Zbe Sarm. TO CORRESPONDENTS Communications upon subjects of interest to the farmer, the gardener, the fruit-grower and stock-breeder aro solicited for this depart ment of the paper. All such communications should 1,0 addressed to Umucti tiritlckLmt, Agricultural Editor, Conestoga, Lancaster county - , Pa. 'Management of Young Chickens E=! While the young chickens are emerg ing from the eggs, the hens should not be disturbed unnecessarily. If the hens are quiet—and no others should be al lowed to set—it is well to examine the nest once or twice, after some of the young ones are out of the eggs, and re move the empty egg-shells, as they will sometimes slip over eggs that contain young ones, which will inevitably cause them to perish in the eggs unless the shells are removed. They should be al lowed to remain in the nest until they ire from 36 to 48 hours old, when they hould be removed to a coop. The lop should be open On one sine only, he other sides mid top should be board ed tight. They should be placed in a dry situation, on the south side of some building, or close fence or some other shelter from the cold winds. • The coop must also have a bottom, or be placed on loose boards, the chicks must not be allowed to sleep on the cold, damp ground, or they will become feeble and Bottoms of boards in the coops are indispensable to success in raising early young chickens--hatched between the beginning of March and the middle of April. It its not desirable to have any hatched before the first of March. lithey have a dry, sheltered situation, where the sun shines nearly the whole day, and the bottom boards of the coops ire cleaned occasionally, young chickens hatched in March will do very wi 11, and comparatively few will die. liatcr in the season, when the ground has become dry and warm, the ',idiom boards of the coops :In' nut me ssary, then the coop.imust be frequent• ly muvcd, :is the bottom becomes filthy and unhealthy, causing feebleness and the gapes. lint the sunshine is always necessary. It i desirable, after the young ones are a few weeks old, the hens may he allowed the 11111 of the place during the middle of warm ititys, after the lie ginning of :\ lay, but nut before, and they must :,LlWayti be moaned at night. The manner of Meiling and the kind f".l ere td," importance. ne,ideS plenty of Mod, they should always have 1,,0, water in vh Irth , more importance than many suppose. frequently see the wider pm into Vcs,t.is half-rllll , if 11111.1:111.1ille 'Ner,111,•111 of the chickens. This will invariably proililee disease. Young ellickens should I.e fed at least three times a day, live times is better fur quite y1111:1_ Ones. ThH, cal.:mit) . for receiv ing Mod is very small when quite young, and its they grow rapidly, they requite eonsiderable quantity of food, hence they must be fed frequently. The kind „r Inud must also be considered. We are reemumended by fowl fanciers, and in poultry books to feed (hiding lire first few days, the yolks of hariblioiled eggs the food most natural. This is U, fur that will false 'prim,, We tried it when breeding high-priced fowls sonic years :Igo, Mal eiilllit net. bee any supe riority in either hardiness or rapitlily groivill river Illuse out r,d1,(,. \\'r iced uutliiug but vont front the imie they are Pistil in the coup, until 11l the table. \Ve claiin that this is Preventive or the gal.". \Ve have nut lint a single young chicken iron' the italics during ihe last four or live yt.arQ, the time bi'e been feeding, nothing but corn to i/o/i/iii chickens, ler had We elle that Wa, (yr/ if with die gapes. \Ve claim this discovery to k•e original tvith us, having never seen I in print i•seept in an article written iy us :mil puldislied ill the 1,111,11,1 r l• tto,cr, of June Is7u. As the article real , in detail the matter we re-pro duce it entire fur the benefit oldie read of the INA It is )sr :iltention has been al d In Un•gala, in paing land• ry, artidc iII iln• :\ lay lona r,•:• "I 77, a n d a. tl pain g pnultry are nn,,r I ialdt. tii la. all . ,,ted IVIt • you tau . ex fttit tlit• hcnclil la your reader. pars. goat ,ti,l in wir ogrii•ulturaljutir na:, and n(•‘r,pap•r , 'Tom t ,allject, o i, Ltittit•l t aity tilt, Itti ',yid lir HI, lit t NVltrill , Ilit•il tirti rnnl in tilt•NVlllti-pitie t ilitti Which she , • knit but (air • I..•rn•ni•i. 1 , , that, alllnpu. , 4li it al \s'ay , ~•••, 1,1111.1r:try Illit l'lttlit•r, it :HMI 11111,1 1,. Itt•illit'llit•ti with chill:ill , . Will rite, , !. I'l,ll ", lid till Wl' hut vcry 4a: t ,rl • . hill Wl . !WHO Vi• in iill• ultl 1 , 11111,10 . preveution t,t vt,rtit :t rwind ul 1 . 111 . ,•. " .\ f,:tv crew, anaorauul 4.4 not havilu4a,tirra•terit ~upply ,f wheat ~,,ruin,.---.air usual wt•latatittencetl cam lu tlit• larger ones, soul \vprt• ,urpri-aai ta,a•tht: s e nat mar, :hal: a C,ic t 71.1111, uud -\l'all,•v theta. We t•elit.lll - feeding cent, r Neept. 10 the quite -11:111 errs, anti we, hall the plea-.tire tIL teitieing that' eur paint; eilleitel, Were free 11,111 gap,- littrillg, lln entire Spring, while taller yearti bars 1,4 , 11 a SOlll4, et great :W -iley:Luce tous. Tht. I . 4 ,lj"win, spring we ted wahine; 1.111 4 . 0111 to our paint; ellirkt•l,- the lir , t lbw slap; after being hatelttl, einsteeltelet into-toned with wore alt.M , IVCCl:nelli,tlll4l:ll . lertilat Whole t•ttrit- anti 1101 elle ,1140Weil any spill,- uns agape:. Site thelllrr have lir naect the ' , ante phut With the saute re ...tilt, not env of our re , •101 kills the games tittring the last tint, years. \Ve pick 0111 t :Li' , with -mail giants for them when cluite ,t 1 \Ve attribute this freetlein Irwin gapes entirely to the feeding el eitrii :et we 1111r -u 4. the Same plan a 111.tlittme1114.11t, iterre, when our rain -111.4 early punts; t•ltiel:etis was attended ,\ isle nitwit thilioulty and peer success, tit etutscittittitt•tt of the gape-. If feeding torn in this wanner has been the 4.:u se ri preventing the gapes, we van . give tit, rel•ell why but toe simply give tan eNperietiett, and Imp, others may he induced to try the ,anie ezperinreutand let the i,ti [die it 'toss' witty what talree-s." 1t the reeling diret•iietes art , fully te, early yetnig eau laistil -tiettessfully. Root flops As the pre,clit SC:15011 is 0115. 01 coi- It.i,tire in tlie fanner, plailS of operations G) the year are to ho fully considered and 'natured, we tt Huh! again recommend the permanent appropriation of at least one or two awes 11,1' roof-culture, and especially sugar-beets. These can he sown with a drill the la,t of stli month fay), tun! With fair nianagenient there should not ben product than lisle to six 111111- 11rt.41 bushels per acre, :Ind ought to he san s The great drawhacl: to root-kit • ore of all kinds is tub( There an unnecessary Ire of this. I . l' of Every has its owii specific and true mode culture, ill order to perfect a lull and .lea;thy product. 'toots r(viire a rich nitAlow soil, /i/o// (Ind I hooollyhty I 11 Ile sauce piece or I:•,erVt.tl year after year, lhrre es pon.c: will diminish. There ,liould he, if I , l%lt•livalde, I \v., t,,/,(1 H, , ,vings-nlle ill the Fall ore:lily iu rho ryuing, and another preceding tho reeding, the ground being in the 111.2:111 tiuw 1 . 11 . 4 !WM US IMITMVeII 411' CIO LI) Cl'ol, nt germinated, whirls are then adily iiy expo-dire lithe Wrods ~:•.• bcitu t , -.,•••11 gr..;i; lahor them ar are up, somo oNvlti.•ll i, hand- For feeding to duel: id all kinds through the \Viiiter months, roots have direct :14 Well :IS indirect advantages. Pith cows 1.11C3' uuduuhtedly K 1,111,412 SUClTtiffil II Illllk,llllll with them as \veil as with young shalt, dry CONVS, feeding cattle, ele., they promote health, digestion, and it holler assimi lation of other rmiti. While in England rake-incal is used instead (nf our great staple, emit-meal, no good English farmer would under take to put his live stork through the winter without routs, in addition to the Infatte niny either sheep or ((At tie, they are highly important. and the great difference in favor of English beef and mutton, to that usually found in (.11r markets, is probably owing to roots in the fattening prOvess. Should a press of business interfere with putting in sugar-beets, a runt-baga crop will he in season six weeks later. There is some dilli(renee, but (perhaps not very material, in nutritive qualities between these two—but we prefer beets, -specially for cows in milk, and because there is no necessity to chop them up, cows biting Orem off :Is we do an We never knew t cow to choke I beets, and all the labor required is 1., rub ono with a wisp of hay or straw bafore throwing in the feed-box.. Lunen-bogus have a firmer texture, and require to he chopped up, so us to avoid d:nmer of ehok ing. Even with a root THE LANCASTER WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8, 1871. slicer, this requires time and expense. Both should be fed to cows in all cases, after milking, so as to avoid danger of taste to the butter.—Practical Farmer. Farming on Clay-Land Although the different clay-lands are among the strongest and most enduring soils, they are often the most difficult to manage. They are later in getting dry enough to work in the Spring and after heavy rains, and will sooner get too dry and hard to"work well in the Sum mer. Being cooler, harder and more inert, they also part less readily with their usually large store of plant-food than:other soils. The two principal rem edies for these difficulties are under draining and growing clover. The for mer takes the surplus water out of the soil, so it will get dry enough to work much sooner, and remain more loose and open when it is dry ; and the clover roots, acting like a wedge, loosen and open up the soil ; while both have a large tendency to let in air, warmth and the Summer showers, with all of their genial and chemical influences, which have so much to do in developing and bringing into active operation the be fore inert plant-food in such soils. At the same time these operations bring the soil into a much better condition to be readily plowed and brought into a line state of cultivation. I recollect reading many years ago, in a published letter from John John ston, a Cage in point. Having a large field of heavy clay-land, that had been underdrained and was then in clover, to plow for Sommer fallow, Mr. Johnston supposed it would require two teams on each plow to break up such land in the Summer, and he went to the field pre pared to plow in this way. But in com mencing he put a span of horses on a common plow, to lay out the lands, and they went across a wide field and back without the least difficulty, thus show ing that the land was in a condition to be readily plowed with one team ; so the large plows were laid aside, each team put on a common plow, and a good clever-sod was well turned under with out difficulty in this way. 1n all sections adapted to the crop, probably wheat is the best grain crop to grow on clay-lands. The strong, well prepared, and well worked clay-loans, are among the best and most productive wheat soils; and few clays ire so stub licrn thatunderdrain hug, growing clover and thorough cultivation will not bring them into a more or less pliable loam.— Sum tiler fallowing for wheat also a better opportunity to work such soils to the best advantage, as the best time to plow, when they will work up line and mellow, may be selected. The after:cul tivation and preparation for the seed, by having it much longer time than is pos sible for Spring crops, may also be done to better advantage. Winter wheat is also a good crop to seed to clover with ; and after such land is drained, two or hreenlternate crops of wheat :mil clover should bring the soil into a good condi tion fir most cereal crops. (hits also do well on clay-land, and often give large yields; but the tendency oldie crop is rather to make the land harder Own otherwise. Perhaps Fall plowing fur the crop, and leaving the Lund itt a condition to be benefited hy freezing--surface-drainage having been well attended to—may he an exception ; at least it is probable that this is the Lest way to grate oats on clay-soils.- - leavy clay-soils are not adapted to corn; but a good deal of good corn is grown on theclay-luaus. There are also many of the heavier clay-lands that, by under draining and clovering, may be reduced to it loam that will not be bad for corn. It must Loa !wetly stiff clay that, alter thorough draining and growing a few crops of clover, with a good, vigorous clover-sod turned under in May and thoroughly prepared, will not be in a condition to grow good corn. As a rule, and in sectionssuited to the crop, barley will answer where corn does well. if the land works mellow and don't bake badly, and the clover-sod turned Under for mill, (AIMS up a dark rich mould the next l. 4 pring,barley sown on thiS prepa ration ought to do well. 11=1 ME= \V here wheat and rotation of crops are not available, grass lutist be tlw main dependence on clay lands. \V hen sulliviently tinder drained to save them from rallaillg into any of the lowlands, coarse, wild grasses, and thoroughly subdued, prepared and immured where needed, and then heavily seeded, heavy crops fit' grass inny be grown many years \\it hout change, and with no other fer tilizers than a yeatly dressing of plaster and ftll occasional application ~ts true 111:111Illie Ili the 11111,1 ; and in all sections and I'll all 1it.1115 where wheat and corn aru 111,1 available, heavy clay-lands should be turned into IllealliiNVS ;lad lie, of I his character. '('rue clover only grows a iew years on such mead ff‘vs, and the tendency of the tim othy and other grasses that remain, is to gradually settle the land down into more effinpact :111,1 hard condition.— Vet even this is nnielf less injurious than the iftair:e taken by many in try ing to raise grain, and often working the land either too wet or too dry, and not draining, clovering, and subduing and seeding as it should be. The grass crop is not only of immense present value, but it is a eonstantly iir croasing importance; hence all lands that can be made to produce large crops at a reasonable I•XliiillSe. S110111(1 be thor oughly prepared and well-seeded. All the lighter looms 0.1111 Saltily gravelly soils are much less suited Impermanent grays-lailllS,:a4 the grassesare much more likely to run out; sotheya re much bet ter and more profitably managed in a rotat ion of crops. lf.ut heavy clay-lands are either suitable for permanent mead ows and pastures, or may be I:ept ill grass tar long periods, when they are well-prepared and well-seeded, so that on all clay-lands, although it is always an object to grow heavy wheat, the lead ing ottject tnust be to grow heavy crops of grass—mainly timothy, \vilere a rotation of crops can he adopted, and timothy and other grasses hest suited to the section where permanent. grass-lands are hest suited to the eireitinstances.---Coto.vfoaff , al of fatairg (if aft, tame. Charring Timber to Promote Ilurabillt). On account of the growing .scarcity of timber, many farmers of I,ancaster County haVl• adopted the practice of charring that Dart of fence-posts which is to go in the ground, believing that it promotes its durability. 'rile following sensilde:lllll practical article, from the ,ranr, gill be 101 ill(ereSt to As charcoal trill endure for ages in places where timber would decay speed ily, the practice of charring the surface of lence-posts and other timber, has been repeatedly recommended in hooks and papers, as eminently worthy of univer sal adoption. The theory on which such a recoil) • mendation is based would seem to war rant a confident expectation of satisfac tory results in practice; but repeated experiments with charred timber have furnished conclusive assurance that this process will not promote its durability. Indeed, numerous experiments have shown that charing promotes premature decay. Two posts split from the same log may beset side by side in theground, . • the surface of one being charred and the other not; and it will be seen that the charred post will perish be fore the other. The same is true of railroad-ties, anti all such timber as may be exposed to the alternating influ ences of wetand heat. Could the entire innher be changed front its perishable condition to one solid piece or charcoal, the durability would lie promoted to a surprising length of time; but the , trength of the material would be de- ; roy eta. \V hen fence-posts or other sticks of timber are exposed to the rap id action of wet and heat, thesurface will decay first. thie might suppose, there e, that when timber is enveloped by a layer of charcoal. the durability of the entire piece would be greatly promoted. And such would be the case were it not for the fact that the charcoal is not impervious to water; and as the water reaches the timber beneath the charred surface, decay will commence soon after the grain of the wood has been exposed to the influences of the weather. When the change has once begun beneath the charred surface, the durable covering of coal will be of 110 service whatever in preserving any por tion of the wood. Taking this practical view of the subject, it will be perceived that if only half an inch of the outside of a putt be Charred, the Pest will not endure so long as if the same thickness of wood had been left uncharred, to waste away by slow decay. :'ow to Load a Wagon three or four weeks ago the question was asked through the columns of the _Mind New-Yorker whether a wagon should be loaded heavier on the hind than on the front wheels. Your reply, though not asserted to be conclu sive, implied that the load should be equally distributed. I propose a scien tific elucidation of the subject, which will prove that the load should be heav ier on the hind wheels, in the propor tion of their diameter to the diameter of the front wheels. A wheel is a lever, whose long arm, theoretically, is the distance from the wound to the center of the axle; the short arm is a pivot; but, practically, it is impossible to construct a lever of such proportions. Hence, in calculating the advantage of the lever, a wheel or a lever allowance must be made for the size of the axle, and for friction depend ent on size, other things being equal Without going into too elaborate a dis cussion, it will he sufficient to say in general terms that the power gained in a wagon wheel is in proportion to its semi -diameter, and hence that the load on a wagon should be placed proportion ally to the diameters of the front and hind wheels. Suppose the front wheels are four feet, and the hind wheels five feet in diame ter—then five-ninths of the load should rest on the hind wheels and four,-ninths on the front wheel. —Correspondent of Rural Neu,- Yorker. fniscellaneotts How To Be Handsome Most people like to be handsome. Nobody denies the great power any per son may have who has a good face, and who attracts you by good looks, even before a word has been spoken. And we see all sorts of devices in men and women to improve their good looks— paints and washes, and all kinds of cos metics, including a plentiful anointing with dirty hair oil. Now not every one can have good fea tures. They are as (od made them ; but almost any one can look well, espe cially with good health. It is hard to give rules in a very short space, but in brief these will do: Keep clean—wash freely and univer sally with cold water. All the skin wants is leave to net freely, and it will take care of itself. Its thousands of air holes must not be plugged up. Eat regularly and simply. The stom ach can no more work all the time, night and day, than a horse; it must have reg ular work, and regular rest. Good teeth are a help to good looks. Brush them with a soft brush, especially at night. (M to bed with the teeth clean. Of course, to have white teeth, it is needful to let tobacco alone. Any pow der or wash for the teeth should be very simple. Acids may whiten the teeth, but they take ofl' the enamel or injure it. Sleep in a cool room, in mire air. No one call have a clean skin who breathes bad air. Ilut more than all, ill order to look well wake up the mind and soul. \\lien the Mind is awake, the dull, sleepy look passes away from the eyes. I do not know that the brain expands, but it .seems to. Think, read—not trashy novels, but books that have something in them. Talk With people who know something ; hear lectures, and learn by them. This is one good of preaching. A man thinks and works, and tells us the result., And if we listen, and hear, and understand, the mind and soul are worked. If the spiritual nature is aroused, so much the better. We have seen a plain face really glorified by the love of I lod :old man which shone through it. Let us grow handsome. Men say they cannot allbrd books, and sometimes they do not even pay for their newspaper. In that ease it does them little good. They must feel so mean while reading it. But men can allbrd what they really choose. If all the money spent in self-indul gence, in hurtful indulg,ence, were spent ill Imo kSaIIIIScIi-impr”vemvut, we could see a change. Men would grow hand somer, and women too. The soul would shine out through the eyes. NVe were nut meant to be mere animals. Let us have lotadts, and read them, and lectures, and hear them, and SWIIIOII,I, and heed them. Do You Want to Live Long? 11' you do, go and get married, and stand not on the order of your got Dr. Kull, in one of his n 1 lealth Tracts," gives the following reasons why Mar riage is favorable to health : Bachelors are always in a stale or unrest; they feel unsettled. If indoors after supper, there is a sense of solitariness, includ ing a sadness, if not actual melancholy, with all its 'depressing influences; and many. 11):111y hours in the course of the year are spent in gloomy inactivity, which is adverse to a good digestion and a vigmous and healthy circulation. II is own chamber or house being so un inviting., the bauhelor is i nelined o:seek diversionoutside in suppers with friends, and to clubs, which arc introduetor ies or intemperance and licentiousness, or those more unblushing, associations which, under the cover "r darkness, lead to the speedy ruin of health and morals, and when these :ire gone, the way downward is an easy ono." Now that this point is settled, here is another recommendation worth taking to heart, t)r. DM Lewis says: "Every person of remarkable lowgevity, whose habits I have studied retired to rest at an early hour. Ile may have transgressed other laws of health—for example, he may have used spirits and lob:Loa:moderate ly ; hut I have heard of no long-liver who habitually sat up till a late hour, and I may :old that :onong them all I have never read of a large eater. Eat right and sleep right, and you have the two fundamental conditions of health and long-life. Establish these two sources of life as taxed hahits, and if you get drunk 4111,4. , :I 111,111111 1111,1 smoke live [agars 11. day, you may, not withstanding, live a long life in the en joyment of good health. But sit up in a furnace-heated room till 11 o'clock, and eat the quantity and quality of food consumed by people who believe in a short life ill a merry one, and you may rest assured that the yearly trip to the mountains, a month's guzzle of Sur atott waters, and the attenlions or a fashionable doctor—all put together— will fail to save you from early wrink les, early loss of sight, premature gray hair, and a short life. Then do pal ask 111 c how you can reach Si in the enjoyffieht of all your faculties? I reply, go to bed at 9 o'clock, and eat twice a day a moderate quantity of plain fo o d." A Londoui Fog Every thing was Wrapped, :is it were, in a veil of brown holland ; our elegiint statues, our superior public buildings, were all hidden from view. The 'buses moved slowly as ships in a channel mist, and were invisible until within so short It distance that their huge hulk seemed about to crush and topple on the foot-passenger. 'clie reckless cabman, for a wonder, was tamed. The big was too mulch fur him. Ile was afraid to venture upon his customary rushes and might be seen cauti, usly feeling his way, as though afraid of the police, and occa sionally so helplessly adrift that he was compelled to seek the aid of t he link-boys. 'lie Mg sadly interfered with the pride and pomp of the lord-mayor's show as it advanced westward. It is hard for :1 mounted farrier to look imposing enve loped in a brumous mist, and the ban ners and carriages made a blurred, washed-out spectacle from the foot-path as the procession appeared to dissolve into dirty yellow smoke. Ilillows of fog rolled up the Thames, which was literally a silent highway ; barges and steamers lay idle; and the noise of the traffic on the bridges come to the ear with a dull, nndlled sound, while the bridges themselves only loomid into sight when for a moment a cold, damp gust would cause the eurtain or vapor to move aside. The chemical constituents of the Lon don fog must be of the most irritating character. The fog affects the eyelids, tickles the throat, and, taken into the lungs, brings on a fit of coughing. It puts a deposit of those minute particles known as blackson the face, It is greasy and palpable, and wonderfully penetra tive. It is exceedingly difficult to bar it out. Into a room of any size it is sure to get and to take up its quarters for the period of the foggy visitation. It hangs on the landings and in the hall. From the window, you gaze into tog, and. when you turn to look toyour book shelves, you fraud j,That the fog has ob. scored their range of friendly contents. The :node in which a fog enters and takes complete possession of the larger theatres is picturesque if not agreeable or conducive to the comfort of the au dience, or of the performers. The gasa liers :ire murky ; the gods, or the re gions where the gods were wont to be, are as obscured as the peak of 6kiddaw in heavy weather. Coughing sets in in the stalls at an early hour, and contin ues until the close of the last farce. Different Ways of Making Tea The Chinaman puts his tea in a cup, pours hot water upon it, and drinks the in fusion off the leaves; he never dreams of spoiling its flavor with sugar or cream. The Japanese triturates the leaves before putting them into the pot. In Morocco they put green tea, a lit tle tansy, and a great deal of sugar, into a teapot, and fill up with boiling water. Iu Bukhara every man carries a small bag of tea about him, a certain quantity of which he hands over to the booth keeper he patronizes, who concocts the beverage for him. The Bokhriot finds it as difficult to pass a tea-booth as our own dram-drinker does to go by a gill palace. His breakfast beverage is Schitschaj, that is, tea flavored with milk, cream, or mutton-fat, in which bread is soaked. During the daytime, sugarless green tea is drunk with the accompaniment of cakes of flour and mutton-suet. It is considered an inex cusable breach of manners to cool the hot cup of tea with the breath ; but the difficulty is overcome by supporting the right elbow in the left hand and giving a circular movement to the cup. How long each kind of tea takes to draw, is calculated to the second ; and when the can is emptied, it is passed round among the company for each tea-drinker to take up as many leaves as can be held between the thumb and finger—the leaves being esteemed an especial dain ty. When Mr. Bell was travelling in Asiatic Russia, he had to claim the hos pitality of the Buratsky Arabs. The mistress of the tent, placing a large kettle on the fire, wiped it carefully with a horse's tail, filled it with water, and threw in some coarse tea and a little salt. When this was near boiling point, she tossed the tea about with a brass ladle until the liquor became very brown, and then it was poured off into another vessel. Cleansing the ket tle as before, the women set it again on the fire, in order to fry a paste of meal and fresh butter. Upon this the tea and some thick cream were then poured, the ladle put into requisition, and, after a time, the whole taken off the fire and set aside to cool. Half-pint wooden mugs were haEded round, and the tea ladled into them, a tea forming "Meat and drink, and satisfying both hunger and thirst. However made, tea is a blessed invention for the weary travel ler. Row's Thts? The Charlottesville Chroni , le, of Sat urday says, a most extraordinary explo sion took place here a few days ago. A woman living in thesuburbs had agoose, of which she made a pet, and would shoot grains of corn, bread-crumbs, etc., at him,all of which lie swallowed greedi ly. On the day in question his goose ship came to grief by this great habit of his. Some little boys were throwing large torpedoes about, and one of them dropped without exploding; the goose took it for a grain of corn and gobbled it up in a twinkling, but in swallowing it it exploded, blowing the whole top of his head pill—Fredericksburg CiaaVe. FOR SALE OR RENT. H OU SE AND STORE.ROOM FOR RENT This property Is situated on the northeast cor ner of Diamond square, iu Hagerstown, will be rented for the purpose of any substantial business, except retailing liquor, for one or more years. A Dry Lloods Business of Sixty Thousand Dollars yearly lots been done in the: stand. For further intormat ion Dotal, of ml- 3tw:3 I,ll' H. WiNtIEIIT. VALUABLE LAND FOR SALE.--I wish to sell my land lying in Rocking ham County, lu the Valley of Virginia, on North River, consisting of two tracts. One of these contains :113 tweed; the other 117 acres. This is the best of land. The Home tract has thereon a large Brick House, a large Swisser Barn, 91 feet long by 59 feet wide, Out-houses plenty, with Well and Cistern in the Yard. A Creek runs through the Form. On the prem ises are two Orchards or the Choicest. Fruit, ~ol p rising 300 Apple Trees. 200 Peach Trees, Cherry and Pear Trees, and Grape Vines. There are 50 acres al mraduw Stool, and 15u acres ~r low ground ‘,ll this Farm. As 1 want to sell, a bargain van be had. Possession given imme diately. My address is Bridgewater, Rocking ham county, Virginia. feblArlimw7 SAMUEL E. 1.1 /ND. - - A VALUABLE FARM 1 IN MYNA.: BRITAIN TOWNSHIP The unilersininsi otters his vainahle Farm, situated in the township aforesaid at private more or less, adjoining lands of Nathan Haines, David Christy, John Gibson and others, upon which k erected a two-story Dwelling House, a line Bank Barn, tilxlat feet, dad recently creeteill roofed With viale, With GrallUTleS and Corn Crib, all comptetr. Two Apple Orchards and other fruit nun the premises, and all the necessary out-Imllilings. Two good springs of water, fries which every tielit can he watered. S 4 acres of the above tract in arable, and the balance is covered with heavy timber, princi pally white oak. The land is In a high state of cultivation, under good fence, convenient to churches, mills, stores, schools, die. It is un surpassed for produetiveness, being 11.4 good quality of land as the shove township can prod.-0,111,1,1(qt Into convenient Ileitis. T. ally person wishing to lIIVeSt In real estate, a chance Is here presented rarely to he met with. Persons wishing to view the prern hoes will please call upon David Christy, adjoining the property, by whom the .1110 will be show,, or upon the subscriber at Mechanics' Grove. sepldt INGO' DAVID I9\-ANS. rpßusT SALE.—IN PURSUANCE OF A deed of trust executed to dderslgned by Geo A. Anderson, on the lay of AU GUST, 1559 and duly yet,. ut the Clerks °Oleo of the county of Augcounty Va., I will proceed on the prentkes, on 'l'H the '2 , lrd day of MARCH next, to sell to the highest !adder, Otat very valualde tractor land on Middle River, 7 miles north 4/1 Staunton, and Immediately on the line of the Valley Railroad front Harrisonburg to Staunton. Said land eon talus :Kip; A Clt ES, and adjoins Bailey lionlap and others. There are IGi acres cleared, of which lss acres Is II:st - class butt nut; the upland is the brown soil adapted 'lit.-.cult ore or any grain orgrass. There is a good (wick dwelling and all neces sary buildings lin the farm. good orchard, ,he. . . 'fern. of sale of I:mat—tine fourth of the tour ellase money to he paid ou day of sale, or a/Ith— factory negotiable note given same, payable in tta days after sale, With interest thereon from day or sale: the balance in three etlmtl pay ments at six, t wet,. and eighteen months, with Intere,t from date, the purchaser execu ting bonds with approved security, and a lien retalnod us ultinuuc setturity. . • At the sameme li and plave all the personal properly consist itia. in part, as follows: Ilona, cat Ile, sheep. hots, farming ilnhlit intints, uud household and kitchen furniture. TIIP hallo:of sale of the personal properly AViil he 111.1 e 10141,11 cbn (lay of sal, A 1.E.X.1N1.1: Ti URNiI. A m Os 111 I. ',BORN h l'o F [RN 1 'l' 1 . lt 1 :\ I. \TT ItESS, FE. \T If EUI) I N II" .1 I: P: 110 0 s , C11_1:1111Elt Spring Beds, Spring Cots, Feather 13,k, Spring Nlaltre,es, Bolsters 0: BAB' Jlattresses, '“unterpanes. Husk Malt riser ('on&trtables, Straw Mattresses. Blankets, WOVEN WIRE MATTRESS, N. B.—Our Intention Is Cfii treat all customers so that they will become permanent (lesders with us, and orders will receive the same at tendon. and persons can buy Just ws cheap as If present at the store. las-iim WATCHES AND JEIVLLEY. J. F.. CALDWELL t CO.. JEWELLERS, No. 909 CHESTNUT STREET, PH ILADELPH lA. Having largely increased their PLATED WARE DEPARTNIENT, call special attention to their stock of SILVER PLATED GOODS, rum prisitlg, heslite,, their usual Ilse of Niue Wares of high grades:a most complete assort ment of TA I U.,E WA R ES, PLATED UN WHITE NI 1'.\1., rehahh. ;I: exceedingly log' prices AMI lino of PLATED SPOONS, FORKS, I , DIES, 11. 1 0, FINE TABLE CUTLERY, expressly made for their retail sales, crud fur nished In single dozen.: or in complete sets, put up in Rosewood and Walnut Cases. All goods told on their c)wn merits nt tlxed prices, attached In plain flgureg_to each Iffifff2 NV INDOW GLASS WAREHOUSE. .13E:` , ;JAMIN H. SHOEMAKER, 205, 207, 209 d 211 NORTH ' 4 CRT i ST., Di= Thick French Plate Glass English and French Window Glass. Sky-Light and Floor Gll,lB. Spherical DOrlleS. OMRMental Glass Photographers' Crystal and Ground Glass French and German Looking (bass, For sale lii lois to stilt purehasers, squares or cut to Lill' irregular shape, Ilat or bent to any curse, J2.5-iiin w 4 TRAVELLER'S 1 UII) If elf LADELPHIA AND BALTIMORE CENTRAL RAILROAD. MENCOMBIZDIMI On and after MONDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1870 trains will run nu follows:: • Leave Philadelphia, rrorn Depot or P. W. et. B. R. It., corner Brow.' street and Washington avenue. For Port Deposit, at 7 A. M. and 4:30 P. M. For Oxford, at 7 A. M., 4:30 P. M., and 7 P. M. For Oxford Wednesday and Saturday only at 2:30 P. M. For Chtuld's Ford and Chester Creek R. It. at 7 A. M., 10 A. M. t 4:30 P. M., and 7 P. M Wednesday and Saturday only at 2:30 I'. M. Train leaving Philadelphia at 7 A. M. con nects at Port Deposit with train for Baltimore. Trains leaving Philadelphia at 7A. M. and 4:30 P. M., Port Deposit at 9:22 A. M., Oxford at 0:05 A. Iti.,eonnect, at Chntld's Ford Junction with the Wilmington and Reading Railroad. Trains for Philadelphia leave Port Deposit at 9:22 A. M., and 4:25 P. M., on arrival of trains from Baltimore. Oxford at 6:115 A. M., 10:35 A. M. and 3.:30 P. M. Sundays at 5:301'. M. only. Chadd's Ford at 7:26 A. M., 11:55 A. M. :Cal P. NI., and 6143 P. M. Sundays at 6:11) P. M. only. Passengers are allowed to take wearing ap parel only as baggage, and the Company will not be responsible for an amount exceeding one hundred dollars, unless a special contract is made for the same. HENRY WOOD. General Superintendent. A DDISON H urroN, ARCHITECT, 5:.3 WALNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA PLANS DEkiIGNS, PERSPECTIVE VIEWS SPECIFICATIONS AND WORK ING DRAWINGS. - - - - For Cottages, Farm Houses, Villas, Court Hollseti, Halls, Churches. School Houses. FRE NCH. ROOFS. ;lyw m 2-8 LEGAL NOTICES ESTATE OF ELIZABETH =SMALLER. late of Earl township, deceased.—Letters of administration (de bonis non cum testa ments anneso) on said estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebt ed thereto, are requested to make immediate settlement, and those haying claims or de mands against the same, will present them without delay for settlement to the undersign ed, residing in said township. marl-Stw9 WILLIAM ELLISL=II. E. H. Yu:slYr, Att'y. Administrator, &c. ASSIGNED ESTATE OF HMSTRY PEAS terer and Wife, of Penn township Lan caster county.—Henry Plasterer and W ife, of Penn township, having by deed of voluntary assignment. assigned and transferred all their estate and effects to the undersigned, for the benefit of the creditors of the said Henry Plas terer, he therefore gives notice to all persons indebted to said assignor, to make payment to the undersigned without delay, and those hav ing claims to present them to PETER H. WILL. Assignee, Residing In Penn township. H. B. SWARR, Attorney. March Ist, 1871. 6tw.9 ESTATE OF PHILIP DEHAVEN, LATE of Carnarvon township, deceased.—Let ters of Administration on said estate having been granted to the undersigned. all persons Indebted thereto are requested to make imme diate payment, and those having claims or de inands against the estate of the decedent, will make the same known to them without delay. GEORGE DANDWOH.g., Administrator, Residing fn Earl Township. E. 11. YUNDT. Attorney. In 1 etw• To THE CREDITORS OF THE HUN. TEES' DALE LUMBER COMPANY. Abraham Lefever,} In the Court of Common Pleusof the County of Lau ') S. Bare, et, al. caster In Equity. Tile undersigned Master, appointed to dis tribute the balance In tile hands of theßeceiv er of tile Hunter's Dale Lumber Company, to and among those legally entitled to the same, wit attend for that purpose on THURSDAY, the 2.3 rd day of MARCH, PM, at 2 o'clock, P. M. In the Library Room of the Court House, In the City of Lancaster, where all persons inter t,leti iii said distribution may attend. D. G. ESH LEMAN, 1111,31w9 Master. I,I4TATE OF JAMES STIRLING, LATE 12/ of East Lainpeler tarp.. deed.—Letters of admi niatnttion on said estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons in debted thereto are requested to make me diate settlement, and those having claims or demands against the same will present I hem without delay for settlement to the under signed, residing in said township. MARGARET It. STIRLING. Administrat ri x. N. E. SLAYMAKER, Homey. USTATE OF HON. ISAAC E. II I EST ER. lJ hot , of the City of Lancaster, deceased.— Letters Testamentary on sald estate having 'teen granted to the anderslgied, all persons Indebted thereto, are requested to makemtttle men( immediately upon the maturity of their indebtedness and those having eluials or tit- Inands against the smile, will present them without delay for settlement to either of the undersigned, tit his oilier in North Duke street lu said city. IL G. ESHLEMAN, E. H. YUN B. FRANK ESHLEMAN, Exirut ors A lJ2hiw-. 4 - - - CCOUNTS OF TiersT ESTATES, Ac.— 'floe accounts of the following named es tates will be presented fur confirmation on Monday, March 20, 1,71 W. 11. Richard's Assigned Estate, M Frantz, Assignee. Augustus Stauffer's Assigned Estate, If. B. Becker, Assignee, Josiah 11. SheafFer's, Assigned Estate, W. It. W Iley, Assig n ee. . . - lirsuser Hnbaue.h's, Asvlgned Estate, J. 1' Klugh, et al, Assignee. Mary Rafrot h's Trust Estate, Henry Kuf rot h, Trustee. Trewitz & Martin, Trust Estate, W. B. Wiley Receiver, l'eter Shealter's Assigned Estate, A. B. Had: man, Assigner. W. 1). STAUFFER, Prot honotary's I line°, 1 Prothonotary February IS7I. j feb. 22-.ltw S. EGIsTE NOTICE.--THE AC -11 counts of the following persons are tiled in the Register's Office of Laneaster,ounty, for coutlrinat ion and allowance at Eta Orphans' Court to he held In the City of Lancaster, on MONDAY, MARCH 'Nth, 1..71, at RI o'cloek,A. Anna A. Rummel, Administratrls. of William Rummel. E. F.. Snyilt, noel J. K.Snpler,Achnhilstrators will, ILe Will annexed Of Jacob Ehrls,nan. Benjamin Barr, linardlan of Prances 11. tire, der. Jacob Ilarnish and Michael G. Ilarnish, Exe • colors of John Eby. . , Goorge J. Smith, Administrator of Sybllla Klluesmith. Jacob Burnish, Administrator of Joseph V. Eby. Samuel Fankllauser, .l a iio strut or of Ese Fank Joseph D. liasti ngs, G oitrd an of Ellwood Pax on. Jonas S. Hoffman, Guardian of Samuel S. ma rnau. Jacob It. Musser, Guardian of George Bentz and Jololll , mtz, Samuel K. Weaver, Guardian of William S Weaver and Mary E. Weaver. John 13. Bond, Executor of Mathias Lutz Jacob H. Rhoads, Trustee of (at latrine Long eneeker,uuder the Will of Dr. Charles I terbst John Baker, Administrator of Benjamin Rein hold. Reuben 11. Johns, Unardian of Madison .Tobils Jo,..•ph Wanner and William Dagne, Adminis rators of Solomon Wanner. Andrew Mehatrey and Jacob K. Harnish, Ad minks raters of Christian liarnish. John lioltrer, Guardian of henry C. Andrew . . and Clara :sillier. - - - - - - - John S. Landis, Admini. , :trator of J ospph S. Landis. Christian Martin, Executor or John Dussinger. Christian Johns, Administrator ”r Catharine Goshen. Jacob Myers, Martin Myers and Samuel My ers. Eseent ors of George Myers. Benjamin Neil' Admlnlstrator of Susanna , .. . Nell'. 12,,sina Dirkes, Admlnlstratrix of C'arollna liar!. Joseph 11. 120(ler, (tuarillannf .John Shenk. Intvel Jlusser and Daniel It. :Sle.,ser, trators of Daniel Mossy, It. B. Swarr, Trustee of Ueorgiana Di newer, (late Hensel.) 11. 11. Swarr, 'Trustee of Sarah IS. l'idetnitn, Henry Dietrich, Administrator of Elizabeth Fred. D. Itiel:ert, Exeriiiiir of i.uri•tin lartin E. Fry, Guardian of Niary, Eliznbrih Bat - bar:l...lane and Mar4aret K ilitritut r. I hiv id Shirk and Samuel Nis sly, Ex,viitors of Jacob Kurt,. 8. It. Zug, Guardian of Iteluinea S. It, Jug, Guardian of Iliiiiry Hummer S. K. Zug, Guardian of Fanny Lelomin late• 31111er.) S. It. Zug Gmtrdlan (,1 Jacob Snyder. )Ivry llillrr, Adminlstratrix of Abraham Benjamin Ritter. one of the Executors ofJohn Noll, and Daniel Danner and henry M. KJ,- ner, Executor of John Keyser, who W. also one of the Ex.eentors of .14;11n Noll. Abraham Ruin), Guardian of Harriet E. Mar ple, Itelfe of Leaman.) Amos liolllueer, Guardian 4)1 EIV111:111:11,11 , i1 formerly 11411Iluger,) Stilt• \lleh: o •t Ilarnl , l4 Walter 4 IIIIII!3111111 Elu Christ lan Hrc., ( itinrdlan Of nvl, Martha, Ann and Adam ;01.1),i:turn Weill), and Charlotte Kurtz, Ixe4 unit, of Ili i ttry li. Kurtz. Michtn•l Wiingiir, Acting Executor of John G.', o[llll,l z, .I.lTnini•l rat, tlf R,,11,11 steintEwt4. Lucid Harncs, .Allllll,liNtrat , , soli. David BarnQs, A,lniinktralmr of ElizalKlll Eber4ole. B. H. Longenecker, Adminlstrator of Ellen Meth Becker. Amanda B. Denllnger, Administratrix of Henry E. Denlinger. Samuel Itanek, Guardian of Hannah Boyer. Abraham Foruvy, Adininlstrotor of Urahlli _ . E/1111.1111Vi W. Rudy, Administrator of Eliza , . both Rudy. David 13. Prima., Goard(an of Mart S. Andor son, John If. Metzler, Administrator of Abraham Shelley. Gideon Fisher, Surviving Executor of Benja min King. Ephraim If ershev, Guardian of Sarah Heise. Ephraim liermin , y, Guardian of Saßuda H. Heise. Christian Kauffman, John Stauirer and Henry Snavely, ExeentorS of Dr. AlldreW B. Knurl'. wan. James A. McPherson and Sarah R. McPherson Exerni ors of Hugh H. McPherson. Wm. E. McCreary, Executor of William Mc Cream. Ephraim liershey, Guardian of Mary Hinkle. Christian 11. Kllllielrer and Elizabeth .ti Administrators of John Suding. John K. Mellinger, Unardian of Catharine . Hershey. _ Simon S. Nagle, Guardian of .I.llin Shields. Cat Sari ne Shaeffer, (late Keller,) Admlukt ra- Iris of Philip Keller. Daniel Rife and Benjamin Sipreeher, Admi raters rip Soots 110111,11110h1111111•11l0 .1111,0 Of Ephraim Friel:. I.lumhatu littielt, Trustee 1., sell real estate ttr Abraham Miller. EIMIZEISMI , . tors of Samuel G. Bore. Hugh Wilson Black and Andrew Bailey, Ex ecutors Ell.tbeth Robinson. Nlartho Brettenun and George H. Rumple Administrators of John S Rreneman.• Dr. Benjamin Rohrer, ljuardian ut Fan - ny E. Garber. _ David ii i daufrer, Executor of Elizabeth Stant . - Jolla S. Elan and Rudolph A. Frey, Executors of Bart holiatiew Garber. Solomon S. Detwiler, Guardian of Catharine Gin weller. , Jae.lt U. Weldler, Executor of John \Veinier. Henry E. Slaymaker and IL Ultampneys, , Executors of Emanuel U. lteigart. D. G. Eshleman, Guardian of Anna Louisa Baldwin. , Benjamin Root, Administrator of Margaret L. Root. John Golgley, Administrator de basis non ism lestamentu annex° of Peter Weaver. fel) . 221tw S 11. S. SHENCK, Register. CARPETS, &C. G. H. MSYDISH. C ARPETS! CA R PETS ! CARPETS! Full tuisortrnen t—A ( L mArnsus, 11al:U(3E1'S STAIR RODS, S.C. U. B. SNYDER & CO., 31 SOUTH SEEOND ST., PHILADELPHIA, WEST SIDE, BELOW MARKET. N. B.—A liberal discount to Churches end Clergymen. of-rim w4O ITIIOMAS DEPUIt, South Second Street Above Chestnut, : = PHILADELPHIA, Has Jest opened, with a large and well se-1 , 7: lected stock of Foreign and Domestic Car- 1 .7' petings, of choice styles and qualities. •.7; Also,Vii Cloths, Mattings, Druggets,Rugs, Mats, Stair Rods, &c.,a1l of which _ he will sell very c h eap fur cash. sep7-6mw:3B! EDUCATIONAL ' 'lliTfilur pii POTTSTOWN MONTGOMERY COUNTY, PENN'A ENGLISH, CLASSICAL, SCIENTIFIC MIMI COMMERCIAL Location Admirable! Twentieth Annual Son. ;don! Thorough Preparation for College or Business. fl For circulars address REV. GEO. F. .NIILLER, A. M., Principal. REFERENCES.—Rev Drs. Meigs k3chaeffer, Mann, Kraut h, Boles, Hutton, etc,—Hons.Judge Ludlow, Leonard Myers, J. S. Yost, B. M. Boy er, M. Russel Thayer, etc. jy27-trw A GENTS I READ TIIIS ! We will pay Agents a salary of ,9:10 per week and expenses, or allow a large commission, to sell our new and wonderful Inventions. Ad dress, M. WAGNER dr. CO., fl4ditnw Marshall, Mich. BONDS. N " 7-30 GOLD LOAN. SAFE! PROFITABLE! PERMANENT JAY COOKE & CO PAR AND ACCRUED INTEREST TLTE First Mortgage Land Grant Gold Bonds NORTIIEIIN PACIFIC RAILROAD CO, These bonds are securedalref, by a First Mort gage on the Railroad itself, its rolling-stock, and all equipments; second, by a First Mort gage on its entire Land Grant, being more than Twenty-Iwo Thousand Acres of Land to each mile of Road. The Bonds are free from United States Tax •, the Principal and Interest are payable In Gold —the Principal at the end of Thirty years, and the Interest Semi-annually, at the rate of &tit% and Three• Tenths Per Cent, per annum. • They are issued in denonitnat lons of $lOO, RIO $lOOO, 00000 and $lO,OOO. The Trustees under the Mortgage are Messrs. Jay Cooke, of Philadelphia, and J. Edgar Thompwm,Preslilent of the Pennsylvania Cen tral Railroad Company. These Northern Pacific 7-30 Bonds will at ;all times before maturity, be recel vable at Ten Per Cleat Premium (or 1, 10 In In exchange for the Company's lauds at their lowest cash price. In addition to their absolute safety, these Bonds yield an Income larger, we believe, than any other first-class security. Persons holding United States 5-Ms can, by converting them into Northern !Pacifies, increase their yearly income one-third, and Still haven perfectly re liable investment. HWA"TO BET TIIEM.—Your nearest Bank or Banker will supply these Bonds In any de sired tunOunt, and of any needed denomlna tiou. Persons wishing to exchange stocks or other bonds for these, can do so with any of our Agents, who will allow the highest current price tar all Marketable Securities. Those living In localities remote (van Banks, may send money, or other fronds, directly to us by express, and we will send back Northern Pacific Bowls at e u row u risk , and without cost to the investor. For further Information, pamphlets, ramps, etc., call on or address the undersigned, or any of the Bankers employed to sell tnis Loan. FOR SALE REED, MeGRANN 11.111: A: MECHANICS' BANK, INLAND INSURANCE S DEPOSIT CO I I I -6t.4l.olndexT.Clmwem It PO DRETTE T IRE PEISSON POI DILETTE! Manufactured and Sold for 21 Years! EIMMEREIZEI For COTTO'r, try It For THISACM, try It! For WHEAT, try It ! For OAT ,, , try It! F'or CoRN, try It ! - For BARLEY, try It! For RYE, try It! ~r Vegetables, Fruit, and Flowers, no better FERTILIZER Is KNOWN at the present day. A Natural Manure! No Adultertlon! Made from privy deposlto,ornlght soil. Free Irmo smell. Pleasant to handle Each cart load when taken from the well deodorized. • Report of the best parchleal agriculturists aml chemists of Europe and Arorrica. Soil without any manure has produced three times the quantity of the seed sown; haSylehl ed, with a slight application of the proper ma nure, from Decayed Vegetab:e Mat ter 5 times Its nn n seed Stable Manure 7 1-5 Horse !I II It' Guano " lu 17 Fluid tit ercus,or N ishl Soil 12 II 10:1 10=MNEM=trin You alik: What are the advant.g., of ttsirg Putalrette? 1. It produces the largest crops. 2. It en riches your laud. a. It acts quickly on theseed sown, and Conti noes to show Itself in the soil for years. .1. For fruits and vegetables, applied as per directions In pamphlet, it cannot be sur passed by ally fort ilizer of the present day. The price of Poudrette Is ; 1 122 per tom put up In bags, and dell sired at any II the railroad depots or steamboat linnlingi In the city. All orders addressed to STEWART Sz successors to A. Peysson . . • No. TS) brary street, Room No, tall,)Phil'a, l'a. Will Inert with prompt attention; or farmers near the city iiall send their linen teams to our works on Gray•li ,Ferry Road, near the I'. ti. Arsenal, where we deliver In bulk, at 11l cents a bushel, or sill a ton; or parties having the advantages of shipping, can send vessels to our W,k4, lilid Set the same in bulk, at sls per ton. A liberal discount to Wholesale Dettlerit. iIILS GEL LANEOUS B EA TYI A II 0 M E!! A N 1) I'o T N E PREMIUM SALE , *"I'IiREE kNDSOME NEW STEEL EN(3II,AN'INGS! GIFT WORTH FROM $l,OO TO 825,000 =MEM= We have °Wanted the entire control of the following engravings, which we offer at the low figures of . . . 82.00 EACH!! although they are really worth eaeh.— They are Itlx2l Inehes, and each Is a gent of art. I. 1.5 It LEY! A Legend of the Ithine. A female of rare I eauty sits oo the shore of the river, where Line reeks are the test dangerous, and wlth her song anti music charms the unwary saVors in near her, when I hey meet 11 watery grave. The subject is full of life, full of emotion, and is altogether a success. E DISINHERITED! A yountt . multi through the telly influence of some in his hotiKehohl, is deprived of a. share In his father's house, Ha., int but sorrow a. Ills lilt, 111..110partS, and fIIIIIII.IIVIVIILMring hill he hilies its last look and farewell to Ihe Norf.'s of his younger:old better days. The heart tills Neill] deep sorrow in esaininlng this sultieel so hell drawn. THE C It ILI) rII RIST! A child till), human body and dress, angelic face, tint divine eyes, Is represented so well that words cannot tell half nei worth. We do Ina. think that any engraving has yet reached the eye, Hence of Ili!, In touching the heart and lin nnr, i lnw,y to IL higher world. The rye never tires to look. The more It Is seen, the greater the desire to look 11149111 and again. a c,ereat. Lithograph Likeness of (; EN, STONEWALL JACE.SON. l: ~[ tiVer pub lished. Inch., ',wilt :3.'0.. which we will the sanit• It is [rally a pin] of in i t.. A Ptl ItTUNE FOR \-00! With each i'llgl,Vllll4, nil We i)rieS, Sit give shiniei, ticket, entitling each slairchohicii lo one of the follow. ing gifts. Read on. and rennanlor, unit every tlrlret holder will positively 141• I 011 I• thtt following which WM 111'111 , 1,1,111yd by a drawin THE LA PIERRE HOTEL, DENToN,MD., containing twenty-six rooms, furnished throtighour, wall all modern cons enienveg. 1/1 " oint-lanldings, alaldlng lot . thirty horses; including all outfit, st()1 • 1,, WOrth. CaSii ii 25,00() THE PICTLIIIE HILL CAROLINE COUNTY, MD., of l 1l ACREs, on the Choptank river, bovine is steamboat wharf on It, with a good scope of country LO support it with a time kiln. good buildings, a large variety of fruit, convenient to churches anti schools, only six miles front Easton, the largest business town on the Dela ware Peninsnia 810,000. THE COLD SERINO FARM! of 50 ACRES: one mile from Denton, one mile from steamboat landing, tire miles from the Maryland and Delaware ittli I road one thous and peach trees, fifty apple trees, choice varie ties of strawberries, cherries, plums, apricots, crab apples, dwarf pears, splendid now build ings, worth $04,000. THE CARTER FARM! with St/ACRES; hue orchard, good handing.; choice wheat, land $5,000 A HOUSE IN DENTON! with one and a half acre urehnrd, with the tinest varieties of fruits 83,0011. 'OO STANDARD SI•:AVISf7 MAt HINES! worth from Silt to 8150. ro WA LTIIAM ATCI lES ! • Eneh worth from 810 to 8100 FM] It PIA NO4. M===! MR==El ONN: st•M °NE cAslf ~ 'l'll , 'ASII SUMs—F.AI L... €11411). FOUR UAMII til*Nhi—EACl I 111.1170 GI VTS Ma chines, Wrlnger, Stanclardand Work, It Art ; h.ow• Chem ea. 111• jeln•haseil, at re tail. for le, I Ilan while rim], h w"rt II .515 1111,11110 n, The tlrtly;lntr will lake pinee, :Lk 1,0111 ell- gravlngs eunuch tlre sold In clistrilitne ILS the tickets, hetore u, tn., t 'eke! -holders as choose to he present. and to he under Int•ir coot We ref. r In Thlllllll, H. W emit, clerk ttf 'cntline Co. Court. lettrge If. Ilossutti, Law, Itentrtn, 11. It. Itlehttrilstni. Sherilttlf the Ccutity. Fell, Esti., of Ittitt.n Md. Monello lint., Heal Estttle Itroliers, Itllg- It;t, Nitl. Euler also to Charles ftinoli Es/1 .lApeaker of the Delaware Senate, all the Leading Men, the Banks, the Editor of this Paper, and the Press of the Peninsula, g-01 , 111/Y• We want lien,. 1.01 ILlItl Wolllr . ll, every where, to work thr us, with whom we will nuke liberal arrangements, namely,after their ordering their sample engraving, we will give them one engraving 111141 4,11 e 114,10• L Over)' fin, Ilan., [lice send us with $..00 To tinder an Engraving, send us $2 011 In a regLstered letter, or by Post-0111 , e Older, and we scull send 11. y return mail, the engraving and the ticket FItEE. Send all your orders for engravings. money and drafts, and all corresponuenve to stir yen 1,11.1 1/1/11,, zsidressed thus: I'Al )LINE C(). LAND ASSoCIATION, THE CAROLINE PEAR I Will i.e sent to all purenasers FItV.E. for on quarter on appliention. It will give a detailed account of our ptsteeedint, front tittle to time. Newspapers wishing to advertise for us will please send us their lowest rates. arroline (s,lziall, Ard., fry 1871. NA (4 i.itlU'V t 4 are warranted to Iry They are prepared from thefruits, - and will be found ralteh better than many of tne Extra,* t hat are sold. 4E - Ask you troce'r or Druggist for Wiltberger's kJ-a-opts. Barlow's Indigo Blue Is, wit hout doubt., the beat tirade in the market, for blueing clothes. It will color more water than Jour tames the same weight of indigo, and nitwit noire than any other wash blue in the market. The only genu ate Is that put rap at Alfred Wilt berger's Drug Store, No. 233 North S , .,cond Street, Philadel phia. The Labels have berth Wiltberger's and Barlow's name on them, all others are counter. frit. Per sale by most Grocers and Druggists. Wiltberger's Indelible Ink rat!! be found trial to be a superior artirte. Always on hand I'm sale at reasonable prices. Pure Uround Spices, Genuine Medicines, Chamois Skins, Sponges Tapioca, Pearl, Sago, and all articles In the drug line, at Alfred Wilthergers Drug Store No. 1.W3 North Second street, Ptilladelphla. may-lyw2l 31A W A - II 1( T " (IMPORTER OF WATCHES,' No. 6r.. Market Street, Philadelphia, Would respectfully call attention to his I new and carefully selected stock of WATCHES, JEWELRY, DIAMONDS, SILVER AND PLATED WARE, Sc. IJ:rip - Repairing promptly attended to and neatly done. DRY GOODS. 1871 SPRING DRY GOODS ! 1871 HAGER & BROTHERS are now receiving Dry Goods for Spring sales. Our stock In all departments will be more complete 'than we have ever before offered, and at the Lowest Markelirrices, We Invite examination. BLEACHED DAMASK TABLE LINENS, DICE AND SNOW-DROP TABLE LINENS, LOOM DICE DAMASKS, NAPKINS, DOLLIO3, DAMASK AND .HIICK TOWELS. 'MARSEILLES 'QUILTS, !LANCASTER QUILTS, . . S PM!zIio79ANNDD TABLEII 11 3WSLINS BLEACHED I ,AN.bBII,N9IAtACVLISTUSLINS All the Beat Makes, TICRINGS AND CHECKS, PRINTS AND GINGHAMS, 1000,POUNDS PRIME FEATHERS, CHINA, GLASS AND QUEENSWARE A large stock of best ENGLLSH GRANITE AND: BOSTON AND PITTSBURGH GLASSWARE, Plain and Gold-Band French China and Fan cy Goods, purchased direct from manure, tort. and Importers for cash, and will be sold very low, CARPETS !=CARPETS I ! Best English Brussels, English Tapestry Brus sels, Three-Ply. Extra and Medium superfine Ingrain, Rag, List, &c. Rugs 3fatts and Cocoa Matt Ings. OILCLOTHS, all widths. from to :t yards. WINDOW SHADE_'S HoLLANDS, white, huff and green. The largest assortment of new styles ever of fered in this city, in Fine, Medium and Low Priced Papers, PLAIN AND DECORATIVE Comprising all the latest designs of the lead ing manufactories, Stamped Gold, Embossed Stamped Gold Satins, Oaks Marble, Blanks, &e. WASHABLE TINTS, N and 40 Inches, all shades in imitation of Frescue that can be washed. OD= FON. CHIIIiCHE;: PUBLIC VARIEITY OF DESIGNS. - - - Price lees than Maine goods are furnished In Philadelphia. _ - MEM ====l CLOTHING R EADY -MAUI cLoTH WANAMAKER BROWN'S OAK I - I A_ LE. NEw Esc sTl'l,l.:, Ili= 11 .11 - ttrk 1 mid Gilt IN BOYS' WEAR we have every :Llet every Va rlety of styl,, "tall from In 1,, 21.) Boys from 7I 16, fool (10141rtm from 51119 special reference In roll roIILII nsaGe. Iu 110, Jlau•L t mut Sixth 112MEII!11111113111111!IIIIIIIIIII "The Headquarters of Country Trade" In 1:10111111g, alltl we r,ut 1,..,111• 11111. I=ll Ing and sat isfactory print s. IRH•/mt (Hirt Si.r•t/ I=lllllllllll E:nrvy rIII,. rig ,t n,•nt frt., to ally LI; of .1111,•ric 7.lits put ot 1 ,NIARI:ET AN sIXTII PHILADELPII LI TOBACCO AND SEGAR.S. — THE BEST AND ("EST .SMOKING TOBACCO I, 0 FACTORY \O. 1, 31 DI:-.;TIUCT OF M.\ ILYLAND. ti,o that Every Package you buy n 26 bears that inscription. lyw FURNITURE E=l L" N T It I I:IIEISTIANA, Have now nu Itand the la,:est and variety at Furnitur, ever "lirre.l in I Ilk L 4 ,1111- Iy, .Lnd at Prise.; MI I I HIV ALL KINDS OF WALNUT FURNITURE ALL KINDS OF eoTrAGE D'ulorrTußE Chamber Suits, Marble Tor fable, L a rge Look ing and Clocks,i'ur board., Minn tilnks, fables of all kinds, Chairs d all kinds. Lour Res and Softiies. All goods warranted as represonteil, use us a call awl see lor yourselves. fold 4t w 5 TIORN YS-A T- LA If J. r•. FREEAUFF. Attorney and o.unscilor at law. J. W. F. SWIFT. No. 13 North Duke 01.. I.nockeLer B. C. BREAD V. No. 2-1 Dud King otr-.t. 2d n..pr. over -4L , t , . New Store. EDGAR V. REED, No. lON ortli Duke et., houcwit or 13=3 FRED. S. P VEER, No. 5 Piouth Duke ht.. Lnocuster N. H. PRICE, Court. Avenue. west nil 'Aurt House. Lancaster I=l No. `238 Locust. atreet, Columbia. Pit. MEEM:I WM. LEAMAN, No. 5 North Duke mt.. Lauclister A. J. MTEINMAN. No. 4 South Queen 84. Larimmter H. 21. NORTH, • CAllumbla. I.FtneastAr cnnnty. Pt D. W. PATTERSON, Has removed lily °Mee to No. rs't Eat Eine sl S IN" P JAI I( eN EY-AT- LA W. OFFICE WITH N. ELLM AK ER, E,4.. NORTH DUE E STREET, R 25 LANCASTER. PA. w 2.4 ly ROOFING SLATE ROOFING SLATE—PRICES REDUCED it The undersigned has constantly on hand a full supply of Rooting Slate for sale at Reduced Prices. Also, an extra LIGHT ROOFING SLATE, Intended for slating on shingle roofs. Employing the very best slaters all work is warranted to be executed In the best manner. Builders and others will find It to their Inter est to examine Gm samkdes at his Agricultural and Seed Warerooms. ho. 2a. DIAL Ring street Lancaster, Pa., 2 doors west of the Court House We have 8,40 the Asbestos Roofing for flat roofs, or wr ere slate and shingles cannot be used. It la far superior to Plastic or Gravel Roofing. denl2-01... (OW) Il RPRECHER E 3l SCHAEFFER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL SADDLER‘ , NOS. 1 AND 2 EAST KING_STREET, an 10 L NCASTER,IPA. MEDICAL ` pAVIS - I .. 4 RE 81:- 1 40 18 70 - • - - - • - The PAIN KILLER is by universal consent allowed to have won for itself a reputation un surpassed in the history of medical prepara tions. Its instantaneous effect in the eradica tldn and extinction of pain in all its various forms incident to the human family, and the unsolicited written and verbal testimony of the masses in its favor, have been, and are its own best advertisements. The ingredients of the PAIN KILLER, being purely Vegetable, render It a perfectly sale and efficacious remedy taken lnternally,:as well as for external application, when used ac cording to directions. The stain upon linen front its use is readily removed by washing with alcohol. This Medicine, Justly edebrated for the cure of so many of the afflictions incident to the hu man family, has now been before the public over Thirty Years. and tins found Its way into almost every corner of the world: and where ever It has been used. the same opinion is ex pressed of Its medical properties. In any attack, where prompt action upon the system Is required, the Paint Killer Is In valuable. Its almost Instantaneous effect in Relieving Pain Is truly wonderful : and when used record lug to directions, is true to its name, a PAIN KILLER. R ECOMMENDED AND ENDoRNED BY OVER SEVEN HUNDRED DoeTORS ! DR. LAWRENCE'S CONII' () N FLUID EXTRACT ET 0 S ET 0 0 ! THE GREAT HEALTH RESTORER 1, NUT A sEcitrr QUA(K MEDICINE- HYILMI" LA A ROUND TII E Dr. J. .1. I,IWItI.:NCE, Or:otile Chemist KOSKOO sTRIKE; THE tool' ov Itll Y I NG. THE Ii 1,001) This Is the Secret of Its Wonderful Success In Curing I=l SCROFI'LA, SYPHILIS, DYSPEP:II NERVOUS AFFEII'ItIN EiturrioNsUtz THE SKIN, lIUNWU.,i =MI Eg3=l It thoroughly eradicate+ every k Ind of II n mor and Bad Tel and reatot,4 the entire aystein to a healthy condition. It la beyond ,11esti1/11 the FIN FrH"l'ON ll' IN THE' WORLD. Thousands have been changed by the use of Lulls Medicine front weak, sickly, sulTerlng creatural, to strong, healthy, nud !nippy men and women. Invalids cannot besltale to give It a trial. No Medicine has obtained such a great reps tation its tills Justly celebrated einposnil. I=l From Physicians, Eminent Divines, Editors . ' Druggists, Merchants, , see Kosice, Alma nac fur this year. PRICE ONE DOLLAR PER BorriA, Mc Principal Drugaishe in flee United Stales and British D . LAWRENCE'S WO E MAN'S FRIND cores all Diseases peculiar to Females. pH 1 LOSOPII V OF' MA ROI AO E..—A 1 NEW COURHF, OF LEcru ax deliv ered at the Penna. Polytechnic and and Ana tomical Museum, En",i'llest nut SI., three doora above Twelfth, Philadelphia, earl slug the subjects; HOW to Li,. and What • Live far ; Youth, Maturity and Old Age; Manhood Oen evilly Reviewed; The (01IISO of Indigestion; Flatulence and nervous Diseases acconnted for; Marriage Philosophically considered. Tilitße lectures will he forwarded on receipt. of 115 cents by addressing: Secretary of the Penna. POLYTECHNIC AND ANATOMICAL MU SEUM. 1315 CheatnnL Ht., Philadelphia, P. M=t=l M USICAL INS TE UM EN TS 271 , e 2-1 surrit ruin srr.r•.i:•r 11E!11 011f:ANS AND MELODONS 1 ; 1 11.ill , tcill Sl> 11 , 1r1)irt Upwards to itioo. lIMMIII2 I=ll Slnps Elfol , 7 Stop, 1,, IMMIII ll= Fr.,l“ rovanly 1 , , Sri BELLAK'S. Ime .‘" ()ET Ili MI le DIE' 11ESTE, (;1),, ESTE I„ DEN U ler , E,l'EN ), •/i ItII.I.I(;STR.V 1.1: ISK, 1 , 11: LEWIN' ESTEN T EMILY. 1111-lyel SUNTY.Fn E FIRST PRIZE MEDALS A w A It I) E 1116 U R I .1 r BILTIMORE PIANO 111NUFICTORY, WILLIAM KNA S: Ml= uRAND, stal'Altl.: AND UPRIOIIT PIANO FORTES BA LT IM OR E, JfD The', Ie t ruments have heel. beft,re the 1,1111 Ile for nearly Thirty yeltre, Ill.' Upon their ex eellem, alone allalnell ./1” te le inereltneleti pre T whirl, proncru inc., then, ueequallecl Their cointilties grt tit tmwer, sweet (11 , tiaild tine slng Itig, totality, :is well ue great purity Ititttat Ita.atttlsst. ect ties...throughout 1)14,1111re-wale ENGEM Is plal,l :mil el/I,A le, awl , s• irrun I he sl.lll . ntss, Itrull.l many IN WORKNIAIs;SIIIP they are unequalled, usine none but the very 110,4 .e ;Lem,. eaelereit, the large rapnal eno rroyed m our business enalaln ustokeepron uuunlly g all immense stork of lumber, sr., on hand. OA- All our Square Pianos have our New Im proved Deer...inn ay eicale and the Aurriffe Treble 4i- We would call special attention tooor late llllttroveinents In ORA Al) PI A .VDS and Kld ('d leE GRA .vim, Patent Aug. tiring the Plano nearer perfection than has yet been attained. EVERY PIANO 1 , 171,1,Y WARRANTED FUR MMIIMI We have Made arrllngernen to r 4, thn Sote Wholewar Aprn , / for the ment Celebrated lAS - Oltf: A NS'and MELODEONS, which we offer \V 110IeSaie and Retail, at howext Filetnry Prices, WI lAA ANI KNA BE d: JA NI ES It ELLA K c2l-6tnvai Wholf,ale Depot, .174 and 2241 South 51.11 Mt.. Ph I In H. ALLET, DA VIM New Improved Grandy Square PIA N 0 S B. SHONINUER co.'s CHURCH AND PARLOR ORGANS SOLD FOR. CASH AN!) INSTALMENTS Purchasers will do well to examine the Great Improvements before purchasing elsewhere. Fiend fur a Descriptive Circular. W. REDFIELD PHELP;: & CO No. !rli CHESTNUT STREET, BANKING Ho USEs INTEL -LEST ON DEPOSITS -L.. The INLAND INST'ItA NCI , : AND DEPOSIT COMPANY, will pay Interest on deposits Ar follows, For 1 and 2 months 4 per rent! " 3, 4 and 5 " 4 :5 " 7, ri,l4 and 10 months i " " 11 and 12 monthss s : " STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION J. C. MUIILENBERO, nov 2 emw 44 Treasurer MISCELLANEOUS. A GREAT MEDICAL DISCOVERY! DR. WALKER'S CALIFORNIA VINEGAR BITTERS. HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS DEAR TESTI MONT TO THEIR WONDERFUL CURATIVE EFFECTS. WHAT APE THEY? FANCY DRINK. Made of Pure Ruin, Whiskey, Proof Spirits and Refuse Liquors doctored, spiced and sweeten ed to please the taste, calloi 'lronies," I'Appe tizers," "Restorers," Am., that lead the tippler on to drunkenness and ruin, but are a trite Medicine, made from the Native Roots and Herbs of California, tree front all Alcoholic Stimulants. They are the GREAT BLOW , PURIFIER Sill till FE-t a VINCI PRINCIPLE, a perfect Renovator rind Invigorator of I lie System, carrying wr nil poisonous flintier and restoring the blood ton wealthy condition. NIP person can take these Milers aceorditur 1,, di rection 111111 T . 1'11111.111 1,11114 unwell, provided the bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means and the vital organs W 11.41 1 .11 11 yond the point of repair, For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism and Gout, Dyspep.la or Indigestion, Bilious, Remittent anti Intermittent ;Fevers, Ilhennes of the likaal, Liver, Kidneys, and Bladder, these Bitters have been most 1.11,,4111:11. Such 111SellNetl are caused by Vitiated Illood, iiich Is generally produced by derangement of the Digestive organs. IIYsPEPSE A lilt IS Ile:Mach, Pain bl t he:shoulders, Coughs, Tighllleasul lilt. Chest, Dirr.iness, Sour Eructations oft he Stout nett, IMO Taste in the Nimith, Bilious; A t hicks. Palpitat lon of the Heart, Intiaminni lon of tbe Lungs, Palo In the region of lite I: Whey,. 111111 111111are1111111er It/l1 eta! symptoms, In - , the .11 - springs of Dyspepsia. They invigorate the Stomach and stimulate tile torpid liver and bowels, which render I hen, lit unotimiled efficacy In cleansing the blood of nil Im mrl Iles , and imam i lltg 111(1 11 ft, 111111 vigor to the It hole system lil.:111'11..NT nal I IN'I'EItNIIT 'I'ENI' FEVEliti, ,111vh uiu.tl aare‘aalent valleys of mar great( ria ern throughout lie l'allteal Staten, espeehally those Sal Illy \114.1.- 5111 d, 51140, !%11,0•1111ri, 11111101 , , TI•11110.A1 . 1., I.lllolwr land, A rlannrraaa. l'olornato, Braze., Vent ;, Alabaman, Mobile, .tills nianala, t(anannke„lnalle., anal nanny of lit n+ \villa I la , Ir vast IF - 11011ml,, during theSuannierlanal Anlalann,aand an-marl: - ably ..aa donna . Sl,llll, ntaaeaanal Innal ;anal air) 111,4. tie tama ri a ;Antalya arena. ananleal lay es e alerannenaelatt, aaf I In; ...Leanne/11111d liN - k•r,1111Ih1 lalaalanniaual tl , ann la. 'l'hl`li tys Inert; an- 11.. elst tilt-11011A of 1111 I it yr, a arena:in-as anal Ira ;Inane sin!, It 111 , ~.111til. ul,lll 1i , 11.”1 . 1P1 1111\11(11 lil.ll,llll,lllllllllliitlt, 111111,11 i I ,11 1111•111, it I.tligili,t . ...s.•lllllg 1 „ 011.a tall amine van, alt;ana II11.1• \ It tota•eannal , , I. a•- , •eall Noll)) nevaa. y. 'nacre II ,111 liar( It• ler a 1,1,1 to hit n nat . 1 , 111 , •I Ihl wall 1,111t1,1• Illt• 141 Id ) 111:ll lit sa it la Inch lie 111111 11 , RIO t•tl. at the , , Ilulr ntlunlluiiuc 111••••co1.•11,, 11,,•11Nerotti.1 gvit.•1;111 Hll'lll,ll , ll\ 1111111 ittl, It( I Ilt• t11,1••ti I, 1.. °I gllll, 1110 111t1 NI•1 . 4:11 111,111114,11) . .k 1 1111, 141 1111:1,11:Lt /111111,11 i, tt. 11.11•11 , t . 111 It ti tt`t tl It /Ili 111 r1 , 11.:s1.11N 1 , 11 , 1:AS11 ,1 , TI•11, Salt Piresl.l., Plis 111h1111C1 , i‘lll, “hi s ti, 1,, ..1111etii,11. tl3llll . 1.1 . 1,111111. , 1:1. dtig 111.111”1 4,111.4111111 or it.• 111 II ,imrt 1111.• hy 1.1.• 1141,1/ 1111 . . k• 111111 . 1, I 111, 1.0110 lIIS/4•11 Will C4111%11110 the 1111,1 111. 4 • 1,4111holis 441 their 4.4t....S 4 . 1/11114Ve 0141.1. l'lt.ttitmt the Vitiator, ~111.111,1 11 nllllllB littptult Ittirst Ing hnrnupn thin. Inn l'lttittles, Erupt 1,1 , 1 ttr Sttrt•,: elcullist• it 55111, \i,u thrill It otltstrllt•lt.ll null +lttvg , t , It , the vett,: cleutt , t• It ‘vltett It I. hill anti tttii 11,1Itt, trilll,ll vttti w Itt.n. Kt•ot. Ilit. 1,14.1 111111'111111 11010111 o( I Iti• ,vlll PIN, TA 1 . 1.: nll4l \VnliNls, him the systelll 1.1 s.r 111„11.1111 , 1., Itre t•III- aystroy...l anti V., lull - I lls, :::r:•111 II)' Rr. , 11 , 1.1 .•“.•1, printod lu f..ttr (;..ritmin. Frolit•111111 , 1,1111111s11. .1. \V.\ I.li 1,11, Prt.prlt.l.,r. 11. 11. NIcl.S rtintl tiuu Franelm.o., .;I Stre•i•t, 5111,1 D ItY AI.I.I.IiUMJI,TS AN I , I,F:Al.l.ll:ti. A GENTS WA NTEI).---8223 A MONTH -Iry Ihi• ANII.:IIICAN NIA ==iMMEM UIIU B E 13 A . CI littoks. Extra Ist,luctat i o.tll..ta .\ la laritatt 11111 In,. Aatlr,N, \ v 1/..! 111/.111 h!ll•i•I, N. V. I t , IW 'lO '74 I I i ' Lt 5 .1?11 4 1, :11: 1 :% 11 . :I i .7 . 1 ‘ )(1 lIV I'l V - Full :11111 A,: ar ,atapl , , ,1 , 111 r 11141' 111111, r/•:111 t. t 1.11%. tar *,t , . IC. 1,. sViil.llrl - I'. 1 , 1 l'ltalllant N. 1. NV A 11CFE1)--A( SI ENT, (820 Prat to sell the yelellraltl SEWINO ALAcii hies the Makes the "lock stitch" (alike... 1.'11 . 1 si.l.•so foal Is Slily licensed. The best t :mull). Sewing Mm•lllne If Om dress JOHNSON, 4: ill).0111),Mj1,,. l ' itifibt/rgh, hi., Chicago, 111., or St. ',mkt. )1., c.20-tw I, , VA Ihlrr 1111/1/14. PlIt1141:. esi.ry li,1111; bought ill tl.. Tlmil.anok will to,. Ito ilur protitiOn..Ns otitl It trial. lor :1 t • itllt h Si-i.l Orr,., It. At. I:A'.ANS 7ttt Afarkrlntro,l, Ithibtilidirlilo, Pit. CE NR A L ENTs 1 , 411 t irtPeNhc • lCV rupld, avc•uritti, op.•ntl 11.1.1 I Icaut Iful. 1111,11L14111s ter skili , lntctic.ll., tuldug trim, •,11.• vo ohm, :1 111.., earrylw: horrt.vlng 111111.11,11 X, Mit the lonsf thought "II 111. ptlrl oper,- tor. A..1.1r.,5, %IF:W.I.:IL h MlVl'ltl , l% Pltllndolplll3, NVo• %VW Send IL ,hitndsmno• Pro.— FIIEE 'lO reelnn of our N..w Illostroto.l 1:11,l,• vont/titling ovor III)))) Scrliollire Illuvtrul. 1 , ..h 10 ILIA' Agent, of cloirto, ilresm, NA I 11/N.%1, PUBI.ISIIIN , i 11)., Philadelphia. Pa. A liEsrm WA NTER FOR " W O N .1) S i)p"riti.: Nvuiti,o," Th. :lg. 111 I 1I:' li, in ~111WW11(1.• .0•1.1 t , or Iv, 111 1 ., .1.. y 11 , 1 II 11111111/, 11,1:1 111 ,c,pit•nl pi, .1.. Selo! Por villa,. will/ i 1,1114 111 ,1110 . ... L'. 1:1,1,011Nl; I'll., 111 It EIIIIF4'IIIINI 1.11[1111:S t n 4,11(uf lii In ItEDUCTIC /Nnrnt•rn:, Ill= form will arisanpany 11,1,1111011111 g tionh—making a largo saving 1.,1,11,1111,11 and I,lllllllerlaiVtl to rluli 111141 TIIE GREIT 31 R 3:; VES E Y ST R E ET, MEE= •lrnr!llJ MMENI I=l Thi• most Important cllta , a cry of Clio ,041. Ilils WOOderfill alai I loao , ,ing aaont (or all 111,14411( or welsk 111,4 , of the Itt—piraiory l/rgaum,Soro Throai,Stal.lon oar-olli (0. / Catarrh, Ar,lhma, Drynona of tha Thg oat o K'lndldpc, (14.010(cli 01 /IV 1.1111145 / null 1,, al: r Irritation sot 1.1.2 11111(110 1 / 4 110(11111,111, • h.l.illllioLf ~.i..e• 114,1111,1 V /l+i,Pll,ll - rni) ti I.) 11111111,4011 n El= kit directly on the ;11110111111, 1111•1111,11111,1111 SIIOIIIII 1/e pridopt ly and freely talc., In :11l 1,- post], or 1. t change iir Weal her, tliey equalize lie Circulation Ihe Wood arid !his ward 011 all I,lllll'llQ' 10 Lipids !tad Lidig diffi culty. The pr(Trielors would say, all n1'4,111414 Meillein, have their naltat hoc., :out they would EA 11"r1 it,: the iodide itgaltuit ed. 110, by having other nit-divines 11,11,1 upon In place of Iffiest- !unafraid., Tablet!, J. ch. 181E1,1,o(;(i, Agent, 31 Platt •111.1. t, N. Y. I,ltl'(,olsTs Price '2.5 rerits I•e,x. L.l A' G .V 1 U N lON PAI'l Fly RA I 1.R0.1 ('OMY I=l 12,000,000 ACRES Of the 11.4 Parinlbg and NI l tientl Lamix =E2132 Mi=t= Nov for sale, for catqh or rrrdlt till low rut., of l'llese lands ar.e near the list. paral lel of North IttUltutle, It. sit 1.111.1 and healthy ellt^aha. and for grain growing and ',tor lc rots- Ing are unequalled by any lit the United tinkles onveilletif to market, both East wad West. Prick , rangb from to Blu per tae re. Rich government Mints along the roml between OM AII A AND Nolan PLATTE. Hureeyed and upon fur entry under t he MIMI.- mtead and Pre-emption laws, and 1,11 he talien 11E1= An opportunity never before presented air securing homes near it great Railroad with all the convenienees of all uld settled ennntry.— New edition of deseriptive pamphlets with maps, nun. ready and stall free to all parts of the United Stales, Clalatht Hilt J . :lll'l4W, Ati• ll F. DAVIS, Land Commissioner, Jll-lind.Cimw2l U. P. It. It. Co_ onnalm. HOTELS AND RESTA L.R.I.N HORSE NORTH QUEEN STREE.T LANCASTER, PESNA The undersigned In feints Ills fries& 0.111 thu public generally. that he has leased the above well-known hotel, Mid that his undivided attention will be paid to its management. The tattle will be furnished with the best tile market affords, and the bar supplied with the best of liquors. No eltbrt soul be spared to render all guests comfertahl.. Transient and permanent boarders accommodated. lebls tfw 7 11. ht. KAUFFMAN.