JJ rsr- faa.isc.jS5i:cH:ia. jslo b el ices iw - ja 7Wr Pi Sin HI! rnrrCfl'l ( Ht CaMBHlfk MHfM cx.-i- "" " j 8Z?j&BU3C, PA. UiV MdTnln?. - - Tib. 26, I 875. . .. , .. ........ Tuii President has issued ft p'oclama- 1 .-.,. cmrening the Senate in extra Pension ti.A r.ili of Match . I I he "principle Ousi-' to be lid b-f .re it Mill be the ratify ,;iou of a commerce treaty lately couclu- !. .1 betweeuthis eminent and the Iviug f tLe Sandwich Inlands. In tLo cicctioim to fid the vacpneics in t!u Fe jn.lvMia Legislature, James Ij. I.ii.-h.in, Dpniocrat. was elected from the 1 .1 di'tricl, rhiladu'.phia ; Joseph R. Con i .l, lemoci at, was chosen in Berks county, ''i Washington co!intj-, Mr. Birch, Demo i . .it, was elected by n'K.ut 2) majority a ;r..iu. In Centie W. K. Alexander, Demo t rat, succeeded by a n.ajoiity of 151, and i.i Ar.nirroig, Mr. Bell, Kepublican, had cr 0?0 . sty. T.it Ilatrisl-urg Patriot appeared last Mod. ;ay crilaigtd and in an entirely new ureM. , iitau, ujiiy aim an. i ins is " nufi"- t This is an iraprofe- i!t!it which was eminently fit to have been i.iade, and we congratulate the central or : ii of the FYiiu-ylvania Democracy n the h cided change for the better which has ! vc i e.lYitc.1 in it. .' tt..'.emll'. Th Vin ;riut now i ie.-cnts a decided!? neat and at- , 'i.-ictive fii eai nr.ee. iKorondin ci-t v.j to ho j u:iial iu the Mate. Cor.. A. K. McCLtnE has purchasod The Ajt newspaper, Philadelphia, and on 'he 13i.h of March w ill commence the pub lication under his editorship of a daily pa- er to ho called The Timet. It will be a fi'jr-page two cent morning paper, lit size Mid appearance closely resembling the New Yoik S'in. The Timet w ill be an hide- ' to be enacied to give eil.vt to the new ; eodt-nt journal, opposed to the National j constitution, and if this is done the Lcgis-:-.nd State administrations. Col. McClure j lature will have performed its full duty, iiau accomplished and vigorous writer j The radical papers in demanding more leg .:ie of the ablest and most aJiuii politicians : islation and in abusing the Democratic :i the whle country and is pcculi.-uly mi inl eis of the House for not promptlyfur- uell pialilied to make his paper both lacy j :.ud inti restinff. We wit-li him every pos j w hich will be abundar.tly satished with j:U!e success in his new euterpiise, The j mucli less than a tithe of what has hereto-i.i-.'s.h ctns of the Timet will be found in fore been piled mountain high in the j.hape a a Iher part of our j.aper to-day. j o 4 Is the United States Senate, yesterday j veck. the motion to admit Feicy Uyssche l.elly Ptrichback, a New Orle ans mulatto, toase.it in that body as a Senator from . .oui-ia'iri, whs d.feated by a voto of 22 yeas to 39 nays. Pinchback has played a conspicuous part in radical politic in his own Slate and U as unscrupulous as Le is running, lie is said to De the inot expert . Jay week Mr. Disraeli ottered a resolution -.Inyir at uVju? poker in the Uniud States, J declaring that as Mitchell had been cons always excej. ting Robert C. Schfhck. the victcel of ftlony and sentenced to traiispor-l.re.-.ciit American Minister to England. 1 tailor., at.d as he had neither suffered the r;.ie!back.H credentials were signeel by ! penalty ner recei' . ed a pardon, he was in- tv.ll o gjr, who is acting as Governor of the State, protected by Giant's bayonets, and this vote of the Senate is a declaration to llt ll-gg that lie is a usurper cf hit office, v.hirh the I)ein--ci ats of that Slate have i.! ayb aa.-reited was the fact. Tur Legislature of West Virginia suc i i eded at the close of last .reel: in electing Am.es F. Cakpenter, Democrat, to the 1 ViMted Si des ti:ate. lie is a lawyer, :'.b"i:t sixty yearsof age, and is represented lobe a man of ability ai.d unblemished i iiitation. About the same tbi e th.? L-k iniature of Minnesota electeel J. II. McMil lan, Republican, to the same body. He is the present Chief Justice of the State. 'The caucus candidate of the patty was Ramsey, one of the present Senators, but tho radicals of that State havo becoae so demoralized that even the cohesive power f public plunder cannot uditc them, and Ramsey was thrown overboard. Minne sota i the thirel State, .Michigan and Wis consin b.ing the other two, in which the i a-lical caucus nominee for Senator has f.iiled te secuie an election. It shows the i lender thre.ul by which "the party of ;reat moral ideas"' is held together. We said last week that the resolution r iTeied in tho House by a Democratic tnems her named Foster from Schuylkill connty. :uf horizlng the purchase of :j,n:"K)c 'pies of Sinull's Legislative Hand Book for the use f the Senate and House, was an impudent fiand. Foster, acting on iuf rmatiou Ihe niuice ot whicn we can more reani.y cons i.eture than commend-the fact being s:m- I j.ly tu.lH.dj busme-s has seen proper to ;. eld. ess to tin writer et tin., a very stupid ,md baellj spelled letter on the subject, in vhi.h he infoims us that last year each member tecciveel 20 "cop-pit (this is the way he 6jlls it) of the aforesaid "Hand Jtook." Our reply to this is, that each Member received just 25 "o'tVV mote lb in he ought to have received. We are hIso given to know that as the present House consists of 201 members, only 13 "eoppitn can le given to each that "the peop'e of the district in which I (Foster) 1 live desire to have the Hand Uo. ks ve, v ! much," and also that "the members are very anxious to hare them for their oe.nstituent." If the people of Foster's district are suffering for the want of "Hand T . . -i .i a nooKs, iney can easily get mem l.y pays trig for them, and should not seek them through their representative, thus inducing him to plunder the treasury for that purs pose; and if the members are all rry anxs i u to have them for their constituents, then let the n.cmbtirs buy' them, as they would any other book, and not call on the State to furnish them. We advise Foster --..1.. 1.;. 'IT n.rl Fwtlr " l.ii - a. "rrk- j V f W ebster's Dictionary and learn how lo spell. He ought also to be very judi- j cious in the distribution aniotig the minert ff Schuylkill of his share of the "Hand . . i llok', crab, for if thev are fitallv bent oil n ' - . . .. f - : . :n r i" . Itavtng a eoppy iin"ui j.ajiu' iui . it, a mwtake in me oojecis oi nis cneap ( . . . . . . 1 lnevolence might produce most unpleas-1 iienevoieue-s nnj," I i .ut consequences. We repeat, that this .it i r " .1. unt ion aeheiite. of w hich j 1 .t 'III 1 wv - i... um In be nrotid. it a sw indle on he poblic treasurv, aud no one but a! Thb Wal option law was repealed in the i ing it, and men of considerable scientific chiiyikill "iooter" would w rite a letter Mouse on Wednesday night by a vote of repute are trying thus far in vain, to dis i i its df.iiC9. eas to 55 l,n' cover the tnckety. - ,T ifc&'pedLythe radical press as a mat- stirr,ri,r p-osed of a very small amount of business, Aaeomnared with f. iner sessions, this is conspicuously the case, and instead of W ! iog a repnacl, ought to be commended by i every right-thinking man in the. common- wealth. The present i the second session . ... .-,-. j,. .1.. ... .And tnv ! m igis.-iuire uuue. v...- , ! tion, and it must be remembered that the pi-u-css of passing a bill through its cMtter- j tions in Louisiana. ! cut st ages is much more formal and tedio., In li? term, he is bent upon strife, . , . . r r 1 and he will deliberately seek an occasion now than it has ever been heretofore. One ( overtlirow ,6 ,accable Government in , of the great redeeming features of the con- j Arkansas, which the people fairly and le stituliou is, that it cuts up special legisla- ; ,-a-;v established by an overwhelming ma Itionbv !l.e roots, and consequently the j j-uity, and nude, -one of the best conjtitu I , , . ' , . .,i i.ars ' tions to be found in the whole Union. amount of business to be transacteti oeais i.,.L-inrT ontjaae is to be atteuiDt- no comparison to what u was m i :n ..nr lioiv tinini nor ! . ... !.: e inipor- J times. A bill, no mailer ....... . ..cl.rl Ilirrtnr1i h one :ant, canuo, no " " hoate, much less both, in a s.i glo daj as . was the frwift prait:ee unuer ine ora ui . - . i 1 1 v. .. . i.; ' . pei'atioll. Jot Oiliy lue wmiti, out j country csr-eciallr, is governed too much, cu nu) . P i . ii o , nrnmlli- ' ; .d the mm.lHT of laws that aie annually ; cround out hy the thirty-seven legislative j ! mills of the uiiVen nt States is fearful to , couteinj .late. The interests of the people ! v"u"" " ' ... , ... . . tUa ,llc ' , , enactment if the fewest number of laws ,.-;i.ln If the mr:ioi itv in - the iicukc ha made hiiste to j rocerJ slowly, iney , - , i.i . .. u ...in sus : Lave acted wisely and the peo.rfe .1 su- t.iin them lather than visit them who le- , proach If the Republican Senate is ativance oi , . r .1 . T.-...-r nil,- House in the ' i - .,Y i.n i -r.ro of bill. . uu 13 u t I e ' 1 ! . . I t .1 I 1 .. V . . ........ fortuvr boy consists of Init fiAy ircmLem r..i o nii.fcr iin Home in uuuu iii.il luc while the Utter numovis iwonuuoieu ...... oue, and as largubfMlics move slowly the ad vantage is with the Senate. IlcsiJes the passage of the appropria tion bill to keep the State government in motion, tLcie are ceitain laws whichought nMiir.g it, misrepresent public sentiment, I ur .'Acts of Assembly." The people want .but few laws aud mainly such as are of; general application and easily understood. - . The voters of Tipperary county, Ireland, elected the well known John Mitchell to PailUir.ent to f.'.l a vacancy caused by the l-etiicnient of C ol. White. When Farlia-J mcnt met, a short time ago, Mitchell did not nppt-ar tolnke his seat, aud on yestcr- curable of election to the ITrnse of Com mons. 'Ihe resolution was ad"tttd by a In-c majo.ity ar.d the Speaker isfr.cd a ! - J J . i, , . . j writ for a new election. Mitchell has is- s;ird an adeii ess to tlie electors announcing t that he will again be a candidate. Even if Parliament should adn.it him, of which there is not much picspect, he, least of all others, is not the man to advance the cause (jf i,cia,,j A Walk A nor so the World. Mr. Mark Unison, of Richmond, Va.. is now in Wilmington. Del., training for the protli rious and hitherto unattemi'ted feat of I ' 'I . IHt lllVll-l l ..... . I 1 'W U . .. k V. I walkin-r around the world. Several weeks t ago Mr. Uiason, backed by Leon Macarthy, entered into a wager of $Jo,tM0 with J. l Wilkinson and Thomas L. Jlurdock (the parties all being of . Richmond, Va.), that lie would walk around the wen Id in 000 days. The dislarce to be included iu the whole route is 10.'20'i miles, w hich w ill make a daily average of a little over thirty-two miles. Urder the terms of the agreement, which have been accepted and signed, Ura- son is to start from the City Hall, New he will make up his dailv average bv walk- ing on ship-boaid. He will be accompa- nied by Mr. Macaithvand some persons to ! be seid on. bv the other parlies to the wa I ger. The exception incliidd in the i " " agreement are delays occasioned by assault or unavoidable accidents. Mr. Uinsn is twenty-eight years old, five feet soven inch es high, weighs 1.0 pounds, and has Vph known in Richmond in tho vaiiou capaci ties of an actor, anther anel pedestrian. During the excitement eccasioncd by Wes ton's wall., h started out in the pedestrian ... .. I . Tl' ,,,e "cc-...npiiSn.n- " t-aenty-fotir hours. During the Seymour nd ;.;..iir cain,iirt, j,, ixw, he walked from Richmnnel toOiuah.i, Neb., a elli-t.mco ofalK.ut l.otHJ miles. He cariicd the Stars J .:.. . . ! ., . . . . T .? a:,u "!'. ' "' .- emcia.. . t i-ioof iao n iIiivr'rvii-iii-or.l-a I I a V. llVvJ VP r t t. OI ll'U.l JIHILI .1. j a u now ciasniK to uc tnc cua.r pion pedestrian of the w 01 let. Ar; event which calls for Mr. Bamnm investigation is reported from Owen, Ky., where a mule, having lost her colt, is al leged to have aeto).td and leaitd a bro nl of goslings instead. The birds are now weaned, their only acquireel peculiarities being an unusual length of neck from rom "ted t clung up to nurse from their ado, . . ..,.o A i ...eo .(i .Miy kic. I he facts thus related arc fully cred.ted by tliA iniiim?imt in u'1nli f 1 . r - ......i.n.l I il 1 j.:jj :...,-,. i Yo.l:, on Sacutd.iy, A mil 3. 1.3. and to a"l'tea iy violence to gain ine looting I rein. n nth. same ph.ee on Tlumdav'No " . u,11 'B-.iu' - ve.nber 23, 1S73. I'art of his trip will be ! ?,cu 1'im' a".(i. C'immtxd m the n ti.n. .,.. o,m,rc .lini.,,, vri.it. i!n. formal rdcogiiition ot Baxter oy the Presi- "" " J j" ." "VV..NUI, j i nese iacm are ir:tispu.alie, and tney and we have no desire to cast 'he faintest are short of the whole tiulh iu not present imputation upon'the veracity of the report- ; jg the robberies and wrongs inflicted by er. It is possible, however, that he may i tlo lnrl of tl..pv. ul.nl.oiri k; sio ,,ave lpen m;sirif..n-ed as to the antece- I dentsof the case, and that the mule, instead WfcnsESDAT's r.tlsbnrgh Gazette says: Ortvvein paid the penalty of his crime jes teiday, a crime which for eold-blroded ferocit y has never had its equal in our crim inal annals. To the last, tho convict main- t lli8C,lief characteristic. It is no won- tier that the man preferred todio, and wel- corned his hour of demise. Life, with the j?d of remorse thai must have rested upon the S'.nl of the man trmltv of Kiirh a pi m , .i .....i. ' would have been worse than any death. ' The execution was coiidnetnd asnnietlv a ! : I 1 . .. .1 .. 1 . J : . 1 1-..1. Fiuif, nu autuuoi wnn as nine , excitemont as ine nature oi uie case would .ti ..t -rl !..-. ...o . i;ii ; n.-, I i ri i m iiiuu in me sion to pander to the tastes of the morbidlv 1 . .... I I .1111 inuo. 1 The Truth about Arkansas. If the Repablican lenders In Confess -i."u . L ik Wonel bill 1 imiudiu i i - . i,irh thrv drove through the cancuilast week, llie President, bo is in full sympa tl.y with all their madness, willstill adhere to the reckless policy threatened in Lis monstrous menage respecting Aikansas. A failure to legislate in this -wrill be treated ov Lim as a tacit acquiescence in the " . 7.. - .u,.,.n..tiri tvhieh lie recentlv incuatiiit i. - --- --- - jn t,je face of Co4i;-iesSj lllst as lie ff-, bapk a like pretext lor hisusnrpa- .... n r . 1 for no other ieaon than to loice uacK j i..tn -tr,.A tlm frn'Mr if T.Iimrlfi fis whom , ito office the gang of plunderers whom the people expelled at the ballot Iwx, and roEt'ir ralH.w the passions which subsid- ciirpet.baggeis. ,j-(e iiqjty of this criminal design is . . . t : . 1 4i. !.., t'o macie couoiy j:;tiuif; uy inn i iwuiciiio former action, in recognizing by solemn rclamation as the only "lawful Govern. 1 Le nfw sUjke jown wjtj, aiI0ther aitisan object. He IKt slone in this violeut contradiction, Hie conspirators who pun tue wires oeuma him are equally guilty Jn jg,-., i?axter?,,5d uIO,ks were oppose pfT ramfiti;lte8 for Governor, Both were i icmiblicans Baxter lepresented Grant 1 t t an.i imooks politicalorgamzations. Tlie State Goveruo i Lf eislature were in the hands f piavtoI1 nnd his carpet-bag crew. They returned Baxter and-gave the electoral v-te tnbiam ati!iesan:e lime. LiooksappcaUdtiiUieLtgisIalureagainst ' Jim .Aunt ii, . In! j iiiinir thit hn lind been. the count, ni iiiitaining tliat he had been clearly elected Governor, and that was also the popular belief. The Legislature decided against his claim by 62 to 8. The j - & r - v.u.. , v" " ,7,' ' . i then brought suit by a wnti f quo war ranto to ascertain who was t he legal Gov ernor, and the Supremo Court by five against one held thai the court had no ju risdiction, and that the Legislature under the Constitution of the Slate alone had the power to determine that question. The Legislature and the highest tribunal were thfiefoie in accord. While these proceedings were going ou, Clayton and Doieey, the two carpet bag ; Seiiaters who are now running the t'resi- abettors; ' "the great hierarchic iower elent were in this city. As soon as the re- anel those who have egged it on," "the suit was known, they both hastened to present degradation of the Episcopal or send telegrams to Baxter, which are of ; der,'" "the subset vieucy or pi. ability of the value as showing their position at the out- ! Council," "hideous mummeries," "hestd- c t i.f tlii.. pnntiiiveisv. lv contrast with . nn.rfr " 'ili fitllics of r.lpsi:L.st ical the false pretences set up at the present ! time ajiciv ii.j i j Xf.w York. June 3. 1873. I I . A .. n .. . "Hit EznUenry Elisha Baxter: these words from his pages with repug- "yo icarranto proceedings against yon nauce not, indeed, for our sake against have been inaugurated without my know- j whom they ate levelled, but for the states leelge or approval, and are, In my opinien, j nan wljo bas tliought them fitting. .Mr. unwise aud highly detrimental to the inter- Gladstone can do many things: but hecan ests of the Stau. "I believe you are the d n , ; n h t , d lfcitimaie Governor of Arkansas, and as J , " . P , , , ...". . , ' .. '.u ... t . , . a,,,, a but there is a bow which he canuot beud. al.road hv disiractions at home, I hope you - . . - - f will stand tirni, regardless of results. Powell Clayton.' New York, June 3, 1873. "To Governci Klisha Baxter: "u have the unqualified supporef my self and friends. The revolutionary pro cet'iliugs instiiuted will not tie sustained by the people. S. W. Dorsey." " The people were tired of anarchy and misrule, and they acquiesced the more ! willingly because Baxter exhibited a de l".atct f'li,,i" d :c 5nter- i ests without regard to political eluTerences. i , hc hr.:d!y warm in his seat before I Clayton, l'oker Jack, Dorsey, and their corrupt facti..n made demands which hax- ter refused to comply with. They wauled j him to approvo a bill by which certain rail- toad companies would le released from j paying the State six millions of dollars; ! another bill to make the whole State a j iiietropelis in which the petlice might ar- j rest without warrant any citizen and elrag ! him to the capital for trial ; and an election j bill to make three men a returning board, i with power to appoint judges and clerks, I ,.1. - . , absolute supervision aud review of all returns of elections. Baxter resistet! these excesses and would not submit to this dictation. Then Clay ton turned against, him, made a corrupt I bargain with Brooks, and has been seek i ing ever since to destroy the work of his ow n i hands, by putting a man in etficc whom he I ami his confederates had not oi ly returned ! as defeated, but who had been rejected by I their Legislature almost unanimously. The events of last spring, when Brooks uel" s proclamation, are i am mar io me public. Ihe Attoi ney-Geneial, with all '' prejudice for the carpet-baggers and bitterness Awards theSouthcin people, wns compe lled to decide against the pre- I.....1 le.iMoiis ei ureioKS. After order had been thus re-established I ami the Raxter Government was workins I smoothly, the Legisl mire, in answer to a i groat populai demand, passed an enabling ' co-operation of a united people, gathered act to change the Constitution. Theques- ' around the centre of all the Christian glo tion of calling a convention for this imr- I rinss Such a solution would then be cou- po.se was submitted to the people, wheu ccntiateel bv the highest sanction of its .......... it.. . , .1 ... . I r - .. I. . J :,'.. - 'J. , ., ; eighty tliousand votcil f-jr nijr i ii..n.-,.im 'cini ui ii. ituu cigui i thousai.d voted again?t it. The convention met in obedience to that expression, and framed the pi cseut Con stitution, which is a monument to the wis dom, patriotism, liberality, aud enlighten ed spirit of the meu who n:a bj it. On tho ' 13th of last October the prw p'c ratified this ! in-sti unient by a majority of iifty-fonrthous-i and. Daxtcr, w ho hud been cotispicious in i all this angry contest, wisely declined to ' be a candidate for Uovenicr, and Garlaud ' was elected without serious opposition. The State seemed to spring into new nieaiavncie oouuu. ivpoiinency cnang- cd into contident hope. 1 Ueorderor a ew England village prevailed everywhere, and the people with a noble spirit set to work to retrieve their nast losses anel to restore ' . . . ... . . their true relations to tne . nion. AUthey asked aS peace. I - rr . .. , . . ... I the throat for eio-ht lonrr vpam Ai.d it is proposed by the President, at the iu- pull down this Government, to trample tne . onsiu ution nnaer root, and to turn the State over to '.he mercy of the thieves, merely to serve his selfish ambition. Will the country submit to so great a wrong? V. 3'. Sun. An automaton of wonderfully clever construction is on exhibition in London, and is exciting more wonder than did Baron Kempler's famous chess-playei. In tins instance the concealment of a dwarf, or a legless man, ineide the apparatus- is fhown to bo impossible The figure, which is a mass of wheels and spiin-is, plavs :Wlllsrwtt!lRkllI n II ft fi.mt'.ia Ant cimt.U "-Vi V;-i , . n " j 1 .""'V.',, V. ' , , table with a crlass ton. so that it seem tn - . . i rAia ill I r i ........ -. . 1 . 1 ... .. I be totally disconnected with whatever agency controls its intelligent movements. j Its owner is amassing a fortune by exhibit- JLrchbisho Manning vB.GUtdstone, Dr. Manning, has issued a reply to Glad- atone covering some two hundred rages, .;.. ..t .-omit at oft as a polemical writer. -He conclude his reply in the following courteous terms : And now there only remains for. me the hardest and saddest part of the task, which has not been sought by me, but has been foiced upon me. A few months ago I could not have believed that I should have ever written these pages. 1 have never written any with more pain, and none of them have ever cost me so much as that which I am about to write: Thus far I have eudeavored to con tine myself to the subject-matter of Mr. Gladstone's pamph lec ; but, before I end. 1 feel Ix.uud by an imperative duty to lay before him, in be half of his Catholic fellow-couutrymen, the nature of the act which-4ie h dne lie has not only invited but instigattd in nuiLU lit; BUBiAinn p. . - - j Catholics to rise npainst the divme au- thority of the Catholic Church lie lias endeavored tocreate divisions among them. li iMr. Ulan.stone does tioi uciieve me au thority of the Catholic Church to be Di vine, he knows "that they do. If he thinks such a rising to be '"moral and mental freedom," he kuows that they believe it to be what his own Litany call, 'Schism,' heresy, and deadly sin." If he believes religious separations to be lawful, he knows that they believe them to be violations of the Divine law. I am compelfefl, there fore, to say that this is at least an act of siffual rashness. No man has watched- Mr. Gladstone's career as a statesman with a . . , . . J ' Ml more geneious and disinterested good. will than 1 have. 2So one has move gladly ap preciated his gifts ; no one has more equit ably interpreted certain acts of his political ! life, nor has hailed his succe&ses with J greater joy. But when he casts off tho I character of a statesman,- for which he has shown so great capacity,- to play the can nni.f flinnlwimi f i irtv Ii it-i he h :ik here onist and theolciaii, fornhich he has here J shown as little, and that with the intent of , sowing discord and animosities among 6,- j 000, 0U0 of his fellow-countrymen -and, I , ...v , - ' . . . . j, , . ,. Y'j .-V " . ' ! of unchastened language laic.y tube equal- led-I feel bound to sa that he has been betrayed into an act for which I can f.nd uo adequate excuse. I must tell him that if he would incline the Catholics of the em pire to accept the ministries of his com passion, he must fust purify his style, both of writing and of thinking. Catholics are not to be convinced or persuaded by such phrases as "the present perilous Pontiti- Cate ;" "the Papal chair, its aiders and iwcr." "toreigu arrogance," "thu myr- i -1 . . . I . ....,.!.. -,nn. I... ' ... ruieiems 01 iui; n im i ji i vuauiuci, i foicicn influence of a caste." I tiansct ibe He has here tried his hand at a task Tor . : . i . .1 :.. . ...... !. .. .... W IllCll WIIUOUL soiiiveiiui uiuw lua.i uh i literary knowledge, even his varied gilts will not sullice. This expostulation is as I have already said, an act out of all harmony and proportion with a great statesman's life. I have written these words with a painful constraint ; but, cost what it may, duty roust be done, and I believe it to Ge i I j.... i .t :.. r...i :.. i.i...ir ! mv duty to record this judgment, in behalf : or the Catholics of this country, on an act i U11JSU ,t in itMf ui.d therefore not onlv l,a"ea cf . grave public u.tug off with a note fo rc-Uit, dui charged wit n . . . . . i I Hirers. Jut 1 cannot Lutsk ?o cheerful. If this expos tulation has cast down tuauy hjpesbotii of a public and a private character, we can not altogether regret its publication. If such mistrusts and misconceptions existed in the minds of our fellow-subjects, the sooner and the more openly ihey were made public the better. W e are not content to bo tolerated as suspected or dangerous persons, or to be set at large upou gexxl behavior. We thank Mr. Gladstone f.r gaining us the hearing which we have had before the public justice ot our country, and we are contielent that his impeachment will be withdrawn. His owu mind is too large, toe) just and too upright to refuse to j acknowledge au error w hen he sees that j he has been misled. It is also too clear ; and too accurate not to ierceive that such is now the fact. I see iu this the augury of a happier and more peaceful future than if this momentary coulhct had never arisen. We shall all understand each other better. Our civil and religious peace at home will be firmer by this trial. If the great Ger man Empire shall only leain in lime, thir teen millions of contented Catholics sub Sy. As.r A e tliPV ill IT. SI V hi. lkV L return of juot laws, will give a support to j its unitv which nothinii can shake. If Italv shall onlv come to see that the Ro man question" is, aud forever will be, a source of weakness, contention aud danger to its welfare, and, seeing this, shall solve it peacefully, as Italy alone can do, by un doing its un-Catholic and, therefore, un- - . . .. ., . . -. 1 : i It iliau oolicv : then its unity and indepeu dence will be secured by the spontaneous faith. Jf wise ceiuncus prevail auei w ise friends of Italy shall gain its ear, it may bo again w hat once it was the foremost people in the Christian world. And, last ly, for ourselves, our world-wide empire cannot, turn back uiKn its oath without disintegration. It is bound together, not l)y natural force, but by the moral bond of jl)st iilws and the glad consent of a free people. But justice and freedom cannot be put asunder. They flow from one SOutce ; they can be kept 'pure ouly by the same stream. They have come down to .. Un v..' rii.itii.r'-. D'.v'.deJ ai wa are. wo rrj a ChrlsMan people still liv relif u I 1 i coniiict our Christianity will waste away a, a nit,,i, flf,ttinir a carment. Uv relicious peaco an ti,at is true and wise and just n. ;ii .. ri.rtn.iiir m.,i; auu Vlll ltl 11 ......... plied bin(Jing indissolubly in one alljmen race, of our imperial common. 1 v ' t,vvy wcalth. A oi.t '7"7;; e . i A. nlAit i -I m i n -ac irf inir ar I 'nner "f u'c" r I " V' ' : Canton, in this State, was, some ten years aco. actually stupid,-ignorant and besotted . . . . . .... . i . : . c as thongli tlie poor animai were ss auui able for its deeds as a Christian. lie placed the creature in a small stable, and exclaimed: "D you! stay there," and there he kept it until a month ago. a periixi of about ten years. In consequence of the confinement, the colt's hoofs grew to an enormous length, as it had never lieen shod or its feet pared. About two years since Forepangh, the circus man, saw the animal and offered fl.OOO for it as a curiosity, ptin cipally to show the length of its hoofs, which grew out like a man's foot, and were from eighteen to twenty-four inches long. The offer was refused, as Coleman deter- - ' . .. l mined to imprison the animal tor lile. It I died last month, after an imprisonment of ! . ... . . f ten vears. citcaoo journal. i . - a. I A t Ttoston on Thursdav Amhnvai Tfil. liams a uegro was convicted of the brntal " j ------- .... aud sentenced to imprisonment for life. Jfetv atul Political Items. Mrs. Jennie McCollough, a young married woman of "Washington county, committed suicide on Thursday night. A hurricane swept over Chaupigne, in Avoyelles parish La., last week, destroy ing a church and fifty-four buildings and killing two persons. Miss Way, of Union ville. Chester coun ty, found a way to put together two quilts iuside of two yeais, one containing 7,270 pieces and the other 2,178 pieces. A dog fiht in Trenton was the cause of the muiderof an old man named Thomas Hingley, by a sou of a woman whose dog had been whipped by Ilingley's dog. The commerce of France is passing beyond any period in history. The exports and imports of 1S74 amounted to over $1, 500,000,000, largely exceeding auy foimer year. A burning gas well in Butler county makes summer weather in its ncichbor- hood. The trees are budding and 1he o-roca frrnin in the charmed circle of its inllucnce. Twe young men of Sugar Run, Clin- j of a rope to one of the braces of the joists ton county, recently, ran a barefoot race a i in the cellar of her home. After placing distance of a half mile for a half bushel of i the noose around her neck she had evident Thor nftincd their nrize without ! Iv jumped from the chair. Of late she had .., . j r... , freezincr their fc-et A veteran of the cam paign of Xapoleon in Russia, named Pierre Fachoud. nged iK, is a resident cf Xcnia, Ohio. He was a participant in all the horrors of the Tamous appears that a roan, whose name is not retreat from Moscow. ' given, has kept his wife, who at times is Sheridart isn't afraid to stay at New ! insane, in an open room chained, all win Orleans and lie, but he declir.es to swearto ter. She was discovered tho other day, by his lies. When the committee proposed to ' accident, by one of the neighbors, and re take his testimony upon oath he had sud - leased. Her feet were both frozen, and den business at the North. j her whole body frost bitten. The Washington, (Fa.) Reporter says ; During ti e absence from home of that farmers in that county are hiring Elivha A. Eir.gslcy, a wealthy farmer of woik hands at f 25 to 30 ner month, where ! Flat creek, Schoharie county, N. Y., on they. board themselves, and from $15 to 18 per month and boarded. ,-noi" 'e,,0,j' Micliiga.i, commu ted " ."n"oU!! ""J ? . !t"lr!' deficit of $S.,,(X,0 m his oCci; John 1 . W. i horn, ex-treasnrer or suicide at . rumored that 1 ol-cial accounts ' w:. the cause of the rash act. i t res.oent nas approve.! tue puni , resolution anthoiizing I homas W. 1 itch, , engineer of the Liuted States navy, tp ac- J m i! cept a weaaing pixseni seni to uis wiic, Jlrs. Minnie Sherman Fitch The Germania newspaper of Berlin, for havinrr nrtnte-J the late letter tf Pio Xono to the bishops of Prussia, has been r. . 1 l !.. l.-... n . -...-. U. IIIJ-alC i T t i I uciiuau kuvc. Illlicui. and the proprietors are to bo prosecuted. The petrified forest in Kapa countv, Cal. is 16 miles from Ilealdsburg. The trees, which lie scattered quUe thickly I posed to have been accidentally left in the over an extent of 50 acres, far surpass in j side of the oak when the latter was a sap size any that have heretofore been disco vs I pling, and the iucreasing fibre of the tree ered. I finally covered the weaion. Judging from A school teacher near Allentown, Pa., I the lines counted on the tree, the toma- punished a nine-year old by placing him im in A H I 1 .1 . 1 1 I II . I " l.l II I I, lll.l T. V 7 III . a straddled ' posture across two desks, for nearly two hours, causing such asevcie An immense Catholic temperauce dem strain upon his fraue that he could hardly j onstratioii was held in Baltimore, Md., on walk home. j Suuday night. Father Didier adminis- The Ilawkes family of North Sougus, tered the pledge to three hundred of St. Mass., Mill occupies the faimowned by his j Vincent's Society, the audience, number ancestors in 104O. The house was built in ; ing ."5,000, vising to their feet as it was ad lCW. Adam Ilawkes owned the i-on mine ' ministered. The Catholic Societies of the which supplied ore to tho fiist founder- in ; city- were present, w ith banneis and re tLe country. .. j galia, and the meeting in zeal was not I)r. Gernier, of Erie, has a bonk ?9l ! equalled since Father Mathew was there, years old. It is entitled "The Lives of the j A girl was smothered to death while Holy Monks," aud was printed in the Im- ; on a sleigh ride near Bangor, Me., on one rcrial Citv of Autrsbu'ir. in 1-188. The ! of the recent intensely coltl nirhts. A Doctor proposes to place it on exhibition in the Centennial. At Chicago, on Friday night. was ar- tcj ;,t"k n -he terrible charge of havtliT. t lire a Tours aero, mri-deie.d a ot vHig, t U re e years ago, tn entered a man'asd dispofrwl of the remains by chop- l,M 1,1 ui' mnnig i.ii-u. m n uane-i 'in.1 4 1 -' t ii . I It a 1 f f a i-occaI in I the river, V ",v- n.nn ...imnl P l...nU ..ll . "T" ' into a beer vat in Lafelle's brewery, at Prescott, Canada. Friday night, while it was tilled with boilinc beer, lie was literallv boiled to death. The skin was peeled off from his head downwards. lie will undoubted'y die. following morning the bodies of the chil- The Democratic and Republican State ' then were found on the road between lx Committees are both called to meet in j e!er and a neighboring town, frozen to ilarrisburg on March 4th, to fix the time j death, Ihe oldest with his arms around the for bedding their respective State Convcn- tions. 1 he talk i all indicative ofchoosing an early day, in May or June, for holdiug both. It rarely happens that a death ocenrs at. a funeral. Mr. Symonds of Sangus, M.iss., was seized with apoplexy while at teneling the funeral of a friend, anel died instantly. lie had celebrateel the fortieth anniversary of his weelding tho night pre vious. The Lebanon Ji'eirt says that Mr. Jere miah Showers, of Antiville, was the recip ient of a very large orange by express, last week. Its appearance caused suspicion ; an examination was made, anel a quantity of arsenic eliscovcred sufficient to poison his whole family. A Missouri gentleman has pas.Fed the lastforty-fouryearSinlhecndcayOt''to cot.nt two bihions be fore he dies, and is i encour- aged to hone that if it please Providence to spare his life for another half century (he is now only sixty-five) he will be able to complete his task. Robert E. Monaghan, esq., of West Chester, has received the unanimous ens dorsement of the Democratic committee of Chester county for the Democratic nomi nation for Governor. Mr. Monaghan is an honest and eloquent Democrat, and would make a good Governor. In January, 1874, a French professor of natural history placed a frog in a hole dug in a solid stone, and closed and hers metically sealeel the opening. On the 17lh of last month the stone was opened at the Museum of Natural History in Paris. The frog was living, but not lively. A largo willow tree in Sullivan Cennty, New York, was completely shattered by the frost, with a loud report, on Tuesday of last week. The tree was over twelve feet in circumfet-cnce at the roots, and it is supposed the water penetrated a crack, and then freezing produced the result. At Dexter Park, Chicago, one day ween, parey oi sportsmen were snoot- inr ennv 1 ii I'll ; frnm t m r. : L r n .ra nf i i i . . . . the birds being crippled in the wing, anoth er from a fleck that was passing overhead swooped down, and seizing him carried him out of bounds over the fence. Mr. Carruth, a Northern Nebraska man, h-es on a farm which is six miles square, and all surrounded by a hedge fence. The hemse is set three miles back from the road, which must " make it very fl n nnnAl ita nice for afellow when he wants an apnetite in the morning to run down to tho gate and back, A Milford, N. U, boy was charged with stealing a gold pen, pleaded guilty, and was sent to the Reform School. A young girl has since been detected steal- . . . niK ironi me sa.ne store, auu me leienticai pen which the boy was said to have stolen was found in her possession. The boy is to be pardoned. A horrible case of depravity is reported from Laramie City. A father has been cauKtu living in an open siate ot lascivious cohabitation with two daughters, one six- icciiHuu tue oinereignieen years old. lie has been arrested and taken to Lincoln, Nebraska. One of the daughters has just wen uenveieei oi a cnua Dy mo lather. - A rl-iin-Ul.. st All. Tr.A li r , , ::,:;,:. "e -ou.vu cuiimy, iew ioik, was rpeer.t.lv lia nclim f a niu.n ... . . , ....t awi- n . . . . . . I 1 . .. . dent. While combing her hair in front of a lokinr-i1ass. her ohlest. sister eallnl ho. ' tt.-,,... t.. . "."." ,v ouniciuiuK, wucu tue tiirnea her head around suddenly, and through isplacement of some cord, her head cmained almost in the same position, his remained The Governor has changed the time for the execution of Harney M'Cue. of Ly coming county, ;":om the 17:h to the 2Cth of March. Barney may thank St. Patrick's day for three days more of life, the gover nor having postponed the execution be cause the 17th is the aunivc-rsaiy of Ire land's patron. saint. . A "match factory in Gottenbui c, Swe den, crowded with working people,' took lire a few days ago. The flames spread with such laniditv that the employees in the upper stories were cut off" from escape and many perished m the names or were Kiuea by jumping from the windows. Fifty-one lives are reported lost. A cat was recently found sucking the breath from a child about two months old, near Conneantville. The baby was Irft alone in its crib, and the cat ws found with its mouth and nose pressed into the child's mouth and its paws on either side 6f the babe's head, and it waswith diffi culty the cat was removed. I he wife of Jwis o arner, or iorns town, committed suicide 1 hursday iy standing on a chair sue nati iieo one ena , - , . been unusually melancholy, 6he having been sick for some time. A case of the most fit -erne brutality comes to us from nest Buxton, Me. It ' Sunday evenin to be on fire j'ening woman, tho bouse. Tl Mrs. K. was wedged in the flames by a falling beam aud burue-i to death. A novelty in the mode, of hanging criminals was recently introduced at New gate, Encl.ind. Instead of erecting the usual scaffold above ground, a pit was dug in the soil, and a tran-door made level w ith the ground opening into the pit. The cou--it riiiiriid liv tl.A x.rutioner on the top of the trap, and at a given signal i the drop fell, aud f ..-r.. .1 t s. 1 ; .-. ' i.caoi.u w at - A Canadian wooel cutter recently diss covered a polished stove tomahawk imbed ded in the wood of an oak tree. It is sup- i hawk must have been stuck in its old po- ' Fition one nunarca ana one years ago. piiiiy en young o.'jj.ic wrro eU' 0:1 i none-, . . r l . r. l : . . i : i . . 1 : i . ri ' 1 : . 1 ...liiiij i luug aici.i. s 111. i-,111 K " 'J cold, and to keep her warm her sweat heart wrappetl her closely in a mure blanket, cov- , ering ner neaa ana iaco. 1 oo nwsy anei j benumbed to stir, she suffocated without v..i-ii'uiji-.ii .1 v.i.-i u. . j uying. A dispatch from Oneoniia states that ! eluring the intense cold of last w eek three ! children named O'Brien, ranging in age ' from 8 to irVears. were forced bv their j parents, basket makers, residing iu Exeter, I to start on theii usual peddiing tour. Tho , neck of the youngest. A remarkable mortality has prevailed among members of Congress dm big the las, three months. Three members elect have died since November last Mr. Allen, e.f "NTw "Voi-Ir r Atr ATr At ilirtTi r. f I or.i" . t . 1.11. 1 .nr. uean, eu leunessec. in aauition, lour members of the present House have died Messrs. Creicker and Hooper of Massacl ,u. setts, Hcrsey of Maine, and Rice of Illi nois and to thoe named must be added the recent tleath of Senate.r Buckingham. One of the lost arts has been rediscovs ered, if oue may believe the report that a Frenchman named V)". la Hastie, who has f p nt nearly six yenra in experimenting, in connection with learned chemists, has solved the problem. The glass produced by him is said to be as malleable as copper or iron, and so capable f resisting the ac tion of heat that it can be used for frying iians anel all manner of kitchen utensils. ! as well as for lamp chimuejs without li.k ! of fracture. The Lewistown Democrat says that a ' cat belonging to James Uibbs, of the west j enel of town, two weeks ago gave birth to t a double kitten. It had Iwo complete . heads, four complete and four smaller legs, ami tho appearance of two bodies, though from shoulder to hip they were joined inn elissolubly together. The kitteu walked and ate and lived for ten days, when, strantre to sav. Mr. G. killed it. because of onnx3 ,,ot,ol, Uy'xt M" waB au .... . . . - The Boston Globe has this mention of - i.,,.i, ,.. x-.r r. H..J greuihouse of Mr. Mansfield, in Ward II., l there can be seen a white Lamarque rose- ; . , - . , , tree, upward of twentv years old, covering ',. 1 . , J '..,,0 a radius of over 10U square feet, which has had a prodigious yield the past season, ' RinB Durorobor it has fiirnishr.ftwf.iitv tn ' . . . . . .. . " . tlnrty buds daily, and it is estimated that lia jiciu nil iuc rx: ii 11111 uc t L .tiilli 500. At !p0 jer hundred, a profit of $223 will be realized." The blunder of Mr. Wheeler in the House, Saturday, in reading from the Globe of lSofi, the speech of Leander F. Cox, a Kentucky Whig, on the -subject of :ia r. i, .:i; i - i i n rcderal interference with hcal btate gov ernmc-ut, under the impression that it was the language of Hon. S. S. Cox, who was not uieu in uougrcss, amm ine roars oi derisiou from the Radical side of the j House, under the impression that they had i t rl Tk.ftfC-B riAcf c . 1 1 i4 i ik 1 ?- them into the deepest lioiculc. A curious effect of the cold was no ticed in Mead ville. Pa., a few davs so. A . t 1 . . . I 1 1. - ,1 1.- T 1 -.4 : . . otiuug nun I nan ucru iiiii niiii nai.l and a cork placed in the nozzle. Dnrinir 1 " O the flight the water froze solid, and expan- ; sion jmsned tne coiic irom its place and formed a column of ice above the top of tho j bottle three inches in length and half an j iuch in diameter. The cork stuck to its pot-ition as well as it could, keeping on tho j upper side, where it still remains, perched on top or the transparent, shaft ed ice. j Mr. Ralph Strickland, a wealthy sil ver- j ware manufacturer in Albany, was . sued I by a young woman named Clark, and now j i Miss Clark is in jail on a charge of at- ; tomptin? to lew black-mail. Mr. Stiick- la land says that he nver saw or heard of i, l ter before last month, when she sent him i letter rl fm million- mnnCT. He refused tn irire her nv. and soon afterward a lawrer i- Z, ' . . , " 7 .. m.uuu. inreaieninir ii.e auernative oi a iiublic'scand.-il. Mr. Strickland would not - . ' . . be Beared, and when a suit was commenced he hf.d Miss Clark arretted. S, his bain was an-cove red f Fish Oil. 1-ur.i Oil. I.jnsofd Oi!, J.uin i,:,'.v,(; by h s wire, ho, with a -" J "r ,-' A. J .. ' . ' i cohol. Sec. : 5il vc-r-Flaied WrcG i,. were the omv persons in . , . hev saved tho stock, but 1" aiiiily Grocerios, GREAT BEMCTIOH ffliB TO AT THS T 'II K im!-r"ir:ioi r-sin- ;ini:v n-.f.,, citizens 'f l.!-nr iirir mul hf ..;). , Hy tli:(t re vi uiU'lcn liK". !;:.;. I I'lilLl HM AMI 111. titS Oil u.l , . ' i his line, consisting of MOWING and REAPIXCMAniLMs hUO UIHtH tAhWUJlj hY.KllV.rNTS- COOKING, PARLOR AND HEATING of the most fopo)ar tlesis-us ar.J of fcU.T prices find qualltl- : - of uy own manufacture; HARDWARE, ALL KIND I such ss Txcks. Ferews, Tluft Hiniffv, S,ar Hinsres. 'J'hOIc 1inires. Bolts. Iron and , , Window Glass, Putty. Tntilf Knivi- ami F.rt Curving Knives and Forks. Pocket Ki iv '' riK-niid if-s pocmp. .Mt-an. inif-rs. .I'jMe l'rf 4 j , isir. Shfiirs. K.i7.rsnd Jftroi.y. ji ,,u,; II.... I.,... IL.... U...ki...o 1 . . . " . v . 1 1 .in mi?, .nr. in. - . ....' . t urs. (. i sel. Plsnes, Con.p;iss-s. Piiares. Fiit- K,.., Anvil. Vlsrs. M'renehes. Kip. Panel wni f Cut Saws. Chains of nil kin ;?. sp-,. S-vtl:os nn'l Smith". Kkes. Porks. Srli-ixliV.' " Shoe Irfi'ts, TVg, Wax, Brittle. Ck.tl:.- v,..v ers find Wrlnirr. I'Htnt "tii!rn9 nnij;pBt,. Mm-hines refierlly, ririd-St'me. IVoi.t fZ lnos Oufpsund MjstirfS. IiimlK r ti(.- Slfl Kiti. Shot (iutts. Kevolvrr.l'i.ii:5-s tri-lc-es. fiiwrtm-, Cs. I.ad. Hnr Naiis, t !d Stove I'laics.Grntrs ond Fii Hr. ' Wi-li and Cistern I'umr'S. kc., tc; Harness and Saddlery Ware of ell kind, In jrr Ht vsinn ; WOOD and WILLOW WARE l.-eyund deeciiption ; CA niiOX OIL ami OIL LA Mrs, Biieh ns Tens. C.;flW-, Suirars. Syrups Voia, Ppifefv. Iirifd I'-n-lie-P. liri'-d .. pi l.-. Hunilat J- lsb, C.-ackers, itiee, i oari Uai !ty. Ac. Tobacco and CTiqrars. , Patnt.Varntsh.'Whitewash. Prr.it. H .rsr-. shr. , I'yl: many other fin icU-s. fit th httrct rait f. HOUSE SPOUTJXG ltV'r . KdI!GE HL .NiLtV Ebensbure, July 5, IST3.-tr. Wood, MorreHTCo WASHINGTON STREET, Near Pa. R. R. Depot, Johrstcwr.Pa., Wholesale and He nil D.a'tiiia F82EI6I AI3 BQMSSTIC BSY SOI! r-IU.I.IXLlRI GOOD... HARDWARE. QUE ENS W ARE. BCOTS AND SHOT5?. II ATS AND CAP?. IRON" AND N'AIIi, CARTETS AND OIL CLOTH5. lif snv.tsnr rT,imv,. l ......... -' 1 1 - ' . . . . . , t 4 cq WITP VI-T 1 fW . r r 1 -. .. ....... . 1.1.x . ..in WOODEN AND WII.H'W V. ATI. PflOYISIOr.S and FEED, ALL Klf.CS, , To-ether with all nur,i:frof WP.f., pr.jc -.,rh at KLOCR. DaCON, Fiji:. .,LI ijij.. a;c., it. U hoiea'e and retti! frtr? p-.Tic':e and T.romptly ti 1 le 1 on the shone.: v.-:'.ce t:i bos: reasonable i. : rrs v.'uOI) . M o n n EI I. A cr. ula7 DEALER 1S- DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, GROCERIES, HARDWARE, QUEEN SWA FF, ,.. I 1 TV I I t'V (I'll TV V !' I' I kt.l I tj, l .11 IT UVU I UiiVUi'', AND ALL OTHER GOODS USl AI.LT KEPT IN A COUNTRY STORE. WOOL AND COUNTRY nrOLU'CE TAKE IS EXCHANGE tO GOC'IS. Store on South Side cf Main Street, LbCKKbui'i;, Pa. THE HOLIDAYS ARETSl AS WE A LI. KNOW, BIT THE 3E. 2E E3 CHEAP CASH STORE, Aro not over, but rather nn!er, the'e of any ottff dealer in r e . n . j m bta liFCss Gsoas, Ha s ana m nnnfC Qunae t ,, 4 r . Boots, bnoes, Notions, GROCER IEES, FLOl R, EED, CR ii . . . . , ' ., In Ihi .kfclt ' Timber. t a , . , -A complete sun el'-irsTit oorttnrnt cf r. . eoods now in store win positively be f!.! a- tt t eio.-st mrrin. Country produce at th. h-V--t ' market prices taken in cxihanarc for .x ta 1 i saiistaftion saaranteed to all High street. na Centre street E. J. MI I-U Ebensburir, Jau. 15. 15T4.-tf. i : i ? i cts s; 1 5 1 t i ? ii I'M Fi nAVIXG roo-ntly enlarged our to k nnw lr-..n r...l tn c.M 1 ...-.i.f r.-ii II. i i' 3 ' trom former prices, our ! V.T!!1"; r1"1"' stock c-or:'.: ' rv, Paiiry Hair l!-t. r;: ' Ointment I'luster. Liniment. Pa'". " lers. Citrate Mairtieia, Ess. .lamaa-a Pure Flavoring- Kxtrarts, Eencf.. I "" ': Syrup. Southing Syrup, Spiced Syrup, It""-1"-' Pure Spiees, e-. Cigars and Tobaccos, Ttlank Ttonks. Iloed. ntc nnd Iloni-: f,? lest. Commercial at1 all kinsof Net'.- l's: ! I- . !....- 1, ..:.. . ..'.I n . T ' T 1 ' j i.hii.i,i,, t-iii.it?.. .-i.i.-i'. f- S I.1"1.'1' ,.lnck "n(1 lIf-'1 ,nk- Pe-J?'t s-- ; t4t U niiKTATinflUD i W C- - ll.T X X f ' - . II' ries. Hibles, n..ig-ius. rVj ei anJ Toy U ' k" re-n i roves, I'lncs. A;e. , rI. r t cy-We haveail(i'(i to our stock a lot of M JKWELKY. to which we would invite tl.e " tentlmi of the T.adien. , PHOTOGRAPH AinrMS at lovrrr !' 1 thin evrr offered in this place. Taper and Ciirar snld either wh.'lesn!'-r tail. LEMMON M'."liK July 30, Main Street. Kt-er... ts E XECUTOR'S NOTICK. Estate pfJoHN O Cov SF.M . el'r T..ttlrl tl m.-ilr- n thP ec'ate of J"'in l;unneii. late er i nmnrla townsinp. "y , i . r" ty, Penn'a. rieeeaet. itsve been ise1 t" . ; derJiznert. rexKilnir in tornfh ''. t.' n -, .. persons inrlebted to sili e:t- sre rev" ' r make pavment. and tliee hsvinar "''n ,,n, Diands willmske known th ssoth- Wi'-t1 "' '. i ' Jan 15.-5t. AVM. ll t'ON.VIXU L"jjj. . - " 1 .-r-IL TVT D T I P T-. Persons hsvi Ci:'-'-'" r k- i . .. a u 1 . Bi"t p ivi CHE'fTV h - J.mt Pr" J- E- -AL i K aitmrr. Jn. n. JST5 -if. : t i f ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers