PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY, StAITCH & COCHBA.N. No. 18, Neva Queen street, Lameaster. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION 1 bop", eat year, e 1.80 5 10 copies, (each" name ackiressed,) 1 LOD espies .00 15 copies " ti 188.00 erel 14 16 ".01 ad PAO for each additional oolbscrlber. 10i CLIIII., IA PACNAGINI. 10 4 tB l (16 4: 29" adfre"') # 8.00 11.00 16 eerier 18.00 20 /Zol.Bo for each .°° et-All subscriptions mnbt invariably be paid in advanee. JOH 1 0 111INTINO Of everyAesarWita, aattly a_aia Promßt4texe at Mari salawa *wan *mam .1100.11altletaratay Cosines: SOUTH tow the " rinuatelh JB LIVINGSTON • ATTORNEY AT LAW. Ormuz No. It NORTH DUNK ST., west dde, north of the Court House, Lancaster, Pa. C HARLES DENUES,_ ATTORNEY AT LAW. Overate No. 8 SOUTH DUKE STREET, 'am meter, Pa. JOHN B. GOOD, ATTORNRY AT LAW. Orincaz No.Bl RANT KIN( ST., Lancaster, Pa. JW. JOHNSON, • ATTORNEY AT LAW. Ovirics: No 2,3 SOUTH QUEEN ST., Lanes& ter, Pa. DT. ROSENHILLER, Ja., •ATTORNEY AT LAW. - With A. Hess SMITH, seq., South Queen St., opposite the crake of ' , Father Abra ham,,, Lama - ober, Ps. AA C. REINOEHL, • ATTORNEY AT LAW. OMPICII: N 0.3 SOUTH DUKE ST., Lancaster. JOHN P. REA, ATTONNEY AT LAW. 0/NICK: With llon. 0. J. DICKEY, N 0.21 SOU TII QUEEN ST., Lancaster, Pa. MARTIN BUTT, ATTORNEY AT LAW. 0/7ICE Of the late 11011. THADDZIIB STYVENS, No. 26 South Queen St., Lancaster i pa. A mos 11. MYLIN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Ostica: No. 8 SOUTH QUEEN ST., Lancaster. JK. MUTTER, • ATTORNEY AT LAW. iirsics: With General J. W. FIBIIIIR, NORTH DUKE ST., Lancaster, Pa. BF. BAER, • ATTORNEY AT LAW. OPPICE: No. 19 No= ii DUKE Street, Lanese ter, Pa. [deo 18.1 yr Reading Advertisements. MALTZBERGER, 1.11-• ATTORNEY AT LAW No. 4' NORTH Si XVI ST., Reading, Pu. JGEORGE SELTZER t • ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLER AT L.W. No. 604 COURT STREET, (opposite the Court !tones,) Reading, Pa. FRANCIS M. BANKS, ATTORNEY AT LAW AND NOTARY PUBLIC. No. l 7 NORTH SIXTH. ST., Reading', Penna. Book and Job Printing. RAUCH & COCHRAN, BOOK AND JOB PRINTERS. PLAIN AND FANCY PRINTING ON ALL KINDS. From the largest POSTER to the smallest CARD or CIRCULAR, mooted in the best style, and at reasonable prices. liar Order s from a distance promptly attend ed to. OFFICE,—NO. 11, SOUTH QUEEN STREET, LANCASTER, PENNA. Furnishing Goods, ter. HEADQUARTERS VOA UNDERCLOTHING, STOCKINGS, 'GLOVES, COLLARS, CUFFS, SLEEVE BUTTONs, and Gent's ware generally, at ERISMAN'S, No. 41! NORTH QUEEN ST., Lancaster. An ivver oue grosser shtook goods—suitable for Krishdoge, het-Yams un winery Presents— so wo Bole lKoher, achnnp-Dichcr, Collars, Hem sertnel g'shticktallemmer-fronts Pocket Bicker, Perfumery, CigarCasa, un onnery fancy articles ens E. J. EItISMAN , S, 4116 North Queen Street, lAneaster. (Om sign fain gross Slitreatleh Hem.) (no5:0-ly Books and Stationery. C BOOKS AND STATIONERY. C SCHOOL. and MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS, HSTATIONERY, H E FAMILY 4ND POCKET BIBLES, A BLANK BOOKS. A LIBERAL REDUCTIONS TO p PMerehants,tiohool Directors t Teachers. J. H. SHEAPFER, CHEAP CASA BOOK STORE, No. 32 NORTH QUEEN STREET, LANCASTER, PA. AN OROSSE YARIETYI Bieber, Blanks, Bobbeer, Feddera, Dlnda, Dlnds-glesser, PenciU un FOMELIA UN SOCK.BEEVELA. J. H. SHEAF/MR.B Wohltehier Cash Snob Shtore, nolFlyl No 311 Nord Queen Shtsose, Lancaster, Pa. Banking. DAVID *AIL BATE & SHENK, BANKERS, NoataxAsT ANOLN OP CENTRE &WARN, LANCASTER, PENNA. n 010.131 Book Binding. GEORGE WIANT, BOOK-BINDER AND BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURER, NORTH QUEEN ST., LANCASTER, PA. BLANK BOOKS, For Bub, Morahan* County °Mees e Le., nude to order. BOON WADING, in all Its braneli•• p ly attended to. • branche s . Y AT LAW. .omeolkd house Leseaster, M. I rip lit, lot No strive on to finish Me work ors are is; to Um, up th. 'Wiens opoimo4O; to = VOL. 11. 9 . 44 FURS! FURS! FURS! HAGER ft BROTHERS have just received an elegant assortment of FANCY FURS FOR LADIES AND MISSES Mink, Sable, Siberianirg, n t 'Ernline; IMEZZI Muffs, Collars, Zugenl Skaas, Circulars, Lin Muhland Ikons, wan,' Down and Squirrel Ties, Re SHAWLS, In great variety at HAGES, Z BUOTELKIIS Open and Filled Centre Brooke, Ristort Long Show's, raney Woekm Long Shawls, Children , ' Shawls. MOURNING SHAWLS. BLACK THRUM' LONG AND SQUARE SHAWLS, At Lowest Prices. F ALL AND WINTER BEADY-MADE CLOTHING, FOR MEN AND BOYS. HAGER & BROTHERS offer for sale the largest stock, at lowest tpriees, all of their own manu facture Fine Fine Dress Suits, Business Suits, Boys' Suits, Overcoats, From the FINEST ESQUIMAIU X BEAVER to good ordinary grade. OVERCOATINGS— Black and Colors all grades. FRENCH COATINGS—BIack t Brown, Dahlia. SILK MIXED COATlNGS—foreign and Do mestic. CASSIMERES—New Styles. BOYS' WEAR—In great varlet , . LANCASTER COUNTY SATTINETS—In all colors, and warranted strong. Just received and for sale, at lowest prices, at HAMM: & BROTHERS. nov 27-tit* Clothing. JUST OPENED AT BEAU MONDE HALL! PORTICO ROW, 543 PENN SQUARE, 543 READING, PENNA., A LA/1011 LOT OW BEAVERS, CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, VESTINGS, &c., &c., FOR WINTER WEAR. ALSO, BOY'S CLOTHING, AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING GOODS! LEVI G. COLEMAN, Cutter. BUM & BRO., no2O•tfj Pitoritntroits. GEORGE B. COLEMAN, MERCHANT TAILOR, Having leased Erhart's old and well-known stand, NO. 42 NORTH QUEEN-ST., Offers to the public an entire now and superior stook of GOODS of every dription, which wilt be made up in the very b# w t and most fash ionable style. GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING GOODS Of every description, for sale cheaper than they can be had anywhere elsein the city. [nov 904 f Hats, Caps, Furs, dc. 1868. 1868. SHULTK & BROTHER, HATTERS, No. 20 NORTH QUEEN STREET, LANCASTER, PENNA. Latest style Fall and Winter HATS and CAI'S in all qualities and coolers. LADIES? FANCY FURS, We are now capering the largest and most complete assortment of Ladles' and Children's FANCY FURS ever offered in this market, at very low prides. ROBES? ROBES!! ROBESM Buffalo Babes, lined and unlined; Hudson Bay, Wolf, Prairie Wolf, Fox, Coon, Le. BLANKETS AND LAP RUGS Of all qualities. to whit* wa weuld particularly invfte ataantion of an persona in want of articling in that line. cLovEs, GAUNTLETS and MITTS. OTTER, BEAVER, NUTRIA, . SEAL, BUCKSKIN, yttemr,R, KID, de., de. Ladles , Fine Fur Trimmed Gloves, (Muntlets, MAtts end Roods. PULSE WARMERS and EAR MITTS. WOOLESALR. AND RETAIL. uo2o-tr) Come hither, ybaby, i airy dirrihsg, My lily, my onderfa roes The white bosomed ?)owns in the garden Begin their soh peals Is clams; The bees have gone hose Bain the diver, The swallows are ember the weep, And down in the orebisiri tfai robin Broods over her nest is the bowie. Come, baby, my beauty, my darling ! Your eyes are heavy with sleep ; Your little red month has grown silent, And scarcely its laughter can keep ; Lay off the white robe frofet your shedders, Unclasp the small shoes from your feet-- Oh, daintiest blossoms of Eden, I kiss you, my lily, my sweet ! Do you feel the cool wind coming softly, And see the young moon in the sky ? The clouds sailing„ over the sunset, The bats flitting silesktly by? Do you hear how the cattle are lowing Along the green lane by the hill? And the brook running over the pebbles, With music that never I. still? Now hush while I sing to you, baby, A song of the angels above, That come on invisible pinions To watch o'er the children they love. 1343 all through your beautiful dreaming, The voice of your mother shall creep, Lest, heating the harpings celestial, Your soul should fly homeward in sleep ! Water Mink, ke "You must come home with me, Min nie." No, no! What claim have I upon you Laura,i that shoukl make me go to you now? No, I will do something for myself—teach, or write, or sew—some thing! There is some niche vacant wait ing for me." " The niche my sister's death left vacant years ago. Minnie, dolling, we have been sisters in love ever since our school days ; let us be sisters still. lam wealthy, you are left poor by this day's sad work ; now let me plead for your presence, your love! Lone home with me! You may sew, teach, write, anything you will—but let my home be yours. You are too young to live alone; come, brighten my father'slife and mine." And after much pleading the young petitioner won Minnie to her will. The pretty, childlike girl, who that day had buried her father, having been moth erless from infancy, was indeed too young, too innocent and lovely to live alone m this cold, censorious world. She had been the petted darling of her father, who had been so lavish of his income, to supply every desire or whim of his child, that his death left her penniless. Laura Goodwin, her chosen friend at school, had come from her own pleasant home to comfort Minnie in her sorrow, and brought her father's cordial invitation to the orphan to make his house her future abode. Widowed himself, with one child, he could readily second Laura's generous desires. He was waiting at the station for the travelers when they reached the town where he lived; and, in the dim twilight, Minnie could see his tall erect figure and dignified carriage, but his face was not distinct in the gathering darkness. But when in his own parlor he drew her into his arms and said gently, "You must let me fill your father's place, my child," Minnie saw that the face bending over hers was kind and good, noble and true, and she shared Laura's good night kiss with a sigh of relief, feeling that her new home was second only to her own. The few days immediately following her arrival she submitted to Laura and rested from grief and anxiety, pleased to let her weak frame and sore heart repose in the love and tenderness of her friend's stronger nature. They were very unlike, these girls whose love bound them do closely together, and their very dissimilarity creased their affection:- Laura, tall, stately and resolute, with her noble, firm nature, was like the Boman matrons in her dignified beauty, her gen erous impulses and clear judgment; while Minnie, petite, pretty and caressing, timid and gentle, clung to and leant upon this noble nature as the ivy winds round the oak. Mr. Goodwin, who almost idolized his child. and had given Minnie a place in his heart for 'Aerate sake, soon learnt to love the winning little beauty for her own. Not many days elapsed, however, before Minnie insisted upon maintaining bur in dependence ; and Laura procured - fog her, from her own friends, dainty. embroidery well suited for such Atilt fingers, and for which she was well paid. Whether the sums piped or lost anything by passing through Laura's fingers, Minnie never in quired. And soon after Minnte'sedvent into the family there came another change. Lure, the stately beauty, found that her heart had wandered from the home boundary to rest upon another love offered and accept ed. Tier lover was a gentleman iti every way calculated to I.6lllinku . 4er hoppy—a true, gooff Matt: and Mr. Goodwin gnvea willing consent to her merrier. The long evenings foliowmg the an nouncement of this engagement were very pleasant ones for Minnie. Iler own mourn lug kept her from gay assemblies, and Mr. Goodwin was very well pleased to let a younger escort take his place beside Laura. He was getting old, he said, though but little past fifty, felt the cold severely; and was apt to come home len-. guid after the business of the day was over. Minnie soon learnt that it was pleasant LAN 00136 TO NUM pisallantono. MINNIE'S CHOICE. BY EMILY MACKINTOSH ,e st ME earelbr Mae a** *UN Aare borne Me Mills, am! a.4lldayagoir Ala orpAaa, to fib eat whisk may ° opt afterath a just caul a lartisw paw ats", 4iPaskais mid *pia all protector ibr him to hear her and talk; and, as these long Isr them mars cloudy. *eth er, she found her eltisUpleasure was to listen to the words of advise, Wit f lar wis dom that he gavel. Mhe wet tohim a sweet, loving. W i ld, to be guidO, taught And petted; he, to her, becamC a hero, a man to revere , hot* sad twat. It wanted bat a math el abinaslewed• ding day when, am aheasoaasaathegirls were sitting in the parlor w4lidag the summons to dinner, a heavy NI Overhead startled both. Mr. Goodwin's library, which was di rectly above them, was evidently the room from whence the noise cum, and, alter a moment of silent consternation, the two ran swiftly up stairs. The friend and dither it upon the door, where he had fallen after leaving his chair, struck down with paralysis, insensible. It was many days bakre speech was restored, more before motion came to any limb; but in the long MINIM Minnie threw off all timidity, and Laura herself was not a more tender or careful nurse. The ap pointed wedding day was over, when one morning Laura beckoned Minnie from the invalid's room and took her into her own chamber.' Her thee was pale but resolute, her eyes hill of suppressed pain as she naici,-" Minnie, will you do a painful task for me?" " You know that I will do anything for you, Laura." " Then you will see Herbert for me and tell him this:—Dr. Holmes said to-day that my father will never regain the use of his lower limbs. His mind Is now clear and he can use his arms and hands; but from the lower limbs the power to move is gone for life. He will be crippled, al most helpless, and I, his child, can never leave him!" "Does he know about all this?" " Who? papa do you mean? Yes, Dr. Holmes told. him. " But of your decision?" "Notyet. I will tell him fhile you— you tell Herbert. Tell him not to try to see me, for I cannot bear it! Herbert!" It was a wailing cry of parting, but Minnie's lips smiled as . she drew her friend's head to her bosom to caress her and soothe the unspoken agony. After a .long silence she said, "Conte with me to your father and tell him now ;" and Laura complied. Mr. Goodwin heard the resolve silently, though his bowed head and grieved face shoved how deeply he felt the necessity of sued sacrifice; but as Laura bent caress ingly over him, Minnie's voice, low, sweet and clear, broke the sad silence. "I will not tell Herbert, Laura, nor must . you break your engagement. You will not hesitate to leave your father in my care; niy hands will minister to him as tenderly as yours; my feet shall fill the plat* of his; my—)• "Stop! this must not be," said Mr. Goodwin. " I cannot consent to bind your youth to my infirmity, your activity to my_ helplessness." " You would keep Laura?" " She is my child; her own love keeps her." "ller love!" The child's pleading face was gone and she stood erect before them, a woman speaking her heart. " Her love calls her to Herbert as truly as mine 011, spare me! she cried, covering her hot blushes with her hands "do npt force me to tear away from my heart its veil! Do you not know," and she crept close to the bedside to whisper, " that as Laura loves Herbert I love you! Do not turn me away; let me be your wife—happier, far happier in ministering to you than I could be in any freer, _gayer life." It was a strange wooing where all the pleading came from the woman's lips, the reluctant admission of love returned from the man's; but the tall, stately bride, who gave her hand to her young lover was not happier than the young . bright maiden who bound her life to the crippled invalid's. A REMORSTRANCE FROM VIRGINIA. The President of the United States Senate presented on Friday a remon strance from Chas. King, D. D., a resi dent of Staunton, Va., against the re moving of the disabilities of rebel officers. He says : • "The rumor of it creates a panic among Union men. If you relieve these rebel Judges we are politically ruined. For God's sake, interpose and prevent this. It is false to say that we have not Union men to till the princi pal offices, and if not, let them remain va cant until they can be filled with good men from the loyal States. Save us from the ten der 'nerd.i of wicked, persecuting rebels. The restrictive measures in the reconstruction acts and the fourteenth amendment, and in our proposal eonatitrition, are our only hope. If you wdi hold the rebels in check until we can adopt then.* constitution, then, perhaps, as they Wag firth fruits meatier repentance, they may 014=1ly and individually be re -0.111 red froWthe cures of a broken and violated its tbr the pitman we are unwilling to 0 swap for them." VOL EDWARD RePRERSON. The I blicailhg from a Washington cot.- respoltdemt of the Independent, pays a high compliment to Mr. McPherson, and will be read with pleasure by his numerous Mends in this locality: "The organisation of the next House will soon occupy the politicians. Having ex- Welted myself heretofore upon the queetion of speatership, I will net mention it again. These can be no doubt, I thi..k, of the re-elec- Polior McPherson, the present Clerk. He is by litr the best Clerk the House has had in dam years--a pure, efficient, courteous, and ever•to-be-trusted man. It is of the utmost !gap:waft* that a thorough Radical ohould have the place, salmon the organization of a net" House the Clerk is the presiding *facer. McPherson has been repeatedly tried and never found wanting." / .1 gainhaseo Chips. THE Fifth Avenue Hotel, New York, pays an annual rental of $96,540. GIIANT has been spending a pleas ant time in Baltimore. MORE than $2,936,900 worth of one cent revenue stamps were sold last year. M?PossotsoN is -writing the life of Thad. Stevens. rnua inmates is the extent of thepop ulation of the Westmoreland county jail. THRICII hundred and sixty paupers are now in the Chester county almshouse. HEAVY losses from flood and storm re ported from different sections of the coun trY IN Chicago during 1868, $278,421 worth of property was stolen, $190,332 of which was recovered. BARNUM'S hotel, in Baltimore, took lireone day last week, and was damaged to the extent of abont $2,000. A LETTER from General Sheridan to General Sherman announces the substan tial close of the Indian war. THE Editorial Convention of Pennsyl vania, will meet in Harrisburg, on the .2(1 of February. THE Beaver .7?m/icat hoists the name of Gov. Geary, as its choice for re-nomination for Governor. WESTON, the pedestrian, is again on "the travel;"—the journey this time being WOO IN Charleston, S. C., all the hogs found running at large are killed and distributed among the poor. Mn. HAYAIIO, of Yana, Illinois, is said to be the largest landholder in the United States, and he owns one slice of 60,000 acres in Nebraska. THE Cops talk of taking up Cowan— the renegade—for Supreme Judge. We hope they will—he just suits the party and the people want a lick at him. THE Ohio Legislature, at the present session, it is said, will probably pass a law submitting woman suffrage to a pop ular vote. BETS are already being made about the length of General Grant's inaugural mes sage. It is said that it will be the short est ever delivered. SECRETARY SEWARD gave a dinner party to General Grant on Saturday, and a reception after dinner, at which General Grant was present, but very few called. TUE gallant Gen. Kilpatrick, ou the evening of the tilst inst., delivered his lec ture on " Shennan's march through Geor gia , 19 to a large audience at the Academy of Music, Philadelphia. A PAIR of salmon, weighing 111 and 15 pounds, were recently speared in the Sus quehanna river, below the Shamokin dam. The lucky fisherman sold them for twenty five cents a Pound in Sunbury. Tim lower house of the legislature of Dakota haspassed a bill conferring upon women the elective franchise and making them eligible to otlice. The senate is ex pected to ratify this action. HON. ALEXANDER RAMSEY, hasbeen re-elected U. S. Senator from Minnesota. lie is a Pennsylvanian, and a Radical iu whom there is no guile. Lebanon county has the honor of producing him. Gov. 13itowNLow, of Tennessee, has issued a proclamation calling on the peo ple of the State to enrol themselves in the militia for the purpose of protecting them selves from the Kukiux. A LARGE vein of iron ore has been found in Maiden Creek township, Berks county. It is found within a few feet of the surface, and covers an area of over thirty acres. Ix 1868 seven hundred and seventy seven boys, six hundred and twenty-three girls, four hundred and twenty-three men, and four hundred and twelve women, died in New Ark, N. THE last witticism credited to Grant is as follows: " I have been reading the papersto get help in making my Cabinet; but, as no two of them seem to agree, I think I might try my own hand at it." nue York papers say that the prices of horses and cattle at the country sales re cently held, ranged considerably lower than last year. Produce of all kinds sells at much loiver prices. Ix a French town a man was lately triod for manslaughter, having smothered his wife by hugging her too rapturously. The event gives an opposition paper a chance to liken it to the love certain gov ernments show for liberty. THERE is a general desire among mem bers of Congress to take action at once upon the amendment to the Constitution regulating suffrage. A Washington de spatch says there can be no question as to its passage by both Houses of Congress. GEN. GRANT is shortly to be presented by the Republicans of the Tenth Ward, Philadelphia, with.a magnificent specimen of the American eagle. It was captured near Reading, and is a kingly bii 1 , meas uring nearly seven feet from tip to tip of the wings. A conno.seomnEsT writes to a city paper that Colonel A. K. McClure and a few of his friends had an interview with General Grant a few days ago, in which the subject of Pennsylvania politics was freely discussed. The General gave them to understand that no proscription of Re publicans upon thepartof Senators would be tolerated by him, and the wishes of.the workingmen of the Republican party would be looked to in the selection of any Cabinet officer that may be taken from Pennsylvania. Right. CASH RATES OF ADVERTISING IFITTI:ti I • Ten lines of Ponpalteitoonatitute a agitate. , , 7 ' cf co et X i TIME lweek....'e 76-61 4061 18.8 801600 2 weak.... 1 20. ~, , 4_111,. 8 - m 8-w 0n e1 1 110,,,, t ~. . . 4 1 th ~ ' t . 1 months.. .1., J . months.. ; 6 months.. 1 . ' • ' 1 year 11 -4 , 10 , , 14 . . Smientors 9 Notion 88 IS id u l d ninistraWelise %. .4..... 2 • msees , • I la Auditors , Notice 1 all 11P110116.1, 1101 , 1191111-Aren cents a thin *V i z drat insertion an d Seim cents a line far subsegeent 1111Millit. ItIAL 'SWATS nolvertionaenta, lin mitts line tar the not inaZ i r mo n and Pita amass Imo nor aeon additional on. Fox, the Copperhead Mayor of Phillip deiphia, could not find one of his party fit for Chief of Police, and has appointed Gen. Mulholland, a Republican, to the place. Tun Pennsylvania Railroad Company, having previously purchased the West Branch Canal, has recently bought the line up to the North Branch, and, we nu de r stand, purpose deepening it, and other wise increasing its capacity for . business. IN these days of progress it is. ridicu lous that railroad companies, which should be most progressive, still cling to the stove fires in their cars. The danger of this system of warming has been fully demon strated time and again. GENERAL SHERMAN reports that the back-bone of the " Indian rebellion” has been broken.—The final blow having been given on Christmas Day in the destruc tion of a Camanche village. Tux Harrisburg State Guard says that a number of noted thieves, burglars, and pick-pockets, have arrived in that city, and warns the citizens to be on the look out. Is that a reflection on the Legisla ture ? ATTORNEY GENERAL BREWSTER is a faithful public officer. The expenses of his office last year amounted to only $5,- 939—less than two per cent. of the col lections made and paid into the State Treasury. A FARMER in Michigan, finding that his sheep were disappearing mysteriously recently, placed a wolf trap in the field, A few days afterwards he found it sprung. and now one of his neighbors is laying with a sprained ankle. A GENTLEMAN of Washington has late ly purchased 55,000 acres of land in Taze well, Buchanan and Prince William coun ties. A number of Northern capitalists are examining lands in Virginia, with a view of purchasing. Good land is sell ing at $.4.50 per acre in Virginia. THE decline in the price of stove coal. in New York, within two months, has been $2.45 per ton, in consequence of which collieries which were standing idle at the close of the year to settle up, are in no Murry to start, hoping thus to bring down the stock and run up the price. TILE people of Waterbury, Coun., drank 41,661 gallons of wines and distilled li quors, and 127,148g,a110ns of malt liquor during 1868, not including such fluids brought by express or manufactured in town. This cost the consumers $366,684, while the flour used for the same period was worth only $240,000. llox. GALukula A. Gnow, chairman. has called the Republican State Central Committee to meet at Harrisburg on Thursday, the 4th day of February next, at two o'clock, for the purpose of fixing the time and place for holding the next State Convention; and for the transaction of any other appropriate business. A cot;NTnYmAx wishes to know whether ladies wear horse-tails at the back of their necks. Ire don't understand that they crimp their nape locks, and let them de scend in the style of the Angora goat or the Peruvian taunt, overtheir shoulders— the pet lambs ! 1 TnuitE is reasonable ground for hoping that our State Legislature may this session abolish spring elections and authorize all officers heretofore voted for at that time to be selected at the fill elections. A due regard for public convenience, as well as economy, calls for the proposed change. GEN. GRANT has a quiet and efficient way of dealing with difficulties, small as well as great. Certain parties were very anxious to have an inauguration ball given in the Capitol, to which certain other parties were opposed. Gen. Grant. hearing of this, wrote a note, requesting that no ball be given at all, and the great question is thus settled satisfactorily. MAYOR FO x, the ne w Copperhead E xecu tive of Philadelphia, has a good time mak ing policemen. The scalawags, burglars, thieves, and such cattle, who make up the voters of his party, are applicants. He tries to ve t good men, but can't find them. MondayOn e ' of last week he appointed a man in the 17th District, in place of a good officer, and on Saturday lie was brought bef ore him in the shape of a high ray robber. rtntic interest is rapidly centering on the postal telegrap h reform. That the movement for c heaptelegraphing will very soon assume practical shape, we may now take for granted. It is one of those things which only needs agitation to insare then triumph. The people are moving against a class privilege, a monopoly, and the re sult can not be doubtfbl. A T,EnninLE murder was perpetrated at Fifteenth and Chestnut streets, Phila delphia, late on Wednesday 'week. Two men named Joseph Donahue and James Dempsey got into a quarrel, When the fbr mer seized the latter and a desperate struggle ensued. Donahue finally drew a pocket knife and cut Dempsey's throat from ear to ear, causing. death, in a few minutes. The homicide was promptly arrested and confessed his crime, but in sisted that the act was done under prey.- cation and in self-defence. JUDCIE LA wintscit, of Ohio, c laim:mu t of the special committee to investigate the alleged frauds practiced at the late Presi dential and Gubernatorial election in New York,has nearly finished taking testimony, and as soon as the evidence is put in print Mr. Lawrence will begin the preparation of a report. Mr. Dickey, of the commit tee, was detailed to visit the cities along the Hudson as far as Troy, and prosecute investigations at all points where fraud was charged. The testimony secured is of the most damning character, and will show up Copperheadism in alt its beauty, • n ma MI as ei OS is 00 210 SD 00 41144