6 111r/ion_ Raitana CARLISLE, PA., I'liarNiln}' Morulnu, .Uny 6,1870. “ WHITE Mi:x sil\sr Itvi,*;." This appeal's to bo the motto of every white man 'worthy the name of an American'citizen. Let it be emblazon ed on our banners, and serve as a text for our speeches and our meetings. This negro mania that is now rampant in our land will soon die out. Like Know Nothingism, in a couple of years there will be none to do it reverence, and the .very men .who are nowmakingspeeches in favor o- negro equality, will deny, their colors and declaim against the in famous doctrines they pretend to defend. The White Max's Pautv will tri umph finally. Courage, Democrats! White men—men of honesty—true Ame ricans will ere long be at the head of aiTairs in onronce glorious but now dis graced country. In the language of that able defender of the people’s rights, the Bellefonto Watchman, we say come one, come all who feel like keeping negroes ' from our places of public-trust, and join the glorious. White Max’s Bahtv. Too . long already have .ye reposed in fancied.security. Years ago this thing should have been strangled in its swad dling clothes, lint ye dreamed a dream of peace, and now you are surrounded by your enemies, who wait, with rppes livtheir hands, to bind ye. hand and foot. But it is not yet ton late. The “ Old Guard lias never yet surrendered,"and it will form the nucleus of a mighty array to break the ranks.qf the hordes that threaten us, and restore to the peo ple the pristine purity of their institu tions. ■. With the white men of the country uniled, Radicalism, with Us negroes and its deadly purposes, will bo over •throwh. Who will not aid in this mighty —thisglorious work ? Art! not the peo ple fired of the party and will they not aid jis to stay the impending ruin? Shall negroes be Senators and Repre sentatives and Judges and Jurymen? Shall white men be hauled up before negro magistrates, and the laws of the land he crippled and enfeebled by the silly interlopations of negro legislators?' White men, for the sake-of your chil dren, for the honor of the past and by I your hopes of the future, wo charge you to crusli tins evil now. There is hope for thc'conn try, and iov lor mo people in the binding together of white men for the good of white men —nay, for the good of all. Let us not allow tlie negroes to hold tho balance of power,’as the Radicals fondly hope they will, and ail may yet be well. For tho sake of the country’and our race, break the bonds of party fealty and cling to tire rock that offers us.safety from the storm. Three cheers, then,, lor the White Man’s Party! Let this bo the slogan with which (he people will hereafter march to victory, and at the sound of which the enemies of the country ami their negro allies will flee in great af fright. Democratic Papers. —Weagain call attention to the fact that a more free circulation of Democratic papers among the people’must be to their benefit as well as to that of the party. Why should any farmer be without ids own county paper/ Why should any Democrat, for the small amount of two dollars per year, deny himself the pleasure of read ing a newspaper at least once a week ? fn fact, most of our firmers should take two or throe.papers, and no one is so poor but that one paper at least could bn taken in a family. Wo hope that the question of newspaper circulation will be taken in hand by thedilfercnt active Democrats in each locality and worked np-unl'l every Democrat in Cumber-, land county will have a paper coming to his address. Look at it at once, for the whole question depends upon the proper enlightenment of tlx? people up on the issues bc r ore them. Better Study History.— Sumner, and all similar progressive Radicals, are exceedingly happy because the carpet bag Legislature of Alabama has passed a law to legalize marriage between the whiles and negroes. But Sumner and hi; political friends should' remember that the negro question hasaiready been pressed too Air, and that, by force and fraud alone, existing unconstitutional a rift unwise privileges have been grant ed to the blacks. The le-sons of history in which .Sumner pretends to be well versed, should at least teach him that tyrannical and unreasonable legislation always meets with a summary and ter rible retribution. tS-Seaator Sumner says the black crusade'is not ended by the ratification the Fifteenth 'Amendment. The work of agitation is not finished. EC 's -racked, nr grochildren side with the white in The colors fnu-t in til ;>laces of key nvc-c.share 1; rxAr-t il j..-: -1-T . r ;e T'L'l.jv.-hc-olr n:Lg> TUvir. >'IL' T -S f rJ-t TJ* •i- \i • f; - -oil-:- L»c*'JL- :ii hoi- IS-* >.i li :or.- ; ■ P"- V ’ L *'if l^l 'Jlt'Ailii* S'dZD*\hlis.r. ilir'u -vom. xh'-v.r- ji.u-l }.* js full ar.d ii msilgainK-tion of ihc r^r-?- ThR i: the 5 iiitiorqj of the Kodical jns tv.-hDO while- }Li : : i irmM‘ Tii'-f'ji at the T.r.Uf !,‘li- Tail KhAT.LY a!l !!ic- rum made- in the failed Slates is distilled in Massachu uf, and the distilleries are situated around Boston. A Boston paper, in a went review of the trade in New Eng land rum, says that the greater part of the export is sent to the African coast, and points with pride to the cargo of a recent hart, which consisted of tobacco, rum and four missionaries! And 'this ■ is Christian nnf) Radical Massachusetts,, the land of steady habits and of “ groa.t .vinoral ideas.” • ' .lipfiK X-.ee, of Nashville, Tennessee, vv.. i- before the committee on recon - -iruetion of the House this other day, and testified as to the real condition, of that St ale at present. Ilesaid the-State, a- a jie-nt.'u! tiling, was in a peaceable •jeme:Li.iou, is much so as .any Nortliern •nuts 1 ; and that the few outrages that Were erne united wiae nearly all trace noje it. i. ela-s.- ol idle vagabond iprgro'-s, •. disguised t'f XCu-XHux, roamed’ n„i)ir Ilililiftilif peup.i (it UieirvM o eolot e. v-■!!' ae wiliii people. J,e;e 1, .said o Too P(,f/n r > rAKf; a N'rwspam.p..-- Decidedly the poorest man'in these stir ring timed is the man who is too poor to take his local newspaper. We pity such a man, especially if he is a man of prop erty. Whoever heard of a man too poor to smoke- ami chew tobacco, if addicted to either habit? And yet, men who spend fi'ytst ten to fifteen cents a day for 4 ‘ the "‘•♦■d’' : M- u,’, tMi'.r to take a newspaper. h'-'piliUi'Aif.. inn mi -mar, h \ -,J enjoyments of whhdi ( rpJViillfl/;' h' f lid tin ,l»nflj*a’de *P 'i.e 1 !' :.»*■ i; par thdpatc, JteclJy »rn/u evc-ah- cu».- , auou na-ti m»- p-.<vrl They arc ohj'.-cts of Ui< p/KpCw ()'•' icinininp i - Xuyu .do W. khoy/Jjot to 1 ihv Cijc wenlUj Um,v juiaou*. ? r i ystr. Tin: sr.vrr: senate mat teak. Tho terms of tho following Senators expired with tho adjournment of tho last Legislature, viz : Messrs. Davis, of Berks; Randall, of Schuylkill; Robin son and Melntiro, of thodouolo district composed of Blair, Centtg, Huntingdon, Milllin, Juniata ami Berry; Nagle, of Philadelphia; Brown, bf Lehigh and Northampton ; Beck, of Union, Snyder" ami Lycoming; Lowry, of Crawford and Erie; Lindernmn, of.Bueks; Stinson, of Chester, and Brooljs, of Delaware, tho district being double, and Howard, of Allegheny. Of the retiring Senators, Messrs. Davis, Randall, Melntiro, Na gle, Lindcrman, Beck and Brown, are Democrats; the rest Republicans. The Lycoming district, which represented by Mr. Beck, can be cai-rfed again by him, and there is little doubt that ho will bo renominated and re-elected.