febfori) fnqnircr. BKBFOKD, PA., FfiIPAY, Jl 11 23, 15*69 STATE TH'KET. OOrIRJOB, JOHN" V. GEARY, of Cumberland Ccunlr. JIOOK 01' StPBEME .OCBT, HENRY W. WILLIAMS, of Allegheny County. DIKTEICI TICKET. seirtTtiß, G. SHANNON MUM-IN. (Subject to the decision of the l>i*L Conference.) j A,EMILY, J. 11. LONGBNECKEB, Kk{. (Subject to the decision of the Hist. Conference.) coevrv TICKET. rHOTHO.E'TIRY, J. W. LINGENFELTER, Esq., "fEedrurd Bur. suF.atrr, WILLLAM DIBERT. of Bedford Bor. THLASCRM, WILLIAM I'IIILLII'S. of Bedford Twj.. Ct>**lSSß>Yl.U. JAMES.KI-NE, of Hspewtlt Twp. POOR. DIRKCTOB, EMAXIKL J. DIEHL, of Cderain Twp. conoxnis, BE- A. S. SMITH, of St. Ctgirsviite Bor. AtDITOR, JOHX P. WILLIAMS, of South Woodbery Twp. THERE i Cholera ID New York City. THE President has been spending the past week or two at Long Branch and Cape -May. AMONG the distinguished visitors at the "Springs we notice Hon. Simon Causer* sn and Judge Thompson of the Supreme Court. THE Cops weot for eac-h others pockets with a vengance at the Ilarrisburg conven tion. They will go for Packer's the balance of the campaign. Money is the measure of merit with thetu. THE adjourned court held this week has been but meagrely attended. On account of the lateness of the harvest our farmers are still busy securing their crops. Judge Row? presided and a eon iderable amount of business was disposed of. JOHN M. COOPER of the Chambcrsburg Valley spirit has retired from that paper and from editorial life. Mr. Cooper is a clever, genial gentleman and barring his politics we heartily wish him success in whatever field of iafcor he may determine to cast his lot. THE Ohio Copperh- ad Convention con demos unequivocally our present protective tariff. The Pennsylvania Cops keep mum on the tariff, but are equally ready with their Ohio brethren to do the bidding of British free traders as soon as they get into power. GRANT'S administration has been paying off the national debt at the rate of fifteen or twenty millions per month. The Copper head convention is opposed to this kiud of thing and demands reform. It is the true rebel idea they have got—they are opposed to the paymc-ut of the debt at ail. THE Cops make a great ado about bloat cd bondholders. Last week they nominated a twenty million aristocrat as their candidate for Governor or rather be with tho help of Brick I'omcroy bought up their convention for the, to him, paltry sum of a hundred thousand dollars. THE cops say Gen. Cass was not nomina ted because be belongs to the railroad ring. They forgot to say that Packer owns the Lehigh Valley Railroad and is as much in terested in railroad monopoly as any one in the State. Why don't they tell us that Hancock failed to .-eeure the nomination be cause be was a soldier. That would have been a true statement << r the case. FRANK HI'UHES declared in the Demo cratic convention at Ilarrisburg that he had to run a gauntlet of pick pock' t- to gain an entrance to the convention. No wonder — the majority nf the delegates amour whom Packer's hundred thou.-and dollars had b- en distributed were -apposed to have their wages in their pocket.- ex<- pt what had already gone tor whiskey. COL. F. JORDAN, Secretary of the Com monwealth combining business with pit-m --ure, has been spending the past week among his old friend* in Bedford. He has cho-en Ilarrisburg as his future place of residence and business, and in addition to his duties as Secretary of the Commonwealth is prac rising his profession. His acknowledged ability as a lawyer will soon command for him a lucrative practice at the capital. PACKER is worth fifteen or twenty mil lions of dollars and the cops expect his uioney to elect lum. They have always been the upholders of a uionied aristocracy. It is not long since they upheld the doc trine that capita] should own labor. They have since undertaken to play the ro'e of poor man's friend, but that i. only for effect. Their aristocratic preferences will crop out in spite of all their efforts to hide them for a season. Packer owes his nom ination to his money alone. THE Solditr made but a poor show in the Democratic Convention. Gen. Hancock got but the paltry cumber of 21 votes on his highest ballot. .Money settled the ques tion. Packer wa- always a Copperhead which was sufficient to have beaten Hancock of itself But beside this ah end red thou sand dollars out of Packer's millions soon settled the hash of all opposing candidates. There is .-aid to have been no difficulty in buying all the votes that were wanted and as a matter of cour.-e "Packer had no conscien tious scruples on that point. THE New \ ork Tribune publishes a list *of some of the "poor men" in that city whose names do not appear in the income tax list. Ex-Mayor Wood stands at the head and "Ben," his brother, comes sec and. Each of these men is worth mil lions, and yet they return no incomes! in. M. Tweed who is said to own SBOO,- <•00 worth of real estate, is put down as another of the "poor men." Richard O'- Lorman, Corporation Counsel, whose office is worth from $50,000 to SIOO,OOO per year, pays no income tax ! —These men are all good Democrats, and advocates of "econo my." IHE Erie Railroad is making a regular < hapter of accidents or rather murders. Rut a few weeks ago we chronicled a fright ful accident with loss of life and now comes the news that again on the 15th through the gross carelessness of the con ductor of a freight train, nine more victims hare been cruelly murdered by the running of an express train into a freight traiu that had only been partially switched off. It is high time that railroad murders he punish ed as other homicides are. A careful in vestigation and prompt pumshmcnt of the guilty parties iu a few cases would socn cure tbefs railroad officials of their careless i habffe THE Heading Diejmteh t thus forcibly sums up Judge Packer's eiaitas upon the people of Pennsylvania: Judge Packer's name is familiar all over Pennsylvania, more on account of his promi nence as a Democratic politician, a railroad king and a monied aristocrat, than on ac count of any peculiar worth as a citizen of this great and growing Commonwealth. It is true his railroad enterprises have been great; but in all of them he has steadily worked for Paeker, and Packer only. He has.aroassed untold millions as the head centre of monopolies, and those millions have been forced out of the bauds and pockets of the "plough-holders" and the honest sons of toil; he has spent the great er part of half a million in buying the posi tion he now holds as the standard bearer of the Democratic party, and he will spend another million—his present year's income —to buy the Gubernatorial chair of this State, that he may have unlimited swing at the advantages that office would afford him in strengthening his monopolies and filling his coffers with millions more of money wrung from the bard fists of the toiitDg masses of Pennsylvania. In this nomina ticn we recognize the influence of money and not principle, and we believe this to be the conviction of every honest man in Pennsyl- vania. THE proposition to introduce Chinese Coolie labor into the South is beginning to gain favor in the eyes of the Democracy—it has the look of their old idol, slavery. Political Parties in Virginia. There are two classes of persons who are endeavoring to force Virginia into (he Demo cratic party, whether she wtif or no. One is the party of carpet baggers and scalawags in this State, who are of opinion that they may da us damage with the President and Con en - bv calling our victorious party Demrf era ic. The other is the Northern Demo crat.--, who are very anxious to muster us into their ranks. First—The victory here was wen by an alliance of good men generally of all politi cal shades of opiniou in other days, who sunk all party preferences, all personal opinions, and joined in the common cause'of rescuing the State from the dominion of ig norance and dishonesty. They acted as pa triot-. national and domestic. They ig nored the old party names, and associated as comrades devoutly struggling for the public -a'yation. So it is the greatest ab surdity —it is an in-uit to the grand motives which governed them—to call them by any of the old party names. Second—The fight here was upon reeon struetiom and the victorious party, which has ret Virginia free, stood upon General Grant's platform, and that party is now ab s rbod in more important matters than hunting for a party name. They are endeav oring to complete the great work that has been propitiously begun, and they desire to go on with it in entire harmony with the Fed ral Administration until it is consum mated. Their party relations depend upon the event- that are to follow. Those event.- are to be controlled at Washington, at pre sent. wo repeat, they stand on" the Grant platform, desiring, in proof of their senat or the favor extended to them by General Grant, to go in harmony with the Federal Kxecutive. And * Third —It is plain that parties must ba re formed. The old issues and the parties that were formed UDOII them must give place to new b -ties and pew parties. \Ve do not be i ve there will ever oe a Democratic parly in Virginia; or if there should be. it will be altered iu every respect that it willresetn !. the old one in name alone. The revolu in the theory of our Government has taken away the main pillar of the old Demo cracy. *Nor do we think that a party bear ing the name Whig will anymore resemble that which existed before the war. The old parties must all pass away. The now crystEducations out of the debris of the old, and their combinations with the new is-ucs that mu*t grow out of the new order of out political system, arc now steadily going on, and \ irginiawill not be ready to take sides until they take shape at;d have the breath of life blown into them. As yet she is in the chrysalis state, endeavoring to expand her limbs and recover her strength in the genial sunshine which has been intro duced through a loop-hole kindly made for LIS by General Grant. She is now drawn to that light, and is inclined to continue in it. Thus iar only can we see now. But to join any of the old parties she is not at all in elined, and it is not probable that she will. I hey are dead.— Richmond Dispatch, July Terrible Itailway Calamity. Collision of an Express Train with a / night Tram on tin Erie Railroad, ■ tar Cnrr s Roc/c—.Sir Passengers Runt ed to Death.—Particulars of the Catas trop'ie. MfDor.KTOWN, N. I'.. July I V—A fright ful disaster occurred on the Erie Railroad a mt midnight at Mount Hope,on the Dei iware Division. The night express train ft m New York whirti left"there at half-past six o'clock, made the usual time going west until twelve o'clock, when the disaster oc curred at .Mount Hope. It would overhaul a freight train, also going west, which, ac c rdii g to telegraphic in-truction, should .ia\e run on a siding, t permit the express t > pa--- without stoppage. The freight train switched off in the reg ui-ir manner, but, from some carelessness or fatality, did not move far enough up the >:ding to entirely clear the track, and the trail of the train, consisting of one or two oar-, remained on the track when the ex press train came thundering along. The it.,iu .struck the tail of the freight, and the ogrne and baggage car, express ear, smok ing ear, one passenger car and a sleeping car w Htrown off the track and smashed out of all shape. The accident occurred about thirty miles from Carr's Rock. i he splintered cars and fragments of tim ber came in contact with the scattered lire from the locomotive, and a conflagration en d, in which timber', and the wounded pas-engers all went to feed the flames. Seven ear* were thus destroyed, and nine passengers are known to have been burned to death. Two of the passengers are ftforn New } ork, and one of thetn is supposed to be the Rev. Benjamin B. Hal jeek, pastor of a New York church, who lives on East Fourteenth street. CAPITAL ASI> LABOR. TO increase the rates of interest is a backward step, and no political economist would advocate such a measure. It is not hostile to labor home productions, but directly robs these interests of that much money, and tends only to pamper wealth, trafficero uud the drones in the community; and the rep resentative who votes for such a measure is the most deadly enemy the laborer and manufacturer has to contend with, because just in proportion as the rates of interest in etease the price of labor du reases, and our home industry declines. Our legislation is largely in favor of capital, against domestic productions, simply because money-ehang ers and the monied interests buy op the members of the legislatures to legislate in that interest, while it ought to be in favor of encouraging domestics by reducing the rates of iuterest and dividends, to as to make it a greater inducement, to invest money in manufactures, which give employ ment to the people, instead of making it more profitable to invest in stocks, stock jobbing and speculations, which only tend to destroy legitimate business. Since the destruction of .slavery, our coun try is only liable to the dangers, to-wit; The legislation in favor of capital, which enrich es the few aud empoverishes the many, ere atimr an aristocracy based on money; eorrup tion in our legislative halls where members sell themselves to the highest bidder to pass improper acts, and corruption in the Halls iof Justice. These three crimes against the, principles of our Government, arc twice as ! deadly as treason against the country, and we firmly believe that nothing will check it out a dose of lynch law administered to those who are notoriously known to b guilty of such acts. It is a sad rcort, but! the body politic, like the atmosphere we breathe, sometimes becomes so impure that nothing but a terrible storm, however de structire it may be ta some, will purify, and give life and healing' to millions who pass through the ordeal. — Miner's Journal A Hell-Known Citizen of Chicago Fa tally Poisoned by Wearing Ited Stock ings. A strange case of threatened fatality, arising from a most peculiar canse, has just been developed in this city. On the 27th of June last (St. John's Day), Mr. Alt ran der Bangley, a well known grocer of the North division, joined an excursion of the French Society of St. Jean de Baptisie to Bourbonnaise Grove, near Kankakee. He wore on that occasion a pair of what are known as French socks, composed of fine thread material, with bright scarlet bot toms, which his wife bad purchased at a leading dry goods store. At the close of the pic nic, cn his return to Chicago, Mr. Bangley complained of severe pain in his feet, and on the following morning was un able to attend to his business in consequence of iheir painfully swollen condition. From that time forth the strange disorder in creastd rapidly, extending in white blisters over nearly the entire body of the sufferer. Dr-. Henrotin and Fisher were summoned, and were at first of the opinion that the case was one of erysipelas, but were soon compelled by the symptoms to abandon the diagnosis. The physicians were completely at a loss to account for the peculiar manifestations of the disease, which unquestionably indi cated that a deadly poison had been infused into the system through the medium of the blood. After several consolations bad been had. the doctors incidentally learned of the scarlet footed French sock worn by Mr. Bangley on St. John's Day. A minute ex amination of the soeks developed the fact that in the bright red coloring matter was contained a principle of acute poison, the . absorption of'which into the sensitive sole of the foot had been aided by abundant perspiration, until it had taken complete po>se-sion of the system. Subsequent to arriving at the cause every effort was made to effect a remedy, hut without success. Mr. Bauglcy's condition has continued to grow worse day by day, until, on yesterday, he was advised to make Lis will, as he had but a short time to live. So stands this singular poisoning ca-e at present. It is stated that other cases of the kind have arisen from the same cause, though not nearly so severe. Repudiation openly Advocated. Although the present administration has reduced the public bebt $36,000,000 and we can, during the current century, wipe out entirely the national debt without increasing the taxes per cap-ita! or per capita, yet the Democrats are rascally and foolish enough to talk of repudiation. Some are shy of owning it, others are opposed to it, but the prevailing sentiment where Democracy is dominant is for cheating the nation's creditors. A recent number of the Louis ville Courier Journal contained a letter from Franklin. Ky.. which bears testimony to this fact, as follows : The Court room at this place yesterday, was filled with an intelligent assembly of citizens, gathered together for the purpose of hearing speeches from Asbury Dawson and W. W. Bush, rival candidates for a seat iu the next.Leg : slature and also to listen to an addsess from the Hon. J. S. Gollady, our representative in Congress. Mi. Gol lady was in fine trim for the occasion, and without any circumlocution whatever, came squarely out in favor of repudiation and an noum-.-d that it was the only solution of our financial difficulties. He spoke at length of the two political parties in the country, but said that the doctrine of Repudiation was no part of "the Democratic creed, but or iginates in common sense, and is older than Democracy.'' Many instances were cited to show that the history of all debts created for warpurpost-s had resulted in repudiation. He charged that the Radical party, while it insisted on the saeredness of the public faith to liquidate its obligations thus contracted, had virtually set the example of repudiation by refusing to pay for "private property taken without just compensation, as well as the passage of a bankrupt law; and he now was in favor that the entire public debt should be paid in good faith or none at all. Iu the course of the address Mr. Gollady exhibited a piece of Continental script issued by the then colony of Virginia in 1781 for $ 1,500 which was repudiated by the As sembly after it became a State and a res toration of peace had been declared between the Colonies and Great Britain His speech was listened to throughout with marked at tention, and was frequently greeted with rounds of applause. Labor in England. Agricultural labor in England ha- again given rise to an animated discussion in the Briti.sh Parliament. The laborers, it ap pear', aro reduced to a more fortern and helpless condition than eve* In the South ern counties of England, wages for farm work arc as low as uinc shillings a week, that i-. eighteen pence or thirty-six cents a day. The employing farmers, it is stated, lis the wages to correspond with the price of the tight pound loaf of bread. When the eight pound loaf sold for seventeen pence (thirty-four cents), the men were paid eleven shillings a week, or forty-four cents a day, and now when the eight pound loaf is one shilling the wages have been re duced to thirty-six cents a day. This rate, however, is too low to support a family, and thecome/iuence is that the laborers compel their children to work in the field as soon as they are able to walk, in order to help earn their bread; and although schooesare plenty, they are ofvery little u-o to the agricultural population. In Parliament, it was suggest ed that compulsory education was the rem edy, and that- the farmers should be forbid den to employ children under thirteen years of age, but the reply to this was that the parents could rot afford to feed children who did not work, and that the law, if en forced, would cause starvation. No one, howpver, in tne House of Commons, seem ed to know how to grapple with this diffi culty, and the poor agricultural laborer, af ter having been the subject of discussion for half a day, was di-miped to manage as best he may for himself for another year. ANECDOTE OF THE FBESCH EMPEROR.— A correspondent of the Philadelphia Bulle tin writes from Paris. July lid: "The im perial family seem to have taken up then residence for the remainder of the summer in the vicinity of Paris, and propose giving a series of matinees and soirees in the gar dens of the Palace of St. Cloud, to indem nify themselves and their friends for their privation of Fontaioebleau. The Emperor has begun to -troll about the little town and the banks of the river, jnst as he uably did not like to seem ill natured by ortl Ving them off, so he sought out one of the ginger-bread stalls which are always to bo found inthc neighboihood, purchased the whole of the stock at a bargain, and then upsetting the entire concern with his own hand, left the contents to the mercy of the hungry crowd of urchins." 1s the free \\ estern States of Ohio and California, the Democrats have placed their candidates upon platforms of the most odi ous principles—old-fogy, illiberal, narrow minded, dishonorable and dishonest. In the State of Mississippi, the Re publicans have placed their candidate upon a platform of the highest American ideas.— peace, amity and justice, "unfaltering devo tion to the Onion, first, last and forever 3 (*' r i impartial and economical adminis tration;" "unrestricted right of speech to all men, with complete freedom of the bal lot the e-tablisbmcnt of a "system offree schools, which shall place the moans of lib eral education within the reach of every child ; the "removal of all taxation and as sessments which di'criininate against labor ers and labor;" the "equality before the law of all men of every race and color." Now, which of these Republican principles JS the Democratic Party opposed to, and why cannot the Democratic Party construct a platform embracing such principles? ST. PIERRE, Miquclon, Wednesday July 14. —The ocean cable was spliced to the shore end to-dry by the steamer WiUiam Corn/. The cause of the failure to splice yesterday was that the shore end was lost The buoy was easily found, but when taken up it was therefore necessary to grapple for it. Directly the splice was made, the in ttrument and the full staff of operators were sent ou shore, and communication was soon opened with Brest A PACIFIC RAILROAD RUNAWAY.— At Echo, the other evening, three freight trains stood upon the main track, when word came flashing over the telegraph from the superintendent, "A locomotive and ten der, with steam up, and with nobody on board, have broken from a freight train and started down the grade." Ah! then and there was a hurrying to and fro! In a few minutes came a second message: "She has just passed Castle Rock station.' Never were three trains got off upon a siding with less delay. Then the workmen piled sleep ers high upon the traek. Lest even that should not stop "her," and she should do murder, further down the road, they tore up the rail# below. Just as this was. ac complished she came in sight. She shot through the sleepers like a bullet through a pine board, sending them flying in all di rections, and darkening the air with splin ters. But at the broken traek she jumped up and down with Texation, and finally plunged angrily head foremost into a hill >ide. Bhe had run twenty-six miles in twenty minutes—the best time yet made upon the road. A BRAVE SON. —Daniel Upton, former ly a member of the Michigan Legislature, recently attempted to cross Black Lake, Mich., which is half a mile across, in a leaky boat, when it went to pieces, leaving 'aim and his youngest son to get to shore the best way they could. The latter succeeded, but his father, becoming exhausted, began to sinkr. Eddie Upton, his oldest son, saw all their movements from the house, wlieh is close to the shore, and. running dowi to the beach, shouted to his futher to keep up good courage and he would save him. He quickly threw off his boots and outer cbth ing, and swimming out to where thi old gentleman was struggling in the vater, caught him just as he was going down the third time. CliDging to his father witi an iron grip, ho turned upon his back and swam back in this manner to the shore , a mi, upon reaching it, sank to the ground insen sible from exhaustion and excitement. Mr. Upton laid to all appearance dead, aid in this condition they were found side by ride upon the arrival of neighbors whom the youngest boy bad called to the spot. WHERE ARE THE WRITERS?—Has Ltng fe'low hung his harp upoD the willows? Is Whittier tired of his sweet singing? Is Holmes too i'at and too lazy to give us .n other book? Has Mitchell become too mtch enamored of landscape gardening and riral architecture ever again to paint a word jic ture for u-? Will Holland rest forever on his Kathrina laurels'/ Is Gail Hamilon dead? Have Fanny Fern and Grace Grcn wood left the field? Where are they al — the writers? Won't cvan Walt. Whitman tunc a/ain bis erratic lyre? Has marriage lost t> us forever Miss Prescott, now Mrs. Spoftrd? Ha; Florence Percy become disgusted vith author>hip because of the controversy >ver her i; ltock me to sleep?,' And Read,and Boker, and Mackenzie—have they droiped their quills forever? Have the Warner no more novels? Have the Carys given tk-in selves up wholly to Sorosis? Is there no body to write a bright new book? SCOTCH ENTERPRISE.—The Scots arehut a feeble folk numerically, but. by their in dustry, thrift and "cannyness," they pot to shame many a more populous peqple. They are great at building ve3sels ior other people, and they have made so inch money in this and other ways as to be aHe to build not a lew vessels for themselves. An official return recently issued shovs that on the £ Ist of Dtctnber the numbir of sailing vessels belonging to Scotianl was 2,925, hiving a capacity of 709, 'Joj tons, and that the number of steam vesselt was 530. with a capacity of 260,229 tons The entire population of Scotland is no much, if any. larger than that of the State of New York; but when will that Statv own a mercantile navy of 3,445 ships auu steamers, with a capacity for carrying a million tons of freight? THE Democrats of Pennsylvania evidently have not read the left >r of Jonah G. Ab bott, of Boston to the Tammany Society of New \ ork, on the occasion of its late Fourth of July festival, or else they do not recog nize him as he is regarded "here as ont of the authorized expounders of the true faith. In that letter Judge Abbott declared iVat • negro suffrage and reconstruction are sa iled issues; "and if we to-day had the mi jority in Congress and the President, w: could not deprive the negro of the South et of harpoons. When the whale is suffi ciently near two harpoons are thrown as nearly simultaneously as possible, and when imbedded in the flesh of the monster com pletes the circuit. The charge is expected to be sufficiently powerful to paralyze the animal, so that the small boat may advtnce and dispatch him at leisure. CALIFORNIA WINE CROP.— The M.ta California, of June 29, says: "The grape crop in Sonora and Napa will be above the average, but less than that of last year. There has been uo frost in either valley :his season, but in the former the fly has made its appearance, and will do some damage. On most of the vines the bunches are set and the berries well filled. The vineyards generally are cultivated with care, and the owners are zealously trying to learn as much as possible about the qualities of the differ ent varieties and their adaptation to the various soils.'' THE REGENCY TROUBLES.— The troubles of the Spanish Regency are increasing. Be sides the Republican demonstrations in Spain itself, and the revolutionary uprising in Cuba, the Government has now a diffi culty on hand in .Madeira, and troops have been dispatched to suppress the Republic which has been there proclaimed. This will be an easier job than the suppression of the Cuban Republic; but it adds to the compli tions in which the Spanish Liberals are in volved. The Regent, Serrano, has man aged well thus far, and has borne up brave ly against adversity and misfortune. OITE of the most fashionable "lions" of Fans, Count de L , has just had a lover's quarrel with one of its most fashionable "lionesses," Mme. de X . The Count is much too elegant a man not to be bald: in fact, he has no more hair on the top of his head than Old Uncle Ned or a billiard ball When the ex-lovers had returned each oth er, with tears and tragic sobs, their letters and their portraits, their gifts and their sonvenirs—"seals of love, but sealed in vain" —Madame de X closed the dread collo quy with this parting shot. "There is one blessing, at least, about all this," snid the eonsolable Lydia, "one hasn't to send you back any locks of hair." LIUBIST CLEBC, for more than fifty years prominently identified with the cause of deaf mute instruction, died at his residence in Hartford, Connecticut, aged 83 years. He was a native of La Baline, near Lyons, France. A deal mute himself from infancy, and pupil of the Abbe Sicard, be came to Hartford in 1816, at the request of the late Mr. (iallaudet. and became in 1817 a teach er of the American Asylum at Hartford, the first institution for deaf mutes estab lished in this country. His ability, zeal and graces of character made him always respected and beloved. In 1858 be retired from active duty on a peflsion. ITEMS. MRS. COL COLT'S income is >400,000 per annum. A PROMINENT New York Democrat writes the editorials for The, ImpfrtuliiU, Saturday's internal revenue receipts were >1,683,000. A census just taken shows the population of Mexico to be 9,000,000. NINE houses in Brooklyn, N. Y., were blown down by a tornado on Friday after noon. GEN. SHERMAN is at Boston, and Gen. Sheridan at Newport. Chief Justice Chase is in New York. GEO. B. VASSIION, colored, was admitted to practice law as a lawyer in the Criminal Court at Washington on Saturday. THE number of convicts in Sing Sing frison who are rebellious is over six hundred. hey refuse to work, and are locked up. THE era of the uosurveyed land# of the United States is fifteen times greater than the whole era of France. THE forthcoming wool exhibition io Cin cinnati is looked forward to with interest throughout the trade. CHICAGO is to have two new tire engines of the "rotary" make. They are to cost >IO,OOO, and will be third class machines. THE Secretary of the Navy and Admiral Porter will shortly make a tour of in spection through the various eastern navy yards. THOSE who can take the time to nap it during the summer seasoD, are informed that ten minutes sleep before dinner is worth more than an hour after. It rests aud re freshes the system for vigorous digestion. GEN. PHIL SHERIDAN was recently chos en President of a society of the- Officers of the Army of the Potomac over Gen. Mc- Clellan, who was also & candidate for elec tion. MCCLELLAN once remarked to a friend that he would not again put up with the in dignities which he had to endure from poli tician? during the campaign of 1864, to be President a hundred times. GABRIEL FAU, a militsry surgeon under the first empire, surnamed the Physician of the Poor, went on foot to the village of Lcvalynot to deposit his vote at the recent election, though ho is in his 102 d year. THERE is a man in Gallia county, Ohio, whose sole personal property returned for taxation is included in the item : "Dogs, one hundred hollars " Of course he's a Democrat, and howls about excessive taxa tion. A MAN at Belfast, Me., who bad not seen his son for eight years, and supposed him dead, recognized him as one of the acrobets in a circus which exhibited in that city last week. THE Pittsburgh Gazette says that the Monongahela collieries have shipped, in the first half of the current year, twenty-seven millions of bushels of bituminous coal to the West and South. This equals very nearly one million of tons. A REVEREND son of Rev. Beechcr, on be ing ordained, was solemnly charged thus : "I charge you never to forget that you are the son of your father, the grandson of your grandfather, and the nephew of your un cle." How about his aunt Harriet?" THERE were three hundred and ninety seven deaths in Philadelphia last week, an increase of seventeen over the return for the week previous. Among the deaths were nine from cholera and cholera morbus, thir teen from diarrhoea, and 104 from cholera infantum. AN OBLIGING LANDLORD.— The sigh board of a tavern near Strasbourg, France, bears the following inscription: Strong beer and wine of the first quality. Customers drinking more than twelve glasses will be sent home in a cab, free of charge, in case they are unable to walk. A QUANTITY of lager seized from a beer dealer in Boston on July 6th, was returned on Saturday, on the ground that if kept it would spoil before a deci-ion by the courts could be had. In Cambridge a man whose stock consisted of only one keg oflager, lost it by seizure, and was also sentenced to three months' impri.-onment and a fine of fifty dollars. MR. ISAAC N. MORRIS, late a Govern ment Commissioner to view the Union Pa cific Railroad, whose report caused so much comment, is out in a long letter, in which he reiterates his former statements concern ing the road, and is rather severe on Sena tor Cockling and ex Senator W'adc for their j despatches in praise of its construction and i management. "OLIVIA," the correspondent of the Philadelphia Press, exeu.-es the strong mindedness of Susan 15. Anthony. "Let us" she says, "visit her faults tenderly. Baby lips have never pressed her hard, cold cheek. She has never tasted the sublimity of motherhood. She has never bathed in that immeasurable sea of Glory whose waves touch the gates of Paradise." HANK MONK, who drove Mr. Greeley so rapidly aDd joitingly down the mountain de scent into Placervilie as to coerce the most vigorous Saxon out of the mouth of the philosopher, and to uiake him howl in sin cerity "just once" for "protection," still lives to tell the story, which he does to every casual traveler. HELEN DOUGHERTY, of Western New York, after a long contest, has secured in the Supreme Court the inventor's title to a machine which cuts splints from a board in bevel form, producing a cut hoop ready to apply at once to a barrel; which patent cov ers a monopoly of the manufacture, and a pretty penny for the inventress. WE notice the following in the Gaulint Princess de , before leaving Paris, must have come to the conclusion that al! is not coulenr de roue in the life of a fashionable woman, as the bill presented by her dress maker. and paid, amounted to the modest sum of one million two hundred thousand francs ! This beats the Boston dressmaker's bill for nearly one hundred thousand francs! A FRENCH Democratic writer, just re turned from Italy, gives the following dis mal picture of the actual condition of Gari baldi : "The General is reduced to a skele ton; his features are wizened and contracted. I found him lying on a divan and suffering horribly from chronic rheumatism. The ex-Dictator, bent over like the leaning tow er of Pisa, is but a shadow of fiis former self. It is difficult to recognize the lion of the republic in this forlorn and babbling old man." REV. S. S. BURTON, a Methodist minis ter of Chantauqua county, has just been tried by his church on the serious charge of having said that he believed many Univer salists would be saved, and acquitted, the charge not having been proved agaiost hi in. "Do you believe everybody will be saved?" asked an anxious old lady of one whose or thodoxy was suspected. "Well it is possi ble that a few will be lost." "Ah, well," said the old lady, drawing a sigh of relief, "that's better than nothing." A YOUNG man, named George Fahnes tock, son of W. Frank Fahnestock, a prom inent and respected citizen of Harrisburg, shot himself last Sunday night, at about 10 o'clock, it is supposed accidentally. He was at church as usual, and returned home about half-past nine o'clock, and was sitting in the yard door way with a small pistol which he usually carried in his hands play ing with it. , The family in another part of the house heard an explosion, and running to the spot fonnd young Fahnstock lying on the step senseless. COLD WEATHER IN PARIS.—While New York bakes with the heat, Paris shakes with the cold. Not even the emeules of June sufficed to warm the Parisian sum mer. "Robinson's," where people of an airy turn of mind used to go and breakfast in a tree, is shut up for want of patronage, and the Court has decided to stay at St. Cloud till it goes to Corsica instead of at Fontainblcan. Tho long expected "Cos sack" has not taken the French capital, but the Cossack climate has. In truth, the climates of the whole world are appar ently getting into a state of profound eon fusion, which may possibly prefigure the coming of the day when the sun shall take fire en matte, and this little globe of ours disappear in a puff of vapor, like a soap bubble at the mouth of a furnace blast. A YEAH or PLENTY.— From all part* of the country the cheering intelligence con tinues to come announcing the abundance of the earth's productions. The wheat crop just harvested is all that could be desired, and the yield is pronounced to be far above the average. In the South the cotton promises to furnish more bales than has been produced since the commencement of the war. In the West; excepting a portion of Illinois, the corn stands firm, and gives assurance of an uncommon harvest In New York Btate all kinds of grain have done exeedingly well, and potatoes, the farmers eay, are too plenty to pay. We have plenty, now let as have peace. AMONG the laughable incidents which took place during the recent election riots in Paris, was the case of a pickpocket caught watch in band. The indignant crowd seized the culprit and would have handed him over to tbe police as a robber, but the thief preferred the fate of a revolutionist, and as he was being carried along raised the lnsty cry of "Vive la Republique!" The consequence was that he was torn by the police from his captors, and will prob ably get a week's instead of a year's im prisonment. THE railways of France, which run at low rates, under restricted tariffs, have for the last six years aversged dividends of 11 per cent. Y ALUABLE PR E MIU MS. NEW AND GOOD BOOKS. Having for four years past labored to improve and enlarge the ISQI IRER and to so fill it with the latest news that our people would have little or no need of any other paper, wc have found that one of tbe chief difficulties in our way has been that of getting & sufficient number of subscribers to pay the expenses necessarily incurred in mak ing a county paper what it ought to be. Though the Iset tsiK has a larger number of subscribers than any other paper in the county, it still has but little more than half what it ought to havo to justify us in the outlay necessary to keep it up to the standard at which we have steadily aimed. The INOVIIUIK will continue to be the exponent and advocate of a thorough-going Republicanism, and of retrenchment, economy and reform in the administration of tbe affairs of county, state and nation. It will also, as usual, contain a larger amount of late news nd carefully selected gener al reading matter than any other paper in this. Congressional District. An important political campaign is just about to begin, involving the election of a Governor, Supreme Judge, State Senator, Member of the Legislature, and a fall county ticket The State and District tickets are of the highest importance as there will be a new apportionment made at the next cession of the Legislature. With such an important campaign before us, it is highly desira- I ble to put the IXCICIHER in the hands of every Republican in the county. We therefore call up on our friends to help us put it at once into the hands of as many of our people as possible. As a farther inducement to exertion we have conclu ded to offer the following desirable PREMIUMS: J For one new subscriber and $2.00 in advance, we | will give one number of Scott's novels. 20 cent j edition. | For two new subscribers and $4.00 in advance, we will give one number of Scott's novels, 20 cent ed., and one number of Dicken's, 23 cent ed. For three new subscribers and $6.00 in advance, two Nos. of Scott and one No. of Dickens. For four new subscribers and $5.00 in advance, one copy of "One* Hundred Selections," bound in cloth, or four Nos. Dickens. For five new subscribers and SIO.OO in advance, five Nos. Dicken's works, or one copy of Ten | nyson's or Burn's poems, worth $1.23. | For six new subscribers and $12.00 in advance, one copy of Diamond Dickens, Longfellow or Whittier, worth $1.30. For twenty new subscribers and $40.00 in advance, a complete edition of Dicken's works (23 vols, bound in paper.) For twenty-five new subscribers and $30.00 in ad vance, one large family bible, bound in best morocco, full gilt. For thirty new subscribers and SOO.OO in advance one copy of Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, illustrated edition with 3000 engravings, and worth $12.00. The above premiums are offered for new ad vance paying subscribers. Dicken's works arc made the standard for premiums, but we willsub ! stitute any book on the shelves of the Inquirer Book Sloie of the corresponding price whenever desired. Parties unable to raise clubs large enough to entitle them to a copy of the bible or : dictionary will be allowed the premium for the I number they do raise, and can have either of the i above books by paying the difference. JOHN LCTZ, I tf. Editor and Proprietor. ! JJOUSE FURNISHING, i HARDWARE GOODS Ac., JOHN F. BLYMYER has opened a full i stock of HARDWARE, HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS, WOODEN WARE, BRUSHES, FAINTS, NAILS, GLASS, OILS, SHOEMAKER'S FINDINGS, BUILDER'S HARDWARE. OIL, POCKET BOOKS, COAL OIL LAMPS, COAL OIL, SADDLERY, CUTLERY, BUCKETS, CHURNS, TUBS, Ac., &c., Ac., Ac., Ac., He hopes, by strict attention to business, and prices, to merit a share of Public patronage. Store in same room as occupied by B. M. BLYMYER A Co., as a STOVE AND TIN STORE. 9apr GOODS. THE UNDERSIGNED HAVE NOW OPEN A LARGE AND WELL ASSORTED STOCK OF SPRING and SUMMER GOODS. THE CREDIT SYSTEM BEING NEARLY "PLAYED OUT," WE WILL SELL CHEAP FOR CASH OR PRODUCE. CHARGED ON ALL AC COUNTS AFTER NINETY DAYS. ISjone A. B CRAMER A CO. A BIG FUSS OVER NO PROFIT. We are just telling for a little amusement 10.000 yard* choice Styles of standard Calico printx, at 8,10, 11 and 12J cent#, and you should see 'em grab after it. It's SO CHEAP, is the rea son- G. R. OSTKR A CO. Bedford, Juae23:3uj EA D! it eadTT beadHl Middhton'i Wonderful Pain Cure. A >urc rained; for Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Lum bago, Growing Pains, Sprain*, Bruises, .Stiffness of the Joint* and similar diseases. This wonderful remedy ia composed entirely of vegetable ingredients. There are no injuriona substances used in its manufacture. For assurance of its excellent properties, read the following certificates: BEDFORD, Hay 8, 1849. I take great pleasure in giving my testimony to the value of -'Middle, ton's Wonderful Pain Cnra." I have been a mar tyr to Rheumatism. For two months previous to Feb. 24th, last, I was suffering intensely with pain so serere, that during all that time I had not one night of comfortable sleep. I could not put my hands to my face, eould not comb my own hair nor feed myself; but after baviug the Pain Core applied onee, I faund relief enough to give me comfortable sleep, and with iti steady use, I con tinued to get better, and now at the end of ten | weeks from its first application, I hare compara tively free use of my hands, sleep well and can attend to business. It has done me more good ; than all other medicines I have ever used put | together, and I cheerfully give this certificate of iU value. ELI M. FISHER. BEDFORD, April If, 1868. Mr. W. W. Middle ton: This is to certify that I was taken with Rheu matism, in my right shoulder, ou the evening of the Bth in St., so that I was unable to raise my hand to my face. I got some of your Pain Care and applied it twice, and was entirely relieved. I would recommend to every one who suffers with Rheumatism to give it a trial and be cored. Yours Ac. A. F. MILLER. BEDFORD, May 17, 1869. Mr. Middleton: Dear Sir—l have used several bottles of your medicine in my family, and find it to be all you claim for it. Yours, truly, JOHN HAFER. BEDFORD, May 13, 1869. This is to certify that I have used "Middleiou's Pain Cure," for Rheu mutism, and was very much benefitted by it. JOHN HARRIS. BEDFORD, May 18,1868. This is to certify that I have used Middleton's Liniment for the Rheu matism, which I had in my right sbonlder so bad that I could not get my hand to my head without great pain, and after a few applications was en tirely relieved. L. F. DART. BEDFORD, May I, 1869. Mr. Middleton: Dear Sir:—Mrs. Bowser was in much suffering for some four weeks with Rheumatism, and got some of your Pain Cure, and the first night I applied it it eased tbe pain; and after keeping on using it for two weeks she was restored to health. I feel it to be my duty, as it is a pleasure, to write this recommendation lor the benefit of otheis. JACOB BOWSER. BEDFORD, May 16, 1869. Mr. W. W. Middle tor: Sir—l procured a bottle of your Liniment for Rheumatism, and it gives me great pleasure in saying that after using it for two days, my rheumatism was completely relieved. My sister was suffering, at the same time, with Inflamatory Rheumatism in her right hand and wrist—after using it for several days ebe was relieved. I con sider it the best remedy I ever heard of. JOHN KEEFE. BEDFORD, May 21, 1869. This U to certify that I have used one bottle of Middleton's Lioi ment, for Rheumatism, and think it a good core, and would recommend it to all persons that are afflicted with the above disease. AUGUSTUS GARVER. BEDFORD, May 26, 1869. Mr. Middleton: Sir I procured one bottle of yonr medicine and used one-half of it for Rheumatism, which effected a permanent cure up to this time. I cannot hesi tate in saying that it is the best remedv I ever used. A. B. CARN. This excellent PAIN CURE is prepared only by W. W. MIDDLETON, Bedford, Pa., to whom all oruers for the medicine should be addressed. 4june'69:ly AVER'S CHERRY PECTORAL, For Diseases of the Throat and Lungs, such as Couqhs, Colds, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis, Asthma, and Consumption. Probably never before in the whole history of medicine, has anything won so widely and so deeply upon the confidence of mankind, as this excellent remedy for pulmonary complaints. Through along series of years, ana among most of the races of men it has risen higher aid higher in their estimation, as it has become better known. Its uniform character and power to cure the vari ous affections of the lungs and throat, have made it known as a reliable protector against them. While adapted to milder forms of disease and to young children, it is at the same time the most effectual remedy that can be given for incipient consumption, and the iangerous affections of the throat and lungs. As a provision against sudden attacks of Croup, it should be kept on hand in ev ery family, and indeed as all are sometimes sub ject to eolds and coughs, all should be provided with this antidote for them. Although settled consumption is thought incur able, still great numbers of cases where the dis ease seemed settlea, have been completely cured and the patient restored to sound health by the Cherry Pectoral. So complete is its mastery over the disorders of the Lungs and Throat, that the most obstinate of them yield to it. When nothing else could reach them, under the Cherry Pectoral they subside and disappear. Singers and public speakers find great protec tion fiom it. Asthma is always relieved and often wholly cured by it. Bronchitis is generally cured by taking the Cherry Pectoral in small and frequent doses. So generally are its virtues known that we need not publish the certificates of them here, or do more than assure the public that its qualities are fully maintaiued. AVER'S AGUE CURE, For Fever and Ague, Intermittent Fever, Chill Fever, Remittent Fever, Dumb Ague, Period ical or Bilious Fever, Ac., and indeed ail the affections which arise from mala rious, marsh, or miasmatic poisons. As its name implies, it does CURE, and doe, not fail. Contaiuing neither Arsetic, Quinines Bismuth, Zinc, nor any other mineral or poison ous substance whatever, it in nowise injures any patient. The number and importance of its cures in the ague districts, are literally beyond account and we believe without a parallel in the history of Ague medicine. Our pride is gratified by the acknowledgments we receive of the radical cures effected in obstinate cases, and where other reme dies had wholly failed. Unacclimated persons, either resident in, or travelling through miasmatic localities, will be protected by taking the AGUE CURE daily. For Liver Complaints, arising from the torpid ity of the Liver, it is an excellent remedy, stimu lating the Liver into healthy activity. For Bilious Disorders and Liver Complaints, it is an excellent remedy, producing many truly re markable cures, where other medicines had failed. Prepared by Dr. J. C. AVER A CO., Practical and Analytical Chemists, Lowell, Mass., and sold all around the world. Price, $1 per bottle. fdecly B. F. HARRY, Agent M„ 1364, S. 9, CONSTITUTION BITTERS THE BEST TONIC AND STRENGTHENING BITTERS IN USE. Also, a most delightful and exhilarating MEDICINAL BEVERAGE. A wine glass full of CONSTITUTIONAL BIT TERS three times a day, will be the best preventive of disease that can be used. CONSTITUTION BITTERS CURE DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, COSTIVENESS, prevents FEVER AND AGUE, and all Billions Diseases. They are the Stomach Bitters of the Age. They are prepared by SEWARD, BENTLEY & CHENEY. DRUGGISTS, BUFFALO, N. Y. S., B. A C., also prepare the A LIB MA FOR THE HAIR, Which is the best Hair Restorer, Rencwer, and Hair Dressing in in the market It prevents Baldness, frees the head from Dandruff, and thoroughly eradi cates all diseases of the aealp. Sold by all Druggists. SOapr s. m'camamt jona klliott d. t. caldwell 1. X. HARPER WILI.IAM STOKE. nCYRONE PLANING MILLS. McCAMANT, ELLIOTT & CO., Manufacturers and Dealers in Sash, Door*, Blind*, Flooring, Brackets, Moulding*, Stair Railing, Plastering Lath, Shingle*, Common and Fancy Pickets, Frame Stuff, AND ALL KIN US OF LUMBER. Tjronc, Pa., March It, 1569:m6 Aht KINDS OF BLANKS, Common, Admin istrator's snd Executor's, Deeds, Mortgages, Sudgment Notes, Promissory Notes, with and with out waiver of exemption, Summons, Subpoenas and Executions, for sale at the -nquircr office. Nor J, 1368 1 ' ALSO. STOVp°fJn E ur C v?oe ENT TRACT OP LIM ■oTONE AND Rl\ ER BOTTOM LAND, wi" n two miles of Bedford, containing 228 acres, 150 acres of which are cleared and in a high ,ut of cultivation and the balance well limit- / rhere are excellent new buildings erected there with a weil of never failing water at the dw There are two orchards of choice fruit up-,- R 75 acres of meadow, (River Bottom) can be culti vated with trifling expense. The upland i good state of cultivation, well set with clover and under good fence. There is sufficient timber upon I it to pey for the farm severs! times if thrown into the Bedford market. Apply to J. R. DURBOKROW, AMornev at Law 7mtytf Bedford Pa. yALCABLE TRACTS OF LAND FOR SALE. The subscribers offer at prirate sale the follow ing valuable tracts of land, vis: No. 1. The undivided half of a tract of land containing 227 acres, situate on the south -ea-t side of the Broad Top Mountain, lying partly in Bedford and partly in Fulton county, and ad oimag lands jo Samuel Danner, James E:.a hurst and Wishart's heirs. TWO VEINS OF COAL, one ii feet, the other 6$ feet in depth have been discovered on this tract. No. 2. A tract 0f230 acres near the ab -v joining the same lands, and supposed -o e- f „ the same veins of coal. No/3. A tract of 409 acres, within two and a half miles of tho above tracts, lying on the North | side of the Harbor across the mountain, well tim bered with oak and pise. May 3,-tf. JOHN LI'TZ. OR SALE OR TRADE. FIVE lots of ground in Bedford, 60 by 210, formerly part of tbe Lyons' estate. Two tracts of 160 acres each within three miic? of a depot on tbe Pacific Rail Road back of Oma ha. A tract of bottom land timbered and prarie two miles 'roan Omaha City. One third of 7,000 acres in Fulton Ccunty Pa., including valuable Ore, mineral and timber lands near Fort Littleton. Over 4,000 acres of valuable ore, coal and tim ber lands in West Virginia. ALSO, Twenty-five one acre lots, adjoining the Borough of Bedford, with lime stone rock for kiln or quarry on the upper end of each. Also, 320 acres of land in Woodbury co., lowa. SO " " Franklin *' lowa. 109 acres adjoining Bedford, with house, barn, Ac., known as the "Amos farm." Also, a farm of 107 acres in Harrison twp. Also, Six acres near Bedford, with 2 bouses, stable and brick yard tbereon. 0. E. SHANNON, June 21.-tf Bedford, Penn'a. AT PRIVATE SALE. A BARE OPPORTUNITY TO BUY .1 HOME. Tbe subscribers will sell a number of lots ad joining tbe CHALYBEATE SPRING PROP ERTY in Bedford township, AT VERY LOW PRICES. On two of them dwelling houses have already been erected. This is a splendid opportunity t . buy a cheap and most desirable home, as the lots lie immediately opposite the Chalybeate Spring Park, on tbe road, and not more than 120 yards from the Spring, at the following low prices: 1. One-half acre lot with dwelling house ar.: other out-buildings, garden and fruit trees, an the best of water convenient, at S7OO, cash. 2. Hall-acre lot SIBO, cash. 3. Half acre lot SIBO, oash. 4. Half acre lot SIBO, cash. 5 and 6. Half acre lota with dwelling house, brick yard, garden and fruit trees thereon lor SBSO, cash. 7. Contains three acres covered with fruit trees, and in a good state of cultivation, adjoin ing the above lots, for S6OO, cash. Any person desiring to buy a home, a few yards out of Bedford, will find this offer worth serious consideration. JOHN LUTZ, mayS.tf Real Estate Agent, Bedford, Pa. T>RIVAT* SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE. The following lot of ground, situate in the town of Dun can sville, Blair co., Pa., fronting on Main street (or Turnpike) 7S feet and extending back ISO feet, more or less, and having thereon erected a large two story BRICK HOUSE. with base ment and kitchen, and good vellar, frame Black smith and Wagon-Maker's Shop, frame stable and other out-buildings, with fruit of different varieties on the lot. This would be a good star:! for a Tavern or Boarding House, being conveni ent to the Rolling Mill and Nail Factory, and the Railroad. The House is in good repair and very pleasantly situated, with water at the door. Also, A lot of SIX ACRES, near the Chalybeate Spring, one mile from the town of Bedford, with a Log House thereon erected. Adjoining lands of Chenowith, Amos, Shannon and others. Also, If acres of Timber Land, adjoining the Colfelt farm, and convenient to good roads. For further particulars apply to JOHN LCTZ, Isqvireu Orricn, or J. G. BRIDAHAM. lSdcctf Bedford. Pa. TUKX AT PRIVATE SALE. The subscriber offers at private sale a g"'>d farm of 10'J acres, lying on the south side of Pry Ridge, within 2$ miles of the line of the Bedford and Bridgeport Railroad, adjoining lands of Jos- Ling, Leonard May, Peter F. Lehman, Esq., and others. The improvements are a two story LOG HOUSE with kitchen attached, a log barn ant other ontbuildings. The land is well watered having a good well and two never failing springs- There is also a fine young apple orchard of H" 1 bearing trees, besides cherries, plums, peaches, Ac Sixty acres are cleared and under fence an 1 the balance well timbered with white and chestnut oak. A large qnancity of Chestnut oak hark can be cut on the land and find a ready market, as there are several tanneries in the neighborhood. For further particulars address Anna* BITCHED West End, Bedford CO., Pa., or JOHN LUTZ, 19feb.tf Bedford, Fa. A FIVE FARM FOR SALE IN DUTCH CORNER! NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY CHEAP The subscribers will sell all that fine farm in Bedford township, containing ISO acres, 9.1 -'f which are cleared and under excellent fence, and the balance, 95 acres, well timbered, adjoining lands of Charles Helsel, John Schnebly, and oth ers. The buildings area two and a half story LOG HOUSE and BANK BARN, with other out-buildings thoreon erected. Water in every field, with an excellent Saw Mill seat. A O'-'jl' did apple erehard also thereon. Price * luOT TERMS: One third in hand and the balance in three annnal payments with interest. JOHN LUTZ. June 21. 186<:tf Real Estate Agent. nARPER'B WEEKLY, HARPER'S BAZAR FRANK LESLIE, CHIMNEY CORNER, and all other Illustrated papers for sale the Inquirer Bot.k Store. tf MARRIAGE CERTIFCATES.—On hand a- i for sale at the Inquirer office, a fine assort ment of Marriage Certificates. Clergymen and Justices should have them. ALL KINDS OF MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS furnished at the Inquirer Booh Store.