tu eatuntla---'4pg.. • _ ~ , • - k .1. W. YOOl7lll, J. W. YOCIT.M. Publishers and J WOLVF.IISDRGER;f Proprietors. Cedumbia, Pa. Saturday, Tepraury 4', ,1870. • coamostetrioss,letters, contributions, generally of merit und interest to the reader, acceptable front friends frtnn all quarters. SUBSCRIBE FOR 'ME COLUMBIA ..SPY ME "CI oti UNBIA .SPY AND TR : A'ler YORK lIVDEPENDEN 7 I ENGRAVINGS Grant '& Colfai ! The SPY, worth . $2.00 per an nual; the NEW TORII. INDE PENDENT worth $2.50 per annum; a , Steel Engrav ing of Grant, worth $2.00, and a Steel' Engraving: .o f • . Colfax, worth:i , $2.00. ALL FOR FOUR DOLLARS! To any It ros - subscriber for the Srr, whoseads us B-1.00, we will Semi not only the SPY, but Tim Isogesztimyr—the largest newspaper in the World, ably edited and full of general interest, together with the su barb steel_ engravings of Giant and Colfax. - This offer is one or the most, liberal we have ever made. The pictures are gems of art, by 'Ritchie, ono of the mast celebrated artists. We - make the same offer to any person. whether an old or neW subscriber, who will se cure one new subscriber and $l.OO in cash. ilSer; OTHER PREHIIpi.NS For 13 new 'subscribers, and 030.00 in cash, we will give one of Webster's New UNABRIDGED DICTIONARIES; containing '3OOO engravings. and the most complete work in the 'English language. - . To every new subscriber, or to every old sub scriber, wbo • secures a new subscription forns, and $3.00 in'eash, we• will send to any address One Copy or ilia Sry and a copy of TILE LADY'S FRIEND; it monthly magazine of literatuin and hulling, for one year. THE' LAST AND 'BEST: WHEELER 4.1 WILSON'S Unrivalled Sewing :Machine , For GO new selfsbrlber and $40.00, in cash, we will give One of Wheeler 'and - Wilson's Unri valled Family SeWinglifachines ; the best in the world, and selling at 'the rate of one hundred thousand a year ;the cash price of which Is 595.00. This machine may be seen at the; General Age ncy; 64 North Queen Street, Lancaster. Pa,. - Here is an oppdrtunity to get, a mach! for nothing: 'lt Iswininnted for one year, and In structions bow to operate given free. The ma chine will be complete' in every department, with all the necessary, attachments • perfect. Lat us see who-wilt get the first. , 'The Franking One of the fourteen members who voted against the abolition of the 'franking priv ilege was g 0... George Woodward- of Pennsylvania. , in tlhe face of this, record, the dernocrtic, crY , .of :'republican abuse and extravagance 'will 'not de; : The privilege:of franking,letteri;,doe'- amenta,'?,-;c., to,thoircoustituentwas grant ed congressmen very long ago, when the nation Wasletiyottniel:'-' ,-, Thcnzineit - liiiii comparatirely' , poor -andih`oneat;::l34' th times Tiro • • ChistigLaini4 CV • I - t ` L lh — en77. -- ,7stw the the :members load the mail- with' useless. documents,'''by the ton, which - nieseldom'read: The earice tures of the day are even pretty severel directed towards abuses iu the 'different department of the government.' Pail: we hail this movement' to curtail the ex penses of 'the national *legislature with pride and,pleasure,,we Teel that a substi tute of some kind must be devised- to pre vent congressmen, "from being overtaxed and overburdened with- postage. bills. When once we are free,. of this,franking. privilege, even in :spite,ordemocratic sup port, some means:can-be-devised to main• tain honest communication .between rep resentatives.and their constituents. As was feared,.Senator LoWry has joined the democracy; and in the future 'we may count - him as one of the •unwahed. His persisterit affiliation with the detnecratic party entitinalim to, the fullest confidence, and until - vre shall have , reason -to think otherwilie; -- we echigiatulaie - the RePubliCan party upon' the ,tiUUsfet., Of_ this apostate •t o the ranks of the enemy. The 29th sena torial district-Crawford and Erie =coup• ties—rmasi find' another, truer' and'more devoteci, - rePreseetatiyer the next terin: It wiii‘keared,that-Seaater Lorrry's op position to the metropolitan Police Bill would ultitqateljr ',bring - about .its It has however passed ftriillyand now (Wednesday) . awaits the 'concurrence of the Hansti: - , • , A Lho#:CO3iPs.:tmtxT.—Soine ihe highest:iloinpliment,spand to the memory of the great: War 'Secretary Edwin M. Stanton, are -furnished by his enemies-in their den'uticiatiOaS. , Here is one from the &vertu alt,Sepublecun : "Mr. Stanton was a bad,quan.;.he was, the life 'and soul of the z-Federal armies, during :he lute war; bitt tar - his - nbilities and, uneoarluer.: able eterne , p.„o,...,purpoAe, it ,would have closed years: hefure it - did, and with 'the South independent" Stanton' saved the llnion. ' Let 'his " enemies continue to praise him: W E f iripinily rinrggest 'that the ileia/i/: transfer the names or'applicants for office, from this county to - the advertiiing col-' umns. This'would do. the aPplicanti service, . businesi; and would be. jnEtoitely, more respectable. We aro to' contribute our quota towards ''reaidfalitiii,g 'aubh_standink''ad vertisettiente:;(.lfeiiides'„'the''eatididates would then avoid., the : asso oiations,;cOnUncted With - the editorial•Col mums of the' Bera44„. '' ... _ WHY thi -r o'orresiondeat of Faaer Aka/tam give that righteous jour nal the ~whele list of--office-applicants at . ..Harrhibeirea r nyjtitiliide . 44 late' expost-: master, - anirapapar, - 44t who-is a formidaile ,of.1:1:1 G;;Steser:for,the dOsition':of inapettor -:of- Lancaster eannty.:;''l3itehan':it Preanniad'hy'tha people --ifiaK-thirr,grdfeclak:ia,„ii, , • permanen eandidate'n , forl ant:and :*6very t hing 4 thai ..may thin ; up4M • , A- Philiitici! g bia furnisfiitik store ,pitiOhe-rOglifielit imntors't,:wpnty. amts ' Mr. Wells ou iron. Is his Report fim 1868, Mr. Wells as tonished probability by the broad asser tion that our production of Iron had riot been increased by Protective Duties—at all events; ,that the-expansion and growth of this industry had proceeded at the rate of eight per eent. - per anrutn, Whether un der Protection.or Free Trade. 'Mr. A'. S. Hewitt had - Shown that. the reverse of this is true in an elaborate essay read and printed":l dozen' years ago ; and Mr. IT. C. Carey-elaborately refuted it once more in his criticisms on Well's Report. Such refutation should not have been needed, any more than a demonstration that. a cannon ball will roll more swiftly down a steep roof or along a gen tle glade—that two and two do actually make font. If anything is predicable of human nature beyond the power of met aphysicians or political economists to 'befog it is unquestionable that Capital, Enter; prise, and Skill, rapidly desert less profit able for more profitable employments. Whoever would cavil at this might. as well deny' at once that Man is a ramonal being,. or that motives influence his conduct. Whatever may be false, this is true : .Ninety-nine of every hundred persons will do that which promises to pay them best for the required sacrifice of time or corn fort. And whoever contends' that more Capital and Labor will not be drawn' into making Pig Iron when the business pays a profit of 65 to $lO per ton than when it pays from $1 down to less than no profit at all, only proves li;s own dishonesty or radical incapacity. We do not understand Mr. Wells to maintain in his last Report this monster error of its predecessor; how could he, in, view of the incontestable facts that we have more than doubled our product of Pig Iron within the last five years? But he still insists that the profit of making Pig Iron is very great, cud cites certain witnesses (chief among them a bankrupt ex-iron-maker of Tennessee) to prove that Pig Iron which the makers sell for $33 to $35 per ton might be offerded for 820 to $26. This the iron-masters generally de ny; and statistics are bandied back and forth in reckless profusion. Editor. Now it seems to us that those who are actually making Pig Iron—making it with all their might—ought to know what it costs better then those who never made any or have failed in trying to make it. But we take no great interest in this wordy war, since,' for our purpose, it is better that Mr. Wells should be right • than his antagonists. What we desire is that the Iron needed to supply fully the wants of our People should be made on our own soil, not imported from abroad. Washington urged that, in cue of his early - messages; our most eminent patriots and statesmen have deemed it iudispensible. Madison, Taught by experience, urged that- we satisfy our need of Iron more yleaply in 'time of peace by importing, and cet find -Jur cheap whistle a dear one when we came to want Iron in war and not find it; unless at exorbitant prices. If there be one point on which the great men of our heroic age were a unit, it is this— thtt, we ought not to depend on Great Britain for supply of Iron. Now, then, we knim that . under Pro• tection we are advancing swiftly toward perfect independence of Europe in regard to Iron. On this point, there is no room for cavil or mistake. The sixty-five uew and generally superior furnaces erected, mainly West of the Alleghanics within the lust eighteen montlis=the millidn tons of, Pig Leen 'in this 'country in 3869 more than were ever smelted here. until the ,present Tariff was enacted= have placed.this beyond,dispute. What ever else may he ,claubtfwf, we - know, that we are = tunichiti o , tstraight oli ,to sn ample home produet UtTig hon. '-rt 'The" above 4`riiii the 'iciatre is- of es pe-- seiatin ter'ist,teitthe iron' interests of cr....1 , i4;*& 'Oil "(3: - "tl3. Orulib'& on; litre. s.'Kauffuan,-and the'Chesnut Hill Tron Ore Company of 6.dumbia and Vicinity 'have 'recently peti tioned-Congress iirreference to the error neous statement of Commissioner Wells, which if accepted by Congress would be a most dangerous guide to legislation. They as that a searching inquiry be • made for -the data on which the Commissioner has based his statement, that the error may be effectually refuted. It is right that the iron interests of the county be protect ed; altd 'no:class of people will have niore potent influence in securing just and proper' legislation than the resrionsible mantiracturerstiamed above. Ai ANY, and important as are the services which the Union League •Club of New York' has rendered- to this city and the country, there is no one more deserving or gtateral recognition and earnest atten tion than the report secured by it from Dr. Franeis Leiber, the Chairman of its Committee instructed to consider the ah iitraction of money.from the public treas ury for sectarian- uses. The•E,ures pre sented by Doctor Lieber are still cling. In one year there have been t tken from the common sehoJls over halt a mil:ion dollars for the uses of religious sects; :lad of this sum a single sect has received over $400,- 000. The'same sect has received as a free gift from the City Government nearly three and a quarter millions of dollars' worth of real estate. We welcome every expenditure by every sect on its own ac count, for magnificent churches, schools, uuneries, or asylums, but we protest most earnestly against the withdrawal from the Common Schools. which are the Chief guaranty or our republican government, of moneys; raised by taxation upon the whole.publie, for the benefit o f - any The startling exhibit made in ibis report we, feel sure. go far to confirm the opinion urged again and again, that the teaching of religious matter; must be with- drawn tram the Public" School system as the only security for the system itself. The Columbia Spy. In all'that constitutes a really good and interesting journal—home items, foreign „news, and sound,'well-written editorials-- the Spy excels., Its Editor J. W. Yocum, is the embodiment of: intelligent energy. -We have admired the celerity with which he moves about his theatre of labor, and surprised that with so much speed things could be so well done. -Push," is the mottothrift, the certain and inseparable result )Ye think good .things deserve approving. For this reason we mention the Spy: ' Its political professions are the offspring 'of conviction-khe growth of principle. The Editor' is' a- young inau, sot above twenty five years of-age, and-has: merit of having been a soldier, risen' from theiiinkof private to that of Major of his regiment., He bears with him the evi dence of patriotism iu a disabled arcs, and the marks of several other wounds. A lalyer.by .profession, he combines. with ,his practice his editorial, duties, : A clear 'forcible and'eloquent writer, lie' is also an' earnest, .fluent and impressive speaker .' The Spy deserves success, We predict the - fulfilltuent of its, most sanguine hopes, :and our wishes for its good, do not rest this side the most ,ample,expectatioosl of, its friends. =Beading, Daily ; Evening .Dis- P. 0.71; ilEr luiprisontornt for !debt Abolished in 31..:sigland. On the first of January the new bank rupt law,,:,whieh abolishes imprisonment, for debt in England, except in cases of county court judgments for small stuhs, came -into operation, and there' was in consequence: a general jail "delivery from All , the debtors' prisons and "spong ing houses . ' in the metropolis. It has long been conceded that the practice of locking up a titan who owes money which he cannot pay and keeping him for years iv prison like a felon, is as brutal. as it is senseless, and the stubborn opposition of Englishmen to innovation has kept alive until now one of the niost cruel and ab surd laws that, ever disgraced. the statute hook of any country. Within the last 'twenty years, it is true, many modiflea tions of the' ithprisonment for debt law have beee.niade,:and there has been less power than; there was prior to that time to throw a.delator - into jail and let him rot there; but still the ahuses have been nu merhits, and - the opening'of the priCin doors has turned - loose Upon - the world a score or two - of miserable wretches who for no.erime but poierty have grown old and rusty in jail, and rendered unfit ever again to earn their,living by labor. The, new luw took'effeet on the first of January; and hence at twelve .'o'clock at night on the last day of the old 'year the prisoners were virtually free, although a judge's or-, der Dir their, release, might have been•re 7 qnired before they were 'actually set at hberty. The governor of White Crosi Street Prison, - the largest' place of deten tion in• London, determined to waive this formality, and notified the prisoners that all who pleased were at liberty to leave the jail at midnight of the 31st of Decem ber, and out of ninety-four inmates,' thirty one availed thernseves of the privelege. These poor creatures longed so ardently liberty- that they. paeked .their few goods together as early as four or five o'clock in the afternoon, and counted the seconds until the 'hour of their release ar rived, while in many cases their families, women and children, waited for them out side the gates, and watched as. anxiously the slow flight of time. It is a sad corn meotary upon the old law that sixty-three of the prisoners begged to be allowed to remain in jail until the next day, on the plea mostly that they, had no homes to go to. No hall there' be a culler Representa tion in Congress. -The full number of Representatives in Cong,ress from ,all the States was fixed, nearly twenty years ago, on the motion of the late Samuel F. Vinton of Ohio, at two hundred and thirty-four; and at that fig ure it stands to this day. A new State admitted after the Apportionment under a new Census has been .made, of course adds an extra member—possibly two; but the number has never (we think) exceed ed 237 ; but this is supplemented by five or six Delegates from Territories. it is now proposed that the total (exclu ding Delegates) be put up at one jump to three hundred. This would almost nec essarily lead to an enlargement of the Hall in which the House meets. It is amply large now; but sixty-odd more members would strain its capacity. If Congress decides to increase the number of Representatives, we plead for a reduction of their - pay. We consider, $5,000 per , anunta liberal whew" the two sessions need hardly , average five months 'each;, but,if we have to pay nearly four hiindreti members, (of both Hou,es) we ,ought - not" to be required to pay them, $lO,OOO each and extras ~for those ten montlis. Increase the number, gentlenien, if you will—we are indifferent as to that but, 'pray, don't increase the aggregate cost. If we.are to pay four htt-ndred of yon, tryto' seise • :_for !let t toots tlwn • $4,000 . , • •‘!----£ , The lollowsirg is a reeapitulation•of the 14 :011bl/odebt stateinent for January. DEBT BEARING COIN INTEREST. Five per sent bonds - 8221.589,300 00 Six per cent bonds 1,836,319.900 00 Total q2,107.030 7 ,21X1 00 • terest 832,84,304 n EI:ET REARING INTEREST LAWFUL HONEY. Three per cent. certificates 815.530.000 00 Navy Pension Fund; Vireo per - cent . 14,000,00000 Total Interest ... . .. $39,M0,000 00 00 Debt ou which intere;Gh . a.s - C . e . cs — ea . 611:49W since maturity Interest 51,05!3.016 64 533,666 SS DEBT BEARING NO LtitCREST. Demand and legal-tender notes:: $356,110.23350 Fractional currency 40,063.512 62 Gold certificates of deposit ' 50,392,18000 Total 6440,565,951 /2 Total amount outstanding 2,618,669,197 76 Total $-1,090,013 70 Total debt, priacinal, and interest to date, Including coupon, due, • not presented for payment 4 ^ 052,187,211 40 • AMOUNT. IN TREASURY. • • Coln 8101,000,730 77 Currency - 8093,807 41 Sinking Fund 23,,16,06000 Other United States coin, and in terest-bonds purchased;-and -- ae= - ' • cruded interest thereon 71,388,303 86 Total 5207373,e2 54 Debt, less amuutit. lzerressury f,P2,111,813,288 02 Debt, less amount lu Treasury • January Ist V 2,448,710,953 31 Decrease At debt in Jantuu, Tice a a cst•Day of January. Old Father January made on the last day of his lease for this gear a deliberate effort to retire'in his favorite white over coat. But in this locality he failed to get it on, though to the west and the north he was successful and went off with flying colors. Some might say it was after all a clear case of showing the white feather. No matter—lie has been a real good old fellow, this time, though he did neglect to give the young folks a single day's skating or sleighing- Nor can we close his obit uary without recurring to a letter fronran "old sport" at the Terrapin Club Retreat Long Island,•dated the 30th ultinao, en closing ii'mosquito and some "leaves of grass" of nearly three inches growth, with • a note that at said-Retreat for the last fortnight the thermometer has run .up. daily among the fifties. So much for the prevailing south windS, 'from the Gulf Stream. But how about- theice crop ? ;We have still; three weeks in ivhich we may be given, by a chopping round of ,the wiuds'to the northwest, a good ice crop, though we rather inciine, to - the opinion that the New Englanders will have a mar ket next summer for an-extra supply.— 21r. Y. Herald. '—, • . . Ttte Herald rooster ;publishes the list of applicants for office in' this county, an act for which all the said' applicants are extremely obligid'tn - him: The only dis grace attending the, publication 'is, that their names should have found. their way into the Police'Cazeite so' soon. This in= stance, in con'nection with' Thousands'of, others, goes far to'proVe" the superior ca-' pooh' , of our neighbor or, neighbors to mind other people's business.. .AbcohnlNG to the 71eialil it would have j,urnals prejudge, condeinn and ex:- ecute judgment upon public - Officials be fore a fair hearing hadbeen'held.: The . county officials must`be condemned with out triai, and their testimony ignored ac cording to onr copperbead'neighbor. CUICAGO is euttiag 'rents. Other cities - are following is heir wake. Thciee of Philadelphia are still.kept up to an, en3rmous extent. What can Columbia do for the poor? „. . Row the News of the Passage of the Metropolitan Police Bill was lie eeived-::Seenes let the (Jen teal S tion. Yesteiday obout'one o'clock it became known thrbughout the city that the Senate of Pennsylvania, Democratic bribery and corruption fund notwithStancling, had pass ed the Metropolitan Police bill. The glad news was soon afterwards announced from the several bulletin boards, an I what a few mlnutes'before had been looked upon as an idle rumor now became a certain fact. THE SCENE,ti that followed the reception of this news were both serious and comic. ,The crowde arMand-bulletia - boards reminded ns of the old war time. All - -000 D CITtZF.SS, after reading the glad intelligence, express ed their thanks to - drici, and the feeling seemed to be that a great battle had . been won and the corrup - tionNts t . dti defeated. The action of the Housn is now an ion%ly awaited. ' • " ' • . on the,strength of the fund they had raised to.corrupt tile- Senate, have laterly been very sure of retaining their stars' until after the expiratiod of the term of Mayor Pox. They have invested heavily in blue, over coats and glazed navy naps, besideS lavish ing their money on other personal adorn ments which the six-fuoters of the Reserves consider so attractive. The announcement of the passage of the bill by. one branch of the Legislature caused the wildest conster nation among the force. rhey could hard ly believe the despatch, and many of them said "it was a trick of theinimy:'' ON CHESTNUT STREET, the majestic Reserves, who do nothing but eat peanuts and admire the lady promena ders, were greatly crestfallen. The news boys, too, defiantly flaunted the evening papers, containing the,glad results, in their 'Very faces. These ragged urchins ditl'iiot content themselves, however, with this, but insolently offered !o buy the overcoats of the unlucky knights of the locust "at a great discount. AT THE CENTRAL STATION ' there was wailing, weeping, and gnashing of teeth. Vigil and low olfeials participat ed in the general mourning, and all hands bemoaned their unhappy fate. Hero were gathered deteetives,high constables . , reserv es, patrolmen,und, in fact, a representative of every branch of the force, and the oaths that some of them got ot would have made the hair of our worthy Mayor stand (mend. They were especially indignant that, after the heavy assessment they had all paid into -the corruption fund and their defeat of the regular Republican nominee for State Treas urer, somebody should have gone back on on them thus. • One of our reporters interviewed a Hi bernian who had just heard the news. The following was the resiat: Reporter. Well Pat, what do you think of yourself, now? . .„ Pat. I'm after thinking I'M a gone spa!- peen. Reporter. It is hard, isn't it? Pat. I'd hardly suppose it wasn't. I'm just after buying a tine new coat, and a nice party cap, and paying more nor a week's wages to them. legislators •not to do this thing, and be jabers they have gone and done it I Reporter. W nre yod going, to do when the bill beeomes a low ? Pat. I'm after thinking Pa go hack to runnin' a sthill an. selling tilp:cent whis ky. I'm getting all f dhrink now for noth ing, and it's rale good, too. Our reporter left poor Pat bemoaning his sad latc'and denouncing '•' thim legislators who be gave, more-wir a week's wages' not to do this thing."—Pleilaclelphia Press. • , queen Victoria has sixteen grams len. - Alrs.:E. A. Pollar li:t; aspeao(l a Ii.AVI in lArashington. A. sister or . Ston,4,,,sy 113A:z-0n133 ;p ahto- nt .. , ,eel aheiaiol4o. ive s o sl house , - 2 • ;;:gßidiatil , y iady - ooite.alier iscar: , ed with cruelly treating a young girl. ' A young lady of St. Luis has just been awarded a $12,000 contract for laying street pavement A Mrs. White of Toledo, sang "I would not live alway," and proved'the truth of the assertion by, dying five minute; after. ' Miss Jelfof Eliztheth, New Jersey, own ed up to 'being an old maid. She has' just passed her one hun had an 1 fourth birth day. - A young lady wont to a photoArAph galle ry lately, and taken with an expression as if she was composing a poem. A lady who lost a $3O) diamond pin in Chicago two years ugo, had the pleasure of taking it from the shirtfront of a yowl.; man at her hotel a few days since. Mrs. Stowe has published a new book, the object of which is said to be the vindication or Lady . Byron. It is a catch-penny of the usual Beecher-Stowe stamp "Mother," said Jetnima, " S.un wants to come courting me to-night?" "Well, what did you tell him?"- "Ob. I told him he might come. I felt anxious to see how he would act." ANVOMIII2 hanged herself in New York on Tuesday. through fear of a long separation from her husband, a.tainst whom a warrent has been issued bye. criminal magistratt3. Florence N. Kelly wai arrested a week ago at Poughkeepsi, N. Y.. charged with swindling clergyman and other, by repr!- senting herself as thedanghter of the Bish op of New Foundlattd. $3,93J,664 89 A young woman in an Illinois town k so pious that she has to get a rarioagh from the minister to attend a dance. 'rids is the latest branch of ministerial trade and com merce. Annie James, of Alton, Illinois, k a I var • tised as tha andsomest niece of feminine loveliness in , the wait. A 1):11):” . StiVy s h e has hair n "waxed mass of golden feathers...! Tha t's the gosl mkt dos n•iption of hair we have seen yet. nervods Elmira girl requests Olive Lt gait to "stand erect when speaking, my dear, and'do not rub those pretty hands so nervously and incessantly, es it etnets the nerves of the audience unpleasantly, evon painfully. „ eighty-four year.i or age, died in New Haven, Conn., on Christmas day. She Was married on Christmas day sixty-three years ago, her hu-band (tied on Co ristmas twenty-three;years ago, and she had 'often remarked,'" I wonder it I shall die upon Christmas, too." Mrs. Rose Muddler is lecturing in Ohio in opposition, to woman suffrage, as calcula ted to destroy her " conservative power." She - argues that the more woman takes upon hersetff the man quality, the less she 'governs man. - Rather a sensible pleco of Maddler.'ilutt. • The Bridge Award The Arbitrators in the case of the County of Lancaster vs. The New libiland Turn pike Company, have filed the following award in•the _Prothoitotttry's office : "Jamer C. Carpenter and George Albright, two of the above named Arbitrators, hav ing met at the place in this rule men tioned, and George D. Sprecher not attend log, Henry Fisher was chosen in his stead when the said Arbitrators were sworn sm . - sording-to. Jaw. and-proceeded to-hear tie; parties whereuPOn; Janies C. Carpenter was called as it witness and withdrew from the Board, when the undersigned, by con sent of parties, proceeded to hear the par ties, their proofs. and _allegations, and ad journed front day to day tO this date; when we do find in favor of plaintiff the sum of five thousand, • liftmen hundred and eig My aeven dollars and eighty-four cents with costs of suit." [Signed]• osonog Armen:tap, SENATORS ' Warfel and Billingfelt voted the - Metropolitan Polieelbill,'as we ex deetept: . .• • • :• '7 • • TII Ii POLIChMEN, I= Fem'inizze: I=3 Spy- tugs. —Moxico'has another revolution. —IV - est - N*4ln la-has no State debt. .I.loston has an Bsquimaux oxibition. '- - /Binciimati has had a thunder storm. last year hit ilt 638 school houses. • ;They have sleighing in remote portions of Maine. Chinese idol merchant has appeared in 'New York. —The New. York Tr/Luxe - made $lBO,OOO profit last year. —Ladies are becining to attend public banquets in New York . . —A blind tight, rope walker has been per troAiting at Opolousa, —Sunday theatrical amusements :have been legalized in California. —A letter for Florence Night' ngale is ad vertisod at a Western post ofilee. —The largest vineyard in California has 000,000 vines, covering -130 acres. --Nearly all amortizes in the lowa Logis t ore are t..ought after by women. —Petersburg, Va. has a citizen who can oat a gallon of oysters at a meal. —Another package of $lOO in greenbacks has passed through a New York paper mill. —ln a W.i.consin town the politicians are lighting over a poSt otlie t worth $8 a year. —One of the Mormon Bishops has just died, :Ind ten widows refuse to be comfort ed. • - ME —They are having both grasshoppers and butterflies; this mild 'Sy...tither in Connecti cut. —They ha ve ice a foot thick at St. Athens, 'Vermont, but there is no snow on the grout]. - • —They have May flowers in bloom on Cape Cod. - That always was an enterpris ing plate. •, =The soldiers of the British army in In die are heronfter to be taught signalling and telegraphy. —A clerk In a Hartford life insurance of fice haS written nine milei of policies, num bering 40,000. —They have very cold weather out west, as a sort counterbalance to our spring weather here. —Tho Min ois Legislators get, furnished at public expanse with pen kn i ves sa id to cost $5.25 apiece. cotemporary speaks of a famous lit eratuer as "being flora deeply read in the nose than the brain." —Judge Dent, who was not elected Gov ernor of Mississippi, has become a dein, - agent in Washington. —The Court R eporter r f a Cincinnati po per has invented a new word, by which he tells how an indictment was "nollicd." —A man in Chilicothe, Ohio, has succeed ed in making a whistle of a pig's tail. He lull named the_ ntrti meat the pigolette. —Wendell Philips is to deliver the oration in Boston on the 5t.12 of March, the centen nial anniversary of the "Boston Massacre." —Several Congressmen have called atten tion to the slight inconsistency involved in franking petitions lhr the abolition of frank- —The lowa Legislature takes twenty three daily papers for each member of the •Senate, and twenty-five for each member of the House. —Jain es Fish is said to have talked at the rate of 101) words a initiate for six hours, in his gold "corner," testhnony at Washing,- t an last week. —There are MIXON/ dogs in the United States. A tax of $° a head will produce $1.2,000,03 . J. Ulf with rnentne tax and on with the dog ta x. —'roc publisher of an Idaho newApapor, gives notice that nit libel suits should bo against him personally, ••or tli!•y . won't amount to a bill of beans." • .Abveral members of. the Illinois Legis lature have' been attacked by 'small-pox, terferelvrith business: Tile " lobby" are afraid to liegetime with them. - —New Orleans cries aloud for "change.'' An apple or an orange now costs a "picay une" there, and a man with four cents would go hungry because he could buy nothing with them. —A friend sat up with a sick man at Fond du Lac the other night, to whom he was to administer brandy at briefintervals. The friend took the brandy himself, and the sick taco recovered. —Thomas Powell was r.,iu ht be tween the bumpers of two cars at Penobscot, on the Lehigh and Susquchana Railroad, on Sat urday, and injured so severely that he died in two hours afterwards. —A nervous Ohio householder was wak ea up Um other night by an alarm of burg lars, got out It is gun, tired from the window and ruined a pair of his best trousers that were flapping on the elothsline. —Smator Saunter his di -Kt Wol'o las ef 'eetive way of preventing other Senators from Nrsonally explaining away his charge: against tit em. lie threatens to tn tite an hour's speech in reply. —A tnvm"nr or the Wyoming, Legislature seeking to sustain n point of order, jerked hiq rout MT, ••14r. Speaker it some reliable mom will hold these duds, I'll leach him that ho is out of order." The point was sus tained . —A Massachusetts paper tells of a recent Congressional nominating convention there in which voting was carried in such a scien tifia milliner that "on the fourth ballot each canididate had a majority of the whole con vention." —The Lynchburg, Va. papers indig pant ly deny that one of the preachers of that City called Congress a"set of infemons senundrels,•' and state that what he did say was only that Congress was a "set of infa mous s•tpheads." —Ts it not a little singular that Gotti‘chnlk and Lefeburn- Wely, one a great pianist and the other a great organist, should have died 'Within a month, nail that each should be stricken with death chile playing his Ta -vorite instrument ?, _brethers....have long been In th e habit of attending. a Cincinnati Sunday School on alter native Sundays. One Sun tiny the teacher asked her pupil if he would be present next week, "I can't," said he; "it's my turn to saw wood." —Gen.' Butler recently remarked to a _Boston Post correspondent that he did not care what the papa r said about him. Many of them had misrepresented him, called him harsh names, but did not see that any of them called him a fool. —A. healthy competition is waged by two opposition stage lines in Wisconsin. One line carries for nothing and gives a dinner to each passenger: the other carries for nothing and gives to each passenger a din ner and a pair of buckskin gloves. —A. contemporary publishes a letter in which the writer says he has been placed in the trying dilemma of having to choose between a barrel of ap?les for his family and a subseribtion for the newspcper. He adds that he finally concluded to subscribe for the piper. and ',•trast Providence for the apples." a recent prayer -meeting In Maine ttie sexton' arose and remarked that "the Devil had got into a corner and is running ,oppesition,"' , aini that' he would have a chance to go out. As the disignated immediately accepted the role as signed to him and made his exit, the meet ing went nri in peace. • —That was a profound philosopher who compared advertising to a growing crop. B e sa id, "the farmer plants his seed, and while he is sleeping the corn is ,growing. So with advertising; while you are sleeping or eating, your advertisement is being read by thousands of persons who never saw you or tieard 'of Your business, nor neuer would had it tititlieen"for yOur advertising." SPECIAL NOTICES. LET COMNION SENSE DECIDE. What is the rational mode of procedure In cases of general debility and nervous prostra tion Does not reason tell us thut judicious stimulation is required. To resort to violent purgation in such a ease is as absurd as It would be to bleed a starving man. Yet It Is done every day. I r es, this St upid and unptillosophlcal prac tice is continued In the teeth of the great fact that physical weakness, with all the nervous disturbances that accompany It, is more certain ly and rapidly relieved by .flosrErrrna'S STOJE-. Ann Ilirrints than by any other medicine at present known. It is true that general-debility is often attended with torpidity or irregularity of the bowels, and that this symytom moat not be overlooked. But while the discharge of the waste matter of the system is expedited or reg ulated, its vigor mast be recruited. The Bitters tlo both. They combine aperient and an tl-bil lions properties, with extraordinary tonic pow er. Even while removing obstructionsfronithe bowels, they tone and Invigorate those organs. Through the stoma-it, upon which the great veg etable specific acts directly, it gives a-healthy and permanent Impetus to, every enfeebled function. Digestion is facilitated, the faltering circulation regulated, the blood reinforced with a newaccesslon of the alimenturyprinciple, the, nerves braced, antl.a.ll the dormant , powers of, the system roused into healthy action; not spas , modically, as would be the case If a Mere stim ulant were achninistered, but for a continuance. It is In this way that such extraordinarychangds are wrought in the condition of the feeble, enami lated and netwous invalids. by. the usePof this, wonderful corrective, alterative and tonic. Let common sense , deelde between such 'a prepara ration and a prostrating cathartiquiupplemented bs a poisonous astringent like strychnine of quinia. , • .., PAIN, MILLER Kansn's',,Spril i 7, ISCO. Messes. Pcany DAvis & Sov, ,• - GENTLEMEN * • I Ivant to say a little more about the Pain Killer. I consider it a very valuable medi cine, and always keep it on hand. I have tra v eled a good deal since 3 have been in Kansas, nnd never without talc ing it with me. In my practice I usedit freely for the Asiatic-Cholera in 184 e, and with better success than a ith any other medicine. 3 also used it here for Cholera in WA, with tee same good re sults. A. 13 UNTING, M. D. * * * •' I regre t to say that the ..holera has Iwo caned here of Info to great extent. For the last three weeks, from ten to fifty or sixty fatal eases each day have been reported. L should add that the Pain Hiller sent recently from the Mission House, has been used with considendde success during this epidemic. If taken in season, it is generally effec tual iu checking the divease. Itcc. CHAS. HARDING, Sholapore, ' sept-1-110-tfw THE ONLY RELIABLE CURB FOR DYSPEPSIA IN TILE KNOWN WORLD. Dr. Wishart's Great American Dyspepsia Pills and Pine Tree Tar Cordial are a positive and infallible cure for dyspepsia in its most 11Ggravated form, and no matter of hoolong standing. T hey penetrate the secret abode of this terrible disease, and exterminate it, root and branch, for- They alleviate more agony and silent suffering than tongue san tell. They are noted for curing the most desperate and hopeless ea , es, when every known means fail to af ford relief. No form of dyspepsia or indigestion eon resis their penetrating power. DR. NWISHARrS PINE TREE TAR CORDIAL It is the vital principle of the Pine Tree, obtained by a peculiar process in the distillation of the tar, by which its highest medical properities are retained.' It invigorates the digestive organs and restores the appetite. It strengthens the debilitated system. It purifies and enriches the' bleed, 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 , ptirt, relieving,painand subduing inflammation. itis the result of years of study mat experiment, and it is offered to the afflicted with positive assurance of its power to cure the following diseases, if the patient has not too long delayed a resort to the means of em e Cbastanplion of the Lung; Congli,'Sora Throat and Brute, Brunchetic , liver Complaint, Blind and Bleeding Piles, Asthma, Whoop in:, Cough, Dipthcria, etc. A medical expert, holding honorable collegiate di plomas, devotes his entire time to the examination sf patients at the utllro parlors. Associated with hint are three consulting physicians of acknowl edged eminence, whose somees are given to the public Free of Charge. This opportunity no offered by no other institution in the country. Letters froth any part of the country, tisk egad vice, will be promptly and gratuitously responded to. Where convenient, remittances should take me shape of DRAFTS OR POST-OFFICE ORDERS. Pike of Itii4hart's Anicricati Dyspepsia Pills,sl. box. Sent by mail on receipt of prico. ' Price of Wishart's Pine Tree 'far Cordial, 51.50 bottle, or 611 per dozen. Sent by express. All communications should he addre,sed L. Q. C. WISIIAKT, DI. D., No. r.ail North Second Street. oel•Gl-::ml Philadelphia. CURE FOR CONSUMPTION. LW hat the Doctors Say: AMOS NI 'POLLEY. 'At D., of ICoecLuska Coun7 iy, Indiana. says: "For thiee years past l have aged Aibra•es Luaa BALSAU extensively in my or:Intl& and lam satisfied there is no bet ter medicine for lung diseases In use." ISAAC A. DOItAS, M. D., of Logan County, Ohio, says : 4. A.L.LEN'S LUNG BALSAS/ not only sells rapidly, but gives perfect satisfaction in every case within my knowledge. Having con fidence in it and knowing that it possesses val uable medicinal properties, I freely use it in my daily practice, and with unbounded success. Assn expectorant I t Is most certainly far ahead of any preparation I have ever yet known." NATHANIEL nAnras, :NI. 0., of :Middle bury, Vermont, says: "I have no doubt it wilt soon become a classical remedial agent for the cure of all diseases of the Throat, Bronchial Tubes, and the Lungs. Physicians do not recommend a medicine which has no merits, what they say about ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM, Can be taken as a fact. Sold by all Medicine Portiere. SPECIAL NOTICE SCII &NCR'S PULMONIC SYRUP Seaweed Tonic and Mandrake Pills, will cur e Con sumption. Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia, if taken according to directions. They are aiLlt three to be taken at the same time. They cleanse the stomach, relax the liver, and put it to work ; then the appetite becomes good; the food digests and makes good blood; the patient begins to grow in, flesh ; the dis eased matter ripens in the lungs, and, the patient outgrows the disease and gets *tell. This is the only way to entre consumption. To these three medicines Dr. .1. H. Schenck, of Philadelphia, owes his unrivalled success in the treatment of pulmonary consumption. The Pub monie Syrup ripens the morbid matter in the lungs, nature throws it off by inn easy expectoration, for when the phlegm or matter is HIM., a slight conch will throne it off, and the patient has rest and the lungs begin to heal. To do this, the Seaweed Tonic stud Mandrake Pills inns t be freely used to demise the stomach and liver. so that the Pulmonic Syrup and the food will make good blood. Schenck's Mandrake Pills act upon the liver, re moving all obstructions. rek'st the duets of the gall bladder, the bile starts nod the liver is soon relieved ; the stools will chow what the Pills can do; nothing lots ever been Invented except calomel (a deadly poi -on which is very dangerous to use et- , Petit who great en es 9, that will unlsek a salt-bladder and shirt the secretions of the liver like Sohencles Mandrake Pills. Liver Complaint is one of the most prominent Ca nog of Consumption. • Sclienek's Seaweed Tonle 1.4 a gentle stimulant and alterative, and the alkali in the Seaweed, which this preseeption 1.5 Made 01. 11001:40 the stomach to throw ond the gastric juice, to dissolve the food with the I . 'lllllolde Syt tip. and it is made into good blood nithOtlt fermentation or souring, in the stomach. The stoat reason why physicians do not cure con sumptionto.tecy try to do to much : they give medicine to stop the cough, to stop chills, to stop night sweats, hectic fever, and by so doing they de range the whole digestive powers, locking up thel?e cretions. alai eventually the patient sinks and dies. Dr. Schenck, in his treatment, does not try to stop a cough, night sweats, chills or fever. Recuoge the cause, and they alit all stop of their owe accord. No one can be cured of Consumption, Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Caturrh, Canker, Ulcerated. Throat, un less the liver and stomach are untie healthy. If a person has consumption, of course the lungs are in some way diseasetheither tube relas,abseesses, bronchial irritation, pleura adhesica or the lungs are n mass of inflammation and fast decoying. In such cases what must be done? It is not only the lungs that are toasting, but it is the-whole body. The stomach and liver have lost their power to make i blood out of food. Now the only chance s to take Selieuck's three medicines, which will bring up a tone to the stomach, the patient will. begin to want food, it will digest easily and ittolie good blood; then the patient begins to gain in Heii,. antL as soon as the body begins to grow,the lungs commence to heal up, and the patient gets fleshy and well. ' This is the only way to Mire consumption. • • When there. is no lung disease, and only Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia, Sehenck's Semvead'Tonto and Mandrake Pills are sullicient without the Pu I monic Syrup. Take the Mandrake Pills freely in all bilious complaints; as they are perfectly' harmless. Dr. Schenck, who bas enjoyed uninterrupted health for many years past, anti note weighs 225 pounds, was wasted away to a mare skeleton, in tho very last stage of Pulmonary Consumption, his physicians having pronounced his ease hopeless and abandoned him to his Into. lie was cured by the aforesaid medicines; and since his recovery many thousands simihirlyattliuted have used Dr. Schenck's prepara tions with the same - rem:al:4le' success. Full di rections accompanying each. Make it not absolutely necessary to personally see Dr. Sct.enck, unless the tri Beets wish their lungs examined, amid for - this purpose he is professionatly at Ids principal °Mee, Philadelphia, every .Saturdav, where all letters for advice must be addressed., Vet is also professionally at N 0.32 Bond Street, Aew York, every other Tues day, and at No. 35 lianoyer , Street, Boston, every other Wednesday. Ile gives advice free..but for a, thorough examination with his Respirometer the, price is EA. Unice hours at each city from 9 A ill to 3 PM. Price of the Pulmonie Syrup and SeMvoed Tonic oath SI fal per bottle, or $7 SU a half-dozen. Man drake Ma 25 cents a box. For rode Vail druggists. Ds. J. H. SCHENC.b., 5up.14,04fw . ) IS nth St., Phila., Pa. ee).- DEAFNESS, BLINDNESS and CATARRH treated with the utmost success, by S. Issncs, id. D., and Professor of Diseases of the Eye "and Ear, (his specially) in the Medical Col'ege of Pennsylvanian veers experience,.(formerly of Leyden, Holland,) No. SOS Arch street, Phila. Testimonials can be seen at his office. The Afedical faculty ere invited:to accompany their patients, as he has no secrets in. his practice Artificial eyeainserted without pain. No charge for, examination. , ~ • rsep4-894fw HALDEMAN'S STOR E ~,, E sTA.3w-siaEr) 1815. 1 }7,4 . "i:- , •,:, - L,:i-:,:i , :":i>.; ' ::,.<? ':.'...--', ~', ,•--:,:',,:" H - ' -' . H 0 , Our regular purchase for this , - L L week will consist of ELEGANT GOODS for the Holidays selected - I in New York from latest inipor tations-.---Our display - display the - - , - D , --.- ; , i fi'ne'Se`fei : many years; . and our - A ~ . A , , f iriCes the lowe4since 1860., ,. . . . „ . _ . : NEW BARGAINS EVERY ~ WEEK. 0 ,_,l :_,;:; 0 - . . P 'GREAT - REDUCTION IN PRICES. S ' S ... . GEO.'W. & B. F. HALDEMAN, 112 & 114 Locust ' Street. 1869. 1101_,ID_A:5L 7 'S WILLIAM . G. PATTON, No. 160 Locust Street, Columbia,. Penn'a. ' IS NOW OFFRING GREAT INDUCEMENTS IN FANCY & STAPLE } DRY GOODS SHAWS, BLANKETS, TRIMMINGS, NOTIONS, LARGE STOCK OF) r u f ( OF ALL GRADES, AT ( LADIES', MISSES' LOWER PRICES THAN AND CHILDRENS' J EVER BEFORE OFFERED Special Attractions in Dress Goods. His Partner being the buyer tor a Wholesale Dress Goods House in Philadelphia gives him the advantage not only of securing the BEST BARGAINS by being AL WAYS IN THE 'MARKET, but also sews him ONE PROFIT, which enables him to sell Goods at from 10 to 20 per cent. lower than any other retail store in the county. Line of Cloths and Cassimeres, A Full Cir..3:C.A.P'S'i• iN ".VONVIV LARGEST AND 'Mr . ESTABLISIEWNT BEST iu.erchant Tailoring { IN TUB TOWN. LE M AKES DINGI sE m vvING IN ' MACHES f AT rmcEs. AGENT'S A j 1870. 1870. FONDERS':ITH'S '127 & 129 Locust St., Columbia, Is CLOSING OUT the balance of his Stock of WINTER DRESS GOODS ! SHAWLS, FURS, • . Ile. Stbck'of 'GLASSWARE , QUEENSWARE , AND CARPETS. BEAUTIFUL TEA SETTS, 4S PIECES, FOR $5. CHECKS, TABLE LINENS, METSLINS R SHEETINGS, LOOK ING GLASSES, PRIME FEATHERS, &xi., &c., FOR HOUSEKEEPERS. At, Prices which cannot be under sold in Columbia. _FI_YeI.NCIAL. TNTEitEST ON DEPOSITS. i_ THE COLUMBIA NATIONAL BANE" will receive money on deposit,and pay interest there for, at the following rates, viz: 51.4 per cent, for 12 months. , 5 per cent, for 9 months. . 5 per cent. for 8 months. , . . • ~ • 13,e, per cent. for 3 months. 7-39 U S. Treasury Notes exchanged for new 5-'2O (Mid Bonds. sept4-69-tfw], , SAMUEL SHOCH:Cashler. TIIRST NATIONAL BANK OF 00- - LUMDIA, ' ' Interest Paid on Special Deposits as follows: 5 1.2 per cent for= months. 5 per cent. for 6 mouth and under 12 months. 4 1-2 per cent. for S ivied under 6 noon ths. We make Collections on all Accessible Points to the United States, on liberal terms, Discount Notes, Drafts. and Dills of Exchange. Buy and sell GOLD, SILVER, and aIIrUNITED, STATES SECURITIES. • • ' - nd are prepared to draw DRAFTS,' or Philadel phia, New York, Baltimore, Pittsnurg, • England. Scotland, France, aufil all parts of Germany. S. S. DETWEILER, Cushier. SECURITY AGAINST LOSS lEMEI BURGLAR, rim.% OR ACCIDENT. The Safe 1J posit Company ESSEITM .Neu' Pi IT and Burglar-Proof Building Nos. r.L.J & at CHESTNUT ST The Fidelity Insurance, Trust, SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY. Capital, - - - - $1,000,000 DIRECTORS.. N. IL Browne. Edward W, Clark, Clerence H. Clark, Alexander Deury, John Web.h, " • Stephen A: Caldwell, Charles Macalester. George F. Tyler Henry C. Gibson. , - President—N.B. Brown. Vice President—CLAßENCE H. CLARE. Secretary and Treasurer—ROßT. PATTERSGIc. 'Assistant Sec•etary—JAS. W. DAZLERURST„ The Company have provided in their new Building anti Vaults absolute security against loss by SIRE. BURGLARY. at ACCIDENT. and RECEIVE SECURITIES AND VALUABLES ON DEPOSITS UNDER GUARANTEE, Upon the following rates, for one year or less period Government and all other Coupon Securities, or those tx - aiusferitole by delivery 81.00 per $l,OOO Government and all otherSecurt ties registered and negotiable • onlylby endorsement '5O per 1,000 Gold Cosa or Bullion 1.25 per 1,0 K) Stlver;Coln or Bullion 2.00 per 1,000 Silver or Gold Plate; under :cal no ownr's estimate of value, and rate 'subject to adjustment for bulk. 1.00 per 100 Jewelry, Diamonds, etc 2.59 per' 1,000 _ • Deeds, 'Mortgages. and Valuable Papers gener ally, when of no fixed value, Si a year each, or according to bulk. These latter, when deposited•in tin boxes, are ' charged according to bulk, upon a basis of .1%, feet cubic capacity, 810 a year. Coupons and interest will be collected, when ileslied and remitted to the owners. for one per cent.. The Company offer for BENT. the lessee ex clusively holding the key;SAFF INSIDE TliE BURGLAR-PROOF VAULTS, at rates varying -from 81514875 each per annual, according to size. Deposits of Alone y Received on which interest will be allowed ; per cent, on - call Deposits, - payable by check. at sight, and 4 per cent, on Time Deposits, payable on 10 days' notice. - Travellers' Letters of Credit furnished, avail able in all parts of Europe. This Company's also autbonzed to act as Ex ecutor, .Adraistrators.• and anardiands, , to .re ceive and execute Trusts of every description from courts, corporations, or individuals. •.N. 8. - Brown; ROBERT PATT.ERSON, President. SECRETARY AND TandlsUrtkli 01-01869 & 70. 1. DOUG HT FOR CASH AND SOLD AT PRICES I3EYON D COMPETITION 1% ;- kw .4I>YERI'ISEMENT. TiA ND WARRANTS WANTED or War of 1812 .. Mexican 'War. FOREIGN COINS, STOCKS, GOLD. GOVERN MENT AND OTHER BONDS, BOUGHT mid SOLD. COLLECTIONS promptly mule on all points. DEPOSITS RECEIVED. No patus will be spared to serve the interest o f those who favor us with their business. Joins.; S. nusmoN & co., nAracmts and BILOICERS, No 50 South Third St.. Phil'a• ' tlee-5-13 ] CIOURT PROCLAMATION. k,,/ Whereas. t he Honorable lIEN RY G. LaNG . President,. and Honorable ALEx.krzmut. L . HAY s, and Joni , : J. LUMART, Associate Judges of the Court of Common Pleas in and for the County of Lancaster, and ASSIStAIit Judges of the Courts of Oyer and Terminer and General Jail Delivery and Quarter Sessions of the Pence, in and for the County of Lancaster. have Issued their Precept to me directed, requiring me, among other things, to make public Proclama tion throughout my bailiwick, that a Court of Oyer and Terminer, and a general Jail Delivery, also a Court of General Quarter Sessions of the t , ifica and Jail Delivery, will commence in the Court House in the City or Lancaster, in the. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, on the THII.Z,D MONDAY IN JANUARY, (the 17th)1870 In pursuance of which precept Pummo Norlng. IS lIILItEIIY GIVEN, to tile Mayor and Aldermen or the City of Lancaster, in the said county, and all tire Justices of the lance, the Coroner and Constables, of the said city and county of Lan caster, that they be their and there in Melt own proper persons with their rolls, records and ex aminations, and inquisitions, and their other remembrances, to do those things which. to their offices appertain, in their behalf to be minute; awl also all those who wilt prosecute against the prisoners who are, or then shall be in the jail of said county of Lancaster are to be then and there to prosecute against them as shall be just. Dated at Lancaster, the 2ith day of Decem ber, iStig. P. MYER.S, Sherilf.": deeS-tit NOTICE. 011iec Columbia A Port, Deposit Railroad Co. Notice is hereby given to the Subscribers to the CAPITAL STOUR' of the COLUMBIA AND PORT DEPOSIT RAILROAD COMPANY who have not paid up the installment clue on their subscriptions (as per notice heretofore given) that it all the Installments clue and owed by them, are not paid on or before the RIF TEENTII. day of APRIL, ma, to J. B. 11.11Teli- IN3ON, Assistant Engineer, nt the Engineer's (Mice of the Company In COLUMBIA, Penna., the said stock will be declared forfeited to the Company. . By order of the Boarder Directors. JOSEPH LESLEY P.IIILAXELPIIIA, Jan. Is, rer. [Jan. LECTURES. _. . . A. course of four lectures will be given in the Lecture Room of the :a. E. Church, by the Pas ter. Rev. S. H. C. Smith, as follows : FEI:D.AIIi EVENING, FEB. Axis, Young MreiWisA Search of a Wife.. FRIDAY, EVENING, FEB. lira, Young Lady Choosing a Husband or Companion tor Life. FRIDAY EVENING. FEB. 18Tu Harried Lite after the Honey Moon ' is over. FRIDAY EVENING, FEB. 2.5 TH. The Sphere otllncoor, and How to CHMEaI Ticketsfor course. admitting a ltuly and. gen tleman, $l. For single lecture, 25 cents, Proceeds for the benefit of the Sabbath School and Church Improvement Tickets to be had at :Messrs. MAY 6c Enwriq and 'Wino= St Co's.. Book Stores, and of the Teachers of the Sabbath School, and at the door on the evening of lectures. Doors open at 7% o'clock. Lecture to com mence at 5 o'clock. A LUMBER YARD FOR SALE on WENT. River, Canal and Railroad facilities, and a first-class location for Bash and Door Factory, A. SIIMMY, Marietta, Pa janl•2rn 1870.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers