An> CARLISLE, pa., thundny Sept, a, JSOO. DEMOCRATIC STATE TICK I T FOR GOVERNOR, HON, ASA PIC IE OF CAUIION COUNTV FOU SUPKEMK’JUDGE. HON, CW t, PERSHII or CAVIBRIA COUNTY. Democratic Cotinty Ticket. HU! ASSEMBLY, JOHN B. LEIDIG, of (silver Spring Tou'nsldp, FOB PROTHONOTAEY, tv. V. CAYANACOH, nf Penn Township, FOR CLERK OP TUB COURTS, GEORGE C. SIIEAFFER, “of Silver Spring Township. FOB REGISTER, JOSEPH NEEDY, of Carlisle. FOR COUNTY TREASURER, GEORGE WETZEL, of Carlisle, FOB COMMISSIONER, JACOB. RHOADS, 8/ West Pennshoro ’ Township. FOE DIRECTOR OF THE POOR, JOHN CMBERGEB, of Lower Allen Township, FOB AUDITOR, C. V. KELLY, of Js ewton Township. REMOVAL! The Volunteer Office has . been removed to the second floor of Wetzel’s H&11,.0n Church Alley, directly West of the Frnnhlln House. Entrance on Church Alley. 1869. THE VOLUNTEER FOR THE CAMPAIGN Great’ Seduction In Price . We will furnish the Voi.vnteek from Iho stl of August until tho 2d of ihicember—FOUJ stoNTHß—at tho remarkably lo& figure of' FIFTY CENTS PER COPY. We design that our friends shall have the oppor tunity of placing u'sou%d*feJiable Democratic paper in every household, and hnvo put the price so low that it scarcely,more than- pays for t lie white paper Used. We have” thus dona our part, now lot our friends In the country do their part* There is no'better way to insure success than to scatter Democratic truth broadcast amongst the people. Political 'meetings and great dGinonstrntlous inny.servo a purpose, but It is the newspaper, In the collet of a man’ll home, which makes converts. For clubs wo make a further deduction. CEVB MATES: tm-copKr,-- — g-do- Twenly Copies , - . 500 All campaign subscribers will bo discontinued on December 2d, unless subscriptions are renew ed. in all cases the cash must accompany the order. Address, , BRATTON & KENNEDY, ; . ‘Carlisle, J’cnnki. “SWINGING ROU.MI THE CIRCLE. When we see the officers of our gov ernment “ gadding about” for months together, to t/ie neglect of (lie duties • they are expected to perform, it is a bad symptom—an evidence of careless ness. Nearly the entire summer Grant . I,as engaged in pleasure trips. He has been a visitor at all the principal watering places, cities, race courses and other resorts in our country. He cares nothing about the duties of his office, and seems to think' the Government can take care of itself as well without him us with him, which conclusion may be correct. The Cabinet officers, ■in imitation, of their chief, are also oif on pleasure trips. One is in Massachu setts, another in Rhode'lsland, another in New York, another in Illinois, and I another in New Jersey. All are "bob bing around” at theipublic expense.— The wheels of government run -slowly, with no one to examine the gudgeons or-oii the,cranks. It is permitted to run itself. Nor is pleasure-seeking and neglect of duties confined to Gran t and hia cabinet. Nearly every Radical Senator .and Congressman, is also " swinging round the circle” at the ex pense of the Treasury. Really, this Radical party is full of fun. 'To them fho war was a frolic, from the first shot to the last. Dancing, debauchery and loud laughter could be seen and heard at the White House even when the groans of thousands of dying men filled the air. The people’s distress was their harvest, politically and finan- dally. They lived and grow fat upon the blood of the young men of ourcoun- try. They .loyal! Wliy, they—we spank of the lenders— would sell their , souls for gold. Look at the little puffed up Grant, as heexhibits himself at the race-courses and watering places. What cares he for the country ? He accepts presents, from a $75,000 house to a bull pup; pockets his $25,000 salary, puff 8 his gold-tipped segnr, and feels happy. Ho has no time—indeed he has no ca pacity to think about his country or the interests of the people. “ God save the Commonwealth.” '• The Dent family is becoming a scource of great trouble to the President It is a blguconcern, this Dent family is, and at*tiraes obstreperous. Judge Dent has just raised thestandard of re bellion. against ids kinsman by mar riage, Qenehd Grant, and npw General F- J\ Dent, Grant’s doorkeeper, is also in revolt. He is desirous of wagerin" Ids next year’s salary that Judge Chase will lie the next candidate of the De mocracy, swd that his brother, Judge Dent, will lie the next Governor of Mississippi. this second Dent will have to he a more cautious in h3a expressions, or he not have ai salary to wager. KEJr?GmT« of tho hot weather ami drought continue focomefrojm portions Ttjv r> • , . &tsz£sn:£rsz S=;,“S?S;C ,OT "S£f* -*-V wwKJ THE SCHOOLS AT M ASH I SCION The appointment ofignorant negroes os trustees of ’the phblic Schools of Washington city has had th'b effect we predicted. The • teachers have all re signed, and the schools are closed.— Immediately after their appointment, tho negro trustees insisted, as a first step in “ the new order of things,” Unit tho white and black schools should be consolidated ; that negro children and white children should mingle together in the same schools. Tho white teach ers remonstrated, but they'were point edly told that they must obey the Wishes of their now masters—the npgro trustees. Bather than 'submit to;' tho humiliation of being dictated to and in-. suited by negro boot-blacks and wait ers, thyy. resigned, and, as wo have said, the schools are closed for the presen I. Is it not enough to cause the blood to curdle in a white mail’s veins when lie reads the fantastic capers of the in famous scoundrels who tiro attempting to force the equality of tire races ? The cause of education, like morality and decency, must suffer and languish be cause white teachers Will not consent to become the willing tools of the ne gro boot-blacks who have been placed qver them, as trustees. “Let us have peace,” says the poor imbecile Grant, as he places negroes over whites and attempts to force white children into social equality with black children. If Grant is so very fond of the negro, why is it that ho nqglects to send his own children to' a black-aild tan school? Why is it that he has no negro in his cabinet; none in his suite? Let him bo consistent, if it be* possible for a Eadical to possess such a virtue, and thus show that ho is willing to what lie seems determined to force upon others. This attempt to force the white and black children of -Washington city to mingle together in the schools, is Eadi cal ism in its essence. Every decent white man and woman in America will commend the course of the white teachers who. resigned their situations and closed the schools, rather than sub mit to the degradation that the Grant administration and- the infamous “ Mayor Bowen” demanded; To ask intelligent white teachers to obey the demands of a set of ignorant negro boot-blacks, was a little too much even for white - Eadical teachers. Bather than become the tools of negroes they resigned. . All honor to them. 1869, Where Is tlmt million? We desire Governor Geary or his friends to inform the people of Pennsyl vania in whose hands the piillion of dollars belonging to the State at pres ent is. It is now definitely ascertained . that it is not where it should be, and that certain private individuals are de riving the benefit of it. Is it not de manded of Governor Geary that this gross wrong upon the people’s pockets should bo stopped, and that whatever revenue accrues from this large sum shall be paid into the.public treasury? But Geary dares not, even if he had tfie disposition, make any disclosures; The Ring with which he is so insepara bly conriftcted. and whiqh hi« State, holds him in its toils,- and would crush him in an instant did he' venture even a remonstrance, for all this there is but one remedy, and that is for the people to wrest the power thus corrupt ly wielded from the unworthy hands in which it has been placed, and give it to an honest man. When Asa Packer is elected Governor of Pennsylvania which he will be as certainly as that two and two make four, then, and not till then, will the money affairs of the Commonwealth be honestly managed, and tho people got their own! ’ Thk Presbyterian Banner speaks in the following complimentary manner of the nominees of the Bemocratic,par ty for Governor and Judge of the Supreme Court: - ' “.In }SCS, Mr. Packer -founded at South Bethlehem, a scientific school, under Episcopal control, called the Le high University, and endowed it Jwith a trijet of land fifty acres' in extent) and with $500,000 in money, and it is be lieved ho intends giving an additional ranking one million of dollars. He is said to bo a man of- most exem plary private life,' who dispenses his charities with a most liberal hand;” “ Ever since Mr. Pershing was ad mitted to the bar he lias resided in Johnstown, where ho has met with complete success, and has always main tained the highest reputation for integ rity and Christian character. He is an able lawyer. * , * » He is an Eider in'the Presbyterian Church of Johnstown, and Superintendent of its Sabbath School. Eor four years he occupied* prominent place in the Penn sylvania Legislature, and 'no tongue has dared to whisper the slightest inti mation of corruption against him.” There is a voice of wailing heard from Yankee schoolmarms of Hhe South. Sambo has proved ungrateful, and refuses to pay for the tuition of his offspring. He., promises, but “goes back” on his word. One indignant fragment of the Plymouth rock tells liGr piteous .tale in the Macon Telegraph which is, that after a Northern society agreed to pay her salary, her board was to be paid by the parents who sent their children to school, but that they failed to do, so, and that she would have been turned out of" doors by her landlady had she not paid her board herself. She says the negroes are pro fuse in words, make any amount of fine promises, but never think of ful filling them. This is terrible, and Georgia should bo “ reconstructed,” es pecially the' negroes who refuse bacon and skipjacks to .Yankee schoolmarms. • The Philadelphia Ledger complains flint Secretary Boutweli’s reports are so ambiguously worded that it is impossi bio to tell whether the public debt lias been reduced or not. Very true; ip is verg doubtful whether the debt has been reduced at all during Grant's administra tion. The debt bearing greenback in terest. has been reduced, but has not this reduction been more than counter balanced by- the increase of the gold Aicaring’debt.- (T.ONRM, One of Grant’s military satraps, General Ames, has directed the'militn ry cominanders in Mississippi not to obey any writs for the release of priso ners in their custody issued by the U. S. Courts. Wh'ata free country Ameri ca is under Badical, rule! Only a few days ago Gen. Ames “deposed a num ber of officials in Mississippi for aiding the Conservative movement.” Uhles s President Grant wishes to have trouble, lie had better remove .this shoulder strapped young upstart, and put some sensible person in ids place. Again aery coirics ft’ 1 * traveling 'on At IMthole, Mary. a man named Ryan, who had seduced her. ana failed to ho the proper lt is feared Ryan will live. ' • ° The .Methodist church of Lewis town, remodeled and improved, was dod ieated on the loth inst. Dr. Dashiel, J, rf » l ,' 1er ‘ t of Dickinson College; Dr. McCleun, of the Presbyterian church and Rev. J. H. McGarrah oiliciatihg. —Dr. Benjamin, of Duahore, Sullivan cmmty, died suddenly last week from the ©treats of a large dose of morphine. He oat " e npwe veiy tiled, and laid down, and asking his wife to hand him his me- turned some morphine from ‘Vi ,e t v i ,nl ! nto ll,s m °uth.' He saw at once that he had taken top much, and every elrnrt was made"to counteract' its effects, hut he expired In about - two hours. On the I2th inst.,.three men l —two of whom were disguiaed—ontored the resi ■dence of Mr. Abner Buckwnlteiv near (jordonvillo. Lancaster county, and robbed him of 81,()!)() and other" valua bles. -On Monday last a little daughter of ' David Powell of Carbon township, Cam bria county, had one of her feet taken off immediately above the ankle by a mow ing and a little boy who was lying asleep m the grass made a fortunate escape from being ditto pieces by his lather discovering him and stopping the machine. —A man named John, a former em ploye.of the Erie Railroad, has made a confession in which ho declares himself the author of the terrible disaster at Carr’s Rock, in April, 18G8, whereby twenty or thirty person-s.lost their lives. Ho 'says ho displaced a rail thereby causing the accident.. „ , s< r r yautgiri in Altoona recently •tried whiskey to kill rate. She sweetened it with sugar, soaked bread in It, and then loft the bread in the cellar, where rats “most do congregate.” She had been un stairs but half an hour when she heard unghing, siupiflg; and a general India bailed dowji stairs. She accordingly went down to spe what was the mutter . Imagine her astonishnfent to liud about a dozen rats gloriously fuddled’, engaged in throwing potato parings at each other and hauling one another up to drink. * POLITICAL —Tim Democracy of Snyder coimtv have nominated William H. Dili fm assembly. ’ —Andrew Johnson's chances of being elected Senator from Tennessee are s-iid to be growing. —Senter'a majority ip Tennessee I* do-' ciared to be ogOOO. Glory enough forouo —A contemporary thinks-the choice for the next Presidency lies between Hodman and Chase. —The Republicans of Franklin oountv have nominated William C.*M’Knight for asspmjjly, u ’ '—Washington despatches say the “ Government is-out of town." Ti e President, Vice President and all of the Cabinet are off on summer tours. —The Scranton ltcgislcr,u herofoforo Si 10 • i . ou, ' nal > l hna P»t on the Dumo- Pncker ° ‘ U ' d ? omc out datfootod for —The Republicans of Delaware coun ty have uo.iiinntcd the following ticket —Stalp Senator, H; Jones Brooke; House of Reprosontau vos,. Tiros. V., Cooper. 8 Pendleton for Governor I" j 9 the emblazoned stylo of the ludlanopo a State Joio-m which has' till this been roanngly Radical. —For Senator.— Hiram Flndlav of Somerset county; Jicprcscntaiivos- j„s. eph R. Noble, of Bedford county Xhomus .Sipo, of Fujion comity, i a the Democratic ticket of the Homprsot,. Bed ford am Fultoi) district, —The Democratic Convention of Mas 8 sachusetts met lari week, and nominated John Quincy Adams for Governor. It-s oiutions were adopted denouncing mo prohibitory law, and acquiescing in the. results arrived at in National affirms. Mr. Adams accepted tile nomination' in a speech opposing the tariff. —'There is greitl destitution among the freed'men of Washington City, and, ear nest appeals are made to the charitable for means to keep them from dying of starvation Giving tbo capital of the nation over to the rule of negroes does not seem to have done much for tho fa vored race. —The Washington correspondent of the Baltimore iSwn says, there is trouble at Washington because’the federal office holders in Pennsylvania decline' to con tribute funds for the pending campaign. An attempt will be mad&tri oust all such, and Geary is said'to be looking them up. -Ben. Butler is a candidate for Uni ted States Senator .for Massachusetts, to lie chosen next year, and therefore, the Boston Advertiser says lie will give .con siderable. attention to the election of the Legislature this full.” That is another way ol telling tho people that Butler will “ see” them, / i‘i:nso>Ai, —George Peabody will be TS.years ol next February-. i —Henry A. Wise, of Virginians so i that Ids life is despaired of. —Senator Yates is said to have been horrified at the recent Philadelphia fire. Eugenie is to have $1,000,000 pin money for her Eastern tour. —Brigham V,oung's sons are marrying ns fast us they cun, in hopes to catch up with tho old man. —The girls at West Point complain that married ladies cut them out in the affections of the.cadets. —Gen. Meade and Hon. Asa Packer have returned froin.Long Branch. —Mr. Savage, recently deceased London, leit Louis Nupoledtr $150,000. —Breckinridge contemplates beco.mii a law professor in the Kentucky IB vorsity. ' . ' —Prof. J. P. Wk-kcrshnm, giiperlntoi dent of Common Schools of tins stat has-been elected. President of the N tional Superintendents Association. —The Pittsburg Commercial announ ces that Justice.ll. C._Grier, of tho Uni ted States Supreme Court, will resign early tliis• fall. ■He is 75. years of age, and has become physically enfeebled. —Commodore Vanderbilt was married at London, Canada, n week ago, to Miss Francis Crawford, daughter'of Robert L. Crawford, of Mobile. ' —John Mitchell has sued General Dix for false imprisoument.during the war. The suit has been instituted at New York, and 325,000 damages are claimed. Dix gave $20,000 security to answer. ■ —Cbas. A. Dana, the .Radical editor of the New York Sun, and during the can vass lost year n very, ardent suppoiter of Grant, says of the President, “ he is like a yellow dog lira menagerie—he is too. small for a ilou, be dont look like a tiger, and nobody wants to..see.a dog.” .lIISCFMiANEOIS, —U. S. securities abroad—Our cruising fleets, —New York munches 55,000 baskets ol peaches daily. , —The Central Pacific Railroad Com pany is erecting extensive Workshops al Sacramento. —Patrick Henry’s nephew has beei arrested in lowa for selling hogs withou a license. —A Texas paper commends the Jaoks boro Flea, published iu-that State, as a ‘•lively” journal. man named Johnson died recently at Nashville, at the, advanced age of 07. He was an orphan. vi ..imir-iiJiegva'pviowteßf himVe'-CiTv man led two of Brigham Young’s daugh- —Tlie proprietor of a bone mill adver- Uses that “persons sending their own bones to be ground will bo attended to with punctuality and dispatch. r . * shtui n g killed a Mormon near Salt -Lake, and throw upon the market a fine dltioM. ,e,lt of witlows of'all ages and con- • Toledo,Ohio, collections are taken A two-dollarbill, on which in wi-iHnn an adyertisement foi a -wlfos'W^u“ I.7®* river Nile has fallen lower- than aud“flv e y U ear“ 0 ' Vtttol,e f ° ra A French paper tells a happy thougiit for two lovers in New Jersey tlmt life r Mood ( .nay bo „ ommillg , ea thc u° W - I < *' ,ea “ s T!mca fnVors nm- King ex-1 residents benutors at large for fe so “that their- ‘commanding tSloiii" may be preserved to the nation. 1 ’ • -The miners of Nevada designate the members of a Chicago commercial tbwr ? ns feJJers P that breeches oln” 6 U,eir h>B *- to e ifc |. “f- 1 . 1 . Amcilcrrn .who broke his ankle by a i .iilumd accident in Hesse-Durra- Sl(inn.S,i‘V ni , lny ' m •>«'>?, br-t. was paid puny g ‘' ,lamußes ' the railroad eom- —About eight years ago a prominent' merchant in New York accepted a deed for a plot of ground,m the. vicinity of Chicago ftp- an old debt.. The plot was tlieu valued at about $BOO. He* lias re cently soldone-lmlfof the plot for $OO,OOO. il&licilisrincnts / CC)UNTY^ I^^^, I^iX^VSLT or Ul ° orphuns ' luia farm la one of Uio celebrated Blnnir ci n ta RpHMfBI "S«SSTJSS|S| perches, strict measure. The bulldlnaß^mMm 1 provomoflts are ample, ana In good order d It la not often that a farm of tbia oualitvnui character la oliorod for sale, and lU|3 »« nn} 11 ?.! ow ”* 0 propo MiSBSils , »’ 1)0 soW vfgSS&g* l -*”- Guardian, 4c. Sept, 2—ts. EXECUTOR’S BADE OF VALUA BLE BlfiAt, ESTATE, On Friday, October Ist, 18(5!). Will bo sold at public sale, on the nlmvo i„ qn the premises, tjmfvuluubld farm liinn S ; 81 yor Sprint? township, CaraborlauJ?osn?u l « mile north of Kingston, on tllo romi »n?>y’' one Storrolfs Gap,adjoining nronortv ir a r h * e l ,° Mussoron thoeasi, Martin lrftrinannn ( ih« JoHl3,,h J.C. Ecklea on the went, and wm .!i 10 ? outll » and Itobort Heufey on. the north%“Atahilne man . 110 ACRES OF GOOD LAND, part Llmestono and part Slatn ninoi., „,, of which are cleared and In a Koo 3 snin?Sf a « r^ 8 tlvntlon, the balance being timber tami * ffi Imnroyoinonts are a two-storv ? he very desirable property, Snd the dayTf°s^ Sept. 2-st. • J. O. EOKLES. T)UBLIC SALE, Saturday, SeDtomhar J 7 The undersigned will oflSratnub ho salo, on Hid promises, on the above day i. ha lollowing described Keul Estate : IIJ A TJtACT OX 1 ’ LAND Situated la Middlesex township, about B}J miles cast; of Cuidl-io aso ■M of a mile from Middlesex Station, on IhoUumJ borlanil Valley Biplroad, bounded by lauds of Tiiomua B. Wllllllins, Snmiiol Moliler Amni Miller, and others, containing 6S°mcs r 'an“n porches more or less, and having thereon u two-story. Wealhorboardcd Boul" w w"S mQut.aliauk Bain, Hag fen, and other nut houses. There Is a good well of water' near the door, and an orchard of choice fruit.- The soil it of the best duality to bo found In (Minbehind XV'i'Vf’ u l ‘i Uu , l '“ 1 l0 ’"” i wl “ hooirerod ontho day 6f sale. Bale to commence at I o'clock I- At Sept. 2—ls, _ HAMUEI^WILLfAiIS, Keto aabcttfsemmtsj. ORPHANS. COUUT SALE. iiy virluaof an order of tho Orphans’ Court 01 CumberlamV-county, the undersigned Admin istrators of tho estate of Wm. B. Mullln, clec'd, will expose to public sale, on the premises, ut lu o'clock a; M„ ou Tuesday, September 28M, 1609, mid on each succeeding day until all Is sold, the following valuable Ileal Estate, to wit: , No. 1. The one undivided half of the property known ns the • ZUG PAP K R MILL, situate In South Middleton township, Cumber land county, one mile north ol M t, Holly Springs. Thu Mill Is substantially built ot brick, Is thiee stories high. with, machine room, boiler room,- Ac., attached, containing three Rag Engines, a slxly-slx (00) Inch Fourdrlnler MnoTilne, In per fect order. Also one thirty-four (HI) Inch face stack of Super t 'alandera, (seven rolls) the whole driven by two of Lofell’s improved Iron. Water Wheels, and capable of producing . ONE TON OF PAPER PER DA^c* Attached to the above are twelve, acres of laud and two houses. No. 2. Sixty-six acres of laud adjoining the above property known os the “-Zug Parra," ou which is erected a ouo-nud-a-half Story WEATHERBOARDED IIOUSE AND GOOD panic bar.n, Near the house tea never-falling well of excellent water,and an Apple Orchard in good bearing condition. The fund Is under good fence and In a high slate of cultivation. No. 3. A tract of land containing llftecn (16) acres, more or less lying northwest and in sight of the town of Alt. Holly Springs, bounded by land of Smnuel’Zug, Matthew Moore, and oth-. ors. 'lllol*o are no buildings on this tract, but the land is of excellent, quality and under good fence, and Its o*•> acres respectively, and the same will bo sold all fog-other or in several parts, as will best suit purchasers and bring the'best price. 1 o.s.se.ss[pn will bo given on the Ist of'April next. lerras of Halo;--Ouo-iourtU to be paid at the tune ol confirmation of sale, one-fourth the Ist of April, 1870. ono-lourth the Ist of Aprih 1871, and oue.fourtii Ist. of April; Is7j. with Interest on each payment; Tho purchaser having the privi lege to pay auy greater amount. • A . J. B. LEECHEY, Adm r of Holm .Logan, dec’d. gTA 'P E ~~ | Sept, 2—ts. AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY. HARRISBURG, DAY,' SEPT. 28TH; ISfO, And to continue four days. ireTiffiSo Sauf '° 0,1100 oftho SMrotnry® Entries will open September 7, and close Men day Eygiiluk, September 27, at 10 o’clock Pa?” at the oflloo of the Secretary, in HarrlsbiiMr* nV tor which none will bo received “ arnsDur ». af - I< or Premium Lists and other Information «h dioss oitlu i- oftho Secretaries, at Harrisburg ad ~ ft W. &BILBB. WSSf A KAPI ' *“*"? ELBUtDGE M’CONKEY, C or. Sec'//. Sop; 2. gTGBJJ HOUSE AT PUBLW SALE, On Tuesday, September 28 Ih, 18G8J' • The subscriber will, sell at public sale on the PSi 80 ? 1 1,1 Ncw Kingston; on rimHaU risburg turnpike, seven miles east of Carlisle about cloven miles west of Ilarrlsbunr the following described real estate, to wit* - commodious Store House now no cuplorl liy Orris and Lamb. The house isfchWv ono feet front and thirty-two feet deop wIK double warehouse back, the Lot being thlrtv-onS lect front and about two hundred and fifty foot deop, having thereon erected a good stable Ihero s a good Cistern' on the Lot. ■ f ble< t.ii 118 ™I** 1 ** ono of 11 . 10 most desirable and commn. diousStore stands in the county,’the from the trade being equal to those of any store In tlio llorouj-b of Carlisle. It Is situated in om of the wealthiest communities In tho countv Uall I!mul’, a mll ° ? om tho Cumberland Valley Sale to commence at 2 o’clock', P, M. on K niii day, when terms will bo made known l>v * hfUU Boj>. J. ’ . ROBERT HEAGY X IHE CARLISLE ACADEMY, citUiale “ l School for young men l)°ys will bo'Opened Sept. OtU>ln building, on South Hanovorstreeu ■ Bonlz 8 Pupils instructed In English, Clnsalca Mom,« rnatlcs. Natural science. Peumanshtp A , c MaLhe ' ’I ho government will ho adapted to young S' I'cwon, nnil (huso who cannot bo treatedthfa wilt not ho allowocl to remain with ua. w 1 Iho School year la divided Into two aosslona uury!lrd! S rcs l'°° tl ™ | y September Oth, and Sm! Torma per Seaalon, payable In advance wf;i!®xigsiria ,iBii ' si6 «' (; '“-ic» alSTvul^i:ion UU =.S «“• Vacations.—JulyanirAugUKt.and from I'hrisi mas lo the Monday after Now Year. ■ *■ nrlht ibmrdlng.—Pupils from abroad will ilm] unod boarding In a private fumllyint reasonable rati s «»| l under the sunervlslon of t o nr nef’ pul. Address i{. \y % STEUIIIm* ° * J rmt'lpal , Carlisle, JVi. UlimtENuUS} Tho President ami I‘acilliy of J3UjJc|uhoii ColJoko \v «in^r, e » at \ 1 - l ?i lsukJ. D., H Preacher to H ur vard University. Price {l3 "On Art. architecture, laws, manner!! as: doty, his criticisms' are discriminating, kt and often original; and the volume coni more Information, less spite and more i sense, than many of far greater size and tension.— Saturday Iteview, London, ■Ago. By Thos. 'Lachlan d7 i ‘•Homespun; or, Fiveand Twenty Years! which we have before noticed briefly. Is a b which we cannot praise too highly. Hladest lions nave that strong flavor of the soil tbr notice In the opening spring, and that refit us-more than the moatcoatiy lorolgu odon I* rom silken Saui arcand or spicy LoLsuk Springfield Mepublican. n?*X w ° t , Tao F SA^D miles on hue BACK. Santp Fe and Back. A Summer! | through Kansas,Nebraska, Colorado and.' j Mexico, in ‘the Year 18au. By Colonel Ju i Moline. i-vol., crown 8 vol. Price 62. - - " The title gives, however, an Inadequate! of the nature ol the book, which contain} only descriptions of the Incidents of travel, valuable historical matter which is botht and interesting.”— JSvening Post ; New York. 10. THE HAND-BOOK FOR MOTHERS. Guido Jn the care of Young Children. fly EH H. 1 urker, M. H. A new edition. In, one vole i2mo. Cloth, $1.60. "The volume answers authoritatively all questions which mothersare continually ad; and removes the painful doubts with which t are continually troubled, it is Indeed oft groat practical value, and meets so genen w 2 nt i that there, would seem to be no ra why It should not be considered a necessity evury family.”— Boston Daily 2Yanserlyt, , n. WOMAN IN PRISON. By Caroline Woods. In i vol.,ll ARY OF A MILLINER. By Belief (Lurollno-H.'Woods.) In 1 voi.lOmo Cloth,* *. A stnurt milliner could tell many aflued A emurt mUlmer Is ■ Belle Otis ani tUuIUJ what sue does. Her narrative has all thovlvi ty and piquancy which belong to woman. > it sends a Keen shaft, and tlien follows a&hl.' exquisite humor.”— Albany Lxnress. , ■ U.'KasjA'rfs orv ATtx. xiy ri uuuis Turner I grave, late Fellow of Exeter College, uxfon yol., lOmo. red cloth, gilt tops. Price $175. "Mr. Palgrave’s cannons of art are emluec catholic, Iree from any tendency to sensullo: Ism; and, though hla examples are cuudi chiefly to the edrront emanations of Britisla turo, his motives are general, his reason broad, uud-hls stylo of expression is such asi ries authority.”— Boston post,' .Ji*. AUT JDEA; Sculpture, Painting*. Architecture in America. By James Jnct ■Jftrves. i voi. iUmo. cloth. Price Si 75. * ~1 0 volume deserves the careful study of telllgeut amateures of art; and, whatever* fereuces of opinion it may call forth, Us deb wm bo found of rare interest and full of Instr tlve suggestions.—AW York Uyidunc. June 21, (otiu—• An ordinance relating i , BORROWING OI'MOMEY lioilcmctedandor'damedbythc Town Omci the Borouyti of (Xuhslc, tind It iphcrobu cmwwi c ordained oythe authority v/. the same. That tliuT sldent of the Town Council bound Is herein-' reeled and empowered to borrow for the use tho Borough o* Carlisle, to pay oir the mj, and other indebtedness ol the Borouaii su sums of money as may, bo necessary Urefef not to exceed, however. In the uuareimt..t thousand dollars, and toissuo bonds lonbotm In the name 61 said Borough, under lia corner, seal, attested by the President an J Buni-Atim ’the Town Connell, for that upiount in aunu ono tboilHUud,/ivo rnuudroO, am | Jnb hnnrtr dollars, payable’iu leu years irom Julv lit i‘ with coupons attached, signed by the SecreU for the .payment pf the semi-annual inter therein, and to pledge the property md fre oluacs of said Borough for the payment- nf &s bonds and Uielr Interest. 1 ymont oru Enacted Into an ordinance this 8m dnv ni A gust, 1889. - C. E. MAGLiAUGHLIN, ;.. , u£f' °/ Town Cbt<« Attest: CAMPBELL. CIIAS, A. CoKNMAN, Chief Buts' tiec'y oj Corporation. • Aug. 2tf-St JOHN DQBNER, MERCHANT TAILOI In Kramcr’pulldips:. near Rheom’s Hall, Ci lisle, P«,, has Just returned from the Fad* cities with the largest and most COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF FALL AND WINTER GOODS, consisting of CLOTHS, 1 OASSIMERES, Gents; Furnishing Goods, <*o. f over brought l Carlisle. His cloths comprise J3NGLI&H, f RENCJI, and AMERICAN MANUFACTUH of the finest texture and of all shades. Air. I)orne£ being himself a practical cutU’i’* long experience, Is prepared to warrant p erf* 1 !It«. and prompt lining of orders. • -* IMooo Goods by thoyard,or cut to order. Pod 1 forgot the place. Aug. 20 lw* rjIHJ3 MARY INSTITUTE, OAtt LISLE, PENN’A. A BOARDING SCHOOL FOR GIUIA Tho Ninth Annual Session will bocln on W’ iesdny; September Ist. For circulars of IW* her information address HEv. WM. a LEVEaJ ETT, Sf. A. , ' Carlisle, P«dd‘: April 22,1600—1 y A WORD TO CONSUMPTIVES' jTJI Being a’short'and'practlcal- troalM on & nature, Causes, and syinpioina* of Consumption, Bronchitis and Astlimb,' their' prevention, trouimout, and cure by |n- Imlatlon, Sent by mai: :Veo.- ■ , Address ■ q. VANHUMMELL. V- 1 ' I«, West FourteontU Street, N. Y, ■ Juno 10, IBCO-ly 1 JNO.Jaco,, J OHS' JfAlJxij? P. GARDNER 4a VENTINGS,