CURRENT NEWS. i . Forty deaths frcm cholera have occured in I Memphis during last week. The Queen of Spain is said to be writing a woik of the Happiness of Nations. English ladies arc adopting the fashion ol Wearing belts with a small dagger attatchcd. ; The gossips again talks of EDWIN BOOTH'S marriage to a fifth Avenue lady. Noah is probably the first person who wont to sea for fear of being drowned. General Sheridan has ordered that one half of the Louisiana election Commissioner shall be colored men. A little boy in New York made a kite out I of his fathers seven thirties—the rope broke j —and he let them tlicker. The N. Y. Times says that "every A men- ' can is entitled, as his birthright, to life, liber ty and the pursuit as a plan of reconstruct- i ioD." A public man of 18C7 who holds to the : principles avowed by Lincoln in 1860 is de ! nounced as a copperhead or rebel sympathizer by the radicals. Thad. Stephens declaicd in tbcßump House that "the fragments of the old shattered Con stitution struck in the kidneys of somo Sen ators and trouble them at nights. The latest story is that Wilkes Booth is now the captain of a pirate vessel and the ' terror of ihe China seas. llow about that j back bone in the Washington museum? Kossuth has been unanimously chosen to j represent the city of Waizen in the Ilungar I ian Diet. The voice of the great orator may I now be heard once more in defense of the j rights of his native land. Attorney-General S anbery, now at Capon Springs, is in poor health, aud he will not re- j turn to Washington for two or three weeks- Pike, of Arkansas, charged with violatirg his parole by "writing incendiary article*,' aays he never gave or had any parole to violate. A Mr. lloreau, of Nobltsville, Indiana, j who helped Robert Fulton build bis first j steamboat, still lives, hale and hearty, at the age of 97. ThaddeusStevens is the latest LL D. The University of Vermont did it for him. Tiie i LL. may refer to Loyal League. The D. is j obvious. The body of Colonei D. A. Gilmore, late Postmaster of Chicago, was found in the Lake I yesterday morning, at the foot of Harrison ! street. His funeral will take place today S'nce Stanton can no longer borrow car nage horses from the Quartermaster's De-\ partment, he proposes to resume his profes. j sion of the law, devoting himself especially to ; "conveyances." "A Carol of the Harvest, for 1807." by Walt Whitman, wiil he published in the gal axy for September. It is a iong chant cele. brating the bounteous harvest of the present year. Look out for a terrific yawp. One M. Bureau is said to have fled to France with §000,(100, abstracted from the government funds HI Vera Cruz. The pecu lisrity of the operation suggests the probabi! ity that this M. Bureau bolouged to the Frcedmen's Bureau family, - And now Pennsylvania University has made Edward McPherson, clerk of the llou e of Representatives, an LL D. The cullid pusson, who sits broom in hand at the door marked ' Fur Representatives only," comes next in order. Sir Frederick Bruce is said to have per petrated the following conundrum: "Why is an antagonist of Mr. Gladstone in debato in the House of Commons like a telescope? Be cause be (Mr. Gladstone) draws him out. sees through him, and shuts him up." Gail Hamilton (and Gail is a stiff Radical) j says of Brownlow, that "the rcklessness profanity and uucleanness of his speech are i such that it is difficult to conceive of anv ' combination of circumstances which should make it the duty of any man to propose or support him as leader in any measure affect : ing the welfare of society," Sioux Chief Big Mouth is very mad because j the llou. Thomas Cave,an English M. I'.,now exploring the far West, will not become his son-in-law. The case differs from that of; King Theodoras of Abyssinia, who only wants to be si n-iu law to euino Englishman. A Philadelphia despatch says that S'anton arrived in Philadelphia yesterday, and that tie will visit the white M >untains—possibly ' to invite those eminences to fall upon him and 1 cover him. A Washington dispatch says that Stanton and Mrs- Stanton have left Wash ington for a visit of a few weeks to B >ston whe-e they will be the guests of Ilun. Sain" nel Ilooper. The public have already been given full reports of the little fellow's voyage up Salt R ver. The White Mountains will be a relief to the eye of Stanton—everything looks so terribly ! blue in Washington. Caligula made his horse a consul. It is doubted if there was as much made out of that horse as Stanton has made out of the go/ernment stables in the past five years. Thaddeus Stevens has writtn a letter to the i Radicals of Pennsylvania that they may be ] in danger of defeat in October "through 1 apathy." He means through Democracy. The London cosnioplilian maliciously says that Harvard conferred the degree of LL. D upon Mr. Peabody, not for his learning in the law, but?or his other "great gifts." The Archbishop of Canterbury stated at ! a recent meeting of the Hawaian Missiun, | that he knew few English ladies who could bear comparison with Queen Emma, of Ilono- 1 lulu, in a knowledge of the English language and literature. &)tdemocrat. Q II.VRtKV SICKLER, Editor. TUNKHANNOCK, PA. Wednesday, An?. 2 1,1 SG7. ADVERTISING AGENTS, EX* ' CHANGES, and all others interested, wil | please note the CHANGE of TITLE, ofthis j aper, from THE NORTH BRANCH DEM ; OCR AT to WYOMING DEMOCRAT. General Sheridan, who, for some | months past, has been playing the tyrant ! in bis military satrapy, was by order of the President relieved from further duties in j that department, and Gen, Thomas placed ' in command. Joe. Ilolt, has also been re leived from his duties at Washington, STRANGE ATTEMPT AT SUICIDE. —One I ol the nio-t whimsical and unheard-of means ot "shuffling off this mortal coil (< occured lin St. Louis, on Wednesday. 24th nit. A woman living in the lower part of the ciiy | named Meyer, who, from ill treatment of j her husband, had become disgusted with ; lite, attempted to make away with hersell ' in the following very unique manner; She took a six pounder cannon ball which i her husband had brought from Vivksburg as a relic, and which had been lying on the mantle piece for years, and having a rather ' indistinct conception ot the terrible effects i of the projectile and the manner of using J, at length hit upon an L lea. She went , to Edward's grocery and purchased fifty I cents worth of powder, returned home and procuring a breakfast plate she placed ii on the floor. She then poured the gunpow ; der upon the [date, and put the cannon ball 'on the top of the power. Having thus got her artillery into position, and everything in readiness, she then sat down over the \ loaded plate, and with a burning taper in j one hand fired tiie powder. The effect of I the explosion may be imagined. The ex ; plcding powder burned and blackened the | woman's lower extremities, while the ball, | which she vainly expected to end her mis eries, did not stir frcm its position. The ! unfortunate victim ofthis insane attempt at ' self destruction is lying in a precarious con dition from the effects of her foolhardy at tempt upon licr own life | A NEW HOG I)I*T:U*E, it is reported, has ' broken out among the hogs of South Mis | soura, which is killing off nearly all attack | c:d by it. At fir-1 the disease was snppos t .J to be hog col! ra, but close observation j shows that the symtorns and actions are quite different froiii that disease. The an imal lias much the appearance of having I what i* known among farmers as the "blind | staggers " A* iong as warmth and circula tion are kept up, the anim il shows no signs i of disease, but as soon as it is quiet and inactive tiie suffering appears intense. In many instances the eyeballs are turned completely around and frequently burst. The bog attacked generally lives from two to three days. Ail remedies yet tried have proved ineffective, and many farmers are in dismay at the ravages of the disease. NEW FRACTIONAL CURRENCY. —To meet the demands of the pubiic, there will be is ' sued in a few weeks an additional curren icy note of the denomination of 15 cents, i The principal embellishment:. on the face i ofthis note are an engraved likeness of j General Grant on the right hand, and op posite on the left of the note a likeness of Lieutenant General Sherman. The back of the note, like all other late issues o Government money, will be green, with (the figure 15 ou each side of the note. The bronz: figures which have thus far : been placed upon the various denomina- I tions of United States currency, will be ' omitted on this issue, and for safety a pe culiar kind of paper substituted. When Sherman snubbed Stanton in the ; presence of the President, while his army was marching in review up Pennsylvania avenue, !he gave bis view of the status of the Secre tary of war by calling him "nothing but a (I—d e'erk;" and he said if the president, who was, by the Constitution, the Commander in-Cuief of the army, should order bun to take a musket and stand guard lie would cheerfully obey the order,but that ifStan'on ! ordered bitn to do any Hung, he would tell him to >. o to a very hot place. Not a single Jacobin, from Stevens, the i high-priest, d iw n to the "creatures" whom i Greelv so unmercifully lashed, even at j tempt to reply to the unanswerable argu i meuts contained in President Johnson's late veto of the mote <•! y b il- '1 liey burl epithets and billingsgate at the President —act use him of being a traitor and Con federate —but to bis logic and facts they have no answer. EVIL EFFKCT3 OF TOBACCO.- - That the use (if tobacco must necessarily injure the health ar: mocratic citizens of the county called for that purpose by the Standing Committee or if the same shall piss two successive Coun i ty County Conventions without amendments i and not otherwise. L.C. CONK LIN. Chairman Standing Committee. WHAT THE "LAMBS" HAVE BEEN AT.— A negro ravished a little white girl at Brand} wine Hundred, Del., on the 9th. x\ negro watchman is in jail in St. Louis for ravishing two children aged eight arid nine years. Negro highwaymen arc bold and bloody about Norfolk and Portsmouth. A negroe committed a rape on a white young lady in Christian Hundred, Chester county on Sunday the 7th inst Three negroes murdered the family of Mr. Joseph Foster, of North Carolina, a few days ago. A brutal ferocious looking negro forced his way into a car and took a seat in a white lady's lap, A gentleman next to her knocked the scoundrel down, the negroes rallied for a fight and the car was quickly cleared. The police interfered and stop ped the proceedings of the violent negroes. Infanticides prevail to a great extent among the freed negroes. In Columbia. Miss., nine babies were found in one v. el. Negro highwaymen are so plentiful about Norfok, that the military have been requested to interfere to put a stop to their to their depredations. Rev. Thomas U. Jones, of Pembroke, Mas., a negro preacher, has been sentenced to pay a tine for an indecent assault upon a couple of white women. Governor Geary, upon learning of the nigger victory in Tennessee, ordered a sa lute to be fired at the cxpencc of the State It seems to us that decency, at least, under the circumstances, should have prompted him to buy powder with his own money. Their patriotism, however, never takes money out of their pockets—it only puts it in. A Western paper thus hits of a popular but disgusting fashion: "The attention of the police should be directed to Pant A. Loon. He's tight on the streets daily—awfu! tight." TAX-PAYEES READ. Expenses of the Pennsylvania Legisla ture. IIARRISBRG, August 15. —The accounts lof the last sesion of the Leg : slature have • been audited. A careful examination of the books in the Auditors General's office shows the following to have been the ex penses: Senators'pay, milleage, and sta tionery $34,477 00 i Members' pay, mileage, and sta tionery 107,508 45 The legal allowances lo each person was 81000 for salary, $25 for stationers, and 15 cents per mile circhila for traveling. The thirty-three senators and one hundred members, therefore, received an average jof §1075 each (or 101 days (from January j 1 to Apiul 11), or about 810 04 per diem. I • Rev. E. E. Bailey received S3OO from j the Senate and Rev. Jacob Kennedy S3OO j from the House for opening the daily ses | sions with prayer, being at the rate of #3 j per diem. ! The thirty-three senators liad twentv t nhie regular officers, seven pages, twenty five women, and four reporters who drew pay. The officers drew $28,893 80, or an average of S99G each; the pages drew 81270 50 or slßl each; the women $921 ■or S3O each; and the reporters SBOO, or #2OO each, The contingent hill of the clerk of the i Senate was but $632,44, as acainst the ' contingent bill of the clerk of the House, which was $ 1000. The one hundred members of the House had sixty five regular officers—thirteen pageS, women, and four reporters, who I drew pay. The officers drew $57,530,78 !or an average of SBBS each ; the pages, 2359 50, or 181 each ; the women 1240, i and four reporters 200 each. The members ajnl officers availed tbera ! selves of the privilege of franking docu ments (postage paid by the State) to the ex tent of 9250, with other bills not ascertain ed. i The entire work of the session was the passage of fifteen hundred and fifteen pri vate laws, seventy three public laws, and, I fourteen resolutions. The House appointed a number of inves tigating committees, the expenses of which j were as follows: j William S. Gregory, chairman of j committee to report upon ex empt pioperty in Philadelphia $1,893,00 Advertising meetings of commit tie " 867,64 George W. Mooney, clerk to committee 819,85 $,080,49 Edward G. Lee (chairman), and E. \V. Davis, William M. Worrell, James Subers, and William J. Donohugh, committee to inquire into the lottery business in Philadelphia $G60,00 Jost-ph It. Matthews, clerk to committee $289,98 $949,93 Samuel Josephs, chairman of com mittee to ascertain whether the Atlantic and Great Western rail way had made discriminations iu freight charges $445,00 Joseph T. Chase, member of com mittee 445,00 George W, McKee, do. 455,00 Alexander Adaire, do. 445,00 A. Muckley, do. 445,00 George B. Bcmus clerk tocommitee 825,00 William J. Ovens, sergeant at-arms 427,10 sjWO William B,Wadded, chairman of committee to investigate certain in reference to an Alleghany county liquor law $375,00 I Three witnesses 104,30 $477,10 R. A. Colville, chairman of com i mittee to asseitain whether the Pennsylvania railroad made dis crimination in freight charges $225,00 N. B. Pennypackcr, member of ; committee 225,00 O. S. WoodwarJ, do. 225,00 iA. D. Mark ley, do. 225,00 George A. Quiglcy, do. 225,00 Luke V. Sutphiu clerk to committee 363,40 ; William J. Ovens, scrgeaut-at-arms 272,50 $1,760,90 ! William B. Bood, chairman of committee to inquire into the run- I niug of locomotives over the paved streets of Philadelphia $381,60 George De Haven, member of com mittee 381,60 William J. Donohugh, do. 381,60 George W. Ghegan, do. 381,60 George A. Quigley, do, 381,60 John W. Bolleau,clerk of committee 741,60 William J. Ovens, sergeant-at-arms 109,00 2,749,60 I George (). Diese, chairman of com mittee to investigate fast freight transportation system, and M. S. Quay, George De llaven, William 'B. Waddell, and L. Westbrook, members 1,408,25 J. L. Anderson, clerk to committee 350,10 Two witnesses 21.90 Expenses 250.00 J. L. Anderson, clerk 495.20 ! Three witnesses 76,23 2,504,3 John D. Sturtevant, clerk of com mittee to ascertain whether any j corruption attended the election of ! United States senator * 100,00 Two witnesses 68,64 163,64 An exchange well says, "ont of every dollar the laboring man earns, about sixty 1 cents is taken indirectly to keep the indo ! lent negroes, to maintain military despot isms over eleven states, and enrich Aboli ; tion officials. This is why our poor men are kept poor, and our laboring men com ! [ilain of hard times. It is the high prices and high taxes that takes their money, and it is the negro Bureau, military depotism, and abolition officials, that made the taxes high. To get rid ot these; Radicalism j must bo voted out of power." j QgT Subscribe for the Democrat. : THE MODEL JUDGE OF PENNSYL VANIA. GEO. Sir.VUSWOOD, L, L; I). rKESIDKNT JUDGE OF THE DISTRICT COUET Foil JHE CITY AND CO., ©F PHILADELPHIA BT DAVID PAUL BROW*, HBQ. The Hon. George Sharswood was born on the 7th of July, 1910, and was gradua ted at the University of Pennsylvania, on ! the 31st of July, 1828, with the highest honors, delivering the Greek salutatory,and manifesting a scholarship, af which his un ceasing industry had given an early ear i nest. In the month of August, of the same year, he became a student in the office of i Mr. Joseph li. Ingersoll, and after a severe 1 application to his studies, was admitted to practice on the fifth of September, 1831. j Even after Mr. Sharswood's admission, i lie still blended his classical with his pro fessional duties, besides giving some at ! tention to the modern languages and it may be truly observed ofliirn, that it has seldom happened that such young sbould j ers bore so wise a head. lie was not deficient in genius, but his ! great quality consisted in rigidand in defati j gable labor. He was a model for a stu j dent. Always thoughtful, yet alway cheer- I ful ; modest and retiring in his manners, ! yet in a moment of exigency not deficient |in just reliance upon himself. We do not ! think he could ever have been an effective l advocate. The turn of his mind was too I tranquil to enjoy or to endure the tumult, i agitation, and excitement of jury trials. — But in an argument to the court in banc, i upon a point of law, few men of bis years i would have been his equal—cool, calm, col • lected ; 1 c had ('.ill control of that abun j dant stock of know! Ige which untiring i perscvercnce and iud .-try had enabled him j to accumulate. After remaining at the bar some five I years, with about the usual share of pro fessional business, but with bright hopes j him, he was elected to the Legislature on the 10th of October, 1837, i where, it is sufficient to say, that he justifi j(d the mo t sanguine hopes and expecta tions of his constituents. On the 9th of' 1 October, 1838, lie became one of the Se | lect Council, and on the 29th of June, 1841 ; was appointed Secretary of the investiga ting committee of the stock-holders of the Bank of the United States. On the 12 of October, 1811, he was elected again to the 1 Legislature, and continued in that body by another election, on the 11th of October, 1842,. Scarcely had his legislative servi ces terminated, when,on the Bth of April, j in the year 1845, he received the appoint ' mi nt of Judge of of the District Court for j the City and County of Philadelphia, and j on the Ist of February, in the year eighteen j hundred and forty eight, became its Presi- , d<-nt. On the 14th of October, 185 Bun der the new Constitution, he was elected by a large majority to the same judicial position, which lie had previously held from from the Executive and Senate of the State lie v as commissioned on the Ist of Decern her, 1851. ID all those varied and highly honorable and responsible employments, it may be justly said, that he manifested the most abundant capacity and fitness for the du ties imposed upon him. But he more es ! pecially shone in his judicial qualifications. Take him for all in ali, at his time of life, no bench in I'ensjlvania has borne a more tsni'ilemished, more competent, or more exemnlary incumbent, lie is a man of kind liberal, and honorable feelings, just such a man as you might suppose was born to be | a judge ; and if he holds out as has begun i and Heaven and his constituents continue him to his "three-score years and ten," we arc mistaken or he will furnish the best practical proof of the folly of legislating judges out of office, at the expiration of sixty years. I Since his presidency in the district court Judge Sharswood has been chosen Profes sor of Law in the Pennsylvania University, where lie is an invaluable acquisition.— Ai •art from this duty he engaged in deliv ering a course of elaborate lectures before the Commercial Institute. And when it is remembered that the court in which he | presides, sits ten months in a year, and is continuously and laborously occupied dur ing all that time, in every diversity of trials ' certainly no better commentary can be re -1 quired upon his exhaustlcss patience and ; energy of Character. j But to glance from the mental to the personal —Judge Sharswood is about five feet ten inches high, with a slight stoop of | the shoulders, attributable, probably to his \ studious pursuits throughout life, lie has a benevolent face, an even temper, great patience, and that—without which every thing else is nothing—uncompromising honesty. The honesty of a judge, how ever, is hardly necessary iO be referred to, as without it, no man is to be considered a judge. He is only a pageant in the temple , of justice. Judge Sharswood may be cited in sup port of our theor , . h;' judges—all other I qualities being equal -taken from the bar i before tliev have been extensively engaged in practice, generally discharge their du ties more satisfactorily than those who are hackneyed in litigation, and therefore take partial or prejudiced views of a case. Un less the opt isite sides of the issue exhibit great inequality in merit and strength, we defy any man to perceive, from the deport ment of the judge, to what result his mind inclines. This is a great virtue in a judi cial officer —nothing is so unbecoming in authority, as to descend from its high call | ing into the arena of professional disserta tion. and advance gratuitons opinions, and join in a conflict between outposts before the mind entirely grasps the merits of the j controversy. Counsel may be less obser vant of what they say or do, but a judge ! should permit no word to escape bis lips ; during the progress of a trial, that may tend ! to bias the jury, or throw reproach upon I one party or the other. Words, as we have ! elsewhere said, are things, and judicial ! words are verv operative, if not controlling i tilings, upon the minds of the "sworn 1 twelve," who, having for the most part but I little in themselves, look anxiously for the least glimmering of it that maybe shed ' from the bench, and sometimes even con vert that light into darkness, J udg Sharswood puts his cases, of course, very fairly to a jury; he seldom intrenches upon their rights to determine upon the facts, and when he charges upon the law, | he does it with great clearness, precision and cogency, and so as to be comprehend ed by any man of the most ordinary intell-, igccce. Ii is are not only perspicfous, but' the language in which they are clothed is so plain and unaffected as to prevent all equivocation or misapprehension. BEAD: BEAD:: BEAD?!! In order to interest all in the circulation of the Democrat and secure for it a circu- j lation which will enable us to still further improve it, wc offer to canvassers the fol- 1 lowing libera! PREMIUMS. FIRST PREMIUM. . To the person sending us the names of TWENTY srnscßiiJErts, with S4O, we will give a copy of WEBSTER'S UNABRIDGED QUARTO DICTIONA ARY —a Library within itself —containing upwards of 1800 pages of closely printed matter —with over 3000 illustra tions. The retail price of which is sl2. SECOND PREMIUMS. To the person sending us the names of (en subscribers, with S2O, we will give a choice of one of the following works, worth $5 each. "The (heat Rebellion," by J. T. Ileadlv, a finely written and complete his tory of the war—two volumes in one, with ' library binding, "Pollard's Lost Cause"—a Southern his tory of the late war. A Photographic Album gilt-edged embossed, Morocco bound—an elegant centre-table book, LU:RD PREMIUMS. To the person sending us the names of five subscribers with SIU, we will gjve a choice of tue following works, valued at $2.00 each. ' Beyond the Mississippi, by Tiichardson Library Binding. Public and private Life of Alexander TI. , Stevens—with speeches. Europe—its scenes and society. The Nurse and Bpy—morocco bound. Annals of the Persecution in Scotladd — 2 vols. "Ferguson's Rome," (history.) J FOURTH PREMIUMS, To the person sending us the names of three subscribers, with $6, we will give a choice of the following books, valued at ! from Si,oo to BJ.OO each. | "Mexico under Maximillian," ',The 104 th Pa."—by Gen. Davis, "Drifting About"—by Massett—very entertaining, j "Hydropathy, or Water Cure"—Fowler. "Hie Lawyer in the school-room," "Parson Prownlow's Rook"—by a villain—(valued by us at 0,) Speeches by Wendell Phillips—ditto, i "Youth's History of the War," "Sketches of the old paicters," "Life and times of Cramer," "Les Miserables," by Victor Hugo— (Fantine.) "Garret Van Horn"—a novel, "The Morgesons"—a uevei "Light on Shadowed paths"—a novel. "Sprees and Splashes"— by Merford— funny. "Life of Buchanan," i "Life of Gen. Scott," | "Edgar Poe and his critics," "The Fruit Garden," by Barry—a rare and valuable work, i "The Young Mother," by Alcott. "Poems of a year," by Aldrick, SPECIAL PREMIUMS TO THE LADIES. To any Lady who will send us the names of four subscribers, with SB, we will furnish either "The Ladies Friend,' or j "Peterson's Magaizene," for one year, or "The American Practical Cookery 1 Book."—All good things in a family. , As we have but single copies of the ; books above mentioned, we can furnish a particular book to only one person—the one who first sends in the club required, and order for that book. In the event of the same book's being desired by two per- I sons -the first one sending in, will receive it, and a book of the same class, value, and as nearly similar as possible in matter, will be furnished to subsequent senders. The Ladies who send clubs under the offer to them, can all be supplied with magnzines ! from the publishers. A little effort, by any person, wi'l se ! cure for them one of these really valuable Books, or Magazines. ! Lei's hoar fV >-u VOJ, frien Is! $40,000,000. This, says a Washington dispatch, is the expence of'the army in the for the current year. If that amount of money in gold, had been taken out of the treasury and sunk to the bottom of the ocean, it would have been better disposed of. It has been used to perpetuate anarchy, and to obstruct all the operations of legitimate business. The countay is made poor by taxation, and kept poor by thy uses to which its money is applied.—llow long? IIARMONV. —The Black Republicans are constantly prating about electing Judges whose ideas "harmonize with the political sentiments of the day" This is an old tl e >ry with Stevens & Co. The fol'owing Judges were "harmony with the political sentiments" of their time: Pontius l'ilate, Judge Jeffreys, Lord Ellenborougli, and Fouijuier Tiuville; and these arc the kind of Judges the Radicals want in our day. Do the people agee with them? All those too lazy or too proud to work for their living, are in favor of Ben Wade for the Presidency, as he is in favor of tak ing the property from the industrious and dividing it with those who have none. Horace Greeley savs any number of such statesmen can be found in Sing Sing. JHrfo itertisfiitEitts i /UGETS IVANTED to cn„i for~To 1 IX. ycnn in the Old World."' 13.0(H) already gold -Vow is the time to make money. No competition' i Orient induceinentg offered teachers, minister*. active ladies or experienced agents. Send for terms to FOSTER 4 PAI.MKB, Jr., 14 Bil.le House, New York QUACK. UN BOS 3 AKITIIMUI ItsT" The Latest and Best. Primary, 40c. Elementary, 60c. Practical, SI ,00 i Up to the times; teach the methods used by busi ness men; complete on all -he branches of Commer cial Aril hmetio ; well conlenscd in rules and analy | scs; admirably giaded; perfect text-hooks- wipi no defects: So gay Teachers who use them. Going in j everywhere. Specimen* mailed to 'IV a. be r* at half t the above prices- Agents wanted in every County Address I) APPLETON A CO., New York. r IGIIT WORK ANI) GOOD PAY. Ftrf \J pleasant and profitable employment take Agen !cy for ' Good Book." A*k tor Illustrated Cuta- Ihgue. Son J two stamps, S. B WELLS, 399 Broad way, N. Y. "AGENTS WATED. * Another Great Work by E. A. POLLARD, entitled 'l.l. E AND HIS LI El TENANTS," comprising a Life of Gen. li E. Lee, replete with facts never be fore pu blighed, including Biographies of every South ern General of distinction, A companion volume to "THE LOST CAUSE," aa Standard Southern History of the War. A new and' cnl.aiged edition is now ready. These two work* form a complete library of the War from the other s de, E. B TBEAT 4CO , Publishers, 654 Bread' way, New York. JOSEPH GILLO'ITS SI EEL PENS, OF TIID OLD STANDARD QUALITY. JOSEPH Or Descriptive TRADE MARK ; Gl LLO IT, Name anl Deeig- W'an an ted, noting Number. The well known ORIGINAL and POPULAR Numbers* 3O 3 4O 1 I 1(1-351, Having been a sumed by other MAKERS, WO to caution the paolic in respect to said imitations ASK FOB GILLOTT'S. Ull 1 ION I— An injunction v.as granted by th >tl PTC me Court (New York) at General Term, Janu ary, ISG7, against the u e by others of tho NIM BLE 303. Jos. GILUOTT AND PONS, No. 91 John >t, New Y >rk. HENRY OWEN, SOLE ACBWT. UO D M AN, FIS K & CO., BANKERS, AND DEALERS IX GOVKRNMKXT SECI7 It TTIES, NO. 1H MASSAU ST., N UW YOUK r Buy and sell at mark-t rates Six per cent Bonds of 1391; Five-Twenty Bonds, all issues; Ten-Forty Bonds; Seven-Thirty Notes, all series; Compound Interest Notes, and Gold and Silver Coin. Convert a!! series of 7-30 Notes into the New Con solidate i T2U Bon is at best market rates Execute orders for purchase and sale of all mis cellaneous securities- Receive Deposits and aliow 5 per cent Interest on balances, subject to check at sight. Make collections en all accessible points. All i.-sues of Government Securities credited or re mitted for, on receipt, at market rates, Free of all commission charges. R. F. 4 CO. f LEGS AND ARMS invented by a Surgeon. Nine patents in- Legs, ranging from 550, through all the improvements, up to the Anatomical Leg wnu Laterial motion at Ankle, like natural one, at $ 150. Two pi tents in Arm?, v*irli new Shoulder motion, 573 to -3125, Send for pamphlet, It contains yal u.dile information a id is sent free OFFICES: (.' ncinnati, 153 W. Fourth St-, Chica go. opji,site I\ 0. St. Louis, Pine St New York, 633 Broadway. Address, DOUGLAS ELV, M D., at neirest Office, MDCCLX." 17 CO- 1867- "CEXTUE Y." SIOOO A DAY. We here adopted the plan of putting money itt-' CKNTCRY|TOBACCO to induce customers ti o*e it , krowing that it is only necessary for them to it a trial to become f d : y satisfied ot its merits, aud to pronounce it the best fine eut made. We will continue to offer these inducements until this facl is fully recognised. We are making THE CENTURY from selection of the very choicest old leaf, and have tie-oted ev ery care to its manufacture. It is free from Drugs, and every respect a pure article of chewing tobacco. On Mondays we will in one paper a 8100 L T . S Note. On Tuesdays, in two papers. 85 O each.— On Wednesdays, in five papers, 820 in each On Thuisdays, in ten papers, 810 eaeh, Ou Fridays, in twenty paper.-. §5 in eaeh. and on Saturdays, in fifty papers 82 in eaeh, in all cases Issuing genu ine U S. Greenbacks w the amount ofßlooa day. The finders of these (GREENBACKS— by sending us their names, address, and numbers of the bills will be presented with packages of our Tobacco, in proportion to the amount of money found. This house has been sstablished lor over a Hun dred Years, and has always sustained a character for honesty and 1 iu dealing, which puts to Sight all doubts, if any should exist, .is to the genuineness of this enterprise. The Century Tobacco can be had in large quanti ties at Manufacturers prices, of A R. Mitchell, 35 Centra 1-st,. Boston ; 13. A. Van Shaick. 163 Fron St., Philadelphia ; Foy A Earle, 81 Water-St. Chicago ; Schultz A Bagley. 94 West Second st.' Cincinnati. Price list sent on application to 1\ & G. LORILLARD, (Established in 17grt ) 11 Chamber* St. N. Y,. iMlnfflfT A COMPLETE HISTORY OF THE New Slates and Territories from th© Great river to the Great Ocean,, BY ALBERT D, RICHARDSON, Over 20,(XX) Copies Sold in On© Month. Life art'l Adtetilure on Prairies, Mountains and the Pacific Coast. With err 200 De scripHte and Photographic \'ic,rs of the Scenery. Cities. Lands Mine s. People and curios it iss of the A etc State* and Territories. To emigrants and settlors in the- "Far. West," this ili itory of that vast aud fertile region Will prove an ir valuable assistance, supplying as it does-a want long fel, of a full, authentic and riliable guide to climate, soil products, means of travel, Ac. Agents Wanle i— Send for Circulars and soe our terms, and a full description of the work. Address NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO. 507 Minor St., Philadelphia, l*a -815 PER DAY SURE. —Agents wanted every where tosell oar Patent White Wire Clothes Linos. Will last 30 years. Address the AMERICAN WIRB CO.. Ofiioe lg'l Broadway, N.Y. "Ml S T O F THE MORNING" BITTERS. M O |{UTEN D IT FT. The purest tonic in the known worlJ. Universal*- , ly and MISSED if not taken. | BARNETT ALI'MLEY, 130 Water St. N. Y BRANBRETII'S PIM.S —These Pills are I safo and sure. They aro prepared bv a process ! which secures all the best qualities of the herbs of | which they arc composed, wil hout any of their bad. ] They benefit in all eases, and do haruxin none. See B. Braudreth is iu white letters on the Qor eminent stamp. v7-nl-lm — 1 THE GLORY OF MAN IS STRENGTH.-There ( ore the nervous and debilitated should luiuieJiaUly ■ use LIEUTIS'.-U/S Exikact Bvchv.