13 , Mm CARLISLE, PA., I’hursilay Mornings Jonnnry O.IHTO. QIII.I.INOS- The Roman Catholic Churches in this country number 3G69. Simon Cameron istho oldest Senator In Congress. A Newark man has eloped with his family washerwoman. The Milleritos are preparing to ns • ond to tho “ realms of bliss” on tho Ist >T February. „ In- Jersey City, some days ago’, a'little child, while eating’ dinner, fell out of I is chair and was killed. Attorney General HoAKhasbeen rejected for the Supreme Court. Senator Sprague wants to make a ten hour speech on tho eight hour law. McFarland has been arraigned for the murder of Richardson, and pleaded •‘Not guilty” Female lecturers have invaded Can ada. TitE inauguration pi’ the Governor takes place on January IA M is. Henry C. Schaffer, Civil Engi neer of tho Fire Department of Harris inu'R, died on Thursday night last. Hartford has a thirteen year old ■■! rl who is a com mon drunkard. : 11 ere is a package for John Smith a(j,an express ofliee in Boston," •New Yor’k thieves have bccotne so bold that, they rob policemen. Cincinnati laments its wickedness; and proposes to fast and pray. Mrs'. Elkins, of Kentucky, aged 80, is just cutting her third set of teeth. Gen. Kilpatrick, .Minister toChili, is doing a thriving business ns a horse jockey. .. Louisville and Philadelphia are in tho same boat. Can’t pay their school teachers. The busy bees failed to improve each shining hour last summer, and honey is scarce. And nowcomcsHonry Ward Beecher, who says Stanton was a second Wash ington. Ye gods I Ann Dickinson contradicts the re port that some he-male has engaged he r to lecture him for life. President Grant was presented with a forty-pound turkey for his Christ mas dinner. « What office is to pay for it? The Prosidonthassigned the Georgia bill, and a State of the Union is again stricken down and reduced to. the con dition of a satrapsy of the Radical Con gress. A newspaper just started at Oswego. New York, declares it will he neutral in religion and polities, as it “knows very little of the former, and nothing whatever of the latter.” J.-E. Schmidt, of Vienna, has com pleted his atlas ofthe moon. Ho has been at it,thirty years. The Directors of the Cincinnati Hos pital have been buying; $2O brandy for convalescents, and,using it themselves, and the Grand Jury find it subject for remark. In 1852 some workmen kindled a lire in n Missouri coal mine to warm (hem selves, and last week It was foilnd still burning. A FUNEHA.T, procession stopped at a hotel in Trenton, the other day, to let the mourners take a drink, whereupon the horses ran away with i he hearse and tumbled the corpse into a ditch. • Svlvanos Cobb, Jr., who has de lighted so many Ledger readers with his long-spun love stories, is how con fined in the Boston Inebriate Asylum as a hopeless drunkard. Senator Brownlow, of Tennessee, who some time since was supposed to be in a dying condition, has arrived in Washington, and says he has not en joyed such good health for a long time. Mas. Lincorn has returned to Frank fort for the winter. It seems there is not a word of truth in the story of her intended marriage with a German ba ron. She is living in retirement. The Washington Star reports that Mary Harris, who shot A. J. Burroughs, a clerk in the Treasury Department, has been discharged from the Insane Asy lum cured, and is now employed in the Philadelphia Post Office. Henry Ward Beecher is going to visit Ipdiana. Mrs. B. is alarmed for fear she won’t be Mrs. B, when becomes hack In Macon, (Georgia,) on i hristmas, money was so scarce that young chaps went around trying to trade corn fodder lor drinks. Nashvipbe hasablind organ grinder, whoso grandfather was a Revolutionary general, and was killed at Brandywine. A woman of Memphis was married at night and divorced in the morning. Her “liege” refused to order breakfast up to her room. cJince the reconstruction of Georgia, the decent white people of the Stale are getting out of it ns fast as possible, and emigrating to the West. Out in lowa, a mail carrier being chased by wolves, made his trip in quick time. The people talk of employing a lot of wolves to chase him every time. Counting every tiling, the war for the liberation of the “ wards of the nation,” cost twenty tho'usand millions of dol lars, which is_ JG.GGtij for every “ nig” freed. In a peaceful manner the whole of the slaves might have been bought up for about $5OO per head. Custom receipts for the week ending December 21.—Boston, $202,185; New York, $1,089,000; Philadelphia, $80,089; Baltimore, $99,925; San Francisco, No vember 30 to December 10, $339,125. Total. $1,810,921. X -MEMoiuaXj, signed by a number of influential residents of Victoria and other cities in British ColumbD, pray ing for annexation to the United States, was handed to the President by Hr. Vincent Coliyer, of New York, a few days ago, and by him passed over to the .Secretary of State. ■SegrMrs. Abbie Sage McFarland Rich ardson, according to the Now York (Jotmtumteeatth, is to have a fund raised for her by subscription ; and it is said, also, that she is to huvoan editorial po sition on the New York Tribune, and a sinecure in the Sub Treasury at Gotham Tin: MU. EDWIN 51. STAN lON. mm. Edwin M. Stanton, who will be re membered for all time to come as President Lincoln’s War Minister, and who by heeding the advice of Radical mischief-makers, attempted to “stick” in the. War Department after Pre-idem Johnson had notified him that he was no longer wanted,-died at his residence, in Washington city, < n the mprning of December after a very short illness: Ho died of congestion of tho heart. His ago was 51. On tho Monday previous to ills death President Grant had ap pointed him a Judge of tho Supreme- Court; f oip;Wednesdny tho Senate con firmed the appointment; on Friday he died! Mr. Stanton, wo repeat, will not soon be fofgollon. Ho was the idol of the extreme Radicals, and was worshipped by them. Ever leady, when Secretary of War, to use the military arm-in aid of his paity or to punish a political op ponent, he was just the man Radical Jacobins delighted in. He was a man of passion and impulse, and perhaps he was not to blame for tho ungovernable temper which nature gave him., Tho Radicals will remember him ami reverb lus memory, because he was their echo, their creature, their tool ; and the peo ple at large will also remember him because of bis betrayal of McClellan and j tho Union army; his refusal to exchange ■ prisoners, owing to whicli-refusnl thou sands of otir soldiers found premature graves; his thirst for the blood ol -‘that innocent -roman,” Mrs. Surratt; his use of (he.forts to pen up political op ponenls, Ac. But, Edwin M. Stanton is no moio, and as it is both right and proper to deal gently with the memo'ry of the dead and to allow the veil of charity to cover up tho errors they com mitted, wo shall say no more concern ing him, but will conclude this article with tho remarks of tho York Gazette. That paper says: Death op Edwin M. Stanton.— This personage who, by his cruelty and malignant course towards Democrats and Conservatives, during the lute civil war, achieved an infamous eminence, died at Washington, on December 24. We do not hazard much in saying that ids death will not bo mourned by a large number of the American people. He had just been appointed and confirmed as a Justice of the Supreme Courtof the United Slates, but died before President Grant had signed his commission. His appointment to such a position was a great outrage, and it is not to be regret ted that Providence prevented the dis honor of that Bench, distinguished by a Marshall and a Taney, and other em inent judges and pure men, by the as sumption by Stanton of the judicial ermine. When Secretary of War, he was a strong robust man, hut during the last,three years of liis life he was in feeble health. How much his recollec tions of the Apdersonvillo prisoners, whom he refuted to exchange, the ex ecution of Mrs. Surratt, and the suffer ings ol hundreds, who were imprisoned by his cruel and arbitrary orders dur ing the war—many of whom died under their tortures,and others emerged from their gloomy dungeons with broken spirits and shattered constitutions'—con tribuied to the breaking down of Mr. •Stanton’s health is only known to Him who seeth and knmveth all things. It is not at all, unlikely that those things preyed upon ids mind, and had much to do with his ueatli at tho age of fifty four years. Tioiti.i; wo mis. At a dinner given to the National Hoard of Trade, on thelth of December, at Richmond, Va., a speech was made by Joseph S. Ropes, Esq., of Boston, from which we make the following ex tract : A nd now what remains for us, fdlow cilizens,—! dare to say it again,—of one common country? What, but to th-ow aside ail the hrt-ter feelings of the past, all the memories which may stir up un happy or unpleasant thou.hts. There is not one of us who need look with hit ternes- upon his neighbor. Every one of ps has, before God and Ids country, endeavored to do what, at the tune, he thought to be his duty. . You are not ashamed of the part you took ip the defence of your State [applause], and certainly we, are not ashamed that we stood by what we believed to be our constitution hud our-laws. [Renewed applause ] It remains, then, ns I said before, only to throw all those things behind our hacks, “lo forget the tilings that are behind, and reach forward unto those that are before,” and devote all our energies to building up a creat, a noble, a peaceful, a prosperous, an en lightened. and law-abiding country.— [Applause.] These are noble words, and it were well for (lie country were they acted up to. A pestiferous set of political adventurers, which, like flies around a molasses barrel, swarm over the South ■ to suck the substance out of the land, and to raise up strife among the people, wi.ll not let the country “ forget the things that are,behind,” nor 11 reach forward unto those that are before.” Their trade is strife, and contention.and lying, and cheating, and until these, things, have gone, and carpet bags and and carpet-baggers are known no more .forever, the ‘‘good time coming”, that Mr. Hopcsqircdicts in , his .speech will not conic;/ A ; garden patch might as well be, expected to thrivo.with a lot of ■ hogs rooting in it daily as for ,the South to, be (prosperous, and tranquil,-and happy with a tot of scouridrqls constant ly stirring up strife among the people, and between the .scct'ons. We hope lo live to see this polilical millenium. : Tn E tidal wave of free trade ia sweep ing over the West and Northwest, and iprooting many of the Radical pillars of the protection edifice. Donnelly, the ex-Radical Congressman from Minno sola, in a letter to the New York Trib- tine, says, 11 while large taxes to the support of the government, we are also paying still larger taxes for the support of a part of our fellow-citizens who enjoy greater prosperity than we do. Out of our poverty we are made to contribute to their abundance. As a Republican, I feel that the Republican party must either set its face against (he High Protective doctrines advocated hy your paper, or lose forever this great. Northwest.” This is a “staggerer”.for. the Tribune, and instead of disproving Donnelly’s position, an attack is made upon his record as a party man. This does not reach the issue made by thy ex-Congresamnn from the Nortiiwest. nor will it bo accepted by the people of that section. Now that tho negro is falling into tho back ground, tho masses aro beginning to examine tho other links in that chain forged by the Radi cals on theanvil of war necessity. They gall now, and hence tho state offsets presented by Mr. Donnelly. Arhi.hy—the gay, the pure, the noble, the brilliant Ashley, has been removed from tho office of Governor of tho Ter ritory of Montana! Let the heavens he hung in black, and Conover clothed in sackcloth I nitiiitoiA. The infamous bill .turning Georgi out of tho Union again and reducing her to a territorial condition, or rather, making her a satrapsy of Congress, has passed that - body and been signed by tin? President. In this act, says the Doylestown Democrat, tho Rump lias been guilty of the meanest perfidy and the grossest despotism. It will he re ■m.-tnbcivd that tbo Legislature of Geor gia, elected in accordance with tho Re construction Acts, unseated the negro .members and admitted their white con testants on tho ground that tho State Constitution did not make them eligible to office. This view was held by qome of tho leading Radicals at the time the Constitution was adopted, and there was nothi 'gin tho Reconstruction Acts that compelled Georgia to center this right on them. The Legislature passed a resolution, which tho Scalawag Gov ernor vetoed, offering to ’submit the questiomof negro eligibility to office to the Sup-cine Court of the State, hut nevertheless the que-tbm came up, and was decided in favor of the darkey hold ing office. The Legislature has not met since then,and as it had pledgeditsolf in advance to abide by the decision of the Court, there is no doubt that the rights of the negro t’o participate in the de lightsof office would have been accorded him. But the President and Congress could not wait to see Justice done in n constitutional way. He recommends in Ids message that Congress pass a law authorizing the Governor 1 to call to gether the old Legislature some time since defunct, arid to unseat tho white members, and to put the negroes in their places. Well, Congress has done it. They,hnve'heen obedient toOrnnt’s suggestion, and at his wish committed a,most gross political outrage mi Geor gia. The Governor is likewise author ized to call upon the military to enforce the law. In this act, as we said at the beginning of this article, Congress has been guilty of great perfidy toward Georgia. Slu had'complied witli the Reconstruction . Actsin every particular, and her mem hers had taken their seats in the Lower House. There was no condition pre scribed in those acts that Georgiashouid allow , her negroes to hold office, but only that universal suffrage should pre- vail, and ’this was secured to every Cuffee in the State. Even the President in his message admits that Georgia had complied with the Reconstruction Acts. All the late rebel were reorgan ized under the same conditions, but an exception has been made in the case of Georgia, and new condjtionsare impos- ed that were not exacted of the other States. Coiigress hns.broken her faith with this State, and been guilty of per fidy. What makes the case stronger against Congress, is that, Georgia is weak and notahloto resist this despotic law. There are two motives for this great outrage on State rights pone is the desire .of the radical revolutionary party in Congress to have two of their own kidney returned to tho Senate. At the Inst session of the Legislature, two Con servative Senators were elected, both gentlemen of high respectability. But they have not been admitted to their seats, and the Radicals hope, and-no doubt it will he the ease, that the negro Legislature, will elect Governor Bullock and Foster Blodgett, to the Senate in their stead. The second motive is to have the Fifteenth Amendment ratified. To accomplish these two Radical' ras calities it is necessary to turn out enough white memhersand put negroes in their places at the point of the bayonet to give them the majority. How far.an amendment to the Constitution ratified by compulsion maybe legal, may come up for question some day. This is but another act in the long series of outrages the Radicals have enmmitted on political liberty since they have been in power. There is not a single guarantee.in the Constitution that they have not violated when it stood in the way of earrving out their designs, and some of them they have violated over and over again. Their treatment of Georgia is one of the worst cases against them, hut it is no more than we might have expected. Her fate may he the fate of any other State that does not come up to the Radical revolutionary standard. As New Jer sey has not yet ratified the Fifteenth Amendment, what is to hinder Con gress turning out enough Democratic members and putting Radicals in their places, to give them the majority? . The disposition only is wanting, and the act of despotism will be carried out. If the case of Georgia is to be recognized ns a precedent to be followed; we may ex pect to see other States reduced- to the condition of satrapsies. Congress is as auming imperial powers, and it is as absolute and despotic ns Russia or France in many of its acts. Although people may not generally be aware of the fact, it is the truth beyond question that the -Government of - the United .States is, to day, a despotism. Con gress docs anything and everything that the majority wants done, and no re straining power of the Constitution or hws clieck them. They only recognize their own will. What this will lead to it is not hard to determine. We have already done enough to satisfy (he old world that republican government is a failure, and it will not he long, from present indications, before the people of this country como to the same con clusion. Trig Factory Girls in several parts of New England aro dissatisfied with tho treatment they aro receiving from their employers. In Dover, N. 11., about COO have gone out on a strike, and a meeting of female operatives in Lowell lias sent messages of sympathy and support. According to the com plaint of tho chief speaker, (Miss Coi.- i.inh,) in old times tho girls were treat ed like human beings, “but lately tho cotton kings have become more avari cious. j«ld in their wild rush for wealth have forgotten all honor and forsaken every feeling of humanity.” From tho extraordinary pains which President Grant took to prevent his message from meeting tho public eye before its official delivery, everybody was tempted to think that it certainly contained something very extraordi nary. Well, what was that something very extraordinary? Can anybody tell? Tho Louisville Journal says that it naturally reminds people of a Pagan temple, which is protected by power ful guards, but which, when you suc ceed in making your way into, it, you find inhabited only by a monkey. THE <IEAT I.inEL SETT. The developments made in the libel suit of Quay vs. (he Pittsburg Commer cial nre decidedly rich. The article of the Commercial chahres Mr. Quay with having corruptly money while u member of the Legislature. In the preliminary examination before an Al derman, who seems to have been ready to decide exactly ns the counsel of Mr. Quay dictated, the defence undertook to show thpt Mr. Quay was a poor man whprTKrwent to the Legislature in 1865 and that Ito-cobtainf d money for his yotes anjWimuence in that body. Mr. Qanj’V'counslr'objecl ed to one question after another, and the Alderman invariably, sustained the objections. Among other questions asked, which Mr. Quay thus declined to answer, were the following : Question—At and about the lime of the election of Speaker in 1867, did you have the command of $13,000 to he used in your own election as Speaker, orln the election of any person as United States Senator? Question—State whether during the session of the legislature of 1807, while von were a member, yon received any money, notes, bonds or other valuable roifsideratlon, other than your pay as a member, from any source whatever? Question—State whether in the latter pad of 1800 you did not have a note dis counted at the Mechanics’ Bank of Har risburg, for $0,0007 Question Did you not, about three weeks after the election of Senator in 1807 take up that note foi $0,000? By Mr. Hampton—Stale whether dur ing the time you were a member of the legislature you became the owner of $lO - 000 or $l2 000 worth of stock of the Union Railway Company of Philadelphia ? Question—Did you propose last fall to Mr. A. P. Tulton, supervisor of Internal revenue, in Philadelphia, that if he would not' seize two or -three distilleries in Philadelphia $6O 000 could be realized 1 y the operation ? , Question—Were you present at any 'ime when an offer was made to Mr. Tulton, that if lie complied with the proposition made in the foregoing ques tion lie,.would lie handed,; an envelope O'nitainingSl.OOOevqry Saturday evening fur some weeks ? Duriig tho examination Mr. Quay professed to be wiling to answer a num' , ier of the questions to which his coun sel r:: sternly objected, and at one point ho explained the motives which gov erned his course by declaring that he I would only destine to answer for. the sake Of the Republican, party.” That declaration certainly does rend very strangely. Here we have a prom inent ek-member of the Legislature, the Secretary of the Republican State Central Committee, declining to say whether he took bribes, and whether' he undertook to bribe a revenue’officer, and all “for the sake of the Republican party.” . The counsel for the defence filially demanded that’the case bo dismissed and the defendants discharged. They based this demand upon the ground that the prosecutor was hound to go upon the-witness stand and testify, and that in declining to answer the ques tions put upon cross-examination he had depriqed the defendants of, their legal rights. The magistrate could not see it in that light, and he held the pro prietors of the Commercial to answer to the Court of Quarter Sessions in the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars each. It is to be hoped the Court of Quarter Sessions of Allegheny county will not construe law as the examining magis tinte did. Let the doors be opened wide sops to.permit Air. Quay to an swer fully. Let us know how the Re publican party is implicated in the acts of Mr. Quay. We think wo can guess, but we would like to have a full expla nation from one who holds, so prom inent a place in that organization. Let us know the grounds on which Mr. Quay declines to answer—“/or the sake of the Republican party,” Senator Pratt, of Indiana; is about to astonish his countrymen by -esign ing his seat in the “most august delibera tive assembly on earth.” Mr. Pratt’s explanation is, that the Senate does not suit men df his class; that he “does not feel at ’>omein the Senate Chamber,” that he continually distrusts h s own ahility;lhat he is of no use to his consti tuents..and, in short, tbit ha “wmts to go home - ” This is a most remarkable ease of modesty in a man regarded as a politician, and goes far toward prov ingfhut Mr. Pratt is a proper man for Sena'or, for it is always a good sign in a man for him to know his own defects Mr. Pratt is regarded as an able man by his own. people, who had elected him as thier Representative in Con gress just before his election to the Sen ate, which occurred without any effort on his part, if not without his previous knowledge. Physically, he is the lar gest man in Congress, and his modest opinion of himself indicates that he is one of the best men in that body, A Prominent Radical politician in Congress was lately asked what would heconje of their party if the Fifteenth Amendment was adopted and the negro question disposed of. He replied that he counted much on the continued re sistance of the Southern politicians to keep their party alive. Such . tactics are understood to be at the bottom of the Georgia bill and the continued ex clusion of Virginia, the object being, it is thought, to good and irritate the South so ns to utilize the sectional agitation for party purposes as long as possible. In connection with this mat ter it may be stated that Mr. Stokes one of the Tennessee members, has sta ted, that it would be necessary to re organize Tennessee, by which is meant to take it by legislation out of the hahds of ,tlur Conservatives. The Radical members ofdljje- Reconstruction Com mittee are said to have had the mat ter under advisement. While n general stagnation in busi ness exists throughout the country, the taxes continue the same.—The tax gatherer takes his victim by the throat and cries “give,give!”—Of the hun dreclsof millions of dollarspaid in tax es, one half of that vast sum never reach cs tho.jfjedoral treasury. It goes into the pocm3ts'h£ : tho tons of thousands of lazy office holders who feed and fatten upon the Industry of the country. The tax payers demanded a reform In these outrageous abuses. Congress would do Itself credit if it would pass a law making it a peniten tiary offence for tlie-head of any De partment or Bureau of the Govern ment, members of Congress, or other officials, to receive any present wrung from the earnings of subordinates, who are dependant upon them for their means of support.—Robbery becomes respectable when compared to this kind of stealing. 1 A TBIP TO DIXIE. Xotci on tho Way— > n. a. Wo left Bichmond at 4 o’clock on Monday morning, and after, a ride of twenty-two miles the cars halted at Petersburg for an hour. Here we took breakfast. Petersburg contains about 26,000 of a population and is a thriving town. It is third in rank, population and Influence in the State. The long lines occupied by the “Foderals,’’ as the Union army is called everywhere in the South,. stretching formlles totheilorlh, were quite visible; while to the east -tmd West many mounds of earth, used pits and other defensive de vlcesjserved equally to mark the theatre of strife and the places where so many hundreds, bravely fighting, fell, and where their remains now quietly repose. The chief object of attraction to the vis itors who arrive almost every day from, .the North, is “ the Crater,” where the long mine so bravely dug by the Union soldiers, terminating directly under the rebel fort, and which so fatally explod ed, is located, and lies like n gush upon n landscape still torn and lacerated by tlie wotinds of war. To give the reader an idea of this mine, it is simply necessary to say that it was commenced at least half a mile from the fort, and, although excavated at considerable depth, it struck the con troofthefertifleation. Whilothe Union soldiers were progressing wiA their subterranean operations, the Confeder ates suspected theirdntentions, and com menced a counter mine; and one night the Federate were surprised by hi bring their eneraiesat work immediately over their heads. They suspended opera tions for a short time, and so did the other side, but subsequently renewed their digging,and reached the objective point. The explosion, when it took place, was like that of an earthquake, shocking all the country around. It wai felt for miles distant, and caused the utmost lonstornation .in Petersburg. Thousands were lost on; both sides; and it is nowhere doubted that if the at tacking party had been properly sup ported, the whole rebel army would have been captured. But; before rein forcements could be ordered up, the alarm had been given and a terrible fire opened, which played fearful havoc upon the brave fellows who.hud to re treat over toe open space between the two lines, under a heavy enfilading fire from the opposing batteries. Peters burg resisted all attempts at capture until near the end of the war. A few days before the fall of Richmond, Pe tersburg surrendered. For some of the above facts we are Indebted to Col. For ney, of the Press. \ Again in the cars, we proceeded on our journey. We pass Rheem’s Station, ■t here Hancock was so badly used tip. Next is Stony Creek, a small village, two-thirds of which bad been burned by our troops. At Weldon, Halifax county, N. C., fhecars make a halt;, This is a small village, but yet a considerable trade is carried bn/here, We noticed a number of one mule and one-steer teams on the streeis. Cottfln la brought here from a distance and sold to merchants and traders. The mules wore collars made of corn-husks, and ropes were used for traces. Everything we looked at indi cated the slave country'. Everything was black—black men, women and chil dren, black steers, black hogs, dogs and cats—all black, except the few pods of cotton in an adjacent field, remaining on the stalks. Directly opposite the principal hotel, we noticed a small, rickety one story house, containing a hugesign. Itread—“Tho Great South ern Restaurant.” In the window were some pea nuts, an apple or two, and candy. “All bnt.the restaurant,” said a Philadelphian in front of us. Hun dreds of negroes were lounging at every corner—men, women and children.— Some were comfortably clad, but the majority were in rags. The next town on our route that we stopped at is Goldshorough. It contains 3,000 inhabitants, and is a pretty town. Nearly all the buildings are frame, painted white. Cotton in large quan tities is raised in the vicinity of the town, also tobacco, wheat and corn. Thereisconsiderable fashion and wealth here, and the indies dress with’great taste. On our return from Wilmington; we remained in this town for several hours, saw a cotton gin in operation, picked several pods of cotton from a field, &c. Lund in the vicinity of Golds borough sells at from $5 to Sl5 per acre, according to quality. The town struck us favorably. But, we have .written enough for this number. Our n**xtstop ping place was Wilmington, which we will speak of in our next. J. B. B. Would it not he better for Mrs. Gov ernment to bestow attention upon the morals—to say no hing of the manners —of he - ushers, than up >n the cut of the tails of their coats? Answer afterread ing the following from “Mack:” I had accompanied a friend who had some business with the President, and ns he entered theinnersnnctuary I pro posed to wait P r him outside. I was not unaccustomed to the place, and took a seat, as on many former occasions. Just then a “gentleman in waiting” rushed up to me in something of trepi dation, and as if he were about to storm my works, or otherwise annihilate me. Said he: “Look here, you musn’t sit down. If the old woman comes along and sees any body sitting down hero she'l give mo h—l - ” So 1 yelded to the demands of the new etiquette, and more astonished at the “republican simpli city” of .the door-keeper’s language than at any thing else, I stood erect. Southern Lands.— We have seen no more melancholy instance of the de preciation of Southern lands than that mentioned by the Charleston Courier, as occurring recently at Georgetown, S. C. The estate of the late Governo r Allston, consisting of five splendid rice plantations, and containing 4,108 acres, was sold for $42,700 under a decree in equity.—Those plantations cost Gover nor Allston $222,500- Celestial Phenomena.— Next year there will be six eclipses; four of the sun and two of the moon, viz: a total eclipse of the moon, January 17; a partial eclipse of the sun, January 30, invisible heroi n partial eclipse of the sun, June 28, vis ible only in Australia; a total eclipse of the moon, July 27, invisible here; a to tal eclipse of the sun December 21, visi ble in Europe and Canada. Venus will be the' evening star until Feliuary 20, .morning staf until December 23, and the even'inir star the rest of the year. True.— “lndustry must prosper,” as the man said when holding the baby while his wife chopped wood. Xlic l.iTCry Matter. Wo saw, with no small degree of sur prise, a defence—by “Mack,” the m..v correspondent of tho Cincinnati Enquirer —of the order requiring the domestics of the White House to uppeur in livery, or uniform ; mid our surprise lias been in creased by seeing one or two Democratic papers copy tho defense, with accom panying words of approval. .What if Mrs. Belmont, and*Mrp.Som# body else, do put their servants In livery, is that sufficient to justify tho wife of tho President of our Bepuhlio in aping, the customs of royalty ? Tho fact that her husband is President, should make her more careful to avoid innovations upon tlie republican simplicity ptacticed by stroll ladles as * Mrs. Adams, Mrs. Madi son, Mrs. ‘ Polk and Mrs Pierce, and which-accorded so well with our demo cratic Institutions. We shall have no unkind, or what tho self constituted chain pionsof ladies'might style—ungallanl, word to soy concerning Mrs. Gaunt, if she will conform to pro cedents established by those who were in no wise her inferiors. Let Mrs. Bonds adopt tlie airs ofa Queen, Mrs Goldgam bler Imve the liveried lackeys of a Dnobcas and Mrs. Shoddy wear tlie jewels of a Maid of Honor, but let Mrs. Grant - us long as she occupies the Executive man siou— avoid georgeous displays and titled customs,'which will not Increase tho ro spee.t of foreign representatives for her, and will lose her the esteem of tho better p rl|oU of her own peojde, ami will not be sincerely commended save by the tri lling class who compose the snobooraoy, Don Piatt, the sprightly correspondent of the Cincinnati Commercial, in olfu. ding to the Presidential mansion; says-- To come down'to a smaller matter I am lold for 1 have n-d seen it, not daring to Venture in the'presence of Hie august custodian of the card-rack and keeper id the unleohamt/er, lest I be seized and in carcerated In a coal hole for my lack of respect for-the high official. I am told that tile domestics of-tl.ie Executive man sion have ben put.in livery. What this livery Is I am not informed hut it has “transpired' 1 that swallow tails abound. I suppose there is a’bomb shell worked on each tail, and a grape' vine up the b ck.. Whatever it might be, it is un mistakable livery. It is significant. As ,labor goes down under the piesent sys tern of oppression and degradation, the marks appear. . As we help ihe negro.out of slavery, the white laborer puts on the badge of servitude.' t When His Excellency was hauling wood in Illinois, lie would have resisted to the death any attempt to put the cos tume of a slave u-pon. Ilia shoulders. But in w all is changed. Our Republican simplicity disappears under the slough of corruption that rots'and smells, and slinks about the foundations of our Capi tal. , A Terrible Fate, The Mon tana Democrat of Ihe Ist says: "One of the saddest affairs we have ever been called upon to record occurred in Yell township, in this county, on Satur day, November 25th. ThF facts, as we have gathered them, are these: “Emery Abkerman, a young man of twenty-five or thirty years of age. left Boonshoro on the day mentioned logo to bis father’s in Yell township, having with him his gun, and hunting as he journeyed along. When in Yell town ship, nearly bogie, .he fell into an. old de serted well, thirty leetin depth. Upon the mouth of Ihe well plank had been placed and covered over with dirt. Over all the snow hud fallen, completely hi ding all. evidences of ti e tenible pit. On to it lie walked, and the retina plank giving way, he win Instantly hurled in the bottom of the well. But the saddest part ot the story remains to lie told. A portion oftbe old Slone wall remained, and on it he ci-imliered. But above'him there was no means of escape, nothing by which he could climb, nothing by which he could clutch. Death stared him in the face. How lie called for help, hour upon hour, thrnuhnut that long ni"ht. and (he next day, and the next, only God knows, for the echoes'of the voice never pierced beyond the dark and dismal eavaro into which he had fallen. Hope fled and the King of Terrors con fronted him. He soractehed upon a stone tho story of entombment, and upon the fourth day he probably perished. On Friday the sixth day, some one fell on his tranks, which were yet imprinted in the snow, and coming to the well, at once realized that a human being had been precipitated below. The search was made, and the facts as we have re cited them brought to light. As young Ackerman did not live at home, it is likely he was never missed so that -no leurch had ever been instituted. WHAT IS GOING ON AT WASHINGTON The Growth of Corruption—The Rinc In tho Scnnie—.iliiHNnelmMetta. , Correspondence of Ihe New York Sun.] Washington, Deo. 16.—The spread of corruption herein appalling. It has invaded the highest p aces- Such op portunities through class and special legislation never existed before, and they have been Improved without stint by ■■ distinguished” members of.both branches of Congress. Fifty or more men might be named without the least effort, who came to Washington poor only a few years ago. and who are now rolling in great wealth, it Is hardly necessary to inquire how these sudden and large fortunes have been acquired; —Enormous railroad grants, whiskey taxes, banks, tarifls, and the like, fur nish the explanation* In former times political and personal agencies were employed to exert influence in Congress for special objects. 1 hey are now almost entirely discarded, unless they be of the gentler sex, who have become “claim agents,” and whos n exercise ofthat cal ling provokes more than criticism in the lobbies, which thhy unbecomingly' haunt. ' ' f In all the big things, Congressmen >f -osed power, and who are - . supposed power, amV who are open to ■onviction up n the principle so broad ly .announced by Sir Ruben Walpole, will admit of no intermediate agency. They are frank enough to demand tfie price ot co-operation, and to insist upon the conditions of the bond to the lest ounce'Of flesh. Hence, we see them making costly voyages to Europe, set ting up grand establishments here, driving fast horses, sporting fine car riages, and affecting the airs of court life; , There is what js called a ring of Chair men in the Senate. As the Chairman has power to will Ihecommitiee togeth er, and to exercise exceptional influence in many ways, ho is neces arily the or gan of its authority, and often, by a Sort of conventional rule, the director of its opinion. Hence,such plaeesaro sought with unusual zest, not only for their prominence, but for their advantages, there is a Holt understanding among these Chairmen generally (to which there are exceptions, of-course), that one shall not oppose any project partic ularly pressed hy another. In this way multitudes'of corrupt schemas are car ried, because the Chairman who is fa vored to-day reciprocates the courtesy to-morrow, when some other J ib is to be huiried through. No questions are asked, 'the committee report the con cealed roguery That is suffic'e-H. A law. is made. ‘ One or more Senators are enriched, and the Treasury is robbed. But these are patriots all, and pre-emi nently Radical, else they could not be Chairmen. Look around that Chamber and remark the pursy demagogues who have gt-own proud, pretentious and wealthy by shouting for frbedom, bleed ing Kansas, on. to Kichraond, and re construction. Their shouts, like the mantle of charity, cover all sins with the faithful; and the greater the knave the louder the shout. The noblest of causes has suffered hy an organized venality, which has had no paralle. In history. ‘ These practices and others have car ried demoralisation everywhere in the public service. Witness the President "ivi";r the example of choosing his vuumet in consideration of presents received from Fish, Uorieand company; of Oiling the great offices with Butler flelds and Grlnnells, who were regular gift collectors; and of crowding the public service with the kindred of him self and his wife down to the remotest degree. It is stated with confidence that more nepotism has been practiced since the 4th of March last than by all the Presidents since the foundation of the Government. Tlie Cletk of the House has reported that somes67,ooo in round numbers had been expended of the contingent fund, ami since the 4th of M trch last, when tliis Congress commenced, committees of various hinds have squandered this money without the least reason. This shameful pr dice is of recent growth, and deserves the sternest condemnation. Among the curious items is one to the '• Hon. N. G. ©rdway, Sergeant-at- Aims, for fees, $6,588 78.” This, man draws a large regular salary, has his office, clerks, and stationery free, and yet is allowed fees* which have already summed up a.fortune. And so they might easily do, us the price which it •has cost to bury momoers of Congress, with mourning gloves at $4O per dozen, anil everything else in proportion. Although the South has hardly had any representation in C< ng 'ess for eight years past, which should naturally have reduced tlie contingent expenses to that extent, it will be seen that they have frightlully increased since 1861 under every imaginable pretext, until the plunder from that source has become enormous. It is no longer considered respectable or prudent even for ladies to go unat tended into the. marble room of the Senate, or the reception n«m of the House. Notor.ous females are seen about these places, sending in their cards familiarly to various well known Senators and members Who control pat ronage in the Departments, and who have heretofore secured offices for per sons of more than doubtful repute. Men who spout very strongly about “moral ideas” are exactly those who have been most noted in this regard. If a fraction of what is known here was published-, what a sensation there would be, anti how some fictitious reputations would fail! -j • Well, Massachusetts has got another plum in the nomination of Mr. Hoar on Justice of theSupremeCourt. The suf fering condition of that poor State, Which now has only about a third ■ f the consuls and diplomatic appointments, most of the picked places in the Depart ' ments, two Cabinet Ministers, a large proportion of the carpet bag representa tion, the choicest Committees in both Houses of Congress, and the lion's share of the profits of the war, required this sop h> relieve her wants. Mr. Hoar is a respectable man, but he has not gained much repute as a jurist among the pro fession, here. He has, however, the great merit °f being from Massachusetts, which supplied so many substitutes of all colors during the rebellion for her patriotic citizens, who found it more congenial to “ prepare the hearts of the people,” to pocket large dividends, and to organize- victory by profitable con tracts. Spectator. ißtete aimerttecmentß. QBEAT AUCTION BADE DRY GOODS, w. c. sum & no., commencing Jan. 12th, ami continuing until the entire stock Is closed out. Our stocks consists of all kinds of FALL AND WINTER GOODS. SILKS, POPLINS, MERINOS, ALPACAR, DELAINES,' CLOTHS, CA^IMEREe, FLANNELS. SHAWLS, CLOTH. COATS, FURS AND NOTIONS of all kinds* 20 Patterns Fancy SILKS,.aII shades. Every article will he:eold without reserve, don't fall to come and seqqre Home of the bargains that will bo these sales. We will continue to sell oungpods at auction .prices, at private sale, until the miction commences. Hales ns follows : .Taft. 12th day and night, 18th night. 11th afternoon, 15th day and n ght, : 7th night 18th day and night, 10th day and night,* and 20th night. w. o. SAWYER £ CO., In tho Rent* House, East Main St., Carlisle, Penna, Jan. 0, 1870— SALE LlST;—List ofSnlento be called by N, 11. MOORE, Auctioneer: Januarv 11, 1870—R. Kenyon, Dickinson two ‘l2 t 025, W C Sawyer, Dry Hoods,Carlisle February 1. A. Bradley, Middleton. ~ P* Shearer, Dickinson, | A. Brodler. fl. Middleton. .. 2* I*Coover, Penn. ■< ,?• J- Carlisle. 10, James Homes. R. Middleton. 11; Jos. Green, S. Middleton. « Hemmlnger R. Middleton, is* Theo. Spangler. Dickinson. *"» Rami, Evans,Dickinson, 17, -Win. Hartman. R. Middleton. 18. Lend. Gutshall R. . “ •• 0?’ Elder Green. Penn. • i „v J‘>hn Young. Dickinson. $ £ fl "f s c £ fkff< ; r - fl.. Middleton. • •« o?* Panl. Shank, Dickinson. „ on' Jaoob Black,, pi.-klnson, .. B Janies Kenyon. Dickinson, „ , John Johns. R. Middleton. March I. Jeaseo Zelgler. Middlesex twp. A Jacob Shnpp.H. Middleton. I, i> gn ol .! Whenry. Middlesex twp. ' 1, Kurtz Plshhurn. Penn. Benj. Lockart. Dickinson; „ i» JnQu D. ShoSer, Dloklnsnn. «. Jacob Plunk, 8. Middleton. “ 9. Moses Wetzel. Carlfsle, 10, Abe Rnotts; Dickinson. •'* \h Myers, WcstPennsboio. j an . e, m'L W1 '"“-S1».PP,H, Middleton. , NOTICE. CmiBEULANI) COUNTY, & B.\ State 0/ Pennsylvania. / Joseph 0 Thomnsari. Sheriff nf the County of Cumberland, end state of Pennsylvania, Heine duly sworn according to law, savs that he exe cuted Adam Titus. a criminal convicted of mur dor In the llrot degree, by hanging him by the 10 n ( .^ Qf1 ‘ an d done the same within the walls of the Jail of Said County of £ n V}]« er i lK . nd * on Wednesday. December 22d. A. D. IMJ9 between the houra of 10 o’clock A M. and 3 o clock P. M„ that being the time deslg. noted by the Governor nf the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, In his warrant for the execution of the- sentence of death nnon the eald Adam TlJnsliy the Court of Oyer and Terminer of the said County of C umberland. Sworn and subscribed the 22d day of Docora bor, into, before me « . QROHGRO.SHRAFFRR. fJ crk of the Oourt of Cumberland ('■ouniv Pa Signed, Jt.R.O, THOMPSON ‘ Jan, a, HJO-if" !r<tr ‘ >rCumbe> ' bm s omnt U- 4THIEF. a linn boon traveling about humbugging urußKlntn nml private partlen, mixing up and rnVm hua'VJS £'l'?S t ? un ‘i h jCll l ln aaUs \vni,. COTT.HPAIN PAINi. All of Wolnott’agenuine remedies have a white outside wrapper with sin nnjYrt‘J?rPe‘Kl*?ols °ut for counterfeits.' 0 o E V x it! nfr^ f ,TOM' oT F fl ANNIHTLATOR for Catarrh and Colds in the head, or nno Pint nf Pan Paint, for Ulcers or Paln.sont free of eJ press charges, on receipt of the money at isi Chatham Rouare, N. Y .; P or one Pain Pnmt (double strength) lor $2O, Small bottles B °Jan’ V O R Btß * L ‘ WOLCOTT - 1 THE NURSERY. 1 O^A "The beat, cheapest and most rlohlv ILLUS TRATED Monthly magazinr for child- URIST, sl,Wa year In advance. Subscribe now and gel tho lust numborot I«69..FURK, Address JOHN L. shorry:' Jan. (1,1870—1 w 13 Washington Slrcet, Boston, TTJNRHAR —How mndt* In ten liourw «F ,*5 v W. ~,ut circular**, address L. SAGE, vinegar Works, Cromwell, Conn. Jan. 0,1870—8 w NeU) Gilberts einents lOK > 8 FLORAL GUIDE FOR .The first edition of one Hundred thousand copies of VIUK’d CATALOGUE of SEEDS and- PLOkAr T il*l is published and ready to pend om 9«I gantiy printed on fine tinted paper in? * 2U» fine wood Lnuravings of Flowed. tables, mid a beautiful COLORED pr »*! slating of seven varieties of Phlox nisif' making u fin© * u ®> BOUQUET OF PHLOXES. Ills the moat beautiful, as Velln. ,u Instructive Floral Guido published »!,, e anti thorough directions for the, ’ " ,T CULTURE OF FLOWERS AND VEQBT4t The Floral Guido la published for ih’» of my customers, to whom It Is sent a out application, but will be forwarded V apply by mall, for Ten Cents, which i« the cost. Address, u Jan. 8. IR7o—3t A UUITOK’S NOTICE. -Tho A signed appointed by the Orphan, Cumberland county, Auditor, to imike tiou of tho fund found on final settle the bands of Janata Hamilton. Ki Judge H. Graham, and £tev. D. Bt«i ecutors of Mrs. Susan V. Thorn, Ui borough of Ca*lisle, decoased.'arannet teas and all others entitled thereto' the parties Interested, St bis room tfc Main St. Carlisle, on Monday tbo 7t February next, at 10 o'clock, A. Jd. J. W Jan. 0,1**70 —8t TESTATE OF GEORGE W. Hi JLli FKR, Deo’d.—Having been appoint* tor, by the Orphans Court of Cumber! to make distribution ol the balance In th of R. M. Henderson. Esq., and Dr, Andre inger, Executors of George W. BhenlTer the borough of Carlisle, deo‘d.. to and the persons legally entitled .thereto, nt fore TAKE NOTICE that I will atm duties of my appointment as Auditor, i at my office In the borough of Carlisle, day the 27th day of January; A. D. o’clock. A M . when and where all j terestedare requested to attend ant, their several Interests. Jon. 0, IS7O—St M- HEIi! (JIBE BEST 1 -85F“THE fc'CIENTIPIO AMERICA. A weekly Illustrated Journal of ifli voted to, Machinery, Agricultural mentfl, Chemical Rolence and Newt), A splendid Journal. $1,500 cash in prizes wilt be paid for i subscribers, on the 10tn of February A handsome large steel plate ENGRA I 10 distinguished American Inventors’ i to subscribers.® v ’* Specimens of'paper. prospectuses, am for dames, sent fres, Terms, s3a year* •1 months. Discount to clubs, a booV parlance to all about to apply for pm e r free. Write for full particulars rnncermn and patents, to MUNNau V „ Publishers and alentSol Jan. 0, 1870—Iw 87 Park Kov SDIKKAmmiI II mad.- by af’enh.« ipJLt/t/. OLIVE LOGAN'S gn-al work FORE THIS FOOTLIGHTS and 'RKlUvii SQHJNES. Tlie moat aplcy, rapid yelllm? ot»;. 10.000 ordered theflrat rannll,. Ei secure field und ft 82.00 out-flt free by cmdn out and addressing FARM KLEE A CO, iv era, Phila,, Pa, ana flllddletown, Conn.' ('i LAD TIDFNGH TO CON* VDT TIVES.—A grateful father will m who wleh tt. the directions by which hit. ter, after being gtv«li up by physfclmwn *nalred of hy her lather, was reatmrw) CONFIRMF!) CONSUMPTION topprfei'll' ’’'•'houi the uao.of medlcihe. Sent free dress , • ■ Mr, GREEN D. FRANK I. •Jqd. 0, 1870—Iw Jersey City. JjIREE TO BOOK AG E N We will'Rend'h handsome prospectus NEW ILLUSTRATED FAMILY BIBLE, Bbok agent, free of charge. Address NATIONAL PUBLISHING Jan.o,lB7o—iw Phi adelphl pi A R ME HELPER QHOWB HOW TO DOUBLE THE PI OK THE FARM, ami how' Farmers ar sons can each make 8100 PER M< INTH !ji 10.000 copies will he.mailed free to fat Serpl m.me and address to ZBIGLER, McOURDY * Jan. fl, 1870—Iw ' Phlladelpl NEU RALGIA .—JVcj'vousness w male Weakness aired—A Clergyman's Hiiiiered for years with the above disease send the means of her own. cure free. Mrs. DIXI, Jersey City,; Jan. 0,1870-^-4vf riIHE MaQIC (-OMB will chain _L colored holr or beard to a permoner or brown. It contains no poison. Any use It., One Rent by mail Tor 81. Addre MAGXCCOMB CO.. Sprlugdeil Jan. 6,1870-Sm y Twas cured of l)eafneMt and Cal a simple remedy, and will send U Mrs. M. C. LE( Jan. 6.1870-lw Eegal Notices. PRO C LAMATION.-Wh. Hon. •fuiiir'H H, Graham. President v me several Courts of Common Pleas of U ties of Cumberland, Perry, and Junto Justice of Courts of Oyer find’ er and General Jail Delivery In said e and H on**. Tims. p. Blair and Hu«h fudges of the Courts of nyer nndTerml Jail Delivery-for the trial of all car other offenders, In the said county ot land, by their precept to me directed, d of Nov, 18K9, have ordered the Court and Terminer and General Jail dellyc holden at Carlisle, on the 10th of. Jam being the 2d Monday. . NOTICE Is hereby given to the Corm tlcos of the Peace, and Constables of i eounty of Cumberland that they are by precepts commanded to be then and 1 their proper persons, with their roils, and inquisitions; examinations and f remembrancer to do those things whlcl ■ -fflres appertain to be done, and ail ti are bound by recognizances, to prosecute the prisoners that are or then ntiall lit .ini' of said county, are to be there to p them as shall be Inst JOS. C. THOMPSON. Sheriff s n fftck. Ca nr.isle. \ December 8.1H69. f 4T n Btnlpil Orphan*’ Court hr, Tucsilny, the Hth day ol Tipcemhc holden at Carlisle. In and /or rum Countv. before the Hon. James H. Orah iddent Judge, and Hon. Huoh Stuartm tP; Blair. Esqs.. Associate Judges,the ft p'mcee line* were hhd, to wit;' In the matter of the pe'ltlon of flamu der. Administrator of Geo. W. Snyder,lst Borough of Mechanlcsburg, deo’d., for charge as such Administrator. November 2.1*09, rule to show causewt uel Snyder. Administrator of Geo. W. > tier’d., the within named petitioner shot he discharged as Administrator afrnwiM i. to be given given by publication In nnene paper within the county for three bu« weeks. By the Court. Now to wit: Uth December Ibflft. Nolle# rule granted on the within petition noth been served by the Sheriff, an Alias la a* returnable next stated Orpl ans’ Court. By-the Court. In testimony whereof. I have bercDD my hand and affixed the seal o l. e. > Court, at Carllflepthls 15th dn?o: SAMUEL TUXI.E Deputy Cfov Doo. 23,1M9-St Ad m in tstr ator’s noth tloe ir hereby given that letters ft istrntlon on the estate of John B. Btri late of the borough of Carlisle, deo’d. h granted to the undersigned, residing in rough. AH persons Indebted to said* requested to make settlement, and tAo olalms against the estate will present settlement. SAMUEL H. G( December 16.1869—fit. Admlnl Administrators not Notice la hereby given that letter minlsi ration on the estate of Abm. Brw of Hnuth Middleton township, deo’d., hi granted to the undersigned, residing 1" burg. Adams county., All persons fa themselves to be indebted to said estato quested to make settlement, arid those claims against the estate will present tl settlement, JACOB 1 lSflO—Ct Admin Nkwville, Pa., Dec. lai NOTICE Ir hereby that ‘ tion will be made'for the In com a nnnk of Discount.-Deposit and Cli under the authority of the Act of A wt Broved8 roved May Ist, 1801; to be located in umherlaml county. Penna.. and to * the “People’s National Bank.” with o« Pifly Thousand Dollars, with the pn' increasing the same to One Hundred T Dollars’ Wm. Kncttlo, Jonathan Rnj R. M. Hays, Henry H. Manning. John lUdlot Bobt. Montgomery, Samuel M. ® Peter Myere, ( John Oiler- Dec. IQ, UHJQ-flni. ' Dental ‘nottce.-thb YEAR DENTAL VULCANITE through their agent, H. F. OnUlln. he; lions the public from employing anv n other poraon to make or sell orUflclftl plates of Vulcanized or Hard Bofr Is not licensed by this company,, license* for Cumberland County Lean, J, O. Miller and J. Blyder f‘,> r ji burg; Dr. Cno. W. Neldtoh, of Granule H. FettorhofT, for NewvlUe ; an* 4 d,-.J. dor, for Rblppensburg. All persons wearing artlfld A j ounlzed Rubber made by per sons *1 licensees of this company, n ,re equflll slide with the parties maklrthem, a 1 prosecuted (or Infringement of our r*l . (Signed) H, F. o*'^ Dec, 23,18(19—3t of t>emoval. tv 1% tn nil klnrlsof LlftU R*. hnnrenv>wrt hlantoreto* room in the " Vo’mnteer BalkHntf. Honth of Ihe Market Rouho Carlwe* nor>ra°ntof llqunYs t* verv complete,*' lonter than HI* old cu*i°j 1 the nni»ii<* are invited to g" ci|!J at hi* •ew'gtand. OcW.UW. JAMES Vi Rochester, THE B Hobnlii accoa is evil Tbob 'tfaal Thi hreqi Jatnet "Flo. lllustl Pho '“ami Qulier solicit, #ubllo
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers