AT 'ME 31:1.1?tiET Rochester. Oct. 20th, 1871. • Dwblling Houses, TENEMENTS, I3IPROVED AND UNIMPROVED REAL ESTATE AND N".AR THE Borough of Rochester, FOR SALE AND RENT [fel)* ly ES. 3. •CI:LCOSiIE3. . Ilay3-Iy:chd my3l-novl. , LIME 2 El 31i8cellaneoift4' NEW GOODS! NEW -GO S . NEW ARRIVAL OF FANCY DRESS GOODS, J. M. M'Creery & co's RADICAL BLOCK, BRAVE* Pa Consisting of Fancy and Staple Dress Goods, Trimmings, Fancy Notions, Ladies' and Gents Furnishing Goods, IlftllfnFry Goods, Carpets, CHFCloths, Spoodinatles NEW BLACK GROS-GRADIED SILKS —JAPANESE SILKS, SILK VELVETS, VELVET - 1 VS, PLAIDS,. POPLIN ALPACAS,TI 3111111 ,NS, ' - TYCOON'u REPS, for Wrappers, 45;,-c. CLOAKINOS, - SHAWLS, SCA RFS, and SACKS. LATEST STYLES IN PALL BATS an.l BONNETS • LADIES' A:. VELYZ' & FELT 11ATS AND TCWIANS, BOYSI' VELVET t.t: CLOTH HATS Plumes - & Flowers BRUSSELS and PKGRAIN CARPETS RUGS, OIL CLOTHS, &c., at J. M. IT_Creery's. sep 27:t f THE BEST IN THE WORLD The Improved Sampson & Howe STANDARD SCALES, AU stzea anWvialettes for * oale by .W) 0 UT) F. ,Sc., 31' C LAU IR 63 'Wood St., Pittsburgh. Also, Warehouse Trucks, Patent Mona). Drawers —and— GROCERS' FIXTURES a e pfl.3m JYALLES VEGETABLE SICILIAN itv t e SictL , 3a I q Q, HAIR - ENEWEI3. Every year increases the I,opillari ty of this valuable Hair Preparation ; which is dit to 'merit alone. We can assure Syr 01,i1patrons that it is kept fully up to ito high, standard; and it is theontliNkablo and perfect ed preparatitreifolinr , aIIAY OR FADED HAIR tO its 'youtheul color, making it soft, lustrous, and silken. The scalp, by its use, becomes white and clean. It removes all eruptions and dandruff, and, by its ti4nie prop erties, prevents the hair front filling out, as it stimulates and nourishes the hair-glands. By its use, the hair grows thicker and stronger. In baldness, it restores the capillary ,lands to the r normal vigor, and will create a new growth, except in extreme old age. It is the most eco nomical llmrt DaEsstxn ever used, as it requires fewer applications, and gives the hair a splendid, glossy appearance. A. A. Hayes, 31.1) . ., St ate Assayer of Massachuset ts, says, "The constituents are pure, and care fully selected fir excellent quality; and I consider it the 'BEST PI:ErAn- RATION for its intended purposes." Said by all Druggisti, and Dealers in Price Ono Dollar. Buckingham's Dyo. FOR Asour Renewer in many cases requires too long a time, and too much care, to restore gray or faded - Whiskers, we have prepared this dye. in one preparation ; wl4ch will quickly and effectually accOinplish this result. It is easily. applied, and produces a color which Will neither rub nor wash off. Sold by all Druggists. Price Fifty Cents. Manufactured by R. P. HALL, & CO.( NASHUA. N.H. Ayer's Oathartic - - - • ..e Fiir the relief :i: e or :ill der:mg nientpi fu the , lot :lib, liver, and lee ri Ttie a aiQrititit, null :elleilt pu rgatii. they cent, 11 0 mercury or min ral whale% cr. US SIC knt',, :11 iolfreriug pre% en ...I by their 11,e, :Id veer. raniileFllolll,l liar Itletn On how for their pi , ii•etion s and relict. Nvtwir• I.orig ex - perienre provol them to be the nlnt bet the PULA Vi iii. ti htrl inatl.et :•te,naolx. By their ),7111e(1,11to romtption, t!...• Lvu e‘i•elh4l, ote-tetigtien , ttatlntc I, - lint) tie V. 111,1 e ittih•looort of life ro.torea to it.. It ti:l , ) 3 ' tiviT Y • Intmlizil orgtu , who h hecuine am ) ^luggi - h eleiiiibe‘i liv .1 ft.'''. ti! 1- ~) ,:thwx.ii3O•.l,,,ith,trw \alio of tilt Ii h , •11 l'eekoned it ho ohj, it, tumult •.I - Make. Ille.Tt e,erVe tbru - for ahv o ' t •• Ito". at ..v •r frof4l, N l,l the, tow!. Nodl , orat, I , i 4itil ) ll, tilCt, en Or 'Writ FIJI all' , heti+ tire ;:icon ell the Ivrapper t• , 11- , them a , :L :tn.l th, compHito.. 4 , v,larli 11113 , 1 P://.4 rapidlv ''r "Solkels.la ur I[ml:4-elation. Listloom. La n ll , " 7 and r... 05• of Appotite. I hey hm ino(lerateh to -tiumlate the 3. 3, :ld It. heal! 10114 . anti ;WI ion. I - ~ I . Liver iromplAilit tool itA v axiom, ~.y U' 1 t.,t1 , , ElMOnsi Headache, Pilch Ilea • ache. Jaundice or Green Nick l ines*, ligi • i•in. Colic 811 , 1 Hilion* Fever.",4tt y , 11,,tild 1 "‘ i ntli ' l "'")A Y t Ol, fir each ca - c, to orrert tilt .11-1.a,1 P$ arL3oll or remove the olt,truction. , 55 Mel I miAtt it. For Dysentery or 11Diarrheen, but not gyrierally libenniatisen, Graxel. Dilation of the Heart. Pain in the !Ugh.. !loch :let I Loins. they •tionlil he ouutin taki•n, a.t reguireit, io change the .li , ea , ei action ref the sy,ti ;it. With I/ change emnplaints iliQappear. For Ilropsy Dropsical hisvellince they should he taken in large unit frequent to produce the ell'ect of a ilra , tte purge.. }or Ihiupprritstion, a large ilo , e Fltottlit b. trik.'..n. as it produces the desired etfeet by sym pat by. a Dinner Pill. take one or two Pills it promote .14testion and relieve the stomach.. An occasional dose stimulates the stomach ant bowels, restores the appetite, and invigorates th. Syetein. Hence it is often advantageous when no serious derangement exists. One who feel. tolerably well often finds that a dose of the,. Pills makes him feel decidedly better, from thei cleansing and renovating effect on the digestiv. apparatus. PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. AYLR .3' CO., Practical Clicniists LOWELL, zgAss., U. S. A. • FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE .ocs.4:ly ANDEUSON, hiring taken laOld his old Foundry a4;ain, In Rochester, Pa., will be pleased to meet his old customers and friends who may want either the BEST COOK ING STOVH, Heating Stove, or anv other kind of atstings of best material and workmanship. The business will be conducted by Je9:tfj J. J. ANDERSON & SONS. JOB PRINTING neatly and expedlthinaly matted at thte cam RoviellicCes'Advertiseinenti. CHICAGO Mr ,DESTRUCTIOI‘ A fail And complete taste of Chicago. her, pest. present.and future.. Wiagraptdo scenes. JPGI• dents and full details of therdisaster, by Geo. P. Vtoo and J. W. Sheahan, editors of thelthicago .•-- With over 400 pagesand 60 Wu 4mM:titre It is now res4y tordellvery, AGENTS WANTED. At ß eiiii. tgrorfot:r t : Mori. • ' Graft Puolishing Co., Chicago Illinois, or Philadelphia. Pa. . • ' tdee"w* CUNDURANGO. BLISS, KEENE do COOS Fluid El tract, The wonderhal remedy tar Caucus. ST emus, -Sonoma, Utcaus, L`LXO7lkll7 COX. PLAINT!, 13ALT 1,1118IIN.:lnd all CRBOBIC BLOOD Diskaske, is prepared from the Genuine Can. durango Iparki from Loltkrmuulor, secured by the assistance of the authorities of that country. It Is the most effective, prompt and certain anon:l -nv° and BLOOD. PURIFIES/ known. , Sold by all Druggists. In pinc bottles, having on them our name. trade mark and directions. Seed fora cir cular. grace and Laboratory, No. GO Cedar St.,; New York. 00th YEAR NEW - YORK OBSERVES. riper annum, including Tear Book for 1871. SIDNEY E. MORSE, 311. & CO., 37 Park Row, New-York. COPIER rrtriri. UNIVERSALISM. Send for free sample copy of the CHRISTIAN LEADEIL a Irat,eltios weekly Jogirnal. published by the New York State Convention of tfniversal- Ist, and containiog the Sermons of Dn. E. IL CHAPIN. „Terms $'2.50 per year. Address. Pub- Maher CHRISTIAN LEADER, 12 , .38 Broadway, New York City., , WOOWS ENV % H AM free during jG the coming year to every snbseriber of Merry's Museum, the Toledo Blade, = P0i ... 1 . 0 'a EZiona etc., which httu.• deuce of= an pope. lathy. Horace (ireete , James Parton. Theodore = I=l Tilton, bdinanaittott, etc., write tor every num .......... /APO t.l( " l7 " Tn tri% irlaem three Ural-class period od teals for the price of one of them. A varied of iremiums OD equally liberal terms. It Is an orig nal, first.class marantne. Volume X begins with =2:l - s it r i ... ;: . 1 4 t .... 1 w; cc= free. Address 11:111111111M1 S. S. WOCirS l ea .'.77... = , Over 14)0 _Pages, tA .;:i , <7. v , 55.‘,..,„,....,-ee Tr Printed In ro era, on c . ...- superb TINTED A PL II I c - " -- .., 6 Aft,. Modred El - gratings of of ..,. FiOWdrB a isd re( unts ile _, la • J I.;