The Columbia spy. (Columbia, Pa.) 1849-1902, February 26, 1870, Image 2

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YOCUM: / - Publishers and
Proprietors.
18VO.
,3eatlitiamartotte,letteriiicontrlbutiona, generally of
merit and intermit to, tbia reader, .tvAll be acceptable
from friends froinAll
- 'Fon-ARE
if; ,;.
..._ . • • •
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X.,11E.!t7 OLV:113,1"1".. SPY! ; •
e:36-4 lirt4 s .
tea • „
T
”;, .14 z.%.,
Grimit &;'Colfax !
. • - . ,
thei; NEW' YOKIE..;INttorr:
-;145 -6•OIENDENT•Iiorth- , $2.00; per'. ;
am:l4ll'lm ;7•lSlSteekiEncrav-..i.:
Grant Worth
• 42 . .60 'so l d; a„ Steel/ •
; "; • ,
•,• . C?lfa-x; l *,° ll l,.k. ';-
••,. _ , , $2.00, I '
DOLLARS-
L , Tolruf,6ezmir tibseriber for the SE;Y, WbOierldS
n3;s9:oo,hre send:not Only the Sri v lollt Tart
.K.l4netßththe, lnrgeet :'nelvresiaper r in, the
yrottil; r ebly: ,i4ttett And. ht. iehentl; interest:
tAgettVer;:witn i .tit'e'litiniTh eteei 'engravings ''ot
Onini '
fi!This offends'oit& or the mold =intend we , hai , a
„The
.. Atettlirag are gems ,oc, art, by
I=qteh le Olie niOst- trblitedartiste.
We_nutko`tha• :dime`' offer' to any person,
• etlierMi , old'oexitiw• subscriber,' who ae-;,
,cure one new sabseriber, and 84:00.1xecash.t
"
^
00 3n Cgsli 4 ' "
,or ;new a cr ers an .
45* - .6t Wetite'd Nen4I:I2.IIAIiRMGCEIS
1.13.igg:0145,6.inta1idng. , 4 1 :01 engravings;.• Lt.,ll,6 l; sinosi cornparg.,-,Nyork ( p l / 4 tla Fvngiish
ei'eii'nevillillbS6l6i, or 'tAi:t3yer:fiiid
fOr
:and4l.9oorOciaddyreprilL send ;tolany addreisa
~oneLoopy.ocrar: S py and a copy of
,TRE.A.a..px ; 's
Pera.9:4 monthly magazlno of litel*iiro and,
fasblosi for °Re
4 4 ‘, , tv" ' l "7. i tt"'7it , r- -,, :c . t• • • :
" . 1 1 11 EST 2'
44 :W/ 040 :ST's
4 fflekii•dt•led,:Seaving :Machine.,
For, al now stibscrinero and S IW.OO in cosh, we
egilie - Orie` „Wlieobir'arld'tliliscints
N'AilletiTanfO!§6wing Wadi Ines; the best in the
t,worid t 'antiltelling At-the rate of one. hundred
; thousand yoar; thorns] i prl co of wh lett is Salle;
This m ., aehine , inakiaee4Ce'u:siittici General
ey';s4:,l,iPitt*Leantreet, tittienetai. Pa.!
,
iirrin'cliiportniaty':to 'get: b. maeht-te for,
ler wir,ritiatod, forone' year, and in
' tit.titOoni how'iii °Piute free. Thema
chine;wilf
be every department;
with 'oil , the ,Itecessaiy - attachments 'perfeCt.
Lot us see who will get the first. " '
.--' -onOrk:T.r...knOY's Fux - EnAi.—Don
,B...(aftiiireVerea,itly, s ,l3ut,titithfiilly, *rites to
..tlieP,inelniiai Cera;,,zeic r ial; , . . , •
r , A; wonderful calm fell upon the Capital,:
laSt night : :• • The wind ;Newland - the snow
-tell;.butthelkearto of 'man' was at. rest, for;
I.the;rumor.reached; ua ;that. the late .Mr.`
.:P.ealxalpavas at -last buried.: Mr:fr: was:
. antktcellentgentlernan;le: was, I.MaY - say,.
an biestimable;'citizen; and:Somewhat - cel
' ebrated for 'his , beitevolence.7 - But he was:
Aniriechtoi:emuch. ;-, - .The fear - ea - mention usf
thatilie'never" would :be ' entirelr,buried.'
- Werwere ,tbreatened , with, •an: everlasting:
• tuneral4Onei. - took -upllie,papers atbreak4
tasttoreadlathestattlingEbeadlineamor'
about_, the . 'la -P
mentedeimd-his f - uneraL.
Theyvening3iapera nontlnuedthemourn
el
'la intelligende. ' .We,,,got'.. - ebilfused. ' - Wet
could not clearly make - out when where'
or how the.t.he deParted .1".. was - being bu-.
- vied.", 'I don , t/kmoW ' how.. I Would - not
likelto' lie examined on that point: I have .
• a mistTnotion cthat.:itf was near:Boston.;
I helve Boston lad a
.land. in .lt ; : and ,if:,
,this iliniot is:contra:dited and More liurY-:
ing-lateing"done'some Of us ' - will - go - mad.l
- WeiVrillrcontradict it and' take , tlie•tense
- quenpes. .-..-' ' ”--- :- -.! -',- - -
ma
As.order has recently- ueen issued from
war,pep.Ftment, requiring . -officers;
.4ho
oyer,thret sears to e 4 uhange with. officers;
I',lffhe`cOp, qf General
,lii4e.‹Elipi - Deilti-
t4lgirtermait6l.'denero '42 . 'hist this
,
.oraeOil'64(r.
lis_ t hadNiceasi6'n - ge'igfar di-
isioris of iia;
'lloe9 not remember.,dkQPo4 Rg 1 4 l er
wllotlWW44leeqied;aidlleproO ,
pt
nessvty*liiiihtaUr ptfane's's was attend
ea to 1)y G .eral Hellas Also re -
aikErigfßri,- . faib'ilie'll4)itd#,R4-
Aia"Gceilia4l;coria,i
puttee a nii : we
to tho:pisiusieVijiatinlei'elue
with 114124:19,5i0it ideSiiiicandvelnist
the' Gen re al'Riil :: tie'.retnined '` - tiOng his
*lends.,
r + ramie iiiii," . a state 'Of:negative 'ievolu-'
.tion. OnelOtthe "editors of La. jiiii•seilles
a xßajdiatOo s nxnal;, , sent a eintli,enge to
I!ler,%*napFtie:,,yfe r toy 'lstiiii, .was th
e-:dpliyerei:i,,,..l9;l44ii-dFeiv.a,revolker and'
kiiled'hini:.All : „liitilS,:fs, eicited. -The
`deßtinsiiit,lielik at thea‘ftinerai 'of the'un
happ3:,:vietiii(.,7cie ,inten`selranti-Bona
iirte.,:;',.tteTyFilnAnnqs,thieatened. -- Itaiio
'101! 1 - 9 :
.. 2 ,4lrui. r-.4*-v4lie,young_l'xince is to
—PI ITi_c43- ...IR tPe,eypitt Of his conviction or
e h
,acotiittai, O:ii,:to,:be 'sent to -Ainerica to
riside ic.,:;TiOyal,inurdirers act ;IVith.
iriiimuil ' itinl jnitieels `not serVed.' . '
Gb eked
OUTICIT„ ' •`` a -up -by- some
prominent' enKKlq Cary oftIOS as well as some
.Moving 'biz- a
is . !nt•w•laboilng
r finder: clisig:uagfieatiOng frani eV holding
°thee under;,„the,,
st .t, n
!govemeup,.: Tins, 'ls
aS;WeI :as
:the
'',fi r ttrfes • Pg.et l W,i'sa,M4,Ai44iiiliffiailq2 7 .
nAlikiiiikighedat v e4
that lip
lives:- •
ALBio.°:Ggist 7 ai*a,* tti tie sissidiiou "
sly`iie=
i-oted ",
its haW4ifti*iaitiplefforni, natty :bound
iiiitligabor!tlisietnifiatiiii- political
know' leirgitr.s.ll - e' - inikTit'aifd ail.lappea 7
tliertC,*ival,VgroiciP' 4s : The eilattei
iconld-fur
' , ornnentiiichpl93*(9nirailrhads and else
. yvhere - Nywiintenly*iilie baggage; has
hem signeli , hrthe•CiayeiTkor, .411cla s•lnhly
,
eayfr).Rofiehashcds.l9l-
[0481is:10.1:'i, .
This s P*:E,#tsciflktitlgh it
,*y;l,
, ••••••,1 2, -1-• ',.",
'‘''""''' — I
-341ifesiii llt,g4yascertaiiig.
~ • :; . ?,tii , , han'at lan,p,,
~ ,
',, ' , iha"t the 'defence cif-gacheytb di 3r s t in lie
teres Erit ted mt f :
. "•,•'"ner,Allifercadan7Alitcge. -.`
, - .'sbaine,to .hintudth ink othernry
, se ,: , ,
''' ~.- —.--- . —44dead,leirel
, ~,i,ti-r• ..1.w1...,. •—..„ - At m i t a is ed.fom . , .
f - I V P .n- ‘ ,l7 P"'"'''' , -"dalo.-cialftlideloaue.nr
lAt'ailithigli-,!c • • - smo r ,- € 4:6 1 ai e e s t
rep&nilcite.OPM l l.°.l-1 , ,; „, :._ ~:•• , • T. • T."'.7l . rt
.••-.4ctn-„;-Wed PRP a X r TT g '•••, - ;'•,, -. " ',',„
';', , qW; -, •,'.tt'';, , ,!•;:;•4•„-? • ;:.= ~-;,:,--, ...,;,;;;.:,•- , •,„ ,
~,,. , s .
~
The Legislature ye. The People:•
Below,we give the text of a bill repently ,
introdun - eaintOhe,Legislatwo, by Sena- ,
for Billingfelt. ; • .•
An Act authorizing and empowering the
judges of the court of 'quarter sessions to
appoint the prison inspectors of Lancaster':
'county.-..
Snortot , rl.' -Be it enacted That the judges ,
of the Court of Quarter Sessions of Lancas
ter county be and they are hereby author
ized and required, at their next regular
_term commencing on the third Monday of,
April next, to appoint in lieu and in place
of the present , inspectors of the Lancaster
County Prison. six discreet; taxable citizens
of said county, lo b inspectors of said pris
on, two of whom may serve until the first
Monday in January, one thousand eight
hundred and seventy-one ; two of I.lrhtim
may serve until the tirst Monday of Jima
, ary,,one thousand eight hundred and
enty-three, as shall be ordered by, sitid
Court, and, the'saidlndges sliall be requir
ed at their regular term or November; one
thousand eight hundred and seventy, and
at their regular term ,in November every
-year thereafter,' to appoint two other
• ble citizens! as ~successors to those, .whose
terms shall expire in Jenuary of each year
'and 'all ' - lawS";.ificimitisttont herewith are
hereby repealedL. •; • • -'; ; "
:Editor
, The bill was-prepared and • sent • to- Mr.
Billingfelt in the same..form'in.•
Antroduced rmdertieand that It does
not meet his approval, and that important
_modifications must-be made =before'it'can
become' claw witb his consent. q -• •
Its main provisions are radically wrong.
Its-objects—to break down a "ring," and
:insure. an honest:administration. of prison
affairs—are right • in. themselves. -„That
there are just causes for a change inthe
• present,, management,; and that - private in
dividuals are enriched at the • expense of
the public' ' are so patent, thatwe need on
ly- refer to them. But how , shall - we rem
edy the evils? ,
The first part of the-above bill provides
:that the judges of the Court of Quarter
Sessions,,--atz:their regular term, on -the
third.-21finday of April shall 'appoint-in lieu
-and,inp/acelof the present inspectors six
' - discreet, taxable citizen§ to -be:inspectors
of said-prison. This we, believe is trans
. cendimplegislatiOn _power.: Messrs. Gast
:and Musser have recently:been elected-to
serve .fort a term of three.years. They, can
not be removed- from-office except lor dis-,
-•abiityto serve. - They are esteemed honest'
men:They: have ;.received the endorse,
Anent of.thepeople, .and theyliave -nearly,
three years:yet to serve. -qßy what right.,
;or pretext;of right ican,any legislative
-enactment rob them of theihonors- and the
Jegal•emoluments of.odce?--/ ThetLeg*la-;
turemight create:a law, , authoriv:
ng- ; the ;:court: ,to' -appoint , \ whomever - At'
might please, in lieu and-in-place of-, Capt.
Stauffer,; for Prothonotary, or in lieu and
in place of Keen, the one-armed soldier,
,for clerk of Orphans , . Court, or in lieu and
in, place of Captain SSTiDi. in Barton, the
crippled soldier, for clerk of Quarter Ses
sions, to take effect on the third Monday
of April.- Intrinsically and legally one
would be as just as the other. All such
actions would be unjust. The principle is
i wrong wherever applied.
IMEIMMEI
This measure is no doubt the result of a
misconception of the recommendations
and suggestions of the Auditors' Report.
At first glance, the measure seems plausi
ble, and competent to meet the case. But
upon a more thorough examination we
feel satisfied tinkt its adoption IVould only
expose us to greater evils. THE PEO
PLE are the ruling power. To them we
appeal for redress. As the law now stands
,we can make the appeal every year. Last
fall the people decided in favor of a reform.
Messrs. Gast and Musser were elected.
;From the Lancaster Expressive learn that
. both these men voted"in• accordance - with„
tlieteachings of the result. In. anotluir,
year we hope to securetwo more members,
infavor of reform:. Aud so on,, from year'
toryearime - can agitatethe subject otecon
' omy:and mitilweiseeurethvdesir
ediesult. F•
But adopt this.bill and what , will be the
result? , ' • ' . • - •, ',• e ,
Tora few - yea.'rs, •ai the bench , is now.
;constituted, good, honest-men may bezp
pointed. to prison management. Mean
while the .people, conscious that their in
terests are being guarded by a faithful
fJudge, will grow, lukewarm and cease to
manifest- that t deep .interest. in reform,
which for yeamwebave-been laboring to.
excite. • Meanwhile:the `..`ring," embitter
ed by disappointed . hopes,, will grganize
ill4ir:fOic'es; 'with ti 'icasonatiole hope' of
carrying This
'is riot
• toarY than one example, to
prove ours hypothesis: 'A' faCtiOnal jOge
once elected ; 's iiiiri*oompena . riot
- 13;"t6 . 0.ifuTwoffial;p1h ais§judioal
•i'uption'fof . ij,g•klier' with. all,
ttieir train of attendant
This is'the'•inbre probable fro* the fait
:that our made
the poinilar sisterd - ;' t and nihjorii:OieieV
'being' itee4iitif ici choiCe,
'aty
' e'er:it-1 1 4On bne•inaii`bY - Previons'a.riange
-inerit,ind r ieeiiie 10s'ereCtiiirt;'irliifethp
ilitotig*Tieihape,q6ur or - fie
will bedefeated:l '' 'A;
The interests ,now at' stake are ,too im-
Perian't to he endangired hj,=:Unwiselegis
lation. :The action "of the Goi,:•ernor Sin
vetoing. the Metropolitan Police was
`has . ' ed'up"onilie same . grounitas that upon
which we now pretest against this , hiter
ference with the just rights of the people.
"IF we have a black Deimicrat in our
ranks, we will put him in that part of the
.pro Cession where the mob will be likely to
make an attack." This is the. sensible
conclusion cone to by a New York com
mittee of arrangements to prepare for the
'coining celebrarion -by the colored people'
ofiithe adoption:of the fifteenth amend
ment: It looks, too, like the handwriting
'on - the wall for the
,Nothern Democracy.
The 'colored people of New York and
Pennsylvania geherally know how to read
and write, and, as they have been reading
the history of ' the Dethocratic 'party for
the last ten years,pretty attentivelY, they
will' not' be so easily 'marrinulated as cer
tidn'Other cia:sses'Of the community. Un
like the miiled • Irishman,';and,tbo often
the 'Or'brinanS, that they
will wrest the ballot 'tc their own deAruC-
ta; .btarir.6
- -
Through th'e kintifiefii`Ot PreflK. H. ti,4l
- ImiN4beenVurbislied NZritb-a
this:lnsfitntioM-of Twbich =lron.
Thos. H. IturrowekiSTresident:-:
Fy The -Institution As' intended to meet -the
want of practical education, and
,to benefit
'otti,r . lndustrial classes no less then,,the
- fees are -unusual low
trin,the fact that each student in a measure
pays his own expenses by devoting a small
Portion time to practie:W aPplicathin
of the prliabinles'he'eludies'. l4 ‘"
ong.thiiittiablitliieliqicliJ. D. Mir-
flip; AV. 4.. g. , Br l tirier;Rai.t . 7 - 1:4 1 C641:6 . 11; Atim-
uel , ;W:- - Douglass' Colnthble, B. Ceti:
ningham of Paradise,lirnr:A:. Keneakyl of
Btresbtirg, , HenrY Idance:ster, -
nnd , ; Newton-L. •Hopkins, - ; Buck,, this
• county. There, ure ineluded, njbe. ourrio:
'Main both" sclentillo.„and....ll4grary courses,
Tkeimptr:tince of ebetni.l?4lllpocittoriiiispas
.act and.m in ;
the
;14 , 166'
Itbe intereets of the it ateE,l‘;
j ghe Legal Tender Decision.
~,,,; ! ]. r b9. recent legal tender dicision of Chief
Jti tide Chase has awakened the'peoilo.t6 4 . ,
' , the dfimaging effects of a judicial decision - ,
rendered without regard to a full appreci-,
.ation v of public necessity. All,eontractS
'entered into prior to the passage of the
Legal tender act, Feb. 25th 1562, must be
paid in Coin; and the question of re-ad
justing accounts, since settled, is still
'orieritondiSiffite"The
has a most able article in the decision, a
part of which we extract.
It is a fact—still fresh in the memory of
this;generation; vriergeney,
which threatened the ruin Of the Govern
_ment, with treason andrebellion stalking.
through the land, with a bankrupt treasui
Witha ,totai,inpapacity,ito, meet the
neeesitury . publicexpendituresin,coin, and
ipi equal incapacity, to borrow money in
sufficient amounts on, the. ; credit of thti
United States-Congress, nsthecusfodiarr
of the general
_weal, :author*, the is
sue of treasury,i,Mtes, and did also make
theran,legaltender in the payment of all
- debts, Publieand private, Stith the,excep;
- tion of,theinterest onthepublic,debt, and
the duties , on„imports., The legal : result
;Was„that, -the,eoantil hndtivo, kinds of
Moneycoin-Monek, .and -paper-moncy.'
The . financial result, ranging through va
rious degrees at different times, was a de,
preciationof the latterns compared with
the former, involving, the usual evils,at-:,
tendant upon such a state of things.
The general result to the life of the,na-'
tion was salvation from. impendingruin.:
These legal,tendei
-notes did serve .
purpose for :Which they Were intended.
They did bring relief -to an empty treasury
and to a bleeding and suffering, country.,
They did enable the goyernmentto carry;
on the, war, and cruslitherebellion.. They:
gavetot rr
he people a'cuency, in ; the pox-
session of. which they,. were prepared. to'
,hecome large lenders to the "Government:
These, are facts undisputed and indispnta-1
ble. That,some other means would haVe
equally'serVed ill*. ends . cminot`now be 7
known,. sincene,pthers.xeretried. This
; particular measufe.wasAried,,andreved
iteelfg.be 01dfigtikTe to the eiiits,sOug . ftt,
and irl'thisrgeitSe".'neceSSai?and 'proper"i
is ,a noticeable fact, which hasliot,-s-;
. capedthepublic., eye, that z the:,ChieftAis-'
- •
ticeoftheSuprerne-court.now,condetnns;
•
t gp, F xponstAutionaia.mea,sure of which he
,wastallycognizant,, to,.the procurement'
of whichhe contributed his, influence, and'
which >he ,favored .and„,aceepted the'
;ground
.of, its stern necessity -when acting•
as . Secretary of; the , Treasury. The dis-,
crepancyfin his, record., is, alike palpable'
and unmistakable,; It is,charitable to're
gard .it - ,as the : discrepancy which some-;
times occurs in the history of an honest
man. Mr. Chase has been-,mistaken at,
least,once; and, if so, :then it-is not im
pertinent to inquire as to which of his po-,
sitions really constitutes the mistake.-
. The public deservedly-feel a very strong
interest in this question. If it be true'
-that Congress cannot use the means, not
expressly prohibited by the Constitution
itself, 'ivhich are 7Anecessary and proper"
for the fulfillment of its trusts, without,
being blockaded by the Supreme Cpurt,•
then it-is high, thne that the fundamental
law of the land was changed, and Congress
invested with all the power it needs in any,
contigency to save the ,life of this nation.
This is what it, actually. did, in the late,
war; and the Legal-Tender. Act was one,
of the prominent measures of its success.;
if - there be any doubt .whether Con
gress can-do the same thing a secondtime
, then the vox populi ought to cry out-from,
:ono end of ; the t land;to.theyother,,for,an'
;amendment to the Constitution: ,
'seenis to be the presenti,theory he Suz.
preme.Court is to Lstand as ; Atte settled :
'doctrine of-this country, then this govern-'
ment has ; , : net, power. enough to * live ; in
those extreme .emergencies which may
overtake any government. •-
..in,view of all these facts, we pronounce
the late decision, of,the Supreme ,Court
be pile which, if, sustained,,will directly,
encourage future rebellion; will-complete
ly tie the hands of the. Government,-if we
arethreatetted with War ,; will destroy the;
confidence ofeapitalists in•the.,ability of
the nation to. raise • money,, will .furnish '
just the,aid and comfort every Jeff. Davis •
may,ask.for to, insure our destruction. , Is
this our present condition? What say, ye ,
at-Washington? ;. •
The Bi'ale
The -higher- courts' of Ohio have .decided
:that Christianity is part •of the common
law; and that exelusion of .the Bible from
the public schools is violative ofsuch law.
-The•opinion is secondedbythe sentiment
thatit io the duty-of-'the State to care for
the-intelligence and morals'of the people,
and.that , it=is unlawfUl to strike down any
.of theMeans-whichr the 'Woildtecogniies
or - tfacts prove essential td.goodgoVern
ment. difficult totueet this question
intherightspit* . on, account of -the in
tensity of.the feeling ;stirred: up bytelig
ibus•discussion:.,- But .the: reason should
prevail: , We look-upon - the . decision of
the Ohio courts -as Proper. It' does not
even hint at sectarian teaching. This is
left to:enthuslasts; to those-whose reasons
are mot so'free as:their passions and prej
udices. z.:Byniany. it is , supposed - thatthe
question just , decidedds the precursor of a
host which. Catholicism threatens to drive
down upon Protestantism. -at is not our
purpose to, inquire whether this be true.
If it is, -Protestantism should not . lay
claim to this decision. .:If it is not, Cath
olicism shbuld not repine,at it: The State
must exist... Religion-is free to exist. Let
this, howe;ver, be said, the - Bible should
never. be driven from- our-schools of in
struction at the command of any sect or
any, party. In itself the Bible is not sec
tarian. •.Itis thetocus of. all_ sects. All •
cluster , around it as they. would gather
around God in the end. Wheninterpreted
by the light -of sect; :when perverted by
prejudiceovhen, corrupted .by ignorance,
then- complaints; againstitS introductibn
in the cominon, schools- might, with some,
plausibility he heard. But, looking upon
it as Divine law given.S.to assist our :un
derstanding, of the inner, law which %we
are slow.to discover; early: habits vof pe
rusal• shouldlecomet one4'of the!first ele
,
meats of education.--,,Or, ,, againi. ;looking
upon it is as a repository of quaint history ,
as-a cabiret•of the,' purest:..and best MI-
-glisl4;as a work unexcelled:tor its :poetry
and pathos,•it camnever be over-valued as
atext-book.. 4Why,:theni should it:be;ex
pelled?, Reason _cries out against it.:
suspect the obstinacy-that insists upon its
removal.-- Press::
A I•TATIoNAL 'Convention to secure: the
adoption, of,„,n coss_tittuipnpl,„ - ,,amend men t
•• recognizing Odd the holy Scriptures"
is tot, held at Pittsburg on - the:Mot March.
All citizens are, irtirltect4o , be , present and
participate in the deliherations. The ,call
is gigned•by , Gov.' Fetlock ;• Gen Howard,
I Gov.. , McCiting,,,Judge.•Maclandles, Xtidge
Allison, t.Taylor. „Lewis,, Dr. ;Hodge, , Prof.
Wiiiiterstiam;"Get4 - 31:, Stuart; Dr. 33 out
berger,'Dr:Pisher-and a • ierge 2 ntiniber O r
clergy, tnen.' JOgee,, and other •prominent
The Pennsylvaiiia 'giro
curSlon to delegates' in attendance on, this
Convenhon: Those'Aesiring to aveil them=
solves of thiAlft2vor ;`' inust aend = theh rieinea'
fB'T. rP. SievetigcM; 1 1%..""0ffiN.W .. Vine 7 street;•'•
Philadelphia, when tut order.for-tielieis'tit
excursion rates will be forwarded to.thetn:
Tam Chesapeake tad ... Ohio Railroad Cont
i to , •
puny,
,have their lino in suocessfui;oper-,
atlnn. ei.em Itjp*od thetiVy lz htte Snlpitur•
Spring,' ivest';„Virginia—a disfainia!Or 227
1 miles—and the cash.Vnlue of thia completed
'antl , w,orkiag.portiort' the':riiad ; ig' Daft
' Mated 44at $ 1 . 5 090;9001 - !,,Virigr,atvIetollie:
prompt extension. of, the line thiongh - fe
the Ohio River, at or near the mouth of the
Big;Sandy River. a further stretch of about
200 miles (of which extension a considerable
beeiT - Vinistilietedj, the
.Company.have decide to offer, : thruugh their.
financial agents, Messrs, ,Fisk & Hatch,
$15,000,000 of a Thirty 'year First Mortgage
Loan proteptedrhy.thelpletigtmf-their . entire
road, property; frtniaises!,, etc.,' through
from Richmond to . the2ofio River. Tee
mortgage 'will - cover all -the - obligations of
:the Company, whose outstanding' indeb“
, citiess consists oforilY;:tl,.‘.6BB;7s7in tidiest
„laneous :bonds porw.portions 'off the' old
,Virginia- ; Central Railroad (which-1 now
forins ,a, part of, the,Chesapettke..aud Ohio),
,and a small, obligatiorrito "the State of-Vir-:
mma,,for the payment otwitich. provision ,
has already, been, ( i made State
Bonds: The outeitnnfiiug Boras ofth'e yir-;
ginla' Central . .R . 9g' for by ! ,
a regeifration'Of $2,000:00? cif' ttie7Firat: BIM.;
taglige 'eir:iiie"Cileliigietili L 'aitd” Ohio
%Corripady"; and of the reinainiiigtl3,ooo . ,oo6
'of •his4'irst'Martgageq:odri,'lbe'Conipey,
will iielronlY an airionneetiftlicierie 'to-tom- 1
pleto the road . to the Obioltiver perfect and'
improve, the portionirjOirin,operation, and .
thoroughly
„equip - the whole for the large,
active, and very lucrative, traffic- whion';
- may be,Fonfidently looked, for as the inevi
table consequence - • thp opening , Of, thls r
s iMpoitant Trim 4:min nie.ation!.
rbetweek'thaseabo:rd:and the Ohre' Etiveri
The Bonds of the' Loaniarenf tpi)
;nation...at' $1,000,f $660 aAlci 1.194 roipeeyAv9)Y.l
sand • are- issued , in ='e'e diffeient 'forms ;1-1
' , .donfainißonds, - 4.ayahleAO:bearel4."; '2`
.Itegisterea Coupons attaohed :'
, arid.3.,Registeredllouds. with Coupons de
tach:A, which forms are explained in the
prospectus .ol: the _Loan which appear.l: on
another page of this paper.: !Both - principal
and interest ,of the, Loan are,made piyable .
expressly, in gold nein in ;the City of
rork. '746 Bonds yield • interest ai.-tharaie.
of 6 per cent." pe r' annum, in gold. •.TheY' ,
are offered:for:th . typreselit at 99 per cent.:
'and accitred interest in' currency * ,
I .7NTOv- 1,.11369. Seerireii Oi the'taanis
:absolute. lien' on the ; entlieline'of
fromv Richmond to - the th
, :equiptrient and allother'proPerty,l and by
the additional igauruntees - afforded piy the;
.eminently.;,reeponsiblelyßoard,of %Manage.'
~I?2c!pc.,p,t!d Agency:, of the-, Com:
pany- 7 i ncl it ding. the nem es,,of some: . of our ,
.IXIO4 ibuitiness.,meri,,:bapkers,l
and railroad builders—the First Mortgage,
Bond's of the `CheetipealtrY Rail
road "Company, . commended as con
7--atituting a first-Olais'relialile; 'and' prod
taple'fortri 'of
NEW C0r.r.1.4=1""•• • -
NEW COLLEGE under the pationage
of the Philadelphia ClaSsic . of the German
Clatitcb, is alIOni"to•go into oper
ation at Collegeville, irOlontgotnery coun
ty. A most liberal charter has been ob
tained limn the Legislature, considerable
funds are being raised towards endowments''
and for other purposes, and suitable build
ings provided at a ineeting, of the Board of
Director in this city last week a full. par
oily was appointed with "the view of open
ing the college•to students in September
next. - •
The following gentlemen are to . fill the
several chairs; •
- President and Professor of Moral Science—
. Rev. T. 11. -Bomberger, 11.. D. ,
Professor of .Nfathentatics,,Pc.—Rey. 11. W.
Soper, A.. 111. -
Adj. Professor of Latin and Greek—J. S
Weinberger, A. M.. • .
• Professor of 'modem Langnage l s—Rev
John Van Haggan, A. M , • ,
P ofessor of Natural Scienees-4; ~Sun
derland, LL. D.
A „ , , : ,
• PrOfeSsor , of natomy arid PhysiOlogy--4
\V. Royer, M. D. • ' • • - •
• f eiti Weighb4s:-
A'l~ umbel ot the ;rot-104 girlil'oc9inelic r .
.nati have/become - tsbnard'et ;:Wrl - o(rid
..carry: books' In 'itrair bands. whehlpaiising
;along the street; JD' order lo wake :the fni
pression that they are attending.sehoot
,',`Shoo Fly'!. has been superseded by anew
song, , N 3 P,shaw,, , , • ;
_ The Hartford Conrant,tantalir4s its read
ers with this ,atrocity: ,"Haye you heard of
the man ,who got shot? , Got shot? No, how
did She get shot ? 'He bought 'etn.7 ,
.."
Chinge:—iii. r 'l. 7 ,'Suydan fortntirlY -
Superintendent' 'Of: the ',and!
Reading Railroad,' has been appointed to
'the pOsftion of General 'Freight Agent. His
succesaoris j: C. Sharpless, ierlY'En
gineer on theTennsylVania R. R.; who has
,assumed the duties':of Superintendent and
Chief Engineer. , • • • • •,, 7
of the ,reasons,given -why Henry
_Vtirarcly ! eecber refused an-increase of-salary
was. ;that „the .bare rill; or jot the change
broilitht, an influx of beggars upon. him
st lias no man could ,enc e rtn;er,for any
ngth of tithe wind , •
Ttie brit:ilea of a, woman Minted Bridget
:;Claricnnd infant child - were fennd in, Mill
'Creek, 'near- the L. S. ,R. bridg"„pa
'Monday , . morning, of last ; weeit.:Th'e-Wo
, man was intoxicated on the priiiiiminight;
and it is supposed that in attetnpting to
;cross the. railroad *bridge she• Missed her
ootiug and fell into the creek
On. Thursday. week, the, trial of Solfix • P.
Reafi for the murder of Richard M.-Harlan
was commenced at Readiog,,Pa. „It ;lasted
until the following Sunday afternoon,
when the jury brought* a verdict. of
"guilty of murder in ttie dist degree.""the
tvidence was wholly circionatanlial:
' The Iran business dose' not seem to he
'very brisk in Lehigh • county. TVG Allen
! town isfemocrat.'states that the 'Allentown
Rolling Mill Coninany has finished railfi-on
hand to the amount 01 over s3oo,ooo,•With
no demand. The Roberts Iron Company
have abort worili of iron laid up
,waititg purchasers,
On Wednesday week, Mathias Kohler,
„employed et the Colebrookdale ,Iron
Works, in 13erks county, was. instantly
killed by the bursting .of an : immense
grindstone weighing :Iwo tons. His head
was crushed by a littge, piecep,f,Ae „sroSnt,
which had struck'hfin• - 'l-le'litid wo
night in order: to visiellis - parenTs. Re was
about forty years of age, and leaves a wife
and three children. Ire•was a steady, roll,
able man., end : had worked in the sante
place for fifteen -years.,
,A lady in Susquehanna county finished
a quilt recently, containing 3,4'23 pieces.
The nett annual meeting of the G. A.-R
of Pennsylvania will bo held in Willies
„,
"baii•e. -
'Samuel the Srotini; main
'who Mairdei.d intard'nehi
- has beerilienteneed - ' s
Willin msport has • been' tioabl ed. ith
'ancither:4;h6ot' TWO" appeari to-be ii chrciu
•ici affliction in , the. "Saw=mill •
frAollazleton man With :arrested at...Harria
„burg,the:other day; and put in jail; charged
with•passing"counterfeit, money, in, React:.
Ingo no, turned out to, be the wrong ; man,
And , ,
GsM I.4l6.W.—The'following•inay be of in
terest-to onr,sportamen-at this' Bute of. the
year... The , Game Law, passed: byr.Legisi
hire-provides : •
parent! shall kill,erkuv:istnnhi , eAnl:4
ly in, his or, her possession, or expose to sale
any ruffed - grause or pheasants between the
20th of December, and the, 20th.daypf..4u:'
gust or any quail partridge ,
bet Ween the 110tii or pecPpilierii44
the Ist day .. of. Dember'r 'or 'aUr l ttild
turkey between the Isf diiy of January and
lit day Or October ori-any-figurrriti or7rab
bit between tho Ist day of Janua.iy;andthe'
Ist day'et.WngniOncider::a tvo
dollars
lorleaelatufd:,. very equirrel
set lkine4.pr, - -aplimfullyilbeltign , p9s . 4mion'
or•ixpo!edfor;salq.:„:d2eer:
betuyen,,the..3l:4c,'„ ci :s ? pte A t ! , F „
posseaslonOf4'iri7elijekin or carcass of one
inithatinterval shall be . :aufliolent to Aver- ianta ' conviction :'-'"i _: .
'.^ r . 7
Spy-bigs:
—Headaches are prevalent.
inedes long.
—Dzinria piiyS better than opera in New
York.'
--qtoOlitichild's • dal employees carry -re
volvers. -
—Senator Nye used to snap jokes with
Lincoln.
,President Grunt smokes , Gumbert's.
"Three Brothers."
--Eotith Carolina supplies the white clay
for our confections.
~Two men were fined $2O for cutting down
Y.O Semite valley trees.
-The Richings troupe are having splen
-did'success in Cincinati.
—A lunatic le running at large in the
woods about West Point.
Joe Howard calls Theodor., Tilton , the
"long-legged pretender." '
—Colored folks are no longer excluded
from theOquates in Philadelphia.
—The ; South ' Carolina Legislature ad
fourned to the window to see a show pass
—Currency being scarce, chickens are
taken at the Vox. office of a Salt Lake thea
tre.
—Newark workmen,are.lectured free. So
are married men some times, entirely too
free.
-Wen you leave tho church after a wed
ding ceremony. you may be said to be going
out with the tide.
—The negro possesses an advantage over
the white man—he can more effectually,
conceal a hlack:eye.—Panch.
—A Lewistown Marl says that if ho builda .
a house be will have folding doers—"they
are so handy in case'of a funeral."
—Au Indiana editor abused a man to the
extent of half a column, and stated in thA'
next issue that it was a slip of the pen.
—Mrs. Stowe; as the creator of "Topsey,"
was once famous for her colored female;
now she is notorious for her black-mail.
--To'fids are very fond of beetles. Iu the
stornaCh of one, A. S. Ritchie, an enthusi
astic naturalist found thirteen distinct spe-
I=
—The net earnings of the Pennsylvania
Railroad Company on its main line and the
laterals this side of . Pittsburg amount to
$5,047,544.
—The Boston papers congratulate a
couple upon having just got themselve suc
cessfully married' "after a twenty-four
years courtship."
—A. Connecticut manufacturer of coffin
trimmings complains of dullness in busi
ness. He•" ought to be protected. Down
with quarantines.
—The 'handsomest woman in Norwich,
Corm., was burned M ,a cinder the other
day. She resided in a millinery shop and
was inade-of was.., .
—A. Chicago reporter, in describing the
dress of a well known lecturess, says that
"the blaek velvet waist was plain, and well
lined with Olive Logan."
—A dear creature in Bridgeport has a
way of sending her lovers in charge of a
policeman to the station house when they
insist on sitting up too late.
—The chimes of a fashionable church in
Philadelphia played "Shoo Fly,"• "Not. for
Joe," and "Pm the Girl that's Gay and
Happy," at a recent weddi..g.
—The editor of the Berkshire Masschu
setts, Eagle writes his Items from an ink
stand made of a human skull. He is not
sure about its being his father's skull.
Missouri gentlemen carries about
with him a memento of a lost brother in the
shape of a cane cut. from , the tree on which
that relative was hanged for horse-stealing..
• .—A., Canadian post master- had a keg of
damaged . ..powder, threw a - lump into the
stove to see whether it was gopd for any
.thing.. His widow is now preparing the
house.
7 ,,-A Missouri river captain bu 4 gone Into
the ice business. He built himself a cabin
raft of ice, about half an acre in extent
and
,Steored it safely down ttui Mississippi
to SC'S:Amis. '
Commodore Vanderbilt refuses to make
a will. He desires that his youthful wife
shall have her full legal share of his prop
'ert:. 'She will be heir therefore, when ho
dies lo` some- $23,000,000.
, ,
= 'Chung woman in St. Paul, Minnesota
playfully bit olf her lover'S thumb, in a tiff
they' had' the other day. The girls have
been"threatening to eat their lovers for the
last,six thousand years. ;
- - -It Was a famous saying of Lot d Eldon
.that "some barristers succeedrd •by great
talents, some , by.high connections, some by
miracle, but the great majority , by - coin - -
metteing without a shilling.".'
—The Augusta, Maine, Journal relates
.tbat an advertisement of "a xtnall sewing
:machine," for one dollar, was answered by
a,young man, who received in. return for
his dollar, a shoetuaker's.awl.
-A Californian," who bad been "inter
trlewing':' a - bear', reports his conduct as
touching in the
_extreme, so much- so, that
,he:ivas constrained to leave with, hint sev
eral
,I4': , ck - s'Uf hair and his4sv - ok:oat.
—A young divorce-seeking colored wo
man of 'orinouptiti plead her own case as
n'tlove",dat dar' nigger; he
licked Me in the ribs once till he loosened
all thy insides."
Masbnic Lodge, No. 3, of
Glasgow; Stiotland, lately celebrated the
eight . hundred and V.velth anniversary of
its existence. It was founded by King Mel
,
coun in the year 1059, nine years previous
to the Norman conquest of England.
—Somebody says that Ike's last nick was
to throw Mrs. Partington's in the alley, and
then call the old lady down from the third
floor to see an alley-gaiter. Re might have
called jest before be threw the gaiter.from
'the _window, and asked her to see "Shoo
—A. gentleman who took occasion to doe
tor some ci der on the, 6711)1)att1,-. wits -taken
to task by his good wife for laboring on that
day. , His roply was that'no good Christian
ought to find fault with his work—he had
been doing his level hest to prevent his
ci
der frrim'wo.rking.
colored man ate 37 hard-boiled eggs
in Springfield on Tuesday morning on a $5
wager. Ile is now in the shape of a globe,
and is in as good condition as any two-leg
ged hog could expect to be'. Perhaps We
'ought not to do injustice to the pokers by
making such a comparison.
Indianapolis woman recently gave
birth to a child during her husband's ab
aence,-and "the neighbors" borrowed two
other babies and placed them .in bed with
the little,strunger. :When the father asked
to, see his child. tbe,.coyerlid was,tn rued
down. He ‘ cooly turned ,to his wife and
asked, "did any get away?"
one,of the churches in New York a
stranger , who visited the midday prayer
3, llEfethags was assaulted aud put out of the
charch • by, the sexton because he persisted
Praying aloud more than live minutes
11,i:pidated in the ruleS. 'Be not' weary • in
9 .3ifelt doing" is the ScripttirallitjunCtion the
'stranger was trying to'fultil, hedld net
- calculate on - wrestling with . theiTAA'and
the sexton too: , ••
—On '• Sitn'd'ay 'two weeks,' . upon,. the
"ocaitisiOn . • We " iielelaratieri tbe'Lord's
'2upfier; at thelairit 4 Dresbytei pia n Church;
iutTrentou, there-sat 'ln One' 'peive biro per-
Anos;mboie ages combined was t b f ee tt iari ..
dredlandle,venty-tive,years : or „sn average.
of,' seventy-yettre.-eacb; all : , in• good health:
T,,boy:Wern i all eduaated at , the same school
in tlieTiownship,oi:Eveing,, and -home-.
stead i carcup,on,wbicit„tbey were severally
bOrri and ralee'd , tench other. Wo
another bkrctim-'
eltaiiieelis'the•
ilVote could be' found in any`
otbeiveity thetrniim, , ,- .
NOTICES.
-"•.' • IRRITABLE INVALIDS.
Indigestion not only effects the phisicti,
health, but the dispositions and•tempars Dejt - e.• •
victims. . The *dyspeptic becomes, too, In
fiinasure•demorailzed by his sufferings. Ile Is e ;
iefibJect to fits of irritation, sullenness, or'clesi
pair, as the case may be• A preternatural sent
sitiveness which he cannot• control, leads WM
to misconstrue the wards and acts of those
around him, and his intercourse even with
those nearest and, dearest. to, hlut..is„notintfre7
quently marked by exhibitions of testiness for
eign to his real nature. These are the mental
phenomena of the disease, for which the lava
' lid cannot be Justly held responsible, but they
occasion we ch househeld discomfort. It lid to
the interest of the home circle: It is essential to
fami ty harmony as,well as to the rescue ,of, the
principal suffere4from a state riot fAr "'removed
from incipient insanity;that -these' symptbms
of mental disturbance be promptly removed.
This can only be donoby,remoying,thelr physi
cal cause. gderangement of the functions of the
stomach and its allied - viscera;.therliver and the
Dowels. ' • ' • ' • - ' •.
Upon these three important organs Bostet
ter's• Stomachtl3itters act simultaneously; pro
ducing a thorough and salutary change in 'their
condition. The vegetable ingredients of which
the preparation is composed are of a renovating
regulating and a/lc:stirs - Character and the stim
ulant, which lends activity. to _their, remedial
virtues' is the - purest and best that can be ex
tracted from the most wholesome of all cereals.
viz : sound rye No dyspeptic can take this ge
nial restorative for a single week without a no
table improvement in his general health. Not
only will his bodily sufferings abate from day to
day, but ilts mind will recover raphllv. from,,,lts
, restlestiness and -irritability, and this happy
change will manifest itself - in his demeanor to
all around. him.
PAIN KILLER
MANITATT" Kansas, April 17, laC6.
Mamas. Panay' Deets S 50N,.1
Gt.:maim * * I want to say a little more alien s t
the Pain Killer. I consider it a very valuarde meth,
eine, and always. keep it on hand. I haveltaveled
Rood deal sinee I have been in Kansas, awl never
w,them taking it with me. in my practice I used it
freely for the Asinti.-Cholera in 11349, and wet) better
: nee, es than a Itli any other medicine. 1 alto used
it here for Cholera In .1.831,.wi Ili tee same gond re
sults. A., LIINTING, M. D.
• " I regret to Eq,) , that the —haler- has pro•
'sidled here of late to great extent. 4 For the last three
works' from ten to fifty or sixty fast elutes each day
have been reported. I should add that the Pain
littler sent, recently from the Ills-ton House, has
been used with considerable success during •this
epidemic. If taken in reason, it is generally4ettec
tool in checking the disease.'
REV. CHAS. HARDIN . O, Sholapo re India."
septl-611-tfw
THE FACTS AS THEY ARE:
( We began in 1101. to make linpr..ve
-1 mcnts in the style and make 01
1 Ready-Made Clothing, and continued
1 to do as; introducing new style , . and
I "U"'" cd * . 1 ideas every year, so that the entire char
se ter of the business is now vastly
better and totally different from the
systems of older bosses.
Ou ear first id is WAN
to learn aly'
Wtlt 41' THE CUSTOMERS T,
and Instead of persuading him to .buy
what may be mast conveniently 'at
hand, we take the utmost pains to meet
ILLS wishes. ..
•
The building.we occupy is the MOST
CONVENIENT SIZE, LARGEST AND
BEST ADAPTED for our business of
,any.itt Philadelphia
Customers can see what they are
buying, ,our Establishment being on
the corner of three large streets, Illar-,
(ket, Sixth 'and , Minor streets,) abun
dant light is afforded from all direc
tions. A light store is far better for
.customers than a dark one. '
• 'Aferchanti know ' that our' sales are
larger titan those of, any other h,.use
in Philadelphia, in' our line : hence we
have to_buy, larger quantities of, goods,
and so' get them at lower prices, es
pecially as we buy 'altogether for cask.
Buying
. chnapest, we can sell cheap
,
What
Cu tot s
Size
31 x IN leet
143
'Vindow
The
Large
Fur
chases.
We closely =amine every ineh of
goods that comes into our Establish
ment, invariably rejecting all imf
perfect, moth-eaten and tender fab
rics.
Inspection
The time wasted in looking over the
sto• - sa of a dozen stores can be oroidut.
fr.:, under .me r roof, we offer for axle
an assortment equal in variety and ex
tent to that embraced by a score of the
1 ordionry houses.
We have 600 hands employed In the
manufacture of Clothing, who are
constantly making upstock to take the
place of that daily sold; this gives our
customers new and fresh goods to make
selections from.
It is an undisputed fact that this '
Department, (a large Hall on-our
second floor fronting on Minor street,)
has nothing in Philadelphia, to equal
it. We have here concentrated the
[ best skill and workmanship, and those ,
who prefer Clothing made to order
really Ave advantages they do not re
ceive elsewhere.
'DEDUCTIONS. .'
Qreat
Saving
Fresh
Goods
Custom
Depnrt-
I &ent.
From all of the abort, we deduce
this one fact, that Oak Hall has ALL the
advantages of any other Clothing Es
tablishments iu the city, and in addi
tion these.
lst—A firm composed of young men of the present
generation, hilly in sympathy with the tastes
of the day.
2d.—An insight to the wants of the people and an en
terprise to meet these wants, which in seven
years has placed Oak Eall:in a position not al.
1 , 7/411 attainedlin experience ,of twenty-five
Deduc-
•
, veers. -
31—A Building bettor located, better lighted, better
•adapted and newer in all its appointments.
4th.—Workmen, especially Cutters, who are not
only from =sag the best and most experi
enced, but are artists in their professions and
couple with good work a stylishness, in which
Philadelphia tailoring has beep partichlarly
deficient.
It is the liberal patronage with which we have
been favored that has enabled us to offer the un
paralleled advantages. and this patronage continued
and extended will Multiply advantages, which wo
divide between our customers and ourselves.
A visit to Os.w. Hall will movie. every met above
stated. WANAMAXER k BROWN,
OAR MALL
— POPULAR CLOTHING /louse.
Corner of Sixth and Market streets.
[septA-694N
CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
• What the Doctors Say:
AMOS WOOLLEY. M. D., of Koscluska Coun
ty, Indiana, says: "For three years, past I have
used ALLEN'S LUNG , BALSAM "exteasiveiy , 111
my practice, and 1 am satisfied there is ,no -het,
ter medicine for lung diseases in use."
ISAAC A. DORAts, M. 1)., of Logan County,
Ohio, says: "ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM' not only
sells rapidly, but gives perfect satisfaction in
every ease within my knowledge. flaring con
tidence in it and knowing that it posaesses,val
made medicinal propertles,l f reely use it in my
daily practice, and with unbounded success.
As an expectorant it is most certainly far ahead
of any premtratiou I have ever yet known. 7 7 ., 7
NATICANIEL HARRIS, M. 8., of Middle
bury, Vermont, says: have no doubt it will
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 he taken as a fact.
Sold by all Medicine Dealers.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
SCIYENCR'S PULMONIC SYRUP
Seaweed Tonic and Mandrake Pills, will cure Con
sumption. Liver Complaint and. Dyspepsia, if taken
according to directions. They- are'all three to he
taken at the Berne 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 Hash; the dis
eased matter ripens in the lungs, and the patient
outgrows the disease cud gets well. This is the
only way to cure eonsuroption.
To these three medicines Dr. J. H. Schenck, of
Philadelphia. owes his unrivalled success in the
treatment of pulmonary consumption. The Pul
manic Syrup ripens the morbid limiter in the Inure,
nature throws it off by an easy expectoration, for
alien the phlegm or matter is ripe, a slight cough
will throw it elf, and the patient has rest and the
lungs begin to heal.
To do this, the Seaweed Tonic and Mandrake Pills
must be freely used to oleanse the stomaelfand
so that the Pulinonic Syrup and the food will make
good blood.
Schenek`a Mandrake Pills act upon the liver,; re
moving all obstructions. relax the ducts of the gall
bladder. the bile starts freely, and the liver D soon
relieved; the stools will show what the Pills Witt do;
nothing has ever been invented except calomel (a
deadly poison which is very dangerous to use ex
cept wits great care), that will unlock a gull-bladder
and start the secretions of the liver like Schenck's
Mandrake Pills.
Liver Complaint is one of the most prominent
causes of Consumption.
Sehenok's Seaweed Tonic is a gentle stimulant
and alterative, and the alkali in the, Se weed, which
this prescription is made of, assists the stomach to
throw out the ;metric juice, to dissolve the food with
the Pulinonlc Syrup, and it is made into good blood
without fermentation or souring in the stomach.,,
' The great reason why physicians do not cure con
sumption is, they try to do ton much they give
medicine to stop the cough, to atop chills,-to stop
night sweats, hectic fever, and by so doing they do
range the whole digestive powers, locking up the se
cretions, and eventually the patient. sinks and dies.
Dr. Schenck, in his treatment, does not try to stop
a cough, night sweats, chills or fever. Seniors the
cause, and they will all stop of their own accord. No
one can be cured of Consumption;•Liver Complaint,
Dyspepsia, Catarrh, Canker, Ulcerated Throat, un
less the liver and stomach are made healthy.
If a person has consumption, of course the lungs
are in some way dieeased,either tubercles, abscesses,
bronchial irritation, pleura adhesion,
or the lungs
are a mass of inflammation and fast decaying. In
such cases what must be.donet. 'lt is not only the
lungs that, are wasting, but It is the whale body : The
stomach and liver have lest their power to make
blood oat of food. Now the only .chance is to take
Scherick'a three medicines, which will .bring up a
tone to the atomach, the patient will begin to want
food, it will digest easily and make good blood; then
the patient begins to gain in flesh, and as soon as
the body begins to grow,t he lungs commence to heal
up and the patient gets fleshy and well. This is the
only way to cure consumption.
hen there is me lung disease; and...Maly Liver
Complaint and Dyspepsia , Schenck's Seaweed Tonic
and Mandrake Pills are sufficient without the Pol.
mordoyrup. Take the Mandrake Pills freelrin all
bilious'complaints, as they are perfectly harmless.
Dr. Schenck, who has enjoyed uninterrupted health
for many years past, and. .new welgha 425 pounds,
wits wasted away to 3 ITINO likOiet01;1, in this very last
stage of PRlgumary Coriaumption,-, his physioireas
having progounced the case hopeless and abandoned
11 In Ms fate. 'tie - mas cured hy the aforesaid
me lefties and sineejhis reeovery many thousands
aim laity fainted have used Dr, Solieeee's prepare.
Mons with the same remarkable success.' Full di- -
rections accompanying each, make it not absolutely
necessary to nem:tally see Dr. Schenck; unless the
patient" wish their - lungs examined; and for this.
purpose hole professionally at his principal office,
Philadelphia, every Saturday, 'where all letters for
advice must be addressed. fie Is also professionally,
at N 0.32 itondStreet"Vew 'York; every other Tues
day, and at No. 35 Hanover -Streak , Boston, -every
other Wednesday. 'Be gives advice free, but for a
thorough. examination with his , flespirometer the
price Is $5. Office hours at each eity , from $ A. to
PM. • ' • • - - •• •
Price of the Pulmonip Strap arid, Bawled Tonic,
each $l. 30 per bottle 'or tai' a • halt-doter, •
drake Pills 23 cents 'a box. For sale, diugg
liopl-tl*69] DA. J. E. SCHENCK
15 - N: Oh Pa
...,„,,,, n ,
61 A
i 11 , ii ' .- 2 ',-.
I:DEKA N'S STOR E
~..„4, , ,,,,,,,:, P4i Oe",
• •-,• J ,;.'.. .
- RID 1815.
, ETAA3.I,IS.I--1
t,,,,. - . ,
~,,,
f.;.;..: ) --.,
r ' E
_,,,, .: , ~•I f . 4 .'.' -
- ) ` : '-eSip I'll' mfroll L
I
y.,v,~YDITRIN(~-~~~~FE~R~~IT~:~~R~~~-,w~F...-r 1S r}o:
EXTRA , IN D,..;tliC::Elti,l:lFA'N , T S
TP .BUXFAS OF ALL KINDS OF
. : 31
SP - 111 - NG PV,A,:o:.tt*g.t.s,
1
A. 'T T i1,,..A:C1T,T.,,::.V4,1
<4~v%/
GEO. W. & B. F. _HALDEMAN,
112 114: Loeust Street
WILLI AM C - PATTO N
•
No;--I60 Locust Street Columbia. 1) . a,,
• • LL OFFN R - S
S,P RC. [IN DUCE .14 E 7 4/ 4 "1" S
TO PURCHASERS OF
.• .
DR Y. COO DS NOT I ONS 9
GROCERIES, QUEENSWARE
Pyiees. li ! edneed ..to a ,Gold ,Standard and Winter Goods at Cost.
Elavinfi deterMiiietiio relinanfsii the SHOE BUSINESS, to make room for other goods,
he now offers his entire assortment of th best Philadelphia made
SHOES AT - 40 .- OST!
M E , R, - 0“1-1AINT rEA_I 10 Ft IN !
Braaithes. To Suit the Times.
S IVJE 1-1 I NT . '.E' S .
Of all Popular Makes, and on easy Terms.
Sept 4 GS-ly
. T . ' 1870.
FOND E SHM - 1 - TH -3 - ' 3
127 & 129 Locust St. - , Columbia; - - •
IS CLOSING OUT the balance of his Stock of
WINTER DRESS GOODS
FURS, &c.
He is now receiving a large Stock of
GLASSWARE, QUEENSWARE,
, AND:, CARPETS.
BEAUTIFUL TEA SETTS, a PIECES, FOR $5.
TICKS; 'CHECKS, -TABLE LINENS,- lUSLINS' &, SHEETINGS, LOOK
. ING GLASSES, FIUME' ' EATHE4S, ac., Szc„
- yoß7Hou4.piiTit .-,
.pit- Prices which catnot,,be-iiitaer.:,'Sold - 2n Columbia.
TYNDALE v IVIITCHELL '& WOLF,
CLASS & EARTHENWARE,
CHINA,
NO.. 707 .CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA.
PARISIAN
4
WHITE, FRENCII , CHINA - zoin all the best shapes and slyly
DECORATED DINNER,. TEA sand TOITET vnviety
GLASS ENGRAVED ON THE PREMISES, A
teblngs, In , the best Tnanner:
FIRST-CLASS GOODS ONLY,
Letter of inqulrS in Tegard to prices, ac., ofg,
.FINANCIAL.
vIIRST/NATIONAL BANK OFICO-
E 4 LIIMBIA.
IntereA Paid On 6pea;il . lsOpoiifs'it:4 c ionows
51.2. per cenVfor,l2.lxi4mtliiii;'.l-`,
IS per cent. for 6 month and under
12 months. --
4 1-2 per tent. for . 3 and under 6
months. -
We make Collections on all Accessible Points in
the United States, on liberal-terms, Discount
Notes, Drafts, and or 'Exchange.
Buy and sell GOLD; SILVER, and all UNITED
STATES SECURITIES.
. •
And are prepared to draw.DRAFTS on Pliibuiel
• .• • phis,- New 'York; -Baltimore, Pittsimmr. ,1 f.
England, Scotland, Franco, and
: - • ' % all parts of Germany.
S. S. DETWEILEit, Cashier
SECURITY AGAINST LOSS
• ;
, • : ;
DRRGIAR, FIRE, OR ACCIDENT
. , • .
The Safe beposit Company
sp
New. Fire' and Burglar-Proof Building
Nos. 331 & 331 CIiESTNUT,ST
The Fidelity Insurance, 'Trust
SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY
4 - • $1;000;600
DIRECTORS.
N. It. Browne. Edward VT, Clark,
Clerenee H. Clark, Alexander Henry,
John' Welsh.; : Stephen A. Caldwell,
Charles Macaleiter, George F. Tyler •
Henry C. Gibson.
President—N. B. Brown
Vice PresIdent.LCLARENCE H. CLARK.
Secretary and Treasurer—ROßT. PATTERSON
Assistant Secretary—JAS. W. 13.AZLEHURST.
The Company have provided in their new
Building and Vaults absolute security agait , st
loss by VIRE, BURGLARY.na ACCIDENT, and
RECEIVE SECURITIES AND ...VALUABLES
ON DEPOSITS UNDER GUARANTEE,
Upon the following rates, for one year or less
Government and all other Coupon
Securltles;or Chose transferaole '•
by delivery $l.OO per $l,OOO
Government and all otherSecuri- -
ties registered and. negotiable
only by endorsement 50 per 1,000
Gold Cain or ....... 1.25 per 1,000
Silver Coin or Builien.-. ZOO per 1,000
Silver or Gold Plate, under -cal no
ewner's estimate of value, and •
rate subject to adjustment for
bulk ... , ...... 1.00 per 100
:150 per 1,000
Deeds * Mertgages;and Taiiiis";giMer
ally, when of no fixed value; $1 it year each, or
according to bulk. '
- These latter, when'-deposited in tin boxes, are
charged according to bulk, upon a basis of 13$
iffeetcnblo capacity, $lO - a year. -
Coupons and interest wilt be crilleetitl, when
desired and remitted to the owners, for one per
Cents
The Company otter for RENT, the lessee ex
clusively holding the kev,SA.FES EsTSIDE THE
IUTRGLAII-PROOF'.A.l.lLTS;ataates,varYliat;
from $l5 tO S S eat:ols3er an It Ilm, adcord lug W size.
Deposits of Money Received on which interest
will be-ullowedr Spur cent.' on :call: Deposits,
Payable .by cheek , at stght4. and 4 per cent. on
Time Deposits, payable on 10 days' notice. •
Tt•avelierms Lettersof Credtqfurnisliect,;uvallt
Able in all parrs of Europe. '
This Companyis alsoantbortzed,to-notkur.Rx
eentor, ..dtltnistratoni; and Gauntlets's, to re
ceive and execute ;Trusts ~o fievdrYYdescrlption
from courts, corpututions,or
• "Li ri.t.l.4:ll..rDrOwnn: Y t.
RODERT PATTERSON, • yrtalpent
Fisica STA ItYVI. 14D TREASURE-A
t rlic.ll4TtEltitiCit X • • • "
• ~:ae"-tnika- 4 004;nas, taken . rooms • rliolcuu,s;
Ali .,
residence of Stones Barber, in Wuinistree,t,
egnerdhe. Is aCall.tinies pre.pared.to do all kinns
•of work in his line, such us Hanging Curtain',
malting and laying 'Carpets, repairitg
) Sous and, Chairs, tusking Spying; corn -husk - h.
LlELiar Zdattnuaies, Cushlalls, &e.ttor• •• • •
sep4-69-t furl tin:Ku - xi, CARTER
WE WILL CONTINUE TO OFFER.,-,!
11E1
TO MAKE' AGOK.KOR
r, WHICH WILL' BE TNITBUALLY
ME
.=e==a==Zl=Otslawm-ali
AND LOWEST, CA , II PRICES
4;,ctflis promptly tw - sivbrod. ,
W AD V.ERTISEMENT.
USE TUE7'BEST
Soap !
The Manufacturers invite the attention of the
Citizens of. Lancaster county- to this excellent
SOAP, which, those who have used it, pro
nounce the - • : • •
GREATEST IMPROVEMENT OF TEE 'AGE
It. Saves Time, Money, Women, Labor, Clothes
and' Fuel, and does not injure the finest fabric,
as certified .by well known• and respectable
druggists.
By the use of this Soap you can wash In ONE
HALF LESS TIME than with any other soap.
it is superior, and will reach farther than any
other soap in Market.' It drew the First-Premi
um at the Montgomery County Fair.
It has been in successful nse lathe SPy office for
nearly six months, and the publishers are will
ing to testify to its superior merits. .
For sale at the principal stores.
Manufactured by TROS. GROOM 64 CO.,
„., _ , Columbia, Pa.
THE CHEAPEST AND THE BEST
• SHIRK'S'
CONFECTIONERY SALOON!
25:11T Se., Lgucaster,
Is the best place to procure your supplies of
ALL .ELNDS ' OF. con.; , •.EcT roz;Bity,
--• - CAKES.
rm. Parties and others served promptly at
shortest, notice tat • .
Jann-trt No 2.5 isorth Queen Sr.
OA7.I::CGALII : •
• PRICES LOWER AT
BRITN - F_M,'S
COAL YARD.
On Good Coal 75 •cts: to sl.so'ar Ton:
`Gennine:Ealtiniore • Coal. •
Maltby,' Coal, taiiiaes; the best coal for Morn
ing Glory Stoves.
The old Lyken's Valley,' the best in - town.
All Coal put, in GOOD onman before loading.
Sonte Behoylkill Coal on hand will be sold
at any price. • •
Call and examine the Coal.
septll-419411 • ' •M. F. BRUNER.
F. F. LANDLEI, YACOU 8.1,.0 Dlff
, K EYSTONE •
MACHINE ,WOPKS,
EAST JAMES STREET, LA-NCASTER,
Man uraeturent of Stationery and,Portable-En
glues, of .the' most' approved style.' and plan..
Mill. Gearing; Shafting, Pulleys, Hangers and
Couplin^s,, , an improved pattern. Farmers.
Portable Grist Mill.
OUR NEW': AND EILPRCiVED onAnr
Tn RESH.EIt AND SEPARATOR.
With the Best Tripled Gtetred Horse Power.
Iron and Brass workataade to order. Furnish
'Models for Patters at reasonable rates. Barlow
good and experteneedltands,and being praetical
tuechanicS theinselves,lcel sale in , guarantee
log aU•.their work to give satisfaction. For par
titulars„ladd ross' LANDIS & CO..
nevp.tti9-trit. - •; ,•• r Lancaster, Pa.
12144tia -. 4.0 q f;.i1312 air•Alltesie stia War..
FOR.pIGArr,S4II:zrBFIC.S..“.G.A.g.4vv.p3R.N
-,-.BOUGTITand SOLD. • •
bOiaLECTIONS prolnp6y made on all • pants.
- • - -DEPOSITb-XECLIYED.
....,
Noiialtur will be spari-sitO•serve the interest or
those who levor us with - their business.
,- - • - . ••'' •JOIIN b. RUSHTON ct C 0. ,.
e .-,.. -''' ' •-= • 13A - rdnas and Briomni-.0,
d6:26-131 . No 50 Mouth Third St,. Phil'a.
COLD WATER
Made . at Our 'Own Homes
MEM
feb:C•Sm