tBEWSOU.TC, FA., I'thlay Morning, - Januaiy 21, 1873. Tub Constitutional Convention tip ears to I c discharging itsdutics with coiiiineml ;.t,V zund energy, I'ntil the different . - litlees submit their rpoits wmnitted to tlieir charge, the "Convention 'will V preat impoitance. , hnont we believe , ... jnetl by the Convention,- i provides that the Male election shall , V- held on t Iv fiit I ueMay aru-rtr.e lirst : Monday in "November, instead of on the, ,.i,l Tm-sihw of (Vtol.rr. This will pre- i riii two elections in the ar in which a jrhidential election takes place. l. B. R. Pinch heck, the mulatto gam-, b'.rr, who for a brief reriod vs illegally; .uid by the force of United States bayonets f irttwl by Grant into the office of Governor , Louisiana, Las been ele ted t the I in - led Slated heuate by tio Custom llouso '. !. ranch; of the Lenislature if that Stale, i l- i enough to make the bones of Alexan- ; uer PoiUr turn around in their honored ; . ottn. If this corrupt political adventurer is ermittcd to.take hi Kent in the Senate, . : s we thick ho will be, what a bright gal- uxy of i.atriotism and talent Till be pre- : n-nted in tht onu diguified Kiid illustri- ! vv.n body in the persons of Pinchbeck,! Clayton, Spencer, Amef, Osborne, and i L'attrKou, all of whom are carpet baggers ; i Ml owe tlieir election to uublushing bri- ! bery and the most hhame!es f.aud. 1,abt AVednepdav two weeks, the Rad:- cal members of the Legislature met in cau- I eus and went tb.oi-.gh the form of .mini- natini Simon C an.ero.i for ro-election to j United States Senate. On last Wed- I Lesdaythe two houses met in Joint con-j - , ,1 ' ntion and ratified the action of the can- t ( ik by 11 vote of 75 for Cameron against j Aft for Wallace, democrat. J 111s result has been regarded as a foiegoae conclusion, 1 m . 1 . r. n.-A. i.l iio'illi.r fuCxWlMT arid linn wicick'h! g , or su,Tri,e. Had any fo.midablo opai- j tion to Cameron manifested itself before , . , 1 -v. i the meet ng of the caucus, ho vtould quick-. , ,- 1. 1 T ;t 1 ; and e loctuallv have concliateil it by a ' , , , .... I lesort to his well known mode of political) 1 ; tactics. Lnhkc all his previous elections , . , ' to the Senate, the present one Las not 1 , r..., I caused any very serious drain 011 ( ame- ' ,-, ,, rou's pocket. It was very unlike the oon- ( . w, . n fr ! test six years ago, when Andrew (. Cur- ( , . ... , r-..... ' tin was his comiietitor, and when Camcion , . . . ; and his corrupt agents bought u the ope u . and avowed friends of Cm tin with the ! same facility and for about the same jriee vrr ca-ita that his pupil in political de- ' '""n 1 iti ko tK iwi,1)f np.,,, our per co,ho 1 f i j people and State. It is primal v among our 'uuehery. John J. Patterso-i. recently ur- t ,'o'.igaiiops to sre thai .-very duty whi h tho chased the negroes in the South Carolina , Kt:ue owes to thf Lnittd States U faitiiiuliv ii- i ,vjt ,i 't schargt'.r. and that th- rights atjil powers ig.sUture to sei.d bun to the Senate, and ; ))f tllt; t;ltM aru 1IIsUllt.Ul t, .lIJtl ,,,5,,, thus make him the Ct colleague of a man ; Itetwc-n th-.rightful amhoriTv of the Statu who has done more to corrupt the politics ! 'V"1 'hi, powers of th- Vuited Stat.-s there who uas uont luo.c , . , should be no conttiet, and if thev be asserted of Pcunsylvapiathau an other man in the ; Hnd exer.isd in the spirit of the Const im itate living or dead. The Republican i tiou and with a primer appreciation f their i '- .11, kuu r.r- 'aiTei()ii more 1 r,1:l,i""B ,llro will 1 umis. Under the partiin this State fVais arr.eion mote , r.IlMituti1 ,.:u.h Statt. t5ic Uliiu.(1 StaU g than it trusts him, and only acknowledges , are s.i related that the support of on .-is tidel bis political supremacy simply because ; jt.v to both and hostility towards eith-r is 1 1 : ill- hostility to boih, and the exercis.; of tin war- it cannot hel.P " 1S an etcr,lal rit-d atithority by either provokescollisiou grace to that party that.iU representa- ; ami is a public wrong. Tho Federal power tives had not the moral courage to cast J'Z KAXK aside this Pennsylvania V aljiole and send ; service so seductive, that .nr-most watchful some man to the Senate whose character ; car" " necessary ui preserve the printer di'- , . , . 1 ' aschemins and corrupt ilttician has . as not become a by wordjendjreproach. TTxe District Court GiiccMTe. Mr. Henry, tho member of the Home from this county, has handed us for pub- ; , . . . , liration a printed .copy of an Act, to be resented to-the Legislature, the object of which isto revive the District Court, vthich j has been in a t.tatc of siibpension tiuce the ; decision of the Sumemo Court last July, j ,. , - " , in the quo v,'.rr:nto pioceedmg of J. K. i Hite njaliitl George T. Swank. Tho Act. will bo found in the local dej"artrae:;t of our paper. . If the I )isti ii.'t. Com t is to start out in its career for the third time, there is no man within the limils of its jiuisd'.ct ion m hoses rights of pcic.oii aid property may le atlrcted by its deci.'onp, who ought not to desire, or rather dcm.nnd, thr.t it shall stand on h firm and impregnable legal foundation. Without this roouuemeut is brfct assured, that court can neveif possess the eunjidencr of the people, without which any court of justice in an unm'uigated cuie, Tbe fatal defect inlthis proposed Act of , Akseiubly is the arsunipt in that iho jncs-t.-nt Judges of the Coutt have an undoubtid legal existence. But the Supreme Court iu the case of Mite ve. Swank, above re ferred to, decided the very revei se. 'Ihe opinion of the court in that case was ds livertd by Judge Agnew, who taid : -ln order to prevent the disastrous con- : ohna. has linally resulted in a report from eoueuces resulting from tho acta of an '. the Committee on Flections to the effect unauthorized tiibunal, it in proper we ' that De Laugl: was never elected, and ' il-o add, that ie ro authority to that so many frauds and iriegularities court fry unyjvtiy, flaring lair ful were committed on both sides that it was iion, and that without further leg- impossible to nay that either of the oontes f the most careful nnd thorough ; tauta wc.s legally chosen. As IK Laugh, Act of 18(VJ cannot be cai lied iu- . who is a worthless follow, has been per'- , niitteil to occunv the n.ntiul .I...- "missions of the Judges of tho Joint were unlawful in July last, . . , " Ditrict Coiu t. ..i. r.tu. i l.v., " c, .u rtnj- 1i.,rr iuptll'l-p.l il1fA lit tl-llrj fll.M.,, f..t guw 9 nicy were, n,s any- red since to make them hurful "o"o v-- -" - - - - ....... . now. The Supremo Court seems ta think urt might bo resurrected, but , ... . that the Court the remedy now proponea wnl not answer : that purpose. j feat, and get it paid, as ho probably will, Mr. Henry is asked by tho gentlemen ' he ,,' T'11 hc ljappy ; we shail baveanexl who prepared this bill, to Fa it through 1?fStrr"U,r. '? n,ern l-;ctice ? in caaes of contests elections; and two the Legislature and thereby admit that the prominent representatives of the ruling District Court is a legal tribunal, and that ciaM- in the South the negro and tno too in the vei v face of the decision of tho ta,'l:et-baggcr will have beu hamlsome Bupremc Court, which declared that the i lU"l-"e--V. Court had no lugal exigence at all. Will - the Legislature commit an act of ti:i.h i T,ie Springfield liubliean stonp a mo- FiuiuuLauuiii uu lunik ii0tj Jll(1 w9 SjS J thiuk that it ought not to be asked to do SO. Why not begin this Luainew at the r.ght place, nis.ead of thus comnhcating the matter, which wnl be certain to end diHKtr-u-ly ? 1 hose however who WtIa to have the District Court s infirmity pe- caharly in hand have seen tit to pursue the preecnt nieth.vf, and with them must ret tho iesioiUJbility. I eytitlfttire Juyglery. 4-. J- "" The House of He preventatives at llnr- r'sbtirtf was occupied tlnriiig a large port ion of the kcmoiis of last Wednesday and Thursday week in drawing committees i'i jice contetstetl election case. Four of thei coi tests corue from Luzerne county, in v !ich the right to their eeat6 of the four DcnicKMatic members from that county i contested by their Radical opponents, and the fifth was the case of Fa in ice, Demo crat, against Ash, liadical. the Bitting member from the twelfth Pliiladflphiadis ttict. We know nothing about the merits of these different claimants and T ill tlitre- r - ,.,.iiii.tii on the Kiiliref "J"" " ." v. - - - - - nii.e members, vrfortt-Ji: in ail. In the House there are i-ixty Rr.dlca!, thirty nine Pe-inoeiata and one Independent. The propoi tion ,tlerefr:e, is about tiro Dimo- i iiats to ll.rcs Radios!. In one of the Lu- zcrne ca;s tlie c)rni.iittee i.i comj i f-f d en tirely of liadicaia. In the other three, as well as in the Philadelphia caF, the Pern, oeiulfl linvi: oiily ci;s"i.ieiiiber on tach cum-n.itte-5. How euch a ot.c-bidi-d result ca:i fairly be accomplithcd ia beyond com pi e I hent-ion. Prcciwly tlie eame thing was , clone at the last aefaion in the disgraceful ' o.ve of Green ngaintf Short, from TVarrr n ; cm:i:ty. However the tir.guiar leeult in ; drawing these five committees was brought about, it is perfectly maIi!ft that the ! plain object of the law. whlch was to cb i tain a mixed nnd therefore non-j artiran i tribunal to hear end determine each case, ' has I een utterh J!efeated. To expect Hint : tLe?e committees will dj justice to the J Democrats, whether bitting members or j contestants, whose rights hwve Leer, conr j luitted to tl:em, would be sheer nonsense j and against all former experience. It bec,,:!, to n" 1,iat thu 1 roceeding was I"-"-anged to b;ing about the isult that 80 nc;l,1Jr compli.hed. and that the ' o',, ,,, .uauipuiaieu me game f,rf "."killed in the art of legislative thimblerigging. ft Uox. Thomas A. IIendkuxij was in augurated Governor of tlie State of Iudi- 1 ana ou Monday, the 13ta iuatant. No In"ilcr of th I-ratic party occupies ,UOre position in its rank, or exeicises moie influence 111 its counsels . , than Govornor Hendricks. 1 his is to be attributed to his acknowledged ability and , , . hlt I'U'C nd unsullied ler utatioii both 111 ' 1 publ.c and private lite. Ho is an honor to . 1 , his party and a credit to the State that has . , , . availed itself of his wisdom n:id experience . - . ,. , ,,J the Rdmiinstiation of its highest ofhee. , , .- . t ,,e fdow mg is a summary of his inaugu- & J ral addreFn : t, Kki-kkskntativks : In nsumiiig tho duties of tho otKce to whith 1 have been 1 1 y atio jiim linjiiienee pi .sta'e It ,,,,, attra(;t ..tu.,.til)11 HIwl ex(.ite rioUst cotuern hikiii i.K.-al trouhls aiul cotitrover I sies, growing out of matters wholly of Slato ; con. ern. are made a pretext for the interpo j sition of Federal authority .il a menaeu of m3 n.-aioiial arms.- Sur-lv von will :n-r. with ire that Indiana, is 1 ureal eotnnion- ' a',il '- We w so entirely e.ipat.le of seu-goveriiiuent that every ques- tion and controverr.v connected with her I'"1'' ." "r growing out of her action, and '-ul' ofhe !'Cion!imrst TJruU1-!! and adjttMe.l ai-orting to her pleasure and hy l t r 'thorsty. ly conduct upon all i'U-slioi:s that to;teh the relations letvveen n,,. s.t,. a,i the Unite.! States t all U- t'overi en by an euriieht desire to preserve ' the h jritnaie aillnordy of boih and to main tain most sin. -ere l.ai inoi.y t.y tlie. prompt ar.d full rijs.-li.irge of every tiiuy ami the e'x ereise of a fraternal eoiniiy. I wiii lalir to pi-oinotM niordial and enduring friendship lrtwerii I mt l.ina nml ilirnilifr srmn.. Tl. C ertMir thn i alls special alien! ion to the election laws, recommends fair and real rep resentation upon election Imards of all polit ical parties; that voting places should be numerous and the prei-iucls small, so that Voters may be- known by the l:ei,nhtoi hood as well a.-, l.v the officers ; and he alto re-" i-..inu:e::-Js a reasonable period of residence in ll.e u. ii.i t as a qualification to vote. lip recommends representative reforms re form in tl.e civil service of ihe State, and an " Tease in tho raiaries of jiides of the su- preuie anil inferior KPiirtu ot the Plate nr.'.. hpecial protection and fostering care over the fi-.-o kehoo'.s, and the guarding siih anxious care of the funds that Mippi rt them. The interuduble case of C Of. TiowKJf, contestant for the seat in the Ilous-e of ltcpieseutativea which has been held by Die La roe, a colored man from South Car- "' "'b' ho whol of the time for which LS'l?" "j"'? K1 &ud Kf-wlil on!j L:ive li.id a ftw tieeks inure ta -e-rvo hefoie the d:soluli:i of Congress if his claim hail been continued, he nm. o,.. . . . . - . . . ; to serve oeioie tlie l:s.so:ulio:i of Con- ress if lt.tt il-!.,. 11 S1,ici' that he has the best of the contest, yifS,Wdlf "S 1,a'1 iegahy a member. iNow if ,Alr. Howks .... vt-t-.i tuiiiii men, ne may con wiil put in bis claim f..r nim.ii-i ).. meiii iii iiipiiimii inui me act 01 reoruary 1!"5:'' t'5""'8 t,)9 bribing of a member i wi'tfres a iiign crimeaiui niisuemetui.r Fedeialcourtshavingcrimiiialjurisdiction, the briber n ay be lined three times, the amount of the bribe and sent to prison for three years vvhile the bribed forfeits his alH, is furwvcr llijl41lIaliOt.d from ho!d- in,; an otRce of honor, trust, or profit uudar IU G.iwul UoveruuenL Vehy AnuEMsn. Stxio n a nd his Bride. Yesterday mrniing . John 11. Toiler, Judge f the Police Court, received a telo pium , from James Soxtnn, an old fiicnd, announcing that himself and wife would pna-s through the city in the afternoon, on their way tast. The meeting of the Judge wiih.liuold friends was an event full of pltasure to Ins Honor, lor concerning bex- i criminal court pettlctl the case of eenten ' ton there is a truthful histoiy which rival icing Brown to the penitentiary and Minnie I Teiiuys-on's 'Euoch Aiden." 1 to the Reformatory institute. In the two , -. lu the year 1S41I James Sexton was a grade s of punishment inflicted, ihe colon d man ltd mail, living in Indeteud- ence, Missouri. He left the same vear with , a train bound for Santa Fe, leaving his j j oung wife behind him. "When the train j arrived at Albuuuemue. Kxti:ii IuLok'I j.dovyn with typhoid fever, and not expected xo nve, ami so nis comrades were nitormtil by the physician." The train moved on to its destination, and the traders, on their ( Jfcliuu home, mfoi aixd His. extou-that her husband had died of typhoid fevi r. Sexton had the good fortune to fall iuto the hands of a couple of Spanish nuitrs, who saved his life. After his recovery he remained in New Mexico over a year, and then returned to ludeiiendei.ee. Rut what must have been his disappointment to ti:d his younc wife wedded to another hian ! He came l ack altered in appearance,' his hair thin and gray and his features changed so that even his nearest -friends failed to recognise him. He had learned that hiR death Lad been reported at home, and that, his' wife had been led to marry again. 1. ike Arden, he stole a glimpse of her, and being almost iroK.en-iiearteV did not malte his presence riioTi, but hireo out to another train bound for lower California, whc.e he be gun dealing in -cattle, and becamo very wealthy. After Sexton had been in that country seveial yeai-s, another startling and roman tic episi de occurred which. reduced him to his former state of melancholy. Accompanied by Judge Porter, he had anived at a mining camp called Williams' Ranch, with ,000 head of sheep, and while di-joii;g of 'them, information was bro't that his wife was living not far oft' with her coiid husband. He immediately sought an iuterview with her, and when the be came convinced that he was roally her first husband, whom she supposed dead, she fainted. She had borne him a child while lie was absent in New Mexico, and since her arrival in Cr.lifornia with her second husbabd had given birth to another. Sexton rgain met her and tried to induee Iter to live with him. This she would not do, as the child of Iter second husband was an infant, and she thought that to him the ovted the strongest allegiance. Finding that neither money nor entreaties wou'.S accomplish the desired result. Sexton com promised the matter by obtaining posses sion of his own child. Shortly after these vents Judge Porter left, the country, and never saw Sexton since till esterday at the L'nion l'acilic Depot. What was his surpiise upon meeting him to learn that the wife who accompa nied him was none other than the woman he had married at Indej endence, Mo., and whom ho aft ei wards met. as the wife of another man at V iiliams' Ranch, in Cali fornia. It was all exphuued by the fact that the second husband had died, and Sexton hd remarried his widow as well as his owu wife. Omaha L'ee. A Tehtmui.e Ptiicgc i.k for Life. The dead body of a Mr Thomas Thomp son, of illdoi iido, whs brought in ou Tues day by companions and lay iu a wagon box at the shop of Mr. Forty, on Water street, until a box was made for tho remains. Mr. Thompson went out with a party of hunters from FJdorado about a week ao. Wl ion they had reached the Chircaa river, about fifty miles from here, they stopped to camp, owing to the severity of the weather, 'ihe point on tLe stream at which they proposed to go into camp had no laiger timber upon it than bruf.h. Mr. Thompson, who had hunted in the vicinity before, seemed determined to find timber, and said it could not be over two I not lie over two the piote.tations 1 out in the face miles away, and against ef his companions started of a piercing wind to f.ml it. He did not return that night, and the mxt morning his party went iu search of him, aud after a three days' hunt found him about live miles from camp, frozen stiff and dead. All about him wt-re evidences of his des pot ate attempt to feed the vital spark. He had used up a box f matches in the vain attempt to light a tiie against the terrible wiiyl. He had shot away all his cartridges to be heard, and- around for a half acre they could trace where he Lad dragged himself after his feet had fiozen, vainly hunting a hole or shelter. We saw on the hands and fac of Mr. Thompson biuises and spots of blood, as if brought there by slapritig himself to keen the narta warm. j His countenance gave evidence of terriblo j tortuie, his eyes were staring wildly, and nis nice coinoncu out ot shape. Y e hope never Rgain to look upon a spectacle so hori ible. The remains were taken to Eldorado to day for burial. Mr. Thompson was a well-to-do farmer, living in Rut ler county, about five miles south of Eldorado. His wife died last summer, and he left a lktle daughter, about nine years old, who is in the keeping of a friend. Witchiia, (A'O Be-tcon. Tun St. Mary's Gazette of tho Gth r.aya : 'On Sunday evening last onr litizenswere called upon to witness a mcst horrible scene. About hslf-i a-t nine o'clock an ularm of lire was sounded on our street, caused by tho fiery flames issuing from a tenement house belonging to Mr. Joseph Yv ilhelm, and occupied by a woman named Julia Luck-ley. Our citizena generally rushed to the scene of tho tire. The first peisou who arrived on the ground found the woman on the outside of the building, having, it is supposed, just returned home, ohe informed the people that her three children were in the burning building. Iho door was immediately broken cjien, when the flames and smoke burst out in ali its fury, and drove the would-be rescuers of the children back. They then went to the rear of the house and cut ahole through the weather-boarding, and with fire-hooks attempted the reseue of the bodies of the children, who weie now almost literally consumed by the tire. They succeeded in oragging out the remains of one of the children, the other two being so nearly consumed that the hock would take no hold on the body. They were eutircly consumed not even a bone remained. ' OnscEJiE Literati; be in the Mails. Tho l'ostmastcr General having asked the opinion of Attorney General Williams as to whether tho pont-oifico authorities have a local risiht to seixo r.i.rl from beimr trai:viniit. 1 1. ...i. .iA ! . 1 ....... m.vuLTij liiu uiaua i a..oU,l 1. ... . t seaiea letters and circulars bupposed to Y'"iaiu uotccne iiierature, the latter deci ded that no authority is conferred upon the i ostmaster General or his subordinates by existuiir laws to dc.t lit Wit. -la . . j (Lbt VUk mat it niitft bo forwarded to the parties to j whom addressed ; neither has the Post- n.t-sici- ueneral uor his subordinates any author, ty to break tho seals of letters or circulai.. placed iu tho charge of the Post olhce Department for transmission through the mails, although there may be a suspi cion that they contain obscene literature. 1 ho 1 ost-oihce authorities have no rio-ht to open any letters addressed to persona other than themselves. Rev. TatLcr Uurtc is called to Koine. The negroes in Indiana are 'etltrlbgytajr tl.esubject of miscegenation until it. has become quite odorous. A deeply eihrool man, named Eruwn, married a Caucasian Iii:h woman, Minnie Sullivan," against the law for ucli eaes made and 'provided hi the State of Indiana, The police got after the unlawfully matched couple and the population m Indianapolis discovered a distinction nisdo on the ground of race or color or previous condition, and they held a big indignation meeting in - the , colored Haptist Church to express their views of j the law itself and the case in particular. They were all agreed that the law is uu- coiistitutional, and resolved to make efforts ! to lme it repealed, or fight it to the bit ter eiid."- ,1 hey discussed the.woid ''bit ter"' and finally concluded that was what they meant. Some of them were not in favor of intermairying with the pale faces, even if there were no restricting law, and or.e speaker declared that he never taw a white woman in his life whom he would marry if he could. The meeting twit oc casion to exonerate the Republican party i 1 from any D'.ame for the existence of the ' law in question. They were very cmpliAtie i j on tliis point. They were Republicans! j themselves, and congratulated themselves I j that they held tlie balance of power in the ' county and State. The grand, result of j j t lie meeting was -the following petition I addresse d to the general assembly of the : i State of Indiana : j The undersigned- citizens of Marion ! countv, 111 the Stute of Indiana resit ct- ft.ily. but earneastly," petition your honor j able body for the repeal of tbat'tection of ! your criminal code whichmakes it a felony i for white and colored ieisons to iutcrmar-j-ry- I A -committee was appointed to tefce j. Brown' case in hand, and up into the .ln'gLer courts and prosecute to the "bitter enu. Tkmvekanck Stout Romances from thu Tkui'ehakc e Pi.atkohm. We do not ksow vhy it is that temperance lecturers stietch the truth out of all manner of shape so often. As good a cause as temperance ought not to require story telling that lies outside the bounds of truth. Rut the fact is, that more romances are uttered from the temperance platform than from any other place. From the Saji Francisco Chronicle we cut an extract from a tem 1 era nee address delivered in that city by Dr. Gibbon, that beats any, of Cough's .'torics, ami that is saying a great deal. Here it is, as follows : As a t-till further illustration of the pow er of a depraved appetite, the doctor told a story of a ship lari enter in Philadelphia, who accidentally cut his toe off with an adze. It w;.s too late to put it on ami make it grow fast aain when he got home, so he put tlie severed extremity in a jar of alcohol, and placed it oil the man tlepiece as a family memento. The doc tor advised the i.atient to tnk a little whiskey cery day to keeji up his strength u apisus w;n;e cuntmca to his bed. j The advice was scrupulously followed, aud thejiaiinit began to itlish the medicine, j One day LU wife went out to work away ! r 1..- i , ,,. iiom jioojc anu negiecteii to inocure the man pined for his potation. Dining the day the appetite grew so strong upon him that he cou!d not resist. He hobbled out of bed to the mantlepiece aud smiled at the jar containing his pickled toe. He didn't like the idea of drinking the liipior and went back to Led. But the smell aroused tlie demon appetite with ten-fold t power, and he soon got up and dvaii cd tho bottle. This served him for a time, but the appetite soon returned and must bcap 1 eased, and to do this he got up, aad there being no more liouor, took his pick led toe back to bed with him and sucked it elry. EXTRAOIIDIXABY BASK HoiIISMIlY. A ! , , f4 r,"bbP s pel I tl,e Mechanics' rpetratcd iu Lancaster, on iank. Wednesday. The cucuiiibiauces are as lollows : I Met ween twelve and one o'clock two j leen engaged the ca&hicr's attention, who , was alone in the bank, by aelling seventy I five dollars in gold and silver coin, tlie i latter being in pmall pieces. One i f the men had on screeching boots, and walked j continually while his confederate and the ; cashier were counting the money. ! Fending the negotiation, a third pa;tv entered the bank by a rar window audi entered-the vault, which was open, and ab stracted convertible linls to the amount of over six thousand dollars, and other reg istered ard judgment bonds amounting to over foity thousand dollars. The thieTes, four iu number, were seen about the bank during' tho forenoon, and the men who entered from the rear were scan by women in the restaurant under tLc bank, but were, of course, not suspccU co. l ne parties wito tfo.tl tne specie were, wsll dressed, one being about live feet five inches high, tlorid complexion ar.d dark muetache, anrl weighs probably one hun Oic.l uoU fft-tjr )"in,ci. 'i'ho other was kix feat in bight and sparsely built. 'So c'v.o to their whereabouts has been obtained. SlKUULAU 'PlfENoMK.NOW A BURNING ilu.n in Kit.NTt e'KY. Thiee miles from Hahibridge, Koss county, is located a hill of considerable altitude, known as "Cop peras Mountain.'' Out of the top of this mountain issues a constant stream of smoke, while on its summit and general surface the vegetation has withered and died, until the whole hill presents a bar ren, sterile and desolate aspect, blasted as if by a whiilwind of lire. It is believed that tho interior of the hill is a mass ol ignited combustible matter, and the fire is and has been spreading with considerable rapidity. The theory presented to account for it is that on or about the 1st day of last October the party to whom the lands be longs was burning bnish on the hillside; and that the Ilames communicated to in flammable matter, probably crude oil, coal, or other combustible substances, contain ed in the geological foimation of the hill. The quenching of the fire is, of course, ini posbiblo from its situation, and how soon, if ever, the lire wili reach a point where it can be controlled, can only be conjectured. At present there ib no danger to be ap prehended to property in the vicinity. L'irclecille (Ohio) Herald. An Estkaoi:binaky Pkp.xo.mekok. j On Tuesday last between the hours of 11 I o clock m the morning and 11 o clock at night, the most extraordinary sounds were j heard in that portion of our vailey which j - ".uiHicu oj uiu iiiuv-uuit-ur on nie vrest, and the base f the South Mountain . . . , . , ..... Oil tllO i?lar oi.rl ou WA !?lrM 9l. la.l4i.i..u town in Frederick County. Within this I range it was heard in llagerstown, Funks I town, and Beaver Creek, where persons j lan out to see what was the matter with I the eKcited cattle and dogs. It was heard j at Sniithsburg, itidgeville and all through ; that region; also, at the same time, at Mid ; diekaiili"8, Downey, Hardscrabble, Zeller's j and Kerahner's. i The sound in all those places is similarly described as the distressed cry of some wiid bea,t It evewhere coated the ereatest ZT: " r" cu' JC. "u .was i i.-.o.i at. me many piac.es aiineaame time, t they be ne remote from each other. What j caused it rn one can surmise, but posed to have been produced fr it i.s sup. i Isedto have been i.rod.icr.d from k,-. ' atiuosi'bciio cause. llajtrntoKn Mai'.. . . Ve?f. mul J'olitical Jtcms. A Peoi ia hermit Sivesin a jeeking-boi. - liven Hsfari'owiias Mississippi a negro Vona: frort- tolfSth on ( hiistmas night. Jel Favis, of Palmyra, Io., lately wIkeil fifty miles to pay a note due on that da v. Twenty or thirty persons were injnred lr- a railroad smash-upuear Port land, Maine, Thursday. A Texas boy, 10 years old. is kix feet high, and weighs over IMsJ pounds. Theie are riants in these days. John F. Donaldson, the Prothonotary of Tioga county, Pa.i has retired after hold ing the office for thirty-three year. John R. Jol mson. the alleged murderer in Connecticut, claims to cf Joanna 1 less. l9 a lnemocr in ine Jiussian nooiuiy. Two old bachelors (brothers) at Iitta- field. 111., froze to deatli in. their loir-cabin, froze to death in.lheir log-cabin, the other night. They were worth $12,000. K Paterson (N. J.l lxy poured scald- mg Tiuirr in ine ear 01 111s eveii-yrnr-oiu siUcr just for fun. The joke affected her fatally. A roan in Vinton, la., recently sied sixty-one of his neighbors in a single day, and thinks his time will be pleasantly oc cupied throui'h the winter. John Karly liistwochildren and a span -of horses were drowned in the river in Jef ferson county. Wis., by the breakir.gof the ice on which the horses "ran, last week. "Rleedirg"' Kansas has leeuwell call ed. Caldwell lias i.led Ler severely. It only cost him tno.fYtO. but then, that is nothing to a pupil of Simon f.mron's. The President of the Macon & West- ! ern railroad lias dismissed every person, : from conductor to htaktman, wliowas em i ployed on the train vthich caused a recent i accident 011 the road. t A telegram from Rome savs that the Popotold some visitors that he believed the bodies of the Anostles Phillin and Jmes 1 were discovered on Wednesday last in the j Church of the Apostles. -t hiselhnrst, famous as the spot where I tnis apx.leou found frefuge after his Cun.n rrcoiNO. .1 JJotdle Horn Fnb i downfall, and where he died, is a parish in rtitiihd for Mral Suasion. On Saturday the county of Kent, eleven miles southeast j from Londou. W illiaiu Camden, the fa i lniiiis British antiquarian, died within its 1 boundaries. Governor llartranft has appointed Col. M. S. Quay, of Reaver county. Secre tary of the Commonwealth ; Hon. Samuel E. Dimmick, of Wayne county. Attorney General, aud Hon. Thomas J. Righam, ef Pittsburgh. Cotnmissioiiorof the Bureau of l abor Statistics, eV- Thos. A. McDowell, removed. Wbistlirg is not usually reckoned among female accomplishments. There is a young lady in Lehigh ward, Easton, how ever, who has cultivated it as others do tinging, and her whisrliug to a piano ac companiment is said, by those who have heard it, to be as sweet and full as the tones of a flute. Among the articles given by the State of South Carolina to then-embers of the General As-sombly is mucilage in bottles. One of the colored members was heard to declare, the other day, that "this were de jrreatest legislator he had ever seed. Te State not only gin a fellah bottled bar grease, but a brush to rub it in wid." A chain making machine is one of the mecnanicai novelties of Erie. The r.atew. j t..v .ia "i.rincu bevei hi valuable ma . chines. It is claimed that with this ma- chine, two men can do the work of eight in ; manufacturing chains. If this is so it will ; work a revolution in that branch of maiiu i facture. Willie Clark, the lad who rocently : came near throwing a train off the Boston ; and Albany lailroad at Chester, Mass. ; died theotherday at his father's residence. I in West Springfield, where he had been since bailed out of jail on suspension of J sentence. His arrest, trial and impt . .w. .A. .,1 Ai . .1... I...- : , , " . . ment shatterd his nervous svtetn II.. .,. 4i i. 7... anil for. . " vvn.a i' UCOII W11UIV insane. A Fort Wayne, Indiana, special saya a Catholic prieid of that city has just re ceived m a present from the ex-Fmieror Ix.uit Napoleon a magnificent gold and sil ver chalice, to be used in the Catholic church of that city. It is engraved in four colors, ami the autogtaph of the ex-Emperor accompanies it. The priest was a per sonal fiiend of fhe Emperor in early days It did not arrive till after the Kim-ei-or'a leath. The Uniontown Standard sava an ex traordinary case of a child being very near ly buried alive lias lately come under our nonce, l lere is the mother s story : When the child was young he was very sickly, and continued so for some time. During this sickness they supjiosed the child eiead, three different times, and. according to custom, had his grave dug three times. Lvery time the child came to, and now is a hearty looking lad. In Loudon a patent for making gas of air only, without the intervention or use of coal has been taken out, and is said to be a perfect success. The validity of t lie pat c.nt is now undergoing a test of a law mi it. '1 he new yas i much cheaper than that manufactured from coal, and besides being an admirable illuminator, it is claimed can bo ued as a heating medium and motive power, so as tosupersede thetteam engine. The particula-s of the discovery are" not piven, though i.s ruriortance is beyond ques tion. A. M. Thomas, of Council llhifla, Io., has succeeded iu making both sugar and syntp from the sap of black walnut trees A specimen of the latter would readily pass for a fine quality ef maple molasses. It is about as thick as ordinary store syrup, but its flavor is vastly superior. Mr. Thomas obtained two gallons of sap in ten hours from a walnut tree that is only one foot in diameter and about forty feet high. He thinks the walnut trees will yield as much sap as maples, while their fluid is one-third richer. Mr. John Mcintosh, of Washington township, Jefferson county, closed a most eventful life on Saturday, December 2th in l.ia 7.;1. it. .. :. ' settler in the Leechwoods district, naving carried his provisions and outfit tolhis pres ent proi-erty from Luthershurp- ... ..... 1.11 Tr.ii. jie wav 1 lid t..-t-fr , broken paih upon his back, sleeping upon the snow until his first rndo shanty was j created He lived to see the forest disau- pear and his ueighboihood become one of j the most prosperous iu all the surrounding tumiiry. A Fottsville (Pa.) letter states that great alarm is felt in the Schuylkill and Leliich Vallevs nr tho Reading Company effecting a monopoly in tho coal trade. Coal .nen say it is only a question of time when they will have frt muui up OUSlllt&S. It is also Stated that every iron mine, and all largo factories us ing quantities of coal, will be at the mercy of this monopoly. It would be in order to spice that monopoly with a little "I hinec." Pigtails and black diamonds might reverse the casting-iearls-before-swino proverb .mi. v mines ;uiu went to Vineland, N. , from Pennsylvania, about three years J a to Just previous to leaving th stateoneofliiscliil.lren was burned to death At nielaiid his only reniainiinr el.n.i - onlv rcni.-iiniioT ..l.;i.i cmslicil t.. ,Mii. i. n i... , Vrt" I ut of a hoistm- apparatus. This aeci'lent ! waa at inipresiThc U ZZFZX "er menial powers cave wa v a was sent to the lunatic asrlnr,. o' -r These succeii J- imftif- F,f nt?" lowit.p- o., k.v; "' " 1 M. -v r - .T. ":": ""V"11 "'."Ke now'" ip health acou- pie Ok weeLs ao. It is stated that Father Jandel, the j Ceneral of the J)omiii.U.ians. leccntly de7 ; ceased, is the Rovi-nty-tiflh of the members j of the Ecumenical Council wha have died i since it was opened, on the Sth of Decern- ber, ISC.). Among the soventy-five were j eight Cardinals. The number of living Cardinals amounts te forty-live, of whom i j twenty-one are seventy or more yearn of, j age. Caidinal Rilliet, who lias reached the i age of ninty, is the oldest. Duiing the j ; reign of Pius IX. ninety-seven Cardinals ; : have died. All the Cardinals are now at j j Home, with li:e exception or Uaiuiiial llo- ; i henlohe. Twenty-live Cardinal' hats are ' '. now vacant. ! A most remarkable weather phenome- ir..,!- i.ruir timn j na occurred on Saturday morning last be- j fn , tween Milwaukee ami Sjiarta, Wisconsin, I one hundred and eiirhly miles west. The ' degrees below zero, and at Milwaukee eight above, The difference tinct currents of air, that : nig iiom uio uorwieasf storm of snow, while at Sparta the wind was from the northwest, with a clear sky. The change in the temperature at Milwaukee occurred on Thiusday even ing, at which time a dense bank of clouds worked its way acioss tho sky, following closely iu the wake of tho moon. ue iiunareu mi;u eigniy nines west. 1 ue j imck m.. f A ieon mV,rv "'"V j thermometer at the last place was forty-five ' taioiu'M'iniihiuatl.i ;' 7 ; i de-rrees below zero, and at Milwaukee eiirht 1 a.Ui:. 'I?? -?r,,t n'llo u?s 1 here is a man named Hicks living at ' fiOf)Ve""t8 llrJv' 1,.,1 ' i -i - - t x- - . hart: who bmied his wife nine years ago. Like many another man, he married a;jn.in. About two weeks'j-.go be got into a dispute with his present wife, and. during the con troversy, ho 'cast up to his other half that the dead wife bad been the best-lookif.g of the two. The new wife denied it. He in sisted, and liuallj, said his dead yvife had a miniature on her person, aud ho would dig up ber btdy and ge t it, so as to satisfy the doubter as to the truth of what he said. Accordingly he got a pick aud s.ade and proceeded to tho graveyard, and in a short time disinterred the body, found thelocket rnd brought it forth. morning a hearing was held before Alder- man .nciasters iu the case of J. II. Fritz, a schoolmaster of Ormsby, Twenty-fourth ward, charged with beating one of his pu piU named Catherine Lewis, ten years old. The child was placed on the stand and testified that on Friday last the accused charged her with carrying lies, and with that as a reason, beat her on-the back and shoulders with a doubled rope as thick as her finger. She remained iu school till noon, when she went h me. Tho mother of the little girl next testi fied that on Friday noon, January 10th, the- girl come home from school looking very ill. Upon being asked the cause of her unusual appearance she stated that the teacher had beaten her "till she didn't know what to do. Her back and arms was so sore she could hardly mote her arms." Witness stripped the child, who is a deli cate, sickly-looking bit lo creature, and discovered that her back was "lacerated" from the waist up to the shoulder. She took ths girl to a Mr. Johnson, and show ed him what had been don. The girl was j confined to her bed the f Uowing" Satur- day, Sunday ar.d a portion of Monday, as ! a consequence of the injuries received. There were red streaks on the skin where the blows had fallen, but no cuts. Fritz was held to bail to answer at Court. PUtsluryh Post. Ohpickrs and soldiers who served in tho ' army, physicians, surgeons, and eminent men and women everywhere, join in re commending Johnon'x A nodyne Liniment to be the bebt internal and external fam- I ily medicine ever invented. That's our ex ! perience. Am. the vear round, Sheridan Cttralrv Condition I'ovderx should be civen to hor- i vo,. m.iv nri up. to norses an. . . . i , . . t , . . . re i i cattle that graze in summer they should only De given in winter and spnng. Chappeo hiiPos. Taco. ro:ij?-h skin, ptmplrp. rlnir-orm. salt-rhenm. and other cutnneoiis nlTectioiis oureil. e.nrt tlie kin iinnlf soft mvl siinx.th. by ii-iiTir the .Ii'mvkh T h So a p. nnnte by Caswell. Hazarrl ft Co.. New York. He cer tain tii ifPl the Juuif.fr Tar &riv, an there are many worthless imitations mu.ie with common ,,lr- ii.15.-12w. IRORARDtlilBlUHDS I hercwitli ofTcr for Rale ttru of the Pest ami most VHlual.le Iron l'ropei t ies m the Stoe .f 'J'-uiiossfC. ine t met about 5 miles below Fort liouelson, containing IO,OGO ACRES, known n;tiie "Trnri .t.Vniifapj furnace T.enjitn." wild Rl. lindane.- of rich ( ire. Wood ami I.irr.e stone. nml vrii Inn , 10,4 mile or the Tennessee nml CninPerlMii J rivers, also iuciinlinir uliuul 20 !nii1! farms. Tlici.tlicr Tract frr.ntSH m'leon I he Tennessee river, near Port Henry, including- ,OCO ACRES, pnrt of wli!eh 1? rich river l.ottniu. the t'lihniee eovei-cd with thei.t -1 kimlof tinilier. tn.-h us hite ami Hluek Oak. i'ophir. Hi. koiy, :ai. Ami. &t:, Stv.i underlaid w oli t lie le5."l or Ore. IJotii tracts are hi Stewart county. ALSO, Two v:;liinMe Tract or Thnher T.nn l it Hous ton .county, one of 1,70 itere.. within half u mile oT the Louisv ille and .Mcmidiis It. K . a.id 1 mile east of 1 Countv Seiit. (die other trin t hnlf a mile u-cst of t he County Seal v.ith tlsr la;li-o:id .nssimr through one corner' con Tan.ina l-i0 iiei-e.. Itoth or these tracts li'ivc il noire ainoiinr of White I lol.- u...i i 1 ..." Tiu.l.r, nnd well Hila ted for raruiiiijr. ALSO. several Frtrms In Tlickson countv, on the Nash ville and Nort h-Western K. It. Any of tlieuliove l'ropei ties are s represent ed, with koo.1 Title- to each. Anr or theahove lands can t.o bought at one-hair their value and other irood property will he taken as part address " dcscl'iP'i-," cull on or O. 15 ISI.ICar-'li-l Dt-U KR is Real F.state, 116 Smithfield Street, Pittsburgh. Pa. fcrrii Olii'itutinn I FAITH,! HOPE, J CHARITY. nr" H.iic nhi,le1h faith. H-pr. awl Chnritti these three, hut the vr. atct ., lhte ls iVar"tJ- Nothinjr has nppenred in religious nrt for a oinr time so pure, and fender, mi. I .e ii t j I u I ns thisjiew pu tine. The rroiiiilr of the riir urr. is yrnee it-elf ; nnd the eountenanees of Mich h..uvt-iii.v5Min..w. that it f.-emsas il the artist must hn e seen th-iii in a i,.. This ran- ami eleiraiir r liui- and sth.ple steel ensrravinje is sk.t hiik to e erv siil.-eriher to Vj- !'X" V.'1 S 1 ftATwu H-.mi:'Mao a.i.nf. for 1S..J. l'riee of M.i!ruzl,ie,'.a..-,u a year. Sam ple niiTiiI.ei-s. It ernts. I.K ALCANVASSIXC. AOKXTS wanted ev. eiyw here. Ut rue coin m issions and territorv iriiiii-nntofMl. Semi for Auei.Cs C.nii.!entil Cir cular. ou can har.ilv show the "CimisTi N j.ltACF.s- to any person of taste r leliirious i'1 "i"'.",!' I',"1,'? f! '!- -I'seril e-. Address - Ah lilt U A ll.N, l'hilaileli.hia, fa. i;i. T O F ('.A I'SKS m i tin ii n f . ( i . . . . , journed Court to he hehi i , v,"1. "V. 1' coinmenciiitron Monday. Fehruarv loth IH-a-Fl"rrn' Patterson et al.vs! r?risei ,S,,:0n!;: ' MiMiken. ....... ........ .-i neiiier. vs. I' alt Rowers Hanks .vs ('owen ot nl. -. Hurter. vs. McAlecr. -vs. Powell .vs. M'Mnllin. VS. llel.e. ks. vs. Fronhejser. -vs. Knierson. . vs. Neason. .vs. Wagner. ,,,m .-"("a s t M't anee ! iommonwealth... Kmei-son Fronheiser Krisc ".. Snrout i Fry . . Krise Smith Tierney & Null . Hevlin Spencer. McKay & Co - vs. Hips ji0 .: vs. Wilson. vs. R.-ieh. id. vs. lovle. vs. I. le. t Tierney & Null'. .. ,.vi MtiIoiipv. -I I, if r-i-i, . . . Prothonotary, uflic li 'LT,. i . VKII" illl'VKT,... aol ,lh fry Lett tisiin,.."ICll off wrel. Ja r be found i..1''1 ir takhit-nubso, LlTXRAKT. f.ni.,r v- 1 II E Orewt w b ioh iitlffdirnth,i if !.,, . !' ' urn Picture ver uffoiert. th ,,:n n I $iz.oo FKKxru or called "I'fl'i t'nrn1lnt " 'At choicest class r Krcnch Art ii, ' r '-..' the perfection -f OiI-ei.,rj.., j V '' '''.' uperl 10 aalruf (Jc-inilu- Fi-iT, '" moa. "Wn.i Awake" . "Kast 4' ' " tial Paiiitiuri. -. I 1111 ki . " r.in chxxilatit'n in t lie imtli. It win ' ue nnier iiiiid er. ff-rinl 1. mn tinnnri. M. Alci.tt i. ' rriei Hveeber Slowe. BSE OKTS TllfcU WHEN IIS FATS h.t,V.. GH)l AGKX1S U .4 vfl intelligent men and wr.tiu-, wjre. lo jet zomt territ r, .Jl 0..-1..1 mm ij jor eneii 1 IfoHl) A f).. New York: It. m, III.; Sin Frntieisen. t l. ii. J!.s IH"I! .In! him ' i ... i iu iuei.se s.es. rtini iorc. nl . . r ..l. j:p or tt n -rr.ite t ?tatrr ; " . "World" Man on rrverc aid ('''' Miart! (o ilk" wiliMie. " ' UAAi.li lA HI.Ei Ii T. I n., utatilialuiit nt. iCT I.il ertv tSO mndc Dec. 3.1"l. Hciaco Creelev ant! r, A fine emriwvfnir 2Sji2s in. s;,t T '' V e elso i jail Ii.it ton-;io.' a :- v.. , ' Thread t'uttersi. an.! Need e-' hies; orice Jr cents eaeh. t in j, . ' otiit-r N'oirei; es ii-ile.' r . ' Addrew American irrlij ( c rj (V j ' is, AtlJTS, now i, tf-j LIVINGSTON AM) TY:IV The only book on ti e si:)-. V,-t t ' -1 ttrestory. Dr.n't be huml. iy t,-. i' f . !' Tl.l, t,, ,,eH v arm pea. JV70 Jl'l . sen it at sunt. rorBratcii..';.;.; f eddress at once n ; 1). -VSIIMKAH. 711 (ril nnl ti I r t tot.fr;,:. S A rV A XT ou ' - - J. X J. 1 TUB in Ti'itor-T-- new honk I i; A. M . author of Gou l.i H;,r ft o-u ii-o;o rtneiiis b l.ire. ,t K. I;. TltKAT, rut.htber. f: Ur-,,5 OUTFITS Kith: 2: rl Wnttl rcrnbrt' "TCJC fG riTL'rrir-i rt i. iu jtiw i n&rvo uuiu". ..i.. m me uesi opportiimtr 11. " .!?--.. iri uu.mriTMsf.itii livetx.ok. Uvi-rvV ..wl. bu i wants it.. Jt sell. rui.id'T. i , era pronoiiutv it the het Bel.u.f l , market. Send for nirculars an1 .vr :ir r M.'vr""- Address CONTT NKN i AI I.iSLllSG i.n., Iion-j St.. S. V. ( Hy. i a rain, ma, J'ain, CAMPIit.r i i:c yi-eat discovery for the relief nfu j...e im imiinKiiaie cure for KheijiBi i i . .. -icutc- .pra:na.oi-Thr : I Isliii. Hrmea. )'ln in Chest, tlaek or ' Croup, SiiCiJoiut. Strains. Inilnmiiiat.,,. rnlr.n. Iturria nd Sciild. Iiuui.iia I Feet. Catarrh. JLc. It I. a a idrajwn t a id - la(r odor lifid wUI uottreeae .,r gtai-, ielieate fabric, wbieh makes u a I.uxu-, erv Family. Prleo 25 ctv per It .ttie f . bvall druyrista. itKl'BEN HoVT W.. 3o3 Urcenwich St.. New York. ' acvntn Wa-Jlrd. r-r . -r I Pila of KOUfJ lu lu 1 he people 'uaiiiii ouy tne authentic hit' 0l-,. LIVINGSTONE'S and Tbrillinf Adreatarea during - OW(A u...i. . - - 'ean ji I ... v , wi.it (i ,-eouii i. or ine ';a!i v.'er oou pases, only i in .... 4 . ... n.i ... .. v .. .. ims ja me univ eoi,-;f U t tr.d n. woik. Send for circulars, a;.s v r,i rt 1'M mccrtr ag-ma are tiav ; re II L BHAItL) URll., I u iSr. YV. j "$75 to 250 pr monib.Irt . nn'i". K Intrortin-e rne i.'et im OUEOI hKSK HH1IT fcIWIt - i ma i:u-niuo will stitch, lieu-., feli.r.ita.ci . . .. . ... . i .... . Y oiu.i. t.raiu anu eiiii.r. -u,r ir. n cv ;i warranted for five vaii. y::. Tor any machine that ii! .m.- er. inor heautiul. or nior P is;i. .-it J-onra. If makea the -F.!!;!c I.. . i : k i" Kvery second atitc-h can he cur. a:vj i-;! . cloth cannot he puli'-d ai'Hrl ; r.-.tn-it. We I'll irmll fri i,. 1 . t.. 1 r, . C and expenses. r a eouimiksicn fr m-. r-twee lhat 'amount ran he n-aie i "JKI-X'OMH A ,,,.. Ih-ston. Aa . fC'f.t I C hieagi,, Hi., or r . l.nuut. JL'o. Choap Farms! Free Ucm IH line or the UNION PA( Fh r.: ROAD lS.C-CO.t00 e.res or the I Fi-. aiid Mlnerul Lands In Anier!.. 8.C-OO.O00 Acres in Nehra-ka, In UU V alley, now for sale. Jlfiltl Ciinuite, rcriU-c Sul, inriirain arowinjy and Stoo Ktiti:itM i j a,-? m t tie t nile.. f rtu CHBAPBR if Ijttt c. n:.,re fv. riH f ir-n. am! moreeoriTeuient to uiaro..ui e found ebewhere. osap-trai! for Actntvl M.W Ths best lecalion for C..:.r.t?s -titled to a llnii-rstfttl or If 0 Aer 8eud rorthe new I teseriin ire 1' new maps, put.likhe.l in Knxiirii. .-r ' Uiah n-Td Uar.ihh, mailed free nrrn - jldrefcs Q. ; Lund Cooa'r 17. V. B.. II. Co.. i:et.: LOflETTO MARBLE W PRICES REDUCED! And Worl Harranlfd ! 'P Tomb Stuvij i.r-1 i a lll.tr ami Ti in . t. '.. ' ... ..rJZ the finest Italian Slirl. '..'.! .'l.-.'e'i "orninainiup Ul, Fll r, ,;,.., n sfr nuj manutieturer. (iive ns a ".Moie ueci.iinjr upon i.iirei:Ki: work elsewhere. I'ir.KEi l.JiVJi Loretto, Jan. 17, ISM.-rr. Kuabe Co.'s Virtues, llainert JSro.'tt riant. Geo. A. rrlnce .f Co.'s 0rga- Taathrea bet and most popu'ar I"'-'-' now In the market, t ataloffi;- ar .' IT '' containing full rartieuiars. t . '' drr.M. ("II A RLOXTB BLCT.M&. lt&-XTt l , I rn-r-acasa. A., k'.U A gent. jT- CLAI3I OMNCY OLDEST IN TUB STAfl . B. F. BROWN & CO ne Btanlthaaltl aitreet, ltabarl. 1 Collect Pensions, Bounties. Prf-'M' " SdmHiI tttoution mill t.ix.B 1! ' ' Ml rkiiDL JkalluAil... k. ... ..i,'1 rt ta praoai. j.v0. JA' PITTSBURCH i IAEBLEIZED HAML H FAMES OI.IK isa Mnr.RTY sr.. imtthkik-" Alao, Kanires. Crnts. 4c. and par'ici':r; Hon Baid In E.m... n..k.i 1',-m-'- 111 a. fVei.l- Ji!"s5i1: IVli-- T1, 'HE undersigned. F.xeeutor of l'' ''', and testament of M M. Aims, Ut"' son, Cjinhria co., dH-"d."herel.v r ff v sons indented toatiid esttttetliat e- ' he made without le lay , an.l t lu x '" '. tofaitisi t ne same are retjiiest.-.l t..'i- Uuly uuthentia-e.l r.r sen le-neiii. JNtl. K. SCAN" LAN. "-"-Khensburir, I-c. -0, l7-.-it. W 7.M. M. hr.oyi) & ro . ItA XKKltS. A I,Ti '., I'rarts on the prin-ipal cities an.l ri..i.i r..- ... i. .n.;. ,u.i. V' 1 . eelvwd on depi:t. (.aval le ra lierean1' ' J tntoies t.u)Mia tame witu mtrsi . - . i F l-OYI) & CO., Hankh:s. j J EnxysMT''" rsf Gold, -direr. Covernn-eitt ' other Securities. hniii,'ht and a-.M- lowed on Time Hepoits. Cnl -eti'"' all nooewHIOe rinty in rbe I nile" " j reii eral Rnnktntr hualnocs tms,fl W'" iujAMixTiTr.il.. AT-LAW. VThrsl.niv. Fa. V.l ounadii Kuw, Ccutor alree't. was due to two dis- i n. r n in o., h." ....TT. V mnn in r r ...... k . . at Milwaukee be- and J0 to 140 pr dy. ThUvear ' ' . . . . ...I ----- ...Ml... II -.Mill. , . . onsK. wiin a nveiy w v." " ,- "t
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