The Beaver Argus. .t . WES AND -- Beaver, Pa., 3 one 35,1973 TETE President and the Secretary of the Interior have under consider ation and will probably adopt, as a means of settling the Modoc question, the entire breaking up of the tribe, bringing all belonging to it east :of the mountains, and distributing them by families among other tribes and nations. None of the tribe will be informed as to where the rest have gone, and the object will be to separate them widely, care being ta ken that families are not divided,. Means will be taken, if this plan is carried out, to hate a knowledge of the punishment inflicted well circu lated among all Indians, and it is be lieved it will exert-a most salutary intlucnee, and especially cause chiefs and those who hold positions among I miian: to maintain peace, lest their tribes be broken-up in the slime innnne r 'l'tir•: Democrats of Butler county met in county convention on Mon ii:ty of last week and placed the fol lowing ticket in the field: .INsernbly—Dr. Joseph Lusk, of Har mony, and William S. Ziegler, esq. of Butler. Treasurer—Lewis Roth, of Frank lin township . . (0111.111 t.Vstohcr —JOhti %Vhitmire. of ).tic land township. .1 ary ecnami.v?toner —John Nl• less, of Centre tp. Anditor—John :%iartin, Lancaster tp. Dr. Lusk was a member of the I louse, last winter one year ago, and is generally regarded as one of the hardest men to beat in this District. That he will run somebody to the firth, quite clear, judging from the ,uecosstul race he made last fall one v 4 1r ago SAY., the" New York Tribune: This is likely to prove i a b: year for the Pennsylvania Icing. T 1 ?e indications from all-parts of that .4'taste are un mistakable that if the Ring candl it,tes are forced upon tilt. Republi c an ticket for the fall election there will be such a revolt as will insure the election of the opposition nomi nees. The Philadelphia Press re• marks in italics that?"this year, at least, there is no necessity for forcing ,bject ionable nominations," and th u s paves the way fur a bolt in rise :gll nominations are made: "We desire to see the Republican party live. It has done too much good to ilia at the hands of creatures ,who have never helped to save to. dis grace: and it can go on doing good if only a better spirit is infused into the Iti.puelican party in the prima ry elections. If that fails, let honest Democrat-, , - Itepublicans, and Re formers join hands and save the city and state from continued outrage." E Constitutional Convention, la,t week, took action on the law of ,1 in this State. It proposes a change in the organic law, but whether the change contemplated will satisfy the newspaper men of the State, is a%ouestion. We doubt it.—Here is the difference: rr o pox,-.1 .47,eighnent !ThePresent l (nutlet ',hon. No convictlon .hall he' In proaecutionn for the in any pronenutiun pablic-ation of papers ior the publication of triveantrating the official piper., re g to the conduct of OniCern or mofitlf•; of "it- men in public capacity. or men in public t 0- or where the matter nu p a , ity. or to any other Mated In proper fur pub ni.itter proper for public Ire Inform/own, the ‘e,timition Of !Win -MA truth thereof may b e II .71 o nere the tact that given in evidcnce: and in p• i iiltratitritwa, not all ledirrOlentri for . II to•::114Jont. bets tire Inc) Khali have :6 rtitade, -trail br entati• a right to deternitne the -:I• 4I to the .0!1-ifiction salt abil the lacto. under the Iry lo the direr troll or ti r e •: for I!!a.1 nit court a.. it Our. .1.11 bane firy •• rrn:ur •.I,e :air y ••• t!..• court, 0-- Tut.. New York Tribune has been in estigating the back pay question. Tue iornolete list of Senators who returned their increased salary to the. Treasury shows that quite a !lumber of those who have been gen erAlly credited with such a disposi t of their hock pay can't truthfully j a i l , ' the honor. I p to the 17th have elirectea 11w return of their loohey thruwgh Trea.r,urcr Spinner, :IA the. slaines here given Iltepubli ,• t ry. in Democrats in Italie:, in ...m i di rillty iu nlI iI upslll 11, (Ti- lv :iccur.,t+ !i r v I:. A , 1.; i t., I,l,h:truth 1.. r, ty, ( 'a l ..' / \7//N, N. Tlyarm , 4 \V" I •-rr : Frelinghu.en, N. !hal Hamlin, ]1.•.: IP:mit-1 I). , I t,rl , 1 . %1 , t1. 111 lar. , IIn,; , t, 71., , ar4,l 'the ahove h-t that s of : the I :: of the 1 7 Liberal Republican-, and :: of the 17 Dente_ i-rat. , in the St-nate at the tinie of the tote on the salary question, have re turned their pay to the Treasury. If these, when the question of an In erea-e of salary came up in the Sett :,:t.. :ill voted in the atilt:lllative on Etintutick.'s: motion to strike 17ttin the hill all relating to the sala r: 4Scriatur , , Itiprettentatives, and lit le.gates, e xeept Mr. Fenton, who ‘t.t.t eti —No" anti Senators Bayard, ::-'uniner, :tint Wilstin, wilt) ‘vere :tit- r. :-Neott ova, "paired," but :t , t it the FA tit ut,cl-; amendment . The ~ther- NV I 1() voted for Mr. 1•;(1. CEIBI :mind's motion, but who have not returtad their money into the Treas ury, are s t;:tt Boreman, Bucking ham, Cragin, coie, Corbett, Ed munds, I faun iton \larylaud,Har lan, Howe; Morh.n, Morrill of Ver intuit, Morrill of Maine, Sherman, wi n d o w, and Wright. Mr. cur k understood to have given his Lark pay toward the building of the tVa-hington Monument. It will be , R that the only States represented in the first fi=ts by both ( their Sena- are Massvachusetts and Michigan. N Senator from the South has re sponded, and none_from the North- West, unless the Michigan Sentetor9 :ire so clamed. About onet-hirdof those returning their money made the request that their names might not be made known, chiefly tijkli the gr4,uud that many among their as:cm-Mies, good as they were , had ta kt,e it, and they did not desire, by giving publicity to the - matter, to vast any implied reproach upon their fellow-Senators. All the officials of ti Treasury have continued to re a list of names; but as entries Were' of necessity made at several point's in the public records both of the Senate and of the department, a coin plete list has finally been obtained. The total amount of "back pay" returned to the Treasury i s 5p 0.01 . 47 ::1, and the number of Senators and Representatives who declined to re rcis,,e it is 4G. THE weather has got too warm far the Constitutional Convention. That body first agreed to adjourn to Bedford, then i t agreed that It would not go to Bedford. Finally the mem bers resolved to take a recess frotn Friday next till the third Tuesday of October. EDITOR A 011 EAT deal of suspicion has been entertained recently to the ef fect that the Arctic explorer—Capt. Han--had met his death at the hands of some of his associates on the Polaris. A careful examination of those of the crew of that vessel who have reached Washington leads to the belief that these suspicions were all unfounded and that Capt. Hall died from natural causes. TIIE Republicans of Washington county, at their Convention lust week, nominated the following ticket: Assembly—Jonathan Allison Treaxurer—J• C. French. Sheriff—David Hart. Commissioner—Alexander McCleary Jury Commiasioner—W. A. Grable. thrector of Poor—Ralph Vank irk A uditor—D. L. Rowell. The Reporter of that county rep resents the ticket as a strong one, and as politics are pretty close over there, we may confidently expect an interesting fight over its success. The Convention passed a resolu tion denouncing the congressional retroactive salary increase bill, but strange to say it did not repudiate the -Ratan, Graham, Davis appropri ation of publis money .ta..pay the ex penses of those gentlemen and their wives while making the tour of Eu -1 rope. THE following sound advice as to selecting and instructing delegates to the Republican State election, which every honest Republican will en dorse and which might be followed with general advantage and satisfac tion, is given by the Harrisburg State Journal. "Every delegate to the Republican State Convention should, before com- ing to Harrisburg, ascertain exactly what his constituents want, whom they prefer for State_ Treasurer and Supreme Judge, and then. like an honest man, comply with their wants and wishes. And, what is still more sound and practical ; the masses -of the Republican party all over the State ought to take special care not to cend any man as delegate to the State Convention who will sell them out—who will disregard their wishes in order to 'please a friend,' or turn a penny. We believe if this were done, we would be able to pre sent a ticket that would challenge and defy all fault-finding. HERE is reliability for you! Be fore the primary meetings were held in this county, and while the editor of the Radical was endeavoring to fasten the mixed system of nomina ting candidates upon the Republi cans, he was wont to tell them that that method was in vogue in Law rence county, and that every person seemed satisfied with it there. The ARGUS denied all this and alleged that the mixed system had been in force in Lawrence county, that it had fallen into disrepute, that it had been abandoned, that the Crawford coun ty or popular vote system had been substituted, and that the Republi cans there were now generally dis <gusted with the old and pleased with the new way of nominating their ticket. We do not recollect how of ten the Radical intimated that we lied about the Lawrence county method of nominating candidates; but we respectfully refer the public to an article in that sheet, last week, clipped from the Lawrence Journal, to see how the Radical itself uttered one untruth after another in connec tion with that question. Its state ments were false in every particu lar; while the AuGrs' were in every instance true. All of which goes to ,huw that editor Curtis k either a knave or zi---stupid fellow. A l'En.soN can hear nearly a thous and and, "onc.stories just now touch :ng the Chinese exodus at Beaver Falls lust week. Some of our sensa tional I,eople will have it that the "rebellious" Chinamen were barely prevented from making mince-meat of their employers at that place; while wthers more philosophically(?) inclined are ready to swear by the points of their knives that this hegi ra si.t ties the Chinese -question at Beaver Falls, and that departure af ter departure wilt now follow until tier last Chinaman has gone. In regard to the first of these ru ini.rs we learn that it is very wide of the mark. There was no trouble be tween the employers and the Chia , men %%Ida amounted to anything; IBM nu thre:tts of violence were made b. the latter toward the former, and as will Inc seen below the exodus was Merely the result of 8 difficulty among the Chinamen themselves. A Beaver Falls correspondent of the Pittsburgh Omar/terrier/ gives this fle count of the matter. Thp ~imple lacts relating to their trou bles are these: Hong, the interpreter, has 1,(4.11 an American nearly twenty years, is quite well versed in the En glish language, and as foreman hap much influence over his countrymen. lie has !steadily discouraged the educa ting of Chinamen in the English lan guag and books, for his purpose was best served b 3 their Ignorance. He has also encouraged gambling among the men, and if he could not get their mon ey iii any way else, he did not scruple to tube it from them by gambling. The Cutlery Company stipulated in their contract with the agent through \N horn these men were employed, that there should be no gambling or opium smoking. A few days since two of the men were detected gambling and dis charged. tieing special havorites of Hong, and perhaps "pals," he was much offended and excited the men to mutt n.. The company came to the conclu-, stun that he was best away, and rouse . quently discharged him. His means of 1 living being endangered, he strove to excite the men against A h Poy, who was to is , placed over them. Any one know ing the Chinese character knows it td be excitable and untrustworthy. The charge made by them, that Ah Poy was cheating them, and retaining a part of their wages, your correspondent was Informed by one of the company is en tirely false. Ills conduct toward tbe :nen has ever been honest and kind, and ine charge was only a pretext. The long line of Chinamen as they tett their quarters, each with his baggage sus pended at either end of a long pole renting upon his shoulder, in Oriental style, was novel and indeptiulent. I saw ilt the depot, belonging to one of the party, two largo packages of baggage, weighing not less than fifty pounds each, attached to an inch rod of iron some six feet in length. This the Chi namen carried upon the shoulder, and when weary, by a dextrous swing to the rear, transferred it around the back to the other shoulder. At the depot they were quiet but com municati, e. A large deputation of anti-coolie men were drawn by curi osity to the depot to witness their de parture. As time wore away the opin ion prevailed that the men had not mon ey enough to get away, and some over zealous parties engaged to collect mon ey to pay their passage to Pittsburgh. A quite large amount was collected In small sums, and l paid over. The cream of the joke exists in the fact that in the crowd was more than five thousand dol lars in gold, as is certified to by those who know, Unpleasant as may be the reflection of these men, they must nev ertheless enjoy the thought that - John t_thheitnnanoutatno,f hisin his pas sadgepeatrotuthree,cistwy.iudled DERE AND THERE. —Here is altogether a now name for a newspaper. Jewett, Texas, boasts a journal called The Gladiator. As it promises to have "a single eye to the prosperity of the country," we suppose that the other (ye has been extinguished in its previous gladiatorial struggles. —lion. William Williams, of In diana. has disposed of his "back pay." Ile has been boarding with an excellent lady for some thirty years, and having ever been hand somely treated by her, and at -cheap rateg, he has turned over the whole sum to her. We congratulate both "Billy" and the lady on this arrange ment, which must be mutually high ly satisfactory. The lady's name Is Mrs. William Williams. —Battle Creek, Mich., can boast of two damsels, the Misses Elizabeth and Lydia Taylor, who have for five years baen employed as compositors in the office of the Journal of that place. They have made from $8 to $2O per week, have supported a widowed mother, have kept house handsomely, have bought a piano, have taken music lessons, have given $lOO to the Baptist Church, and have saved $1,200. Both are unmarried. Young men desirous of visiting Bat tle Creek had better, consult their Railway Guides at once. —Last winter Mrs. Hattie Daven port, wife of Flower Daven Port, of Albion, Erie county, had a presenti ment that she was to die and be bu ried with her then unborn child. On Friday Last sbe was delivered of a child which lived but a few hours. She wou Id not.allow the child to be buried, stating that she wished to have it kept until her own burial. Singularly she departed her life on Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock. The funeral of the mother and child took place last Tuesday. —A father of fifty children is vouched for by one of the mast trust worthy and - respected citizens of Waco, Texas, in a letter to the Ad vance, of that place, which says that by his first wife he had thirteen chil dren; by his second, eighteen; by his third, ten; by his fourth, six; and by his fifth and surviving wife, three; and that thirty-five of this numer ous progeny are still alive - eight + having been lost in the rebel army, and seven having died natural deaths. —Mrs. Jane Ward, a good-looking woman of forty, accused Mr. George Gamger, Superintendent of Green wood Cemetery, New York, in which her husband was employed, of repeatedly attempting to put his arm around her avid kiss her as they strolled among the silent tombstones. She considered this to have been im proper and out of place to the extent of five thousand dollars. but Mr. Gamer showed that he wasn't any such a man and saved his tive thous and dollars, while Mrs. Ward de parted with an impaired reputation. —There is a model old man de scribed by a Peoria newspaper. He hasn't taken a bit of care of himself. lie chewed tobacco sixty years, and got fat on it. He drank hard for twenty-five years, and got younger every day. His eye-sight is so good that he reads his newspaper by moonlight through a microscope in verted to make the type small enough for his peculiar vision. lie walks every morning four miles for his drinks before breakfast; he Amps a cord of wood between each meal; he has tried to die of old age thirteen times, and failed every time. He attends to the wants of an old and feeble grandson, and superintends the funerals of his' posterity with great care and decency. --A lady of a truly manly spirit, ac companied by a small poodle, is said to have sadly failed the other day in on attempted reformatory move ment. She entered the smoking car of a Western train and solemnly re fused to go into another car,observing that her presence would keen the oc cupants from smoking. One stony wretch, however, 'insensible to the claims of refinement and reform, be gan to enjoy his accustomed cigar, which was suddenly snatched from his lips, with the remark,- in high treble, "If there is anything I do hate it is tobacco smoke!" For a time the offender was silent and mo tionless, then gravely rising, amid , the plaudits of the assembled smok ers, he toot: that little poodle and I gently threw him out of the window, sighing, "If there is anything I do hate it is a poodle!" No mortal pen could describe the feelings of that reformer. --A correspondent writing from Hillsborough, (kilo, to a Cincinnati newspaper, tells what he has done to exterminate potato t4, , 5. First, with no good result, lie sprinkled upon the vines lime, ashes, plaster of Paris, and sulphur. The hugs were next treated With turpentine, ben zine, spirits of hartahorn, and alco hot, but these fluids only seemed to add to theirenjoyment of life. Gum camphor and asahetida were then resorted to. Still the Insects lived on; and so they did through a course of chloroform, and of sulphuric, mu riatL, acetic, nitric, nitro-muriatle, and 'chemically pure nitric acid. These did not in the least affect their appetites. Then Paris green was tried, and this was found rather too effective, as it killed both the bugs and the vines themselves. It is now proposed to try calomel, which it Is thought will loosen the teeth of the insects. —Hon. John Scott is known among his friends as a very SUCCESti fuI Sunday School Superintendent and Bible class teacher, and is, we believe, the Superintendent of a Sun day School in Huntingdon. Mr. Scott, it will be remembered, voted for the new postage law, imposing postage on weekly papers and on newspaper exchanges. On a late oc casion, lie was examining the school on the lesson of Joseph and hishreth ren, and among other questions ask ed why Benjamin did not return from Egypt with his other brethren. A teacher whispered to a member of her class, "Say, held afta hostage.'l The little fellow, fearing someone might get an answer in ahead, promptly sang out="Lkld for post age, girt!' which answer "brought down the house," much to the em barrassment of the superintendent and scholar. The boy was slow at perceiving "where the laugh came in," but the honorable John quickly saw the point and appreciated IL For The Beaver Argue. WASHINGToN COUNTY, PA., 1 June 18th, 1873. Hon. Benjamin F. Butler, §lg:—On the 20th of March, you mailed me a 3 cent postage stamp to make rue "good as to loss personally" sustained by the congressional salary steal, in which you appear to have . been one of the grand leaders. I thought at the time, in view.of the surroundings, that it looked a little suspicious as to how this stamp was obtained, and sent it back to your honor so that if all right you might have it properly certified that you are the legal and rightful owner (not the government) of this stamp, in which case I authorized you to send it pack to me. Now as two months have elapsed and the stamp in ~q uestion has not yet been returned, 1 am left to draw, my own inferences as to the way or Manner you came in possession of Obis stamp. In my hasty letter to you. March the Ist, complaining of this mon strous salary thievery which has ' produced so much restlessness and discontent throughout the country. To which permit me to say your answer was very unsatisfactory, nor was it creditable to a person claiming to be a gentleman. 1 stated inithat letter that "it is the nature of our American people to honor their ben: electors, and despise and detest their betrayers and oppressors." If you or any of the congressmen engaged in this notorious raid upon the Uni ted States treasury, are yet burdened with doubts as to the correctness and soundness of this sentiment, will in due time (if I properly understand the tenor of public sentiment) be re lieved of the burden. You may write to me or any one else as you please, or as much as you please about it being made the con stitutionalAuty of congressmen "to vote themselves a salary -sufficient for their malntatuance and support" you may ingeniously smooth and polish this transaction over -as you will. Or you may draw the lash of your pen upon outspoken remon -1 strants against this high handed out rageas you may see fit,and as will best gratify your splen at such remon strants. Make the best of it—it is a 1 1 steal, a steal of such magnitude and so dishonorable, that it has destroyed the confidence of the people in their public servants and which has dis graced us as a nation at home and 1 abroad. The people of all shades of politi cal views throughout the country almost unanimously pronounce it a steal. The public press from one extrem ity of the land to the other proclaim in a tone not to be misunderstood, that it Is a steal. Conventions of the people which have met in different parts of the country, and several of our most enlightened State Legislatures have by joint resolution and otherwise de clared it to be a steal, and denounced 'the whole transaction as such, and in two or three instances have invited the participants in the public plun der, to resign their seats In Congress; and sir, the ill gotten money which appears to weigh more heavily upon the consciences than the pcckets of members. has induced quite a num ber of them to return the money for which they rendered no considera tion to the treasury. Now as it is generally believed, your conscience is capable of carrying a load which would prove intolerable to any other congressman, (Simon Cameron's alone excepted) no one entertains the most distant suspicion that you will ever return your $5,000 to the treasury of the United States from which. it was so unscrupulously and unjustly taken. You say in your letter, "No man who cannot anywhere earn at least $7,500 is fit to do the work of a con gressman." If this Is really true, the 24th Congressional District of this State in which I was born, and now live, has been unfitly represent ed in Congress for the last 40 years. I never knew but three out of the 12 or 15 men who have represented us from this district during this lapse of time who could anywhere from per sonal services in a legitimate business, make more than the seventh part of $7,500 per year, and some of them not half that amount, except when they made polities a trade and prosecuted it to perfection as a few of them have done. And all these men were pre surned,—by themselves at least, if not by anybody else,—to be the most or amongst the most talented in the district, and "fit to do the work of a congressman." And what I say in regard to this district will, I believe, apply, and in reality hold good to three fourths of the Congressional Districts of the whole country and very probably yours will not be an exception. Then, sir, what does this subterfuge so repeatedly urged and brought before' the public by men who desire to hire and fatten upon earnings of others amount to? • The mailing the 3 cent postage stamp to me, to make me all right "personally" as to loss sustained, does not prove that the people were not outraged by this infamous back grab, salary steal, it proves just the reverse. Money which is your God, has doubt less obscured your; vision that you could not see it, at the time. In sending me the three cent stamp, you make an acknowledge ment, and commit yourself to two propositions on your part personally, or as the representative of the con gressional treasury raiders. First that you own and should pay back• to each Inhabitant of the United States :3 cents on account of steal, and seconed in remitting that amount to the as pay of my private share of this indebtedness, you in equity bind arid obligate yourself to pay every inhabitant of the country 3 cents or its equivalent, and as you are now known and called the 3 cent man, it is therefore fully understood by the inhabitants thatyou have thus bound and obligated yourself. Will your honor then have these stamps certified and disbursed without further delay? When it comes fully to be under stood that congressmen calling them selves honorable gentlemen, who hold a position at the heed of the government, can at pleasure, after arranging preliminaries make $5,000 each by simply voting I, instead o no—without rendering any considerf ation therefor, what a stinaulous in our times, when government is becoming a luxury and the morals of its agents are being held at a heavy discount, when so many of our pub lie men are on a perfect cant for wealth, unscrupulous too, as to how it is to be obtained or acquired, for the whole army of public men, official and representative, together with the government employees, who have not thus been lavishly used to extras, to step to the front and de vise ways and means equally easy and expeditions to make these piles, and Is it not natural and reasonable to suppose that a grand movement of this kind would sooner or later follow the example, of which we have already so abundant evidence that such must and will be the result. For if the officers holding in one de partment of the government, have a right to make their money in this kind of style or fashion, all have the same right, and when the ball is put into motion and the whole army of officers, national and State, with the employees and hangers-on, are wheel ed into line. How long I ask your honor Will it take this formidable force of officials and representatives and attendants, (yourself in chief command) devour the whole availa ble substance of the people and reduce the country (save the office-holders) to au abject state of bankruptcy? Will you be so kind as to take the pencil with which you so accurately computed the cost of steal to each in habitant, and calculate the time that it will require to consummate the end here referred to, and !yr_ the accom plishment of which you and some other congressmen have been indus triously engaged fur the two or three years past. It is to be feared that the more rapid way of acquiring for-, tunes b y - the Credit Me - biller and other forms of robbery in which so many members were implicated and in which the people as usual are the victims, lay at the root. of this retro active push upon t he public crib; $5,000, the regular anti exorbitant pay of members, for the lest six years, nearly as much money as our cow men farmers save from industry and economy during a natural life time, was made to look little, and even an Insignificant sum, as pay for "gentlemen" when com pared with the large piles swelling up to ten and twenty and perhaps in some Instances to fifty times the amonnt acquired from these soureC-s of corruption, and which—as it appears —were put through a formal Investigation.by congress, more to see and ascertain which of the 'members hold the largest amounts of stock and who had made the most money in these operations, than any Intention on the part of these bodies to Inflict censure, or other punishment upon the members thus engaged. Clay, Webster, Benton and the other noble statesmen of their day—whose names will long live in the hearts of the American people after yours and the names of all our present losses of the , public crib made than the country shall have passed into. oblivion, served tne country in congress for 8 per day, and they had no Credit Mobilier stock nor any other vil lainous resources of corruption to fall back upon to live as you say, "a gentleman representing forty million people ought to live," and these men served with fidelity to forward and promote the legitimate business and interests of the country, not spend ing one-half and more of their time, as Was done the last session in the investigation of the thieveries and robberies of their own members. It is, sir, the large sums of money made in these disgraceful jobberries that has made the salary of $5,000. which is nearly a double compensa tion for congressmen, look little and insignificant to support gentlemen. In this old Conimonwealth where Mr. Cameron owns the Legislature, the examplAxf congress was early imitated aniV.vorks up to perfection. It has lareay expanded the ideas of representatives as to the importance and great value of official service. Three of the members of the Legisla ture at the close of the late session, helped themselves by good manage ment from our State Treasury—by he Governor's sanction—to $2,000 each to defray exnensets of a pleasure tour for themselvc and wives to the United Kin - gdom of Europe. The members of our Constitittional Con vention now in session all Philadel phia having inhaled the same spirit stimulated and influenced by the ex- amples, have went back upon these constituents andvoted themselves one hundred and fifty per cent more pay than they at first agreed to per form the services for which they were chosen by the people of this State and voluntarily excepted on their part. Truly, Mr. Butler, this bill preg nent with mischief in its example and effects, you snaked through the Houses of Congress—in which you evinced so much more tact and inge nuity In generalship than you ever done in any of your military opera tions. Take your Fort Ilatreas inlet expedition as a sample, in which, in your bombard explosion. you dis turbed your tranquility of the at mosphere a thousand times more than that of the rebels in and about the Fort—will 90 its work, and has already given the sums of the official salaried hosts a value and an import ance never dreamed of in the earlier and better days of the government. Now if the people of the old Bay State really desire to be ruled in a rigorous tyranical kind of fashion, and to be brought up to a full appre ciation of the value of the services of man after their introduction into of fice, and their State Treasury deple ted, by having its funds squandered upon official favorites. He should now make a gook thing of the oppor tunity and elect_ you Governor of the State, and they will have their wish es to heart's content, I am your humble and obedient servant, MOSES SCOTT. 11. F. Butler, Mass. A litevolt in a liarein It is mentioned in the European ournals that the short sojourn of the jShah of I'ersia in Moscow was mark ed by a striking change in his ar rangements, for His Majesty while In that city came to the determina tion to send back to Teheran the four or five Persian ladies who had trav eled so far in his household. It is stated that during the journey from Astrakhan to Moscow the Shah was much occupied with the question of the proper accommodation of these ladies, who traveled under the title of servants. Ilk Majesty telegraph ed to Moscow more than once upon the subject, and on learning that apartments in the palace had been prepared for him the Shah suddenly decided on their being placed In a country house near Moscow. The ladies not relishing this isolation, sent a messenger to the Shah cow phrfning, that they were not suitably lodged. Ills Majesty was displeased with his Ministers, and directed that the ladies should come to the palace, where he waited till after their arri val,_before he proceeded to the thea tre. it appears that his favorite wife wished to go also to the theatre, but the Shah would not permit it. On the next evening, after his Maj esty's second visit to the ballet and to the ball at the hotel of Prince Dolgoroukof, it is said that the la dies were loud in their complaints, probably because being in Europe they expected to be allowed in some sort to follow European fashions. However, the Shah determined to send them hack, and, despite their tears and protestations, he adhered to his determination, so that a few hours before his Majesty left Mos cow the ladies started by railway for llizzen, en route for Persia. WOMAN SUFFRAGE. What It CONON MI Woman to Vote —Susan It. Anthony Fitted $lOO nod Costs. CANANDAWVA, N. Y., June 19. At two o'clock this afternoon Judge Seldon made a motion In the ease of Miss Anthony for a new trial, upon the ground of misdirection of the Judge in renderingo verdict of guilty without submitting the case to the jury. The Court, in a brief review of the argument of the counsel, de nied the motion. The District At torney immediately moved that the judgment of the Court be pronounced upon the defendant. The Court made inquiry of Miss Anthony if she had anything to say why sentence should not be pro nounced. Miss Anthony answered and said she had a great many things to say,and declared that in her trial every principle of justice had been violated, that every right had been denied, that she had had no trial by her peers, that the Court and jurors were her political superiors, and not her peers, and announced her deter mination to continue her labors un til equality was obtained, and was proceeding to discuss the question in volved in the case when she was in terrupted by the Court with the re mark that these questions could not be reviewed. Anthony replied that she desired it fully understood that she asked no clemency from the Court. that she desired and deMand ed the full rigor of the law. Judge Hunt thensaid: The judg ment of the Court is that you pay a tine of one hundred dollars and the costs of prosecution, and immediate ly added: "There is no order that you stand committed until the fine is paid," and so the trial ended. A motion (or a new trial is to be made in the case of the inspectors to morrow morning, on the ground that Hall, one of the defendants, was absent during the trial. LYNCH LAW Death of a Desperado. NEW MARTINSVILLE, W. VA., June 11, 1873. I 'From the Wheeling liegister.l Last night about 2 o'clock a num ber of persons, all disguised, painted red, etc., went to the house of John Jennings, one of the notorious char acters who has long infested these re gions; took him from his bed and right in his own house and in the presence of his family, shot him full of holes, killing him almost instant ly. His wife clung to him,and tried to put herself between Jennings and the firing. and in doing so, received, accidentally, two shots, ono in the weist and the other in the thigh, wounding her, but not fataly. No one besides the family was present at the time except Mr. Jesse Morris, of this county, who was staying all night and was sleeping up stairs. The masked party of lynchers shot the dogs and then went into the house at the time mentioned, and en quired of Jennings the whereabouts of his sons Frank and Jack, and sev eral other parties known to be con-, nected with them. He told them he did not know. Two of them then went up stairs where Mr. Morris was sleeping, to search for the boys, and enquired who he was; he told them. Mr. Morris said they treated him kindly and gentlemanly. After fail ing to find the boys up stairs the two went down again, and the party or dered Jennings to follow them, he got up quietly from the bed and partly dresSed himself, all the time protesting his innocence, and asking them to ask his neighbors if ho were not a civil man and if he could pre vent what his sons did. They replied to Jennings that his neighbors had been consulted, and all knew that he was eqally guilty and was one of tile ring-leaders of the gang, and that they intended putting an end effectually to the whole band. The firing than began and it was at this time that Mrs. Jennings threw her arms around her husband trying to save his life by sacrificing her own. Mr. Morris says something like twenty shots were fired. This woman's devotion to Jennings all through his terrible career and trou bles, although his second wife, at the risk of her life, bas been truly won derful indeed. She has stood by hint when his own sons were pursuing him forthe purpose of killing him. The Jennings boys could not be found, or undoubtedly they would have shared the same fate. The peo ple are greatly excited and Nejoicing, and say boldly and publicly that not a hair of any man's head snail not be harmed for the transaction. It is not known how many, nor who the parties were. John Jennings' death in all prob ability was hastened by his conduct last Saturday week in this town. The people have been very much enraged by the depredations of the Jennings boys for some time, and had determined that they should stop their robberies, and some person or persons saw proper to write several communications which appeared from tiwe to time in the Labor Vindicator denonneing these villain ies in the most emphatic terms, showing them up generally and pointing out a method of getting rid of them. John Jennings came into town on the Saturday above mention ed, and on the streets publicly de manded of the editor of the Vindica tor the name of the author of those articles, which demand, of course, was not complied with, Jennings grew very boisterous and acted gen erally very badly. A number of our leading citizens admonished him both publicly and privately that for his own sake he must keep quiet for such actions would not be tolerated. In the next number of the Vindicator another article appears, written per haps by the author of the other, showing the manner in which Jen nings had acted, and criticising him severely, warning him to beware, for the opinion of the public in refer ence to him had undergone a mate rial change, and there was no telling what an excited populace would do. John Jennings has always protest ed his innocence and succeeded for a long time in securingthe sympathies of the people, and making them be lieve that he could not prevent the conduct of his boys. But the people began afterwhile to watch the gentle man, and some discovered that he was the ringleader of the whole gang. He never was caught actually committing a robbery, but he would go around and make surveys of the premises and ascertain who had money, and frequently would be seen at midnight twenty miles from home. The neighbors could almost tell when a robbery was going to be committed, for he would always manage to go away somewhere so that lie could clean his own skirts. The pleadings of the wife and chil dren for the old man's life, and their screams after he was killed was one or the most terrible and heartrend ing ever witnessed. JenOings' last words were "my boys have brought me to this•" JOHN CHINAMAN AND THE "PIG- TAIL' , ORDER. Lie liepresenta lits Case to the Sari Francisco Board of Supervisors, and Makes a Novel Proposition. On the 2d inst., when the order for clipping the hair of the Chinese prisoners in,the county jail came up at the meeting of the Board of Super vi-ory of San Francisco tier final ac tion it was finally passed, but veto ed by the Mayor), the Rev. o.' Gib son, Chinese missionary, appeared before that body with a petition, signed by many leading Chinese merchants, which he had translated and was invited to-read. The paper was a statement of the Chinese ques tion from the Chinese point of view, and after stating that public senti ment was strongly opposed to them, and that discriminating laws had been enacted against them, called at tention to the fact that the policy of the Chinese Government was strictly exclusive, and. its traditional policy had only been given up and treaties of friendship and interchange made after the defeat of its armies by for eign Powers. Under these treaty stipulations, dictated to China by Christian Governments, the people of Europe and America have freely entered the country for all purpose::, and they have caused more dissatis faction than have the Chinese In this country. "The disclaimers against us because we supplant white labor ers in this country ought to know," say the petitioners. "what is well known to all intelligent Chinamen, that the introduction of American and English steamers upon the riv ers and coast of China has thrown out of business • a vast fleet of junks, and out of employment a whole army of men larger in number than all the Chinese now in America." Attention is further allied to the great commercial relations between the two countries, and the siguficant fact that the Chinese Government has sent and continues to send scores of youths to America to learn our languag,e, customs and laws; also, that foreigners, under stipulations, are not subject to the laws of Ch ina, but carry their own code of laws into 'all parts of the country. Speaking of immigration in general, the peti tioners ask why there should be such great opposition to the immigration of 15,000 or 20,000 peaceful Chinese annually, when 400,000 Europeans-- one-third of whom are plotters asainat our institutions—are received with open arms. "In the name of our country, in the name of justice and humanity, in the name of Chris tianity. as we understand it," the petitioners say, "we prOtest against such severe and discriminating en actments against our people while living in this country under existing .1 treaties." They then make the fol lowing proposition: "Finally, since our . presence here is considered so detrimental to the country and is so offensive to the American people, we propose and prom ise on our part to use all our influence to carry the propo sition into effect. We propose a speedy and perfect abrogation and repeal of the present treaty relations between China and America. sequin ,- tug the retirement of all Chinese , people and trade from these United States and the withdrawing of all American people and trade and com mercial intercourse whatever from China. This, perhaps, will give to the American people the opportuni of preserving for a longer time their civil and religious Institutions, which, it is said, the immigration of Chinese is 'calculated to destroy. This arrangement will also, to some extent, relieve the Chin es e people and Government from the serious embarrassments which now disturb them, and enable them, by so much, to return to the traditional policy f their sages and statesmen, i. e., 'stay at home and mind our own business, and let all other people do the same.' This is our proposition. Will Amer ican people agree to it? Will the newspapers, which have lately said so many things against us and against our residence in this country, will they now aid us in bringing about this, to us, desirable state of affairs ? In the meantime, since we are now here undersacred treaty stipulations, we humbly pray we may be treated according to those stipulations, until such time as the treaty can be re pealed and commercial intercourse and friendly relations come to an end." —A Mrs. Day, in .WOrcester, Mass., last week committed suicide by the very undignified method of taking hed-bug poison. Really there is a taste in such matters, which, if peo ple will kill themselves, should be cultivated. Chloroform, strychr.ine, the hare bodkid, and the rope are all more respectable resou:ces than bed bug poison, and more agreeable to take for the purpose of Inking one self off. New Advertisements. STEVENSON & FOSTER SilltlonerS,Priliteni, "linden!, Blank Book Maker. ANu WIIOLY.SALL DEALER* IN l'R INTEIt S' ST t )(' Flat Papery, Book Punero. Ruled hill Head.. Lel tei.liendo, Card", Printing 1n4., Sr., nlwny+ on hand. Give no kcal]. Car. Wood SL 4nd Third Are , and s 2 s.l Third dre., PittOurgh, l'u 1‘02511161 KLYON'S ATHAIRON Only 50 Cents per Bottle. It promotes the GROWTH, PRESER VES the COLOR, and Increases the V I gfn• lid ISE.ICTS o (the , n TIIITIIT YEALIIB A,lO T,TON . EI HATTIAMON ros r 11,111 eau aret.placed in the market by Professor E Thomas Lyon. a inidetate of Princeton college. The name is derived from the Greek •• KArna sigtolyuag to c/eaes., periffy, T,Jiar , lictle, or , ', dor, The favor it has received. and the poi.uLarity it has obtained, is tinprecedentil and Incredible. It In creases the GIWWTH and lir-at - TYr‘f the it AM. It a delightful dressing. It ersdicaLs dandruff. It prevents the Hair from turning gray. It keeps the need cool. and gives the hair a rich. soft. glossy ap pearance. It is the 14 AVE in Qr tsTrl Vend QUALITT La it wad over a (41' irrt: it of a ( 'F.BITITUT AGO, and 18 B,Alti by all Druggists and i:oulitry Stores at wily GO Ceuta per Dottie.. Warasn'o Mogi Her Lir. LYON'S ATHAMON , 000 7A_ a f.Li'. Pr, EP Ait A linN. R )OTS, '7 k.l ih 11‘t.1- -, 1 . Lt.01. - irat .t t ( V S . : LS ME= BE sm. lON w at , - A 2, dic T on.c, MI I=l Is 1.4,11 2 111,,A.rs si r i Viol a 1.52.,1.y eu. •: ti 10eq. A, A r , nIS Is. , t. it s • r • • a Kr. ht., •••• 'SVC LI,. . j A ad IMII•ti E.A; '5• v n., r A apinuaAt A ppt•tn, r ..s•rtte v . They purl and i•I th, tx..1.1y ?I • Now Y T J. PO WIER— Civil ItinK:neer una Stineyerf • Ofllre wour Dtpot, Iteciwsier, I; 4- tf DAIG & SILVERMAN. WATER STREET. ROCHESTER, PA IS WEIIKLY RECEIVING A FREsII st PPIA OF ouollS IN RActi OF THE cot.i.uw DEPARTMENT,: 11)1t..Y . Cir . CI C_).l)S Jeans, Cast inieres and Sattinets, \Vitae and Colorttsl and Barred It'lannels, Merivms, Delaines, Lawns, Water Priatis, Woo it n w Is, Brown ar.tl Black SI uslins, Drilling, Tic-kings, Pr;nts, Canton F'lannels, .laeonets, Table Linen, Irish Linen, Millinery Goods, Ribbons and Flowers, Hats and Jewelry, (!ounterpanes, Hosiery, Crash, Gloves &Mits. By close attention to hominess, and by keeping couatantly on hand a well assorted stock of goods of all the different kiuda usually kept in a country store, the undersigned hopes In the fu ture as In the past , to merit and receive a liberal share of the public patronage. DAIG ik. SILVERMAN. - JO 4-ty] Rowell & C :o.'s Advertisements... A GREAT OFFER! bo a4Bl 14w A ny, Y 4 will dispose of 100 PIANOS & ORGANS of first class Jia.terc Including, Waters', al ,str,ratly loon prices for each, or part cash, and balance lo small monthly payments. New 7 octavo first-class Pianos, all modern Improvements. for. ,27r., cub. Organs i5t..."5. $l5. DOUBLE REED OR GANS. t 100; 4 STOP. $110; s trl7ol', ti2s, and upwards. Waters ' Concerto Parlor Organs are the most Ipaalkftd to style and perfect in tone ever made. The Concerto Stop 18 the best placed in any Organ. It is produced by a third set of reedit peculiarly voiced, the effect of which is most Manning and soul-sttrrinq, while its Imi tation of the human voice Is most superb. Tenni' liberal. ILLUSTRATED CA TA LOGE:I:W mailed for one stump. A liberal discount to Ministers. Churches, Sunday Schote- Lodge.. &c. 6-ts-4w AGENTS WANTED. WANTED Jrlt JOHN A. DODGE, Gent Agent, Dant.nry,conr, WiLLACE & compANv7N CREAM TABLE CHOCOLATE No boiling necessary. A cup of delicious Choc olate made with It In two minutes. No waste Packed in pound )21r8. Vanilla or plain. One doe. to box. Unequaled all a confection for :anch, spread on crackern, with aglass of milk at hand to drink. For making Soda Water Syrup or du- Toeing Ice Cream it Is superior to any ch‘imointe made; and for ChocoiNte Cake, nothing dee NY 1!I be used where this tine been trued For sale by J. T. WARREN it CO.ACincinnatt, U. WE WANT AN AGENT In DO, towin,hip to canvarm for Ilw new. valuable and ta,4t gelling book by Dr. JOHN COWA N. The Science of a New Life. Recommended and endorsed by prominent elle isrero, phyo,iclans, religion,. and pecular papvr. No other book Ilkes per v.', tr. Fuaranteed. Addremu, COW AN A I:19 Eighth Nt., J. IL JOICISTOII Rifles VI to $75 Rev°lvf rs *Li to ri t .l o t, $1 To tt , l t:on 'Material, 70,k1.• /Aro* di/would to deal , ro or . - L Army vtin. Revolver*, yC.. bough( or LTZlllieli I JI /1:“. 10 , by express C. C. D. to be exarnioel for. WORKING CLASS.)„. I ENIALF: t a itempettabla tm..pioyaa•Lt at Imin , 4' LI • •• .1 ; BO capital req:llr. , l; fun , • yuluablr• packa' g 'e of gmoli4 e•esit Iry ' A.I drees. sltli his o•ot re.urn ntamp, It. .1 , 0 •1$ CO., 10 Cortlaffilt St . . N. Y $5 to $2O per day ' Agent , . wanted ! A.t r Inr , -ert utwi,rking iteuttie.ol eitlit•r ot . x.) nun: ur Add, Mak , 131 , kr , nnttoty at e, k nor ILI It 4 1.11,11'0,1110111,1:Ir• lb , nate Oeut at anythltiv else. Particular. fr,c. hTiNsoN CO., Portland. Mad, THE, New Patent sprint; "NEVER MISS 9 1E171" FISH HOOK. This is the grente-t invention ever contrived by man, and catches nab with such rapidity that it astonishes all v. ho see It operate. It LetiNtl to an ordinary line, bait ed and set, and operate etornewhat like the cock or n inn, an soon AA the tiffin touches the bait the epring cotaei down upon It. and it to canwht. Sent lir mail. post pant. for 7,0 COUP. or 3 for Ad.tre,l4 IRON CITY NOV ELTV Pittabrirgli. j••I, BEAVER SEMINARY, Fall Scssioll Opcils September 9th : 1873. GIATE DEPARTMENTS. For further information, send for circalar, or afhlrecm M. E. SCHEILINER, President j..1,•tfl BEAvan,Y, rOUNTRY'', , TI)ItE, near !tar. chance for a man with a n mall capital Ma-t 1,. sold to settio an as•at.. Address, .1 P CI—NM:N:I.II\M. - ) _ , 1 0., To gg 4.1.•1 CLI I h r MEM =MEM p:1 !A. Constt p.. t to General +Lad Uwe) Agents. for the Bertram Sewing Ma chine, made at Danbury. Con. famteet eaalcet Lock-Stitch, Stratght Needle Machine M th. mar u e L We give twit*, borer than any other r'dnpany. Addretql Nelis Adrertisentents HOW TO CATCH FISH BEAVER, PA PRIMARY, ENGLISH AND COLLE- Vt)lt, FltANi; )1 . C.IICIY. UM ',.7it i,l ti l STEAM REFINED ENGINE CARBON, SPINDLE, CYLINDER. PAINT, &4I(; Al. pqrt r 111111 POINT OIL WORKS, SNIFF] VS II;I mI'NTY. l'A , rniy2 , tf 1,. I'. II f) T. In IN IrklN4 WATC,IIES.JEWELRY,CLOCKS & SILVERWARE S. El itTn AVE NI E, I,‘”r+ SIIIIT1IFIFLI) Fr.. rirr,ni Sp., 'al ativntion L':ive:r re 1.. 11' and al , elry. .•- 1 , '1"1.1.7\ - 1"1`1F121.:. PAlt L 4 )IZ. LIBRA In l)1\1\(; IZ( )4 )N1 .1*1) ()1'11( I: N['l:Nfl•l 'Cl I= A),.1. 111.1ntilaci lor Wo•!. . MiDollough's Pahl LOilllail, Bed. T. B. \.OUNG & CO 4 y . 1 / 4 s7re,l, I'ITTSI;URG l'.l 1),•", f 1,[1 , / 1(14.11 01 th . \ nl , nu.l It, its r N..w , .t .S , ll , tl I) hu•n April ItEs(t•lccEs 4.l‘ , lclraflr. . 11.1,d.. 1 , / sc,Ure • . I. S. U mds and se , Antics nr, hnnd U. O.) for I}ne tr,rm ..muvz ;.r . l+ 11 In l II: Due from National IS:thks. I/Ile :rola Stat.• 113Liks and 1.1aillo•fs sr: sll /3:111k1112' Furniture and Fix!ur,— vxpelist s . . 1. o,li IN Prorn , nnis Chl ek. and ether 1 . 301 4 - ..; Bilis 01 NAI{01:11A }:411110k 11 1 ,111 1111 Fraen.ll3 I Currency A. Nlekels I;! Specie ( (1111 Legal 'fnder Notes. . . 1k) LIA BILITI ES capital Stock pant in . . • • • $2 1)(1 .0 0 0 04, Surpint , Fond__ . .. .. .. . 2 7 i, ' , IA IA 2Ati 49 , Exchange . . . .. .. I,Nil c< Interest.... .... .. ~,.. . ... .... 1.115 :CI Profit and Los' , .. ... ... .. 141, 61 National Ilar k Circulation ... .. . .. 105,2-is 00 Divtdentls unpaid.. 1,4.1.1 31 . . Individual Deposits. .. .. . . 1.1,670 I 1 Dne to State Ilankr. and Bankere , . lqii 'lll STATE 01 , PENNsTI.v %NIA. COUNTY op IIEAI ER. I I. Edward Hoopes, Ca,hier of the National Bank of Beaver county, do solemnly affirm that the above statement Is true, to the best of my knowl edge and belief. EDWARD HOOPES, Caghter. Subscribed before me this al day of June, !873. MILTON TOWNN EN I). Notary Public Correct: Attest - R. E. HOOPES M. T. KENNEDY M. DARRAGH, ic.ll-3w Directory. New AdvertisententN STEVENSON & WITTIg LAND OFFICE No. 198 Penn-Bt, Pittalar,h, F. Pe " We Ofkr the fOriolV for oale. Call at our WI 11 'Ater of propi•rtlee for rat, Thls farm contains acrem of ar,t mostly cleticcd, with fmou4l,l Tinted 4 mllea from New lirttjht,,, t , Castle road. In North Sewlekle., Pa.. has a ve r y F.OI Or •!.. . t,md order and repair; A NI!W FiltMl of ti rootna, well finished. A '. : BARN. with other nnthulld I • wut,t, mprill;!. Tit the Mace. Pricy e 5,: t. net ADA Si jr . r,:•.!ler ,!, , • . Bali A thoo'caMc f.alc ctm".l,lldl Economy tom, or , laip fitoc.cr o i••, the .thhion at Leg , 01,."', , 100 acres improved.:.e r , •. all tillable shun rleatru machinery: goreivorm,r •. nes er 7ailing. and runs; ;peel - inz-stopm with quarry 01„e21 fruit on the plaer: frame 11,i,, • flee, containing 1i rooms; (rano fret in good repair; -tablhig duly 11, neighborhood, cone, ntorr.o. pomit Min( a • $/f1:41.0 A N.lt-rlld farm - and ,112 , 1,r ru It 'vat km. towt,top. Iteaver ~, m4t) I lam! can to• ,f,rk4 r 1 by tua , „ Cif,”. tlmg u nr,r. !Joilo:r lqwl ;Story. ('•.! Pp good v.01,r. li, : 4 )oe. Cut 11.0111, ',VIA! I. j, ill, State ( .110111,11 l N frr OLT M Yr.,'.. r•I REIM N. • , , • x. • • 1)1 I,•_ /...-t ME lh, , , i„ 11 •k- t,r• kft,r, '•• -t,i 12111121111 ti 4 • • •? 11141 p IL Llopt• w it• us: , t Taxeg p:tbl cent. off A/b +all; be &titled All paid tall (lab ONE .1. NV I :\ A :1 ITru • (IS LI - 1• Irun Glass and AZTICTIIiIIfc, Knabe & Co.'s 11.1\ E- 1;1:i)- 1, 1.() A 1'1:1\1 t, MEMO nir....• r:Lt or's: L;quir r,l - - 11 county of ft.,. „, ..111.4::1 .:t;•••1, rer0.,1,4 ,•.•• d". • .' 'T I II ine 1!II=E111111 ( >I 1.-.-4 bave un bend a I,n: II ...., MIME n. 'hi ) an t. POP•01:1 , !,hll/, milt .art' motley p:ir. tee to hott , r lot, for other t;rtn In the CJIIIIT v. A ZiNDSTONES ANit CEMENTh OF ALL RI \;'- . TIIOII IS ALLISON Dry Goods ad No .izo( 1:EN“V.\1:1 ►i.~~:u~c.~~;r \ %IL', 1111.:07 N \VwW convtantly kr•y good+ on !land and f , ll at lb. Vr — All heavy gca,,lK deliver, Torre )^K Pall`,ll Ice Cream Fr $lOl 517 1, Newest and Best Ira rratded to .Fror:r rrato nz been appointed Wholesale the sale of the celebrated Freezer In It I am prepared to supply the trade AT TUREICP PRICE,. Call and EN.2lllline lug any other W. A. McCE T 63 Wood lit., Pittsbur Agent (or I.l4nre's Standard Scale.. No. :1O CI, 23'2 O. I I, liffl NI i i IMM I=ll h .1 M S 4, •( MIS I= 1t... L. Piai I I; \ CM J -1 . 4*EAS.? 'D-, , th -\:- MARBLE WORKS W.H.MARSVIALL, MANUFACTURER OF MONUMENTS ) 8: GIIAVE L S TONES EMI IMIN =Mail i.l i'l~'l n 11.1(UN, FI,()1 It, )1 1.. A I I.I:AJN, )111.1 IMES
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers