"JV3- '?-Zt''i-i-?Xlf ' i'V Jy"'fWr.ii-i ; t-c--!V-: SQje Imifti; nttiiwmM T Volume XVUI-Xe. 1. LANCASTER, PA., THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 1, 1881. Price Twe Cents. r ' i f i i CLUTMNO. TjyiLLIAMSON & FOSTER. SPEW SALES' IN FANCY HOSIERY, IN SUSPENDERS, IN BOYS' HATS. IN SUMMER U.NIJtUWEAK, IN COLORED SHIRTS. IN PAPER COLLARS, IN LINEN COLLARS IN WORKING PANTS, IN OVERALLS. Weaie making lliia ucek one ler SPECIAL BARGAINS In MicackoeiK liy inaiking tlicia down Tery low in price. The New Goods wc will tell you about in a few day-,, lint mmhc el tlieni ;irc ready for sale new. MAMSON & FOSTER'S ONE-PRICE HOUSE, 36-38 BAST KING STREET, LANCASTER. PA. "IAI.L CAMPAIGN, 1881. O'lr fit -.t invoice ei the season of FALL AND WINTHH GOODS MEN'S WEAR Arrived te-day. Outing this week the bulk of our Foreign orders) will lie in stock. We will be prepared te Miew the linest line, of ENGLISH AND FRENCH NOVELTIES ever ettered te the citizens et Lancaster, in cluding a full line of the ever popular and celebrated Talaiiien's Specialties, confined ex clusively for our Hade and conceded te lie the handsomest goods imported, together wHh a choice line et the hitcst novelties of the lead ing manufacturers. We invite an early In spection et our -tock, lccltng it our duty te advise persons in want of a Suit or an Over coat ler Fall or Winter te place their orders early bclerc the nisli commences te insure entire satisfaction. All aie cordially invited te call at 121 N. QUEEN STREET. J. K SMALING, ARTIST TAILOR. MW&S OPKING OPENING AT H. GERHART'S New Tailoring; Malient, Ne. 6 East King 3treet. I have jus-t completed fitting up one of the Finest Tailoring Establishments te be found in this state, ami am new prepared te show my customers a stock of goods for the SPRING TRADE. which let quality; style ami vaiiety el Patterns lias never been cqiulcd in this city. 1 will keep and sell no geed-, which I cannot recommend te my customers, no matter hew low in price. All goods wai ranted as upicsenlcd, and prices as low as the lowest, at Ne. 6 East King Street, Next Doer te the New Yei k Stere. H. GERHART. N EW STOCK OF CLOTHING FOR SPRING 1881, AT D. B. Hostetter & Sen's, Ne. 24 CENTRE SQUARE. Having made unusual efforts te briny before the public a fine, stylish and well made stock ei READY-HADE CLOTHING, we are new prepared te show them one of the most carefully, selected stocks of clothing in tills city, at the Lewest Cash Prices. MEN'S, BOYS' AND YOUTHS' CLOTHING! IN GREAT VARIETY. Piece Goods et the Most Stylish Designs' and at prices within the reach et all J J3Give us a call . B. B. Hear I Sen, 24 CENTRE SQUARE. awra LANCASrEB, pa. VLOTJUING. rpUK BUSINESS Of SELLING CLOTHING OK HALL Has grown te its present greatness because these points are faithfully observed : IN MAKING. Te Get the Best Material. Te Spenge it Properly. Te Gut it Fashionably. Te Sew it Thoroughly. Tlic block of MEN'S CLOTHING is always kept very lull in assortment, even te the end el the season. In HOY'S' CLOTHING the Styles ami Trimming are net appieachcd by any Clothing Heuse in the Country. A cordial welcome is ready ler all who conic, and we expect te sell only when people a'c satisfied in every respect. WAMIAKEB, & BROWN, OAK HALL, Sixth and Market Sts., PHILADELPHIA. THE LARGEST CLOTHING HOUSE IN AMERICA. IT OSENSTEIN'S ONE PRICE HOUSE. AL. ROSENSTEIN'S ONE PRICE CLOTHING HOUSE, NO. 37 NORTH QUEEN STREET. SPECIAL OFFERING FOR A FEW DAYS ONLY. IN ORDEIt TO CLOSE OUT MY ENTIRE STOCK OF BOYS' SUITS I ha deduced them Si percent, below the ORIGINAL COST. Nete the Price as maiked in the window. Children's' Suits from $1.50 up. Beys' Scheel Suits from . $2.00 up. Suits te Fit Beys from 12 te 16 years $3.00 up. Se raie a chance will net beetleicd seen again. Call early ami net a geed choice. AL. ROSENSTEIN'S ONE PRICE HOUSE. C clothing t Anyone having neglected or put oil getting themselves a SPUING OK SUMMER SUIT will de well te call at CENTRE HALL, Ne. 12 EAST KING STREET. MYERS & RATHFON. The LARGEST CLOTHING HOUSE IN THE STATE OUTSIDE OF PHILADELPHIA. We are ettering our Stock et Spring and Summer Goods At leduced prices. In order te make room ler our coming Fall Stock. If you want a Ready Made Suit you can be suited for a very small amount of money. It you prefer being measured and having a Suit made te order you can find no better stock te select from and at such prices as will a-slenMi you Indeed f he prices arc se low that no one need go about in a shabby suit these days. lust think of it, we can lurnlsh you with COAT, PANTS AND VEST te keep cool in, ler the the enormous amount of THRUE DOLLARS. Yes, for a man te wear, and a big man tee. Call and see and be suited and save money. We employ the best experi enced Cutters, ami we can guarantee satisfaction in every particular. MYERS & RATHFON. CENTRE Ne. 12 EAST K1NU STREET, JUiV 1IVLKK, BOWERS Si HURST I GRAND OPENING OF BLACK SILKS. GRAND OPENING OF COLORED SILKS. LADIES, wcaic new nrepanled te show the Finest Assortment et Colored Silks in all the New Choice Shades ever elleietl in this city. GRAND OPENING OF PLAIN AND FANCY CLOTH SUITINGS. ELEGANT PLAID AND STRIPED DRESS GOODS in the New Oinbie Shades. ANOTHER LOT OF MOSQUITO CANOPIES OPENED THIS MORNING, ALL AT LOWEST PRICES. To-menon evening, September 1, we will begin te keep our 5terc open until 8 o'clock as heretofore. GIVLER, BOWERS & HURST'S Dry Goods and Carpet Heuse, 25 EAST KING STREET. IRON HITTERS. TKUN HITTERS. IRON BITTERS! A TRUE TONIC. IRON BITTERS are highljrecemmendcd ter alt diseases requiring a certain and effi cient tonic; especially INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, INTERMITTENT FEVERS, WANT OF APPE TITE, LOSS OF STRENGTH, LACK OF ENERGY', &c. It enriches the bleed, strengthens the muscles, and gives new life te the nerves. It acts like a charm en the digestive organs, removing all dyspeptic symptoms, such as Tasting the Feed, Belching, Heat m the Stomach, Heartburn, etc. The only Iren Preparation that will net Dlacken the teeth or give headache. Sold by all druggists. Write ler the ABC Boek, 32 pp. et userul and amusing reading sent free. BROWN CHEMICAL COMPANY, 123-iydAw BALTIMORE, MD. Fer Sale at COCHRAN'S DRUG STORE. 137 and 139 North Queen etreeV.Lancaster. ' AT IN SELLING. Te Get the Cash. Te Have One Price. Te Pay Back Meney if Unsuited. Te Guarantee the Goods. ROSE OSENSTEIN'S ONE PRICE HOUSE. c LOTIUNGt HALL, LANCASTElt, PENN'A. HOODS. ritVLKK, IIUWEltS 8l 1IURSTI LANCASTER, PA. rRON BITTERS. SURE APPETISER. Hancastrr Jntclligrnrrr. THURSDAY EVENING, SEPT. 1, 1881. COLLEGE OPENING. THE NEW YEAR AT V. & M. Address Dy President T. G. Apple, 1. D. Tbe fall term, first of the new year, of Franklin and Marshall college opened this morning. The opening address was deliv ered at 10 a. m., by Rev. T. G. Apple, D. D., Ph. D president of the college, in the chapel, and was listened te by most of the old students returned te their studies, and quite an encouraging number of accessions te the institution. The new Freshmen class will number nearly thirty, and sev eral ethers enter the higher classes. The outlook for the academy is also premising. The seminary studies were also resumed this morning. Atter the formal opening and the presi dent's welcome, the usual announcements of the schedule of studies were made. The Opening Address. The subject of the president's address was " Human Personality in its Relation te Education," and the following outline of it will convey an idea of its general plan at least : A study of the nature and dignity of human personality is valuable in endeavor ing te form a right estimate of a liberal education, because it recalls te us the na tuie of man, the being te be educated, English writers en psychology, Perter for example, niake little account of personal ity, though it is familiar among German psychologists; Rauch for example, whose work is one St the text books of the philo sophic ceurse of the college, making it the subject of an able and profound study. According te German thinking. personality is the central actuality of man's being, rather than the abstraction of being a person. Personality constitutes the per son, net vice versa ; it is that centre of activity which constitutes man an individ ual being as distinguished from humanity. Personality is te be considered as a ccn ccn tie of human existence bearing a three fold relation te nature, te humanity and te Ged. Its derivation is originally from persenare te sound through, designating the lclatien of actors te their characters in the play. Human personality constituted by the union of the rcaseu and will, is, first, a centra in relation te nature which " sounds though " man. Of late this relation has awakened new intersct in the .sphere of science, though before Darwinism and modern evolution were known in scicuce the truth which is involved in them had long been familiar te the students of this college. In a deeper sense than mere science can fathom man is organically one with na ture. In the way of organic evolution he is the last link in the chaiu of cicatcd ex istencc. The human body is the eniteinc and mirror of the natural universe. Dy reason of its union with the body the soul tee is intimately related with nature. Man's intellectual and moral activities start down in the depths of nature. Rut man is also above nature, and in cludes, au order of existence from a spiritual world interior te nature, upholding and supporting the natural universe. Man is the interpreter of nature. This sympathy with nature rules in the intuitive activities of man in all ages, and influences him in mysterious ways. In lespect te its bear ing en education, while the natural sciences and mathematics have a utilitarian purpose in making nature minister te man's physi cal wauts, their higher purpose is the de velepmcnt of the mind itself, and any lower view of their study degrades educa tion. Whenever education is made a means te an end lower than itself it ceases te be really a geed, and the danger of our age is that mere industrial progress is becoming both the first and last consideration. Edu cation for the elevation of man should be the first object te be maintained, and it is discouraging te see the great and iwpuleus Oriental nations seeking te gain from our experience and our institutions a utilita rian education, ignoring the higher inter ests of true culture and religion. In the second place personality is a ceii tre in relation te humauity, being related thereto as the individual te the genus. "We distinguish between " mau " and "a man ;" the ancients had diilerent words for them. While personality distinguishes man from humauity it hinds him in living union with it. Humanity sounds through him. He feels the throbbing of its great heart. Men mould in their personal life the spirit of humauity iu different degiees. The genius, like Shakespeare, becomes a universal mau and speaks for tl-e" whole race, net, however, in any measure lesitig its own individuality. The most import ant side of true education is te study the movement in man's ethical life deeper than the merely intellectual and which must be actualized in the right de termination of the will. Applying the subject te the requirements of a liberal education the different branches having man for their subject are language and literature, history aud philosophy. Lan guage being the embodiment el thought, its study is a means of culture, especially the classics, in which is imbedded the high stages of culture leached by the na tions of antiquity. They cannot be re placed or emitted. History is another line in which the life of the race Hews into the individual intellect. It cultivates the memory, enlarges the judgment and disciplines all the mental powers. It re produces the life of the world that hi s gene before, as childhood is taken up into youth and one stage" of development into the ether. Philosophy is tiie science of. sciences, in which all branches of study beceme unified. An education without a philosophy must be a mere external and mechanical union of different forms of knowledge without a soul te biud them in one living whole. In an institution of learning phil osophy should unify the meaning of all the branches studied. By these processes of study the human becomes humane, the crude material cultivated and polished ; and the individual reproduces the life of humanity under the directing power of his own mind and will. Rut there must be a conjoint development of thchcaitand head in humane culture. A lack of either is a dwarfing and starvation. Knowledge and virtue must go haud-in-band, the Geed be joined in holy wedlock with the True. The golden rule is the soul of all geed manners. Thirdly, human personality is a centra of being in relation te Ged. Divinity sounds through humanity, and through every individual soul. The word of Ged penetrates both soul and spirit. The idea of Ged is intuitive in the human reason, in all men and in every stage of enlighten ment. Frem the mysterious musings of childhood ever the infinite te the riper develepement of advancing years there is a -constant unfolding of this. Mere forcibly the existence of Ged impresses itself en the moral nature of man. Ne extent of moral debasement can obliterate it This sense of relationship te Ged it is the office of supernatural revelation te quicken into the new-born religious nature of man. This is the benediction which crowns the whole of education, which can not, however, produce or cultivate this religious sense by any human book or human culture. It can only come by a higher power and grace. Man's threefold relations are in harmony,and culture must aim at developing our humanity in its Gedward aspect as well as its mundane aspect, aud te the Gedward capacities must be conceded their paramount and dominating place. Religion tee must em em brace culture aud acknowledge all the capacities of man as Ged-given gifts and cultivate them te the utmost. The course of culture and religion in history has been respectively from Athens and Jerusalem. These two ideas wrought aud expanded en separate lines, antagonizing and despising each ether, until in the fullness of time they were reconciled in the one absolute religion for our race in the persen of the Ged-man and theuccferward there was te be neither Jew nor Greek, but ene perfect man. Christianity filled humanization with a new soul when the Greek became the language of the new Divine revelation, and human culture found in Christianity the spirit which alene could save it from absolute wreck and ruin. As the Divine in Christ's personality glorified our human ity, se Christianity tills all forms of human istic learning and culture with its heaven born spirit. Hcnce all true education must intoned by the spirit of our holy re ligion. The crowning dignity of human personality is its relation te Ged and this determines the chief interest in all right education. Te realize the harmonious unfolding of all his capacities, world-ward, man-ward and Ged-ward, is te be a truly educated aud cultured man. Reorganization. New Rules for the Democracy. 11. L Ditlcnbaugh's Clinten Democrat. At the late meeting of the Democratic state central committee, en motion of W. U. Heuscl, esq., of Lancaster, a committee, with Hen. A. II. Dill as chairman, was ap pointed te draft rules for the government of future conventions, and report te the ensuing convention. This is an important aud most necessary step, that will prevent the enactment of such disgraceful scenes as characterized the opening and conduct of the convention of 1880, and will other wise be of great advantage in securing a correct expression of the popular Will. Among ether thing it is te be hoped that that prolific source of ill-will, irritation and mischief, senatorial delegates, will be abolished. They are of no benefit in se curing an expression of the popular will, or in perfecting proper representation, but the conflicts for these places are frequently sources of contest in conventions aud of discord between the counties. County committees should also be prevented from selecting delegates except in cases of emer gency when there is no time for their con ventions te act, for these committees have coma te make a habit of cutting off all choice by the people. The result is that our state conventions are largely made up of delegates appointed by committees and iu which the people have had no voice. In short, it will be the business of this com mittee te prepare rules that will secure the fullest aud fairest expression of the voice of the pcople in conventions, and the harmonious organization and conduct of these bodies, especially without the inter vention of mobs. Lebster Canning. Scribner'a Monthly. The factory opens at ene end en the wharf, close te the water. Twe men bring in the squirming leads en a stretcher and dump the mass into coppers for boil ing. At intervals the covers are heisted by ropes and pulleys, and dense clouds of steam arise, through which we catch vistas of men, women and children at work. Twe men approach the coppers with stretchers and scoop-nets, and they thtew rapid scoep-fuls, done te a scarlet, back ward ever their shoulders The scarlet hue is seen in all quarters en the steam ing stretcher, in the great heaps en the tables, iu scattered individuals en the fleer, iu a large pile of shells and refuse seen through the open deer, and in au ox cart lead of the same refuse, farther off, which is being taken away for use as a fertilizer. The boiled lobster is separated en long tables, into his constituent parts. The meat of the many-jointed tail is thrust out with a punch. A functionary called a " cracker" frees that of the claws by a couple of deft cuts with a cleaver, and the connecting arms are passed en te he picked out with a fork by the girls. In another department, the meat is placed in the cans. The first girl puts in roughly a suitable selection of the several parts. The next weighs it, and adds or subtracts enough te complete the exact amount desired (ene or two pounds). The next forces down the con tents with a stamp invented especially for the purpose. The next puts in a tin cover with blows of a little hammer. Then a fray is rapidly filled with the cans, and they are cariicd te the seldcrers, who seal them tight, except for minute openings in the covers, aud put them in another tray, which, by means of a pulley tackle, is then plunged in bath caldrons, in order that the cans may be boiled till the air is expelled from their contents through the minute openings. Then they are sealed up aud are boiled again for several hours, when the process of cooking is complete. Killing the Eagles. Dcmeiesl's Monthly. Hew wanton are sportsmen ! Taey net only kill innocent aud te them-, useless birds, but they are destroying the eagles in all the eastern states. One, of the curiosities of Litchfield, Conn., was a pair of eagles that lived for many years en Ban tam Lake. People came from far and near te sce these splendid birds. They were the last pair known te live iu the hills of Connecticut. But they have been shot, and there is an end of the eagles, se far as Connecticut is concerned. There is net much sentiment te be wasted upon eagles, for they are a rapacious bird, and an unfit emblem for a peaceful country like, the United States. That, however, is no rea son for exterminating them. It takes five years for the cagle te reach maturity : and one, at least, is known te have lived a hun dred aud five years. This was in captivity in Vienna. . i i It Seems Impossible That a remedy made of such common, simple plants as Heps, IStichu, Mandrake, Dandelion, Ac, should make se many and such marvelous and wonderful cures as Hep Bitters de, but when old and young, rich and peer. Paster and Docter, Lawyer and Editor, all tcstirv te having been cured by them, you must believe and try them yourself, and doubt no longer. See ether column. sl-2wdtw Small Comrert. AVhen you are continually ceughins night and day, annoying everybody around you, and hoping it will go away et its own accord, you are running a dangerous risk better use Dr. Themas EclcctricOil. an unfailing remedy in all such cases. Fer sale at II. B. Cochran's drug store, 137 North Queen street, Lancaster. Visible Improvement. Mr. Neah Bates, Elmira, N. Y. writes " About lour years age I had an attack ei- ieus fever, and never fully recovered.. My'. gestive organs were weaiceneii, ana i would completely prostrated for days. After ust: two bottles et your Burdock Bleed Blttc fmnrevement was se visible that I was a.v i-,lied. I can new, though l years of agende0 a lair and reasonable day's work." Price $1. Fer sale at II. B. Cochran's Drug Stere, 137 North Queen street, Lancaster. HUMAlrt -S'TT NEW ADVERTISEMENTS' w E COMMENCE THE FALL SEASON READT-JffADE CLOTEEM, COMPRISING EVERY POSSIBLE VAKIETV OF Cassiuiere Suits, Business Suits, WerHngmen's Suits, Diagonal Suits, Full Dress Suits. Positively all New and Fi eh Heed at J.ewe3t Prices. A. C. YATES & CO., PHILADELPHIA. Ledger Building, uevse eumsnisuinu aoevs. H OUSEFUKN1SIIING GOOiJS. FLINJST & SUCCESSORS TO FLINN A BRENEMAN, Have new en hand the Largest aud Meat Complete Stock et HOUSEFURNISHING GOODS IN CENTRAL, PENNSYLVANIA. Fl or Oil Cleth 25c. a yard, Table Cutlery. Buckets Wc., Weed and Willow Waic. Cook Steves, Pailor Steves, Roem Stevos, Steves et all kinds, Table Oil Cleth, Spoons. Breems 10c., Lamps, Ranges, Parler Heateis, Egg Steves, Ac. Every Steve guaranteed. Call and see our 152 NORTH QUEEN STREET. ltOOFING, S.V. TTEATEKS AND KANUES. JOHN L. -CONTRACTOR FOR- Slate Reefing, Cwel Reefing. Tin Boeing, PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING. -:e:- Nes. 11, 13 & 15 EAST ORANGE STREET, LANCASTER, PA. raprt-tfd LIVJSXY STABLE. THIRST-CLASS LIVKKY aTAllLE HOUGHTON'S FXRST-CLA.8S HVMT STABLE! -:e:' Five First-Class New Omnibuses te Hire at Lew Bates, for Private, Public & Sunday Scheel Picnics. -ALSO- Fii'st-Class Driving Horses, Buggies and Phaetons te Hire, at Ne. 221 NORTH QUEEN STREET, S-FORMERLY ZEC1IER BRO.S' OLD BOOKS AJfJi STATIONERY. S' CHOOL ISOOKSl SCHOOL BOOKS! SCHOOL BOOKS! All Scheel Beeks and Scheel Supplies at the very lowest rates at L. M. FLYNN'S, Ne. 43 WEST KINO STREET. S' CHOOL BOOKS! SCHOOL BOOKS. NEW AND FRESH! GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICE. Shelf-Wern Scheel Beeks, Geed as new, which I will sell far below the Regular Prices. Second-hand books, In Kxccllent Condition, at Astonishingly Lew Prices. All books used in the schoeli ami colleges of the city and county, new and fresh, always en hand, at the most liberal rates. Jly arrange ments with publishers enable mc te sell bchoel books at lower rates than ever before. I shall be happy te have you call and learn my prices before purchasing elsewhere. CHAS. H. BARB, Ne. 35 CENTRE SQUARE, angSl-tfd . Lancaster, Pa. JOHN BAEK'&SONS. SCHOOL BOOKS FOB THE LANCASTER SCHOOLS, LOWEST PBIOES, AT THE BOOKSTOBE OF JOHN BIER'S SOUS, 15 aid 17 NORTH QDSSN STREET, LANCASTER. PA. JEWELERS. OILVER JEWELRY. LACE PINS, EAR RINGS AND BRACELETS. NECK -CHAINS AND HAIR PINS. - sxims SI.KEVK THTT"rn.-H AND SCARF PINS SILVER. OF -. .-AUttUSTUS KHOAUS, TXe. 90 East King Street, Lancaster, Pa wmtJk:., --fcirr Stiii 1,'V- ". OF '81 WITH FULL iJNKS OF Pants and Tests Matched, Fine.Deeskin Pants, Werkiiigmen's Pants, Coarse and Fine Pants, Fall Overcoats. Chestnut AUD . Sixth. scptl-4iud TTOUSEFUKNlSHlNtJ (iOODS. WILLSCXISr, goods. LANCASTER, PA. r N KOOFS REPAIRED AND PAINTED. AENOLD, TJUKST-CLASS LIVERY STAKLK. LIVERY STAND. rAl'EJtHANUlNUH, Jte. w IRK WINDOW SCREENS. In order net te cany ever uny stock we have reduced the price of our Extension Frames for Wire Window Screens te seventy-five cents and upwards. We meas ure the windows and put them up at short no tice and in such a manner that you need net remove them when you wish te close f lie win dow. All kinds et plain, figured and land scape wires. WALLPAPERS in elegant styles and large assortment for the coming season. " We liavc opened some choice Dade Window Shades entirely new. The designs are beauti ful and cannot fail te please. Ot plain goods we have all colors and widths. Hollands. Paper Curtains, Fixture, Cords, Tascls, Fringes, Leeps, Extension Cornices, Pelcw, Ends, 4c. Orders taken for Finu PIER AND MANTLE MIRRORS. PHABES W. FBY, NO. 57 NOKTH QUEEN ST. OIJFT tlKA WIXOB. WMMOMVfcALTU DISTRIBUTION CO 36th Popular Monthly Drawing OFTU COMMONWEALTH DISTRIBUTION CO. In the City or Louisville, en FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30th, 1881. These drawings occur monthly (Sunday excepted) under previsions et an Act et the General Assembly of Kentucky. The United States Circuit Court en March 31, rendered the following decisiens: 1st That tbe Commonwealth Distribution Company l local. 2d Its drawings are fair. N. B. The Company has no-.v en liand a large reserve fund. Read the list of prizes ler the SEPTEMBER DRAWING. 1 prize 30,010 I prize 10,0CO 1 prize 5.00C 10 prizes ILOOOeach 10,000 aOprizesSOOeach 10,000 100 prizes $100 each lo.eue aoeprizessoeach lo.eec 600 prizes 20 each 12,001 1000 prizes lOcach 10,068 9 prizes 300 each, approximation prizes 2,789 9 prizes 200 each, " " L80t 9 prizes 100 each, " set XfJiU pnXCS 9AMhfl1w Whole tickets, 92; half tickets, 91; 27 tickets $50; 55 tickets, $100. Remit Meney or Bank Draft In Letter, ei send by Express. DON'T SEND BY REGIS TERED LETTER OR POSTOKFICE ORDER. Orders of $5 and upward, by Express, can be sent at our exiicnsc. Address all orders te R. M . BOARDMAN, Courier-Journal Building, Lenlavllle. Ky.. ei K. M. BOARDMAN, 309 Broadway. New Tork. fenl-TuTh4S4w