NEWS AND NOVELTIES 
PERSONAL ITEMS 
tteal (Estate, (Etc 
implements and ittadfinern, (Etr 
Two Dos Moines (Iowa) girls have invented 
and patented a washing and cooking boiler. 
A little girl at Dubuque was bitten by a rat¬ 
tlesnake, a few days ago, but was saved by 
whisky. 
An Ohio girl recently won a bonnet by throw¬ 
ing her father twice out of three times in a wrest¬ 
ling match. 
Mrts. John McAui.ee of Pontiac, Midi., gave 
birth to three boys, whose united weight was 24 
pounds, one day last. week. 
An educated robin belonging to John O'Neil 
of Syracuse was sold recently to George P. 
Simonson of New York for $50. 
A man who wr.s the valedictorian at Harvard 
about ten years since, now rings the boll to start 
the horse cars lu an Indiana town. 
A white perch, weighing one and a quarter 
pounds, was caught a few days since, with rod 
and line, in the Delaware at the Lazaretto. 
Eight women of Morin precinct and seven of 
Grand Mound precinct. Thurston county, voted 
at the last election in Washington Territory. 
Mrs. Hugo of Chicago lias applied for a di¬ 
vorce from Mr. Hogg. There was loo much 
hugging done in the family by Mr. Ilngg, to suit 
Mrs. Hugg. 
A couple were recently married in Coventry, 
New Hampshire, the lady being twelve years 
old and the gentleman fourteen. They are now 
keeping house. 
SwOBDMSii are now considered the greatest 
luxury at Pall Kivor, Mass. Three thousand 
pounds of these warriors were offered for sale 
there in one day. 
The wife of llcv. J. B. It. Walker of Hartford, 
Cl., is the successful competitor for the $000 
prize offered by Mr. Hoyt of Boston for the best 
Subbath-school book. 
Figs grow very abundantly in South Carolina. 
They ripen twice a year, and compete, when 
dried and packed, with the foreign imported 
Ones in the home fruit market. 
A Nebraska City bride demonstrated hor wo¬ 
man's rights by locking tho doorof thoepithala^ 
inial chamber and refusing to admit the bride¬ 
groom until he handed her $300 cash. 
A man at Springfield, HI., bet two ladles anew 
dress each, that they couldn't refrain from talk¬ 
ing two hours. Onoof them held out for an 
hour and ten minutes, and the other won the bet. 
The hirsute appendage of a young lady in Now 
Orleans became undone the other day, ami when 
she became aware of her misfortune a string of 
luilr several yards long was streaming behind her 
in tho wind. 
A German inventor is exhibiting a talking 
machine at, Bremen. It is made of wood and 
caoutchouc and is of life size, in the forma 
woman. It chattel's away like any living mem¬ 
ber of tho sex. 
The ownership of Thomas Jefferson's homo 
and tomb is contested in tho courts, while the 
estate goes to ruin. Shutters and gates are un¬ 
hung, and weeds and hogs thrive in the neg¬ 
lected cemetery. 
There is a clergyman in New Port, B. I., who 
sleeps in one bouse, takes his meals in another, 
lifts a study in a third, and preaches In a fourth, 
all on the same street. It Is scarcely necessary 
to say that he is a bachelor. 
A kerosrnk lump explosion occurred recently 
at Rooky Mount, N. C., setting Are to a blanket, 
which was hastily thrown out of the window. It 
turned out, however, that a baby was wrapped 
up in the blanket, and died of the fall. 
The right name has been found for Mr. Bergh. 
He is an Animaltliropiat. We remember that 
Mr. Brown of Baltimore objected to the cum¬ 
bersome name of Mr. Bergh'g organization. 
Why not call it the Animulthroplo Society. 
A lady in Center Falls, R. L, claims to have 
in hor possession tho musket with which Israel 
Putnam shot that wolf. She says her husband 
obtained it many years ago, and its history can 
lie traced directly to that doughty old gentle¬ 
man. 
Mr. Augustus Burk of Newburg, Ohio, has 
a largo native cow, weighing about 1,200 pounds, 
which is giving daily a large yield of milk. On 
the 10th lilt, she gave sixty-five pounds—twent y- 
six in the morning, twenty-two at noon, and 
seventeen at night. 
A Montana farmer has found use for a sand¬ 
hill crane. lie lias ouo which spends most of 
his time in live potato lot, feasting on the potato- 
bug- a meal which the longed-limbed biped 
seeinR to relish as fondly ns his master does a 
dish of strnwborries. 
A New Jersey paper reports that more divor¬ 
ces have been granted by the Chancellor of that 
State since the war than in all the time previ¬ 
ously since tho formation of tho State; and it 
claims that “none of them have boon granted 
without good and sufficient cause." 
The receipts of f*>gs in New York city for nine 
months of lftfifl, averaged about one thousand 
barrels per day. A barrel contains about eighty 
dozen, or nine hundred and sixty eggs; the ag¬ 
gregate, therefore, was. in one day, nearly a mil¬ 
lion. One thousand barrels of eggs, at an aver¬ 
age price of thirty cents pet-dozen, amounts to 
$24,000 per day, or $8,790,000 per unman. 
Thaddeus Stevens preferred burial in an ob¬ 
scure burial ground rather than in either of the 
two beautiful cemeteries in Lancaster, in both 
of which ho owned lots, because colored people 
could not be buried there; and over his grave, 
in his obscure resting place, is a plain marble, 
with his own inscription s—•' I lie here because 
the earth is free to all.—Thaddeus Stevens.” 
The Oxford (Me.) Democrat tells ns that a 
plucky girl in Weld, named Dorcas White, was 
met in the road by a wildcat, which was being 
pursued by her brother, who had been hunting 
it with a gun. With presence of mind ami cour¬ 
age amounting to heroism, site took her shawl 
from her shoulders, threw it over the vicious 
brute, and held him till her brother came up 
and dispatched him. 
ONEof the most singular sights growing out of 
the war is a continuous line of peach trees of 
nearly fifty miles in length, arouud Petersburg, 
Va„ and extending towards Richmond. They 
are growing frow the breastworks thrown up by 
the Confederate army, and arc the legacy left by 
those who were on the advance line, within one 
hundred yards of the Union forces. Having 
eaten tho fruit while on picket, duty, they cast 
the seed aside, and now they appear in one con¬ 
tinuous line of beautiful trees, which yielded 
an nbuudant crop last year. 
Ira Lapham, one of the pioneers of Wayne 
county, died on the 7th Inst. 
Gen. MoCt.Et.LANhasbccn appointed engineer- 
in-ebief of the New York docks. 
Queen Victoria's children keep her busy 
acting as godmother now-a-days. 
I). S. NORTON, United States Senator from 
Minnesota, died at Washington on the 14th inst. 
Samuel Bowles of i lie Springfield Republi¬ 
can, nailed on Saturday for a three months' tour 
in Germany. 
Sir Morton Peto isiu Hungary.superintend¬ 
ing the construction of railroads for the Austri¬ 
an Government. 
Sen itor Pratt of Indiana, it is said, has con¬ 
cluded not to resign his seat, as he iutended to 
do some time ago. 
*' Brick ” Pomeroy delivers the address be¬ 
fore tho Harpersville Agricultural Society on 
the 29th of September. 
Nathaniel Wilson, the celebrated living 
skeleton, died in Boston on the 1st inst. He was 
born in Oldtown, Me., thirty years ago. 
Brigham Young has sent in a little memoran¬ 
dum of $17,000,000 Whit h the Union Pacific Rail¬ 
road owes him for contingent expenses. 
Rev. Dr. Wilson, of tho Cattaraugus Reserva¬ 
tion, lias been deprived of speech it. is feared per¬ 
manently by u recent stroke of paralysis. 
Charles Mahon, or Ham 11 ti on, N. Y., late 
.judge of the Court of Appeals, has been appoint¬ 
ed clerk of the United State* Circuit Court, 
TnEonoRK Frelinghuysun, ex-Senator from 
New Jersey, has been confirmed as Minister to 
England, and Chits. U. De Long, Minister to 
Japan, 
JOHN McKinney, formerly Secretary of State 
and State Treasurer of Michigan, died at bis 
residence at Lawton, on Saturday, the 0th inst., 
of dropsy. 
Geo. MarshAI.i. and John Kendlo have been 
sent to Glens Falls to lie tried for stealing $16,000 
in Government bonds from the Glens Falls Na¬ 
tional Bunk. 
Capt. L. T. Pattek has been ordered to as¬ 
sume temporary command of the Washington 
Navy Yard until the appointment of a successor 
to the late Admiral Dahlgren. 
Hun. Henry Holmes of Baratova died at Cove- 
vllle on Tuesday evening, July 6th, aged sixty- 
eight years. He wits a prominent farmer and 
sheep breeder, and held several offices of honor. 
M. Prevost Paraool, the new minister from 
Franco to this country, is the firet professional 
journalist that has been accredited ns envoy to 
our Government from any first-class European 
power. 
Thomas Kean, city editor of the Buffalo 
Courier, has been presented by Edwin Forrest, 
tlie distinguished tragedian, with an elegant 
heavy gold ring set with anamethystof unusual 
beauty and size. 
Barnum has struck a new dwarf in California 
that only weighs fifteen pounds, which he calls 
“Admiral Dott.’ He thought of calling him 
"Colonel Fly Speck,” but concluded that Dott 
was more high-toned. 
Hon. John W. Dwinelle of San Francisco, 
donates rare and valuable books for the library 
of Hamilton College. They belong to what are 
called in European libraries, incunabttSa, so 
called because they were printed before tho 
year 1500. 
Geo. Arhmdn, formerly a distinguished poli¬ 
tician, died in Springfield, Maas., recently. He 
was Speaker of the Massachusetts House in 1811, 
and a member of Congress for the terms of 1846 
and 1861; also. Chairman of the Chicago Conven¬ 
tion that nominated Lincoln iu 1800. 
Miss Wire, a niece of ex-Gov. Wise of Vir¬ 
ginia, and about twenty-eight years of age, was 
found dead in bed at the Rutherford Park 
Hotel, New Jersey, on Friday morning. She 
had been a sufferer from rheumatism for u long 
time, und it is supposed her disease affected tho 
heart. 
Da. ALPnoNZO Perry died at bis residence 
in Clarkson, on the 11th inst., aged sixty-four 
years. Ho had resided in Clarkson for the last 
forty years, and most of the time was engaged 
in tho practice of medicine. In 1859 he was 
elected member of Assembly from the western 
district of Monroe county. 
^ORTII MISSOURI UA3ri>S 
FOR. S A. Xj E 
by the 
HANNIBAL & ST. JOSEPH 
R. R. COMPANY. 
About 130,000 Acres of the Finest Farm- 
iiig mid Gruzina Land in the United Stares, 
for sale at low prion* and on very easy terms : thus 
enabling an industrious man with small capital to 
pay for hi* land with money earned from It.. 
Missouri i* not too fhr West to he at a great dis¬ 
tance from market s; its Railroad facilities are great 
and constantly increasing: the climate i* splendid, 
and good crop* are almost a certainty; while the 
numerous thriving towns and cities springing up on 
every hand attest beyond doubt that the blight of 
slavery has been effectually dissipated, and that 
Eastern men and Eastern capital are doing their 
perfect work. 
OllR LAND* DEFY COMPETITION. 
Sond for full descriptive Circulars and Sectional 
Maps, encluid 'g 30 Ota., and stating what paper von 
saw this In, t< EDWARD WILDER, 
Land i'omtniHsioner, lliiiliiibal, Mo. 
A rw\ SPLENDID FARMS FOR SA LE IN 
'dfci.MJ fihenuridoah Valley arid Blue Kidee of Vir¬ 
ginia. If you want good, beautiful und cheap lands 
—■unsurpassed for grazing, grain and fruit growing— 
80od for large Descriptive Catalogue, tree. 
JAQUiSLl.N M. MUCK. Rea) Kswte Agent. 
Front ltoyal, Warren Co., Va. 
HE CHAMPION. 
Jlickok'f- Patent Portable 
W ANTED 1 — AGENTS, Ladies or Gentle¬ 
men, everywhere, to canvass for “The Life 
and 44 citings of Charles Dirken*,” by Mrs. 
P. A. Ilunuford. A handsome $1.31 12mo., destined 
to meet with an immense sale. .Now in your time to 
make money. B. B RUssKLU, Boston, Mass. 
Missouri & Western Farm Register, 
QUARTERLY- N o. G. 
Published July 1st, 1870. It describes every 
countv In Missouri, and Improved farms for sale in 
over do counties — giving the location, price, twtiit 
nnd address ot the owner, and a ininuto description of 
each farm, with other valuable Information to those 
seeking home* in the West. 
PRICE, 60 CENTS PER COPY, POST-PAID. 
Copies of Nos. 3 and i -one of each—sent for 35 els. 
J. It. PA KfiONB A CO., Publishers, SL Louis, Mo. 
IMPORTANT to ROTTER RAKERS 
Is made on an entirely new principle, dispensing 
altogether with udusher. It cun do the work in much 
less time, saves a great deni of labor, brings butter 
more quickly, makes more of it, and is more easily 
cleansed, than any dasher Churn in the murlcoi. ALL 
THIS HAS REFN PROVED by competition with 
other Churns, and any Farmer or Dairyman can be 
convinced by on examination. The cost I* small, 
AGENT8 WANTED EVERYWHERE. 
Address F. WETMORK A. CO., 
70 AVushlngton St., Boston. 
The fertile prairies of Kansas offer homos to the 
tolling millions of the East, " without money and 
without price,” und if you want to know what sec¬ 
tion of the country offers the greatest Inducements 
to settlers, subscribe for the 
TAOR Pnmlly I’ll*— Simple,cheap,reliable. Knits 
-T everything, Agents Wanted. Circular and 
sample slocking FREE. Address 1I1NKJ.KY KNIT¬ 
TING MACHINE CO, Bath, Me., or 17« B’wiiy. N. Y. 
THE LEAVENWORTH BULLETIN 
PRICE A YEAR. 
The Bulletin haa correspondents in all sections 
of Kansas. Nebraska and the Territories. It is a 
purely IT'extem paper, nod luukes a specialty of just 
such news ns Is sought hy Eastern people who con¬ 
template moving West. W fi. BIJRKW, 
Leavenworth. Kansas. 
V G K N TS W A N T K I>. We wlt.I» an 
Agent in every town to sell ft new hook wanted 
In every family, and recommended by the leading 
papers of the country. One Agent latgjv reports 34 
orders in a day. One Lady says:—” I have sold 100 
c»ple* in the last three weeks* and attended to my 
own house work.” We received an order this week 
from a l-ady Agent for 775 Copies. There Is money 
In this book, fiend for private circular. 
W. .1. HOLLAND A CO., 
Springfield, Mass. Chicago, 111. 
THE REST MACHINE EVER INVENTED. 
I make also two sizes of superior Presses for Ber¬ 
ries, Ac. If your merchant does not keep them, tell 
him to sond for one for you, or write for one your¬ 
self. Don't, buy any other until you see this, 
fiend for a Circular. \V. O HICKOK, 
Harrisburg, Penn. 
COUTH JliKSF.Y FARMS. 20,000 acres 
11 Fruit and Farm Lund for sale cheap uud on easy 
terms. In lots to suit purchasers, on railroad 24 mllos 
south ol Philadelphia. Soil product!vo, climate 
and proverbially lieultkr, pure soft water, no chills 
and fever. Map and full description sent free. 
Address MORRIS k. CO., 
Franklinvllle, Gloucester Co.. New Jersey. 
A Hit FO It TOWER’S THERMOMETERS. 
The only machine-graduated Thermometer ever 
made, whereby perfect accuracy In workmanship Is 
secured. Dairy Thermometers, expressly for farm¬ 
ers' use. Buy none unless the name of the maker is 
stamped on the pinto. Kvt ry Instrument warranted 
accurate. Also, manufacturer of tin* celebrated D. 
10. Lent Barometer, Dealer* sond tor Price Lists. 
LEWIS C. TOW EH Rochester, N. Y. 
4 G KNTS AV A N T E O 
* nut THK WORKS OF 
ALBERT D. RK'lLV RDHON, 
Mrs. A. D. RICHARDSON, 
JUNIUS HENRI BROWNE, 
ami MARK TWAIN. 
No books sovaluablo, popular or salable as those 
hy above authors. For circulars, address 
AMERICAN PUBLISHING CO.. Hartford. Ct. 
YY/TIITE SPUING FARM, GENEVA, 
» » FOR HALE. 
This VERY DESIRABLE FARM of 300 acres, lo¬ 
cated within one mile of the village of Genova, Is 
offered for sale. It Is situated on a ridge overlook, 
ingSeneofl Lake and Geneva, and tomitianiku most 
extensive view. The farm is iu a very high state of 
cultivation, thoroughly uuderdrained, and the build¬ 
ing* mostly new and In excellent repair. Theorch. 
arris arc in full hearing, and the supply ot water 1* 
very abundant nnd ot excellent, quality. Tim lawn 
surrounding the house contains some 4u acres, Is In 
hue order, and ornamented wit h natural forest, trees, 
As the farm Is so well known, a further description 
is deemed unnecessary. To any one desiring an ele¬ 
gant country residence, this offers u very favorable 
opportunity. For particulars, upply to 
JAMES O. SHELDON. Geneva, N. Y. 
I VOR OILING AND FRKHEKVING IIAR- 
1 ness. Carriage 'Tops. Ac.. there Is nothing equal 
to Frank Miller's Prepared Harness oil 
Blacking. Manufactured by F RANK MILLER & 
CO., 18 and 20 Cedar fit,. New \ or*. 
Br GEORGE E. WARING. Jr. 
Of Ogden Farm, Agricultural Engineer of Central 
Park. n. v.: author ot “ Drainage for Profit and for 
Health ,’’ Ac. A Guide for Farmers, young and old. 
in every department of Agriculture. I'M) pages and 
100 engravings. Agents wanted. E. B. TREAT & 
CO., Publishers. G54 Broadway, New York. 
T he richest farming lands 
IN THE WORLD. 
1,300,000 ACRES FOR SALE 
TO ACTUAL SETTLERS, 
NEOSHO VALLEY, KANSAS. 
Union Pacific Railroad Company, 
SOUTHERN BRANCH. 
The lands now offered by this Company are situated 
mainly within twenty miles of each side of the road, 
extending one hundred and seventy miles along the 
NEOSHO VALLEY, the richest, finest and most in¬ 
viting vallpy for .settlement in the West. 
One-thlnl of the lain,r required at the Hast in the 
culture of farms \\ ill Insure horc dun hie the amount 
of crops. 
BUILDING MATERIAL AND FENCING of every 
variety and In great, abundance. 
STOCK llAlfilNG. The rich native grasses of the 
prairies ami bottoms, with the large area of unoccu¬ 
pied lauds in eot in notion with the dry, mild and open 
Winters, present unequulod advantages for the rais¬ 
ing of cattle, xhuepand horses. 
THK CLIM ATE AND HEALTH of Kansas are 
tineqnaled. These, Indeed,pro among its chief ex¬ 
cellencies. and are recommendations tor settlement. 
PRICES OF LAND.—From $2 to $3 per non*; credit 
of ten (10) years' time. 
TERMS OK SALE.—One-tenth down at time of 
purchase. No pevment the second year. One-tenth 
every year after until completion ot payments, with 
annual interest. 
THE HEAD T.ANI) OFFICE 
is at JUNCTION CITY. To nil purchasers of lands 
FREE TICKETS from this point are given over the 
Road. For further Information, address 
ISA AC T. GOODNOW, 
Lund Commissioner, Junction City, Kansas. 
f \ AV. ROYNTON A: CO., WixiiihrUlyc, N.J. 
DRAIN TILE, 
HOTTTCIJ TltoE -A.XD OOLIjARS. 
The STRONGEST, LIGHTEST, BEST FORMED, 
MOST EVENLY BURNED nnd DURABLE TILE 
In use. Saves In breaknui, saves In Cott of Transpor¬ 
tation , stives in LnJm of Lui/im/.nntl gives thoroughly 
reliable FIRST C LASS WORK. 
(EUncatiomil, 
(2>t) |\||(| A YEAR AND EXPENSES TO 
agents to sell the celebrated WILSON 
SEWING MACHINES. The best machine In the 
world, hatch alike on both aides. ONE MACHINE 
without Money. For further particulars, uddress 
THE WILSON SEWING MACHINE CO„ 
Cleveland, Ohio, Boston, Mass., or St. Louis, Mo, 
K ifles, shot-guns, revolvers, 
t Ac., of ail kinds lit reduced price#, warranted 
and sent by Express (0.0. IL.lto he examined before 
paid for. Liberal terras to the trude, agents or clubs. 
Write t'oc a Catalogue, Address .1. H. JOHNSTON, 
Great Western Gun Works, Pittsburgh. Pa, Army 
Gnus, Revolvers, <&4V, bought or traded for. 
X> 1V EltViK W MILITARY ACADEMY, 
Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 
OTIS BISBEE, A. M., Principal and Proprietor, 
A wide-awake, thorough-going School for boys 
wishing to be trained for Business, for College, or 
for West Point or the Naval Academy, 
Stock, poultry, 
OWING MACHINE Oil-. Uiiequiiled ns 
a Lubricator. Free from gum. Sold by dealers 
era By. Manufactured hv FRANK. MILLER* 
. 18 aii d 20 Cedar St.. New York. 
T OFFER FOR SALE AX ELEGANT 
I pair of Imported Game Banlams for twenty-fi vo 
dollar*, and if they do not give perfect satisfaction, 
they can tie returned, If done Immediately. 1 also 
offer Golden and Silver Sebright Bantams, Bronze 
Turkeys, A vlesbury Ducks. Cret e-Coeur#, and a very 
tine lot of Ilolidans—which last named vurlotv will 
he sold for ten dollars per puir until the first of Sep¬ 
tember. Several other varieties beside iho above 
for Bate in the tail, fiend for Price List. Address 
E. J, TAYLOR, Waterloo, Ben ecu Co.. N. Y. 
■p DU CATION FOR YOUNG MEN. 
1J WZXxZjZSTON seminary 
having received from its founder, Hon. S. Wllllston, 
an endowment of $800,<XX). offers the very best advan¬ 
tages to students desiring u thorough preparation 
for Business or for admission to a Classical College. 
Board at cost, arid Tuition free to the Indigent. 
For Catalogue, address the Principal, MARSHALL 
HENSHAW, East Hampton, Mass. 
(Erccs, plants, Sccbs, (Etc 
With our Stencil and 
Key-Check Outfit. 
SPff~ Circula rs Free. 
F lower bulks. -Tulips, Hyacinths,Narcis¬ 
sus, Crocus, Iris, Lilies, Gladiolus. Ao„ Ac., for 
the full trade—general assortment, at Wholesale and 
Retail. Also liases. Green-house Plants, Colored 
Fruit and Flower Plates, fiend three-oent stamp far 
Bull> Catalogue, or ten cent* for Bulb ami Nursery 
Catalogues. F. K. PHOENIX. 
Bloomington Nursery, McLean Co., 1)1. 
1*1 It. WARRING'S MIL1 
V , ING SCHOOL FOR BOYS, 1 
Semi for Circular. 
« rpWO OHIO IMPROVED CIIES- 
JL TER HOGS weighed Two Thousand 
Jr\ Seven Hundred and -•> • m* fiend 
kZJ stamp for a description of thin famous 
rjf breed Of Swine, and a greut variety of 
other thorough-bred Animals und Fowls. 
Address L. B. SILVER, Salem, Ohio, 
PARY BOARD- 
oughkeepsie, N. Y 
I. N. WH1TNKB, R. H. MARKS. 
AA J U1TNER A MAKES, 
’ ’ ( nil Engineers and Ileal Estate Agents, 
Mellonvllle, Fin., 
Will sell 20,000 acres ot choice private lands; some 
improved ; all very valuable and convenient, to navi¬ 
gation. They will aJso plant out Orange Groves, enter 
fitate lands, locate Homesteads, select eligible sites 
for Residences, execute Deed* of Conveyance, Mort¬ 
gages, &c., supplv approved Fertilizers tor tropical 
fruit trees at manufacturers’ prices, expenses added, 
and perform all work pertaining to their Itueof busi¬ 
ness, promptly, und on reasonable terms. 
\rnpltvvoot) Institute fur Young Lnilicx, 
ILL Pittsfield, Mass,—Long established and prosper¬ 
ous; solicits attention to Its unrivaled advantages 
and moderate charges. Rkv.C.V, fiPKAK. Principal. 
iUU\ A8PAHAGIJ8 ROOTS, 
WELL GROWN. TWO-YEAR OLD. 
$1 per 100; 87.50 per 1,000. Strawberry Plants— 
Wilson's Albany. 50 ets.: Triumph de Gand, "5 cts. 
per 100: cheap by the thousand. Address 
MRS. D. W. WHITE, Aldeil, N. Y. 
] 70K SALE.-A VERY FINE JERSEY 
^ IH'LL, 12 months old. Full " Pedigree ” given. 
Price fHX). WM. S. LINCOLN, Worcester, Jlass. 
Q W . I D E L L , 
* FRUIT ANTE) PRODUCE 
COMMISSION MERCHANT 
328 CREENWICH STREET, 
NEW YORK. 
P URE-BRED CHESTER 44 MITE PIGS, 
Sheep, Poultry, Pigeon*, Rabbits, dvc., 
bred and shipped byJ.W.AM. IRWIN, Peuningtnn- 
ville, Chester Co., Pa. 8end for Illustrated Circular. 
1 M)KT E!>4VA H IK'olIcgliife 1 n**t11 tile.-Fall 
1 terra Sept. 1st. ft per week for hoard, fuel and 
washing. Brick building*. For 16 yean, Lbe best sus¬ 
tained hoarding seminary for ladies and gentlemen 
tn the State. A regular Course, Classical, Scientific 
or tv.mmereial nut' be pursued, or studies may be 
selected. Address tar New ratjib.gue, liter. JOSEPH 
E. KING, D.D., Fort Edward, Now York. 
L A 4V AND BANKING OFFICE. 
PITKIN C. WRICHT, 
De 4Vict Clinton County, Iowa, 
Money loaned foraterruot years on unencumbered 
iniDroved Kurins, at 10 per cent. NET interest, pay¬ 
able annually. Interest collected w hen due. Have 
been in business over seven years. Parties having 
money to invest. please notice. 
LOOMTNGTON NI RSEIt Y tlOO Acres, 19th 
D Year, 10 Green-houses. Krnit and Ornamental 
Trees, Nursery Stock, Root Grafts, Grapes, Ever¬ 
greens, Shrubs, Roses. Hedge and Green -house 
Plants, Flower Bulbs for Fall, Colored Fruit and 
Flower Plates. All at Wholesale and Retail. Send 
ten cents for Catalogues. F. K. PHOENIX. 
Bloomington. McLean Co., 111. 
T 44 r I L HINSON, 
"•RURAL ARCHITECT 
AND LANDSCAPE CARDENER, 
N. w. Coe. ok Crt aui.f.h and Baltimore Sts., 
BALTIMORE, Mb. 
The Rural New-Youkeb is the greatest and 
oldest newspaper devoted to Agriculture. Hortlcul. 
tore and general interests of the people that we know 
of. It contains more reading matter than any other 
paper of its kind, and a vast amount of useful infor¬ 
mation to all. lve cannot too highly recommend it 
Moore’s Rural is not merelv an eletwnMooking 
paper; it is really beautiful. Its illustrations of rural 
architecture, fruits, flowers, etc., are worthy-of a 
handsome book.— Hartford Daily Times. 
RICHARD GIRfioN, 
New York Mills, Oneida Co., N. Y. 
