A , 11141i.f,113 , 1 ' $,4131.31t0T. czs • ' CARLISLE, f’A., rtnirftdny Wonilncr, Slarcli 17. IR7O. *»noCEEDIN«* OF THE DEnOCRATIC' COUNTY COMMITTEE. At a mcellnc of tlic Standing Committee, hold im Tuesday, February 22, IS7D, the 'following Preamble and Resolutions wore unanimously adopted; On motion ll was Kcsolvcil, Thai In the opinion of this Commit tee a change should he made in the manner of nominating candidates for olllce In this county, that thosystem known as the “ Crawford Coun ty system” Is injurious to tho Interests of tho party; that It should bo done away with, and. tho following system adopted In its stead : DELEGATE ok conventional system. Conventions shall bo composed of two dele gates at largo from each township, borough or ward, and au additional delegate for every one hundred Democratic voters or fractional part thereof over se.vouty-ilve; the vote of the last general election lor Stale ollloors precedlngsneh convention being taken as the basis for said representation. . . Candidates for olllce shall he nominated by the delegates composing said convention. Conventions sb til sit with open doois; dele gates shall vole iwc;" all voles shall bo recorded, and a majority of all votes cast by the delegates shall ho necessary for a nomination. Delegates shall not bo bound to selecl eandl ilates irom those who may oiler themselves, hut •diall select such men as are best qualitled to 1114 the different olllcos. Nominees lor Congress, State Senate, or the Legislature shall, upon tin; request oiwle.Stand ing Committee through their Chairman, detine their positions. The delegates from the dlllorent distrietsshall name as many members.of the standing Com mittee ns the district Is entitled to delegates. That the members of the Standing Committee In each township, borough or wuul, shall ap point one person In each school district ot said township, borough or ward, for tho pm pose of forming a township, borough or ward comm it tee, whose duty shall be to make out a list of all the voters of said township, borough or waul, It) not*; all changes and at all elections to attend to get ting out the'vole of tho party. That an election for or against the adopt-hm of the above resolutions be held on the :id Satur day of March, between the hours of - and 7,1*. M.,at the usual places of holding delegate elec tions, and the members of the .standing Com mittee shall act as, or appoint the olheeis of said election. LJv order oflhe St a inline Committee. ALL. H. ADDAM-S. iScrn tory pro. (rnK : Should the above “Delegate m- Conventional System” bo adopted,' the soveml townships and wards will bo represented as follows In tho next Comity convention: - DISTRICTS. Carlisle, Hast Ward, “ West “ South Middleton, North “ Fnuikford, Newvllle Borough, Mimin, Hopewell, Nowhurg. Shlppeiisburg Borough, township, Southampton Newton, Penn. Dickinson,- .Middlesex, Sihyr Spring, Monroe, Mechanlcsburg, North Ward South Last Pcnusl•*•- words—v i'o i«: cm I in :h \’n 'fo no‘ } iirrj nf R-Oui 6 i r' by *.h'. : .i\'>u ‘?j.Ct of bril-. I c-‘.:n do noUano for j/ou. - :V,v minur-ef- rejection. and after i.v;ni r '.vej^ne'iCa:'.< - word', pru-y edKl a; one* to Ro:c with the ■■o restore hire to hie throne i-tr-t'h mil lion 'lollan. The mot J-y voe paid down «nd the bargain cr.nr-jtnnjaM-d. MEE Ptolem (laughur. Bc-rc-aie-' ■- e .’de- Lad iDOumwi ;he Egyptian ihronf-afu-r 'Lct fa:her’r and h«*r gree magniff _ and rreri?t3 'de— prot-ee jwi to aj-no : /r aod negroes in power, five O/oo* -c-h siiucii hr it c.O‘i under Ihr- J J o!k f l'l<:Tco arj -v;j,o'*viva ft/a r JooJf at !ho.-o o&*nioJJkU'i y, bfi'J Hr V. VOJJfrOI VO-» a a.- Are we to I •fr- r. ‘,l •• osi: vfaA of ohast." Undei* tho above gpption our neigh bors of tho JJcrald, and indeed all tho Radical papers of tho country, arc pub-, lishing what purports to be a resume of tho doings of tiie .Grant administration for one (the lirsl) year. To the man not posted in thoaflidrs- of government, tins’ resume looks plausible—favorable to tho smoker of' the White House. But, lebtis examine it a little, and then, after having done so, decide whether Grant is entitled to credit or censure. It is asserted that during tho first year of Grant’s administration,, some eighty seven millions of dollars of the public debt has |>cen paid. .This is not true; but, for tho sake of argument, lei us, for the present, admit the cancellation of ttyis amount of debt. The question tho people are interested in—tho question 'they want answered is this— how much money was paid into the Treasury duriny the first yeur.pf Grands administration ? It is very easy fora man to pay;hisdebts When his income far exceeds Ins neces sary expenses. We learn, then, from official documents, that'during tho “one year of Grant”—from March, 18(10, to March, IS7o—the income of the Govern ment was nearly four hundred millions of dollars , as follows : . From customs. “ revenue, “ other sources. Crand total, ■'S-UM.ItfH.tT.S 82 Of this amount, according to tho Rad ical organs and the published account of the Secretary of the Treasury, only $87,184,782 84 was applied to the pay ment of the national debt, showing that the enormous sum of T/liIEK HUN DRED AND S.EVEN 1 MILLION, Bight hundred and twen ty-four, THOUSAND, - TIIR E E HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN DOL LARS AND THIRTY-FOUR CTS. hare been rqiiandcrceUiyl/icculmimstralion of President Grant in one year, in ;i lime of peace, and under pledges of economy retrenchment! Thus, to run the .Government for one year, under tho blunderer Grant, costs the people 8307,- 82-1,310 31 !! 5 & lire '= oj Jf &■£! a I ;V)i, 5 . .212 I. V 2- 5 na. IfrO- v in”, a But it is not true that the debt iias been decreased. It has been augment ed. tlio debt is made,to appear by'■'the adroit manipulation of '.figures j h>;Ußecretavy Bouhvell. lie mixes'Up tilings purposely, so that a Philadelphia lawyer cannot understand them ! Wo have been watching Bout well’s figures for some months, and we have arriwod at the conclusion that the debt, instead of being reduced in the past year under Grant, some eighty-se ven million of dollars* has actually been increased over jifly-ltco millions, as will be discovered when a true settlement once, if ever, takes place. In the first place, under the preceding, administration, the Pacific Railroad Bonds were always included and esti mated as a part of the public’deUt. Mr. Boutwell’s figures throw, them out, over sixty-five millions,) and claim that they at once have reduced the debt thus much. As tire indebtedness remains, it is ridiculous uonsen-e to make such a claim. .Lot them bo first paid off. The grand indebtedness on the Ist of March, 1 when the present adminis tration came into power, and on’the Ist March, Wo, after a year of reel ucl ions, Porn T.t-.ucujcm? ti... 0.„.a.. lie a .WV&. > 11,71 11 131 i;e 3 lie a iia a issued to the pacific railroad companies, was as fu’lows: Tutal iU-1. for ,/r/.o_ ’f, Ptolemv, fj.-v. .M .r -h I.‘l-T>l. J ..Ull dre, p-U March 1, 1-0. Now. what we have suited aro/p-G— -facts that will not..cannot be controvert ed. It ir evident, then,That ‘‘oneyear of Omni" bar not been-a profitable year to the country. L-'enf.-rone creed Again, the Radical?, in their attempt to eulugi-e tjie poor nonentity Grant, always refer to the administration of Johnson, as having been extravagant, but they omit to state that Mr. Johnson was not permitted to dismiss no! oriously incompetent and corrupt officials, who were retained in office, in spite of his remon-trance. by the temire-of-oiiice law. He wa- not permitted, as Grant is. to =ell si,dps, arms and munitions of war at ids pleasure, and to retrench expenditures by the wholesale dismissal of superfluous The income, of the govorn.mentccwfts nearly s27,iiun,obo a year" less under President Johnson than it is under President Grant. Bear that in mind. •«r and =j»!en- Oh, ye people, look at these things, is it possible fur you longer to bo de ceived? Du you not see that the corrupt imbeciles in power are squandering your moans, and using them for party purposes? We have no desire to mis represent—no desire to over-color our .statements. We are dealing in facts, and we appeal to men of sense, of all parlies, to investigate for themselves, and they will tind, as wo have found, that the “ one year of Grant”—with the immense revenucs-of the country flow ing into the Treasury, and the burthen some taxes on the people—has been a year of profligacy and blundering. rno .m iiiirjinis ptiiuoMuii By dir.rgion of the President, the un executed portion of the sentences of Thus. Brown and Alfred Brown, colored, who were condemned by'a inililary■comniis sinn to imprisonment for the term -of their natural lives, has been remitted, ami the prisoners will he released from confinement in the Slate-Prison at Con cord, New Hampshire. These men were convicted in June, ISU.'i.jif Ur. murder, at Milwood, Clark county, Va.,of Addison 'Purer.— Washington Inter, .I lurch 1?. n is a great matter lobe “colored” now-a-days. A Jew weeks ago a vil lainous negro in Virginia, who had committed an outrage upon a beautiful and accomplished white girl, and who had been sentenced to te,n years in the penitentiary, was set free by a carpet bag judge of a higher court, without ■ one particle of excuse. And now we see Grant turning loose upon the eom ihunily two desperate black lieuds wlio had committed a bold and brutal mur der. Xegroe-, ean do as they please— murder, rape and si cal—for Grant and bis carpel-bag judges are ever ready to remit sentences, ft is time for K. K’s to organize in every State. “Fauci-; oi- tut. Dt;vrr,s.”—That was a slashing editorial in the last Ship pensburg ,Sentinel, under the above cap lion ; at least Brick.Pomeroy considered it such when he wrote it for Ids Now York Dnnaeml. The article condemn ed dralin;/. .See” Pomeroy’s Democrat,” March !). It will be fun for tins Democrats to watch the black and while niggers vot ing together next fall. 5 l7H.il*,rl.TiU 8-*) i7-vn7.ni ot :19,5113,2m In Tr-.n- i, In Tr.-a Mar-.h !, 1.-o L’l «• EnVAIiITT.” Under tho above caption tho Wash ington correspondontof Forney’s Press, mentions tho fact that the admission of the negro Revels as a member of tho United States Senate, has had an ellcct In Washington negro circles. Tito ne groes now demand that their children be admitted to the schools heretofore composed of white children. There are twice the number of colored schools in Washington that ihereatewbileschools, and tho colored schools arc not as full of pupils as the while schools. The teach ers in the Washington colored schools, 100, a»*e tho best that Massachusetts can ailbrd. There Is no excuse whatever, therefore, for the negroes demanding, admission to the while schools. But they not only demand, admission, but their demands are recognized and grant ed by tho black-and-tan School Direc tors of Washington city. V During'tho last week,” says this Washington correspondent, “siy colored children to each school have taken their seals in the while, schools.’” A few months ago this “equality” experiment was introduced into tho white schools of Washington for the first time. One “colored pupil” was foisted into each school, as a feeler. The white children mutinied, and their parents withdrew them from the schools. .Now “ six colored, children to each school have taken their seals in the white; schools.” Thisj correspondent adds: “ lit is a favorable symptom that sev eral ...of Ibe white parents who ordered their children out of the schools in Jan uary last-, because one colored scholar was Introduced, have applied to the School Board to re-admil their children into the schools.” “A favorable symptom,” says (his correspondent of Jorney’s Press, What sublime impudence! Arc,the poor peo ple—those who cannot afford to cduVatc their children at thph’ own expense—to be compelled to send them Jo school where negro children arc forced into, their company” Let us see! Would Mr. Forney,thoadvoeatbofthis “c’.pial ity,” compel /its children to attend a hlack-and-tan.school? Would Wir-on, Banks, Sumner, Cameron and thcotlißt, Radical leaders send their children to a school where negroes are scholars’? Xo, they would not. .These men’ are rich, and can afford to send their chil dren to private schools. But the poor man, and the poor widow, who lost her llusljntid i\v the* svrtv wtvr -nrWic.il V its waged that Revels might occupy a seat in (lie Senate—must send their children to a,hlack-and-tan school, or-to none. It is a “ favorable symptom” that some of the white children who had been ta ken out of the schools, have relurned to them, say the negro equality advocates. Wo see no symptom about it, except that tlie parents of those children arc compelled from poverty to submit to the demands of the negroes. They dis covered that they were not able to send tin if children to private schools, and, therefore, rather than see them grow up uneducated, they, send them to, the mixed school-. 'Phis action of the Radicals, .who have charge of the Washington schools, is another evidence of the contempt they feel for poor whites. “Down with- the poor white man, up with the negro, and make him the coming man," appear to be the watch word- of Radicals. And yet we sec poor wn ito men conn ram ro support this party and to vote for its candidates ? Is this fanaticism, or what is it? AX ISF.DIIIUS I,Ij: In the United States Senate, last week, Senator Cameron of this State, said in his place that “ho believed the tide of war would have gone against us, had not 200,000 negroes come to the res cue.” We were about to reply to this most atrocious assertion of Cameron, when the following article from -tho Ddyles town Democrat, met our eye. The edi ytorof tho ffDffldOCi'at is our valncdTrlcmi,' General W. W.' H. Davis, who was in the war and commanded a regiment for four long years. Ho was twice severely wounded, and is now minus a hand and two rills. Gen. Davis then, lias a right to speak in reply to Cameron— more right than wo have—ajid we give . his reply, asdic publishes it in hds able •paper, the Doylestown Democrat. Gen. Davis says; “As Ah ex-officer of tho war wo deny tho truth of Cameron’s assertion. The back-hone of the rebellion was broken before a negro was put into tho field. Not a -ingle victory ofthe war was won by negro troops ; nor wore they engaged in any successful enterprise that would nut have been equally successful with out thorn. It is not complimentary to .(lie 2,OUU,Oi(U white troops to be told that they and their cause were saved by I lie nogroe-; nor is it to the credit of the country to have it said that (wentv mil lions could not whip ton millions,"with out-calling upon theslavcs of the latter to help. Mr. Cameron’s statement would ho highly creditable to the South if correct; hut it is ftilsc, false in -every particular. The negroes never fought a successful battle during the war. They are not lighting nlbn, and Cam eron knows it.” . • I Dma i> It—Wo mean the communiea-, tion on our first page, signed “ Ferret.” It is tiro production of uh earnest and intelligent young Democrat, tylio, in common wit'll every far-seeing man of the party, is alarmed at the attempts of a few restless spirits to make a pack horse of the party to subserve their own sollisli ends. Read his strictures care fully, wo say, and then, on Saturday nmxt, attend the meetings appointed by the County Committee, and vote tho ticket which reads “ Against the Dele gate System. We also direct attention to tho com; mmiipalion of “ Candor,” on tho same page, on the same.subject. It is from a Silver Spring man, who has voted (lie Democratic ticket some twenty-five years. His views are sensible, to tho point, and deserve attention. The cadetship committee had under consideration the other day, the ease of honed John Covodo, of this State. After establishing tho fact that honest John had appointed a non-resident of his dis trict, tho committee dropped him. The reason-for leaving Dim down so easy, it is said, is, that Do may have gorged some of his ill-gotten gain tosomooftlie committee. This is the same John Covode who acted as chairman of tlie Republican Stale Central Committee during the late election. A bog was killed at Springlleld, Illi- nois, the other day, that had in its sto mach thirty nails, half n saw, one file and a suspender buckle. That hog was a thief, and in politics a Radical. THE RINGS I THE RINGS I Wo liavo in this country, regularly ollicercd and organized, the gold ring, (with Grant and Ids wife and brother in-law Corbin as members,) the whiskey ring, the Congressional lobby ring, tho cheat-the-Indians ring, tho negro equal ity ring, the carpet baggers, ring, and a dozen other rings not necessary to men tion. All these rings or organizations are tho legitimato“oll'siiring of Radio'd-, ism, and they work separately or to gether as circumstances demand. Tho object for which tho rings contend is robbery—tho enriching of the members at the expense of the public treasury. Look at our country—watch tho hun gry vultures who protend to bo its guardians. Grant and his wife specu lating in gold; members of Congress receiving bribes; Indian agents giving whiskey to tho Indians, for the purpose of getting up a fight; carpet ha'.Gov ernors and State Treasurers stealing the monies of the over-taxed p'oplo ; revenue oflicers running oil daily, car rying with them the money they had collected; negro murderers pardoned by tho President; army ■ swindlers; wholesale robberies; swindling, plun dering and peculation the order of the day, and debauchery in all tho public otllces. No wonder that the-loaders of the Radical negro party are appealed to by Forney and other leading editors not to tell tales out ol school. Oh, how co hesive tho power of public plunder! Tlie Bale of t’mle(slii|is. The sale of cadetships, by members of Congress is essentially wrong, and the offence, whether committed by a Re publican or :v is equally ccn. siira'ble. Nor dobs it make the slightest difference in the bascn'cssoftilepractice, whether it has endured for one year or for twenty. The discovery, at least, is recent, and pnhiic condemnation of so gvav and gross an abuse of official patroiiagc slioidd he without extenu ation, cither in respect of persons or the time ofils continuance. The strangest fact of all, however, is, that,, persons deemed tit to hold seats in the Nation 'ttl-r.egislatnro should not only commit .actsso manifestly iniquitous, but coolly .declare that they thought them .'quite innocent and unexceptionable. The right of a Representative to nominate a cadet, cither at Annapolis or West Point, is n sacred trust, to be exorcised on behalf, lirst, of his.immediate con stituents, and, secondly, the nation at largo. It is, therefore, not the personal property of any Congressman, which he may set up in market and sell to any purchaser for the best price he can get. Yet Whittemore, and Dowces, and Golladay, seem to have hawked openly their appointments about the streets of Washington and sold them for various sums ranging from $5OO to 11,500. ' Nothing could more strikingly show the very low character ol the men who arc now being sent to Con gress. Rather than bo thought knaves, they have confessed themselves to bo fools. Hoping to escape the infamy of selling cadetships, with knowledge of the crime, they have willingly incurred (lie hardly loss odious reproach of selling them in the belief that they were doing nothing that was either dishonest or dishonorable. Even after finding nut that. -they,Jiad, committed,ai_.ver’v-- base action, Dowees and Whittemore sought to excuse themselves by saying that they had spent the money in carrying elections for tho Republican party in their districts. These men are either groat rascals and liars, or they are tho most remarkable brace of moral idiots we have ever mot with. They certainly whnt either (lie brains or the virtue, probably both, to fit them for the office they have disgraced, and but for the votes of negroes, wo doubt if (hoy would ever have got into Congress. They must tie accepted as samples of "the kind-of Representatives negro suff rage.is. to.fiirijislnnnd the:N.or.th.will, in. due time, share tho evil and tho shame of it with tho South. The Bill to Pcxisti “Baggage Smashers.” —We are indebted to our member of the House, Mr. Leidig, fora copy of the bill providing for the pun iuKmout of’ “Unjrpr ai r e ..smashers.” This bill hris been signed by Governor GeaFy,. and is therefore*a law : A.v ACT to prevent the injury or destruc tion of baoyage ivitfdn the limits of the State of Pennsylvania. Section* 1, Be it enacted by the Senate ami House of Representatives of the Common wealth of Pennsylvania in Gen eral Assembly met and it is hereby enac ted by the authority of the same'; That any bnppratre master, express agent, stage driver, hackman, or other person whose duty it is to handle, remove or lake care of the baggage of passengers, who shall wilfully or recklessly injure or destroy any trunk, valise, box, package or parcel w,bile loading, transporting, unloading, delivering or storing the same, shall be guilty of misdemeanor, and on conviction thereof shall be sentenced to pay a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars. What is Congress doing—is there any thing'done- to relieve the distro-srs of the country ? is so frequently asked by the tillers of the S'il in our locality, that We deem it our duty thus to answer one and all. Nothing whatever. The nigger under the wood-pile is yet in the mouth of every Radical. Reconstruc tion, negro now, negro then, negro al ways. The negro and the spoils of of fice areall that engrosses their attention.. It is asserted by documentary evi dence that it costs the Government precisely $27 50 to collect $1 of revenue in that delightful! locality, Alaska, which has been added to our country at a cost of upwards of seven millions in gold during Radical rule. This is evidently an economical administra tion. In the libel suit of Armstrong, an ox re'presen(alive from Lancaster county, against Father Abraham, a radical .paper of that same “moral vineyard,” for charging him with swearing into his pocket more miliage, as a member of the house, than belonged to him, the arbitrators returned a verdict of “no cause for action.” You can’t got ahead of old Coelti.vK. After stealing all the spoons ho could got down South and elsewhere else, ho has at Inst stolon a march on his Radi cal cotemporaries and got himself nomi nated for the presidency by a nigger meeting. Bully Beast Butpeu ! Half a million dollars’ worth of cot ton is said to bo lying in the Helds of thoregon tributary to Memphis, which cannot bo picked for want of labor, Gold continues at SII2J. STATE ITEMS. —Ladies'in Norristown arc knocked down nyd robbed in tho streets. —The Pennsylvania Veteran' Volun teer Cavalry will hold a reunion in Har risburg on the 10th lust. —Tlio people of Danville who have just been furnished wltlf a new Court ’House, now want a n.ow Jail. —Contracts hove recently been made for tho erection of an opera house at Scranton, to cost $lOO,OOO. —Hester Wilmor.wns murdered by her husband, in Philadelphia, on Wednes day night. She interfered with bis beat ing a child. He was arrested. —An employee on the Lehigh Valley Railroad by tho napio of John Tyler was killed while coupling cars at 311 Carmel qu Friday last. . , ... —A terrible accident occurred at Scran" ton last week The holler in Dickson’s rolling mill exploded killing nine per sons and wounding seventeen others. —lt is alleged that an uncommon amount of gas is consumed at tho State House. But it must ho remembered that during every scssiou of tho legislature there is an uncommon supply.— Patriot. —Tho Reading Ear/lo says that the county prison of Lancaster is a rival of Andersonville, that themrisonors are na ked, dirty, and freezing, and tho institu tion generally in a wretched condition; This, it-will be remembered, is a Radical “shebang.” —On last Wednesday,- a young man named,Fellon, of Somerset comity, was crushed to death by a bank of falling earth, while at work on the Railroad near Southampton Mills. —Thomas White, while hauling ice, in Montgomery county, fell from his wa gon, which passed over his neck, killing him instantly. —Adam Ward, a cripple, who had lost a leg daring the war, fell down an em bankment hear Mauch Chunk, mid "Was not discovered until the next morning,' when lie was frozen stilt. —ln Lancaster they chain tho “bum mers” together and make them work on tlie streets. Tho plan might work welt here. —The dwelling house of John Michaels about two miles north of Orrstown, was entirely destroyed by lire, week before last. The family wereabseut from home, and the entire contents of tho dwelling consumed., —Henry Maag was run over by a train mi the Reading railroad, at Henry Clay Furnace in Reading,- last week, and in stantly killed. —Mr. Franklin B. Gowan has lately been re-elected. President Of tho Reading Railroad Company, aud his salary .in creased to 830,000 peT year. In consider ation thereof lie is to relinquish his law practice and devote himself exclusively to the interests of the Railroad. His yearly income from his profession is said to have amounted to 832,000. —Helen Eckert, well known as the fat girl of Easton, died on Sunday week.— She was eighteen years of age and had been confined to the house for the past .two or three j cars. In early lifoshe was on exhibition, and traveled under charge of Col. Wood, now proprietor of Wood’s Museum, ill Chicago. She was for a time engaged with Barnnm, in Now York. At the time of her death she weighed 500 pounds. —A resolution has been introduced in to tlie House of Representatives at Har risburg, appointing a committee, consis ting of tlie Governor, Auditor General aud Attorney General, to lay before Con gress the claims of the citizens of York, Cumberland, Perry, Franklin, Fulton, Adams, and Bedford counties, for dama ges sustuind by the rebel raid in 1803. ‘ m —lt is rumored in Harrisburg that Gov ernor Major General John W. Geary was recently invited to address the children of a Public School, and in alluding to Washington’s Birthday, put the follow ing question : “Now, boys, why should wo celebrate Washington’s Birthday any more than ¥ii tho midst, of profound silence-nTlTi tle fellow at the foot of the class rose.and replied : “Because ins never told a lie.” — l The Scranton Democrat of the 2d inst. reports the commission of an nttro cious and brutal act by two human fiends upon the person of a crjppled and help less woman. * The names of the brutal vlllians are William Ferguson and Thos. Stanton. One would stand aud hold the aged, crippled and infirm husband, with a gleaming knife upraised, threatening death if he resisted, while the other was satisfying his hellish lust upon the crip pled, helpless wife, and tho fiendish, di abolical act was perpetrated by each brute some three or four times upon the faint ing, prostrated victim. * . PERSONAL —-They have a colored female law stu dent at Harvard. • —The health of McFarland, who killed Richardson, lias been greatly impaired since his confinement. —The'Birmingham Post asserts that tenders of a peerage or baronetcy have .been mtulo to Charles-XMcltona. —Tiro Prince Imperial receives a lesson in fencing every morning, at which- the Emperor often assists. , o' —Louisville, Ky., ling a Gen. Jackson wiio is called “Muthvnll” to distinguish him from “Stonjpvnll,” —President Eoye, of the Republic of Liberia, is a pure-blooded Ohio African, and a graduate of Oberiin College. —Roche fort's friends arc alarmed about him. It is said that lie is seriously ill.— This is coupled with the story that small pox is raging in the prison. —“Well,” said Dougins .Terroid to the collector of a fund in behalf of a suflering friend, “how much does want this time?” “Wiiy just fourand two noughts will, I think put' him straight,” the bear er of the hat replied. “Weil,” said Jer-‘ rold, “put mo down for one of the noughts.” Joseph Wesley Harper, of the firm of Harper and Brothers, died at his resi dence in Brooklyn on the 14th inat., in the 70th year of his age. He was the third of four brothers who founded the house of Harper and Brothers. A few days since, Mr. Francis P. I Blair, ,Sr. and his wife, who have been j married over sixty years, rode on horse : back, to Silver Springs, distant some lif- I teen miles, and returned to Washington j city without dismounting. —Tlio health of Hon. Alexander H Stephens is improving and it is announ ced that he is in excellent' spirits. I lie second volume of his great work, “A Constitutional View of tile War Be tween (lie .States,” is in press, and will soon bo given to the public. —Vielor Hugo Ims got off another of bis insane letters, this time to Rochefort, ns Bins : “You are in prison. X felicitate the revolution on it. .Your poniilnriiy it, as your talent and courage. Ail that I predicted about you is realized. You are henceforth a force of the future: I am as ever, your friend, and I grasp your hand, dear proscript, dear conqueror. ViCTon Hugo.” —A letter dated Darlington, S. C. -March 3, says Mr. Whittemoro was in sulted In the cars on his way to Darlin don, nl, sevi.rid places, and has been burned in efligy in nearly every town in (lie district; but his friends are active, and regard his return to his seat in the House as certain. An enthusiastic tnass nu-eting lias been held at Darlington, in which w-liilo and black men took-part am Mr. WhUtemore’a frank statement of ins ease was received with great an plauso. 1 It is reqorttid by German papers that emigration to the United States next summer will lie larger than in any for mer season A Goon Plan.—Ni black advised Whittemoro as a go- d way to retain Ids neat, to get some Democrat to contest it Tito Radical.cautlhhiU) has boon elec ted Governor of Now Hampshire, hv a majority of about 1200, I .MISCELLANEOUS. —Nevada has snow ten feet deep. —Peach trees are in bloom in Georgia. —North Brookfield, Mass., has a baby with only one ear. —Roasting ears are in market In Texas, while freezing ems nro in fashion hero. —A “ lady school, teacher ” in lowa lias been dismissed for habitual inebrety. —Mormonism, says the London Times, will be extirpated by the Pacific Railroad. —The capilol of' West Virginia is (o bo removed from Wheeling to Charleston. —A clergyman in Hartford is going to preach on chignons' from the text, “The glory of a woman is her hair.” “ Fair Betsey ” is tho name of. an Indian squaw who gets drunk at Omaha and breaks up fuyiiij.ur.c —Sullivan County, Indiana, had a “big tiling” on a petrified snake until they found that it was a root. —Doga paid $2,000 tax in Kentucky Inst year, and killed $5,000 worth of sheep by way of balancing the account. -An Ohio journal prints the names of its delinquent subscribers upside down, as a hint that they ought to settle up. —Henry Heimerlo, of Hudson, New York, committed suicide tho other day, on tlio, eve of his wedding, leaving a note saying “I don’t want to make that girl unhappy.” —Tho Boston papers congratulate a couple upon having just got themselves successfully married after a courtship of twenty-, four.ycars. —The South Carolina member of Con-, gresa who was detected in the cadet traff ic is not a whit more guilty than John Covode. —The.Mormon.niissionariea on Long Island-have “converted” five young aud pretty girls, and .will send them next mouth. —Th© Rhode Island Democratic State Convention is to be held in Providence on Thursday, March 17, to nominate can didates for State officers. —A man whose wife hung herself in his presence, on being asked why he did not prevent the tragedy, replied : “I cut her down three times Jast week, aud I can’t bo always cutting her down.” —Phillipsburgh, N. J., is to have a now physician, amt a woman at that. —Forty- live nice young men already feel bilious, and think they need a little fixing up. —“Did you know,” said a cunning Gentile to a Jew, “that they hang Jews and jackasses together In Portland?” “Indeed!” retorted Solomon, “den it ish -veil dat you and I ish not dere.” —Miss Bollq Stevenson, of-East Sagi naw, Mich., was arrested last week for boldly asserting woman's rights and ap-» poarihg on , tho streets in a complete suit of male attire. —According to the Revolution there is a faro bank on Fourteenth street, Wash ington, kept by a woman, where tho women clerks of the Treasury go to gam ble their salaries away. —A jealous young Cincinnatian, who a few evenings ago climbed upon a'fence to peep into the parlor to see what other gentleman was calling on his betrothed, was mistaken for a burglar. He will never climb that fence again. —Salt Lake, in Utah, is seven feet higher than it was ton years ago, and is constantly rising. It has been urged by those who have paid attention to the sub ject that the rise of water there might produce a solution of the Mormon ques tion before Congress would act upon it. —A man afLowell, Mass., made a provision in his will, that he must be buried in a burglar-proof safe, when he dies, for fear Ben Butler will steal the gold filling out of bis teeth. —A large frame hotel, known as the' National Hall, was totally-destroyed by fire, at Huntingdon, ort Saturday even ing last. The fire is supppsed to have originated from the bursting ofa coal oil lamp. funeral, during the service, said to the chief mourner, “Is it a brother or sister?” Ho received the puzzling answer, “Neither; it is only a cousin.” —A strong-minded woman in Indiana chastised her husband with a kerosene )arnp tho other day. Having forgotten to blow it out-before performing that painful duty, the oil caught Are as the lamp broke over his head, and not only her husband, but the house, was burned np. —The experiment of mixing negroes and whites in the public schools of Loui siana was tried’Monday, in Algiers, op posite Now Orleans. The result was the withdrawal of all the white scholars, leaving the blacks to “go it alone.” OUR WASHINGTON LETTER. More Hcconslrurtion—The Immaculate Covode—Kt/t In Dimmer. Vito—Another J.illlcJob for the Otmc ron’s— Washington Wit—Grant as a'Oirnmtloni.it —Senator Thurman— Mhy ire arc so Had—Kin and Tuck in Louisiana. Correspondence American Volunteer. Washington: Makoii 12,1570. Now that Congress la pretty .well through tho vocouHlrucllon butitucHs, some not ion ofgoingarnuiid thesecom! time and reconstruct Ing them all over again. They have given Geor gia a .second “hitch,” and now Butler Ims prepar ed a bill for the reconstruction of Tennessee. Of course Tennessee was never, theoretically or practically, out of the Union, hut that maken no dlffeieuco to Bailor. Consistency is not one of hisvlrtucs. Of course, too, Tennessee was repre- Kemed In Congress during the whole of tlio re bellion, but that makes no difference to tbb Kadlcal majority, Tennessee Ims become dis loyal—site Ims elected a Democratic Legislature and a Democratic governor, and she must.be re constructed according to “loyal” ideas. A bill has also been prepared to reconstruct Alary land ; and New York, Now Jersey and Kentucky will soon follow. Of course the sub-committee of ihe military committee, sent to Philadelphia to take testi mony in regard to the sale of a cadetship to • young Romaic by “honest” John Covode, lias reported Hint Covode is ns innocent ns a lamb. Tills was wlial the committee were sent there for. Their visit to Mlllward was for the purpose of white washing Covode, It Is true Mlllward testified that lie obtained one thousand'dollars for Covnde’s nomination of young Rcmuk to West Point, but lie declares that he cheated Co vode out of Ids share of tho plunder and pocket ed the thousand dollars himself. Now no man who knows John Covode will believo him to bo so silly ns to let Mlllward got a cadetship out of him without consideration. Millward is un scrupulous. every one admits, but then ho Is no match in cunning or for Covode. If Covode did not make anything out of It, why did he go out of his district to find a cadet. The sensation of the week In social circles hero, has been a report that an army ofllcer, who some time ago married a very beautiful and wealthy Indy of Georgetown, and who was quite prominent In the fashionable and polite world ol tho Capital, Ims literally turned his wife out of the doors by his brutal treatment. Their do mestic infelicities culminated on last Tuesday when, In a drunken debauch, ho metaphorical ly spouse Into the street and locked up In one,nf..thQ,.cUy-banlm iho family—plat-Op whish Is her property and not Ids. Tho outcast, ills said, Ims gone to his friends In Pittsburg' with a protestation that she will never rejoin tlio beast who has cruelly abused her. This va< Hunt son of Mars lias two daughters by a previ ous marriage, who are socially distinguished for their charms of person and mental accomplish ments. The “silver-tongued orator of Iho West,” Sena tor James W. Nye, of Nevada, has como to grief from an Indiscreet purchase of diamonds which ho made In Conslantlnoplo two years rgo, and for which, H Is asserted, lie forgot to settle.’ Ho had a warrant served on him for tho payment of the same, whilst speaking ataltadleat meet ing somewhere In New Hampshire, Inst Monday night.- Tho. Ottoman of whom tho diamonds were purchased had not forgotten tho llttlo transaction, If Ihogullant Senator had. Tlicro Is a nleo llttlo sehemo'of plnndor now beforo the House In the shape of u railroad bill —fortlio construction of a railroad from Ham, more to some point on tho Schuylkill river. It Is culled the nfr line route to New York, and is to ■he constructed without tho consent of tho Peg. Islnturo of Pennsylvania. It Is to ho under (ho oxeluslvojnrlsdleLlon ofthe United Slates courts and Is to bo exempt from nit Slate taxation on freight m'tdnnngo, The Cameron's are Into tho scheme up to their eyes, and that In a snlltelent Indication of the character of the Job. If (hey succeed in establishing the rule that Congress may Inyudo tho slates with ttiolr monopolies- then farewell to nil Slnto rights. If tho people of Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware and Now jorsy get to understand the lull meaning of this contemplated outrage,.yon may look for the to rise hi their might against It. Tho following “on Ms from a morning p At Mrs. Secretary Belknap's reception the other evening, It was remarked that, In- aplto of the crowd, Mr. liobeson had steered his way through. Said a lady, “ I don’t think ho would manage a ship ns well.'’ “Then,” re plied another, “ his Porter could do it for him,” “Why,” somebody asked at a reception a few evenings ago, “ is President Grant's administra tion like an antiquated frylug-pau 7” “ Because it is so full of Dents.” _ It speaks badly for reconstruction 1 that the carpet-baggers engaged In • selling cadetships have loss brains tflian Qrauf, They sold appoint ments and gave tho money fOr partisan and charitable purposes. When Gruntsells appoint ments lie is shrewd enough to keep the 1 money himself. But If It Is fair to expel Whlttomoro, Golladay and Dowccso for bestowing appoint ments to West Point upon young gentlemen whoso fathers had kindly presented the con gressman with 51,500 or $3,000, would it not also bo fair to impeach a President who appoints A. T. Stewart Secretary of tho Treasury, in conside ration of a gift of SOS,QUO; or Borlo Secretary of Navy, In consideration of $lO,OOO in ft brown stouo mansion; and who makes a bargain with /The corrupt Mayor of "Washington to give him. entire control of tho appointments for tho Dis trict, for tho neat little pum of $20,000? Lot Grant bo Impeached, ' Ho deserves It leu times more than over Andrew Johnson did. In fact if all tho Congressmen who are guilty of oven ba ser rascality that that of Whlttomoro, tho great 101 l retailer of cadetships, would . resign, that body would soon bo \vlthout a - quorum. And what a blessing It would bo for the people I Hon. Allen G. Thurman, of Ohio, now takes thd lead on the Democratic side of the Senate.— Hois one of tho iron sort of men. Iron-gray ilnges Ills complexion; his form, 1 though not ovor-tall. Is sinewy, and hla face Is sot and bard. There is not so much light ns force in that man. Ho does not strike, but cuts and presses his way straight through what wo would accomplish.— Ills Virginian birth -Issoon In his thln'muscular ■fonm 'lf tho ne£t fifteen years do not give him good chance to make Ills own plncoln the Demo cratic party, there will bo some, wasted 'Oppor tunity for Mr. Thurman to answer Air. Some people ask, why Is it that there is such fearful immorality in social life at Washington? Thequcstiou can bo readily answered. At balls, theatres and receptions tho'wlves and daugh ters of members of Congress flash in diamonds, laces and gold. The women in lho.departments —many of them very poor, see this and com plain of their hard fate. One Is virtuous in a garret, and yet she knows that fashionable and . oven virtuous people court the mistress of a Senator to gain his iuilucncc. It is any wonder that hero and there one fulls? Honesty and chastity have noshowat Washington. Intrigue and easy virtue arc the winning cards. The ellVontory some of these women of the capltol put on is disgusting. They attempt to defeat scandal by facing it down, and congressmen and cabinet oflicers are,sometimes conspicuously courteous lafemalejs whqso characters are by no ;heans above reproach. ’ islunar' Wlckllfle-ihdlctH.WarjfnDuUi— Uaus li diets WlokfitTe—ftowTjornebOdy Indicts Haus and It remains to say who will Indict the last re maining “scallawng” and “ carpet-bagger, ll when all the rest shall have received their dc* serfs. Ncte SUibwtismentsi. "VTOTICR. —Notice is ‘ hereby given 1\ that the following named person's have til led applications for-Hotel, liquor, Restaurant and Retailers’ Licenses, under the several'Acts of Assembly relating thereto, m the ofllco of the Clerk of the ,Court of Quarter .Sessions of Cum berland county, which said applications will ho presented to said court-on Monday,the Ilth day of April, 1870. ' FIOTELS. 1 Goo. Z. Bontz, Carlisle, East Word. Lewis Faber, “ John Hall. " .Tnoob Thndlum, “ NAY. Woods, Geo, Wetzel, “ 11. li. Burkholder. *' " , “ William Crozler, Dickinson township, James May, East Peanshorough two. Eli George, “ “ “ Jacob Switzer, “ “ <* John Krellzer, Hampden twp. John G. Heck, Lower Allen twp. John T. Sholbly, Middlesex twp. A. L. Harsh. Monroe twp. John Thompson, Mechnnlcsburg. North Wan Isaac Hull, “ J. W. Senders. ", jL&X&gp'w- - ■ • - '» • H. O. Blattenborgor, Newton twp. J. C. Beecher, North Middleton twp. William C. Sharp, Nowburg borough. Chas, Honneberger, Newvlilo borough Gen. Boltzhoover, Newvlilo borough. Elias B. Eyster, i enu twp. Henry & David Hursh, Slilppeusburg hoi'ouc! John Wynkoop, Sr,, ** “ Clemen Grove, “ Sami,.Baughman, Southampton twu. William Clark, “ 1 .. p * David Z. Geyer, Smith Middleton twp Ellen Ilupley, '• “ .« Geo. Filler, '• •• Williams. Mullin'' «■ . .. John 0. Reesei*. Silver Snrina •* J. W. LohUg, , “ “ •• Goo. K. Duoy, " “ u Peter Coeklln, Upper Allen “ Joshua Culp, “ »<■ 1 .i- CU-Vkqf Quarter Sessions CvUrt March 17, 1870. T H UY? BBAT MEmCAL disoote ail. WALKER’S CALIFORNIA VINEGAR BITTERS, n Sr i or «r tll, i U r’* 0 , 0^ 0 bear testimony to their Wonderful Curative Effects, * WHAT ARE „ THEY ? TAEV ARE NOT A VJLE FANCY DRINK Made of Poor Rum, Whiskey, Proof Spirits, and Ivclusc Liquors, doctored, sploed. and sweetened to please the taste, called “Tonics,” “ Annefclr ers, • Restorers,” Ac., that lead the tippleron to drunkeness and ruin, but are a true medicine, nrndo trom the native Roots and Herbs of Cali lornia free fiom all Alcoholic Stimulants Thev are the GREAT RLOOD rUHIPIBU nnd LIFE GIVING PRINCIPLE, a perfect Renovator JSd Imlgorator of the System, carrying off all uni sonous matter, and restoring the blood to a healthy condition. No person can take those unwell accortlln S lO Directions, and remain long SiOliwillho given for an Incurabio case, pro ved the,bones are not destroyed by m noral !I ‘° V »“■ , t WB- nl ll, I m ltlcnt Fevers, Diseases oi Ho J.l , ’ L , [vm - Kidneys, ami Bladder, these liUlcM.s have been most successful. Such iiisens es are caused bv Vitiated Blood, which Is gener- Org-ius° ,IUCe(I by tlomu Boraen t of the Digestive Cleanse the Vitiated’ Blood whenever you find IU Impurities bursting through the skin in Pirn-. J{ C! ?* Lrunltons or Sores* clean'O It when, yon ilrnl It obstructed and sluggish in the veins; cleanse U when ills foul, and your feelings will i ( «, iYi OU rV} lcn * tll ° Idood pure and the health of the system will follow. MN, TAPE, and other WORMS, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are effectual ly destroycdand removed/v .. 1,1 Bilious, Romltlcut.and Intermittent Fevorsi these Bit pus have no equal. For full directions read carehilly the circular around each bottle i^vj;}tu , . Bunses - Knellai *- Gorm “ n - J. WALKER, Proprietor, 32 Commerce St. N Y , R: ii. McDonald a co.. '■ Diijgglsts, and general Agents, Ran Francisco ® *“> Com «?7yi^ RUGQISTB * BE AM®S- CARPETS I CARPTvrsi i . . Fromm & weiseb, CARPET STORE, -Ao. 23 East Main &(eeet, CARLISLE, In tho BENTZ HOTEL. Tho laVgost nucl cheapest assortment of CAUI’ETH, OIL CLOTHS, • MATTINGS, • WINDOW SHADES, LOOKING GLASSES, mat AND CARPET CHAIN,’S always on hand. Wo nrn prepared to furnlHh mm:fianorn with all, grades or Carpets at tho lowest rates, „ 1 , March 17,1 R 70- 8m ™ YSINaER * iiiclu idiibei-tisemenisT 1115 HOOP SKIRTS, 'j'jj; . HOPKIN'S "OWN MAKE." In «U tlxo Now Spring Styles, for r n ,nl and Children; the quality and will recommend Ihenlßolves to ovorr « COIiSETSI UOUSETSI! marked down to gold at par; making 11 ent prices less than they can bo gold declines to that point, and ft) than the price one year ago. Wo In Philadelphia to give silver In chni? customers, ami now take the lend | n Si.?, e to full advantage of the return tonsm£ I . fi ’ advance of the Gold market; which wo.* ly appreciated by all who examine miri b iy low prices. Hoop Skirts, our own 1,1 37. -10, 60.55, CO, TO, 75. 80. 85. 00.05. 8l 0o V^ al Hand.-made Whalebone Corsets n t m $/ 81.00. Ac., to 81.75. Superior French uv®’ sols at 76 c. reduced from $1.00; at «i jiS*' Irom 81.36; at 81.25 reduced from V-w-85.00, -85.00, reduced from 57.00 UjWoriy Corsets at 82.00, reduced f r& Thompson's Glove FUtlpg Corsets,,* dueed from 82.20. Ac. Ac. Mrs. Mni ,L Self-Adjusting Abdominal Corsets mf 1 Hon of 2o cts. to 81.00 per pair, ncconih. ? 1 ty. All older goods proportion?! v E o ' Skirls and Corsets made to order Repaired, Whblesaloaud Kelail-Onfte —Cull or send for descriptive circular & WM. T. lIOPKIXr llw as-5% ■PUUAnsipr March 17,1570—3 m POTATOES. A lino Block of EARLY ROSE rm. wnrrnntoa pure seed, ia 51.50 per busliol ™ por barrel. 1 UUisl ‘Oi,or Any orders through ninll for dellvcrlm. liendcrtvilk Adams Co., March 17,1870-31*. .TIABMERS. —Their Song and C can make money rapidly. soillmr n.. Illustrated palimiSrs’manit.T by Geo. E. Waring, Jr„ Practical Fam', Author, and Into Agricultural Engine” to Central Park. Tho best book for Fntm„ Issued—All need Itbeforo plnntlne it i. labor saving, money making book Thn" ln Ma°fch 17;i870-lw Uta CheSlUut sl ’ DR. I. Y. REED, Homeopathic Nlclan, has located In Carlisle, onto noor to St.-Paul's Evanitlllcal - Clinrci Lmither Street. Patients from A matonce cnll In the forenoon. Mnroh 17,1870-mtn* TT'OII KAL,i!i UK March 17,1670—3 t '^“•““SoiftliHanov.,. EXECUTOR’S ‘NOTICE.—KoIia hereby given that letters testament estate of James McElhlnuy, deceased I tne borough of .Newburg, Cumberland r having been granted to the undersigned tors. All persons knowing themselves lm thereto, nio requested to moke payment’ dlately, and those having claims -will them for settlement. .TAMES T. McELHrNJfV EGBERT W.McELHINNV Ex’rs. of the estate of James McElhlnuv / March 17,1870-0 C J ' l gHEBIFF’B BALE. By virtue of a writ of Levari Facias It of tlio Court ■March 8,1870, '/ CAUCASIAN. CONDITIONS.—Oh all Sales of 5300 or cm. will be required to be paid whcii the proper;; stricken oir. and 525 ou all Sales under fiw, March 8,1870—8 t. West Ward. "DROTHONOTARY'S NOTICE.-i I lice Is hereby given that thd following counts have been filed in Iho Prolhbnot Ofilco for examlnation,<6c.,and wilMiopresi to the Court of Common Pleas of Cumbe County, for confirmation, on Wednesday fi day of April* IH7O, viz: 1. The final account of John Stuart. Jr.,s« trator of tho Hanover & Carlisle Turnpike pnny. ' 2. The partial account of Daniel Miller,, of Dr. S. E. dqefl of ~W. V.'OAVANAUC • - • Jtofftm March 9., 1870'll*- • South' “ A N ORDINANCE RELATING r\ OPENING A PRIVATE ALLEY Ff NORTH STREET.— Be it enacted and orduin the 7own Council of the Borough of Carlisle, hereby enacted and ordained by the authority same , That a private alley be opened, begi at a point on the North side of WestNortln at a distance of two hundred anil fori; Westward-of North Hanover street, exit Eastward 11 ft Northward through the pn of John Moore, and Dr. "Daniel Common, Southern line of lot of Mrs. Tlzzard, at a of fouatcon feet. Enacted into an Ordinance this Ist March, 1670, Attest: C. A, Coiinjian, Scat. Corporation. March 10,1870. NOTICE,—Not I JCli'hbfehy'triven that “letters tesfamoiita the estate of Hczoklah Voter, late ofNorlli dletou township, deceased, have been grant tho undersigned Executors, All person b ,ing themselves indebted to said eglale a quested to make settlement Immedlntelj those having claims or demands against tl *ato will present them for settlement. ; HEZEKIAXI G. VOTER, JOSEPH L. YOTEII. Exec March 3,1870—Gt EXECUTOR’S NOTICE.—NotI hereby given that letters testament* the estate of p. inhoff. lato.of the borov. Carlisle, deceased, have been granted to u dorslgncd, residing In said borough. All sons knowing themselves fo bo Indebted t< ORfulo nro requested to lajdio RP.ttlomQnt.lr d lately, and those having claims against estate are requested to present them fors< ment. March a,IBIO-0t NEW DISCOVERY!! It has lona been known that the old esh eel and well stocked FURNITURE AND BEDDING WAHEIK U. It. LEWI 8,8 r nre the cheapest In the city. Ho is now R Parlor Suits, In Plush, Hair Cloth, Reps or 1 Walnut Chamber Suits In Oil or Varnish; tape Furniture, • all styles; BEDDING MATTRESSES, various sizes, cheaper tliar tlon prices. Como ami see. and-bo convi Yon will save money by giving us ft call ik purchasing elsev’here. IT. R. LEWIS, Sr.. 1-131 Market Street PMto'Mw* Next door to cor. of Flftceutli *.i* March 10,1870-Sra. , __ J> FEIL & CO. PRODUCE COMMISSION MEUCIU-™ No. 10 North Water-Strict. Philadelphia.. Solicit consignments ofnll kinds of PKOPtf Also, Putter. Egcs, Poultry, Ac, Ac. . Philadelphia References—N. p. MaW Esq - .. Pros’t Union Banking Co.. 'Phlladriot Messrs.' Alien & Clifford, and Messrs. »« •Sloan & Bop. • . N. 11.—Please send for Weekly Price cot free of charge. March 10, 1870—flm EGGS!! EGGS!!! From llp-lit Brnlimn. fowls, pea pure from Imported stock.' 52,0 0 PER DOZEN No order will bo booked unless acconip* by the car)). ‘A'foW' pfrtis fur finite —$tfIO"PER' " Half-Breed Italian Bees, for pnlo In movable comb, hives—ob™?* dross O. U. HOFFWj, p. O. Per 1 CorlWaJ. March 3,1870- j^ECTURE! Go and hear the eloquent J. B, GOUGH, EHEEM'S HALL, CAELIM 1 ’ APRIL, Ist, 8 o’clock. P. M. Subject, FACT AND FXCWQ*' Get your tickets In time ot RHEEM'S MUSIC STORE. FOR I' AMXLY tTRE-sliiißle. dimp, ovorythlnpr. AGENTS WANTED. Cl«"', g i samnln RtnolcltiK FREE. Address ft" ol KNITTING MACHINE CO.. HnO'. 11 Jirnnchvny. N. Y, ..icb.17,1870-3m Jwna cured of deafness and Cnjj u simple remedy nn«l will seiul u' »j j, eo. MUH. M. u. LEQGET, HoboUeu, * March 3, IP7O-IW. Horse-Bills executed at this oHM iLcgal Notices. On Saturday, April 2d, 1870. C. E. MAGLAUGHLII JNO, CAMPBEI Chxefßurt 0. INHOFF, w. W. DALi Jweculc I fc'-.'j