a Ea5PXiiJtt.tjrjMOaajgMi--i--'Ji.'-ai.'-iJutaiJu jfcffcrsoniau Republican. TInis"il:iy, DcrciuburSS 152. Wood ! Wood ! J Wood ! ! ! In order to accommodate such of our subscribers who are indebted to us, and cannot make it convenient to pay, we are willing to receive, a lot of good sound drv wood. We trust that a number of patrons will avail themselves of this op portunity and square up their accounts. Pennsylvania School Journal. This cxoellcnt magazine is published monthly for one dollar per annum at Lan caster. The editor is Thomas IL Burrows, who has been deservedly called " the Father of our present common school sys tem." Other states have long maintained such a periodical, and cannot the old Keystone ! Teachers do your duty. JST On Sunday last, a large drove of Turlccys, and also one on Tuesday, cn route for the New York market, passod through this place. Washington National Monument. The Washington Mouument is now one hundred and twenty-two feet high, and will, in all probability, before the close of the building season, reach the height of one hundred and twenty-four feet. It has yet to reach an additional elevation of three hundred and seventy-six feet to make it what it is to be, the most lofty edifice in the world, in commemoration of hira who, infill the attributes of great ness, was the most lofty of human be in S. U j3 A correspondent of the London Times draws a heart-rending picture of the distress to which vast numbers of the poor of Ireland are brought by their landlords. Speaking of the county of Mayo, he says : " The whole population of a district many miles in extent are sim ply turned out into the roads to go where they please, and live or die as they can." Steamboat Maj. Banict. The Eastou Whig says : The steamer Maj. Barnct, lying at the foot of North ampton street since last spring, raised her steam last Monday morning and pass ed down the Delaware. We learn that it is not the intention of Capt. Young- to run her between Easton and Lambertville hereafter. She will be taken into other waters. V. S. Senator from Arkansas. Hon. William K. Sebastian (Dem,) was re-elected to the XL S. Senate for six years from 4th of March next, by the Ar kansas Legislature, on the 10th inst., by a vote of 85 to 4 for John S. Roane (Dem.) and 0 for William Stith. The two Hou ses also elected a Chief Justice of the Su preme Court on the same day, by a near ly unanimous vote, George C. Watkins receiving 94 votes and Mr. Craighead 1. Egf A dividend of thirty per cent, is ready to be paid to the creditors of the Oommcrcial Bank, New Jersey, by Thoin 3Iarsh, one of the Receives, on presenta tion of certificates at the State Bank, New Brunswick, N. J. Convention of Slaveholders. A Convention of owners of slaves from Mason, Bracken and other counties in Kentucky has been held, to devise some way of preventing the escape of slaves. They would have slave protection socie ties formed in each county in Kentucky, each to have a pursuing committee. A census to be taken of all the slaves in each county owned by members a fund raised to pay a stipulated reward for re capture and the expenses of the pursuit of the slaves of members to pay to citizens of free States for the capture of fugitives at the following rates: $50 for a slave o ver 10 years old, $100 for younger ones, and 50 for information which results in the capture of a fugitive. JpLand warrants are bought by the brokers in Cincinnati at the following rates; 160 acres, 8140; 80 acres, 870; and 40 acres, $30. Few are being of fered. There is an old man in Belgrade, on the frontiers of Hungary and Turkey, who has attained the enormous age of one hundred and seventy-two years. He is still in possession of all his faculties, and smokes his pipe regular. Fifty years ago he used to go out bunting with his grand son, and it is not quite one hundred years since he made his third marriage with a young girl of nineteen, whom he has out lived by forty -four years. From California. By the Prometheus, at New York, wc have San Francisco news to the 1st inst. The steamer California having sailed on that day for Panama, with the mails and 2,044,000 in gold dust. American Flour at San Francisco was worth 852. Politi cal excitement ran high, and a large vote was expected. Cotton, equal to any grown in the Southern States, had been raised in San Joaquin county; and Coal had been discovered in Trinity county. The accounts from the gold mines were favor able. From Europe. The Baltic arrived at New York on Sunday, with Liverpool dates to the 17th. Among her passengers is the Rev. Al bert Barnes. The Cotton market was dull, without material charge. The mar ket for Breadstuff's had improved, and sales were made at an advance of six pence a barrel, chiefly for export. There is no other news of importance. 2 A gentleman near Lebanon, was recently married to his fifth wife. He is already the father of twenty-one children. JS-Thc case of the Commonwealth vs. Weaver & Orth, ed&brs of the ITarris bitrg Democrat, for libel, on the oath of Mr. Geo. Berger, was tried in the Quar ter Sessions last week, and resulted in the conviction of the defendants. EST" Sailors' wages arc very high at New York; on vessels for the China trade, 820 per month are given. CgyThe vote in Morgan county, Ya., last year for Governor stood, Democrat 283, Whig 2S8. This year for President it stands, Pierce 291, Scott 291. In Rockbridge Co. Virginia, there is one town called Jerusalem, and another call ed Hell Town. We learn by the Rich mond Enquirer, that the Whigs carried Jerusalem, and the Locos Hell Town. After all, there is something in a name. A small town in Montgomery county, North Carolina, called "The Forks," vo ted unanimously for Scott and Graham, at the late election. There are one hun dred and twenty-five voters in the place, but not a solitary Pierce and King man. Death of Hon. John Scargcant. We rogret to learn of the death of this eminent citizen of Philadelphia. He died at 9 o' clock, on Tuesday evening 22d ult. He held many posts of honor, and was one of the most distinguished lawyers and states men in this country. " Peace to his ash es !" Hon. Walter Forward died at Pitts burg on Wednesday Morning. Veteran Voters The Painesville (O.) Telegraph says Dea. Rider and James Woodworth, of that town, both of whom voted for Wash ington, for President, voted on the 2nd ult, for John P. Hale. The Northampton Gazette says : "Oli ver Graves, aged 92; Justin Morton aged 91; and Consider Morton, brother to Jus tin, aged 94, of Whately, were born in the same house, voted for Gen. Washing ton, and have voted at every Presidetial election. We doubt whether another such remarkable trio can be found in the com monwealth. Col. Samuel Thompson, of Amherst, a revolutionary pensioner, over 99 years old voted Scott. Among those who voted in Newport, R. I., for Scott and Graham, was Nathan Munro, who is one hundred years old. He voted for Washington at his first elec tion. The Portland Advertiser states that Mr. Conrad Heyer, of Waldoboro,' Me. aged 1 03 years, notwithstanding the se verity of the storm, travelled six miles and was at the polls as usual, and cast his vote for Gen. Scott. Mr. Heyer has voted at every Presidential election, and has always been a whig. He served three years in the war of the Revolution. In Newton township, Sussex county, N. J.. Benjamin Halsey, Esq., who has voted at every Presidential election since the establishment of the Government, and who numbers among the great names 'whom he has supported, those of Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Munroe, J. Q. Adams Clay, Harrison and Taylor, appeared at the poll on the 2nd ult., and voted for Winfield Scott. Sus. Reg. California contains four hundred-thousand square miles. This would give eight States as large tjs New-York State, fifty as large as New-Jersey, and fifty-seven as large, as Massachusetts. With a pop ulation equal per square mile to that of New-Jersey, California would support eighteen millions of inhabitants ; if equal to Massachusetts, forty millions or fif teen millions more than the present pop ulation of the entire United States. Rev. Joseph Case, a young Baptist clergyman, was killed nearBruce's Cross Roads, S. C, on the evening of election day, by the falling of a decayed tree upon him, while he was passing home. Another man was knocked down, but recovered, and several others received some injuries. Au Experiment. The New York Tribune says : " Sin gular results are obtained in this city from a very simple application of the nervous 1 fluid, animal magnetism, or whatever be the agency, to brute matter. Let a party of six or eight persons sit around a com- J mon pine table for twenty minutes to half an hour with the palms of the hands held flat on' the top of the table ; it is not ne cessary that their minds should pay any ( attention to the process, or conversation be suspendad; but presently the table be comes so charged with the mysterious flu id that it begins to move ; then rise from it; push away your chairs, still holding your hands near, though it is necessary to touch it, and it will turn around from end to end. and even proceed rapidly about . . . i the room, without any visible agent, on which, excursions the persons must bear it company, or the current is broken and : the movement stops. This simple experi ment may easily be tried ; it requires no faith and no outlay of moral strenth; and the result, with a tablo that is not too Heavy, is pretty sure to follow." A Prediction. The Natchez Free Trader makes the , following prediction, the truth or false hood of which will be demonstrated in less than one month : ' We predict that by the 1st of Janury, . 1853, a revolution will be in the States ! of Zacatecas, Tamaulipas, Chihuahua, I and all the Northern States of Mexico. The object will be to establish an inde pendent confederated llcpublic, similar to the United States. It will be under" the lead of Americans, though nominally un der that of Mexicans. It will be success ful, and will have a material bearing on the destiny of the South, of the United States, and of this continent." The Purchase of Cuba. The National Iutelligencer publishes a very interesting collection of public docu- ' meuts relating to the efforts of the United States to purchase the island of Cuba from Spain. It seems that this subject has en gaged the attention of our government at intervals for the last thirty years; and that among the official papers recently transmitted to Congress upon the subject arc letters from Mr. Clay and Mr. Web ster and other distinguished men. The last effort for the purchase of Cuba was . made under the administration of Mr. Polk. Mr. Buchanan, Secretary of State under President Polk, instricted Mr. i Saunders, then our minister at Madrid, to open negociations, directly but cautiously with the Spanish Government, for the transfer of Cuba to the United States; that he was authorized to give the most posi tive assurances that the United States would never permit the transfer of the island to England, or any other European power; and that the sum of 100,000,000 was further tendered to Spain in exchange for Cuba. The details of the various conversations had upon this subject, with the Spanish ministers, as given by Mr. Saunders possesses some interest. The Spanish government not only declined to listen to the proposition, but declared that it would sooner see Cuba sunk in the ocean than consent to its transfer to any other power. Thus the question stands. If the U. States ever obtain Cuba, they will be compelled to go to war for it. A Ncio Motive Power. It is stated that Mr. Charles Mowry, of the city of ', Auburn, N. Y., has invented an arrange ment by which the elasticity of comprcss- ed air can be used to propel railroad en J gines any distance required. The air is compressed by water power or otherwise, and carried in a tube or pipe the whole length of the road. Sugar, starch and gum arc compounds of char-coal and water, in different pro portions. For proof, place a small quan tity of either in a tumbler, and cover the I same with oil vitriol (sulphuric acid,) stir the mixture with a piece of wood or a ' glass rod. In a minute or so, the sugar, or starch or gum will blaoken ; the mix ture will become hot ; steam (water) will be evolved, and charcoal deposited in the glass. I A Blue Beaiid. In Cincinnati, Mr. j Samuel Parker, seventy years of age, has just married his sixth wife. Since his first, he has always married a widow, and never remained a widower longer than six 1 months at one time. E. B. Washburn, Esq., just elected to Congress in Illinois, is a brother to Israel Washburn, recently elected in Maine. j They arc the sons of Israel Washburn, ; Esq., of Maine. This is probably the first instance of two brothers meeting together j in Congress from two extremes of tho Union, both Whigs, and printers by trade, , and both highly esteemed for their talents and moral worth. The State House, at Trenton, ia about to be renovated and put in perfect order ' for the members of the Legisla ture, who will make their appearance on thc second ! Tuesday m January. The aggregate wealth of the United ! States amounts to $12,000,000,000, and the population is 24,000,000 of souls. : Thc wealth, divided by the population, j give $500 to each person, young and old; and counting five persons to each family, ( it would give the handsome little fortune of $2500 to every family of thc Republic, , not excluding the slaves. i The Louisville Democrat has the following startling statistics of the swine business of the West: Ohio, in lSSOjproduced Kentucky, i Illinois, Indiana, Tennessee, 1.904,770 hogs. 2,801,103 1,915,910 2,263,776 3,114,111 Total 12,1 19,030 hogs. This is coming it pretty strong half a hog to every man, woman and child in the Union; but it is nothing to what we are threntened with at the next census, in 1860. Here is a grand total of over twelve million of swine from only five States, and these States not a quarter set tled. If this it not going the whole swine, we should like to know what is. Why, if these porkers were placed in a row,and a continuous line formed by placing the caudal appendage of the first in the mouth of the second, and so on, through the en tire millions, and taking no unfair advan tage by untwisting the kinks, but allowing only four feet to each animal, there would be nine thousand, one hundred and eighty one miles and a half continuous pork; or if Symmes' hole could be found, they would stretch quite through our globe from arctic to antarctic pole, leaving, be sides, a handsome projection of over five hundred miles above the surface on each side; or, supposing the Atlantic to be three thousand miles abroad, and the width of each pig to be but eighteen inches, a pig bridge of nearly five feet broad might connect New-York and London making a road broad enough for a neat hand to tool a sulky through in handsome style. It is no joking matter, but ti pretty serious and substantial fact. What we are com ing to at this rate, no one can tell. This western country will become one vast hog pen if this thing continues to increase at thi3 rate. Gerrit Smith Gerrit Smith has announced, in a card, the principles he intends to maintain as a member of Congress. He declares that by no possibility can Slavery be brought into or recognized by, either the Federal or any State Constitution; that "the right to land is as natural, absolute and equal as the right to the light and the air;" that "political rights are not con ventional but natural, inhering in all per sons, the black as well as the white, the female as well as the male;" and that the province of Government is but to pro tect persons and property; everything else falling within the voluntary principle, and resting solely upon individual effort. These are among the positions he intends to maintain. We do not doubt that he sincerely believes them; and wc know that he will argue in support of them with candor, serious earnestness and marked ability. Harboring Fugitive SlaveSi We have already stated that in the U. S. Circuit Court at Philadelphia. Messrs. Oliver and others, of Maryland, had ob tained $2,800 damages against Daniel Kauffman, of Pennsylvania, for harboring and concealing thirteen fugitive slaves. Judge Grier, in his charge to the jury, took the ground that the Fugitive Slave Act did not contemplate making mere acts of charity and kindness to the fugi tive a crime: but that the "harboring con templated as criminal, must include the idea of encouraging the slave in his escape from his master and impeding and frus trating the attempts of the master to re claim his slave. The Judge said: "It is too plain for argument that this act does not intend to make common charity a crime, or treat that man as guilty of an offence against his neighbor, who merely furnishes food, lodging, or raiment to the hungry, weary, or naked wanderer, though he be an apprentice or a slave. On the contrary, it contemplates not only an escape of the slav$, but the in tention of the master to reclaim him. It points out the mode in which this reclam ation is to be made, and it is for unlawful interference or hindrance of this right of reclamation secured to the master by the constitution and laws that this action is given. The harboring made criminal by this act, then, requires some other ingred ient besides a mere kindness or charity rendered to the fugitive. The intention or purposes which accompanies the act must be to encourage a fugitive in his desertion of his master, to further his es cape and impede and frustrate his recla mation. "This act must evince an inten tion to elude the vigilance of the master, and be calculated to obtain the object." 2 McLean. 608. The Presidential Electors chosen in Pennsylvania, on the 2d instant, meet at Ilarrisburg on the first Wednesday in December, to give their votes. The elec tors in all the other States meet at their respective State capitals, on the same day, for a similar purpose. The votes are sent under seal to the President of the United States Senate, at Washington, and on the 2d Wednesday of Fedrury next, they are opened in the presence of both Houses of Congress, and the resut official ly declared. A Daring Feat. The steeple of a new church was completed in Hartford on Wednesday. Justbefere the last stone was laid, says the Courant, Andrew Con ner, one of the stone masons, mounted the top of the stonework, and standing erect, made a handsome how, at the same time taking off his hat then placing his hands on his hips turned completely around. The place on which he stood was only a bout a foot in diameter, and two hundred and ten from the ground. BST Good fat sheep may bo had in Mexico for 25 cents! Spiritual Rappings. The spirit rappers, like all modern in ventors and operators, arc progressive, and recently have entered the field of politics, if our impressions are correct. The probability is that they had some mysterious agency in the election of Pierce, perhaps by calling up to the ballot box, "spirits from the vasty deep," and since the announcement of that event, it is evident that they have not been idle or inactive. Their grcatortcis said to con sist in the ability to produce mesmeric sleep in the individuals who happen to como under their influence, and it is a subject worthy of inquiry whether many Whisrs were not oneratari nnnn Jn this wav nn nWfinn dn v. T$ ,; nD . a few uavo smcc the cation been troub- w' r?PP'ngs-Cab.Det officers For- eign Ministers, Consuls, Indian Agents, Customhouse officers and Postmasters .. ' have seen visions of great commotion. We ourself have more than once since the olection experienced slight rappings, without, however, fully comprehending their import; and the other evening, while seated in our sanctum and pondering o ver the uncertainties, the ups and downs " ,,vr , j j, -i T . j p bv Nature's fond nurse;'' but instead of uj """ ? i enjoying balmy sleep m her lap we soon found ourself transported to dreamland where the following interesting scene was straight-way presented to our vision, in which, as will be seen, we became a pret ty prominent actor. We fancied ourself seated astride an old log on the Banks of a great river, our spectacles off and a telescope to our eyes, viewing the cmbarcation of a large crowd of men, some wearing epaulettes and oth ers in citizens' dress, while a few hardy tars stood on deck to receive the passen gers. Among this crowd wc recognized many friends and acquaintances, several of whom winked at us significantly, while others, seemingly much excited, motioned to us to come on board. We hesitated for a moment, but concluding it were bet ter to be with the crowd and afloat than solitary and alone on an old log, we mas tered our aversion, and so walked the plank and took a scat on deck. To our great joy, wc found there amongst other distinguished men, General Scott, who was partaking of a "hasty plate of soup," which had just been cooked over a blaz injr "fire in his rear" and being told this was the starting meal, and some one hand ing us a spoon, we imitated the General as well as we knew how, and found the soup of an excellent flavor, though rather too highly seasoned for our taste. Break fast over, the dishes washed and stowed away, and all things in readiness to com- A u 3 6X "T-T g V -.. cut the cable; and being fairly afloat, with a fine breeze springing up from shore our Kni-ii vlirinn Qrtirvcc? m r ttto f t Ii uuivjuc uuvi auxvao nns vu.tA;i niwj. i duck, while three cheers were given by all on board, which were answered by three times three from the people who remained behind, after which the Graham band struck up the well-known air: "Old Grimes is dead, that good old soul We ne'er shall him more." We had iust fairlv rob under wav. uavc ut'UU uauuviauv uuuu cu, auu vy nirr . . . . . , editors, instead of dreaming of writing" ! thhlt ot T 8wJrd ' appeared faint leaders about the safety ol the Union, I ?nd hSBI? and 50 mUch botliered that when the man on the look out cried "Ship j dream3 of gushing fountains, and Elysian ahoy?" and presently there hove in sight 1 groves, and vales of bliss had vanished a "low. long, black schooner," at whose ; and we found ourself relieved fromanexcL mast head was floating an immense flag j ted delusion, to meditate again upoa Lifes inscribed with thc significant words! "To the victors belong the spoils." The 'human lumber" with which she was freighted, was a poor, lean, care-worn set with "all the vulture in their jaws." A- mong them we saw many whom we had known years ago, and some there were of ; new type, new features and new attrac whom we had heard much without know- j tions) on the first of January next. An ing them personally. On inquiry we , original novel from a well-known pen, a learned their names generally, but we can only notice the more prominent. Near the bow stood James Buchanan, wearing a DiacK reversioio coat and wnitc ; to subcribe tor tho coming year. At the vest, with a ten-cent piece fastened to his ( very moderate price of two dollars per hat, turning his face North and South al- . annum, or three copies for five dollars, ternatively, and bowing politely to all a- j this elegant, refined and universally pop round him; and apparently in the best ularjournalis with out a parallelfor cheap imaginable humor with himself and all ness. Now is the time to subscribe; so, those with whom he was associating. ' reader, take our recommendation, enclose But this pleasantness was undoubtedly 1 two dollars to the address of Morris & affected, for shortly after, finding himself ! Willis, 107 Fulton-street New-York, and alone, he was humming away something after this manner: " Oh ! my heart is unasy, My brain is near crazy, And it'a often 1 wish I was dead;" For "Penn's favorite son," Is again nately done, And another by my sowl, is elect-crl Next to him was Lewis Cass, his head uncovered, holding a scroll in one hand, and the other a little raised, as if in the act of addressing the people ; but he was evidently prevented from speaking by the " noise and confusion" around him. But during a short cessation in the commotion, the hero of Seisword was heard expatia- ' ting most eloquently against the doing a ! way of old fogyism, with its snags and j sawyers and steamboat disasters, (inas ' much as it was exceedingly funny to see so many people taking a plunge bath in tho lake at once, and then it was condu cive to health, too;) and substituting there fore the new, progressive doctrine of Riv er and Harbor Improvements, and finally came to the conclusion that : Nac longer thrifty citizens, an1 douse, Meet owre a pint or in the council house, But staumrel, corky-headed, graceless gentry, The hurryment and rain of the country; Men, twa parts mnde by tailors and by barbers, Wha waste their wcll-hained gear on rivers and harbors." Near him sat Judge Douglass, astride a whiskey barrel holding a Jiuge bottle in one hand and a horse-fly in the other, but was as motionless as a statue. Sam Houston was bobling about, near by, as if in search of something. Suddenly turning to the Judge, the Texan remark ed that he thought their situation was similar to that of a certain old lady's fa vorite, so graphically set forth in the fol lowing stanza : "Old mother Hubbard, Went to the cupboard, To get her poor dog a bone, But when she got there The cupboard was bare, And so the poor dog had none." In a corner sat Marcy, on an old tar bucket, mending his breeches with a bod. Kin ; ana near mm otockton was sawin away on a two stringed fiddle, sinmn with solemn air, " A life on the ocean wave "Now nobly towering o'er the restarnienr ' A irn .nnt nrinno thnt tnr IranennnJ. l: S fatuXZi1" And more a Ma'rs in u"0., mr . j -n i -n- l- , There stood Frank Pierce, his one hand noiaimz me ruuuur uuu me oiuer unon he could neither speak nor move. Joshua R. Giddings was seated on a cotton bale, with a little Nigger perched on each knee, whom he was feeding with sugar plums obtained from the Island of Cuba. John P. Hale was floating behind on a sort of platform made of old corn stalks and sugar cane : but iust then his frail barque was caught by a snag, and , 1. , ,,& . J , ..?' .. there he stuck, unable to reach either the , , vessel or the shore. Oft as he turn'd, the torrent to oppose, And bravely tried if all the powers were foes, So oft the surge in watery mountains spread, Beat on his back, or burst upon his head." In the meantime the black schooner reached the wharf where there was a large boarding house with long rows of tables, laden with provisions "fine, fat and grea sy," which were instantaneously devoured by the hungry passengers ; and as there was not enough for one out of every hun dred, those that got but dry pickings, or nothing at all, commenced beating the others with clubs, which resulted in divers broken bones and bloody noses. The un successful then began to curse the officers, and regrettod that they had ever made the voyage, which had terminated in ju3t nothing at all for them, for in the country whence they had come they had enjoyed peace and plenty. Before their quarrel had ended, our vessel, running against the current with out effort and straight as a bee line, had increased the distance between the com batants and ourselves so greatly that we were unable to see or hear anything more. At this instant, too, arriving at a bend in the river, our attention was drawn to huge piles of salt along the shore, from which we were informed the stream had derived the name of "Salt River." Here we an chored, and were making arrangements to disembark, when a few men who had gone a-shore, were so beset with fleas, , hich wcrQ le'ffc b thc company whom had . tha fch com elled to I ' come on board asain. We were all con sulting what was to be done in the emer gency, when the " spirit of our dream' was disturbed by a rap 1 rap ! ! rap ! ! ! and we were in the act of springing to our feet, but were arrested in our purpose by a well-known voice informing us that our candle was burnt out. This awoke us ful- lv. Uur voyage was cnoeu our lancy sober reality. The Ilome Journal for 1853. The first number of an entirely new series of this bright, sparkling and surpe- ior family newspapers will be issued (with fresh supply of pencillings by Willis, and a new batch of songs and ballads by Mor- ris, are among the tempting inducements 1 you will receive in exchange for that tn- fling amount, fifty-two numbers, (a whole year s subscription) of the most racy, pi quant and refreshing family newspaper extant. As a new-year's gift to a lady friend, it is invaluable. Send your orders while it is fresh on your mind, and before you forget it, and you and your family will thank us for the advice at least fifty two times in a year. Thc Home Journal is a great luxury at a very trifling cost. We conclude this notice with the remarks of the " Gem of thc Prairie," published at Chicago, every word of which we en dorse : " Thc Home Journal is one of the few newspapers of the country that is nov cr taken up without real profit, and never missed without so much dead loss, t fur nTshes a style of reading and a clas3 of information that can be gotten nowhere else. If a person takes the JSrcioYork Times, he can jog on very comfortably through life without tho Keio-York Tri-luneZ-or if he reads the Chicago Tribune, he will be 'in town' without reading thc Democrat but he who tries to get on without the Home Journal, plods along with one shoe off a loss not supplied by the fact of his having the other shoo on. Morris & Willis furnsh just those criticims on art and music, those choice selections from the best writers, and those 1 insightings' into thc heart of society, which no other editors can, pr at any rate, which no others do. So we say to our friends, take the uomc jourmu, auu thus be weekly reminded that, in the words of their prospectus, 'it is not all Qt life to get a living.' VDay Book,