(Eambria Jfmnmu. EnEXSBl'RG, PA. Saturday Morning, : ! April 13, 1872. As wt gn to press we learn that Got nCry informed a committee appointed by j -. i . ,v i o . . . - f . - a . .i ... . . i iim for that purpose, tbat he would not sign the iniquitous Apportionment bill. The consequence will be. that the Congressional fVihtricts will remain as they were established tinder the former apportionment. TflE Radical State Convention, which met nt Harrisburg on Wednesday lust, nominated the following ticket: Governor, John F. 1 1 a htca n ft, cf Mentgomeiy county ; Audi tor General, IIasiuson Ai.lbs, of Warren rounty ; Judge of the Supreme Court, Ulys h-.b Ml'kccr, of Bradford county. Hai.t r ak ft and Allen were the recognized can tlidatcs of the Treasury King and represent its rapacity and greed. John W." Fohnby. in his rress of the day before the meeting fT the Cuuvention, warned his party against llartranft's nomination in the following em phatic language : The nomination of General Hartrnnft, width it awhile ago lookd ms though the peo iJe demanded, is now must t-trohj:lv opposed ly ibem. The "plot or j jb,' or whatever it .may be, of the purty nt .-imagers, bus evoked a t (or in of honest indignation throughout the length aid breadth ol the Commonwealth. 'J he people 6ternlv rject any nitempt to force r.pn Ihetn a Cil.iiiuate nominated by such means as those which elected one hull the egntcs sent to liarrioburg from this city." The Constitutional Convention bill, as it finally pasted the Legislature, fixes the num ber of members at 133 being equal to the present number of Senators and Members of the House. The election is to take place next October and the Convention to meet at llsrrisburg on Tuesday, the 12ih of Novem ber. Twenty eight delegates are to be elected at largo, each elector voting for fourteen. Six delegates are to be elected by the city of Philadelphia, each elector to vote for three. Kadi Senatorial district is to be entitled to three members, each elector to vote for not nwro than two which will enable the minor ity party to secure one delegate iu each sin gle Senatorial district in the State and two in a double distiict, as iu Luzerne district. It is estimated that this mode ef electing the , ,.u.Ln.a a ma, .ruy ci three in the co..vco.ian. This Is perhaps as fair and equitable a bill ss could havn been lovked for when it U considered that the Sen- ate had to deal w.th an ignorant, mulish and rmg-rulden inajmiy ia the House of Reorc tentative?. Harry White, who was chairman of the cotnmittee in the Senate to prepare the bill. iid liia very Lest, as was to have been ex pected, to nuke the convention a partisan body, but a broadside from the raking batter- ies of Lucaalew and M'Cure two day. bef.re ! 1 11 A fl Ou 1 oil. ii. . v..-. t. 1. . t w , uj .hi iiuicu b iTotigni tne Indiana trimmer to a sense of his cwo littleness aud rompelled him to assume a vii tue even though lie bad it not. The tr fling nmj -rity which the iepublicans will hnvu in the convention will practically amount to nothing, for the reason that if it prostitutes itself to the pur poses of party, the people, when they come to pass judgment upon it at the ballot-box, Will rifus to ratify its woik. Samuel l Hi own. This is tho name of a friend of George O. Lvans, in Washington, to whom Evans in his lectin.ony before the Investigating Commit tee says he paid $10 .000. for services render, td iu prccuririg pa3inent f the war claims', f the State. We have read Brown's testi- j timouy, the material partot whkh is con- tined iu his answer to the tenth interrogatory I of the committee, ai d is as foil jws : I .-2,"th' l:a Py you snv pnrt of the f ,tt receiver" b him iu 7 If yea ' how mueh ? )n juu know if he paid unr I part ol that money to mv i.e eUe. or oid he j oer suie to you lhat he hl so p.ii.t ? Jj vea RlNn'ne.i,red ,le- U1"exT A. He paiu rne t.18.0.0 lor srrv;ce reiid,Ttd and debts due .on wtierthe first c.lleeiiou nmoe, which I culiectiuii amounted to uout $I.9j() 0oi At I that time J.e Kvai sj was indexed to me tor ' money loaned to him ior his rnr.i. r.d was lso ,d,bted to o.h.r parties here. Inch debts 1 paid, st hi rro.ie.-t. out ol the fe..jd mohey. Ho a!i-o s ated tome that l eld lopay lrge amount of money to ! lei.UMlTUi ofliciaU lor the purpose ol ob Uiu 111,1 the i.ete....ry legitlatiou. He ,;avc me a tiieiiiorniiJuui of anioniKs he I. .id i.ronneed to pjy to these patties. Ou H.u memorandum nppeare'l Ihv i ameol "Gov Cerv .ind Irinid" lor $.io,(i00; D. C yon:cv, ?U,0". 0 J. Rob ley Uunjtiirtoii, 45 t0t. uud -other panics" $,0uU. He M.bsquen;ly Hated to me that 1 e was to procure the publication ol the lifeof Govm.or Gery. anil that a large poriiwn of the f 30.1 0 us lobe upproprmu d to that j urio.e In a suli-rquent coi.versaiioti ilr. tU-oige O Kvai s tidd me that he luid an inter view with a publishing hou.-c. the name of which he mentioned. (I think it AppUtou k t'o . but am not certain.) and that it ou!J ost i4J.0t0 to p,,l.li-h the lite of Governor Oe.tr, bem- about Sltl.OM) mote tlmn he hud i.nt:eipatrd. Atioihei con-idernlioii he was to P,e lo t'overnor Ge-ry was either to purchase u toiitrolimp iuteu-M iu a piriii Hatrisburg cr to tart n new one, to bring Governor Gent , t ame pioniii emlv before ti e people a cu.ui.jate tor the fresideucy. This pio posed paper was lobe ruii whollvinthe in teie.t ol Governor Gearr, and to b under his (Ihe governor's) control. If.KvaLa is tiuworthy-cf belief on his oath. as he mnu to be by common consent, can any reliance ve placed on his unsupported dec'aratious to llrown ? That is a question which we will not now discuss. It is in per iod harmony, however, with Geary's well known inordinate vanity, that he should meditate the publication of his life as a stepping-stone to his Presidential aspirations. It h a disappointment that we are not furnished will, the nam. of th biographer who was to immortalize both him.elf ami his hero lf 3r. Gihou. Geary's FidU3 Achates, and who predicted his elevation to the Presidency Hill lives, he would be the une amongst tec tbourand to become the Uoswell of our illus trious Governor. To write a lif cf John Yv. Geary ought to be a vety cheap under taking, but at the very munificent figure of J40.000 it would certainly be the most profit able enterprise in which a man cf the lowest jKtlibla. literary attainments could embark. Tlie Apportionment Bill. Although it is a pure waste ef time, now that the Congresssional Apportionment bill has pawed the Legislature and become a law, yet we cannot forego a brief notice of its palpable and monstrous injustice. It has not a eingle redituiing featuie. It is wholly rdJ can onlv be defend ed on the robber plea. 'That he may take who fa nt And he may keep who 'a able." An Apportionment bill, to be a just meas ure, ought to be so framed as to enable the two political pat tits in the State to fairly exercise their numerical strength in Congress through their elected representatives. This bill totally violates that fundamental prin ciple. It was a fraud in the first place in the anthors (f the bill to establish the arbi trary Lais that the radical party was enti tled to sixteen districts, or almcst two thirds of the whole number, and the democratic party to the remaining ten. It is a Well known fact that for th last ten years the average radical majority in the State has not been large enough to represent the present ratio of population required to elect one member of Congress. It follows, therefore, that of the sixteen members to be elected by the radical purty under this infamous bill, there wil! he Jive of them who will be abso" luiely without constituencies. This result is reached from the peculiar formation cf the districts, and efpecially in Philadelphia, by which not less than ninety thousand demo cratic voters in the State are disfranchised. At the last Presidential election, Grant re ceived 342 280 votes in Pennsylvania and Seymour 313,352. Under the present bill takin- these figures as a basis, it will require 31,338 denxcratic votes to elect a member of Congress, while it will only take 21.300 radical votes, almost ten thousand less , to do ihe same thing. This is precisely' what will happen under the practical operation of this Apportionment swindle. Nj fair-miudtd man can defend the outrage, and we repeat again, that every man who voted for it, we care not to what party he belongs, is guilty of uothiog less than moral peijnry. The manner in which Montgomery county is emasculated and her ditj iuted members made to form parts of two districts, is a grievous wnmg and violates every pticciple upon which a fair and holiest Apportionment t-.t!l - .... i . . t r i kiii miiii, io oe iramea. it was cecessarv however, to perpetrate this glaring outrage ! in lhat reticular localitJf m orJcr lQ w j out tbe ori.in)d dwign of ,hoM : nated tho biU weMJ deterniincd to cun. summate the fraud. No political party ever J )et gained any permanent advance bv th. - r j passage of a one bided and unfair Apportion rr.ent. J he experiment has been tried before, and has always recoiled with fearful effect upon the dominant party so exercising its power. It will be coutrary to all past ex nerier.ee if the ro-nttj in 1 hmnol.i i in the future, under th. operation of th , , ( sent scandalous gerrymander, do not return to plague its inveutors. Congressional Apportionment. The following is the apportionment of the State into Congressional districts, asrassed by the Legislature on tho last uight vf the session : 1. District Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eleventh, Twelfth, and Sixteenth Wards, Philadelphia. 2. First, Second, Seventh, and Twenty tixth Wards, Philadelphia. 3. Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Thirteenth, ond Twent eth Wards, and all that portion of the Seventeenth Ward west of Second street, Philadelphia. 4. Fitteenth, Twenty-first, Twenty fourth, Twenty-seventh," Twenty-eighth, and Twenty-ninth Wards. Phila Iclphia. . 5. Eighteenth, Nineteenth, Twenty-second. Twenty-third, and Twenty-fifth Wards, and the Seventeenth Wards east of Second street, Philadelphia. C. Chester an 1 Dtla ware Counties. 7. Lancaster County. 8. Berks and that portion of Montgom ery northwest of Norristown, Whitpaiu, Gwynedd and Montgomery townships. 9. Bucks and .Northampton and balance ol Montgomery. 10. Lehigh, Carbon, Monrce, Pike and Wayne. 1 1. Schuylkill, Columbia and Montour. 12. Dauphin, Lebanon, and Northum berland. 13. Luzerne. 14. Bradford, Susquehanna, Sullivan, and Wyoming. 15. Tioga, Potter, M'Keaa, Cameron, and Lycoming. 16. Union, Snyder, Miflliu, Centre, Clearfield, and Elk. 17. Huntingdon, Blair, Cambria, and Somerset. !8 Bedford, Franklin, Fulton, Juniata, and Adams. 19. Westmoreland. Fayette, and Green. 20. Cumberland, York, and Perry. 21. Indiana, Armstrong, JeKerson, and Cl.trion. 22. Pittsburg, Birmingham, Etst Birm :n;hamj I'rtuoby, South 1'ittsburg .Mon .n ghela, Mount Washington, Ttmperance ville. West Pitt f burg. Union, Allentown, St. Clair, Verout, Braddock,ar.d the Town thips of Plum, Wilkius. Penn, and Potter. 2i5. A'l Allegheny County not iuciuded in the above. 24. Washington, Beaver, and Butler. 2V Lawrence, Meic r, and Crawford. 2G. Erie, Venango, Warren, and Forest. At the last session of the Legislature an Act was passed and signed by the Governor, allowing defeudauts to testify in certain crim inal cases not above the grade of misdemea nor. There can be no 60tind oljcction to the passage of a law .f this character, and our ouly regret is that the Legislature limited its provisions within tuch a narrow compass. The following is the Act: Sfctios 1. Be it cnocted by the Senate and Iloiifc of Itepre.-enMiivesof the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in General Aesemblv me:, and it is hereby enacted by the nuthotity of the aame. That, in the trial of all indictments, comp'aiiits nnd otbfr proceedings againel per sons charged with the comai sion ol crimes or offences not above the grad of misrtemenor in any court of record, of ciitiinal jurisdiction, the person so charged shall, at hi, u riuuest but not otherwise. bi deemed t competent wit ness. but his neglect or relusa. to testify shall not create any presumption agvinst him. nor , i.M.i any re.eienee i.e mae to. or sli( j """ ' ,B'VJe UPU fch neg ecl or , , oj cnuiibHi in me cise curing thfc.riai of cuuse; provided that this act hl! " ,J to the trial of anv person on an in.? , . r penury or forge,. 1 D "tmeut for Local Legislation. An Important Act I TVe direct attention to the following Act passed by the last Legislature in relation to the collection of taxes in this county It produces an entire change in the present pjstem and de serves to be carefully examined in order that tax-payers may become familiar with its provisions- The fcjstem has been in operation for a Jong time in Ohio, and many years ago was made applicable by special acts of Assembly to several counties in this State. As long ago as 1958 a bill of the stme character, applicable to Cambria county, was prepared by a gentle man of this place and sent to Harrisburg, but it was not seriously pressed, owing to a factious opposiiion raised against it in some portions f the connty. The people of the .counties in which the experiment has been tried generally approve of the change from the old mode, so far as our knowledge ei'ends. --Tli people ol this county will now have an opportunity of deciding upon the merit of the old and the new arrangement. Here is the Act entire: AN Act relating to tbe collection or Taxes in the C'ouuty or Cambria. Sec. 1. lie it ennrteri, etc.. That from and after the passage, of this Act, it shall be the duty of the Commissioners of Cumbria county, in each :tnd every vear, immediately aftur the assess ment of takes lor tate and county purposes shall be completed, not later than tho first Monday of April, in the manner prescribed by law, to cause their Clerk to make out tt luir duplicate of all seated real estate und personal property assessed, with the taxes thereon, in a convenient form, ami deliver the same o the Treasurer of the said county, together with a certificate unoer their hands, attested by tho Clerk, duly certifying the sumo to lmye been regularly Assessed. i?ee -i. That it shall le the duty of the Trea surer of said county, alter he shall r cei vo the duplicate of the assessments lroni tho County Commissioners, as hereinbefore provided, to Rive at least thirty davs' notice, by weekly publio itions in two newspapers published 111 said couiitv, and also by.it least ten w ritten or printed "handbills, to be put up in the most public plaees in each township, borough, or word, in said count v. of the times at which he will attend at the place of holding the town ship or borousili elections 1:1 eaen i iiiJi borough of said conntv, f or the purpose or Col lecting and receiving State (including imiilu ryi. eountv anil poor tsxes. and it shall bo tin; duty of the said Treit-urer, iu person or by deputy, to at tend at least one day 111 each town ship and borough in said county, tor the pur pose aloi e.-aid, previous to the Hist day o. tep iiif...h vea-. ami he shall five receipis i in ull eases when required by the persons pay I ing the same: i'r..odt, 'il't " any person or persons shall, on or before the 11 11 ot.y in i teuiber aforesaid, pay to such Trc.viiicr the amount of his or her taxes, such person snail be entitled to a reduction of live per centum 011 the amount thereof. See. a. In case any State, military, county or poor tax assessed in any township or borough within said count v shall remain unpaid fiu- a period of thirty d"avs from a..d alter the tirst d.-i v or Niii.nh-1-11 foresaid, it shall be the duly ot the Treasurer of the said county of Cambria to issue his warrant under his hand, aee 111-rmui.-.i l.i-u s,-li.-.li,le of a. I such uupiuu taxes, lidding thereto live per centum, aim the names of tbe persons respectively to whom the same are charged in the proper duplicates directed to the constable of ihe proper township or lKi-oug!i, or if there be no (.-unstable therein, then the Treasurer shall appoiut some si itable freeholder, w hose duty u is hereby made to receive the same, authorizing and requiring him to demand and receive H orn the person named in the schedule the sums with which tuev are chartred respectively, und the said warrant.- shall further aut hoi ize ami require such constable or collector, in wist: any person named in the schedule annexed shall lail to pay the amount with which suoli person is t heroin chained, alter demand therelor made by sin h constable or collector, to levy the sime bv distress and sale 01" goods and chat tels of siich delinquent, giving ten days' public notice of such sal. by three written or printed advertisements, and. in such cose, the consta ble or col lector shall be cut il led to retain, al ter first deducting tho taxes, t he snme fees lis now allowed constables by. law for levy and sale upon a writ of execution- pioriiiii!, when ihe said taxes are paid on demand, or w ithin leu days then-after, the constable or collector shall be entitled to receive us a compensation live per centum tor his services. See. 4. That upoti t he delivery of the County Treasurer of his warrant to any collector or J constuble, according 1 tho provisions of this act. he shall charge such constable or collector with the w hob; amount of taxes contained iu the schedule thereto annexed, iu a book to be provided for the purpose, from which liability such constable und sureties, under the provi sions of this H'-t, shull only 'bo discharged by payment of said amount, after deducting such exonerotions us may be allowed to such con stable or collector, ami certified to the sai l Treasurer by the County Commissioners for mistakes, indigent p. isons, unsealed lauds:iid other cases wherein exonerations are now al lowed by law to collectors of taxes. Sec. 5." The bond of the constable now re quired by law shall stand as security for the faithful performance of their duty under this Act, and in case the Court ol" Quarter Sessions of Cambria conntv shall deem the same to bo Insufficient, it sha":l be lawful forsaid Court to direct that a bond in a penalty not more than double the amount now required shall be given Sec. 6. It shall be the duty of the constables or collectors who shall receive warrants from the Treasurer of suid county, under the provi sions of Ibis Act, to settle their accounts, ob tain their exonerations and pay over to the Treasurer of said county ull mo evs collected by them in pursuance of said warrant, within two month-, from and after the day of delivery of such warrants to them respectively, which day shall be endorsed n each warrant by the Treasurer issuing the same, and shall also bo by him entered in a book, to be by hint kept for that purpose, which book, verified by tho oath or alllrinat ion of such Treasurer, or, in esse of hti death, absence out of tho State, or other inability to appear and testify, by tho oath or ufnrmnlion of any credible person proving the handwriting of such Treasurer, shall be competent evidence to establish the fact of the delivery of any warrant or warrants to any constable, as ufof esuid, in any Court of law iu the Commonwealth. Sec. 7. That in case any constable or collec tor shall fail to make tho collection and pay ment in the preceding sections of this Act within the time aforesaid, it shall be tho duty of the Treasurer of the said county immedi ately to cause un action of debt in the name of the Commonwealth to be brought upon tho bond ofsuc'.i constable or col lector, und if upon tho trial of any sne'i suit it shall uppcar that such constable or collector has not complied with the provisions of this Act. judgment shall be rendered again-jt tho .i.i..iwUi iiir-iu rT the amount for which such constable is de linquent, together with interest, nt the rateof twelve per centum per annum, from and after the expiration of the aforesaid two months, aid full costs of suit. Hurt in all such cases there shall be no stay of execution or other stay, any law- to tbe contrary notwithstanding; but it shall be t he duty of the said Treasurer to pros ecute such judgment to execution und satis faction without delav. Sec. 8. That if any Treasurer or constable or collector shall fail or refuse to perform any of the dutica required of them resiwctivelv bv this Act, he or they shall, for every such of fence, forfeit and pay a fine of fifty dollars, which shstll be recoverable in the name of the Commonwealth, at the insfanco of any person who will sno therefor, in the same manner as debts of like amount are now recoverable, with costs of suit, and the money, when collected, shall goto the use of theschoolsin the respect ive wards, boroughs, or townships where the fot feiturc shall have been incurred. Sec.ii. The Treasurer of the said' county of Cumbria shall be entitled to five per centum on all tnxes collected aud paid out by him under this Act. Sec. 10. That all laws or ywrts of laws incon sistent herewith, so far as tho same relate to the county of Cambria, are hereby repealed M. KIXIOTT. Speaker House of Kepresontatives JAMKS S. UUTAX. . '. ., . Speaker Senate. Approved Apnl P, 1S72. JNO. W. GEARY, Governor. We cltarge that General Grant hasintliree years apnnted to office more persons related to himself and hisJitmUy than alt our former Presidents did in thei" eighty years of admin-' istralivn And tee are confident, but do not charge., that the emoluments which have ac crued to Gtueral Grant's w.iw. h.- w raiisi, IA' ceedtd tho.ie realized by all the relatives of . i . j ., ...... J vu, yiccu.n.g i resiaenis aurtng weir respect ive terms of office. - IPtVZ the Times meet us squarely on ihe viain p.int namely. Vie number of his and his familys relattces appointed by General Grant to office, tcih that tf Vie like appoint ments of all his predecessors, respectively and in th aggregate i lf issue is joined on Vtis point, tee shaft proceed to develop the facts. He trill consider Vieir bearing nflertoard. .New York Tribune of Mirch 29. . Vkterinaby Surgeons all over the coun try are recommending Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders for the following trouble ia horses ; Loss of appetite, roughness of the hair, ttoppage of bowels or water, thick water, coughs aud colds, swelliug of the glands, worms, horse uil, thick wind, and heaves. Tlie Great Earthquake. From the Virginia (Sev.) Enterprise, Mar, 30. We yesterday met with and interviewed Mr. Frauk Bell. Division Superintendent of the Western Union Telegraph Company iu this SState. who was at Independence. Inyo county, California, last Tuesday morning when the great earthquake occurred which shattered tbat whole region, and which shook us up not a little iu this iity. 300 miles north of what would seem to have been the ceutre of the gieat telluric disturbance. THE FIRST GREAT SHUCK came nt 2:30 on Thursday morning, and was probably the mot.t sevtre that occurred. Mr. Bed, who was sleeping in the second story of the hotel at Independence (a fram- building filled in with adobes), says that when the first shock came it threw his pitcher aud wash-bowl, which were upon a wash-stand six feet distant, upon his bed, whence thev rolled to the floor and were broken. After a tew heavy sidewise lurches fiom south t north, during which Mr. Bell was tryiug to climb out of his second-story window, about half a dozen perpendicular jolts came, which seemed to lift the house to the height of sev eral feet. The eatth now settled down to a steady, tremulous motion, which sort of calm lasted long emu-h to allow Mr. Bell to par tially dress himself, find his oveicoat aud carpet-sack, and get down stairs and out into the open air. Here he found the startled in mates of the hotel, to the number of twenty five or thirty, MEN, TVOMKN AND CHILDREN KM DISHABILLE all in momentary expectation of a repetition of the shocks. Frightened as all were, one man stiil had suflicieut commuud of his wits to notice Mr. Bell's overcoat and carpit-bag. Hallo!" he ciied. "here ia a man who has packed his duds and is going fo leave the country." The joke muit luve been consid ered a good one in some quarters, for just al the moment the earth laughed such a lanjh, and so shook its sides that nobody cartd to make another attempt at wit. -, , From this time till nearly 7 o'clock the earth was never for a moment perfectly quiet, aud every few minutes heavy shock of a lew seconds' duration were cccm ting. In all, there were more than fifty very heavy shocks. The first shock, cracked and threw down many walla aud huiidiugs, but it was the heavy succeed) na shocks which leveled every thing. Tho brick Court House .ami evvry biick and adobe house in tlie town tnd thrt ughout the whole country wnu iLruwu dowu. PERILOUS POSITION OF A CHILD. Wheu the first shock occurred, Mr. ila.ris, of the firm of Harris til Kline, rushed out id his dwelling with his latuily. Alter gettii g o'ut he fjtind one child was missing, ami was rushing back to rescue it wbeu the whole building fell. It was supposed that the child was kil ed, but upon ctltting through the roof and removing a portion of the wreck of the building, it was found and rescued quite un harmed. It would be useless to attempt to describe tho consternation which prevailed through out the town during the time the shocks Were occurring; 'many supposed the last great day bad come. The shocks were ac companied with a gre;t rumbling, and the air was filled wiih great clotvla of dust in deed such quantities f dust tided the ait lhat a cloud was formed which was seen by persons residing Cftceu or twenty aiilea to the north ward. THK Srf CK- WF.RK STILL C INTISUISG when Mr. Bell lelt, and the people were so utterly demoralized that they did not know where to ttnu or what to do. The impres sion at ludepeodetice was lhat to the south ward the earthquake was stiil mora seveie than in that place, and fears were entti taiued thpt but little was left of Cerro (Jotdo and other mining camps in that direction. They worked an hour aud a half trying t get at Wells, Fargo oV (Jo.'s treasure b x, buried iD the ruins of Nithan Rhine's stole, and at last the stags Came off without it. Evan as the stage started there came one or two rat- tling shocki All the adobe buildings at Pot t I ideper.dence were laid low, and a child killed ; the mother, also, was seriously in jured. TH IN Td ''ISDFPKNDENT" OFriCE, a frame budding filled in with adobes, was not thrown dowu, but the cilice was badly damaged even a cooking stove that stood in it being t-na!ud to pieces. STRKAMS OF FIRE JSSUK FROM TH 5 MOUNTAIN. Fourieen tnihs this side of Independence, in the Sierra Xeva'lf Mountains, is a large mountain calltd Black Hick , tne sides ol which are covered with lava aud which is supposed to be an extinct volcano. The set tlers informed Mr. Bil that during Ihe time the Kliocks were most severe, li.ishts of light were sn to issue from the top of tl is moun tain and streams of fira rati down its sides. There are on the side of the mountain three old lava 6treams, but when the 6tsg passed along do ODe had yet goue to see if any fiesh d.iw had rccuned. Mr. Mallory, foimerly of C-irsou City, stated lhat he observed fl tab es cf light in other places in the mountains. but he Was of tha opinion that (hey mere cau?ed by rocks striking together asthey rolled down the slopes of the peaksl In places on the ttaga road there were encoun tered Itc CKt A3 LARGS AS TWO'STORT II' USFS. which had rolled from the roountaiua. From Independence to Big Pine, a distance of forty-Eve miles, there is not a square yard of ground that does not show cracks. Near Big Pine they found a crevice across the road sixty feet wide aud six feet deep. Off the road, but in plain sight. this crevice was two hundred feet wide and tver tweuty feet deep, an l it could be traced a long distance, ruu ning g rth and south, parallel with the Sierra Nevada Mountains. LAXD RII'GEs AND WATER SPOT7T3. South of Fish Springs Slough the water spouted out of the ground iu maoy places, aud there were still to be seen large pools when the stage passed. Here also ridges of ground from eight to ten. feet in height were raised up across tha road. At Big Pine the heavy dining table, with all it contained, was overturned, and five shocks were experienced while the passengers were eating breakfast.' Between Fish Springs and Bishop creek, where formerly was a desert place, there now gushes forth a stream of water large enough to turn a mill. Iu other places streams and springs are dried up, and in fact, the whole country turned topsy-turvy. At Hot Springs, while severe ahocks were felt on the surface, the men in the mines (200 feet deep) folt nothing of them. We have been told of many other circumstances in counection with tnis great earthquake, but have Dot room to mention ihem. A friend of ours who is chief clerk in the Governmental Dispensary, says that no med icine chest is nw complete without John son's Anodine Liniment. We always sup posed it was prescribed by law ; if it is not, it ought to be, for certainly there ia nothing in the whole materia medica of so much im portance to the soldier and tha sailor as Johnson's Anodine Liniment. . , A remarkable coincidence was present ed in connection with the death of Jonas Parker, of Goshen. New Hampshire, on the 15th. Three cousins, residing iu different Stales, all died the same night, and Dearly the aame hourand each iu a fit. IVcvrs of the lVcelt. T!T'f!nr dirt in in nn bin irfl p ImmA A cow with two tails is attracting the J cream of society iu Dover. Tennessee. I -A two-years-old son ol Wm. Jones, of Kennett Square, swallowed a shawl pin two inches long, two weeks ago, and was cone j the worse of it. " I The South Carolina colored Republicans ! in convention demand thnt a colored man must be put in the Cabinet by the Republi cans. Samoo continues to loom up. The Montgomery county poor house was recently destroyed by fire, and three of the inmates were burned tn death, whi'e another bad his leg broken by jumping off the roof. -' . ' . rPl,a - fTia .f tm T .vcmr-ii n f ATntlial T,i - -" t j , ............ j , . . j , burglars cn the night of the 4th, aDd thesafe i lim ed ami ou-sieu uy powuor, anu j.uuj worth ol bonds stolen. A bill allowing wompn tn nrartieff law medicine, theology, and anything else, ex i cept soldiering, has been psssed by the j Illinois Legislature, and sicred by the Gov- j ernor. It will po into operation in July. j A man in New York recently bled to i death after having five teeth extracted. Kverv (fl irt una mnrln tn xtrin thm klo,11r.rr ' ni mo ums, nut proven fruitless, and the patient gradually died from exhaustion. 0;i Aptil 1st the Democrats of Chester elected the mayor the first time since Ches ter became a city. The city usually givs about 400 Republican ma j rity but thev didn't come out," and const quentlv a Dem ocrat " wer.t in." The Leader Fays, J..hn Rss.' of Ken nett. Sotiftre. had" a w.-im!rfnl Kn Ki,o r A 1 . . . f .., . laid five eggs in one day, th fifth egc being ' double. She then rested six days and wert t to work again, laying a few more eegs and I then died. We hope she was buried with i honor. r It is now thought that Congress will j adj'.ii-n snme timo in May. a it will not take mi-re t.";an a month Unger to: dispose of the general appropriation bill. How rmtny millions of the people's money will .e dis- i po?ei oi curing mat month, it is not easy to gtlPSS. The Democrats e'eaned that Radical 1 ot I e Cincinnati, last week, by r.enr'y 2 000 msjrity. That citv h been over whelmingly Know Nothing and Radical rver since 1854. Grantism is causing the senh-s o fall ( ff the eyes of the tax-payers in tie Q i? en citv. The Village Record says, the first col ored applicant fr the pi sition of teachfr in Chester county, is Susie Goodwin, of Ken nett Pq'itre. ,She whs examinrd by tie Connty Superintendent at Tonghkenamn. nn Thursday last, and parsed a vtry Credita ble examination. Near Brownston Crawf. -rd county. Ind.. nn the night of the 1 :it Ii . Mrs. John Snvth and her infant weie burned to death. Mrs. Smith was sulj ct to fit, and. while hearing her child in her arms. Ml forward into an open fire place. There was no one elso in the house at the time. Two men having arranged to fight a duel in Rhode Nlaml. the Governor issued a proclamation forbidding it, whereupon one of the partios sent him a nte sayirg that one of them wou'd ttand in Connecticut and the nt! er in Massachusetts, and sh ot over his miserable li'tle State. Peter Nelson, Farmington. Minn.. h?8 gotten up a corner on lager. AM the licen ses in the town run out in May. but his holds good till December. So he became a convert to the temperance cause, rut through a no-license vide, and nnr has built au ad dition to his hall 85 by 40. The Pope hta refused to receive thasnm if mouey which was tflVrvd him by the Italian government. His Holiness, in de clining the gift, declares that when it be comes necessary for him t accept alms as a means of obtaining subsistence, he would ouly receive them from the Catholic world. The grand ju'y sitting al the Old Bai ley. London, have found a true bill against Arthur 0C.cnor, tho assailant of the Q ieen, charging him with a misdemeanor. Prince Leopold, who was riding with her nujest at the time the was attacked by O'Coiiuor. will appear as a witness against, the j risotier. Julius A. Sumner, of Akron. Ohio, says he rode on the first passenger car ever drawn upon a railrovl in the United States; that he rode upon the first steamboat that ever navigated Lake Krie, and that he was the first man to build a rolling mill and nail factory in the State cf Ohio. These are things to be proud of. Jesse James, Jr., of Bensalem." Bucks county, beg'n: ing with the 1st tf April. 1870. sold, frem six cows, fifteen hundred and thirty pounds of butter, frim which he realized the sum of $900. He says that proper attention paid to butter-making will pay the farmer better than any other branch of his bus:ness. On the eve of sailing, gays the New York Star, Miss Nelle Grant partook ! Inrineuijr of imni omelette, which her father reminded her was very bad for sea sickness. Miss Nellie pouted and said her father was always reminding her of disa greeable things. The noble President there upon said not a word more, but walked out aud smoked. A special from Westminister. Carroll couoty, Maryland, Bays a terrible murder was committed in that county Friday latd. Abraham Lynn, aged twenty-seven, was muidered at Stoner'a Mill aud his body robbed of eight hundred dollars. Lvnn was running the mill, and his body was found in the sink of the mill with the tkull frightfully fractured with a crowbar. Lvery day brings something new. Razors are to be laid aside, aud shaving, in the proper eeusa of the term, abolished, and henceforth tho hirsute growth cn tho lip. chin and cheeks is to be removed, not with soap, brush, lather, hot water and a keen edged blade, but by simply rubbing a piece of pumice stone over the bearded parts. We have not tried it, but the Scientific American Bays it will do it. Mr. Stephen Reid, cf West Chester, has a hen. which in her ardor to lay au egg, a few days ago, took possession of a cat's nest in a 6table in which there were thtee kittens. Mrs. Puss hud perhaps left her mewing pro geny and gone on a mousing expedition, and upon returning fouud her babies in charge of the her, who remained, unterrified at the bristles tf puss, in possession thereof until the succeeded in laying an egg. -.The earth seems to be quaking through and through from stem to stern, we might say, were we a hold navigator of tin cana'.. Sau Franci sco, the Queen City of the Occi dent, and then Antioch, the Queen City of the Orient, have taken their turns at the metropolitan ague. Altogether there seems to be less motion amidships than elsewhere, and we are glad we are here instead of off at the uttermost ends of the earth. An explosion of fire damp occurred on Monday last in the Pine Brook shaft of the Lackawanna Iron and Coal Company, at Scranton. A man named Campbell was killed, and two others, named Stone and O Hara, were injured, the latter so badly that he is not expected to recover. The ex-, plosion was caused by. Stone's temerity i gomg to the locality of tbe fire damp with an uncovered lamp after repeated warnis of the danger. ' As ITiR' ic Act. A Three Mile Run vcith a Burning Oil Train Tlie Pet: nay I vaoia railroad, near Huston's station, was the sceue of an accident of a rather ptculiar nature on last Fiiday. What In raihoad parlacce is termed "an oil wreck" occurred near the point named, by which an entire oil train ' was moie or less damaged. Mr. RAiert Liggett, the conductor of the train, tearing that the oil which wa leaking upm the track mijjht Le set cn fire by some pars ing train, iigbttd n;ne cars on the rails and proceeded with them in the direction t l Ice Mouutaiu siding. He had gone but a short distr.nco when he dnCiveied thai tie thiid car fiom the engine was on fire. Al gteat personal ri.-k Mr. L;gg:t made his way almost through tho burning oil to the coupling and thtre took rut the pin ami leaving (he -tlhr seven car ( l-Hatk. made quick time with 1 Le Lurning C as far a tne aiding, three mile distant, wheie he left them", thus paving the '.main trai k Irum catching tire. The inn to this point is spoken of by railroad men as s metbit g in the heroic hue not often attempted. The flames fiom the burning car, we are iufirmcd. lolied up far abovr the tne tops, and mI in an oil barrel would explode the Luridng Co -tents shot in all dittcions, the cab of the engine not being allowed to escape the dan gerous element. When the ndiig was reached and an attempt was made to b..ck the c-irs upon it the et ginc had to run oer the burning oil which was on' the track. Tha kidir.g was down a steep giade, t:i the direction of the larg Inn. her nanufc'ory of Mr. R II B own. Mr. Liggett, knowitg what a terrible loss woti'd en:-ue was the burning car allowed to ilcfcri.d the grade with the brakes t ff. bravely determined to board the burning car aud use his best en ilfavont to check it. Tiiio he did. and audit the smoke and llime he st-il at the brake, uniil the great hr.it caused the biake ri d to snap asunder. Frttmattly. Mr. Ivgeit. anticipating such an tvei.t, had dispMchcii oi;0 of tho train men a few yards abend l the burning car, with instructions to plac a heavy . g upon th track. This was ac c -mpluhi d jiit in lime to rave a great h-! .f proerly. Mr. Liggett is deserving of all ctedit f.,r his heroism ou the rccusior., which oeitainly ai i f an unusual order of merit. Pittsburgh Ctnnmei cial. TiitLosi put Qi.n akd'-Nfw In the earlier hifloty of mediciue in tho treat niei.l of lung diseases, of which C-numpt tm s the chuf, tl,e philosophy of cme consisted in weakening ami dep(tsiiig the syMeu:, ao us M keep down the rapid circulation which, like a torrent, threatened to trar the colsi: lutiou to tatters. To fit d this out. it is not tifcesnary to ransack the archive and pit over the Volumes that nr ulder on the shelves of antique libraries, as theie am living among!, n.s those wh e memories will btHi them back to the linns when il was com mon, and few if any aUiV.ved uch tin ea sonable treatment. The mean of cure now iu uso, ol which Dr. KtTsi-n's Lino Cull forms an important pa:t. aie wholly d tier en t from this, and instead of tearii g dvi, and weakening the powers of nature, on the contrary are calculated to tute and build them tip. Piudence woul.1 diitate that whatever the di.-ease is, much will be gained in taking ad vantage of eArly and cuirect treatment; especially is this tiu of a disease if such frightful mortality as consumption. The new plan i f treatment pnrmd by D:. Keyser has succte led in some of ihe m st ex treme cases, some t f which are published in his treaties ou chronic lung diseasts, which will be sent to any address free of charge. Price of Luxe CtruE. Jl 50 per bottle, or 4 bottles for J,Y If your drugjrst has not got it, send Uj Dr. Kryser. 167 Liberty street. Pittsburg, and he w ill forward il by x. press. OfhVe In urs f. r i x filiations from 10 a. si. until p. ii., aud from 3 uutil 6 P. M , tno ou Saturday night until 9. A Horrible Affair A Young Man Sawed iu Two. Oue of tha inot terrib e mibhapB we were ever calleJ upon to chron icle curred at the tesideuce uf Abram Stocking, Esq., ou Saturday morning last. Wood was being sawu w.lh a machine, and a son of Mr. Slocking, Geo. J. Stocking, was feeding it. In some manner, the guides or stays holding the sliding raik gave way, allowing the rack to strike the raw. The latter was revolving at a high rate of speed, and. stiiking the rack, threw it from the fram?. and young Stocking was hurled for ward upon the sa.v. Ia an instant the saw had entered at the lower part i f t le abdomen, aud slit his body iu two clear to the rhou'der. and his entrai's gushed out of the frighlfui wouud. His father sprang to the rescue but he only cried out. -Kill me quick! father!" and was lifeless. The deceased was about 21 years old, and a youth of much promise. Fur some time he w a student iu the Geucso Acicny, and was well koowti by many in this village. IJ was well likedJy ail who knew him for his many gootl Qualities, and his sad and tetri Die death will causa niiny a heart to ache with sorrow and sympathy. Geneso ("iV. Y ) Republican. A family residing on Euclid avenue, Cleveland, owns a cat of the Thomas variet v, who is nearly 20 years old. lie can remem ber clear back before Perry's monument was erected, and his footmarks are upon everv roof within a mile' of his home. The num ber of boot jtcks thrown at him would ktep the city iu kindling wood far ten years to come, and his back has been curved in so many fights that he now looks like a small dromedary when gaily promenading a chimney-top. Not until some more deadly tx plosive than nitro glycerine is discovered will an attempt be made to kill him. Not a single colored delegate in the Republican State Convention of Wednesday last, while every voter in this State with a black skiu will be expected to vote the ticket nominated. OIIKHIFFS SALE! 2?y virtue of a writ of AK "CHfi. Krjwn. Issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria count v, and to me directed, there will lie exposed to Public Sale, at the Court Houe in Khcnshurir, on Hominy, the SSil day of April, inst., atone o'clock p. m., the following described Ileal Ks tate. to wit: Anu the rijrht, title and interest of Andrew 1 onnir, of, in and to a piece or parcel of land Bituato in Illacklick township. Cambria eountv adjoininif lands of Conrad iioffmnn and l'r! Uradyon the south, lands of John Harvey, Airi- (leous Ivy and lloofnotrle on the west lands of John Nitzetl nn.i Peter Ptirrish on the north,. nnd lands of Lewis Edward nd Robert hdwards on the cast, containing :o) Acre more or les, about 4(i Acres of which aro clear ed, bavin thereon erected a two story Loir House and a i Lo llarn, and a water Saw Mill and Grist Mill, now in ihe occupancy of An drew Ion nr; and a two story Plank House, now in the occupancy of Andrew Yoiins-. ir Taken m execution and to be sold at the suit of anIl5.H.Kdv f W- Gitti" SherilIsOmce.EDcnuSbnu0 pUHLIC SALE of REAL ESTATE ". undersigned will expose to ae by public outcry, at the Court House In Kbens burg, on Saturday, the oth day of put noroiiKh of LlM nsburvr, bounded on the south by Sample street, on the west by Mary Ann st.. on the north by Crawford street, and on the east by Beech alley. Terms made known at tho time of sale. SUSAN li. Ull E V. Ebonsburjf, April 6, 18T2.-3t. Vinegar U!Ur m not F.ncr D. rna.le of I'oor Rum, W h.'r, Vroof Spirii, ,d Ft.-, Liquor, doctorrd, : I, a,l iwmkik.I io p!n. tae, cslied "Lmics," Arpi'xer," -ResTrc,' 4c., that leaj th tim-Won to ctrunkraness ii-vi r, . but Are a true Mett one, mads from fli! native r and hei ba of Ca'Sfurnia, free from alt Alcoholic 5jn ,, , " 1 lie are the O'at Hlootl Purifier Tirl a I-iie w Fniicip'e, a Perfect Renovator and I nvigorator u 1 System, carrying oT all itonou mailer and rtco, -! the blooj to a healiliy co:nl:lion, enrichin it, rr'r-. , ' and tnvioralir; b-:'i mind and body. Thev of administration, f-ronif-t in their aciion, certain i .. result. afe and reliable in all forma cf rineae Tio Person can take thrie Riftera acc-..-mg to d.reclion, and remain lone; tmwe i, jrr.v . their bones are not destroyed bv mineral jwiion r.rr means, and tbs viul organs waaled be you J u.: ;. of repair. ' l)yile;mlaor I-i:lI;lion, TIea.W; ' in tiie Shoulders, Omi!is, Ti;!itnes of ihe Chet. It ziness, Smir Kriiciaiions of ihe Stomach, i.. in the Mtith. liwnin Atocks, IV.i.un.n wf 1 Heart, Innanimnt'on of (he Litres, Pain in the re-. n i ' the Kidnevs, and a hundred oilier paitifu! svi:--..-.' re the ofiipritijs of Iiyspensia. In these con; , ; . it hat no equal, and one hi. tile i!l rrove a he:;rr -.j-aiiiee of ill m-rin tlii i a len-hv adveniemei !. Fur Female C.-irii;i1aiuta, in von.i- r.r , married or single, at the iiivn of urinnn'ii...!, rr turn of life, thee Tonic IVtter rlistav o Hei .- ; influence that a marked iinpruvcnicnt is iwi j.t tible. 1 or IstflatrtriinTnrjr ati'I Ctironl Klii. nul is til aud ui, I) vs. ieps:a r I ndicesuo'i, I;, n. . Kemittent an i I ntei nihlent fevers, I'isrD'r , .. IJ mid, I.ivcr. Kid:i-r a-i I H'ad.Jer, ihese l!.::t-i ., lieen niwt sii ce-f il. S ich J se ie ae - , Vniateil I'.'ood, nln'i i e iera.ly produced o i.:: nif t cf ili: 1) jtini! O jji Tfiojr ni- n Uclii S'lirpfaflra 1 . a Toiil?, pfisessiii al- the pecu:iir nier.t - -. as a jiowerf-.il aenl in i'ievinj i Vi;esiiin -r I matinn of ihe L.ver aud Viscera; Or-ns, and m li I:s-ases. Fr SU! Disease, Er;ipiinr, Til"-, Khetim, i;io!thi-, S;ois, I'nnp'es, Ihnures, I'.: hurtc'es, Hin-r woriTii, Sra'd-1 lead, S re tre sipe'as. I:ch. .Scurf-i, 1 li-c.ih.iatlc.iis of tlie Skin, I: , . and l lise-ises of the Sk.n, f v liatever name r.r i are literally dnj n;i an I caniedo'-t of the v'eni short time v r.i il:e; 11 :!f---s. l h'i - sncli OiK will couvaic: t'.ia inu,i iiicred...ous of i' curalir- rfletrrii. Cleanmo tlio -Vi1lMe-l nino.l 1,er.- , r find its im-mi.nes hm.liiii ilironK'i ll.e iVm in I' .. lC:.i;.:ioR, or Srs ; clea-is,: it 'iri y.i fi .. i sti irte I an t e'us;i!i in th veins : iltin- it : - , , f.ul : your lee: n-s will le I yon w hen. Kec !'. : .' pure, an l ih- hcalili of the v-srei-i wi l fi.'ioT. Crteful I Iioiiis lid pnHlaii V;Ntn,, ! - Tf.RS the moM nrondeiful 1 n sraul t Ij.it ever . tb.e siiikini svsieni. Tape. a:il oCior Worm. the svsteni f.l" o niir.y t htvrsaii'is, T. eTn ... T" moved a id removed. .Savs a d tl-.r-jcuis r 1 ogkt : Ttiere is sc.i:ce' a-i i-iii vi.l ial n;.,iti jh- v- - . earth vh..e L.i-i,- is ex em ot Irti-n the ;rc'-i .' ... It is no! iijviii the l.ei !it einiKi u f t'n ; worms exist. Ijnt noon ihe ihse ise.l h i:n- .-s a 1 , ... depsiis lh.it h er I these living nioiisien .: ,,'. No system of Medicine, no vermifuges, t .v - -. U;cs, Will f:e ll.e s.-3'.e:ii fior.i Worms iiue ;i.e: 'cK ters. Mecliaii!eal Dlstnics. p-r.n, .,..,. Paints and M mera's. s uh i Phim -.,, i v -Hold h-aters, a i 1 Miners, as thev advai.ee r. .:r. be subject t p.tra'v-is f ihe ISowels. T ft '. .r. this tahe a u..e of Vi Vi-,e.a Lh m,'i..., or tw re a week as a 1'ieve nive. Illliuti. rteiiiKtrnt, nnd T'lvrtnlttrrr Fevtrs, wlrrh are so rer'ei,t in ihe v.'.e.i . : treat riveis ihronhoiit the United State, e -. lii.ise of the Missisiipj.i, ohi , Mis,ni. I. Ino. nessee, Cnml.er'an.!. Arkansas. IN-,!, Colotad . il i -Kio liramlc, I'ea:!, A ab.imi. Mohi e. S ivain .i . .'. oke, J.imes, and many others, v. i;!i their a t : i ries. thion-hoiit onr entire country d u ing ihi S i anl Ainimn, anl remaikaiiy s ilmnig sen -t unusual heat and di yness, a:c iuvariahy a. r.. i -by cz:ensive ilnanncnirmi ,( ihe stomach an 1 i. e- o;hcr ahdiuninai viscera. '1 here are al-.vavs moit ? o!j-.iruciions of ihe liver, a xeak:iess a:i I i:ri;.-.':. . i of the r.imuc'i, an 1 (;i.-jt tor;-, r c f ihi h..e'-. ' clogged up wit!; vitiated accumulations. I n theii :. men!, a purgative, excriin; a poweif.l i.itliier.i . these various oig. ins, is e'enlia.ly neiessat y. I -t no cathartic f'r the pnroe equ ii to Da J. W -1 w Vimeciar lliTi su-i, i ihey will "pee.ii y re . dark colored visc.d ma'ter viili which tlie h r w loaded, at the same time eiimnlatint; the st.' e: , the liver, and peneiai'y lestjrii.;; ilia hta.; y I . of the dirre ive or;.vs. S.-i-ofuln, or Iiliiir; TZrll, WWre " U cers, Kiysiie'as, S.ve.'ed N.-c'x, I i.ier. ' Inil-iinniations, Indolent I illauiuiaii nt, Meic.i: j. A feclions, U J Soies, Ilin;. ,.,:, o' ti e Ski- S c tr etc., ete In these, as i i ail oiher coi,sianT:i 'n To e.ises, Wai ker's Vimgi lllTres hass .! i pre.it curative jios-jii ia si.i i;wil Ow.i;.a:e j,..i . a'.'e cases. JOr. Valler'jCalirrrnla Tini;irRlili act on alt these cases in a simiiar ina n e. H -. the r. oo.l tliey iemive the cunt, an t h- re v the ejects r( the infl.itntnario , i , j : o titherc-i:ir the aTtcted paits receive l.ea.tii, a;id a jei.na.-t : is efT.-cied. Tle properties of P. AVatk-r-'s Vrsitu PiTrirics arc Atierient. 1 )i.i;!.Tre:ic and I i mm- f Nutniioiis. Laxative, Diureiic. Sedative. O.i.i c: I:. tant. Sudoriii-:. Aiteiative, an 1 Anti-U n.ns Tlie Aperient and r.uid I..iaiile prr': Iu. Walku's VixrosK I'.iTrmts a tit !;: i.' guard in al cases of en:itio.is and ;t' thetr Ua sntuic. l.eaiii.;;, and soothii: i..-ier:.es in- uuiiiiin cn mo lances. 1 he.r S ahay pain in the nervous s-stem ive . s-.o.ii.cit, a-i i either fro ' t. Their Couiner-1 ri iiant induenco roiti inn.-imm oion. wm.? tlie system. 1 heir 1 .tn exten-.!5 t ' -'t - etic pronerlies a.'. i ti'ff ' revs, correcting and retaliating the tiow ol i. . e ' "! Ami-Bilious rone'tiss. stimulate tlie liver, -. . : ' '" tiim of bile, and its dichav;es Ihiougli the 1 ' "-c"v and aie su;erior to ail remedial Jjsutj, IU. Uihous Feve--. Fev-.-r and A tii. etc. Kortlfr tlie bmly nsaliiat llaene -y fviliB all ' rlni'-ls Wilil V I N C. H ItinKK. Nu " dennc can take hold f a system thus fnurnie.l T ' liver, the stomach, the bone s. tl-.e L Jneyv a:-1 ' nerves are rendered d.scase niool Ly th. tcai ; orant. Direct Ions. Ta'..e of t!:e Eitters on going tr. vi at night from a h.iii" to or.s and onedti t w ne-e, -Eat good nourishing f.xvd, such as beefsteak, rr 1 1 chop, venison, roast beef, and vese;ab.es, a;.i tii ouj-door exercise. They are composed of jturaiy vt; able ingredients, and contain no spirit. J WALKER, Prop'r. IC II. MclHIN AI.D CO, Druggists and C.en. Agts San r lancitco. t ii.. and cor. of Washington and Chariton S s , New V. SOLD BY ALL DRUGOISIS AND DEAi.ERi "1 WASHINGTON STIiEET, Near Pa. R. R. Depot, Johnstown, ."a. Wholesale and Retail Dealer s in MILLI.VCRY GOODS, HARDWAIIE. QUERNS WARE. BfOTS AND SIIOF.S. HATS AND CATH. IKON AND NAIIi CARrETS AND OIL CLOTHS, READY-MADE CLOTHJN3, GLASS WARE. YI-.LLOW WARF W00DKX AND WILLOW VAE PROVISIONS and FEED, ALL KINDS Together with all manner of V" extern Prndtv ucu as riiiitJi, UAtUa, JrlSII. 6AI- CAKBON OIL. &c. c. tW Wholesale and retail on! era si.lic:f'; and promptly fille l on the shortest notice most reasonable terms WOOD. MORRELL 4 CO. Geis 4 Foster. Nos. 113 and 115 Clinton Street. Johnstown, Ia. invite th attention of buyers to their U'S and i lOKiint stock of SPRING AND SBIMER GOODS CONSISTING OF DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS. MILLINERY GOOIS, FANCY GOOfS. CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, &o.' UP Piano Co., X.Y. 1st class W0. -v7c,!'.",'. .O. Namca of patronsin IU states in