.fft fociilatieous. DISPERSION OF TIIE SINKING FIJND. REMARKS CtIABLES 12. lIIICIEALEW, In the Senate of Pennsylvania, on Wed nesday_ evening March 16th, 1970, upon the Bill to facilitate the construction of Railroads by exchanging the Securities in the Sinking Fund for new and inferior obligations. Mn. SPNAKER: I take early occasion in the progress of this debate to state my briefly not reasons fr voting this bill. As voice is in good condition, I shall bo compelled to solicit the indulgence of the Speaker and of the Senate, while I attempt to state those reasons. They aro three in number: the first Is that this bill takes out of the Sinking Fund no less a sum than six millions of dollars, put there under a pro vision of the Constitution of this Common wealth, and pledged to remain there until It shall be taken therefrom for the purpose of being applied to the payment of the pub lic debt, and to be applied to no other pur pose whatever. My second objection to this bill Is that it impairs that security of the Commonwealth for the final payment of this debt which is now owing to us from the Penn' a Railroad Company. We are to dis charge that wealthy and powerful corpora tion from all responsibility to us upon the bonds which we hold against tier, and are to take, instead of them, the bonds of a rail road corporation whose road is not yet con structed, and IVIIOI4O future prosperity and solvency is problematical, and about which we have no certain information. We lire, stherefore, d to give up our deman against a tialvent ebtor, a powerful co d rporation, whose future !solvency is reasonably cer tain, and we lire to take the bonds of a cor poration whose road ls unbuilt and whose future is unknown. Mr. Olmsted—The construction of the road is to he guaranteed before there is any delivery of the bonds. Mr. linekalew—l am coining to that. 'lite Senator need not apprehend that 1 shall state the claims of this bill unfairly, be cause I have 11,, hostility against tile im provement proposed, nor lute) , I against the gentlemen who are particularly inter ested in its construetion :uul in the passage of the hill. We are to Lave gnat:HM.l;s, however; and what are they? \VIly. they are these I—the Pennsylvania Railroad Compa ny, and the Northern Central Railroad Company, and the Philadelphia tts Erie Railroad t 'omit:my, are to guarantee to the State tint the road shall Ito built within three years front Lite passage of this and thatalltring that period of time--during the construction of the r o ad—the of interest provided 111 this bill shall bl' mad( by this eorporation whose !melds we take. Now, sir, I understand that to he the whole Belli.) or the guarantee. But from the time whoa the road shall he fully boomer imperfectly that IWO; he -alai or 11:100 110 guarantee that it shall be well done- from that moment all claim and security which the Commonwealth bolds against the Pennsylvania Itailresel company will be entirely discharged, the guarantee will he discharged, and we are hull: le 111 i, 111, I...Tor:ail/11 abate. SIIC -11,511, payments after 107.1, are to les Made . t.ll/0.1/011 lloWll 1,1 1 , 91/, allll uthrr pl/r -tii 1 1 .1ir tJa• rota , ipai are to iPI• paid 1,9:2 Ille host paylllellt in rep' 01, 1111'11, 111:11 Illy sevollil 11.11 to ills hill i 0 lilat it impairs lile wea rily of the people of Pettit•a, that thistleht ui six missions of dollars which is slue to them shall be paid acntrding to the terms the raulrael tt hieh ha. 1)(1'11 unade.— Lastly, at hill loostliolie, till, or tills ut.uev, 011,1 poslpollt'S it iu a Very 111:11erild del.:fee. We undo a I•olltrata It itli Ille ilaiirlald o discharged her from the payment el' toimage tax, for the pyiliont whil.ll , llo. Iva, Habit , by lire ellaril.r, the eollirael into !tallier tine. 1.1..V011 , 1 the ri COliceliOli many pOr,l.ll`: M.,' in this r 11:111111,1'. condition was intposetl upon that eta-pm:s tilts, Whet] the WO, 4,11 , 41111 . h - 41, dial she ,111/111,1 ray duties Inthe Cl/1111111111- Wealth Upon the hnsiurss Sill` 111 d, it, a sort of protection to the State against the cnot 110tithal of a• arty raili•Oati improvement with the pultlit• works that had been tunic and were tit, 11,1 1/y the Commonwealth.— Time p,sscd on mitt Prii, Whelk the P 1•1111- sylvAnia Itsiltstatl Company Vallle forward ale] agreed to pay t,:itse,tsta per 8111111111,11 poll her intichttline , , to the State, until the year 189 °. Li”‘ part of the principal which tyould be still bur--tau n, be palii. Now, then, by this lilii, you 1•S11•1111 its payment for throe or Palle years. Itat, What is more material, you postpone the payment 11( the principal Which 15,111111 be paid - 1,3 , the Petlll - Railroad Company midst' the law or Shed; you post pt am the pay Ite'lll. "la great part or it u n til 101111, tot that the people tit' the State 1,11111.4. I,lliZe the Illo lleys (heel, illey cannot he ap plied to the public indebtedness ' under the Sinking Fund laws, ;is soon as then would if ows hiii sbwhl not pass, It. Other WorilS,a,Slllllill . ‘ that all there moneys will come into the treasury--which I insist is not Wider this bill -it is 111111111,- tiutluble that the payllll.lll of the debt title to Its to lie pustpuuvl i'Y this andpoa t l , o uvd very Flt s eallV, without any ‘,ll,ltieratioll Whaler or . are it/ reiellbe 1' co hail U 11'11111 1111 obligation which 1 sup pose to be worth hundrnis of thousands of dollars, and pont:me millions. nf the el/111111erelal all 011iiVatioll is tale it hurl, law 11141,11111e/I'lll 1°,411113L0. i gay Mai that IPorpOralioll is to ile discharg ed tram that obligation by 111.• ti.llll,or tali. All status and demands against her ere to let extinguished Ity this hill; 1/lll' SeellriiieS agaimet lIIr are to lilt 11.1.,e1l Orel' MIEMtMZEIM=I== 111, l't•lltisylvan' C,lllipatly is ki rusp,iiil lu the ;in.] 11'4 It. till' SL:ttt No surn•ilder thee? NVIt • h,uld'tve,li '•tint t tIIi, libligali1:11 again porfoutly ahlo 1,4• ri .point to us, ,Lll,l our that NVI . III:ty Ott 1.4)11(, porreetly t 4, It t ,:PI V:1111:11110 001 11,1' under 1114.1. t, ? I do and 10,q,..5r t.) tit tl O, upou the lit pn~ciJruoa .d tins 111,1,111 . 0. I lakl , it I,Fr thi, 710 W r.,:td from I int" the fnlrnl+ of 11iir n,•rlhrri: 1111c1 I, I 4 . 1.1111,•4 , 11 NVilll lilt. Philatll . lllllill railroad at .leNcy ,Sl)l,rc, and L , 11110:11l1 4 . 111111,1 Hr,, ill •11,q, till. 0:1 , 11'1•11 liury Itt %%111111 !MVO 11, a Vo.ll,tl'll.•tt'd , air State, is to 1,, , , all taut, Z1111;1140 Ills I,llitt tV Erie. tttt• No. tla•ro Clottrai l'otitt,,,vlvatlia ft:oll'63 , l_ l'otitparitos, that Lill . .V 1,11 svoll uliunl lt, Lake up guarantees hp thi, bill, 31111, iii 10,1, 1." LI demand for that improvement. They :we dirertly intiae,t4 , ll in its being made, and any 1 . 11“ rt ur sarritWe IN 111011 thl'y ran Mal, WC OI • that road will prohably he returned to thuin iu rich and :thutidunt, result., in the prosperity 4 /f their ciwn lines. tliereftire, there is no reason, 1 as sume, in the tt:tttlee of the iltsl., tchv the Pernis,vlvania Itailroad Company sleuth] be discharged from the olilit;ations of the act the Common, unith—uu reason 111,11ry tote 111.1 c pr to Leanne due I to the people of this State tilts-ails, \viten paid (11•Aslll'y it is their 111‘,11Uy I - hy letylll , lll iltut ivitiett it, to the imbue iudrht rv.lr,es,i,should it wilt ite rmr ittieg timefor large amoutit , , under the operation thin bill. it:, tel t.t the :ueeit, ut thin 111,1 , 111, ut Lon , -;t11. 1 protii'd again that I ant in tliteli.ssl hy n., ittipt•..vt.tet•lit. very muck tnsre it Itt:etti, I iv,eitd tw tcillingtn natl:o canna saerilices of feel ing in tinier to secure inter,,ting jm pr4,ollll.llt N. , 1111. (If course I 41, nut spt•al, NVl•sterll ',ads larked un I as :1,1(1,hla lit the hill ur ruthrr V. , a tail, S,/ to -.livid:, to the nutin kilo; I know little of their merits, and trill tuit attempt to diseitss them, as I might do them injustice. I 41,1141( pl.c.p,S(`t. ,nlargo upon the improvidence of this hill, nor to exhil di any el' those feelings of antipathy and iiitternisis tchirh spring up S.11110(hIlt, ill LIPIGItP, hilt Whi4.ll unm inappropriate in ennsideringa measure of this magnitude, AffiwtitigNtirli vast interests, touching livery Irian who toils in this State and. who pays taxes in this State, is W(.11,1S1110SC , giant en terprise in railroad management which have grliwit up amongst us, and which I grant you aro among the proudest achieve ments of our people. I turn hack to the first and material question. Is not this Moil already devoted to a parlielliarl,itiVl•t by 1110 constitutional amendment Of 1557, and have we power to take it front tinder the operation (Its that amendment, and of t h e littvs that 'MVP been passed in porstiam, , (f o rever, and dr rotc it to another purpose? \Vital is that amendment '7 shall he brief in stating it, because to suite it Is to conclude the argu ment: Words:aided to the mere statement of the case, meddle and to no purpose. Ity the amendment, which was drawn by till in 105(1, and voneurrell iu by every member of the then senate, It NVIO greater aunnuit of tallith. Indebtedness should he ,'rested liv the state, or against the State, than three% punters or O. or ih,liars, nth.. lit chit, of WRY (11.111V:1,111,11 •—a cam , whielt hits, sines arisen, lint which we may )1,1110 11111 y IPA again, at !Pilot HOOll, arise. But that went lad n small way, In I order to secure te4 for the future against the' Improvident management of our piddle af fairs. 'the anitintlinent goes tin to provide that a sitticititt Fund Hull Ito estittilh-litiii Urn gradual payment and extingtiliili ment of tile (rlildic debt ot' the com monwealth, which wits then nearly forty tolltiona, a huge num and groat burden, which It was desired to liqui• date as moon as possible, thereby relieving the people. (VII provided in that amend ment, Iwttleit was adopted by the people by an almost unanimous vote), that certain sources of revenue and certain objects els value should be irreverably devoted to that fund. Among other things, the revenues of the public works of the State, held and owned by the State, NVOI, to in put into the Sinking Fund, and then, sir, the proceeds —I quote the exact purport--the proceeds of the sales of the public works, as they might be made under authority of law, were also to be paid into that fund, togethek with such other objects of income or reve nue as might be designated by law, and the Legislature, at its first session after the adoption of that amendment, was to enact a law establishing the ma •cliinory necessary for this Sinking fund andprovide the proper agents for its practical working: and management. Anti then, sir, what more t—becauso I come now to the material clause of that amend. meat: It was provided that no part of the said Sinking Fund -bould be used, or ap plied otherwise tha. In extinguishment of the public debt. Now, Mr. Speaker, if I were called upon at this moment to write a clause to con demn this bill and prevent its passage, I do not know that the English language would afford me more apt and conclusive words than these to exclude all pretence of power in the Legislature to pass this bill : "No part of the said Sinking Fund shall be used or applied otherwise than in extinguish ment of the public debt." Here, sir, you propose to use that fund to build railroads through the forests of Ni'Kean, in ty' of Erie, and among the hill and valleysl of Greene ! The north, the west, and the southwest are to bo reached by statute, and roads aro to spring up there, upon what foundation? by what means? By these means in the Sinking Fund, put there by constitutional injunction, placed there by statute, covered there by words as strong:Ls the English language contains in any lexi con ever written, and sacred from and un touchable by legislative power ! And, yet, sir, this bill is to pass. 'nese words I ut ter here (which are simply, I repeat, words of sincerity and not of malevolence against this measure or against the men concerned in it)these words of mine will go for nought. Influences more powerful than logic, in fluences which the highest arts of rhetoric cannot roach or effect, are present within this chamber, and exist outside of this chamber, and the men who are sent here to represent the toilers and the capitalists of Pennsylvania will be moved like auto- mata by [hem. There will be recorded upon our enduring records an act which, in my judgment, in vades the fundamental law which we have taken oaths to support, which will put in peril the collection of these nine millions and a half of public resources and which confessedly postpones the payment into the public treasury of moneys to become duo to it from a solvent debtor, and dis charges that debtor from a solemn obliga tion, contracted in NIA, for full considera tion. All these public considerations, which ought to speak trumpet toned to us, will be put aside or disregarded. And why? It is not for me, an individual standing here fur the first time in many years, to go over the recent history oflegislation in our State, to portray the unpleasant features which have attended its progress, to repeat here the observations. which have been made concerning it in various parts of our Commonwealth, and beyond its limits. I I do not think, Mr. S 1 that, much ,gooil is ordinarily done by denouncing clamor ously,and violently,supposed corruption in ' high places of political power. .I. think that indiscriminate denunciation doesmore ilijll - than it can possiby dogood, for it creates in the minds of the people the impression that, all government is unsound Eliot that human nature is utterly degraded, that our institutions cannot :mil do not work well, and possibly may lay the foundation of opinion and sentiment for their ultimate abrogation, for giving them up, and fur sub stituting ill their phew other institutions supposed to be better calculated for the government 01'111011 who have I,eoollle (00 hate 1.0 govern themselves. Therefore I think it is not expedient to dilate too much and too often upon the evils and corruption or public life. When I would speak upon these subjects, I would speak when the apeceh can he fullowei I by a blow, by pun ishment which shall teaeli a wholesome lesson to the doers of evil. Sir, I am :id monisheil by facts which have recently oc curred that this is not a time to punish or evell to investigate theconduti ufullictal de linquents. A public officer, who has man aged the treasury of the people, nod who by your Governor himself is charged with misconduct (along with others), is at this' moment contumaeious beibre soar ostler_ g :rod your power, and, sir, you are lina bie to Gill him to au ll 011111; you darit not bring him to your liar and uubinit to him an open question, in plain language, about his administration of the 1111111le moues.. the people ibhich he was employed WaII :UZI, (Ohl admiui.sler Under the Incas of t h e State. YOU Ito 110( (Well that you shall have some little gleams of truth from a witness, through a conunitdeo, so that the people shall know what has been dime in high public positions. With this fresh lesson in our 110101 S, 1 thief it unnecessary (0 appeal to high Moral eOll - the passage of this bill. I insist, therefore, mainly 111(011 the three great objections before mentiowsl a enure than sullieient to condemn the bill and to justify my opposition to its passage. .V o l now, sir, having vindicated my own peSi lioll, I shall leave to (Were oth e roo member the personal responsibility of his own Ginnie and his own vote. Niork.--It is to lie oliserved that the ti re going remarks relate almost untirolv be OW original bill which was confined to Cheder sey Shure, Pine Creek A Ilutialo Railroad amma= seetion reported by the Committee, as ttll MI the very day when the hill ralled'up fur con,ideration. Ilia that section is as much open to oh servution :IS the first. Its material feature k the taking out of the sinking fund of $3,- 500,0uu or bonds of the Allegheny Valley Railroad Comyany, the payment ~r which is guaranteed by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, and substituting in their stead bonds For a like :miount issued by three rompanit.s NV ilc)Se if/MlS:lr° Ite lat ter bon& are. to I, tak. n Nithont any guar antee of their payntent,t,intilar to that v. huh i. Itttaeln.l to the b0n,13 now held by the Stale. 'Their paymont 4.1t111.11,1 111.11 1111 1 ,101 N.11 ,1 y 111:1V :thility iu 111,11•1. tic , W•inand i.ftlii• State as a ,t , i,iltl ntiolgagt• 11,1 Liptal their Horrible Outrage In . I . lrglnla....Cluriler Robbery I Arwon. One of the most diabolical crimes that ever startled a community was perpetraied in this county on last l'ritlas night. The storehouse of I". \V. Bayne, situated in the lower part of the county, ahout tree miles from the Itappahatinock river, was entered he a party of negroes; the clerk, a most estinuthle young Mall, named Jett, , murder.' in cold blond ; the house plun dered and then set ou tire and burned to the ground. It appears young Jett, svith his gun in hand, succeeded in malting his snipe from the house, but ',HMIe getting' more than some tAvelit3 or t‘venty-live yards distant, was overtaken mill with his own gun, his body dragged Itel: to the house, 'and left to i,111 . 11 NVitil this charred remains were found in the ruins the next day. A largo moaner of citizens turn e d nut the lay Ildlowing ill search of the dikereants, and about tight, three of them, as they wire preparing to cress the river_in acsl,W, eontaining twelve socks lbo st.lon were eaptuml, and surely lodged in th...unty 'They impli.ate four and suite that Jett was killed by a uecro named whom, they allege, NVa. lilt' instic:ur.d the terrible affair. It is to he sitneerely hoped that the whole party Nvil I be speedily cap lurid, and the severest petialti,, , ,r the I:ttv out to thorn. In addition 01 the storehouse aid goods, \lr• favor Ill"' all his hooks, bond., and is only partially 111-11r.d, .ne. EAWIiES IN SAN FLIA:SCISCO II ooke of the Belgian conanl Mown Up ulth Gunpowder. 'rite Belgian Consul atSan has eer't and inveterate enemies in that city, Nvlio last weal: attempted to tithe his life.-- :.-leveral gentlemen were dining with him, and after dinner they passed out in a body to a rear house, and as they went out they learnt a terrine explosion. They waited, startled and oven terrified, but all NV:LS still after the report. They finally ventured hack into the house:tint found that iu the dining -1.1,0111 the table had been hurled from the position it had occupied, while everything inn it and around it melts Utterly destroyed. In the parlor all the furniture Neils lle111"1- iolted utterly, the Iliad torn in pier's, all the glass to the windows, as well as in the ,Villih/NVS Of the adjoining houses, hrol:ru. An iron powder canister was found embed ed in the floor• of the parlor. 'n. would 1110111 about tell I/UtalliS. It had boon split and torn by the explosion. Beneath the floor niarifs of hands and feet ovum' tll, served, bits Ma fuse and a quantity of half hurtled paper. It had evidently been in - tended. to blow up the Whet(' house while the C1)11,4111 amt his dinner party were at the table. A Card Extraordinary. '1 Ow ..I People, ( : :1111 commissioned to procure the male and address of every person in the United States who takes a friendly interest in \V man's enfranchisement. In order to compile this roll of honor, I hereby request every such person, immediately on reading (his announcement, without waiting long enough to forget or neglect it,to take pen and ink, write the name and ad dress legibly, and Ibrward the same to me by 'nail, postage paid—a trilling cost Which you will not begrudge to a good 00.1150. Anybody sealing in one envelope oil the imineu in a family, a village, or will render a helpful service. Three thou sand American newspaper., will oblige a brother editor by generously printing I his card In their columns. The purpose or this registration Is to know to whom to send Important documents. Friends Ilw cause are urged to respond so mini tillanoottaly that their letters shall Ily hither like a snow storm. Sign al once. And the ell in when your children and ehildrcit's children will he proud of the room'. Fraternally, T. ~,,DORE Lire s, Editor of Indepenticul,, Ilux '272 , 7, New York city, Unlvernall , l4 , , Statistics show that the Tali° (,f anneal in,rea4o in suicide all over the world Ia from 3 to 5 per cent., while the ratio of In crease of population la about 1.6-1 per ...cat, a year. Thin suggests the possibility of the suicide rate ultimately exceeding the birth rate, anti resulting consequently in the self extinction ofthelniman race. Thu St. Louis licpubtican, gravely reviewing the statistics, looks mournfully forward to the time when there will be left but one human being on the planet, and he, with a rope around his solitary woasand, shall Jump from a barn ratter, and leave the unPuln nato planet without an inhabitant. Dictum's Farewell Reading. On the 15th instant, Mr. Charles Dickens supplemented his farewell reading at St. James' Hall, London, with a few extem pore remarks, in which ho referred with pride to his experience as a public reader for the past fifteen years, and closed by saying: "From these garish lights I vanish now for evermore with ono heartfelt, grate ful, respectful and affectionate farewell." A 2111 D-OCEAN HORROR Another Steamer Disabled and Adrift. The terrible ocean calamities of the be ginning of 1870 have received another and melancholy addition to their number. The British Mail steamship Venezuela sailed from Liverpool on the sth of March with thirteen cabin passengers. She carried a crew of forty-two officers and men, and was an iron steamer, 270 feet long, with other dimensions to correspond, brig-rigged and of 1,682 tons register. She put to sea under favorable conditions, steaming out with a general cargo and her passengers, bound for Barbados, Lag-usyra, Porto Cabello, Santa Martha and Colon, being due at Bar bados on the 21st ult. Her course was about southwest by west, and this direction she pursued, encountering heavy weather and all the dangerous and disagreeable in cidents of the month of March at sea. EIBIZEIZEI and 1,000 miles from Liverpool, right in mid-ocean, at eight and a half o'clock in the morning, the passengers, while at breakfast in the saloon, were startled by a sudden and tremendous crash, which shook the vessel like an earthquake and made every one tremble with fear. Instantly all hands were on deck, and a hurried exami nation showed that and outer stern post of the Venezuela had been carried away—the rudder wrenched from its pintlos and the stern post torn violently away. As the steamship was built in compartments, with strong water tight bulkheads, the whole vessel did not till ; but through the large hole in the stern, seven by ten feet, and mostly below the water line, • rushing in volurnes, and in five minutes the entire compartments occupied as a store room for the cargo and ship's proTisions was lull of water. The length of the store room was twenty feet, and the ship in the brief time of live minutes had to sustain the additional weight imposed by the ad mission of thirty-live tons of surging and splashing water, gaining even more force than would be produced by this weight by the crowding of the external sea and the frightful rolling a n d pitching of the steamer, sending at each throw this destroyer of thirty-live tons against the interior bulk head, :eel threatening all with instant death. the Venezuela was now one where the strongest and bravest were required to look death in the lane and stand beside their own watery graves. The passengers were struck with terror. Embarking but a few days before for the sunny clime of the South, sonic fitr business, others for pleasure, and others yet to fulfil offices or piety and duty, they were appalled and FILLED WITH IIIsMAY at this sudden calamity. But then) was little time for thoughts of a melancholy character. It was the duty of every ono to work :it the pump, to save Mesta:liner, and to do the of Captain Cowell, who, in all the gloomy forebodings of the hour, aided his part with heroism and coolness. =I in the flooded store room were now sub merged and kept up a terrible thumping against the deck above. The store room it self was situated below the saloon, ths lat ter being below the spar (leek, at the ex treme after-part of the ship. Directly for ward of the store roost was the engine room. The store room was twenty feet long, with a width of the full breadthof beam, and ex tended to the ship's floor below. Now the gmit fear wits that the water would tear away the bulkhead separating. the engine Inuit the store room, break into the main End of the ship and .luu.,apyp . . . . tn. it was finred that the water would force up the deck in the saloon, rush through and flood this compartment, in: which ease all hands would have . mine to the bottom. They at true began to work, put up slimes l ,tween the spar deck overhead and the saloon deck, to keep the plankingdown and resist the iIIIIIIOIISO pressure of thirty tive tons ef water, which, it'admitted, would founder them en the spot. The water had already =6l from other passages, and they now began to lode to keep afloat, and all hands toiled like towers. In the mvuntiute the boats were put in readiness to ciinr away as the last resort. They worked hours, and the water was making visible headway, rising up in the saloon and keeping every one at the buck ets, Constant watchers were kept fur sail, but wino appeared. Nightfall drew on, but no relief. I iarkiniiiis overwhelmed the sea, but no lights cheered thy suffering souls. 'l'he•irs were anxious eyes, and theirs were longing hearts. Midnight ante on with diiisperato an siely, Lilt no relief canto. The♦ were a:, iu the midst of a vast desert, with "water, water everywhere, but not drop hi drink. - The W MATHER WAA Si I Lt. ITRIOI",n, tornailoes, lashing ,ea;, overwhelm ing WaVt , , ana t h e whited form, of the 'retail hilliiws and the whistle of the rig- ging—these had no cheer. Unmanageable from the first crash, the sails were of little service, and the steering Gear was of course gone. There was no time to rig it jury rudder, all attention be ing required at the pump:rand buckets. So the Venezuela drifted alsalt, insubordinate to all control. The head sails would riot pay sir her head and the after sails could not keep her to the wind. It is fine of the most difficult matters in seamanship to control a vessel with her sails alone, especially in a violent aeaway. lion - much more so when the stern is sag .ged down by thirty-five tons of furious water anchoring, as it were, the ship to her ,Inarters. Matters did not alter their complexion till the morning' of the 10th inst., when Captain ll= coming nicer the horiz.on. fie signalled in hlktrei.s. The Camilla, steamship, from Palermo, .Sicily, bound for New Torlc, With a I . :trgi, of oranges, bore up. Both ves,els were now in latitude 13 deg.3o min. north, longitude 4:1 deg. 30 min. west. It NV:V.I eiVilt o'clock, 1111,1 by ten o'clock eight male, live female and two children passen gers were tramcferred in bouts hut board the They left the Venezuela believing that she was doomed for the bottom. It was a providential escape. The captain refused to desert hi, vessel, and Si the crew, and thus forty-two wools were 101 l to the terrible umiertaility it may take months to 'flue Venezuela when the pa.,sen mirs left wits throwing her eoale overboard to lighten her atern and thus h. pitch the ship at such an angle ill.) to get the aperture ten by seven above the water for repairs, to relieve the terrine strain on the saloon deck and keep the sea away front the bulkhead separating the engine room. Forty feet "Ellie teasel hail been disabled and ralw weather was neee.sary to effect repairs. The reporter who boarded the Camilla yesterday talked with the passengers who inert' of the higher stalks of lire. Tho 1110,4 intelligent giive the reporter the utter facL : Reporter—Do yon believe the Voneznehi will founder? Passenger—My opinion is she will never tUrn up. Reporter Ile first oil - icor —Were you will 'e the Captain and crew of the hoard the Camilla? . . First ()Iliuer—Yes, sir; but thy mould 111,1 mule. Reporter Ito passenger)—What were the prospects of her safety? Passenger—lf she could surylvo the ter rible gales, the captain had me doubt of his ability to save her, but when we left the tempest was fearful, squalls and fresh gales blowing hard. If she weathered that night I think she may lie all right. The passengers left the disabled steamer because they thought she was going down; but remained at his post. ft is premature to =peculate, upon 010 fate of the Venezuela. Shen as without a rudder, with a wide gap in her stern: with no provisions but rice, beer and wine to part of her cargo); in ma-ocean unmanageable; he, force weak ened by the desertion of her passengers; in the midst Ma howling tempest, and in a latitoele where she could meet few sail at this season of the year. To It FOR HER SAFETY is of course only a hope; to four her loss is a more natural conclusion from the facts. Transtbrreil with the passengers were lug gene, the mails and the purser. The pro peller and engine of the Venezuela wore uninjured. She was iiwneil by the West India and l'aville Steamship Compare', and prohably insured. The Camilla left railer .March 1. The passengers she look on board and brought to this port front the disabled steamer were no Hunter, purser of the Venezuela, in charge of the mails; Lorenzo Zeroga, for Laguayrn ; James Merchant, William Smith, Mrs. t 1 iddleton and two children, for Aspinwall; lt , w.Crimpin Field, Captain William Good, H. Millie and three Sisters of St. Joseph ; A. Clunv, rs. Bond, Stewardess of the Venezuela; A. W. Maglachlan, for Antigua —thirteen. Cuptnfu Ponce, of the Camilla, received e vote of thanks front the rescued passengers for his kind treatment.—N. Y. Herald. Moelnt Equality In Chnrlenton, N. C On Saturday a number of negroes wade raids 1111011 the various bar rooms 111111 res taurants ill Charleston, S. C., for the pur pose Of testing the civil rights bill. They erne evidently Organized 17 Magistrate 'I% J. Mackey, who 500111.1 to be the prime inover In the matter, for while two of them would go In and demand drinks, a consta ble with a warrant ready at hand would Amyl outside. In tho evening a party con sisting of 'Mitchell, the Clerk of Council, Hampton, Mlshaw and others went into Mr. Stelling's bar room, nod called for drinks. The attendant supplied thorn, but refused to reeeive pay. Knowing this fact they called for more drinks, and having satisfied themselves left. A number of restaurant keepers have hold p meeting and resolved to Unit the legality of the vile social equality bill, recently passed by the Legislature.—Charfeston Courier. Opposition to Whittemore for Congress. From a private letter received in Charles ton, S. C. it is learned that Captain C. T. Dunn. of Little River, S. C., will be nomi nated for Congress by the voters of Horry district to fill the place disgraced by Whit tomore recently convicted of soiling cadet ships. Tho writer of the letter says: "Captain Dunn is conservative, and Horry will be a unit for him. He is an honest man, and has been residing at Little River since 1885, planting and otherwise developing the resources of his adopted State. " The Dael Bet weed Bourbon and Mont- MADRID, March 14.—The telegraph will have already conveyed to Amerlca the news of the duel which took place on the morn ing of the 12th inst., between Don Enrique de Bourbon, brother of the ex-King-Con sort of Spain, and his cousin's marriage, the Duke of Montpensier , resulting in the death of Don Enrique. About a week ago, Don Enrique issued a letter directed to the Montpensierists, which he had printed and widely circulated, posting it on the corners all over the city. In this letter he qualifies Montpensier as an unscrupulous,ambitious rogue, a coward, a canaille, a villain, and a French juggler, using throughout the docu ment language highly unbecoming a prince and a gentleman. In all compassion for the misfortunes of this misguided prince, justice compels us to acknowledge that nothing could be more insulting or aggra vating than the document published.— There was no alternative. Montpensier challenged the Infante, and the challenge ! was of course accepted. The place selected for the duel was a I park, a little way out of Madrid, called La Casa de Campo, but when the respective parties arrived there they found it already occupied by the police. This was the enly show made by the authorities toward pre venting the encounter. On finding this obstacle in their way, the parties immedi ately left and drove towards Carabanchel, three miles from Madrid, where they se looted the en cam p men t for target-practicing a 9 the most eligible site for their purpose. The spot chosen wus behind the target, and the duel took place in the presence of all the officers of the artillery regiment sta- honed there. Fate seemed to favor Dun Enrique to the very last moment ? when it deserted him. In drawing lots, has was the first shot, and by lot he was placed with his back to the sun. lie was a tall, slender man, and Montpensier is very corpulent. The dis tance was ten metres. Both combatants were perfectly cool, and showed no signs of emotion. The Infante fired first, with out effect. Then, Muntpensier's seconds made him observe that he was presenting a full front to his adversary. He changed his position, and his first shut was also without effect, although it must have barely grazed Don Enrique's head, from the involuntary movement he made. Don Enrique's second shot was also wide, and then Montpensier fired in the air.— This was objected to by Don Enrique's seconds, who knew that he was determined to mortally wound his adversary if possi ble. The Infante's third shot was also wide, and Montnensier's third hit the stock of the Prime's pistol. This was fatal to the latter, for from that moment he La conic entirely disconcerted, and his fourth ball went nowhere near his adversary. It is said lharat this, Muntpensier absolutely refused to fire again; but the seconds on both sides insisted to such a degree that he hastily, as if only to satisfy them, and apparently without aiming, fired his last ball, which struck the Infante in the tem ple, causing instantaneous death. On seeing his enemy full, Montpensier exclaimed, -flood I What have I done! this is the first human being that I have ever injured in my life! God knows that it is not toy fault!" and, carrying his clenched hand hi Ills mouth, he bit the flesh till the blood started front it. He was then taken with a nervous attack, became speechless, and lout fainted completely when he was carried to his coach by his seconds, and in this state was taken to his house. The friends of Don Enrique carried his corpse to the chapel of the barracks, and at an early hour on Sunday morning ho was brought to Madrid. A Sod Story—.\ Itotortnee of the (Meld "Mack," the Washington correspondent of the Cincinnati Enquirer, recites the fol lowing painful narrative: In isolversatiiin with a very Intelligent and accomplished lady from Maine, a few days since, I learned the fq)lowing facts, which throw the shadow of a sad romance over the orldida disaster: Commander Williams, the highest officer on the vessel, and one ofthe lost, was a widower, of some thing less than forty, and was the father of two bright little children. In May last ho contracted an engagement for a second marriage, which was to have taken place very soon after the arrival of the Oneida in this country. I believe it was fixed for the middle of April. He left the United States for Japan in June last, and just before his departure he was ono of a dinner party at which my in formant rind the affianced bride were also present. Had lie returned safely he would have known a fate which his brave heart would have met with the cool courage that faced death at his post on the quarter-deck. Since the first ,if.l an nary his two children and his intended wife have died. When he left Japan he had not heard this sad news, but supposed ho was corning home to meet them all in . health and happiness. So to one, at least, of the gallant men who went down in the ill-fated steamer, death cannot he called disaster. Heroic Condnet---A Train on the Penn sylvania Railroad Preserved by a Boy not 10 years Old. Last Saturday morning about twenty minutes past nine o'clock, one and a half miles west of Altoona, as the " Pennsylva nia Central Pacific Express" going west, was rounding a curve on the mountain side at a rapid rate, a deep precipice on one side and high impending rocks on the other, a wee lad was seen ahead waving his hat and tossing his little arms aloft. The train was stopped within a few feet of a mass of rock and dirt upon the track sufficient to have thrown passengers, engineer, and ears over the precipice. The lad, whose name is Willie Caliko, not ton years old, had seen the fall and hastened to signal the approach ing train. While this act of forethought and human ity ill one sn yreing and mountain-bred deserves especial pu bile record, and will ever be a source of satisfaction in his after life, yet we have no doubt he will receive a more substantial recognition, as he would have Bono from the passengers had they known at the time of his providential inter ference. Mr. Thomas Wiatt, the conductor of the train, was highly elated and gratified at this worthy specimen of Pennsylvania's youthful benevolent forethought, All honor to the mountain boy Willie Cahko. The Company cannot do leas than provide for the erheiation of this boy, and give him a start In life. A Pretnlnm on Asrindling Some time since a so called firm began the 111:11111facture of bogus greenbacks, so well executed as In escape detection under ordinary examination. They were exten sively advertised, and large quantities of them imposed upon the ignorant Southern Nose a dishonest fellow at Detroit, Villinling to be a practiral chetnist, offers to furnish, for the pittance of two dollars, the receipt ror making the erosive fluid used by the Wall street forgers in altering cheeks. Ile warrants it to extract inks or stains frolic any kind of paper, parchment, or cloth without injuring the fabric, signifi cantly adding: "Caution is given not to use it on cancelled government stamps, as it will completely remove all signs of the cancellation, leaving the stamp as new as it came from the press." The meaning of the last NOlllf`llle adillitS of no doubt. 'Phis rascally •• chemist" brazenly declares to the rascally disposed that if they will send him two dollars he will return the where with to swindle the govern mentand the pub lie generally. Ile should be nabbed at once, and punished as an accessory to crime.— \'. 3'. Com rnerrial. Shocking—.\ Man Ground up In a Mum- Mlxlng-Tub. About 2 o'clock on Tuesday morning a young man named William firiner, about twenty-four years of age, employed at the of Miller a: Smith, beyond the Reading Rolling-mill, nog with a horrid death by being ground up in the phosphate mixing,-tub. The tub is of wood, about live feet in diameter and two and a half feet high, and an upright shaft, supplied with a number of iron arms, revolves in the centre, making some twenty-five revo lutions a minute. The maehine Is situated iu the second story of the mill. Ilriner and a carpenter were engaged in cleaning it twit at the time of theaccident, and the deceased had got inside of the tub for this purpose, when by some mischance the belting was shifted from the loose pulley on which it was running, starting the shaft and in stantly killing Itriner, whose body was terribly mangled, nearly all his bones being broken. So tightly was the body wedged in the machine that it required a consider able length of time to extricate it. The matt who was with Briner at the timo did not seem to be able to give any rause for the accident, but it VMS probably the result of carelessness. Ile also narrowly escaped being caught in the machinery. The Improlenee of ti Thief. A lady living in Marseilles was returning from church on n. recent Sunday, when she heard steps behind her and felt some one take her hand and draw it under her arm. Turning round she saw a gentleman, ele gantly dressed, who was quite a stranger to her. She tried to draw away her arm, but the unknown held It firmly, and said with an air of the greatest politeness, " Madame, I ant a thief, and am closely pursued by the police. They know that lam a stranger In the town, and will never suspect me It they nee me In the company of a lady so re spectably connected as you must be." The rascal escaped. Another En(11411 Alnndnl Lady Blanche Noel, eldest daughter of the Earl of Gainshorough, has eloped and mar ried a musician, an organist—ono Mr. M ur phy, Lady Blanche Is twenty-live years of ago; Mr. Murphy, the organist, who has boon in the employment of the noble Earl, at Exton House, Rutlandshire, and who was Lady Blanche's music master, Is twenty-two. They are all Roman Catholics. They lied to London, and were married at the pretty and very fashionable Catholic chapel In Ctulogan place, Chelsea, whore the seats are inscribed with the names of a considerable portion of the Catholic peerage. —oor. N. Y. Times. A Clue to the City of Boston As a melancholy interest attaches to every incident that possibly may afford a clue to the fate of the (iffy of Boston, the following, from the log of the brig iaboatia, from Pernambuco, is worth placing on record: "March 22d, at 6 P. M., passed through a large quantity of wreck stuff, consisting of panel works, deck houses, etc., which ap peared to have been not long in the water. Also passed a boat, bottom up ; the boat was varnished. The wreck stuff extended for a distance of two miles." Regret is expressed that the captain did not make an effort to secure the boat or obtain some other proff of identity. Web N. Taylor, - -.-- A Thai cal, who cialletits seittie . f John. Reading, a Deitioti& of Pennsylvania, in: the House, was declared entitled to it by the Committee on' Medians, yesterday 4 We do not propose to discuss the correct ness of the decision of the committee, but to call attention to the fact that all or nearly all these contested election cases are deci ded in favor of the party that has a major ity on the committee. There is no use taking evidence, searching election statis tics and sending for persons and papers at the expense of the public, if it is the inten tion from the first to count in the man who belongs to the party. The committee lays itself liableby the uniformity of its deci sions to be classed with tho fraudulent election canvassers in Brooklyn.—N. Herald. Finding Money on the Can—lnteresting Deeislon Some time since a Mr. Haws found a package containing one thousand and forty five dollars on a car of the New York and Harlem railroad, which he handed to the conductor, remarking at the same time that he supposed the company was entitled to it. The conductor gave it to the company, who were unable to rind the owner. The plain tiff now believing that as no owner has been found, ho is best entitled to the money, brings suit to recover it. The company claims that according to the laws relating to the public carriers, they are responsible to the owner, and, therefore, are entitled to the money. The court held that although the defendant had no positive right to the money, the plaintiff had none at all. To be reed Only Once Commissioner Delano decides that no manufacturer of tobacco or snuff can be allowed to use, a second time, any box, bag, vessel or other enclosure for packing tobacco or snuff, however thoroughly the stamps may have been removed, it tieing clearly the Intention of the law that such packages shall be used only once. LEGAL NOTICES. ___). ------ -- bOVATE OF ELIZA NEWMAN, LATE of Manor tap., deed. Letters of admin ration on said estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted thereto are requested to snake immediate payment, and those basing claims or demands against the same will present them for settlement to the undersigmsf residing in said township. DAVID SHOP F, Administrator, ruarlei-Otw.ll Manor township, TMITATE •F JOBN BRENNEMAN, BE- D ceased,—Letters of Administration On the a:state of John Brenneman, late of Pequea township, deeeaaed, haying been granted to the subscribers:—All persons tinting claims or demands against the said estate, are hereby requested to present them to the Administra tors, and those indebted to the estate will bu required to snake payment without delay. DANIEr, fiItENNEMANI . J A t'Ull BRENNEMAN, Aunt rs., m 1110tw , l1; Residing in Proth cave twp. LINTATE or HENRY SNYDER. LATE Es of West Coeulive township, deceased.— Letters of Administration on said estate hav ing been grunted to the undersigned. all per sons indebted thereto are requested to make Immediate settlement, and those having claims or demands against the same will pre sent them without delay for settlement to the undersigned, residing: hi said township. JOHN BA RINGER, Administrator. m Ottv 13 ESTATE OF FIALIAFf 'COGAN, LATE OF Earl twp. deed. 'I he undersigned AMU tor, a p pointed ' to distribute the balance re maining In the hands of Ezra Burkholder, Trustee, appointed by the Orphans' Court of Lancaster county, to sell the real estate of said deceased to and among those legally entitled to the same, will sit for that purpose on TUES DAY, MAY loth, at o'clock A. M., In the Li brary Room of the Court limes., lit the City of Lancaster, where all persons interested in sabl distribution may attend. C. S. HOFFMAN, mar3o-Itwld Auditor. DRY GOODS D RS. GOODA AT GOLD PRICES! HAGER & BROS.. w F.:AT 6 Esru STREET, LANCASTER Are now receiving from New York, a choice welectlon of merchandise, which they offer at prices below anything known since Difyn. LADIES• DRESS GOODS—new materials. MOURNING GOODS—Lupin's manufacture. MEN'S WEAR—new style cuttings. BOY'S WEAR—plaln, plaids and stripes. LlNENS—table, sheeting and shirting. WHITE GOODS—Piques, Nainzooks, Carnbri, DOMESTICS—Chintze., Muslins, Gingham,. CARPETS. GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES. BRUSSELS, VENETIAN, COCOA MATTING INGRAIN, HEMP, CANTON MATTIN,;. FLOOR OIL CLOTHS. WINDOW SHADES. WALL PAPER:4, DECORATIONS. Doll DErts I=l ENTIRELY NEW DESItNs. WIT I ENGLISH GR A SITE {FA RE PLAIN AND DECORATED DINNER, TEA AND CHAMIIER sETTs GLASSWARE, FEATHERS. READY MADE CLOTHINU NEW SPRING STOCK, MEN'S BUSINESS SUITS MEN'S DRESS SUITS BOY'S SUITS. CLOTHING A PRIL. IS7O MIMI SPRING TRADE READY MADE CLOTHING IVanamaker Brown, THIS MONTH Opt n thL PEOPLE THE' (;P,ANDEST 0} FINE CLOTHING FOR HEX BO S, OAK 11A1.1,11.1.1 EVE]; FA:NEL. Since Inns Fall We have seegrea thy• ncu large lute adjoining us, and have erected mum them nn troll-front building, rvlual ill size to car for mer Building, making OAK HALL TWICE AS LARGE AS liEFOltl• In order to necominodate thu GREAT MASS OF PkOPLE XS" We invite all our custuf ners, with their neighbors aunt friends, to pay LIS an early vlsll. to examine our NI ANI NI OTII 1: LI) INt:S, and to Insp,t oar MA mmoTit STUCK WANAMAKER ,k BROWN, CLOTIIINO ESTABLISIIMENI Nos. ."..30, ro; Market. strtqa, and N, 1,3, 5,7, 9, II and 13 South Sixth Ph Mr d el ph ea St Send your Orders If you rant emu', BANICING ROUSES C OLUTHILt NATIONAL n.imu 11l pay Interest on deposits as follows, viz For 1 and 2 m0nth5...... ..... For 3, 4 and 5 months. For 0,7, a, 0 and 10 months For 11 and 12 months SAMUEL stli:11, Cluthler. EMITMEIII N•TICE.—TPIE co.rAnTNrnlintr which existed between Robert A. Evans, Patrick McEvoy, Henry Carpenter and Samuel 11. Reynolds, Bankers, doing business as Evans, McEvoy rt Co., In Lancaster city, hav ing been dissolved by the death of Patrick Mc- Evoy—the undersigned will continue to con duct the Banking Business as heretofore from this date under the name and style of It. A. EVANI-I,t CO. ROBERT A. EVANS, 14 ENRY CARPENTER, HAM!.. 11. REYNOLEs. Feb. 14th. DM. f 111-tfil.tw SAMUEL A. ItICIIAILDA W. E. THOMPHON RICHAIVIIIM etc THOMPSON. BANKERS AND BROKERS, DP:ALI:RA GOVPIRNMF.NT AND RAII.IIOII RUN DM °OLD, SILVF.R, AND ALL MARKETABLE REcURITIES No. 13.1 SOUTH THIRD STREET, d 1-40 PHILADELPHIA. lyw L AND WARRANTS WANTED OF WAR OF IM2 & MEXICAN W.R. FOREIGN COINS, STOCKS, GOLD, OOH' ERN MINT and other BONDS BUIJOILT and SOLD. COLLECTIONS promptly made on nil points DEPOSITS RECEIVED. No pains will bo spared to serve thelnterests of those who favor us with their business. JOHN S. RUSHTON dr CO., Bankers and Brokers No. 60 South 3rd st., PhUnd'a. aZ•lyw6l WATCHES AND JEWELRY. DIAS W.DAILY TH° • IMPORTER OF WATCHES; No. 622 Market Street, Philadelphia ' Would respectfully call attention to his new and carefully selected stock of WATCHES, JEW.ELEY, DIAMONDS, SILVER AND PLATED WARE &c. Xi-Repairing promptly attended to and neatly done. WEDNESDA CLOTHING, IN STOOK FOR I3IIrIEDIATE BUSINESS SUITS AT DRESS SUITS AT SPRING OVERCOATS, SO, E V A_ N S & 628 Market Stre sample, of Goods, and dlrevt ions for Solt SATISFACTION GUARANTE zn3o IN STOCK FOIL IMMEDIATE QUEENS IFABE, dC. TYNDALE, MIT CFITNA, GLASS AND NO. 707 CIIESTNEY Fine Paris Tlw boll stoneware In the market, wrirrE ,FRENCH crnNA, DDRODATED DINNER, TEA, nod GLASS ENGSATED UN THIS PLIBMISEti, or matehlngs, In the beta manlier. FIRST-CLANS GOODS ONLY Letters,' inquiry In regard to prices, Sc., or FOR SALE OB REIVI C.I.I"ILS FOIL SALE. ITTITEFU-1 AND From Four Weeks to Two Years orld. Aid pure blood, and out or Lbw boat Unpurtud Muck In the country. Also, Chetit nut l'oats and flails, bust quality. Apply ur write OLIVER CAT,DWELI„ mltkimir.ll Agent for U. 11. (Woman, rirlukerrillu, I'. U., Lanctutter co.. Pa. LiAnn FOR 6ALF.-4 WISh TO SELL privately the farm on which I reside, lying im both sides of Christian's creak, adjoining the lands of William Hamilton H. S. Bell, and others, three miles from Fishery Ills Depot. Augusta county, Virginia, and live front Staun ton, c,iiitaihirig THREE HUNDRED &SEVEN ACRES, about one-third of which is creek bottom. The DWELLLING is a substantial frame, contain ing nine rooms, passage above and below, with frame wing,with two good rooms and kitchen. A large double FRAME STABLE, Lath Corn Crib, Ice House, ere., a good Tumult. Eons,— The creek affords tine water power, a thou in the creak with a little repair would be very sub stantial. A large building, 11110 N Ualsi Its a dis tillery, would make a good Mill House. There is an Apple Orchard—just coming into toll bearing-50 to 75 peach trees, bearing us many mars net ant, Pears, Nectarines, ac., ilk grape roots set out last Spring, a few old vines ()ear lug. The largo amount of alluvial bottom, convenience to market, schools, churela a, Lto., maks it desirable property. It will be sold a whole ur divided as parties may wish, wish ing to make a speedy sale, a bargain map be had if application is made Mlll - 23-31,±1 JUiiN U. GUTHRIE. - I) IT B C MALE OF A FIRST-CLAMS 1 FREDERICK' COUNTY FARM.—lly ,ir tue of a decree of the Circuit Court for Fred erick county, sitting as a Court of Equity, the undersigned, as Trustee, will sell at public sale, at the City Hotel, In Frederick city, on FRI DAY, the 6th day of APRIL, Is7o, at 2 o'clock, I'. M., the Farm now occupied by Dr. J. O. tii b- Wn, being part of the real estate of Dr. William aiters, deceased, • , CONTAINIYO 2'M ACHES, more or less, and all under cultivation, laid off in eight fields, all enclosed with excellent fencing. The Improvements consist of a two-story STONE DWELLING HOUSE, con taining nine rooms, and Kitelmn attached, with a first-rate celler under the dwelling house and kitchen; • Tenant House near the mansion, containing five rooms; 2 Dairies, 1 for summer and the other for winter; large Stone Switzer Barn, with Stabling under the whole, capable of stabling 12 horses and 12 cat tle; a double Corn House, capable of stur!ng 300 barrels of Corn, with Granary above it to store 1500 bushels of grain ; Wagon Shed largo enough to accommodate two wagons and other vehicles; excellent Hog Pen, with Crib above it to hold 75 barrels of corn; fine Carriage House, large enough to accommodate 2 car riages; a Smoke House. and a new black smith Shop, together with all other outbuild ings, and all in excellent order. The fencing on the entire Farm is in good order, n great part of it having been recently made. There Is n Well of good water within six yards of the kitchen, and • large and never-failing Spring near the barn yard, and running water Inure than sufficient to supply the stock of the entire harm; a large portion of the ground has been broken up for the spring crop. An Orchard of choice Fruit, selected with great care by Or. Waters during his life time. Also A Mountain Lot, containing MEM more or less, well covered with young and thriving timber and from Willull the Farm is supplied with wood, lying within two miles of the farm. The farm Is situated about 2 ', North-west of Frederick, and there is an excellent turnpike leading from Frederick city to the farm; this is certainly (me of the best and most productive farms in the neigh borhood of Frederick city, in the highest state of cultivation, And in the very best condition, In eery - respect; its nearness to the Frederick city market where eery description of pro duce commands the highest prier, renders It the most desirable of any farm that has bet, offered for sale fur many years. - - Terms of sale as prescribed by the Court (Me third cash on the ratification of tho sale, balance In two equal payments at one and two Tears, with interest to be secured so his Sat!, Mellon of the undersigned. Persons desirous of !weals . the property con do so by calling on the Trustee, ret.iditm 11l Frederlek City, or on Dr, J. U. liaison, re:M ing on the promises. liltig - LEY KOONTZ, marla-tanrll Trust, 0. rlllrit TRIIIVUSAIVR ACRES OF YALTA IILE AND HIGHLY IMPROVED LAND. lying on Ronuake River, fu the Courtly of Mecklenburg, Virginia, fur Sale.—ln pursuance of a decree 01 the United States Circuit Court, for the District of Virginia, In the cause styled 11askervIll's Assignee vs. Alexander aria oth ers, the undersigned trustees sit mexanth•r, Sr., will sell be oodles eh the premises, the Large and Valuable Plantation known as is II BEND, an the 12TII LAY OF APRIL 1570, hit.. Iniies thShlitt 1 . 1,111 hnyrholl, the county sent, containing twenty-one hundred andthirty-four acres: lour hundred and of which In rich 1111UVIIII river buttons, in Is compact Ludy - , and in cultivation. The Improvements are eXeellellt, and in style and extent such nc are rarely beet] its the country. The mansion house is large and commodious, built of wood, with fifteen rusts situated In a beautiful grove of forest Treed, with a simeious lawn in front, set with shrub bery. The garden is tastefully laid off and contains five acre:A t The plantation has ap purtenant to It a ferry franchise, worth per annum seven or eight hundred dollars; and, also, another settlement, whiten, with a moder ate expenditure in repairs, may be made a very comfortable resldenre. And on the SIIIIIO day they will sell another farm adjoining North Bend, known as - CARTER'S PLACE," 4saltalnlng four hundred and acrOS. Willi nil the buildings usual 01l a farm of t his . . tot the 13TH DAY OF APRIL, 1 , 70, thee will sell, on the premises, two other btrge owl valu able iilautatlons, viz : SALEM, A well Improved place, containing bar limn sand 11111 i nine and thro-fourthslteres two hundred and twenty-seven of witieh are low grounds nil the river, of superior quality, two and a half miles below North Bond; and PARE FOREST, The beautiful reslilmire of Mr. Alexander, iiolllllinlng thlrtven hundred and stiventy-,lx aeries; two bond red and twenty-three of loin grounds, on the river below Saban :mil adjoin ing it. rile AiallSiOn 111,11,. Iv blllit Or and the sparlons ground , around It are beauti fully laid off and extemlvely Improved. These phusis el. be reached from Itisintilie Station, on the Richmond and Danville rail road, by it daily line of lineks to florid:on, or from Clark,llle .Itinet lon, on the Raleigh and Boston railroad, fourteen finites ill-dant from the Nort II Rend Estate. TEugs—tine-third of the purrhase, nmney will be required to be paid In hand on the day of side; IMO the residue lu three 111 , 1:111111,11, at six, im - rive mot eightisin taunt hs—bnails hearing Interest {nun Ihe day of sale—the title will be retained as nertirtly fur Il e e deferred paymets. fiiir further par tfrulars apply to of Illy TI I IV OA' ER, It. BASK ERVII.I„ Truutoos for M. Alexander, Sr Nlytitoll, 1.)7". MiliMNlAll CIEMZEM The Nelson county Farming, ()rope, Merton- Irra and Mercantile (Incorporated) Company have opened an office on their farm, 7 Mites northeast of Nelson Court House, where the President or Clerk• of I he' Company rutty be found at all times. They solicit correspoodenee with persons desirous to purchase or rent lands In Neisi,ll or adjacent counties. Address the President at Nelson Court Mouse, and eorres pondents will be promptly atten d ed to, he is a practical man, with large experience, Is a law yer of 30 years practice, still practicing, and was a land trader before the war. lie Is well arrainted with all the lands In Nelson and ad Wiling country, end will Investigate the tit e to all lands we 'say sell. Nelson county will compare favorably for original fertility of sell with any county in Virginia Is perhaps the most rolling of any county east tufthc Blue ltidge. The valleys and net lands not surpass ed tip any In the State for farming and plant lug purposes, and the south, southwest and southeastern slopes of her mountains and hills, It Is thought, is unsurpassed in any part of the world for the quantity and excellent.) , of the forest (drape. And the abundance of pure spring Water that abounds In every section of the courtly togeth er with the Immense water power that Is capa ble of driving any amount of machinery that may be desired for the roost extensive mauu fcturing companies, and last though not Icnsti wo hove perhaps the most salubrious climate In the world. We have at least 100,000 acres of land In lots and tracts from one acre to 1,1552 acres, ranging from 82 to $5O per acre. We have ono tract of 10,000 acres of Mountain land for sale. Persons desiring to purchase, are respect fully holicited to open correspondence with us, ALEX. FITZPATRICK, President. REFERENCES Judges Win. J. Robertson, Watson Rives, Sherry, Slineklefeford Fultz, the Faculty of the University of Virginia, the bar of .Nelson exam ty, and Alluirrnarle. ALEX. FITUATRICK jetblya - M Preoldent. A DDII3ON ARCHITECT, G 33 WALNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA PLANS, DESIGNS, PERSPECTIVE VIEWS, SPECIFICATIONS{ AND WORK ING DRAWINGS. For Cottagos, Farm Houses, Villas, Court Housea,'Halla tThurohea. School Howse& IsLtENSIEE itlX{{ll3. lyw inll-9 APRIL ,6 1 CLOTHU"G, USE OR MADE TO MEASURE. $l4, $l6, US, $2O, & $25. 820, 825, $3O, $35, 840, ss, $lO, $l2, $l5, AND $2O. L E A C H, et, Philadelphia, Measurement sent post free on application. ED OR CASH REFUNDED. L'SE OR MADE TO MEASURE. 3myr QUEENSWAXE, fC CHELL &. WOLF, EARTHENWARE, SITIT.EET, PIIILADffLPTIIA, ian Granite, sold at tho prices of ordinary goods In nit the bust shnpea and style. TOILET SETS In arena :vivriely AND CIS DISCO RATED either In full „•I goods, promptly answered RAILROAD BONDS T lt E ONUS lIP THE Chicago, Dau ilk and 1' lac vanes RAILROAD CO. I=l EE Fut:Nl) 'fu BE THE (211EA.1'ES1' YET I ,FI , I , .I:EDIu TII 1;1.10 I. TILE 111('11 COUNTRY THEAI , TEA VERSES, wrril 'Ts Annicui:ry RAI, AND mi NEPAL REsOCECES. 11. THE CASII BSCET KEP TI l E FIAT, STUCK. 111. THE EXCELLENCE Tun FIFTY FIVE MILEs ALREADY BUILT, A:10 ITS FULL Eg I: 11']f ENT. IV. THE PLANS COMPLETED AND MoNET EXPENDED Fun VIU , )I's FIN ISHING OF TILE LINE IN THE sPRINO. V. THE EXCESsIVE EARNIN , is Ac CHILE vitum nix Co.)IPLE:I'IoN ol."11IE WHOLE LINE. VI. THE A.MPLE SINKING FIND lull THE CERTAIN :111.mEmrrl ,, N uF HE BuN D. 63. VII. THE VERY LIBERAL INTEItEsT RUNNING OVER A TERM oF Finery VIII. THE sEcUItITY AFF ,, RDEDIS7 REGISTRY. IX. THE MORTGAGE COVERING THE ENrIHE no.vu, EQuIrmENT, riLAN cmsEs, AND ALL PIUiI'ERTT, rnEsENT AND FUTURE INDEED, THE sEruitin' OF TWICE THE AMOUNT OF HoNDs IS SUED. Y. THE LOW CURRF.NUT ERD'II THEY ARE NOW OFFERED AT. • (his 1.1 verified in detail in the Oomph* pamphlet, which ran be had of us. We A'S(,) ll' these Bonds lobe gond, end 11, 01 , 111 . (he character and capacity of (he Company's csti mates can be implicitly rCiiVII upon le give thew Bonds the highest standard. 11 - e the fon frert!, and fully recommend them. W. BAILEY, LANG b CO., Merchants, No. 54 St., N NV York, Agents for the sale of the Bonds. Pamphlet. and full Information may alneil of 1 - n7-211,1,1.w REED, MeGRANN CO., Specil Agent, for the sale of the Bonds. EIRE S RA CE COLUMBIA INSURANCE COMPAN Y JAN LiAltV Ist, MI!. CAPITAL AND ASSETS, Siiii9,lol 15. ' This Company continues to Insure Itrild lugs,pferelsnnil lsr, and other property, nit:dust loss unit thunatte by tire, on tit. inutinti plan , either fur u rash proud Lint or premium NINTH ANNUAL ItF.P(/lIT. CA prcAl. AND INCI/NE. Ana't of preminto notes, ,59. - 14,r,i1 la Lea,, amount expired........ 1917,7913 19 3 iii.;,731 Cash revel pts less commissions in '0 67,:1.11 1)1 Loans Due from agents arid others 3,59 . 2 02 Assessment No. V, let l'91). 21,00 U IN MEMO Losses and expensespaid In 1511.4.. 1' 2 1 71,111 12 Losses itdj lISt 1,1, nut 1,710 t,7 Balance of Capital and Assets, Fel/. 1, 10,9 11G11,101 752,077 A. S. riItEEN, Prehldent. IiKONGE YOUNG, Jr., Seeretary. M. M. Snttek I,Ln,Treasu re, DIRECTuRS: R. T. Ryon, Will lant Patton, John Fundrieh, M. M. St tackier, Minich, Go, Young, Jr., Sarni F. Eberlein, Nicholas McDonald, A Inca S. rc,ll, John B. Buchman, Hiram Wilson, Robert. Crane. For inelltion, and other particulars spply to fil,t, HERR ,c E, Real Estate, Collect lon and Insurance Agents, Nu. 3 North Duke street. Lancaster, l'a. - - BONDS. uNiTED STATE% 1301 - S Boeawr Am• Excii.kNotAr • MoST I.IIIEICAL GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLO At Market IMfes. COUPONS CASHED. Pacific R. H. Bonds Bought & Sold. STOCKS Ilotight and Sold on Commis sion only. Aceounts d I.od Inlcrcst a110,..1 dolly 1.1,11(.4 s chock. DE lIIVEN , BRO., 40 Smith Sd hdreet, Philadelphia. 10(1:2 !phew 211 CS I C.. 1 i INS TR UMEN TS. __,- - - - .._ . .. •- = : Vil 0 0 D IV ARD's WIIIILESALE ti RETAIL MUSIC `TORE. NO. '22 WEST KING' STRE ET Hallos, t). - 141,11,, ' Mel.sieons, Violins, 1 V 10l in Bows, Well° linsti, Avel,rdtms, I Flutl mu:, ii:unvrtlna., Tainlmrlins, I Witars, I Banjos, Flugvolels, flarntoniv,ts, Its, Drums, Fifes, Flutes, Triangleg. Tuning Forks, Pitch Pipes. Mu•de Doses, Musty Po Music Hooks, Piano and Melodeon Covers Piano Inel if rlu cleon Stools; Strings vigil kinds; Sheet Musk' Music Books, Musk. tapers uud evury doserlp floss of Musical Merehandlse. MIME ALL Onmucs tilled promptly at t! omml Whtdrsale and Retail Priem, and .4,ATISA'A(*- T.1 ,, N (IUARINTEED. . . /hi-Tuning and Repotting promptly attend ed to. A. Wt W1)01)W - ARD, ', 2-t Ma," No. Z 2 Went King St., Lancaster. ROOFING SLATE Irg t i t . t i t 7. 4 l ' er Pi nl i tr 'A tt undersigned t i tt . t E al t E o n hand n full supply of Roollug Slate for sale at Red ttee4l Prlcee. Alen,an extra LIIT Itta/FI NO SLATE, Intended M for shill on eh Ingle roof, Employing the very best slaters all work In warranted to he eseented In the best manner. Builders and others will Mid It to their Inter est to examine tie samples at Ilk Asrleali oral and Seed Witreroonk, No. ZS East king street, Lancaster, Pa., 2 doors west of the Court !louse. We have n an the Asbestos linoflOg for bit rook, or set ore slate and shingles cannot he used. it le ha nuperior tc Plastic, or Gravel Roofing doelt-Irt.l,tw El) UCA T lONA 11 rrin: HILL BOARD As EsoList!, CLASSICAL, MATHEMATI CAL, SCIENTIFIC AND ARTISTIC.: INSTITUTION, FOR YOUNG MEN AND EOM! Al Pottstown, Montgomery County, The First Term of the nineteenth Annual Session will commence on WEDNEHDAY, the Bth day of SEPTEMBER, next. Pupils received at any time. For Circulars address, REV. GEC. F. :KILLER, A. M. Principal. • REV. nltH.—Molgs,;offer, Mann, Kranth, Muldenberg, Shover, Hatter, stork, Conrad, Bomberger, Wylie, kiterret, uryhy, Crulkahanka, C. V. C. Huns.—Judge Ludlow Leonard Myers, M. Rum mel Thayer, Ben :X. Bower, Jacob S. Yost, Illeater Clymer, John Kllllnger, etc. ESQl3.—Jamcs K. Caldwell, C. xi. Grove, T. C. Wood Harvey Bancroft, Theodore U. Botr, C. F. Norton, L Mown, B. °roc, Fry, t ier & Darr, Charles Wannomaahcr James Kent. Santee & Ob.. etc, _ SCIUIEFFER, IfOLESALE AND RETAIL SADDLERY NOS. 1 AND 2 FAST KING STRIIET an le LANCASTER, PA.! tfw AGRICULTURAL FIELD AND GAMMEN SEEDS LAND ?LASTER, BONE DUST, DRAIN AND WATER PIPE, REAPERS, THRESHING MACHINES, PLOWS, HARROWS, STRAW CUTTEBS ROPES, PULLEYS, BELTING, SCALES, PLOW AND REAPER CASTINGS, 2fo. 9.8 EAST ELYO STREET, LANCASTER feb 9 3mw W. D. SPRECHER. E ARLY ROSE POTATOES, WHITE NORWAY AND CELEBRATED SCR PRISE AND NEW BRUNSWICK OATS NO. 'ti EAST RING STREET W. D. SPRF.CHER B ()WEIR'S COMPLETE MANURE, Saper.Pboaphate of Lime, Ammonia and 11=2 A PERFECT FERTILIZER FOR ALL CROPS On account of the reduced cost of Raw Mater ials, I Inn enabled to sell •• Complete numb," at a lower price, and by the aid of new machinery, it Is Improved In condition, also in quality, k Warranted/ reefrom adafteedf O WER, ion.) HENRY B Manufacturing Chemist, (Tray's Ferry Road, Philadelphia. This Manure contains nil the elements of plant food In a Soluble form. containing I. well, Mod for giving lasting fertility to the soil. Expel - len, In the nee or c. , mph.to Manure by the hest farmers of Pennnylvanla, New Jer sey, Delaware, Maryland, and of the New Eng land Stales, running through a period of throro years trial, has resulted tin contlriffing It to ho the best Fertiliser nrra• rfferedf, .sale. DIXON, co I=l Pdl LLIA)I REYNOLDS, au , 0-'23 B ♦ u H.\Vr BO\ I; SUPEII PHOSPHITE OF LIU. MIME MARK Sri I " FARMERS ! ll= Add to the Ferlility or Your Moll By u.ll(•l,,its u d 1.:€•,14/11110al IllotIt• M.\ • • . . TIII . FIItST N. HEAVIER (OtAIN. MlMll=iiiMil Efif I , ver SI.TTEEN yrnr, ,)( orn•lntit a :111 Crtll., 1,1 . 0,•11 !lull 1111110's Itar l'1.4”.1)11111.• ti lay boolopelitlotl tllll,l loy I•zmuct, h- I huhig I 114 prore.i (slid Tr nt . ..nit.. Lx .I,4ll,:ltur:tl BIUG II & 9O', El=l 'rime ,r), A rt.,,tre pAcirec GTANO CAPITAL, 'l,ouo,uou JOHN S. REESE & CO GENERAL AGEN'N„ OFFICES I2:' Sol fth Delawer n• .1 rrstite Pleilndr•lphirr 10 So rith st rcct /.uUi,nuw SOLD LE PACIFIC G U 1L N 0 . N FEHTILIZEIt INTIti.I , I•CrI/ 'l'u Tifli FAitmEits oPriir. )111.1 , 1.1.: AND ,0)("111- EItNSTA'rEs lIAS,IIVEN NI,q;Ew.:NERAT, ANDUNIF(MNISATI,F.V"I'Ii)N N 'NHS THE TRADE IN IT STEADII.T IY- I:itE.\SEI)L'Y'III.TIIEC.NsUNIIN'D,N NI,NV UIIVC'i' ENTIRE (I,l•NTity FAR EXCEEDS THAT 4ft' ANY FER TILIZER. THE LARGE CAPITAL INNHINT,I , IN ITS pip)p"ri. , :v AFFt , iths GI.*AIt.‘NTEEI , E rt,NTINI;F:D ExcEl.- TENcE. THE ci,NIPANY HAN A FAR lIREATER INTEREST NT HE I'ERNIA NENI!E,,FITsTRARE'III.‘N.\ NT NI'MRER CHtisI'MERSCAN HAVE: HENCE IT Is THE HIGHEST INTFIIF:STUF THE NY 'D) pt - 'r THF.: REST F - Elcrit.rzrit INTk) NI.IIt.NET,THAT THEIR UN l'sl'Al, AIDED 'FITE fiE,TIE.NTIFIL ABILITVCAN PIN MEMO ,; ( • \ N,, lIT 111 I. AGENTS or '1•11F. , ' , /,d1'.% NY d'T N PENNSVINANI. , THE sui"rnEicN lIT .1011 S S. REESF, & Co., General Agents for the Company. f.• 1,16 Grmv7 MEDICA PECTORAL CURES I'OEIJ 3FL PRIM; NIX P ECIO RA L REs COUGH P tENI.N. PECTORAL CEIL ES COL AIM rs~IT y~4. •:i:- TY, Piot:nix Pvelnrirfl will c.ro 11.1 u iilhhhhen of :toe Tuff...PAT and ,fick 1:011141111, A.stlinnt, Lirnchltif, Catarrh ! eoro 'flirfit, Hoarsen..., Whooping Conon, and PrLittfma wt . CffNsi 511 . 1 . 11,N. Is prrlntrrd toy Dr. Levi ilferholtr, of Plills delphia, :Ohl formerly ifi Phwnizville, Pa., and although if.liffa only tel oftrred for Yv eye:kr., slurs than one Million !futile, havy already lwrlf sold, and the drYnand for It is Inerrasing ev - ery day. Many of the }trial! Drugghffs if!!! It in lots rff five grubs. and not it fur: of tho Country Storrkerprr. try our gross at It lino.. Nearly every one that has v•rr 101,1 It trsl.ltiv. to Its popularity, lull nrarly all who hav• used 11. hear Intl hone to Ifs wondrrnil power l• curing Cough. We are efonflflonl that there of inf known sirdlf•lfte of nuch great value to the community 11,11..1'1141.111x feel oral. P. has run!!l rm...., of the lhost 'adornl and fli•trrssing It ins gleesl 111,:illt rt•lo.f In spf.ll4 of ,olgh- Ing fl hits instantly sloppoil tho paroxyblit WlMoping and grratily 1,1,1 11, duration. It has curial Crimp In a trw Tillnutris. l'inlsurnpl lon has I cavil by 11, whore all (Jt her remedies hail failed to ill, gond. lass been cured by it. In Ti ntrigle Many rilYhi , iallS rrr.nnrnr r 1. 1 ,1 It, and "I bees use It Illiimselvois and aihninist ye It lu their gruel lee, while "(hers ininiise It because It takes away their business. We rononlitiond It 11/ our roadors and for fur thrrparlloular,, wo , uld ref, to our clroulat around I lin hot( i t who V you Wiii y llnd 1111,11e1 . - “us nortlllnat , al von by r;orsons who humus,ll It Is so pleasant to I too , hot rhildrrn rry lor II In a strength at the same I irn enws,h• The proprietor of this medicine hay su much confidence lit Its curntive powers from the tes timony of thousands trim have t0.e.1 it tint t money sell! be refunded to any purchwsor who Is !Mt satisfied With the elTect.f. It is so elleap that all eau buy it. f 'Price 25 I' ents, Large inalles SI. It Id prepared by LEVI IiIIF:TUIIII.TZEN., ..‘l . . D., WIIOI.I,II.II.X7I,IfUGUIST, No. 1.r:l North Third t4treet Philadelphia. imilt N. 11.—If year nearcHt. Drugglnt 011-41 •:keep er does not. have This medlelne ask l to aet IL for yOll, and do not let him put . is ‘fltil XtOile oth.•r proparat Inn 1114,11..11e more money on It : but go Jr send fit I ~0,,,, X 11,11• where you know it 1,4 kept, I to Dr. Oberhollz.er. Hold A. 11,•1ifitslt. Pnrry, I.ong, lir. Ellinak,r, J. r'. Lung Hon, A. Lovill.r, Mr'. MH4,runl,k, tool W. Cl. Druggists, 1.114,10,, un,l neurly rrrn Drug gist awl illorvltm.per In I.uncust,rrounty. tive BOOTS AND SHOES WILLIAM Mn.L}:u•N BOOT AND SHOE STOUT• \VEST K N( ; STREET, LAN L.A.. n/ the (1,,r 10a, and Wen • Ki ;11rerls,and Senzrly f far :lir "King 0/ Proseia The subscriber hereby notllles the public tha he has always on hand a large assortment of 110()TH AND 81101.1.4, haters °fall kinds and sizes, for Men and Chil dren, which he null at the lowest ete,ll prices. Having n long experience In the busi ness, he hopes to be aide to hllthiry the Wish., of his fellow-citizens who tnay favor him with a call. After four years services In the army ho has returned to civil life and hopes by et rlet atten dee to business to merit a share of public. pat ronage. . .rW Customer Work of all hinds p.lomptlyat ended to. ou-i - - - PARLON'S'!" INDIGO 111.11 IE LS TUE cheapest:and best urt 'vie In Ow !narks! for L . I.TEI NG CLOTHES. _.__ _.... —. It does not contain any acid. It will not Injure the driest fabric. It is put up at WILTBEItti ER'S BRUCI STORE, No. 243 North SECOND Street, PHIL ADELPHIA, and for sale by most of the Ulm- s- ClElts end llituaOlsis. A A TEAR AND EXPENREOII.—.TO Thu genuine has both the and WILT- S 6 2_,OUP agents to sell the celebrated WI L . 4 N ISEN INC/ DIACILINESi. The best mashine nanowies names on the label ; all others are COUNTERFEIT. In the world. Stitch alike or. both :Was ONE BARLOW'S BLUE will color more water Mixt:tura WITHOUT 111cdcair. For further par than, four times the same weight of indigo. Mettler*, address 95 N. 9th St„, Philadelphia, Pa. apr 25, I iltai ;tyw-'• f V-&umell MISCELLA.NEOUS WAN CUBED OF DEAFNESS AND CA- T HIM Mil by a simple remedy and will li T \ e receipt free. MILS. M. C. LEGGETT, mil- w lloboken, N. J. Trur ?MOORE dt CO'S OVAL STEEL EN. ORAN INGH, Itt NIISSAUst., N. Y. Any body can Hell them. Cheap. {Sell fast. Pay handsomely. Scud for New Circular. In3l-lw AGREAT CHANCE FOR AGENTS ! $75 to $2OO per month. We want to employ a good agent In every County In the Lt. S. on commission or salary .to Introduce our World Renowned Potent White Wire Clothes Lines; will last a hundred years. If you want profitable and pleasant employment, address It. S. BUSH ,tCO., Manufacturers, 75 William at., New York, or Pi Dearborn at., Chicago. THE NEW ARTICLE OF FOOD For twenty-lee cents you con buy of your Druggist or Grocer a package of Sea Moms Furine, ruanursetur,,l from pure I rlsh Moss or Carragren, wltlett will mulct , sixteen quarts of 13Inne ntni n like quantity of Puthtlngn fa by far the ehenpert, healthlemt ael moat I I=ll IMO SEA MOSS FAMINE CO., PLANTATION BITTERS. This Nvontivrlld voiscletblo reslornllve I% I ultect-ttm.ll, of the fechle :Ana Jrbllltate t. .\ 1..n1e and eerdlal firt lho aged and litagnid It has 110 01111111111111111 g stomarltlvs. As a rrai I=l are egpeelally sallJeet, It In aupermaling ever) other stitittiltant. to tal ellthttlem, tropleal tomporolo or frigid, II arts irons Peii llt•Iii ovor rot•io,, or ,11,...nict . 11.11:MI111i, II THE GREAT MEDICAL I/DWI/EMI% I MEEM=I I3if MORE THIN 509,000 PERSONS I11 , 1:i)11,”) . Cririit 'l'laey rt ar *yell 11, 111,,, I 111. prctilinr nct Inv tt•l 11,11vorrill 11;4,111 lo LooLo-- I lon. or I ollmono,t lon of tho to• Visceral FOR VET; LE con P I'VE'S. whet h, ..r t. 1.1, twirrit•tt Hi I ht•h. Itru.ottutllll.t,..l ttr I ho turn mut, I itt,. have tut ...putt. C ti .1.. lIII= Nl.le I,i Poor Runt, Vflabmltey, Proof ' Mitirit, !Old ftefmied I.lottc.rr, ~ .5., 0 ,11,•,1 ploto•e• 111•• taste ,•,111• 11.1 1,. , 1 tliol,l, on 10 drUllke11111•PIN !Intl ruin, Jull 11, a lilt 111,01011, , , 1111,411. 11,11,1 111, [lnd hints of' California, free front nil Alettholle Thry 111 i• (11.•17rertl Itlond Ptirliterllllll/1.1fe4/11 . 1om Principle,:. 1,1,1,4 . 1 Itcnovikl, , rnna ~1 cnrrying la all and 111,• 1,1.0 11,1) 11,111,10 ...lino, N., per.ou ran 101, I In•se HMI, • 1111,1 rrinalu iiPleg.ittl w.•ll. 8100 will he gist, far any Incurable cos.., iota lard the hones are not .',I by 113111 eral poisons or oilier 1113,115, tint 011 3 vilnl oi - pins N1:13331i 3 11 111 3 ) 3 ,111 the point 111 retialr. For Iminornmolory 'lntl l'hroole Itheo rnothon, 'lntl DyNipepoln. or Judi- Pleonllleol, 11.111 Inter .of glen( Fe, ern, IHsewoot of the !Hood. Liver, filth...y.6, nod Illochtler, Ilo , so III?. lero have been 11133 , 1 5113 3 1 3 1 3 ,4111. Noel, TH..- cameo are rinsed lie !'it lailett HI I, which I. getiernily prl.dtc•cll derangement it the Orgnrot. Clean) , the Vitiated Blood 5e111 3 ,11,1 3 1 . and Its Iniptiril ire hiii , dlnn through the In Pimple.. Kropilmci SIM,/ 1'11,11 , 011 when yu and obstructed mid eltigalell lit ila• velite mien(l , l` II IS 14,111, your lut•I tell you when. Keep the blood lilt, anal the 11,11111..1 Mt. 51.•11, will fallow. I'l N, anal other lurking In the syidelo of P. ninny thoneantle, are ettect 11 • ally dint rivet I mid removed. hu Ilillotis, Itew l lent, anti Intermittent Pi-v -ers. These Itll hers 1111,• nir equal. F., 11111 Ill• noel 14.11,1 read earenilly t la' clriallar around viten lad I le, printed In tour latittitagea, 1 . :m.01,410K 1 3 - man, I , rencliltnit Spaniel, J. \VALK tat, Proprietor, di! Commerce SI., N. V. 11. \1.'1111N:\ 1.11 LC: rll., Nicl 1 rid Anetilit, San Fram.in... , 111111 Nit fa 111 3 311 13 3, L 111163111111, Il1111:12111131311 '33131• 1111•1 3 1 • 1• :it., N. Y. f 1911= 11 I IL I. I: T KNITTING MACHINE FOR FA MI IA -31 mph., rhenil, I:Nt'rm s.ltl i ENTS kk A NTF .\ HINKLEY i:Nrrrix(; I N (1 , ., IttLl Me., Itr , a.lwny, N. V. f I 1-:nn viANTEn TO SELL 91:1_•', YEARS IN \VALI, STIIEET II Innl‘l , , St •- n,t WnII tilcelt • l , ol t•n, the I - Invoulalllie. In iold, 5t..104, t'., ‘Vt,lllllll Sw•volninn.., 1.111 ill thlti 1.. grnnl ftd, nl,l,l4ll.l,stcrlnus, wolo linnL7lnv. ti•hk.f focus, Pnrlntil. I VtLinlerl)lll, 11,11, 11m1111. .I r., and ',luny nilinn4, Engrnv 11,4, 1011, :knit , 4 1.1.111“1,1,1, Oen rria.oeu Ift , A, ire, 5.11 , 1 lor t'lrvidurs to I,lti I Iv sl.. nll -11 l Ilnrt rnrcl, Conn. 110 CONAUTIPTI VER. I Pr, m 1 811 y toy clutightor wtts r• - storotl to Itt ;dill 1,3 1,110,11, 1111,11, atiout .10 . Th.. r :,, 11•,11,, , Itt•no•nt Jrcr. nll7 -1W REV BEN I:. 11 , ll' NSI,t,W, Slot . l,totl nt., ltrooklytt, [Atm; Isl/Lotl. !nAclic con n clrAnr(ar. lialr 4,r 1.. ant It, ..r lirmvn. llroTitallls primm. Any Ity mall 1., $.l. Arldr. ,, API ACM' l'llllll ,p1111,411,•Ikl, ll~n In In o „,„ It c..rn 1.1c11111...f y.ltir In u‘.• ..r II IL llarlll . 11104.•. Arl.lt.••s (.117.1w r. N0.:21 Vultotivlllo, N. V. LIFE IN UtItAII• I): 1 mysTERIE.- OF ),101Z,MoNISM, Ily J. I,ILI 10•1,1,rt,r. 111:1.v,; 1:.l' 7'111:11: SI , :c1el:1 1;11•1;1',CEli cli . l.lf Es. Wit It n lullnnl 11101..1111e liktory 103g1.- Illy n •II lir N1 , 0100:1 • trool „right tio. prt.svot flow. IS. 1,1.1.11 works 011 1 li.• )1.0 . 11101,10 , 1)1 . 111 , 4 1•!11•111atell, (111:01 ,•:0" " 1100 i «. 011111110, 33 11 1•,0,1V10gM. 0 , 01 . A, ;ENT's WANTEI 0. ticnol for lirculicrollll , l n..00r ti•rlon 1l01:1 diowrlpl lon of work. A , l.lre , s NATIONAL PI:III.ICATIUN (IL adelph la, I'll. 11111-1," T EI.I.S' C.tltl3ol.l . ("r,trif.rrn. r iniii•li study and nr lruuuC 111,.11- vaII,III 1. 1,1 the tgiialltliis of (:.\I:- 1(111.11'ACID, lir. NViills I, urrnui4 nnllonwlthot hoer itrtlciles In 1, , • form of Is Tal,lll, n Mll,oolllr for ill pilluum:vy iiisi•asi.s. Tit Esi.; .-1111.1.. - Is aro it N( /t 0: CrleE for all ilisiusuil of the I:ESPIIe.I TM/ Y .Iw.! ° vs .so I 7111111 A '101,1 , , 'VW CI% 1 , 11 . 17 I 1.,*1.1, Axil ix .1. TA le It 11, • ulna o nllere.,4l/1 rr,ur, ly Ih.r I: Wiley f1J111 , 111114.K l'rit•iiLiCVllln per Selit lop Mall 1tp..11 reuelptgel I,V .11111 N (4. h".).:r.i. , a;0, .v., Niiw York, isiilii.Ngi•tit for the United litittes. ATTO R N E IS-A T- A W xiwoloratil, giving ;hat. It ttlltlys the J. W. 1-*. Nwir"r, No. 13 North Dolce nt.. Lltneartor 41'. I{ READY, No. LI East King ntr..et, -dl floor, over SkUrn NVW Store. EDGAR C. REED, No. Ili Noll h Duke nt., I,nnenxt, 11:1=11! FRED. M. p r urn, No. 5 sfmt h Uula• nt., I.ancw.ter A. J. NA A DEIAAO N. No. 1n East Ring street, Lanett:it, N. H. PRICE. Court A FPIIue , WI , 11 of Court I [mime, Lnncnnti•r Wn. LEAM A N, No. 5 North Duke mt.., f,n,nramter A. J. No. to Ertrl Orunv RI., LI:11101M vr, 11. M. Lititramter c•olity, Pa D. W. PATTIIItaO:I. Jinn ronuard liln ofltreto MR Rn.nt. PC Ing SIMON P. E 1 T. ATTMINIT•AT - LAW, OFFICE WITH N. ICI.I.MAK PAS, Paw., DUKE: d'lliF.l7, lIANIPASTAIt. PA. lywUle Mew. Potter. James F. IMpe. 0. C. Washburn. E,/a•, N. Worrell, George Polio, THOMAS POTTER, RON Q . CO., XANUVACTIIIIISM Or OIL CLOTHS AND WINDOW HADES, Floor OILCLOTHS; Enamelled and Ducks, Table OIL CLOTHS; Mahogany, Rosewood, Oak and Marble OIL CLOTIIS; Oil rho, and Clarriaga• Carpets. Plain SHADES and Shading, Plain nod Fancy 0 ILT SHADES and Cords, Tassuls and F.LrrUltEki of all kinds. vvl I 418 .41.1W11 STREET, mom, Fifth street, PIIILADELPHIA. No. am COlllllll,lll, Iln OIL CLOTHS', ACC
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers