. . A d vertf.s'ementsare inserted at the rate or $l,OO per square for first insertion; and for each subsequent insertion 60 cents. A liberal discount mad% on yearly ad vertisements• A space equal to ten lines of this typo m ew, u res a square. - Business Notices set under a bead by thernselves immediately after the local be charged ten cents a line for each insertion. dvert)sernentB should be handed In b • ore Monday noon to insure insertion In that week's paper. Business Directory. BRAYER. I I J.CHANDLEB,Dentlat,otlice over Mx.Thoe. 11. Allison's store, Beaver, Pa. Greet care taken in all operattoba, and warrantOd to ;The satilitaction. Give me a call. mar47.ly. HIES CAMERON. 'Attorney at LAM. Beaver. hi °glee on 3d st., in the rooms formerly oc ended by the li , e Judge Cunningham. All bus E.. 413 entrusted to him nil/ receive prompt and ca refut attention. JOHN B. YOUNG. A ttorney at I.Bw. [Mire and restdenre cm Third P t t of the Court Buslnestit promptly attended to. apiCtly H. Iktcr:REERY. Attorney at Law. Office on Third st., below the t'ontt House. All bust n,.4 promptly attended it, jetht, I'. Kt'llN. Attar).) , at Law. Wilco east ~~i• end al bird street., geaiver. Pa. marar;fhly Al , NUTT. PLITFICIAN AND SUJILMON. 1 Inn t talutc.-raloo paid to treatment of Female 1 , -ea.,- Residence and office on Third street, & doors we iof the eourtliouse aprl3'7l:ly [ - E - NEY MERZ:Manufactifirer and Dealer in 1 Itis , tr. Shoes and (inhere.; Main st. [sepaitly 1)D EA VER DRUG STORK, Lingo AndrtespiiCu Druggist S Apothecary, Maio st. Prescrip t ~ns cureitins compounded. ostp.*M;l) NEW BRIGHTON. COAL E, Dealer to C. 1001:11i-giaasee, frames, garden and flower-seeds and fancy fowls. }:ills street. ticw Brtgbtou. ikep2r7l-13, NAT IS.EN ER .t BINGH A M, . • anufact arerr of ear V rine*, buggies, apring-wag,na, buck-wag onr and vehicles or every description, Bridge t••• Both practical workmen. Succeaaora to George Metz. martil) LANGNECKER, dealer In Watches. Clocks • and Jewelry Itepairim; neatly executed, Broadway. near Falls-sr. 1'71.1; I \i," Nli't•EltT,' Baker S. Confectioner; he eP ' cream, Oysters and Game in season. Bails, Pic•Nics. Widdings, tc., supplied. DoVI r i' ti. SMITH, opposite Press care, Bioudway, 1 • Dealer in the best building hardware. Oa, 11113 Mad putty, which he furnishes to Contractors /Ind builders cheap fur cash. octls 71-ly I/• dF. METZ, Bridge street, dealers in fresh • meat and (at cattle, will visit Beaver on Tuesday, a'hursday and Saturday of each week. ocr2r7l-iy a i"..F.11A RD —Dry-Goc,ds, Clrocerles. Notlona queenaware. illghera price for good but ter and produce generally:. Oppoette Pres.bytert an Church. Broadway. - 4 (pep-2771-1y F V'lNTElt.—Watchmaker, Jeweler aua au. 2.24 Broadway. bet.ern 1 y I I M. 11. PacDONALD Dealer in Fine Tea,. choice Family G.rocrri . tjueenpware.Gia.. Woodenvrare, Sc. Broad • a). near rev:7'7l-1y IL TUTTLE, M. I) —222 Broadway, New• Brtiztitcm, makes the treatmeut of chronic di-- ....ea and -female weaknesses a tpeclalty. Con ..l.tation free to the poor every Sunday front I to 3 p rn to t tALLILAND Dettier;in fancy mid 1 lkimnstic Dry Gonda, Millinery. Gror-erie.. l'•ovie.lonr..te. Broadway. New Brighton. L.mr: McCLAFS Photograph titillery. Every , a- I • *frt. - orPietnres nmltly ntectitud. Corner of and Broadway, New Brighton. [pir I\-M WALLACE. Dealer in Italian S. American Marble ; blanufacturea Monuments, Grave , aha at reasonable prices. Railroad at., rear new Depot, New Brighton. jeep? II II If. MILLs, Tobacco. Cigars • and Gents' Fitraishuz Goodri, Broadway, v at Apple, septrr7l ly G g.TkWARt CU.- Groceries. Coffee, 1 .1. T. - Sugar, Canned Fruits, and eversthing lonrid in a fret clang grocery. Bridge r.r., I.oen.t. MAI/ & WISNER. Dealers in Boots, st.oes & Gaiters, tear Ste Mol l ." CollfrAltal• v, t iir,mdway. YOUNG S M. UNISTEAD. Lieaters to I Notions. Ladies' Furnishinz Goode. 110.oery nthing. Cot. Apple Broadway. je-2.14 lioN TON RESTAURANT and Edenso ) Loos; mealos a! all hours; table supplied with the delirajes.of the season Prlees low. kland. cm. of Paul and Broadway mytril-ty I )It , isPECT MOUNT NI. itsetties. .P.Nt.r ,reaus and small Fruits. Three miles ast or Wu:Non. '7l-1y) E. TJIONIAS. ) N r p D I or. an r c t i lgtc l lt i : y•••. N..n Brilfh!on, la. kStiecessors to L. B. No felnt2'7l -1 y • ltaker% Conf•-•ttonerl, 1 : 1.; • ; eel. ntteuthan viven to. %yea - ~,tter• and ice-errant [-:eirld 1% ItEltt., Merchant Taht,r4. ,I) V, a Itrtglihal see tidy ~ ..pll,ly. ' Nuss tV:11-tai's Mock'. I re he.:,ah,e• •en: I 1) AN 1 . 1 ., 111. 0 , al, l'ap••• ,dow I. Itrt+3,l. ~~~~ iu Lin;rht~~+i. I'v BEAVEII FALLS. - fv.81..1(T:•0.1 Ju.tly cde bralca llutue.nt Z•tfst wg MatiAloe, Lildieo and be c.nn ILICCd. 5141iL t B. Falls. o•p21 I F: t‘' A Wl' N. Deaten, In Yankee No . Man, Beaver Yallp. e‘epl3:ly ,; p i t t w ltc p ,o n ts .. an a d na shore of •-. 01,1, Main St. : Beaver Falls Pa. lanlSOs BRIDGEVII ATER. ;- It'El!' 7 llAN, Manufacture or lool,.and Beldiv St liridpnA ater. (ner1.7.1 y MOLTER. dealer In CUI L of all klna., e • Bank at McKinley P Run angtr7l ly GSEPH EIDEGGEB. House and Sign , Pato. I ter, Bridge . Bridgewatt.r, Pa sprit! 71:ly k littE/111. Bridge street. Bridgewater. Pa., • Peeler In Gold and Silver Watchiw; Cloei•e. Jewelry and Slicer Ware, SPeetaCitli, 4t , C Watch : t - ioekt, and Jewelry repaired. 1 \ MILLER, Fashionable Tailor. None 1.1 but etperierated workmen employed. Shop ,r 1 • ridge at.. Bridgewater. I'a. fely4-71:1y AM ES PORTER. Tinner. Dealer in Tin, t'up. her and Sheet-lrun ware. and iron Clstt.ru Pqmpoi Bridle at. Bridgewater. kseplt'y k C. BURST, y 4,00,10, Hat.. Caps. Furs, • Carpels, till Cloths and Trnmning,: , .Bridlre St., Bridgewater, Pa. 110 C HEST 1E H 11 ILL SMITII S CO , Fancy Dry tioodo. No- I clone and MA leery. Madl.,un Eq., near Dia mond, Rocao•ter, Pa. k,e1,14:1y ' 13.i1„;tk.-± In t i N ia t ta , o li n e d r-nia t n e : i ‘ r v o ti . e t c , 1 , 2 „ scriuttona earetully cor-po . unded. - - • +:01.-C(7E SCIMELFIN, Agent. -Bakery and k Courectionery,o)!•te,s uud ream in ~-avon Particular attention ;;teen to ..dpply Partim Italia and Wedding.. on ?atoll tN.tice Diamond, drc 13.11. \ !IV , . It Rll , BlN.'Millinvry. Fa.tilonable . 1 1 making S ladle.,' F urn Fitpt ntvr abuve Cross' Store, New York pt. I Manufacturer* of NVagon*, 1 Coach,* litu. , gles. Spring-w agon*, sulkeyk, Ittaekvrotthho: and llor*eebottut dour In thc tu.”..t. manner. ROCIII,ter, Pll 1V.ep71).1). 11 LINNENBKIN IV'. Dealer* In t tome d,..,cerlea. Flour, and Mid Feed of every dr', r, Zion, cor Brit:bum S Adatn**treet*, Itoebe*t.•r. Pa *cpt.l3 S. JAM II CA LKINs Cu, a tern Buthle.Ta Sr .11dt - heater Pa., near thet'em etery• IW. HANKINS—DeaIer ltootp,Shoc* • tcr*. and agent* kr a Sewing mneh Hie; New York and K. lt. sta. It,* beater. Ifebtrl.l.l% I63II'ND UROTL, t,ttnvnilth New uork • of the beet TILIPAYriII, inane to order. All w ork teat ranted. Repalriug neatly done "Pric,-$ Low. Anarn St. . Itnchetder. Pa `. Janis. ly i 1 EN R (1 I' LAPP. Manufactorcr at, r I Fur-ll:tare of ail lingiirmi . Plow Factory. See adv't. EL C HANSEN. Drug L ri- Prehrrip ' ad.. carefully compounded. Water ,L, 1:,, `P E FM a SUNS, 1% hoksale S Itet:iill)ral ern II) DO rd t.rn t, 1.. 4! t•too••• I r•nt: Cur Wail r Jam,. •P AI MILLER a t ontra, tort , 111 i iloerr , . .11 •M. uufac turers of Ss-it, Doors, Situ: tors Se Immb,7 Lath a c ly uTT. HUT LE S W I LLI A M , ..SUCC,•Prittre• tot'. • 1 1,0 . 1 b.S Cu., I.;:mber Lntb & Shlziirr. Itude•ster dp:?s.ly lE.It'S LIVERY STABLES utiA y ARI ), bets ern R.ll ptation and t duo river ocp.t.lv 4„,,L TEFPLER. S CLARK. proprietor,. (fl Jottn.t.,a .1 [bops, Good accornruudatSbno and g...0a .ta -1,-6 Near B R Depot w•Cl9.ly FT). MILLER_ dealei to Boot., Shorg, c. Repatrim.: (lane neatly and prow! ). &!ore on the Diamund, itnehePter. Pa. ocil9.ly ,ALLEGHEN It" C1T1" R.J.s.WlNANS,Electrical Ph) Winn: Chron:c A dia4aees made a epectally. Of9ce, Warh ngton r:venue. Allerheny City, ila. I .1)14.1 v It' AN PC liT N . CORNELIUS Co.,—Denlerf in General el Jic Highest price paid for country pro duce Isul0;ly lIIISCELLAN 80 Cs. B SNEAD, Freedom Seaver comply. Pa. "'P • dealer In Sawed and Planed Lernett of all icthilo, Flat,. and Barges built toorder. }nuts 1-:y oIIN THORNILEt, - Manaraetnrer of the Great 1 Renablic Coolling Stove. and Patentee of Poe. vxtenpion top and centre. Falleton. Pa .1, E , NICDYLE, , S Mc vABLE SECTION BEEHIVE. PATENTED FEBRUARY 20th;1872. . For Wriins of Right, Hive mud Italian Beep. ad ..!roar.. with stamp. . J. E. IdOORE, ; Residence Bridgewater.) Rochester .Ps. - rnarrte..V.Sw 1 111. CONE, M. D., Into of Darlington. • having removed to New-Brightch. ofivre hie i , ervlccp, In all Its trranches. to the people be clty and Barrow:Wing cuouiry. Office cor ner of Bailer and Broadiatay. FRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL TREES, (, ILLENLIGUFE AM) BEDDING Pl. .\T-, F.st - rgyeens,Small Fruits,Asparagus Itmlt SEED POTATOES, choke Vegetable and Flower Seeds. Dahlias, &C. &c.. Wholesale and Retail by J R. & A. MURDOCH, liorsersinen a, Florists. 113 !'stattlilleld Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. [nollo-101 Vol. 5 4----No. 16. Misceliaueous. JJ. J. ANDERSON, having taken hold of . his old Foundry rosin, in Rochester, Pa., will be pleased to meet his old enstamers and Mends who may want either the BEST COOK- I Nisi sTOVR, Heating Stove, or any other kind of Castings of beat =Witt; and workmanship. The business wilt be conducted by tf] J. J. ANDERSON &SONS. Wiaial•= - o,JM7=I ..,j5-• I EDI—T..I.4.:IIAND ' LER, of Rochester. has 4•" 4--. %•-,"- --''''.; “: . >..NN'.'....s 'purchased the exclusive e ,- .. li=ete t right of Bearer county t....4,2„;,,i W • , 4.....Jt- •`• : • . to useDr.Stuck's Patent ~" • t:-.' by which he can put ... • =.7 i 4 : Up Vulcanite as thin as Gold Plate, with a beau - A.• Wu! enameled polish; and to light and elastic ac to perfectly adapt itself to the month; obviating all that clumsy and bulky condition, so mach complained of heretofore; and leavening tilt hr liability to break 100 per cent. In deSd,no ane seeln;_ it would be.wllling to wear the old style plate any longer than they could conven iently get them exchanged. All branches of Den tistry performed in the best end most substantial manner. In filling teeth with gold. etc., I chal lenge competition from env quarter, and can relet to living subjects whose intai t,. bare stood be tween thirty and forty years. Among the number Ron. John Allison will exhibit fillings I Inser ted some 95 years ago; the teeth as perfect as the day they were tilled. Laughing Gas prepared on • new plan, freein.: it from all unpleasant and dan• gerous effects, making the extraction of teeth a source of pleasure rather than of horror and pain. Prices as low as any good dentist in the bt•ate. Office at Beaver Station, Rochester P. novatn 'T .1, cIiANDLsa. 1 Brighton Paper Mills, BEAVER FALLS, PENN'A. PAUNTI%G, MANXILLA, ROOFING, BAILING, Hardware, Glass, Straw. RAG AND CARPET 3E: 24 _La. FP , And Sold At Wholesale at Reta►il b 3• Frazier, Metzger & Co., S 2 Third Avenue. r4r" Raga taken in a:chance. Homes Still Larger FOR THE MILLION! ante opportunities are now offerod for .ecurlng homes to a mild. healthy. and congenial Climate for one-third of their value five years nance. THE NATIONAL REAL ESTATE AGENCY has for tale real estate of every description, locat ed in the Middle and Southern States; improred stock, grain and fruit farms; rice, sugar and cot ton plautationen; timber and minerai binds ; city, village. and rural residence, and.bueineta stands; mills and mill Wet. factories, dc. Write for Lahti Itegisler containing description, location, price and ierm+ of properties we have fur sale. Address—B. W. CLAItKE & 77i National heat Estate Agency, 471 , and 479 Penria. Avenue, VEctihtnyton, ' 3;ti. 34, aaits.-L Bridge Street, BRIDGEWATER, PA. IS WEEKLY RECEIVING A Fmr.sn SUPPLY OF GOODS IN RACE OF THE FOLLOWING DEPARTMENTS: 1) RIC GOOD Steubenville Jeans. Casimeres and 'attinets, White Woolen Blankets. 'White and Colored and Barred Flannels, Merinos, I)id Ginghanis, Coherz,, Water Pr di, Chinchilla, • Cloths, Shawls, Brown and flack ;Mushus, Drilling, Tiekings, Prints, Canton Flannels, Jaconels, Table Linen. Irish Linen. Crash, Counterpanes, liohwry, Glor.ps, =EI G roceries Coffee, Tear, Sugar, Molia-geli, Whitt Silrerprtyni Golden and Common S'yrupP, Mackerel in bar rel. and kita, , Star And Tallow ennitir, Sump, Splce-s and Mince ?!leaf. SALT. Hardware, Nails, Glass, Door Locks. Boor Latcher, tillages, screws. Table Cutlery, 7 able to.d Ten Spoon., Sid Th Bells, Coal Bones, Fire Shovels and Pokers, IClallo and Glut , . Spades, Shovels. 4, 3 and 4 line Forks, Raker, Scythes and Snathr, Corn and Garden Hoes. WOODEN WA E Budzets, Tuhr., Churna. Butter Prink. and Ladles CARBON OIL, Linseed Oil. d, White Lead. Boots and Shoes LADIES' MISSES' AND CHILDHENS' SHOES In .rent rnrlety Rifle Powder and Shot, Blasting Powde r and Fuse. Fleur Vet•cl QuiDa-Thavwsure. al heavy goods deltvered free of charge. By cio, , .e attention to business, and by keeping constantly On hand a well assorted ntock of goods of all the different kinds usually kept in a country store. the undernigned hopes to the future as in the pant to merit and receive a liberal share of the public patronage. d:IY. - 7ch;:d Cash for Old Iron. VS *mall or large tot,. 1,000 tons wanted tin- Itnediatele, ui catt and wronght I. , crati iron, for which the hittheet price will he paid Inquire of (;111:Ell CU, l'a h 239 REMOVAL. Arbuthnot, Shannon & Co., aq7l4 I. Have n - •vol TO THEIR NEW BUILDING =Nos •_:35) LIBERTY STREET, sl rert, Ind open with au 2 ? ELEGANT :TOCK OF , DRY-GOODS, Notion 3, and Small Ware.l SELL at LOWEST EAsTERN PRICES Boyer. are invited to call C. AltlICTIII•i0T W. 'l' t4IIANNoN .1. G.'STEPIIENS()N J. D. RAAIALEY'S OPERA, Hat House, GENT'S FURNISHING EMPORIUM, No, 04. Fifth Avenue, PITTSBURGH The Best Goods at -Lowest Goocxlt , sent to any address, on approvaL rnay24-Iy. • ';',- .. 1.. 1 , • * W. , . . 'T. .:',... :L .. • , .'.; 1 ^ - -: .-.... ... .... :. ..• PITTSBI:liG11 tiscpl9;'o3:l 13. e-4. gill A N -D Prices. EIN Railroads. -S - PITT S.. FT.WAYMi t CIIICAGO RAILWAY. On and after Nov. lath, Ital. tram will leave Statlems daily, (Sundays emeelli 15311 °" ,- (Train leaving Chicago at 5.35, P. M. leaves ditt. 171 sATraln leaving Pittsburgh at LW lee ^c s TaLll , lB GOING WWII STATIONS. Ezr's Pittsburg-la. ...... . 14.5.t0 Wart 710ars, Rochester 252 :".11.1.1 sir, f 898 Salem . . Alliance 503 . 135rx !145 1 Gl5 Canton... Ainslitlou Om illc. . Woo.ter Manrticht. 910 Creatltne • ' ' lit Bucyrus Upper asudueky Fkrresr I 143 A 31 1158 950 Me 1241 Limn Van Wert.. Port Wayne. Cobnithla... %s'arsaw tlyalutith Valp.traiso.. Chicago 417 1 SUS =EI MAiL : Xxr'e WEED Chi Valpariao.. Plymouth.. Waraaw Columbia.. Fort Wayne Van Wert.. 920a.0 i =me 550 Am 91.0p1a 1 : 115ra, 9133 . 14.5 640ar 13 UiOvi' 35 Lima . 420 ' latax 1305 ' 505 Forest... „.. . ... 6.4) , 24,0 420 ' 63d Upper Sand usky .... Bricynis ..... ' A . 640 420 601 1 ereetline D . 11 . 10 430 Mta tt 11anefle18 72.3 1600 112.06Pri Wooster Orrvillel I 020 700 22 Martel:lcm Canton.. Alliance... Salem. 4 4 Roches Plitebar2 noo I sao 1 440 10Iast 1105 1 I 717 210 1 1210rw trls - - — YoungstoWn, New Castle anti Express tea% es Youngstown at t itt p. m; New Castle, 2:55 pm; acrd es at Pittsburgh, 6:15 p. fieturning. leaves Pittsburgh 7:010 a. in; arr. at New Castle, 9:30 a. m. Youngstuirn, 10:9A. a. ta. Youngstown. New Castle and Pittsburgh Ac commodation leaves Youngstown. 6:30 a. tn; lif•ve Castle,l/0 a. in: arrives:: at Pittsburgh, icr. to a. m. Returittng, (caves Pittsburgh, 2:00 p. ra; ar rives Newksastle.4:4s tienerai liusenger and Ticket Agent. CLEVELAND (.t. PrrTsßuttoui RAILitoAD. On and after Nov lith 1811. trains will leave St:.lions daily (Sundays excepted) as follows. GOINO SOL7TII STATIONS. ':MAIL. 3XX, 0.1 ACCON ..... MOAN 1215 Pa Euclid Street. Budpon MVO 121 !tavern's . . :630 13. Alliance . 1130 234 Bayard.........aniem 3tr2 W4 , 11e 440 Pittpharzh 41.411 640 Gl()ING NORTII eTATIONIs. 11 MAIL. IEX.P . N.I ---- Pit tpinzreii i 6:3oAxi titteral. P Z941,_ ) 409 Bayard illas Alliance )1135 I '6211 Ravennal:2l , arx 7114 Hudson , 11253 I 734 Euclid Street Cleveland 210 245 MIELE rEl!===:l MEI IleHair Steubenville. Wellsville. .. Smith'■ Ferry Beaver... 555 11‘.1 ... 315 815 155Px 410 Rochesier. Pittsburgh 001X0 WEST. 11T•71 , >20 , VAIL. Ear'e. Act:on Pittsburgh Rochester Beaver smith's Ferry Steubenville Bridgeport Be lair nu" , 210rx 41.14 'l4O 310 4.33 ti,TS 410 161 540 1 tki7 ti:kl 1110 610 TCSCARA WAS BRANCII. • caves. Arrives. N.Philadelphia 0;40a.m. I Bayard 9:45 a. in. Bayard 19.:10 p. m. N.iF'tilladelptda 3:00 p.m F. R. MYERS : General Ticket Acent.. Miscellaneous. CLOTHING STORE. NEW GOODS! summEn STOCK. The undersigned takes plea.ure in In forming he friends and the public gener all:, that he Peas just received anti opeuct A New Stock of Goods; OF THE LATEST STYLES FOR Spring and Summer Wear. lie keeps the hest of workmen in his employ, and feels confident of his ability to cut and make up orments both FASHIONABLE dkIIIIILIBLE. and in such a manner as will please hiN eustnuicrs. GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING GOODS ALWAYS ON HAND OW and see us before leaving your Orders Elsewhere WILMA:II REICH. Jr. may 4:70:1y Brhigewater, Pa RE 0 J. DRUGGIST Presoripaons CarQfully and Accurate . ly (bmpounded. Tnr: It Es f BRANDS OF ASSORTED laclic33zlast.l IVINES AND LIOUORS;, int.*, Oil MID 1)1 - 1.: STUFFS: ANILINE DYES OF ALL COLORS; GLASS A'k PUTTY; Sp.•dal attention given to f , ecare the beet quality of lamp" and Lamp Trlmmlnza, Lanterno do A Large Assortment of roiLET ARTICLE,, SOAPS, , 13 It U,SMES I).k TEN''' . MEDICINES, Main Street, Gearitr Pa. IDec7, "Mtt Notice in Partition MO r M MANNING, Leonard Mallory. M. C. I wit, John For..)lh, A. W. Brown, Samuel Kennedy and William G. Batty. take no tice that an Inquisition will be held on the ir2d tiny or May. 1572, on the real estate held - by you mid Jesse Smith in common. situate In the town ship of Ohio, county of Beaver. and State of Penn- Pant o r te 7 e t ra lbl i dy e eN lvania, bounded and doscribed as follows, to wit: Beginning at a chestnut, thence by land of Ill'ritehard south 31 1 1 degrees; east 5 21-100 per to a sycamore; thence by land of same south 154 de. green: rust b 9-10 perches to a post; thence north :o , cierees; east 21 2-10 perches to a past: thence by laud of said Jesse Smith north tir4 degrees; west II 45 Itt) perches to a white oak; thence by land of same N. 31t 4 degrees; west SY; S 4 1W per to a chestnut oak; thence by land of same north 5 degrees; west V... 5 7-10 perches to 11:1110ht! pile; thence by laud of Clark Thompson eolith tine de ogfrZeno' ru'ge"DtarcisPOrthrosth'et4'irs aPorn6l:4l6tlthedlecgarebeyvqleseendt = l eesil north perches g 1 post;de gre e,; g,lt :m e containi n g„thencewantdrpb place l i o n clp d r eoc o r.a f e hac i nan t e . d. 8 -Pi ge ( h )l. 4 l :. '' a g t i' lf i 'hi ' c% If you think proper. , _ JOIIN OBABL : NO. Sheriff. Deaver, April 13, 1873; iIaWARTIFICIAL HUMAN EYES INSERTED TO MOVE AND LOOK LIKE THENATUILALEYR, No Cutting or Pain Whatever Atinnkss—Dß. G. W. SPENCER, Sur geon Artistic and pentlet, 254 Penn 'street. Pitts burgh, Pa. 17XECUTOR'S NtrricE.—Eitate of Jane Row el an, deceased —Letters testamentary to the estate of Jane Rowan, late of Btg Beaver township (formerly of the borough of Bridgewater) in the county of Beaver and State or Pennaylvanta, do ceased, having been granted to the subscriber, residing, In said township, all persons having claims or demands against the estate of the said decedent are hereby requested to Make known the same to the undersigned without delay. aprlU;Gw WILLIAM BEATTY, Erect:tor. 11121 m.zr's. blur.. 323 l53Pa 747 4i2 ' 414 G7O 3W 100 (1:15 GIOAsi !OS() 225 Pm ; 510 820 .srx 445 F. R MYERS EMEI Accom EMI NI 11171 BEM ' , 'Vleli 255 535 400 ' OM April 13,1871; ly JOB PRINTING neatly and expeditionely executed at tido drace. MEYRAN & SEIDLE, kl Ylt N Sr. SI:111E1 L. E., 4 STH AVE., PITTSBURGH, PA., ' DEALERS IN FINE JEWELRY Watches, Diamonds, Silver A: Plated- Ware, Seth Thomas' Clocks, Fine 'ruble Cut !cry, Frefielt Cloekit, FINE SWISS WATCHES, AMERICAN WATCHES, JULES JERGENsEN, WALTHAM WATCH COMPANY. EDWARD PEHEYGACX, ELGIN WATCH COMPAN Y VACHESON & CONSTANTINE. UNITED STATES WATCH CO., CnnES E. JACOT. E. HOWARD & CO. "TUE ZIMEILMAN WATCH," made by CAUL ZOI6RNAB, Liverpool. to fully equal to any watch offered to the public, both In tlniehand time-keep- Ing toot excepting the Frodshanio 111113YRAN & SEIDIEL. novl9-17.] SOLE AGENtS. ROSABANS 0 S ^ 4 ; • ;. S Blac4,4nd Gold F),onti GEORGE W. BIGGS FINE ii ES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY OPticaVOnd Fancy Goods, &c. PITTSBURG 11, PA. FINE WATCH REPAIRING. please cup t 1 s adirertiflearefit out axe bring it wild you. kl4iy • ;7' ,111 .A _ sY Betwer, WedimUy, April 24, 1872. Miscellaneous. v•O4 Z . : .4 ,CD r 0 1r ..0, la Pc -4 ►• = cra Pt m 0, S '.O O O szi rt m ct ev: CM .e., ct , po- rtit 004 Vi T. Successora to J&inaman GOLD AND SILVERSMITH REGULATORS, BRONZES, THE INGREDIENTS THAT COMPOSE HOSADA LI S nre published on-every package, there fore it is not a secret prep.trAtion, consequently PIIYSICIANS PRESCRIBE IT It is a certain cure for Scrofula, Syphilis in all its forms, Rheuma tism, Skin Diseases, Liver Com plaint and all diseases of the Blood. ONE BOTTLej•OP ROSADALLI will do more gOod than ten bottles of the Syrups of Sarsaparilla. THE UNDERSIGNED PHYSICIANS have used Rosadalis in their practice for tiro past three years and freely endorse it as a reliable Alterative and Blood Purifier. DR. T. C. PUG IT, of Baltimore. DR. T. J. BM W?' LIR. DR. F. 0. DANNELLY " , DR. .S . SPARKS, of Nicholasville, K y. DR. J. L. MeCARTHA, Columbia. S. C. DIL A. U. NOBLES, Edgecomb, N. c. 13SED AND ENDORSED BY J. R. FRENCH & SONS, Fall River, Mass. F. W. SMITH, Jackson, Mich. A. F. W HEELER, Lima, Ohio. D. HALL, Lima, al io. CRAVEN Jr CO,Oordonsville, Va. SaliPL. G. McFADDEN, Idurfreev bons, Tean. , Our space will not allow of any ex. ;ended remarks in relation to the virtues of Rosadalls. Tonle Medical Profession we guarantee a [ Fluid Ex . t superior to any t hey have ever Used is the treatment of diseased mood; and to the afflicted we say try Rosedale. aztd you will be restored health. Rosadalls is sold by allihvggists. .prise $1.30 per bottle. 'Address DB. CLEMENTS k CO. Meaufservring Cantu:a, =3 7 7 Det.74llolZ s 106-IY. No. IS' 19,1iTIISMELD ST. Foq..ioord above Sixth Ai7e. Gold & SOPetfrateha. ROBERTS -HAS 1 7 1, E-MOVED No. 22 FIFTH AVENUE, (WHIZZ 1:100III Shot ) WHILE RUILDING. Our Grete4fliitialties: F.. HOWARD & COS WINR'*4TCITES Waitham Watch pti,i,ty'.llVateltra, . ELGIN WAITIV 4 - OD:8 'WATCHES . . . United Slatca Orlon) Watches. At LoisrestiraPrices:- - • NEW STYLES LADUtIe GOLD WATCHES, . , . Gold Opera apo"utr, , Chains., CHOWS STOOKIENYELRY, Sterlfpgl**,'Weire, BRONZES ANlni: . 001 N E CLOCRS. SILVER PL=I)V74E, A rne ric4w. cioctis, SrECTILES a E. P. I I Z I RTS, No. 22 ' Avenue, PITIMBURGB, PA. •-•;460. •, - Npecisl tudneemerl SaitolDelre from dis tance. Yls4y;cbdgapr 17. SELECT fciRLLA 4 From the N - orkilethodlit. %EDITION By lllit . De WITT Tale. Iff• .14roy ark' 0 t ,,, •:Lauuchsout. into 1004eep."—Luss. 6: 4. Christ, startingot , the campaign of the world's conquest. was selecting his staff offimrs.-11rhere were plenty of students, willaAtigh foreheads, and white hantllvand intellectual films, and reilnedilgatirs, in Rome and In Jerusalem. Chlillgtmight have call ed into the ApoOksiklp twelve book worms, OT 'ls, or twelve art. aces a group of rni lade a speech, - ta in belles [dire tough to make t I—their hands brow :suck led. He chf other rea...Ams, I physicully strong arn climbing . head' steal wrestled opening NI rough wot twelve in' o ct ct , ral et*. et , ti cowplainii they felt. students al their mots. of,and goe s out of the an apostles] wore corps class. Fu noes are be physical Intelteetwil ".6 built and 'the grist good. but there most be enough blood in the mill race to turn the one and to grind the other. He chose fisherman also because they were used to hard knocks. The man who cannot stand assault is not fit for the ministry. It always has been and always will be rough work; and the man who, at every censure or caricature, sits down to cry, had better be at some other work. It is no place for ecclesiastical doll-babies. A Man-Who cannot preach because lie has forgotten his manuscript or lost his spectacles ought not topreach at all. Heaven deliver the Church from a ministry that preach in kid gloVes, and from sermons in black morocco covers ! These fishermen were rough and ready. They had been in the severest of all colleges. When they were knocked over by the main boom of the ship, they entered the "Sophomore;" when washed off by a great wave, they entered the "Junior;" when floating for two days, without food or drink, on a plank ,they came to the "Senior;" and when, at last, their ship dashed On the beach in a midnight hurricane, they graduated with the first honor. My text finds Jesus on shipboard, with one of these bronzed men—Si mon by name. This fisherman had been sweeping his net In shoal-wat er. "Push hut," says Christ; "what is the use of hugging theshore in this boat? Here i. 4 a lake. twelve miles long and six wide, and it Is all popu lated—just waiting for the sweep of your net. Launch out into the deep." The ad,vice that my Lord gave to Simon is as appropriate fur you and for me. We are just paddling along the shore. We are t afraid to venture out into the great deeps of God and Christian experieace. We think that the boat will be upset, or that we cannot "clew down the mizzen top-sail," and our cowardice makes us poor fishermen. I think 1., hear the voice of Christ commandingous us he did Simon, on that day when bright Galilee set in among the green hills of Palestine, like water flashing in an emerald cup: "Launch old into the deep." This divine counsel comes, first, to all those who are paddling in the margin of bible research. My father read the 13Ibel through three times after he was eighty 'years of age, and without spectacles; not for the mere purpose of saying that Ite had been through it so often, but for his eter nal profit. John Colby, the brother in-law of Daniel Webster, learned to read after he was eighty l four years of age,in order that he might become acquainted with the Scriptures. There is no book in the world that demands so much of our attention as the Bible. Yet nine tenths of Christian men get no inure than ankle-deep. They • think it is a good sign not to venture too far. They never ask how or taw; And if they see some Christian he mming inquisitive about the deep things of God they say: "Be careful; you had not better go out so far from shore." My answer is: The further you go from shore the better. if you have the right kind of eh' p. If you have mere worldly philosophy fur the hulk, and pride for a sail, and self-conceit for the. helm, the first squall will destroy you. But if you take the Bible for- your craft, the further you go the better; and after you have gone ten thousand furlongs, Christ will still command : "Launch out into the deep." Ask some such question as,•"Who is Clod?" and go On for ten years asking it. Ask It at the gate of every parable; amid the excltmentofevery miriele; by the sol itarities4 of every patriarchal thresh ing-floor ; amid the white faces , ' of Sennacherib's slain turned up into the moonlight; amid the flying char iots of the Golden City. Ask, who Jesus is, and keep on askinw of every Bible lily, of every rave n of every star, of evey crazed braiti, Cur ed, of every blind man comato 14112iun light,of every coin in a 8 m y th, - of every loaf that got to - be five loaves t of every wrathful sea pacified, MEI ~. MS • 4Vt.ft Were rnakcs Much one's mpest The was want him. badly plicate le for ) care te,and makes I need othei Itn- must The well of every puisless arm streehed forth In gratulation; ask it of his mother.i of Augustus, of Herod, of the Syroptie-- nieran woman, of the .damsel that woke up from the death-sleep; of Joseph, who had him buried; of the nngel posted as seminal at Ills tomtit of the dumb earth, that shook . , and groaned; and thundered when ho died. A missionary in Francs) offered a Bible in an humble dwelling; The Man took it, tore out a , 4ozen -pages, and with them began to light his pipe. Some years after the nfisSionaq. hap- - pened In the same honk.: The fano, ly had lustiest their stip in the' Care ean war, and his Bibiellad been sent back home: The mlsSionar'y took it up, and saw that it was the very same Bible that he had left in the house, and from wide!' the :leaves had been torn: The ;dying soldier had tvriten on one of the leaves of the Bible : "Rejected and Scoffed at, but Shailly believed in and saved." The Bible may be used to light the pipe of witticism by some, but for us it is a stallin life, a pillow inAeath,and our joy for eternity. Walk all up and down this Bible domain! Try every path. Plunge in at the prophecies, and time out at. the epistles. Go with the patriarchs, until you meet the evan&lists.' Ruut wageand ransack, us - cZlaren:'Who are not satisfied when they come to a new house, until they know what is in every room, and Into . what every doer epens. Open every jew el-casket. i s Examine the sky-lights. Forever be asking questions. Put to a higher use than was intended the Oriental proverb : "Hold all the skirts of thy mantle ex teadest_when Heaven is raining gohl." Passing from Bonn to Ceblentz on theßhine,thescenery Iscompaintive ly tame. But from Coblentz to May ence it is enchanting. You - sit on deck, and feel as if this last flash of beauty must enchant the scene, but in a moment there is a turn of the river, which covers up the for mer View with moreinxurlant vine yards, and wore defiant castles, and bolder bluffs, vine-wreathed, and grapes so ripe that if the hills -be touched, they would bleed thidr rich life away intolhe - bowls of Bingen end Hoekheimer. Here and there, there are streams of water, wetting into the river like smaller joys swal lowed In the bosom of a great glad ness. And when night begins -to throw its black mantle over the shoulder of the hills, and you-are ap proaching disembarkation at May enee, the lights along the shore fairly bewitch the scene with their beauty, giving ones thrill that he feels but once yet that lasts him forever. So this 'river of God's word is not a straight stream but a winding splendor—at every turn new wonders to attract. till riper vintage pressing to the 4nink, and crowded with castles of Strength (Stolzenfels and Johann is berger as nothing compared with the strong tower into which the: right eous run and are saved), and our dis embarkation at last, in the evening, amid the lights that gleam from the shore of heaven. The trouble. is that he vast majority of Bible voyagers stop at Coblentz, where the chief glories begin. The sea of God's word is not like Gennesaret, twelve miles by six, but boundless; and In any one direction you can sail on forever. Why then confine yourself to a shot t psalm,or to a few verses of an epistle? The larg est fish are not near the shore. Hoist .11 sail to the winds of heaven. Take of both oars, and pull away. Be Itkeqsoitie of the whalers that go. off froth New-Bedford or 'Portsmouth to ho gone for two or three years.— Yea, calculate on a lifetime voyage. You do not want to land until you land in heaven. Sail away,o ye ma riners, for eternity Launch out in to the deep. The text is appropriate to ail Chris tians of shallow experience. Doubts and fears have in our day been al most elected to the parliament of Christian grace. Some consider It a bad sign not to have any doubts. Doubts and fears are not signs of health, but festers and carbuncles. You have a valuable house or farm. It is sug gested that the title is not good. You employ counsel. You have the deeds examined. You search the record for mortgamjudgments and liens. You are not satisfied until you have a certificate, signed by the great seal of the State, umsuring you that the title, is good. Yet how many leave their title to heaven an undecided ►natter! Why do you not go to the records,and %find out? Give yourself no rest, day nor night, until you can read your title clear to mansions in the skies. Christian character is to conic up to higher standards. We have now to hunt through our library to find one Itobt. McCbeyne,or one Edward Pay son, or one Barton Page. The time will come when we Will find half a dozen of them sitting in the same seat with us. The grace of tied can make a great deal better men than those I have mentioned. Christians seem afraid they will get heterodox by going too far. They do not believe in Christian perfection. There is nu danger of your being perfect for some time yet. 1 will keep watch, and give you notice in time, if you get too near perfection for the,safety of your theology. One half of your Chris tians are simply stuck in the Why not cut loose from everything butl.od? Clive not to him that for mai petition made up. of "O's"--"O Lord !" this, and "0. Lord !" that. When people are cold, and have nothing to say to (16d, they strew their prayers with"ON !" and "For ever and ever„Amen," and things to fill up. Tell God what you want, with the feeling that he is ready 'to give it, and believe that you will receive, and you shall have it. Shed that old prayer you have been mak ing these ten years. It is high time that you outgrew it. Throw it aside with your old ledgers, and old hats and old shoes. Take a review of your present wants, of your pres ent sins, and of your present bless ings. With a sharp blade cut away your past hall-and-half Christian life, and with new deterinination, and new plans, and new expectations, launch out into the deep. The text is appropriate to all who err, engaged in Christian work. The Church of (Rid has been fishing along the shore. We set our net in a good,calm place,and insight of a fine chapel, and we go down every Sun day to see lithe fish have. been wise enough to come into our net. might learn something from that boy with his hook and line. lie throws his line from the bridge: no fish. 4 He sits down on a log: no fish. He stands in the sunlight and casts the line: but no fish. He goes up by the mill-dam, and stands behind the bank' where the fish 'cannot see him, and lat has hardly diopped the hook before the cork goes tinder. The fish coma to him as fast as he can throw thertrashore. lo other words,in our Christian work. why'do we not go where the fish are? It is not so easy to catch souls in cliutch, for they know that we are trying to take them. If you can throiv yotir line out into the world where they are not ex pecting you, they will be captured. is it fair to take men by such strata gem? Yes. I would like to cheat five thousand souls; into the king dotn. Our Tabernacle Free College, within one year, Will be doing the work. of many churches. The stu dents set their net list night on the ,back streets. and will set it every night this week in Many destitute places; ed n lay p d r e c h a e w r s 0b ,; s oroda al hahvneinagbuthne- • • s . , TS. t - Gavel' day by day, foul week by , week. - and three or four hundred aristins - prepared fur other styles of Christian work. If a man does not appreciate that work. he is stupid beyond all arousal. The whole pol icy of the Church of God is to he changed. Instead of chiefly looking after the few who have become Chris thins, our chief efforts will he for those ouWd9, If, after a man is eon verted,liemunot take cage of himmeff I am not going to take care of him. If ho thinks t hat lam going to stand and pat him on the back, and feed him outot an elegant spoon,and watch him so that he does mot get into a draught of worldliness, he is much mistaken. We havein our churches a great them of helpless, inane pro fesmors, who are doing; nothing fur themselves or fur others, who want us to strip and nurse them They are so troubled with dou:.t LIS to whether they are Christians or not. The doubt is settled.Theyare not Christians. The best that we can do. with these fish is to throw them back into the stream, and go after them again with the Gospel net. "Gro into all the world and p'reach the Gospel," says Christ ; into the lactory. the engine -house, the club room, Into the houses of the sick,into the dark lane, into the damp' cellar, Into the cold garret, into tho "dismal prison. Let every man, woman, and child In Brooklyn, New York, and London knoll/ that Jesus died, and that the gate of heaven is wile open. With the Bible in onepocket,and the hymn-hook in another pocket, and a loaf of bread tinder your arm—launch out into the I/eau:deep °fails world's wretchetliffs. The text is appropriate toallthe un fury iven. Ever.) sinner in this house Would come to. God it he thought that he might come julthis he is. Peo ple talk although the pardon of God were a narrow river, like the Ken nebec or the Thames, and that their sin draws too much wider to enter it. No; it is nuts nraver, nor a baY, but a sea. I should like to persuade you to launch out into the great deep of God's mercy. lam a merchant. I have bought a cargo of spices in In dia. I have through a bill of ex change, paid for the, whole cargo.— You are a ship-captain. I giveyou the orders,and say: "Bring we those spices." You land in India. 4iou go to the trader and say, "Hero are the orders;" and you find everything all right. You do not, stop to pay the money yourself. It is not your bus- Weis to pay it. The arrangements were made before you started. So, Christ purchases your pardon. He puts the papers,or the promises, into your hand. Is it wise to stop and say: "I cannot pay fur my redemp- tion"? God does not ask you to pay. Relying on what has been done, launch out into the deep. The Bible promises Join hands,and the circle they make will compass all your sins, and all your temptations, and all your sorrows. The round ta ble of King Arthur and his Knights had room fur only t4irteen banquet ers; but the round table of God's sup ply is large.enough for all the pres ent inhabitants of earth and heaven to sit at, and for the still mightier populations that are yet to be. Do not sail coast-wise along your old habits and old sins. Keep clear of the shore. Go out .where the water is deepest. 0 for the mid-sea of God's mercy! "Belt known unto you,men and brethern, that through this man . is preached unto you forgiveness of sins." I. preach it with as much confidence to that eighty-year old transgressor us to this maiden.— Though- your sins were blood-red, they shall-hes/low-white. The more ragged the prodigal, the More emu pasionate the father. Do you say that you are too bad? The high-water mark of God's pardon is higher than all your transgressions. "The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth from all sins." Do you say that your heart Is hard? Suppose it were ten times harder. Do you say that your iniq uity is long continued? Suppose it were ten times longer. Do .yon say that your crimes are black? Suppose that they were ten times blacker. Is there any lion that this Samson cannot slay? Is there any fortress that this Conqueror cannot take? Is there any sin this Redeemer cannot pardon? It is said that when Charlemagne's host was overpowered by the three armies of the Saracens, in the pass of Roncesvalles,his warrior. Roland, in terrible earnestness seized a trum pet and blew it with such terrific strength that the oppising army reel d back in terror; but at the third blast of the trumpet it broke in two. 1 see your soul fierily assailed by all the powers of earth and hell. 1 put the mightier trumpet of the gospel to lily lips andl blow it three times: Blast the tirst—" Whoso will, let him come." Blast the second—" Seek ye the Lord while he may be found." Blast the third —"Now is the uePept ed time; now is the day of satralion." Does not the host of your sins fall back? But the trumpet does not, like thatoflloland, break in two. As it was handed down to us from the lips of our fathers, we hand it down to the lips of our children, and tell them to sound it w hen - we are dead,t ha t all the generations of men may know that our God is a partipning ; (xl —a sync pathetic God—a loving God; and that more to him than the anthems of heaven, more to him than the throne on which he sits, more to him than are the temples of rel e e stial worship, is the joy of seeing the wanderer put ting his hand on the door-latch of his Father's hotise. Hear it, all ye na tions! 1.147 . 1 id for the worst hunger. Medicine for the worst sickness.— Light for the thickest darkness. liar- Imo from the worst storm. Dr. Prime, in his admirable hook entitled itroundthe World, describes a tomb in India of wonderful archi tecture. Twenty thousand men were twenty-two years in erecting that and the buildings around it. Stand ing in that tomb, if you speak or sing, after you have ceased you hear the echo 'etnnin,g from a height of one hundrol and fifty feet. It is not like other echoes. The sou lid is drawn out in sweet prolongation, as though the angels of God. mere chanting on the wing. How ninny souls here to-day, in the tomb Of sin, will lift up the voice of penitence and prayer? If now they would cry unto God, the eeho would drop from afar -k-not struck from the marble cupola of an earthly mausoleum, but sounding back from the warm heart of angels, &lying with the news; for there is joy among the angels of God over one sinner that repented)! A Spingtield paper says : "We know shoes have soles and tongues, and now a chap in Rhode Island ad vertises, "Shoes made Hear." We don't believe it. ZAs Governor Geary's term in office and opportunity to dispense patronage draws near an end, he is beconi!ng, a target for all the men whose ambition he did not advance and every mendacious journalist with no opponent at hand. The last attach upon him is in connection with the report ot the committee to investigate the settlement of the war claims. This report was one which no really fair-minded man would have signed his name to, and in its presentation—at the close of the sem fon, when the Governor had no time to make an answer—was cowardly. Governor Geary, in an atmosphere of corruption, has reMained an hon est and faithful public servant. and can afford even this last charge.—Phil adelphia Press. EstabliBhed 1818. Protu the New Tor: Tribu n e. ABOUT IN VESTItiATIONS. We find in The Reading (Pa.) Times and Di:patch of March 27 the follow ing:' "We heartily agree with 4The &ranlon Repuplieun when,it says that the most prominent an ready men iu the country to chargeeorru p lion upon others for political effect have been, and now are, the Hun. Horace timely of the New York Trib une and Charles A.Dana of the Sun, and yet in no une instance have these brave accusers been able to estab lish the truth of what they charged although again and again have they had the opportunity." This is ut a pied with a good deal mores:it misreprelentation; instigated, we are glad to believe, by Ingoratice rather than Malice, and, therefore,to be corrected right away. The Trib une has been always a little Tree in de nunciation of bad men and gross abus es,political and social. As lung as the men and wrongs denounced were of and by the Democratic party we were applauder! by Republican papers.— W hen we discharged the higher du ty of exposing corrupt men and practices in our own party, there were certain partisan journals which roundly abused. na_in u manner as - above. Now let us review some of the charges of corruption we have made and proved, and see how far the abuse is deserved. We reluctantly pubiished a few months ages; tel the only- way to cur- Tweet the evil, the painful tact that the Administration was sustaining, to the injury of tile Republican party utal the discredit of the country, a corrupt politician and contractor, in charge of the principal Custom-house of the nation, arid we names' hint by name, Thomas Murphy. "I'l2lie evi dence we published showed precise ly how and to what extent he had swindled the country in time of its surest need. Mr. Murphy dal nut wait for an investigation but resign ed, which was perhaps the wisest course fur hint to pursue. We found it necessary in like man ner to expw Mr. Murphy's than, Terwilliger. We charged that he had corruptly received twenty percent of the State printing and misapplied other property of the State while Clerk of the Senate. Invt~tigatlon confirmed all we had charged and de veloped, indeed, something more,by which another appropriator of pos tage stamps, named Cushman, came to deserved grief. Mr. Terwilliger did not wait the issue of the investi gation, but, offering as an/ excuse that the peculations prove* against him were customary under former Clerks,confessed his guilt 63,T resign ing before the senate eon nUaet. Senator James Wood was also of the Republican party,to its great discred it. We said he had taken bribes from Wm. M. Tweed and Jay Gould and had voted iu their interesta cor ruptly, and we published the proofs. They have been examined by u com mittee and sustained ; the report condemns Mr. Wood ; a resolution of expulsion of the guilty Senator has been introduced and is pending iu the Senate at this time. As to the case of Col. Leet. We charged that this staff calker of the President while still on duty in Washington drew 4i- - ),000 a year from the Custom-house in this city, and that was proved by written duet/- merits. We said that lie had conic and, fortified with a letter trout the President., had demanded control of the General Order business. The letter was produced and published. Weetharged that he had threatened one Collector with removal If he did nJt get the busins, and that was proved by Leet's own confidants. The Collector did refuse, as we stated, and he was removed, as every body knows, to give place_ to a collector who at once gave Col. Leet a monop oly of General Order. We said the charges under this monopoly had been increased filly .per cent; the first merchants of New York estab lished that they had been doubled. All this was shown before an hives: tigating tomtnittee by witnesses named by us on the stand. Before the Committee had concluded the inquiry the General order business was redistricted; the charges fixed at reasonable rates; the monopoly was broken up; and the imposition. on Commerce of which wb compldined wits re moved. There were printing frauds like those of Terwilliger in New Jersey, and The. Ti•i6une scut a eurrespon- Wlll. to Trenton to expose thew. ell, this was done pretty fully, and no New Jersey papers will be found to agree with thejournal above quo ted, in the notion that it wa.tkr not done very effectually. We declared last July that the Quarantineof this State was admin istered to the disadvantage of com merce, the robbery of merchants, and the discredit of the State; and we as serted that the Health I Mimi., Dr. Carnoclian, had been imbed with s2leooo tq allow the most outrageous impositions on merchants. When a Committee of Investigation WaS se cured, we sent witnesses before it who proved matters worse than We ' had suited them, and finally produced the papers signed by t :arnochan and the books kept by his confederates, proving absolutely his corruption. Dr. Carnochan Was removed and a Republican was kappointed by the Democratic Governor in his place. We charged similar abuses upon ten ! or a dozen of the Harbor-Masters of this port, saying that by collusion with tow-boatmen they made it im possible for shippers to obtain wharf age without bribery of the Harbor- Master. When the committee au thorised to investigate these charges came to town it spread a copy of the The Tribune before it, called the per sons therein named as witnesses, and established every thing we had said, and framed a bill to correct the abuse and remove the corrupt men who profited by it. Look ingalong these same wharves, where CarnOOiall and Leet and the Harbor-Master defrauded the mer chants, we saw how our seamen were maltreated in boarding houses, and we denounced by name a score or two of the ruffian landlprds.— Thereupon the Seamen's Friend So ciety was, encouraged 'to act. An old law of the State which these men had defied was enforced: many of the keepers were compelled to take out licences; and thirty-two others were indicted. We had previously exposed the class of theives known as "Emigrant Robh.ers," who pil laged in spite of the police. Since that time four of the worst of these fellows have been sent to State Yds on for the full term of the law. The majority of the unconvicted rogues have gone into business with a notori ous person named Elias. who praeti ceschiefly on fellow knavesand fouls, but whose latest attempt at fraud, exposure has already frustrated. evenal months ago, we exposed the sale by two Medical Colleges of Philadelphia of bogus diplomas, and named Drs. Buchanan and Payne as the culprits. Well a Committee of the Pennsylvania Legislature found what we had published was true and the Legislature itself has revoked the charters of the disreputable Col leges. A fortnight ago we denounced :he South Improvement Company as a corrupt monopoly, designed to seize control of the oil-relining trde—the fifth in importance of the industries of the country. We sent a,•corres pondent to the oil regions ,)r Penn sylvania, and exposed the whole eon- THE-V4F•AVW .ka_Wira Is published every Wean&slitir in the old Argus building on Third Street,Bes ver, Pa., at por Year in &avow, • Communications on subjects of rxal , or general interest are respectfully so licited. To insure attention favors of this kind must invariably be scamps nied by the name of the inthor. Lottem and communications should be toldo.Lvm:4l to J. WEYAND, Beaver, Pa. spiracymarning the persons who had organized it. Since that time• the l'erinsylvanitt Legislature has revok ed the charter of the Company, and Congress is investigating the subject. We began months ago an exposure of the abuses which have crept into the system of References and Receiv erships, which we believe to be nee esiary if not wise schemes for facili tating the administration of justice. The articles which we publishd • named names every time, and our facts were from - the court records.— They may have been refutable, but they never were answered by any of the persons charged with encourag ing the abuse. They had their effect, and the abuses were in large measure corrected; indifferent lawyers were deprived of a monopoly of th.,9, busi ness, and iitnrants were .. given . ii choke of referees. But as a )further result of these articles, the per Associations of this city was iOilipired to prefer charges against three of the J udges of the State Courts, and the investigation is just now comiludinK: The proof has not, been made Public in full and the result of the itqiestiga lien, of course, is not known. What The Tribune has done in the exposure of the Tt.tfrity and Erie - Ring' Vas been -in commOn with other papers. It has not indUlged in, invective as freely as others; but it has been at least as fruitful in facts; it 1 has nothing 1,1 regret,looking atria I ly back over Its filet: k in its course in these matters ; and ;fter fully eau vs-sing the whnle sub ect it feels all es the stronger in its rllve to strike at abuses hen-atter whe'rever it-flnds them , irrespective rif persons, classes or parties. d MRS. MASON. Ronswilie I.llllory of the Woman in the Frehet Arum Job. A special correspondent of the New I I , rk- ii en d, writing frorri=Washing ton, gives the following history of Mrs. Mason, who is now figerin4 , Somewhat conspicuously before the French Arnu investigating Commi ttee. As there arc so many stories ufl at fegarding the idezitity of the lady whose name some of the unsuc cessful speculators ifiarms have dis creditably drawn into newspaper notoriety by their testimony before the Arms luvestigating Committee, I have been at some painsio ascertaip for the World precisely who she is and somewhat of her previous life. Mention is first wade of the con nection of a lady in these arms sales by a Mr. Mackenzie,who recollected that he had been • induced through Schenck, a broker, and Peck, a dealer in arms, to write a letter to a Mrs. Davis, promising to purchase arms by the hundred thousand it she could get them. The connection of a lady with arms sales having been thus brought upon the tapis by one New York witness, another proceeds to inform the Committee that the Mrs. lh►vis in question was a Mrs. Mason of Washington. This - he, could do, a woman being in the ques tion, and yet withhold the name of the man who had placed him in rela tion with her. Peck and \Viard tell how they were beguiled into the fancy that Mrs. Ma son could achieve for them what oth er wise they had tailed to effect,and in the connection conveniently forgot to mention that they had invoked the suppoze I all-potent influence with the Government of no less a personage than the prr;sent American Minister to England. That is to say that there were two Schencks employed in this affair as well as a lady; a fact appar ently not convenient for either Peck or Wiard to recollect. We find, moreover,that these witnesses forgo.* another important matter in their relations with this lady, whom they have brought into such mortifying publicity by revealing her name as connoted them in their effort to purchase arias withou tone cent C'ap I:11 t he.Y.,rdrgOt to tell that the :. hid failed to pay her hotel bill on that visit to the Roffman House, "or were unable to do it, much less pay up the large bonus of $2.5,000. wilt) is NI Nt ASoN? But turning from Peek and Wiard to the lady whose name they have made so public, it may now interest the general reader to know that she Nva!, born in Virginia, some thirty years ago, and grew to womanligod there and ilVlialtimore, in which last city she became engaged to be mar ried to a distingutshed Californian, who wounded Broderick in a duel, and who,dyiniz before their marriage, l e ft h e r a handsonie inconn y of which she was defrauded. 11er - family hav ing removed to Washington she re sided here several years before the war, and until she was allowed upon t pass specially granted by Genera , Scott in the fah oF 'Aid, to cross tta. "lines" into Virginia upon impor Cant family othairsNrossing the Poto Mat:, a small, frail boat, her journey to Richmond was full of hardships ant romantic incidents, for she was sus peeled by the rebel authorities, wh( for some time regarded her as a spy tier stay in the South wa_s short however. for she was taken under "fiag of truce - to Norfolk or Fort re-s Monroe, and turned oveT. accord ing to the newspapers of the day, a ;in -alien enemy 'l' ex pelted from th j t'on lei ler.a.y. It is al iezed, however that this was a mere cloak to cove ,an important inis-;iim with wind 1 she had peen intrusted at Richmond 1 and for %%Adel' her peculiar talent - , I simile.: and inclination fit her. She did not enter Virgin; on any other errand than person' business. Returning to Washington, she rt sided apparently at one of the princ pat hotels, attracting a good deal ( attention from prominent milltar men and politicians, until Qnally rested and thrown into the "01(1 Cal itol Prison," upon charges of belt; in direct communication with ti rebel authorities and having begin ed illation from a high staff oil cer. Curiously enough it is thougt she owed her arrest to a rival en inissary, the fatuous Mrs. tireenoogi After several months incarceratloi no proof having been found - again her, slie was released, but requirt to return to the South, presenting i the person of one delicate woman tl; strange nfiectaele of being expelit alternately from the territory of tl: tutu giant belligerent powers, ( th e like a shuttlecock from one I the other. Site was even sent undo the e scort of tin officer to the Conte( ' crate lines on James River. As an illustration of her elevernes it Is told on good authority tha having a handsonie Confederate fla for General iieauregard, 'and tindin that. her baggage would be searche as she was leaving Federal territor, she folded it within her shawl, whit ° was proudly and gallantly mrrie upon themm of an officer (Gellert Buel) intrusted by theMovernatta with her expulsion from the territor of the United States. For the rest.of the war UN. Masa seems to have resided at Charlestot S. C.. where she was when that cif fell into Federal ptmession in Febri ary, istls and soon after Which . st was allowed to return to her famil In that city, with whom she has be( residing ever since. HER PERSONAL APPEARANCE She is a brunette of the most d Tided type, with purple-black hai dark brown eyes, and although small, delicate figure, is ofsingular. sti 'king appearance, with the air an manner of a French rather than a American woman. :The has read Concluded aolourth . page. •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers