nnH . : t mraan. EBENSBURC, PA.. FRIDAY, - FEB. 6, 1880. We have only time to-day (Thursday) to state that yesterday at Harrisburg Don Cameron's convention endorsed Grant for a third term, by a vote of 133, to 113 for Blaine. Lemon was nomina- ted for Vuditor General and Green for upreme Jude, t The Philadelphia Times almanac for j 18U surpasses in completeness any of ' 1 its three predecessors. To say nothing of the vast amount of useful and inter esting general information which it con tains, its election statistics of 1379, and especially of this State, cover the whole ground and furnish amost reliable refer ence. It ii beginning to be believed by a good many shrewd Republicans at Har risburg that Gov. Hoyt would like it if the Chicago convention would put him on the ticket for Vice President along with the '-strong man." Iu that event .he believes that his "forty millions of us." more or less as the case may be, would rise up as one man and call the I ... ; country doubly blessed. 'I he edilor of the Perry county Ikni-o-:rt in the fullness of his political knowledge, has discovered that a large majority of the Democrats of this (Cam bria) county are for Tilden, although the delegates to the State Convention are instructed for Hancock. Suppose now that we meet this assertion by the allegation, that thrtt-fov.rths of the Iem ocraey of Perry are for Horatio Seymour, although the editor of the Democrat in oist that they are for Tilden. Who has made the best gis.i the editor of the Ik li.crot in reference to Cambria, or the editor of the Freeman in reference to Perrv ? The taking of the next census as our readers are aware, will commence on the firbt .Monday of June and must be com pleted within that month. There is a penalty provided for in the act of Con gress for refusing to furnish the infor mation required by the Supervisor or enumerator, and vre herewith publish the law on t tie subject for general infor mation. It is as follows : "All persons above the acre of twenty-one years who shall refuse to furnish the i'nfor niation required by the supervisor or enu merator shall pay a sum not exceeding 1100 to be recovered in an action of debt. Presi dents, Ifirectora or other officials of private corporations v. ho re fuse to furiii-h Informa tion requite. I ct tin;, i nr" made liab'.e to a .penalty not to exceed ?10, 00." Monday's issue of the Lancaster yeic Km. the anti-Cameron and anti-third-term Republican organ in that county, evidently anticipating the suc cess of Cameron's programme at the Republican State Convention on Wed nesday, gives the son of Simon and the men obed.ciit to his will a well directed blow in the following vigorous style: "Through the operation of gag rule and sharp practice, the will of the people is to be cast aside and the badge of servi tude once moie hunj about the necks of the protesting but submissive voters of this State, by the most corrupt, the most arrogant, the most shameless and the most detestable cabal that ever cursed a State, or usurped the prerogatives of a free people." 'In. I'aunki.i., the Iiisli home-rule advocate, delivered an address before tiV members of Congress in tlie House -of Representative's at Washington, on last Monday evening, it is not often that such an honor is accorded to a for-eignc-, or indeed to any person, but Mr. Parne.l represents thousands of strong men. tinder women and helpless chil dren iu Ireland, who are threatened with all the hoirors of famine, and the great heart of the American pen pie, through their Repres ntatives, beats responsive to the noble cause of Christian -charity an lvvillingly extends to him the at ion's ear. Who will say, in view of the mis sion of Mr. Parnell to this country, that the present condition of Ireland, through the work of her land owners, spreading poverty and distress over a fertile land, is not a shame and reproach to the Kn vclish Government that sustains so ini quitous a system ? That irrepressible mulatto and ac romplished drawpoker-plajer, P. P. S. Pinchback, is the Mew Oilcans man who is now causing the Republican pot of Louisiana to boil over at Washington. He wants Mr. Hayes to give him the comfort aMe position of Naval Officer at New Orloam, and as his prospects of success appeared to be good, a car-load or so of his Republican enemies, em bracing prominent Government and former Stat' officials, have rushed in hot haste to Washington to protest to Mr. Haycsaeainst the appointment. Of o;:ise. the usual amount of the tallest kind of Louisiana lying and personal de- duiation win ie indulged in. ami the character-: of a great many good Repub i lican.5? in tho Pelican State will be Mack rned. if not forever destroyed. Rut of .-w:h stuff are ranioal pcliticiar." i:ale of L'i thj ta:c t c.ui bo.int of having produced Wi!!-?r Pll! n .teiiks. Hogg :i A; The nomination of James N. Kerns ;n 1. S. Marshal for the Eastern district 'if P tins;. ivania, which was tent to the "ontte bv Mr. Hayes sooie time ago, has Motjet been finally disp s. d of. being in .'lie bauds of a .sub-cuinmittee for inves tigation. That the Domination was not fit to have 1-cn made, and that it ought to be rejected, is all plain enough. Mr. Wallace hold the fate of Kerns in this matter in his own power, and if he docs -tot give Iiiiu -'a sii.-e of the day of judg ment," be will not. be excused for his faunf. The Democratic majority in the Si-nate v. as equal to the occasion last week, whe:i it rejected the nomina tion of a man in Wisconsin. Kutchinby nsicr to be a collector of internal rev fnue. lie was a vile defamer of some of the best men in the State, simply bc-tau:-e they were Democrats, and if any man ever desrrveJ bis fate Kutchindid. The fame measure of justice should l-e ueted out to James N. Kerns, whose ( THcial fin? ran r-er be c?ndopd. Tbe Fusion Legislature In Maine ad' journal ou Wednesday of las week to re-R6emble. on the 4th of August. This conclusion was hastened by the decision of the Supreme Court of the State against the legality of its existence, in answer to certain questions directly in volving that point which the Fuaionists themselves submitted to the Court. It , is hardly probable that any considerable j nnmbtr of its members will ever again return to Augusta in the capacity of I legislators, but that a square contest for supremacy in the State will be made by the G reeii backers and Democrats on one sile and the Republicans on the other, at the election next September. This .r 1 CD 1 1 ..-.11 na f.rmiif t mil. ! .Mill I It UlUlLUll V , iio ncu a-a ..v.- bles of a less serious nature, grew out of . her singular and absurd election laws, ' under the operation of which, as con- strued by Republican Governors and their councils, the most flagrant injustice has repeatedly been done to Democrats who rightly claimed to have been elect ed to the Legislature. Gov. Garcelon did nothing more than his Republican nredecessors had often done before, and the only mistake he committed was irefsepresent factions and not because they submitting a number of questions as to the legalityof his action to aRepublican Supreme Court. Gov. Garcelon is a doctor and not a lawyer, and always ap- plieg the Sdme reUiedv to the same dis- ' . . . ..." . , ease. Acting on this principle, he no , doubt believed that the Supreme Court would be consistent, and declare the law now to be what it had formerly decided it to be. 15 ut in this he was terribly mistaken, the Court having decided all his questions against him and overruled all its former opinions. Even though the Court made sad havoc of his case as he submitted it, Gov. Garcelon's honesty in taking the course he did cannot be impugned. Former interpretations of the election laws of the State by the Su preme Court, and the duty of election officers under them, abundantly sustain ed him, as did also the oft repeated ac tion of former State Executives. lie at least belleved.be was right, and his in domnitable courage in standing by his convictions had much of tlie ' 'Old Hick ory" type about it that makes it worthy of all admiration. An editor of a Democratic newspaper who undertakes to identify the Fuek m a x with William A. Wallace in his i rivalry with Samuel J. Randall for ; Democratic management in this State is simply measuring this pajnr with his own political yardstick. We admire : both gentlemen for their acknowledged ; ability and their devotion, manifested by ; each in his own way, to the supremacy : of their party, but we do not swear by either of then:. When in our judgment they arc- right, wa will commend them, and when they are wrong we will cease to follow. We have always believed that Mr. Randall's re-election to the Speakership at the extra session of Con gress, saved the Democratic party from many grave and serious complications, just as we are satisfied that Mr. Wallace has discharged his duties as a Senator with honor to himself and credit to his state. What is it to us that Mr. Ran dall is an ardent friend of Mr. TiMen's nomination for the Presidency, or that Mr. Wallace is hostile to it V The pre ferences of the one. or the opposition of the other, cannot control our views on that question. Recause we differ with Mr. Randall about the propriety of Mr. Tilden's candidacy, is no reason why we should be his sworn enemy, which we are not, and because we agree with Mr. Wallace in thinking that Mr. Til leu ought not to be nominated is very far from being a reason why we should be his pliant advocate in his contentions : with Mr. Randall, which implies a sub- serviency to him which never existed, ! and which never can exist between us ; and any living man. An honest differ ! ence of opinion between two Democrats i on the quest ion of the next Presidency . affords no ground for strife or quarrel. : And yet some men appear to think so, I and to prove it, proceed forthwith to impugn motives and to make false aceu- ! sations, interspersed with at tempts at the i lowest sort of wit. This may b" as pleasing to the man who indulges in it i as it is harmless to all the rest of the I world. , The most singular delusion in repard to the nomination of the next Democrat- ' ic candidate for 1 lie Presidentcy is the effort made in behalf of Mr. Ti'.ilei:. No ' man who is at all conversant with the present po'itics of the country, and who : knows bow many electoral votes it takes to elect a President, drni s the fact that l in order to elect thfir candidate it is ab solutely netessary for tli'- Democrats to carry the state of New York, and that - the loss ;f thot State moans sure and ' hopeless defeat. Iu addition to this, no man has the shadow of a reason to doubt that not only the stcreuty-scrai th"u.ni votes cast by Tammany Hall last No veiulfT against Gov. Robinson, but sev eral thousand added thereto, would be cast asainst Mr. Tilden. thus rendering his defeat in tlie State, as it did Robii: son'.s, a foi egone ao I inevitable conclu sion. Ami yet m tno lace ot tins plain and self-evident result, there are Demo crats who are clamorous forMr. Tildci.'s nomination men who think and hay that 1-ecausf he was cheated cut of ids election in 17) by the ileluraing Roards of Louisiana and Florida ."".?, and by the Electoral Commission oft, ;-n;trrLi, every dictate of justice demands his re noinination. Most assuredly thisouuht to be done if there was a reasonable hope of his election, but in 'he utter absence of any such hope, his nomination would be the most preposterous and suicidal act that any party ever committed. As an act of political infatuation a delib erate sinning against all light and all knowledge it would be without a par allel in the historv of the connirv. The Nov York Sun, in staling that a correspondent inquires why it (the .S,.-i) opuses Grant's nomination for a th'.rd term, and yet predicts that if he is nom inated he will le defeated, gives the following answer, and the same reason, we doubt not, would be given by almost every anti-third term man in the coun try. The 5 says : We answer this question very willinglr. We tuve no doubt that tiranfe will h beaten if he is nominated ; hut w desire still more to Mve our country from the cslamity.ot set ting a.-k!c that sacred unwritten Jaw'whieh limit tenure of the PrfiWccy tr t"-o tf :ms t' f nv man. Tlie Way to Win Daring the present vear the American people will again be called upon to select a President whose term of office, if his life be spared, will extend for four years from the 4th of March. 1881. In a few months the two great political partiesof the country will put tneir canuuiaiea m the field, and then the struggle for su- j premacy will begin. Which will be suc cessful will depeno: entirely upon im. candidates nominated, for, strange as it may seem, trie out maxim, not men," seems to have been reversed in modern jtolitics. An improper oi uu ! popular candidate cannot be elected by either partv on the soundest-platform. Though fairly representing ins pan, he must be sound himself, thoroughly j l i i i lii id iv irim iniiii, i-Ji ; trusted bv the rank and tile as wen as the leaders, and enjoy to the fullest ex tent the confidence of the masses, not only because he to a standard-bearer, but, for the better reason, that he is al together fitted to be one. Just now there seems to be an unhappy conflict of opinion in the Democratic ranks as to who should be their leader. We are afraid that the conflict is based more upon the desire to promote individual interests than to secure party success. This is ierhaps natural iu the present construction of parties. Candidates are named as available merely because they are suppxieu iu ue itccepiiiwie u me whole united Democracy, lluspreler- ence is founded quite as much upon the i hope of prospective plunder as upou the real merit ot the candidate. We are ; aware that it is a difficult if not an im- , possible thing to find a man acceptable ! Q eyfry onf G g D Vnntic once ; icorge said, with great force : "It is in vain to hope to please all alike. J-t a man : stand with his face in what direction he : will, he must necessarily turn his back . on one-half of the world." As with j men so with parties, and hence it is a j fact, which must be looked squarely in ; the lace, that whoever is nominated will be made the candidate in opixisiiion to a large number in the Democrat ic ranks, j In this view of tlie case the National ; Democracy should earnestly strive to ! find the very best man for the crisis, I without reference to sentiment, or prej- j udice, or individual interests, or the ; promptings of factions. Such a man i may not be easy to Find, but he is worth j diligently looking for. Without him ; the party will gointoan utterly hopeless , contest, with no chance of success, and the same polilical organization that has ruled the nation since will again reap the fruits of victory. The Democ racy can elect a President this corning Fall if wise and prudent counsels pre vail, but they need not hope to do so un less they show that they are worthy of public confidence by nominating a can didate whom the people respect and ran trust after the election as well as before the battle is fought. JliUi.nr.rt (lazrtte. Fatiikr Hoiha's Defection. The renunciation of the Catholic faith by Rev. John ITojda, a Roheniian priest stationed at Raltiniore, a notice of w hich was published in these columns last week, has taken on a new and rather un F.tvorr phase. In the popular cant of the day. there is a woman in the ease, and ( barges are made that the prirst had be trayed a young Bohemian srirl before leaving his native country, that she fol lowed him to Baltimore, and that the pair have now disappeared. Friends of Father Hojda claim, however, that his ' relations with the young woman did not j involve any violation of morality, but that, having fallen deeply ;n love with the young lady, his vows of celibacy had ; become irksome, and that immediately upon renouncing his allegiance to the Catholic Church and abandoning his priestly functions, he married the girl and went to New York with her. where they are now living in lawful wedlock. ' Rev. Mr. Pister, the pastor of the Lit- '. theian congregation intowhich Mr. Hoj da was received, says that the ex-priest had expressed to him his intention of . leaving the city, as when the archlcshop j learned of his action it would create too much comment, and he would therefore remain away from Raltiniore until the j excitement subsided. It is known that ! at the time of Mr. Hoj. la's alleged con- ; version and reception into fellowship by the Lutheran Church he had been sus-: pended from his ecclesiastical duties pen- ' ding an investigation of charges t.f ini- ; proper conduct that had been made ' against him. j Facts A r.oiT lSO. Tlif f,r?t lay of year and of Ajuil will fill I on Thursday; the 4tli of July conies o:i Sunday, ar.rl Christ mas on Saturday. It is leap year, and February lias 2 ) d u s ; and the girls will then bo privileged to go cotirlins. tin y -vt ill have tlie ipportunity to do plenty of it. as the almanac-maker was cnnsideiate enough to put five Sundays in the month of February. Ka.ter ernies within a wed; of as early as it ever ratoe on lhe'2sth day of March. The. year of ISvV will have six e( ii;ses. tour of the pun and two of the moon, but f'hlv d:e of tl'.em will be visible l;er.'. namely, the sixth, wlueli is a par tial eclipse of the sun o:i the last day of the year, v;ry early in t!:e monnnp. A try unusual tiling wbout these lipsi s is that three of them oceur in l-eemIior a. eii'.iiinsiar.c that will :; ;t acain fu.-'-ur in many yeai.-. lloth eclipses of the moon wid be lutal, but invisible in '"r:h America. About (he middle of 10 V," iiincck's comet will make its api anmce in th' heavens after an absence of live years and seven month-. The moon will be the ruling planet of 10. and tin- year will be pent-rally more humid than cold that is, the almanac says so. The year of of cour.-e, toes out on Fridav. Tiif. rule recently entered in the Lan caster Court by Judge Patterson, requir ing Messrs. A. J. .v! inman an 1 . J. lleiiscl, nit rni ers of the bar ami editors of the Lancaster InteUi-ji urcr. to answer for contempt and to show cause why their names should r.ot be stricken from the list of attorneys-, was heard on Fri day by President Judge Livingstone and Assistant Law Judge Patterson. Mr. Ilufus L. Shapely. of Ph iladelphia. apj "ear ed for th defendants on the rule, and presented their formal answer, asserting that the proceedings recited in the prefatory-part of the rule as having taken p!uc: in the presence of lh-- Court, did not wc. t in any legal proceedings in said Court, and v re r-a,n w). jt'dire, and that the respondents are not answerable for contempt for any answers made in Court or for declining to answer any of tlii questions propounded to them by the Court. They declare further that the publication complained of in the IntcUi cj, na r was not made in the presence of the Court, or while acting as attorneys or officers of the Court, or of or concern ing any pending or undetermined case before the Court, and that they are re sponsible and will answer in any pro per form for the publication according to the law of the land. The case was held under advisement by the Court. It re quires tin? concurrent assent of both judges to make the rule absolute. A Pk Errors P.wrt. The younger of the two Americans who were recently arrested lor swindling a Russian naval officer out of ?v.000f. at Brussels is only sixteen years of age, and yet it has been discovered that he and his brother, who is twenty-eight, traveled under a half dozen different aliases and had laid their pians to carry on a n umber of swindles of a wmilar character. They hail fiom Brooklyn and refuse to give t'n ir history. ILey Avere arrested in water was found, that rose rapidlv in i 5300,000, and only secured $3,000, alian Niiples i-nd the Belgian government h;:s J the well. The tn -c-topdug throurrhVas i doning a roll of SI 50.000 in railwav i'ija-.l"'! iiv ir e-.:; iv liion ..! tria. iii - A it. tourrh c'uv. " : biridi. etc. SEWS AJTD OTHER SOTINGS. The Pope has cent 10,000 francs to the relief of the distressed in Ireland. More postmasters (1,041) were com missioned last week than ever before in a like period. Freeman, the I'ocasset fanatic, was removed to the insane asylum at Uan- vers, Mass on Monday. Ben Ilogan, the reformed wickedest man, is holding forth in Oil City, and his meetings are largely attended. The unveiling and dedication of the New Orleans monument to Stonewall Jackson will take place on February 22. Three deaths from starvation oc curred last week in th3 neighborhood of Parsontown. County Tipperary, South - - - Ireland Senator Biaine was fiftv years old on Saturday. He :s a handsome, stal wart man, with a grey beard, and brill iant eves. 1 )aniel Green, colored, of Bay Shore, L. I., has been in the Suffolk county poor-house for the past twelve years. He is 10T vears old. Alexander Gibson, known as the "LumlHMT Kins." of New Brunswick, has sent by cable from St. John a dona tion of ..",W0 to the Irish relief fund. Mrs. Hattie Baldwin, w ife of Harry Baldwin, who was so mysteriously mur dered in Cincinnati recently, died last Friday, her death being the result of grief at the loss of her husband. Mrs. Harris wasill, at Mitchell, Ind., and deliriously insisted on getting out of bed. The busband tried by persuas ion to keen her quiet, and then losing his patience, killed her with an axe. A fly having alighted on one of the glasses of the engineer's spectacles on the Union Pacilic road, the engineer thought it was a buffalo on the track ahead, and turned on the air-brakes to avert a disaster. Pittsburg papers rejort that a new oil well near Reyuoldsville. Jefferson eonntv. is yielding about 150 barrels a dav. "This" discovery has created an ex citement throughout the oil region, as it is new territory. And now they say that a newspaper i folded so as to have three or four thick i ntsses and placed over the chest is one I of the best protections against cold ex ' taut. A paier paid for is much better than one not paid for. Dan Rice, the great showman, and ! late a Moody convert, stopped off at Grecnsburg a short time last week. He ! indulged, it is said, in the usual-sized 1 cocktail at the Dixon house, not wit h j standing his alleged conversion. I Gen. Grant has written to Admiral Amnion that after a briet sojourn in Mexico he will go to Denver and Lead- ville for the purpose of examining the ; silver Field of Colorado, lie expects to 1 reach Galena by the middle of April. ' A few days since a gentleman, while i attempting to' light a cigar at the rail 1 road depot in Williamsport, had some ! difficulty in getting the (ire to take hold. ' lie squeezed the end of the cigar, and a ladv's gold linger ring dropped from it. j On Saturday night, while Mr. But ler, of Pitts-burg, was out visiting with his family, a man with blackened face ' surprised a young woman left in charge of the house', and, after gagging her, se ! cured about ?'' i, which was in a trunk, j About :?450 were collected in Cath olic churches of Bradford, on Sunday i last, for the suffering poor of Ireland. ; It is proposed to hold relief meetings i the re, and a number of wealthy citizens have pledged themselves to give fljioij cacn. A grave-digger had throw ii three or four shovels of .sand ou the eofiin of a smaU-pox victim at Ottawa, when he fancied that he heard a noise. The cof fin was raised and it was found the per son still lived. He was taken back to the hospital. Or Tuesday night Frank Ferrier, a Frenchmen, boarding with another Frenchman named Labolli, in Houtz dale, Clearfield county, went into the hitter's room, and a light ensued, when I.abolii was disemboweled and killed. Ferrier made his escape. A California toy stood an umbrella in a public doorway during a religious meeting. To this umbrella was attach ed a cord, an end of which the boy held in his hand. Eleven different people are said to have carried the umbrella to the length of the string. At Easton, Mass.. early on Sunday morning. John D. Gardiner and wife were burned to death in their house, which, was also consumed. Both bad been drinking with callers on Saturday night, and it is supposed a kerosene lamp was accidentally overturned. ; Lev. Mr. Taylor, of Uichmond, Ind., I undertook to escort a young lady from j his church to her home, in order to pro : toot her froTi the attentions of a suitor, ' who was disliked by her parents ; but ! the suitor waylaid the clergyman, whip ped him savagely, and eloped with the : young lady. Samuel MeLain, on trial at Pitts I burg for the murder of the boy Hunter, i at Praddocks last March, was on Satur day found guilt v of murder in the sec- ond degree. Samuel Gisal is yet to be : trieil for complicity in tlie same crime, i In view of the slight evidence of guilt ! the verdict was unexpected, i The great catch of Congress is Mr. tialie Poifk. of shkosh. lie is as striking as iiis name. lie is very dark, with straight black hair and smooth 1 face. He dresses in a blue coat with . brass buttons, walks about with great ! dignity and looks wise. If he is not a 1 statesman it is not his fault. ' A Pittsburg dispatch tells a tale of a little giri finding live men under the ; bed one night, aii at once, she goes 1 ahead of some other and older girls who 1 have beer, looking under the led for men ' in hiding every night for twenty or thir- ty years, and have not so far fonnd so ! much as a pair of suspenders. ! General Joseph F. Knipe, who cn j tered the service in the rebellion as a ! private in a Pennsylvania regiment and ! left as a brigadier general, is an appli ' cant for a position as a special agent of the treasury. The Secretary is disposed to do something for him. and Joseph I will likely get what he wants. About tif'y ranchmen near Dead wood started after a band of eighteen i robbers who had lieen stealing their cat ! tie, and traced them to their roost in a ; deep ravine at Wolf mountains, where ' the outlaws, eighteen memliers, were : surprised and killed liefore an opportun ity was give n them to return a shot. ; iJev. Mr. Cowley, the wolf in sheep's . clothing who kepi the Shepherd's Fold , in New York, is now safely lodged in : the. Tombs, in default of the bail requir ; ed for his appearance to answer the : twenty-five indictments fo-rnd against him by the grand jury, and will not have . another chance to beat and starve a lot of babies. Mrs. Harry J. Phillips, of Scranton, committed suicide on Friday irght. : She was the wife of a prominent politi 1 eian who is an ex-number of the I.egis i lature. She fitted up her chamler as if ' for the reception of a brid.il party and then swallowed poison, Mr. Phillips is now in Wales and his wife accused him of deserting her. Some of the Washburns have been sharply criticised on account of append i ing a terminal r to the family name. In a short letter which appeared in yester . day's Xew York Hcrakl the discoverer of General Grant sigr.es himself "E. Ii. j Washb')iin.r." 15oth the surreptitious ; vowels are .silent, but they make a high ! toned show in print. In digging a well at Freeman, I)a i kota, recently, limbsof a tree were found, i which had to be cut through with an ; axe. The well was one hundred and six feet below the surface. Five feet Mow i this timber line an abundant sunnlv of The case of Robinson Howe, on trial at Franklin, charged with themur der of his father, was closed on Thurs day of last week, and the Commonwealth failed to sustain its case. It was ascer tained that on the day of the murder a strange man was seen about the farm, and it is now thought that this was the murderer of the old man Howe. The State prison contract labor sys tem, which has long leen practised in California, will probably 1m abolished by the Legislature of that State, now in session. A bill providing for its aboli- ; tion is now being considered. It de- j clares that no prisoner shall labor, ex- j cept directly for the State, county or ; : city of which he happens to be a prisoner, j The long-standing suit of the St. ; i Louis, Alton and Terre Haute railroad ! company against Samuel J. Tilden, - Charles Butler and others has ended at I last by virtual confessions of judgment ) by the defendants and the payment of several thousand dollars. Judge Blateh i ford, of New York, on Friday last, dis ; missed the case without costs to either j party. I Frank Leslie's sons are contesting , their father's will on the ground that he . was not of sound mind and disposition ' w hen be executed the alleged w ill ; that, : if ever made, it was procured through the fraud and undue influence ef Flo- rence Ieslie, known as Mrs. Peacock, I otherwise Mrs. Squier, otherwise Mrs. 1 Frank Leslie. They also deny that she was the lawful wife of their father, j Isaac Mills, Sr., a well-known citi j zen of Western Pennsylvania, died at ; Braddocks on Wednesday, 2?Hh inst., in i his7!th year. He was a man of won : derful activity, and four years ago had j a desperate encounter with two high ! way men, in which he received thirty j distinct wounds uporv,his liody. Two brothers named Jacobs are now serving 1 a lengthy term in the Penitentiary for j this attack. i Secretary Thompson says that he ! saw Andrew Jackson at the time of his j inauguration as President. "My father, ' who introduced me," says the Secretary, j "told Die then that I was getting on the ' other political side already. Instead of ! lecturing me, as I supposed he would, Jackson put his hand on my head and said : 'Whatever your jolitics, think : always for yourself, and let conscience ' be your guide.' " , Count Masenna, a son of Napoleon's : Field Marshal Masenna, died in the poor ; house at Salt Lake City a few days ago. In an obituary of this man the Salt Lake ; Tribune goes around the maxim, "Of the dead sjK-ak nothing except good," : and ascribed his low end to a career of meanness, and rapacity such as marked his more notorious father's life. The wife of the deceased is now a domestic ' in a Salt Lake family. ! A Chinaman presented himself at the County Clerk's office in Red Bluff, Cal., i the other day and asked for a marriage license. "Who's the. happy maiden V" ' asked the Clerk. "Ingee squaw," said . John, explaining that he had fallen in ' love with a Stoney Creek redskin the ; Pocahontas of her tribe. An interested , gang was present at the ceremony the t first marriage of the kind that has taken place in the history of the world. -- Pullman, the palace car man. trav : r-Is about his native land in a coniforta- ble manner. He has a luxurious car. ; made after his own design and for his ! own special use. which lie attaches to ; any train which he wishes to take ' Most of the railroad magnates indulge themselves in the same way. Mr. Van : derbilt's car attracted considerable at . tontioii from the old Commodore when ' it was brst built. Colonel Scott's is very plain. A Washington dispatch announces: , Mrs. Kate Chase Sprague gave a dinner ' party here last week to a few gentlemen ; and ladies, among whom were several ' members of tlie Supreme Court. Senator . Conkiing and Mrs. Conkling were pres ent. It is said by a gentleman well qualified to know, that, immediately af , ter the affair at Canonchet last summer. Mrs. Conkling wrote a letter to Mrs. ' S. Prague inviting her to accent the hos- pilalitiesof the Conkiing house at I'tica. The celebra ed pigeon roost in Scott county. Ind.. is now, as it has been for seventy-five years, the roost of millions of pigeons. They fly away in the morn ing to their feeding-grounds, many of them going to such a distance that they io not return until midnight. The tim !or on thousands of acres covered ly thiM rist is broken down badly, large limbs being s!iapied off like reeds by t lie accumulated weight of the birds. Thou- i sands are killed nightly, but the slaugh- i ter .eems to make no dinrnution in tlie : vast flocks that congregate there. A four-handed exhibition game of i billiards of ioints was played at St. i Louis on Friday night letwt-en Sexton ami Gallagher on ore side and Schaefer i and 1 aly on the other. The former won by a score of SOU to 778. On Saturday lialy beat (Sallagher by a score of 2!K) to i l.Vt. and Sexton then won a game from I ScliHpfer by 4M to i!t4. Sexton. Shaefer ; and Daly left last night for Xew Orleans, ! where they will play for prizes. It is also announced that these three billiard ists, as well as Slossen, are engaged for a tournament at Chicago the first week in March, oOO points up, balk line, for prizes aggregating ?l,oM. On Saturday morning Christian Sehaffer, residing at Bridesburg, near Philadelphia, was arrested as a public nuisance. For two years Schaffer. with his family, consisting of a 10-year-old daughter, who acted as his housekeeper a girl of 1, and a boy of 7 years, have occupied a miserable hut in the outskirts of Uridesburg. Schaffer used to catch stray dogs, kill them, sell the bkins. and it was Ins lxi.ist ainnnc: the neighbors tliat the meat of the lorrS formed the principal article of diet on which Hie children subsisted. The children were taken charge of by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelly to Children. A yoimp couple called at the house of a clergyman in Host on. a short time since, and asked him what his price would be to marry them. lie answered $5. They having no company, he called in two of his servantsas witnesses. The sei ices ended, the bridegroom present ed a if-Vi bill, and was given in change J45. A few days after, having occasion to use the fifty-dollar bill, the clergy man found it to be a rank counterfeit. The clergyman, on reflection, now thinks that they were two young scamps, one dressed in girl's clothes, as the purport ed briile never looked him in the face while h was erforniing the ceremony. In Little (erntapy, Ferrj county, ; , , - , , , -ir. nooer, louiieny 01 v uuuh i i.tnu county, haa heen out iinniing, nau seen game and snapped his gun, but the weapon failed to go off. This defet t o.i the part of the gun was repeated and spoiled the hunt, and he returned home with the charge still iu the gun. In making an examination of the piece he did not take the precaution to draw the load. His wife was near by at the time he was fixing the gun. While so engaged, the loadwns accidentally dis charged and bis wife dropped to the floor lifeless, the contents of the weapon having passed into her lody, killing her instantly. It Is whispered around in West Chester that W. II. IJobinson. otherwise i , . , . i, t;ii i n r-uroiJeuii uwri v- imvr nui unci ivi ru, anu knon as Gopher Bill, the man eon- nwi jnte,feie. But with the tiovern victed several days ago of lieing one of ; niOT,ls wj, have declared th.-ir independence the roblers of the Bailey Brothers' safe, j and maintained it, and whose independence at Taggaii8Corner,nearKennet Square. ! we have on great consideration and on just in November last, has made overtures to I principles aki.owVdged, we could not view "squeal," or, in other words, to betrav i any interposition for the purpose of oppres the names of the other men er,e-arrP,l i, 1 smg them, oi controlling in ar.y other inan- .i. .. , ; , ... 1 oa unw-rririao in avrniiiro t,i- hie nn-n ... .'AVIMIIISV , no-.,,,, it freedom. Negotiations have also leen broached, it is said, for the return of the few securities the disappointed rascals carried away from the safe on the night ! when thev antieinated a haul of alwmt Thej Wanted TheM to Tote. WITT REPUBLICANS AIDED THE EMI GBATION OF NORTH CAROLINA NE GROES TO INDIANA. A Washington City dispatch of the 2d inst. says " At tb meeting of the 8enl Comtnltte on the EkxIus to day, B. K. Morrlw, a ret.1 e-.tt.te agent of India-nanoU", testified that Perry and William, me coiorea nait oi I tlie North Carolina emigrant, called on lilm ' last October to talk about Retting tratmpor ; tation to Kansas, but subsequently expressed ; themselves In favor of settling In Indiana, ; and he bought tickets for them to retnrn to i Washington on business connected with the ; movements of their North Carolina friends, i They furnished the money for their own i tickets, and witness did not know whether : or not they got it from Col. Jordan, the : United States Register in Knkruptcy, or I where they got it. He had ta'.ked with Col. ' Jordan shout some lands Id Morgan County f which he thought might bs sold to North ', Carolica emigrints at 55 or SO per acre, j Senator Voorbees Yon thought it wonM relieve the condition ot those colored emi grants to put them on some of those lime ! stone knolis and ridges ? I Witness Yes, and I wanted to sell the i land. Laughter. ; Thomas Wells, of Indianapolis the partner ', of the last witness aod also a Repnblieati, ! was next examined. He testified tLst he remarked to ''the boys," when the North ' Carolina colored people first began to arrive : at Indianapolis, "We want 20,000 'bucks' I not women and children." Mr. Voorbees You wanted them to vote? j Witness Yes, we wanted them to rote I ! Mr. Voorbees Well, that's a square in- swer. Yon thought if you had them you conld politically slay ns ? Witness Yen, we thought if we had them . we conld get away with yoa everlastingly. Laughter. 7 j Mr. Voorhees But they bronght a good many women aud children with them. I Witness Yes, they overdone the thing on , women and children; but we thought it ; would lie a good thing to scatter 'em around ' on cheap lands. Mr. Voorbees (interrupting) In close counties? Witness Well, yes ; iu close counties. Renewed laughter. Mr. Voorbees State whether these views ; which you hare given eo frankly, are shared by your party in Indiana. I The witness replied that he thonght they ! were tc a great extent concurred in by indi ' vidnal memltera of the rarty ' hut he did , rot know of auy party organization or party effort to draw negroes to Indiana. He be : licved tlie colored people had not a fair chance to vote, or, at least, were likely to j be "eontned ont" iu North Carolina, and it j was only right to givo them a change in Iu : diana Witness introduced Perry and Williams - to Col. Jordan, the Hankniptcy Register. ; They wanted assistance, and iiokucw they . had money when they retired from their in terview with Jordan. The money with which transportation to Oreenenstle from Indianapolis -as procured for fifty or sixty of the emigrants was raised through United States Mail Agent lieynolds. Perry ap. proached witness since his arrival in Wash ington with reference to the testimony he was to give, and expressed a desire that nothing should be said about the purchase of tickets for Perry and Williams bai-k to this city from Indiana. Mr. Voorbees What did you say to Perry? Witness 1 told him 1 proposed to do my own swearing. Laughter, j Mr. Voorbees Web, you have kept yonr wonl faithfully, and bare gireu very frank testimony. Two iiu.Ni'Ui.i) prominent lit publi cans in Philadelphia, embracing nit r ch. mts, manufacturers, etc., addressed an earnest protest against the third term to the Pepublican state Convention which met at Harrisburg last Wednes day. Tip; fVhnving U the important portion of it : To avert sut-li a result we, therefore, lg of you so to act that the influence of the great State of Pennsylvania may !e thrown iu fa vor of :e wlm ran tie conscientiously sup poeteJ, ami anitist those w hotu the honest voter may fel himself ohlifje.l to oppose at the polls. We havu no candidates to sug gest, nor do we deem it fining to specify by name any whom we might feel compelled to reject. We may say briefly, however, that the numli-r of Republicans is very iare who cannot be relied upnn to support on the one hand one whose candidacy would violate a tradition which has become part of the un written law ot the nation : nor on the other, one who regards iheski'ful tieof patronage for personal ends as the highest fun"! ion of a statesman ; nor one whose pas', inability to resist temptation would put his supporters en ihe defensive throughout the campaign ; m:t one whose personal ambitiou may lead liini to resard Ihe public service as a mere jiisirumentaiity for furthering his own vtnls. .n:il whoso convictions are bin expressions i t temporary political expediency. The p'.itfortu on winch we entered the Presiden tial contest nf lsTii--nation a! supremacy iu national affairs ; the avoidance of unconsti tutional iutet uit-ddiiug wi:"u local sell-gov-erumont ; ln r.rst money aud a thorough re form of the cnil service is the accepted declaration of Republican prlncip.es, and It w ould be an irsult to the intelligence "f the party to present tor its support any one whose record would show that his cauvass on such a platform would be but a trap to catch tho unwary. The public views with increatiu and just alarm the dangerous lengths to which party leaders are prepared to go iu the effort to ad vance their litical fortunes. While the disgraceful attempt to set aside the popular will in Maine is still an oft'ec.so io our nos trils, we are shocked with the propobitiou openly made to silence the voice ef the gr-at- ; est State in the Cnion by the action of a I-eg-isiamre not choien upon auy such issue. '. If the contest for f" great a stake as the Presidency of the Cuited States is thus to become a men- game cf hazard played by both sides with loaded dice, it needs no , prophet to foretell the result in the i:rar I'u- , lure as anarchy and civil war. ! When thoughtful men seek the catis of these dangers, they find it in the low stand ards of luauy of onr political leaders aud the nnwortliy methods by which the scratu ble for power is conducted. Recognizing the evil, they have not far to look lor the remedy. In the existing perfection of polit ical organization, they can have iittle or ; nothing to say in the selection of candida-es. ; The only recourse, then, is at the polls, and i the opinion is spreading apace that the high est service a voter can render to tns party j and bin rountry is to vote gaint unwottby i aspirant an the only effectual method of eu- forcing improvement. c pray you, tuero j fore, to be wise iu time, atul to take such ' rourse as nball conduce, to securing for the ! Republican party and its candidate thesup j port of that vast body ot indepeudent voters witbont whom snccegs in tne I'resiaennai contest in impossible. The Monroe doctrine,"" w'lich was originally asserted in this country in l2'.l by the President whose name it bears, sind which is now the subject nf a gootl tleal of ni'wsjmper iliscttssiun grow ing out of the fact that M. 1 e Lesseps. a Fretich t nginet r, has conmienced the const riK'l ion of a ship canal across Ihe isthmus of Panama, is referred to by the Philadelphia L'emnl as follows : The "Monroe doctrine," as originally pro mulgated by the fifth President ef the United States, was" cue of the most getierallv ap- i planned outtrivuigs 01 mat a:ne aria noiifrw , j,e thoucli n..t hrilliaiit, statesman. In it lie declared the American policy of "neither entanelins ourelves in the broils of Kurope, imr suffering the powers of the Old World to interfere with the affairs of the New," and mat ' we eonsioer any attempt 011 tneir pari . to extend their system to any portion of this hemisphere as danecrous to our peace and j safety." The latter declaration occurs in ' President Monroe's seventh annual Message, j December '1. IS-.'.'t. After remarking that 'in the wars of the Knropean Powers, in matters j relating to themselves, we have never taken any part, nor does it comport with our policy to do so," he says: "With the movements in this hemisphere we are of necessity more j immediately connected, and by causes which i must lie evident to all enlightened and ini- ! partial observers." He proceeds: "With ; the existing colonies rr dependencies of any tier tneir lestinv, nv anv t.uroiiean lower in l ..... - - - ' nnt rt hor l'irrtit' thnn na ti manifnetaf ir t an unfriend)- disposition toward the United Mates IlllS IS tlie snttanco of til "Monroe iloe- trine" ns announced bv its putative author. It was meant as a warning to the "Holy Al liance" of Kussia, Prussia. Austria and France, the object of which was to propoxate monarcliical llistltntlon- Pn.1 to SrtpprrS frCC JUSTj?UT. Hood's Great Book OF XII K WA. ADVANCE and RETREAT: I I'ernonnl Experience m jne . . j teil State atul ixttifetiernie i State Armie. Uy 0"r-l .T. Ii. HOOD. iMtt I irulrnant Crnrrml fonfrieratf Statu Army '. ri BMSHBD rod j TSS E30B E?.?HAX UEIKEUL FUND ; Ceneral C. T. Beauregard, HEW ORIT.AM io. i The entire r.r"'''' srlslnc from the sl of this work arerti-votcd to The H..d r.hn Memorial Fun.i filiicb l inve-tei t'ntte.1 Stated H-?m-tcre.l'Hc.n'iJ t'r the nurture, care, sniipnrt sn-1 ed ucation of the ten fr.fiititi-ar rived of their parents last summer t New t irlcaiiF. (the melancholy in-elii-nts of whlrh sad bereavement are utill frei-b io the public mind.) . Thk boos i as ii.roiST cktvo. ronjisna . 30 raoits. with a riE rmpTiK'RAPH libkne AXB iisik btkki. nimvio, lira wr.KK fiirn LAHOK M A rs l-r B.M-1LK riKLne rr 1 waiiwik ' "a i " -i..'at TIIKIi; IMM.MB. i ' " iftFEP BHWMI WITH M H-HLK I.Wl.TIIKI.b IIOI I.AKH A.M IHTT EXTW-lr. Hir Iloi ii .lluwno. tintiAiiv sttlk. Hl R I.tRM. on I" nr-xT Tit-.kwt Mnw"i, FCI.L ' IiitSiMwaiii) Kiwjk. t'i V. 001.1. A Rs. On the receipt l.-om anv per? on remitting I t mail or iitvj. or the Minuet. t In a rcRiKtcred letter or tT a po-tal order, hank dra!t. nr check, a enpr will he immediately ent tree of pontajrc. reiciitered as seoind-elas matter. The volume is published In the bet stjle of ty po)fTaphy. on eieirant paper, with illustrations. I-e-nt!l ns hitrhet specimens oTart. The snthoT.the suf-ieot. th piirii.-e. all alike render il w.rthv a jdaee In every library. on every deck or upon the book j-hell ot every house Id the country. . Airrnlt vanttd in rrrry town and rovnty tn the United Statri, and a pre f.rencr trill be viren to hon orably disrhcrqed referent f,om the amy. To the ladies, who feel a de'lre to ext.reM their svmpathy with 77ie Hcoel Orphan Memorial fund, the sale of this lo k ainon tl-eir circle ot friends will afford an excelled wy ot conlributitiK lub itantial aid to o clei-ervlnjr a cause. KK TKKMS. KATi.5 TO AUFNTN. KT ., AHPHKSS WITH H U,rARTl'i;i.AKS. Crii'l J. T. Beanreifsrd, rabllsher, ! ON BtHAI.F OF THE IIOOB JIHIOKI1L IlD, 1-30 Sif.W OKLCAXS I.A. (3m ) rpWKNTV-TIlir.D Axni.u. St.uk- st r.Ar-K Compact r Cawbiua. I'oISTT, for the yeHr ending Janaary 12, lj : Ani't of property Insured Jan. I". 17 l.'J5!.2i.S3 Am'tof l-ropertv Infurel during the year 3e.2S.0O H.S48.46S.-3 leduct amount expired during U.e year &t5,l"0.!0 I-".lu-t amount surren- derod and canceled Sl.a-.-s.OO- Jrt.W 0" Am't property insnre-l Jan. 12. 1S0 r'L5-7:? Am nt premium notes in l..ree Jan. i:i. IST'J t 132.Me.7i Am'nt iireuii urn notes ta ken durinif yr M.081.6 a 15S,1.S liedtiet amount expired durlnir year 84.03.00 I led net amount surrender ed aud canceled e.027.( 80.W5 0O Am't premium nut in force Jan. 12. 'so 123..S23 43 Number of policies inr.l il iirlnij y"nr MO in f'jp Jiin. U. 1J tJl cash AoonrNT r.rj Etna. Am't c.n hnnd at Iat fcttlewent tl.lsj M t'ach for n-w insurance l.JS.71 Ainoui.l AetMnent Net i4.4s S liirt s lITl DM. psi.l .Tohn .T . Isvi f nil. 00 " !atrc-k Msruev h.VJ " !vid It. Ikhs &). " " Wlihsm lhfhrt T -0.00 " " Thorns' I h?.Rli" 41. ".''. " Philip Skcllr e.K THEK Kxrr.SFJ. ("'Tum'"ion on liiaii-! meut No. f. I T? Secrets ry'a foei Trena-.irer's halarv K"I1T .' A ifcnts ?vniTn:9i'n lre:nii:in) r'.'tnrr;el ( t policies CHii-eiC'I t VniperiMit ion -f Ln-eii 1 1 v- Cum- im ttft lriii:Di:.T".'-tai;e. Mati"Dcrr, ei- preii.ifcir, ti: 17".i1 sj.Oo 4-V. J3.ST 27.00 13S.3S 2.9.34 Hn?e r.n lisn 1 I'remluTn ntes uljc-t to tswrnent". . . t S? SI 13S .Wo 4 3 Janinry V-1-.!!. lsti.', t?ie nt'OTc s.-ronnt su. !!teJ. I-juti-1 correct, su-i upprovej. K. iiu-:K"rs. . .iiiHN l.I.i i V 1 1, Executive Committ". .T' KIN .1 i VAXS ?-.cr.iiurif. Jan. -JC. l-i.-5t. ORPIIAXS" CHUaf SALK UY virtno i-t rn ordr f f tic Orr hrins fourt of amria ouat. to rr d:re-teit I will offer t -utii ale on the premise-. tn SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1SS0. A 1 2 ' e-ta:e. '1 t(K K. r. M . the foltr.wins o! wlii li Junes Turcv .1 ; c 1 dec,-ri 'rd to real it : A PIKCE Oil PAKCKLOF LAM) Situ.ite Ir. MMTi.ter town.lrp, 'amhrla cenntr. l'a.. adi-.'i'iintt 'und.oi t ' .-rei.tis 1 H er. M c-h'I itruw ley. .l-.hii l:e!. nuj i'ili?r. eoutamiriir 52 Artre. mere or lc-c. al-.mt i'' Arrrt cleared an.! in a -uo-i -itiiie ot cult tv.-iti-.n. having there-jr. created n Two Storv I'latik House nl Loc Itarn. Trrmi of Male. tne third ci The pur-hn'e money tr. be pnid on runtirnuitinn of pule an-1 the reliance in trr.. e.jual annual pHyinent'. with intcr-e-t. to he 5tmred t.v ludiaent lu.n-! and tnorUjage of the pur-haser. JOHN IT EL. Jnn. 3-'. l-0.-St. Adni:rii-tr3tor. 1rr.i.ic sale or vai.iist7e JL HEAL ESTA i'E. W c. the underpinned Hx eeutor. w:il oer at pul-Iic fale on the premi'e-;. on -Ifonita-r. larfh Slot. l-.0. at Id r.'( lut, A. m . the following des.Tited real c't.ite : No. I. Tie ell K a vi.iitt Hm i.stk o. eoftitn inir Jo3 Acrc. with improvement, and sltuatej in Munster township, faiubria eouuty. l'a. 2. The .T..U5ito- Kaht-i.'ihI Acre', with iniprovc-iuents. situated in AlU-Kheny .tuwnship, Cambria county, l'a. -Teruj3 made known on daT of sale. Ji HN tr.'K.AYLi R. 1 IKiMAS SAKUE.NT, JOSEPH lit Kit E. Eieentrra of I'ETtr. Kayiou. de.-e.-icd. Jan. 23. lsj.-w. E XKCl'TOKS' NOTICE. Estate of l'ATTllr E 111 N.'Sr.. dee'J. lettef te-taiuentary to the e5tnte ot Patrick I'unn. Sr.. lareof SamTucrhill town'hip. deeesaed, having neen trranti-1 to the urjder'isrned. uot.ee ts lierthy riven to all pt-rsuiis indeotcj to aid e'tate th.it pnyment miiPl t-e mad- without delav. and those haviuii claims acainst the same will present tliem properiv authenticated tor -et t lenient. fAlKH.H. MrlH , ( .1 A t h Mi-DVNX, i Execv.ton. j.in. is. mj.-t. A1 DMIN ISTK ATIOX NOTICE. !"t:ite of Timothy l.in.ttrc. dec"d. Letters of adtniniitrntion on the ct:'e of Timo. thy Lumediie. late f l.ca.le township, frimhrta county, deeim-pd. havinic tcen iMied t- the un-!er-aiajned. all persons indehted to said e-tte arc here hy t otitd thnt immediate payment tU"t f.e made, and thr.se ha vinirrlaira against tlie same will pre sent tliem pronerlv anthentieitcl f, r settlement 11 A i; Il lET l.r.M AM U, Administratrix. Itcnde Twp.. Jan. V. 14HO.-6t.-i. A SSlc.NEE-s XOTICE. Not ic is JL iier-"hv iriven that I'eter SineltTo nd w.fe 01 Aiirnni-ny Town-i-'o. nuie niit-ie ,r) --.-i-Tinient of all tlie estate ot ".i d IVtcr STiieltn-r to the en dcriitne.!. in trut lor the hern lit ot .-r-.-.Pt.irs. All persons indented to the said i et er Smel -ier w 1 11 in-ike payment without delav. and thn havme claims will present them property authenticated for settlement. JOSEI'll lloill E. A'sinneo i IVf-r Soioluer fii w.te. Allegheny Twp.. Jan 30. lsj.-ei. fXECrTOlfs' NOTICE. I.etteis J J te'tomentary upon the estate ot Morris W. Jons. lat ot t'amhri township, deceased, having hecp irranted to the undersigned, notice Is herebr Kiven to those Indehted to snid et:;e to make Im mediate payment, and those hnTlmt claims will present tbe same properiv anthentlcated lor settle ment. W M. M . J( INKS t- l'AVHl M. JONES I EiLCCiuors. Jan. 20. 1S0. -ja-flt. 1701 EE OU HE NT. The well known hotel t rot ertv owned hv .,.i Kiuni-d ami situated in 1-retto horoujh, consisting ot three lots of ground and a lare tw.storT fmmo hiiihlinnr. w ith all necessary conveniences "U otler- I J.A fur '!e on ensy terms. If not sold on ..e h.in the middle of f0mary. the t-runertr trill th.n h. for rent. I . X. 1IA1I). ' Ioretto, Jan "5, lS0.-3t. 1 RED I'ronaptlr and pfr. manrntlv, 1 send a l-tr.e ol 1 my celebrated remedv. with a val- nat.lc treMtis on this disease, iree to all r ufterers who send rn their 1". t. anrt Expreps address. ir. II. I'. ROOT, No. 1HS Pearl St., New York. T1UAE JAT for Adjourned Court, to be helj at Iicushuri?, cn the lih Februarv . P. 1 io ; MclVrmltts T Flvnn e: at , E. OTK INNEEI l'rotho'notarv l'rothonotary sOfflcc. Ehenshurg Jan 19 issd"-t. ! $10 to $1000 i invested iu Wall St. Slocks mate fortune even- month. H.Hikas.i.t 1 Iree eiolalnln evervtl.ir, dress BAXTER & CO., Hankera. 7 Wall St.. N.Y'. UU-AKSR CTTV GALVANIC t'O. i T2CZnitrV2i!iLyrmd TVJ1 i C'"' 7T a Vtniln,! exnensMto A'n. n,,iiv. c 1 I I Address r. o. vSckfrt. Ahius.1 iiairi. Q7"7 tonth and expenses ruaranteed to Arents' v i iiumi iree. haw- k. t;o.. A rot st a, MaIU. . Cl"f prj How tn hecome Kich and Watch ssnt dBnnn Bi b a & FORM-DEMOfBlT j Spread the Truth-Male TM Now Iff tb time to THE WEEKLY 1 J i I OH J.OOIC AT Ttir ,.. . f 1.25 per Year In Mnb nf " i. 1 : i- , pottagt jryma. We will rrv a K--n'. ;t j fur lfcJ in the wi-n!t,,,f .la'p3 .1 brr. If Tou war-? i-n-. pt lf.; dau-. IT t. " t ,. . THE (1KEAT ItiMTIc ,, His 1.,,'-,' Tlie rr-!it I'res i.ler.'!', , the fyii.pntlile" .f er , the lan.t, and tbe ictn't i . of ri.tT. It pn)ini- to b The r .,.., . t-- preioaoy ot Irofv- rati- pr n-m'-n tn the irt-vr.rnrT.nt i I he wiiy to en wn it wc.h . j I and eii'-oTirf the vr.rr i ermlr trurh. 1-t the tru-ii boutliuld id the land. ' kr.-; t Mir I 'ati :r ! Arrl Tr'-iipi 1, :s Ja-. ' By the (ret! ;:.l lo t r ;r , d-cre l;i' tor.e -ti with the ballot---! ru .j. ; '(;. '. tion and lot tin:-!f t, a - " tr Mar'hAli :n be nr. ; .n. r rw-rstic 'T;rr ha ,..nr ... ' be no mttrf 'win.i: i.jt 1,.,'.. franchise 1 niirrat;c i Vr ef St.itr-s li'nr.!!y f.ur . more -to 7 JurniTc I. make Iraud Aira n Ir.i:n. torr. by mpprr-dFi i ir l!if tn !, . count and 'tire a : v i .1 - .. . -Six Million '."! lMn.'it rnltr H.r o-ne .,f : h r. . . - tire of 1H7C. hve iif;i. 1 ; r ,. m law of the land that tl a' f t . nic U irtAtiii, let the coi.v may. in IL ear r lumrrn-r t Itk t'linvfiiti'-n' ;.! n.f tn- rontendin' ..r tl e r will present their -nr:c ! ire I're'i.iert. an-! Shall t'O to the crest iu I ' A - - , 1 h' w-.ii lam. -I: ut ,.Q t ' ff SJ, ileitine.J t.-, le t! ! ' t- ' and ir:tertin in 'i.r-"s. that t me until the rrfre' wl!i he of t ;: ;!.-. thin 'un'.ry. 1 H K. V. I 1. 1 ' f iairirnt-r?' p-irt in 'i ' ' the Mi or-t (.1 tL- hi v . 1 WTTJ "Ii all tlie ; c imaud. V e iiothir t r I eai"e. forin that r-'pe. t ,t hr. we hope to if-e' t cur rt-a !. r- !- 1 ber T. Iho. with a n stj f . i th.-.t wiil el,..(-r ti.' ir h.- . the esmp-uL-n. ' We inuM m t f .r?et . Pennsylvania tn l-. ! w , roadcrs a;-ie f-tu tl e It j er nte-t. a it ii I !r-1 on e I ture whieh -;!: eiet a t plnr-e o! H -n IV a--. A W a. in March. 11. OTHEK 1I1ATI Kl:1: 1 ! V.'hl'.e jf ''.:'"i'l c" a: 1 panly be the nlr'..t 'e ' I't 'ST. durinr The r rr.i. . reit. yet 11 w.ll rr.a r.ta : ' p"l r5t - I'lIIillv ewt 1 THE NEWS It wUi c ' rt the day fr -in ail q-ir.n and telecraph. cirw'-,j ; ly ' chiilina: lull rr-!r-rt "f ( "-. with pee: a I d '-he 1, W ahici?ton, Hsrr.i: nr p, I K rn r.i.-i . 1 . ! tere't. IJTEK AKY M-.S( 1 T.I. ANY- V ' choir-e l.Ucrrtry uin'ter. l1 '--. :.- .. f"r the amuiiint-.': t sr. ! :itl: i circle. i MABKVT llMiiIiT-i-Ti. : . root reliat-le Market l..;f.r: 1 mercial C'Otrnt. wf:;te a "i-e- ;. c ! made of tfi I.irp sir.--k ri.iti . ' farmer s inf-rer.. ' EPIT- KI I-SEiU.-r a!. ' r. ,r I interest that may tran.-i. -e. a- .-. ! feature'. SUlT?-e.J 1-y if.. . . eal caj iv. t (:. ...'.'. r--cr. 1 : 1 ma 11 k Tin: 1 i;i KT Twe're r." 5. 'r.z.g " . ' the ; a;.rr. ii'.i- t.'.- r n:t 1 ; ; Hlein-Rs : Sinir-e S j' " r- f .r ;-, . Iu Cluhc c: I.c .7 u. . : . : r - : IMS An Extra c ; y f r i T - - arspt.:icea c j t- : . a : J ti-c oflice. si:ni fop. sri: imi .v t t-m J (WE TKEPAV Al l. I" TA . F. 43-lVr1 f !i 'il t oi- . - 1 t!on ..1 THE WIT KEY P'I. y v or enla-io-rrirnt r,I ':'- !n -:r r a -: Money rn.iy l-c 'Tit hy lira.., 1' -s' t -or bv Measured I.c-i. Addre'.. J ts. p, IHHRi (O 1 4tli YKAlt Gocley's LADY'S BOOK. The Oldest and Best Fashion Magazine in America. mhmrhti pnr HKIHTKD T( S1" l'KUYKAL Kobarrlpflon n III l- rereivrd at tah Oflir in Inti m It h irtls I'sper. 1 it e c a .1 r rt n ta r 1: 1: i:ta i ;iti: vs i;A ! luntK One I ear for f3.0. Set what GOUT'S I.ADl'S BtMJk wlillciui IX IJSSO. Nearly IC "0 .3?r ol f rt-el. s L!'-i-t . 112 Steel l'late Ilennti:ui r:ifiu:l r.'if-n-V2 L-.rire and Eleirantlv e: -r-d I :- -. 1 24 I'aires oj Vocal and In'tramiusal . fK' hn-Tannc. cn Art. S iciice. and Is- r le Larae IiiaiTam l'altcrn oi LsU:-? nl t. :.. drer. 's I resec. VJ Ar.-hite -tural lK"icii f r Ecn nt ; ".. 1 li " 2 or more .narlnal E'-.-ip, . 1 r 1 a'i:: v 1 And the usual t r:iiial le; -rtu:ri.! ti ..t- The January No. ol the - Year w ,' r ..' Iecemh-r nrst. and w ill e,.nta rt tin -:..'. :s: tcrs of one of the HestSer:! Stvrn-i i-tt 1 " " in an American Mainline, t y CHRISTIAN Itlin. the author "A (lel.tle Hc'.lc." Val'.r'e A.'zr "Morton House."' eti .. entitled ROSLYN'S FORTUNE. Ve l-.isve frit' l a l ull rp of Dtatla- KnlMtteU Writrra. wi.t.,.. 1 i.:r ' u: . enrich iodey"s lj li llo, t duriri. ::.v -r Send in your (".'t.i.s cf once. u cc-. r.il '.:' attrtrarftM ni t.:'r,e 1 o r a .".r ffn.-'i.-iol 1 it1. TIlltMS C"r-L in Adv.ilii o. I'imacu rum:?. o( copy, one year. T. v- Two copies, one year. .... " Three eoi-ies. -r.c yen'-, - . ! -- K"urc .'ei.yne .vcar. - - -Eivc cp.es, one year, ard ar. ex -a c--t '. the person e it.tije up tl.eciub. risk if sir etudes, - . - : Eiht coioey, one year, nnt an cxt-a c : v to the per". .n return; op the t in.-, zy.uk Hilt rinccopica, - - . . 1 Now Isllietliiiriomakenp 3 onr I lh on TO KK V1T 7et a IV-t "-.-, H -der on Philadelphia, or a lirafl on I'h 1 . " New York. If you onrr. 't c t-t eitl.. r 1 : . '' Hank-noici. and in the letter ra'c rr- :f ' --: letter. To parties Inti-ndirif t- eel r.p t'li:' ,, 1 copy will le sent on appl.eatioii. Address. Oodej's Lady's Bonk rub. Co.. I.ioii 1006 Chest rat Street. I'hlladi '.phla. Pt TI 11. -2 il AST CAMimiA FKKEMAN i.00 YE.ilt, POSTAtJE IX LI 1I 1 The t'Hti-co Must t Nrnno' e-re : Oi-nircl us a pn.cr unoiri I in : ments pf Ameri'-an JourrnM-m. It . r -. Pt'icnous am-.iir.c lie metr. :-li' :ii ' --.rr:-. ' country as a cr-rupleti.. nri-.-i -i er. l:.s ' ' service comprise all the disj.at -he cux AssisuTtti I'nr s and the Nou (Utcd I'rkss, t-eside a Tcrv citen- ve special ti'lisrsini from all inip 'rnn' ) ( a er.-yt'ai.er it has no sUT.crior. I hi 1 I Politics presentir.it ail pel it i .-a I partisan bias or cohrir.c. and ti'.-'- r-: lir or l.iTor as to parties. It is. in the fullest rere. a rM!i. r Ench issue eoiit.iiiis Sit Covrinu M'" " sides a ri.'h Tarietv r' c .rden-.-d n"t losrs. Art. ljtfifsVniK-. I.ii'XtuT'. ks. KTi .. arrc. Its M sp.kkt vii-ottios r' and to he relied upon. i It is iinsurrtass,..! as n n ' C rt'r' -1 n 1.' 1 .- . -t. f.- trustworthv orvictm. i-m:lt strir I special c!utlinit tinn hr.'or it wr h n ir-e all. Spei-ltnen copies nir t-f " "'- 5 ' 1 aTNer.d 9ul'erlptiLiti to th-s "f. -e. A GOOD PLAN. I . C7..les r.s KuerMS. I . s circs-.-, "i nr coitina i'fn iretorl. r.sJe sur-ssHil. . i. --' .. n .l tl 1 n. UU o.' larwsi. ,-s.-it1 J ' i na. irtses In s 111. shnls. 11 US .Kiirlirf t( " i - - -.i.si.isc-s of urn I i - - I m r- sl.w.rf mnnim,. AottUi.t l.m 1 t .u Us a tt..sslio N T l--i..4 ' . r... I-s. Hj v.. s, -mJIoslesJ '" "V "t , ,. j psr e-M ;ltis..til ..-ll -I e-to. . . remi rn t. .-. e srloe lis r . t-K i -. l i. -. ..-I N "-:--" J " fctnsltn. nitlii ef P-.-'il'.nr ' I , Ir r -sr i-Tl-A ' New tr.-t lol-I " t- st-M.1 Slew Tf.- ino.p . ,s-psl combination ntem t 1ovr,el u"7.l " . . ,. . -r peine CipPS, O'1 ec- poWl '.S C '"tv, - . . . J .i--'--' ' w .r13 br Ws-srs. Isre-t , .ii - ' "' ksp w ri3 br ljisrrreti .. es-H.imi " ' - . rl.!ssv.rj!iin. Itt-VllrtW"'"1 1" Ti;r.ll'X Jt. LA.V7LI5CK ft CO., ft CO.. Batitra. IT ir.rra.-i ' js") tO S"0 rV crditit homo. dH-ees w w ...si (V 1 ... ; imrtn isaklnR before, oeeine m u . a fair!! V,a.ft & vr irtt jr.on'b Tery lel eft re eorreP ' nd tbn i peor.ty : A i trade It frir noth ' and lnt -unoD , lerrat jrtattr i 1 1 ' - ,w ' - . . r p - - , m " . T". fl 7 r " , TJ'i pd V'Ss