0 NANT'S 
PeiNDB* 
] »0*i i I 
c |0 RlAl?APt fis 
Nero publications 
(Sbtscational, &'c 
Secbs, plants anb ittiscellaneons ^bncrtiscmcnts 
NEWS CONDENSER, 
HE GREATEST HOUSE-BOOK 
EVER PUBLISHED. 
n B. WARRING’* MILITARY BOARD- 
L.'. JN(J Hl'liOOL FOR BOYS, PoughkoepBie, N, Y. 
Somr for Circular. 
M aplewood Institute lor Young Ladles, 
Pittsfield, Mans.—L ook established ami prosper 
— Tho population of Auburn is 30,000. ^ 
— In Peru they use mats for spittoons, 
— Sandusky, O., claims 10,000 population. 
— Omaha is to build a *200,000 high school. 
— Evansville, Tnd., has a negro 108 years old. 
— Texas has thirty-five feminine postmasters. * 
— Buffalo harbor gets an *80,000 appropriation. \ 
— John Real is to tie hanged on the 5th of Aug. i 
— The Cuban sugar crop of 1308-09 was "50,000 
tons, 
— Columbus, O., is to have the Holly water 
works. 
— The loss by the Gold Hill (Cal.) Are exceeds \ 
*500.000. 
— Every Nevada convict costs the State $2,254 I 
per year. 
— Harper’s Ferry has become a summer water- : 
ing place. 
— Princeton College has made Gov. Hoffman 
an LL. D. 
— The Funded Debt of the State of Ohio is • 
*10,000,000. ; 
— There are seventy - eight newspapers in 
Minnesota. 
— It costs Galveston *6,000 a day to support its 
30,01)0 dogs. 
— Grand Haven, Mich., oalls itself the Ameri¬ 
can Venice. 
— Great Britain has 160,000 miles of macada¬ 
mized loads. 
— Illinois Industrial University has two hun¬ 
dred students. 
— Albany makes *3,000,000 worth of boots and 
shoes annually. 
— Coal has been struck at Virdeti, III., at, the 
depth of 285 feet, 
— The first Sabboth-school of Rochester was 
organized in 1818. 
— The Mohawk and Ilion horse railroad is 
nearly completed. 
— One of the cheap papers of Paris circulates 
340,000 copies daily. 
— Seth Green has deposited TO,000 young shad 
in the Genesee river. 
— Cincinnati is tho fourth manufacturing city 
in the United States. 
— The total cost of the Boston water works 
has been *9,765,959.87. 
— Tho population of Winnebago Co., Wis., has 
doubled in two years. 
— Pennsylvania has a paper called the Punx- 
uatawney Plaindealor. 
— The Army of the Gulf will hold a re-union 
at Boston, August 5th. 
— The Legislatureof Massachusetts adjourned 
sine dir, on tho 7th inal. 
— Mrs. Judge Esther Morris of Wyoming, is 
overrun with business. 
— The Minnesota State Reform School has 
eighty boys as inmates. 
— Twenty steamboats are in process of con¬ 
struction at Cincinnati. 
— A very fine bed of soapstone has been found 
In Cass county, Indiana. 
— Tho late rains In Missouri have killed off the 
potato bugs by millions. 
— Southern California has been visited by un¬ 
precedented heavy mins. 
— A line of steamers has commenced running 
on Keulsa (Crooked) Lake. 
— Two acres of strawberries netted a gentle¬ 
man in Albany over *1,700. 
— Professor Niles has accepted the ofiioe of 
Bishop of New Hampshire. 
— Work on tho Agricultural College buildings 
of Indiana has commenced. 
— A Junesville, Wis., printer girl set 12,000 ems 
solid nonparlol, in ten hours. 
— Out of ninety-two counties in Indiana, 
eighty are reached by railroad. 
— The number of communicants in the Luth¬ 
eran church is reported at 10,000. 
— A linseed oil manufacturer of Indiana is 
Importing flax seed from Calcutta. 
— There are eighty-four Masonic lodges in 
Kansas, and a membership of 3,123. 
— An “ Erie " freight car has just made the 
trip from tho Hudson to the Pacific. 
— A Chicago couple celebrated Independence 
Day by getting married in a balloon. 
— E. M. Holbrook. ex-Member of Congress, was 
assassinated June 18th, at Idaho City, 
— One hundred and thirty thousand dollars 
have been coined at the Carson mint. 
— A professorship of Chinese and Japanese is 
to be established In Cornell University. 
— The reduction of the public debt for June is 
upwards of twenty millions of dollars. 
— Minister Burlingame’s property in San 
Francisco is said to amount to *800,000. 
— Chicago has a horse which dotes on tobacco 
and steals it from the hostler’s pocket, 
— Lenox, Mas9., Glass Co., will furnish the glass 
for the union depot Sn New York. City. 
— A farmer ia Newton Co M Iud., found his en¬ 
tire flock of sheep dead, a few days ugo. 
— Wisconsin is attracting more emigrants this 
year than any other Northwestern State. 
— The senior class of Hillsdale (Mich.) College 
has twenty-one gentlemen and nine ladies. 
— The fruit crop of southeast Missouri ba6 
been entirely destroyed by the caterpillars. 
— Chromate of lead, a dangerous poison, is ex¬ 
tensively used in the adulteration of sugar. 
— The Surgeon-General’s office lias expended 
*416,000 for artificial legs to disabled soldiers. 
— Peacfiam, Vt., dedicated a *16,000 monument 
to her forty-two dead soldiers on tire Fourth. 
— Beloit, Wis., claims to manufacture more 
paper than any other town in the United States. 
— Of the Governors of the thirty-seven Slates, 
twenty-nine are Republicans and eight arc 
Democrats. 
— The West is emphatically the place for 
I young men, and he who cannot there reach riches 
and honor, must either be a fool or a sluggard. 
ON Tills 
rASSAUHUSKTTS AGRU I LT’L UOL- 
l LUGE.—The next Academic \ cur begins Hopt. 
. For Catalogue, address 
PBKS’T W. S. Cl,ARK. Amherst, Mans. 
OKT EDWARD Collegiate Institute.- l ull 
term Sent. 1st. Si per week for board, fuel anil 
. For IS vetm the best sus- 
frjr Indies and gentlemen 
’nurse. Classical, Scientific 
.... ,7 be 
Htulogno, Kkv. JOSEPH 
HOW TO TRAIN AND DRIVE HIM, 
With Reminiscences of the Trotting Tnrf. 
The Results of the Author’s Forty Years' 
Experience nud Uneguuled Skill in 
T mi ini iic and Driving, together 
with a store of interestimt 
mutter eonceruiiig 
CELEBRATED AMERICAN HORSES. 
washing. Itriek buildings, 
tained boarding Seminal ) 
In the State. A regular l 
or Commercial may lie pursued, nr studies■ may 
selected. Address tor New i atalogiie, KTtV. JOSE I 
E. KING. D.D., Fort Edward, New York. 
Ileal Rotate, €tc 
jyoRTii missoiiRi lands 
F O n S A. Xj IE 
BY THE 
HANNIBAL & ST. JOSEPH 
R. R. COMPANY. 
Stock, ponltri], &’c 
Every one who knows anything of the hlutory of 
horses In America, knows that Hikam WooDRUrr 
might almost be said to have been the creator of our 
distinctl vely national animal, tho Trotter. The vaftte 
of this record Of his experlenec. and those sugges¬ 
tions of his skill, cannot, therefore, bo doubted, as 
a standard authority in the technicalities *f homo 
training; while the graphic style or hi* description, 
and the vivid pictures ho gives of successive periods 
in the development of the breeding und perfecting 
of horses In this country, anil the many Interesting 
episodes naturally occurring fn tho course of the 
work, combine with its more solid qualities to make 
it a rare book. It Is attractive to the general reader, 
itsernl to the seeker for practical advice, and worth 
the perusal of all who would be well informed upon 
the history of one of America’s most characteristic 
development*. 
Gentlemen owning horses, professional trainers etml 
drivers, farmers, having the opportunity or the de¬ 
sire of breeding good trotting stock, to supply the 
rapidly-growing demand, or even to Increase tho 
speed of their own horses every mini who has, or 
drives, or lovos the noble animal, will find this bank 
invaluable and almost indispensable. 
W INTER WHEAT FOR HA I.E. - Farm¬ 
ers, try some of my new White Winter Wlieut. 
The most productive and best. hardy wheat, yet. Will 
TUI PROVED STOCK.-HOGS, CATTLE. 
1. Sheep ami Choice Fowls. Shipped with safety to 
any part of the United States and Canada. Send for 
Circulars. Address . . 
II. F. STOWF.I.L, Williamsport, Ta. 
yield 40 bushels to the acre on any good ground. 
Stands tho winter best of any wheat. Small sacks 
sent free by mall for *1: by express, fo per bushel; 
2 bushels, ts : 5 bushels anil over, to any one address, 
$3 per bushel. Sack? free Address, with the-cash, 
all orders to F. C. MALI It Y, St, I aul, M i nn- 
EXE It Y PLANTS. Incomparable 
i uwart While. #1 per 11)0, (by mull; I *3 per fiOO; *a 
per 1000. Larger quaotltles at special rates. By ex- 
nrcss ourefutly packed •«> that they will reach the 
purchaser in perfect order. If the distance does not 
exceed three days iri transit- 
TURNIP HEED, by Mull.— Early Dutch. Yel¬ 
low Aberdeen, Golden Ball. Red-top Strap-leaf, 
White Strap-leaf. Improved Yellow Rutu Buga, Ac., 
Ac. 75c. per lb.: 25c- per I Ofc; 10c. per n*. 
* mo. p. HENDERSON & FLEMING. 
Seed Merchants and Growers. 
67 Nassau St.. New York. 
I IIE-BRED CHESTER WHITE FIGS, 
Sheep. Poultry, Pigeons, Rlthliits, iVc.. 
d amt shipped by J. w. & M. IRWIN. Peunlngton- 
o Chester Co., Fn. Send tor Illustrated Circular. 
About 130.000 Acres ol the Finest Funn¬ 
ing nud Grazing Lund In the Culled Stales, 
for sale at low prices and on very easy terms ; thus 
enabling an industrious man with small capital to 
pay for Yus land with money earned from It. 
Missouri is not too far West to beat a great dis¬ 
tance from markets; it h luillroad facilities ure great 
and constantly increasing; Inc climate is splendid, 
and good crops are almost a certainty; ■wnlio the 
numerous thriving towns and el ties springing up on 
every hand attest beyond doubt that tho ought ot 
slavery has been effectually dissipated, and that 
Eastern men and Eastern capital arc doing then 
perfuct work. 
OUR LANDS DEFY COMPETITION. 
Send for full descriptive Circulars and Sectional 
Maps, enclosing 30 ets.,nnd stating What paper you 
saw tlirs fn, to EO WA K D W71/DER, 
j'.nud ConiniiHsloHet- Ilannihii,, Mo. 
OHIO IMPROVED CHICS 
I ter I log., produce t he anatrsl amount 
of Fork, for food consumed, of uny known 
breed. Send stamp for Its description,und 
li great variety of other T borough-bred and 
Imported Animals and Fowls. 
L. B. SILVER, Snlent, Ohio. 
£ife ihtourancc 
2HO W YOUR BALANCE MI LET 
BEFORE ASKING PUBLIC PATRONAGE, 
SHOULD BE DEMANDED BY THOSE DE¬ 
SIRING INSURANCE. 
p W . I I) E L L, 
* FRUIT A.NJ> 1'UODUCE 
c 011 n ISSION ME It C RANT, 
328 GREENWICH STREET, 
NEW V ORK. 
ry h E 
1 Missouri & Western Farm Register, 
Q TJARTEliJ jY-N o. O. 
Published July 1st. 18*0. It describes every 
Countv in Missouri, and improved farms for sale in 
over li) counties—giving the location, price, name 
and address oj ilie owner, and a minute description ot 
cacti fiirrn, with other valuable Information to those 
seeking homos In tho West. 
From the New York Tribune. 
This is a masterly treatise bu the master of his profes¬ 
sion—tho ripened product of forty years' exparUhrce 
in handling, training, riding and driving tho Trot¬ 
ting Horse. There Is no book like it in nny language 
on the subject of which it treats. It Is accepted as 
authority by tlu, owners of racing trotters and of 
fust roadsters. Its publication bus boon hailed by 
gentlemen us critically appreciative ns Ration Bon¬ 
ner, and by trainers and drivers «« distinguished us 
Sam Hougland Dan Mace and Dan Pilfer. The book 
is unquestionably one or great value. Fur in Amer¬ 
ica, and England the development of the horse litis 
long been considered second only in Importance m 
the development of man. This work contains tha 
results of forty years’ uninterrupted labor fn bring¬ 
ing the trotter up to the highest speed and the great¬ 
est endurance of which lie is c*pubic. Before wo 
road It. wo hud seen with curious surprise very 
hearty commendation of it and eulogy of its author 
in the leading Presbyterian, Baptist und Methodist 
Journals. No wonder, for Hiram Woodruff 1 s system 
is based on tho law of love. 
TWENTY-FIFTH ANNUM REPORT 
OF THE 
NEW YORK 
Life Insurance €o. 
LOO MTNGTON NURSERY-WX) Acres, 19th 
Yeur. 10Green-houses- Fruit and Ornamental 
•cs. Nursery Stock, Root- Grafts. Grapes, Evor- 
ens, Shrubs, [tunes. Hedge and Green-house 
mis, Flower Bulbs for Fall. Colored Fruit, and 
over Philos. All at Wholesale unit Retail. Band 
i cents for Catalogues. K. K. PHOENIX, 
Bloomington, Ale Loan Co., Ill. 
PRICE, 50 CENTS PER COPY, POST-PAID. 
('opies of Nos. ft und 1—one of each sent for 25 Cts 
J. H. PARSONS & CO- Publisher*. St. Louis, Mo. 
DVRIVETT’M COCOAlJlE, 
aJ for 
Promoting the Growth nml Preserving flic 
Rcutiiy of Iho 
ALL ABOUT KANSAS. 
The fertile prairies of Kansas offer homes to the 
tolling millions of the East, “without money and 
without price," and If yon want, to know what sec¬ 
tion of the country offers the greatest inducements 
to settlers, subscribe for the 
OFFICE, 
346 & 318 BROADWAY 
HUMAIS' HAIR 
Tho Inventor* of Cocoa tsi:, knowing that, when 
loss of hairoeciirs.lt Is genemll v from that, part, of 
the head where the greatest heat is necessarily gen¬ 
erated,and ihat animal fats liy their nature Induce 
heat rather than alleviate It, turned their attention 
and pbarniaeontfcul science towurds Veget-nhloOIJs 
ns the basis of a medicament, to promote the grow Pit 
and preserve the beauty of the hair. The Oleum 
Cocos, or __ 
COCOA NUT Oil.. 
presented itself most strongly ns possessing many 
properties peculiarly adapted for the purpose. Uv a. 
sclent,me selection of other Ingredients, those which 
will choratcuUy combine with thuoil have been dis¬ 
covered, and they together have produced a tropical 
compound, which is unqualifiedly pronounced to bo 
the bestthii! hn* yttlappeared. 
In the form here preedited. ihis oil is permanently 
deodorized, and held in a combination which pecul¬ 
iarly adapts it for the toilet; if ia unrivaled in deli¬ 
cacy and ugreeubtone**, cooling In It* nature, and 
possesses such a penetrating affinity for tho secre¬ 
tions of the skin that if is rapidly absorbed. 
INTO OTT-J I’M?. OD1MFOUND 
possesses the peculiar properties which so exactly 
suit the various conditions of the human huir. 
It softens the hole when harsh and dry. 
If soot lies the irritated , scalp . 
It affords the: richest luster. 
It. remains longest In effect. 
It prevents I In bate from falling off. 
It promotes if* hralthu, vigorous growth. 
It is not greasy or sticky. 
It ItaWs HO dlMOKlNn. inter. 
THE LEAVENWORTH BULLETIN 
The following is a summary of the Company’s busi¬ 
ness for the year I8GD : 
10,717 New Policies issued, insuring.*34,416,353 00’ 
Income from Premiums...., *5.104,640 99 
Income from Interest, &c... 870,157 10 
-*5,974,798 39 
Disbursements for dividends 
and expenses . *2,801,607 54 
Disbursements for losses.... 758,104 07 
- *3,062,711 61 
Balance in favor of the Pol¬ 
icy Holders WHO ARE 
THE ONLY STOCKHOL¬ 
DERS, AND RECEIVE 
ALL THE PROFITS OF. *2,412,086 00 
ASSETS, JANUARY 1, 1870. 
Cash on hand, in Bunk and 
In Trust Co. *839,090 61 
Invested In United States 
Stocks, cost. 2,261,037 49 
Invested in New York City 
Bank Stocks. 41,549 00 
Invested in New York State 
und other Stocks. 1,024,384 11 
Real Estate. 1,545,637 17 
Bonds and Mortgages. 4,570,400 00 
Loans on existing policies... 916,859 35 
Quarterly and semi-annual 
premiums,due subsequent 
to Jan. 1, 1870........... 028,156 92 
Interest accrued to Jan. 1, 
1870 . 65,327 77 
Premiums on Policies, in 
hands of Agents, and In 
course of transmission.... 533.218 81 
PRICE: fri A YEAR. 
The Bulletin has correspondents in all sections 
of Kansas, Nebraska und the Territories. It. is a 
purely U'cstern paper, and makes a specialty of just, 
such nows as is sought by Eastern people who con¬ 
template moving West, W. 8. BLRKK, 
Leavenworth, Kansas. 
The book is a handsome 12mo, and contains a splen 
did Steel-plato Portrait of Hiram Woodruff. 
PRICE, EXTRA CLOTH, $2.25. 
Single copies sent on receipt of price. 
J. n. FORD & CO., 
39 Park Row, New York. 
COFTII .I1CHNKY I'" \ RMS. ’10,000 acres 
ki Fruit and Farm Land tor sale cheap and on easy 
terms. In lots to suit, pur,dinners. On railroad 24 miles 
south of Philadelphia. So ) productive,climate mild 
and provurMully healthy, pore soli wuter.no ehtlts 
and rover. Map and full description M-nt free. 
Address MORRIS <X CO., 
Frankhnville. Gloucester Co., New Jersey. 
O IT NOW !! I—MAPLE LEAVES in the 
cheapest, the best, and the most popular Mngu- 
3 published. Only Fifty Ceuta tor one year, 
iscribe now, and get all your friends to <n> the 
,o. O. A. ROOK BACH. Fiiblftbtsr, 
1(12 Nu:»ui) Ft.,, New York. 
W IIIT 17 STRING FA 11,11, G1C.NHVA, 
FOR Sll.K. 
Tills VERY DESIRABLE FARM of 300 acres, lo¬ 
cated within one mile or the village of Genova, is 
offered for sale. It is situated on a ridge overlook¬ 
ing Seneca Lake and Geneva, and commands a most, 
extensive view. The farm is In a very high state of 
cultivation, thoroughly underdrained, and tho build¬ 
ings mostly new and in excellent repair. The orch¬ 
ards are in full bearing, and the supply of water is 
very abundant anil Of excellent quality. I’he lawn 
surrounding the bouse contains some tUueres, Is In 
tine order, and ornamented with natural forest trees. 
As tho farm is so well known, a further description 
is deemed unnecessary. To any one desiring an ele¬ 
gant country residence, this offers a very favorable 
opportunity. Kor jan tlculara, apply to 
JAMES O. SHELDON, Geneva, N. Y. 
P SYCIIOM A N(l V, Fascination, or 
Soul Charming, 400 pagos CiOth. Full instruc¬ 
tions to use this power over men or animals at win, 
how to mesmerise, become trance or writ rig medi¬ 
ums, Dlvlnitliou. Hplrttnuilsiii, Alchemy, Philosophy 
of Omens and Dreams, Brigham Young's Unrein, 
Guide to Marriage, Ac., all contained In this book, 
100,000 sold, can be obtained liy sending address, with 
lOets. postage, toT. W. KVANrt Ac CO..41 hemtll 8lh 
St., Philadel phia. Pa. _ 
moiuisTs AND PLEASURE seekers 
L will find It to tnfilr advantage to procure u copy 
of tho Erie Hallway book of "in .nor Exeurslons’’ 
LOSS OF HAIR. 
Boston, July 19. 
Messks. Joseph buknett & Co. 
For many months my hair has been falling off, 
until I was fearful of losing it entirely. The skin 
upon my head became gradually more and more m- 
tliuned. I commenced the use of your Cocoa me the 
last week In June. The first, application allayed t he 
itching und irritation; in three or four days the red¬ 
ness and tenderness disappeared, the hair ceased to 
fail, und I have now a thick growth Of now hair. 
Yours, very truly, SUSAN R. POPE. 
rpHE HIGHEST FA It.IIING LANDS 
L IN-THE WORLD. 
1,300,000 ACRES FOR SALE 
TO ACTUAL SETTLERS. 
NEOSHO VALLEY, KANSAS. 
Union Pacific Railroad Comnany. 
SOUTHERN BRANCH. 
Tho lands now offered by this Company arc situated 
mainly within twenty miles nf each side of the roiMl, 
extending one hundred and seventy miles along the 
NK08M0 VALLEY, tlie. richest, Uncut and moat in¬ 
viting valley for settlement in Iho Weak 
One-third of the labor required at the East in the 
culture or farms will Insure here double the amount 
'bfI'ldinG MATERIAL AND FENCING of every 
variety and in great abundance. 
STOCK RAISING.—Tho rich native grasses of the 
bralrtes and bottoms, with the large area nf unoccu¬ 
pied lands In connection with the dry.mild and open 
Winters, present nnequaled advantages for the rais¬ 
ing of cuttle, sheep and horses. . 
THE CLIMATE AND HEALTH of Kansas are 
nnequaled. These. Indeed, arc among its chief ex. 
eellonetes, and are recommendations for settlement. 
PRICKS OK LAND.—Fro iu *2to *3 per acre; credit 
Of ten (10i years’limn. 
TERMti OF SALK.—One-tenth down at time of 
purchase. No payment Mie sripond year. One-tenth 
every year after until completion or payments, with 
annual interest. 
THE HEAD LAND OFFICE 
Is at JUNCTION CITY. To all purchasers of lands 
FREE TICKETS from this point are given over the 
Road. For fnrttoar information, address 
NEW ftn4 MUCH-NEEDED KOOK 
JfKJlTERJVlTlt 
A Popular Treatise for Young Wives 
and Mothers. 
ByT. 8. Vbrdi, A. M., M. D.. of Washington, D. C. 
Dr. VERDt is a well-known and successful Hotmco- 
pathlc Practitioner, of thorough scientific training 
and large experience. His book has arisen from a 
want felt In his own practice, as u Monitor to Young 
Wives, a Guide to Young Mothers, and an assistant 
to the family physician. It deals skillfully, sensibly 
und delicately with the perplexities of early married 
life, as connected with thodicdy duties of Mutornity, 
giving information which women must have, and 
generally have, to seek reluctantly from their phy¬ 
sician. It treats of the needs, dangers and allevia¬ 
tions of the time of travail; and give* extended de¬ 
tailed instructions for the earn and medical treat¬ 
ment of infants and children throughout all the 
perils of early life. 
As a Mothers' Manual, it will have a large sale, nn l 
as a book of special and reliable information on very 
important topics, it will be heartily welcomed. 
Handsomely printed on laid paper: beveled boards, 
extra English cloth, 12mo., loO pages. Price *2.25. 
For sale by alt Uookselters, or will be sent, post-paid, 
on receipt of the price, by 
J. B. FORD & CO., Publisher*, 
39 Park Row, New York. 
J. Bcii\'»:tt, Esq.— Dear Sir: For some time past 
I have been using your Coconino, and think it fur 
preferable to anything 1 have ever used for the hair. 
If my Indorsement Is ot value, you are perfectly at 
llt)e ‘ ty HesUpecL l inlly yours, FRANK LESLIE. 
BANGOR, Mareh'j, 1868. 
Joseph Burnett & Co.- Gentlemen' Your Co- 
coaine is the only dressing for the hair used in my 
family for the last eight years. It stopped my Wife's 
hair from coming out, and Increased its growth. 
Lam also under ubllgutlous to this same Coconino 
for saving my own hair, which was very fast coming 
out previous to using this valuable preparation. 
Very truly, yours. 
J. C. MITCHELL, Grocer, Bangor, Me. 
Add excess of market value of invest¬ 
ments over cost..... 302,363 40 
ASSETS, Ian. 1, 1870.*13,327,924 (13 
BALANCE SHEET OF THE COMPANY, 
Jan. I, 1870. 
Assets as above.*13,327,924413 
LIABILITIES. 
Amountof Adjusted Losses, 
due subsequent to»Jan. I, 
.. *167,000 00 
Amountof Reported Losses, 
awaiting 4’rqgf, Ac.... . GGJiOO 00 
Amount reserved for Rc-tn- 
surance on existing Poli¬ 
cies.*11,213,955 84 
Return Premium 1809 and 
prior thereto, payable du- 
I ring the year. 209,718 07 
A REMARKABLE CASE. 
EAST MlPULBRORO, Mass.. June 9.1864. 
Messrs. Burnett & Co. :-My daughter lias been 
afflicted with neuralgia lu her head for three years. 
She had used daring that time many powerful appli¬ 
cations. These, with the Intense heat caused by the 
pains, hurtled her Pair wo badly that III October, laid, 
it all came off. She was Induced to try your Cocoalne. 
and the rnxult was astonishing She had not used 
half the content* of a bottle before her head was 
covered with a tine young hair. In four month* the 
hair has grown several Inches In lenxllL very thick, 
soft and tine, nml of a darker color than formerly. 
frith respect. Wit.LIAM 8. EDDY, 
HAT EVERIY 
Rural subscriber 
wants Is 
D. D. T. MOORE, 
41 Park Row, Hew York, or Rochester, N, Y. 
A MANUAL OF 
CTf KAPHSV Hair busying in the world. It promotes 
the GROW'TU OF THK HAIR, and is entirely free 
from ult irritating matter. The name and title thereof 
is adopted as o Trade.Murk, to secure the public and 
proprietors against imposition by the introduction of 
spurious articles. AU unauthorized use of this Trade- 
Marli Wilt be promptly prosecuted. 
Divisible Surplus 
1IOKKIS FHANKMN, 
Provident 
WII.Mill 11. KEEKS, 
VIce-FreeH a»d Actuary. 
THEODORE M. BANTA, Cashier. 
CORNELIUS It. BOGART, M. D„ > Medical 
GEORGE WILKES. M. D.. * Examiners. 
CHARLES WRIGHT. M. D . A t Med. Kxamin 
H. A. DYEIt, Superintendent of Agencies. 
With full directions for 
Preparing tl»<* <* round, 
Sowing, Cultivating and 
Harvesting the Crop. 
As also the 
Prcparatiou for Market and Mannfactnre. 
Also, an Essay on 
H E 3VT P AND FLAX 
in the West, Modi*of Culture, Preparation for Mar¬ 
ket. Ac. With botanical descriptions and Il¬ 
lustrations. Price *25 cents. Address 
D. D. T. MOORE, 
41 Park Row, New York. 
JOSEPH BURNETT & CO., 
Manufacturers and Proprietors, 
No. 27 CENTRAL ST., BOSTON 
For sale by Druggists everywhere. 
Moore's Rural New-Yorker.—W e ate not given 
to puffing through the columns of the College Advo¬ 
cate—In fact seldom allow ourselves to notice, edito¬ 
rially. any enterprise, however deserving of com¬ 
mendation li mar be; hut Muork’h Rural New- 
Yorker has challenged our admiration to such an 
extent as to cause us to overstep our prescribed limit 
to say a word In it* praise- We have alwa ys regarded 
the Rural us the best Agricultural Guide and Fam¬ 
ily Companion In the country : but th« long strides 
which it has recently taken places it pre-eminently 
ia advance of uli comyelltoni. If the nigh Dined 
miscellunv whlnh it contains, from week to week, 
could supersede the tra.-diy stuff svhleli has found Its 
wav into so many families, it would he a glorious 
consummation. We commend the Rural unsolic¬ 
ited. and hope for reward only in seeing a higher 
moral tone imparted to the literature of the day.— 
College Advocate, Rochester, A’. Y. 
M Airr? VILIMBLK THAN GOLD. 
,m WADSWOR’l’ll’8 DRY IIP FOR THE 
r A'i’ARRIt-A newly discovered, perfect and speedy 
cure for tilt* loathsome disease, in its worst torm. 
inevery ease of Catarrh, severe or tight, the disease 
,i,ouhi he removed as antm as possible, for It givb» 
iwe in hoarseness, soreness in the windpipe, dry 
cough chronic inttamruailon ot t.h« lungs, dizziness, 
duff pain' in the head, with a sensation ot a weight 
over tlie eves, loss of the senses ot smelling and 
tasting, and various painful neuralgic affections. 
There i* nut any mi stake about the above remedy, 
and it may oe hud of the Proprietor, 
If. H. BURRINGTON, Providence, R. I. 
Send stamp for Pamphlet about Catarrh. 
Also for sale byJoHN F. hBnri.8 College Place, 
New York, aud by Druggists generally. 
Moore’s Rural New-Yorker,-T hisisthe very 
best Agricultural Journal in the country. It* Agri¬ 
cultural, Horticultural and Mechanical Departments 
are made, up by tlie most experienced editors to he 
found, and Its corps of contributor* constitute the 
best Improvod minds throughout the Union. To any 
farmer tlie RURAL must prove Invaluable, a* » 
“Chapped Hands, face, rough skin, pimplea 
ring-worm, salt-rheum, and other cutaneous affec¬ 
tions, cured, by using the Juniper Tier Soap made by 
Caswell, Hazard & Co., New Y'ork. It is more 
convenient and easily applied than other remedies, 
avoiding the trouble of the greasy compounds now 
in use."—Sf. Louis Democrat. 
■ rural architect 
and landscape cardener, 
n W. Cob. of Chahles and Baltimore St6„ 
BALTIMORE, Md. 
