Cambria Freeman. THURSDAY, : : : MAY 13, 1869. Roy ins CommUleci. Jot oootent with J5IatiT honors achieved at Washmgtoo. several of the tending commit toes of Congress propose spendiog the lummtr and autumo ia visit iog various portions of the country, for the ostensible purpose of gathering statistical Information as a basis of future Congression al action. Their contemplated journejings cover a vast scope of country. The committee of ways and meaas have already visited the custom bouse at New York and probably Boston, and as eoon as the Pacific rail road is open fur through lure', will go to San Francisco. AU this hurrying to and fro is hid under the flimsy protest of acquiring a more intimate practi cal knowledge of tne working of our finan cial system. That this committee, as wU as the entire radical party, stand in sore need of thorough instruction on the subject cf the currency, is paiafully apparent, but that it can acquire the knowledge from an examination into the financial operations of any or all the custom houses in the country, U simply prepcaterou3. The business of a custom hcu&e ia to collect revenue taxes and net to regulate the currency of the country. A custom house is not a school in which the laws of trade and political j or.omv are tanzht. and this coomittw, so far as the evils cf our present system of cur-1 reocy ere concerned, will cot be any wiser I when it returns than when It set oat on its jonmey. About one-half of the members of the i-otnmittea on elections will visit South Caro lina and Georgia, to take testimony and in vestigate certain contested elections in these States. As that superlative demagogue and trickster. Cessna, will be its official head, we have no doubt that its achievements down ia Dixie will fully come up to the Congress ional standard, and that no democrat need apply. The ether members of the commit tee will open up shop in Ksatucky, Missouri and Louisiana, for a similar purpose. If any man expects at it hands anything but the most disreputable and partisan work, he has a very limited appreciation of the kind of stuff that a radical election committee is composed of. Whether either or both branches of the committee propose visiting John Covode district, we are not informed. The committee is probably of the opinion that the "Al!:gator," with the aid of Geary, can fix the matter all right. Tnst they will do a vast deal of dirty work no man doubt. SccfiV.d said in Congress that Geary I Lil "explored all the election precincts in the d5tr"et." Of course this was a false-hoc-:!, and was a part cf the inftrr.ous plan ccecc:d to thrust Covode into his seat. T!.e cetris crrnmlttee will a!so be on the vlzg. but wLI.cer ii will scar cr for what purpose we knotv cot. The bill cf expenses Lieu will be incurred by these and other Uurclig cociaiittees will be enormous, and wLI cf course be paid by the next Congress, witioat ocj:ion, out of the public treasury. I: ia both asserted and denied that the cccisiinee cn foreign relations intend to viart Havti aad St. Domingo. The chair man of tits ewmmiUee is Go Banks, the r-:st failure of the war, Ben Butler alone errepteii. He ergineerevi the ATaska pur iue three gh Congress and is now am bit iocs cf t.-j;.-g his hand at the same business on cos cf the West India islands. Seward locLt two of them, including earthquakes, fr-wca tie Danish government, but as he failed u pay tre purchase money they are not jes oadet t'aeprotecting wing cf the model re jcblic Banks and his cemmittee ought to dike a trip to the two negro republics cf Hayti xcd Saint Domingo, with a view to thair azrexa'.icn to the United States. Our cai-fedt destiny wHtsveT be accomplished cntll that event is cca rostrated. The ia- j Uid la pr-cia' tie sort of country in which j rv-; would iiuiah. TLere are aount acre XnIred CvijmmZ negroes and mulat to oo ti-e Lalaad, whose ancestors have been, iz. a sU.ia of chronic revolution and easing each ethers' throaU" f-r the last nrrectj-five yrra. S a rely it Is crime that the d-radcd. blood thirsty and cruel rcea and brother! should centime to s!agh ter ece another, when by the simple aad peH?y process cf annexation each ore of tbm ecu Id be transformed into a first class radical voter. If Hayti was inhabited by aa inteltiect art population there would be no anxiety among the radical in Con gress for iu annexation to this coat try. The two island purchased from Denmark, St. Thcmas aad Si- John, contain a popula tion cf cnTy ffUeti thousand, but it !a near ly all icicle, arid that perhaps explains the reason why the radical in Congress have refused to pay for I hem. If the time shoo Id ever come when this government will take iata its embrace the negroes of Hayti, St. Docnic go and Cuba, then will it glory have departed, and tie paradise cf carpet baggers will have been fcsad. It is a dark picture fr-DG the contemplation of which enr feel ings revolt There are several other committees that intend to have a nice time generally in see-i-g ad beicg sees at the pnblic expense, Theaa committees have already drawn about teniy-nxt &omad dtZan from tie contingent f&td, to pay kg lienor, cigars is'-iuT "-itsiaeau. Was there ever a country so pldered sad cjgTcmed ? w mistaken is ccr auiemeat last ! week, that a law tad been enact hr the I Legislatare, Increasisg tie asucat tf pro- j peny exempt iroea sery and sale en exacs- - - fw ft.A . - Iff A 1X7 - ' . .-.j .e. 3 r.-. the Harriabcrg Pane tiax an act to that 3,rt pasMii the Hicse cf psa3tves but falls.; is itt Senate, Oca fciesd. J. Patten Thompsca, ha ci wised a pa'xct or a tjoc! cwt cr cabiret. Stewed Dried Apples and Straw berries. In order that onr readers may understand the following despatch from Washipgton to a Philadelphia radical paper, it is only necessary to state that the "Southern Tour ists" were a traveliag party that have just visited the South, and embraced Governor Ward of New Jersey, John W. Forney, General Van Wyck of New York. Gin ton Lloyd of this State, and some other radicals of letter note : Gove. nor Ward, had a chat with the I'reei- to statesmanship. If Gen. Grant connives dent upon the status of affairs South. One at these military expeditions against a Span of them gave as an instance cf the inanne r in colony, organized within our jurisdiction which the Southerners are developing their ! oVject of ho6tility a own resources. tut .,, nmiu oranges, strawberries and other frsiu were now in season, the travelers were given sieved drud apples, which, n inquiry, they found had come from New York, and only ftct'ce were strawberries found at the hotel tables. They are unanimous in the opin ion that the time has not come when North ern men can go down there to live, unless they go in colonics iarge enough to be in dependent of all but their owe circle. They concur, also, in the belief that the day has not yet arrived for an indiscriminate remo val of political disabilities, and that years will have to pass away before thousands of them will be restored to loyalty." Ilere is a case which demands the most profound sympathy of every loyal man. That away down in the flowery State, Ward. Forney Co.. the loving friends of the South, should be treated to "stewed dried apples," instead cf strawberries "smothered with cramey' Is an indignity not to be tolerated, and affords conclusive evidence of ran disloyalty. n vxmgress were in session this last outrage wou.a re quire prompt investigation at the hands of a committee, with power to send for persons and pnpers. There is certainly a wide dif erenee between dried apples and straw berries as an article of diet. Yet a western man once managed to live on dried apples for several days, by eatiug them for break fast, drinking a pint cf warm water for din ner and letting the apples swell for supper. We admit, that to serve up a dish of dried apples, "stewed," to a maw of the delicate Bense of honor of John Y. Forney, was Deither calculated to gratify his taste or soothe his feelings. But who will deny that it whs a dainty dish to set before the author of the Jamison letter ? We have no doubt that Gen. Grant was highly delighted with this report of the Southern tourists upon the relative merits of dried apples and strawbarries. and that all his doubts about Southern disloyalty were speedily confirmed when he was informed by Ward, Forney & Co., that in all their wanderings through Florida "only twice were strawberries found at the hotel tables." As the eatiDg of an app'e on a memorable ccasion biought disease and death into the world and all our woes, so in thos3 piping times of rtconstruction have apples, dried and sieved, caused these Southern tourists to concur 'in the belief that the day has not yet arrived for an indis criminate removal of political disabilities, that years will have to pass away before thousands of them (rebels) will be restored to loyalty." The unhappy South will long curse and deplore the rashness of the man who imported into one of the harbors of Florida this accursed cargo of dried apples from New York." The fabled wooden horse, full of. armed aoldiers. was not more calamitous to the hopes of Troy than have these fatal dried apples been to the peace and quiet of the South. If John W. Forney, whose envenomed pen for four long years has indited conatant and uninterrupted li bels against the men and woman of the South, expected that he would be treated with kindness and consideration by those whom he had so foully and causelessly tra duced, he has at list found out the delusion under which he has been laboring. Even the worm will turn upon the foot that treads upon it. Cuba and the Administration. An event took place in the harbor of New York, on last Tuesday week, which rtSscts deep dishonor on the administration. It is well known that for five or six months an insurrectinn has been going on ia the is land cf Cuba against the Spanish authori ties. The insurgent, or rebels, have had an agent at WaaLitgtoa for some weeks, whose object is to procure a recognition of tie Cuban revolutionists by our government- Meetings of sympathy with their cause have been held in New York and Philadelphia and resolutions passed and speeches made ur,ging the government to in terfere in their behalf. For more than a month rumors have been in circulation cf the intended sailing cf ve&seU from Northern and Southern ports, carrying men and am munition to aid the rebels in their unequal struggle. Of all this, and much more, the President has been fully aware. Bat he hxs not seen fit to issue a proclamation enforcing cur neutrality law. Such has not been the coarse pcrrced by former President under a similar state of circumstances. Martin "Van Bnren enforced tee law of 1818 against the Canadian patriots, as they were called, daring his administration. Presidents Pierce ad Bachanan dil the same thing against Lopes, Walker, aad other fiUibnsters, while more recently Andrew Johnson en forced its provisions against the invasion of Canada by the Fenians. Oa the day to which we hare referred nine Losdred men armed with pktols and bowie knirea, and acme cf them with muskets, were received on board of a reesel in New York barber, who declared that their destt- nation was Cnba. and their purpose to assist revolutionary party cn the island. All this ha been doc without tie slightest ta- tezUnce oa the part of the United States ... . . - . . . rv!r?T-.TTe .w jrw. i nat taay ware g criis cf tie moveiat impee a degree ef ! atapidity which we wQ not impcta to theaa. ' This eocatry, ben at peace with Spain, is ti of public dy to prrreet, or at fc 1 tecpt to prevent, asv cf he least arises of her terrl- tory by arsaed expeditions fitted out on our oil. Bot it is said at Washington that Gen. Grant does not intend to enforce the neutrality law. If be should pursue thai course he will incurs fearful responsibility, and will disgrace his administration in the eyes of the civilised world. It is believed that the only member of the Cabinet who is in favor of a rigid enforcement of neutral ity is Mr. Fish, the Secretary of State. This is rendered more than probable from the fact that of all the members of Grant's Cab inet he w the only one who has any claim nation with which we are at peace, what then become of our boasted claim against England for the depradations committed by the Alabama ? The two cases are precisely similar, and the law that will apply to the one case will equally apply to the other. We cannot hold England responsible for the ravages cf Semmes and his confederate crui ser and at the same time claim immunity ourselves for acts of hostility to Spain which are equally indefensible. Of course Spain will not declare war against ns. because sue is too weak to oppose herself to the military strength and resources of the United States, and this only makes the conduct of the ad ministration the more reprehensible. If Cuba belonged to a powerful nation like Eng land or Franco, what took place in the har bor of New York would never have occurred. When Lki entered the ante-room at the White House there were many persons pres ent waiting to see the PresUeot, among them several members of Congress. Lee was rec ognized by some of them, and a general burz ran rcuud the room. '-There's General Lee wonder what he wants hrre ?" General Dent was assiduous in his attentions, and lost no time in getting Lee's card before the President. There was some half doxen per sons, mostly Congressmen, in the Presidents room at the time, oa various sorts cf busi ness. Nearly ail of them were after cCice. and wanted to press their claims upon, the President. As soon as he got Lee's card, however, he said to the congressional office hunters : 'Gentlemen, you will have to excuse me. I have an engagement with General Lee. who is now waiting outside to keep it, and I wih oar interview to be pri vate." This was a broad hint for the Con gressmen to retire. They picked up their hats aud made a hasty and somewhat de moralized retreat towards the door, uttering curses, not loHd but deep, at the intrusion of the big rebel guest when they were fixing up their business. ' The President," said one Senator "sees us in a crowd, and there by exposes our private business ; but when a rebel come alon? he is siven a private audi ence." "Yes.", said another, "and we are driven out as if wa had no business here, when we are looking after the interests of the country." "That's the way," add a member of the House, resignedly. "Being a rebel i a good card of admission here, it appears." observed an indignant citiztn. Grant asi Lee. The cordial interview a few days ago. in the White House, be tween Generals Grant and Lee bas sorely disconcerted the politicians of the Radkal persuasion the more so. because it was in vited by the President himself. They seem to tlrtnk there is more behind this meeting of the two prominent chieftains of the lata" war, than appears upon the surface; and they are evidently becomiug somewhat fear ful that the gallant Virginian is likely to have more influence with the present occu pant of the White House than is at all in consonance with their ideas of loyalty or propriety. Some of them are beginning to be alarmed lest Grant should be a second Johnson on their hands, and are giving vent to their feelings in curses not loud but deep. The storm is brewing in the Radical camp, and it will not be long until it bursts. The party is only held together for the present by what John C. Calhoun designated as the "cohesive power of public plunder;" and as Generaal Grant ia taking care of all his cousins and wife's cousins to the exclusion of many of the "trooly loil." and. in ad dition, is bob-nobbing with the great Rebel Chieftain and taking him into his private counsels, it is scarcely possible that the "hap py family" can pull together in the same traces much longer. We consider the conduct of General Grant ia inviting General Lee to the White House for consultation, as the most sensible act of his administration. It may bode evil to the Radical party, but it will be followed with good to the country. Lane. Int. Ghawt's Dismissals and Apfoit ments. 'Jen. Durbin Ward fought for the Union at Coickamauga. General James Longstreet fought against the Union at the tame time and place. General Durbin Ward is removed by President Grant from the of fice cf District Attorney at Cincinnati. Gen era! Jansea Lontreet is appointment to a fat ofSce at New Orleans by President Great. Genera! Uitche'l commanded the United States troops at Valverde and whipped the rebe'a. Colonel Crow commanded the reb els at Valverde and was whipped by the United States troops. General Mitchell bas been removed by President Grant from the Governorship of New Mexico, where the battle of Valverde was fouzbt. Glonel Crow has been appointed by Presdent Grant to le Governor of New Mexico. Genera! Knipe entered the Union army when the war began, and rose from the ranks by brave service to the command of brigade. After the war he wis appointed Postmaater at Uarrisbnrg. He has been re moved by General Grant and George Berg cer, who stayed at home and made a for tune out cf the public calamities, has been appointed in his place. President Johnson permitted Grant' fa ther and brother-in-law to remain in office. Grant removed President Johnson's son from a petty office in Tennessee, and removed General Blair from being a Director of the Pacific Ra ilroad Pittsburg FosL The Eaaton Argus says : In formation Is wanted as to the whereabout of Mrs. Sarah Daniel, of Sooth. Bethlehem. It appears that she has been deranged for some time past, and on Friday morning last, after pre paring her children for school, she bade them farewell, saying that it woold be "the last time they would sea their mother." Since that time she has not been seen or heard of by any of her friends. It is feared that she has committed roicide, and a very vos aaaren baa h"i rala f'-r m U tie neighboring towns and valagea, bot thus far without gaining any it formation what ever. Spragne bas spologized to Abbott for calrmg m a peppy. Sw, 11 he vruhea to 1 &o t&e s a . ie fair thin? a3 trc d let hii acckK LITE WE1TS ITEMS. Salt Lake CHy is favored with a one legged acrobat who walks the tight-rope and swallows a sword when in the middle. A Pittafield lad recently bold 201 musk rat skins of his own trapping, and with the avails thereof paid his last winter's tuition at school. A whiskey barrel !n an Evansville brewery exploded on Wednesday, while a man was boring a bole in it. injuring one of his eyes so that be will lose it. A soldier with a bullet in his bresst not back received at Bull Bun. has just been removed from an Indiana postoffice, to make place for a rich radical. Hon. Horotio Sej moor has been buying large tract of land in Iowa, and bas become president of a lake and river transportation J company operating in Wisconsin.' Schuvief isn't as careiui of nis relations as Grant "is. He allowed old Ben Wade to miss the commissionershtp of the Pacific Railroad even after Grant bad promised it. . A successful office seeker in Washing ton had to search the Gazeteer to ascertain where the country was to which he was ap nointed as minister from the United State. "7 T TTrwlrnrrrV was COOVlCted of murder in the first degree, at Butler, the other day, for shooting his cousin, Miss Mc Candless, who would not accept him as a lover. Weston, the pedestrian, made another attempt to walk one hundred miles in twenty-four konre, recently, and failed. He is like Grant's administration. a' Courtitutoual failure." Gold has been discovered in the rocks .f the S:eveift estate, at Hoboken. New Jerer. It will pay eighty dollars per ton j for crushing. There is considerable excite- ment in Hoboken over the discovery. . Boil one pound of poke root in one pint cf water until the strength is exhausted, and then mix the decoction with molasses and spiead it upon plates and feed it to your roaches, if ycu waut them to get sick and die. A Mrs, Arbuckle. of Indiaea, draws a pension for herself and sixteen children. Pensions are not allowed children after they become sixteen years old. How many chil dren exceeding that age Mrs. Arbuckle has. is not stated. D. A. Moore, who lost a leg in the sev en days fight in front of Richmond, wanted to be postmaster at Columbia. South Caroli na. but Grant appointed a negro, who can hardly write bis name. This is "making treason odious." Some two weeks ago a passeocer on the Cumberland and Pennsylvania railroad, re fusing to pay his fare, was about being for cibly ejected from the cars by the conduc tor and train hands, when he fired a pistol killing the baggage master. An oyster was recently fished np at Stamford, Connecticut, which contained one hundred and twenty-seven pearls, and one at New Haven which had one hundred and thirty-seven, varying in sire frcm that of a buckshot to a mustard seed. Simon Wolf, the Jew who electioneered so hard with the race for Grant last sum mer, has been appointed Register of Deeds fir the District of Columbia, an office worth io.000 to $6,000 per annum. Pretty good for a wolf in sheep' clothing. In the prize drawing of the Good Will concert at Allentown. on the 5th inat., the ' first prirs of fifteen hundred dollars in gold ean was drawn by Carl Reno Beno, editor i of the County and Stale, a German news ' paper publ'it-hed in that place. J. Holmes Grover was recently appoint ed by General Grant, Consul at Ancona, Itally. The Buffalo Courier says thia h in return for a "can of plums" which the aforesaid Holmes sect General Grant last fall. "Like master, like mao." The South Bend Register tells of a young lady of sweet sixteen, from Angola, having passed through that place en route for Chicago, who turns the beam at six hun dred and ninety pounds. She takes a posi tion in Wood's Museum. Hefty and deli cate. . A plumber of Davenport. Iowa, bought 35,000 pounds cf army belt buckle at Rock Island for seven ceuts a pound. They cost nearly a dollar a pound, and srould have supplied an army of more than 200.000 men. They are to be melted down for the brass and solder. A thiee story brick house, eighteen by forty feet, and in the construction cf which 42,850 bricks were used, was built in Lancaster, Pa , week before last, in nine teen and a half hours, and pecsotis weie liv ing in it within three days from the time it was commenced. On the farm of Mr. E. Craft, in Fayette county, is an apple tree that is now almost a hundred years old. It was planted in 1772, four years before the revolutionary war. It still retains much of its vigor. As many as forty bushels of apples have been gathered from it in a single season. -A well known New York capitalist 'has purchased a large area of land iu New Jer sey for the manufacture of peat. He claims that the discoveries thus far made warrant his being able to supply the entire New York market in a short time with an article equal to the best coal, and raneh cheaper. Tne shell of a land turtle with the flesh freshly picked out, fell into the town of Meriden, Connecticut, the otlier day, proba bly from the claws of an eagle who had made a dinner of him. The shell was en graved with an initial V.. and the date 1750. The old fellow had a long life and a diEtingnished death. Alpeoria Bradley, late of Sing Sing, and more recently a radical member of the Georgia Senate, denies the report that he has been tendered a foreign appointment by the r resident. Aloeoria savs the trouble in ; his ease is that he is not related to Grant, j but he thinks that not beipg so i full corn- pensation for his failure to get an office, j The body cf Mrs. Thomas Taft, who j died in Elgin, Ohio, about three weeks since. in a mysterioas manner, his been exhnmed and microaeopically examined by the medi cal fraternity cf that city. Muscles from the different parts cf the body showed trich ina to exhvt. not only in large numbers, but still alive, three weeks after the interment. Miss Jones, Postmistress at Winterset, lows, recently married Mr. Alfred Smith. Mrs. Smith is not known to the department as Postmaster, Miss Jones has no longer a legal existence, and things are generally vary mach mixed. Smith is as x ion to know if Le ha married into the postofifce, or has married the poatoCce cnt of the family. Don Piatt relates the story of his being oosted from bis position as clerk to a com mittee, by the efforts of two members, one from each house. Tbeae anrnia he nick names the Hon. Pisias Pigiron 0 Prnoryl rania. and Senator PnUyfacc! The eon tempt which the correspondent presses for the Congressmen and their achievement is sabfim. 3Iusa Oa.. a dnra-harj vTcJs f mountain 00 the Island of Hawaii, eoataim two lakes, side by aide, one of fresb water aad the oteer salt. Both are far above the sea, and it is believed there U no connection between the salt lake and the ocean, TLa drpoaiu of salt are iw mad oae of by por. The Montgomery (AN.) Mod aays the five negroes who were implicated ia the as assination of Gen. Hindman, and who con cocted the plot'to burn the town of Helena, including the negro, Charles Porter, who shot HindmaB, have for reasoLS unknown, been discharged from custody at Helena, notwithstanding positive proof of their juilt was In possession of the officers. In the upper counties of Virgiai pea nuts will take the place of tobacco, to a large extent, the coming season. The pea nut culture has grown up almost entirely since the war, and its present magnitude may be ascribed to the fondness con tracted for these nnts by the soldiers of both armies, who occupied, by turns, the section of conntry in which they were cultivated. A lad in Iraaburg. Vt., sick with mem branous croup, was lately given tip as Ueaa, nd nrenarations made to lay him cut, when a slight rattle was heard in the throat. The most vigorous enorta were used, and he was again restored, almost as one risen from the dead a warning to peo ple not to remit efforts to have life as long as there is "breath or 'a pulsation of the heart. To relieve from the terrible effects of running a nail in the foot of man or beast, take peach leaves, bruise them, apply to the wound, confine with bandage, and the cure is as if by magic. Renew the applica tion twice a day. if necessary, but one ap plication generally does the work. Both man and beast have, in a few hours, when appsrently on the point of having the lock ja, been cued. The Futcn Reptiblican tells this story : "Henry Spannuth, who lived two miles west i.f McConnel.sburg, died cn last fcusaay morning of the loathsome disease of "glac- j ders.' Mr. S.. it is said, has been dealing in glandered' horses for the List few years, and several have died for him. About a week iirn Vi t..L- sii'V ami from that time to hi i death developed this effensive and dangerous disease in all it. forms." -Henry Huffman, of Chillicotte. Ohio, is ninety-fhree year, old is still hale and j hearty, and work every day at his tra .e , carpentering. Matthew Colesbire, who lives j five miles from Zanesville, in the saT.e State, i does still better. He is one hundred and i,i knnt;r .ipr, now and then, and occasionally waits to Znesville. where, if his own statement may be believed, he ''gets as tight as a brick." ilie town 01 Anna, union coaiy. 1111 1 nois. was visited on the 4:h by a fearful hailstorm. The hailstones measured from one to two and a half inches in diameter, and not a few were as large as a man's fist. The ground was coverad in some places two feet deep. Fruit has been almost entirely destroyed. Strawberries were jnst begin ninc to ripen, with excellent nrcpets- Now there win not be half a crop- Nearly j all the peach are krocked off. A workman, engaged m excavating a . eeller on Market street, UcK.ee port, on J Wednesday, discovered a rare and ancient j relic It is an old French corn, cf the vah-.e j of two SOUS- and bears the date cf T793- ; The inscriptien on one side is "liberie. Ej-i- lite," and on the ether. "RejmUi'iue JVu caise." The coin is thick and dumay . beicg t larger than onr old copper cent, and osnsid- J erably thicker. The oin is two years cider than the borough cf M he a port. The appointment of General Gregory! to the office of Mrh0! of tne Eastern ls- ' tnct of t ennsyir-a:a. :n pisce c: uen-ra. t Ely, deceased, neatly acertiua the degree ; f ictliience p.cs.l by the Cmeon and Curiiu factions with Grant. It i down 1- ; most to zro aad 6tiM f.d!:ng. They have j fjund a rival in the Unicn Leaiaers c: Croat! street. ThiLide! fhia. who. with B-r.e f at their head, have matters ptty nifcvh ! their own war at the White House. weeks sgo. a daughter ci Mr. Isaac M-u died, apparently, and. after the rsnal servi ces, was borne to the grave. A the friecJj were alKut to take the laat at tee de ceased before the cv CIa was Uwered isWtte earth, it was olerved that tba fac bad a remarkably fresh appearance Upon ccnul- tation it was resolvev! to take the KWly heme acain, ami await further deve'opmeBts, i Three weeks hava elapsed, and no :gca of decomposition are apparent. It is theopiu i n of the physicians that the oun lady is in a trance. Tur Verdict ix thk Loxa Isiayr Uaiu road MuBDzn. At leugth we chronicle as exception to the usual verdict in ctrs oi t railroad slauzhter "Xobudy to A conscientious jury, after thorough investi gation into the cauiea cf the daaih cf six victims of the recent Log Is'and Railroad horror, have deliberately came to the coscla sion that the fatal result was in cc&scqcccce of a car being thrown from the track by a 3 r . ? zt . v . . v t t ueieciive rau. auu toti iae ixog i.acti r Ktiiroad Company is to be h?Kl respaiot fc or Jjri at lia cars t t-tf(njiu F':ii. for the accident on account cf reglacticg to J ioe-t'at eu tarw.i et tHxa.. iiii keep their track in proper order. This Vr- s li aid AacI il "Cicr. oa diet at once brioga the case within the diract f fr?3 ti bonc f asrvaioay iiari .- r i t . 1 - f 'JtO wta Xi.t Jl t-.jie-. cwiiTanMt nf tKa fcrArw Jnrr . n.l it i. (n. requisite preliminary to proaecutiocs on the part of the friends of the victims, wuh a T,ew exemplary uamges- It mcra'Jy latest railroad murder, aad readers it Fable to Bwingmg oamaies m eaca mJt- ruiiial inatsnce f irinrv nml .'tl'n ran lot but raarxl tVis 4M-i.kn f,vv -orof tieraona! riffhtaru1 aft am.t -1- fish, arrogant and soulless railroad mono po i , , , , lies. rtertua. Maavxijors Isdcstet. It is scarcy necessary at this dav to say anything ia praise of Webster's Unabridged Quarto Dic tionary. 1840 pages, aad 3000 engraving?. Having come into poesesaion of a copy cf the latest editkn. we cannot refrain from expressing onr admiration at the wxrveZeus industry and learning which such a book must have called into demand. I a the hock line, this Dictionary deserves a place amongst the triumphs of the cecrnry. The publishers' part cf this ponderous volume has been done with a beauty and an be tan -tialness which also deserve special recom mendation. "Pading the Dictionary." with this edition of Webster before yon. is exceedingly Interesting pastime. A copy of it must certainly be considered to belong to the appointment of every intelligent fami ly. It cost i12, but it is cheap at that price. Moravian. THE C053TITUTI0SALLT BILIOUS. So two part ef the baosan body more wengiy syaipatbixa tag tbaa Uie stomach and liver. "When oae is 4raoged the other ia generally oat of repair. Aftd at do otbarperiod of the year are tkey so liabje to becostc de railed a bw, and thee lay tba foasriatioa of dMorders which will rob life f iu plaaaare. aad, perhaps, end in death rUIf. Tbe atom aa rrrw reqntres an . bi.ioaa lo'. tha Irraa needs towing immi,u-Ar, aM tht hUxA oartl to bo elaa1 sad pnrifiarL Par Warm J -" " " wo ... MSWBIfXj ' LtTsrinms, (fit nmraat'r Utt mttrririg ii tWm tft'm.. Be warTiv Jn lima, tttj g sa'aty a4 erewrtian fr'im rf;aaae br Minr JflSULCft'A nEP.B BlTTfts every dy rearIafJy . It w a erUii enre ff all d?Mraaa ' v'.'h Kvr PURIFY THE BLOOD. It is conceded by the most emineat medical men, that the blood is the (nwtf ul parent of disease, by serv ine as a vehicle through which noaioa sab stances contaminate the fleh by absorption. The foetid contest of the- bowels, if leng retained bv constipation, are often taken a by the veins or beorbeat. Various orbid pro ducts, such as pas and Me of unhealthy ni cer,. occm.iou.llT find their way into the bleod Easels, -hkh result is seated case. Scrof nlaor King Evil. Erysipelas. Salt Rheum. Ulcers Eruptive and ConUneous Diseases of Ses n. Enlargement of lb. OUnd. Pain, in the Head. Sides and Back. Stl ' Dance. PleorUv. Dixxinese, Tumors, onpiog - lie Pain. c.. all of which d.es "7 .v- -,..r4iii Indutoceof Dr. Kobaca s Blood Purifier, wihch eearcbea oat all Uva vile humors and distempers, leaving the blood m a pure and healthy condit:ons. v ti. . ..lu.hle inirredtentsof which toe I Blood Purifier is composed being adapted to ' 1 each other strictly according to the laws oi 6 t chemical science, makes it one of the most alub'. alteratUee and system rfnuw. . the present age. and it suecese a great nscc iciue must increaje so long a dUee o long a disease continues to vex the soul of man. Thx leading pape' f lb Northwest, the 'Wi.cos!." MHwaakie. get ofT some very good things, among the latest of h:ch e i tract tue follow tog : A1 Excellikt Medicise. One f he j mMtnornlar medicines of the day is Hoof- . i v.. n.-mm "Rittr which is designed to ! keep the stomach and liver in a healthy con dition. The Bitters is prepared without the u?e of intoxicatiag Liquors, and if a person desires to drink liquor under the fashionable ranse of Bitters, he had best appty for tome thin" else than Hxfland"s. Dmggisis tell n . i . - ..i- r ,v; i Urn. and ia ton- nisi fci.c MiT w mw.w w r ' I ticnallv on the increase that all wno nse ho use are p'easct wun us cicciicbi . . ... - i, . I.f i I that ther cocid tot tb-.ck or keepnr store without it. Iu cae of debility er rr-tratioo 1 nT th Ti:eix. Eoofiand's German Bi-ter will y f foci-.i an excellent article, as nil as tor Dvart-Mia. EOOFLAKD'S GERVAN JOMC I eon.blnu-n of all ,Di I Bitters wr.h rraa Santa Crus Rum, er e cTtZ. &l3WC tiie. Bluer, in e hera aoeoa ihoj-c Stinulant U required. Principal Of- ; 531 rcj, Street. Philad'a. Pa. Sold ev- here br DruggUu aad other. apS-J i ' " t DON'T BE MAKING RYE" t l -i l- iBOO BID BRE1D & f IKES FROM HI. Ii. OAT3IAN, Who sells the BEST BRANDS j I fTTX 1(11 C? If 1 3 Ft? PHifT tfll ilUl IrJflial Mlliiil flllbfi. R. J O II N Y r. Aaalatad r hla !: ftiinnrflll cUKbtlil OCXce ob rranklin Street, Crreerrt ihi iirr iaet.) JOll.VSTOVT.N. X?A. TZ t. X: ri rr"i.eit:ae3 of L2- Ve ami Xiiocier. Trci!avlaai cowmt. Pa.ciherfu tire froa:3 a -ri of ? eatitaate cf I?r . frr aailis aaa p ;S : W re-ri Pr. Fry i. cirin"'' a-Ia;ivi tw tKe profasafca eJ" ki. cVic- Hi ateieiasleal I iara3ty W-t frrji u b a asnay laxai i uitle caitiawB4 asd isaprvviKaaca. aad ve t t &:aa si w cthx aa aarsa t 1 Mr iVt. iaa a : ; eo. caa evt.aJei; aki kuxa't aott.i&t- t rrvCT aaeW axsa ft? all wS aaiy I'ttt ia i. as a.'e, Ltitii-i aiJ eirev-eaea workataa L.tav.a Ri Ferxo. V- ? . JwSa itc Otrr. V D . Re-. Jxa Kaa ratrr, J . L Caat bee. NV, St. A. Foe- Kxt. Daii W;.'XaM. vo.w . i tarav. Sjv;-. Jja-xC! L.i';gsuij."i:Tv joe;rU ua.lMr .4 . rf- w. 3? . F-' sn IV. , rm T. P Fees iirriTioN" fok divcsce Cvh- sar Cor-rrr, TT ContjioafTvrih j Feci7t-a3K to Cla 5uri Jt CajiHr;.:i C;."inc, I Greetrai : 5 her ae; t !-woi- Vn Z. c:aa. aui. ta SrOer, A -1. J5. srtff-iff 0 jeocun j MValW. wr ea. ei (W aetsaj: aiti ail bai b aad nee wtiaaHjaaer. Toa & aai pac in t o a;? rr-jrer cwswx brjr mar J i2a j tcaox-rf. a. a Cwt f Comxtca Fleas" U t be teid l.r u ti-.LaT ii i..t .:l-: i, ca t-e ess m 1 t c; v use ' j ias 1 : uia ! t' aay jm Ti itw ii ia ! AtBiifCaec. 7M wife. saoaJti act oirorvau nva tin sa-r ec axazrjnoav, agTa.bij u the acts at Geseral Aaaaozolv aa sh eases ataie ami peovMed ; aaJ tarauf fjl Wiutaa the Eoeri-Va Gsorem Tsv'-w. Pres- kletit J u-ira at our msi Coar as Eisaaaoarr, tie iota cay of lrxir . A- D. l3fc!S J. K- HI TIL Prboai At:5 J car A. Eiai . 5aai2. ( itaj 6. "tt-J SPLENDID FARM FOR S ALSL Ta aei! knowa aii T-aTniSTa wmmm V.. r.-4: - - . - . . - - i Saraseraill ooaS. Caaaitrta J; c a-aii saiies rrca v tisaof e sasoe. aadcontaiaicg2 ACRES, ia good eoadisioa. weO fencad aad bavxng tWeaa ereet a daeUieg boaaa and other &caaaary baddlaga. together wit a two spUatii orthjui aad so laca ot exra'.iect water, is oferei for ! ca I moceraia barms aad aaay pirtEkenta. For iw tueriaXomiAUon apply to or a4d.-e. , , J- MeG05IGLE. Hemlock. Pa. II. May 6, JrfeD.-tf. Sovraixr Hcaato pleaepbnah three mocths and send bill to thia oCce. TXECUTOR NOTICE! Having --a been appointed Execxtor of the last Will and Testaant of Roaaay Wiluim, late cf Casabria towaahrp, ceceaned, tba abacriber hereby notifies all porsooa iadabted to tba es tate of said eecsdanC that pa; ment sooat be aaada to bioa without imUj, aad tb&ae bavisg eiaisae aaioat the are reoeatod to pra seat tbeoi properlr tbntirul far ule- saet. William Larimer, Cas&btia Tp., May 6, 1569. Ct. txecutor. 1 X EC VTOWH NOTICE. The on- t-f of iaa l.4i wiil ail lumwi of Un. Apa loni Tlrowfi, lato of vTaakiMftow towaahip, dea d, hereby notice to all persons indebt ed to the MMU of said flceaaai that pat aaoat rat bt mad wittot delay, aad tboao naviag elaiios aaainst the same are raqoeeted to pre teat theta priypartr aathnticatod for seule mant. JOSEPH CRIST E. Exeeator. WMbiBgvm Tp , April 15, 13. t, o o 0 0 o I I BIT BCIT IOIK ah aalr mm a u i j . Skr ajakllc vtaaaalasita ar. j2?r J3La GQ d rj-g HOOFLAinyS GEB1IA5 BITTER BOOMS 6ERLUH TGHt, IMi HiiasaaU tae this aaaawv &ea Ova oi4a ' 1834. TOST CVBXD TO UK FATIXE2S A3D MOTHSEfi, Am& wCt enra yoi toot AiMm aaureir 4JtirnH cai.ae B::vmn or I ) ja lavara yrepa liAawe; tml "d i ara Idrer Complaint. -DTflPEPSIA. . . Iterrou Dctdllty, . JAUJffDICr, Dtscasss of Che KUnejt, ERUPT10HS OF THE SKIR. aas 11 PViaaaaa ariiax Cromm. m Dla Uvwt SSnaaelt mr - IMP V MITT Or TK.Z ALOOJK Conatlpatloa. Frnleaoa, Inwrart Pjw JfaliMii oi Blood to the Haad. AMvT1 of taa Etoaaaotx, Xaaiv bini1p-.ut for Food. Tolmaaa or wticht ta tha Stcmaea. gear jii-xKJtationa, traJc- i-rar or FlntWrinf at the Til of tiie Stomaca- Bwua mis.K ot t Kad. il'iml r Iricuit Bxaathinr. Fluttaria- when in a Ly-VV- JJl2 Posjart D 1 m n a a of . Ix or Wtbs bafora Utm Bifbx. IhH Pain a tJba Haa it. Dttawuf ef Parayira-tion. Xellowjseaa of tiva fiksa miA Btm, Pain in th ftida. Back. GSxat, Liaba, ete.. Swanec Fla&baa - E.U B arc-las- in Tlaalk. Cnjaatat Iaaa-.iLkaaa knl mzi& DcpTaaaian of airs. Boo Hand' G&rmm SitUn la MrlT Tee"" w7Z.Tma llqaor. It la a aapw f li t trlrta. Tfca Bta, Meraa. aad: BarVj rraaa wfejaa a wM.uwwm an aaa axtracC mr sJsaw fararaj-a'a t Ul caaaUT b aaraMPaaaiy far Um maaatatlar aftsieae Bitters. Taarta aaalaaalUtfctaa af ajrkia aat tai uaiaaaaaisc BSttara. aa u a iuaH ara m a Hoc Hind's 6rm&a Tooia 1 ff a CU CZL , afAar dk-r nnrt p7tu! f tart. 1 wr Ttrmt a Swi m 3. m a f a-rw-T at ji - wmm a - -Taiaa .r aW a.r.r... fa-aa. mm mi - - a in. 1,' 1 DSBH.ITT. a, f-y-rm-fl a Weak nd Lircata Cfci'!r-n tn awaW aa a ai ay ulaj Blltara at Tmuc. la Cavrt. ekrvy ara KajMll T BU riar. TWr rat n mt aataatiatatcrva w1U p n ra aavtVty la tBirae aaaaU f alactf. t Oitaf J-ffl 'Jim ftirr-m Ca'iat aP ra-a' T Jnw tirrF c j-hou Js'Mmrtr " m -a am - V Jm jltfrmfrra jimt. iimt 4 -mm. m a a W l ant& aim .rw msutn. oa Jm j j hi i. t 7-i it-, ja is I ccatUtr jaa. H' Gas-aaaja B A tr - a mauMcm tm eaia jT ai i - t-( attaa 1 tc a - r mi r DuMr1, I aa avrrtrv It in n aa mmy x?rm la. 1.xrs. xartia r Faaaar at A Ba jiaa Cwa. rr mJ wb-j tm. cuiij 1 1 Tin m. Sat ttxr a " a on if i mii ttjlr-n. I l s 1 m"'I .- twc rnnrnJ. a -ar m l u-urmt m rai imittiitj at u mta M ca - '""T Cauh. a is aam saaaaa a-4 of riao Bltvara. tl f0 Tr J' o sail aioaam for O-. . lrto of tba TobJc. fl iOfW er, av taaOX ua (ar 23. Tba taaia ta wax i to assart Wu-'ai MmrnOtt Oaf a m L- Rwt?ttrSt rBivcupAi. ornos. Mm. SSI BCSr ST MIST. JaaWa. CTIAA JS. EVA3TS, S-ormortw O. ZmI. M CO. Taaa Kcam aaJaa ara far aoJo T ' srlete, aaorasraaaara, agsvsl ra oraxravlaaro. Dwt raraat m aiiaaan aS I SfaaUaasM P HB-jClwelR. J. LLOYD. V--5' ZbrttbuFfi Fa. fn.S2-:-- I -v o su aw, nu Ir O-m jshm. aau a. M m mi "s!t Asm raa4sa a.- aann Una rm 3 wj i.iy r a ana f jinr"a aaw a-au4a Iji T-"- aal a . iq 1 mr. iuaa J- - a L pmrtj '1 "mmf. fa a )aj ark mmp vrt a i ' 1 m W th-i. mrmd awji psnM mmr- imtvm, aW C cm bmmrni m a iuwa. Xm rana umi4 pmr : mn? Lirtm- aa irr . 1rriT fim .r;ai 'f"' a a i. m a. ) bi ff smm. V aw mm? fcaaaaafl in f w H amr if Vaua 11 a.nw fm txft S mm. J-J aa faaaia. n Lr i aaaa kat ar a.a v t L CATITIC3. tt -a aa ml a tmi ar4 aaa ' ZZa mrmwlmt ; mwUdt aa aawaaaaas. aarw tM aaaaat aaa la avka ft aaaa
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