Clje - ‘ flOl).C. HIINTING,DON •PA Wednesday morning; Noi;1 \VM. LEWIS,. ff.UGH LINDSAY, / ED/"lts - The 'Globe" has • the- laryesl number of readeraof any other paper published in this county. Advertisers should remember. this. ler The 'Guerrilla Organ _tries to make a defence for thei.guerrilla chief, Dr. Orlady,:in its last issue.. That's right—the Doctor is master of the "sit ballot-Plaid- hisi . programme 'must 'be worked 'up' to by the whole:. clan or some of thorn will find themselves "drojyied"in,thenet campaign. ternlt is:only a question of which is the Republican party." 7 -Gaerrilla A question of which is the Republi can party 7 -the party that supported and•voted Republican party nomina tions, or‘the guerrillas and their influ ence voting with thO Democrats ? Cromer's mind must be . getting very muddy--no . wonder, ho is in very muddy water. SEr The Guerrilla Organ can, see nothing in. Orlady's first , letter ex cept that he w'as working for his own success. Perhaps• Mr. Cromer has Sean something more .in the second }etter,••and can eee more in others to be published.•'• The Doctor's'.•'/pro gratnmo"'was always a full ticket so footed by himself and a - small "ring" of friends, .and, his ; nstructions to his duped-delegates would always be to AnppOrt his • programine—his ticket, froin.top to bottom. " ;.. lear•The now Legislature is superior to the last one, iri point both of charac ter and ability.—Pittsburg Gazette. We doubt it, for several of the "roost. tern" of ihe last twe Winters, who do the "setting up,'!•have been re-elected, and ' Will be on hand' for any "jobs" that 'May be presented: They would cor rupt aily, body of- Men - were they as pure as'angels, if allowed to associate with them. Until our Legislature is -purged 'of' these notoriously' corrupt buffoons and , blackguards, who violate law,and. - cheat justice 'almost every moment of their rotten existence, we Cannot:expect:better or purer Legisla tion. I We ishall'see. . • . 11& - Tho RepuTalican ' district and chanty "nominees defeated by Orlady, Scott, .cremer, • Dorris, Blair & Co., .were as muchlthe nominees of thelte-. pithlidati: party as were 'Gov. , Geary and:jadgeyillianis; and yet the guer rillas' have the impudence to clai rn . to be good. Republicans. , If Republicans generally throughout the State had bekkno.hotter, the Democracy would have carried every : county and com pletely straightened out the Union Republican party. Andy Johnson was a good Republican—so was Ed. Cowan —about as good as the Guerrilla fac- tion, oily a little more honest. Ita1:. The Globe and Journal of fast week again'read senator Spott, Qd. , Dorrie, Capt. Blair and • other prominencßepublicans out of the party.—Orlady & Co's. Guerrilla Or gan. Read Scott, Dorris, Blair and other prominent Republicans ou t of the party? Why, you jack—their own act of de feating the party read them out. They placed themselves outside of the party as soon as they agreed to defeat the ticket put in nomination by the Re publican County Convention the hamo 'Convention that you, Mr. Cre-. tner, asked to nominate you for Pre': thonotary. • Out of the party ? Of course you are. "Scott, Dorris, Blair, and other prominent Republicans," in cluding yourself,•aro just as much out of the Republican party as the Demo crats you worked with and voted for. There is no rule in politics by which any of you can claim to be party men. Your party is Doctor Orlady's party. More Light. - We ask the attention of our readers to the following paragraph from the last Journal d American: "OLD Rzt,ros.—The Globe has a propensity for exhuming and re•publisbing old "confi dential" documents, and we must say that some of them have a very familiar look. We have a few of the same sort, which might be very interesting to certain parties, but we presume that the over-sensitive nerves of Messrs. Cremer, Scott, and others, could scarcely bear the information that, in their crusade against a secret league, they have been made use of by the sworn leaders of an other secret political order for the purpose of defeating the Republican party, one of whom boasted on the street, a few days ago, that "he used them for that purpose." We have the information in our possession, and whe ther we enlighten them and the , public on the subject hereafter depends to a certain ex tent on the good behavior of certain parties." There is considerable light in the above, and we have no doubt , the'Re publican party of the county. will soon see how 'shamefully hundreds. were hitrnbiii , :ged by the guerrillas during the late .:6ampaign. It hai been our honest , coeviction for years that Orla dy was at the - head of a secret combi nation of office seekers and party ru lers, and the evidence coming to light every day shows that.oui conviction was right. The defeat:of a part of our tiekot was the work of: the combina tion, with the assistance of such outsi dere. as were indirectly influenced by the leaders. No wonder that some of our prominent citizens who were used to assist in the defeat of good Repub licans feel 'VerY - *bad—and will feel worse before _they get back to a re opectable standing in the party again. It. W. MACKEY, the present State f.,Cceasurer, will be a candidate for re. That "Sett-off." The Guerrilla Organ last week pub lished what it said was "A kit.off" to Dr. Orlady's letter. The iS,eit , off" is as follows: ~ ; , .07 „ ., Azer - • tlid iTer'imait'; 4, 1:80. Roar:, LAIRD,- F2-12:ecYtY P 4: Dear Sir either yitz'Or Ottligus mould coraikdolburon d -Saturdayi-the day 61: , the show. "I am 'anxious to see on& of you, to fix up final arrangements and to have a consultation. YoUYS; 63.; - WOODS: 1V0:fly, 41 pgcnot • matter materially. what the "final arrangements" wore to, be, or what the "consultation" was . Co be Watt—whether it was Potter Island Oil Stock, law, or politics.- Thu important question is, whore and how 'did Mr. Oreille!' got . the letter ? Mr. Laird did come down on show day, in, that year, and in the, struggle , to,get show tickets at thos show ',wagon,his pocket . , was picked of a -Pock-eV-book , coutainiim - . some rdonyy,'netes,- . orders, and the ktipi• polis li od in the, G uorrilla . Organ. Mr.,Laird , ndvurtised.in the Journal . & American; 'at the. time, the loss of: hie proPerty,'but not' until he saw 'the above letter published Could IM.get:or the track of big pockOt-book or its contents. Mr. Laird called upon Mr. Cremer on Friday to learn how the letter got into his possession. Mr. Cromer declined to givd him the name of the person he received it from.— Hero is. a' pretty "situation" , for the purifiers to'be in. We give place to'the followinerom Mr. Laird : 860 HEMS EDITORS last week's Republican I see there is published, private note from :W. 11.. Woods to myself. I wish - to state that I did not furnish that note to Mr. Cremer for publication, but the note was stolen from me under the following eircum• stances: The note in question, reques ted me to call and see Mr. Woods on the day of the show, October, 18(36.- 1 was in Huntingdon on that day and went to the show ;, while in the crowd seeking admittance into the show, my pocket book was stolen. In my pock et book, I had _a . number of valuable papers, some AlOney 1 and the note written by Mr. Woods, a copy of which was published last week's Republican. Seeing that note in the Republican is the first trace I have had of my stolen pocket book.' I called upon Mr. Cro mer and asked him who furnished him that note, stating that it had been sto len from memnd that I wished and in tended to bring the thief to justice.-- Mr. Cremer either could. not or. would not state where or how begot the note —as far as I um concerned, I am de termined •to know who .stole my pocket book, as I: had in it about $l7OO worth of paper and 613 in•money. Yours, &c, R. A. LAIRD. Nov. 8, 1669. Working up to "My Programme." LETTgR NO. 3 ' The "prominent Republicans" who helped to do the dirty work this fall will see by reading the following let ter how the Chief of the guerrilla clan managed to control Conventions. Of course the Chief was _ not seen in the fight.daring the late campaign—he oc cupied a position in the rear from which he issued his orders to his clan all over the county. "Prominent Re publicans" were only tools of the per. rillaChief—nothing more, nothing lees. STRICTLY PRIVATE PETERSBURG, May 10, 1866. FRIEND SHEARER: Dear Sir:-1 drop you a confidential nolo which I trust you will communicate to no per son. The suggestion I now make is made in good faith - , and I trust some thing valuable may come of it. It is nothing more nor less than for you to become a candidate for Register and Recorder. The office is ono that would prove of great value to you. A man in that office is always re-elected.— Your bolter plan would be to declare yourself a candidate, get Brice Blair, Clymans, Robison, and all those per. sons in that quarter to declare for you Have the delegates from Tell to vote for every candidate from top to bot tom that you may suggest. Don't men tion my name to a human soul. I will give you a list of prominent candi dates, and it may be advisable to throw to them. Don't attempt to do any thing special except in Toll; get those delegates to commit themselves to your interest exclushely. The candidates who I think will he successful are Capt. Blair, Congress; 11. S. Wharton, Leg islature; D. Clarkson, Associate Judge; J. R. Simpson, Prothonotary; H. Shea rer, Reg. and Rec.; Abr. Renner, Co. Cont.; Oliver Buller, Director Poor; K A. Lovell, District Attorney. We will work up to this programme all over the county, and I know we can make it sue teed. There will be an ample share of soldiers on the ticket. Profess great strength to candidates ; don't tell them who you rely upon. Be careful that they don't connect you with factions. Keep aloof from every body who aro candidates. Blair will chime in ,with your suggestions. Let me hear" from you soon. 'will meet you after some time at Mt. Union and compare notes. Bo reserved in regard to the prospects of all candidates. Burn this letter at once.: Yours truly, H. ORLADY. liiii7Tho Richmond Whig does not speak to Northern. Democrats in an over-encouraging 'vay. ,It thinks that ono effect 'of thePhio'and Pennsylva nia elections will be the 'temporary dissolution of , "the Democratic party." How many such "temporary. dissolu tions" the party will be able to stand with the least Lope of subsequent re solidification, we do not undertake to determine. If a . - man were sick unto death it would be rather cold com fort if friend should approach his bedside and kindly whisper:, "The sooner you die, - my dear sir, the bettor "for you. Don't be frightened—it's 'only 'temporary.' It's 'discouraging,' "certainly, but the sooner you go Ebro' "with it the bettor. You can have no "idea how fresh and lively you will feel "after it. So just go ahead with your "dying, my good fellow, and you. will 'be a sound man to-morrow." Death of George Peabody, Esq. A cable tele o gram announces the deatliNGer'rgTP . ,eabOdy, the eminent . PhilaWirophifand,true'Obristian gen tlemtg);::in Lori'dori, on NOVember 4th. dAthAtlionglOudden, was not 'UnexriCCieci; as he had in failing: •health for some , time; Ile was born in the town of Danvers, Massachu setts, on the 18th of February, 1705. At the age of seventeen he—left Dam : • vors, where he was for several years' employed as cleric to Mr. Proctor, grocer, and shortly : afterwards went to;Georgetown.imthe District. of Col umbia, where ho was in business with his uncle, John Peabody; At the end of two years he engaged in the,whele sale ark-pods bonsiness with : Mr. 'Eli ;si% Riggs. , Being successful, the firm removed from „Georgetown to Baltiniore:n; In 1.827; Jr: : Peabody 'made his firstfrip too:Europe, 'to pur chase gods. ; o.ll".the' 'retiremeet of Mr. Riggs from the partnership, it be came necessary for him to make an• nual visits to the old world. In 1887 he removed to England, where ho re mained, oecasionally'visiting the Uni ' ted States. ; The incidents, of his. life are manifold,' his benefactions great, and the love and respect which hettis elicited frbm'the objecid of his bounty, is fully attested by the people of, both hemispheres. Unlike the many phil anthropists who: have preceded him, ho did"not await the hour of his' final separation' to bestow his gifts and charities, but while he lived, wherever and whenever he saw that the hand of brotherly'love should be extended, he was ready'to give. Would that the world was full of George Peabadys.L -' The extent of his benefactions may be summed up as follows: - • To the Institute at Baltimore - $1,400,000 To the Institute at Danvers' ' 200,000 To the poor of London „.1,750,000 To the Southern Educational Fund , 2,500,000 To To Harvard University 150,000 To Yale College 150,000 To Washington College " 60,000 To other objects 386,000 Making a total of $6,596,000 Besides this he gave to his relatives the sum of $1,400,000. Great interest is manifested to• know what• disposi- tion he has matle,olthe fortune ho ac cumulated iii London, : and: which is variously 'estimated at from twenty to thirty 'milliong of 'clol)ars. Editorial Brevities, Gov. GEMIY Was seriously ill for sev eral days last. week: ;Ile, is again convalescent. ANDY JOHNSON has invited the mem bers of the Tennessee :Legislature to' Partake of a banquet ut his The members,' and others, naturally wonder what it all means. Andy has evidently an eye to business. E. 11. Rauch, Esti , editor of Father Abraham, will be supported by Senator Billingfelt, as a• candidate for Clerk of the &Mate. We liave our doubts of the, ability of Senator Billingfelt or any one else to oust the present Clerk, G. W. Ham me rsly. "TFIE DAY" is the name of a new daily paper just started in Philadel phia by Alexander Cummings. It does not claim to belong to either par ty, but will be published for the good of the whole country. It presents a neat typographical appearance, is well edited, and sells for one cent. n The result of the elections on Tuesday last, is as follows: In Massa chusetts, a Republican Governor was elected. Now York went Democratic by 12,000—the New York city "re peaters" having full sway.' New Jer sey and Maryland went Democratic as usual- In Illinois, Minnesota, Nis cousin, and West Virginia the Repub licans carried the day. Hon. 11. C. Johnson, of Crawford, and lion. B. B. Strang, of Tioga, aro prominently mentioned in connection with the next Speakership of the House of Representatives. Mr. John son was a member a few years ago, and served one term as Speaker. Mr. Strang enters upon his third term in the Reuse this winter, and was prom inent as a candidate for Speaker last winter. Both are gentlemen ofability and either would make a good Speak er. We also hear other gentlemen named in the same connection. The contest will eventually narrow down between Strung and Johnson. vay- The interest exhibited in the attempt to connect President Grant with Fisk, Gould, and Corbin, in the gold conspiracy, has somewhat subsi ded, but it still remains the subject of general comment. It has been ascer tained that the only basis for the al leged.complicity of .the President is the fact that when, ho sold his house in this. city to Gen. Sherman, ho gave Mrs. Grant $12,000 of the proceeds.— Corbin was there at the time on his wedding trip, and Mrs. Grant placed the money in his hands to bo invested in building lots in,the Suburbs of New York City. This is the only money transaction that has transpired be tween them since President Grant was inaugurated, and it will probably be the last, us the President does not hesitate to declare that in the future he' will have no social comniunieation with Corbin whateve'iL It is prebable that Corbin used the motley thus placed, under his control to impress Fisk and Gould with . the belief that he was acting as Mrs. Grant's broker, a'belief which was suddenly dispelled when the order was issued to sell Gov ernment gold, and Corbin's transac tions'were discovered.—N. Y. Tribune A fire in Bow, New Hampshire, Monday night, destroyed a barn in which 200 pounds of powder was stor ed. The explosion injured no one. HURRYGRAPHS. Chicago hae a lawyeress. - • Jeff Davis , is visiting his relatives b William t sq fyrtiisca' iitrall44 - "of Ati itf ie a Catholic. Balkier° inanufhqtriell-'22;fi14;184 cigars during the,tast . Yeat." :- The rice crop of the South this year is estimated $1;915 .T , „4lpago, , lqgpftv, a coroner's inquest "replivining a vote." In Russia;_,,yo T en work at harvest ing for .ftfyty e'entsra!-y. .Lailgo_napibers of bilidal outfits are being got ready.in New York. The ciacirinati /allow ehabtilers use forty-tons` of Wicks a yetii. - A Kentucky hen has hatched and is rearing a ISt6ocitorpartridges.. A Concord. (N. II ,) church takes up four collections. every Sunday. Ono grain of barley produced 112 heads containing,2,24o grains in lowa. Doestii;lts, once fauncius,.is- keePing tt grocery store in Troy, N. Y. '• Germany has'about 300 Trades' Un ions, with about 80,000 members lowa is. worth $294,532,252 for, pur poses of taxation, The Pacifiellailroad took ten •thou sand eggs to Sacramento last week. 'New York Uri a, '•lVomaii's Parlia ment" in fall operation. A.piano played by the feet has been invented in Cincinnati. Now the been comes that gold has been diicovered in Alaska. A Memphis jtiry . 4quit,ted a 'travel er who shot And killed a hackman for overcharging hi in.. A fire recently destroyerten' thous:. and orange: trees in Santa Barbara county, Califoruiit. Wayne county, N. Y., raises $50,000 worth of peppermint, and the babies aro delighted'. New Bedierd has an Indian Ocean clam-shell thirty-six 'inches long and twenty-three inches wide. Cuba's sugar crop is estimated this year at 3,313,000 boxes, 600,000 less than last year. The drops in Mainethis season are estimated tolm•twonty, five per cent. better thanjast year - . - • The Lewistown Journal say that an Auburn farmer has a cow whose milk product daily sells at $1.20 One town in - Cape Cod alona, will send twelve thotisandbarrels of mac. karat to market.,,`, A pumpkin tine, one'•'hundred- and forty feet lung, is iunning around New Hampshire._ . The only.bac,b,elor in Cabinet is the Secretary of.the : Navy, •who„.is besot by naughty . No AV rightthe cbtiverted -burglar, proposes in Landon , tor , open heaven with h'Crosperlitnmy." . ' "The bestithlored talent in'the Conn try"'is shortly to be engaged on a new neWspaper at •Washinguiti. • • Amos Kendall bas given t17;000 'to the- establishment of free mission school's' in Washington. A Chicago bar tender poisoned hiin self for fear of starving to death. Ho didn't do it With' his own liquor. M. do Lessep, of Sues Canal fame, is about to marry a young lady just 44 years younga t than • h Sixtyeight'thousand children • were present on the first day of the opening of the public tichools in-New York city. A peach trCC in Virginia, fifty-fivo years old, 1.1114 .borno a full crop this year. A North Carolifia farmer has a couple of "foolish turkey &biers" who will persist insetting on nests full of apples. The 7,000 distilleries in Prussia con sumed in 1808, 0,750,000 bushels of grain and 88,000,000 bushels of pota toes. Mrs. Harriet 33. Stowe is, it is said, now on hot way to .Florida, whore she seeks literary retirement for tho win ter. A fashionable young woman• the other day undertook to make a sixty dollar bonnet for herself, and did it at a cost of two dollars and fifty cents. • The biggest pumpkin in Paris weighed 300 pounds, and soid for $23. How much Paris has lost by not knowing of Pumpkin pies ! The rising generation will be glad to learn that one California manufac turer converts 1000 bushels of castor beans into castor oil daily. A woman's rights paper, to be pub fished at Crawfordsville, lnd., will bear the terrifying name of "The Avenger." Thero Dever existed but one Mor mon Irishman, and a Mormon Irish woman is something totally unknown to naturalists. A notorious 'Southern female spy, Belle Boyd, has become insane and been sent to the California State untie Asylum. It is stated that a coin of the year 1091 has been discovered in the trench where the Onondaga giant was discovered. Ex-Senator Lot M. Morrill has been appointed by the'Governor of Maine United States Senator to fill the va cancy occasioned by the death of Sen ator Fessenden.' They have a public library in Mel bourne which is open to all, upon one condition, viz : every one who enters must have clean hands. Soap, water and towels pre'vided in - the ante-room. , The editor of the Reporter at Cor• len no r Utah Territory, was recently beaten nearly to death because of , hie opposition to the "peculiar institution" of Mormonism. There is a man in New Jersey who 4isists on having his marriage cere mony repeated every year, going thro' the whole ceremony of new dress for his wife, dinner to his friends, Ste. A fireman on the Central Pacific Railroad fell off the locomotive when traveling at.a high rate of speed. Af ter going ten miles the engineer miss .ed him, backed up the traio,and found bum asleep against the bank. The use of the Bible and the sing ing of hymns in the public schools of Cincinnati has boon prohibited by the Board of Education, but an injunction against thn.Board has boon granted forbidding snob prohibition, One of the centrifugal drying-pans 'itil4e-Pcoblep.qat,e -, Sbgar Refinery, in burat last week, seri fehr persons, ono of whom :Was J. O„ltavviins, brother of the.-jate Secrelary, of War. The h - onis 'of six men and fortisiX borses_supposed to be the remains of liarfy loSt from Fremont's exploring expedition, twenty years ago, Were discovered in South-western Colorado, by mou tai Deers,. a few d ays' si nee. A Minnesota boy, under ago!, lip i Irlif ii iffid - ei? law, but wits denied 'ow* thST gretira that lie was not married. In just thirty two minutes he returned with a rime- Ay : Ur !tho' difficulty ',hanging on his A Republica:li Corim'ililOn - fc;7Tta: wood county, Minnesota, passed, among others, this following resolu tion : Resoved, That we brand as sore headed bolters those Republicans who havg, this.-day -met, in GoAtv.eptippt. at =tli:e!blueltinittli:sbbp. 1 1 fenotA . 11 nfler 4tflibiteqs a vagrant, was put through the usual course of questions ' which he answered satisfactorily, until it came to the point "Are you married or single?" Being on his.outh thirpoOr felloxicoul;dn't-really A number _of workmen, says the Mobile RekiSter,-While , Crikag,ed Ito:ma king an excavation at the Gas works, discovered, at a depth, of,la T feet, a po trified'hutrian At — has• been placed in the hands of Dr. Gilmore and will be subject to an examination. The Titusville Herald says the ,pe teoleurn 'production duling-'Atigust Materially enlarged by the finding.. of now wells. The stock on hand Sep tember 1, aa„coropard with that on, August I;:sOwsittujnorease.iof ti.bout 25;000 - ' A Wisconsin paper alleges that the secret of suce‘sss of Chicago newspa pers lies in tho fact that every man and woman in the town takes every paper, for fear of a divorce notice in. which they are interested may . be published and they not find it out. here is an instance of the, way they do. justice in, .`Texas. black mare Wairsfolen fiOrnqr. Avery stahl6 ;and after search was heaid from in distant town. The proprietor afterwards re ceived a dispatch us follows : "Your mare is here; I will bring her; thief hung. The Bachelors' club of Topeka, Kan sas, lately offered a reward of §IO for the prettiest unmarried girl of over fir teen years of age, and the editors of ToPekti were appointed 'the judges.— After a careful scrutiny. they decided that Florence Morrison was entitled' the first premium. "tiiintjemeriof thejury,"said an Irish barfiatef,„ i in say whether this ,defendant' be allowed to come into court with unblushing foot steps, with the cloak of hypocrisy in his mouth, and to WithdraW three bullocks out of' my client's poCket with iinpuni ty." :All : die; ;1.:: certain French city recently struck for higher wages, less labor, and the privilege of having the corhimiiy of their bilaux in the kitchen. •The mistresses granted' the last named demand, which so thor oughly satisfied the girls that they re sumed.duty without troubling about More pay or lighter tasks. A Mr. Floyd, or6alena; Ill.; hai a qttoer'kind of a dog. Ho is six months old, has legs about two inches long, and, instead of hair, is covered with a heavy growth of black wool, exactly like that on a coarse wooled sheep.— His tail is like that of a sheep, ho barks like a dog, and evidently be longs to a canine family. Ilis mother was a: 5-cOteli THE NURSERIES OF CRIME'—On Sun day night last the dens in the lower portion of the city seemed to have pour ed out their whole stock of disciples of Bacchus. At Fifth and Pine streets sev eral persona woro tripped in the dark by stumbling over the prostrate form of one overcome by too frequent plead ings at the bar. About the same time another of tho disciples, after several urisudcdshful attempts, nidly managed to enter a Fifth street car. At Fifth and south a wife and mother woro plea ding, with a drunken. husband, trying to induce him to go home: Still fu - rther down, at the corner ofShippen street, were congregated the crowd of loaf ere who - make the night hideous with profanity, and who are a terror to la dies obliged to pass in goingand return ing from church. Another square fur ther down, a mother pleading only as a mother can, with a son, sunk so deep in degradation as to heap curses loud and deep upon the woman who gave him life and sustenance. What a ter rible picture to look upon on a Sabbath evening, within a few squares. Can tt,.y ono wonder that crime stalks red handed through a community so de praved I—Phila. Day. There is a pretty story told of one of the ancestors of the Empress Euge nie, which is probably new to many of our readers. It seems that many years ago there lived in an Andalusi an town a German toy-maker, who had a charming daughter. This young maiden was famous for her beauty and virtue, both of which attracted the attention, and eventually won the love, of the young son of the Count Montijo. She met his advances with the cry—"marriage before love." His affection for her was an honest one, and in spite of his father's obstinate refusal he married her. The old Count refused the young pair any assistance, so that their sufferings promised to hp very great. Put the two elder broth ers of the young husband dying, the old Count had but the prodigal child, whom he tool bacli.to his heart and purse. The Countess of Itlontijo was the mother of Eugenie of France. • • There is a haunted house in Harwich, from which a tenant recently removed, forfeiting a quarter's rent rather than remain. The Register says the most re markable thing about the haunted house was thdt the noisy demonstra tions . ofthe ghosts, wore always heard the wind"WaS'Ulowinif high, and the strange lights were always seen from without at the east windows, about the time of the moon's rising. - ' Vlollu e. From 82.50 upwards, at Lewis Book Store. i-Sohool Bo c 7 of !til l Itjnyfor sale at 'Lewis' ]Boole Store, tf NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. ATTORNEY LATV, ; 111RIT1NGDON ; PA. ft1 .— i9,71111.1..+.41541i1., Iq. no.lo'6l* .AIDANISTRATO,/t'S' NOTICE. 4