THE COLUMBIAN AND DEMOCRAT, BLOOMSBUKG, COLUMBIA COINTY, PA. flffr SfttlttiitBtstit B33SK7ATf ii SI'ff2LL,E liters. lUiOOMSBuiia", pa". F v i d sx y, TVtTv y TV . 18 78. Hcr.iocrallc Stain Cent cation. Tlio Democratic State Convention of l'enn ylvani.i, for 1S73, will til lieKl in Jiljrnry Hill.-l'iltOi.trff, (l'enn Avenue, near Otli Mtci't.i at l a. tn., YilnoeUy. May '!, to lilaco In luitninalimi oiio nrni fur each ol" tlio following named oflicoi : Governor, .Iiiilgo of tlie Supremo Court, Lieutenant Governor, nnl Secretary of Internal Affairs, lty order of tha Stato Committee, W'lLLtAM M'Cl.Kl.t.AND, Chairman. THE UEPUllMCAN CONVKNItllN. The C.irturon metiagerio CTnpletcil Its at hlleJ work on VeJnesJ.iy lait by nominat ing the State ticket in follow : For Gover nor, Henry M, Hoyt, of the coal regions aterrelt, of Allegheny, was named for Judgo cif the Supremo Court, nud the venerable Chief Juitice Agnew w.t shelved. Tho oil regions got Sen itor Stone for Lieutenant Governor, and Philalelphh got Senator Dunkd for Secretary of Internal atf.iirs. The Convention n cut and dried ntiiilr, and Cameron's men can be beaten. MMi (IK liYCOMIXa. Alfred II. Hill tho uiombor from tho Lower end of Lycoming dos?rvos unro than a pass iug notice at our hands. Kew men of so short nii cxpcriouc3 in matters of legislation have mado a mora dntin"Uishcd record. His su periority is not found in tho number of pa ges in which his name figures in the Legisla live Record but in that closo attention to bu siness and capacity to weigh tho relative ef fects of opposing interests. Tha man that (ays most in the halls of legislation, is not the man that wields influence. Hill is not of that class. Ho is ono of those that docs not talk until ho has something to say and then it is to the poiut. His closo attention to busi ness has often attracted tho attention of his fellow members, and won for him the sobri quet of firm as the hills. In our frequent vis its to tho Stato Capital wo bavo always found him at his post. Tha business of his county and his constituents is the first thought of his mind. After that in all questions of State policy ho takes a broad and plntantrop- io vie. Ho has now mastered tho routine of business and will in tho future, if returned again by his constituents, brin to his com mand n complete knowledge of parhamenta ry law. This is an essential prerequisite in order to maintain that equal advantago and skill m legislative tactics the tine qua nan of success. The peoplo of old Lycoming wo think would mako a great mistake in not re turning Mr. Hill. Wo hopo thoy will, and our word 1'or it they will not be sorry. THE NEW l'AKTY AND ITS CANDIDATES Tho possibilities of tho party that met ii Convention in Philadelphia last week, were great. By judicious nominations, nnd well constructed platform, they might bavo polled n very largo vote at the fall election But all llio golden opportunities were disregarded, the platform first adopted was a couiuiuuitic document "fit only for a mob." True, the nioro conservative elements sat up all night after the adoption of tho platform, to con struct something else a little better calculated to catch the floating votes here and there, and on Thursday uiomirg tho Labor resolutions wero repudiated and tho Greeuback senti ments nlopted. Tlio platform is too long to give in full. It demands everything while it promises nothing. It is a conglomeration of so-called principles of tho Labor Reformers, the Nationals and tho Greenbackcrs. The name ado'ited for the new party in this con vention, indicates tho character of tho plat form.. It is tho National-Greenback-Labor party. THE CANDIDATES. Samuel It. Mason, the nominee for Gov ernor, is a lawyer reading in the town of Mercer, scat of Jlerccr county. He is fifty years of age, having been born of Scotch-Irish pareutago on a' tuiall farm in Wa-diington township, Lawrence county, but then a part ofMerecr. i o has been practicing at tho Mercer bar for twenty-five years, and in Western Pennsylvania is known as a gentle man of largo experience and marked execu tive ability. His practice has been good from the beginning, aud for the pat fifteen years he has been looked upon as well-to do. Ho never held any publio office or office of any kind, except that ot cider in tho l'resby tcrian Church of his town. His vote has been cast with tho Democrats, but he was never an active .partWau. Threo years ago ho pub licly took up tho Labor cause, aud has since then lxen identified with tho Nationalists in Mercer. At tho Williamsport Convention last year Mr. J. G. White, chairman of the United Labor county committee of Mercer, mentioned Mr Mason as a candidato for the Supremo .Judgeship, but ho withdrew in fa vor of Judge Bentley. Mr. Mason is a largo man, well precrved, with n fine address. Uo has not a Iriir on the top of his head and very few whiskers. Ho is u good speaker, smooth, persuasive and always logical. His family consists of a wife and nine children. The nomination ol' Mason was tho woik of tlio Cameron riug. Agents were in Phila delphia for tho purpose of preventing the nomination ol Armstrong, aud they were suc cessful, William II. Armstrong was tlio only man whom Hoyt IVared. Had Armstrong been nominated, it would have made Hoyt'u nomination by the Itcpublicaus uncertaiu,and his defeat if nominated almost sure. To pre vent all this, the Cameron.', who s till own the state, tet about Armstrong's overthrow, and accomplished it, by the nomination of Judge Bently ol Williuuiiport for Supreme Judg Tho trick seemed apparcut when Immediately after the iiomiucofor governor wan sclcctcd.a dispatch was ent Bentley asking him to withdraw in favor of Judgo Agncw. He was put on the track only long enough to crowd Armstrong oil. Wo would not guar uutco that a certaiu delegate uot fur from here did not go to Philadelphia to holp the Camerons capture tho Convention. Christopher Shearer, the uomineo for Lieu tenant Governor has declined to be a candi date, and the vacancy will bo filled by tho Stato committee. Judgo Benjamin S. lleutlcy, tho candidato for Supreme Judge, is about sixty yeaia of age, auU lias been a member of tho bar over thirty yeari. In 1808 Lycoming county waa made a ju dicial district, aud ho was appointed to pro tide upou the bench by Governor Geary. In tho fall of the year 1SU8 ho was renominated by the Kepublicaus us tho opposition to Judge Gamble, who was the candidate on tlio Dem ocratic ticket for the President Judgeship, aud Mr. Bcutly was defeated. Upon hU ro iliceucutfroui tho bench, tlio members of the bar lield n meeting and passed resolutions coinplinionting liim upon liis fair nnd ablo elections vfliilo upon the bench and tho high regard which they hold htin in. Sinco then ho has been practicing law with considerable jucect?, and is regarded as ono of tho nioit popular men in tho lumber districts. Ho was n (launch Hopublicn until four years ago, when, as lio says, ho discovered that the two political parties wero ndmltiNtctrd In the in crests of tho money power, nnd that ho could not conscientiously support cither ono of them. Ho voted lor Cooper and Carey in S7C, and last year was tho candidate ol the Independent Greenback parly for tho pn-ition for which bo is now again nomlna ted. In hi speech accepting tho nomination last year .Tudga llcntley declared that ho was in tho Independent Biorcment heart nnd soul. James L, Wright, tlio nominee for Secre tary of Internal Affairs, was nominated for Stato Treasurer by tho first State Con vention which was held at the city of Harris burg, September 10, 1S77. Ho is a tailor by trade and lives in Philadelphia. Mr. Wright is fifty-nino years old, and has 'Hded with tho workingmen,' according to his own word, since I was nineteen. Ho was president of tho Anti-Monopoly Convention hell at Har risburg In March 1870, aud temporary chair man of tho National Labor Convention held in Pittsburg in April of tin same year. As tho matter h is turned out, the new par ty is gotten up in the interest of tho Repub lican party. Astaunch Hepublican liko Wil liam II. Armstrong was rejected for Govern or, and Mason, formerly a Democrat was nominated to draw off Democratic votes. Democrats who aro deluded into following this new leader should bear in mind that ev ery vote drawn from tho party is equivalent to a vote for Hoyt, who will bo tho Republi can candidato for Governor. Investigatiii!; tlio Fraud. The work of investigating the criminal processes by which the people of the United States were defrauded ot their choice of a President has at last bgun in earnest in Congress, and it should not be abandoned until all who who were engaged in the com mission of tho crime whether as principals or accessories shall be brought to punish ment. A substantial basis for the resolution of Mr. Potter of New York was found in the solemn memorial of the State of Maryland and in the affidavit of a member of tbo Flor ida returning board. As Speaker Kandall was bound to decide, this resolution Involv ed n question of the highest privilege. Hut instead of fairly meeting the issue .the re publican minority in Congress resorted to fil ibustering in order to cover fraud. Many of them have admitted over and over again in private conversation that Hayes is in fraudulent occupancy of the president! al office. Yet when confronted with a simple resolution which contemplates the invest! gation of the fraud and making an enduri ng official record ot it that it may stand In his tory as u warning they shrink away from the issup. They dread the inquiry proposed in this resolution becausa they have already anticipated the revelations that will.be made Hut tho investigation will go on in spite of their resistance. If it shall be ascertained that John Sherman in Louisiana was complicity with J. Madison Wells, advising the commission of the frauds by which the electoral votoof that state was stolen, and that Edward P.Noyes bargained with M'Lin and others in Florida, promising official re wards in behalf of Mr, Hayes in return for the theft of electoral votes, another and more Important issue will arise. Hut first let tho facts be ascertained aud put them upon en during record. To that end let the investi- gation of the frauds In Louisiana and Florida be searching and thorough. The republican opponents of this invest! gation profess to entertain great fear that it will interrupt tbo business and interfere with the prosperity of the country. Their alarm Is unduly exaggerated. This foar of distur bing tho business of the country is beco ming rather threadbare as a partisan pretext . Is it proposed to relorm notorious and flagrant abuses in the revenue system of the country. at once those who are interested in main taining these abuses cry out in chorus against disturbing the business of the country. Af ter they haro derived all the proGt that is possible from the abuses they will perhaps consent that another generation shall inau gurate the necessary reforms. Is a resold tion introduced in congress to take notice of the most astounding frauds upon the suffrage upon the confession of some of the men who officially participated in them the cry is re pealed that the prosperity of the country will bo Imperilled by the investigation and the agitation attending it. If the prosperity of the couutry cannot sustain such a shock It must rest on an exceedingly insecure toiin datiou. Hut the quietists dread agitation much more on their own account than that of the country, for whoso business interests they profess so much concern. They shrink with undisguised alarm from an investiga tion which threatens to reveal to tho world the proof that Mr. Hayes by offering official honors and rewards to those who were enga ed In making the canvass of the electoral votes In Florida was an active participant in the frauds by which he was elevated to the Presidency of the United States against the consent of n great majority of the peo ple. As partisans they dread the exposuro of tho character of the services for which John Sherman was made secretary of tho treasury and Edward F. Noyes was sent as minister to France, with the work that was performed and the rewards that were ob tained by the minor conspirators In this great drama of political crime. Hut the Is sue between the two political parties on this question has been made up by the action of the house on Monday, In behalf of a wrong ed and outraged people the democrats de mand an investigation of the electoral crimo and the exposure of all who were con cerned in it that It may servo as a warring to political conspirators and knaves for all time. The republicans In congress, on the other hand, throw every obstacle in tbo way of Investigation In fear of the partisan con sequences, while making hypocritical pre tense of alarm concerning the business inter ests ot the country. No country can pros per nor deserves to prosper whose reprcsen- tatlves have not the courage to probe to the bottom a crime against the elective franchise which saps tho very foundation of the polit leal institutions upon which all its material prosperity must ;depend. The people wjll decide between tho two parties on this Issue. Patriot. The Congressional Huddle. Washington, May IS. Persons at the capital who have made calculations say there are 131 Democratic members of the House of Representatives present, including the Speaker, unpaired aud nine Democratic members, who being paired with Repuhli' cans cannot vote. There cannot be a quo rum without breaking tome of the pairs. Tho Democrats absent from the city who aro paired have been telegraphed for and extra exertions are made to secure the desired riuor rum preliminary to a vote on the 1'otter in vestigating resolution. WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington, I). C, May I I, 1878. Tho Pott (Democratic dally) of this morn ing Is confident that a resolution based principally on Blair's memorial and second arily on the cvldenco contributed by MeLIn nnd his pals In Florida nnd elsewhere, will bo carrlnl to-dny, calling for nn Immediate Investigation. It mj thn Speaker has de rided It may be offered us n privileged ques tion, anil Unit the temporizing expedients and the vacillhtlon have been so far over come as to jmtlfy tin belief that before ad journment tii-ntgbt the ground will have been broken for n imwt earch!ng Inquiry, It further Intimate that tha Kepubllcans will move to amend so as to Include all Southern Slates having railed Itpnhllcan majorities but which went overwhelmingly forTilden. It Is thought likely that this r.oure has been ailopied so that by raking over several States they may be able to get together somo fragments whr-rctvith to rebut tho damaging ili'clo-ures relative to the rad- Icsl manipulation of votes In South C.irollnn4 I' loriila and Louisiana. 1 o the extent that the Republican leaders have any specific evidence nf fraud, tlmy will likely be grati fied. Hut It hardly seems provable that they will bo allowed to go all over United States tn pick up Isolated eae.s of intimidation of voters, to belittle aud off.et thrlr wholesale frauds by which tho popular will of whole communities and States was defeated and the minority made seemingly, the victors in a national election, "The dog shall return to his vomit nnd the sow tn her wallowing." Dennis, who seems tn have ery much ex aggerated tho weight nf obligations under which he has placed the Democracy by the part ho has had in tho Florida confession, and probably regretting his weakness in yielding to the promptings of conscience, has left us in high dudgeon becsme, as it appear, he was not permitted to boss the job, and hurry the investigation prematurely when ho could, perhaps, have established just as much as would have been to the good and behoof of nuinberone.and there stoppei without particular regard for anything but the aggrandizement of Dennis. Any how, he has gone, breathing vengeance nnd swearing to make the investigation a hot one forho Democrats in Florida. Itseems the judgment hero that he has been treated by the administration to a tasto of his own de' coction and it-seems to have been as distaste ful as to fill the abdominal viscera with the East wind. I cannot refrain from referring for a mo' ment to the speech of Gen. Gordon deliver ed in the Senate last Tuesday, because it is one of the lew speeches made here this win ter on national finances that will.have a per manent value. While the courtesy that marks Senator Gordon's bearing under all circumstances was observed throughout the speech, that did not serve to detract from the force of bis scathing arraigment of those responsible for the financial .legislation of the past 10 years, which will be denoun red as the remote aud proximate cause of nil the ills wo have sum-red sinci 1873. Contraction he declared good for the bond holder and the wealthy and ton correspond' iug extent paralyzing to legitimate business. ubmerging the masses deeper and deeper in the depths of poverty, deprivation and wretchedness. Every deduction was logical clear aud to the purpose. Uo impregnably fortified his position by citations from the fi nancial history of leading European powers The floor and galleries were deserted by tho usual habitues and filled by a critical audi cnce.such as might be expected to be interest' ed in finauces. He had it with him through out. Of all Southern Representatives none have stood higher than Gen. Gordon from the moment he first entered the Senate.then best known as a commander of one wing ol Lee's army, and as the confidential friend ol that great captain. I commend his full speech to all who desire a clear presentation of tho financial problem of to-day free of the verbago nnd abstraction usually strung together and dubbed a "financial speech. Sitting Bull's threats receive some atten tion, as his ability to execute them or at least to earry devastation to many a frontier home is undoubted in the present condi lion of our Army. Seminole, Pennsylvania Editorial Excursion. The regular annual excursion of the Pennsylvania EJItorialAssociation will come off on the 17lh of Juno. The place selected is Cressou Springs, on the summit of the Alleghenies, a tim-l delightful spot, where. we have no doubt, the Ir.iterinty will enjoy th'-m-flves in thu full. The excursion to tin Water Gap lust time was so eminently ib llg'iilul that all who participated in it w nut tail to be presentat the meeliug nt.Cres- sou. 1 h" nrr.iugements, as fur ns they have been completed, are that the members shall meet al Harrisburg on Monday evening, June 17, where they will be the guests of thV J, .duel House. A social or bop, & sup per, He.,. in I the presence of all the officials nl the State Capital will be the features of the evening. O.i Tuesday the association will proceed to Cressou, where It will be handsomely entertained until Friday, when the parly will ill-band for their homes. Mr. Ungcr, the proprietor of the hotel at Cresson Is a gentleman of experience In that business and the fraternity will meet wl th a hearly reception at bis hands. A good t nn gener ally Is anticipated, as the attendance prom Ises to bo larger than any that has preceded it. The committee (Professors Brook, Maris and Schaell'er), appointed by the conference of isormal school principals, prepared for fi nal action a report recommending some changes in the courses of study. In the tl enientary course Etymology and Physical Geography, as separate hranchos shall be dropped. Tho subject of Geography shall include the leading principles of physical aud mathematical geography, and be taught as one lir inoh, 1 he outlines of rhetoric and English classics aro substituted for rhetoric, Tne elements nf Latin, including the first book of Cicar, shall be added to the course, Students in the scientific course shall be al lowed to substitute for the latter tbirdof al gebra and for higher mathematics an eoui alent in Latin, Greek, German or French The classical course shall be dropped from tbe catalogues of the schools. These chan ges will only become valid after they have been ratified by the conference of prinpl pals and approved by the Superintendent of Public Instructiou. In 1878 and 187P stu dents will be allowed to graduate on the ba sis of the present course. Doyleilaain Demo crat. Two College Students Drowned, Alter Y. Shlndel, of Danville, Pa and W. U, Kohler, of Hanover, Pa., both stu dents of the Theological seminary at that place, were accidentally drowned on the 8th lust., by the upsetting of their boat on Sniln lake. They wero graduates of the Pennsyl vanla college and members of the class I Continued. TUB MONEY.QUKSTION. Eight general and disastrous failures nnd suspensions of epecio payments occurred in tho United Statos within sixtyfivo yosrs bo foro tha era of greenbacks was inaugurated, not to mention tbo almost iuiiumcrablo local suspensions ovor the satin period. Money is merely a means of exchanging articles, and no other valuo can bo needed in money. It is legal mcaurn as much as a fn it rule is n le gal foot, twelve iiulms loni, established by custom nnd law. ft does not iilfect pi ices, for the legal cord of pine wood liny ho worth four dollars, whilei tho sa ne- legal measure of oak ood may he wjrth i ight dollars, the prico of legal ton of )i iy may bo ten dollars, whilo tho same legal weight of eo il in iy bavo only livo dollars as Its price ; llius a legal measure of vahw cannot nlfiot the priuo of commodi ties or production'. The measure of the car penter need not bo a two foot rule, made of gold or Any other metal, it may bo only n nar row strip of papor, and yet ai perfect as if of gold and set with diamonds. All luuisurcs whether money or yardsticks, gilhnn.or tons, aro measures only, we d not cill them pro ductions or commodities. Gold is no better as a measure of valuo than c ipper, nickel, or paper money. All those uiMiures hive tho same bais too, they all rest on custom and law; thoy have no other truo bais, nor need any other foundation. Ten cents in sp?cio or ten cents in paper, are measures of valuo, the ruckle cent is also a incauro of value. The fleets of a mixid eurre:i:y hive always brought disaster and fit inci it distress. Pa per money issued by any g.jverinent as a law ful tender for all debts, taxes and government lues, should rjst in tlu o.i ictumits of th) nation's la.v.s an i credit ati.l on in other basis whatever, any other basis is falo an 1 delu sive. Metals are eounujdities and produc tions for manufacturing purposes, and not Heeded fot money in exchanging one article ii your p)sossion for another article in your neighbor's poisesd in that yiu may desire to Iiavo. Money is only a convenience, not an absolute lucess'ty ; frequent purchisos, sales and payments, aro mada without the use of money, or any othor rjprescuta'ivo of valua, but simply trade value for value, but when money becomes tbo reprecutattre, it is used for convenience in nuking exchanges. A one dollar greenback represents ten loaves of bread, or half a days woik ; it can twenty or a huudred debts iu ouo day for as many peo ple, and be paid back to you at night, this is its mission ; it dies the work it was created to do, law gave it being and rapacity. Com mon consent gave it motion, vigor, nnd cur rency. It represents and ex j lanos property, pays debts, answers ovory man's purpose, meets every contract, fulfils every function required of money. We do uot mako watch es of it, but mo it forunnoy, The use of money dupjiids on legal authority nnd the common consent of the people, and not on its material. It is a gross error and an ab surd notion to think that money must be metal, or that paper must ret on metal t make it vu'uable. A few pounds of nickel costs but a few cents, but if the .same iiicklc bo faslii ned into cents it represents a hun dred dollars. Tho iuiprct-s of authority gives it va'u3 unknown before, and passes curreit as money by the consent of tho pjop'e. Mon ey, like manure, is of uo me if never spread. H o do nit want mtney to keep, wo want it for use, and divide it up in am mnts to suit all our purchasers of articles in different pla ces. If metal money wero not used its abun dance would .cause uo inflation, its scarcity no distress. The PinlNh notion that God made any motal of i-ut ror nf equal importance tj the'ordinary pro I tots of 1 ib ir is false; that the material for in ney in i-t be something scarco and difficult to proe iro, is equally ab surd. Th- 'nVrent vil'ij if m my, in tiio mater d out of wliioi it i mule, is uo more fixed mid t i'n tlu i tho quality of tho wool of w !i a bihel ba-ket is constructed isaiegula.oi nf its mca-uriug capacities. All notion1 i) 1 1 ilon to the contrary, however ajol nnl ihj-Ii juoroil, aro relies of super Hi', hi. V. t il money, cuuibeisoine and hmvy at Iwot became too)buideu.somo in mak ing i ,1 ai ges, nnd pre lubes wcio written on pi' . i.f aper to piv so much in coin, and f ' ii- pi ictii-e banks sprung into rxhteuce. and Umk iiotis were priutcd, promising to 1 iy in eiip. O -casinually a man wanted a lh"Ui-ind dollars in clin, aud presenting tho pa er -eceiicd the metal money without do lay ; and peilups thu next week tho tame coin cauio back to be exchanged for paper money. Hanks constantly had on hand, coin almost untouched, and five dollars in paper wjre represented by only two dollars iu coin The amount of specio held in rfservo in 1SC9 did not exceol twenty cents to the dollar. But every village wanted n bank for conveni ence, the bankers floated all the paper money possible, and thus uiado their living by eating up their customers. A handfull of specio for a bufbcl of bank bills, rented out to the nil l.ng, confiding, outraged public, and yet tho specie iu tlio vaults iu I860 was above tbo averago aud exceeded that of any year sinco 18-U. A mixed currency has juoved to bo unsound, rotten, dishonest, and does not con tain a single clement of justico.all laws framed iu its support have been in tho intoiest of tho rich, whilo the agriculturists nnd produc ing classes, havo been tho chief sufferers, by exchanging their productions for bank bills resting on a specie basis. Everybody knows that the amount of currency needed can nev er bo redeemed in gold. It is as idlo talk as to affirm that twice six will make filly. Un der such a system tliero nevor was or can bo auy reliability. Fluctuations and speculations aro tho direct results ; panics, disasters and misery sure aud inevitable. So long as ev erything is prosperous, and no ono asks for gold every thing goes smooth ; but tho uio ment any considerable number, thinking of tho pos-ibihty of thoro being more papor money than metal, rush to too who shall get what gold tbero l, the thunder-clap of de moralization and ruin occurs, whilo the bono and sinew of libor and productions shoulder the lossc. Bankers and inouey-lenders es cape unharmed. Currency resting on a spo cio basis Is fills, de1uivB, intolerable. Met al money aud mixed enrrency combined, wero a failure at almost tho commencement of tho most disastrous war of modem times. Schuylkill and Y-rU. It Is the old story over, The Legislative bribes, on the Infamous Recorder bill were taken by Schuylkill and York, just as It was done In 1837, when Lbn and Wairgnnsel'er of Schuylkill and Sam Miuear of York. VO' ted for Simon Cameron, for United States Seuator, against John y Forney, who wft tbo Demouratlo nominee. These three men got $300 ii piece for their trm.on and bri bery. One of them fell dead In the street of Tamaqua, anoth er was killed by the cars atSunbury, and the third Is supported by his wife, and Is the moat Inhuman creature iu his personal appearance that tramps tbe streets of HarrUbtirg, What Torbett, of Schuylkill, and Hussey, of York received tbe other day for voting for the confirmation of Quay, of Philadelphia is still unknown to tbe many, But that tbey should be awar ded a seat la tho Penitentiary, or drovned in tbe Susquehanna, up honest man will dV ry. Clearfield Jlepubligarf. Thp Hon. Hendrlck B, Wright reported a bill to tho House on Saturday, tn loan $000 from tho Treasury to every msJi desiring tn irom mo treasury to every mj uesiriug in ,,, ' , , K ... sett e upon the publ o lands.Ou being i il it ... , i, , , ,i ns&t-u ujf ,ui, Ill-will, Ul AIIIUHma, wucuici his report was ordered by the Committee on Piillic Land, Mr. Wright nnswcreJi "I have been walling six months to report It ; it Is a unnnlinous report from the commit tee;" whereupon nnother member of the commltlro said "that tho committee unani mously ngre-ed not tn recommend the bill." This covered tbe great Leveller of Luierne with confusion and filled the Houso with laughter nt his expense. It Is too bad that so benevolent a statesman ns Mr, Wright should bo subjected to such a merciless ex posure and mortification. This large-hearted man desires to bcucfit the laboring classes and he Introduced n bill to lend (on what time aud terms we know not) $.100 to each nnd every settler on tho public lands and to continue doing this until the loans should amount to $10,000,000. No doubt Mr. Wright, when ho fixed this moderate limit In bis bill to tho aggregate of these loans, believed that his plan of benevolence and agricultural development would become so popular by the time the 810,000,000 should bo exhausted that Congress would be glad to grant nil the money necessary to continue tho loans ad libitum el ad infinitum, lie only wanted the $10,000,000 ns an entering wedge, as it were, to the ultimate and sue cessful opening of a grand scheme of colo nizing the public domain and making happy thousands nnd tens ol thousands of his fel low citizens who nre now landless, penniless nud unemployed, Who will say that this was not a reasonable as well ns a very gen erous nnd benevolent desire? No small hearted man would or could have conceived such a broad and magnificent scheme of publin charity nnd political economy. Only broad-chested, big-hearted man,like the geii' tlcman from Luzerne, could have the capac lty to devise such a plan for benefitting both the workiugman and the country. And yet we find men Iu Congress base enough to riif iculo Mr. Wright and suggest that he should make the proposed loans out of his own pock et! They must take him for a Rothschild, n John Howard and aGerritSmith nil rolled into ono man and named Hendrick II. Wright! Doubtless Mr. Wright would, If ho could, loin evrry poor man In the coun try de-irons nf settling upon the public land tho sum nf fftOO ; but it is folly to talk of any one man s lining this Only the general Government rati nffud to lend so much mo ney, and Mr. Wright, therefore, drafted a bill re' iring the Government lo furnish the capital to set up poor men in the farming business. And he bus managed to get his bill out of committee and before the House, notwithstanding the fact that the committee resolved not tn recommend it. This show that Mr. Wright is as bold and adroit as he is generous nud nenevnlent with the mo ney of the Government Other members of Congress and tin- blunted capitalists and bondholders nf the country may jeer and ridicule .Mr. Wright, but the workingmen of Luzerne will appreciate his noble efforts in behalf of their guild; and when the next Congressional election comes 'rund they will show what they think of their fearles champion. They will re-elect him by a tre mendous majority, and Mr. Wright will be just as happy as though his bill had passed the committee unanimously nnd both Houses of Congress. His constitueuts will tak' him at his word, aud will accept the will for the deed. Then what will Wright care for the ridicule of the rich or the contempt of Congressmen ? They may call bim a king among beggars, but he will be too proud to bo a beggar among kings. lie will walk back into Congress with n host of th sons of honest toil at his back, and will be sort of Jack Cade, or a Rienzi, or a Massani cllo, or a village Hampden, "guiltless of his country's blood." They laugh best who laugh last, and Wright will bo ablo to laugli lustily (in his sleeve) after the election. II is "The-Old-Man-Not-Afraid-to-bc-called-a Demagogue," and ho knows what he's about Lt him alone. Phila. Jlecord. More .Mischief. The bill which passed the lower branch of tho State legislature on Wednesday, en larging the criminal jurisdiction of magis trates and justices of the peace to such an extent that they may hear and determine cases of larceny, assault and battery, mall cious mischief and similar misdemeanors with jury trials, is a very dangerous and oh noxious piece of legislation. It trenches on the province of the Quarter Sessions. It doubles tho cost of, trying cacs over what is charged in the Quarter Sessions. It al lows extra compensation to constables, and that to jurors will be sufficient to surround the magistrates' courts with crowds of needy hangers on. No provision is made for the representation of tbe Commonwealth, and prisoner may be brought before any magis trato for trial, however remote from the sceno of the offense. The bar is unanimous against the ex tension of tho jurisdiction of the magis trates, and tho community deprecates it as public calamity. The disposition of magis trates to decide in favor of plaintiffs, or those who bring them business, renders all proceeding before them Incomplete aud un satisfactory. Few or none ot them are learned in the law. It is surprising that bill, fraught with such evident mischief as thisis.should find favor with the Legislature, It is safe to say that two-thirds of all the cases tried before magistrates are appealed to higher courts and that they are almost in variably reversed. Should the bill in ques tion become a law It would greatly Increase tbe business and expenses of the courts. Its effect will bo to largely Increase the emolu menU of magistrates and their dependents and the judicial expenses of the city. Our legislators manifest a remarkable readiness to create new offices and to impose new burdens on their constitueuts, nofwithstand ing their protestations to tbe contrary, 1THI, The Euroneau War. London, May 1C, A telegram from Bat ourq states that n concentration of 7,000 armed Mussulman Inhabitants of Lazlstan In the Aedanatch district, lias compelled tbe Russians tn retreat, and that the rapid gat! ering of armed bands renders untcnaable the Russian positions at .Livoua and ou the Charuk river. Advices from Hucbarest state that de tachmenls of Russian reserves and recruits continue to pass through Roumania for regi nients In the field. Some of these men are totally Ignorant of military drill, Traius of ammunition are also passing to tho Dan ube. Tbe Russians are making additional con tracts iu Roumania for transport carts and auimals. It is fald that 3,000 more are or- derest to be ready in two weeks for service aju'h of the Danube. Renewed activity prevails in the several arsenals. Orders have been issued to the factory al Kragujevata, to increase the pro ductlon of Peabody-Martlnl ammunition to tbe amount of 40,000 rounds per day. All serviceable artillery In store has been or dered to be mounted and sent immediately q thefropt. Political Assessment!) and the Law. We bavo bad again and again to point out . . . -. , i, ..i recently the fact that no law has any real ' ,. , . ,,, ' . mean ng or effectlvo force unless.there U a public opinion back of It powerful and strong enough tn enforco It. There are liquor laws Iu Pennsylvania which, If exe cuted, would thoroughly regulate traffic In lis deleterious nrllclo and close up most of the low grndo rum shops. There aro Sunday laws e.n tho statute book rigid enough to stop all human activity on tho Sabbath nnd veil e whole city In Judaic garb, but popular opinion does not support them, and they nre radically dead letters. To day we pre sent a section of a United States act, being portion of the Appropriation bill for 1877, hich of course Is still iu fullforce.and which ould seem to mako tho Issuing of any civil service orders by the President, or the repeat of them, immaterial. The existence of this stntute.which is almost unknown to ho very peoplo who aro clamoring nnd writing about the evil of political assesments, shows that this evil is something which reaches down into society and below the politicians This act provides "that all cxceullvo officers or employes of tho United States not appoint ed by tho President, with the ndvieo and consent of the Senate, are prohibited from requesting, giving to or receiving from any ther officer or employee ot the Uovcrnment any money or property or other thing ot aliM fur political purposes ; nnd any such officer or employee who shall offend against the provisions of Ibis section shall be at once llscharged from the service ol the United States, and he shall atari bo deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction thereof shall he fined in a sum not exceeding five hundred dollars." In view of this statute any Presidential orders," one way or the other, seem rather superojralory, and the remedy would appear t J be in the courts. Press. o Cleveland Herald is greatly alarmed about the probability of tho Democrats con trolling the next Houso at Washington, bo- cause, with a Democratic Senate and House, they would be certain to count in tlio Democratic candidato for President, whether elected or not. Of course tbey will if they can, just as the Ilenublicans did last titno and will do again if they get the chance ; but if tiie Republicans could count in Hayes against a popular majority of half a million and a decided majority of tho electoral votes, with a Hepublican Senate and largely Deinocralio Home, why may not the Democrats do tbo samo in 1881 with a Democratic Senate, whether tho House Bliall be Hepublican or not? The next Senate is already assured to the Democrats by from eight to a dozen majority, and as that body has tho custody of Presidential election re turns and disposes of them at will, it is no mere phantom that now afflicts the Hepubli can leaders when they look forward to the Itb of March, 1881. Hepublican villainy lias established tho fact that tho popular wilt may be defined in t Ye selection of a national ruler, and Democratic virtue must become more he roic than it has been in the past, if it shall fail to profit by the Hepublican precedent Intead of mourning about a probable Dem- cratio House, the Hepublican organs might be much better employed in telling the hon est truth about the last election, and demand ing the legislation as will so clearly defino the adjustment of electoral disputes that a repe tition tf tlio monstrous fraud of 1876-7 shall be impossible by any party, Honesty will pay the best in the long run, and tliero can be no more conclusive evidence of the fact thau the insane sacrifice of Hepublican pow er to Hepublican debaucbery. Times. Shooting nt Emperor William. A dispatch from Berlin says that at 3:30 Saturday aflernoon.as the Emperor William was returning from a drive with the Grand Duchess of Baden, two shots from a revol ver were filed at him in the avenue Unter den Linden, Nobody was hurt. The assas sin ran into the middle avenue, followed by a crowd. On an attempt being made to capture him, be fired three shots and then threw his revolver away. He was then secured. The Emperor's carriage was stopped, and tho footman sprang from the box and assisted at the capture. A few minutes nfterward another individual was seized in the middle Bvenue, in consequence of an alleged attempt to rescue the assassin, Dense masses streamed in from the remotest suburbs to manifest their loyalty and syra patny, singing the national anthem. Th Emperor went to the opera nnd Hoyal Tliea iro mat nigui ami received great ova' Hons. At the official examination Hoedel, th imsoiier, ueniea mat ne nred at the Emper or, lie allirmed that he was without work and intended to shoot himself publicly to Bhow the rich the present condition of the people. The prisoner was in possession ol several socialistic and democratic writings, tickets of membership of Beveral Berlin socialistic unions, and the likenesses of 'tw socialistic leaders. A Closely Contested Case. In 1802 the Locust Mountain Coal and Iron Company leased to Joseph SI. Freck a right to mine in the Ccntralia Basin, Columbia county, for a period of ten years. The right only ex tended to the fouth dipping veins in the basin, and it was provided that the vein should not be worked within 20 yards of tho eastern or western limit of its run. In 1870 a lease was made of the north dip of the same vein to Bob erl Oorrell & Co. The two dips ran parallel and converged below the surface in a elupe re sembling Hie letter V. The apex of the V 1 termed by engineers the "synclinal axis," and was the dividing line of each lease. In the course of his mining Mr. Freck run his gangway over the axis and into the limits of Oorrell & fjo.'s Itae, the consequence of which was that as the latter drove his lennels he struck into the Freck gangways and the water drained ofT into the Cenlralia colliery the name of Frcck's prendnes. When Freck's lease expired the conipany.as laudlords.trought suit against him for this trespass for damages caused their properly by Iho running in of the water from the Hoiledell or Oorrell colliery. The cao was tried in Philadelphia in common pleas court No. 3, and resulted in a verdict for the company for $999. A new trial was sub Krjuently granted, aud a fecond ory assessed tho damages at $17,000. In the course of the latter trial, which occupied eeyeral days, the defendants, excepted to many points of evidence oflered by the plaintiff and allowed by the court, and presented numerous oInU to the judge for his charge to the jury. The rulings on these foruitd the alignments of error, which wero forty-six In number, upon iho removal of the suit to the supreme court for rovlew. In general the point pressed In behilf of Mr. Freck at tbo argument in the hlj her court may he Haled thus i That If the evidence showed be used the best scientific methods of mining, and that the transgression over the dividing line could not he foreseen and provided agalnst.then the judgment In the lower court was erroneous and that evidence to this end should havo gone to the jury. Another point made was that the company should have exercised Its power over Gorrell k Co., who were Its tenants, to prevent them from letting ihe water from their mine turn Into Ihe Cenlralia mine. The decision of the supreme r curt iiielain. (he correctness of "'" 'f Mt and reverses the judg- Candidates. Tho following persons haro been proposed for nomination by the next Democratic county Conven tion to bo beM August ISth, 1818. Canil'dates an nounced In this list are pledged to abldo by tiio de cision of the Convention. ron coMinuss, O. B. HUOCUWAY, . lllnnm'bnrij. van ltni'iuaiiNTATivi!, J03KPII II. KN TITLE, Catiii-itsa. TOR I'llOTIlONOTAHV, till. J. It. EVANS, llloomt'jurg JAMIW BHAKMAN, Orangeriltr. I. K. MILLER, Jloomtburi. J. H. MAIZE, UhomsbnriJ. ron nmisTini and lir.cuuiir.it, GEOIiOE W. Sl'ERNEII, Jitooillsburff. MICHAEL F. KYEItLY, of Jllonitiburij. JOHN S. MAN.V, Centre tiii'iiihii. II. J. DIEN'EIltCII, Centre townthiji. ir. a. riNVKPrnxmsKn, Centre htenrthip, DAVID Y31 I hh higcrcek U u'nh ') . FUKUKIUciniAGKNIlUCII, Centre township. isaiah now eh, ikrwtcL I'OIt COMMIHSIONIWl, M03E3 SCHUaHKK, Jieaver Township, NATHAN mtltiSUACU, I'hhingcrcclc towmhip. CIIAIU.ESUEICIIAUT, Beaver township. THOMAS OEUAGIITV, of Cenlralia. JEREMIAH HAGENI1UCH, Centre township t i; r liimiw l'NBii n i tviih- riio. Has never been known to fall In the cure of reak- ncss, ntt('QdHi Mltii kj uiptoni, tnillsposltlon to ex ertion. los ttl memor, niniculiy nf .m'rtth.nr. pt'ii pral wpiVkms nnrrrr of MseM wtlrt nenuu. iruiriuwe urpamm nnrroro' I'l-nin. nignr, Kleins, cold icnr, ftknes rtlnm r of tl-loti. I.injuor, nnl- HTHul ln'-sltuae of .he tmi suil.tr MMem. i-normou nppfiltp. Willi i)yp.'ptlo sMo-iji. hot I nmls, lUHU- IIlK (Jl I IU1 I Hh'j i;r, Ilt-m Ml 1111 H III TUIIl'r CO" I ill1- naiK'e ii tal (T'liitlonsiin th" tiif. PUil'Wnir thhlool. itvn in me n.icK, ni!fsH ur in -ytiiis, imi'iera i)nc! atu.ta t lurr lwffnii Hum tw ultti tnn.rmrnrv Riurusiim Hiiif loss of blerht : wiitit nf uritloii. etc. These syri'tMnms ull wise from a u akin, nnd to rtuiciiy i-iai usu r r. iaudm i s jui I it uuiuoi iron. It netT fulla. 'IhotiH.iCfU nn nuw eiiliMiii? licit I h ho havo tint.! n. r;.t tin k- nulnc. boU only in fl ARK for Kiinki'l' t Itff-r Ulnonf Tmn. TliU trnlv ralunhltf tntiiu Ihih hei'ii o tlmroutrhlv rented bv all clashes of the community tint UN now dfeini-d ln- nispenaiJie an a, romii im'tiium1. 11 comk uui ut ile, purines the mood, ur a tflws tone to thufrtom uiu, rtjuuuius ii. Kt hit; in i i to on its inc. I now onlv ask u trlnl of Lulu Vdluatiln tonic. Prim $1 per bottle. K. Y. Kunkel, i-ole Troprlclor, No. 259 ronn iimn ureei. oeiuw Mne, Mmacieipnia. ra. Afekfor Knnkel'fi lutter Wlnoof Iron nnd Ukir un other. A photograph of tho propi leior on each wru- jjci, mi utunadru ruuin vrieit. liewareof countrrfeltfl. h not let your druggist sell juunnybtJL Kunkel'-', w hl-h Is nut up only as ftwjiw icyii.-'w-'jicu. urn run m innucu ,ior ah i om i.h one simple in u. . TnitoWnrin Jti-ninvei! Al ic. ITead and all ComiiletH In run linitr. Nn fro until head nabses. seat, pin und mmiiucIi worms re moved by Dr. Kuukel,2Sff North Mnih street, Ad vloefree. o feu until head ond all pisses In ont. cian in tu country for the icnotal of worms, und his worm BvruD hi lnujint and safe for children vi Kiut'u vw-ruui. !enu lufcircui iroraK ior a ooi- ueoi nuiiMTH worm mrup. rriee l a boltle uei, it oi 3 our nrugKist. u noer UIR may NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. iibai.hr in Silverware, Watches.Jewelry.Clocks.&o, All kinds er Watches, nocks nnd Jewi lry cartful, lr rt-nulri'dttiiil wmruriteil. 1 Uemotedto Uicnantje lilock, l'osl Ofllre build- ui'. may ii, '.s-ir ASSIGNEE'S SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE ! In pursuance of an order of tho Court ot Common Pleas of Coluintli county there will bo exposed to puouc saio on IU3 prcmls-s, on FMDAY, JUNK 7tli, 187S, at I o'clock p. m., tho folio Ing real estate, late 01 Thomas Itecce. Purpart No. 1. All that OIIIST .MILL with wate power appurtenant and piece ot laud situate Iu lireenwool township, said c unty, bounded and de scribed as follows i Ueglnulng at u nono by run In nno 01 lands or the aid Joseph llainun: thencob same south Tsy degrees west 15 0.10 perches ton stone on bridge In roid leading Iron orangevlllo to itourauurg j thence by lot ot Samuel Freas, being tho tannery lot purchased of lllhin Patterson and Jonn Patterson uoi tlx tsx degrees w oht iv Mo perch es 10 a stone in Green Creek ; tl.ence by other lana of tho said Joseih Ilajman north S74 degrees east 10 0-10 perches to a stone by tho tald creek ; thenco by tho same north l.v degree s, vest T 5-tn perches to a stone; thenco by tho fcamoboulh I8'( degrees si. percoes 10 tne place or beginning, toutalntng 1 AUHE A.NU l'KlKJUl-S, strict measure. Purpart No a. All tUat certain tract of land situ ate la sild township ot Orecnwoo.i, bounded and de otnoeu as rorows: licglnnlng utu post on lino ot land belonging to Fdnard .Mcllenry; thenco by th samo south to degrees west 53 5-o perches tu a post: thence north so degrees wen eo p-rehes to a white oalf, now gone j thenes by land of Samuel Froas north degrees east sopcrehes to a pot; theme -v.u. urnrees eusi uv-lil perches lo a post , thence north 19'; Degree wc-tt percli-s to a post ; thenco norm 18 a, '.degrees east T 5-10 lurches to a post 1 thenco south Je.V diiireisettjk-io perch, es to a post; llieneo south degree, west 10 cio i.-iwa i9 a none ; tnehco north M), degrees, west T .1.10 perches to a poet i tueuco by lands of lames Patterson north 83 degrees west fii Mil perches to a post i thenco by lauds ot James llnj man south 83 degrees eattn J-lo perches to a ston- .ihnro north 83 degrees eastsipeichesto tho place ot be- fcujuiug, wuiammg 05 ACHI2S AND -10 l12UCHJ2S strict measure. ' Purpart No. 3,-lsd tho unduided one-halt of a tract of tlinbef land, adjotMnir lands of John nalev Jobn ltanii. IJitthew ilclletry and ottitrs cental 8 EVJ2NTY-F1VI2 ACliKS. .iXJ.'.l'J? ov KA'-K--Ten per cent of ono-tourih nf iJ!i'ia a."M ) rM '" ''" coulVrniu i.m of Stj K1" (trowing in tha ground h rmnt-u 'ffiSi noi.rsburg,Wu,fs?iE"E)u" B,g0. SSICWIIK'S NOTICE, w&i'nl&ee ?. of Cata- ttoso having claiuTs or demand wiii f.S'A"? "ni1 tho earn without delay, 11 laake know .... M.tl. 1IUOIIES, May, it, iw. A t,s'SI" Wofloy iWy. ' ' Catawlssa, A CHANCE TO MAKE SOME MONEY SURE. uiacu jj, i-B-jJa l2cV """'fNa. V idiiirC !! .V kerne mado by the wanted mbe T u Vwk iS' "J""1 Iinct. CeUr outdid 1,.. "w Is the uw in mi TO. Adiln-Knl.. Much VK, ItHj- PENNSYLVANIA BAILBOA ID GREAT TRTJK'K LIN AND UNITED STATES MAIL UOl'TE. The attention cf Hie trnul'lnc pil.li is o 1 fully Invited to s me of tho im ills i r Mi !- n i . i; 1 1 , way, In Ihoeontldent nsserti' ii nml belle lli.,t nn other lino can oner equal Induccui' nu us u route ot through tracl. In Construction nnd rqiiijiniunt THE PENNSYLVANIA II ILUOAD Ktunili confessedli nt the head of American rnllwaj s. The track Itilmibto tho tnllro length it tho linn, ot stent ralh Inld on heavy (ink t Its, w hlcli fire e nil ed detl In n found illon of ruck ballast etubteen Inrlics lr. depth. All bridges are ot Iron or stone, nnd hul.t tipoh tho most nppr.ived plahi. llspns'enptrcars, wlillo eminently snfo nnd substatitlnt, nre at the same time models oi com tort and clegnneo. THE SAFETY APPLIANCES In ti'o on Hits line well lllustrnto Hie far-wine nnd liberal policy or Its inanniemeiit, In necordiinci. with which tlio utility ouly of un liniTnement nnd m t Its cost bns lioen the question of consideration. Among many may be noticed THE BLOCK SYSTEM OF 3..FITV SIOtTAIS, JANNEY COUPLER, BUFFER asi FLATFCItU, THE WIIAMCU TATEtfr SWITCH, AND TUB WESTIKGIIOUSi: AIR-tEAKE, forming In rnnjnnotlon v'th a perfect double (rack Ullll I Uilll'l "Celil? htH pos-lble. unil lo.iil bed a cimiliiiiatlon of satifii nnls iil-hIiim "iruifi.n nuitii ,iuu Il'IHltTUU li fill (HUCI ICllliy im- Pullman Palace Cars are run on all Express Trains I'rimi Ni-iv York, I'lillmlrli'liln, Ilnlllnii.rp nml ii ii.iiiiiiilitii, To e lilniKo, e'liu liinnll, Loiilnvlll,-, lnitliinitliolin inn -i. i.iitiiN, t ITIIOt'T ( ll tM,!:, nml tn nil rrliiclpnl polnti In thi fur Went mid South Willi liuloiieiiiuiiireoi ctr-. connection- me nmilo In l ulun lirpois, und uio iusi.iuJ to nil Innoriuiit p. Ints. IHS SCENERY OF TIIE l'ENNSY I,VA N I A HOI IT 12 Is admitted to be unsmpni-M'rt in tlio w rid f ir rrnn deur. Iienutv mid uirl. i ,i,k,i.r r. ,,.,.i.i... .., ,a clinics nre provided fniplojicsareiouriious nd attentive, and it Isun luieliabie r. suit 111 it u irlpbj iu reiiuciivuuid nunrouu luubr rorm APlcaslEgan UemcraM Experience. Tickets for flille at thn Inu-etf. rntea n, tl.a Tlz-Vfl, tinicesor tbe Company In nil Important ctut'B and towns. FIUNK THOMPSON, I. I'. FAltVEIt. eicn'l Pneenjrer Agent. ueuerui .Manager. J. k. uiiohjiAKEii. iu.s Aeei 1st. in rortn Third y trett, llturtshurg, p. ieo l. ,s-iy G OMM1SSIONK V S.W.K. Tlie following Irnpisnf lnni! n-prni.l In- tti.f1 Imentcnr. imtMinr ir t i.liin lih, enimtv t.. ti .. Coin is-liii.ers of sal. I c. 111. ty 1 n Hi k. c. ui MonUaj of lune R71, 111 il iho Mine nf to I' 11101011 liuv nir pawn by an vet iii provt-il Mnrcn milnisis nn mp. pi.menls ihereioihe H:in.uiii ii mii.i , ,1 iim .... ond Monday or Julie IsTs, at Uio C'ouit lluuse In muuiiiNUuri; nillahau Jiunei one lot Ccnlialhi llurniiuli unwited ..1 tt. .i.vii 1 iiuiima " - Median Jam's " Ne In Michael " " itellv ., .. Miepperd II F ' mooio iiraeo Mrs two lots " " lAvclunil IU ono lot " .star John . .iniiu-8 hdwtrd " Fensterinnkpr J 11 . Jones Annl'T Mrs " " '" hiino turollno " " Mu.-phy '1 hennas " ' .Mlnilun Michael ,. luino .lonri . . Ials I lent v u Miller r.llOS SfKl neri'H Ite.irer ImrnuM , eiearhurt llltam sue acres ninarloir twp. tjii-ey John 1jwer two lots Coujnjliam tw twp. (.rated silas yv. mchiixiiy, John iii:kni:u. Coin's. JO.s. K. BANIIS, f'DminkalnnATai lifting mnn.n. i... - may 10 's-ts Attest: VM. KIHCKIiaiIm, Clerk. H Till: TIME TO SKCtmiiTEKIIITO 'IOHY KOIt lilt. Eeil.E'H OUKAT WUHK THIS NEW 1I.LIWTHATKD HIS'lulU OF ITNNSYLVANIA. The. grnr.dekt telllns look tor the linnf.)ltanla Held. Liberal tenns to agents, send 2.01) al ones for complete outfit, or 10 cents for our in pace pample, nml name territory wanted. Addicss I). C. GeiemiilL'ii.ri,t,iiMi(r.llarileburr.l'a. Iiout fall to my what pa pi r 5 ou hw this In. march 15,18 m iiur DMIN'lbTKATOK'S NOTICE. ST1TK OP JOHN SSVDEK, DEC'D. Letters of admlntitratlon, on the c-tatoof Jehn Snjdir, lato tt orungo township, Columbia to.. htn',1'"0 .Uen Wined by tlie lloirlster or Co lumbia e-o, to Samuel Zlmu erinan, edmliil&trator. or orange twp., to whuin ull persons Indebted, are requcsied 10 mako Immediate payment end those nawngciaimsor demands agalrtt tbn pnid ete irator wflhSut dela" tUU' ' ''nlD'S' SAMUEL ZIMMEItMAN, n,n , . Administrator, nprll 18, 'rs-cw orang- twp. Dauchy & Oo's. Advt's. Sure Reward, ft yi:hs 10 itv loa t rum. $4 TO $10 I EH ACRE. ! !iiiiie!Miiilo 1 i,,uJ , , ,.,. uaii In M. ..niili.i. ii,. .-aiii olitif l.rniiii lliili. anil (liana Itnlliomi . onipiui). title PEnrrcT. Ii i.Kruim ,-. cup,- ,.l iiiiiii i'-iii tii-iiimiii.,, . chinti, IiiiKk-iiii liiin rr-. ' ItCNNIKO TmaSIS-'t'KK ATIK-1IKIIV MAHKSTS SCIIOOU- IHIU-OAD COlin ITkb Tiiuuruil tu k CkNTllli OF IHItUKiNI. Scinl leu- VlMVlH,-t,;ligiflor Oerman Address w. o. nn:ii.itT, n,,.v, .,..!N" t'OaNISSIONEll, nprll 1.1M,"A,1U'-T"' ix.-ccuu.bo t t.u t ;iuUerlWoki N, v" may m, ir IM A T A.Anotliei- Pottle on llinil r MAMh-ltlCES WAI. wl.h "isir.0 fi v N tin re ,1 otatts laleet ePTro? e iiivm.iT l'!lK ""'re bu.lng PlA.vei or tea 1 i?m A1?,1 lau "'lrl;u",r' He-nttyh celt bra I?ire comniruJ . l L','u" "ul '""I'Uimnt I dial. ki ffi rlsIJ 1 l".,ala "lu leal' us or 111 sue ii rieetl aV.J':'",,",ul 1'',u' ln Aim rial 1 e.m "ear , lf(kV, f ll1l;fc,"','i,w,"1."1 "ollur. mlesnuw en e i-Jsi,, l.- am"."'.llt Um U iirlces ei r gl' in.tlikai't boseKceKl llanos I-in."., ic Hope lniuji A 15 ;f. J: R,li iiei"niiou bur- 11 1 1 gams 1,1 w ready. Addle l. F " A I 1 Steu.Ne w Jeihey. 0 t A 1 r. ".' Cf T A RH r I l.iat, Miinuuifc 11,.. II 1.11 ur tllfj ' aioirh win i 01 mm nt y 11 lit ve mid u ..kretdll) 1 tie. I ii'i.i.'ir, ll.ii') we Is, usij, .veile, Fur,'i K a, Au lora. K V.; 1 , I., v 1 1 , 1 H , .Me (n 111,11011, f.iuM itvki,.M ouS. I J'ftlmu'lab- uui 1 1 11,1 In- bj u.ull VJfjyj J rite-. . lit, iii.jn 11 d ini.au 1 l Hid ourjwl-erc. WihK- 1'- nut, nay lM8.I,,0I""-',0r"' ll0'u0"' J ut8 Cotebratcd Library KXTtNhiON LA M 1' ! Adapted loony room blitli or low Celling. Lowered lo tablo when In u-e.aiul ruleeil bymeielj tuuililug. 1'kiin.ai.v kim mow ki..imi. 11,'hts wliliout rt-moi li.g chimney, ejulle us cuiiMiik nt ui, gas. and at i Iho exifi,ko. 'Ihe kaiuo eileu s on pilnelpla Is uppllediuullour tliandellein not exceeding o Ugld" advantages uie: Inm-used I'Kbt with suiue euubuminiou ot ell. by having tho llhl where wanted I safely, t-unuot bo lutKk. ed o.er or ujiset. 'ihe extension inac ilueiy Is simple, and cannot POSklb V lrll-t, Unv I-i.turt, 1..,,... Uoii lump and thandelhrs f ull ktllpM flir.l.l...j, .-.. ... li ..II ...ujiNi uutiug inerii. A.J. WKlDKNElt, Dealer in Lamps nndOukswiHi!, , -- '""m iieu. ,,coeii ui, may 10, ts-4w d. Micona street, I'bltada. or L'kl. apriiw.'H-nv . z . n i j in ii i in ii i i'. i.e. a. i" mo. ti' ei"'.1 ,or ""I''. U. V. WAIIIII ,, "'"i1 Hl.r(, V-UIJB. iiuernl Ami.. i'i.n.,. .l. Ml OKGANK L1!?1,'.1', ,lonfrsot ull Worlds and t'lBcui iIsT?i,n "'"'tlon. LvasTCiTilomiks and miieh iMor . i 'V,v "'" "l"-d nice. luai'iN iii ?.'?2".u,"1"1.."'t i-Ktii. iAy.N c eaL-u. VUl iiosiou, Now York S1! VU.1SW ' -- --- u