American volunteer. (Carlisle [Pa.]) 1814-1909, June 09, 1870, Image 2

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    aintrinto otinteve.
CARLISLE, PA.,
rbamdHT nornlnfft June 9,1870.
RATES FDR ANNOUHGEMERTS OF CANDIDATES.
As the several candidates for the va
rious oftl’ces to be voted for this fail will
bo Inserting their .cards shortly, we
deem it proper to publish our rates for
theirinsertion for the two months prior
to the August primary elections. We
have made our rates ns low as possible,
for we know that candidates are at a
heavy expense ns well as a great deal of
trouble. Our rates then will be:
5s W) I Commissioner, Sit 00
, r > (to Director of Poor, 1 00
4 00 | Auditor, cnatla.
Coiißreas.
Assembly
Sheriff,
WIIITTKHOKIB he-ki.ectko I
Whittemoro. “ the carpet-bagger and
dealer in cadetships,” who had been
expelled from his sent in Congress a few
weeks since, has been re-elected by a
decided majority, from the First South
Carolina Distict! Two-thirds of the
voters in this District are negroes, and
the re-election of the unblushing villain
Whittemore, is another evidence of their
capacity and judgment as voters. Most
of the whites of the District are dis
fr mchised, and the negroes have it their
own way.
The re-election of Whittemore has
opened the eyes of the better portion of
the Radical party. Col. Forney, in his
Press, deplores it, and pronounces it an
outrage. The Philadelphia Inquirer, a
leading and able Radical organ,, is also
shocked at the .infamy, and. its Com
ments are as truthful us they are en
couraging. Even Radicals—we mean
the honest portion of them—are now
■ convinced that to disfranchise intelli
gent white men and invest ignorant
negroes with power, will not do. The
State of South Carolina, under the rule
of negroes and carpet-baggers, is in a
deplorable condition, and the same may
be said of every Southern State. Some
thing must be done, or this entire sec
tion of our country will be utterly
ruined. But to the remarks of the In
quirer. Let our Radical friends read
them:
Reports ftvtoi South Carolina indicate
that B. F. Whittemore; the carpet-bag
ger and dealer in cadetships, was re-elec
ted to Congress from the First District of
that State on Tuesday. This is a scandal
on the National Hou«eof Representatives
that should be provided against in some
manner. Whittemore was re-elected by
the newly-enfranchised colored voters of
South Carolina, and it is quite certain
that the country might have been spared
the disgrace of having him again in Con
gress, if the whites had also been disfran
chised-
But a few demagogues in that body
seem determined to prevent a general
amnesty, which would place the affairs
of the South in the bands of the intelli-,
gent, educated class, instead of leaving
them under the control of another class
which is both ignorant of, and incompe
tent to discharge, the duties of citizens.
The special correspondent of the New
York Tribune, who in this case will cer
tainly be acknowledged good authority,
writing from Charleston says, in lelatiou
to the ruling power in South Carolina
politics:
‘■There is an unpleasantly largo class
of politicians who live only by politics,
who know no other profession, and who
look upon Die legitimate and the illegiti
mate emoluments of tile trade with equal -
‘ ly favorable eyes. When to these we add
an infusion- in the Legislature of men
chosen as the moat eligible in the commu
nity of Hold habds who never saw a
school-house and never owned a live dol
lar bill, it is easily to be seen that dangers
beset the public affairs of South Caroli
na.”
The above is a fair resume of tiie pol
itical situation throuubout the entire
South, akd it is quite as true of every oth
er State as it is of South Carolina. There
was more poetic justice, in giving the
vote fo the totally uneducated slaves of
tiie South than wisdom ; but if at the
same time .all political disabilities hud
been removed from the intelligent whites
there would have been leas chance of ul
timate harm resulting to the country
from the bestowal of the ballot on the,
former class.
It is time the sort of men of whom
Whittem,ore is the type should cqejjsejto
claim seats in Congress.; but so long as
they can inveigle the freedmen into vo
ting for them, while more intelligent
Southerners are prevented from voting
against them, the carpet-baggers will
continue to disgrace the halls of Con
gress. . .
Nehkoes at West PoiriT-—lt is
slated that there will be three or four
young negroes nominated by members
of Congress for cadetships at the Mili
tary Academy at West Point, and if not
“rejected by the officers for incompetency
—(and this cannot bo done with nil that
will be sent there)—in four or five years
hence will be holding office in the TJ.
States army. It follows that it will not
belong until Negro Lieutenants, Cap
tains, Majors, and Colonels will be com
manding white men, in the ranks; and
claiming and receiving at the hands of
white officers, who consent to serve
with them, all the social
that military rank confers. This isjjjjf
very pleasant prospect to contemplate,
and we commend it especially to the
young gentlemen of the Republican
persuasion.
Minister to Constantinople.—
Wayne McVey, of West Chester, a son
in-law of Senator Cameron, has been
appointed as minister resident at Con
stantinople, in place of E. Joy Moiris,
the present minister, removed. Mr.
Morris is a gentleman of commanding
ability, and is the author of a work en
titled “Notes on the Holy Land,”
which had an extensive sale in this
country and in Europe. He is a Repub
lican in politics, too, and no reason for
his removal was urged except that Cam
eron wanted the place for his son-in
law, McVey. To take cure of his rela
tions has always been an object with.
Cameron. In this respect ho is like
Grant—always on the look out for No. 1.
Another Radical, wlio was never
elected, and has no constituency, lias
been admitted to a seat in Congress by
the Radicals, in place of a legally-elect
ed Democrat. He proteases to hall from
Kuutli Carolina. This is the way the
Radical power is to bo preserved in
•* Congi'i-ss, but we think they will hear
thunder from the people next. fall.
Tilts gentle Butler seems to tied a
perverse pleasure in urging the most
absurd and hopeless propositions. It is
at least a month since he began to ask
unanimous consent lo introduce a joint
resolution for the annexation of Sim
Domingo, and he has been vainly im
ploring that boon ever since. He seems
to aspire to the distinction, which ho
will soon at this rate acquire, of at
tempting to introduce this resolution as
many times as he voted for Jefferson
Pavls as (i candidate for President.
FACTS I’OK TAX I’ATSIUS.
Mr. Dawes, Chairman of the Commit
tee on Appopriations, and, therefore,
posted on all such matters, Said lately.
In debate, that “thoTJnltod States navy,
which consisted of only 8;509 men, cost
$28,205,671: while the estimate of the
British navy last year, which consisted
of 63,000 men, was only $49,000,000. —
Every vessel in the United States navy
cost an average annually of $138,911,
and in the British pavy $69,000. Every
ton in tho tonnage of the United Stales
navy cost slsl.lopcraniium, and in the
British navy $72.60. To keep tho Ame
rican navy afloat—to keep it in repair
—cost $6OO a man, While the British
navy cost but $6O a man to keep it up
to. the stand ird. The United States
Navy Department had estimated for
$0,975,000 for repairs, while thecstim-.de
of the British navy for the year ending
March 31, 1870, for new machinery and,
repairs, was but $3,000,7-19.” And fol
lowing up the same line of remarks,
Mr. Logan, Chairman of tiro Military
Committee, said that “there were In the
United States navy 1,409 officers and
but 8,500 men—one officer to every six
men, and a fraction over. The pay of
tho navy was a little over $7,000,000,
and of that over $5,000,000 was paid to
officers. There were on the active list
of the navy 759 officers at sea; and on
shore 650. Why should this swarm of
officers be kept without any necessity
for them And further, “ Unit there
were now in the-Treasury Department
sixteen hundred employees mure than
wore, authorized by law, and six hun
dred more tliaii were ■ employed last
.year.” Such is the “economical” and
“ honest” administration of Gen. Grant,
which has been so much lauded by the
Republican newspapers.
Beauties of the Fifteenth Amendment.
The beauties of the atrocious “Fif
teenth Amendment,” which the Radi
cal wretches in Congress protend to
have fastened upon the country, may
be imagined by the refined, educated,
and Intelligent masses of the North,
when wp state that of the sixty-three
jnembers of the Legislature of South
Carolina, fifty are negroes and thirteen
white men I Out of these sixty-threo
State legislators ( 1) but eight areable to
read and write intelligently, and but
twenty-two can read and write in nIL
Not less than forty-one of these mise
rable half brutes, which the mongrel
governmentolGrant*Co. have foisted
•upon the people of the South as rulers,
make their mark (X!) Only nineteen
of that entire legislative. ( 1) body pay
taxes, and the gross amount of those
taxes are $141.(50, official data. The rest
of these law makers ( 1) do hot pay one
mill, but fill the legislative halls of poor
South Carolina, a caravan of beastly,
brutal, animalized, ignorant negroes l
One would suppose a picture 9 f such
fruits, theresultof a so-called American
government (1) in the year 1870, with
over thirty millions of white popbla
tion to be disgraced by it, would pro
duce a revolution in forty-eight hours
in this country, North and Sputh, that
would hang the perpetrators of this po
litical and social infamy, every man of
them, as high as Hainan. It cannot be
that white men will continue to sleep,
and let these outrages go on unrobuliod.
THE DIFFERENCE. *
There are some Radical editors who
make it a point to pick up every little
scrap that may be said or written by a
Democrat and. parade it before their
readers as evidence that the Democrat
ic party is seeking after negro votes.
The difference between tiie Democracy
and Radicalism is this; If a radical
editor comes out in bold style in favor
of a particular political dogma, the
whole party yelp their acquiescence at
once, and the voting mass are called'up
on to uphold the party as a means of
“saving the counlry' from Hie rebels.”
If a prominent Democrat advocates a
doctrine at variance with the principles'
of the party,, ho is no more regarded
than if he were to sound an alarm up
on a tin whistle. In tiie Democratic
party every man thinks for himself
and acts accordingly. A lladical will
go tp the polls, cursing and damning
his party the whole road, and when lie
arrives (here some leader will take
him by the coat coHar ami make him
vole Ihe ticket. When a Democrat damns
his party for outrageous action or cor
ruption he goes to tiie pools ami makes
his “damn" count by voting "against
the party. This is tiie* difference be
tween the two.
Wlmt tlio find leal rally Ifus Done.
The Radical party Is bound to sustain
a ruinous defeat at the ballot-boxes next
fall. Among the thousands of political
crimes committed by it, in its short but
ruinous lease of power, the following
alone would he sufficient to make Rad
icalism a stencil for all time to come :
It has enacted laws giving over white
women to the beastly lusts of negroes.
It has legislated for negroes, and at
the same time allowed white men to
starve.
It has defeated all measures calculat
ed to afford relief to the businessmen
and business interests of the nation.
It has taxed the people for the benefit
of the negro.
It has robhed-tho Treasury.
It has,and is, stpinmloring the public
money.
From a free ami peaceful Republic, it
has turned our country into a military
despotism.
These are among the charges against
the Radical party. Not one of them
can be, or will bo, denied by any one of
the party having a regard for his repu
tation ns a man of truth.
The people will puss upon them at
the election in October, and condemn
them. Tho-record is already made, and
the verdict needs only to bo ollieially
rendered; then the Radical party will
pass out of sight infinitely quicker than
it sprung into its mushroom, but pois
onous, existence.
The ironmasters of Columbia, Pa., at
a meeting, unanimously agieed that pig
iron cannot bo produced at enrreift mtes
without loss; and it is stated Unit with
in sixty days-probably all, or nearly all,
their furnaces will lie idle.
Then let them go at some other busi
ness, and not ask Congress to tax the
people to support a business that will
not sustain itself." Congress does nothing
for newspaper men, why should it favor,
the iron men V Let every tub stand on
its own bottom. •
Qoi.l) is quoted to-day at $1 11.1
All Ailnllrnbte. Free Trade spreeli.
At the installation of the officers of
tho Milwaiiltio Chamber of Commerce,
the Vice President of the Chamber, Mr."
F. H. West, made an admirable Free
Trade speech. We give a short extract
fi-omit;
At present the growth mill prosperity
'of the edit o try, and especially of the West,
is greatly retarded fur reasons that seem
not to lie well iiuders.tmid. Agriculture
Is the great and hroad'foundation of all
l.usinesH and pi-osj erily in thin country.
Thu p;osperity of the farmer is the pros
perity of ail ‘middle classes. We have
die finest country in the world ; It is set
tled l.y an indiistr,ions and frugal people;
they have been blessed with most abun
dant crops ; their granaries are all filled
luoverflowing; the country abounds with
the natural elements of wealth ; and yet
the people are groaning about hard times,
and are unable to meet obligations for
the common necessaries and comforts .of
life. Why is it Hint for overfilling we
have to buy we have to pay the highest
price that 'anv people in the world pay
for the same article, and Hint everything.
Unit we have to sell we have to sell at
the lowest price that it is to lie, sold for
anywhere in the world V There must bo
something radically wrong, or tills would
not lieso. ' in my opinion, the Jomdi that
is sinking our siiip is tbo miscalled pro
tective larilt, an oppression creator tbau
■ was ev. r laid on a civilized people in the
w-nrld, and without a partie-io of benefit
in return. We are tlie worst taxed peo
ple under the son. Under the operation
of our tariff laws, it costs nor farmers
twice as much for everything Hint they
'have to boy incident to the raising of
great staples—wheat, col-on, and pork—
thereby doubling the cost of production.
Everything that a farmer buys Is pro
tected ; everything lie aejla is free; and
on every farming.tool, for every shoe for
liis horses, Tor lively tin pan for his dairy,
lie lias to pay two prices on account of
protection. If lie would put a nutmeg lu
bis'lintel lie must pay two prices (br it,
that the enterprising manufacturer ot
that article in (.'miin client may be prop
erly protected'. If ho would put a little
salt in his porridge, lie must pay the On
ondaga Salt (loinpuny a tux of one dollar
and a quarter on ea'-li barrel.- It is gen
eml!v suunosed that the English people
ure heavily taxed. A British farmer gets
twice as much for a bushel of grain as a
Minnesota farmer does, and for each dol-’
lar-that he irels for U lu* can buy twice
as much of the'comforts of life as the
Minnesota man can. making one 'bushel
of grain there equal to four here. 'lt we
dill not have the richest country In the
world—where the most could he raised
for the least labor-- we could not stand it
a year. As i» is, our virgin soil is being
stripped and impoverished, and w© get
nothing for it.
- Blindcring anil Obstructing.”
Under tlie provisions of the bill which
has lately passed Congress,, to protect
the negroes in the right- of suffrage,
white men must hereafter be careful
that they stand entirely out of the way
of negroes when the latter go to vote.
Jostling a negro at the polls, even if
by the merest accident, is “obstructing”
him in the exercise of the right of-suf
fragej and makes the white man liable
to fine and imprisonment. ,
To challenge a negro’s vote is “ hinder
ing” him, which has also its pains and
penalties of fine and imprisonment at
tached.
These enactments are so outrageous,
that people are inclined to look upon,
the assertion that they are the laws of
the land as frivolous talk. The facts
are such, however, that the American
people will only arouse from their leth
argy to find that they are at Ihe mercy
of radical despots, with negro bayonets
and ballot-boxes, and that their liberties
are already gone.
The Tahifp.— The fact that a prop
osition to largely increa.se the duties
un ler the tariff has failed, should not
blind the country to the fact that the
tarifi' ns it stands is altogether too high
in its rates, and constructed from be
ginning to end on a false and injurious
principle. Early in the session a re
duction of the tariff'and its remodelling
on principles of revenue and not pro
tection was mooted ; fetit, shirking this
issue, the leaders'of the Radical party,
with characteristic rapacity, sought at
once to re-nfflrm the principle of protec
tion and to double or treble existing
rates. The advantages of this course
were that, it successful, they would not
only fortify, the general principle of
protection but secure the higher rates,
while. if defeated on the issue, defeat
would bring no worse consequence than
leaving the present tariff intact. The
effort to raise has been defeated, and,
as calculated beforehand, the result of
that defeat is the simple non-alteration
of the present tariff'. True,, it is some
thing to have prevented an increase;
bul the real issue was to procure a reor
ganization and a reduction, ami the
defeat of the free-traders in this leaves
us saddled for another year with tiro
present oppressive protective tariff.—
The platform of the Ohio Democracy;
as adopted recently, denounces the pres
ent ns thoroughly as the proposed tariff
as a swindle, robbed, and fraud. This
is the correct doctrine; for it is not
enough that the evil is not increased—
it must be abated— jV. Y. World.
I’IiIISOSAI,
—Napoleon Ilf was sixty-two years
old on the 20th of April.
—The President and Mrs. Grant leave
Wnabingrnn fur Annapolis this evening.
—J. D. M' unkin, of Venango, has been
renominated for the Legislature.
—Daniel W. Voorbees has been renom
mated for Congress in Indiana. ■
“Pahson” ISkowni.ow has stopped
swearing. He has lost bis voice *
Governor -Geary is to do love in
a cottage at Long Branch this summer.
Even with "children half price," it
co-ts Brigam Young $75 logo to lliocir
cns.
—Jnbnl Early is about to settle perma
nently in Lynchburg, Va., for the prac
tice of law.
—John Oraliam was paid $lO 000 fordo
fending McFarland, and the New York
.Vail thinks bo earned the mopey.
General George H. Tbomos loft no
will. The amount of his personal estate
is reported to be $-10,000.
—Grant wants to get away from Wash
ington. Ami the people oi' Washington
want him to get away.
—Church's (Democratic) majority for
Chief .lodge in New York fools up over
87,tm
—Benjamin Batman, the Editor of the
Pollsville Mimrn Journal, is proposed as
a candidate for Congress.
Hon. A. A. Barker, of Cambria
county, fa announced as ' a candidate for ‘
Congress in the Eighteenth 'District.
—ll M’Aleer and J.' S. Commau,
are candidstes for nomination for Assent
lily on the Democratic, ticket in Hun
tingdon enmity,
—Hon. C. W. (Hi 111 Inn, having carried
Venango connly, his renoinination iiy
tho Radicals lo Ciuigress may lie consol
ed probable.
—Col. Win. f-’irweli isaiiiiounced in tin-
Armstrong Sentinel, as.a Deiiincrnticcaii
tlidaio for Congiess in Unit district, and
ux-Gnvoriior Win. E. nlinston, for As
sembly.
—Mrs- Rebecca Wood, nioilierof Hon.
KernainliMind Benjamin. Wood, of New
York, died on tlio g-Ub ult., in the Slid
year of her age.
--The term of lion. James Thompson,
Judge °f tho Supreme Court, will c'x.-
piro next yeni. Ho will probably bo the
nominee of the democracy for ro-olcc
tlon.
—The Louisville Courier Journal is of
tbe opinion that If anything could tone
for the Infamous conduct of Gen. Ames
in Mississippi, it is tbe reflection that he
is to have Hen. Butler for a fathor-iu
law.
—Dan Bice is about to begin his thirty
seventh annual farewell tour. Daniel is
the farewollest.mau in the business, mul
runs a newspaper at Girard, in addition
to Ids other clownish and educated mule
duties.
—The birthday of Queen Victoria was
celebrated On the 24th nit., by a grand
feast given by Minister Thornton to tbe
members of the British Legation. Her
Majesty fifty-one years old.
—Hons. F. M. Kimmel, A. W. Cofl
roili and B. F. Myers are candidates for
the Democratic nomination for Congress
in the IGlh District. Either one of them
can beat Cessna, who will be renomina
ted by the Radicals'.
—Mr. Weyand, of Beaver county, after
an animated. contest, lias beaten Mr.
Henry for the nomination to Congress,
by a vote of 1,03(5 to BDT. On the Assem
bly ticket in Beaver county, the, vote
stood Sburlock 5)53, Chandler 5)41.
—All the Democratic papers in Indiana
are full of names of Republicans who
come out against their party on account
of, their adoption of the XVlh Amend- N
ment. Some of them are prominent and
'influential men, and the number of hith
erto Republicans who openly declare
their purpose to vole against the Repub
lican.party, seems to be upwards of 3 t ooo.
—Oregon voted for Governor, ami mem
ber of Congress on Monday/ The Dem
ocratic candidate for Governor is S. t •
Grover, the Radicals have nominated
Joel Palmer. 'The opposing candidates
for Congre-s are James H. Slater, Deni.»
and J. G. Wilson, Rep.^The.Democrats
carried tbe last Congressional election in
Oregon by 1,200 majority. '■
—Mr. Richardson, Mr* Greeley, Mrs.
Calhoun, Mrs. McFarland, and all the
other celebrities of the recent trial, have
been worked up into, a, four-act .drama,
with the lealistic effects of an actubl pis
tol shot, policemen in uniform, and a
jury of twelve supes—the whole inter
spersed with comic • songs and a street
fight, for a ban Francisco theatre.
' —Brigham Young luisjust been refused
by » iiansiviit lady whom he asked to
become’ Mrs. Young No. 78. She said
she was small, and diden’t like to take
her cbance§ among so.many jealous wo
men. Brigham was so mad at being re
fused that he said he wouldn’t ask ano
ther woman to marry him again in two
weeks.
• —Weston the professional walkiat,
succeeded inhia walking' match against
time, one night last week, at the Empire
Rink, in New York. The match was to
walk one hundred miles in twenty-two
consecutive hours for $1,500. Weston
began at 12:15 A. M. and finished at 9:52
p. M., having about 22 minutes to spare.
• Borne thousands of people werepresunt
at the Rink, and his victory was received
with triumphant and long continued
cheering.
—The Petersburg Va., Impress of Mon
day says: General R. E. Lee. has been
spending several days at Lower Bran
don, on the Janiesriver. We are pleased
to learn that bis health has been very
much improved by his trip Booth, and
by tlm temporury cessation ol his labors
at Lexington. The General came up the
rlvt-r yesterday, and landed at Bhirely,
the residence of Hill Carter, Esq., where
he will stop a day or two before going on
to Richmond.
STATE ITEMS.
—A young man was stung by a bee, in
Chester county last week, which flew in
to his Car. Ho died in less than half an
hour*
—Win. L ,Geary, son of General Gea
ry, lias been appointed to a cadetship at
.West Point by the President.
—James Patterson suicided near Wash
ington, Pa., on Sunday last, by haug
iutf liliisuulf, .... j..
—Morris L. Chester, colored, formerly
of Harrisburgh, but more recently of
Liberia, bus been admitted to the EifJ*lisb
bar as a bnrrlater-nt-hiw.
—ArrungemonlH have been made for a
trot between Butcher Boy ami Hector,
Thursday-, June 9, .in tho ■’Harrisburg
Driving Purki The race will bo for five
hundred dollars a side.
—Recently James Bennett, who had
been employed about the Peuneylvunia
railroad ui Columbia fop thirty-Hvo years,
was run over by the cars and crushed to
death'.“
—Two little boys at Harrisburg, aged
six and nine years, left home one morn
ing for school, but went, fibbing instead
of going to school. The result was their
bodies were fished out of the canal next
day.
The Eblejship of the Church of God
has selected Lancaster as the place of
holding tho next Pentlcostul meeting,—
Tiie time for the gathering this year ia
the 4ih,.sih, and Otn of July.
—Ex-Attorney .General isrowster was
robbed a few nights' since of about two
thousand dollars’ worth of valuables.
His residence at Philadelphia was en
tered by burglars. -
—The Reading Eagle says ; "Some of
our farmers hr Greenwich township,
Berks county, aie considerably excited
over the appearance of a strange disease
among their cattle, which they fear is
the rinderpest. The cattle suffer for two
or three weeks, and finally die.”
—A boiler in Maitby’a Rolling Mill, at
Columbia, exploded on Tuesday last.
Some six of the workmen were badly
scalded by hot wafer projected on them,
it is thought fatally. The boiler, was
situated over one of the puddling furpu
cesj
—As a man and his wife, residing in
Keokuk county, lowa, were returning,
last week, from tho funeral of the last of,
their three children, who hail died of
scarlet fever, a thunderstorm came up
and just as they were entering the gate,
of their.dosolated house tho lightening
struck their can iage. Tho man was in
stantly killed, and his wife is now a
raving maniac.
—During the prevalence of the violent
storm of Saturday week a large qnan*
.tity of sulphur was precipitated upon
certain portions of tho township of Han
over, York county. A tin pan exposed
in theyard of Dr. Hakes exhibited a de
positorsome fifty grains of tho mineral.
Such a phenomena must have led the
people in that locality to imagine that
Hie latter day was near at hand, and to
count np their transgressions- with all
possible speed.
—A burglar called on Dr. Mitchell,
residing at. No 1433 Spruce street, Phila.,
and sent (lie doctor on a wild goose chase
ton pretended patient. The burglar then
commenced operations. The wife of the
doctor was aroused by the barking of a
dog and wont down stairs, revolver in
hand, where she discovered the burglar
engaged in packing up some silverware.
She filed at Jdm, wounding him twice.
Ho however succeeded in making his
escape through thedoor.
—The Easton Sentinel says : Tho Com
mencement exorises of Lafayette Col
lege will begin June 2Gth. Tiie sendees
of the famous Dodswotyh Band, of Now
York City, have been procured for com
mencement week, tyLau expense of about
$(500, and will add an attractiveness to the
week’s exercises I heretofore -lacking.
President Dr. return a few
days previous to commencement, after a
sojourn of one year in Europe, studying
foreign educational institutions. . Ho.wiil
be welcomed by demonstrations of.an'
extraordinary character.
—The West Chester Jicpuhlican says a
horrible tragedy occurred oa Saturday
night last, near Clifton Station, on the
West Cliesterand Philadelphia Railroad,
Upper Darby township, Delaware county.
It appears that an old man named Clay,
whoso son keeps store in Cheater, was
traveling* along tiie road in company
with Ids daughter, a grown woman, and
it is said they had hoeu drinking, rtho
had a hatchet with tier, and struck him
with tho blade thereof, just under and
behind one ear, repeatedly, almost sever
ing tho head from the body. The corpse
wasmot discovered until the next morn
ing. Coroner Rigby summoned a jury
and held an Inquest. The daughter was
taken into custody.
MISCEM.AMiMIIIM.
—Old maids are fond of pairs, but can
not endure any reference to dates.
- Wo have the joyful news that Con
gress will adjourn on the 15lh of July.
—Alnnn in Svrntmao ate fifty melons,
won a bet. ahd died all in one day.
-n0,000,000, it is estimated, is invested
in newspaper property in North Ameri
ca.
—This year’s cotton crop is estimated
from' 3,600,000 to 4,000,000 bales. •
—An Edinburg paper calls for special
omnibuses for mothers with infant chil
dren.
—Senator Revel’s sister, Eliza, la in
the poor house in Now York. Brick
Pomeroy is raising a subscription for her.
—The New Jersey ' Editorial Conven
tion is to make its anudal excursion to
Albany and Lake George this month.
_The King of Sweden meditates a
tour around the world, in onfer “to see
with his own eyes whether it is round. ’
—Allen and McCoole. the prizefight
ers, have signed articles of agreement for
$2,500 a side, to fight within fifty miles
of St. Louis on September 13.
—A Cincinnati man went up in a bal
loon, Monday evening, and fell into the
middle of tbe river, drowning before aid
could reach him.
, —Secretary Fish has received a-note of
thanks from Minister Thornton for the
promptness - with which the United
States Government took measures to
preserve neutrality on the border.
—That must huve c been a practical
young woman who, on hearing, it re
marked that silk dresses were very much
worn, said that she knew it, for bur’s
had two or three holes in it.
*—lt is a little queer, isn’t it, that while
all the darkey women 1 of the country
tiying to comb the kinks out ol their
hair, all the Radical white women are
trying to comb the kinks into tbeir’s.
—New York Cltv casts more votes than
the six States of Oregon, Florida, Rhode
Island, Delaware, Nebraska, and Neva
da. Sixteen States, with thirty-two,
United Sta‘es Senators, cast 787,310'votPS
New York Stale, with two Senators, casts
849,700. .
—DeHavens, a balloonist, ascended
from Rock Island last evening and sail
ed West. When over the western por
tion of the cltv and rapidly nearing the
ground, the hallooi/collapsed, and threw
out the aeronaut. He went through .the
roof of a summer-house, and was .injured
internally, but it is hoped not danger
ously. . -
—A letter from Crawfordsville, Ga. the
home of Hon. Alexander PI. Stephens,
nays:
I spent the day recently with Mr.
Stephens, at his residence here, (Liberty
Hall.) 'This is an unassuming country
house—a white frame building; erected
with an eye to comfort and convenience,
wiilchemi its proprietor has most succes
sfully attained. It is the coziest, conhat,
most, inyiting bachelor's retreat I ever
visited—opening upon a grassy lawn,
unusual in this Slate, and shaded by a
number of. pretty oaks, locusts, &c. I
found Mr. Stephens looking very pale
and emaciated, reclining in his invalid
chair, and Intently discussing some law
points in a murder case with a legal
friend. Though extremely feeble, when
interested or excited lie would sit uperect
ids remarkable eye would sparkle with
its old fire, and h* would address ids
hearers in an-animated anti always con
vincing strain. It la his custom, when
the weather is fine, to ait in his easy chair
in Ids verandah, and as ho converses,
wlieels himself slowly back and forth by
a convenient arrangement which costs
him hut little eflort, and, us lie says,- ex
ercises and strengthens his arms and
chest. When Uie-snn gets.low lie calls
for Ida crutches and hobbles slowly over
the lawn and through' bis well kept gar
den, iu which .he is much interested.*—
Having but a partial use of Ids legs, Mr,
Stephens walks with difficulty on Ids
crutches. Ho uevya Ida ati»looQ.u»fl:
uml uiMiiva i>o w-i/l-never be able to Jay
ids crutches aside.
OUR WASHINGTON LETTER.
What thru arc After—A Oynnre.ui of Do-nothings—A
Setith inn Speech /■ pm Senator Ferru—Uow the Big
Bailroiul tirindlc was But Through,
Corrrspon{leper American Tolunlcer.
Washington, Junk-1, 1870. ,
The N. ,Y. Hun, In a recent editorial. In regard
to the action of the radical majority in Congress
-and tho entire pblicy pursued by thendm nistra
,tion asks the question: “What nro they after?”
Why, nftJi* tho people’s money, to bo sure; after
tiie public lands; after a perpetuation of power,
through tho .Influence of over-shadow ug mo.
nopnlies, created without constitutional autho
rity; after the liberties of the people, which
they desire to grasp and hold within their vi
cious and unworthy hands; after their own In
dividual aggrandizement at tho expense of the
hard earnings of the people. They .aro after
everything honest or dishonest, that will give
them place, power and plunder.no matter what
shape It presents Itself. They are after a gov
ernmental policy that will recognize them as
tho ruling and the people ns tho ruled class.
Ronator.Wilson remarked, the.other day, that
“every body knows there never has been, at
any rate.durlng the last dozen or fifteen years, a
Congress that has sat more hours, or that has
talked more and done loss than tho present one.’’
“ Mr, President,” said Senator Cameron, last
■nook, “the Senator from Illinois says tho coun
try expects ns to pass bill, expects- us to
pass a bill, expects us to pass the Geor-'
giablll. I do not believe the country expects
any such thing.. My belief is that the country
expects u.f to pass the appropriations necessary
to carry on'the government, reduce the taxes
and then go home and attend to oiirown private
affairs. When wo are at homo we do no harm
to the public, and while wo are hero we do very
little go. il. and therefore I think the sooner wo
get off tho bettor for ourselves, and the better
for tho country.” Had t oso statements been
made by Democratic Senators, our opponents
would have alleged that they wore prompted by
a desire to make political capital. The scission
is to continue several weeks longer. What addi
tional schemes of Infamy will be perpetrated no
one can foretell. Of course there will have to bo
some additional legislation In behalf of tho ne
gro-probably an act providing for the fining
and imprisoning ofa while man Who falls to re’
move his hat, when ho meets “a colored man’’
and punishing white women who do not step
into tho street and glvoThe entire sidewalk to
wenches. Uf such aro the glories of RadlcnlMn.
Mr. Forrj’—United States Senator from Con
necticut—ln reply to tiie proscriptive policy
urged by tho vindictive Morton, from Indiana,
made a telling speech, Inst Tuesday. Ho said;
But, says tho Senator from Indiana, history is
against tho Senator from Connecticut; history
sIK-ws that yon can do notnlng by conciliating
a vanquished people. Docs It sir? What Hltl
I know of statesmanship I hnvn learned from
history, I believe it to ho God’s handwriting on
the face of this earth of ours ; and what does it
tell us? In the first place what does internation
al law tell ns is the first duty of the victor and
the sole right—yes. sir, the right of tho vat.finish
ed? Clemency. What does history teach us of
tho effect of disabilities and test-acts In other
countries with whose story .wo arc familiar ?-
Why, sir, wo ought all to bo familiar with that
old English story. It has comedown to ns from
tho books of our boyhood. What has England
gained by five hundred years of disabilities and
test-oaths for the people of Ireland? Has It
created or raised up there a loyal generation
loving the crown and ready to rally around the
qnlor. Jack ? No, sir, Ireland tells tho story to
day of tho effect of disabilities and lost oaths.
What have they done fm England herself? They
were tried after tho revolution of 18IH, Go look
‘lit tho statute-book of the reign of William HI.
On every other page Is a disability bill or a test
act; and the throne of William and Anno and
tho Georges tottered year by year upon Us foun
dations for two -fenerations, and twice’-tho
eruntlou broke forth In 181.1. Cannot wo learn
something from history? What did Austria
make by her pains and penalties and dlsablil
lilies in Hungary. Nothing but smothered re
bellion ; nothing but o Ibrcaking revolution.—
At last sho gave Hungary a free Constitution
and free representation, and peace reigns
throughout the laud, 1 might go on, sir; bu 1
finch a monstrous perversion of history ns the
argument of the Senator from Indiana seems to
me to need no further refutation.
On account of thcBo historical citations, ami
the advocacy of u more pacific policy than timt
adopted by tho proscrlplfonlsls, Senator Ferry
has been denounced in unmeasured terms by a
number of tiie lending Radical papers. Jt is a
fact worthy of remembrance, timt a member of
tho opposition party cannot utter a sentiment
In luvor of tho abolition of obnoxious disabili
ties—ln favor of any measure calculated’to re-
Bloro filomlly relations between the two sections
'of the being pounced upon by
Troy, Blanche and 'sweetheart, mul worrtcd.by
all tho dogs from tbo Radical Kennel.
The following Is tlm History of tho Anal pas
sngo of that moss outrageous swindle, tbo North
ern Pacific Railroad Hill. The House proceeding
to net upon U, tho by Mr.
Welkor (Hep., Ohio,) to restrict tho saloof
new lands granted by tho hpi to aelual settlers
at $2.50 per aero was rejected—yeas 86, nays 00.
Tho next amendment was that offered by Mr.
Rmuiall (Dcm., Penn.,) to Insert the following
proviso:
> Provided, That nothing In this hot shall bo con
strued ns a guarantee by tho Untied states of
iho bonds Issued by said company or Its agents,
or of any bonds authorized or permitted by this
act, ,
’Thoamendment was rejected—yeas, 00, nays,
92.
The amendment offered by Mr, Clarice (Hep,,
Kansas.) providing that all .tho hands) granted
shall bo Immediately open to settlors only, was
rejected— y eas, CO, nays 1115.
The amendment of Mr. Ela (Hop.. N. Ha) re
serving the right of way across the lands of »ho
company for Intersecting lines of railroads, was
rejected by yeas, 70, nays, 111.
Tho amuuclmer t of Mr. Lawrence Hep., Ohio.)
requiring annual reports of Iho condition and
transactions of the company; was rejected by
yeas, GO, nays, 90.
Another amendrhent offered by Mr. Lawrcncol
reserving to tho United States the right at al
times to tatco possession of and own Ino road
and appurtenances on payment of tho actual
cost thereof, exclusive of the value of tho lands,
was also iejected by yens, 59, nays. 115.
• The ameildmclment of Mr. Coburn (Rep. Jnd.,)
limiting tho branch rond to 3UO miles In length
was rejected by yeas, GG, nays, 109.
Another amendment, offered by M.‘. Coburn,
to restrict the mortgage to the tracks, depots,
rolling stock, and other personal property of tho
company, was rejected by yens, 09, nays, 10H.,
Tho amendment offered by Mr. Williams, re
serving to Congress tho right to regulate and
.limit the rates of freight and tho fare of passen
gers, was rejected—yeas, 69, nays, 90—this being
,lho last of theamondments.
Mr. Holman (Deni., 1iu1.,) moved to lay the
Joint resolution on the table, which was
by. a vote of Ml to 100,
' The joint resolution without any amendment
was then passed by yeas, 107, nny.s, 85.
XctoSOibcttisrinnits
rjIHE OLD' W AY
AND THE NE W
THE Git EAT AMERICAN
TEA COMPANY.
(Established ISGI.).
Nos. 31, 33, 35 and 37 Vcscy Sired ,
jS’IW YORK.
HAVE APPOINTED
DANIEL CORN MAN,
CARLISLE, PENNSYLVANIA,
to'sell their tear ami coffees at the ’tame prices
that tin* Company sell .them at their Ware-,
'houses inNew Yolk. A full supply of the fresh
est New Crop Teas will be kept for sale at nil
limes.
All goods warranted to give satisfaction or the
money refunded.
On/y one profit, charged from the Producer to the
Consumer. From five to eight profits saved by
.purchasing from this Company. .
UNDER THE OLD SYSTEM
of doing business, the consumer of Tens had to
nay about eif/ht pro tits between the producer and
himself to cover us many intermediate sales.
UNDER THE NEW SYSTEM
the Great American Tea f’o., distribute Tens" to
the i-onsumer, through their Agont.s.nll over the
eountrv. subjectlnir them to lap one profit, and
Hint hut a very modemto one. nsa small paren
tage on the Immense sales, will nmplv satisfy
the Company, for they sell thousands of chests
of Tea In the same or less time than it took to
sell one chest under the old system.
June 9, 70-3ra
JMPORTANT TO FARMERS.
BULLARD’S
IMPROVED HA Y TEDDER
IMPORTANT IMPROVEMENTS! !
(See Pamphlet.)
The experiments and public trials of the prist
• season satisfied nil who witnessed them that
the Bullard Tedder was the only one operated
that would THOROUGHLY SPREAD ADD KINDS
OF HAY ON ROUGH AND SMOOTH GROUND, “ la
tfinou.ni'mv tiiu noT-rnst.ahd leaving it in
ftLronr fleecy condition for dkvi g.”
Spreads from behind tho wheels, and does not
run over the grass after it is spread.
It is the only machine for tuknino and
spreading hay that Is of light, easy draft
for one nonsE. It’s use enables tho farmer to
cdt, cure, and stow away hay Ip one day, and
adds 20 per cent to tho value of crops. A large
fanner says : “its use in a single season will
more than pay irs cost.” The euierplslhg
farmer ennnot, will not do without it; the lon
ger ho puts off buying* the poorer ho will be.
. To bo seen’at Dlnklo’s Machine Shop, near.
Woodward’s Warehouse, Carlisle.
JOHN P. BRINDLF,
Agent,
June 0, 70—lin 4 *
T> EADING RAIL ROAD,
SUMMER ARRANGEMENT.
Monday, May IG, 1870.
Great Trunk Hue from 1 the North and ■’North,
west lor Philadelphia,. New York, Reading,
Poitsvlllo, Tamaqua, Ashland, Shamokln, Leb
anon.' Allentown, Easton, Ephrata.LitlJvLaucns
le'\ Columbia, &e.
Trains leave Han ishurg for New York as fol
lows : at 5 til, 8 ID, 11 25 A. M, t and 2 oil P. M„ con
necting with similar trains on Pennsylvania
Railroad, and arriving til New Yojk at 12 10
noon. 850, C*o3 and 1000 P. M., respectively.—
Sleeping Cars accompany thos'Ssund U 2.1 A.
M„ trains Without dhango.
■ Returnlm*: Leave New Vork atl) 00 A.M., 13
00 noon and 5 00 P. M., Phlladelphla-pt « J 5
A. M. and 880 P. M.; Sleeping cars accompany
the 000 A. M„ and 500 P. M. trains from New
York, without change.
Leave Harrisburg for Reading, Potlsville. Ta
maqda, Minursvlllo, Ashland, Shamokln, Pine
grove. Allentown and Philadelphia at s 10 A.
M,. 250 and-1 10 P. M., stopping at Lebanon and
principal way stations ; the 4 »0 P. LI. train con
necting lor Philadelphia,'PoUsvillc and Colum
bia only.- For pottsville, Schuylkill Haven and
Auburn, via. Schuylkill and Susquehanna Rail
road leave Harrisburg at 8* : I0 P. M.
East Pennsylvania Railroad trains leave Bead
ing for Allentown. Easton ami Now \ork at
7 21,10 3D A M,l 27 ami 115 P. M. Reluming,
leave New York at 0.00 A. M., 12 00 noon and 5 Ui)
P' M. and Allentown at 7 2u.A. M. 12 25 noon, 4 20
and K io P. M.
Way passenger train leave Philadelphia at 7-
80 a. M.; connecting with similar train on
Penna. Railroad, returning from Reading at 035
P. M., slopping at. all stations.
Leave Pottsville at 5-10, ODD A. M., ami 2 50 P.
M„ Herndon at 0 80 A. M.. Shamokln ats-10 and
11)10 A. M.. Ashland at 7 05 A. M„ and 1280 Noon
- Mul'mnoy city at 7 51 A. M„ and i 07 P. M„ Tama
qua at 8 38 A. M., and 2 20 P. M,, for Philadelphia
and New York.
Leave Pottsville, via; Schuylkill and Susque
hanna Railroad atS 1.) A. M. for Harrisburg,and
12 0) noon for Pino Grove ami Tremont,
Rending accommodation train, leaves Polts
vlllc at ft 40 A. M. t passes Reading at 7 80 A. M.,
arriving at. Philadelphia at 10 20 A. M., returning,
leaves Philadelphia at 5 15 P. M„ passing Rending
nth 00 P. M.. arriving at Pottsville at (M 0 P. M.
Poltstown accommodation train, leaves Potlfi
town at 0 25 A. M„ returning, leaves Philadel
phia at -100 P.M.
Columbia Railroad trains leave Readlngnt? 20
A. M., and 015 1. M., for Ephratn, Lillz, Lancas
ter, Columbia, <tc.
Perkiomen Railroad trains leave Perklomen
Junction at 0 00 A. M„ and at 3 00 and 5 80 P. M„
returning, leaveHchwonksvllleatH 05 A. M., 12-15
Noon, and-1 15 P. M..' connecting with similar
trains on Reading Railroad
Colebrookdalc Railroad trains leave Pottstown
at IMO A. M., and 0 20 P. M.. returning, leave Mt.
Pleasant at 700 and 11 SA. M., connecting with
similar trains on Reading Railroad.
Chester valley Railroad trains leave Bridge
port cIBBD A. M.,2 05 and 502 P. M., returning,
leave Downtngtown at (120 A. M„ 12 15 and 515 P.
M,, connecting with similar trains on Rending
Railroad. -A
On Sundays: leave Now York at 5 00 P. M.,
Philadelphia at SOD A. M. and 8 1} P. M., (the
H 00 A. M. train running only to Rending,) leave
PottsvtlkMU KOO A. M . Harrisburg at 5 85 A.M.
and *1 10 P. M,; leave Allentown at 728 A. M, and
H-15P. M. leave Rending at 7 15 A.M. and ID 05
P. M, for Harrisburg, at 7 28 A. M. for Now York,
at 1 15 P. M. for Allentown, and at II -10 A, M. and
■1 25 P M. for Philadelphia.
Commutation, Mileage, Season, School ami
Excursion Tickets to and from nil points at re
duced rates.
' Baggage checked through ; 100 pounds allowed
each Passenger. G. A. NICOLLB.
May 2tJ,187c. General&upcrmlemient.
jyjOTIC'E.
The undersigned, having associated his sou,
Robert F. Wipe. will) him in the undertaking
and house .furnishing business, all persons in
debted to him by nolq or book account, are re
quftaled to settle tiie same on or before Hie. loth
of.lnly next, after which tune tho books will bo
placed In hands of Johu Conumui, !■ sip, for col
lection. With duo appreciation for tho patron
age of this community for 8D years, he asks a
continuation of the sumo to tiie new firm.
Juno y, 70-51 DAVID BIPE,
EXECUTOR’S NOTICE .-Notice is
hereby given that letters testamentary on
the estate of Elizabeth Warner, lute of Carlisle,
deceased, have been granted to the undersigned
Executor. All persons knowing themselves in
debted to said estate are requested to make set
tlement Immediately, and those having claims
will present them lor settlement.
1 . HENRY SAXTON,
June o,7o— lit JtJcculor,
B. REYNOLDS, M. D.
Graduate of HAHNEMANN MEDICAL COL
LEGE, Philadelphia.
Ofilco, 2-1 West LoulhorSt., at residence of hia
mother. Carlisle.
, J imo y, 70—ika*
Z3c» CGooIDj.
IwwA
QHEAP DRY goods,
. CHEAP DRY GOODS.
NEW STORE,
D. A. SAWYER,
D. A. SAWYER,
Irvine's Corner
r. aw N adt nes.
UEBNASI^
LACE POINTS, f|
. HUMMER SHAWLS,
LACK CURTAINS.
PARASOLS, FANS, «Sc. •
Piqtres r
Marsahles,
I.OOK AT THE PItICES.
CALICOES. f>| 4. S. 10. 12
MU-LINS. «$, 8. W. W*
GINGHAMS, 12 ](., 11, 10, L,
TICKINGS, H, I*. 22, 25,
Cheapest Pants Slufl in the town.
Cheapest Cloths and CasSlmers In the town.
Cheapest Hosiery . . In the town.
Cheapest Gloves ami Handle s, In the town.
Cheapest Notions, all kinds in the town.
DRESS GOOES.
Cheapest DeLalnes in tho town,
Cheapest Poplins n the town.
Cheapest Alpnccns black .t ool’d In tho town.
Cheapest Black a Fancy Silks }n the town.
Cheapest Japanese hi the ton n
WHITE GOODS,,
Cheapest Piques Fig, striped Jn tho town.
Cheapest Marsallles ln I} 10 J°' vn *
Cheapest Percales *« '} vo J wwn *
Cheapest Chintzes J>* the town.
Cheapest Em broideries a Laces In the town.
Cheapest Collars A Cun's In the town.
Cheapest Table Linen In tuo town.
Cheapest Napkins. &c. in the town.
A splendid article Pique 23 cts. All other
goods in proportion. Como ami examine lor
yourselves. No trouble to show goods. our
motto is small profits and quick sales.
These goods have been purchas'd for cash, at
present field prices, and wo cau sell you now
u.-oiis iwoinv-rivo i>e cent, less limn they will
charge you for old goods at ol p*^ ht g^yy Eß
June 2..157U, * _
CAUCASIAN,
ILrgal ‘Nfitires.
•Jo ihc hrtrs find representatives nf .Tone E. Sharp
late 0/ X-eu'toh (uu-nsh)]) dec'll.
Take notice that In pursuance of a writ of par
tition and valuation, issued outof the Orphan s
Court ol Cumberland emmiy, and to mo directed
ntr Inquest will he held on l ie Real I-.slato of
said dec’ll., to wit a tract ol land situate Hi Iho
township of Newton, county aforesaid, bounded
on the South hv lands of Samuel M.-Sharp, on
the West by J. U. Steiret. and Allen- Henty, on
the No*th liy Hubert Mickey, lind on the East by
Robert Mickey and Samuel M Sharp, containing
•MO acres more m less, on Friday, the .Id day of,
June A. D.. 1H70.nl 11 o’clock. A. M.,on Hie prem
ises for the purpose of making partition- and
valuation of tho Real Estate of said dec d.
Sheriff's Office, Carlisle, \
. April 20,1570. , J
JOS. C. THOMPSON, Sheriffs
May 5,70-flt
nOUKT PROCLAMATION.- Notice
I / Is hereby given .I**-« 11 persons Interested,
that an adjourned Court of Common Pleas, will
he held at Carlisle, In and for Cumberland[coun
ty on Mondav tho 15th day of August, ISiO, and
to continue one week.,for the trial ol causes
pending and undetermined in said court.
By order of ilie court,
* JOS. C. THOMPSON, Sheriff.
May 5.7 0-lc .
TJIXECUTOR’H NOTlCE.—Notice is
Vi hereby given that letters testamentary on
the estntcrof John L, Waggoner, lateof North
Middleton township. Rceased.have been grunt
ed to the undeisipned Executor, All persons
knowing themselves Indebted to said estate are
requested fo make sot lenient linmeoiately, and
•those having’claims will present them for set
tU!mo,,t - r. W. Q.UIOI.EY,
Juno 2, 70—Gt ' E'xeculor.
NOTICE —Notice isTfereby given that
an application fora charier of Incorpora
tion for tho I'antp Hill Cemetery association,
located Jn East Pennsborough township, has
llintie-KJ \J*fUtV t»l tvmiii"ii -m:nn Itr
Cumberland county, and that the sumo will bo
granted at the August terra lb7o, unless objection
be made llioroto. M. PENROSE,
June 2,.70—5t Ati'i/. for Applicants.
NEWVH.I.E, PA., DOO. Ist ItfUO.
NOTICE is hereby (riven Hint appiiea
tion will be made for the incorporation of
n Hunk of.Dlsconnt, Deposit and Circulation,
under the authority nl the Act of Assembly. ap«
proved March 22d. 18111 ; to he located Id Newvllle
Cumberland Penna.*nnd to be called
the‘‘People's National Bank.” with a capital ot
Fifty Thousand Dollars, with the nrivlllge of
Increasing the same to Oud Hundred Thousand
Dollars* • • .
Wm. Knettle, Jonathan Snyder,
11. M. ijnya, Henry Killian,
H. Manning. John Redick,
Bnht. Montgomery, .Samuel M. Sharp,
Peter Myers. John Oiler.
Dec. 1(1. 18(i9 (Ira.
NOTICE.— Notice is hereby eriven that
letters of administration oh the estate of
Frederick Alehele, late of Carlisle. Cumberland
connlv, deceased, have been granted to John
Usznian, residing in said county. All persona
knowing themselves Indebted to sold estate,
are-requested to make payment Immediately,
xml those having claims will present them for
settlement.
May 12,70—fit
AUDITOR’S NOTICE.—The under
signed Auditor appointed by the Orphans’
court of Cumberland county, to marshall
and distribute the balance In the hands of
John Mater, Adin’r. of Mary Mater, deceased,
hereby gives notice to those interested, that he
will at r end to Ihe duties of his appointment, at
his olllce In Carlisle, on Friday, Juno 17, at 10
o'clock, A. if.
May 20,70-3 L
NOTICE.— Notice is.hereby given that
letters of Administration on the estate of
David Meals, deed., late of South .Middleton
township, Cumberland county, hnvojbecn grant
ed to George W. Pressed, residing in Monroe
township. All persons knowing themselves In
debted to said estate will make payment imme
diately. and those having claims will present
them for settlement.
GEORGE W. PRESSED,
May 20,71> Ct Administrator,
IN THE ORPHANS’ COURT IN
JL AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CUMBER
LAND.
In the matte)' of (he Estate of James Culver, late of
Calljoimta, deceased,
The undersigned-Auditor appointed by the
said Court to make distribution of the bilance
remaining in the hands of John Miller, admin-
Istratorof the said James Culver, lute of Cali
fornia, dee used, to and among the parties le
gally entitled thereto, hereby gives notice that
he will meet Ihe parlies interested for the pur
pose of his appointment, at his oflice. In Carlisle,
Pa. nn Fiidm/, JtOu l.j, IS7O, at 10 o'clock, A. M.,
when and whoi e they muy attend if so minded.
M. C. HERMAN,
Juno 2, 70—Gt Amiitor.
Estate op Joseph culver,
LATE OF THE BOROUGH OF CARLISLE,
deceased.
Xn the Orphans' Court of Cumberland County t
The Auditor appointed to make ft correct dis
hilmtlon of tho estate of Joseph Culver. Into of
thofummch of Carlisle, deceased, and to ascer
tain thoamnuntov-rpald, If any, hy John Mil
ler, executor of said deceased, to the distribu
tees of said estate, and report the same to tho
said Court, will attend to tho performance ofhis
duties as Auditor aforesaid, at his otllre, In the
borough ol Carlisle. ia„ m Friday, the JlUrenth
dal/ of July, A. D. lK7<b at 10 o’clock. A. M., when
and where all parlies lulcicsted are hereby noli
tilled and requested to attend and represent
IhelrsevoiaJ Interests. „
M. C. HERMAN,
June 2, 70—lit Auditor.
'VTOTIGB.-Notice is herohy Riven that
a meeting of tho Htockholdera of the Mira
mar Iron Company will tie held o tho 2UMi day
of JUNE, IS7O, at 1 o’clock, P. M.. of said day, at
tho “lilt? spring Hotel." Newvlllo, Cumberland
county, I’u., fur the purpose of electing oftlcers
and completing tho oiganizatlou of suld com
pany.
HARRISON MALTZBERQER,
•HENRY M. KRIM,
AKBUUY DERLAND,
HORACE A. YUNDT,
Reading Pa., May 30,1H70. Commissioners,
Juno 12. 70- 3t
QOMBINATION.
TWO IN ONE
JIA VER&TICK BROTHERS,
No. 5 South, and No. 10 North Hanover streets
April 121, 1870-ly
QABDEN BEED3,
AT HAVEUSTICK BROTHERS,
No. 10 and 5 North and South Hanover streets,
HUGS AT
No, 5 South, and No. 10 North Hanover streets,
haverstick brothers,
CARLISLE, PENN’A,
April 21,1870— ly
at the"
Trvine'a Corner
jlargalns In
JOHN TJKZMAN,
Administrator,
A. B. SHARPE,
A mtitor
CARLISLE, PA.
fWciiicai,
r£IO PHYSICIANS,.
New York, Atjodst 15th, 15$
Allow mo lo call your attention to my PhePi
RATION OP COMPOUND EXTRACT BUCHt
Tho component paita aro BUCHU, long leaf
Cubelfs, Juniper berries.
MODE OF PREPARATION.—Buchu, In vacuo,
Juniper Berries, by distillation, lo form q
gin. Cubebs extracted by displacement with
spirits obtained from Juniper Berries; very m
tlesugar.ls used,nod astnail proportion of»pi,
rlt. It is more palatable than any-now In n«e.
Buchu, as prepared by Druggists, i« 0 f e dark
color. It la a plant Unit emits Its fragrance* tie
action of flame destroys this (Its active pr'lncl
pie), leaving a dark and glutinous decoction,-
Mine Is tho color of Ingredients. The Buchu in
my proportion predominates; the smalles
quantity of the other Ingredients aro added ti
prevent fermentation; upon inspection, liwli
be found nob to be a Tincture, as made In pn ar
macopcea, nor Is It a Syrup—and therefore can
bo used In cases where' fover or Inflamatloru*
Ist. In this, you have tho knowledge of the In
gradients and the mode of preparation.
Hoping that you will favor it with, a trial, am
that upon inspection it will meet with your ap
probation,
With a leellng of c-nildence,
I am, very respectfully
H. T, HELMBOLp,
Chemist and Druggist of 10 Years’ Experience
[From the largest Manufacturing chemists Inti
wSd.]
“lam acquainted with Mr. H. T. TlelmbolJ
he occupied the Drug Store opposite my res
deuce, and was successful In ' conducting tl
business whore others bad . not been equally i
before him. been favorably impress*
with his character and enterprise.”
m WILLIAM WEIQHTMAN,
Ftfm nf Powers and Welghtraan Manufaelurin
Chemists. Ninth and Brown Streets, Phils
delphla.
• —n isDM'imnD’B FLDTD" ETCTnAor u vauu. it
weakness. Tho exhausted powers of’Naiur
which are accompanied by. so many alarmiE
symptons among which will be found, Italic
'sitton to Exertion,Loss of Memory.Wakefulne*
Horror of Disease, or Forebodings of-Evil; i
fact, Universal Lassitude, Prostration,- and Ins
blllly to enter Into the enjoyments of society.
The constitution, once affected with Orgaol
Weakness, requires the aid of Medicine If
Btrenghten and invigorate the system, whirl
HELMBOLD’S EXTRACT BUCHU invariable
does. If no treatmeulissubmitted to, Consump
tion or insanity ensues.
HELMBOLD’S FLUID EXTRACTOF BUC’Ut
In directions peculiar to Females, Is unequal)*
by any other preparation, as in Chlorosis, or Re
teutlon, Painfulness, or Suppression of Customs
ry Evacuations, and all complaints incident t
the sex, or the decline or change ofllfo. - ,
HELMBOLD’S FLUID EXTRACT BUt’Ul
AND IMPROVED ROSE WASH will radical!'
exterminate from the system diseases arlslei
from habits of dissipation, at IiLMo expense.li!
tie or no change in diet),no inconvenience orW
poem o; BupcrßOdlng lh<.RO Troj&*
ant and dangerous remedies, Copalva and Mer
cury, In all these diseases.
Use HELMBOLD’S FLUID EXTRA(JT UUCHC
in all diseases of these organs, whether exlsllrj
in maleor.female, from whatever cause original
ing, and no matter of how long standing, it ll
pleasant In tasmand odor,.“lmmediate'’ In ac
tion, and more strengthening than any of the
preparations of Barker Iron.
Those- suffering from hrokeu-dowu or dellcal*
constitutions, procure the remedy at once.
The reader must be aware that, however slight
may bo the attack of tue above diseases, Itls cer
tain to affect the bodily health and mental
powers.
All. the above diseases require thenld offt PW*
retie. HELMBOLD’S EXTRACT BUCHU ia W
great Diuretic.
Sold by Druggists everywhere. Price—St2s P' r
bottle, or 0 bottles for 50.50. Delivered to
address. Describe symptoua In nll coinmuDlf*'
lions.
Address H. T. HELMBOLD, Drug and Clienl
Ofti Warehouse, 504 Broadway, N. Y.
Nouooro genuine unless done up lu B{ee * ,€
graved wrapper, with fac-slmile ol my C^ eiu
cui; Warehouse, and signed
H. T. UELMiJOBI*
May 10, 70-ly
Novesiber 1,1551.
r m