— The Democracy can elect both the Sen ators in the double district composed of Huntingdon and the adjoining coun ties, if they nominate good men and work as they should do. Tliat would give us a gain of one member, and would cause tho next .Senate to stand sixteen Democrats to seventeen Republicans. Had Mr. Diamond not been .deliberate ly cheated out of ids seat,-the Senate would almost certainly have been Dem ocratic next winter, and t be result would have been a fair and equitable appor tionment bill, instead of the infamous gerrymander which now gives to the Republicans the power they have so shamefully abused to the cost of tho lax-payers, if was ■ regarded as abso lutely necessary to keep Air. Diamond out of bis scat, and that accountiffor the outrageous decision .made by the ma jority of,the committee. The Pittsburjyi Post says : “ How things have changed ? A few short years ago anything savoring of ‘disloyalty’ was sure to be punished; and it was disloyal to speak disrespectfully of any act or measure-q C-n 1 loyal ’ Congressi much less of one of the household of the ‘ faithful.’ Fernando Wood, of Now York, has the reputation in Republican circles of lining the most disloyal ‘ Cop perhead’in the country, and has barely been permitted to retain his seat in Congress. A single crook of his finger, On a dozen different occasions, would have provoked his expulsion, or still worse, have caused that little bell to tinkle which would have consigned him to Fort Lafayette. Gen. Howard, on tiie other hand, lias been esteemed in tiro same society as perhaps the most decidedly loyal man in tho land—an unapprochable paragon of that modern virtue whose most distinguishing trait' is to blow its own horn. Yet things have come to pass in the lamentable decay of tho loyal spirit of live years ago, that this disloyal New York ‘ Cop p/rhead’ can rise up in his seat and charge tho radiant chief of-the Freed man’s Bureau with peculation and fraud ; and what is still more d sloyal and impudent, made good his asser tions!” Hgy-WENDELL Phillips, one of the staunchest friends of the colored voter, is one of the very few Radicals whose pro fessions of friendship are sincere,'and upon whose advice they can safely rely. He equally well undoistands and dis- trusts the insincerity and emptiness of Radical, professions and nrO'C'Kna. "a speech at a Fifteenth Amendment celebration, ho thus pithily admonishes his colored brethren: “If I hud any legacy to leave the race T have labored for all my life, it would be this : For the next twenty years to i?o to thy ballot box and vote, not as a. Republican, or as a Democrat, nor as any thing else except, a negro." The meaning of this is both plain and significant. Aware that the negro vote is r only wanted by Radicals to foist themselves into office, he advises them not to vote as Republicans or as Demo crats, but in such manner as will sub serve their own interests. His estimate of the selfish character of Radical lead ership, the negro is beginning to under stand, is correct. A.\ APPEAL TO WHITE M^.!' The Democratic City Executive Com mittee of Philadelphia,, at a recent meeting, adopted tho following resolu tion appealing to the dignity-and self respect of the while race to preserve it self from the degradation of political amalgamation with the blacks: “That as the enemies of the Constitu tion, having failed to ‘restore the Union, re-establish the government, and give the people peace,’ now declare that they are unequal to the task and seek to bring to their support an aid which the Democrat ic party do .pot court, a race; which is on ly to be, in faot; the instrument by which the enemies of the Cons'itution can main tain power at the sacrifice of the consti tutional government established by the fathers, the Democratic party ask the governing or white race in the United States to <}«o itself from the debasement of being ruled by the negro and thus en forced to live under a system of govern ment which Poland, Ireland and Cuba would reject. 1 ' In .Vcv; York, on Sunday evening, a -ame The colored preacher delivered a harangue on ilie duties of hi- rai r- under the new tdiizeri-hip. He demanded, among oth er things, “equal school rights," that distinctive colored schools be abolished, and that v. bite and black children be made to An together in all the public schools. He wu; prouder of a ne gro than he would be to belong to any other race: but he was an American citizen, and demanded an American’s rights. IJjLli.I bt liJror.T: A Gkoiujia paper calls attention to the fact that, so far, only mongrels and ■yello\v men have secured political posi- the new Older of things, and 'adds : • • Why not give the sure enough negroes -a f showing V After a while the genuine (Jiiffwill wake up from his imp in the sun, and commence toa.sk the same quey ~Boi'. He certulnlyslmll not Jack prompt ing. When lie gets the hang of llic great swindle, Forney and his like Jmd heller get their Jives hiHired. There’!! be mu sic In the air, Tlio I.iUMI Grnbbcrtt. There is nd etttl to the land-grabbing, land-stealing schemes before Congress. Some of these aro so stupendous in their operation ns 'to bo second only to the Pacific Railroad. Tho last of these is tli'o operation of the lobby connected with the Southern Pacific Railroad, a company not connected with Fremont’s lino on the second parallel, but charter ed by tlie California Legislature, run ning 1 southward from tlie city of San Francisco. They aro asking on'y tho modest amount of eight millions of acres of tlie finest agricultural land in the world; and, besides this, want to raise tho price on actual settlers on nine mil lions of acres more. At present the Central Pacific Railroad is lobbying at Sacramento, California, to get authority for the counties to subscribe, on tho pretence of running two lines; but ns these grants at Sacramento mid 'Washington are secured tho two lines are expected to consolidate. There is a strong ioport from tho Secretary of tho Interior against the recognition of this giant monopoly; but Senator Scott, of this State, who is deeply allied with railroad corporations, has made haste to report in favor of the demands of the monopolists. Tho Senate belongs, body and soul, to the railroad corporators, and there is hardly any hope that in the House the rights of actual settlers under the.homestead and preemption law can be guarded. The land mono polists are a controlling force in the Radical parly, and are rapidly absorb ing what is left of the public domain. Radical Senators support these schemes with an alacrity 'and a'perfectness of discipline that even tho blind can dis cover a nigger in flic fence! „ STATE ITE3IS. —Lock Haven is'now putting on city airs. ■ —A calf recently killed in Centre conn ty weighed 1000 pounds. —Several acres of woods were horned in Fulton township. Lancaster connty, last week. —The Pennsylvania Reserve Associa tion \vill .meet at Lock Haven on the 7th of May. ■ —J. Whit. Wood, editor of tlie Easton Free. Press,' has been suggested for Presi dent of (he-Northampton Railroad Com pany. —Tlie fourth story of tlie Exchange Hotel at Huntingdon, was recently de stroyed by lire, and the' rest of the build ing badly damaged by water. —The mountains between Harrisburg and Aluiumu, along the line of the Pen n sylvania R. R.; were recently on fire, causing great destruction of timber and other property. —A grey eagle measuring seven feet from tip to tip of wings was killed in Monroe township, Bedford county. —About 30,000 coal cars are used by tlie Lehigh Volley and Lehigh and Susque hanna Railroads for the transporoation of coal. —A Philadelphia Indy and her daugh ter belonging to the wealthiest society of that city, have been sentenced to a year’s imprisonment for shop-lifting. —A tank containing one thousand trout, passed through Easton, on Satur day Inst, on their way to Baltimore.— They were from the pond of Dr. Slack, at Bloomsbury. — l The dead body of a man supposed to have been named Harmon from an en velope picked np close to the remains, was found near Ligonier, W.eotmoreland county, on Saturday week, The birds had utmost denuded (he bones of flesh. —A young man named diaries Shell, a brakeman, formerly of Halifax, Dauphin wnunj Jtrot liia lUH TIIOT»Uay Oy lUll . ing between two freight cars on the P. & it. B. R., at Dewart station, —Mr. Lee Caskins, employed at the planing mill of the’West Branch Lum ber Company, was caught in the belting, on Saturday morning last, and had three ofhis ribs broken. —Rosa Ann Schaadt died in Lock Ha ven on Monday of last week, from lock jaw, occasioned by the running of'a large nail into the sole of her foot about an inch. - . , —Tlio Governor has signed the death warrant of John Deal, who was convict ed at Reading, in January of the murder Richard M, Harlan. He is to be execu ted on Friday, the 13th of May. —The news from .the collieries in Schuykill and other anthracite counties indicates that, strikes among the miners has become pretty general. A woman .named Isabella Dunkel, was instantly killed on Saturday, after noon lust, at Bethlehem, by belng’ruh ■over by-a passenger train on the Lehigh and Susquehanna Railroad. • MINCrrU.AAEOPS. —A ‘mine of petrified mud turtles* has been discovered in Montana. Three inches of applejack is called a straight drink in North Carolina. —Woman suffrage has been defeated in the Massachusetts House of Representa tives by a larce majority, —An American student in Heidelberg is.the champion duellist of the universi ty. —A gambling- house is said to have re suscitated faro on the border of the Red Sea. —Miss Mattie Johnson, Horace Cooke’s affinity of lust winter, has recently been married. -James William Dennlsqn, a colored man, 100 years old, was registered in San Francisco-hist week. He votes Demo cratic. —The graves of the Confederate dead in New Orleans, were decorated with flowers on April Cth. —A Cincinnatian pawned bis watch and then shot himself. Having parted with time he sought eternity. —During the late storm in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, two feet of snow fell on the Central Pacific R. R. —Two Georgia darkeys injudiciously .tampered with a steam holler, and were picked up in the next township. —A lady in Indiana, with hair ten feet long, receives ten dollars per week for merely sitting in a hair dresser’s shop as a show. —Grant wants Congress to appropriate money to have the White House painted black. By nil means give it the prop er color. It Is a well established geological fact that the Straits of Dover, between France and "England, were at a former epoch bridged over by dry land. —A young lady at Burlington, lowa, who went away from home, leaving her waterfall on the open windpw sill, found n blue bird" sitting on two eggs ia it, on her return. —The Territorial Committee of the House of Itepresentatives, decided yester day week to report an emijdlng act to al low New Mexico to frame a State govern ment and apply for admission into the I'liion, —Vaccination direct from the heifer is all the rage In Baris, and In accordance with the eternal fitness of things, ns well as to avoid disfiguring their arms, the French ladles Insist on being vaccinated on their calves. —A deaf and dumb hoy in Shelbyvllle, Ind., amused himself on Wednesday night sticking pines through Mrs. Dr, Walker’s trousers while, she was lectu ring. This little pleasantry led to a bloody fracas In the audience, which re sulted In the shooting of an cx-Hberllf, and the mortal wounding of another man. APPALLING CATASTROPHE FijtijrEiyht Persons Killed Two Hundred More or Loss Injured. TWENTY LEGISLATORS KILLED OR WOUNDED A WHOLE CITV IX MOtKXI\G -Richmond, April 27.—A terrible ca lamity occimed here this morning. The floor of the Court of Appeals, in the State Capitol, gave way ami precipitate*! the hundreds therein assembled to hoar the dioision of the Mayoralty case of Ellison and Gaboon, upon tjie Conservative cau cus then sitting, in the Hall of tbe’House of Delegates below. 1 Among the killed are P. H. Aylett, a distinguished lawyer; Dr. J. B. Brock, reporter for the Enquirer and Examiner ; Samuel Eaton, clerk of Mayor Gaboon ; Captain William A. Charters, Chief of the Fir* Department'; N. P. Howard, a lawyer; Ash Levy, a Richmond, mer chant; Chnrles # \Vutson, of the Danville raijroad; Hugh Hutcheson, Lewis N. Webb of this city; Wheeler Schofield, brother of General Schofield; 11. H. Maury, Jr.; Senator Bland (colored).and and Powhattan Roberts. It is supposed that twenty members of the Stale Legislature are killed or wound ed. The Judges of the Court of Appeals ail escaped unhurt. Ex-Governor Wells was badly injured. L. H. Chandler, counsel for Gaboon in the Mayoralty case, was injured. James .Mason and Judge. Meredith, counsel for Ellison, were also badly hurt. About, (wo hundred persons were hurt by the accident. The greatest, excite ment prevails, am) hundreds of persons in the capital Square are weeping and wailing as the deatLand dying are brought out of the building. Governor Walker escaped unburt, though on the fleor of the Court room at the time. About eleven o’clock the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia was crowd ed with eminent citizens and many local politicians, and a great many of the pub lic at large, who were drawn there by furiosity to hear the result of tlje Inte hearing of the question as to the Mayor alty of Richmond. r . /The friends of Messrs. Ellison and Gaboon, who comprise the prominent .Republicans 1 and Conservatives of the' city, hud assembled to hear the decision, which it was expected would be given to-day. Among the many prominent, persons were ex-Governor Wells, ex-Con gressmun Kelson, Judge John A.. Mere dith, Patrick H. Aylett, ex-United States District Attorney for this District, vx* United Slates District Attorney L. H. Chandler, and others. At 11 o’clock the gallery ofcthe court room, which was crowded, fell in. The floor followed, and all thereon descended thirty feet to the llo'or below, which was I lie floor of the House of Delegates of Virginia, on which some few of the mem bers of a caucus were waiting around. There was a general crush of ail the tim bers, and the fulling of the inside wail, by which were killed the following: THE KILLED. Patrick Aylett, Cnptdin Charters, Chief of the Fire Brigade; E. M. Schofield, late Assessor, and brother of General Schofield, late Secretary of War ; Dr. «. B. Brook, editor of the Richmond En quirer ; J uiius A Hobson*, city collector; S. Diegger, member of the Hou«e of Dele gates; T/*A. Brenis, commission mer chant of Eaton, of Boston, Mass., and formerly manager of the Boston Theatre ; Powhuttan Roberta, commissioner in Chancery of court of Common. Pleas ; James A. Blasmiero, of Berlin, Prussia ; S. E. Burnham, of S.vrn-' cuse, N. Y.; N. P. Ilowan. lawyer; Ash. Levy, merchant; J. VV. D. Bland, col ored Senator from Prince Edward ; J. Watson, merqUaAt, of Danville; Thomas in Wilcox, ex-rebel General; Samuel H. Hairston, a wealthy 'land o\vne», of Henry county; Charles J. Grimiali, of Washington, D. C.; Robert H. Maury, Jr., land agent; Edward Ward, of Eng land; William W. Davis, coal mtu'chant; John Robertson! colored Baptist minis ter; Colonel Pichgrew; Wodfolk T. Foley, Deputy United Stales .Marshal; W. E. Randolph, of New York ; R. E. Bradshaw, grocer, and thirty-three aiuoiig- tvlititD. -ivi'i o- one wcrjftKTTt, one sergeant. ami nine privates of the police, who were on duty tiMhe building; WOUNDED. Anfong the wounded were. ex-Govern or Wells, ribs broken , and otherwise ini ternally Injured; Mayor H. H. Ellison, .slightly; Mayor Gaboon, slightly; L. H. Chandler, Judge A. J. ‘Meredith, Jas. Neeaon, J Howard, Rush Bongess, Col lector of the District; W. C. O. Dunham, Agent of the Virginia and New York Steamship Line; Hon. T. A. Babcock, ex-Rpeaker of the United States House of Representatives, leg amputated ; .Gen. MV D. Corse, ex-Major General of the Rebel army ; Col. G. \V. Brent, of Alex andria:. Capt, G. W. Allen, Port War den ; W. C. E’am, newspaper coirespon dent and broker; T. S. Baldwin, mer chant, from Newark N. J.; W. J. Ones* lerman, of the Petersburg Index ; Wm, H. Soper, merchant, of Baltimore, and about one hundred others. RECOVERY OF, THjJfDEAD BODIES, % Directly after the disaster occnrred-the fire-alarm was used to give notice, and the hook and ladder companies of thg city repaired at once to the scene. .A cordon of police wna drawn building, and the Judders were thrown up to the windows. For three hours tIW scene ivas full of horror. Minute after minute there appeared, swung out by a rope lj.ed around the midd’e, the body of some popular favorite, who, after being swung on to the shoulders of one of the fire brigade, were brought down the lad der into the green of the public Park, where it was instantly surrounded by. two or three thousand of those who had gathered to recognize the slain. The Park was filled with anxious, weeping women and anxious men until two o'clk when tlie last victim was drawn, from the building. HISTORY OF. SOME OF TFIE VICTIMS. ■Washington, April 27.—A gentle man of Richmond now* here gives the following particulars of some of the per sons who were killed In the calamity : Patrick Henry Aylett was formerly the Confederate State District Attorney, and since the war has been oneof’the editors of the Examiner <ind Inc fairer. Ho was a great-grand, son of Patrick Henry, Revolutionary fame. r sty Edwin M. Schofield Is the youngest bmtheraf Major General Schofield; was a United States Army officer during the war, and was appointed by the Military Commander as Assessor for the city of Richmond. Julius A. Hobson was an old citizen of Richmond. and for the past ten years w«a City Collector. Samuel A. Eaton, former! v of Boston, was an old member of the Boston press; was some t]mo at tached to the Herald of that city j was once a theatrical manager, and has been Mayor’s clerk since the war. Powhat tun Roberta, a native of Virginia, was vjuu oT thV ,A ‘ ”.irh" hiemhers (.!' the B r uerrrr» feuding members m' rlio Bar.— J. W. D. Bland, (colored) Senator from Prlne Edward’a county, was a man of much ability and a leading man among bis rare. Among wounded were H. H; Wells, ex-Governor. He was formerly in the United States Army; was In com mand of the defenses of Washington south of the Potomac; was appointed by General Bohofl<*)d Military Governor of Virginia, ami was defeated af the late election by the present Governor Wal ker. Henry K. Ellison, one of the proprie tors of the Richmond Dispatch, was elected by the City Council, under the Enabling act, to succeed Gaboon as May? or of Richmond. George Gaboon, formerly of Pennsyl vania, was appal ntcd by General Scho* field. Mayor.of Richmond. Tho contest for tho Mayoralty between these two gentlemen was tho occasion of the dense crowd in tho court room. L. H. Chandler, of Norfolk, from Maine, was United states District Attor ney for Virginia until July'‘fast, ami since the war was elected a member of the United Htab-s Congress Norfolk District, bur wan not admitted to his seat. . He Is now a practicing lawyer, and is well known In the North as u leading public spc'flker in behalf of the Repubii can party during the X J residentiai canvass. John A. Meredith, was formerly Judge -of tin? Circuit Court for Richmond ; was removed by’ General SdhoiieJd. Was loading counsel for Ellison. James Neeson, formerly of West Vir ginia, was a member of the Confederate Legislature, and lately Assistant United States Dlstniet Attorney. Was associate counsel for Edison. John Howard is one of tbo leading lawyers of Richmond. Wiu. C. Dun ham Isniront of tho Old Dominion Steam ship Company at Richmond, and a mem ber of the City Council. Thomas S. Bo coek was formerly a member of the United States Congress, and.au opponent, of Sherman for the Speakership; was Speaker of the Confederate Congress; is now practicing, law at L> ncbbnrg. Colonel G. W. of Alexandria, was Adjutant General to Gen. Joseph E. Johnson dming the war. Mr. Burgess is Collector of Internal Revenue for Rlohmond. W. D. Cln sterman is con nected with the Richmond Examiner us reporter. OCJR WASHINGTON LETTER. Another Pacific Railroad Swindle—JobUn"}/ Reduc ed in Scientific Jh'incintcs— J low Railroads arc bvi’t, and Who Pay for Than—Senator Ttyurman in the Jircach. Correspondence Ant erica - WASIIIXfiTON', Al'Rlli 30, lt>7o. Another magnificent railroad swindle Imsjust been smuggled through Congress. It grants about one million acres of land to what Is Unown as the Northern Pacllle Railroad company, who propose to build a railway' from Duluth, Michi- rorlland, Oregon. This latest swindle is .engineered by a clique of Philadelphians, with Jay CooUo and Edgar Thompson at their head* The United States has bestowed upon them lamjf> and privileges wortl many millions of dollars, and they will at once proceed to realize out of them ten times more than they are worth, by oireiing- them ns the sole security for Immense loans, They will advertise aihovor thecounlrj, that they have issued and offer for sale a seven percent loan of tho Northern Pacific* Kullroad payable in gold In fifty years ; that it is secured upon millions of acres of the most fertile land In the world, and upon other .millions, chock full of all the prccious.inctals and minerals, and likewise upon several thousand miles of, rail way running through a country flowing .with milk and hducy, where there Is perpetual sum mer, and where' therefore snow sheds to protect the railroad ace not needeu. The farms, and the. minerals, and the railroad of which earns dividends at the fate 'of 5J per cent, as soon as the rails are laid on the ground,) they will declare, are estimated by those who have examined them in every hook and corner, to bo worth many hundred of millions of dollars, and that upon them the company—which consists of half-a-dozen or so of Philadelphia sharpers and many members of Congress—only deshes to bor row the syinll sum of thirty or forty millions, a mete flea bile compared to the real value of the properly. The accomplished gentlemen who will writeup the advcitisemepts for thopahy, will state nil I his and a great deal more, stuff of the same nature, drawing freely upon,lheir Im aginations to procure seductive facts, and strik ing language In which to clothe them; and the people no doubt will bo so tickled by-the glow ing representations of tho new Garden of Eden found on our northwestern boundary, that they | will rush forward in an innumerable throng, ul* eager at once to buy the bonds of the Northern Pacific, fearing lest very soon it may bo au nounqed thut they &»o nil sold and that' their* chance for a fortune Is gone. ■ Senator Thurman is doing yeoman’s service In the much needed exposure of these frauds He made tho statement a few days ago hr tho Senate that land grants to four of the Pacltlc Railroad Companies—the Union, the Central, tho Atlantic, and tho Northern—as shown by tho official record, amount to an aggregate of one hundred and (ireiily-four mil’ion acres? Near ly ns much land as there is In the States of Ohio Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin and. Michigan;—. Five times ns much land as there Is tho State of Ohio, In addition to this, fifty-eight million acres have been granted to other railroad cor porations, making one hundred and elghty-two million acres in all—a grant, in tho aggregate, more than tho entire territory of what used lo be called tho Great Northwest. This was said' while the bill of tho Northern Pacific Railroad was under consideration—the road, which of nil others, as Senator Harlan, of lowa,clearly prov ed, has been tlnj grAitest beneficiary of.tho Gov ernment, but which is yet. crying for more. Its present application Ims for. Its.object three things, viz: to make a land grant for the branch lino from Portland, Oregon, to Puget Soiled ; which now Jms nothing but aright of way; to \ authorize the company to mortgage its whole line I and all.it* lands, and to give it more land than If | can now get under existing laws. The original. ■ ncior sixyrms ago gives the company the odd* sections of land within twenty miles on each side of tho line in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Oregon and within thirty miles on each side In all the Territories. Kinco It was passed settlers have taken up some lands In the Stales, and tho company now asks to have the origlnnl gVnnt made good by an extension of (emnlles vu each 'ide. of the line, of tho limit within which it may make selection—thus giving the company half the land In a belt a hundred miles-wide across tho continent. Philadelphia has been the great cen tre of the manipulation necessary to the revi val of this years neglected .enterprise. Some •live millions, more or less, of 7 per cent, got I beaiing bonds divided among a “ring” of operators, and be again divided and sub-divided,until they finally falllnto tho hands o f s nuli caplt nllsts and people who are Illy able lo boar tho loss which must be experienced bo fore tho work can become productive, If ever it should. .Senator Thurman said: Tho pro-', motors ol this road (tho Northern Pacific) -when they asked for It and n>ked for this enormous grant of laud, such a grant us never been made before, proposed’ that with -it, and without any money subsidy, and without any mortgage on tho road lo dejraud anybody, they would go on and make the road. They profess cd extreme honesty, I inter from the charter that was parsed giving them this grant,.that they, would not put any bonds upon tho market by which anybody could be deceived nr by which the road could be sold out. They would not ask any money subsidy from the Government at nil, but they would raise, the nccessay capital and go on and build tho road, and rely on the land sub- £ sidy to reimburse themselves, together with the J profits of the road, “Now sir. whut is it tlmf they ask ? They aslc that Congress shall authorize thorn to make a mortgage not simply upon (he road, but vpv n every dollar's u'urth of proprrii /, real, pc>-sonn(, or mixed, (hat they own ; am! not only ,lhat, but upon their corporate frarchlses’nnd franchise of bulng a corporation That mortgage In glvcn-a inortff age given before there is one single shovelful of earth dug out*, before there Is anything done whatever; a ntnrtgage put upon this road with , out any limitation whatsoever ns to tho price for which the bonds may sell—whnt, I ask, will ,bo the ultimate file of the road under such a mortgage—a mortgage unlimited ih amount tin. der.which two hundred millions of. dollars of bonds may bo put upon the market without any limi tation whatever jus the price for whlch they shall .sell and the Interest which they shnlj'bcar? | Does not nny.man who has tho least experience v in the history of railroads in this country know, ftlmt there can be Out one outcome to itich a mortg age as that, and that is the sale of all his proper/g under that mortgage and its purchase by a "ring'' In Thin Us the common history of railroads—the sale of everything under this mortgage and n purchase by a •‘ring** among thestochholders themselves. That is to bo the Jong and short of it. “After thp profits that shall have resulted from manipulating tho bonds, ufter.llie commissions, that shall have been paid to somo banker or* broker, perhaps an Interested Individual in tho concci n, after he shall have squeezed the orange and got all he can get out of It, In tho end tho whale thing will go to safe under the mortgage and all the property belonging to this company! the property of a “ring” in tho corporation it self, and freed from Its liabilities because sold under the prior lien of the mortgage. Then those who are creditors to that company, then those to whom it has become Indebted, may whistle for their pay. ‘ibis.‘Ting’' will have the road' and all Us property under the prior lion of tho 'mortgage,and tho stockholders who ore not In the “ring” and the creditors who are not secured by the mortgage may whistle for their pay.” Thus it is that the people are not only robbed of hundreds of millions of dollars of the public domain, but In tho madness of the hour the whole country Is drained of Us private resources uud ovd'ry available dollar Is swept Into the railroad maelstrom. Whether tho money of tho people w ll ever begotton out, remains tofce seen, lint evidently tho policy of these com na mes h. first to obtain the largest possible amount of public land, them to borrow all the money they can, and doubtless ut some day to foreclose * the mortgage, ml Igttho “ring” become the ah- ■ solute purchasers of the road ut a nominal fig ure. . 1 —The place selected by the Methodist Episcopal Church, this year, for their National Camp Meeting, | 8 W.ilton (trove, Oak h* ton, Hartford Conntv Maryland. Odungton is on the Ilneol the Philadelphia Wilmington ami Ji-dtl more Railroad, about thirty four miles distant from the latter city and sixty four from the former. rjpHL SECOND ANNUAL HORSE FAIR, Agricultural Park Association, WEDNESDAY, Juno, Ist— Xo. I. TrnUinr/ 7Ve»u ii»» t 8250.—Knr Lancaster county horses only. A’o. Z Trolling Premium, Fur horses that huvo never beaten £2to to Hist horse; 8100 to second, mid 550 to third., Best three In live In humps'*. J\’o. 3. 'J'rolUnf/ Premium, 520) —For Lancaster county horses only. • THUIISD VY, JUNE 2d—iYo. 1. Trading premi um. Sii'iM,—For Lancaster county horses only iVo. 2. Trotting Premium, 81,lKKi.—For horses I lint have never b>alon 2:30. $7-0 to Ilrsl nors •; S2O» to Second, and 8100 to third. Host three In live in harness. * FRIDAY, JUNE Id—iVo. 1. Pflofm/.Pmmi/m.SIOO. 875 .o llrst horse, 825 to second.- Mile and repeat in harness. ‘ A’o. 2. 7 rolling Premium, 8500.—Open to nil horses. 8;i50 to first horse: 8 UK) to second, and 85‘Jto third. Rest three In live in harness. jYo J. Uunnl»g ramlHm, 82uO and entrance money added; second horse saves his entrance. Mile heats. To carry JWi lbs. I'uriona 2*rcinitim\iriU be paid for Hoad and Farm Hors■ s. btaU>OH.\ Marcs and Colts. The entries for the trials of speed must bo en closed wllli the entrance money—ll) per cent, of the premium—ln a sealed envelope, which must hetransailtted lo thoSecrotary before 1 o'clock ■P. M.. qn FRIDAY, MAY 2Dth, at which hour the entries a ill close ; and on SATURDAY, MAY 21, at i JF. M.. llio envelopes will bo publicly opened and the entries be announced at the Grounds of the Association. The trials of speed will be governed by iho rules of the “National Association for the Pro motion of the Interests ot the American Trots ting Turf.” Thes-o rules may be hud of the Sec rotary. Price 25 cents. Admission lo Fair , 50 cents. . ' S. s. SPENCER, President. . A. Ji STEIN MAN, Secretary. May 5,70—2 t ~ ■ WESTERN IJVSUJiAACB COMPANY, The 'Model Life Insurance Company of the Continent, and the Largest Company outside of the Soabord Cities. Assets, Over (AND RAPIDLY INCREASING.) No. of Members, AND ADDING 1.000 NEW ONES EACH MONTH. 3 Income in 18G9, $3 338,588.01 Ko, of Policies Issued in ISGO, 9,89] Ofllfco with John T. Green, Esq.. South -Hano ver Street, where pnmpleis ami Information nmv be obtained and applications filled, Special inducements to Ministers and poisons Insuring for benevolent objects. May 5, 70—Jhir* A GENTS,—Canvassing- books sent free for INTERNAL REVENUE, The most remarkable book over published be ing a complete exposure ot the powerful cob fedo ra I lons or ••Rings’' preying on our Government, Showing up all cliques from tho lowest to the highest, f'abinct officers and Congressmen ns well a* minor- opt rotor's 'systematic depredations con spiracies, ofllclal corruption, political influence, patronage mid wire nulling. A fearless Histori cal work, invaluable lo every citizen, contain- IngSIl) pages.-hv n prominent Government De tective. Over 20,500 copies already sold. Agents wanted. Canvassing books free. Addsess W FLINT, Publisher. Philadelphia,* Pa., Boston, Mass , Chicago, IR, or Cincinnati, Ohio. May 5, 70—lw Agrnts wanted for the NEW ; HAND-BOOK OF HUSBANDRY, A.romnleto.«»aia«, far- Pr rmri ‘n ,r'>Utlg UUCI OlfT, by the celebrated Author and successtul farmer. GEO. E. WARING, Jr, of Ogdon Farm. The largo experience and recognized ability of the Author guarantees a work of sterllng merit. Among tho subjects treated are Buying and Leasing a Fa'rm, Buildings, Improved Imple ments, Judicious Fertilizing, Sub-soiling Drain ing. Rotation of Crops. Butter Making, Cheese Factories, Breeding and rare of Livestock, their diseases and remedies. «6c.. A*c. with many use ful Tables. (i(JO pages rich with Instruction and embellished with 100 spirited engravings Terms liberal.circulars tree, “Secure an Agency at once.”. A. 11. HUBBARD," Publisher. -100- Chestnut.fit., Phlia. May s,7o—iw J^OTICE. lo (he fwf.-s and representatives of Jane J<J . Sham late of Fewton township dcc'd. . ‘ ’ Take notice that In pursuance of a writ of par tition and valuation. Issued nut of the Orphan's Court of Cumberland county, and to me directed an Inquest will ho hold on iho Real Estate of said dec'd., to wR a tract of land situate. In the township of Newton, county aforesaid, bounded on the fiouth by lands of Samuel M. Hiarn on the West by J. U. Slerret. and Allen Beaty* on the Noi lb by Robert, Mickey, and on the East bv Robert Mickey and Samuel M Sharp containing 210 acres more or loss, on Friday, the Ud clav of June, A. D., 1870,at 11 o’clock. A. M.,on tho nrom tses for the.purpose of making partition ami valuation of tho Real Estate of said dec’d Sheriff's Office, Carlisle. ) April 21),-IS7O. . / \ iay 5,70—-Ot J6S ' TOMPSON. «*,(* J^OTICB. counli/ U ( ~° Uli Com)>^r)n Ficus of Cumbcrlanu ; Gpnilyeur, Uniting 1 Venditioni Exponns. and Fucking tqi^;jy|itopT3ti>^Ap rl i Venn vs. jjj?o ' Gilson Smith & Co. / i-% m ‘i ra aii-'-Imn- 1 Venditioni Exponas, lei’ Uniik nfsklppeus- Ko. S 3. April Venn knift. t isiil. GUson Smith. J Having boon' appointed Auditor, Ju ihe above Ktnird rases, “ to report the fnclsnnd ulsonn an propnatlon of Urn money,” to the said Court. All persons are hereby notified tli»»t I will attend to llio diHhs of my appointment as Auditor nforesald nt .nvolllce in the borough of Carlisle oti i hursday. the Udh day of May, A, I)„ ikto nt II o'clock, A. M., when nnd where all partlesln tpresled tiro requ- sted to ntlend nnd represent their several Interests. 1 >r -- n ... M. C. HERMAN, • May y, (o—.lt Auditor, ■'-/ f• " ■ ■"'“lllVt' 'Vb'o' v I v . li’niirtJiJiJ— St„ duel., OUlo, or 75 Maiden Lane, ' il»ys, 70— riIHE NEW ARTICLE OF FOOD— I'or twenty-five cents you cun buy of your IJrugglst or Grocer n package of Sou Moss Karine, manufactured from pure Irish Moss or Carra green, wlilcli will make sixteen quarts of Blauo Mange, and alike quantity of Puddings. Cus tards, Creams, Charlotte Russo, die., &c. It Is by food In the world. RAND SEA MOSS FARIKE CO., s‘i Park Place, N. Y B UY yonr FURNITURE, and buy 1 5-ourUKUDI,SU at, the J O'R EAT AMERICAN, 1202 and 1201 Market Street, PHILADELPHIA. Phffiehi'hUi 81 80lected nna cheapest stock In liny s,7ll—Jiv lOR BARGAINS IN FURNITURE, GU TO H. K AMPLE & CO-, - , . , ; No. KU Mtirket Kt, Plilla. A largo and well aeleclml alock of llrat-cluiw Furniture on hr,ml for Sprint; Trudo May 6, 70—Iw Tii DIVIDEND! CAUCASIAN, The Hom'd ol Dlrootom have this day declared a dividend of Five jurrcaU, for I ho last nix months on tho capital stuck, free from National ami titaio tax, payable ou demand. t r?T^ t , J, I*. HABBLKn, C\JshUr. May G. 1870-31 a* 1 A A TO SWO PKU'MONTH OUMT <D iUU ANTMCD. Hinopny. WakohpidiV-wfolc ly to AyuuiK over, where, Helling our, iW-m JJd ner Mould White Wire t'lothsn Sines. Rumncus permanent, Por full partleulara' address - nr. Hard wire mills, puiia. Pa. v* May G, 70—lyr ’ , ‘ TANNERY I'Oil sAuroß M Tj.IWT.-Tho Hiibbcrllirr ollim | TANNMI\ on K.inlh mieet, CnrMalo. for« B io or on fnvonthlo terms, Immctlmro possession ** AprUSH. 70— • '• .WM.V'fl?" S'" m ' ’infill Rklimtenueuis OF THE LANCASTER COUNTY Lancaster, tionn’a PREMIUMS, $3,200. M U T U A l/ LIFE Office, JS T o.. 3lain Sired, MILWAUKEE, WIS. $7,500,000 REV. JAS. S. WODDBURN, DICKINSON, PA., Special Agent, SECRETS' OF .1,.- I' Caki.ihi.k Deposit Bank, > CurlJslo, May y, JS7O, / Ncto atberasrmcnts, QHKAP JOHN! Has just returned from the Eastern market with a lingo Mode of CLOTHING,- FURNISHING GOODS BOOTS AND SHOES NOTIONS, HATS- AND OATS, iW* All wool suits, nt Cants, nt- Cr»als, (mixed) at Vests, (all wool) nt Fine Calf Boots, ut Como and sec Cheap John In building ntlnoh ed to Hie Franklin House, In .tear of tho Court House, at Bossy Wetzel’s. He Is the fellow that used to have auction. Come now, don’t forget poor Cheap John. .May f>, 70—lni JpUßliiO SALE OF VALUABLE EEA*L ESTATE OX iSVI TUIiDA I’, JFA Y M, 1870. On tho above dny I will expose lo public sale at tho Court House, in Carlisle, the following de scribed teal estate, be onglng to tho'helrs of John B. Strlngfehow, doc’d., consisting of a LOT OF GROUND m tho borough of Carlisle, bounded In tho North by Chapel nllev, on tho East by lot. of L. Heckordorn. on tho South bv South stieet and on tho West by lot of John Bveis, contain ing 120 lent In front on South street and 2JO f«|t oh depth, hating'thereon creeled two stnim HOUSES on Chapel alloy, it will ho sold to gether nr in parts, to salt purchasers Sale to commence nt 10 o’clock, when'terms will bo made known by JOHN WELL, Att'i/. in fact for heirs of Jno. Ji. atrinyfcllow, dcc'd. May 5, TS7o—2t pOUKT PROCLAMATfON.-Notice is hereby given in nil persons Interested, that an adjourned Court of Common Pleas, will be held nl Carlisle, In and for Cumberland conn* ty,on Monday the loth day of August, ts7o, and V> continue one week, lor the trial ol causes pending am! undetermined In said court. .By order of the court, JOtJ. C, THOMPSON, Sheriff. ~ ~ May 5, 70-le Tho I’oarO of Directors liuve tills dnv declared a dividend of Four per cent, on the capital stock, clear of taxes. May 5,1570—.2L Paris by Sunlight . and Gaslight. A work descriptive of tho Mysteries. Virhica, Vices, Splendor*, and Crimes, of the C ‘if. l /•■/Jans': lt> contains 150 line engravings of noted Places, Life and .Scenes In Puns. Agents wanted. Ad dress, NATIONAL PUBLISHING GO., Phlln. Pa. May. 5, 70— 4\v 315,000 JMPOKTANT TO HOLDIEK3 ! A decision has Just been rendered by the UriU ted Slides Supremo Court.-wblcUallowsu bounty of.SIO I tp each soldier who enlisted In the volun teer service fur three years prior to duly 112,1M1, and was discharged for disease before the expi ration years. The decision does notnflecc those Vho enlisted nficr July 22, li-(h. The heirs ol those who enlisted as above and have since diet! are - entitled to the same as surviving sol diers. 'I he undersigned is prepared to collect all claims arising from the above decision, in let ters of inquiry, please enclose a postage stamp. W3I. U. BUTIiKK, Carlisle, Pa. March 31,1070—1 f QANDIDATE FOR SHERIFF! The undersigned la always open for emtn* fa vors. and will have no objection whatever to be a candidate for sheriff, 11 lilsDemncrnilc frlcnda see 111, to nominate him. In the meantime, as It Is Ids custom to stay at-home and attend to his own business, it will be impossible lor him to call upon his Irlcnds in various partsoi the coun ty. ami ho requests them all to call at his isliop. No, :il East l.outhcr street. Carlisle, wncre he Is always prepared to furnish the neat-st fits in Hants ami iShnci, of any est \ hllslunent In the county; Ho la now working up tho very best of stock at reduced prices. Extra, heavy soteA sup plied to our counir irlends who don’t want- to he pi,stored with candidates. March :Jl. ls7U—dm. ADAM DYSEUT. TESTATE NOTlCE.—Letters of A<I JCj ministration on the estate of Ronjamln Itoyer, late ot South Middleton township, lUnn bcrland county, have heeii issued hy uio Ueyis ter, to the undersigned living In the sumo twp All persons havlnuclalms will present them and those indebted 'will make payment to • * . KEHKCCA HOVER*. DAVID HICK, Adm’rs.of Ilenlainln Hoyer, dec’d. Appl H—Ot* * NBWViLiac,.!**., Dec. Ist ItjiiO. NOTICE is hereby /riven that applica tion will be made fortho Incorporation of u Hank of Discount. Deposit ami Circulation undwr-tho autliorily ol tlio Act of Assembly im proved March 2Jd. 1801; to be located In Newvllle Luml)crlan»L-efTnTuy, I’eniia., and to be cilled the “People's National Bank.” With a capital ol I*J*fy Ihousaud Dollars, with the pilvllige ol Increasing the same to One Hundred Thousand Wm.Knettlo. Jonathan Snyder, IV k\‘ Hepry Killian, il. Mannliig, j 0 hp Ihdlck, -Kohl. Montgomery, bamuel M. Suarn. Peter Myers. Jolm'Oller. . Dec. l(i, Ibtiii—(mi. JJOTICE. —An ejection for President “VI 1 t Uv ® of the Carlisle Gas and utei Company, will be held lut ho Arbitration L-nainbor, In the (,’mir l Homo, Carlisle, on Mon «.¥ V 1?’ 1 lay *'luy 1*71), between the hours ol 2 o'clock and-l o’clock. P. M. April 11,1»7U—It Qoing east. . Our practical’ Miller, Mr. Wm. Natcher has fnli?Sim 1111 l h i!. s son John A * Watcher, l-n.Vw v.iiJ- ,, f l bI J?Iln 1 lne *i. Ho has leased the well «.! J . l ’ ~ ou' c l ’ end of Cumberland LountA. 1 a., belonging to Eberlv lieolem whore ho will bo ev;-r ready to grind to order lVv M , rhT l l ‘nr e , t ’M flll \ nntl pay 1,10 Whest prices’' B h « Iw ! ,nl, i 011 ho expects to bo patronized > friends, and I he public generally... We U • 1, 1 l w i « 111,1 IUI htrt plans-for the mtme. V AUDITOR'S NOTICE.—The under signed Auditor appointed by the Court of I leas <d Cumberland county, to inar ?| l io A**l l i ,Ut U lil ? ,m , ,nnco in Hie hands of the Aditi i ol John bimko.deceased, hereby gives notice u> Hic.se Int rested, that ho will attend Imh I! 1 ? r. l, M P : s of ! ,m tippolntment at his 1U 0 " lluy M,ly - April Si, 70—31, JOItN COUN^',, 90 000 P ' " n(,a ' of shoulder and side /j'J I J\J\J moat wanted in exchange for pure Iliailonß uVtaxccb® Uy St braUdS of aud a .. nn -ft « JACO.I3 LIVINGSTON Aprh 28, 70—1 m No. 27 North Hanover Kt, A NOTICE.—The niider -Tl. signed Auditor appointed by the Court of rni l V m .” 1 lh V “'Cumberland Cb.miy, to jeport IJ. 10 p ‘/i 8 ai , l< ft pni’°priale(l the money arising horn the sale of the real estate of T. ,J Kerr cr the borough of MechanJcsburg, will attend’to i., lu L^ u at hIR otllco in the borough of Carlisle o’clockTA/'lir, th ° J7UI <lliyttf next, at H) April 2*, 70-.lt NOT ICE.—Notice IB hereby /riven that an application fora charter of Ineor. VoraiUm fortho Mount Zion Evangellca- Lathe- L ,ora etl 1,1 Plcklnson • township 1 «« the Gettysburg voao, has been made to l iim Cmjrt 01-Cnnunon Pleas of Cumberiaml county «I fl n l *' .} 0 K ’i lmo 'V 1 m >o « ranletl ,J .v snidV onrt mmlo thereto M " y ’ uulcl “ > ol^-. April 20. 70-31. A f AppS COMBINATION, TWO IN O.N E JIA VERSTICK ISItOTIIEES, No. 6 Poutll. and No. 10 Norl 1870—] -SEEDS, AT HAVERSTXCK BROTHERS, No. 11l nml ji North niul South Hanover afreets, CARLISLE, PA. ROOM FOR RENT.—The morn In 'ho ■tVolunleer ni.ilrtl,,,” now h v .‘ h' nH - y> Be'™, (mrent for ttie'nnln of Wheeler A Wilson s Rewind Mnel.lnes,) win bo for rent from tlio Ist of April next, inquire of 1 J.B. BUATTON. Fob. 25, 1870. rpHK HAND-IN-HAND MUTUAL x Llfolnuumnco Company tvnnlaitmimboi-nf band Agonist also, a good Ooacral tiwent far Pittshiii-K nmi vicinity, nlso n General a«ent fof the German conn Ilea of Pennsylvania fj ™ Horn. l,2Houtb ...l^r^Plft^*' THU MAGIC COMB will change anv colored Inilr or beard to n pcriniment blnclr or urown. It cnntnlns no jml.ro,i, Anv one itso It, Otto sent by until' for S . Aldross “ April 2,-tbn 1U COMD Ct> - S ('>'‘««neld, l Si 3 . T "'i' sl Pure'* of ileat’ncss anil CnliiTiTTh^ I n simple remedy itml will send tin. reeeini %V„fe'.v L ; u ' :uoCT ' “<•« Wf* I can sell, So on 1 2ii 2 fin etc., etc . Fakmehs’Pank.l Carlisle, Pa.> May 3, is7l). j J. C. HOPPER, Oishhr A splendid nrtlcloiPlquo 25 cfs. Ail Ronds iu proportion. Como and examine yourselves. No trouble to show goods, motto lasmnll profits and quick sales, T» eso goods Imye boon purchased forms! present gold, prices, and we can solt ymit goods twenty-five pc cent, levs than Uiey * charge you for old goods nt-olher stores. D. A. SAWYER. JOHN HYER, &ccl'j/. TO Tliq Treasurer of Cumberland enmity will I loud for the purpose, qf receiving County ! State Taxes for I*7o, as required liy Act o( soinbly, at the followjnff times and prices, v* Upper Allen—at Gulp's Hotel, May 0 anil Ift Lower Allmi—at Hinkle’s Hotel, May II: IJeek'B Hotel, Mnv'l2. •. - Monroe—at Hursli’n Hotel. May''Hand Ik Fast Pennsboro’—at Wilder's lloiel.Maylfl: Sierer’s Hotel, May 17. Hampden—at Krellzer’s Hotel, Mav 18 and Silver Sorlm?—at DueyV Hotel, May 21; Zmr’s Hn'eJ, May 21. Middlesex—at Middlesex School House, M 2.1 and 21. North Middleton—at Beecher’s Hotel, Moj nnd 2d. Hoiu h TV! I Idleton—at Rupley’a Hotel, May 5 ftt Rolling Springs. Mnj'2s. Fran kfort-at Bloservlllo, May ill nnd .11. MUJllu—at Kue tile's School House, Juuolar West Pennsboro’—at ChlsnoU's Hotel, JuneJ; at fair’s Hotel. .Juno •!. Newton—at Blutienbergcr's Hotel, JuuoM l Melllnger'B June 7. * Penn—at EyMer’s Hotel. Juno Sand 0. .•’ JD!oklnson~-at (.Toz'or’.s Hotel. June 10andII. Korn immpiuu-at. Baughman's Hotel, Juno u and H. Hopewell nnd Newburg—at Sharp's ITotel, June a and la Shlppenshurg Borough and Township- 01 McNulty's Hotel. June 17 nnd K . Newvllle—at Honnobergor’s Hotel. Juno Wand A. 33. SIIARPK, , A mUtor Mechnulcsburg— at 1 eldlg’s Hotel, Jarib2’M d 20. New Cumberland—at Bell’s Hotel, Juuo2l and .3 , Carlisle—at Commissioners’ Oillco, /un^27 ona 2s, On all Taxes not paid on or before the first of Angus' next. live per eent will ho addi-d, ’ . TJie Treasurer will receive Taxes nt his nfiW until the Ist dnv of September next.a’ wnlcD dine duplicates of all unpaid taxes will is sifell to the constable’s of the respective Dor-- oukhs and townships for eolJeetion. GKOUUIi WHTZEL. 7V<?".vioyt of Cumberland CbunWi f"'- April 21, 1870—1 m A UDITOR'H NOTICE.—TIie 'unto; jLV. tdjjnod Auditor, appointed by Iho Common Pleas of Cumner'und rminij\ tn mat; Khali aim distribute tlm huJmuo In lb'<* ImmMj Jolin Stuart, Sequestrator of tin* Ilrmover t' p Cat lisle lo and annul' -creditors ofsald (Jfmi mil those interested. that he will afiend to d ties of Ills appointment at the .PiotboneU Olllco In Carlisle, on the Kith »iav of Mnv. IRi It. luVlNk Audits April 21, 70— it, IJIHE SOUTHERN STaTjSS! The oldest, bisi Known npd ablest u . MOBILE WEEKLY REGISTER. Publlshod ovor half a century. I’ornyih, tlm ardent, niproilerof the phen A. Douclna, }* tlu» edit- r. npoMer, Evory.Kortbern'iJemoornt wants Iho ‘‘v»« 0 „ U linu nn ahio AnrlculCurnl dcpurimiut, nv CO. Lan«don, editor. . kno * Every fanner ami Mechanic wnutsl"!,«. it all about the South, now oflcrlugso nuiuj traerfoun. ~ nrn i4. Subscribe for the MOBILE WEEKLY J E( L TEU. Only 8.1,00 per year. $l.OO (or 4 *'{ It lour months. Hand 81.00. tJJubs —* e *Ji B vear 810.00. The Hegister Is the I.intw-t l M ‘P er the South. Speonneu copy free. Aci^roK Prop. Register’, Mobile, AW- April 28. 70—’It AT Nn, fi Smith, mid No. 10 North Hunovcr rtn* B, HAVERSTICK BROTHERS, CAUUSEE, PENN'A. 9 April 21, IS"i) —ly FOR RENT-Tho Store Room »" J . t.'ollßv, No. 72 North llnnover ►ireeh o t tbo uudorslßuea ou l,lo jf r^|J§MAN» Feb 31, 1870, jftli'sfrUniiftma QAUMbUS MACill.N^- F. OAJiI) lYj , n CUMBERLAND VA7 I.EV REAPER ° Wonronow uulhllncnntl 4>l llio harvest of n7u, Ihi* \,V U .S," lirlm,, Valley Cbmblned Kapku ft n'l 1 Cm HBf.F HAKE, and all oilu-r iin, D t S J () 'C It will be built In rho best £ t vj P N'tuviJ to work satisfactorily. 'iliew,,,?,’ nil “ *«. Honpor Join long been felt, , l i ,l ‘ ,f *‘hi able to ofler to the farmers abjolning counties a mucin,.£ , complete and perjeet hurves o r f ' l(l1 brought from a distance. l-W’ qUIII toil to call and examine it. Ul ® ,h «toj Cll - NOVELTY HA >VlU|rt , Wo are lmll,ll nE HjlS ’scason „ , number of Uuy Hakes. TlinK- on,y a Ji, Self Actlllß Imnd, on ,be old principle, n .U' l ' Iho best materials In handsoir.e i ranted logive sulibJaclion. si ! JI< ‘-arni early. . in j UUr^, TIIEGUJIgPRI KOOIiu Wn oonllnuo building tlio , U by jit tout. Gum Spring Oriiln „' r % Um.wn, uml popular among f„ t ‘ *’ W. » lurmor nm nlloid to do wltlmui,llSvi-., }!o fur It largely IncronMa, ami lumrm' 1 l,u ! uml shod pays fur it.-olr, Wa IJ ’t unit Grass Harder alone, m inft ln, l Attachment for sowing phnu i... ii riil f; Wenlso InillJ the Wll&JiK'feot gi Inst might run 1c or zlg tagt tu.-farmeS^' • VARIOUS FARM IMPLEMENTS Wo uro manufacturing a vnriptv «<■ Implements such ns Imran poworv^ l,l', '»» cliiur mills, slur corn shell™ n,J? 1,1 11lr nl ■min corn shollora. Knrelm , „' c !l «, .keep nhvnyson Imml 11, 0 N, i| c ,,,?,j lor, three sizes, wllli vnrlotW nlcnjonls. Wo also nmke K(iri l( lr ! L'"''“'“S bender, and Porter's natom blacksmith should Imvo'2.?| lc| i« finishers was.li Iconics, four k n , lr,,n ' flve illlloront patterns, plow Si„J B,IRr «! castings UoptnUvayH on hanrf S B ail(l t ; TheUAULISLECOUKSTUVE nur mSrkc° n 0 ° rtho befiUM 'taPWiTC,; STEAM ENGINE AND MILL WORK. AS heretofore, wonivo mirt/rni.-,. ' building RTEAM ENgInS " KHAimNG, UI'ARING. PULLFyS Umli part ol the innehlnery cohnefetwi .nllli, Flmirlnginllls Siw m irimSS 1 Our nmtonia r,. r w«un engl! to to Ovemy, live ho.ru l.otvcf.'ronlbh, S'’ ty o const, action w.il, „u m,„| P " " men IS anil rnrl.lsl.pil at ncra.miuoila "J! Wo also build portable enL'We.softwi.h V p ' or for running pruning extensive variety of patterns for ml hv wh eh m are constantly irfakliJ„ d , 1 sh'Aanooce COUU ' aCtS fol ' e,,l!luM ““Sw forbnle' 0 stnt,oli * ftr i'‘engines now BUILDING MATERIALS. Attached to mir establishment, is nn PIANINO MII.L find SASII nml Dnim p ORY.wltli nil Hie machinery for ninn n « dnin- nml window friniics, snsh, nbnufr bUnds, brnckels, mouldings, eornlte m ,i co drapery. slab- mil and Imluslora llonri . ngmul every olbcr nrllclo In Hie lino" lag inaierlals from the lowest price a. fin, qnnlliy. Ilnildersnml conlrncloisninv rpl all orders, large or small, being nrnnihflt An extensive supply ol season, d nineV.i and oak lumber kept eonsinnlly hi oialim yard leiuly for use. fhnall sizes of la°K l.'flcad d always on huud, and oMicrnrl made lo order. All ordm or Inquiries hymnil.orolh« in romu'ction willi nny brunch of our hr will b* promptly attviidcd to. F.UARDNEI April 21, ’7o Im, QKEN! OPEN!! THE NEW CHEAP DRY DODD STOI D. A. SAWYER, Irvige's Corner HEADQUARTERS FOR BARGAINS, Look nt Iho prices " Calicoes, oy, 7.10. 42 y; Muslins, fljf, H, 10. «tc; Hrfit 10 ct. Calico, in the (own; best, 12J-J r» In llu* ln\Vu, liest Jyd wide 1 1$ Hlm-ia-d ' llij in tlio i’oun; best i yd widel2J<Uublw Muslin die town. Ginghams, ILJrf, 10. 17,; Tickings H, I?, hot in the Urirn : Uesiwik town; best Jh Ticking In the town, LcbUi' Jng In the town. Chpnpowt Pants Sluft Cheapest Cloi hs and Cnsslmers In 'lie Cheapest Hosiery - . in Mrfc cincapest triovca ami Handles, Jn ihoit Cheapest Js'olions, all kinds in die ic DRESS GOODS, Cheapest DeLrilncs inllio. Cheapest Poplins in the t' Cheapest Alpm-cas blade a col’rt in the* Cheapest Hinds a Fancy Silks in the Cheapest Japanese iu the WH-ITE GOO.DS, Cheapest Piques Fig, striped la the Clu npeht MursiillleS in hie Cheapest Percales Jnliiei Cheapest Chintzes in the I Cheap* st Em broideries t t La6es In the I Cheapest Collars * Cull's In the t Cheapest Table Linen In truth Cheapest .Naplclns.'&c. lu the ' April 21, 1870— TAX PAYERS hi II)e
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers