RATES OF ADVERTISING. All advertisements foT less than 3 months 10 cents per line fot each insertion, gpecia I notices one-half additional. All resolutions of Associa tions, communications of a limited or indlvidal interest and notices of marriage* and deaths, ex ceeding Evelines, 10 eta. per line. All legal noti ces of every kind, and all Orphans' Court and other Judicial sales, are required by lawto he pub lished in both papers. Editorial Notions li oents per line. AU Advertising due afterfirst insertion. A liberal discount made to yearly advertisers. 3 moots. 4 mouths, 1 year One square $ 4.50 $ 6.00 SIO.OO Twe squares....... 8.00 9.00 18.(10 Three squares 8.00 IS.OO 20.00 One-fourth oolumn 14.00 20.00 35.00 Half column 18.00 25.00 45.00 One column 30.00 45.00 80.00 Nrwsfaper LAW*. —We would <*ll the speeiai attention of Post Masters and subscribers to the IxQcrREJt to the following synopsis of the News paper laws : 1. A Postmaster is rei|Uired to give notice ly •eller, ( returning a paper tloes not answer the lawi when a subscriber does not take his paper out el the office, and state the reasons tot its not bring taken; and a neglect to do so makes the Pos'ma.i ter rrptoneible to the publishers for the payment 2. Any person who takes a paper from the Posl office, whether directed to his name or another ot whether he has subscribed or not is responsible for the pay. 3. ff a person orders his paper discontinued, he must pay all arrearages, or the publisher mar continue to send it until payment is made, and olfect the whole amount. whether il be taken from the office or not. There can be o„ legal disoontin uence until the payment is made. 4. If the subscriber orders his paper to be stopped at a certain time, and the publisher con trnuesto send, the subscriber is bound to pay for it, if he rates it out of the Poet Office. The law proceeds upon the ground that a man must pay for what he uses. 5. '! he courts have decided that refusing to take newspapers and periodicals from the Post office, or removing and having them uncalled for, is prima facia evidence of intentional fraud. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. UT C . HO LAH AN , ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Bedford, Pa. Jan. 28, '7O-tf \L E X . KINO. Jr., .I TTOKXBY A T-LA IP, BEDFORD, Pa., AH justness entrusted to his cere will receive prompt and careful attention Office three doors South of the Court House, lately occupied by J. W. Dickcreon. nov2d MMELL AND LINGENFELTER, ATTORXETS AT LAW, Bedford, pa. Hare formed a partnership in the practice of the I.aw, in new brick building near the Lutheran Church. [April I, 1869-tf M. A. POINTS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Bedford, Pa. Respectfully tenders his professional services to the public. Office in the Isqct KEBuilding, (second door.) JT-ff-Collections promptly made. [April,l'69-tf. T.VSPY M. ALSIP, 111 ATTORNEY AT LAW, BEDFORD, PA., Will faithfully and promptly attend to all busi ness entrusted to his care in Bedford and adjoin ng counties. Military claims, Pensions, back pay, Bounty, Ac. speedily collected. Office with Mann A Spang, on Juliana street, 2 doors south ofthe Mengel Ilouse. apl 1, 1889.—tf. T R. DURBORROW, 0 . ATTORNEY AT LAW, Bedford, Pa., Will attend promptly to all business intrusted to his care. Collections made on the shortest no tice. lie • i, also, a regularly licensed Claim Agent and wil give special attention to the prosecution . 'tit t against the Government for Pensions, Hack I av, Bounty, Bounty Lands, Ac. Office on Juliana street, one door South of the Inquirer office, and nearly opposite the'Mengel House" April 1, 1862:tf S. t.. HISSELL. 1. H. LOX6ENECKER F>ussell A LONGENKCKER, V Attorneys A t'ocxSELLORS at Law, Bedford, Pa., Will attend promptly and faithfully to all busi ness entrusted to their care. Special attention given to collections and the prosecution of claims for Back Pay, Bounty, Pensions, Ac. .ffiirtOffice on Jnliana street, south ofthe Court House. Apri 1:69;1yr. J' M'D. BHARPE K. F. KERR SHARPS A kerr. A TTORSE YS-A T-LA W. Will practice in the Courts of Bedford and ad joining counties. All business entrusted to their care will receive careful and prompt attention. Pensions, Bounty, Back Pay, Ac., speedily col lected from the Government. Office on Juliana street, opposite the banking house of Reed A Schell. Bedford, Pa. Apr l;69:tf PHYSICIANS. B. F. HARRY", Respectfully tenders his professional Bor vices to the citixens of Bedford and ricinity. Office an i residence on Pitt Street, in the building formerly occupied by Dr. J. 11. Ho£us. [Ap'l 1,89. MISCELLANEOUS, JACOB BIIENNEMAN tf WOODBERRY, PA., SCRIVENER, CONVEYANCER, LICENSED CLAIM AGENT, and Kx-Officio JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, Will attend to ail business entrusted into bis hands with promptness and despatch. Will remit mon ey by draft to any part of the country. 17sely DANIEL BORDER, Pitt street, two doors west of tue Bed ford HOTEL, Beifdrd, Pa. WATCHMAKER AND DEALER IN JEWEL RY. SPECTACLES. AC. He keeps on hand a stock of fine Gold and Sil ver Watches, Spectacles of Brilliant Dotrble Refin el Glasses, also Scotch Pebble Glasses. Gold Watch Chains, Breast I'ins, Finger Rings, best quality of Gold Pens. He will supply to order any thing in his line not on hand. [apr.2B,'Bs. I) W. CROUSE; ' SB DEALER IN CIGARS, TOBACCO, PIPES, AC On Pitt street one door east of Geo. R. Ostcr A Co.'* Store, Bedford, Pa., is now prepared to sell by wholesale all kinds of CIGARS. All orders promptly filled. Persons desiring anything in his line will do well to give him a call. Bedford .\pril 1. '*9.. P N. HICKOK . Vw' v , DENTIST. Office at the old stand in Bank Bch.di.no, Juliana St., BEDFORD. All operations pertaining to Surgical and Mechanical Dtnlittrtj performed with care and WARRANTED. Anceetketiee adminietered, trhen demired. Ar tilieial teeth ineerted at, per eet, SX.OO and up. 1 ard. As I am detei mined to do a CASH BUSINESS or none. I have reduced the prices for Artificial Teeth f the vari'ins kinds, 2u per cent., and of Gold Hillings 33 per cent. This reduction will be made only to strictly Cash Patients, and all such will receive prompt attention. 7feb6S VY M7 LLOYD " • BANKER. Transacts a General Banking Business, and makes collections 011 all accessible points in the United States. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. GOLD, SIL VER, STERLING and CONTINENTAL EXCH *NGE bought and sold. U. S. REVENUE STAMPS of all descriptions always on band. AcecunLs of Merchants, Mechanics, Farmers and all other solicited. INTEREST ALLOWED ON TIME DEPOSITS. Jan. 7, '7O. P.i CHANGE HOTEL, HUNTINGDON, PA. This old establishment having been leased by J. MORRISON, formerly proprietor of the Mor rison House, has been entirely renovated and re furnished and supplied with all the modern im provements and conveniences necessary to a first daaa Hotel. 1 he dining room has been removed to the first : , ".r and is now spacious and airy, and tbeehsm " " well ventilated, and tile proprietor * ! -l tnde.Tor to make his guests perfectly at home. Address, 1. MORRISON, , . Exchange HOTEL, Huntingdon, Pa. Wbt ffteMotb Juqmrcr. LUTZ & JORDAN) Editors and Proprietor*. fwquim Column. rpO ADVERTISERS: THE BEDFORD INQUIRER. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, BT L U T Z & JORDAN, OFFICE ON JULIANA STREET, BEDFORD, PA. THE BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM IN SOUTH- WESTERNPENNSTL VANIA. CIRCULATION OVER 1500. HOME AND FOREIGN ADVERTISE MENTS INSERTED ON REA SONABLE TERMS. A FIRST CLASS NEWSPAPER. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: *2.00 PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE. JOB PRINTING: ALL KINDS OF JOB WORK DONE WITH NEATNESS AND DISPATCH, AND IN THE LATEST & MOST APPROVED STYLE, SUCH AS POSTERS OF ANY SIZE, CIRCULARS, BUSINESS CARDS WEDDING AND VISITING CARDS, BALL TICKETS, PROGRAMMES, CONCERT TICKETS, ORDER BOOKS, SEGAR LABELS. RECEIPTS, LEGAL BLANKS, PHOTOGRAPHER'S CARDS, BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, PAMPHLETS, PAPER BOOKS, ETC. ETC. ETC. ETC. ETC Oar facilities for doing all kindi of Job Printing ! are equalled by very few establishments in the country. Orders by mail promptly filled. AB I letters should be addressed to LUTZ A JORDAN. .3 local anb General ftettagapct, Deboteh la polities, ©Duration, literature anh /Horals. ITEMS. TEN old women, widows all, are keeping house together at Palmyra, New York. A CITIZEN of New Haven, a Democrat, recently refused to have his child vaccinated with matter taken from the arm of a Repub , lican child. THE young women of Lewistown, Me., have formed a society, pledging themselves not to kiss any man who uses tobacco, and the young men have formed a society, pledg ing themselves not to look at a young wo man who wears false hair. As a conse quence marriage licenses are not in active : demand. A CONVICT named Alvin Babbe, who os ' eaped from the Michigan State prison in | 18G5, has since that tithe been serving a two I years' sentence in the Ohio peniteniary, and having been released from that institution last week he was returned to the Michigan State prison to serve out the balance of a fifteen years' sentence for manslaughter. A ROMAN correspondent notes the exploit ot two English "misses," who, mounted on the benches above the kneeling multitude, surveyed with their opera glasses the Pope as he pronounced the benediction in the Council. The Pope, with a mild smile, pointed them out to some of the Cardinals, but no alarming consequence have overtaken them. THE castor bean plant, it is reported, ex hibits extraordinary vigor in Los Angelos, Cal. It is asserted that five pounds of seed to the acre will yield an average of twelve hundred or fifteen hundred pounds for r> crop. A manufacturing company in San Francisco offers to purchase all the beans that can be supplied, and are preparing to manufacture the castor oil of commerce on a large scale. SENATOR SCEVRZ is daily in receipt of German newspapers, regardless of politics, j protesting against the probable nomination of Judge Strong to the Supreme Bench, and I asking him to use his influence against it, on I the ground that Judge Strong's orthodox religious views, as publicly declared in favor of incorporating a recognition of the Chris tian religion by amendment in the constitu- i tion of the United States. A CONSCIENCE-STRICKEN THIEF. — A poor young widow in Berlin, on returning to her house after an hour's absence, recently, found this note lying on her table: "Mad ame, I came here with the intention ef rob bing you; but the sight of this respectable and peaceful little room, decorated with re ligious pictures; and adorned with pious souvenirs, and above all, your two little children, which were quietly sleeping in their little beds, and smiling in their dreams, have touched my heart, and instead of depriving you of the little money I found io your drawer, I take the liberty of leaving here SCO, hoping that you will accept of them as a tribute of my respect and admiration." SAN DOMINOO.— It is stated that long before the project of annexing San Domin go to the United States was seriously con sidered, President Baez, with the view of inviting immigrants, employed suitable per sons to make a thoroughly scientific geologi cal and mineralogical survey of the island, and to prepare maps of the most valuable locations for immigrants. This survey, with a large corps in the field, it is reported, has been prosecuted vigorously for more than a year. From accounts given by the head of the surveying party, it appears that the Climate of San Domingo is well suited for white labor, and that the soil yields eve ry tropical production. The gold fields which, under Spanish rule, yielded fifteen millions of dollars per annum, it is asserted, can now be more profitably worked, as there have not been on the island any of the mod ern appliances for saving gold by which nine ty per cent, of the present yield in Austra lia and California is insured. CARRYING LOADED PISTOLS. —An im portant bill has been introduced into the Assembly of Pennsylvania. It prohibits the carrying of pistols, whether loaded or unload ed, unless a certificate from the mayor of a city, or from a justice of the peace is ob tained. The law further requires all per sons obtaining such permits to register their names, their busines-, and to specify the motive in carrying such pistol, and that if any injury shall result to a person by the use of a pistol, the presumption of law and fact shall he that the person using such pistol, and eau-ing thereby bodily injury, malicious ly intended to kill the person so injured, unless he can prove to the satisfaction of the jury that lie used said pistol in the nec essary protection of his person. [T is proposed, at Harrisbnrg, to add to the number of the justices of the Supreme Court. Kvery lawyer practicing in that court is aware of the fact that the justices arc either overworked or, if tbry content themselves with performing an ordinary amount of labor, the business before them is bound to be delayed, if it does not ulti mately suffer. M'hat is required is that the ju-tices be increased, so that certain of them may be detailed alternately to write opinions, while others are holding court. As the case cow is, after a consultation all the justices must engage in writing opinions, which nec essitates an adjournment in a district before half the cases on a list are reached. It must be borne in mind that the duties and labors of the Supreme Court have increased with the growth of all other business, so that just in proportion as this has been the result, we should add to the working force of" that tribunal. There is no doubt what ever that the public interest requires such au increase at once. A RICHMOND telegram says: A salute of one hundred guns was 'fired in the park, in honor of the admission of the State. About S,(XX) persons were present, two-thirds of whom were colored. National Sags were raised on the custom house and capitol. Gov. Walker spoke a lew minutes, congrat ulating the jteople on the admission of Vir ginia, and predicting a glorious future for the State. A colored Conservative and a number of colored Republicans made polit ical speeebcs. the burden of the latter being that if the State did not follow the spirit of the reconstruction acts she would be put back as a Territory. After tbe proceedings in tbe park this morning relative to tbe ad mission of the State, the colored people organized a meeting and kept it up until night, when they adjourned with cheers for the admission of Virginia. The guns used to-day were the same U3ed in saluting the United States flag when the troops occupied the city in 1860. The officer commanding was a native of Richmond. The weather here has been so warm for a week past that the trees are leafing. BEDFORD, PA FRIDAY, FEB. -1 IN7O. ONE BY ONE. One by one the sands are flowing One by one the moments fall; Some are coming, gome are going, Do not strive to grasp them all. One by one thy duties wait thee, | Let thy whnle strength go to each : | Let no future dreams elate thee, Learn thou first what these can teach. One by one, bright gifts from heaven, Joys are sent thee here below ; , Take them readily when given, Ready, too, to let them go. One by one thy griefs shall meet thee, Do not fear an armed band : One will fade as others reach thee. Shadows passing through the land. Do not look at life's long sorrow, See bow small each moment's pain ; i God will help thee for to-morrow, Every day begins agaiu. Every hour that fleets so slowly, Has its task to do, or bear: Luminous the crown, and holy. If th u set each gem with care. Do not linger with regretting, Or for passing hours despond : Nor, the daily toil forgetting, Look too eagerly beyond, Hours are golden links, God's token Reaching Heaven, but one by one, Take them lest the chain be broken, Ere the pilgrimage be done. WASTE NOT—HOW SHALL THINGS ARE UTILIZED. One of the blessings of modern society pre sents itself in the form of economy, fru ! gality, utilization. Things which were for merly thrown away as waste are now applied to man's purposes, to an extent far beyond our general supposition. Dr. Lyon Playfair ; al) d Mr. P. L. Sirumonds have frequently j diawn attention to this subject, chiefly in ; illustration of the wonders of chemistry. .Air. tiimmonds has recently collected a new 1 budget of instances, which he has brought | under the notice of the Society of Arts. Before touching on these, let us refresh I the reader's memory by a summary of re | suits already recorded. Beautiful perfumes I are produced from substances not merely I trival, but in some cases fetid and repulsive. Fusel oil., putrid cheese, gas tar, and the i drainage of the cow-houses, are thus trans formed; the result is a triumph of chemis try; but it is commercially shabby and un ; lair to call perfumes thus obtained by suob delightful names as "oil of pears," "oil of apples," "oil of pine-apples," "oil of grapes," "oil of cognac," "oil ol bitter almonds," "eau de millefleurs." Blue dyes are made from scraps of tin, old woolen rags, and the parings of horses' hoofs. Old iron hoops are employed iu ink making; bones as a source of phosphorus for tipping Congrcve matches; the dregs of port wine for making beidlitz powders; the washings of coal tar for producing a flavoring condiment for blancmange. Old woolen rags are the foun dation of the prosperity of Dewsbury and Batley, in orkshire; there musty, fusty, dusty, fronzy fragments being ground up ioto shoddy and mungo. Other relics of old woolen garments are made to yield flock for wall paper, padding for mattresses, and Prussian blue for the color makers. Chemi cals are employed to destroy the cotton fibers in old worn-out balzarincs, Orleans, coburgs, and other mixed fabrics for ladies' dresses, and to liberate the woolen or worsted fibers for a new career of usefulness. Woolen rags, when even the shoddy maker will have nothing to do with them, arc choice materi als for the farmer as manure. That bones are used for knife handles we know very well: hut it appears they are also used for bone-black by color and varni-h makers, for size by dyers and cloth finishers, and for ma nure by farmers. Horns and hoofs are a very magazine of useful produets in the hands of the scientific ehemi-t. Whalebone cuttings yield Prussian blue: dogs fat is (shamefully) made into sham cod liver oil; wool scourers' waste and washings reappear as beautiful stearioe candles, bul locks' blood is used in refining sugar, in making animal charcoal, and in Turkey-red dyeing; ox gall or bile is used by wool scour ers and by color maker.-; fishes' eyes are used for buds in artificial flowers; bladders and intestines are made into air-tight cov erings and into mu.-ical strings; all the odds and ends of leather and parchment dressing are grist to the gluemaker; calves' and sheep's feet yield an oil which is doctored up most fragrantly by the perfumer; stink ing fish is always welcome as manure to the farmer; and a brown dye is extracted from those small bedroom acquaintances whom few of us like to talk about, and none like to see or to feel. At least fifty thousand tons of cotton waste, the residue and sweep ings of the mills, are annually utilized by be ing worked up into coarse sheeting, bedcov ers, papier mache, and the commonest kinds of priuting paper. Seaweed is used as a material for paper, as a lining material for ceiling and walls, and as a source whence the chemist can obtain iodine. Various kinds of seed, when the oil has been squeez ed outol them, are useful cattle fatteners as oil cake. Grape husks yield a beautiful black lor choice kinds of ink; raisin stalks constitute a capital clarifying agent for vine garf bran or corn refuse is valuable iu tan ning, calico printing, and tinplate making; brewers and distillers' grains are fattening food for eattle. Bread rasping- are in France sometimes used as a substitute for coffee, and as a tooth powder. Tan-pit refuse is valuable for the gardoer's hot-house. Damaged potatoes, and rice and grain arc made to yield starch. Ground horse-chest nuts are not unknown to the makers of cheap macearoni and vermicelli. Cork cuttings and scraps are eagerly sought for stuffing and for buoyant purposea. Pea shells arc used as a food for milch cows, and spirit may be distilled from them. Sawdust is now ap plied in a prodigious number ol ways, for making paper, distilling oxalic acid, smok ing fish, clearing jewelry, filling scent bags, stuffing dolls, etc. Tobacco ashes are made into tooth powder. The coal tar from gas, works is made to yield sulphate of ammonia, sal ammoniac, printers' ink, lamp-black, dis infectants, naphtha, benzole, paraffiuc. and the magnificent series of aniline colors for dying and calico printing. The sediment in wine ca-ks is made into cream of tartar. Old kicked i ff horseshoe nails yield the best of all iron for musket barrels. As for the shops in which gold workers, jewelers, aud gold beaters work, not only is the very dust on the floor precious but a refiner will gladly give a new waistcoat or apron for an old one, for the sake of the auriferous particles thereby obtained. Mr. Simmonds' new batch comprises many | instances of substances recently transferred from the domain of waste to that of utility, ; and many suggestions for a similar trans ference in other quarters. hirst, for the animal kingdom. Horse flesh is certainly not waste so long as dogs and cats eagerly feed upon it; hut the French say that we ought not to leave it to the dogs and cats, by reason of the excellent qualities it possesses for human food; bow-.iver, we must leave this matter to the hippophagie admirers of "ebevaline." Fish are applied to uiany more useful purposes than was customary a few years ago; shark fins are j prized as food by the Chinese; shark liver is boiled down by them for oil shark skin is uricd and used for polishing wood and ivory; dried shark heads are given by the Nor wegians to cattle as food, smoked and dried dogfish is eaten as food, as are aisc the eggs while the skin and the liver are applied to the same purposes as those of the shark. Tie French procure useful medicinal oil from the liver of the skate fi-h, which used tc be thrown away, but which is now found tc be nearly as efficacious as cod-liver oil. j A French firm, Messrs. Souffrie, make large i qaantitics of useful tallow or fat out of the pickings and waste of slaughter houses, the dtad cats and dogs found floating in the Srine, and the used-up grease of railway wnecl.s, when doctored by means of steam an 1 hydraulic pressure, this fat becomes a'ailahlo for stearine manufacturers. Leath er scraps are made into "shoddy leather," ' b;' grinding and macerating them into a pulp a T aliable for the inner soles of shoes and I sach-like purposes. There is another leath- i cry composition iuuch used iu America un der the name of "pancake." Thin bits of ! leather, the odds and ends cut off by the tan per and cuvrier from whole hides, are inter- j laid with paste until they accumulate to an inch in thickness, and then heavily squeezed i between two iron rollers; the mass comes out as an oblong pancake twelve inches by four, and half an inch thick, looking very much "like a cross between a sheet of gingerbread and a cake of tobacco," it is used for inner | soles, heels, and stiffeners. The albumenized j paper used by photographers is subject to I i much waste in its manufacture; this waste, j instead of being consigned to the pulp vat, is now converted into beautiful marbled paper, by a peculiar application of aniline colors to the albumen. Next, as to the vegetable kingdom. We are told that the using Bp of what was form-1 erly considered waste, jn the textile manu factures, now reaches the ernormous quan tity of a hundred thousand tuns annually in the three forms of cotton; flax, and hemp waste. If we include animal fibers, such as shoddy wool and silk waste, the aggregates becomes largely increased. The French make firewood or fire lighters of the cones of pine trees and the waste cobs of maize> saturated with any cheap resinous substan ces. Messrs. Souffrie (already named) buy all the waste and pickings of vegetables I from the twenty-five hospitals of Paris, I cook them by steam, and feed a piggery of seven hundred head of swine—the vegetables being enriched with the greasy slops from the same hospitals. The same firm also pro duce beautiful white fat from the black residue left after purifying colza or rape oil; and another residue Irom the treatment of this residue gives them a useful varnish for cheap out door purposes. The oil retained in olive oilcake is now extracted by chemical means, and converted into capital stearine; and bv this improvement it is expected that seven million pounds of olive oil, now an nually wasted at Marseilles, will be utilized. Old aecount-books, letters, invoices, en velopes, cheeks, insurance policies, and other kinds of writing paper (not printing.) are now bought at about £l2 per tun, and worked up with other materials into pulp for the penny newspapers: Besides linen and cotton rags, cotton waste, old writing paper, straw, and esparto or Spanish grass, wood is also now much used for making into paper. Large factories for this purpose have been established in Italy, Wurtemberg, the United States, and other countries, the wood is rubbed down into du-t by friction against rapidly revolving roughened wheels, and then treated by chemical processes until it forms a pulp suitable for paper-making. There is one wood-pulp paper mill in Pennsylvania that can work up thirty thou sand pounds of sawdust per day. Nearly all the German newspapers now have a per centageof wood in the paper 011 which they are printed. The New York Tribune issaid to be printed on paper made of bamboo; and other American journals are printed on paper made chiefly of a kind of wild cane that is found in vast abundance on the shores of the Mississippi. A German chemist has found a mode of distilling spirit out of a residue left after chemically treating wood pulp fur paper. A French manutae turer converts sawdust, by intense pressure, into beautiful little boxc3, and other orna mental articles. The seed in the cotton pods our tufts, which used to be an annoy ance to the cultivators, is now most useful y employed as a gas fuel; as as urce of o l for lamps, as a chief substitute for olive oil, as oil cake for cattle food, and u source of good hard grease or stearine lor soap and candles. The refuse mola.-ses from beet root sugar, formerly used only as pig food, is now distilled to obtain alcohol, and the residue erystaiized to obtain potassium salts. Spent dye woods, after the coloring matter has been extracted from them, are sold in France to a large manufacturer, who mixes them with tar refuse, and forms them into compressed cakes l'or fuel, which has a very large sale. The aoicular leaflets of the pice tree are converted ioto what is called tree wool, in France, Sweden, Holland, and other parts of the continent; this wool is used for wadding, stuffing for mattresses, and other articles of furniture; a eloth made from its fibers is used lor iuntr vesta, draw ers, hose, shirts, coverlets, and chest pre servers; the membranous fragments and re fuse arc compressed into blocks for fuel; the resinous matter contained in them is dis tilled for gas; while by various modes of treatment there are produced an essential oil for rheumatism and skin diseases, an etheria! oil useful as a curative agent and as a solvent, and a liquid for a medicated bath —all useful substances from materials which not long ago were utterly disregarded. And now for the mineral kingdom. Mr. Mill, and other thoughtful men, are cau j tioning us that, as our stock of coal cannot last forever, we should do well to utilize the thirty million tons of small coal and dust j which is allowed to go nearly to waste an nually al the pit's mouth; and attention is drawn to what Belgium is doing in this mat ter. Near Uharleroi, eight hundred thou .sand tons of coal dust had accumulated, a burden to the colliery owners, and an injury to the health of the work people. Where upon a company was formed expressly to utilize this refuse. The coal dust is sifted, mixed with eight percent of coal tar, heated to a paste by steam at a temperature of three hundred degrees, and pressed into blocks and cylinders about twenty pounds weight. These blocks form excellent fuel for locomotives and steamboats, productive of great heat and very little a>h. In various foreign countries where paviog stone is scarce, the slag from iron furnaces is brought into use, by being run into pits eight or nine feet in diameter, and cooled in slabs for paving. The cuttings of tin plate, and worn out tin kettles and saucepans, are sub jected to processes which yield pure tin, good weldable iron, ammonia, Prnsian blue, and stanDatc of sodium; and as the make of tin plate in England and Wales amounts to more than half a millions tons annually, there must be a very large store of material available in the old tin plate which is re placed by the new. The waste flax, such as borax, used iu galvanizing metals, finds a ready market among refiners and for mak ing paint.— From Chambers' Jottrnal. THE DAfUEN SHIP CANAL The Surveying Expedition. "lbe New York Btrald has the following: '■ THE EXPEDITION will bo under the exclusive control of Lieu t nam Commander Thomas O. Selfridge, of the Lnited States Navy. The total num ber of men who will take part in the affair will number about 287, and the gunboat Nipsic will be the flagship of the expedition and the Guard the storeship. The former is now lying off the Battery and the latter is at the Navy \ard completing her prepa rations for her eventful mission. The ex pedition would have set sail several weeks ago hut for the fact that the Guard was de tained longer than was expected and could not be got in readiness as soon as the naval authorities had desired. THE SCIENTIFIC COMPLEMENT. Bcsines the officers of the two ships, who have all been selected for the expedition on account of their particular fitness for the duties which they will be called upon to perform during its progress, a geologist, a botanist, a telegraph operator, a photo grapher and draughtsman, all civilians, have been especially employed for the occasion. J. A. Sullivan, M. 0. Leman and Messrs. Ogden, Merridcn and Karchcr, officers of the Coast Survey, will also accompany the expidition and act asassistants to Comman der Selfridge. The telegraph operator has been furnished with about eighty miles of wire, seventy five miles of which are of the ordinary office wire and the remainder of the same kind of insulated wire used in the army during the late war. He has also forty cups of Gross' battery, the strength of which he considers quite sufficient to knock all the monkeys who may presume to occupy the wires for gymnastic purposes, into the lands where the spirits of all dead monkeys go. A full set of the reg ular army signals has also been furnished the ships, and these will be made use of whenever they can be of good service. The flags will be used in day time and the lant erns (the lights) at night. Every scientific instrument necessary for the proper carry ing out of the plans of the explorers has been secured and safely packed away. PRESENTS FOR THE INDIANS. A large quantities of beads, trinkets and various cheap articles, held in high esteem by the Indians, form part of the "treaty" cargo of the ships, and these it is the inten lion of the commanding officer to scatter among the savages with a lavish hand, in order to secure their friendship, and thus enable the expedition to make use of them in various ways in which their services will be of great importance to the success of the undertaking. THE OBJECT OF THE EXPEDITION. The primary object of the expedition is to make a thorough survey of the isthmus and to discover, if there be any, the breaks in the mountain through which a cana' might be cut. The Nipsic will call at As pinwall on her way to the general rendez vous to make certain arrangements with the Columbia authorities in reference to the ex pedition, and the Guard will go directly to Caledonia Bay, which is abont 250 miles beyond Aspinwall, where the Nipsie will join her. In this bay the two vessels will remain as a base of supplies while the ex ploring parties dive into the wilds of the . isthmus. After all the preliminary prepa- | rations in the bay will have been completed | two parties will start out from Sasardi and j another from the southern portion of Cale- j donia Bay to discover, if possible, the do-1 pressions in the mountains and to reach a pass which Dr. Cullen contends exists in the mountains and which has not as yet been discovered. Two lines of level will he es tablished from these points to wherever de pression may be found, thence to tLa Savan na river at the mouth of the Lara. In the meantime whatever natives can be induced to work: will be organized into regular gangs as laborers, and tbey will accompany the ; exploring parties and be made serviceable ! in clearing away the undergrowth and ren ; dering the passage of the explorers as easy as possible. Aid is also expected from the j alcaldes, and the Columbian Goverament ! will do its best to help the expedition in va- i rious ways. On the 21st inst., two gentle men will proceed to Aspinwall to ascertain j the correct astronomical position of Aspin- [ wall and Panama, and the result of their in vestigation will of course determine the base j of operations of the expedition. After the explorers shall have made a thorough sur vey and reconnoissanee of the country, the vessels will proceed to the Gulf of San Bias, and thcncc exploring parties will set out to establish a line of levels and ascertain if that portion of the country is better adapted to the passage of a canal than that between i Caledonia Bay and the Bay of Darien. The expedition will be occupied for about six months, and Commander Selfridge, without wishing to say for certain that the ultimate j object—the discovery of the depression in the mountains —will be attained, expresses ! himself confidant that aline of levels will be I established on the Isthmus, a thing which VOL.. 43: NO 5 j no expedition has ever yet been able to ac ] complish. A ROUGH ROAD TO TRAVEL. . Each exploring party will have a special j telegraph wire of his own, connecting with I the ships, which it will erect as it goes from j place to place, day after day. The explor i ers will then be ia constant communication | with the commander, and there will coosc | quently be no danger of any one of the par j ties falling victims to starvation in the wil | derness, as did many of Strain's expedition. The region to be traversed is very mountain ; ous, and ihe ground is a complete net work j of undergrowth, so thick and strong that it would be impossible to make any progress through it without the aid of the axe. The Indians, who may at certain points prove troublesome, arc said to be of a warlike na ture, and although under the nominal con trol of the Columbian government, have never been conquered by the white man. The expedition will, as has already been mentioned, endeavor to conciliate these sav ages by presents, but at the same time each | party will go well protected and thoroughly armed, so as to be prepared for anv treach ery on the part of the dusky inhabitants along their route. The distance from the point where the expedition will start—Cale donia Bay— to the Savanna river is forty miles, and after they shall have made their way to this stream the men will follow iu course to the bay of Darien, where the United States steamer Nyaek, which will leave the Pacific squadron in proper time, will he in readiness for them. It may be mentioned that, besides the Savannah, the river Chauquanaque flows through the re gion through which the explorers will pass, and it is believed that it has water enough j to keep a canal well supplied. IS A CANAL ACROSS THE ISTHMUS POSSIBLE? ' The officers of the expidition have not j the slightest doubt but that they will be ! able to establish a line of levels and reach j the Savannah river in safety, though Dot' without a great deal of suffering and hard ships. The Chagres fever, it is said, plays havoc with "strangers" at all times of the • year on the Isthmus, and this alone will be as formidable an enemy to fight as the sav j ages—should the latter see fit to be belliger-1 ent. Commander Selfridge does not believe j that depressions in the mountains will be discovered of Sufficient extent to suit the wants of a well constructed canal, but he be lieves, nevertheless, that the canal is a feasi bility, and that tunnels of five or six miles in length could be cut through the moun tains if suitable depressions are net discov ered. THE PAKAGUAUS WAR. Do those who are accustomed to speak slightingly of the Paraguayan war ever re fleet upon the misery beyond telling, which has fallen upon that people, not upon one nor many, but upon all? There were nine hundred thousand people there five years ago; two thirds of these have fallen by famine, disease and battle; and, should the war continue, the whole race will perish. Five years ago they were prosperous and progressive, building railroads and telegraphs and ships, and improving and rebuilding their cities and towns. Mow their chief cities have been laid waste, their capital sacked, and their is not to-day a home in Paraguay which has not been made desolate. To whom is this chargeable? The allies say to the aggressors of Lopez; the Paraguayans to the ambition of Brazil. Lopez claims that he was compelled to fight in self-pre servation. The allies declare in all their public documents that the war was for the vindication of their outraged honor. But they have occupied the capital of Paraguay and one-half her territory; they have des troyed two-thirds of her population; they have taken possession of the chief rivers, and they have brought upon the country a misery and desolation that surpass descrip tion. Why, therefore, does the war not cease? Clearly because the claim that it is only for the vindication of national honor, and to obtain indemnity for the past aDd security for the future, is like the treaty of the triple alliance, of which it is the pream ble—a fraud and a delusion. No better proof that Paraguay fights for her very ex istenee is needed than this one fact—that the war still continues. In the face of this the fair promises of the triple treaty, and the honeyed words of the allied writers about civilization and progress and liberty, and the other specious phrases which arc commonly used to defend all false causes, cannot be re ceived by honest men nor accepted by up right governments as explaining either the origin or the objects of the war. The war is for conquest and absorption by Brazi'; and to permit such conquest and absorption is contrary to the received and traditional principles of American policy. We have assumed the role of protector of the Ameri can republics. We played it with success and honor in regard to Mexico. We en courage by popular sympathy the struggle which Cuba carries on to gain her indepen dence. Yet both the Government and the people survey with indifference the magni ficent fight which Paraguy has maintained for five long years to preserve the indepen dence which she gallantly conquered half a century ago; and this independence, won fi>'Oi Spain, is threatened by a monarchy far less enlightened, whose dominion will be fatal to the development of Paraguay, and to the progress initiated there eight years ago by this very ruler, whom it is the fash ion among certain interested parties of more or less standing to denounce as a barbarian and a '"monster unfit to live."— M. T. Mc- Mahan, in Harper g Magazine for February 11. BECHEIt SWOOFE, ESQ. President Grant, on Monday last, sent in to the Senate the name of H. Bucher Swoope, Esq., of this place, for United States District Attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania. This appointment is well deserved. Mr. Swoope is not only a first-class lawyer, pos sesiog the ability to discharge the duties of the office so as to promote the best interests of the Government, but he has been a zeal 1 ous, earnest, and most eloquent advocate of Republican principles. For many years J past, especially, during the dark years of the ( war. he canvassed the State in behalf 'of ; .he Republican party, and his eloquent ■ appeals, cogent arguments and untiring cf ; forts, contributed largely to the success of j our candidates. 3lr. Swoope was born in Huntingdon, Pa., in 1831, and is now thirty-eight year® of age. He received a thorough classical edu cation, studied law with Hon. John Scott, SUBSCRIPTION TERMS, AC The fserrxKß is published every Hr.nur mom ing be following rate* : Ox Trab, (In advance,) $1.60 " " (if not paid within aiz m 0*.)... S!.SO " " (if not paid within the year,)... $3.06 All papera outside of the connty diacontinned without notice, at the expiration of the time for which the snbscription baa been paid. Sinjjiceopieaof the paper farniahed, in wrapper* at five cente each. Communication* on subject* of local or genera! ntereat, are reipcctfnlly solicited. To enaure at tention favora of this kind mod invariably be aeeompacied by the name of the author, not for publication, but a a a guaranty against imposition. All letters pertaining to business of the office should be addressed to LUTZ 4 JORDAN, BeDrosß. PA. DOW U. 8. Senator, and was called to the bar in 1852. In 1853 he settled in Clearfield, and is now in the enjoyment of a very large and lucrative practice. As a popular speaker, he has few equals, and, perhaps, no superior in the State. His manner is graceful, his voice is power ful, yet susceptible of every degree of modu lation, his style ornate, but clear and logical, and the impression he makes on his audi i eoce always pleasing anil convincing. In ; criminal cases, before a jury, he is one of I the most effective speakers we Lave ever | heard. | He has bad large experience at the bar, having been engaged in very many grave and important cases. Our own people will ■ not soon forget bis conduct of the case of ! the Commonwealth vs. Lena Miller, who I was indicted for poisoning her husband, ! where he was assigned by the Court to as | siat the District Attorney, and procured the first verdict ever rendered in America where chemical investigation failed to find arsenic in the" stomach. The experienced scientific experts brought here paid him the ; high compliment of saying that it was the best tried case in which they had ever been called to testify. His recent defense of Morrison, where he almost wrested from the jury a verdict of murder in the sec ond degree, when everybody supposed his client could not escape the gallows, aod his prosecution of Ball for the murder of Job Sneatb, wbo was convicted of murder in the first degree by the force of his concluding argument, with many other eases we might cite, all attest his superior ability as a crim inal lawyer. In the civil courts he has been no less successful. It is not long siooe he conduc ted a case in the United States Court, before Judge M'Candless, against some of the oldest and ablest land lawyers in the State, the trial of which lasted twenty seven days, and during which all the points he made to the Court were affirmed, and the verdict was in favor of his client. The land in dis pute is worth a quarter of a million of dol lars. His argument in the contested elec tion caso of Robeson vs. Shugart, made iu the hall of the State Senate, his annual ap pearance before the Supreme Court, where be has been uniformly successful, all bear witness to his ability and experience as a civil lawyer. We have every confidenco that his duty to the Government will be be earnestly and faithfully discharged, and that President Grant, the Senate and the people of the district will have no cause to regret his appointment.— Raftsman's Jour nal. Ol'R GRANDMOTHERS. BY QAIL HAMILTON. It is simply impossible—listen now, I pray, all knights of bigh and low degree, march ing along thousand score strong, great hearted gentlemen singing this soDg of wo man's sphereicity—it is simply impossible for any woman to do the whole work of her household and make her life what a woman's life ought to be. This is a rule that admits of no exception. The machinery of the family is so complicated and so exacting that one woman cannot have the sole charge of it without neglecting other and equally im portant matters. The duties which a woman owes to socie ty, and to the moral and spiritual part of her household, are just as imperative as those which she owes to its physical com fort. And if she alone ministers to the lat ter the former must be neglected, and the latter will hardly be thoroughly aceomp'ish ed. I know all about our noble grandmoth er?. 1 have heard of them before. I think we could run a race with them any day. But if we cannot, whose fault is it? If tLe women of to-day are puny, fragile, degener ate, are tbey not the grandchildren of their grandmothers—bearing such constitutions as their grandmothers could transmit? It was the duty of those venerable ladies not only to be strong themselves, but to see to it that their children were strong. A sturdy race should leave a sturdy race. It was far more their duty to give to their children vigorous minds, stalwart bodies, healthy nerves, firm principles, than it was to spin and weave and make butter and cheese all day. We should have got along jost as well with less linen laid up in laven der; and if cur grandmothers could only have waited wc would have woven them more cloth in a day than their hand-looms would turn out in a life-time. But there is no royal road to a healthy mauhood and wo manhood. Nothing less costly than human life goes into the construction of human life. We should have more reason to be grate ful to our ancestors if they would have given up their superfluous industries, called off their energy from its perishable objects, and let more of their soul and strength flow lei surely in to build up the soul and strength of the generations that were to follow after them. Nobody is to blame for being born weak. If this generation of women is fee ble compared with its haidy and laborious grandmothers it is simply because the grand mothers put so much of their vitality, their physical nerve and moral fibre, into their work that they had but an insufficient quan tity left wherewithal to endow their children; and so they wrought us evil. One would not willingly quarrel with his grandmothers. All agree in awarding them praise for heroic qualities. They fought a good fight—perhaps the best they could un der the circumstances with their light. We would gladly overlook all in their lives that was defective, and fasten our eyes only on that which was noble. But when their fault is distinctly poiuteioutas their virtue, when their necessity is exalted into our ensample, when their narrowness is held up to our am bition, we must say that it was fault and need and narrowness, grandmother or no grandmother. Indeed those excellent gentlewomen, no doubt, long before this have seen the error of their ways, and, if tbey oould find voice, would be the first to avow that they did set too greatstore by chests of sheets, and bu reaus, of blankets, and pillow cases of stock ings, and stacks of provisions and that if it were given them to live life over again, they would Jendeavor rather to lay up treasure in the bodies and brains and hearts of their children, where moth and mildew do not corrupt, which time does not dissipate nor use destroy, and whereof we stand in sorer ! need than of purple or scarlet or fine-twined j linen. — Harper * Bazar. J A BEEOBJIED prisoner, on being discharg ed from the jail at Keokuk, lowa, took along I with hiui the jailor's revolver.