I Jlcrcliants and Hnn'ufaclnrcrs 1 Bank of r Fitt&burgli—Strange Disclosenrcs. PiTTBDDndU) Oct. 22.—A ta.cl. Wnl ™ lioartl to-day, Icsucd cl the instance ol Mr. Scott, President of Dio Morolmnls nnd Mnnu raclurers’ Bunk, against Janicsnnd IlcrcnlcsO - Connor, Brokers, ofllio Arm of 0 Connor, Broth er & Co., charging them with obtaining fratidii- Icnllr. and liy the complicity ol Iho (molt-kccp orof tho Bank 0f5185,000. O’Conner, In his defence, nmdo grave allegations against Hie Bank, denying flic Indebtedness of Ihe firm, and claiming to bo tho agents of tho Bank, for (ho purpose of drawing specie from tho other Banks on (lioir notes to replenish its vaults 5 that largo amounts of tho nolos of distant Banks ol a loss denomination than five dollars and also counterfeit money wore drawn from (lie Bank on their checks; that their dealings with (ho Bank since February last have amounted to over throe millions, a largo portion of which was not on tho private account of (lie firm ; that tho re- 1 spondents fn vain attempted to effect a settle ment with (ho Bank and had placed securities in (ho handsel a disinterested party to cover any indebtedness; Further investigations were waived for (lie present. (ho'Messrs O’Conner having made an assignment for tho benefit of their creditors. Notwithstanding these dcvclopoments (ho notes ot the Bank are still taken hy the oilier Banks in payment of notes due them, and also hy the public. It is said that its stock will not ho depreciated. Thr Virginia New School Presbyterian Synod— Withdrawal from the General Assembly. Washington, Oct. 24 —The New School Presbyterian Synod of Virginia have adopted (lie roportof the Committee on tho Minutes of the General Assembly recommending tho with drawal of the Synod from that body, in conse nt its action on the slavery question. Tho vote stood 80 yens against 8 nays, the latter being .■given by Messrs. Sunderland and Haskell, ot Washington, and Dnnnlng of Baltimore. Tlje Synod then adopted resolutions approv ing, as a whole, tho resolutions adopUid*ri»y a port ion or I lie Church which lately met in Hlch monel, and pledging itself cordially to co-opp rato in tile organic ujon of the United Synod of tho Presbyterian Church, to meet at Knoxville, Toon., on tho tirst Thursday of April next. Tub Kaxsas Election—Excitkmrxt Rk nrwkd—(Jov. Walkku Dktkrmixks to Hkjkct tub Votr of Oxford. St. Louis. Oct. 20.—A protest, signed by several prominent citizens of Kansas, was filed on the Ifiili inst. against the fraudulent rciurns of Ooxford precinct, in Johnson county. In re ply to which, after a personal investigation. Gov. Walker ai <1 Secretary Stanton publish a proclamation in the Iletald of Fieedom, of the 20lh inst.. expressing a determination to reject the entire vote of Oxfotd. and give certificates 10 the Frdfc Stale candidates. r l he proclamation produced on intense ex citement among the pro slavery men, and threats of vengeance were made against the Governor and Ins Secretary. On the 20ih inst., a protest was made against the assembling of the Constitutional Conven tion. by a moss Convention of the people held at Lecompton. Faon Salt Lake—Dkkjast Position op Bmn UAU Yol.vn lII* IlosriLK I XThNTIOXS. St. Louis, ()et.2n.—The correspondent of the Hcpn Id icon mentions having recently seen Crfpl. Vanveliet, Cmitideiitial Agent of tin* (ri/veni niLMit, at Palmetto, Kansas, on his relit/n front Silt Lake. tie reports * hat the Mormons will r Tnse to allow (he United States troops to en ter the city. Hngbain Young pnhlirly declares tlut lie will hum the prairie, ami thus deprive fho aniiimls nccnnip.vtn Ing fhe * expedition of subsistence, anil oven hunt his own city, il ne. oessary, before lie will submit to the demands «*( the Government. The torts along the route are in had repih, and do not a Hurd snllicient protection for the troops. Plundering n Clergyman, On Fnd.iy afternoon last, the Kov. J ohn Cham tiers was rohhed ol some two hundred doliais worth ol plate. A person came to the residence ••t the diulne in \\ idnul st., Pliiln., snj ing Hint he hwlheen sent by n respectable blind-maker, "*«»» he named, to measure the windows for «»nio alterations In the Wlhds. The family therefore admitted him, mid while they presum ed him to lie meaemrln f the windows, ho suc ceeded In carrying oil'front a sideboard the sil ler ware which the servant had Just finished cleaning. Mr. .Chambers, immediately on dla- Hoveling the loss, went to the blind-maker named, only to ascertain that this ostensible journeyman was a swindler. The fraud thus practiced is a very old one, and now pretty well plai ed out. One 09 mi Caihihok thk Pu ksfxt Cii imh. From n well wilMen article hi ft Ifttu number of the Hudson (Win.) i\or!h Slur, we make the follow lug extract : ‘•With these things In mind it is not tl fin nil In track on I the secret cause of our piesent dilli cnllica. Ou£hcii\ jest b.niktt and banking hous es had become mere lenders to railrmid-H and other stock companies. In.stond of confining themselves to a legitimate business, and lending their power to promote legitimate trade nnd gen eral commerce, they advanced a Marge shire of flieir capital on uncertain nnd speculative secu rities; ami luiznnld fheir very existence on Ihe Jtiilh of gamblers. The niiliond and other stock companies being thus sustained ‘grew npftce,’ anti Inflated their enterprises to llm most mar velous proportions. Wi'eti in the regular course ofjjof* oxclinngH It heenmo evident that rail rdad stocks were not what a crednlons public bad counted them, they began to depreciate.— J'jftch depreciation was felt nt (lie banks nnd by capitalists until now they bleed at every pore. '1 tins the evil is foil moat seriously whcrrwthe error commenced. As n consequence, alrtho Usual reliances of nicrclinntg nnd business men for raising money to suit their convenience nnd the necessities nt trade fail them. The difficul ty extends itself to every department ot busi ness, nnd a general oniharrnssnicnt results. *’ Snsi’KN-DKt) R ui.noAus. —Within the lost thirty days the following railroad arc reported as having cUlhti' gone to protest oft their floating debt, suspended, or made au as signment of their propeny : M Nmnes. Totnl linbilities Now lork and Erie, 338.000,000 Illinois Central, 24 000 000 Philadelphia nnd Reading, 20 000 000 Michigan Central, •14 000*000 Michigan Southern, 18.00o!o00 Cleveland and 7,500 000 Milwnnkc nnd Mississippi, 1 ’ 7,00(L000 La Crosse and Milwonke, 14.000.000 Cleveland nnd Pittsburg. 0 000.000 Delaware. Lackawanna & Western, 10,000.000 Chicago. St. Paul. & Fond du Lnc, 6,000!000 North Pennsylvania. 0,000,000 Cumberland Coal Company, * 0.000.0U0 Huntingdon mid Broad Top. 1.200,000 Steubenville it Indiana, (estimated.) 5,000.000 To ’“I. " ©131,700,000 Another Effect of tub Pressure. —The Ilttkimoro Sun says: ‘ Tho financial revulsion is dcaiincd to do Romei good as well ns Imnn. It would bo n terrible calamity to have the Union dissolved just now, when everybody is sorely troubled nbout the money crisis. It may, therefore, be ‘oknmv ,| m t tho -aeven thousand nnrtSu r '°- rrTO ® llllcs '' vho ' vcr “ 10 lw>W 11 northern disunion convonlion at Cleveland, 28ih •,“! ,n T? 00 l , lmt in “nmaiuoncc of tho In t lu'r Sl i n lh “ nicet ’ n ß has born post, hrfl.ni rU " ’. Cr n °" cc ’ ' vh ™ il ia'prcsiiniwl they will proceed to ‘redeem’ their ‘promises’ by dissolving tho Union—on paper. Tho • ox tension of lime’ will no donhl lingratcfullv nc oepted by those who thought t£ eSlton ntxt wee?’ sU "‘" lorily u l'' 11,0 Union I, Senator Dougina is said lo have lost Utavi y 1,1 dm current revulsion, having been cn. lands t " xu '“ yiv<J ibite spceiilationa in weateru Mormon Outrages.- Tho following letter has been received from one of tho clerks (Mr. W. P. London) whom the Into surveyor general of Utah left in charge of the office when he, for l)ls own safely, left the Territory lost spring. This statement cor roborates the report, published several weeks ago, from a party of returned Californians : Pcagbrville, California. September 18, 1857. Okau stu ; T embrace the carlical opporlnni-, ty nficr my onivnJ here of sending ) on nn ac count of my escape from Salt Lake Oily. I ar rived on Saturday, the 12th instant, weary, worn, foot-sore, and nearly famished, having walked nearly all the way barefoot and almost naked. Vs fly the next mail I will give you all the partiedlaniftf the doings of the Mormons. On Sninrdnv,Jujy 2/5. while engaged in con versation with a nwHjher of emigtants. I was assaulted by a gang led on by Dick Petiit and Thomson, who bent me with stones and clubs most nnmercifiilly. The nnigraivs were about to rally to my but I dissuaded them from doing so, leUing them ibai it would only result In their dcstrupv lion. When I reached home I was insensible. The same afternoon they attacked Deputy Sur veyor Mogo, ns ho was going to the office, by; stoning him, and compelled him to lake refuge 1 in the store. On Monday, the 27th of July. l about midnight, I being awake, suffering from itic wounds the Mormons had inflicted. I was starded by loud knocking at the front and back doors of the office, (which adjoins my residence.) and heard Mr. Wilson, (the other clerk who oc cupies the upper part of the office building) ask from the winuow what was wanted. The re ply was a demand, in the name of Brigham Young, that he should comedown stairs and sur render himself. I then heard a the door having been burst open; and Mrff. Wilson shrieking and begging them not to take away her husband. They brutally told her to keep her mouth shut and stop her noise, or they would mnko her. I heard Mr. Y ilson ask where they were going to lake him. and fthat for 'I her said, in reply, Coiiic along, and no fuss, or we II d n soon show you " I was in apihle o' rendering .ij-si.slnnce. and was thinking what to do, when my back door was forced Oj.cn, and a party of the rnffi.;ns rushed in and otdend mo to come down stairs. I arose, and pul on my pants and one s.ockmg. But, ns it occurred Id me dial they would murder us, I resolved to escape, and cau tiously opened Ihe uimlow for that purpose, alien a peieni] tiny order was made for mo to mnko haste nod come down. 1 replied that I was coming down, when they m.ide u insti for llio stairs. I jumped out ol tl e window, nml es caped lo the house of a Inend, where I stayed until daylight. When I went to (ho store, the boys gave me a pair of moccasins, mi old ragg ed pair of pants, a check shirt, ami nn old hat. j In this disguise, I started the nest evening, and j (ravelled along the banks o( the Jordan and of | Salt Lake until daylight, when 1 struck tor the ■ mountains. I hud baldly reached a place of [ concealment when 1 saw seven mounted Mor ; mons in pmsnit. I twice narrowly escaped.— j Once near tiie Weber canon they camo within ( ten (eet of me, Lmt (hey were riding fast and I ■ was hid behind u sage bush. They followed mo I f° Willow Creek, where flic Indiana were luvy i ing a (ax of a shirt and a blanket on every emi t grant. My pursuers were hoard to say, •« Let him go; the Indians will get him before lie goes very fat down tho Humboldt." The Indhns got many poor follows on this river during last summer. Many men, women ami children have been slaughtered by wholesale. One woman was sc.ilpid nlivo, nml her children's brains knocked out over the wagon wheel. She is still living. I could Enumerate a dozen Midi instances. I saw on the load Ihe Indian IVter. who used lo come to the (survey or general's of. dee.) 110 told me that Brigham Young hud sonlliim out togo* put.g •»’horses rn i cat bines. Me knew me, ami said 1 was trainor, (good ) because I Imd olten given him bishcope fred paint.) He informed me there was a• * he;ip „r Indians on Humboldt; heap pnngoes, heap cn bines, "etc. 1 had not 1.• ff him an hour betoi he shot n man with four li-iIU, But the man c enped, though not much injured. I have m time lo recount the endured whil on the road. I have travelled from Carson Vn ley to (his place bmenb to cat. Inm now working In a stono qnnrpv nearly naked and barefooted. Tor verv llttl more than something to eat- -that I s’, nbun twenty dollars n month. The Mormons ara nil leaving here and Carson Valley for (ho purpose ofdelemling Zion ' Important Inw The following hill was passed at the reren extra session of the Legislature, ami became Inw on the 13th instant; .■hi act for the heller sernntij uf hihorns, M, (luuiirs, anil oilier*, in inlnm Companies. SwrtKiK 1 —Boil enacted hy theSennlcnml Ilhn-c of Ilepresenlftltves of the (’ormoonwinlh of IVnns) Ivaii'ft in General Assembly met. nod 11 is hereby enacted by Ihe anihony ol the wtim 1 . Tint for the purpose of providing aldi lioual security (or the pay;; cut of laWirs op eratives. mechanics, and nlhir/iomi fair cmli tors for services rendered or ;o he rendered, supplies and materials to In- fnrnislnd for any coal, iron, canal navigation, railroad, or turn pike company, incorporated in whole or in part by the laws of this t.'ommonwealih. that it sliall be lawful and competent for any such company to execute a lien or liens, or Instrument of wri ting sufficient thereto, with inventory attached and attested by the common seal of said com pany. if said company have such common seal and if said company have no common seal, then the said instrument of writing io he signed by the President. Board of Directors or Managers", and attested- by the Secretary, to a trustee or trustees, upon any or all such wagons, teams horses, mulls, cars, cans, boats, equipments, engines, tools nnd machinery used in conduct ing the business- of any such company, to bo held hy said trustee or trustees lor ihe Bole mi’pose or purposes aforesaid until said debis herein contemplated arc fully discharged by die sale thereof, or otherwise. Provided. That the said instrument or instruments ofwrhhrg bo recorded in the office for recording deeds, in the resptetire conniies wherein said companies transact business, nilhm thirty days from the execution ihereof Provided fin then That this aci shall continue in fuicu until the first d*y of I'ebrnary, 1861), nnd no longer, unless extended by subsequent legislation. Tlic People nnd (lie Pnprr Curr.-ury. The evils inUioled upon the country by the papcr-nianidacdirjng and paper issuing banka arc Urns forcibly set forlli by Hie New York Day Book: , J Our ourrenoy is completely out of joint ond n is almost impossible for a lnhoriii B J i,,nu or 1i.ee1m.,,0 lo gel bold of a bank bill ,L, hi can buy hi rad, meat, or poialocs with’. This Stain money it is iruc, is ot par in Wall slrew. but bow little do the people get of Hint doss of bills which can ho deposited ? Next lo mine ni all. hasteni and Jersey aro paid lo tho la boring people by nearly every employer, and then they hove lo go from store to store, and shop to shop, before they can pnsslt; and when they do gel it ofl. they must pay ten per cent, more for wlml they buy. Then, again. Stale money is bm little boiler: one cannot go to Philadelphia with it, nor lo Doston, nor Provi dence, nor New Haven even, without a great deal of trouble and annoyance. Now, then, what, wo would ask, have tho people done that they should be troubled in Ibis way ? The banks never did ihom one particle of good, nev er loaned them any money, never pave them a discount. On the other hand, they have loaned ,lhc banks millions of days' labor, and taken their notes at hand for them. Why should they* bo bctroihed with bank bills any longer 1 Let them put a stop to the Issuing of them, and they will put a stop to tho evil.” DjP' A western paper says that a hot so and w.igun wore drowiiud In the Ohio rlvor last wook. limy bad a hard time of It;especially (bo wagon. 1 J Till! PRESENT CONDITION OP CdLIFORNM, In a late number of the Kc\V York Mirror wo find an exceedingly interesting sketch of the present condition uf CAlifornla, founded—so the editor assures us—upon the representations of a gentleman of great respectability and intelli goncc. who occupies n high position in the gold en State. Wo give below the sketch, arranged as we find it in the Mirror under a few general heads: 1 MIXING. The placer mines arc no longer considered the most reliable resources of laborers, although even now they seem to be prolific enough nf cr the four or five washings of former years. Still there is a very large amount of territory yet to be prospected, where the grains and the nuggets nrc to be found ns abundantly ns ever. The chief reliance of the miners is, however, In the quartz veins ami the tnlcosc rocks, from which the supplies continue to be most abundant.— When the quartz speculations first began they wore condncicd by companies on a large and reckless scale. They had presidents, treasur era, and secretaries, drawing as largo salaries sns they do in some of our bankrupt laihvnys. There was not a pnrticleof-shame in these men: they used up everything, and the stockholders got nothing. Now there is a very dilferenl state of things. If a miner finds a vein, he first uses a hand-mill; he proceeds cautiously, pockets his gnias, gradually enlarges his opera* lions as he succeeds, and will not mist to large l companies. A few active persons take charge of ilvir own business and manage it for them selves. The five men who began in this way on the Alisun lend have now five hundred thousand dollars deposited in the mint, and all the skill of the financiers of San Francisco cannot gel them one step out of their regular business, nor induce them to otherwise use their wealth The products of the quartz mines arc yet only in their infancy, and ns the}’ arc now generally managed in the most economical and careful manner, they are paying their owners enormous profits. A vein of lalcoso rock has rcccn'ly been discovered in Calaveras county, which, by analysis, has been found to be worth at least five tbtfbsnml dollars a ton It is a njnrvellous story, but it is true nevertheless. The quick* silver mines arc also very prolific and profita ble, and adequate io any demand that can be made upon them for amalgam. RAXRING. The merchants of San Francisco arc in favor of a change in the constitution of the Slate, which prohibits the establishment of banks, but the miners and people in ibc conn ry arc ns much opposed to them. There will probably bo no change eDecied. The merchants ami I nub T'.sn\ they a r e operating al gie.il disadvan tage ; (tint in the oilier Slates specie represems from 1 to 3 or 4 times its intrinsic or received value, pdiile lt is dollar for dollar, and credit has not a day's advantage. Busi ness is transacted by the use of checks, winch arc immediately payable in specie. If the par ty drawing them has any credit with his hank er, which is extremely rare, ho may have 3 to 15 days' time to make his check good, but no longer. The Interest paid for money is still very high, from 2 to 5 per cent, a month, thus giving the d reel lie to the theory of those political econom ic R who contend that where specie is currency, interest rules at a low rale. It is supposed thot if bank paper was used interest would fall di rectly. and we presume it would. It is said by our’informunt that in consequence nf the stale of society, the ignotancc of the miners, and the want of institutions in which they can place confidence, vast amounts of gold are concealed m California by Its possessors. Much is stow ed away in beds and bedding, m nooks and eo-ner.s of bouses, and millions nn uctnalhj I lined m the cm ih. NATURAL RB3OCRCB3. Wheat is now, raised in large quantities in California, and considerable quantities are ex ported to Polynesia and Souih America. A trade in the article is growing up with China and Japan. Tho soil isproliJic in all vegetables and articles of food, and the grapes arc bo fine it-w tun'fJwdtfrdrfCawrovnMi will bo the greatest wlno-producing conntiy in the woiM. In climate and natural products it is wijium a parallel on the face of the globe. LAUGH. The wages of labor continue to be very high. 1 heie nre hundreds of servant girls in Sim Fran cisco worth fiom one to ten thousand dollars each, their ordinary wages being now twcniy- Ihe dollars per month In the splendor of their dresses they far eclipse their mistresses, and, ns the snymfc is, they ' can lake Broadway down" without an ellort TIIR WAXTR OF CAUFOIIVIA. The great want of Californio is labor outside of the regular professions. It is overrun will: lawyers, merchants, physicians, clergymen.-- U hut nre wnpu-d are mechanics, domestic ser vants. laboreis, builders, masons operators ol all kinds, for whom iherc is unlimited employ menl. Fifty thousand of ihese would find oc cupation nnd high wages at this very moment. POLITICS. Tin- Stale is democratic, and will remain so, 'I he people believe hi democratic mslnulions and nothing else, and they distrust mi} party which seeks to overthrow the government on special or side issues They dd not trouble llil-ir hinds with specialities. Such is a rough sketch of the present condi tion of California, The Crisis in New Orleans,- From (he money article in the New Orleans Picayune of Inst Sutui day’s issue we moke the following extract : •• If anything encouraging can bo gathered from the financial events of the past week, u is some sa<isfac 1 ton know that amid the dis tress and consternation that have prevoiled abroad, ns evidenced by the lone of the jcle graphic despatches, wo have yet preserved our equanimity, and have not given way to heedless fear, i hough how fur wc may bo enabled to escape the geiieial tendency towards a panic is a question wo nre not 100 curious of enquiring into. The fuel of it is and no amount of so phistry or senseless platitudes can disguise it, we close the week with a fueling of gloominess very nearly akin to despondency ; not that for n moment we entertain the slightest apprehen sions as to the entire solvency of the comimmi i,v. but that a state of things has under which the exchanges of the country are paral yzed. and our products, which represent so mixfii gold, have become almost unavailable as a means of resource and payment. How long this condition can Inst without entailing serious trouble is a question which some one better skilled in the torture of the human frame than ourselves can best answer." Frightful Tragedy.—A terrible tragedy took place about eight miles north of Clean, N. Y., oti Saturday night. A man named David Mc- Lean, who has boon lorn long tinm quite Intern pornlo, and Jins boon in tho habit, while intoxl cated, of heating his wife, on Saturday pnrcliu. «t« llvo gallons of whiskey and took II homo.— it is supposed (hat ho diank so much In tho course of tho night as to become helpless, when his wife with an nxo cutoff his head, ami cut several largo gashes In other parts of tho body. Mrs. McLean tins bean arrested and placed in “ Where YOU DK Tim New York -bank officers met on Monday, October fi, and resolv ed as follows : •' That the banks of the city of Now York arc dcicrmincd at hall hazards and under all circmnslnnres lo perform iheirduly In iliecoun try. and all its great inicrcsts, in the malnten. nude of specie payments, and that all classes of the community should sustain them in carrying out this determination." Tho ncjfl day tho banks suspended. A Caso of Ljncli Law in’ tcnotssec—Murder,* Bobbery/ Itonglirg. &‘c. ■flic Memphis papers have the following story; The trial of. Baker for tho murder of Fuget, 6n‘ the Cumberland mountain, has been tho oc casion of no llltlo excitement,'from first to last, In that region of country. Thefo arc many fea tures connected with this affair ol» tv painfully thrilling character, nnd more than usually novel. It will bo recollected ,1 hot tho body,of tho de ceased was found a lilllo off .the road, near n point called tho cross ot the roads,'in an advan ced stage of decomposition. - Tho body of his horso was also found near by, mingling its dust In common with his ill-fated master with tho dust of the earth. Tho man had boon Inhuman ly murdered, nnd the ahorse, to prevent his neighing, had been carefully muzzled and tied to a tree, where ho starved to death. The body of the deceased was recognised ns that of n man named -Fuget, fcrho had boon in the habit of making annual vjsljs to that coun try, nnd who was generally believed lo be n dealer In counterfeit money.. It was ascertain ed beyond a doubt that tho deceased, in com puny with two other men, spent the night nt the house of Baker, ns ho passed through, though Baker denied at flist all knowledge of such a man. Baker was arrested rtnd'brmight to trial. One of tho travelling companions of the decea sed comes forward nnd divulges the plot which resulted In his death. It was Iniown to Baker Unit Fnget had a considerable amount of good money, ns well rts a supply of conntortelt. At n convenient time, previous to.his departure in the morning, Baker concoctso plan with the two companions of deceased tomurdorand rob bim, (ho witness averring that ho ejected and was forced to acquiesce. Baker told deceased, ns l»o prepared to depart, that ho would buy a lot of counterfeit money from him, hut he would have to go to some of Ids neighbors to procure (he means, and would pieof him at the cross roads. Tho deceased agreed to wait, nnd did wait. Bnkcr camo, and the parties repaired to a seclnddd place adjoining and decea sed sat upon a punting out the money, when witness, who occupied a position near them, hoard a blow,-and JWned away to nvoid (bo scene. Subsequently Bnkcr and Ills companion told him that the work was done, nnd induced him to accept one hundred dollars of (lie spoils. There were other circumstances which wore calculated to fasten tho guilt on Baker. One was the finding of a knlfo near (he bodv, tho blade ot which fitted tho wound, and which was proven to have been Baker’s,and indeed lias his mime scratched upon the Imndld. Baker was found guilty In Oic Circuit Court, and appealed. lie was brought to (Ins city on Saturday last, nnd is now ip jail here. Previous to his removal great apprehensions of an attempt lo rescue him were entertained, and the jail wns regularly guarded. The Sparta Timet o| the 9th gives the following account of a counter-movement, resulting, no doubt, irom tills apprehension : Our (own was (bo scene of a most intense ex dtement on (his day (Friday) by the arrival ot I some two hundred and fifty armed men (mm (he , surrounding counties, (principally (mm Orer ; ton,) (or the purpose of executing summary 1 punishment upon Jeiry Baker. About ten o’*- I clock tho armed men camo pouring into town, 1 with rifles, shot guns, pistols, nnd other nen -1 pons, and by twulvu o’clock the town presented a scene of contusion and exclibmeiit such as lias never been witnessed In the,State since its | foundation. The streets nnd public squares wqre thronged most densely, and there seemed | loMiu a settled determination in the crowd to execute Baker at all hazards, ai)d the rope was purchased nnd fixed to u Jlmb ot a tree mar the | jail. At twelve o’clock (ho crowd moved lo : wards the jail, when court adjourned. nn«l Judge (toodnll and most of tho bar repaired to Hie jail 1 purely wjiere they met tho vast multitude. Col. K. first addressed the ass* mhled ; rnaul in n very impressive and eloquent •.peech I in behalf of law and order. In which lie hescech ed his old friends nnd ossoclatcs of his youth, ! amongst whom ho had been,reared, to sta\ their hand of vengeance. Ills speech was well re ceived. and must have had a powerful etlect upon the populace, in quelling the deep-seated feeling of vengeance. Judge J. 1.. Cioodal) next appeared, and gave tho crowd a most Im pressive speech, teplvtc with sentiments for law and order, nnd to tho sacred institutions of our country. *''■ The gallant J. W. McfHenry.Esq.v of Overton comity, wafc called’for and/iyipciyed beforo-lho audience, and gave iJuuu hat/ nn lump; m-rpnierr tig qirrzenajTH 1 words eloquent nnd sublime,Yofcbaprvd /awand 1 order, and to stay tho hand Ofnibb’lnw/na they loved their country, their homes, nnd the laws 6 ot their country. Wu cannot do Justice to tho speakers upon this occasion, who are entitled lo the lasting gratitude of their countrymen lor < staying the hand of mob InW in our midst. • u The speaking over, tho citisena dispersed in ' quid, mid Baker was Immediately hurried otl lo i Nashville. It is due lo stale that it was supposed Unit Baker’s friends intended lo release him, which caused the excitement. Money. Adam Smith gave forth the fallpwing views on the relative nihnnlngcsof money and its re presentative paper- -which will be appreciated at Die present time : U‘l us suppose, for example, (hat the whole circulating money of some particular country mummied at a particular time, to one million sterling, that sum being then fiufllclcnt for cir culating the whole annual products of their land and labor. Lot ns suppose, too, that some time thereafter, different banks and bankers issued promissory notes, payable to the bearer, to the extent of one million, reservlngin their different coders two hundred thousand pounds for an swenhg occasional demands. There would re mam. therefore, in circulation, eight hundred thousand pounds in gold and silver, ami n mil lion of hank notes, or eighteen hundred thou sand pounds ol paper and money together. But the annual nrodureof the land nnd labor of the country Jind before remitted only one million to circulate nnd distribute it to its pro per consumers, and that animal produce cannot he iiflmedinU'ty augmented by thoso operations of banking, (hie million therefore will bo suf ficient to create it after them. The goods to be bought nnd sold being precisely the same ns before, the game quantity of money will be suf ficient for Iniymg nnd selling tjietn. The chan nef of circalntion. if f may be allowed such an expression, will remain precisely the some ns before. One million we have supposed slifll cient lo fill the channel Whatever, therefore, is poured into it beyond lids sum cannot run in it, but must overflow. One million eight Jinn dred thousand pounds arc ppuyyd jnlo 1L Right hundred Mums,nid'pouiids. therefore, nmM overflow, that sum being over and above u hat can be employed in (he circulation ofihocoon- ' try. But though ibis sum cannot be employed nl home, it is 100 valuable to bo ollowea lo" lie idle. It will, therefore, he sent abroad, in or der lo seek inni profitable employment which it cannot find at homo. But the paper cannot go abroad, because nl n distance ffom tho banks which issue it, and from (he country in which payment of it can be exacted by law. It will not be received in common payments. Gold and silver, therefore, to the amount of eight hundren thousand pounds, will be sent abroad, and tho channel of home circulation will ru- - main Oiled with a million of paper, instead of a million of thoso mc:als which Ollcdjt before. How Prophetic! Tho following la nn extract from a speech nmdo by President Buchanan, when In Congress, on thu lndo|iomlent hoosiiry bill t «« Tho evils of u redundant paper circulation aro manifest to every eye. It alternately raises and sinks the value of every man's properly.— It makes a beggar ot the man to-morrow who indulged in dreams of wealth to-day. It con verts (lie business ol society into a mero lottery, whilst (hose who distribute (ho prizes are whol ly irresponsible to tho people. When ttio col lapse comes—ns cimio it must—it casts laborers out of employment, crushes mannlucliirors and merchants, ami ruins thousands of honest and industrious citizens." Snow— On tho N. V. Central Railroad, 100 miles west of Albany, snow was two Inches deep, on Tuesday. At Island Pond, Mo., snow foil on Saturday night. How-till) Biclimond Custom House was Bobbed.- The Hl6lmi<Snd Whig ftirnfshes tlib following account of tho robbery of the Custom liouso In that city; , The porter of the custom house first discov ered that tho safe had been broken open. The floor of tho office was strewn with gold'coin and empty bags, and nonr tho front doorwero depo sited a couple of small ponchos, which the bur glars probably intended to return for, but con cluded, no doubt, that It was safer not to do so. Tho nows of the robbery spread through the citj, and curiosity attracted a turg'i number of citizens to tho custom house, but the doors were kept closed until Mr. Harrison, lusdeputiosand tho merchants who had extended their assist, anco had counted (ho treasure remaining. Tho amount of specie which had been left in tho sate Monday afternoon was $07,000. The result of the Investigation showed that the sum of $20,- flBB had been abstracted, consisting of $16,000 In twenties, $6,085 in fives, one $8 piece. The wreck of tho safe door was complete. The head of (lie upper left rivet had been knocked off with a cold chisel, and nn npdrfurcalso made below (he block whichconstitutes (ho “ powder proof lock.” Through those crevices powder was poured into the frame of tho door and igni ted. The explosion bniyl apart tho franto vjork and enabled tho burglars to force open the shat tered door. Pay Vonr. Small Debts. The country Is now, commercially, at a stand still. There la no movement, and until there ia, there can he no life. There must bo a begin ning somewhere; and tho beginning cannot be made in a better way than by the payment of the amall debts which the people of (he country owe to one another. The country is full of grain and produce of all kinds, and the cities aro nearly empty and ready to purchase freely. Many, very many fat-mars are indebted in small sums to country storekeepers, and are probably walling until money is plenty, to pay them. There is no need to wait. Lot every larmer so indebted, gather up enough flour, or grain, or oilier produce, suf. flcloiit to cancel hisdcbl, and pay it, instead of money, to the storekeeper. The latter, without a doubt, trill be glad to take if, for It will uiinblo him fo pay bis debts in the cities whore he deals. He will at once for ward the supplied thus received, and when he ha* thus met tils liabilities, his city creditors will bo able to meet theirs, in turn, and so on. until one debt cancels another, nnd that onolh- 1 cr, and that another, and a fbw thousand busb- | i ls o( grain thus pul In motion, will carry relief | to many who are now groaning under a load 100 heavy Cor them to carry. If this were but once I begun lairly, commerce would soon Imgin to J flow again in its natural channels, and the coni • try would feel the impulse of a re-awakened 1 life. There is no place fur this to begin but 1 with the farmers. I They must not wail for the banks to move the produce, hut must begin to move it themselves, in the liquidation o< their little debts, nnd tho after movement will come of itself. The great want of the community, now, is a general settle ment of accounts, and a squat mg up of balances wherever practicable. Tho same thing is (mo of cities as of tbccoun liy. The man in the city who owes a mechanic, or trader, or manufacturer, or storekeeper, even if it bo so small a sum as one dollar, should pay it now, if be is able. One dollar thus put In motion, may pay a hundred smalt debts'll) the course ol a day. The tailor and the shoemaker, thus paid, will In turn pay those w ilh w horn they deal, nnd they will pay others, and so on with out end. Pilhburp Gazelle. Pknnsyi.vanu.— Tho Journal of Commerce thus speaks of the tremendous dcfVnt of tho black-republican party in Pennsylvania at the late election : “The result yf (he election may be called a thorough and emphatic endorsement of Mr. Bu chniiuu’s administration, his New Hawn letter, and the Dred Scott decision, nnd a decided affirmation that the people ol Pennsylvania do not repent the way they voted last fall. The large democratic gain seems further to show that but for the lavish employment of the Kan sas fund in the presidential election, (lie vote Mr. Fremont would probably have been nearer what it now is for Wllmot, and Mr. Buchanan’s majority would have been much larger. It has boon extensively believed that Pennsylvania on personal-grounds, and ft fins oven been credited by some (but con tributions were made nnd used fo procure fieri suffrages for him.” ) Hi'uarkadli- Hkstob avion -In Vcrdicrsvillc, Orango county, V« . a little girl, deaf and dumb and puny, has lately had the typhoid fever, ami when sbo recovered, her speech and hearing were restored. Harkris., Pn/i.A., Oct. 28. Fi.oi r—A sale of 300 bbls 'fancy family ex* irn wns made on Saturday nl a pr vale bargain and small Io:s to-day at fiom 85 37 up to 80 for common to choice retailing brands nnd ba kers’ (lour, 85 75 a <>i for extra. CJ a per bid. for fancy brands- Corn ileal is dull, and Pennsylvania Men! is offered at S 3 C2J perbbl. without finding buyers. Rye Floor is wanted at 84 i per bid. Grain. — A few small sales of red Wheal arc reported, at 125 c a 128 c. nnd 1600 bushels choice Kentucky whitent 140 c. Ry* is steady, at 74 a 75c for Delaware nnd Penn. Corn Is i very dull, a few small sales of old Southern yel low were made at 74c. hut buyers now refuse io pay this figure Oats arc quiet, and the last tales wire nl 34c. . Whiskey is selling moderately nl 21 ic n22ic for Penua. nnd Piison bbls., and 2lc for hhds; Drudge is rather scarce, and somo saloi have been made nl 20*.c. Jttarrirb On the 224 Instant, by the Bov. br. McClln Cock. Mr. Ciiuilss W. Cariiiuan, to Miss Lie 21K C. K. SKTUoni. Notice THE Hooka nful accounts of J. G. Williams nro In (ho hands of the snbscrfbor. Per sona indebted « ill jilenso call soon, nl the rftoro room, on west High street, and make payment. ROUT. MOORE. October 211, 1H67. Great Reduction In Prices!!! Jit Units «J- Jhv'e. Cheap Store. NEW GOODS!! CHEAP GOODSM jSI Dents tf Jiro'e. Cheap Store. 25e1. iMOUS uELAJNS selling for 20 els. jit Dents Sf Dro’t. Cheap Store. Krchb arrivals every day. of Cheap goods At Dents ij- Dto'e. Cheap Store. The place to gel your money buck is Jit Dents d- liro't. Cheap &7ore. All Colors Carpel Chain, at 25 cents jil Dents «J- Ilro’e, Cheap Store. October 21>, 1867. Wall Paper*! Wall Papers! THE CHEAPEST JN THE STjUTE I rpilli subscriber, determined to soil Ids present JL extensive stock out by the first of tho year to make room for Ids Spring Goods, lias placed his prices at a rate which bring it within tho roach of every person to paper their house from lop to bottom. Our Goods aro nil from Phila delphia manufacturers, and will bo found long, or, wider, and superior to those from Now York or elsewhere. From this date all paper, except gold, will be hung for cent*, gnd done In a more workmanlike manner titan others whoso charges aro double that amount. Whitewashed walla papored without tho trouble or expense of scraping and warranted not to fall off. Window Shades at wholohulu prices. Paper Curtains 7 cents each. All other goods exceedingly low* Call and see for yourself at tho cheap Wall Paper Warehouse in- South Hanover SU, next to Hannon's Hotel, Carlisle. JOHN W. PARIS. Practical Paper Hanger. Sopt. 17, 1857—dm House and Sign Fainting; C" 'HA’S. XT. Hto-FERi Hoiise, Sign, and Or namontnl Painter, Gralncr, Glrizer and'Pa porllnngor. All the above branches will bo promptly attended (o. The various kinds ol Graining, such as Oak, Walnut, Mahogany, Ma. pFd, Rpso-wood; also, Black, White and Sciennn Marble. AH'jobs entrusted to tils care will bo doncivitli neatness and dispatch. Country work promptly attended to. Shop situated opposite' the Second Presbyterian Church. Carlisle, Oct. 22, 1857—4 t Executor's Sale of Personal Property. WILL bo offeree! at Public Sale, on Satur day, (ho 81st daj* of October, 1857, at the into residence of Maria Stevenson, deceased, West Mam street, nearly opposite the Ware house of Jacob llliectn, a varloty of Household and Kitchen Furniture, consisting in port ol Mahogany Dining 4* Breakfast Tables, Cane Seal Chairs, Sofa, Dressing Bureaus, Parlor & Chamber Carpels, Bedsteads, Muttrnsscs, Bedding, Stoves and Pipe, Chinn and Glassware, a large Cooking Stove, (nenrlr new,) Bathing Apparatus, fcc.; together with numerous other articles w hid) need not he par. ticniarized. Sale to commence at 10 o’clock A. M.. when terms will bo made known and attendance given by T. C. STEVENSON, J. W. MARSHALL, Exr't. of Maria Sterenson, dte'd. Carlisle, Oct. 22, 1857—2 t Real Estate Agency. Removal.— a. l. sponsler, Real £». tale dgenl, Conveyancer and Scrirtner, has removed to bis new office, on Main street, one door west ot (ho Cumberland Valley Railroad Depot. _ •. Ho is now permanently located, and lm« on hand nnd for sale n very large amount of Heal Estate, consisting of Farms of all sizes, Improv ed and unimproved, Mill Properties, Town Pro. pei fy of every description, Building Lots, also, Western Lands nnd Town Lots, lie w ill give Ids attention, ns heretofore to tin? Negotiating of Loans, Writing of Deeds, Mortgages, Wills, Contracts, nnd Scilvonlng generally. Carlisle, Oct. 22, 1867. Notice. LETTERS of administration on the estate of Susan Zeigler, dec’d., late ot the borough of Newrillo, Cumberland co., have been grant ed by the Register of said county, to tin? sub scriber residing to (he same borough. AM per sons indebted to said estate will make immediate, payment, nnd those having claims will present them for settlement, to JOHN WAGGONER, Adm’r. October 22, 1867—Ot* SlicrlflTS Sales. DY virtue of sundry writs of Venditioni Ex -D ponns. issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Cumberland county, nnd to me direct ed. 1 will expose to public vendue, or outcry, at the Court House, in the Borough of Carlisle, on Friday, the Gth day of November, A. U. 1857, at 10 o’clock, A. M., the following de scr'licd real estate, viz: , A LOT OF GROUND situate in Hampden township, Cumberland county bounded on the North by Joseph Waggoner, on the South by the widow Rime, on the East by John Mutch, and on the West by John P. Quigley, contain ing Four Acres, be the same more less, having thereon creeled ■ ■■JrTrt.- a one story LOG HOUSE, and sTTiA EOCi STABLE. Seizes} and Ln- KWjMlIw hen in execution ns the property of George Simmons. Also, a Lot of Ground situate in Newton township, Cumberland county, containing sixty feel in front and one hundred nnd twenty feet in depth, he the same more or less, bounded on the North by land of B- M. Hays, and on the •South nnd West Ly land of James Allen, and i on the East by a public road, having thereon erected a one story Log House and Stable. Seized nnd taken in execution -ns the pi*opcrf of Isaac Chamberlin. Also, a tract of land situate in South Middle* ion township. Cunfberland county, containing FORT Y JiCRES , more or less, founded on the West by Mr. Miller, on the Squill. Kast and North by Peicr F. Ege. having (hereon erected a LOO HOUSE ond LOO STABLE. Seized and taken in cxc* cut ion ns the properly of John Shaller. And all 10 be sold by me JACOB BOWMAN, Sheriff. Sheri ft's Office. Carlisle. I October 15. 1857—4 t £ Proclamation. WHEREAS the Hon. James H. Gtiaiiam, President Judge of the several Courts ol Common Pleas in the counties of Cumberland, Perry, and Juniata, and Justices of the se.era Courts of Oyer and Terminer nnd General Jail Delivery In said counties, nnd Samuel Wood burr & MichaelCocklin, Judges ul theCotiVtsol Ovei and Terminer and General Jail Delivery for Hie trial of all capital and other oflenders, in the said county of Cumberland, by their precepts fo me directed, dated the 24th day oi August, 1867, have ordered (ho Court of Oyer ami Terminer and General Jail Delivery to lie holden nl Car lisle. on (lie 2d Monday ot'Novcmber, 1867, (be ing (ho Olh day,) at 10 o’clock in the fordftoori, to continue tiro necks. NOTICE is hereby given lotheCoi'orter, Jus tices of the Peace, and Constables df the said county of Cumberland, that they are bv (he said precept commanded to bo then and there in their proper persona, with their rdlls. rcdoftls, nnd in quisitions, examinations and' nil other romem. lunnces, to do (hose things which to their ofllcea appertain to bo done, nnd all fhorfo (hat are hound hy rccngniznnd'oflr, fo prWpCiifc against the prisoners that nrd pH then shall be m the Jail of slid county, aro Id lie there to prosecute them ns shall he just. JACOft BOWMAN, Shift ff. September 17. 1867. Tlic New Store Ahead of Com* petition j The <i and Cheapest Arrival ttf thtl Season of Fall iind Winter Dry Goods, Groceries, Hati, Cap'f , 6dHt» «}• Shoii, in Carlisle, is at the New Store, comer oj North Hanover and Leather Streets. THE undersigned returns thank# for (ho pa tr*>nngcr bestowed upon him hy the public, nnd nl (he same time respectfully nmionueeM (hat he has Just returned Irom Philadelphia, and is now opening a new lot of Fall ahd Winter Wry-Good*. and droccries, consisting In purl as lollows, and which he l.s determined to sell at the lowest cash prices : Silks. Ducal Cloths, Alpacas, C bailies, Del linos, Uohapes, Lustres, Poplins, Brilliants, Shirting, French and Scotch Ginghams, Prints, Gloves, Collars, Handkerchiefs, Hosiery, &c. Shawls of every style and quality. Staple and Domestic Dry Goods, Cloths, Cassi mores, Vestings, Flannels, Muslins, Tickings, Stripes, Checks, Calicoes, Oottonadca, Linens, Shootings, Denims, Nankoon, Drills, Marseilles Quilts, colored and whit©'Carpet Chain, Um brellas, &c., &o. Also, a largo and splendid assortment of Bonnets, Hats, Caps, Bools and Shoes. A superior lot of Fresh Groceries, Tens, Coifoo, Molasses, Ulco, Spices, Ate., &o. Hav ing selected my entire stock with tho greatest caru and at tho lowest cash prices, I can assure my friends and tho public generally, that 1 will do all in my power to make my establishment known as the “HEAD QUARTERS FOR BARGAINS.” Those who wish to purchase will find it to their advantage to call and examine my stock before purchasing. T will pay tho highest market price for But* ter, Eggs, Hags, Soap-ami Dried Fruit. J. A. HUMKICII, Jn. October 16, 1867, IMPORTANT TO ALL—Who wish tho very boat quality of throo hnshol Dogs, at $6 per dozen, 2 bushel bags nt $i per dozen, nndßng duff, oan get thorn at the now cheap store of b “* 6 J. A. lIUMKIOH, Jn. . Curfltdo, Abgnst 20,1867. Winter Arrangement f CUMBERLAND VAIihEY RAIL ROAD/ v CHANGE OP HOURS. ON and after Monday, October) 12t5, J 857, passenger* trains will Icuvo as follows fSnn idnys excepted :y ‘ r ~ ' • . ill Train. 2 d Train. Leave Chnmbcrhlmrg, B.GO A. Mi ; 2.10 P. M Siiippcnslnn g, 9.20 “ “ Nuwvllle, D.6.J 320 « “ CaVlisld, 10.30 '«* 4.00 u “ Wixhanirsb’g, U.OU «« 4.30 <• At Harrisburg, 11.85 “ 0.08 « For CKznmhcrsburg. , Ta* Train. 2 d Train. Leave IlarrfoMirg, 9.80 A. M. 1.50 P.M, “ Muchaniesbifrg, I).10 “ 2.20 <» “ Carlisle, , »V 2.50 “ J 0.20 <> 11.26 " ** Ncwvillc, Shfpponsburg, Jl.OO <* ,4.00 <» At Clianihcrsbiirg, 11.80 «•' \4.80 •• Trains Icnvo irai'rliburg for Philadelphia at 1.08 A. M., 7.65 A. M., ami 3.16 P. M.,-vla Columbia, ami 7.00 P. 31. For Baltimore, at 8.8(» A. M., and 1.00 P.3K For Pittsburg. at 3.86 A. M., 12.26 IToor, and djfi’P: J(. F;m-s from Mnrrisbnrg, McCbnii'cslhifg, Car lisle, ShippApainirg and Chambcrsbitrg, will bo t<‘ii cents k*s when paid for Ticket'd at flio OT fice, I lmit when paid in tbo Cars. O. N. LULL, Supf.- Railroad Office, Cbambcrsburg, f. Oct. 8. 1867. f KI/AA II ( li fIUTHRIv OA IN the Court of Common Pitas, of Cnrobcr berlund County, August 26, 1857. THS Pc. tilion of Wm. Jl. Beelem, Edward M-Bld’dle" John W. Henderson, Henry 1). Schmidt amf 1 others, setting tar/h, that they have atfsoßlhtcd for Iho purpose of purchasing land, and laying put and establishing a Cemetery,'and have lor (lint purpose, foinicd themselves IrlFo nn asso ciation at Carlisle, In tho County ol Cumber, land, and are now desirous to bo Incorporated agreeably to tho provisions of (bo Act of the General Assembly of Pennsylvania, passed tho 13th of October, 1840, entitled " ah Ac£ (peon fur on certain associations of the citizens of (his Commonwealth, the powers and immunities of Corporations or Bodies Politic ft taw,” and the Act extending said Act, passed cm thff 20th February, 1864. Now to wit, August 26, 1867. the forgoing petition and artiules of association annexed,be- 1 ing presented to the Court, ami the said Court having perused and examined (hdsamo, and it appealing to tho Court, (hat (he objects, arti cles nod condition therein set forth end Coft tained, arc lawful and not Injurious to the Com munity. The Conit direct said writing to bo filed in the office of the Prothonotnry 5 oT Cu«. bcrland County, and also direct notice to Rein serted in one newspapei printed in said CouK- ty, for throe necks, setting forth that o|)|jlls|. tlon has been made to the Court to grant a J Charter of Incorporation, to said assotjiwrtln, and if no sufficient reason is shown (<j ft o con trary, the same will he granted at tho next tertft of said Conn. By the Court. JAMES H. GRAHAM, Preset Judei. D. K. NOELL. Prntk'y, Per. P. QUIGLEY, Dtp'ty Pro/A’y. October 1,1867—8 t Bonlcf & Bcllzlioovcr, LAND AGENTS, Cjty, lowa. LANDS bought and sold, money invested oit commiKsimi at western rlUcs ot interest, nixes paid for non-residents, &C. Juno 11, 1867, Uuiiibridgc’M Boot, Shoo and Trunk Store. What's the matter now ? each passer docs say* ’Twaa very dull here the other day ; There was nothing stirring, nothing doing, I’m sure there must lie shmetiiing brewing; Bui here comes Weller,” I'll ask him wbal’S the matter. (And by the wny.RrU coming faster.) Good morning, Weller, anything wrong? What’s the cause of all thin throng I W by, did you not hear I if not its very queer,' That the ” Bainbrldgo’s” Jjturo opened hero A Shoo store of the right Rind, • To suit the foot and ulcaso the mind! They sell so CHEAP ff yon have tho OAfefX. That I’m afraid that (hey will smash; And that’s not all for I do knor, That they do sell a little below The regular prices, nnd (hen you’ll find* They have good shoes of every kind. So tell all your friends you chance tb meet, Of” BainbridgcV’ Store In Hanover street, Right opposite Dentz k Bro. f)ry-gooda state. ) mi’ll find 11. D. Weller In the store. Call in and look omi you will see, We speak the truth, yes-afr’ye. Don't forget tha place in North Hanover St. directly opposite Benlz h Bro. Dry-good store. Cm lisle, Pa. Ihtuibn r«s/i Shoe Store ! Octobm }f t< Hm Town rropcrl y at Private Sale. S VITI ATE on Pornfret street, near Bedford, ' I,o 'v tinted and occupied by the Miss’s Gra- Tho Lot conlni'M 20 feet In fronf dff Pomfrct rciut, nmi extending back If 10 tool to all alley. The improvements uro o lifiiik BRICK HOUSE, nVo st Or T covering Hie ciitlrs from, contnlfitng’two parlors on I lio low'd 1 Hnor', n luiseniPiifkltclieri.nnd very comfortable chambers otr flrtj second story. Thero Is also a WOOD HOUSE, WASH HOIiSE, nhd other out building; and a cliolco selection of Fruit. The local lon lb a very de sireubleonb f\.r n priv.itu residence, and the •entire property is In tTre H*«i possible state of rej.air I namnOcli ns the present owners arc desirous f removing (r<un Carlisle, the property will be isposed of on most reasonable terms. For further particulars enquire of A. L. SPOiVSf.KR, Htnl F.stnle Jgl- and Scrivener. Seplcmher lit, 1 H.*7—Ct illdleti’s Celebrated LIQUID GLUE, Tin: GKKAT ADHESIVE, Mott uefful article crer invented, for home, ilorc aml office, inrgiisting in utility Cray other glue, gum, mucilage, paste or rcmcnl ever known. ALWAYS ready ftir application! adhesive on paper, cloth, leather, furniture, porco- Inin, china, marble or glass. For manulaclm-lng Fancy Articles. Toys,etc., it Ims no superior, not only possessing greater strength than any other known ailiclo, hut ad heres more quickly, leaving no slain where the parts are Joined. Never Fails. Within tho last three years npwardsof 350.* 000 bottles ol this jn.sltv celebrated Oih« have been sold, and tho groat convenience which it has proved in every case, Imsdesorved ly seemed Cor it a demand which the manufac turer found it, at times, ditllcnlt to meet | acknowledged by all who-have used it, that Its merits are lar above any similar article or imi tation ever allured'to (ho public. CC7“ This GLUE is extensively counterfeited — olncrrc the label “ McEeu’t Celebrated Liquid Glue , the Great Adhesive.** Take no other. Twonty-fivo jOenta a Bottle. Manufactured- and Sold, Wholesale and Re tail, by WAI. C. WdRBAi Stationer, No. t»t*7 CiiKsT.virr St., PmtAmtWJiiA. QST- Liberal indiioemonts offered to persons desiroils of selling (ho nhoro article. September 21, 1867—Jy Law Notice. RE.MOVAL.-W.M. PENROSE Ims remo ved his odlco to tho room formerly occu lik'd by liiin on Main ulrout, n Cow door, cost ol Ibo » Otbodlal Church, wlmro ho will promptly nllond la all bimlnnia ontnislcrt to lilmT Auguat I\, 1857—U 2.40 «
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers