star anb ftntintl. FRIDAY MORNING, Feb. 24,1671. D. A. BUEHLER, Editor and Business Agent. Advertisers and others Interested will bear In mind that the regular circulation of the "eras Awn gearnum" is much larger than that of any other paper published In the County, being read weeddy by not less than /1.000 Persona, LzeisiLATrws. The Legislature adjourned over on Friday to Monday the 27th inst., taking a ten days recess. Before the adjourn ment Mr. Hereter read in place an Act granting annuities i d gratuities to Barney Bigham and Michael Lauver, aoldierrof the war of 1512; also a sup plement to the act incorporating the Lit itlestown Fire Irisurance Company. ¶The bill in regard to huckstering in .Adams county was reported from the committee with a negative recommen • dation. The bill in regard to collecting tolls on the Gettysburg tt York trirnplliie was also reported with a negative ret ommendation. Mr. Duncan read' in place an act 1;16 incorporate the Bendersville railroad company, for the construction of a rail road from some point near Gettysburg, through the valley of Conowago and Opossum creek, to Bendersville, Adams county, and the iron mines in the vicin- Ity. What is under cover of the act ,does not appear, as the journal does not 'deport the names of the corporators. As we have heard of no agitation of the project in this quarter, it looks as if some person was anxious to occupy the ground, in view of possible future con tingencies. The people of - Bendersville would be glad to hear that somebody is in earnest in this movement. Petitions in favor of the "local option" bill are presented in unprecedented num bers. it is estimated that the petitions already on file have over 100,000 signa tures. The House made the bill the special order for March 1. Bills are also pending in the House to compen sate persons injured in person or other wise by the sale or giving away of intox icating liquors, and to prevent the sale of intoxicating liquors on election day, both of which were made the special order for March 1. Mr. Buckalew is vigorously pressing his cumulative voting principle. He, at least, is honest in its maintenance and in favor of applying it irrespective of partizan majorities. Having success fully put through the Senate his bill for the election of School Directors on that basis, he has introduced two other bills —one to apply the system of cumulative voting in municipal elections generally, and the other in elections for County Commissioners and County Auditors. On Friday, Mr. Buckalew, from the Committee on Constitutional Reform, reported a new bill for a Convention to revise the Constitution. It provides that the question of calling a convention to revise and amend the constitution shall be submitted to the people for their decision on the second Tuesday of June next, at which time also members for the proposed convention be voted , for; and if a majority of the legal voters shall be in favor of a convention, then the members chosen shall meet In '• the ball of the House at Harrisburg, at noon on the second Tuesday of September next, and proceed to business, with general powers otadjournment as to time and place, and with authority to prepare and submit to the people all such changes and amendments of the consti tution as they Shall think proper. Mr. Buekalew's bill disregards the present legislative and senatorial dis- tricts in the State, in arranging the election of members of the convention. Thirty-two members are to be elected at large, each voter, however, only to vote for 16. The balaraie of the members are to be elected in districts indicated by tlie bill, which seems to be prepared, with a desire to secure a Democratic majority. Thus, Somerset, Fulton and Bedford are given 2; Franklin and Cumberland get 8; while Adams is handed over to York, the two getting 3 members. The great difficulty will be to get a Bill, on an apportionment satis factory to both parties. As the Senate is Democratic and the House Repnbli- Can, there must be mutual concession, or the movement will fall. And just here lies the danger. The enemies of Constitutional Reform, under the guise of professed friendship, will work to prevent agreement on any reasonable bill. On Friday Mr. Osterhout introduced a bill in the Senate tocreate a Court of Appeals for the State, with three Judges to hold office 15 years, to take exclusive jurisdiction of appeals, cer tioraris, &c., in Equity practice, and requiring certain proceedings now com menced in common pleas to be origi nated and prosecuted on the equity side of the inferior courts. This Court of Appeals to be distinct from and ad ditional to the present Supreme Court. The bill is not likely to go through. The Senate finally declined to sweetie to the House resolution for a recess to Monday the 27th, and adjourned to Thursday the 28rd. - The House, how ever, adjourned over to the 27th. A bill was reported in the Senate authorizing the Pa. Railroad Company to purcbase the York, Wrightsville and Gettysburg Relined, with the bridge across the Susquehanna at Col umbia, in which the Pa. Railroad eons-, pany has now a controlling interest. It . has no reference to the Gettysburg?, based Railroad, pu re Maltby & Co. t THERE is no be e down in Gen. Frank Blair. He made a speech in the U. States Senate last week, maintaining the correctness of his celebrated Broad head letter, which did the Democratic party so much damage the last Presi dential campaign. Frank insists that the party would lniVe "won" on that programme, but they saw fit to dodge the real issues, and by a chicken-hearted policy lost the priie. He is still for war— wants the reconstruction policy of Con gress ripped up—don't believe in giving a burial, decent or indecent, to "detul %sum" His speech will make a good Republican campaign document, quite as effective as his Broadhead letter. IT lugs been stated that Rev. Father Farrel, of St. Joseph's Catholic church, New Pbrk, had been removed by the Archbishop because of his opposition to the dogma of Papal Infallibility and his letterinlavor of Italian unity. The N. York Tribune says that after confklern tbst interviews bet Ween the Archbishop antiAther Farrell, the latter has been unconditionally motored to the °pastor ship of St. Joseph's &larch, "without involVing any formalTecantation on the part of the latter of his. views on libeety.' Tun term of Hon. Christian S. EP,- ter, as Associate Antics of 'Colorado Territory, will aspire in /larch, and a successor has bet:eliminated and con firmed by *e -Senate. Mr. E. is a native of Clianiberiiinuir,„ Tax inoVtnents of the French Assem bly now in session at Bordeaux, indicate a sound, sensible and patriotic policy, and augur favorably for the future. Mr. Grevy, a moderate, pnaient Repub lican, has been elected Prarddent et the Assembly with much unaminity, and M. Thiers Executive of the Provisional Government. M. Thiers is probably the ablest and most'experienced• states men in France, besides having a high reputation as historian and- scholar. He is 74 years of age, has passed nearly half a century in active political life, and has an eminent and wide-spread reputation for ability and conscientious ness in the discharge of all the public duties entrusted to him, which have been many and difficult. His election will give general faith in the wisdom and discretion of the Assembly. In 1838 he resigned his position as the Premier of Bing Louis Philippe's Cabi net, and since then has mainly occupied himself with literary labors, although in 1851 he was engaged in schemes for the overthrow of Napoleon and the re storation of the Orleans dynasty. He was one of the few Frenchmen who re garded Louis Napoleon's declaration of war against Germany uncalled for, and foreseeing the consequences, he de nounced it in the Corps Legislatif as a crime against France. His counsels, however, were not only unheeded, but au excited mob attacked his residence next day. It is thought, that he still retains his preferences for the Orleanist dynasty. M. Thiers has surrounded himself with a strong and prudent ministry, representing the more conservative Re publicans, chief among them being Jules Favre who, since the fall of the empire, has been at the head of the Paris Gov ernment. Picard, Simon, Dufavre, Le Flo, Pothuan and Lambrecht are the other members. Gambetta, Rochefort, and the revolutionary element generally, are ignored, and herein we have at least a hopeful aspect for the future of France—provided, always, that the real statesmen of France can manage to sustain themselves as against the mob. The Provisional Government thus constituted, will negotiate with Ger many terms of Peace; after which the National Assembly will either declare the future form of government, or sub mit to a popular vote the question of a Republic or Monarchy. Although Gam betta and his colleagues will oppose any negotiations looking to the transfer of territory to Germany, the general im pression is that Thiers and Favre :want Peace on the best terms that can be secured—but Peace at any price. Dis patches from Bordeaux indicate the re establishment of the monarchy, under oney*er of the Orleanist Princes. M. TOO 5 addressed the National As sembly on Saturday, urging the nece.4 - :` sity of peace, to enable France to restore and reorganize her suffering interests. The terms of peace would be courage ously discussed with the Prussians, and would only be accepted if consistent with the honor of France. He request ed the appointment of 15 members to aid in the negotiations, which the Assembly acceded to. Thiers and Favre left Bor deaux for Paris, to begin the negotia tions. Despatches renew the statement that the German ultimatum is the ces sion of Alsace, and a part of Lorraine, including Metz, Thionville, and Belfort, besides a heavy pecuniary indemnity. Confidence in peace is still maintained. THE great "strike" throughout the Pennsylvania anthracite coal regions has assumed a new phase. The "Working men's Benevolent Association," a leg islative body representing the miners in the coal regions, and which, with des potic power, has for years been prescri bing the terms under which its member ship shall work and when not toy work—undertook in November last to dictate terms to the coal operators, which the latter declined to accede to because of the fall in price of coal and their alleged inability to pay the wages demanded. Thereupon the Association ordered a "strike" throughout Schuyl kill, Luzerne and other coal counties, to prevent further production of coal until the market should be depleted, prices advanced, and the operators be forced to terms. Finally, the Association agreed that its members might, go to work , on the 15th of February, in all 'nines where the operators were willing to pay the prescribed wages. Coal hav ing advanced in price, a few of the ope rators agreed to give the stipulated wages rather thin have their works con tinue idle. Jest at this stage an unex- 1 'pected move took place on 'the chess board. The Lehigh vallei, Beading and other great coal-carrying roads, having suffered largely by these "strikes;' being determined to break the posielW the Association, at once put up the tolls froth a . 75 to $7.10 per ton, until further notice. This is vir tually laying an embargo on the few operators who had determined to go to work, as no coal can be shipped to mar ket at those rates. The "dead-lock" is now complete. The idea of these com panies is to force the miners' Associa tion to terms. President McGowan, of the Beading road, says his company represents a capital of $80,000,000, which has hitherto been at the mercy of the few irresponsible men who rule the Asso ciation and they will no longer submit to have their interestmthus trilled with. Whenever the miners and operators agree to an equitable basis that will jus tify* general resumption of coal opera tions, and guard against future unreas onable strikes, the railroad companies will put down tolls to a fair schedule.— It looks much as if the Association will have to succumb. SERIOUS difficulties exist in Arkan sas, growing out of a political quarrel between Gov. Clayton and Lieutenant Governor Johnson. The House is with the latter, and has undertaken to sus pend the former by preferring articles of impeachment against him at the bar of the Senate. The Senate sustains the Governor, and refuses to go into a trial. Johnson holds that Clayton was *sus pended by the simple tiling of articles of impeachment, and claims to exercise the office of Governor. Clayton refuses to surrender and keeps his office guard ed. Chief Justice McClure undertook to interpose against Johnson, when the House replied by impeaching the Chief Justice also. We do not understand the origin of the difficulty, but it looks as if it was a fight of factions for power. Both sides, at last accounts, were threatening to call out the militia, and a serious out-break was apprehended. President Grant has telegraphed to the commander of the forces at Little Bock to preserve the peace. Tan steamer Tennessee, carrying the San Domingo commissioners, in regard to whose safety apprehensions were felt, has been beard from, baring reached Samna Bay in due time, after a rafnd and pleasant voyage. The axmaission ers want promptly tti . evit, had an in terview with President Bass, and were "grandly to explore the island. Tan capital of the nation has just been making itself redicukkus, by an attempt to ape the silly customs of some European capitals. For some time past great ineparationshaVe been , in progress at Wasidngtest for a "grand carnival" and the coming event was heraldedwfill Imposing progranune. Thecityauthor ities tell in with the movement, and Ordered Perinsyltinia Aventie, froirf the capital grounds to the Treasury Buildings, to be given up for the show, which opened on Monday and continued over Tuesday—the pro gramme consisting of racing, trotting, sack races, wheel-barrovi performanees, masquerades, tournaments, fire-works, &c. The first day drew a large crowd of strangers; but the show was so decided a failure, that the denizens of Washing ton had the "carnival" pretty much to themselves on Tuesday. Congress, we are glad to notice, gave - the thing a cold shoulder, meeting as usual and attending to their legitimate business. A MAN went into the New York house of representatives the other day and tried to bribe a member with the paltry sum of twenty dollais. The speaker very promptly ordered his arrest and expulsion, on the ground that the fellow was insane. The point may have loi.en well taken,at Albany, where, under the lavish administration of Jim Fisk and the Tammany ring, $2O may be re garded a "paltry sum," and the idea of Ding a legislator at that figure clear evidence of insanity. It may be that the market value of legislators has also risen at Harrisbarg, but the time was, when $5 would fetch a halting member, when nothing better could be done. Tuz House of Representatives, at Washington, last week passed an amend ment 4 to the national election law of last sessioo, designed more effectually to prevent frauds at elections for Presi- dent and Vice President, and members of Congress. It was adopted by a strict party vote. It is somewhat "remarkable that the Democratic party, in Congress and State Legislatures, should persist ently place themselves on record as opposing every measure to preserve the purity of the ballot, and prevent fraud and violence at elections. GENERAL NEWS THE Maiden's Prayer—An engagement ring Senator Sumner was seized with a seri ous attack of illness on Saturday, but is now better Tam feeling in• Congress is said to be increasing in favor' of entire removal of political disabilities since the President's message on that subject. Berra houses of the New Jersey Legis lature have just passed a bill to allow in dicted persons to appear as witnesses in their own behalf. GENERAL J. Bankhead Magruder died at Galveston, Tow, Sunday. He acquir ed considerable reputation in the Union army before the rebellion. At its out break he deserted, went South, and served in the Confederate armies 'until their sur render. AT a juvenile party in Lowel one little fellow, rejoicing in the splendor of his new clothes, sidled np to another with the triumphant remark: "You ain't dressed as well as I Ital." "Well," retorted the other, "I can lick you, anyhow!"—which is what is often thought, ! but never so well expressed at parties tr ef a larger growth. A French-paper reports that, in spite of the terrible cold, the town of Sedan and ifs surroundings are almost entirely unin habited on account of the horrible stench of dead bodies which pervade the air in that vicinity. The bodied of those that were killed in the battle preceding the surrender have been covered but insuffi ciently, and it will probably be neeeessary to reinter them in a better manner. Tam quarrel between the Hendricks and Pendleton men in the West is getting live ly. The Dayton Herald, speaking for Mr. Vallandigham, says that the Cleveland Plain Dealer's provocation to controversy is perfectly understood, and also "its ald ers and abetters." The Herald adds: "They mean war, and so do we; and that after the fashion of Palafor. And not, a mean, sneaking, underhand war, but one open and sloths board." CHILD Bin - ErTO DEATH.—The Perry county Democrat says that on last Friday a little daughter of Dr. A. Simpson, of the borough of Liverpool, that county, was burned to death, by her clothes taking fire, in the absence of her mothir, who had just left the child for a moment to get a briithet of water. .ft is supposed the lit tle one had been playing with matches. It died the tie same night, and was con signed to its last resting place on Sunday. It was aged about four years. Tax Rev. Francis Tinton, D. D., of New York, who recently returned from Nassua, writes the president, warmly com mending the project for annexing San Domingo to the United States. Dr. Vin, ton derives his views as to the desirability of the proposed acquistion, in a measure, from the statements of Governor Ward, of Nassua, and from a sea 'captain with whom he conversed on this subject; the former, who has resided forty-one years in the West Indies, describing the soil of San Domingo as being unusually produc tive, and believing our American civiliza tion necessary to the welfare of its people; and the other believing that, after the opening of a ship meal across the Isthmus, San Domingo anus* become a grand entre pot for the commons between Europe and Asia. The doctor agrees in opinion with these gentlemen, and ardently urges an nexation. In concluding his letter he says: "I pray that God's blessing may prosper your plans in this regard for the benefit of universal man, the good of our dear country, and the happiness of the in habitants of the island." • HOW IT Worn —The Grand Jury of :Dauphin County, at a late term of the Court, took occasion, in their report, to comment upon the fearful waste of life, usefulness and property, growing out of th% present licensesystem in Pennsylvania. Judge Pearson after some favorable com ments upon the report, expreised the hope that it would be published,.generally, by the newspaperi throughout the common- . wealth. As the report is entirely too long for our columns we can only give a few of its leading and moat startling feat ures. The Grand Jury, after - giving the amount of money which is paid annually, into the State Treasury, for licenses in Dauphin County and the pittance, just $111.50, which the count) derives there form, go on to show, !Win Pollee Stets: • 4 8 7 that the round cost to Dauphin, per annum to keep up the license system, is $51,889. This does not include the loss of life from drunkenness, which could not of course, be estimated in dollars and cents. In oominnuukhon, therefore, for rum's doings in the Akilmty of Decipbil, the tax-payers are bled to the-tune of fifty ens thousand eight hundred and eighty. nine dollars, and this estimate is made up from authentic sources which cannot be gainsaid. If it be so in Dauphin, it Must be so elsewhere, and the eamideratten is mutainly one worthy the paws* reileetnin or ear law makers at Thertisburg. NEWS •/1 0 NI:11a IA COV3ITII3. Cannotz,--gainge Angel, a soldier of the liar otl2lB, 80 years, died on the 4th inid"AuFflWdbburg. Fna7ga.”-'ool3barles Michaele, of Glipeilkaellsollii maidenly on the 14th Miniorrifinease.—The dwelling of tones, near Fannettsburg, was destroyeaily *re, With contents, on the 10th inst. - Wm. X. Kuhn, a clerk in A. B. Barnhart's store, at State Line, was killed on Saturday evening under peculiar Some time ago the store was broken into and to guard against an other burglary Xs. Kuhn had *Gad • loaded musket on a chair with the muzzle commanding this dcar, and had fastened A cord to the handle of the door, which passed around the chair and was fastened at the'other end to the trigger of the gun. On - Saturday evening when about ready to leave the store, alter placing the gun in the position described, he•• started to pass around the counter and ran against the fatal cord, and discharged the musket. The whole charge entered his thigh las cerating it fearfully. After suffering about three hours death came to his aid. 34. Kuhn was only 21 years old. FREDEHICX.—John Loata has been re elected President of the Fred. .$ Pa. Line Railroad Company; Capt. A. W. Eichel berger is one of the Directors. YORX.—Rev. J. K. Bricker has resigned the charge of St. Paul's Evangelical Luth eran Church in Dillsburg, in this county. —George B. Nace has been appointed Postmaster at Porter's Sidling, vice A. G. Rudisill. resigned. REVEASIND PONITION-TDE OLD AND NSW STAVIN, The Philadelphia Ledger has compiled a number of interesting tables from the returns of the new census, which shows, so far as population is concerned, the rela tive position of the several States of the Union. The seven States standing at the head of the list, rank according to popu lation as follows: 1, New York; 2, Penn sylvania; 3, Ohio; 4, Illinois; 5, Missouri; 6, Indiana: 7, Massachusetts. Here we observe that four out of the seven moat populous States are "new States;" that is, they were not included in the original "thirteen." At the foundation of the government under the present Constitu tion, in 1789, the four States then at the head of the list hi point of population were 1, Virginia; 2, Pennsylvania; 3, North Carolinia; 4, Massachusetts. In making oomparison between the rank of the leading States of the present, we miss Virginia. She then stood first, whilst now (if the State had not been divided) she would have ranked in the seventh place; North Carolina, which stood third, now ranks fourteenth. Eight States standing at the head of the list of States contain just one-half of the whole popula tion of the United States. These are New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, Missouri, Indiana, Massachusetts and Kentucky. It requires the aggregate pop ulation of the other twenty-nine States to equal the population of these eight. The three Pacific States have an aggre gate population about equal to that of the city of Philadelphia. The states west of the Missisippi, including the Pacific States, have about one sixth of the whole population of the United States; while the twenty states immediately situated along the Atlantic and Gulf shores have nearly twenty-one millions of people. "The seat of empire" has therefore not yet left the Atlantic coast even, much less gone west of the Mississippi. PROPOSAL TO PURCHASE THE BRITISH NORTH AMERICAN CoLowrics.—A.despatch to the New York Pst from Washington says: The question of bringing before the British High Commissioners the proposi tion for purchasing a part, if not all of the British territory on • this Continent, has been the subject of much discussion among the leading Republicans and sup porters of the Administration. Reny different schemes have been discussed in all their bearings, together with the pro priety of taking at the present time any steps having for an object the expansion of our territory. It is not doubted by some of our best in formed as to the intention of the United Stites High Commissioners that a proposi tion of some sort will be 'made for the purchase of a part of the British territory— probably that part lying on the Pacific Ocean—in order, if for no other purpose, to ascertain the feeling of the British peo.. ple on the &litter of disposing of the possessions on this side of the' Atlantic Ocean. It may be regarded as somewllisignill cant that a majority of the members of the Foreign Relations Committee in the Senate favors such purchase. Mr. Sum ner, perhaps, goes further than any mem ber of the committee. He has already addressed a letter to Mr. Fish on this sub ject, in which be favors negotiating with Great Britan, through the High Commis sioners✓ for the purchase of all her territo ry in North America, including the is land belonging to that country in the West Indies, so that the British Sag will not Sy over a foot of ground on this con tinent. Fuze Eirearmso /N EDGLAND.-A. Mr. Ayrton, member of the British Perlis went and a member also of the Govern ment, and somewhat famous for a cans tic tongue, recently summoned his ocin stituents to listen to an address. The l`waterri!led," to use a New York phrase, accordingly assembled; but instead of listening to Mr. Ayrton, placed one of his opponents in the chair, who thereupon „caused to be read the following resolution: "That, in the opinion of this =Wng, the great and important interests of this large constituency have been lamentably neglected and wilfully slighted by oar senior member, Mr. Ayrton, and that his conduct to the electors of the Tower Ham- lets has even been unbecoming and inso lent, and generally that his rude, coarse demeanor, both in and out of Parliament, has made the borough of the Tower Ham lets a by word through the United King dom. This meeting, therefore, calls upon Mr. Ayrton to resign into the bands of the electors the trust which be has so disgrace fully violated." This resolution was then adopted amidst general applause, And poor Mr. Ayrton, who had till then.been accustom ed to make rough speeches, but not to bear them, afters brief adatiss went home —perhaps a wiser man, certainly a sadder man. Suppose some American constituencies should try this kind of treatment? DANAGILS AGAINST • LIQUOR 8111.1.11 - In Ohio, in the Guernsey County Court of Common Pisa; Mrs. Francis Watt re cently recovered $2,500 damages from one Boyd for selling her late husband intoxi cating drinks. The husband was at one time a promtherd physken and surgeon, and bad represented his county in the Ohio Leg islature. - Pilling into intemper ate habits, be lost his pasties, squander ed his estate, and finally died from the effects of intoxication. tbs widow brought suit, sawing that Boyd, the defendant, cordial:4d dazing an his time to sell and deliver to her husband inthriesting liquor quantitise of from one pint tome quart, Osumi* him to become an habitual drunk ard and incapable of *bending to any hind of business, and claimed 116,000 damages for width. amount she ithedjudgementat the bands el thejary. Alter argument by able coonealcill bothsidas i thejery retun ed &' diet far the plahrtilf, assessing dank!ge at 4500- ralltszeini To seatanas MF Ingle WAS I/1 ISIS. • Dark sad Peesliar illsameraf/We . Annexed Is the full text of the Act of Congress, Mae" Leo. 41.011 i4liialt7 -4 1 11 . 101111111 X grantini Tensions to certain soldiers and sail- without sow mormse. , r . ors of the war of eighteen hundred and twelve, sada* widows of die deceased soldiers,% preyed Feb. U, U7l gilThe Csiedtet." And rH Be u eneeled by As &sate and House of IP?. Sig its was Reiervaentetiese of the United States of Id its ebirp, instead CC the liege*** Aneeriea in Congress assembled, That the iissird Is the iteiletltortra of t 5.1 Secretary of the Interior be, and he is that rattle of gaining appliances rishni. hereby, authorised and directed to place above the din of a hundred vociferating on the pension roll the names of the sag- tongues. riving officers and enlisted and drafted The public gambling house is a recog men, including militia and volunteers, of fired feature of border towns, and it is the military and naval service of .the among Ake fiat of "institaskineeiohamald United States, who served sixty days in the & pip e & oG r civilisation In the far the war with Great Britain of eighteen west. I t :is th e inseparatdo companion of hundred and twelve, and were honorably the star of empire, and its effects may be discharged, and to such other officers and observed anywhere along the line at that soldiers as may have been personally luminary's march. But nowhere does it named in any resolution of Congress for assert itself more successfully than in any specific service in said war, although such places as owe their existence to their their term of service may have been less proximity to mines: Miners are little .giv than sixty days, and who at no time, dur- en to that blahs of diversions which we of ing the late rebellion against the authority the quieter walks of life are content with. , of the United States, adhered to the They are for the most part a turbulent cause of the enemies of the government, set, in whom (if not naturally, then by giving them aid and comfort, or emir- force of association), the animal propensi cised the functions of any °Soo whatever ties develop to the exclusion of the better under any authority or pretended authority qualities; and as a consequence their con k' hostility to the United States, and who ceptions of enjoyment are realized in such shall take and subscribe an oath to sup- amusements only as afford gross or absor port the Constitution of the United States, bing excitement. Gambling houses, with and the surviving widows of such officers their accompanying drinking and quarrel and enlisted and drafted men: Provided, t ling, are perfectly adjusted t. the miner's That such widows shall have been married, idea of pleasure, and they constitute a prior to the treaty of peace which termi- means for gratifying his inclinations, as nated said war, to anwofficer, or enlisted compared with which, in his judgment, - or drafted man, who served as aforesaid all other means are insignificant. in said war, and shall not have remarried. The Cricket, it would seem, "has struck Sac. 2. And be it further enacted, That a paying lead." It works like a beaver, this act shall not apply to any person who from tuorning till night, from night to is receiving a pension at the rate of eight morning; .. and then, not overcome by its dollars or more per mouth; nor to any unremitting labor, it commences afresh, and does the same thing wee, r again. It's person receiving a pension less than eight dollars per month," except for the differ- an enterprising fellow, you may rest as ence between the pension now received stirred, for it makes hay whether the sun ' and eight dollars per month. Pensions shines or not, and by virtue of its bides under this act shall be at the rate of eight try andAhe grabbing facilities it posses dollars per month, except as herein pro- sea, it is gradually but surely garnering vided when a person is receiving a pension an abundant harvest. of less than eight dollars per , month, and The gaming establishment under con- shall be paid to the persons entitled there to from and after the passage of this act for and during the term of their natural lives. SEC. 3. And be it further enacted, That before the name of any person shall be placed upon the pension roll under this act, proof shall be made under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe, that the applicant is entitled to a pension under the provis ions of this act; and any person who shall falsely take an oath required to be taken under the provision of this act, shall be guilty of perjury; and the Secretary of the Interior shall cause to be stricken from the pension roll the name of any person whenever it shall appear, by proofs satis factory to him, that such name was put upon such roll through false or fradulent representations as to the right of such per son to a pension under the provisions of this act. The loss of a certificate of dis charge shall not deprive the applicant of the benefits of this act, but other proof of services performed and of an honorable discharge, if satisfactory, shall be deemed sufficient. Sac. 4. dna be It further z ettacted, That the provisions of sections twelve and thir teen of an act entitled "Itp act supple mentary to 'An act to grant pensions,"' approved July four, eighteen hundred and sixty-four, and of sections two, three, and four of an act entitled "An act supple- mentary to several acts relating to pen sions," approved June six, eightenhand red and sixty-six, shall be appl icable to the pensions granted by this act. (Selected for the Star and Sentinel THE MIIiIIOIII 911•41.W1V1C. Intemperance is slaying its victims in equal degree with the sword. Can yoti ' legislate against lids evil ? The legal right to do so cannot be disputed, as lines already exist intended to restrain, but so framed as to deter prosecutors. We are justified by law in preventing, by force, the suicide from applying the rasor to his own throat, or from administering to himself` a speedy poison; and punishment is prescribed for administering quick poison to another, and he who prevents such a crime is protected. The principal is the same, whethOr applied to speedy or slow poison. It devolves on you, as statesman, to consult the best interest of the people, and instead of being accessor ries to crimes, through legislation, to ele vate humanity and bleu your country; to enrich and not to impoverish; to save life and not to destroy. Adopt the word "Progress," bit let it not be to ruin. Let it be true moral progress, leading at least to material blessings. Put an end to the licensed sale of poison, stop the flood-gates of intemperance, and save the land from desolation. Goys:axon MoeLuao, of Missotui Prohibitory legislation only seeks to prevent public mischief. It dopa not at tempt to dictate what we shall drink more than the laws against the sale of diseased, poisonous or otherwise unhealth ly articles of food dictate what we shall eat. In both cases, the laws are against the sale, not the eating or drinking. The hers of prohibition upon brothels, gamb. :ling houses, impure books and pictures, 'houses of ill fame, tippling shops, all rest upon the same principle, namely, that these trades are inconsistent with the pub lic welfare. No man can rightfully claim, that trade so injurious in its effects should be permitted to exist for his profit or Ac ton:iodation. GovEason PERHAIi t of Maine Da. PAVL Elarourra, who is now in jail at Carlisle, Pi., awaiting a day to be set by Governor Geary for the execution of the sentence of death upon him for the murder of Miss fitinnecke, of Baltimore, has made a deed of assignment of her Property, which he alleges she willed to him. ' Vre property is valued $ 7 40 00 ; $ 8 9, 01 4-0f which he gives for the erection of a idistital at Carlisle, and 111,000 to German Lutheran Church. As the will was proved at the trial to be a forgery, Schoeppe's donations do not amount to much, except to create sympathy for him, for which purpose they wore probably In tended. Priss.—How uncomfortable are itching piles? How terribly painful are internal, external or bleeding piles! Brigg's unri valled Pile Remedy is mild and soothing in its effects, and a positive cure for plies of every description. It has never been known to fall, when used according to direction. CORM, Bunions, Ben Bens, Ce.xsata- Tisk Ac.—lt is an asixmiabing fact nine out of ten persons- we meet are sorely troubled with their feet. Very few are exempt. Dr. J. Briggs' popular remedies ---Oenwitse - and Alleviator—axe reliable and certain in their effects. The Ceratire for sore aM tender corns, 'bunions, bad nails, dke., is a soothing balm for wounded feet, and rapidly cures the worst mass.— The Alleviator, for the cure of common owns and bunions, and the primittkm of an °orris, is a puzzle to sciesdine minds. Above medicines sold by A. D. Buehler, J. IL Huber and DrnagistastenFanr-... Wsicznouss Pox taarr.—Tbe building now occupied by Joe. Wins & Sou i- a- Produce Warehouse, Gettysburg, Ps.— Inquire it Joseph Wible. ti LIS% SWUM. sideration stands in Denver, in its princi pal street, and upon one of its most con spicuous and desirable sites. Located within the very heart of trade, it announ"es itself with all the assurance of a mate business, and its claims to patronage are responded to in the most liberal man ner. It enjoys an immunity from espion age unaccorded to kindred establishments in the eastern states, and its scope and publicity are as untrammeled as if its ef forts were devoted to the best interests of the community. Admission into it in volves neither the scrutiny of faces nor the traversing of dark passages. One simply opens the door as though entering an ordinary house, and, with a single step he is in the midstof an extraordinary scene. The room is very large and its sides are lined with tables. The proprietor, from a spirit of accommodation, restricts each table to a distinct game; so that there are as many different games going on at once as there are tables in the room. Conse quently, the peculiar tastes or preferences of every one wishing tc play may be indul ged, and an individual has only to take his choice, and he forthwith pays his mon- ey. Then the assemblage gathered hem ! One might fancy he had dropped into a Bill Sykes brotherhood. Nowhere in any civilised portion of the earth could there be a more repulsive collection of physical ly sound human beings discovered. It is a conclave of unkempt, hard-featured brutalized creatures, cursing and braw ling, and making the place a very penfold of the lowest beasts. The room is disgustingly foul; it could hardly be otherwise, considering the occu pants. The croupiers, or dealers, are cor respondingly begrimed; and the tables, ig noring the aesthetic combination of orna ment and utility subserve the latter pur pose solely, and are in keeping with the general filth. In fact, to an observer whose habits of life have associated him with cleanliness and decency, this den, this hole has all the attributes of a pig pen, add exhibits numberless other char acteristics which poverty of language Pre clude a description of. The dealers are eminently fitted for the positions they occupy. Did any of them ever experience a disposition toward the honest callings of life, I am confident that under the most favorable 'circrunstanoss such vagary could be nothing more than momentary and spasmislic. They look as though they had been intended for a Aso— mission; and that mission they are fulfil ling to the best of their ability. I noticed one in particular: he was plying his voca tion as eagerly as the greediest, and yet I don't recollect ever seeing a more thor oughly weary expression than was on his face. He was forty years of age, or there abouts, and his exhausted appearance told what crowded years they had been. He was as thin ass skeleton, and his arms, which the shirt sleeves, turned back to facilitate the working of his cards, discles ed to the elbows, were all but fied4ss„ and were marked by deep blue veins that seemed swollen to their utmost tension. His face was cadaverous, and his eyes, though bright, ram shockingly protruded. He was in the last stages of consumption, and a terrible cough—parcntyrans of which. occasionally dehyed the game—was rapid ly tearing him to pieces. That the 'hug giss wouldn't Wet much longer his wan and worn-out look made unmistakably evident. Still, this unhappy being, on the brink of the grave, with the hand of death already upon him, was as keenly alive to the tricks of-lais trade as if a long and jocund life were to be the reward of his thieving; and ealionaly aunt of his inrpendiug fate, with heart and aonl in the effort, he was busily employing the last moments of his existence here in se curing for himself that which we are told awaits the the life to come. It was past midnight when we left the hall. During the time we were there none of those thrilling occurrences took place, which books and publiehed letters lead us to suppose transpire for the edifi cation of sight seeing travellers; nor among the incidents that I heard narrat ed concearning the spot, do I recall any of more than usual horror. But as I issued from that room flied with its heartless Plunderers and*.narling, itibborn,and equally • heartless plandered r and looked from the valley up at the mountains where was hidden the treasure which bad called these men together, a fancy came ever mrs that mow the canons and the gulches, so gloomy with night's shadows upon them, there lay whitening the bones of many a man who would now be living but for the irresistible chirping of, the Denver cricket-- ~:_ NOTICE. Wm. Blair & Bon have made extensive pro. vision for supplying your wants. We will keep eoneroany on ban& the wink use of opium «tans so* to aufaikri Astenden. Iv" it Aka veridn'sen at pit& to salt the times. Cell and see. Wit BLAIN & SOW, Wboiessie and Itstaii Graters an& Queeesware Merchants, Carlisle. Pa. -1117 L ife - DBAS IIIIBB , I3I .I3MMANDCAT.AiIIuI tosaypit 'alkalis utmost sasseis, by J. lassos, M. 1).,104, Professor puma Ars.inee Aar , (MI tiO.Vidfsakbailas Pew* mask 12 yours eaperfassa (foessetly of Lerlea, bisilaad,flo.lll Aral leiskrbgb , •Tatiowd. ski era to issa sifted& TiiijadiOl, flisaft afa. assamysay Wit palimik as la has so' NNWhe lH yeotako. - Annaba athea lassetof *Walt jaga: -246 Skim tie ea. • Mara 18,111%—1f gurtrtiona n ts ? 1870. - 130,000 SOLD 11 Ilrk. S. i N G!E .. ..R. . ' SEWING MACHINE ABE THE MOST POPULAR AND BEST Ei2l or ANT IN riot mmuarr 520,000 SOLID. TREY DO A RIMER WORM OF WORK. They are simple, light-maim complete and always ready to work. Call and see . what they will do at the OFFICE ON BALTIMORE ST., OETTYSBURO, (opposite the Court.house,) J. E. FACKLER, Agent [Bl. B.] Maehines delivered to all part; of the County . and thorough Instructions given free of "en, 1870.—1 y Richard W. Cox Sc Co., Succomors to Wirt, Cox & Co., BANKERS & BROKERS, N. W. Cbr. Baltimore Jr Charier; Btr. BALTIMORE, MD., Do a general Banking and Brokerage business. Allow interterest on Deposits, subject to check at sight, same as the City Banks, and issue tiertiflcates of deposit, bearing interest, and payable on demand. Notes and Drafts maturing in Baltimore, Phila delphia and New York city, collected and credited to our customers free of charge, and Notes and Drafts on all other ac cessible points collected at lowest rates. Agents for the sale of Northern Pacific B. It. Bonds. Pamphlets and hifonnation furnished on application. N. B.—We take pleasure In promptly answer ing ail Inquiries. either by mall or wire, In re pird to seeuritses, &e., and shall be pleased to have our friends make our °Mee their Head Quarters while In the City. Feb. 10, 1870--3 m F. E. 11 ETZGE R, Banker, IA 7 ILL receive large and small sums of money, • v for which the following liberal rates of in terest, clear of State Three, will be paid, viz: 1 Year • per cent. 4 Menthe 3 per Cent. 4 Menthe 4 per rent. Bonds of all kinds bought &sold COUPONS, DIVIDENDS, &c., COLLECTED FREE OF CHARGE. 01/7ICE : IT Corner of Brondirai and York Streets, lie HANOVER, PA. Feb. 10, 1571.-3 m STAGE OFFICE. KAI - STONE HOUSE. THE KeXne House, Chambersburg street, has been selected as the Gettysb t urg Ake for the CILUISEBSSUEG and Em tTISSURG STAGE LINES. 'Stage for Chambersbms kaves daily at 1 o'clock, P. M., and for Em.Wttsburg daily at the same hour. Fare received at the Hotel and passengers called for at any place in The Keystone House runs a first-class RACK to and from the Depot 78= Hack to hire. Gettysburg, Sept. 9.15;0.-6m FLOWER SPFDS ! OL. - Rhiugdvaw a co r l s ectits fi n g , w an er d S4ad o .; each, ahLtdd re lle ie ll bt the ilmeniss. 50 of every planter in the country. They contain ivelly, Sects.. ants. sad $1.25 worth of the seeds, at packet prices, comprising selections of the analt beautiful and destrable varietlea, and eithe e will be sent by mail, post-paid, ou receipt of price, aad we guarantee them to reach the purchasers. sirDescrlpthre and Price Lists on application. airWe put up Vegetable Seeds in the same pro portion. Trophy Tomato Seed at IS and !Scents rl= kage itesti d g: l l. 13°A"M(Yeib.117.1-411- $5 to.Blo per Day. .meA•wainen•B°Yi and Girls who mi me ln our new business make from $5 to 1010Prr day In their own localities. Fultpartieulars and instructions sent free by mail. Time in need of permanent, profitable work, shoots address at once. G town Smarm & Co-, Portland, Maine. UNCLE JOSH'S TRUNK FULL OF FUN A Portfolio of first-class Wit and Humor, opt'. tabling the Richest Comical Stories, Cruel Sells, S p k a ,A d Ving Jokes, Humorous Poen= , Burlesque Sermons, New Con Ind Mirth-Provoking Speeches ever published. Interspersed with Curious Puzzles, Amusing Card Tricks, Feats of Parlor Magic, and nearly 2IXI Funny Engravings. Diustrated Prix 15 Ms Sent by mall, postage paid, to any part of the United States, on receipt of price. DICK & FITZGERALD, Publishers, 18 Annat., New York. THE NEW YORK DAY-IXXDL—The Chain pion of White Supremacy against the World. A first-class eight-rage Democratic Weekly, established In 1 , 60. $2 per year: for six months. Subscribe for IL For specimen copies, address "DAY-BOOK," New York City. 4t R. &8. FITCH'S FAMILY PHYSICIAN 90 pages sent by mail free. Teaches how' to cure all themes of the person; skin, hair, eyes, complexion. Write to 714 Broadway, N. Y. 4t BRIGGS & BRO'S Illustrated and, Descriptive Catalogue OF FLOWER L.`W VIJOZTABLE SEMI AND SUMMER FLOWERING BULBS. Felt 1671, WIII be ready for mailing by the middle of Janu ary, notwithstanding by our great whic low des of type, pa- Etc., fire, h troyed the .3r e ib .. l e '% ra fing once of the Rochester Democrat and Chrortick,2sth December, 1871). It will be printed off a mibst elegant new-tinted paper, and illustrated with nearly Noe Hundred Original Engravings, And two finely executed Colored mene for all of which were grown i t n r C e =es the past season front our own stock of Seeds. In the originality. execution and extent of the en. gravings it is unlike and eminently superior to any other Catalogue or "Floral Guide" extant. The Cataloguewill consist of 112 Pages, and as soon as ptbllehed will be sent free to all who ordered Reeds from us by mail the last sawn.— To others a charge of 15 cents per copy will be made., which is not the value of the Colored Plates. We assure our friends that the Induce ments we offer to pPurchasers of heeds. as to quality and extent of Btoilr, Discounts and Pre. Mums, are unsurpassed. please send orders for Catalogues without delay. Our Cblored Chrorno for MI Will be ready to send out in January. The Chrome will t Forty-two Varieties of showy and Flowers, of natural size and tokm. 'We. deslitn to make it the best Plate of Flowers ever homed. him, 19224 Inches. The re tail value would_ be at least Two Dollars; we shall, however, furnian It to customers at 75 cents rgSeeTi rger "Efe it as a I = li i l o n a. u ntrin i BROTHER. Roth toter, N. Y. 4t MD MEN PAMPHLET TO AVM Pries cm p . w /114)&,^ 'Now, N. * Y. Ow No - 4$ 1821 19MNAtitlf BA LOA " 1870 TIN stindsrd remedy for coughs, Colds, Coo looo CO. ="Nothing better.' Curt= Ram * 4t DEPLLATORY POWDER. e- out uees perAnoushaw In Ave indulges, with out injury to the skin. Sent by malt for $1.15. CWl.ll:i ' raw) a Bakke. most violent paer/sins in live minutes and effects speedy cure. Price SS by ma& " THE JAPANESE HAIR STAIN =the whiskers and kalr a beautiful Black or It consists nly one tore_TVell. 75 cents a lai] . Address S. C. IgPE • m No. VI Jayne Pk i t g lel= Pa. Circulars sent free. Sold y all ft L 'A" -g a TRAVELING AGENTS WANT ED. 110 teats for sample and full par ticulars. H. S. HOWlLED,ltuthind, t 4t ; I “v44;;44viiiiii TO TKE WORKING CLAiiiii—We are now A to futeliti all clangs with Gametal at lime, the wines et the thee or Tor '8 idomeits. Badness new t light, and Droltable. renews of either nu easily earn frots iOe.io S 5 per or/linker, and a proportional sum by devoting their whale time to the biedneni. Boys end Idris earn nearly as much as awn.— That all Who see this sake Tray send their ad: dress, and test the business, we make thip allekd oder: To such as are sot well will send OR to P lee the tee ee we partieulats, a Tellable sample trus wideli a V5/1 to toreaumee work on, and a copy of The Pee 'Ws Literary Cbinpanne erthe lam* sad „faseny arift Aver publisbal—ell sent = la" ' C walit ALM ila St ibent Ca" e, Augusta, Mahe. • it AN INDEPENDENT FORTUNE lIi.FOWL MONTE& Can be midi Ina midst waY br reee that are ea pitble of keeptsirthe secret. Address JANES , GOODWIN, If Kokomo§ Aar* N. Y. 4t 4.GENTf3I BEAD'IIIIBI, I WIIPILL PAS AGEItirriAIIALARTt silt NO PER WE= and impefiz or allow a large 41512211 a foilL h C1 4 210"1- 114 - ce*Anut T4 ll •41,1- : atIMMICKG 90. Jan. 11700-41 • • ,itcw g4thwi!wmits. Receipts /z . Expenditures OF ADAM COUNTY FOR 1870. Coummaanmits' Osstatig - ADAIts omen', PA. A 01/MBADLT to an Let of Assembly. esti "Ah Act to raise County Rates and Levies." the Conunimiouers of the respective Nish a statement of the Iteesipts yearly, we, the Commissioners Of Taxes of said county, do report u follows, to wit: from the bth day of January, A. 11., liflo. to the 4th day of January, A. D., mi. both days In clusive: WM. J. MARTIN, Esq.,Trampler, sad the Cont. Elisio in account with the county of Ad. &MS, Si ToOUtsMulaba i itgraid Quit Bents in bands of tor, 814,588 04 . Cl:rusty Rater and Latter for 1870. Bor. of Gettysburg $1,056 52 Quit Bents , • VS 54 Cumberland twp., 2453 26 Oxford 689 Huntington 2, 2, 353 6 64 4 ; Latlmore 1,653 £l7 Franklin 1 3.130 79 Stmban 3,017 20 Menallen 2,432 50 Hamiltonban 2,140 17 lionntpleasant 2,10) 87 Reading 2,394 15 Butlerl,66l 64 Hamilton , Union 2.718 46 .4,258 "33 Mouutioy 2,309 13 Germany 1,442 64 'lirone7,s9l 51 berty 1,542 14 Berwick 9:42 35 Freedom 906 79 'on high= 2,137 8.5 1,118 17 Littlestown bor., tits, tol) Berwick bor., York Springs 5r3 Su us State Tax ------1149,568 4.5 rpl Money borrowed !rum , bank and sundry 131 57 persons Cash from S. H. Russell, Esq., Water 19,499 0 Dividend 48 00 W. D. Holtzworth, Esq., Nal for oilier.. 40 00 A. W. Minter, Kay.. " " 23 00 Jacob Melhorn, ksq.. " 4 ' .. 20 00 J. Kiunk, Esq„ Jury fees and fines 151 00 Additional Tax 628 Costs from sundry persons 14 12 Cash Posts from P. Hann, Esq., late Sheriff, 7? P Hann, F-sq., late Sheriff, stove._ .. 8 00 George Swope. Water Stock " 4 8 00 Cash from S. Wade for paint , 3 25 Interest - ; '2 63 $14.291 22 The Outstanding Taxes and Quit Renttappear to be In the hands of the following Collectors. to wit: Yrs. CS/Lectors. Bor. and Tar, 1869. Jacob Remmel. Gettysburg. ..$ 54.1 441 R. McCleaf,• Franklin._ .... 423 15 John IL Hutton, 31ena ll eri.... 242 73 1870. James McCreary, Gettysburg. 1,066 77 Q Ren. 1 Wm: Bream,. Butleruit ts. 751 75 04 54 Henry Mayer,• Berwick bar.,.. 141 44 Peter Mackley.' Cumberland. 1.56,5 56 Wm. H. Small,. Conowago.... 779 29 Daniel liettel,• Franklin. 1,496 35 Wm. Scott, Freedom 254 55 K F. liarner,• Germany 963 Jesse Smyer3,• Huntington... 1,51.3 17 Robert Watson,. Harniltonban = 832 n Anthony Felix.* Hamilton.... 708 5) Christian Byers, Highland.- - 352 89 Jonathan B. Myers.•Latimone „ 897 68 David C. Krtse,• Liberty - 312 91 Augustus Crouse, Littlestown 385 16 Jacob- Bair,' Menallen 1,535 13 P. G. Smith,. Mountpleaaant- 1,754 52 Jacob Baker,. Mount joy 1440 18 John L Smith. Oxford T. 22. 18 George Sehright,• Reading.... 1,016 19 Abraham King, Straban. 1,583 64 Emanuel Spangler.• Tyrone... 718 3.3 Jacob Harnish,• Union 955 34 B. W. Ziegler,. Y. Spring bor., 306 71 Rig-Berwick township paid in full berate settle. ment, and Freedom. Highland. Union and Oxford have paid in full since settlement. Those marked thus • have since paid in part. CII. By orders paid out as follows: By Auditing public accounts $ 00 00 J. M. Walter. clerk to Auditors TS 00 J. C. Nee ly , En, auditing pubileollices. ZOD Wm. McClean, KN., Counsel's salary... 75 00 extra services... 25 Os) Dr. J. W. C. O'Neal, Physician to Jail... M 00 M. Rupp, Janitor's salary 35 00 J. JOE Myers, Clerk's salary 600 00 D. Wills, Esq., Treasurer of Adams County Agricultural Society 100 00 Medicine for prisoners 5 00 H. D. Wattles, Esq., for scalps, MN 27 16 Wm. J. Martin, Ears, Fox scalps, 1670... 46 50 M. Samson, Quit Bents 3 00 Secretary of Commonwealth 1 50 Jury Commissioners and Clerk.... 88 24 Tax refunded 19 91 Stamps 10 00 Summoning Jurors 106 MI 1 Assessors pay, 490 00 J.J. KlD:miller, postage. .. . ..... .. .... 602 J. C. Zouck,.Fsq., Inques t body of J. Bond , 17 37 J. C. Plttenturf. Esq., Inquest on body of G. Meckley 17 42 Directors of Poor pay 60 00 Keeping prisoners at Eastern Peniten t/a 390 00 District Attorney's fees 166 00 Treasurer of Alms House..... 10,90) MI Notes and interest paid to bank and sundry persons ' 20,811 13 Wood for Jail. part 1869 and MU 207 25 J. Hellen coal for Public Buildings...... 419 43 CtConiaryveying prLsonen to Eastern Peniten- Keeping Commonwealth cost docket MEI MYERS. °wet Expenses. Grand Jury's pay for 1870 $ 547 92 General Jury's p0r.... 3,072 69 Constabks' Returns 243 24 Court Cryer, Messenger and Tlpetatt• pay. Bins of eons.... Orphans' Courts 750 OD - 1,120 108 00 5.002 14 Boarding and Washing for Prisoners. r. Hann. Eeq., late Sheriff, bal ance on board bill for M 0.., 971 50 Jacob Munk, Fag., Sherif, fr baZilair Prisoners and turn ,229 J Munk, Sheriff. washing ' kw prisoners 91 9010 -----4 1,822 59 Clerk of Cburts, Proliiondrory'S and lbxorder's A.- W. Minter, Row, Cierk'sleas....s 14 40 IL G. Wolf, Rig., 0-Mit's 973 79 J. Melborn, Bay., Prothonotary's fees 29 Z W. D. Hottzworth, Elm., Record- • er's fees 14 50 .-8 331 84 Bedding and Clothing/or Jail. Rebert & Bushman. mdze 837 98 Rebert & Elliott , mdze 45 15 D. H. Klingel , shoes and mending 7 95 -49 91 08 Hardware. Danner & Ziegler, Paint, Oil and Hardware for public bulkUngs.f/i2 74 Pahnedock Bros., Hardware, &e. 36 57 -4 249 31 Elections. • Election Officers' ta t = 18 0...:741 81 Clerks to Return J 10 00 Congressional Return Judge 10 00 -4 761 81 Advertising and Printing. R. J. Stable, Esti, advertising and printing blanks $4ll 30 Buehler & Co., advertising 576 25 'Murphy & Son, dockets for dikes 65 00 -$ 752 55 age in Omuntssioners' pay. Jacob Lott, Esq., pay and mils am - , full 00 Id. Hartma In n, Esq., pay and mlle- ISM % Neldtch, Esq.. pay and tallo- 425 70 w, In full 412 60 -11 1,251 90 Pe Pet eter F r Riidl ermbaugh. John Eckert Manuel Trostle. John 50ck5...... . Adam Doersom... George Pensy. Huebert. A. F. Girt........, Moses Diehl John Hart g man...., Jacob Kin George Walter Jacob . Stephen rge Adams.... Geo Bkweeker.. Israel Little. David Una Isaac Samuel Th Witz... Wm. Hatters Joseph Kramrine.. Mary Wolf Jacob Cowl • E. F. Short Hoses Smith Jacob Wertz Peter Diehl Ed Penn ward 'a. College . ... lter... Bridges and Bridge Repairs. Samuel Stadler, in full for Iron bridge at Eppelman's • Si= 62 D. Gebelman, Sew., repairs at Wnowego bridge S. Hlidebrand, repairs at 653 Berlin bridge. 5 00 Witten', bridge repairs... 8 95 Christian Winner, 36 J. C. Pittenturf, " 250 John M...Forneli s _ " 10 00 Ado= ICBMs, Imnber, /M.,• •• 46 02 Jamb Miller, hauling 600 JoJ. W. M, ...... .... 26 2 6950 siah Skee iner ls, Alfred Christ, " 86 SS Jesse lialbangh, " 50 Joseph Gelhach, " 14 17 111 John Brady, lumber for bridles. 60 33 John Kilgore, repairs at Berlin 178 25 21. b11 0!tde, 04 John or, b=e rs 0 view....... 3 011 Pubuc auiletorri. Ac. • , John Warner.woric at 3211.1... . • 9 90 John Irkseeer . . 848 Mules tjt: ru s K arper me itiw wort at Jail 9Y 25 W R. D. Amor, writ at itidi . 675 J OIS _Wyk 50- eremnin Clap, work at Court- 3 house ,_ 50 Peter hbeads, on work at Jan 4 • ••.... 32 21 CA c arles Jr ,: . 4 75. g_oolal in GOALsad aahousla. 10 75. h. W. rstworts& hag Court house fence 9 50 A. W. resnalmcdsmains_ bansirand orsoling want sad °thee outside work Al h la o w use X ro a ol b" Ina •I^3 , - - • - -Court. . •• • 259 D. YeDannell, maw— 2 OD D. Sweeney, a 2 50. It 60 G. W. 34,tprs, dosing santral wade. &AM. •. 1 ----- -hi 216 Geo. A. Warner a Co.. chairs ous• 00. J. Id. Cour W t-h alter, sbeir#4l for Coo- 12 5 Ot B, l B l . lll Wr im cdate ves for *Mess is the .. " 3 . ... .... i s OS , • J. M. Boozer, making Dunes 1 60. O Inlijilow_ r ..JailL. & G. =puns' wegmeaurt. toot =.070 (Z 5516 Z CO Road Damages. XlOOO ... 75 OD ... 10 00 ... 75 00 50 00 ... 175 00 ... 25 00 ... 98 66 ... 85 00 .. 1000 ' 90 00 4.5 00 39 20 500 .. 30 00 .. 600 10 00 1.5 00 . 15 OD . 510 . 1000 . 25 00 . 50 00 . 35 00 . 200 00 31 00 30 00 BD OD 2D 00 25 CO 1,320 06 -0 1.012 58 Ssw a►dvertif*ttslo. Powers lk Atkln Pil son,mairing and risatiMin ste at C. stand in M. Relse=an, r r ras epalirtnitJudges , 14 25 Caort-a Andreas Court Stock wintacoatlng of& 800 ees in house W. H. Culp, blackamltbing for 18 00 . Jail 8 in ' B. IloCunty_ t .birielt, 00 , A. Stock. prastenag and white. 2 washingst Jail 21 00 C. D 1 i It 8 her t y shade tram 16 tin F. 8. Ranier, Ica for court - 1 45 C. H. Buehler, stove pipe and re rs pai 2 66 & G. Cook, repairing fUtpAelt it is 08 Jail -$ 538 15 Registration. H. J. Statile, Fan., printing Regh try blanits H. 11, J". Enable,Esq., athertlaing • 55 75 Law 60 00 BniaiWi Co., advertising Regis. Lary Law co 00 try Clerk's payks for copying 75 Regis boo M 00 Assessors' pay in part forinaking ,- Registration 253 CCI Outstandinging Taxes ---1 533 75 12,076 03 Collectors' bus 1.82 65 -ronerations 382 10 Treasurer's Commission 59 Balance due county by Treasurer 8 ,491 3/ (ergat-] In testimony that the foregoing state - at of the Reeeipts and EXpenditures exhibited at the office of the Treasurer of said county, is a correct and true oopy as taken from and compar ed with the original remaining in the books at this office, we have hereunto set our hands and affixed the seal of said office, at Gettysburg, the 4th day of January, A. D., 1871. M. HARTMAN, EMANUEL NICIDICH, FRANCIS WILL, Commissioners of Adams county Attest—J. Jars'. Wrzys, Clerk. AUDITORS' REPORT. To the Honorable the Judges of the Court of Common Pleas of Adams county. + We the undersigned, duly elected Auditor, to settle and adjust the Public Accounts of the Treasurer and Commissioners of said county, having been sworn or affirmed agreeably to lau, do report the following to be a general statement of said accounts from the sth day of January, A. D., TKO, to the 4th day of January, A. D., 1871, both days inclusive: WSL J. IitARTLN, Esq., Treasurer and the Commissioners, In account with the county of Adams: DR. To amount of outstanding Tax at last settlement 414,583 04 Coun Bo ty Tax and Quit Rents assessed for Surplus State Tax Money borrowed from Banks and sun dry persons 19,490 62 Cash from 8. R. Russell, Water dividend 4s ou W. D. Holtzwurth, coal for °Mee.. 40 00 A. W. Minter. Jacob Melhorn, " 211 00 Jacob fflunk, Sheriff, fees and flues 1 1 1 Additional fax 67 J: Costs from sundry persons 14 12 Costs P. Hahn, late :Sheriff 121 27 Gash from P. Hann, for stove Cash George Swope, for Water Stock s Cash J. Wade, for Paint 3 Interest 203 By amount of outstanding Tax for 1.569.. By amount of outstanding Tax for 1670.. 21,118 75 Fees for 1866 3117 74 " 1869 o 9 " N7O 51 82 Exoneration.% for 1668 63 CC 1R69 246 V.. 1970 94 •• Disbursements on County Orders 50,77 . 9: f 4 Treasurer's commission on .16,179 92.5 19 Balance due count} by Treasurer 9,491 31 We, the undersigned, Auditors of the county Adams, Pennsylvania, elected and sworn in pur suance of law, do report that we met, did audit, settle and adjust, wording to law, the account of the Treiauret and Commissioners of ;said county, commencing on the sth day of Janpary. A. 1)., 1870, and muting on the 4th day of January, A. D.. 1871, both days inclusive, that said account a.s settled above, and entered on record in settle ment Book in the Commissioners' °lnce of Adams county, is correct, and that we find a balance due county by Treasurer, of eight thousand tour hundred and ninety-one dollars and thirty-one cents, (18,49131,) and in Outstanding County Taxes of twenty-two thousand and seventy dollars and three cents, (022,070 03.) . E G. HEAGY, DAVID RHODES, Jr.. RAPHAEL SHERFY, Auditorq COUNTY INDEBTEDNESS. Notes owing to Hank and sundry per sons MUTTS. Outstandln Tax at settlement.. 2,070 Ct 3 Amount in 491 31 Water sleek, (15 sharesr's hands.. X 515 00 175 Quit Rents, at $lB each...... 2,800 00 Norm—The Commissioners expect to reduce the county debt by six to eight thousand dollars this spring. Feb. 10, 1671-4 t Collateral Inheritance Tax rr BE following acemmts of Collateral Inherit -1 'ince Tax, for the year ending Nov. 30, 1870, have been collected try Samuel E. tiowpe. the Weer yan% from e wes o A dthm s feoounwtyinEnnmdl decedents: Andrew McKinney, Edith Griest Eliza Harper Mary Baker Esther McKinney... Mary Ilockwell Sidney Studebeeker. William Long Esther McKinney , Register's 5 per cent, for collection Amotint s due Commonwealth I hereby certify that the above state/Dent Ls correct. J. C. NKELY, Auditor of Public 01lice& Feb. 10, 1871—:4t NEW 7-30 GOLD LOAN "Safe ! Prelltable 1 Permanent I JAY COOKE & CO. Offer for Saleiat Par and Accrued Interest the Prat Mortgage Land Grant Gold Bonds (32=1 Northern Pacific Railroad Co. HESE bonds are secured, first, by a First Mortgage on the Railroad itself, Its rolling. stock, and all equipments •, second, by a First Mortgage on Its entire Laud Grant, being more than Twenty-Two Thousand Acres of Land to each mile of Bond. ' The Bonds are free from United States Tax - the Principal and Intermit are payable In Gold— the Principal at the end of Tldrty years, and the Interest Semiannually, at the rate of Seven and Three-teenths Per Vent. per annum. They are issued In denominations , of MOO, 4500, $lOOOO, 45,000 and 610,000. 'eatees under the MMesas. J. Cooke, of Philadelphia. and J. E r Thomson, President of the Peessilmuda Central Beamed Company. Thews 1 4 iortherr facile 740 Bondis will at all times before matordy, be receivable at Ten Per Cent. Premium (or 1,10), in exchange for the Compan's lands at their lowest cash Was. In addition to their absolute safety, these Bonds yield an income larger we believe, than any other first -c lass - security ? Per holding United States 5-00's tan, by converting them Into Northern Pieties. Increase their yearly Income one-third, and still have a pe reliable In vestment. HOW TO GET THEIL—Your nearest Bank or Banker will grimly these Bonds in an desired amount, and of any needed deno on. Per sons wishing to exchange stooks or other bonds for these, can do so with any of our Agents, who will allow the highest curet price for ail market able securities.• These living Ifloaillties remote from Banks. may send money, or other bonds, directly to us by express, and we will send back Northern Pa cific Bonds at our own risk, and without coat to the investor. For further information, ph lets, maps, etc-, mil on or address theersign edsell this . or an.y of the Banks or Muskets employed to Lmn. FOR SALE BY WM. PAINTER it CO., Bankers, PhlladelphLa, Agents foe. Inestern Pa Gettysburg National Bank, GETTIBB URG, PA. Feb. 3,187L-12t ROSAD ALIS H E GREAT AMERICAN HEALTH A RESTORER, purities the blood and ewes Scrofula. Syphilis, Skin Diseases, Rheumatism, Diseases of Women, and all' 'Chronic Affections of the Blood, Liver and )(Riney*. Recommended by the Medical Facultt izens. y and many thousandsof our best. ci Read the testimony , of Physic ians pea pm dents who have used for our Bosadalis Guide to Health Bc;ek, 44i manse for this_ year, which we puMdh for gratultious dbdribution; it wiII give Lou much valuable Information. D. R. W. Carr, of Baltimore, says: I take pleasure in re c ommending your ROILIDALIS as a very powerful alterative. I have seen it used In two cases with happy results—one in a can of secondary a= In cuedalter hich the ha pi v tien ieg taken t -pronoun dye ced cure hotties of year medicine. The other whi c h of scrofula of loaf standing, mildly Reproving under Its use, and the In dications are that the patient will soon re cover. I have carefully exsuninedthe formu la by which your Rosadafts Is made, and find it an excellent compound of alteratfre In D r . steaks, of Nlelioluvills, icy., says be has toed dary is w Rosadalis in cases of scrofula and secon Syphilith results ckaner of the Bl ood better remedy- Biususelo. WlF,l4ol,llbuttuberti', Tenn says: I have used. sewn bottles of Ressdalls andam r entirely cured of libeumatbas ;send me tour bo , as I wish it for my brothe who has •-,ms sore eyes. ileajmelnlifeebtot, of Lim, Ohb wiltei. I have suffered for twenty years with an tn westarate °repass ever my whole body ; a abort time since I purchased a bottle of • • sad Iteffeeted a perfect owe. Ilirdioadalls limpid by all Denglists. Laboratory. oil lltabange Plass,' Baltimore CLIOUINTB & CO., Proprietors. Feb. 11, M1,—.1,111 wirer saie liittyiebire,Ta.,l4r D. Builais, Druggist. 161.291 22 19.568 4. , 131 7 84.21 22 $4,291 ssl,r , , 33,6% 3t $17,600 Zi $7O G 5 30 00 167 90 23 03 3 CC 8 96 14 65 46 41 1 00 EU EBB rant : Friday Normleg, 14b4-14.; LOCA L, ITICXX. To DEuxqusrre.—Quit• her of subscribers to the Si =is'. are In arrears for sn jobbing. We have repeatedly. these delinquents, and in alew they have responded, but a large are still in arrears. We agitin request to these persons that jhe and hope to hear from them , - first of April east. We are corn • pay cash for material, paper," performed, &c., and it is a very matter to do so, unless our leis trona will settle their-it'd e btedriesa ly.- We dislike these repeated d delinquents would but oomph.' terms, there would be no n them. To those who have promptly to previows calls, we tender than first of April is general settle .. and we hope the Printer will be membered. A few dollars from scriber would be a small matter bat of vast importance in the to us. Who will be the first to APPRENTICE WANTED.-At Must be of good cliaracte;,- and fair primary education. One re town preferred. Apply immedia APPOIN TED, —Adam Hoke Mks pointed Postmaster at Granito I G. F. Gulden resigned. riirWe have been favored With article from "D. P. F." on the N State Fair, which will appear ilex lionnED.—The store of Yost & Son, in Mountjoy tow • entered, through the cellar, on th of the )th inst., and the change. drawer taken, about #l. FIRE.—We learn thSt the do Richard Price, near liampton f too an early hour on Monday morni. was burnt to the ground. In Dover (York county) company. REVIVAL.-A protracted meet been in progress for several week Ev. Lutheran Church, Now Dale the pastoral care of Rev. I)r., The house is. crowded with attenti em. Deep solemnity prevail;% — rtil oohing, "what must I do to be We understand that a considerabl ber rejoice in the hope of forgive sins. BURNED.-Mr. William Urovni, ford township, this county; met severe accident on the Bth inst. engaged in putting off a blast in stone quarry, a can of about five powder close by him, was - Ignited, ploded, burning his hands in' a manner. His clothes took .fire, the assistance of two other wnekn . were removed before the body: any injury. Dr. J. Culbertson w•. and the injured man is 'doing welt. pil'r. . MORE OF IT.-It seems that & Gardner, No. .5. Beekman strt;e York," are dispensing their favo ally. Last week we gave in full their epistles addressed to Mr. t Mr. John Hartman, of Mum sends us another addressed to hhn, licate of that received by Mr. . word fop word, also inviting $13.7r sent for the redemption of a watt $4OO. These rascals 'have doubtl,_ ed the mails with similar letters, catch some green ones. The is that they are written, not lithog OLD CEN T.—Maj. Samuel Franklin township, showed ns, th 11 k. day, an English cent made in the King George 11, and dated f 7 --"" 123 years old. Mr. Lohr found i field whilst husking corn last fall. has an older cent?— Compiler. • John 3f. Tate, of this place, h possession two English pennies, o. date, both issued during thy re lo George I ne dated 1733 and th. 1734. r. Tate also showed tts prese ed American cent of 1794, WII4T DOES IT ME-A:il l —Some' ago, the Supreme Court appo". Auditor to report distribution of arising from the sale of the Get Railroad, to and among the b.or ers. As there is no special lc .. cult) , involved, and the matter is ly one of calculation, it was ge, supposed that but a brief time;. to at most, would - suffice for the Au get his report ready. The mat now been in his hands for more ilia mouths, and uo sign of a repoti. is the meaning of this delay ? It the money, $lBl,OOO, is worth settle somebody every day this diaribut delayed; but we should be reluc_ believe that the auditor, himself 'k one the Supreme Court Judges,. fluenced thereby. Tn 22n.—There was no special vane. of the 32d of Febuery in.gas Although the day is made a legal by legislature enactment, the eto places of business were kept . ope . . 10 o'clock, A. M., the Zouaveik dress uniform, paraded, their full. corps waking up the town. During the afternoon, quite, a so was produced on the streets, by the k ance of a mounted masquerade pert GO persons being in line—all bei disguised and representing fantastic actors of every imaginable couee ..• The party attracted much attention after passing through most of the • followed by a large crowd, drew up centre square fo'r roll-call. The re , radereqieemed to be well officered, a 4 fitottistic" parade, the affaii.w• . cided success. Later in the day the Gettysburg Band took position in thi; cent& and for same time discoursed most lent music FOUND OUT.--Appropos of ths• • confidential" letters about coon currency with which the New York era have occasionally taken in, knit dupes, the Buffalo EzpreAs relates lowing rich incident: • "One day., .a man, who shall be' 1 ess, entered Police Superintendent I private °dice and asked to see Jitr, The courteous Chief motioned hi chair and asked him to state hie the visitor seemed in a greatly pert state of mind. "Mr. Doyle," h e began, "I hoe swindled, and I want you to help ish the scoaundrels." "Explain!" sententiously remark" Superintendent. "See here, " (producing a letter - si to the a bove,) "I got one of things a couple of weeks ago, and I down twenty dollars." "Well, what did you get in retu asked Mr. Men. "A piper law of sawdust," axe the visitor,. ,"and that'a what I - see you abotit. rasing yott to—" •!. "Stop a bit," interrupted Mi. "what did you !apace to •iresudva twenty dollars?' ' "Why—why—just what thisk - - stammered the man, holdint epty "And what did you impose that stuff?" asked the Su each second his glance becoming. •piereing and the color attic muter deeper ~n propor tion " , I—you Ow. . "Yes, I know. I guess yon had The man went. IZEI