Ctle atriumbia giJ• -„,„; J. W. YOCIIISE,_ J. N. YOCUM, Publishers and J VOLF.ERSBERGER, 1 l'roprietors. Columbia, Pa. . - Satu2:4o/4;_76/3eiizber,:6, 1869. Colatemonoxs,letters, contributions, generally of merit and interest to the reader, will be acceptable from friends from all quarters.. . SUBSCRIBE FOR THE COLUMBIA , SPY! COLITMBIA spy !MEI HEW YORK .14VDEPENDENT: 'WITTE ENGRATZIGS 01' • , Grant & Coif is The ; sry, worth $2.00 per au ' untie; the NEW YORK. INDEe ' PENDENT worth $2.50 per ' annum; - 1a Steel Engrav ing, of. Grant,.worth $2.00, and a Steel „ - Engraiiing o Colfax, worth $2.00 ' ILLL FOR FOUR IDOULARS ! To any t , tntsubscriber for the SPY, who sends us ,S-4.oo;Ave will send not only the SPY, but Tug INDEPEx.oxxx—the largest newspaper in the world, ably edited and full of general Interest, together with the. suberb 'steeV engravings of Grant and Colfax. This offer is'One of the most liberal we have ever made. " The pictures are gems 'of art, by Ritchie, oue,of the most celebrated artists. the 1.40110 afrer to any perbou, whether an old or new subscribe - r, with will ae enre one new subscriber and f-1.00 in cash.. - OTHER PREAIUMNS For 15 new subscriber:3, and 3.30.00, in cash, we will give one of Webster's New UNABRIDGED DICTIONARIES, containing .3000 engravings, and the most complete work in the English To every new subscriber, or to every eld sub scriber, who secures a new subscription for us, `and $3.00 'in eash;we sena to any address one copy of the SPX and a copy of .TIKE LAny's ' a monthly magazine of literature and lkithing, for one year. ' THE LAST AND BF:STI WHEELER & WILSON'S trarivallea Sezving 3la,chine ! For Go new subscribers and 3120.00 in e-tsh, we will give one of Wheeler and Wilson's Unri valled Family Sewing Machines, the best in the avorld;and selling at the rate-of one hundred thousand a year • the cash price of which is 035.00. This machine may be seen at the General Agen cy,- 61 'Ninth QUeen Street; Lancaster, Pa.- , ,Ilerejs anuppertunity 10.,g0t. a machine for, It is warranted for one year, and in structions how to operate ilviti - fr'ed: The ma chine_ tvlll,,bo complete in :ovory- Alepartment,. With all • the necessary attachments perfect. tet: us see who will get theiflrel. ThanisOgiying Proclamation.. lIARRISII,Udar. Oct,,2s.—The Clover, nor to•dap issued the following proclama- tion - ComniOnthealtk of PC71710 Ivania rErksg.sOivlNG • The year. which is,drawing to a close has been free from pestilence. , Health bas pre vailed throughougtholand. Abundant crops .reward,the labors of the husbandman. Com- . merce and manufactures have successfully prosecuted their peaceful The - Mines .• and forests hav,e yielded abundantly., The ' nation has increased in'wealthendstrength, !peace has.prevailed and its blessings-have advanced, every interest of the ,people iu tlib'Union. - 7;3l.iirinony - and ~ fraternal intercourse restored-are ebliterat.: ingThe marks of past conflict and estrange ment: - Burdens have been lightened,•means have been , increased, civil and religious "lierty are secured to every inhabitant of the ,:-.land,,svhose soil is. trod, by-none - but 'free men. It becomes a people thus favored - ' make !'acknoWledgment• to the supreme• , Author from whom such blessings flow of - their gratittide and their dependence, and to :render' praise: and thanksgiving for the -,same, and, devoutly to implore • a continu ' erica of Go ° d's mercies ; therefore, • I, Ulysseis S.: Grant, - President :of ithe' United States, do recommend, that ,Thurs-• day,' the 3.Bth'day'br.NoveMber next, beob served ete r a ,day, , uf, thanksgiving • and; of 'praise and of,prayer to Almighty . God, the Creator rand :the of , the 'Universe. And rdo further _recommend Mall the peo-' pleb: the United States td assemble ou that •• d.ayin - ,their "accustomed places-,of public , worship,. and to unite in the homage and "Ipprifee 'due to: the :13 - Otintiful 'Father of all . • anercies,_ and lmfervent prayerTor,;thecon , finualace of the manifold blessings He has - -.vouchsafed tons as•a people. ' • -, In tesdnacnywhereof.l.Ainve 'wren nto set. my hand and cluiSed the seal of the United. States to be affixed this ditty-day of Coto -1869, and pi* thp Independeocc of the'UnitoceStates, - the iiinety4ourth• •„ • - „', S. Gro.&-Nw. • By the President,. ..t.tamtirox - Pisn. a . - the • United - States having issued the foregoing proelagtation. I'do' most earnestly advise that the peo ple Gomthanwealth bf ''Petinsylva - era; for'the'r - easeikthe'relegiven , strictly 'obsei've its recommenclatiobs. Given iiiider hada and the 'seal 'of the -Comnioi4eaftli; l- ti • .11iriisliuri, this 25th day of — OßTab — e7r7Trinie . year of our Lord '' one :thousand- eight" hundred and ''siity , :tiine,lthfie of the' rnilependitiee' of IheVnit&ESitt tes` t inn tf-forir'th: , "'" Jorn_tN, r A Secretary of the liotnizionirealth: •.? Tiz CotuutylOomxuittee. mot: du Mon ,the..Court House.. :Very little business was, transacted.::,The ease or D. 0 . : aTh gs,.Couuty,Committee man of the; third-iyardi this...l3ofough, was trodtioed .by W..:Julmsoni, Esq., who . .Present P l-a Ation...signgd iv.. nearly _fifty voting eitizena-of-(h)ll . trnbia,- setting forth the guilt of izsaud.• accom panying it witlLsubstantial -proof:,:of the ,chargei: v-Tbo:proof.embraced2even dodti sl mentary:e,videnee in the; Shape of demo- Joratic vard tiekets were. received • t fromlWallings. thp, face of ,all::this, 7,thei Committee „Mildly, accepted, the4Ale ..' nial alr.',Wallings it& ~ the.• whole ,f , :.mattenoni.thc: table: not important ; b Comte ttee % does,. or • how they. inay, ant; the :ruat ter ar • the future ,:'restti , .with; the people i *and ;know:jus tice will be dond. „do not believe that a Committee—mau—sbould—be allowed to ~,net„witis,4np:quityl , on,,,elpoSipo,day,.. and not ottlyipeisotiallyhut,,officiplly Jip!p,to ... ,11 Sfei" IvPart•Y. A V ) !1.:. 1 9 • r.ePre.selats• ~Thp. j proof.,Kas,befoip., the . ,c on; cqittce,,but ..shey chop,tp .. :lpt the guilty pUrty. glory in his shame.'.'. p,, particular .shims • of a singlp.,wsrd,politi,oppk„ure to be eon"- sultp4,x4e..r ithun,the interests ough of ten tbou‘nd people, ye ,faTor,the, adoption oL.now.Ltuelige,_and will do all we , : ..puttto i getjid,o . frupn who.bad hetter,leave i dtlspurtffs,for ths : puity.'e g00d.,!, • •'^ !" gouFin9of that, theonly,uay ictare Honesty * at; "the polls,ls :to have: eleition "on do7Y ) all "ifnvertlie'llnited . •State;i;:auclt:thus:effoet. ually stop the ••...nefariOus ; schemes pesters. Hail Horrors ! exchange thus heads an article on, the.recent'litirning:of steamer ; S:ter:lowan on the Mi'ssissipPl: It seems that 4ufiiln . lifeE,ls considered - of no ;anore 'value - tinktt . •,mere.,property, and the utter reeklessnOsk with„iruen send linman 'beings into eternify'di appalling. ;Only a few years ago a steamer earryinr , passengers ex ploded by the ignition of powder, and alron board Weird - lost, not ono left to tell the sad tale. Then a law was enacted forever prohibiting the transportation of powder ou board a boat carrying passen gers. o Then . -followed another terrible steamboat disaster by the ignition of oil, and .another• law against oil. - Now a steamer laden with-hay and tar rying two hundred and eighty souls, is set on fire through the carelessness of a few gamblers, who were playing cards by the aid of a burning candle near the hay. The scene that followed the cry of fire beggars description; words fait, imagina tion is at fault; the St. Louis papers are full of the exciting incidents of the terri ble disaster. A blazing fire was around these luckless souls and a death . amid icy waters before them. On deck the scene was fearful. Everybody was confused, they rushed to the edge of the vessel, and seeing the lurid flames that illuminated the heavens and glistened on the dark waters —feeling the heat that scorched and burned, hearing the explosion that thun dered from the engine room and machin ery department, frightened -by the noise and confusion, as well as blinded by the smoke, the unfortunate passengers plung ed into the river andsank to watery graves. The terrible scene can better-ho imagined than described. In the frenzy of the mo ment,-it is asserted that a groupe of men were contending over'a watery. grave for the possession of a hale of hay to save• their lives. A savage contest arose for the prize, when one more desperate than the rest plunged a. knife - into' his companion's body, and the lifeless form rolled over into the current. These are some of the scenes as depicted by cores - ponclents of the western papers. Why have we to pay such sacrifices for the safety and protection, to which every citizen is entitled ; now we will have another law; but why not at once have such legislation, as will at once and for ever prevent. similar disasters. Even railroad travel is often rendered 'unsafe by the loading of combustible and explo sive material. upon• the- train" either as freight ov baggage. We have known in stances where. kegs of powder were placed in the express ear, and the agent moved about them -with a burning cigar. If people will not demand protection., hey must hold their lives as a ready sacrifice to the stupidity and carelessness of public carriers. .Editor The Democratic Victory. o• "Shameless and cunning frauds," like those which the editor of The World saw ,perpetrated at our polls one year ago, and which he undoubtedly attributed .to Wm. .\I,-T.weed• and Oakey Hall, have again defeated .the,,Republieattsin'the.general vote of sour State. The vote polled here ,byi"repeaters".yesterday canuot•have Jen below;20,000, and we think it large- Jyr,excecied that amount. The Vdth, and Nllth Wards gave• a Democratic majority considerably exceeding their en ire legal vote ; but.the XXlst (Sheriff O'Brien's) far outstripped all rivalry, polling about -4,060 fraudulent votes, and. thus largely. increasing the fraudulent Democratic majority it rolled up , for Seymour, Hoff man Co. last year.. We , presume the. vote returned front this ~ W ard for the• -Republican candidates is several hundred below; that actually east for them; and we :haye'assurances that like,frauds were per 'petrated, in other:Wards. The swindlers feeling sure of legal. impunity, were even, bolder than last 3:ear,•and piled' up -the , majorities in their rotten boroughs. with, an utter, :recklessness of. appear ances; but they did not operate so• uni- ; ,versally, as last year. 'Still, they swindled us-enough for their •present exigency, and know,• how to double rthe amount: when ever the•stake shall seem to justify the cost_ Unless : the laws can be so amended as to meet and baffle the-new devices and. skillful combinations of the villians who, now-misrule; •and plunder: our city, our elections must henceforth be farces. But the, magnitude of ,the .evil almost insures its speedy correction. In the rural ,districts, the vote was generally light, there being no offices of first-rate importance fo-be,filled this year. .The majorities of either party consequent ly fall off in most of its strongholds, hut , there is no material change evinced in the sentiment of • the State. Could the polls -be purged-of illegal' votes, our• majority would be just about the same as when Gen. Grant was chosen President.—N. Y. Teibune. The Tariff Man. The ; position of th . e-tariff-mrin, and his recent:conversion . to Republican protec tion,. reminds us of .a. good, story, which ;we find recorded in Anthon's Classical bictionary. • piogenes, the great cynic philosopher, who was recently invoked to I,rop up weal--kneed and - despairing Dem ocrats, was a very funny fellow•in his way. ..11e wore a coarse cloak, carried a wallet andAta. , and frequented public places so •much.:that he, soon learned more than his ruler, Xeniades, of Corinth, who set. him : free, and made him ,the instructor of his childrpo. During-. his, employment .as family tutor, le i had an interview with Alexander-the Groat. This was the oc ,casion of Alexander's accession to the command of : the .armies of. the, Greeks, ,when: people of,all ranks came. to pongrat ulate.him on his -new honors. -Diogenes being bold,..manly and independent, did ,not,go. ; ,Alexander,_ curious, to see One so haughty„ wen t search .Diogenes, whom he found,sitting ia,a tithinthe sun. ,I,cpzf..dlex . cylsr, the G . ,:cat,sld. the.mon ,arph; : and I,,anr:DZpsejzcs„t4e C 110; re plipiljthe pkilOsophey, „leFander,,then reg nested tictAnow what kintl)y,,office . he could .render,A Cy nip„tol-,whicit, Diog epos said, ;`gland front LqlzcOn.,?ze cad the r 7tin.'("TheEDiogenas of to- • day_wouldhave stipulated for'n.xevenue., appoin bate n t.. at Alexander,, pleased with the, sin gular conduct of the philosopher, re marked, "If I were not Alexander, I - :;would wish to be Diogenes." rK -':Just so the tariff men are go'jeelingly 'n love with their recently adopted prinei :ple of protection, one which Republicans '11 . 6:4 . 0 always favored as a cardinal - plank in political platforms, that they might act the modern Diogenes, and exclaim, "If I were, not adetuocrat,4- would-be a-Re putt- The Noventbet' Elections; Tux Noieinbei. elections .thr . oughOut" the different states, have resulted as was eipected. Thit asmali vote was Both parties were apathetic—elcept the democratic repeate'rs of New York. In the city the Republicans gained 20,000, and lost nearly the same amount in the country. districts. The Legislature isße publican. New Jersey RepubliCans gained several members - of the Legislature, but do not have a majority- Massachusetts presented - a triangular field of operations. but Olafliu, Republi can, is elected over all oppsition. Wisconsin gives 10,000 majority, quite enough to secure victory agaSust democrat ic contested election cases. Minnesota went Republican in opposi tion to democratic and temperance tickets, and "Maryland, my Maryland" is rebel as 111114 The returns from every section give sufficient evidence that the principles of the Radical party have been sustained where the least ray of hope existed. OVER four hundred thousand dollars a month have been saved for the Goveren went in the Navy Department alone. On every hand the administration of Gen. Grant and his ministers is vindicated,, and the howls of the ,democracy about profli gacy effecteally stopped. A.decrease of the public debt of .87,- 363,852 for the month of October, and of $64.332,270 for the eight months of Grant's administration, was an excellent announcement for election, day. These figures answer innumerable Democratic argumen ts.— Tribune. Journalism. The. best form for newspapers was long . a disputed point, "and 'there still eNsists some doubt ,as to the advantage claimed by the quarto over the folio. 'rho large dailies like the Press and Tribune pre serve the quarto, while others, as succescul adopt the, folio, or four • page form. The Pittsburg pispalch about to lay aside its quarto dress, and says: • , To-morrow morning we will appear in folio form. 'Our readers will have a handy readable sheet, with more matter in it than is contained in the ,Dispatch in its present for - m. Our advertisers will have their ad-' vertisements all displayed on "the outside of the paper," and both - advertisements and reading matter•willhe presented in clear, new . type. The Philadelphia "Press," in noticing the recent return of 'Gazette froth quarto to folio, calls , the change progressing, back ward..l, As .we are about to, take the plunge ourselves, we Protest againstinterpretat ion, Whieli2pOsibly was suggested by the fact that the Press is itself a quarto. If this change is progressing -backward, ive will travel that road! in good...company. The Boston Prep, which rushed some years ago into a quarto, has emerged back to the folio form. The Chicago' Tribune, the leading paper of the Northwest, made the change, though with great reluctance. The Chicago Republican likewise progressed backward. The Cincinnati Gazette, with its' immense' circulation and business, has never depart ed from the folio: , The Baltimore papers are all, we believe, folios; The most prosper , ous paper in I . 'ldladelphia,the "Ledger," is O -a folio. Only in New York city does the quarto'-form seem' to be acceptable, and even there the folio papers, the Sun and the : .Nr_vos, are steadily, encroaching upon the business of the famous quarto-quadrilateral namely,, the Herald, Wo . rtd, the Times and the Tribune.' 'ff ti3e . :Sien hid . 'not be ,come the guerrilla Whits, it would .have z ready„been .one,orthe leading papers of .the Metropolis. The tendency, in.. the. newspa per world is toward condensation and point, • rather than' piefiiieriess . ," , to single* rather than to deuble 'sheets; and ne , "jou real can .successfully resist the pressure. .:; TEM Convention of-the Sunday, Schools of Lancaster county ; was held at:alai-lotto, on the'2.h 4 ihTtricltli• ink; The 'attendance was large and the" exeroiseS' ;very interest ing:. : The ;Sunday, Schools of Columbia, Mount Joy, and in fact of.tbe.whole county Were well represented. '-• The exercises opened wiili - Singing and prayer.•' A committee 'Was' appointed to re port permanent officers; they selected, as Rev. D. D., of Philo delnhia, 'Permanent President ; Sigmund P. Wisiier'iMdliaa'c'S. Geist, Secretaries. • From the''ifa'riittiari we leurn •that the 'Chairrnan, after inalcing'a - few l remarks, in troduced;Rev. F. IL Nevin,•ho addressed the convention in ayery able .and pleasing manner. The following questions waii tlidn discussed : ' " What is the best method of distributing the books of-the Sunday-School library?" which was ,parliipatedin. : by Revs. .Bri dells, Turner, 'Steck, Nevin and Gray, and Messrs. Essick and ,Wisner and the presid ing offcer. The ',',Question .Box "—which, by the way, is a boxinto which all, questions on Stinday'Sehool"m•itters can be deposited by any one present, for theliresiding officer or any momber,present to answer—was then examined and found to contain a number of questions of practical irnporthnce. The only one discussed wtis "What is the best method of instructing,' an Infant class," which closed the afternoon session._ • • - - The Second Session—childrens' 'meeting, opened at 7 dcloclt, in .the evening.-with singing by tkl - e,childrerl of the several Sun darSchnols, and reliding of the scriptures by - T>r:- Hay, :of Fbikidelphin; prayer' by Rev. John Edgar, of Mount Jdy,. Addresses were then ~delivered. by, Dr. on the " Grifoo of obedience ;" F.Turner, of Ltiiiciiiier, - On " The - great - ivOrk OF the Sunday School System ;".°Frof. 'John Beck, of Litiz, on the Absence of Evil ;" Rev. E. H. Nevin, of Laneaster,,on•the. " Influ ence exerted by Sunday School Between each of ihe'addresses, singing 'e . ..f..as had front the - children; which, we are - glad .to learn, was very-creditable. to- them-and to those having that portion ,of the exer cises in charge. Benediction by Rev. • Mr. • The Frida'y morning'session was held in the M..E: Church. ..The,session was opened with Aev ‘ otiontti ,exorcises, conducted i by 'Rev.. Mr. Stook, of Columbia. Rev. E.H. Sevin' then midi:viscid the convention, for -some- time, •ono the importance:of Sunday School training. ; +A spirited discussion then ensued on, '.The best method ,of conducting a StindaY 'School." Revs. Gray, Steck, Tiirner; Bridells 'and' Bear, Rheineol,-Wehrly,• Geist =and , Prof. Beck, participated; in the. discussion. A number of questions from the." Question Bea.'" were answered by the different mein 'be re:: The' iitternoon ' session elbeed -the ConientiOn. The--attendance of parthits and others was large. Interviewing.. ,[This is the-age, 4 of i nterir'le were, and as everybody is going wilcikm - The - subject, a radieal cure for this radical ; evil :inust'..be adopted.; Below We Ltivollui (sarcastic) re port of a correspendent4 of 'the , WltusVille ~ 13. e ralct, who has7.visitetr.orie orthose'Olci, old welt, we hear of every=day- Prrrtorx, Oct. 29th, ISG9. I take a great deal of pleasure In trans isnatkng_to ho_ facts con Mined „In_tiiis letter, whice aro nothing more nor fess than the discovery of one of thoseold moss grown fossils that are yearly brought to light through the energy of certain journalistic adventurers. • " ; • Therels'residing in this a human being who is now in the two hundreth.and forty-first year of his age—and he thinks that he must have forgotten several decades at least. The name of this Daogenarian is . Jacob O'Fusilleh. He was born in the house he now occupies, on the 28th clay of August, 1625. Owing to an extreme diffi dence, combined with a sensative and re tiring disposition, ho has carefully avoided all newspaper reporters, and until I struck him ye terday, no part of his previous his tory has ever been made public, though lie knew that were he to-speak, the young men who knew George Washington and the Pittsburgh boy of ninety-three years (in terviewed by the Commercial's reporter) would be thrown into the shade, as would the elderly gentlemen known 149 " revol a tioners" who have touched par. The fields upon which Mr. O'F's Illocks of bill headed pigs now root out a precarious living, were once a howling wilderness, in which the wild fox. nodded in the wind and the Indian dug his hole unscared. He was an (Adman when Wm. Penn came through this section of country swindling the red men out of their producing territory, and getting the controling interest in their best wells for a few paltry beads. Until he was one hundred and forty years old :Ur. O'lonsilleh chewed tobaoco like a college graduate, to use his own expression, and has smoked a meershaum pipe since he was ten years old, end it is to these in vigorating sti.Lnlants that he attributes his present longevity. When Le was " rising of ninety years" he commenced to swear, and for thirty or forty years he swore like a pirate. This, too, seemed to add to his general good health, and he thinks enabled him to pass through several cholera seasons with impu nity. He broke off this miserable habit on account of going into the fishing trade, on the Allegheny, and learning it might affect his luck. Mr. O'F, was at one time a firm believer in vegetarian diet,as being conduc ive to long life. For nearly twenty years ho confined himself entirely to vegetable food, such as potatoes, bean soup, roasted chestnuts, and corn bread. This gradually served to work an entire change in his sys tem. His muscles became soft and flabby, a second growth crop of potatoes and beans began to grow up through his hair, giving him the appearance of green_ old age. He finally became so obese and gassy that it was.with difficulty he touched the ground when he walked, and when ho hoed corn, or walked in the hay field, it became ne .cesary to attach sand bags to,.his person, to hold liirm down to„his work. One day his suspenders giving away he' came near going up, but luckily caught a tree and held on until hO was Again buckled down. This led to an avowal of disbelief in the Vegetarian system. - fie never east but one vote in his life; and that was for a town constable who was defeated, and he says he never.will vote again. _Mr. W. has had a now set of teeth every five years since he was born, bat even this he tinds insufficient for the mastication of some of the bull beef that has been intro duced into the country since the discovery of oil. does not remember much about George, but the elder Washington, and George's grandfather he knew from their infancy up. George Washington, he says never amounted to much, and instead of staying at, home " bucking " stevelwppd likd other boys, he was , always running round,slashing Into the cherry trees with his hatchet, or watching for a chance to tell the truth, where a lie would have answered his purpose much better. In my interview with this elderly gentleman, I expressed my thanks for the gratification this confab afforded me, and hinted of the pleasure it gave me to talk, with one who knew the heroes of the revolution when they were childrexi, and, who himself wielded the sword in defence of liberty ; but it seems I was on the wrong track, for the old buck wheat chuckled. to himself a moment and said, " Oh bless y0u,,1 don't fight; I did a little bodnty jumping until they got to drafting everybody, when I bush wacked on both sides the rest of the war " I was one of them Indians that pitched the tea into Boston harbor, but I managed ; to smuggle away 'enough of it to last us 'a few years. When the war of 1812 broke out I sent my youngest boy (who' was. then 130 years old) .initsa,sutler. Ha suttled" for a couple of years, and was finally hung by Commo dore Perry because he used to run his goods 'into the British dines occasionally." . Mr.' O'Fusilleh is still's hale, hearty' old man, and bids fair j.o last another century, unless the grocer who, supplies him with the necessaries of life tries to introduce un "iriferioiarticle • of fusil oil info his accus tomed mbrning snifter. I had almOSt for gotten to state that he fell on ton buzz saw a•few years since,,while at work in a g.i'st mill, and before he could get off lost one of his ears and his right leg. He walked nearly eleven miles to his house, with his ampu tated leg over his shoulder, and •carrying his ear in his pocket. He was forced to cut Off tti - o or three more inches of his leg,which ho did with a hand-Saw, resting the stump on a saw-horse during the operation. Not withstanding the many contrivances offered him by artificial limb manufacturers, ho refused all proffered assistance, and now wears a basswood leg which effectually con ceals his loss. Last year he visited Petro leum Centre to attend a revival, and while there (it being his first visit, and unused to the quiet ways of the citizens) he became engaged in a little dispute with a friend, and the result was that he had• the other•-eat^ thawed off and dropped one of Ills .eyec i isin the excitement. He has recently fastened a couple of fresh water clam shells to his head, andenn hear better than ever—though he says daring high tides and pond freshets in the creek his now ears open and shut, Much to his annoyance. Not having the means to purchase an artificial eye, he took a gloss agate from his• boy, which answers every purpose, though he can only go one eye on it, He VMS scalped by the Chief Cornphinter fifty years ago, and has never worn a wig Since ;' he thinks it keeps his brain cooler to wear nothing on his bond. Once a year he Tarnishes his cranium, and during- the oil excitement of 1863 he had a skillful draugh tsman draw a map of his tariff upon its surface for reference in case of his land be coming valuable. His arms bare been broke comany times that ho still has SUN - - oral cords of splinters left trom.setting the Same. which ho is using for kindling wood. 'Besides these trifling injuries; Mr. O'F. is a wrll-•preservbd :bid - gentleman, and -what .thereAs left•of_hira enjoys .good health: I shall interview him again and at no distant day. Dmaaren. ' , Nciw that Ulention, is over, we hope that . the Aepublican . editors in perks, Laueas ter, liuntingdon,, Allegheny, .and other counties in,the state, ,will pay, more . atten tion to, the ,t..equiremcnts.of .the readin g public than . to Ouse_ each. other. , Their ,bickeyings, 4uriug,,the,.last ' , few, months had much to 4.with, our reduced vote.—, d,ot4t, l hnlitive-, it;, the truth must out, corruption mint lie exposed. 'Spy-ings. —Nile green is a new shade, — . Virginia has a chalk in LI) e —Joe Johnson is in Augusta. —The cheif of the Iroquois is ND. —Chicago boasts of her fall trade —Ristoifis acting at Montevideo —The Presbyteries want re-union. —Dronnitie fame is most transient. —The Scotch invented steroty ping —Atlauta is to have public schools. —Methodism is getting faSlllollable —The West will secede on the tariff —Mrs. Gaines is a "perfect dresser." —Stewart's teeth east a lot of money. --Paper hangers are not killed work. —Harrisburg wants a nit man's club. -,---Itochester has a =stile soap factory. —Feather beds are injurious to health. —Plum color is the style in millinery. —Apples for breakfast care dyspepsia. —Gladstone is said to be in bad health —A good title for a book—"will it take. —Mouse-soup is a Nevada idiosyncrasy —Tea culture is spreading in the South —Georgia invites Butler to her State Fair —Winter has sot ill in earnest in Illinois. —The Pest has begun to report marriages —Can dairy maids be called pail creatures —Silver has been discovered in Arkansas —Sheriff's sales are numerous In Read —West Che,ter is very rabidly improv- --Pe lid ti In in clocks were first invented iu MD. —The poor are begin ing to suffer. Help them. —0 ustavoDore's father was a black smith. --Spain is looking about for an "uneasy head." . .-Eugenie uses-1,000 franc worth of gloves a year. Sewing machines are run by water in Maine. —The United States contain 451,355 Free Masons. —Counterfbit revenue stain ps are accu mulating. —York county gives very fashionable weddings. —The Supreme (wort is in session in Pittsburg. —The dry-goods windows were never so absorbing. • —The last descendent of Win. Penn has lately died. —Rochefort says he has fought fifty-one duels to date. —There are 6,000 printing houses in the United States. ..Anna Dickinson receives $2,000 a night in San Francisco. —"Our fellow citizens" is the California term for Chinese. —The West has bought more uidchine•y than it can pay for. —A beautiful sou;;-•`When the corn is waving, Anna Dear. • —The Pope is said to ho the most active pedestrian in Rome. —A Colorado paper writes of "Chicago and other Eastern cities. —Bayard Taylor's lectures this whiter are to be his farewell course. —G. U. Pendleton has been elected Pre, ident of a railroad company. —Gen. Lee's college will have twenty five newspaper scholarships. —An lowa girl has been elected a school director. Let the Sorosis shout. —Down in Mississippi they call a colored man a "Fifteenth Amendment." —The new Masonic Hall at Allegheny City, Pa., was dedicated yesterday. —A Missouri editor alludes to the "Equi noxical Council" to be held in Rome.. —7.tlelcutt, Mississippi, announces that it has "an attorney-at-law wl•o is now an out law." —London is infested by a legion of those familiar insects known as "daddy long legs" —Oysters sent by rail from the Atlantic to San Francisco are siiid to sell "like het ea kes." —Where will be six eclipses next year' but. none of them %%111 be visible in the ijiiitetl States. -=The Taunton, Mass., fire engines recent ly got up an alarm of fire and ran to quench the aurora boreallis. —They most have a strong penitentiary at Salt Lake. A few days since a gentle zepher took the roof off. —There are 275 persons on the u n fortune ate steamer Stonewall, of whom only 44 are known to have survived. —A. man named .11rocl: was recently found dead on the grave of his will! in Van derberg county, Indiana. —The latest about •Prince Napoleon is that ho practices vigorously with dum bells to get rid of superfluous fat. —The Mobile Tribune aecusas Mrs. Stowe of "beating the devil's tattoo with the shinbones of a dead poet. —Chicago declares that it has not a re spectable resident who desires to have the national capitol located there. —The latdst scientific project is a tele graph lino across tho Hudson, to be run ex clusively by "Jersey lightning." • —All that has been said on Byron contro voisy is to be reprinted in book-form by an enterprising London publisher. —An attentive correspondent reports that the President is very "fond of• lemon pie,'' and that he recently "ate a whole one." —A Rhode 'lsland paper speaks of a wo man who died recently there at the age of 110 "but whose real age was about 90." —A New York paper thinks if the rain fall there continues much longer, they shall have mushrooms growing lathe streets. —A‘4lufet,:hllofl'ensive Person" in Decl tar, Ala., killed 13 out o; a party of ld des peradoes who attacked luau the other night. —Boston has at last bean heard of on the subject of Chicago's "great organ." The Boston _Post thinks Chicago blows it well. —The newspapers aro uncertain whether Fisk, Jr., made live millions or lost thirty millions by the recent speculations in New York. --Cincinnatian has wagered gl.OO that M. can carry an anvil weighing seven hundred pounds a distannd of seven miles without, rest. —The objection to the recent sanitary suggestion of cork garters, k that cork is commonly associated with the idea of buoys. —Alexandria, Va., is a model city. It ha 5,15,000 inhabitants and not a single bill iard tabl, ten-pin alley, mutate or gem saloon. —Cincinnati school-girl has been poison ed by sucking the ink from her pen. She said she contracted the habit. when quite young. —A. colored justice or the peace in Jeffer son county, Florida. named rentbrooke, grants divorses for the reasonable awn of fire dollars- —The New York Herald thinks that nt the election in that city last ,year "the full strength of both parties, and more too was brought out. —ln one exchange we see that Robert Toombs is on his death-bed; and in another that he is attending court in Georgia. We want tbisibing decided:, —The New York TimcS counsels young men the country to keep away from the over•crowdeu cities and stick as much as possible to' agricultural pursuits. —There are two hundred and seven thou sand,names on the pension roll at the; pen sion Bureau, and• over one hundred. thou sand eases are stilt, pending for decision. —Mrs. Julia Ward Howe will go to Ber lin this winter.-L-Boston Paper. Mrs. Julia Ward .Howe will not go to Berlin this win ter.—..l nother• Boston PaPer. Howe is it? —•A Milwaukee engine company has a New-foundland dog, which drags children from in front of the engine, ann asks no re- . ward. May his family "live long and pros -An absent minded clergyman at Nor wich, Conn., asked his hearers to excuse him last Sunday afternoon while he went porno to get his sermon. - lie had announc ed Ida 'text before he missed the manuscript. SPECIAL • NOTICES. HOW ilosTETTr.ws Brry ENS CURE Tur wrmie 3TDIII' 1 , 1 A NUS3IItI.I. The ,office of the stomach is to convert the food into a cream-the semi-111dd, called CHINE. This is elFected partly by the action of a solvent, called tlio gastric juice, which exudes from the coating of the stomach, :tilt' partly by a mechanical movement of that organ, tt Lich clatrw, as it were, the issolv log aliment. The Cimnmc passes from the stomach into the duodenum, -or entrance do the bowels, where it is subjected to the action of the bile, and nutritious portion of it converted into a fluid called Cht,lc, which eventually becomes blood. Now, it is evident that if the groat solvent,thogns triejulee, is not produced in sagleient quantity, or if the mechanicalaction of the stomach is not suill cicntly brisk, thef/r4 pr scant of e ill be lint imperfectly performed. It is also clear that if tine liver, which plays such an important part in chang ing nourishing portion of the ollyinc into the material of the blood, is congested, or in any me natthial condition, the second procca4 'sill not be thoroughly accomplished. The result of the boo failures is dypepslo, complicated with billomnits6. The mode in n•hich IiOsTETTEins hypTEl.l.9 opernte in such eases is this: 'they invig,rate the cellular membrane() of the stomach, which involves the gastric juice, thereby instil leg an ample sulii ciency of the'lluici to completely dissohe the food. They also act upon the nerves of the stomach, causing nn exec:oration of the mechanical move ment TIOCCSS3rV to recince the ford to a homoge neous mass. They also act specifically upon the liver, strengthening it, and so enalding it to produce an maple and regular supply of bile, for the purpose of converting the nutritious particles of tine Clow: into Chyle, anti promote the plsssge through the towels of the usele—: debris. In this way, 110:i l'E ("TER' BITTERS cure dy•- pepsia and liver c.miplaint. The evpieenntnee is pink), simple. philo.(aphieqi, and tons. PA. TN K 'ELLER VETAN, Ilinrat.:, April 17, ISG9 . Mrsans. PCWEY & Sos, GENTLEMEN : *1 pant to say a. I it tic more about the Pain Killer I consider it a very valuable medi- Chm, and always keep it on hand. I have Daveled good deal since I. have been in Kansas, ant never without taking it with me. • fn my practice I n-eel it freely for the Asialio-Cholera in 184 a, and with better access than a ilk tiny other medic inc. I also nsed it here for (*Mama in 1871, p ith the same golld re snits. A. MINT IND, ill. " I re fire t to say that the Cliolera has pre vailed hero of late to go eat extent. For the last three weeks, from ten to fifty or sixty fatal cases cacti day have been reported. I should add that the Pam Killer sent recently from the Mission House, has been used with considerable success during this epidemic. If taken in season, it is generally effec tual in checking the disease. Rev. CHAS. HARDING, Sholapore, sept4-69-tfw TAP FACTS AS TIIEY ARE j We began- hi 1861 to make Improve ments in the style and make of Ready-Made Clothing, and continued , to do so, introducing new styles and 1. " 4. "'""" ideas every year, so that the enure char tater el the business is now vastly better and totally different from the systems of older liaises. I Our first idea is to learn exactly I IVII i.T THE CUSTOMERS WANT, j and Instead of Iteriunding him to buy what may be inost conveniently st hand, we take the utmost pains to meet [ 1118 wishes. .1. The building tie 'stumpy to oh, xosT coxvEN i ENT SIZE, LARGEST AND BEST ADAPTED for our businet., of I any in Philadelphia [ Customers can see What they are u booing, our Esblishineut being on the corner of three large streets, net i (het, Sixth and Minor alt cots.) alma dant DO:, j, afforded from all direc tions. A light store is tar better for customers than a dark one. f Ncrchmas know that our - e el's are I huger than those of any other lisle., lin Philattelphia, in our line : hence we have to buy larger quantities at goods, and so get them at latter pones, es pecially as we buy altogether for rash. j 'Buying eheapeet, we can sell recap ! est. We closely C.ta ini at every inch of goods that comes Ante our .E,itnidish merit, invariably rejecting all unf ' perfect, moth-eaten Wad tender lab- Ines. iThe time waited in looking over the ate->s of a dozen stores ran lee ncolaCii. R.:, under one roof, etc offer for sale ran assortmentequal in variety and ex tent to that embraced by a store of the iordinarY hOU-WJ• C., 1 , t(MICES Hard. :31 et I:30 fe et 1 5n The La. ge Pu r rler.scs. t,iTtctio Unat .brith We have GOO hands employed In the manufacture of Clothing. who are constantly main up up stock to take the place of that daily sold; flag giros our customer, ace nod f ru,h goods to make seleettons from. Ft csh Good., It t, an undisputed fart Oen Department, (a forge Hall on • our second doer fronting on Minor street)) has nothing in Philadelphia, to oinal it. - -We have lucre ta.neentrated the best skill and woi Innanship. and those into prefer Clothing made to order really have ildviintage-i they do not re eeive ebiewhere. DEDUCTIONS. Gus'oni bc7etr•t mcnt. From all of the abov, we do .tee this one tact, that Oak Hall late aid. du i-idea:now, of any other Cloudng En tabliehmen h. in the eity, s a d :n addi tion these. DM It holm. Ist—A firm composed of yonns men of the present generation, fully in sympathy with tho tastes of the day. 2d.—An insight to the wants of the people and an en terprise to meet these e eta•, tl4telt to 1,',VC121 years has I.laeed Oak Hall in a position notnl nays attained in expsoCLCV of twenty-tire years. Building better located. better lighted, better adapted and newer in all its lipponnments. 4th.—Workmen, especially Cutters, eho nre not only from arming the hest and most experi enced, Munro artists in their professions and couple with good work a stylishness, in WI tieh Philadelphia tailoring has been partici:Ludy detleient. It is the liberal patronage a ith %Odell we have been favored that. Into enabled us to wit,,r the un paralleled this Non - magi, continued and extended will lilultiply advantages, which Ste divide between our en , torriers arid 0111,e1%&. „ - - A Vi.it to Oat: 11,111 will PROVE every Girt above skated. WANAMARER A BROWN, 0.1: VALI. POPCLAA CLOTHIN'a hi Obn. Corner of Bintil and Market street, SPECIAL NOTICE SCHENCK'S PULMONIC SVHI:I3 Senn cod Tonle and .llfondrake Pills, will cure Con sumption. Liver Complaint and ilyspep s hi, i f tak e s according to thiections. They are 101 three to he taken it the seine time•, They cleanse the stomach, relax the liver, and pot it to work; then the appetite becomes good; the food digests and make• good blood; the patient begins to grow in 11(.11; the dis eased matter ripens ta the longs, and the patient outgrows the disease and gets well. This is the only way to Pure con‘anipt ion. To these ahree medicines Dr. J. If. Schenck, of Philadelphia. owes his unrivalled stieeess in the treatment of pulmonary cons= inlet:. 'l•he Pub monic Syrup ripens the morbid matter in the lungs, nature throws it off by an ••ttcy expectoration, fot• when the phlegm or matter is ripe. a slight cough will throw it off, and the patient has rest and the lungs begin to heal. • To do this, the Seay. - eed Tonic and Mandrake Pills Must be freely used to cleanse the stomach and liver, so that the Pohl - ionic Sy: up and the food will make good blood. Sehenek's Mantirse Pills act upon the liver, re moving all obstructions. rel is the ducts of the gall bladder, the bile starts freely, and the liver is :con relieved; the stook will show what the Pills can do; nothing has ever been invente.l except ealomel .lesdlyysisen widen is wen' dangerous to use ex w/t., great care), that will noise]: a gall-bladder and shirt the secretions of the liver like Schenelt's Mandrake Pills. Liver Complaint is one of the most prominent of consumption. Schenck's Seaweed TOnie is a gentle stimulant and alterative.and the alkall in the Salweed, which this prescrlption is made of, assists the stomach to throw out the gastric juice, to dissolve the food with the Pulmonic Syrup, and it is Made into good blood without fermentation or souring in the stomach. The great reason why pliesietans do not cure con sumption is, they try to do too much : they give medicine to stop the cough, to stop chills, to stop night sweats, hectic fever, and by so doing they range the whole digective powers, locking up the se cretions. and eventually the patient sinks and dies. Dr. Schenck, in hue treatment, does not. try to stop a cough, night sweats, chills or fever. Iteninre the cause, and they w•tll all Slop of their own accord: No onc can be cured of Consumption, Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Catarrh, Canker, Ulcerated Throat, un less the liver and blnnizieh are made healthy. If a person Has consumption, or corn y° the lun g s are in some aytl iseasethe it her mite rcle..,absces..es, bronchial irrintuen, pleura ad heston, or the lungs ale a 11:1155 of inflammation and last decaying. Lt such cases what must be done? it is not only the lungs that are Wat•ting, but it is the a hole body. The stomach and liver have lost their power to make blood out of food. Now the only chanee I- to take Schenck's three medicine., which will bring up a tone to the stomach, the patient wilt begin to want food, it digesteasily . aad make good blood; then the patient begins to gain in flesh, And tis soon as the body begins to growolic lungs commenee t i heal up, mid the patient gets 11c:thy:Ind well. Tills is the only nay to cure consnmption. When there is no tang disease. and only Liver Camplatnt and Dyspepsta, benefit:lt s Sea eat Tonic and Mandrake Pills are sin:talent without the Pal month Syrup. 'fake the Mandrake Pills freely in all halters complaints, 41-9 they ore perfectly harmless, Dr. Schmuck, who has enjoyed uninterrupted health for many years past, and now weighs 225 podads, was wasted atray•to a mere skeleton, in the very last stage of Pulmonary Consumption, his physmians having pronolmeed his case hopeless and abandoned him to lute ' talc. Ito was clued by' the aforesaid medicines, And since Lis, recoverydnany thousands similarly affliffled hare used Dr. Scheack's prepara tions with the same remarkable success. Full du rections accompanying each, intik° it, notfflotolutely necessary to personally see Dr: Schenck, unless the pstients wish their' lungs examined, find for this purpose he is professionally at his principd 011 lee, Plffladelphia, every Saturday, %Otero ill letters for advice must be addressed. Ile is also professionally at N 0.32 Bond Street, „NOW York, every other Tues. day, and at No. r,5 lianover Street, Boston, every other Wednesday. Ire gives advice lice, but for a' thorough examtnation with his Respirommer the price Is $5. Office hours at each city iron a A. bl to P M., • • Price orate Pulmonie Syrup and Seaweed Tonic each St nu per bottle, or S 7 C,U. a half-dozen. Alan drake Pills •:3 cents a box. For at . de by all airug,sttsts. Do..T. 11. SCI-I ENCts. sepf-t94fr.l " 1.5 N. otli St., Phila., Pa. JOB "'PRINTING OF EVERY Description neatly emeculeti at this Office .51'.ECIAL NOTICES. TIIE ONLY RELIABLE CURE. FOB. DYSPEPSIA IN TILE KNOWN WORLD. Dr. Wishart's.Gleat American Dyspepsia Pills find Pine Tree Tar Cordial are a positive and infallible cure for dyspepsia in its most aggravated form, and no matter of how lolog standing. They penetrate the secret abode of this terrible disease, and exterminate it, root and branch, for- They alleviate more agony and silent suffering than tengtte nail They are noted for curing the most desperate and hopeless cases, when every known means fall to oh fot d relief. No tortu of dyspepsia or Indigestion can rests their pouetrating power. DR. wisumrrs 171 .NE TREE TAR COI:DIAL It is the vital principle of the Pine Tree, obtained by a peculiar prOee.S.llll die distillation of the tar, by which its highest inediral properittes arc retained. It invigorates the digestive organs and restores the appetite. It sintrigthens too debilitated system. It purifies 11111 i enriches the blood, and expels from the system the corruption which scrofula breeds on the lungs. It di•solves the mucus or phlegm which stops the air passages of the lungs. Its healing principle acts upon the Irritated surface of the lungs and throat, penetrating to each diseased part. lettering pain awl subdiung inflammation. It is the result of yeaus of study and experiment. and it Is catered to the afflicted Sidi positive ascot:nice of its power to cure the iolluning diseases, if t he patient nas net too long delayed ate sort to On, stems of cute:— Conhuniption of the Lung, °lugll, Sure VII oat unit Bread, Beonchitel, Live, Cumptrthil, 11htul and ilteCailt? Whov tug Cough, Thethcria, A medical expert, holding honorable collegiate di ploma,-, devote- lita entire time to tile eXatilinallo.l of patieln at the °Moe As•oehtted utth 11111 uc 1111 ee eon , olting I,lly:cc:lams oi acknowl edged e Meet:o, Whom: vices are given to the publ,c Free 01 Charge. oppol the ily 1, altered by NO other ileitittitiOn 111 the eulintry. Leticts trotn any part or :AM colliltry, alAKlrlg ad vice, will be In unaptly and gratuttote.ly to. %Vilna e convenient, remittances should take Nhape of Lalaa.l FPS Olt I'OST•OFFICE ORDERS. , Price of \\• i , hat to.lmeucon Dyspep-a Pallsa,s,l Lox. Stoat by until on zeceipt of price. Price of krl.,harro Piot. tree Tar Cordial, $1..10 a bottle, or $ll per dozen. Sent by express. All t•omionnications should be adere,mcd L. Q C. M. 1511.1 IIT, M. D., No, 2.12 North Seco,' ,tteet. oct2.34.nni Philadelphia. (Sep t-CO• VAN' CzJ DEAFNESS, IILINDNESS and CATARRH treated with the inmost soceess, by J. Is ACM, M. D., nod Profegnex of INAcat,en of the Eye and Ear, (fits npernalt y) in the Medical (..'oPertenf Pennsyleama, 12 years experience, gormerly of Leyden, Holland,) No. 805 Arch street. Pinta. Te , timonials can be seen at his ()thee. The Medical faculty are invited to accompany their patients, as he has no secrets in his practice Artificial eye , inserted Sr ithont pain. No charge for examination. isepl-1.19-tfw ALLEN'S LUNG I:ALSAM CONSUMPTION, COUGHS, BRONCHITIS, ASTHMA As an Ex N etorma IT HAS NO EQUAL ft is composed of the active principles of roots and plants, which arc chemically extracted, so as to retain all their medic it qualities. MINISTERS AND PUBLIC SPEAKERS Who are so often aillieted with threat clisewm,wil thud a sure remedy in this Balsam. Lozenges and wafers sometime , give reli •f, but the Balsam, taken tow times, will insure a permanent cure. Will all those atilieted with Coughs or Comminp than, give the it:d>am a full trial, they will be ptenced with the result, and conies, that the :sin a Remedy is Found at Last. IT is sou) BY .1 T.T. DiIrEiCUSTS. NE IV AD VERZELS f ALENTS. l i tl) I ES" FANCY FURS! • JOHN FAREIRA, Importer, Manufacturer and Deal er in all kinds and quality of FANCY FURS I ot: LADIES' AND CHILDRE:s - S Ltn. Having enlarged,: e modeled and improved my old and favorably known FUR EMPOIZIUM, and having Imported a very large and splendidassortment of all the ditierentkinds of Furs from 'first hands, in Europe, and have had them made up by the most skillful workmen, I would respectfully invite toy friends of Lancas ter and adjacent Counties to call and e.xamine my very large and beauti rail assortment, of Fancy h urs, for Ladies' and Children. lam de termined to sell at as low pikes as any other respectable House an this city. All Furs War ranted. No misrepresentations to eflect sales. COIL'S FAIitEIRA, octO-Irnj 718 Arch Street, Philadelphia. CIOLUMBIA CLASSICAL AND FE MALE INSTITUTE, prepare% young men and boys for College. Business, or Teaching, and affords young ladies sup°, for advantages in securing a complete education. Special atten tion is given to the common English branches, Music, French, and the NATURAL SCIENCES, including Botany, Philosophy, Chemistry and Astronomy, as well as to the Classics add higher Mathematics. The next session commences on Thursday, the 211th of August. For circulars, address 11E1% 11. S. ALEXANDER, sepl-tig-tfw] Colombia.ls, JACOB BOTIIARMEL, Brush INT anufacturei C03113S FANCY ARTICLES, NORTH QUEEN ST., se7La - ,-6:1-3n11 WALL HOWELL BOURKE, Ziranulliclurers of PAPER 'HANGINGS AND 'WINDOW SHADES Sales Rooms, Cor. Fourth tt.; Markus Sts., Factory, t•or. Twenty-third and Sansom Streets = scp-21-C9' . :rno CITE V ES WIRE .I_, 0 T , SELLERS BROTILERS, G 23 MARKETSTItr.G.T, i•eplis-69-31a COAL! COAL! COAL! Call and look at the Coal, then ask the price All coal well cleansed before leaving the yani Coal sold by ear load Gross Tons at Mine prices The beat quail( y of coal always on hand. septll-0-tt 11. F. BRUNEI: COAL! COAL!! COAL!!!!! PATTON'S COAL YARD, N the place to buy your coal Particular atten t Is given to have coal sent out cleaned and Sere: ed. .I.laVe on bawls and will keep all 1:111thi (.;t coal that la wanted. DIAMOND, LOCUST MOUNTAINS, PINE GROVE, LYE ENS VALLEY BITUMINOUS COALS. Will furnish coal by the ear-load from any mines that is desired at the LOWEST PRICKS. also, DRY PINE WOOD by the cord or barrel. sent,t4tw3 SCOTT PATTON. BOOK AGENTS WANTED 1 , 01: THE lUTOBTOGRAPHY AND PERSONAL ItEcoLLEcTid:cs, 11 . 17 SOHN 11,. GOUGH A complete history of his life, his almost su perhumn struggle against Intemperance, with vivid pen pi , tures of what he saw in Europe. The whole enlivened with affecting Incidents lull of interest and pathos. The work will be beautifully bound:lnd Illustrated. There can be no opposition. Everyone wants it. Agents are taking from 20 to 50 orders a day: The lowest report yet received is 2.: orders in three days. Address the publisher. 13, C. JOIESSON. oet.o•ltn) Irl2 Arch Street, Philadelphia. IMI=B AND CI:OUP 718 A roll Street Middle of the Block, between 7th and Bth street, Suuth Side, PHILADELPHIA. PItI;nEICTIL E=l Lancaster, Pn PHI LA. DELPII I A PRILADELPTA IMMIEIaaI :Iranufmtured Ly ON FRONT STRF.ET, !MEI NEW ADVIERTISEMENTS. TO BUILDERS AND" OTHERS riulldi rig, paving and other brick always on hand. They are hand made and superior to any brick In this part of the COW] try. They are of ferodat the very lowest price. sop 4G9-trw] MICHAEL LIPHAILT. ADMINISTRATORS' NOTICE Estate of ELIZABETH 'WRIGHT late of the Borough of Columbia, deceased. Letters of ad ministration d. b. n. on said estate having been granted to theundersigned all pet sons indebted thereto are requested to matte Immediate set tlement, and those having claims or demands against the same will preseht them without de lay her sentlement to the undersigned, residing in said Borough, ocl.lo-6ti MARY B. HOUSTON, Adinhilstratrix„ D. B. FOR SALE TO OR LET. An Old Est - aid islied STORE-STAND with Two Story BRICK DWELLING HOUSE adjoining, in the village of Bainbridge, ". Laneamer County, Pa. The above is a very de sirable property and worthy Lite attention 01 an v one wishing to engage In the Inn:Bless. For partleular,, addres Box il, Bainbridge P. 0.0ct.9-6t, WHEELER & WILSON'S LOCK-ST.ITM" Family Sewing Machine. OVER 400,000 NOW IN USE. EXAMINE IT BEFORE BUYING ANY OTHER. SOLD ON LEASE PLAN, SIAID 3POi" Itirtmaxtla.. PETERSON & CARPENTER, General olgents. General Office for Lancaster County: 64 North Queen St. 64 . Lancaster, Pa. PUBLIC SALE ON THURSDAY, NOVEMBER'S - 3,1809,in pur suance of an order in the Orphans' Court of Lancaster county, the undersigned appointed trustee for that purpose, will sell at public yen clue,at the Public Rouse of Martin Erwin, in the borough or Columbia, the following real estate, late property of Michael Dellam, deceased, vle: A DOUBLE TWO-STORY FRAME : Am DWELLING HOUSE! ' 1421 And a Lot or Piece of Ground theretobclonging, situated in said borouth, !routing about 2.5 feet on Fourth street, and extending eastward about 8.11.; met to an alley; adjoining property of George Auer on northwest, and of Frederick Smith on the SOUtheast. Sale to commence at 2 o'clock, P. M., on said day, when attendance will be gIV(.11 and terms made known by JACOB K. NISSLEY, oct:3o--lc] Trustee. DRY GOODS. lopt\ FALL S; 000. TINTER.IB69. WILLIAM G. PATTON No. 160 LOCUST ST., COLUMBIA, PA., Ts now opening A Large Stork of DRY GOODS, G QUEENSWARE, Snitable to the Season, comprising a Splendid As , ortment of DRESS GOODS, SILAWLS, SACKINGS, BLANKETS, WHITE GOODS, TRIMMINGS, lIOSIERY,GLOVES, NOTIONS, LADIES' AND GENT'S FU R- NISHING GOODS, L.iDIES', MISSES, S CHILDREN'S bIIOLS SEWING MACHINES Of all leading in alces at Agen Vs Prices MERCHANT TAILORING In all Itn branches. Satisfaction guaranteed A full line of CLOTHS, CASSIMER ES, VEST INGS, SC., always on hand. REMEMBER that this is the place to get thi BEST GOODS at, the LOWEST PRICES. sepl-614fw j WILLIAM G. PATTON. HO3IER, COLLADAY& I 'O.'S FALL IMPORTATIONS IME3 NOW OPEN. "WIIIriE making thiv an nouncemnt, If., C. & CO. wish to state that, the enormous increa..... ot their business, since opening their new store, has enabled them to add very considerably to their previouiay large importations, and they are now ollbring the mo.a complete stock of Pry Goods ever imported. 'l' 11 1.: SILK STOCK is usually attractive, coat nit log an unlimited issortment suitable for EVENLVO DRESSES, IrEDDIATO S 171 They would invite special attention to their - nienise of BLACK SILKS, manufactured expressly for their retail Fltleti in every grade from a moderate price in (Lc best article produced. Among.L their DRESS -1)5; win be found a great number of NOVEL FABRICS ,111 tante forStz its and \Valli:lag Dresses. Also, a splendid as,ortineni. 01 CLA_ICT T A.BfrANS, Very f,tnit loam, goods for the present, season. The Cloak Department is replete witli all the Paris styles in gnraleals and materlah, In connection with this department, their Dress-mai:hug feature has been very reinwrim hie. meet Mc with such a degree of success they could hardly have anticipated, and they fiat ter themselves In establishing this new branch they have supplied a want much felt of producing good titling and exq Ms tely ga ma en ts with DISPATCH, previously almost impossible to obtain. To enumerate the great, varlety contained in their BLACK STOCK is impossible, as every novelty produced lots been added to their immense stool: of staple goods Intinufaelutrect speeitilly for their trade. Amongst t Leh• Linen and Housekeeping Goods which Is very large, will be found many articles pm clue,al considerably under the market rates, and will be sold at correspondingly low figurer. ME 1-1051147. Lt . "l" DE. l?'_-a.1?..'17311:C2NT is the most complete In the country, embracing evert• kind of article, both for ladles and genti 4 . and for all seasons. N. B.—Although in ntany articles of their im portation IL, C. C Cu. have the exclubive con trial. the greatest attention have been paid to mariting with the most reas , nable profits. 1412 AND 1414 CHESTNUT ST., above Broad Street, PHILADELPHIA =I
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