American Algannigvic.- $ OARLISLEi PA., Thursday Morning, Feb, a. Ihlo. COMMITTEE MEETING. NEWVII.I.K, Sun. 20,1870. 1.11 l art. Bratton & Kennedy. Gents I’leaso Insert in your paper a call for a inertin'; of the "Committee on Revision of miles,” to ho held at tlio Court House, in Car lisle, on Saturday, February 12, IStil, at 11 o'clock, M. The members of (be Committee two Theo. ..'oruraart, Henry Ruby. D. B.Stoviclr, -IAA. Sar rt.n, Alf. Adama and Henry Kerns, We want a lull at tendance, In order that we may decide at once what wo are going to do. Yours, truly, JNO. P. RHOADS, Chairman. ■meeting or Tin: i»F.M««TtATic stand- ISO ejfflwmiE. • ■Aja'eetlim'Bf' lire Democratic s'tjpdipg Com mittee otUumborlaiui County, M ill be held, in lheComn|ltteo Room, at Carlisle, .on Xiicsday. Feb. 'AM, 187$, at U o’clock. A H. 1 It is requested that all committees at previous nVctotries will lie prepared to render a dual report on that day. It is also earnestly urged that every member • i the County Standing Committee will be pre sent on that day, as business of importance will -1 e brought before them for Immediate action, JOHN CAMPBELL, Chairman Democratic Standing Committee of Cumberland Co. ATTEMPTING TO CROWD HIM DOWN The recent speeches delivered in Con gress by Hon. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts, have attracted universal attention. It lo po rare n tVilng to hoar » Republican complain of corruption and extravagance, that the opinion was generally entertained that ho one of ■ that party could make such complaint. Had, these speeches been made by a Democratic member, they would have been spoken of as t‘ Democratic spleen,” Copperhead slanders,” “ disloyal Sen timents,” &c. liy the paid, minions of a' weak and .profligate administration. But these speeches, having been deliv-:, ered by the “ loyal” member from the tenth; Massachusetts district, they start led the who'e Jacobin camp. Had a bombshell been cast into their midst they could not have been more fright ened. “ What!” exclaimed these loyal thieves—these robbers of the people’s treasury—“ must we have our plans and snug arrangements exposed by a leading ma« of our own. party f Mon strous!—we must cry him down; the Beast mustassail him- our papers must denounce him ; wo must let slip the dogs of war upon him,!” , True to this findersianding, the great Hpoon-thief, Beast Butler, attempted to .reply,, to Dawes ; the'Radical papers all over the eoi ntry joined in heaping •ipithets uphn his head ; Forney’s Press spoke of Ins speeches ns “ Democratic speeches,” ami hoped no one would mind them. With the exception of the Radical papers of hisown district, every paper,of that party in the country attempted to break the force of Mr. Dawes’ speeches by showering upon him dirt aud epithets. But the intrepid Dawes has not been silenced nor intimidated. In his second speech in reply to the Beast, he not only drove his assailant to the wall but he reiterated his charges of extravagance and corruption against the administra tion, and by facts and figures proved his assertions true; He dared any man living to controvert Tiis unanswerable facts. He said he had no desire to ar raign .President Grant, but yet he was free to say that Ills administration was corrupt to the core and was faxing the people to a point beyond endurance, and that one-fourth of the money col lected from the people'was squandeied upon political adherents both North and South. He confessed, too, that these robberies of the Treasury have been going on for years, and he appealed to his party friends to join him in expos ing them and the corrupt cormorants who have become rich from their dis honest practices. He utterly annihilat ed Butler, and sent the Beast howling to his kennel. lie accused his own party of violating the pledges of re trenchment and economy by which they were enabled to carry the Presidential election, and of going far beyond the extravagance which they charged.upon the adminisiration of Andiew Johnson. He says the Republicans arraigned that administration for prodigal and profli gate expenditures, turned it out by means of these charges, and that now, in the very first estimates made by the administration of General Grant, it is proposed to make the public expenses $18,000,000 a year greater than they were ■under Mr. Johnson. General Grant’s heads of departments, artf proposing to spend $49,615,537 more next year than was appropiiated for the present year ! and Mr. Dawes says this robbery of the Government treasury must strip. Enough and more than enough money has been stolen by fellows who attracted attention from their villainies by loud professions of “loyalty.’.’ The people are beginning to understand this cun. nirig dodge. Mr. Dawes concluded his speech in these words: Sir, the administration of Andrew Johnson surrendered to the allegation that it had been profligate in expendi ture. The people tried it on that charge and found it guilty, and took from it the .sceptre of power, and put it in our hands uponourprofessionaof economy in the ad ministration of the public service. And the people intend to hold us to ouv profes sions and promises. What is the first Evidence that we have put forth to the country of our disposition to carry out <iur pledges? I hold in my hand the Of okof estimates for the first year of this administration. And while 4 know the ungracious position I occupy, I propose to speak plainly, but to speak truly, to my party friends on this side of the House. T know that while “faithful are the wounds of a friend, 5 ’ chore Is not much ease remaining to the friend who inflicts them. Now, sir. what did An drew Johnson, in the last year of his administration, estimate that he would carry on this government for? He esti mated that he would carry it on for 1*303.000,000, and we cut down the appro priations $20,000,000 below his estimate. i<ut his own estimate of the coat of carry ing on the government, which the people at the polls declared to be profligate and unreasonable, was $303,000,000. Now, sir, what does our own adminis tration estimate Hint it will curry on the government for for the mba year? The sum estimated for is $331,097,174 U 2 : on increase over the Just estimate of the administration of Andrew Johnson for 1809-70 of $28,097,174 02. But we cut down his estimate $20,000,000, so that the exact difference between this book of es timates for the present administration and the uppropiiations made l|ie lust year of Andrew Jobntou’a administration Is $49,682 637 01. It is due 10 the Post Office Department to auy that there is an error of 57.000.000 in the fooling, which reduces the amount to some 42,000.000. jju*. behind mid not entering Into these ls the little sugar pigm of $BOO,- 000 that rny friend from Pennsylvania .(Mr. Scofield), proposes to prepare Hie way for Hie JoeeJ representatives from Philadelphia toudvoc.-de liere for league Island I Buell of it, ton, Is the Bay of Biiimma, and the Island of Si- Th'-mus, at $7 510,000 in gold. And haek of It, too, me, ..hat every man who has here tofore been In tb/s House knows, thu millions of dollars that will c pme back on those appropriation bills from tlio other end of the Capitol. All of, these items are to he added to the figures i have given. It will be remembered that during the Presidential campaign, while tlio Radicals were harping upon the corrup tions and extravagances of Johnson’s administration—things for which they were responsible, but which they iimib' their blind followers lioliove were tlio acts of a Democratic minority—the peo ple were told that this show of Radical economy ami honesty would como back upon them in the form of increased appropriations. Now is the time lor those predictions to be realized, and to more forcibly establish their fulfillment we have quoted the testimony given by one of tho.most respectable members of the Radical party in the House of Rep resentatives, wljoso better nature re-; ..helled against these grossly extravagant pnd corrupt over estimates of what is necessary to honestly administer the government. Taking Comfort Out op It.— Tho Louisville Courier says:—The Fifteenth/ Amendment is very nearly air acconV plished fact. By hook and bycrouk by foul means and by fair, the adicals have shoved it along until they can see out of it. As the whole ’Mugis an out rage, they may as well -uvo themselves the trouble and expense of waiting, andi declare it. at uuue try Congressional enactment, ft is undoubtedly a base innovation upon all our preconceptions 'of government, and Jinsely carried out; but it is not so one—tried as its irierids think it.,/ Since (ho ;Bouth has'been forced to take ti'esTo suffrage it is an act of poetic justice to force it ontheNorth, [(.increases also.the ratio of repiesentfi tidn from the- Sr utheru States. The Southern will ultimately the negro vd'i'e. and may use the Fif teenth amendment to break tho heads of its authors. Who knows but it will in the end set a preiedent and furnish the authority for consolidating the six, New England, States into one State ? Stranger things have come to pass. The Fifteenth Amendment.—As it is neither wise nor expedient to dis pute the inevitable, to no longer feel inclined to doubt the ratification of the fifteenth or negro suffrage amendment; pot in a constitutional manner—not in the mode prescribed by the Constitution itself, but by the arms of a military consulate, acting in tho name of the President and < (ingress. T» enty-seven States ol the Union, according to radical count, have so far given their assent to the mcaguro—including Ohio. Before the next election the amendment pro bably will have been ratified by the re quired number of States—twenty-eight. It is to ho hoped -that it may answer the most sanguine anticipations of its advocates, and that the perverse Consti tution of the United States, which was handed down tons in such an immature and rickety condition - by its bungling political founders, nifty now ho consid ered as -thoroughlyrepaired, and ready for any emergency. Negro U. S. Senator, —Gen, 1 Ames has not only succeeded in getting him self pitchforked info the United States Sonata on the points of his bayonets, but has managed to secure the election of a full blooded, curly headed, ebony shinned, big-footed negro, ns bis col league, from the reconstructed State of Mississippi. H. R. Bevels (negro) has been elected for the term ending in 1871, and Gov; Alcorn is then to succeed the sable Solon. Gen. Ames is chosen for the term ending in 1875. The Radicals rejoice greatly over this elevation of a negro to a seat in the Senate of the U. States. Grant is-said to lie very much pleased, and Korney goes off into ex pressions of the most ecstatic delight. “ It must bo now. de kingdom's comln, And do iynr ob Jubllo.” Fr ster and Covode.— The House of. Representatives has finally taken action upon the contested seat of Mr. Poster of tho Twenty-first Pennsylvania Dis trict. It, has given tlio seat to Mr. Co vode, notwithstanding tho fact that'Mr. Foster was elected by over one hundred majority. That Mr. Foster Was fairly and hon estly elected no one pretends to doubt who is conversant with the case. A single return judge refused to certify to the returns, whereupon Governor Geary refused, (as he was bound by law to do) to issue Mr Foster’s commission. Thus denied a primn facte right to n scat that was his by right, it is not to bo wonder ed that tlio House of Representatives would affix the crowning infamy, by voting Mr. Covode tlie seat. So we move. The Presidential head is said to be badly perplexed about this time. Mr. Bowes’ exposure of thn extra*;ignntex pendituresof the administration, Fisk’s testimony before, the I oiiiniittee on the Gold Swindle, the rivalry of Colfax for thesuccession, the profound somnolency of Motley at the Court of St. James, the curses of the Cuban patriots, the disor dered condition of financial matters, and other irritating matters of a similar character, have operated to disturb oven the stolid equanimity of the Smoker of the White House. Itas said thatahear, with a lesion of the caput, would bean agreeable companion compared with His Excellency at the present writing. Nothing less than the tender of a gift of a brown stone residence in New York or .Philadelphia, will gain a caller at the White House admission to his presence. “The First Negro Minister.”— It has transpired that Gen. Tate, the first negro foreign minister over receiv ed in tliis country, over whom Grant and the Radicals made such a fuss, merely came to this country to beg money to save Salnavo from ruin, and to sell a portion or the whole oV Sal nave’s territory fo..ruiso the necessary funds. Sainavo has been deposed and •shot, Gen. Tate is outlawed, and will ho shot also if ho returns to Hayli, and no one seems to know where the money is to come from to pay for the ram At lanta. Bring on tho next “ negro min ister”—Tate is " nulfin but a common nigga," now. A man who has been three years a private in the army, complains of tho tyrannical way in which privates arc treated by officers, so that they leave tho army after their term of service With nothing but hatred for tho flag under jvhich they have suffered so long. Ho appeals to tho Military Committee fpr «n liivostipat(oi), SPEAKING OUT. Many of tho more moderate of the Republican journals <_f this State ufo growing restive by reason of tho reck less extravnganceofthe Radical leaders, and demand that a thorough system of retrenchment and reform, shall be at once adopted. Perhaps tlio present Had cal Legislature, al rmed at these inilicil ions of ins bnnlination on the pan • of ilii ii ioiiowera, may take the alarm and be induced to gratify their friends by adopting some very smalt re forms; but no important measure for the relief of our tax-ridden people enn or will. I e adopted until the present horde of corrupt Bad leal plunderers are consigned to merited obscurity and the State qnce more restored to Democratic rule. . ' , On the subject of continuing tho pub lication of the Legislative Record (that stupendous piece of jobbery and folly I) the Philadelphia JSvening Bulletin (Rad ical) in n lute number has the following pertinent paragraph: Tlie question of eontinuingthe puhli . cal ion of the Legislativeßecord lias been ■before the Legislature several fines this session, consuming more time than it should havedone. Recently the special committee ip the-. Senate jenorted a contract for ,ita continuance; but hap pily it waS not confirmed, and the whole subject waslndcfinitely postponed. This ought to be' the end of the matter for th is session at least. The Legislature can preserve jn tho journal of each House everything that is deserving of being recorded, and the printing of the Re cord has been such an expensive job that the people will hail with satfsfao tiorVlhq nf'Ws'that it is not to bo con tinged, ' lining wifhoht the Record, ihe, sEegisliftifre can wi h,.ut some of tho-fiistcrs alrid folders iliathnve been, (such an expense to the Slate. A great deal of po-tnge will also he saved for the mailing of tons of waste paper un der the name of a Legislative Record was a costly affair. Retrenchment has been promised by this Legislature, and the people expect it in.small ns well as in great tilings. These war records are growing. Gen. ,Rosecrnns recently stated in a speech made at a gathering of army officers, that the.whole plait of operations which resulted in the victorious, advance of our army at Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge, was, prepared and arranged by him, before his removal from command, and that his successors, i homas and Grant, did nothing but ex ecute his plan and develop his strategy. Several distinguished officers, who were present, corroborated thestatement, yet tho facts have not been so stated, here-, tofoie. Reconstructed “ Justice.”— John Phillips, a negro, who was to have been hung at Richmond, Va., last Tuesday week, has been respited for the ninth time. As he only murdered his wife, and as he is of a good loil complexion, he will probably he. relea ed after a time.- Another unhlenched'American, named David Crawford, who was sen tenced to death for committing an out rage upon a white girl,'has had his sentence commuted to imprisonment for life, preparatory to a pardon. Rape and murder are no crimes in the South if the perpetrators are loil. lIAIID ON GF.ART. The Philadelphia Post, a lending Rad ical organ; thus speaks of “ his Excel lency Major General John W. Geary, Governor of Pennsylvania.” And yet, nntwithstandirig these slntiments by the Post, that paper assisted to elect Geary, by urging a"d pleading with the people to vote for'him. Avimt will not a Radical do to sustain his party,? The Post says: The creature of a convention, the dupe and the dnper of dishonest politicians, a man false to his friends and* fearful of -his, foes, John W. Gearv begins his second term with the eonfldenee of no man who It nows h'm, and with the distrust (!f even those who do not. If Ids past is to he taken as the evidence ot Ills future, there is no. reason to' imps that the next three years of, hi.r administration will he cred ■tnlde to himaeif. or honorable to tjte Stale, Great wan theglorifioatiOn at Rar ' risburg yesterday, but it was eti -pty glory and hollow show. We are weary of the man. and do not care to say all that the occasion ao strongly suggests. We judge him only by what we know of him, and that is enough to depress the hopes or arouse the''lndignation of the humblest citizen of Pennsylvania. Bgyln the State Senate, a few days since, Mr. White offered a joint resolu tion appropriating $1,900 to defray the expenses of Gov. Geary’s inauguration. When “honest Frank Shunk” was inaugurated the expenses were some hundred and fifty dollars. That was at a lime, however, before “the party of great moral ideas” had a foothold in our once glorious old State. A new party is arising in the South. — Forney's Press. Yes, a party headed by jail birds from the New England Slates, negroes, mur derers, thieves and cut-throats. Of course this “new party in the South” is what Wilson calls " the party of great moral ideas ” From fifteen hundred to two thousand men are to he discharged to day from the Navy Yard at. Brooklyn. —Philadelphia Inquirer , Jan. 29. “There is a good time coming,boys; wait a little longer.” Three cheersand a tige' for the “good times” promised by Radical liars previous to the election of Grant. The Pardon Brokerage is still car ried on in Congress. Southern people who have been. disfranchised became they may have a little money or real estate, can get a free pardon by spend ing one-half they possess among tho Radical thieves in Congress, and prom ising to be good Republicans all their remainiu days. Revels, the negro United States Senator recently elected by the Legis lature of Mississippi, has arrived at Washington, and expects to take his eat in a day or two. He says he de sires to he seated between Sumner and brimstone Brownlow. Wo hope his request may he gratified. In Ids speech a few days since in the House, in reply to Beast Butler, Mr. Dawes stated that there are now five hundred officers of the army off duty, at an annual expense of $1,250,000. Mr. D.. wants these idle officers dismissed. ASTBewaiid’s prophecies are always unlucky. Ho had hardly foretold un broken peace for Mexico before there was another revolution there. 'diißHiEY isfiisnppoinled by the Vir jjiniu bill. Here is what be says of it in the Tribune; The House has adopt ed the Senate’s perverse action on the Virginia bill without amendment. We do not need to repeat that we deep ly regret the result finally attained at the end of these weary weeks of debate and recrimination. Congress prescrib ed certain terms for the admission nf Virginia; the State’complied to tlx full with those terms; Congress now— prescribes fresh terras! This is punish ing the treason of Virginia in JB6l by bad faith on the part ol Congress in 1870. We do not believe such a course to be statearaanshiporeven sound party puli cy; and aggravating as is the wrong done Virginia, we believe she.will suf fer less from it in the end than will the p_arty that has wrought it. The Pontiac (.Mich) Gazette has this item: “A p/»or young widow in Berlin, coming home the other night, found on her table a note addressed to her, read ing as follows: “Madame— leamehere with the intention of robbing yon, but the sight of this respeclaole and peace ful attic room, decorated with pious souvenirs, and, above all, your two little children,« ho were quietly sleeping in their little beds and smiling in their dreams, have touched my heart, and in stead of depriving you of the little money I found in the drawer,-1 take the liberty of leaving here fifty dollars, hoping thai you will accept them as a tribute of my respeit and admiration. True the money has been stolen; bul perhaps in the course of every day life you have taken money -from a worse man than your Obedient Servant. 11 >Dr. Cyrus Ramsey of New York, mar ried a beantfful girl, one of Ids patient-, 'three years ago. She induced-him to make over to her half of his property, worth some $75,000, then she went to {Julia for her health; Soon afterward her mother wrote that she was dead. Thu corpse was forwarded to the doc lor, who hurried it in Greenwood. The mother.then came bn, showed hoi daughter’s will, and entered into posses sion of half the doctor’s property, siinee then the doctor has learned that his wife is still in Cuba, and that he,has been imposed upon through a spurious corpse. The case will come, up in the courts. In Paris, on the 19th, Troppman, the murderer ot ttio Kinek family, was exe cuted. Notwithstanding the early hour, the execution was witnessed by a great crowd of people, who taunted and yelled atTn ppman as he mounted the scaffold. '1 he culprit was very pale, but ascended courageously and with a firm step. After embracing the priest, he cried out. in a .loud voice.“l persist I have accomplices.” I he se were the last words he uttered. Extraordinary precautions had been taken to guard against dis order. The police and military wen on the ground in great force, but their services have not deen needed up to this hour. * • ■ , It is sfated by a New York conterap orary that a large immigration of Isra elites may shortly be looked for. It is known that several hundred fami lies are te b > sent to New York from Western Russia, where toleration is no longer to be enjoyed. It is also stated that the sub committees on the itusso- Prussian frontiers will soon organize a general fund for the-exportation of Is raelites to this country. Nearly all these immigrants 'will be poof, but they will here find perfect freedom to do aud think as they please. ■ Almost one of the last political squibs of the lamented Prentice was the fol lowing: : “It is understood that Butler would have been a candidate for the Spanish throne if the crown jewels had not already been stolen.” Mlsccllnneons. —Southern cities are crowded with Chinese* —Tiie weather in Southern Virginia is intensely cold. —The Mormon dignitaries have dedi cated their railroad to the Lord.***,-.•, —Peoria, Illinois, is overrun with rats. But the Chinese are coming* —A Massachusetts farmer has been sent *o jail, for two months for cruelly beating his horse. —The. first civilized word that China men learn In this country is “damn”. —A family residing in Chicago, have been dangerously poisoned by eating bis cuit made with a New York baking powder. —ln Memphis a bride of two days asks a divorce, because on the morning after marrirtpb her husband refused to send her breakfeast up to her room. —Tn Chicago the doctors hnvo%greed to charge $lOO forcuttlngoff’a leg. —A man In Bt. Joseph, Missouri, pot hie life insured for $1,900, a day or two since, and straightway went and com mitted suicide. —Wyoming, in addition to enacting female suffrage, has passed a .law licen sing gambling houses. —The Presbyterians of the United Bfates are said to have more misslona ries in China than any other denomina tion. , ' —Boston Is in raptures over a female Jig dancer whose "feet twinkle like stars of evening.” —The Beard of Aldermen of Wll minptnn, N. 0.. is composed of three white men and five negroes.. —The champion Ohio hog is three years old, and weighs 1200 pounds, ft is nine feet. lung, four feet high, and over six feet around the body. —Mexicans assert that the United States are only biding their time to ab sorb the whole Mexican Republic, —Over half a million dollars worth of property was destroyed at Cheyenne, Wyoming Territory, by fire, on the 12th Inst. —A music teacher in the West has, by ♦he death of an uncle, fallen heir to $24 000 in gold at it tereat in Paris and 5 000 acres of fine land In Texas. The heir Is reconciled to “this afflictive dis pensation,w —A correspondent saj's that there was one thing about the French bail in New York suggestive of Paradise: They were all nuked and were not ashamed! —The bachelors of Louisville are going to give a banquet to the ladles. It la thought that something may come of it. —The darkles have commenced suici ding on account of their blighted affec tions. Ac.-Next they’ll be in a breach of promise business. —The Judge’s chair in a now court house in Illinois, cost $3OO. There Will no difficulty in finding somebody to take that chair. —A.young gentleman at Charles City, lowa,Vent sevent-five cents to New Yoi k recently,-for a'method of wilting with out a pen and ink. He received the fol lowing inscription, in large type, on a card: “Writa with o'poncii.” Purls is tranquil. One hundred thousand citizens attend the funeeal of the sl.iln editor, and ouel hundred thous and bayonets environ-the olty. —A nigger at Eoanoke N.‘C., was found lu a neighbor's cabbage patch, do>n on bis knees He mild it was queer a man couldn't go “no whar" to pray.wilhout being Interrupted. Francis Robl-nn, of Alackington, Conn., was bitten by a mad dog thirty years ago, and about once a month ever since has had fils, during Which he barks like a doe and froths at his mouth. • —lt is staled that an unusual number of persons of Boston are out of euii'lpy meut this winter and much suffering is I lie lesult. S' me ot the benefits of Radi cal egislttion. —A timid youth in Indiana, who was refused tl e honor of altuiding a young lady home, asked permission to sit on the fence and see her goby. Brigham Young drove the last spike that completed the connection between Salt Lake City and Pacific R. R. He -aid-lba' Both desired to be admitted in to the Union. The low-boat Star, collided with the railroad bndae at Wheeling, and capsi zing, exploded her bol'ers, and was burned to the water’s edge, one life be ing'oat. • —ln Louisville, yesterday, a negro, charged with ravishing a white woman, was tried and acquitted. When the ver diet was announced, the woman drew a pistol and fir. d-at him, the ball taking off a piece i»f his ear. —Mark Twai* thinks that soda water is-'not very reliable for a steady drink. It is too gassy. ,The nexVmoruing after drinking thirty-eight bottles ho found himself full,of-gas,as tight.as a balloon. —Mis. John Meekiha, residing in Chester. Delaware county, gave birth to •eventeen pounds of children—two girls, five pounds eanj). and one boy, seven pounds. The little ones are said to be bright and pretty. LETTER FROM OUR MEMBER OF AS- Sr.JUBI.Y. Harrisburg, Jan- 28,^1870. . Messrs, Bratton & Kennedy,: Gentlemen— Having a few spare mo ments’, 1 have concluded 16 drop'you; a ew ii:.es to let you know what position I have taken in my new sphere of life. After spending four weeks us a. member -»f the Legislature of this great Common wealth! I have come to the conclusion (hat the wuftls a certalu ex-member once made tome were true, viz: “that I would he astonished to know how the money of this Hiate was squandered, and whutenr . uption there was practiced at the capital of the State. M After a long and tedious fight, we have tit last, in the face of the most loul at tempts to bribe the members, succeeded in killing the monster blood-leach on our state Tieusury, called the “ Legislative Record , M which lias been sucking fie vitals of. our treasury for years- Very few people.of this Commonwealth have any Idea what this swindle haa cost the State annually for the publication of this dirty sheet— made so by the twaddle pub lished in it. at the . expense «f the tax payers of the ls it' a wonder that the members of the' Legislature of this great State defeated such ugigantieswin die, when we know.that the expense of the itecordcostelghty-five thousand dol lars (S85,OO0) for tlie year-1868, and very intleless for the j ear 18(59? The contract which was made by the committee ap pointed by the Senate and House of Representatives failed to make such con tiuct, shutting the door against Bergn- r delrauding or imposing upon the Slate, as it was asserted he did do in Ids last contract, wldch was not denied by any person. It.ls reasonable to believe.that he cost of the Recotd lor the session of 1870, would have readied sixty thousand l&6t),000) dollars, including printing, fold ing, pasting, postage, &c. t which would allow e»eh member thirty-five numbers of said Record for distribution among his odnuiituents. How fur would this go in giving the information of our actions in Ihe Senate aud Hous“? To distribute (hiriy-five numbers among nine 'thou sand-voters would certainty be a very small’ pro rata for the enormous biim of sixty thousand dollars. Certainly nosanei mum would agree to squander the money, of the {State in such a manner. ’ I came here to represent the people of Cumberland county, and will enueuvor to do so to the best of my and ■ billty, knowing that the lax-pay era have reason to complain of the way in which die public money lias been squandered.. I have taken a decided stand for retrench ment and reform, and shall stick to it all through the session. 1 was oae of the opposers of the Record swindle, and- if all the facts .were known about the Re cord swindle of the past, there would not be a single tux-payer in Pennsylvania In lavor of its renewal, unless be hud u direct or indited interest in the c •htract. Ills a very astonishing tact mem ners will advocate certain measures here on the floor of the House and vole ay they advocate, and then, if they find that they voted in the minority, they will either uy to have their votes changed in the House, or failing in that, they will have them appear with the majority in the daily papers. This Is one way of deceiv ing the people. * But I find that there is enough honesty in the House to defeat the "ring!’.members of the Republican •party', and It Is working well forth® ben efit of tb“ State.. To vote millions of dollars to enrich and keep certain poli tical hacks in office and fat Jobs about (he capitol, is something that good, hon est men cannot do when they know that nine-tenths of the people of this great State earn, their bread by the sweat of their brows, and when bankruptcy is stalking througn our country in a gigan tic form, and . poverty entering honest and once happy homes, where prosperity once reigned, and our manufactures and commerce is crippled, our farmers, mer chants, and laborers ruined, and in tiie face of all this, we ure asked to squander tiie money of the Stale Treasury oy mil lions, what would be tiie end of all this if persisted in? Will the people of tiiis great Commonwealth continue to elect such meu to repieseut them in the Leg islature of this State? 1 must confess that I have found things different from what I hud expected, and all my time and energies will be employed In retrench ment and reform. With these few hui»ty # remarks I will close tor tiie present. I remain, yours reaped fully, . J. B. LEIBIG. OUR WASHINGTON LETTER. The Virginia Muddle— Darkey Inconsistency—Bullcr and Dawes on Economy— n nut well's Estimates— hood for tho pel Lambs—Prince Arthur—A A cgro Senator . V Correspondence American Volunteer. Washington, Jan. 80,1R70. The Interminable Virginia muddle is at last ended. The HoUso has passed the Senate bill, and it has been signed by the President. The discussion lniheH«U6 “ ww-exceedingly anima ted and lively. When Butler got tbe floor lor twenty minutes, he cracked his whip over the heads-of those Republicans who mid ventured to join the Democrats and' vote for the uncondi tional Virginia btU. during his absence. In a manner that nettled.those men very ,sensibly calling them Democratic allies, accusing them of forcing a snap judgment in panging a bill.ln bis absence, and Impudently and conceitedly In sinuating that. If some members bad minded their own buslpcsu Virginia would have got la long ago, and on much better conditions than wore now Imposed; and ho garnished those gen eral reflections by such peisoual allusions to Judge Bingham as being “the mut.derer of Mrs. Surratt.” Butler seemed to mingle his vonmo and bis glee together; for bo spoke In the most, impassioned manner, throwing his shoulders up under his ears, and swinging his arms through the air as If he was undergoing the pangs of vivisection—all the whllecoutiasting his rejoic ing that the bill was going through with condi tions, with bis regret that Bingham hud a mo mentary triumph In the House in forcing a bin’ without conditions. The overcrowded galleries and the full .•ftendaneboa the floor hugely en joyed the scene, which was ailed with Interested groups standing In tbe aisles and under the son gaslight that streamed through the roof of the House and danced and sparkled upon Butler’s 'polished cranium. Butler sal down, and General Farnsworth, acting Chairman of the Reconstruc tion Committee, rose to close the,debate. With a tall, commanding presence, but well known to the House generally as a harsh, dull speaker, It was not anticipated that he would reply to ns no one beltuvid ho was a mutch for—Butler; but ho fired up at once—fired up for Butler— fired up the douse masses of the gallerloo, and sot the House to rcsouudtug wlih plaudits and laughter, as bo continued to administer one ol the sharp* est nail moat luclslvo speeches plumply Into j Butler’s record. Ho Informed iho Massachusetts member tbot. ho could not crack his whip over | him, and sneer at him, and charge him v. ..*• coalescing the Democrats; for, said he, with emphasis, “I have been a Nodical for twenty-five years. I was a Republican when you—*' pointing to Butler, who sot sorouged up In n choir—were chasing fugitive slaves all oyer Massaclfusotts. I was a Republican in a Chica go convention when you were in tho Charleston convention voting fifty-seven times a day for Jefferson Davis for President of the United males,’’ Hoars of laughter greeted this hit, and he followed H’ up by Insinuating that Butler’s conversion to Republicanism was simply to ful fil hlu desire to bo always on the winning side. Air. Farnsworth then showed the House most clearly iiuller.'s sbum onfl pretence over.this Virginia question, how ho hud inado false as sertions to gum delay. Tho excoriation was eu joj od by alt sides, aud even John Logon hud to get up and suv that he had no leelmg foi Butler except for Lis ability. Mr. Cox ol Now York, had five minutes allowed lilm.m which be ap pealed to the 1-fil luembois who voted lor the un conditional admission of Virginia to s-uud by their record, bul the bill passed by a part* vote, for party deucipiine, after all, curried the day. There Is a negro barber hero who is now one of the city fathers, and a leader lu the period negro equality < oil tics of Ibis city. This burner used All his influence In securing the ordinance a refusing a license to any theatrical managers who did not admit tftio negroes to perfect cqimll* ly with the whiles m his theatre. While one of his workmen was scraping my chin iho other day, X u>kcd him Ifhe ever had any colored custo mers. ‘"No, sar, wo don’t have no uiggas in Uis sho, was the prompt reply. ••‘But.’saldl,'suppose a colored man wcie to come in.and sit down In one of the chatis. Uko I do, what would you do?' '"Put him out, sar! Borne shops’ll shuve nlggus, butdis is too ’speclable for dat.’ “‘You wouldn’t refuse to shave the colored Congress* men from Louisiana,.would you?’ “Yes, sar. Wouldn't shave no nlggas, nohow—even If dey was President. One of General-Grant’s nlgsus came here one day—but he didn’t get no shave no Hiy.’ ’’ This Is a matter for Congress to look into, Sumner must mount, bis war-horse. Then will Grant suffer his nigger to be snubbed ? Bat wlmt would becofao of the Nlgga’s pretensions were the white people to withhold their patron age? Tl ore has been a grand skirmish going on be tween Butter jind Dawes in regard to the' extra vagance of Grant’s administration. The “ but tled imp’’ has appeared ns the special defender of the mao Who him.. He attempted to disprove some of Dawes*, charges, but the latter retorted with 'tearful effect. Butler Dawes why he had not .obtained official figures from the War Department. Dawes retoited that he bad endeavored to obtain them, but dtor sever al weeks’ Ineffectual.-work. ’had left the depart-, meet discouraged. He bad then visited the President, and while the executive professed to be In favor of reform and economy, be had In formed him that the expenses of the govern . meat were already out down as low as they could bo, and.thls, said Mr. Dawes, Is the face ol the fact, that there are to-day five hundred offi cers ot the army off duty more than are neoessa-. ry supernumeraries, and there Is paid annually to these supernumeraries, one million two hun dred and fifty thousand dollars, as salary. Mr. Dawes again referring to Grant's professions of economy, said: “The President knows the ne cessities of the War Department betterthun others, and after that statement from a man whose pularstar m the administration of affairs is economy, 1 did not think It worth while to appeal from him to Ills secretary.” The drift and substauco'of all this is that iilsutterly vuln to expect any niovement ln the direction of economy from the p. csent administration, and that nothing has been gained by the triumph ot the Republican-party lu the last election. Thu Executive departments are more extravagant than they were under the administration ol Andrew Johnson, bach Is the character of the now Administration, as depicted by a leading. Radical statesman to eldutit, Mr. Buutwell’s for the expenses of the govern . eat the present year are nearly fif ty millions of dollars more than they were last year . Ho is nut ashamed to cilll for three hun dred and thirty-ouu millions of dollars to carry on the** economizing udmlmutiailon” the pre sent year, To carry on the Depurtmoutot the Interior he asks for an Increase of more than S»X,vOO.OOO over what It cost last year. For the Treasury Department he ask* an Increase ot over so,ooQ,ia-U. For. the State Department he wants an Increase of 882,6&>. For the Depart ment of Warau Increase of more than 85,u0u,uuu Is demanded. The luoie&se which this bhume-- less official demands for the Department of War Is mure, than the total expenses of tne urmj ougntto be In time of peace.* Congress wants uu increase or mure than si,uoo,()o(>«>ror its shame less expenses of last.year. And tor the Post Office Depuitment an increase of nearly So.OiW,- (MJ.is demanded, For the Department of the Navy an Increase of a lut e nio«o than 812,0W.WW Is culled fur, while to Curry out the schemes about the Judicial Department he asks for an Increase of nearly tfuj.ooy. Bat this'vast Increase of the expenses of the government Is only dimly fore shadowed in this estimate of the Secretary ol the Treasury. It has been one of the tricks of the negro party, ever since it hiis been In power U. dyeive the people by calling for a less sum for the government expenses than It Intended to spend, and make up the rest by “ deficiency” bills at the end of the year, bo that Bo.utweil’s call lor an Increase of flay millions may mean a hundred millions. This trick has been played every year since the election of Lincoln. Em boldened by long success, and the docility of the Democratic press, they send forth their lying declarations of a reduccci debt with one side of the mouth, while ■* Itb tho.other they boldly ask for an increase of fifty millions to meet the aug mentlng expenses of tho goverfimentl If the people are esses they.'may safely behp on the burden, but it they are men, these robbers will meet at lost-with the punishment they deserve, Tbe Senate used up tho host part of one day In consideration of a biU, reported by Mr. Hamlin, Hppp»priat.iii£ frV»,o>i» or the poor of thd District of Columbia, but really to give that amount Into the hands of'Mr. Bow en with which to feed the vagabond, lazy ne groes, whose votes ho will want next June for the mayoralty. The debate partook pf a varied gharactor, appropriate to the real designs of the bill. It was a mixture of charily and politics. Tho Democratic Semdors assailed tho Radicals lor what they have done to bring the horde or destitute negroes here, and tho Radicals retorted by asking the Democrats toshow the world what they had done to strike the chains of slavery from tho limbs of these peoolo. At the close of the debate, which was prolonged until near the hour of adjournment, the bill was passed,' The city, during the past week, has been head over heels in excitement about Prince Arthur. Ho has boon dined, and wined, and feted and balled. The bull given by tho British Minister was a i rand affair. Tbe prince danced the first set with Mrs, Grout. At tho reception of Mrs. Grant, day before yesterday, the Prince escort ed Miss Nellie Grant to the conservatory, where MUs Nolilo gracefully presented to Hisßoyul ;Hlgnness a beautiful camellia which he accept ed with many thanks. Tho flower so gracefully presented to His Royal Highness Is known to botanists ’as the camellia Japonlca, and symboli cally signifies “admiration,” The affair bos filled thebeirU of tho President, Mrs. President, the British Minister, Secretary the whole 101 l household, as well as diplomatic people generally, wun ccbuioics or delight. There will be no further trouble In-arranging that little difficulty about tbe Alabama claims. That matter Is about settled. The sleepy Mol-, ley’s occupation Is gone. The floral admiration of the President’s daughter for Prince Arthur has done tho business. At last we are to have a negro In the Senate.— H. R. Revels, the new negro Senator from Mis sissJppl.has arrived and will preseutbts oreden tlola on Monday or Tuesday next. His first measure will be to present the resolutions pass ed by the Mississippi legislature In favor of re moving all political disabilities. Sumner will doubtless avail blraqelf of the first public'occa sion to embrace his sable brother. rpKEEti, PLANTS, ELOWERS, . FOR SALE AT THE CUMBERLAND NURSERIES, this spuing A l&rge stock of fine Peach trees, Grape Vines. Osage Orange, Strawberry Plants, Rhubarb, Or namental’tress and general 'urser.v stock.- Vege table plants alt transplanted, tbe best va rieties of ; Cabbage, Tomato, Cau.lflower. Pepper, Best, Celery, Egg Plants, &o. HweetPotutoe and Tobacco Plants In large quantity. Hardy aud Greenhouse FLOWERS, a fine assortment. Great Inducement offered to persons making up Clubs.for loe purpose ofuny of the above stock. Send for club prlc list. All orders carelully attended to and promptly for w .rtled in season. HENRY 0. HUPP, Shlremanslown, Cumb, co..Pa Feb. 3,187p-3m 4 COACH MAKER SHOP FOR RENT.—Tbe subscriber offers for rent a ih Maker bb p, In tbe borough of Newvllle, It oouHlsts of Wood bhop, blacksmith bhop Paint Shop, Trimmer Bhop, and a room for finished Buggies all complete. Possession given on the first, uay of April next, for one or two jea.s Auy person wishing to lent improperly, call on the subscriber one mile East of Newvllle. BENJAMIN ..EllZ, , Adm’r.olJ.J.BOWfiß&tWd, • Feb, 8,1870-« w ’ n ; New aibetusmentg. 7,'mnofi , . "‘"Abmlmra Flshor, ) In the Court of Conimon A ■ w . IpieiwofOmuherlanilcoUn- Loulia Flshor. J ty. No. I. Jnuuury Term. IR7U. Allas subpoena Sur Divorce, to Louisa to an order of publication to mo directed, you are hereby notified to bo and up* near lu the Conrt of Cominou Picas, for the Fountv or Cumberland,on the 11th day of April, A D., IK7O, to Hhow ctuiHC, If any you have, * hy Abraham Fisher should not bo dlyor ed from the bonds of •« atrlmouy entered Into with you, according to th? prayer of the petition filed m said Court. „ . ttIHtHIFF’S (Tffice. Carlisle, ) Jan. c THOMPSON, Sheii#.' Feb. 8.1870—1 t . ■fJOTIOK "John Kepford, '» to the Court of Common vs. I Pleas of Cumberland c»Un- Mary Isabella [ ty. No. 51. January Term,. Kepferd,. j 1870. ' . Alias subpoena Sur Divorce, to Mary Isabella Keptcrd. In obedience to an order of publication to mo directed, you arc hereby notified to be nod ap* pear in the Court ol Common Pleas, for the. County of •'umberland.on the Utb day of April, A. D.. 1870. to show cans... ifany you, why John Kepterd should not be divorcedJ'roin the bonds of matrimony entered Into with you, according to tbe prayer of the petition fl ed in said Court. Sheriffs Office,Carlisle. I Jam 81, 1870. / . _ _ • JOS, C. THOMPSON, Sheriff. Fob. 3.1870-41 A NNOUNCEMENT.-The partner- J\ ship existing between W, C. Sawyer, J. A. Du (to, and J. K. Jjurknolder.aud known as the firm of W. C Sawyer & Co., ha*; thlsday been dissolved by mutual consent.. Ail persons know ing themselves indebted,or those having claims against the firm are requested to call Immedi ately upon the Junior purtnera at their old business stand, in the Bents House and make settlement. The books will be held by us fora while and will then be placed In other bands for collection. . Respectfully, ■ • ' W.C. SAWYER, • JOHN A. DUKE, J. E. BUKKHOLDER. Eeb. 3,1870—3 t 1870 HABDWARE ‘IBTO HENRY SAXTON. I J. P. BIXLER. H. SAXTON, & CO., HO. 15, EAST MAIN ST., Dealers in Hardware, Iron, Cutlery, &0,, hereby announce to the public, that they intend (■oiling everything In ihetrllne.eltberwholeßale or retail, at pr oea maoh lower than can bo bought thlssld of Philadelphia.' •Our stock cons-ta in part of BUILDING MATERIAL OP* ALL Iron, ‘ Paints, Nalls, Oils, Shovels, Glass, Hoea, Putty, Forks, Varnishes, Rakes, - Cement, - Spades, , Plaster, Crow bars, Hand, Sledges, Powder, Picks, ‘ Safety fuspi Also a full and veil selected assortment of MECHANIC’S TOOLS, TABLE AND POCKET CUTLERY. A full stock of Plowa, Hcmea, Chains. Grain bags, Ropes, Pul leyu, and Hay Elevators of all descriptions.. GUNS, PISTOLS, POWDER, SHOT, oaPB| and ammunition of all kinds. Thnnkfutfor post favors, by strict attention to business we hope-'to receive a Continuation of the same. H. SAXTON & CO. ALL PERSON ■ knowing themaelveß indebted to Henry Waxton, are requested to muke immediate settlement, and those b«v ing.clalms to present them for settlement, as I wish to close up my books to January 1,1 70. HENRY SAXTON. . Eeb. 8,1R70 STATEMENT OF THE FINANCES OF CUMBERLAND COUNTY, From thefirst o'ny of January , to the Qlrt dayqfDe ■ cember, lts<9, inclusive, C. MELLfNGER. Esq., Treasurer, iu account with the County of Cumberland. DR. TO RECEIPTS. To Balance in bonds of Treasurer, at last settlement, 8 6.810 61 To outstand’g taxes at last settlement, 6,272 -10 To taxes levied for the year 1860, 76,677 01 To amount received on loans. 20,7*0 00 • Co subscription fur.Heck's bridge, 1,050 00 To subset iptlon foi Glover's bridge, - 705.00 To Verdict fees, . ' fcO 0 To Ex«ner aU-d taxes received, 10 84 t'u Fines recel ved from Justice Sbryock, 8 CO To umoudt ved for old slate, 191 76 foamo tut received for old hose, 125 To Interest received on outstanding taxes, ; ' 204 2u Toamount received for Huckster Li censes, , ' 281 84 To 4 -per cent.of Treasurer's commission on State lax, 42k.H By amt. paid'for correcting • Assessment, 6680 07 By amt. paid for registering • voters, 7G5 na : 81.451 69 Bridges and Roads, By amt. paid for new bridges, $8,638 OS By amt. nalrt for repairing old bridges. 4,530 40 By amonnt paid for road damages 885 00 By amt. paid tor road view ers, 70 ao By amt. paid witnesses In Commonwealth. $1,185 88 By amt, paid for Grand „ Jurors 550 ll By amt. paid for Traverse Jurors. 4,170 fo By amt-, paid for Boarding Jurors. 857 oq By amt. paid for Court Crier, 93 (0 By arat. nald for Jury Com missioners, 12010 By amt. naid for District Attorney's fees, 642 PO 57,042 05 By amt. paid Ben* Duke. Auditor. $25 00 By amt, paid 8. Blxler. * Clerk’s fees, 511 03 By.amt. paid J. P. Brlndlo, Prolh’y fees. 00 71 By amt. <lald J. p. Brihdle for copying docket. 00 00 By amt. paid J Loudtu, for * ' dockets, 105 25 BBOl 63 Commissioners' Office, By amt. paid J. London and : others, stationary, - $9O 00 By am'trpald for pontage, 23 47 By amt, paid A. F, Mi ck, services as- Coinm’r. 40 00 Byaint paid M. O. Hale, services oh Comm’r, 470 00 By amt, paid Allen Floyd, services as Oomra’r. 610 00 By amt. paid John Harris, nervleesas Coinm'r, 678 00 By amt. pold J. Armstrong, Clerk. 800 00 By omt.paldM.O. Herman, Attorney, 125 00 CAUCASIAN, By amt. Constables* fees In Commonwealth coses. 8106 02 By amt. paid Constables’ for quarterly returns, 856 45 By amt. paid Election offi cers tor Spring Elee’n, 8639 00 By amt paid Election Offi cers for Gone’lEloo’n, 800 60 Inquests. By amt. paid for Inquests on dead bodies, 1 gg Jail and Eastern Penitentiary, • By amt. paid J. O. Thomp son. for nuppurt of Prisoners. Ae, $9 (VM QJ By amt. raid for fuel, i,U3 78 By amt. paid for repair* Ing fixtures, By arat paid for stAble rent, By amt paid "for furniture, . bedding, An. 80 00 By amt paid for shoes and clothing. SO 03 By amt paid for B*4 and, water. . <OO oo By amt. paid for salary/*- 7 keeper, - By amt, . f „ My «'^ v mWfiSyJ fc Ia By- CARLISLE, PA., DESORIPTION S -FARM BELLS, Total Debits, SllB 103 61 CR. BY PAYMENTS. Assessors' Pay, $14,042 71 Courts , County Offices. #2,741 63 Cnnstabtes 9 ‘Fees . Flections , 81.638 60 40 00 12 60 "* I JP A Ml"Slonurv wi I Will semi Wo w m?BS 8* J F«b, 8, laro-iw Roy. FOf ' n • • Jem coco Nelb asbertstwentß. Justices' Fees. Bv amt. paid for Justices* * foes in Coin, <%»es, * Loans and Interest. By amt. paid for Interest,on limns. Poor House, By unit, paid estimate lor l.siiy, , dltoooivi By nnil. pulcl Directors’ ’ v ■ . salaries. By amt paid for visitors’ salaries. By amU paid for now build* lug, Public Buildings, By amt.pald for repairs at By amt. paid for repairs at Courthouse, Public Printing, By amt. paid A. K. Rheoin, ' #2l m By am - paid Rheom «k Dun- w har,- 100 % By am». paid Weakley 4 ** Wallace, 7? By amt.' paid Bratton «& Kennedy. By amt. paid R. J. Coffey, Payments, By amt paid County Audi t rs, 8117 00 By nmt. paid Teachers’ County Institute, 200 00 By amt. pa d Agricultural - Society. » By unit, paid Commission ers’ travel’g expenses, By amt. paid keeper Town Clock, - -50 00 By amt, .paid KoAmded tuxes,. 39 42 ByamU Tald for Gas and ' Water Court Hoube, 88 76 By amt. paid for labor, 4912 By amt. paid for soap, can* dies,'brushes, «ac.. . 10 09 Total amt. of Commissioners' ordw*, By Treasurer's Commielbn- • on same at 1% pet cent., 81,471 n By Qtate tax paid to State Treasurer os per re ceipt, By Trensurer's Commission ' on some at 6 percent. By Treasurer's i ;omm Ission forcolleotlng County tax at 3 per cent. 1373 (n By Exonerations allowed ’ Collectors, 1,413 97 By Commission allowed . Collectors, J. 040 01 By Commission on Huckster licenses, 14 00 By Outstanding .taxes, 6,13)2 49 By nmt. of Balance in bands of Treasurer, Total Credits, Total Debits, STATEMENT OF OUTSTANDING TAXI TUEjBt DAY OF JANUARY, IWD. Collectors, Years, Boro's, and 2Vpj, John Reeser, 186 J, Monroe, M P.Smyser, 18»0.-- Lower Allen. James w idnor, IWJ7. W. W. Carlisle, Charles Smith, “ HlWer Spring, C. P. Sanno, . 1808. • E. W. Carlisle, . John Keefanver, *• Dlolclnson, John Zlnn, “ Penn, .1. H. Caulmon,. " S. Middleton. ‘A. J. elsh, Dep. Ibo 9. E. W. Carlisle, R. Line, ** W. W. Carlisle, E. Line, Dep. “ , Dlrklnran, A. Coble, Joseph Wolf, A Dale, “ Wm. Ilgonfrit/., tf (len. Henry “ JoHpph Darr, . “ Wm* Bughraan, W. J. Kinor, “ J. A Baugher, “ Penn t W. A. Heed, “ ' Silver Spring, J, Seavers, “ Southampton. K. Uoch, ** Shippenaburg We, the Commissioners of ('umherlai ty, do certify and submit the foremilng reel statement o: the receipts and expi of said County, Iroih the Ist day ul Jh the dlstday of December, IM9 iiichiulv schedule of Out-tandlug taxes In theJ and Townships thereto stated. i* -.•> ■. Witnessour.hand*and p J l, b. > flee at - Carlisle, the tbth i' — January, h>7o, - ■' • M.o.HaL ALLEN FL . JOHN HAI Comm Attest. J. ARMSTRONG, Clerk. We. the'Auditors of Cumberland con “acc' rdtng to law, and having been hvi oeedeJ to examine the accounts and voi C. Melilnger. Esq.,Treasurer ormild com . t ho Ist day of January ■, to th*- Hist d >y «l ber, BHU. fnctos* e„di» certify t. at ve j sum of six four -K*ii.aj*a'un leeu dMiars and twelve cents, due Treasurer to the County nioresuld.BK wll by the foregoing exhlb t of said accoimi In witness whereof we have hereuntfl bands at Carlisle, uic 20th day of Januai ELIAB JIuUN JOHN ttEBSi O. V.KELLEI Feb. 3,1870—1 t. "Yy ANTED AGENTH! m TO W PER il Everywhere, male and female, tolntrodc Genuine Improved (J-wmon to FAMILY bEVVING MACHI This Machine will etich, bem, fell, it cord, bind, braid anidembroider in an riur manner. PRICE ONLY 18 DOUAI Fully Wat ranted lor Five Ykb We will pay $l,OOO for any machine lb sew a stronger, more beautiful, or more seam than ours. It makes toe “ELASTIC LOCK STITCH. Every second stitch can be cot.nmltt cloth cannot bo p .lied apart without ter We pay Agents Horn $ « to 82GJ PCVmput expenses, «>r a. comnnswoti-rrOin Whlci that amount can be made, Address, SECOMB A Pittsburg, Fa., Boston, Moss., ortat, Lf.i CAUTION.—Beware of t an Agents sell; chines under the same name as our* they can show a Certificate of Agency trig us: We shall not hold omselves nwpou worthless Machines sold by other par and shall prosecute all parlies ellhc fng or using Machlnes under this n tbo mlt extent of the law, unless such Mi were obtained from us « y our Agents, belmposed Upon by parties who oupf< vert iseraents and circulars and olfei tn Machines at a less price. Feb. 3,1M0-4W ' Dr. A. L. BCOVILL. lathe mve several medical pi eparattons wbV become very popular, and have been Ii used.• Among his inventonsare “ Half'i for the lungs” and ‘‘Liverwort and "cc be past six years nobettor lung|remof lyt otfered to the public. Read the folic.,win from Dr. SCOVILL referring to it; Messrs. J. U. HARRIS & CO., OeitU;— l mako ‘ the stntemen I from aperlecfconvlctl edge ofthe lenefllaot Ai.l.EN> • i.UN BAM in caring the raoßtileep*sev ted I*" 1 (loiiHUinpllon I I have witnessed Itseff the young and on the old. and 1 (nil)’* 1 -' ishy furthebestexpeetornntreu icxly* ll ' lam acquainted For coughs. amialM stages'of • -ung.complaints. I. t .glieve IJ certain cure, and If every faro ,ny would by them ready to administer tn.oDih pl Eenrxnce of disease about the iun^ ~|P[ o very few cases of fatal coo. auiuyilou. os t t o phixktm uDd mutt«r tu tatmg those -delicate. org» ns nlie lup without producing conatips .Don of theß gives strength to % he system,si nlght-swcats, and (m.aagas n l the ru-tf orations to a health- * stale. Yours reapeohrolly, h. SCO' Bold by all Me dlolne Dealers, Feb. 8, IMO— iv. s . , , _ BOOK! \J FUR Paris by Sum. • Gasligh A Work descriptive of tiie M TUBS. VICKS. rtPLENDORS the CITY OP HAIIIR. It tells how has beconv mnstbeuuUfU) mty in the wort tyand Hplenc'ior are purchased j.f Misery an d Suffering; how’ 'dieti by Prr,fenBlonol Advent! ami Vico arm*in*urm In il how the ’inostFearluiCriraeKat concealed; how money Is ►qui luxury*; and contains ovei iwi noted Vinces, Life and* Scenes l wanUjd. CanvaHHlng Rooks set NATIONAL PURI F*eb. 3. 1870—4 w P> #623 47 QBE AT CHA AGENTS WANT) 81,000 per year syre made le ■ ale, Helling onr xmrlcf-renou lotting White Wire Clothes Lin> bfBt clothes lines in O*o worh font, and will laai-abuniliyd, the Hudson Hivtr Wire r0.,75 1U Deurlmrn St. i blcogo, 111. Fob. 8, IB7t»—AW FOK DEAFNESS.—T/1 gnnlo Vibrator. Iuf t 8 Into * ob. 8, JB7O— Iff Pr * l/ww^ssr; Ftb. 8, IWU-lw M. a ~ I 't •”00 w 23.174 W ■ 5538 12 1,011 m m » 15100 - id 100 P 0 130 05 9,991 26 643 Balance. “ B. Pennsbor’o,, Hampden, Meclmnlcstmrg, Middlesex, Mlffllu, , Monroe,- Kewton, N. Middleton, The that flou ,wer niaj
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