' 0 • VirATFIF; • 7s thitliSseg•Tettom. ; • • Aittosc.aits oflxitat. ll 4'e read with meat tea einatingSint la' 'domesUedritma o crime that 'draws roubles: - The . fact that q child. Wait, murdered -by its mother makes -th e deed nitiab raeroluteristing thin!! It had bean tti paininitted tiL j a Am/Mt. - - So, too, wisp Ott 1113 her bus bandior Sikeera hie father: the mot relationskip of the two &email char** frightftli k Bon to tliti;,priniel which It oa otherwise: idle.' It . deep.* .the gloom antidarktteis . the mink*, and theighlene-thc , surprise at and interietln it. Where the criminal fs'odyla dasher telatlite of the' mur da penson-41 great-grand mother, far Ins---the Interest is naturally. leseened, and and might as well be murder= perfect stranger as by. tenth: • The effect produced would be thesamo. • • The *hitlnteresting toftheSeerimes of home are thaw committed by a wife against her 'husband, and, In a tuner degree Tice mike. We all have sort of vaine feel=rivadk perhaps, from poetry tales, time married man aruidd find Will ing but very great happineat in his home. 'Hutt heshould be ablate tutu' from the acres and atminlyeame of • busineso and receive (=lsolation and sympathy from Warne: Or in other words, that a men's wife should be the soothingrigar and. pipe, and sorrow drowning liquor of his bachelor days. • All young men dream thisuntil awa kened from It by marriage. i It thus that people are greatly interested when a %rife commits some crime against her husband; they are shocked; horrified; envious, and ask with Artemus, "Why is this thus?" These crimes occur every now and then? sometimes it is an elopement,! sometimes a murder, sometimes 'a bigamy .case: •The most popular; form at -prefunt; however, 'is a di vorce suit. • : : • But these forins of matrimonial crimes have been repeated se often' as to beconie somewhat wearying' and tedious, and It is, therefore for tunate that the one to be .told jof to day does not resemble them. This one is new and unique, and has:many features calculated to excite admira tion and interest. What is more even, the heroine of a Sunday School book could read it without having a blush tint her saintly . cheeks, junked it was over the natural depravity of man.. Though - , 1 / 4 wholy destitute of murder or adultery, it is yet interest, big, and shows *bat a woman is capable of doing to attain her wishes. Married men will shudder as they mad it, fearing their wi<ai may imi tate, while young men will scornfully say, "Ah ! but my, beloved wouldn't do that." The facts in this singular case are as follows: ~ ' • Last October, Mr. B. Y. Haile and his wife moved to this city from New York, and bought a house and lot on. Madison street. He was about forty 7. five years old, and somewhat stern' in his manners and overse to society. On the other hand, his wife, who was young and quts u otty, was natural ly gay fond of partied, &e: ; They had been married t a few months at the time theyapune here, and ft is now supposed that the marriage was mercenary one on her part. Mr: Halle engaged In bush=es and was only home ddring the night time and at meals, and his wife very soon became aNualnted with • all her neighbors. Much of her time was passed in visiting and shopping.— They had disagreement only on a single point; she wished to attend the theatres frequently and go, to the many parties to which she was invi ted, while lie strongly objected to it. • He did not to go himself, and would not permit her to go without him. So there were tears and re proaches; quarrels and reconciliation% •. sometimes ho would yield to her and go, but it was generally the contrary. Ile was fond of domestic life, while . she detested it. Had she loved him it might have been dilferenL ; Their quarrels on this subject be- (tune bitterer : lod bitterer, until one night las*,4lo:ember she went to a partyl to his commands.— When , rued, he. told her that if It hu ; again he would sepa.: rate from her; that her,expenditures for dream and Jewelry had •hcvn too. great, 'and that in the fittu.re she must be content to Stay at home, as a lov ing wife /should. •He added that he had no objection to taking her to the theatre or to a party once or twice a month, but beyond that he would not go. She cried, of course; but he butt become used to that, having been married almost a year, and dienat alter his determination. . During the last week of Deeember Mrs. Haile received an invitation to attend what WAS tole one of themost fashionable putt:slot' thesesson. 'Not to attend it would be unfashionable. Of course she wished toaccept it, and to get a new dress, &c., for the oeat sion. Coaxingly she spoke to her . husband about it,but, he at once refusi ed to let her go. lie had been luting money; he- could not afford it; and he was tired of having his wifelrom • hoine. Again she eat:toted, aiaxed and wept, and all in vain. • s Angered at her husband, With her self-love and pride wounded, end full of longing to attend the partY, she determined to go Mull hazards. The next day, When her husband was at his imagines, she went to her draw maker's and ordered a new am! ccet4- ly dress. When her husband returif •ed home,in the evening she again implored him to let her go; he rto;- toted. She consulted with he r Maid, who had long been with her, anti the result was, this : When her husband came theeven lag before the ball, she met him with smiles `aid kisses, saying she had made up her mind to be contented at home. At supper she gave him as;usual, his two cups of tat, Which lie drank, complaining of a peculiar taste in it. The tea wasdrugged with something, and in a short time he wait sleeping. About ten o'clock, the wife • and maid took from him- his watch and chain, money, rings, and cut anti tore his clothes somewha t. Then they • pOureigome whisky down his throat, and spilled some on his clothes. ;Then having ; put cloaks on and covered their hauls with shawls, they ; par./ daily raised him and made hintwalk out of the Muse with' them. ; The bight was dark and the streetS deser ted. Supporting hint on either side; they went Armor four blocks , from the house, and then left hint lying on the side walk, knowing that a police' man would pass within }Alf an-hourl They then returned home. I • • All happened as they exiSktted.-. • The policeman found Sir. Haile • hag on the side walk, and knew from . his breath that he had-been drinking'. As'Mr. Haile would neither answer 'nor move, he naturally supposed him 'to be dead drunk, and had him ex pressed to the Police Station.; The next morning ho was brought before • -the Police Court on the charge of -drunkenness lie wasstill'under the influence of the drug, and acted as If drunk. He was fined three dollars; and as.hohad no money _%11.9 taken to the firldineelt. He did not; fully recover until the next day, and could not imaglnehow he carnet° beat the Brldewell. The last think be could remember was. eating *supper ;with his wife. Ilemanaged to get a; note to his partner, and was released wards-evening. I • . Wiled- his wife and her •maid left ' him in the street and returned home ,I they were disappointed to find. that . they had not obtained money - enough to PAY for the dress and some 'other articles. Mrs. Haile saw but one way to obtain it,,and that watt to sell her husbands watch and the other things she lied taken from him. The: next • day they were sold by the maid; at a pawnbrokers. The dress was ahus paid for, and Mot. Hallsattended the • party that evening. When asked why her husband was not meant; she answered with a sigh that she feared he was on a "spree;" that A had not seen him for twenty-four hem. When thee party was ,over, MIN ieturned hob* well mdtstled, and Maud the drew waited her Atuehm- Theu Ole admlyter hi* Mi. Aseticin as Mr. Halle was released Itobithe Bridewell, he went home and there found his wife in bed, sici and weeping. He met with a storm of reproaches, she accuidng hlm of having been drunk and 'haying lett her to keep company with some vile Woman. She• asked him, In a meek and injured wanithe didnotrenoem ber how he left her after sapper two nights previoud, s4ing he had to see a friend on business? - Was that the reward homey have for ecuisenting to stay at • • 1 Ali these teprawhes were moisten with tears. Finally, Mr. Halle Was allowed to speak and ho told here!l he knew; he had foand himself In the Bridewell .with his money, wa tch, &c, stolen. How, why, or ,wherefore, he did not know: She declined to belly° Min, and called upon her maid to bear witness that her husband had said he was going to see a Mend on businem. The maid did so. Mr. Halle protested his inno 6ence, and was finally belived. The next day he was able to find out, by inquiring at the armory-and sub sta 110n, that he had peen picked.up dead drunk in the street. Beyond that he could find out nothing, and the whole matter was a mystery to him.. But for one littleuMdent, it would prob ably have remained so forever, and he would never have known of his wife's treachery and wickedness. The incident was this : On his I way toll's place of businesi, on Satur day morning, he passed the pawn ' broker's where his watch had been sold by the maid. Ho happened to notice a pretty chain in the window, and entered the store to Inquire the -price. While the pawnbroker was getting it from the window he saw his lost watch in the ease on the cowl ! ter. ,He asked who had brought it there, and the pawnbroker described the maid. Mr. Haile could not even imagine how the nuddlot It, but deterthined to have her arrested at once. He had never, liked her, bellying that she exerted a bad influence on his wife. She was immediately arrested and was taken before a Justice ofpeace at the corner of Randolph and Canal streets, who - heard' the ease. pits. Halle went there with the maid, and earnestly besought her husband not to prosecute. lie would not comply with her request. The pawnbroker indentifled the maid as the person who had sold him the latch. Then came the tableaux. The maid confessed everything, telling Mr. Halle that if he aoubted her he could look in his wife'S,trunk, or in quire whether she had not attended the party. Mrs. Halle denied noth ing, but stood there trembling, cry ing, ' confused. What i her husband felt not easy to describe. At his repeated request she acknowledged the truth of what the maid had suld, acknowledging that she herself had taken the watch and other articles. At the request or Mr. Haile, the magistrate then discharged themaid, and the party left his office. What .the result will be is not known, ex cept that Mr. Haile declared his in tention of living no longer with his with., Thus ends for the time being this domestic drama. TUONAN AND NANIIVIJLLE. Ofall the battles of the Slavehold era' Rebellion, the finest as to result ivenats, the finest as to execution, the finest strategically and tactically, the finest as to study and as an example to be referred to and cited hereafter, was Nashville. It was Indeed ade cisive battle. • It was the Waterloo of the Slaveholders Rebellion. Some of Sheridan's fights approach it in re sultiveneifi, but cannot compare when the forces respectively engaged are taken Into consideration. Nashville was a first class battle in every sense of the word. A soldier's interest does not begin with the • lighting. It be-r. gins far back with the assembling of the troops in methodical, steady, pro graislve preparations for something which should be satisfactory when it came off—nor does.it end with the fighting. There. was a crash -and a dfispolution on the one side, and an in stant following up and pursuit and a dissolution on the ether, of which there , are but few instances in the military history of the Old World. The antecedents to the battle were worthy of Napoleon. according to a friendlearnat in military lore, su preme in strategy; to which opinion however the writer takes an excp non. The action of the battlewas worthy of Fredrtek, incomparable in tactics, to whom our learned friend and.the profiting by what had been fought out was worthy of that Blanch , er who mi m ilit t Id:flied energy unsurpas sed by a of hatred to his oppo nents, w i which - seemed to. make hint and his soldiers in a great measure in sensible to fatigue, want of food, or even'the deprivatiqn of aleep,hardest, to be borne. So much so that either through his influence or fhp proveN bled Prussian spur,' the very horses. seemed to become patriotic. This last remark refers to the excuse of the French General In Russia, "that he could appeal to the patriotism of his men for extra exertion, but that the homes had no patriotism—the only appeal in such cases toem was oats or their feed in general. ' It has al k wayei been considered t the aim - paign of Nashville was a part and parcel of Sherman's grand operation of .1864. A critical examination of the facts, since all the facts have be come known, will . hardly bear out this view of the ease. When Sher man wheeled to the left for his march to the sea, he_ left Thomas as inde pendeiit a dart' as lie reserved for himself, and a much more important part; since all that he had to do was to march a sufficient and well adjust ed army; whereas Thomas had to create and organize an arniy, and then fight a desperate • antagonist. While collecting his forces for this battle Thomas fell tinder the diatip probation,of Heise who never pardon any shortcomings except their own. Tlidgreat loyal Virginian bore the impatience which growled In his rear with the Ha 1100 equanimity with which he watched the fury chafing In his front: lie was content • to appear to be besieged because lie was resolved to welt until he got a good ready, as Rosecransvxpreased it, and. because lie knew that the duration of the siege depended solely upon his good will. and pleasure. The accumulation 'of his tomes very much resembled the gathering of a thunderstorm: around the ;wok of a mountain—growing darker and elenser, fearful to contem plate, while the surrounding sky is still serene, and only a few murky clouds, floating here and there ili.*- turb the smiling azure. Then conies a sheet of flame which blinds file eye quickly sucCeeded by a crash MS if nu merous batteries answered batteries along a lengthened lineofbatt le. The eye-is dazzled with the rapidly suc ceeding flashes, the earth quakes as the storm clouds descend amid tor rents of rain, and in a few minutes day has almost become bight amid the roaring of the waters, the howl ing of the wind, and the graining of the smitten forrest. So it was with Nashville. The country stood ex pectant until the suspense was omin ously burdensome. Then . almost simultaneously with the rousing of the Lion from Ids cover the country recognized what an awful wrong it had done to Thomas in doubting for ono moment the eapaeity to grapple with the occasion, and convert- una voidable delay into such a triumph ankisisue as nuirb than rewarded the magnanimity of Logan, and shamed the general injustice which had dared to mbess,_....auPretiend theft glorious man who,could is= the miscalculation of his powers In silence, and then In the fulness of time strike as no one ever before had struck on any 'battle field during the slaveholder's rebellion. lAnother circumstance must be taken into consideratien. This battle was Ifought in the depth of winter, er rath er at the worst period of the year, ... ~ , ~se~, Ay when it is *pima & to esIZI what the cooduirdity,Will Ptive while 701 the zigor of •he sems certain tomardiUst itselflaPhru4kihe nmstaikslit to ommeme, Or Sir - the addlesi - and their animals lamppost As the battle itself will lieLnaade the subject of another article, It is well to pause a moment to *udder the Gin end who annmtmded ,Unicin ferces. :Shortly alter.tbe tattle Itself °Muffed, the writer penned therfol-, lowing synopsis of ids cluuncter:— Thomatiictor of the great battle of Nashvi is a solid: la la Renoir ty. Ile reminds a , mintsgrand rY reader of thespotles Macdonald— not brilliant, but always reliable. whether charging , the ',num Inn ate". churn of thelBpulgen, or' the chaos and crash of the Austrimibatteries at Wagnun ; a sUctacie worthy of con- Olderatlon, eit he r whervordering his drums to beat the charge in order to , encourage his men to dare-confront the'avelanches of the Lentin (Gar- Irison) Ails in 1800, or when ordering his own conduct asan example where , his column had to triumph or to die, on the plain of the Marchfleid, •in 1809. “Ohl paled km bare, trout teak to mak Impetuous Om 'WO math's career uwhkb . . • Belleau emu Mails spettokte stem the current Of the rebel arum sad nu The Impeeeksbie rock of granite arm Is stately taus of Immeblllto . Describe the hewn thusderteo amen. mou th Dlethargleg lames of yield are mend.”, Subsequent events have proved that this eulogy is far below his do; Pert and that, the country never be can to appreciate, until it Naas too late to testify their appreciation bya commensurate 'trust, that man who of all others„• in the display of reali ties, mane by far the -neatest to- the 'destines which with the lapse of years truditionboetry, history, bun combe, and distance, have Invested the superhuman, or loftier defined popular. conception of the greatest of •Virginkuts—Washington. From the outbreak of hostilities, Thomas stood as fair and square up- to his work as he had already previously shown where and on what side he was to be found id the impending struggle. 'No wonder that the South jooked upon his rejection of their criminal causeas the worst condemnation It could ex perience. A thousand gilded heroes, with all the specious varnish laid on to pre serve the plate and hide the treason, .could not by their assumption of the rebel gray, in all the elegance of cut and wearing, make up for the simple putting on, by .Thomas, of the "army blue," mo dest _and greater in his modesty—in a subordinate position. than Lee at the head of the armed foram of the Confederacy. Thomas never failed. Mcmcevered out of West Virginia by thewily Rosecrans an adjective which was nothing more than the popular way of expressing consumato strategy, Lee needed a Stonewall Jackson to carry him on his enthusiastic and capable energy through the succeeding campaigns, in: which' foreign aristocracy and home snobbery hailed him as a ' con sumate victorious general. This comparison his been instituted be tween Lee and Thomas bemuse both are Virginians. The, first was of the numerous-class which held that feal ty was owed to thethate; the second of the happy few who believed their allegiance was due to the United States.. Thomas needed no Jackson, nor HUI; nor. Longstreet, nor Stuart, to hold up his hands in the day of ' battle. Alone ho could sustain the ' *eight of his own burden; yes, and hold up the arm of any. other whore lied upon him in the hour of MIL What Buell found him- Rosecmns found hint, always thesame—gregter only beamre the occasion was ter —always equal to every occasion as great at Chikamauga in command of one wing of the army us at Nashville in command of an entire army. . Of all the great generals to whom Thomas can be aptly compared, the. spotless Gustavus Adolphu.s iSiIL4 fit test parallel, wholvas-said to , resent. ble a Cube, with this motto: ./Equilas *elver et ereetus—"who was never dismayaior puzzled, from eariptrum hood to the hour of his death." Aor is ho unlike the virtuous, and Illustrious Gustavus in his personal appearance, who was as remarkable for the uumly.masslvenes of his head andllgure, as indomitable Interplay .energy and forbearance. Both were alike wonderful In their personal In. fluenee and it is stated by an eyewit ness, himself a distinguished • malor ge neral, ,tiutt in t grad of oflitrrs and aenehe n nds in Chicago , when a storm of indignation arose nt the treatment to which they had been subjected by those who were charged with their entertainment; and when neither Grant nor Sherman had any effect to still the tumult, Thomas arose, spoke a few calm, earnest words and there was pea Ce. • . NEWS SUMMARY. —lowa is suffering from too many wlld pigons. —John Morrlogy invear. ThlM is kind of John:, —Tito fruit crops in Miii.vissippi luivo boon injured by frost. —Black bass and porch me plenty vt Presque Isle bay at Erie. " --John S. Newberry has boon I,appotat ed State Geologist for Ohio. —Brigham luta eighteen hforMon Sun day schools,ln Salt Lake city. I —Doolittle, once a Senator, hal l opened a law ()flirt' In Chicago. I 1 . —Cornell University is trying to secure the cervices of .1. Stuart 11.111. —7,000 hymns is the great result or C. - Wesley's literary labor. —Sleighing was good In Now Ilanip shire as Into as the 21st ult. • —Tho number of Northerners travel ers in the South continues to increase. —An exchange think); the uniform of the letter ,m the should ho a coat of mall. • —A.largo Swediati settlement 1m being formed in the neighborhood of Kansas City. . —.l.St..l.ouis Insurance Company has appointed Mini Adelaide Gapunan, M. L. an extuulning surgeon. —Lord Macauly was the person once complimented by Sidney Smith for his "occasional flashes of silence." —Flighty-nine years had Whored the hair of an old lady In Fort Waynu who drowned herself on tho 214 —An old lady who has just died In Boston, bequeathed her property ton friend, conditioned upon the' mainte nance of a survivingeat. —The Olaerratore .Itonicine says the Pope is now .engat, , eti in!negotta ating with President Grant ;with a view to ceding a Nuncio te Wash ington. —As Grant Won't xty nlUch about things a great many things! are said about him, about half of which are incorrect and the rct are not true. —A very 'tad private house in a goal Meality in Paris can be had for sB,ooo a year th gold. A very elegant mansion mils 21,000 per annum. —The grandjUiy at Quebiv, Calm da, has found u true; bill against the boy Chahner, for shooting' Ensign Whittaker. —Rufus C. Nash and Clitirlw H. Squires, two of the most expert eoun rfelters In the country, have escaped from Jail at Albany, N. Y; —Gilbert Roberbrou,aJewelar, was found murdered in his store' at Rye, N. Y. Ills skull'was crushed in by a gun barrel, and be was robbed of seven hundred dollars. i—About half the town" of Helena,. Mcmtana,was burned Tuesday. Nine ty-eight busing houses and about forty reddenees were destroyed. Loss $.100,003. The honaelres people are. enaunped on a bill overlooking the town, l / 4 alai are in a pitiable State. —4 girl named Buil*, aged thir teen yaw, residing , in. Orange, four miles from New Haven; Conn., while passing along a road between the two places on Tuesday evening, was as saulted by a negro, drugged Into the woods and violated. Tlie villain ;made his escape. . ; • 4~ s. .~~ . tet • sin " , 7'41) . ~,' r , ~., a .,.. j ,,,,,,, , , L ...,: -,,„, -,-. '•:...itA '..-oltp , :tX -.., .., - - wi'w ' Beton each ,eager, 7,: t . -And silenes Ellbs.tEts Or. , , ,' - , ''',„?''.....' 1 % 'As deeps. when ithe,handtVta 'l.. ''''''',.,„," • : . T hrlll.l44o l9 ol lall t ilt t i.44:ll - itl ;I - Then,_ gear ed by onii each gage. sprung us; And deal:Sad In turn Ids brblndago.pe , , _And =nod, the loved oriel mow 1.., And eack as band on hightesalsed,..... , t Ma , Lady'. grace and beauty itsalowl,i,t", filer coasts:ley:Ord Ouns,t't,. -,, :' , ...V.1 'Tie unwell*. tLerizt's ; iirgt gr o k: - " ,'.: On hlns as Sud. those tog ef.rdk' d • • Indlsnt knight ' -'• "1 1 0_ , . g ______ ..iougrA d0.....ir: , ,,, lot Envied Isy l:i, _,.., rex mi In Atairlit .1 11 4 11 ..;'.1 - ,_ • The flower of &NW • ..:''..: -• ' - . . Elt: Lead ilitibd 'di itttlebig•l"-- -.:, .--.. 0 Idttinil drinkiafter WMO •illtemP ea'hir: ::''-- ald .r.t,3 ~ ~ -.. i " Whodko,inupptileyerywd , ~. ~,, t boeurt4thbi l imtplaii , 11 To one .wiseeeionsOlaitzwanballia4- • •'. Whenllghter guidona king hay. past 7 . So tali 41s, and tittativki 'ts .. • Tonne wham lOve bath longer - dwelt, Moro atioply ll*l.lo_4tote kelnly fe11, , , Than am ~,d'47477,..:.'..,:.. 'Each guest ispatarted idlhe Amid ; , And laid his hand upon .14. itorN4,: `,,.; . , With fury dashing vim: • And Stanley erledi"' We crave therugime, Proud kulght;otthlsinoitpehrkesdisne, Whose love you count imp high.," 13skt1.6016busild' reathe me . ~ ; n ams' al If h in e - candan would ~, 140)14 - :-.t0" , , Thus lightly , to another, . ~ !,, Then bepthis noblehead is wha' Would give - that 'Word its revere... due, And gently said: " My , Mother r..-... TUE Outwear-TA. . 42, ;/1 4 .. 4 4 ,0 =0r the Nord * gives the. fo l lowi n g ,P, the Chespot Musket s. : ,,,!!,Eiperlmintit with this arm have.slhownthetthe,peee ent military msnonerres must necwithri-, 'IY be changed. Tho °mention made With It la such that.entlfir battalions would be swept down , as if by asannOnado. , — The men must present the anapest ear taco possible., They ,mutt o+, taught to spread themselves oat as sharp shotere, and form groom behind trOM and on ad vantageons , proposalwat made that,..whan the troops are OrriMil In linnet battle; they should dig a 14-mai and throw,: op. the earth before to to feria a rampart; but for, th at to 6° done the soldiers most,be armed as' mapper; and sometime would be nairatfr.f.YOx °Lode suelientreutismerds. 8 _4, . 0 SOW -, lute the men's knapsacks will !q IPA before the first line. In any mat, theta. mation of squares will be entirely cdrui:., dotted, as they do not resist the and the troops on the flanks cannot fire. . At present, tomtit the heselest shock of cavrlry, all that will haneeessaky, is two lines, the second of which will laid , the arms of tho first. Thepartth lie plop ed by mounted soldiers In tattleappears to be so much reduced that three-to , urths of them might be suppressed * theinsury, cavalry especially, The enly use of the horse will now be to makeroomMois";an cos or pursue . togitivca.; ..In the nest , campaign .a matter of importance will ho for the army to understand the power of, the musket and not MU. Into confusion before the Prussian needhi met. The war should necessarily he • week of at tack and not of &tenet+, as what Is want ed Is not m monk troopawhe stand firmm as siddlenswho,advance.: .Tbe,F f eustves and native regiments et Algestick.woold; bo of great utillty.,l.;; , , Air Ottot4((anidti) dispitch :Wyk Mr. Gl' alto - lade a long speech - the House of Ceinitiforts, supporting his motion relative to Fenian raids. Ho made an addition to his previous mo tion, so as to occlude the correspond anon between Canada end ;the -U. B. during the Warw. defended 41t gieat length thepolierattantalavmul eloseti by saying, the ',emirs° Of the United States government appeared to be dictated by a desire to bring about the humiliation of England through herdependeueimt on this con tinent,. hut t did . p ot -believe, the plan woul succeed. Mland would not ibr A moment give. way, and,,„the periple ;or etuiede would isustulalet to It man: Having repudiated the idea that the policy of Great Britain toward ; the „lloutialtat was. Any ,of abundonnient. • Mr. Galt elbsed maid loud cheers.' —Anna Dickenson succeeded. in getting one woman in Des Moines to start to work us a Miner, that trade "was probably chosen because so much spouting um be done in It., and even the most anonymous of Mb3s Anna's friends can scarcely deny that she is a greet spouter. the tinned States District Court, at Savannah, Saturday, in the case of William lionn vs. the James River Insimmeecontrany,the defendants' counsel demanded the 'Jury should subscribe to the iron clad oats of the act of June 17th, 1882, which was rmd to the jury, when every Juror left the box andtthe trial fell through for want of a Jury. • —Rev. J. C. Lovejoy ba,s, been re iniAred- frern -. the - 'C'n.stom- lionSe at Boston, and his place has been - glven to Charles L., Mitchell, a member of the Massatchusetts Fifty-fowthileg- Iment, who lost leg. h r' the • servkt, of his country, and was one of the first two'colort4 men - ever - elected to the Legislature. _ -, . —A prize fight took place ort•Ho.n day tnontinm twelve • • milete from Richmond; 17.a.ant the..Yo Railrotul, between Charlie Doherty, an Irishman;ittut !Tom: Hanimond, an Englismart,fOrthreettnUlted4ol lama. side. 'Sightysia - -warods were fought in two hours arsltotztfinults- Doherty won. —"Martha .Bmaga?, whit e and Alma Coale 'bake ar eted at Peekskilld Y.4.lnr With muniefine atr. ng to the former. The woman ates that Cornell tad: the child alive, sewed it up tap, beg elMi Vell it away.from. hOltile,„The' Y was found In Foundry Pond ionday evening, partly encased in a bag or sheet.. _. _ • spinsters • ingiltlhulelplua have been in a high state of excite ment recently; they tire 'a Charitable class, and thinking It a pity there shontil be , So :many odd-felblrs in town, determined that it should not be their fault if they went: away as they came, unmated. —There must certainly be more than one woman in a ward—even in Mobile—to say nothing of the • men,, and yet we read that Col. \Vm. D. Mann, proprietorbf the Mobile Daf fy Register, - married ' • his ward last Friday. l'erbarkg Alabama sant:- tions wholesale polygamy "wits •• —Worcester, Masct., lit et•premp-, tious plow, besides having the,inter collegiate bout races she - assumes to have the oldest man living, whereas he is only "107. years old.' —Neponset, • Mum., has a house which Is believed to be the oldest in the United States, excepting the old. tower at Newport:Atha two htin 7 dred and twenty-nine years old. —Monsters Of the deep nreflockleg to San Francisco. The other day a whale. was.stranded .in the bay, and now a terrible - hettied 'fish, with • a shell like a turtle has heel; c aught by a fisherman. ' •- —The Democmtiottientbem Of the St. Louis City Council, .tieing 00 majority, wilt net scoallm'Abelo-. publican Maorts howinations UMW' he makes ha lf of them from the Dual ocratTe party. —The interesting question now be, hie dispesscil by an Israelite piper in eincinnatits 'Was Joh a Jew? This we dedine answering c but we know he was no physician, as he was notbz log if note, patient., .• 'art ...WA.; to :11..f -It Is said that 700 000 Orsons. are empJoy ettin Europe in getting cOal out of the bowels ofthe earth. Of these 300,000 are in Great Britain, 133,000 in Belgium and France, 80,000 in Prussia, and the rest scattered over the other countries. MOW3PAAIANNaeDiMib , iikIa =I in , , .. ~, l IIIMIIIW, Ant . li"..o o z.i i ,l„-T i t .pith ~ ~ .. -t-,,..._, ,,..._, . , i t, gr d iV ig f i rsi- Wir w ,ylr 01 A nrll2;glM ••I , • • ',..•) t.,.Vtoti• i. u,r .2, 0 1,..erm , . ' ;14.01A . " ' - rimiritresigliiii fit ticiadieClih OratiVisistai , NOPOWWW ygA 4 104111 .1. ..P . . ° Sz. =-10, 411 , 11.116:u rf-1 ; .il's F ile vietai llelk kl• '4l on .* Otablitili li, *WSW 411 :=2WA r ATINT a g RIIMINcebs thelarril 104fipote. as:, .r. ...1 c - 110,4141P4raillisiftailliiik 11•1101 :isiAdetilftiVity DWI Ithilladalli ink or 40 . w ....- m 04.000. tO WM , WWI ill to bilhillf sli•l' iskorat i V dos di , to rat di Owes 4 ) , sal siatoir pain& , ~ in tolai of what *bat sanci..ll , a kw prat atavism' lartayala 11vd. 11 .4a41,4ai1a lint. liwytaini, s' wanntikan '- •• ~ • t 11. T.Moshody,' , • ' Abiteellatolte.', ...i , I Santa Heripay, , John U Gibeao, . 4 Rabat M'Cknna, lowa= Shilaida 4 AMUR Watson • *ay. ItinatilL A Dr. Aa. a_ juju*: 41 . 111,1fallf,D. tialo4 , iDr. 1:15.40. ani. 110. 1111110 w Val Dr ~,,„ h i m, , , ..: , .144iM it , 1, • Dr. JaL.ReLlwark 10 woo d le blitollallaer; - II alai* lam , .1.1 79 0 1 9 44 1 4 1 1 M: n autim X04T044 II ISO 13 Bar 'R. Enos" "•-• 'l4 Jambid=r4.. 24 txpL ups tiiimpin, WON. P • 15 Pula. .S. Moans Vaidaldr Dam , i 111 Re WOW; UO." Ma XablivUollowik a KmWs. , .0 Joh* K. liavali. 11111 .I`. 1114. O. y- • to Auto I/) do, ~ 111 Jarna di rikaide ka _ad SI Timor it. Davis arroomalkaraa •I•,i IS 1/itylr Haab : . i Wan. Daalvp _ , lit Cat W. 019=, SI Andrew W. J 114 Than Itrodshaw, Sr 921 impel WOW . ',, As Yttearsibbaw. 99 Ulna Sawa. - ,-. M Robert Radaunr a lin. L Patterson.' ' WIN* i BiaddinW Ir. WED= DavialtaL .1 . a Dian Raid. 8913 a Shively,. . a 311 bani Real , 90 Sanaa Danua.` 4 " al JIM Reed - a INZ lbw. D. P. ia• - SI Wllllualteed, OS Robert In= 114 .Thel Reid, pa Geo. iv. aa nn mos nester 94 Flask Wiwi'. 741. Osenge Wags, II Jong Ilkhardo?,, ,semg m: flukey: • •••• • le Sera 100 Muth; , Plate 'l' 101 Jabs Pierce • • Thauqui . . . . 114 Jarnes Mauston Learrnlyi MI • Marthil= a ; 271tIcber4 Staley Wlllionkfiegran 4:19 Jamesp_b Mcer 40 Thum CarrF ran 41 . 03 John Lowery 04 J.-W.Plionanser 1011 Jamas Thomas. 105 Robert Wallace - • 10711M1dolMattrillt 10S Thames Matzos, 10011 Cir. • 110 Cris* 0/tourha 4 - I.llllaary Tatter Ilf lliesticto llatillet •"- 113 Ell. Higgins.. ao, , 14 It. L 111111enrki h Less. 1111.e1ehael Woland lII' William Pietetaad' 118 Ras Wm Nesbit lls Maury Bradford • 111 Witham Strocir, , • Canna' am - ""' Wm. glicierstai' 47 semael Cremes • 48 oseph MeDermlit a*zw. Jas grDena ltt. , WMLan Wagers ltav B Sawhill parblogkat Eagle isba Y. aVaiti 4415.:M W Douala. al Wm IrDasMd.. Mrs Nsiret_ brattell Ss Akm. Welts 159 Mrs Laud,' . . . el Milo (ong. Ilkston 131!ove In Intrudes:in oar More we metre biome pay i a r seata i nt t n e ber of ollw .attnes !men . ,Th t a lLorl a = thing. are nearty new and embrace the newest and mold homed Myles now made. eseeptlner Mom Inantored by myself. We wfd Wed at i my low 'srtng three dam engines on hanfi, of about dfteen bone power capacity, they nye offend lola° rir!".I;O7I27LTHORNIIXT. teb ' , YAW . • WALL- PAPER . F0r.1869 • Tbamaimalriaboeny.Jollae.Dodine.. At oar nonmodklas and opinions Salad iteairti, annpletoanaorlarit of tiny and Essa4iir styles •• Of - Wall-Papew. . . Unglosa l al and Batts dn4.6. . , .. • , Cheap fisigh:and'White Plorsf ...-.; • . ' AldO, *refine/4* dt• -, . '.• , ` .; 0, .X.X.. ; . C . r.o'ri - 154. '' '.. i rwiiinirtint 'a nilliar,lthfidi4 ffhados; If ignred and .Plan r sit lONdrir Odes Iliad ever perorn offdred 16 the city. • ~ • - -*- ! ' - 017.112:1CAN111 MK . '' • Il . .. likelidlcdecemeelSollbtodtoWicdorale Deidgic Wood , •' . TIIO3IILIPIVEN &CO..' ' No E. BMW, hawses:Oh and Glh are: 'MU eocbekir Il4rion4 awl; Pitobarch; Pc , --;- • . CLEARANCE' , SALE; HA VINO kind Ca preseili stoic ton pump F9F.t9iF ImAt!for,.cc7 will Re- MUVOIO 4 ; Sll. l , abhuE April lRt % "sare: - Irouble) and expenre of .timvingo.iro• am,uow ClOiatig out our Stock Or. 2 • : , HARDWARE • AND` - go 'O TL.ERY Al.iGrestly Reduced rrifesi, LINDSAY, tTERRITIL EUWER, 337 Liberty 0. 1 Pittthurgh, Pa: marlo Nicos'ExpLoarrit. The New Light Petroleum Fluid Glyn twice Hallett of Cuban oll,!tiid Is fate usider drumstauers. • • • . Can:Not, be Exploded. The indaralgned are 'now tnainfaettiiine. and lime fur sale Milton/ Petroleum Flulk nude by dlatillation.lirlitaot th e ald of compound., which la gnu:Wally taki=lace of Carbon IA, in all places where Int • . .. • . • fldenta wanted in every town. Send for tilt , color. Address., . • • rAulaxig 4 Co., nAND . gTIMICT. " ; • • PtITSBUIKUIt. • - . _ - Since .aad .Coanty Tax. .. • Irlin County ,Trannutt win attend In the serer 4. townibips and bo r oughs, tor the purpate or reesivink the State and Musty tazei , Itor the Te 11711131. at the time and, gam& ilqiigeit e d be ls v: • Tps.:el,DOrds.i, , Pian.l Philipsburg boro. May IT, Dielterstarstiotel.' Wooden bantaiKke ilk &Teske, lb Kerr's; Nadel& nannouty, In la. J Y Mail's store. nannoey kiwashitt` " p ta. hotel • • Itoehester horn •,10, Donate' ' . Hotel. Rochester towns ip, •• • tt, do .. do Bridgewaterbons. ' . it. it. Dr. Leyte oCla. Yaltrion borough, 25, 'DOI nonce: New Brighten hem , " • 'PI., hi lluro sp n -- ,do • ,•• or'• 11qtel. • ' Patteisoi 4 Deaver , •Nuy IS: Hotel at depot Glenn& Itot.& Ohio May.3l. a: wa, Jews Smith's. Georgetown burn, ••• ii, p erg (Whourt's stone Industry tp,••... • , ale. AWs *Wet Brightontp., do Richey k Akio s. • Lllg Darer& Nets Urestones do • .Ido .11141paHronlak des.S Jigui oo ° 4 / 1 . North Sewkkly 2:p., June 7, It. nazen's, . Franklin tp. • • • Ato Antersrelth's Store. Marion township. do '9, Geo. Ibutrell'e. ppt i .ki to do 1Q IL Wallsetiv. , : Newkewlekley tp, 'do (leo. Rancher's Economy tp. do 'lt, tie°. Seeley': • Darllngton•ler. &tp do 121, IL Coulee store. :dq • do •do -4,4. Y. , 800th neareatp; " do S D K Joaph Lawrence's. 'Chippewa township Jet, Nis Caunkqrhattes. 8. nearer II Obits de I, Kat'. slim. • Oblelogruablp, do; 3, Id: R. Deringel... Vitiation kora,. do .2, Drs. Stevenson's. • Harmer &Green, July 8, seresreogeles brx shop Ra'w'er tp July 7, Reed's State. .• z ! de r a tr et iops i te do it 4 1k 7 " . I)ittl u e. nookstogn bore, do: us, Hotel, • .•. do & Green Ipso do IL • do- . • • do 14.17stra store — • Iloperfell do IS. lititAlhe's More. - li st* fp - .do EilloWs.'• rrw iti. Can be made In adjaiini tiornithiru, 'Jill cense* mast ow or hekrt•lnne oe tse thry.wnt be oaks:tad by prorogi. cars with costs.. . FILIAL! SLIM Age Ulf.] •• • • •‘•• •• • Trsaseter, IL . . Improved Crystal Palmeri Cooking , pawkier of the Bridgwater Yoe:airy Material. thslas to a traterom piddle for their very liberal patronage and Inform them tuallotwalsael alo elleOurfnt the kmprovid Centel Pm b leir Sto re. which all tamftr a ew„- awl or heartnary, ever di-. arrered In ,the old patters have been remedied, ftligasaahs area enlarged lad remodeled, etin Melba alterztbe mint :amble one Meranada , • • , t THIS COUNTRY, esai. at bhth,llllNloolo3 OTUALLICD. that I hate Sepplterralth. the ,old ittern °tetrad] AilmOolltbrovi (or the Beaver .Eras they am celled IS thseolletry) met, itititiMie theism the tint anddag and , ba _f Ham that ant made talkie .7HeOntager otlha traprovM meta fiereasid 's e ms & enlaered•bake astaX:elibuy mid dews. , gm,dgeite, multmeet or ands!e end fire Meta. MAW' expettele the mat !hirable pattern of a re back that am Is Mid. Adld/otir orders to Tboi. - CaliMell; sehower ' Mee. Ho' Mange in itna.and splay warms °sawed-to ldelLver _stem la any part or the sormandtolt tombq e eo stereo ANL jOres ezeharser, beeaadaaad stages shrillest hand and foreals deem • • 4r14.1f • - HOS. CM/TIM& A riz.!. Won Mill WWI", la the .nto of la - iAliT 4 . 4 Vilyi. ant birw. barely Visa rills 14 , oinn amd adtr dolor i tzed . nix of: litcatimiih. We sell them br elmll t i t= Militias to salt—la arber maims oat To oleo with small eapttel this Is a Mn chases for prolitabls iatesnorat. Call an or addiesi SANER iIItOTHEN ladostry, Dearer Po., Pa. AprU VI, tape. et. ; 1t.t.3 .a , '' • 4' . l'.l -, 7 4 i , r.T/ . 1 119.31M11 , 41511 aliPt t; '' keg , A: 19114700 ; 0 0 1inti r li 'vi'; I iet.L ; • 441,!siociidc'.;!+ h P t:p17.:4 tirteirmffilllA4l 94* sir vI‘S,A . ;v. . Lv : ar i a. - : i•!. es •! I toOKsISTATIQURT: Pi:tl , l;./ . . :1•••, ,eii:::?...,...'.'".,::,iztri0 --A.; ' ti Je , '''kLiageilirichtslad of SUidani BOOM'', ~:.1; P' - f1.7. ,- t 3.. p: ' . 1 7 . , ... ~.a ; ..;1,7! EI , CIKNOW , :. , :• i , 5...'A !./.: ri:; , !I -; ...!..z. .1 THEOLOG k 1 , ,, ,, . Wa G . T4g, 5,.. LETTREEL . . . . Ell= lienkt;ScbooloodCollbaa Tdxt;llbotly Statlotiertaadlc Doak 'l6itittenstittitlyibn Band: tisiatrilinrchinai 'Sappho& with crag• 4 ,. .6 ' • thing 1111-0111%WeAt ,?! , T ~ - IS ...11~Vr/~ r __ ~ ... .t:~ ~ , `R. 13;;DAV,18 ib CO., • 103 Liberty:Street, Pittabiggh. tustot3ay.•-. - ;- .• ~ FOQDSY Spring and.nninmer Goode., „, • . HAIM JUSTRECEITEP4 NEW STOOK OP GOODS OF FDE • • - •.• LII'I 4 I7.ST -13 T For Spring and titluimiier Wear • , GOldlelilell'S Furnishing Good c0.146T/i14TLY . ,U,21 . 1.1A?('1). CLOTHING . UA-D,S.TO DUDE* In kkai sad most taabloaabli styles, and at awn mnen, Jr.. ' DIIIIICIEWitiIt, Pa. 1=33 SPRING; 1869: . . 'M'Elr4,•Dickson &.Co. •Yn. 14 Wood dirt et, . OF SPRING:'-STOCK OF:: . DRY - GOODS diii Notions, s And invite their customers, and the trade generally, to call.. marlo:3m:' Warner. von. YEA RS INDIAN 'PHYSICIAN " of Pnniburgh, Who has had twentyfive years eiperienCe.in practice, rind, whose Grther was known for forty years, as • lADIA*PRACTITIOiER, . . treats with tourers Iltlllll every form of disease. whether eremites long duration.. The Doctors inanagemant of disease la. in mmy respeMs pe culiar to himself and predecessor. - hid any pen sons who may avall.L.entselm of his treatment for swilicisot length of time will MI fatly bane. glad or caved. tfat ail curable. No matter wader what system of practice ,tho. patient. my hare beepitrealed for chronic dlsesse., smotig which tea; he tuelndsa many female compliant* u wail • as loMpimit Consompeon. Asthma, Colds, Coughs, Dispepth , and tltoeu varions.disenses of the Sttipmeh; . Liver. llowels and Kidneys, Dropsy, Scrofula, Tetter:ltheuniatiem, Ery ' sy peir.x.. , llenneblid 'Affections, Sore Eyea,'Nerrous Disorders; . and Many others., generally. yield to his well known practice epthraCing the use of -many Indian . ItemMilei. Where desire ;1 patients May be' treated by rnF respondence, and medicine lent by having the tatter. aerobe 1, giving age, rex, ,ke. • Office; medicine. and consulting rooms, formerly on St. Clair, arc now located at 211, Penn St., near St. . Clair, Pittsburgh, P. . • [marl (Vico AV • J. w • Oa o • ~..0 •••,_ o. !ET ‘-0-4 Cci -4 A , ) 44 'I4P $.l = " rl = ;,V : a : ' V t • " . 1 ." MO NEW FAA i LT GUMMI( . • . . • PROVIS I ON STORE! ; Rochester, Pa. •• • , By 00E,t D.A.RRA GB wuPltf NiAir OE POUND Fia2ll yOroce aid' Provisions, Nei, Flour, • C lr eae laepr .ls ,7l1 ter. I.4"t ittras m. ° L i r T Uldm . - Conies; Y t r lngirs, Cratere, Miasma, wi agery ik 7l7 l"' ' In their line.andtbey oepe ng irtsiet stienUon to , , . heeiner i . • I.I2I.ItItAL 'samm• OF • Tilt PATRONAGE. 11.11.-411 kinds •et Councry fisture biked it the itarlinprice. ..,• !: . " 'COE ac DARItAGEI:" ,itoebeettrOet. . • Q. LDEADIAIDLWI OFFICE, • W. D. sr Pmta'a, Prririauilia„ April hat, 4NO. Tab L to ere notker • --flat nine lad day of AWL A. D. VW& War: rant la 111111144PICIATAI halted against tbe Retail of Joins lir:Cooper.of Bower MN la theCoonty .of , Dervor;aad,atitte of Patooyissola, who • hag bean adladsto. a Bankrupt: ito his own petition; . that the' payineit of any &Mt Itad deltrety gamy to mutt Bankrupt, to ht., or nee, mutt Waugh, of any loosen" , by • lielleehtdden by low; that a Mostlaa repel et the io/d Banktopt, to. prove thik .Debit. and to &age oar or more oaelsneee of Lb LOW. inn ba'beitit Coal t d ItaaktaWr, to be hoiden at the Raton Room. to New artahton, Pa., baton P. A. Knox. leo, RegOter, on the 12th day el May, lb* at 1 o'clock P. IL THOMAS A. ROWLEY, U. le.hlandial, as blemager. •i al , 0,11,0 b• • , • • • 4, •. 4 • 4 t. f 4 .4111 S I TOVErB3IMWM I !511471 1 . 1 ' 41 1 LE.4 V 4; twee Wee J•sil ea flew, ier • 'n' L•rul ; .kellud ;e44 r -•-,7 4Tierecestebeceelt!" ,, ie 1 ,a, ,:„ ...b e irtenet.eer el. y; .. • '' v 14a ,it V ltiSSt rita ; 1 . t.e4i. .61.1404 , 1 . 41,1 eve tej , 1 ...,,lev. • siee‘figenelakfAA &I .tieral Aelires. ' TR!fiT.l : . 4101. • , ~ , 1.14.0,,, - • lettUriPt; MI. ..494 1 100. et 1 „ • „ 0 v.:, . 1 . , me 10.1 . 1 „ 110119 Wa re ,iS ' I . .4 . 1. . .4- 1 .444.1144. 4 1qii lee e•eeet er., , nte • ',ft rsl 6' .:1 , A.' ‘' • rl.. A . Ol Jr. • ...LI I '''l 4, ,wyg i aM a llalabll 1 /Ceilek.X.COMkPl i f I . g , . • 11 i illit• 111 -L. , N i.f.6.44) . Ai , - lei lirleM,oll l ,o .T . TrM71,... ..lt ' f ,•13: :1 rates,oo i , 1 "G ..li`itZtoves ..r. „ 4l3o,d;oxvp, • lIME r. /IL ,^ 'llteeilligy , :4:: I',t•l Sato to Ord tun PromPtlY; ,;:kableTeraw q 7 ,11 ' Faroe der Attention Paid to .1410vorL. " , 1 0 7 LIIMARP4.. ?' t . ,P.5:K..5.5,f..4:Y . t. 1 1E.'.'..'“: irept'COofiquittly ou Hand t w i, Viop on tie lOwor tleayetr. Call 'and Examine .cetr Stock before porchadog [ranrlo:tf B IL 9°Y , F arrell ag Co. • , • Lead Pipe , Slieet k.Bai Lean ' • MIANUPACTIIIIIIIM Apie ' Pig Lead, Iron Pipe,,Ruhber Itose.g.te ,Guages. Whistlesr& Valves.'lrou ,Copper Sinks nntll3otti Tubs; trim Pumps,' Farm' Pumps and 'Pomo i • • ad every desetiptlon of good.; br Water, Gas . . . 170... 167 • SMITHFIELD STIIEET,' Send for Peen Ust. B ACADENL—The ta vet' dea l." drug Dos beennoopeued by • - REV. JOAN ME MARTIN, R. D. lii•Preint euaresetel educator et tbe dart ma lbw Mad: !pm out tarm.,l4 ef104"," 4 1-P' t • • • .MONDAY; JANUAILY. 4TH; 1869. • . ."' ' • gindents kyr both • lent,' Raj learn. tbor. anghlf,W Comer roll Course. .uwie uer virilet varsity amnia, ,L.osomplition. elocu tNc tion. rhetoric and astronomy, the Hebrew. Greek sot lads a nd logic with philosophy. natood, men-. tal and moral, will . he, dllteotly taught by ,tha plopoos to are Willecm's besellow and Bead era ; hUtchell's Goographies with Pellonl 'outline I,laps. Greenleaf's WathemtWltteriel • sad Dol. Gouniaam.. rag additkinal peOlcsdara iplease addresa • • 'J. W.' lit.airgiN.• ; ' 800 1141, Moose. Bearer eiltadTahr lerossec ii:OcErusrrvirt,; HAVE JEN RECEIVED Onq (.W h it e 10 Linseed Oil, w ..< 10 N Mot gtd . a si 100 " Choice Flour, 100 Kegs Nai 3 Hhds. N. 0. Sugar. Large 't4 t cioc, bf HARDWARE. 'Pref.& Stock of =I Boots and Shoes ! New. Spring Style. DRY GOODS. All Bought Low,: and for Sale Low March 1at,.18G9 : • ; • Wall Paper For Spring of 1869. At No. 107 Market ht., Fleur sth wisenuct Jeackstria.,.N. , A large Mock anew rual , claborato signs or, -Paper • Hangings, 'stated Sur Drawing Rims, Nelms, jlalb and together with_ goods oV the Lowest Cost, now Oenttig, and 'to which constant additlana'will be All to trif:dispreed at at prlcesto suit the tones. ' • • JONIL HUGHE/3 8110. .marl7:3as. • TT, 1110T11114-lal tem • testa MTN( bees 'masted to the ander dime al be seats eC ORRIN Chletkri_dieN, ft of Okla .lovis/iWk r. rm.; an poThouunratirr odd &OM win pre • peat ileum d stabile eat pelMeateet; end W aSted to said estate ate nothhd to ma theaddlate payieset to.; NORIMIT M, DAWSON, 11•XlISL DUNCAN. lara i hr . Sen. iseeMl-tlpprik MI nem, A-dm 4 31 n on , cold esl.' 4 di wit 4914,10,4 w .7./++% ' tof t hrti Aittootitcollllo.6 io - ,Atei, • • AA' . 1.14 „ 0 ,1„,,, I “.."1:;:lilt 1,1:6 ,7 , 1;i0t . 5,i. St 1• , Beth . ' -r!v,74:gr "•=x ,a a 1 i , :lotonoti .t.e; !4.r , , -,A,tha10 11 00.41.. I Alto* of. Goods, LOWISTCASIL'PHIOI% ~#rer to the at thols% 0 • :„. , rA /.. 1* ;44. 1 ?.,.;:- • 11. • r !!.! ••••• 0 6011 , ;r5 oir ! coasts or :wassa AJILD, 40110 p Malin zr's'e7r 4 "l‘ . " . •-• • I - : - 4 0 -, V•4111113011%-: I ',et is 'to -0 ' A I M.. ;R00P., 44 Y4 6 3 " 90Z, - ..g5 4 1Y.M./,q, r aP , • „ ... . I. „IIARIVaItEt„. e, I: , ROPE. oCUN PACKTICO' YARN, /WAITE LEAD and PAINTS ,dry and in DM, & Pular aiisoimiware, -- and Willow Wel, - FLOT.Tit, _ tlll haling the Selo Agency of that CELZ MATEO CANTON CITY MOO. foe laud vtdolly. we CO sell dukes at MO B = atelt, oaring freight' " • . iEED,. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL llli Buffalo Scale .Company, w oar Scale; at lIARUFACTURESS PRICE . Eur,eka BpPis Sulphate of Lime cud PLASTER PAIRS FOR LANDS, White sad Water time it italessiel Bates.. BEAVER SALT COMPANY'S SALT. 'Pittsburgh, rt. dlwayaon band. Wit always bniv for Cash and aeilcrao.r. Call and.examine oaLGooda and Da convinced. DETAIL GOODS DELDJIDND YE= Or Mrl . . . I i ,3 / 4 4.1 VI- i . 7 1 i ii iiii T; as irOMMan Cram.-4 am mare prepaid! td lured& al} Maser with masommit at Utah dime, thearbOlu Of the thne,.ra il t entre momenta. Butner new, Tight ad prob able. -Fin? mob to Wiper maim la easily wiro -3 ed earn btmu of either , sex, the hove And did* nearly Mr Much ea men (heat indite*. trent. are orrered these •who II deed* their whole time to the habeas; and, hat elm" per. ion who sem Mk odic. may ten me their ad dwis and tort. lio.immtwees: „foe thawsirlead_ I make the Mewing unparalleled ogar: To all who am not well madded with the Uglier, I will rend ST to's=e troubled writhes an. IoU nii, se.. mut free.. &le went hr ma roe ICJ cte. Address E. C. Auks, 'Arminua, Me. ''•••- • .. • . lUoOnnti , DU u p !riiia,,_ .. ~: )Pq. tw„ ipid belt usortsent or • .:.'DRUGS,.:.,' • .111 De cl 13a. 0.111. AIT .53! Ll:ctu eakt,,-,wiztap Paint i I is • - TOILET ARTICLES, .SOAPS i'ATN3I3I+. SLKDLCIDIK[i in peat ..srlety, all at inn teat quality. and sold . clAysper t han can be Vaught at any other : • Drug:Store UN the : • ihipooto•• Pemali PM. a Pests, pee box • CLeeteueseee, SI:, Clark:#4, jl. Ttot Largest Stock of LAW% & LIMP TILLIIMINGS, LANTERNS, STATIONERT, WINDOW OLAS a PUTTY. F.rer Waged °stelae of tire city, at Iluora's Drug Knee, and sold cheaper than ass lv hougbt sup mhere Let those who doubt 141. call sad wv, owl they wladuubtatt more. MSS C has. 0. "tuna, 1f0;,14 ' Public, Conveyancer and 411 mice Agent Deeds awl, Agreements written' aud acknowl. licneto takes, Ate.. • • t been duly comm'saloired as Agent for see oral rot clase Insurance lboaresales. repireart• Is: Menne, Ufe s .Arcident, and lace stock Hu. yoreuttr, Is prepared - to take risks and write politica on the moelllberal terms. • Alas. /raut tust the 'docker Ulm" of Snit class Ocean Steamers. Tickets sold to and from *Upon, in England, Ireland. Scotland. leenuany *lid France. 1 IMVIMilililililli1;1;1 Wall :;Paper I _ • - Wall Paper ! • Wall Paper I OIL C111.07r13. Z 011 401cbt32.! dIL C,,raCorM3EL's 0112 PETS,, cArsiluvrs,, catupwrs! =EIS BeAtj. Nulheim, BRIDGEWATEICAPA.. flip: just r eirel :t targeat(it:ent Writ Paper, MEC • '0.441.1491 :: M I thl Cl nbs Books. Stationary; all kinds of Window— Shades T. Looking-al:lases, Trnnka, T A,V.E Ist G SACKS, - Satchels, Baskets. Chlldren'irearHages 41k liragous. " A 9 kinds arTovk Mosley U OO . ll 'Also, •An Extranarvo Assserlment of STIE . E REOS COPES ,STEREOSCOPIO 771EWs • - • This fs-• the largest „awl best eeleiited Stack of Goods in Wu county, and bought slirect from manufacturcta, at the iowatt price and • will, he Wild lower than td‘t wher.c. - • ' NUILFILIM. , mitittf . . •, Sra VIII: NOTICE.— lotting best. 11101 Pl ll lllo l ahkibiasisM7 Cessatimdos. ass, wlll fad than 2 * 000100, nier Mice. on penny of mon week asIB SPA Ist, BBL By artier et as Baud. sprleektfi JOUR IL .*VIII(. Clssk. 4, 1144.1 CIO' 5E= PrAOL I Y, t-DITY GOODS. =I m.so,nauscY, Atao 4acirs POD . .c~usae. I fl WA VI 1 . PURE And 130andiess, MO DYE •STUFFS: BRUsII s: J. - noustic IEII I. 3 t.MMONIPA 4 -#0 1 14,7 7 cteleee . is 4 . otoven. .lll 4l :Lea f ( 4 . rrar • • leiscissitil (wiles* la are of a; Ll= app =t f Ul la ris be" rpm; •• I • 14. 1244;.1irP1E !Il a ti://74.12011D • • ;recitative+ dale °LBW Peti "liiplaidis 'discharged for genoll OPrs)aurlove obtain soe x *dumb, lune ist Ilbeilarged Je r *dumb, Msittehf sot low Wag th q boo, served_ privicVng the iffjuri tigi received fre service. For p ink . TS sespecab assitAiseesisim star p) r *int cishasAsti mar Wren (cd, swa IL P: 1:11C01611, .10134140 M th,coppssthirP. O. • 4 ' '! ailevv#4 riots, 'draws Beiellinnuidiy 1,,,y ' 441,0 Wiwi SW% savior pestioe. thellosuble aeQ .fiplme M Koin6 k, ForrasirrEire. • VALUE Paillell3loll. eittutie,, , A ,7 0 zadits Astottnett of aD quatk... t above' MUS' camosur au kw .4 I.add as lemeadd latioatt. '' ;WIDOLI.DALE & IiETAIL AT No:l6lMirU. tetdStAilderreik A re., Nu, tltisitc res. • • • ' A IsTIJOIVID ARCM or ar, vArtcrir GClOl* FM be bead in asaaber dacestoiat et the taft. NOM. agarrna DBY GQQDs. JAL BURCHFIELD& CO. Stkialr Street, , • prl&rl433lLTlZ,llltla PA. HAVE .11:STOPENED NEW GOODS. Table Linens, • ' - " Towels, Napkins, Catkh, Diaper,. . • 410 Martine Slack Alpams, Black Alpaca Lute; Slit* and Colored Silts, Real Scotch Gine* New Printa,,, , . Ads; Ptak, Buff, lihte•Percala, : ) •, N " Uoods for the HolLisys. M. 8. litikint, BRIDGENVATER, PA " • •' IeIiVESSLY itECEI%ING A PRES SUPPLI OP GOODS DT SUCH POLLOWDC, DIPARTMZ7I77 i Mi. DRY E&OODB. Steubenville Jeans, White Wooku Blanketa„Artny Blankets, Brad ' ley'sßarred.klannels, ' Alpacas, Delaines, • . Plaids, Bleached; Brown and gold ; - utllratur. ' Chinchilla Zoths, Woolen Shawls, Brown and bleached Muslin., Dril lings, Tickings; Prints, Canton Flannels, Hoisery, Gloves, BUt-ia;11 mitts, &C. G-rocerie i s, CoGm Tekraingis. Molasses, While Miser Di. hoiden and Common Sy ro W . Candles. Soap. Sko inul Mod Nom • - Hardware, Nails; Glass, Door Locks. Door Litebro. Warr*. Screws Trbl• sa4 Tea Spoon,. 314016e18.c05t Roza m. Firs aikorsis and Pok e rs, Na.l. and Was.. WOODENWARE. Matti, Tubs, Churns, Boner ?tut. szd Linseed Oil tt White Lead ' Boots and Shoes roy . msx LADUMIND CUILDRI-4 Rifle Powder and Shut, Blastin: Powde and Fuse. Flour 1624,4-41 de: Queunww•nr %.11 heavy was delhiered free otchsr:e IV clove sarsalon ln Amstar.. and by enable/Mrs. Anne a well ~stead .twat at atoll the titre.st kinds eanally kapt In a cons, store. the undrrslrns. bor.. in Ilse Wan/ 1 the pi. Is merit end Metre liberal share au' public patronage. . If. its. IL& NirrE: it. dect3 e8:111 J . L. 11. DAWSON. Soaves Fall*, Pa JUSTOPINED,A I:AlttlE ST OT OltilUlOi NOTIONS. UOJTB & SHOES, • HAROITANS. • OLA&SwAItS. (lUSSNswAss, TIN&AItS,. NAILS, Dltuutt, si Wtadow Ghia all olleo . tad double cr.: 4 Speelal attention 'aid 10 illlug order. Ar Larko oixo window Elmo. •Ite. • • - LINSEED OIL. CRUDE 13118:ilnO 011 SENZINE. • COALE'S PATENT wags II Piaui, of ot , Colors. t:rouod, lky sod .0 ("' Porrhasets mitt do well to all sod astir our stock of Paints beforc parcbssit c rlo,"*" Afro, Cboteo Brands of roar Is Bawd oat . docks. all Wads of Gouda, prod Na fatal La 'acting* for Goods. Hotoembeo doe_ plaas, dna door above .s. co ldly dimwit. dde of WOOL - - 00,10V:tr. 'mentors Notice.—idled ~,,., EI • mentary on the estate villonnAlt.t • man, of North e•ealckli:y . !tp , hocir; letenintottal to the ll nth! rs in ttll per ions 1 1161 ring thenoelvel indatted to the estote'ortnld decedent are trionded to make Immediate payment, and Mow ha , ' tog claims ordetottoda against the oats to prevent demi for aettkanent to • - JAB. W.ARNOCK. ES . r. • sprl4;6l. ...7 - 11 di 11 21 II
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