H V. MORTHIMCH, KMTOh I.KIIlnllTON. Ha.i SATURDAY, JULY 22, 18S2. Editorial Mention, Demoobatio county meeting, rtt MaVioli Chunk, Monday, August 15th, Hon. JIobekt Klotz will please accept our thanks for important ilottutueuts. Tub bill for the extension or the char ters of the National Banks wai signed last Thursday, 13lh Inst., by tho Presi dent. Jin. W. U. IIknsix, editor of Iho Lao caster iNnsi.ttaENCEit, has been appoint ed by the Dcmocr.Ulo candidates chair man of the State committee Oub' exports of breadstuff, during the twelve months endinq June SOth Inst, were valued at $170,977, 4D0,asaln8l S2G5,. 6G1.091 during tho preceding twelve months. The Military Department of West Point has been discontinued. Gen. How ard has beeu ordered to the Deparlmeut of the Tlatte to relieve Gen. Crook, who lias been ordered to Arizoua. Col. Wes ley Merrltt of the Fillb Cavalry bni beon appointed Snperiutendeut of West Point Academy. The annual encampment of the Nation al Guard of Penimjlvania will begin on August Cth, at Levristown, and conlitmo for sir days. At the close of the. cncimp ment the First pity Troop of Philadel phia will march homc.a distance of about ICO miles. The annual nunimi of the rennsyb vania Reserves will take place at Gettys' burg on the 29th Inst., and Ex-Governor Cartin, President of the Association, will preside. During tho same week the Grand Army of tho Republic will encamp on tho battle-field. IffE GlOTJD THREATENING THE BOSSES. A special dispatch trom Washington dated the 22il irjnt.,snms up the situation of tho Dorses as follows. 'This is a bad year fur the political bosses. They fully perceive the actual and tho coming dan gers that Uneaten the overthrow of a vul gar and n venal ascendancy. The very citadel or bossisru Is now menaced with capture. Any striking defeat of tho one-man power In n great State heretofore Repub lican will end the rula or that pnrty,wblch for twelve years past has held the reins or government bv force, by fraud, and by corruption. It has not only oullivtd all usefulness, but the present machine or ganization glories in theshameof having abandoned the principles and dishonor ed the good name which once made Re publicanism n proud title of distinction. Tho crisis in the career of Boss Cam. emu can neither be postponed nor quail Hd. Even If some of the Independent leaders were willing to betray their cause for n price, or to entertain propositions of compromise, the result wonldnotbo seriously nflected. They might sell tbcm selves, but they could not deliver the voiia under a contract of treachery. The lonc-cfeferred day of settlement with the Camerons, the Logans, the Ma hones, the Blalnes, the Creswells, and olhsr self-annointed leadcis, who owe their positions to machlno management, and to the nbuscs or patronage, is at last near at band. They have plundered tin Treasury, debauched tho public moral, and degraded the republic In the eyes or the civilized world. Thlukof a elan who has been controlling tin second Stato In the Union for n quarter of a century, without a single quality to challenge the public respect, or one recorded act to re deem the deep disgaace of that fallen Commonwealth. The vote of Pennsylvania has been huckstered at conventions and trafficked at Washington for office and for jobs as a personal chattel, almost without protett degradation. The audaci y The Brooklyn, N. Y., police Tuesday morning found n man on the street who against the was deranged. Ho proved to be George 0f power intimidated the weak, who were II Reeder, who until recently was the inclined to resist this dispicable domina- editor and proprietor of the Easton Ex mess, at Easton, this State. His father was formeily Governor of Kansas. Mr. Reeder had been on to Brooklyn to visit his brother-in-l.iw, Mr. Davenport. He had been in ill-health for some time. Judoe Advocate-General Swaim has submitted to tbo Secretary of War his report on the petition of Sergeant Ma son's counsel for the release of his client, ou the ground that he is illegally con fined. Gen. Swaim merely reviews from a military law standpoint the legal points raised in the petition, and makes no recommendation. He adheres strictly to the views expressed in his original re port on this case, that tho proceedings of court martial were irregular and illegal, The case will be reported to the Presi dent after the return of Secretary Lin. coin from attending his mother's funeral. The Hazleton Sentinel of last Wed nesday charges that Robert E. Pattison the Democratic nominee for Governor of this State, -'was a rebel DnniNO the waej" which charge wakes up a reader of the Hazleton Bulletin, who replies as follows: "If the editor knew that Mr. Pattison was 11 years old when the war opened, and 15 when it closed, he did, not only Mr. Pattisou, but his readers, a wrong. The Republican city of Phila delphia gave Pattison 13,000 majority, tho day it gave GarHtld 20,000 majority, and thereby testified, not only to the loy. alty, but to the integrity of Mr . Pattison, Schneider, don't you want to buy a dog? Abraham Lincoln's widow died at Springfield, 111., at a quarter past eight o'clock Sunday evening, her death being the result of a paralytic stroke received tbo previous night. She had not beeu well, mentally nor physically, tince the assassination of her husband and of late yeaw she witfistood several severe at tacks. During the present year she has made her borne with her sister, Mrs. A. W. Edwards, in Spriufltld, and it has been evident since tho beginning of the hot weather that she was in very poor health. Large bolls covered her back and sides, and it was with tho hope of getting rid of these that she proposed to go to Oceau Grove, on the Now Jersey seacoast, to pass the rest of the summer, but Saturday night she was stricken with paralysis, the stroke depriving her of consciousness, which she did not regain. Sunday morning a telegram was sent to her son, the Secretary of War.and'he left Washington tho same evening for Spring, field. side of the lite President Lincoln, The Methodist minister of Ciuciuuati have declared for a prohibitory liquor clanso in the Constitution of Ohio like that or Iownl "We invite the people," tbey say, "of all political parties, and of all churches, and of no church, to unite with us at the proper time in petitioning tho present Legislature to pass a joint resolution submitting the proposed amendment to the decision of the voters of the State." Similar move incuts have been put under way in Illiioie and In dinna.and a total abstinence revival st ms likely to extend over the West. The constitutional amendment adopted by Iowa is taken as a model by the agi'ators. It is as follows: "No person shall maun iacture for sale, sell, or keep for sale as a beverage any intoxicating liquors ulmt ever, including ale, wine, and beer. The General Assembly shall, by law, pres cribe regulations tor the eulorcemeut of the provisions herein contained, and shall thereby provide suitable penalties for violations of the provisions thereof." The Executive Committee or tho Stal wart Republican State Committee met Tuesday at tho Statu headqnartcrs.Phila. delphia. The three communications from the Independent Republicum were presented by Chairman Cooper. The reply ot the Stalwart candidates to the Independent candidates was uUo read, In this they s&y that they put themselves iu the hands of the Republicans or Penn sylvania, and are bound by the action or the State Committee. The Executive Committee then framed a reply to the Iudependent Committee and candidates, in wbichjthey say that "our action lu sub. milting the four proponitlous which em bodied all or the methods and principles ever asked by those whom you are called tion, and nlirmed selfish interests by a threat of war on the tariff. After long suffering and unworthy sub mission, nu open and a formidable revolt against the Boss of Pennsylvania has been proclaimed in a form that admits of no retraction, without blasting shame to all engaged in it. They must go forward. They can moke no truce or terms. They can accept no composition, because any change or trout would carry with it the suspicion or n bargain and sale. In this perplexing dilemma, Boss Cam eron resorts to the trickery which stands with him for the intellect and the worth that distinguished the leaders in Penn sylvania ot abetter day. He knows, with the party lines drawn, aud the nomina, tions as tbey now stand beforo the pub lic a crushing defeat stares him in the face, without hope ot recovery. The Democrats were wise in their ncioi inatious. Robert E. Pattison, as their candidate for Governor, represents the sentiment and the fact or reform in his owii person. Whoever believes in it hon estly must vote for him, without regard to party, because ho has prover by his good work as Comptroller or Philadel phia that ho deserves the confidence and the support or the people. Thousands of upright Republicans, whose votes would bo thrown away on the Independent tick, et, can make them most effective by sup, porting Pattison. Hon 3701 of tho ReviBed Statutes, which Is as follows: "All stock, bonds. Treasury notes, and other obligations or tbo United States shall be exempt from taxation by or under State or municipal or local au thority." Senator 'Mitchell was asked by your correspondent to-day as to bis viewB con cerning tho action of the Republican State cemmtttee at Philadelphia yester day. Ho said that he was as yet scarce ly advised ully enough to warrant any expression, but if he understood the pur pose or the men who met yesterday, It was Btmply to put the Independents in a hole and deprive them or the moral sup port or the country in tbetr flight. It was idle now to talk about harmony, and the fight was bonnd to go on until Don Cameron and his friends wre driven from power. The Independents of Penn sylvania would not support Gen. Beaver for Governor under any circumstances, and the proposition for a near convention was simply a trap to catch them. The only way to produce harmony was for the candidates on the btnlwntt ticket to bt;p down and out and not come to the front again. The Independents had a mission to perform, and would not be diverted from it by any scheme of polfti cal tricksters. The fight must go on, and let the regulars elect their ticket if they can. Senator Dun Cameron was told what his colleague bad said, and was not at all surprised thereat. He nroarked that he was satisfied the Inde pendents did not intend to accept any offer made to them. The caso of Strgeant John Mason, the soldier who attempted to shoot the as, samin Guitcau, is still pending before the President. He is cot determined pon bis action iu regard to it, but the geneial impression among those best cal culated to judge is that he is not disposed to interfere with the sentence of the court artial which tried the case. It ha: beeu known for some time that the administration desires to have 11 r .Lowell rttire fioin the English Mission, and it he persists in his determination not to volunteer his resignation he will be recalled. It Is expected that Mr. Bancroft Davis will then succeed him, but it cannot be stated just when the change will occur. August. Don't Waste Money On trashy extracts when you can buy a lasting perfume so delightfully fragrant and refreshing as Floreston Cologne. Our Washington Letter. FaOM OUR ItKOULAR CoRltKSrOXDKXT. Washington, D. a, July 15, 1882. Congress has directed the Department of Agiiculture to uudertako a work which will be of much more practical utility than raising sugar at fifty dollars pound or distributing seeds through tb mails which nobody will ever plant. The Division of Statistics has been directed to collect and publish monthly, for the information of farmers, the freight rates of the various railroad and steamboat lines.for the purposeof enabling them to judge when and over what lines it will bo the most profitable to ship their pro. ducts, ir the department could devise some means to compel some or the trans, portation liues to givo the farmers as The remains were interred by the good rates as they do brokers and specu lators, it would have established a claim to practical usefulness which would be gratefully acknowledged. In the mean time the move already made is practic, aud good as far as it goes. The rush for government clerkships someming unprecedented, ily receu legislation neatly one thousand clerk ships have been created, chiefly on ac count of the payment ot pensions. Some eight hundred of these placfs are in the Iuterior Department alone, and that de. partment is naturally besieged witbap plicants. It is said by Secretary Teller (bat be would not have a moment of time forpubliu business if he should devote miuute or two to every individual who came particularly recommended to him The only way is to shut them all out aud let them tlbi their applications. It is es timated that about 4,000 applications are on file already and more are coin! j daily. From Teller they flock to the Pension Office. Colonel Dudley has cer turn views on civil service reform, aud one or these views is the apportionment or the daces among members of Congress pro rata as near as possible. There is some comment in the Treasury Department over the section of the bank charter extension bill providing for the issue or 3 per cent, bonds, because of their exemption from "all taxation by or uudtr State authority" ouly. Heretofore such bonds have Iweu exempt from taxa tion of every character national, State or municipal. It is a qustion whether the new bonds will not be subject to lo cal or municipal taxation. Secretary Folgar called attention to the omissiou during the conslderatien of the bill by Congress, bnt it was not rectified. No great difficulty Is anticipated, however, from this source, as it is thought the pro- upon to represent exhausts the powers bibition of State taxation will be con entrusted to us by the Conveullon of sidered generally as including muuicip. 1 Jane 21, which authorized tho Republi- luxation, and it is hardly likely that the can State Committee to 'adopt all houor- United States will tax its own bonds. able means to harmonize the Republican ihe objection to me mil in lis present party so as to stcuro success in Novein-1 shape does not hold good, as the taxation ber referred to U amply provided lor in soc- tween free meals nt the Government's ex pense, in contriving plaus whereby they may increase their stock of hair, horse hair and human hair. Here Is an incident that points a moral to the tale of the Government's idiotic Indian policy: In the summer of 1870 Captain Rafforty, of the Sixth Cavalry, went on an Indian scout from Fort Rich ardson, Texas. He struck a small" band of braves and killed three of them, One of them was a big Indian heap big chief. He had on him a huge silver medal, granted, If I recollect aright, by Presi dent Van Buren, It bore on one side the figures or n white man and an Indian with hands clasped in friendly grasp. On the obverse side was an inscription which I have forgotten. These Indians did not belong to a wild tribe, but to tho agency at Fort Sill, Indian Territory. The chief had on his person a pass signed by the Indian agent in charge of his tribe, cer tifying that he was a "good" Indian, peaceable and quiet, and granting him permission to go on a hunt, He went on n hunt But it was a hunt for horses and scalps in Texas! He also had bread tick. ets on his person, showing that he could appreciate tho light bread of civilization. and bought it whenever he bad money. This incident is only one out of thous ands. The Indians cajole their tender hearted, sott-beaded agents into giving them a paBs to go hunting. They go. And some white men are killed, sou their horses aud other stock run off. But the poor Indians had their "buntP Ob I the poor creatures. Your correspondent will leave in a few d.ijs lor the far West, and will have a chance to tell you something more about the noble red man of the for est, unless some friendly red-skin lifts his scalp. It is gratifying to know that the present Secretary of the Interior un derstands tho Indian question in its prac tical bearings. Don Pedro. Our New York Letter. From our Sfkcul Corukspondknt. Washington, July 17, 1882. To jndge from the expressions of dis gust coming from members of Congrtss, an en t the blow motions of the Senate in preparing for adjournment, one would naturally suppose that very few of the honorable gentlemen bad oome here frcm choice. They all seem to have n bud case or homesickness, and nearly every one have met for several days past has insist ed that unless Congress adjourned in a week he would go home anyhow and stay there. The chief re aeon li r this haste to leave is the anxiety iu the Congressional mind about a reuomluatinn. In nine cases out of ten the Representative comes here to represent his own interests a great deal more thau he does those of his district, and wheu bis bold on the plac is in jeopardy his heart is "over the sea" and there is a far away look in his eyes. There ought to be a re-arrangement ot the sessions, or the time for holding elec tions that the Congressional campaign wnold come in the year or the short ses sion, ending the -lib of March. Then the incumbents could go home to look after their "rences" without interfering with their duties. If the Senate adhered to its programme of amendments to Mr. Kulley's tax bill, opening the door of dis cussion as wide as that question must, there would be a sick lot ot Representa tives fanning themselves in the south wing of the Capitol. It is not true that Congressmen become tired of Washington life fer be, because when personal interests do not draw them away, the grout majority are loth to leave the Capital, a fact which is attested by the large number who remain here as lobbyists and claim agents after their terms expire. There is spice and variety enough here to suit tho most fastidious or the mostflepraved for the quiet man who delights in his books, bis letters, or his Congressional work, ortha wild.roys tearing fellows who would rather view na. ture through the bottom of n glass than listen to the mobt logical argument on National affairs, who take especial delight iu an occasional game of draw poker, or find solace in tho company of the fair queens of society. To be snre.it is a trifle dull during the summer, and the weather is perhaps a few degrees warmer than iu some places, but there is life hero all the same, and it costs just as much to "see the elephant" as it does iu Gotham. Dur ing the session of Cougress the appear auce and character of the people are con. stautly changing. To-day we have the solid business men of the Quaker City, looking alter their harbor appropriation bill;to-morrow the financiers of NewYork; the following day the rushing, pushing men or the West, and then, as an offset, are the sturdy men or the rural districts, who have a few hours for gazing in aw ful surprise at the Capitol, the Treasury buildiug.the White House.and the Wash ington Monument. You can come to Washington, spend a very pleasant time and return with the most agreeable recol leclious of the visit, or you can so deport yourself as to go home a wi-er but sod der man than you came. During tbi summer, wheu uncoifiuedby the routine of legislation, I shall give you something about the attractions or Washington the. public buildiugs aud institutions hers in which people everywhere are interested, Apropos or a recent talk with Secretary Teller about our Indian policy, I noticed an incident at the Star Route trial a day or two since. One or the Western wit n esses stated in the course or bis test!. mony that Indians from the agencies had killed drivers and run off stock on the route between Bismsrk aud Fort Keogb. "Do you mean friendly Indianb?'' inquir ed two able lawyers in one breath. "That's what the y are called," replied the frontiersman. The surprise expressed by these attorneys is natural and easily accounted for. They are like ninety-nine one hundretbs of the people or the East, in a state or profound ignorance or the Iudian problem. These gentlemen are both men of ability, educated men of the world, standing high in their protesslon. No doubt tbey think, if they ever take the trouble to think about the matter at all, that the roseate pictures drawn by the Iudian agents are trne, and that the Iudians are abused individuals, who spend most of their time in praying for the wicked whites. But they don't. On the contrary, they busy themselves, bo- Regular correspondence or Adyocati. Nitw York, July 111, 1882, A WARM TOriC. I tun not going to write anything abont the dreadful heat of last week, even if it did carry off in ono day, eighty of the little folks, who tried to live through it in the tenement bouse district, and after a struggle ("gainst odds, gave up the fight, aud quietly passed away. There is noth ing new about that warm topic, that haB not been thought and said every year in midsummer. But the days of snow and ice are coming on again, and the dwellers in these same tenement houses will look with longing for another boiling July sun. Then will we see something of the w irk of the two companies who are now encouraging profanity, by the way they nre tearing up the streets down town, for the purposeof laying mains for the trans. mission of steam throughontthe city, for heating and power. One or the com panies has already expended, as the Pre. sident informs me, more than a million and a hair or dollars, and will put bun dreds or thousands more in the work be fore a dollar or incomo coraeB in. From eight or nine central stations at conveni ent points,they are to send steam through the adjacent districts, to factories, stores, houses, apartments, tc, and it will be measured by meters.and paid for by the foot, as gas is now. Manufactories can dispense with boilers and engineers, with the attendant expense, and the danger of explosions, when the engineer pets sleepy or careless. liuilders will put in con necting pips instead of furnaces and beaters. Dwellings will be divested or ranges and the occupauts or coal-bills. Machinery will be run by steam germin ated a mile away; houses will be heated and meats cooked by the same agency; and ir (he city so determines, tbe snow and ice, instead of belngslowly carted off to bo dumped in the river will be rapidly melted by pipes laid along the gutters and curb-stones. Something or the magnitude or the, parations for tbe age or steam, may be judged from tbe stations erected for steam germinating, in Greenwich street, where tbe chimney rises 225 feet high and con tains over ono milliou, bricks, and seven hundred barrels of cement. It is 32 feet C inches by 13 feet at the bottom and 31 feet, 10 inches by 12 feet, i inches at the top and lacks only 10 feet or being as high as tbe Bunker Hill Monument. It will be one or tho most prominent among the tall towers seen from whatever point the city is approached. COOLING) OFF. I admit, it is something of an aggrega tion, when the mercury is up in tbe nine ties, to talk about beating up by steam, or any other process. Nature is doing something too much of that, without any help from men. What we want just now, is a way of cooling off, not warming np. Well, that is goingto be done by machin ery too, and, after a time, we shall turn on hot or cold air, as we now do water. A good deal or interest is being shown in tbe processes which are being tried for producing artificial cold. In England, they have been working tbe thing down fine, mainly with the purposo of reinforc ing tbe domestic supply of fresh meat (so restricted as to keep tbe price of beef and mutton beyond the reach or tbe laborers) by tbe unlimited amount to be found in distant colonies, and especially Australia aud New Zealand. How to get it to tbe mother country was the question, and they have solved the problem so satisfac torily, that meat which were raised, slaughtered and dressed thirteen thous and miles away, is sold in London shops, in as good condition as, aud for less price than tbe domestio article. It is brought all that long way, and across the tropical seas iu a frozen stote.never once thawing from Melbourne to Southampton. The great merit of tbe system is, that this re sult involves no ice, to give a damp and foggy air, nor chemicals to give a dele terious flavor to the articles transported. This dry-air system is being applied ou trans-Atlantio ships aud steamers. I was talking a few da) s ago, with the chief en giueer of one of the great Cuuard steam ships, which b&s tho dry-air process on board. He was enthusiastic oyer the new system, whioh made tbe Company inde pendent of the rapacious ice men and kept all the provisions for tbe ships table in perfect condition throughout the voy, age, without trouble and with neither ice nor chemicals. Apubllo test is To be given in New York, before long or this refrigerating process. Then it will be speedily adopt ed, not only for sending our meats and fruits abroad, but for bringing from the cattle-raising West the carcasses of beef aud mutton, at as enormous saving ot freightage and damage, and also for cool log our churches, theatres, brewerlcp, manufactories, mines, cto. Then, no doubt, tbe system of cold-producing will be extended, until our honses will be so built, and the temperature so regulated, that it will be as simple and ordinary a matter to cool off in summer, as to warm up iu winter. Thus will we revenge our selves upon tbo foul fiend of the ice wag on whose Wild yell now awakens us out of our morning nap, arid who has learned tho art of making a three pound lump of ico count for ten pounds at tho weekly settlement LtiiiBETt THAT Can't DORK. While upon the subject of buildings and their appliances, another curious in vention comes to mind. I Bald, in a re cent letter, that the towering edifices with which lower New York is becoming filled, must be absolutely fire-proof or they would prove to be death traps, because tbey were being raised far above the reach of even New York firemen or fire apara- tus. A day or two after eo writing, I saw a sign of "Terra-Cotta Lumber" and was curious to see what manner of thing it might be. Inqntring as to It of a leading architect, he was emphatic in saying that It was one of the most important applica tions or science yet made to common use. It is something likeflre-brlck.butso con structed that it is absolutely fire-proof in the fiercest flame.lt may be sawed, planed, grooved, turned with a lathe, nailed, screwed and generally treated as ordinary lumber may be. Entire houses, with the exception of posts and beams (which naturally would be made or iron),may be constructed of the new lttmber,and would no more burn down, than the cupola in an iron furnace. Or about one-hair the weight or ordinary brick, it will be es pecially applicable to the walls, partitions, etc., or high buildings, because the weight resting ou the foundations and walls will be so much less than when bricks are used for this pnrpose. Except for textile strength, it has all the advant ages or wood, with tbe inestimable ad vantage of being ob incombusti'i le as Iron, Perhaps, in the year 1000, you or I may come across an old paper containing this letter and may laugh at the interest felt at this time, in what may then be as far behind current improvements, as to be obsolete, but I don't concern myself with what may be tho newest thing twen ty years hence, and I welcome whatever comes to the front in 1882, which may promise to add to our comfort and our safety. BTARTINO A CORPORATION. There is a sonorous ring about the words "Incorporated under the Laws of the State of New York," as attached to the prospectus of a new Company, which appeals to the public for subscriptions. It sounds solid and safe, and as ir all the wise old owls of the Legislature bad sounded, weighed and dissected the scheme, and set upon It tho seal of their dignified approval. This was the old, idea, bnt tbe faith and trust it implii has had some pretty bard shocks, by tl experience or some or the confiding share holders in the mining companies, which have been floated here by the thousands. And, bless your soul, when yon come to sift tbe thing elown, you are astonished to find how easy a matter it lias been to become a body corporate under the laws of New York. From 1818 to 1875 it took no more per sons to make a corporation, than it did to make a row. Three could do the bus iness. In 1875 the number was increased to five. In either cose, all the) bad to do, was to sign and swear to a certificate giving the name of the corporation, its objcts, tbe neminal capital stock, and the number of shares, the term of pro posed existence, the location of bnsiness and the names of those who are to man age the company for tbe first yesr. Hav ing filed a copy of this certificate with tbe County Clerk and another with the Secretary of State the three or five mer, were ready for business under such high sounding name as they might choose to adopt. For less than a dollar tho cer tificate could bo filed, and that being done, the law had been complied with. What wonder that corporations multipli ed until there was hardly a hole in the ground in the mining territories, that was not represented among the companies "organized under tbe laws of the State of New York," A law was passed last win ter which imposed further duties upon those who desire to become a corporate body, and which increased the fees (or certificates, filing, recording, etc, so that it now costs from $10 to $50 to. become incorporated in this State, and this will tend to lessen the number of new and ir responsible companies. ABSORTXD SUNDRIES. The Customa receipts for the first half or July were $9,300,000. My 'customed receipts are not quite so much. The conductor ofa Long Island railroad train dropped his watch last week, in snch a manner, that the fireman shovelled it in to tbe locomotive fire. The passengers footed together and bought him another. They wanted to make np lost time. Nnmber of emigrants landed last week only 7,300. a trine of a thousand a day or so. GOODS Gootl Goodst t XJaetra Hargains I IN DRESS GOODS and BftOCATEL STIVICS ! Dress Ginghams - 10 cents, w6rth 121 and 15 cents. Cottonades - - - - - 19 cents, worth 25 cents. Men's Percale Laundried Shirts, with 2 Collars, fOF 75 cents,- worth $1.25," everywhere. Men's Scarfs for 3fc., worfti 50c. Some sizes in Janvin's Black Kid Gloves at 35c. A nice line of Black Silfc Chenille and Burl Fringes at two-thirds their usual price. PRINTS at 4, 5t 6, 1 and 86. Bleachect- and Unbleaohed Muslin from 6c. per yard upward. My line of Carpets, Matting &mi Oil Clotiig is complete and the Prices are Low as the Lowest ; remomher I have all gradetf irom tne vjneapese to tne ucsi. iina now a worn about the BIiAK CASIlMJllJKS ! This line of Goods 1 take especial interest in, and I will challenge and defy anyontf to excel me in this line either in Price or Quality. I know they ard Sscelled by any Nowhere. I am receiYing almost daily New Goods, and my aim and object is to give the most and best goods for the cash, money, af Will not UNDERSOLD. IST Remember at BOTTOM MCE SIOB M. IIE1LMAN tL CO. BANK STREET, Lehighton, MlJjLUUrt and Dealers In Pa AUKtndof OltAIN BOUOllTsad SOLD a KEOULAU MA11K1ST KATKS. We would. alo, ieotlullr Inform irart li ions that wenie now fully prepared to bur 1'l.y tucm witb. ISest of Coal From any Mine deslied at VJ2BY LOWEST PRICES. July ss.' M. HEILMAN & CO. Rupture Plaster Sure curf . by an outwurd .ppllcatlon which it, Mi.,.n ilm hrrtkMi membrane to heal and become! as strong a belore iho acetdent. No ononctdrun the fearful risk of Itranxiila tii.n when tL frtAtn and SDeedv cure onn be had at a IrlfllnK cost or ti. full treatment and valuable Information sent on receiptor price by t. H. mehkiuk, vKucnim,g, Y, qi....ADnl.lF wn ir discovered a nuBV ber or s ears ago by an old lady a resident of UKoensDurK neiereuco iuiuis.... ., ..wr..-. E. F. LUCKENDACII, Two Deora Below tbe "Broadway Beast MAUCH CHUNK, PA. OtaUr m all Patterns f Ylaln and raaty Wall Papers, Window Shades, Paints & Paintcr Supplies, LOWEST CASK FlilCBH. DROP IN AT THE Carbon Advocate OFFICE FOR Cheap Printing ! mm i i . ' 7 Gold. CHAS. M. SWEENY & SON Announce to their numerous friends and the public generally, that they have Removed from Levan's Building into tbe Old Post-Office Building, Bank St., Lehighton, , and have Just received a very large invoice of the latest Btyles of DRESS AND DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, OIL CLOTHS, Ac, &c. Together witb a lull and complete line of Choice Groceries and Proyisions, .Quccnsware, Wood and Willlow Ware, and in fact anything am) everything urns Ily to be found in a first-class store, alt of whieb they are selling at Prices lully as litv as the same Quality ef Goods can be bought for a any Store-ID mil sccuuu. i msi mil cnnvince you. April 27; 1SSX. Clocks & Spectacles. IS . - " & 5 s 53 P. S. 5.2 J Jk bd 153 8 iWyW -1 1 "151 1 SiBLyi"to3a ( i 5-i s n rest cnfince to make mon ey. Those who alway ta; advantage ot tb good cnarjceslor rasBiua money that nre offered, cenerally me wealthy, wttlo those who do not ;n. - l. . ram. n ftl TWlVeitT. Wl wantmanr men.women. tMiyanrjd clrla towork . - -. .n iiui. ..wn Inftft.HlftM. A ll Y OHO eau do the work proTK-ilr fioni i tho atari. The BOSl nets will pv luurt. iu;u "5",; k' viin. ixpeimlve oolBt furnlfbed free. So one who can enits.e fall, lo "'V l.'iT.'lrk Ir. You can devote vou whole time to the worlc or onlv vour spare momenta, yull Information a dallthauloeedeit 'enll.eo. AJr"'! o & Co., 1 on'anu, Maine. decio-iy Watches and J eweliy O Hi it -co & Oxa The Airicaii Antipariau a!ID ORIENTAL JOURNAL ! ! Published by Jammok A Monsa, Chicago, 111. $3 per year. Edited by STicrnr.s D. Pert, devoted to Classical, Oriental l.u rrrjwan and Araerlcan Archroology. Il lustrated. This Jonrnal gives information on discover tea and explorations in all lands, and is very valuable to those who are following Anil nunrian subjects as well as to the common r.ader. l"8lf RUPTURE Cured 1m SH Days ! By the Combined Treatment of EXCELSIOR RUPTURE PLASTER AND HEALING COMPOUND ! July U yl Positive evidence of Wonderful Cures sent on receipt of Sc. stamp. F. II. MERRICK, Ogdensburg, H. T Address, Sal i Obert's Building, Bank St., licliighton, WILL DURING THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS; Sell his Entire Stock of Summer Goods, comprising ' ItJLDIJES9 GOODS And Men's, Youth's and Children's mW READY ' MADE CLOTHING AT AND BELOW COST ! Trunks, Valises and Umbrellas, in endless variety all styles, sizes and prices. The best White Shirt in the market for only 85 cents. April 29, 1882 . ED. W. FEIST, Manager.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers