THE FEW DIOCESE. Dr. Howe Elected Bishop of Central Pennsylvania. The Primary Convention of the Diocese of Pennsylvania, Protestant Episcopal Church, re-assembled in St. Stephen's Churc,h, Harrisburg, at 9 o'clock, Thurs day morning, Bishop Stevens, presiding. The Bishop gave his consent in writing to the formation of the new diocese of Cen tral Pennsylvania; and likewise in writ ing, elected to remain the diocesan of the diocese of Pennsylvania, comprising Phil adelphia, Montgomery, Chester, Delaware and Bucks. The Bishop further said that this duty finished, he could not part with his dear brethren of the old diocese of Pennsylva nia, who had so long been under his charge without the deepest emotions. Rev. Mr. Marple hero moved that the whole Convention rise. The Bishop said promptly that he hoped they would not rise. Ile :proceeded, by saying that in a few weeks it would be ten years since God placed him over these dear people, in Christ) Since then he had been glad to hod two Dioceses carved out of the old. And now he gave them up into the charge of some one, he then knew not whom, he trusted to lead them to the green pastures and still waters of God's holy truth. Looking upon their faces and re calling his recollections of the past, fettling that he should never again be permitted to traverse the mountains and valleys, and highways mid byways of Iris old Diocese, he proposed to Itjave them 110 W with the emotions of deepest sadness. lie had en joyed the company of his old Diocesans and had regarded them with the warmest affec tion, Ile thanked them from tire bottom of his heart for all the affectionate kindness I had shown hint when ho perhaps 'night (Well have erred in judgment, and when Gull knew !reliever intentionally did wrong. For:all this he thanked them, dear brethren, front the verx depths ()I' his heart, and Ile sincerely trusted, that. as 1111 111/W 1./111Ced into their faees, turned tip to hint its this sublime moment, so he alight meet then) in the day of . judgment, when it might lei said, Well 11111111, good and faillifill ser vants, enter thou into the joy of thy lord." I(eeling, of St. Stephen's, liar risletrg, tittered titer- ) in address: The ( lergy `l, ,, itY r. h , (Yid or 1 l'clertsyl iqt flirt, i Prn 'nary t tuencu hen --7't, Mr lel. Jive. Ibloort Sfccrits, 1,!.. Ihr Ilieoers, ty . itsglvt, Iti;( "'ea /ti.,/rap: In cott,eitting to the final severance the toliend relations you hart, sustained et 1,4 n, rtt limey years, We de sire 1.0 place olt record the expression of our unfeigned regret that your view atilt , interests tit the church should huctt laid such necessity 111.111 Wo feel assured, that, in sll far as yon 'oneself have dr.ircd the separation, you have hewn actuated toy sitniero vunviztiuu dilly and a desire to promote more. efficiently the practical success of the elturelt enterprise in (Wet.) , I nrl nit' the ex E.,11,iv0 livid heretofore Wider pall' excln sivn Anti whilst We :delll labor and pray lit secure :dl the g o ad results you hewn predieted lor our new diocese, we shall ever recall Willi tenderest eitiolionn I he Christi:et courtesy tintl toying-kindness with which you have detellargell the !Vile ties dillies of your sacred onion; Hie words ,if wise counsel and :01'1 4 4.11mi with which you have sought to cheer and sustain lino hot. its and hand , of your dock it, the work lif f tirthering the ex' n laien of the Isilit..ster's I:legatee, and advaliviligLlie paintelileal in terests of your 1ii01.1,40, NV11,111311 r3llllllll - Will; liteliiiiinished adnlirut jolt Red l'eVerellell and Olittilittla ex positions of the sacred Word NVO have so Idlest Inn, itriVilitgotl le hear fro!. pier lips; and we earnestly pray that the fruits or y o ur Itifitnad supervision May lie eVi dyne.' ill eel' more earnest devotedness to our !nide° Itedeollier the church 11111' faith and love. Wit it, not forget that during the ',orb al of your Episeop.d Itbeis anteing us, those I.thors have at tones been interrupted by paiiiltil 114 . 4 . 1411•1114 111141 04 . 1•111,14/11411 Visits 4,1 bodily sielittess, and we cheerfully testify. to the tt wit la wltn'lt Y o u h a, ' borne I Ii 14-41, 1111114 . 1i1111., 111 god's provider tl,, and the promptitude:tint 1111 WL1111 . 1(`11 oily withtchirh VuuITV," 1.""" , sy("1 Y""r o,laseless round of holy eteor ton gospel. Whib,L vonsentlng,therefore, to the sever anon et the I..piseopal bond, Ste rejoice that , the change ta oirelonstatives Call ill 111, ‘1V1.411 11114'1,111/1 lir htn,t, the personal affee- Hon and esteem w 4, shall over cherish for our former Iti-411op. shall bear you 111 our hearts before the throne of th., real Shepherd and Ittshop of our staffs, that Ile 11111)' I'OlllllllM 141 you Ills 4 . 114/14•1,L bless ings; that Ile 1.111 . 4,,V artaind you the to ens of his preteet ion and give to you his 4,111114/11Llig and ,11 . +11111111114 grave until yon canal Ili, . 1 11dgo Nta,vnard moved 1.11.11 this address be adopted as 11111 /1,1411'04S 4 , 1 lilt , 1 . 4/11V011 - 111 , 11 to 1114' 41141 111 , 111rfood 1114 , 1 1 11,4,1,1 , , /Ls 1111 11 , q,1 • 41 . ,14111 1 , 1 1110 14,11111.1 . of the Conven thin 141W111,1 hllll, 111111 1113.1 11 be entort II 111/4,11 tin. .; , 1111 Hai 111111 f tirther, that the rellite.,ted to write out his elo quent toed tooling rernarl, eliciting this reply, for rule( .d . ro upon the journal of proceeding-, .% greed to unanimously, IZev. l'„tor Italdy, it., sitlifititted the rot- Thr the l:nnioa'liteni of 111., he 11.1.4,1 beg have to r"1." that.titt'Y lutOe l d* Lltted " , t hst, i l' - t ions :eel 'dodge- , to the annelid 4.1 ;1 , 11,111111. ;11111 that. 11111 1 . 4,1111111111 . 1 1 V4 , 11.1114'1' 11 4,1 , 1111- 4 , 111 11111.1 the ,111111 be 1111•11.11...1 , t1 It , 11111:.11111 of 4 :r,lllO, 311 , 1 11 , r t. 11 4, p111,,,,-.4 , 4,1 . 1114,11111 , 11411- 1144 . 1.11,11. 401 . 114'1, 1114 , .' ti vporllully rovont. mend to the l'onvention the leloption of a pliet Ihr t..., 11,i14`,1114`111 4 , 1 Olt , 414 , 111•11 . 114 . y 411 this stile upon the different parishes, the interest I lite t , lll . 111 111 , 1,11141 by the saint par ishes mono-annually, :eel the prinoipul 14. 1,11 1141141 111 slut 1..4, 4,11 r V1111'11 , 4 , lil 1114 , par -1,111,5. All slims littrutttl.tr. , t.. 1, 0 crotlitt , tl to Ilitt itttisittts. 'Putts. E. Fit NELIN, Elittirtittitt. .1114141 , W 1111,4 11141,1 4 11 that the Ofilvon now !Inwood lo Ilia eloetion of a Itisliop, whi..h was agreed to, tutu alter a prayer by the Ilishop, Hey. I:eoling nonlinali•d Itov. NI. A. kl'4/11 . 1 1 114V( 1 , D. 1 1., !Tel.! . 4,1 I.ltl;c's Itue. Parot iitmtimitutl Rov. I),, uI Urwa, Church, It 4 ltillit.re. Tho %Nat) .1f (lie win u11111111l•eli at NI. A. DeNVcollo• Howe, D. P Potivr, I. tivilrgel.A..4l, P. D. 1 . 11/11 . 11.11 HAIL I). P x, nt The lt , ov. Dr. being Om choice the cleri - val .lohiganN, the vale the Las I lolegithis WeS taLuu , in For upproVol 1.1 ilon-appro, Dr. 110 Wt. Wei, Iheu nct lit Ole rhuiru lit the Cleit'entioll. MIEMBEN=9 Res° I ved , That the mom hers Or this Con- VllllOOll, clerical and lay, do unanimously voinitir in the dection of A. Do \Volk. llowe, D. 1/,, to the first Bishop of this Di ocese; stint do, without exception or ro• serve, earnestly entreat his acceptance of the value, pledging lint), in his work for Christ and the church, their most zealous and loving co operation. Adopted unan imously. 1101 Convention llom procoodod to tho ....Motion of the Stamti l'onitnitleom of t..., %%1M tho t 'frrierd. I.rr II is Roe. A. A. ..... Rev. leelLog, I/. I) itev. William Le, Ituv. 11. Nl'lo , lll , tni, ...... ICA,. \V. P. I 1 n1r1c,......... l'ev. NV. flout, P. I) W. I'. I lv, II.I).. I Et S. NVltinon 1t...v. Edmund Leal I,elglillm Column]) 1t1.V.;.i. M. l'eek NV. 1: , •,. M AllOl It..\ It 11. ,oll• .1. \‘' I„ ..... Part V T. W1'31110111,, • 1 . . 11. S. t/.11(1,v111, .14511111,..\ Aso. .1. 11. ..... W. Itti,•lll , , ,I. \V. I \V. \\',, , 1,1,v 1111 Itt • Nle,mrs. Mari.le, Fouling, 1.1..ren, Washburn and Orricl:, ,vorolloki•lareti rlrrt wl montlatrs .4 Ow Standing; Ctan ion, and Me..srs. •Alax,vnil and Parry, 1., luau burn olortnd as Lay plan Lrrs ul 1110 Ihnro boing (If a filth hay 111,11'- 11.'1., afflaher bat lot was 11311 With this ro suit: I I roettl r. le. 1.111/ 1 . ,01 re. 1.11. WI( 1•1. T 11111,5 'wing still no vhcrive, Further hal luting teas prim tpuued till afternoon. 'net used Temlilinelltary mnniurinl or do, vioetion ~r the 11(1W Itirhop was then adopted and rigged. , teas iii Lott Treas 11.rer or LIIO lUottris6. Tho Standing ColiiiiiillooWas directed In Lako the necessary 'fleas!' Pev Mr the cons°. canine or the now Bishop, Thu itev . ,hiColoiliall, urriek, Wilitelnqut anti Dr. J. 1.. A tine :old A. Iticketts were appointea n committee to consider the or gapization of au insaitetion fur the training ul Wolikeil fur workm or mercy and charity, annul to report at the next Convention. 'Cite ColiVention adjourned till the after 'oon. iin ru-as omb ing, .1 ulgo l'aiilcor was unanimously elnoloil 11111 remaining mom ,,r the Lay part or the h;tandie g t om lllitleo. I larrinbtl rg and Williamsport were sug gested as the !daces of mooting of the next (mil volition. Williamsport was finally se lected, mei the time of meeting fixed for the Second Tuesday of Juno, 1872. The Com in iteee appointed to ascertain what changes in the Constitution and can ons of the Diocese of Pennsylvania are rendered nenesi•ary by local circumstances to meet the needs of this Convention, re ported ; 1. That the word "Stale," wherever (-m -ourning, should lio changed to " Diocese,'' and that the word "Central " be inserted before the word "Pennsylvania," wherever that word occurs. '4. In article 11 of the Constitution, strike out all after the word "State" as it now reads, and insert "at such time and place as the preceding Convention may appoint. 1, That the preamble to the Constitution lie omitted and that the title thereof be as Gallows: "Constitution of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Central Pennsylvania, as adopted in Primary Coin voution, 187 t." 4. And that the title of the canons be changed by inserting the word "Central" w - EDNT:EBTSX. - - NOVE - AIE - EitYs, 871. • before "lieniylvtlnitiP and by omitting the last prin tedline and substituting ;. "As adopted in P rimary Convention of 1871." The report was adopted and the Com mittee continued to report further at the next Convention. The endowment resolution being the or der of the day, considerable discussion arose, and the following substitute of the Rev. Mr. Williamson was adopted : That the report of the Committee be recommit ted and that the Committee be requested to solicit additional subscriptions from those who have not already subscribed, and that their report be made to the next Convention for action. Mr. H. S. Goodwin offered the following: Resolved, That until the Income from the endowment fund shall fully meet the Bishop's salary, an equitable assessment shall be made upon each parish for the amount of the same, and that each parish shall be credited upon the said assessment with the interest accruing on their sub scriptions to the endowment fund. Adopted—yeas, 64; nays, T 2. Mr. William Buehler moved the appoint ment of three trustees of the endowment fund. Agreed to, and Messrs. Buehler, Watts and Lumberton were appointed to this trusteeship. Mr. Geist, of Lancaster, offered the fol lowing: Resolved, That this Convention elect four trustees of a church building anti parson age fund, the income of which, where the principal amounts to $20,000, CO be appro priated by the :standing Committee with the advice land consent of the Bishop, in aid of a parish that may in their judgment require such aid in the erection of a church or parsonage. Agreed to, and the following trustees were appointed : li. S. Goodwin, A. Rick ets, Henry Cult anti Hamilton AlriAs. Mr. Snyder nerved that the salary of the new Bishop be fined at $l,OOO per 01111010. Prof Coppee moved to amend Lc mak ing t h e aliment annually $1,500. Agreed to, 1001 the INO 0:101i as amended was adopted. Various current resollitifflus relating to printing, mileage, finance, thanks to illn v/irs, etc , were adopted. Bklloli Stevens Mad the (0110, tele graphic despatch, jic.t "L'itibAlll,l.l•lllA, Vov. 0.-- :r0 P•trct (nod lirchng -1 lc, Brcibren : Is loth and heart stagger under the responsibility, but confiding in the help of Cod and tho sympathy and iNceporation of my brethren, I shall von tore to assn 1110 01111 . e. 'AL A. lox \V. llowt.:." P.kitop t,n patting with the Ow votiti4w, tm udu:u; cling limn! c4,llgrattilutory alidrosts upon inn work 44 till. in rnllitlg Lilo 11(.1v 1:i,,11.11, lii pre-o.lt• over limo P 11114,11. A tier Ningint: prayer, Ili l'onyvtititol adjmit tied II i•:,1: :I`ll, upon (1111:t111111,1'lly td . C. N. Prp,idt•lltl.f the C(liiipaily, that the Vllll'llll,l itailway , luts burn vt)inplytod to lis 101.111:11tIs at Stn, on Ili° Dola- IS art. I: IV, and.l but trains will ',twin 011'1111, rpgitlarly the entini rnall in tht.i...L1,0 Ida 55..1.1., A forts .miipany w;.sorgaiii,ed, in 111 norriiun \Vali T1111,113y 111-I, tinder thestyleof Lim" New Jersey )nitl Delaware Ferry Company," . with \Vim A. I louse as Pro.nlnt, Charles Is. 14:11111I`1, 'Fre:ismer, and Edwin M. 'lMr ner, Secretary, for hu purpose of running beat from the rail 1/11.11 I.Ollll ' lllllN 11/ :inn, mice wharf, on Ilin opposite side 111 . the sty In Dolawai e; aleo, to run steamers via ChesaiWaho canal to Baltimore, and to !Mu ditrermit towns along the Delawarn river. It t•onneets on this aid,, the hay with the Maryland and Delaware It. It., at t'latytmi, and this open a shorter and rlu irkrr rno to than by the canal to Baliiiiime and the South. published intention of this railroad mid ferry company is to estahlish a grand freight and passenger route by eanal, lorry and raih ued, bete con ,tliti ti,iiith and Now York and the Eastern States. 4o— (/root Not The Philadelphia. /1,, in speaking orthe election uud its results, says, in the late pnlilirnl contests I,rant 10:1,1 us Tlllll'll foal sight its if he hail been buried in the old iglena tamyard. Ili, name was 11. t con sidered worth mentioning :tint 111. 41',1 en tirely 11011.1,10,15, (lily iu SO far as he 50:IS indirectly felt by the use of the official int tronage in the hands of his ollico-holders. None onice-holder wall dolly this. In our somewhat extonsiV, intercourse with high-minded 410 4114 not call to Mind 0110 who 11008 not trout the name of Ofltllt will, Polito indill'omnrr. IL folly then to attribute the late Itepublican victor ins to the Grant prestige. There are I,ILS11:1,4 lying tlelp belt/W tho surface, tvliy 1111,0 victories have heett achieved. 'Fliose reasons will he 11111110 1110 proper time. I=2 The accident at the African Baptist Meet ing-11.mq° at Louisville, ICV., briefly re ported 111,' telegraph pn 'Tuesday, was really a frightful affair. Religious services were truing held On tho second deer orit twe-story frame hoffso, and the panic originated in consequence ot:the cracking of the thawing. 'l•he only means of egress were two narrow !lights of stairs, and when the rush was at its 'height a cry el lire• was raised. The pee ide were positively craey with fear and in their eagerness to °se:we:they (mewled up on women mid children in the inost illllll - way. Twelve peralms were six or ` 4 1,1 , 11 were seriously injured. and:Wow. seventy-live others were slightly iniervd. Poem n lary Shl fns of Royal I y lAntilon enrrespondent, says that the ex-Emperor is 'theta to g,ivn tip his resi items, at Chisellitirst fur wore eruunm ii•Al quarters. i nnu rent of "Camden House," is ;7;,000 a year, and his Alitjesty pr,lesses that he cannot attnial to pay this 110 has lately been eldigoil to dismiss several et' his servants on acenunt of his inability b. p4y heat ‘vagqs. The actual income id the is said to be $'2.5,0110 a rear, but the Empress by the sale of her :Span ish property Mill jewels, 111111, to 1,6,0 it lu .5.50,01/0 pt in which stun the exiled im perial pair think Hutt they ran dtcrll ill it lot least, ,respectalile The Pittston I Pennit.l Comet reports a visit,-in company with the Pittston Chief of Police, to the cabin of a recluse, Welk Parks, in the wilds of the Wyoming district. Ile was found in the act of bur rowing a collar tinder his list for greater warmth timing the coining winter. His two idiot children, aged respeetively= mph Ll 3, a young man and young woman, were at largo in the woods, entirely nude, and came to the cabin at their lather's call like docile animals. They were alarmed at the strangers, anti darted for it pile of straw, in which they cowered, The old man Parks talked well, interlading his discourse with copious quotations from the Bible. Hard on Radical Go v orinkrs. ltulirul liovernors fare hard. Holden of North Carolina was impeached and has been for months. a fugitive from justice. Buller of Nebraska .vas impeached. Bul lock of Georgia lied ana resigned to escape impeachment.. Davis of Texas has hoot, rebuked by -10,nu0 majority. And now Austin of Minnesota is in court to linty° that Ito did not take a h,ribe of mute for signing a railroad bill, as charged by the St. 'Anthony Falls Deistic/la. Truly, the rascals haVO a hard road to travel in their iniquitous career. There are grounds for alarm in the ro !mil front Washington as to the canstiof tho spread of SIIIIIII-1111X hllllll. Raster!, It is semi-oilivially allinuod that o tho iii meted buffalo-skins bought:n.l rapture) 1 . 1,111 Lim Indians two 'out's from 11111trallt11111, haVI , linen .4"1.1 Ln 1110 Imblir, 111111 that the 111,Valellel• ..f 1110 01'1111,111 Ili , eaSo is attribtitablo - (Ind.\ lexander McClure, nee of the ablest and cleverest Republicans in the State, is spoken or ns a candidate Our Senate!. in Philadelphia, to Ill' the vacancy omi,tioned by the death or JI r. Connell. Ile is do mutinied already by the Canter-en and it rant ring as too " fishy " for their support. lle has too much brains, and is too inde punduutto be a tool for plunderers and dilusgegties: hence they Oppose The W,Niiington .Patriol says that tho oily I hing " constitutional " about this ad ninistration is a sort of kleptomania, or cnstitutional" tendency toward defal cation,, swindling and entbezzletnent—a sort of" morbid insanity," that seems to hays assumed an epedetnie form tinning Repo lilinan ollice.holders. The Now York Ran says, a well-inform el gentleman yesterday wanted to bet a ess reporter that William NI. Tweed will resign from , tie Impsrtmeet, of I'„i4k., Works within a week, and that Mayor II al I will appoint (Sen. (Morse IS. AleClel an in his place. =1 Ity a singular accident a locinnolive and three men wore precipitated into the river at Chicago yesterday. A tug-boat collided with the railroad bridge and swung it partly open just OS the locomotive was crossing. One man WAN drowned and another was severely injured. The Chinese ItliirtWrs in California Judge Lepueveda delivered an impres sive charge to the ()rand ury at Los Align los, l'ablornia, urging them to avoid pre jud ice and sustain the cause of law, order, and morality, by indicting the perpetrators of the recent atrocious murder of Chinese. More Oqiugiu ns. The authorities at. Washington are trying to clear the misunderstanding shout Thanksgiving. But as the President was feasting iu IMston at the time the Uover nor of that State named the 30th inst., he could not disregard the wishes of him hosts by naming .any other day. Winter lu the Weft*. Snow fell heavily in Utah on Tuesday, and there way great difficulty in conveying food to the minors of Big Cottonwood in consequence or the fearful drifts. At Rock land, Me., there was also a fall of snow on Tuesday night to the depth of two inches. Supplying. Their Unkn Euginem Proprietors of grain warehouses in Chi cago., in order to defeat the exorbitant de mands of insurance companies, have de termined to provide their own lire-engines, and thus to obviate the necessity of insur ance. The Ruth Murder. The reader will remember the details of the murder of Mr. Isaac Miles' Rath, at Lawrence, Kansas, last Summer. Mr. Ruth was formerly a resident of Willis town, Chester county, where his father still resides. It will be recollected, that he mar ried a Mrs. Voullaire, who had been di vorced from her husband. , At the time of Mr. Ruth's . death Ski was absent on a visit to some distant friends. On the evening previous to his death a Dr. Medlicott visited Ruth's house and spent the evening there, and administered some medicine for neuralgia. After the Doctor left, Mr. Ruth became deadly sick. and wrote a note to his wife, detailing his symptoms, and intimating that the medi• rine prescribed by the Doctor might be poison. The next morning he was found dead in his room. The letter was found, and suspicion at once pointed to Medli colt as the author of Ruth's death.— He was arrested and placed in prison: In the meantime it was ascertained that he was on intimate terms with Mrs. Ruth, and suspicion attached to her as an accomplice. Medllcott's wife had also died very sud denly, and under suspicious circumstances. All these facts created great excitement, and Mr. Ruth's body was disinterred and traces of poison found in the stomach. In the cell with Medlicott another prisoner named Johnson was confined. Of this man the Doctor made a confidant, and entrusted several letters to him to deliver to Mrs. Ruth and other parties on his release from prison. These fell into the hands of the District-Attorney, and led to the develop ment of such a chain of testimony as to convict the Doctor of the murder of Ruth— of murder in the first degree. Two of Mr. Ruth's brothers attended at the trial, and were not among the least interested specta tors, as may well be imagined. It was believed that improper relations existed between Medlicott and Mrs. Roth, and shave the trial of the former she has been arrested and lodged in jail. A St. Louis paper of the :10th ultimo, stales: We are not informed that any new fact, tending to implicate Mrs. Huth have COMB to light since, tine conviction of Dr. Medlieott, but it is certain that the im pression made by the testimony at his trial was not at all favorable to her. Public opinion coupled Medlicott and Mrs. Mall 11.4 guilty lovers, and . many persons de clared that if one was a murderer the other could not be altogether innocent. The of however, have, in all probability, obtained additional testimony in regard to the part taken by Mrs. Ruth ; or it may be that they had this evidence before, and only waited the result of the trial of Medlicou before proceeding against her. At the trial of Medlicott the prosecution was asked by a spectator why Mrs. Ruth was not cross-examined, and Mr. II uLdt logs replied signifi c antly, that " there was it very good reason fur it." All that time, it is surmised, he had in Inns pINSeSMII , II certain evidences of her complicity, and prudently held them back.. The trial of this woman will add another chapter to the dark record of crime, and,lift the veil from certitin transaetions that are now shrouded in mystery Iler trial will Ice as interesting, and exciting an that of Alecllicolt, and much of the same ground will ho traveled over, while rutty clfWeloll - Will startle the comm unity. The old adage, "illu rder will out," is strongly ex emplified in the CUM, of Medlicott anti Airs. Ruth. We learn that Mr. Soyinour Voullaire, who was tor years the husband of Mrs. Ruth, and is Elio father of her live children, started yesterday fur Lawrence for the purpose (0 . taking ehargo of the ehildren and crouloying counsel I r the 111,11,d. he Only Isom e All I , lher questions that have hitherto divided the American people disappear be fore this one: Call public corruption be stopped? Can public robbery hti put lit,Wll? C3ll political frallthi l•e suppressed told prevented? Can bribery and present taking be banished front political affairs? Ten years ago the great cluestion was slavery. It was settled through the war of the rebellion, with its immense losses of life and treasure and its gigantic heritage of public debt. Since then other questions growing out of the war have arisen• For tunately, they are now all ended and elear ed away ; and there is no other subject to distract the attention of the people from this one supremo issue. Can robbers, thieves, bribe-givers, bribe takers, pres euLt.akers, and official blackmailers be driven from power and honest:men put ill their places? Can the fatal system of cor• ruption now so universal be brought to a close, and a SyStelll of honesty, frugality, and purity be substituted in its place? if our public affairs continue for live years longer upon the same downward course as they have done for the live years since the close of the rebellion, we shall no longer have a country to be proud of; and the great American experiment of self gov eminent, in which the hopes of all human ity were bound up, will end in VOUVIIIII2,s and Shaine. This is not a matter to be disposed of by either of the existing parties. Roth of them are alike in a state of putrefaction, and no spirit of life and of safety can come forth from either. If the Republic is to be saved at all, the tench; must be done in the nation as it \VILS 1.101111 ill this city on Tuesday.— Upright turd patriotic men of till parties must combine for this exclusive ptirpe,.. Democrats anti Ittpublicans untst forget their tint quarrels, and strik. oliands in one. eihwt. \Vital are the differences of opinion and of policy that have hitherto seperateil them, couipart4l with this one al I -en, bracing, al babsorhing, danger . ? And use twill it Ito tin them to 'continue to call themselves Itopublieans nr Done, crats if all that is worth hying for in our free institutions in destroyed by robbers like Twedil, or by present-takt•rs and c,11.- rtipters of the public eonseictwo like it rant. - Y. Nan, I Rail.) =ME= The facts in the case thivernor Pal mer's prosecution of t tencral Sheridan for tho unlifirful killing of Mr. Grosvenor begin to put a blacker faro on the affair for Piegan Phil. It now appears that the only plea which had any plausibilitydo wit,that Chicago would have been left, a prey to robbers if Sheridan had not proclaimed martial law, is entirely untenable.— The day after the lire the Adjutant iieneral of Illinois reached Chicago with a State three of Val picked men,under orders from l toyernor Palmer to assist the civil authorities in the preservation of order, and that by command of General Sheridan he was obliged to desist from the attempt to execute his insl ructions and withdraw his men. After this Sheridan issued his re cruiting edict, under cover of which the reg inient,.fiiom which caino the fatal shut, was raised. In the light, of these revelations it is evident that Sheridan's overweening vanity and insolent contempt for civil authority are responsible for the blood that has been spilt. We most sincerely- trust that he may lie held to a rigid account. The country needs something of the spirit of old Manse Head rigg, in Scott's novel, who took up her testimony without fear before her guard of British dragoons, insisting that she would not hide her convictions "at the bidding of :my man of sin, though he paint him self red as a potsherd and call himself c, r poral." A licintenant-general is a good subject for the issue of -personal freedom and civil law against military aggression, anti the sooner General Sheridan is indict ed and had in the courts the better. In the Now York elections the people have waked up to rebuke robbery, and badly as that election may have hurt Democracy be cause the innocent many have suffered for the guilty tare, we are glad of the purifying denunciation. To it we want, in a like tin , partisan spirit, to see added a crushing overthrow of that infinitely greater wrong —bayonet rule. " lie who steals my pus,. steals trash," lint he who takes away Wier ' ty takes A Y Ire-Proof Negro In Maryland. 'rho 1 , 010011 (Mltrylaild (nil! , alter carreeting stunt - , statements gning the rtaiints about Nathan l'nker, limo tmlortal man Ittinwn u limo "Caroline lire King," ;4, oe4 m m n to Say : 't He can, however, eat red-hot anthra cite coals, stir up rial-trot Male in a furnace with his naked hands, lick a red-hot bar of iron until it is colt], receive nitrites load into his mouth and keep it there until it cools, and it has boon said that he has walkta.t on a red-hot bar of iron barefoot. teat we have never witnessed (myself, although we have seen hint apply a refit-Lot liar of iron to his bare lent, and keep it there until it haul lust its redness. Hut we have noticed there alio times when lira seemed to ,or,et him, and we have seen him start back front its touch. We re member a few years ago, while ho was mixing lime for the plasterers, wino wore at work finishing a building for us in this town, he ran his hand into the lime while being slacked, to take out the core, but he withdrew it in a twinkling. The lime burned him, and lie tett its effects very sensibly. Another Lime 3 company of young men got Coker rather badly. Ito made a wetter with them of twenty dollars that ho could sit on a red-hot stove for lir teen minutes. The stove was heated up until it was all aglow with redness—the lire-king took his seat, and actually, it is said, sat out ten minutes of the time, but onto of the wags, pouring a little oral-till on the stove drew him from Ins position it double-quick, and burned him severely. Ifs is a remarkable negro, and no ono yet hes ever been able to explain his dealings with this element. The latest development of the South Carolina frauds are more alarming than anything yet published. Driven to extrem ities, it is said, the 0,500,000 of sterling bonds the Governor promised should be hold inviolate have been hypothecated to prevent the sale of other bonds that wore held as collateral for a loan that had ma tured. Several bankers and likewise some of the conspirators aro reported to be utter ly ruined, and groat excitement reigned in Wall street, It Would Finish the Forty Attorney-General Akerman tells Grant that unless corrupt Radicals in the South are punished, there will shortly be nothing of the party left in that section. And the Cincinnati Enquirer adds that if they are all properly punished, there will be noth ing of the party left—outside of the walls of penitentiaries. 12MMIZ! Is there no and to the revelations of frauds on the part of officials under the Federal government? Scarcely a day passes but some new rascalityon the part of a Radical official comes to light. It is now believed that the pension frauds committed by "Judge" Wright amount to hundreds of thousands of dollars! So it goes. toad anteUigencr. The Teachers' Institute The Lancaster County Teachers' Institute commenced its annual meeting on Monday at 10 o'clock, a. so., in the Court-House. At that hour the attendance was comparatively small, the Court-room being not more than one-third full, though quite a number came in afterwards. County Superintendent Evans called the meeting to order and Mr. L. C. Oberlin opened the proceedings byreading the 100th psalm, followed by brayer. Superintendent E6ans said that the In stitute would at once proceed to business. He would not state the programme of pro-. ceedings, as all the members had no doubt seen it. He expected the present meeting to be the largest ever held in the county, as most of the Boards of Directors had given their teachers the entire week for 'the pur pose of attending. He briefly referred to the increase in the number of pupils and teachers, school and school funds, during the past year. He spoke of the importance of object lessons, music, elocution, de., in the schools, and more particularly of the necessity of having good teachers. He ex pected much good to result from the pre, ent meeting, and wished to impress on the teachers the overwhelming interests en trusted to their ,are; spoke of the wide spread inquiry for good teachers, instanc ing the State of Texas, which had recently advertised for teachers, offering $lllO per month for class teachers, and. stio and $l l O per month for those of inferiorgrades. lie hoped the attendance would be regular and the attention close. lloappo in ted Mr. lien jamin Huth as Treasurer, and Mr. It. S. Gates, a.-; Chairman At the Enrollment Com mittee. Air. Ulrich Strickler moved that a com mittee of live lie appointed to wait upon the ditfe'rent publishers of the city and as certain the best terms which can be had for the publication of the proceedings of the Institute in pamphlet form, an herelefore. The President appointed Clrich Strick ler,R. S. Gates, B. Eshleman and Moore said vonlinittee. Mr. A. M. Cline moved that the tee of membership lie $l. Mr. llills moved to amend by runic ing the amount 51) cents. The amendment was voted down and the original motion prevailed. The following committee or three was appointed to audit the l'reitsiirer's aeeount —T. S. Kauffman ' \Vim C. Shuman and A. Committee on Permanent Certilivates, consisting or Messrs. .1. N. I:een, .1. 11. Davis, (11171 MM: i tin Fielis, was appointed. A Committee of live on Resolutions was appointed, as follews: 1%1 essrs. Witinyer, Cline, and (therlein, and Misses Mary Wat son and Mary Trout. Mr. 11, D. [tanner 'novel t h at the time of meeting of the I 'lstituto be ii sod at a ci'eleek in the morning, 2in the afternoon, and in the evening. Agreed to. r. S. L. Frey moved, t hat on Tuesday evening the hour of adjournment lie fixed at S o'clock, to citable Members to attend Mr. Tilton's lecture. Agreed le, Messrs. Eby, Hershey, Phil:, Seltzer and Brandt, were appointed it committee (if receptien, le scat visitors, and keep order in the room. Prof. foetid, musical director called for volunteer musicians. Ile wanted about live soprano, five alto, live tenor, and five bass voices. With their all lie thought he could treat the Institute to steno good musk.. 'Hie president anneunced that the corn: mitlee of enrellinent could be lound ill the tirphans (Mull-Room, where teachers could have their names enrelled as mem bers °ilia, Institute. Monday ...literscon.--The Institute open ed at 2. o'clock, P. .M., with music, Prof. riseld's choir singing the "Greeting Glee," "Jesus' Little Lamb" and " Crown Them wit II Roses." Prof. S. S. Haldeman delivered a desul tory lecture upon the many errors current in natural history, science, literature, Ne. Ile read from the /14.,1i5h Quarter/3j Reticle an article alma .1. Anthony Freud, lately eleetssi Rector of St. Andrews, Scotland; the reviewer charging that the historian knew nothing about Calvinism, a subject which lie hist loathe his special study! lie quoted also from the (S'r/tool Journala para graph which states that there is iron enough in one human body to make a pen knife blade, and enough magnetism to form the silver of a dozoo sockets. The Professor said the xcheof ./..umit Was a geed work, but he was linable to imagine what One writer or that paragraph meant. Mr. Methiskey said he was responsible Mr the paragraph ; he had copied it from all exchange without scrutinizing it as closely as he should. Prof. Haldeman said that - Mr. McCaskey was an honest man and acknowledged his errors, which raised a laugh. Ile said that the next page ()I' the lours,/ contained a stiatellient In I lie effect that ill the ver silt; of liehltilierg there were Professors who (.011111 teach all the known latiguag,es. IVlien we consider that there are abolit 2,llll(ldilferrut languages spoken, including not only the (lid:, Latin, (Matilde, Ara bic, Sioux, Ceinanclie, Hottentot, and so forth, tile statement seems. to be a very broad and unfounded ono. Some time ago he had seen a letter from - a Rome corros pendent of the Philadelphia /:///fetici, ill which it was stated, that on a certain day the lietothe•c) of Ibinui Was iu a fin Mont and on the verge 11l revolution. The Professor happened to be in Rome lit the tinie--saw the crowds upon the street--but the nearest appreaull he had seen to ferment and rev.- Ilition, Was their pe.aeibill n un cuing ml pumpkin seeds -an article of Mod which, upon trial, he found lo lie iiiiite palatable! Ile (icily 01011tioned those matters ler the purpose of showing how frequently absurd and incorrect statements creep into the most reliable of publivations. The Pro fessor noticed 1111(1., refuted a numhrr of storieS colitailleil ill works on nat ural history, aiming others the stateltient that monkeys cross strtiallis over bridges fornied by hanging le each other's tails! Ile deseribed the monkey family at some length, giving insta n ces of their wonderful power of imitation; but seemed to doubt the Darwinian theory that man descended from them. I legneted Huxley as saying that the intellesitial difference be tween the lowest order of men a n al the high est order of monkeys, is not se marked, I Wide as the gulf . isl a the dillereneo be tween the highest and lowest order of monkeys. 1 Jere. (.idled thelietitiousstories told about the mermaids and stated that they were not intich more fictitious than many other statements seriously recorded by historians—such as the story of Curtin s leap into the earthquake gulf that would not close until something valuable Was thrilWil into it; the story that the success of Louis Napoleon's Coup d'etat was the result ()Pan aeii(lent on the part ofThedigar flier ; the Story or the punishment of the author of a pamphlet denouncing the ru mored marriage or Queen Elizabeth, (00. These and many other historical statements the Professor showed to be pure fictions. Ills remarks were listened to with great at tention and were loudly applauded. liss Flora T. Parsons, of Now York,was the next speaker. She said the time was 1011011 it Was thought that anybody could teach Primary:schools; now many think theyshould have the very best teachers,and should be better paid than assistants in higher schools. She spoke of the import alive of lessons, and introduced "Pretelozzia's Principles." She explained that ac(tivity is the law of childhood, the teacher should accustom the child to ; should ecluvate the hand; oultivate the faculties in their natural order ; should first form the mind and then furnish it; begin with the senses and never tell actin,' what it can be lad to discover Mr itself. Re duet( every subject to its elements—one dif ficulty at. a time is enough for the mind of a child ; preceed step by step—be thorough —the measure of information is net what the teacher call impart, lint what the child can receive; let every lessen have a point, either inugrolinto or remote; develop the idea, give the term, eultivate language; proceed from the known n) the unknown from the particular to the general—from the concrete to the abstract--front 1110 ',Mi llie to the more difficult; first teach syn thesis, then analogies—not the order of the subject, but the order of nature. Literature in POllllllO,l SellOOlS, by Prof. \Vestlake, was the next question discussed. The greatest defect in our school system is want of concentration, and the power to make use of the knowledge pupils have aei f ili red. They are not eillleated Synillie. t ly. Those well versed in arithmetic, (Vc. ' ;fro very frequently not so well quali fied hi be useful in the World KS those Who knoW less of those subjects provided they have a literary vulture and power of ex pression. Children who have educated parents can readily be recognized ill the schools. The lecturer agreed with Miss Parsons as to the necessity of having the best tectehers in the Primaries, and in stanced Pope, Scott, Bryant and others, to show the value and advantage of having educated 'smelts. The best teacher is he whose mind is best cultivated on general subjects—who does not ()ramp his mind by running it in a single groove. lie believed that recitations and declamations should be encouraged ; btu cautioned teachers against allowing pupils to make their own selee- Dons out of the trashy literature of the day —stun' that ought never to have been writ ten, and if written, never read. Ile would not have long recitations, but have them . well selected. The greatest pleasure of Milton was in his old age, when blind, to declaim'ehoice extracts front limner, Vir gil, and other authors. Such recitations in childhood store the mind with treasures, and teach and impress On the memory choice phraseology, and style of expres• atoll. Professor J. W. Shoemaker, of Philadel phia, next lectured on Elocution. Ile said he sincerely sympathized with those speakers who had felt 11115 way embarrass ed during the afternoon, and assured them he felt more scared than any of them. El ocution he treated as an art easily acquired comparatively; all that is necessary to do is to follow nature—any one can carry d message to his fellow-townsman after he knows what the message is. Declamation is nothing more than this. Author's have written their messages and expect us to de liver them, when we have read them and know what they are. Most persons are natural enough when at home—it is only when placed in unusual situations that they become awkward. He blamed teach ers for spoiling many children by requir ing them to read in tones and positions that are unnatural and improper. There are three sources of utterance—first circumstan tial, an affected form of utterance in which there is no heart or soul. Second, the emo tional, when words of sorrow or joy break forth uncontrolled, likes mountain stream, . and third the combined source of utterance, which Is the great field of social conversa tion. The lecture contained many useful ' hints, but we have not room for even a synopsis of it. Mr. Ulrich Strick.ler, from the Commit tee on Publhnlotr, reported that the Com mittee had called upon the several Publish ers of the city and received from them the rates at which they were willing to print the proceedings of the Convention in the same form as heretofore printed. The bids were as follows: J. D. Pyott, MO; Exam iner and Herald, $300; INTELLIGFISetiIit, $220; Inquirer, V.. 05. Mr. Strickler stated that he had- had a -conversation with. the publishers of the 4py and Herald, cit , Co- Jumble, during which the former said he would do the work for a 22.5, and the latter for $2OO. As these latter offers, however, had not been made to the Committee, they were not considered formal bids. The question Was taken ou the motion to give the work to the lowest bidder and, on a division being called, was decided in the negative. . . The question was then taken on giving the work to Mr. Pyolt nod was decided in the affirmative. Monday Erenivg.—" Over the River," and other selections of music, were sung by the choir. Miss Hannah Kennedy read an able Essay on "Small Scholars." She severely criticized the too common error of cram ming and endeavoring to put old heads on young shoulders. Another error of teach ers is the neglect of small scholars, for the purpose of paying more attention to those farther advanced. The way to make the school-room attractive, is to show the little ones that the law of love is the rule of the school. The essay was very well written and delivered m a pleasant and distinct voice. Mr. T. L. Witinyer read an Essay on "True Training." He said that with all our boasts of improvement in the art of teaching, theroisagreat lack of thorough ness in the system. We have Inure crooked boys than crooked trees; more om pty heads than empty purses—more good furniture than good manners, d:c. Other professions are far ahead of the teachers and preachers. The incompetent leacher retards rather than advances the interests of pupils.— "Train up a child in the way he should go" is the oldest and best advice ever given to a teacher. 'rake the child to the fields, the woods, the streams, the mountains and teach hint nature. The address was well delivered and merely, d considerable ap plause. Prof. A. It. Byerlv read a paper on Cramming vs. Culture." It was I"till of good points, but too long—the reading of it occupying about an hour. No mere sy nopsis, in the suave to which we are me strieted, would do justice to it. Taesdo y rn n!;.—Ttio Institute (moiled with devotional exercises; .1. 1L Witmer reading the loth Psalm, and fel Mwing with prayer. I. N. Keen, reported that the committee on conducting tail election Mr members of the Committee on Permanent Certificates, would receive innninatinna to-morrow 'corning, and that the election would take place on Thursday, at 1.3" I'. M. The bal lets to be received at the door as the mem bers enter the room. Superintendent Evans :Li:not:loved the subject for discussion: " What assistance should be given to pupils?' B. F. Hills opened the discussion. lle contended that assistance should be given, that children are sent to school U: be led. He gives el/Milder:lWe inisbininee to begin ners. It is the duty of teachers to give in structions how to read, spell, Re. He speaks front experimce, l'effiing the want of early instruction. U. S. Clark said, wo know it to be a fart that any knowledge we lusinire ourselves, is longer and inure easily retained than that we learn from others. Teachers assist too u uu •h, instead of luau little. When a pupil eau not overcome a point, show him wherein the difficulty lies, and let him work it out himself. The greatest scholars that the world has ever seen, received no assistance, but were self-made men. I. S. Geist said, that in order to study successfully you must have assistance.— Those great men, spoken of, would no doubt have been much greater, if they lad received some assistance. Teachers should give instruction in the manner of studying. J. H. Stiffer said, there are different ways of giving assistance. One is instruct ing how to study. In penmanship, show them how to form letters. Follow the same principle in all branches. Ile also thought that teachers assist too much. It. F. EDI! teacues them to help them selves; has them to try; does not believe in cramming, but in having pupils to work. S. L. Frey said that too mind' assistance is given. It is expected by Directors and patrons, and in consequence there is tno much superficial knowledge and too little sel b reliance. U. Strickler said that too much, rather than too little, assistance is given. A teacher should not assist pupils, unless satisfied that the subject is beyond their comnprelr♦ensioh, and then he should lead them on step by step, from the known to the unknown. Ile should not tell them, but draw it out by questions, thusassisting them to acquire the• fact themselves. W. U. Shuman said that the speak or pre ceding Min had revered the ground he bad intended to speak on, mid that ho agreed with what lie had said. Prof. Ryer!y gave he-inlet:ion, on teach ing English (Iranimar. Ile c.et tined him self principally to A,Reetive elatiaea intro tlurea by Relative Pronoun,, and iv Rela tive or Conjunctive AdvarU,. t/eist, A rithinetic. lie gave the Eng znethoil of Notation. iNV Parsons, on Primary Imdruction Ilor subject N‘ "lir,t lessom4 in Num hers,” Prof. Shoemaker lectured 1011 Etal•Ilii.111 /it) CO/111118d himself principally It, I ho„no portunee of ,61.•uti on, Adjourned to meet al 2o' clock 11, I. cirtity it 1; RANI. MASONIC (IFri cmcs.---Laniberton Lodge, No. -17 h, was visited on .Mittiday by the (trend Master and other Grand otlicers of the State, for all inspection or the work and an interehange of fraternal civilities. The officers present were—Orand Master, U. L. Lumberton, Harrisburg; Deputy ({rand !glister, Suit'! Perkins, Philadelphia; Senior (trend War den, Allred N. Potter, Philadelphia; Junior Grand Warden, Robert Clark, Philadel phia; (;rand Secretary, John Thompson, Philadelphia; (fraud Treitsurer, 11. [tenni gardner, Lancaster; rent! Senior Deacon, Chas. M. I lowell, Lancaster; Junior (liquid Deacon, Robert Thomas, Mechanicsburg; Senior Master of Ceremonies, Wm. Aug. Atlee, Lancaster; Junior Master of Cere monies, WM. A. Morton, Lancaster; Sword Bearer, Andrew .J. Kauffman, Columbia; Marshal, Charles Kingston, Philadelphia; Tyler, A. Z. Kingwalt, Lancaster. After an inspection of the work and fra ternal interconrse, the inemliers and dis tinguished guests adjourned to Roberts' where a Spiellilid banquet was served up, and the evening spent in speech making, songs, and the most pleasant social pastime. The Grand Officers expressed themselves very highly pleased who their visit, and the occasion will be one long remembered by the members of the Order who were so for tunate as to participate in the festivities of the evening. FATAL R.111.1t,A1. A , CIDEN t. -At an early hour on Thursday, the (Mid body Benjamin Diiionderfer, n ihigman on the first Cumberland valley freight train west, was found lying beside the track of the Pennsylvania Railroad, about lOU yards west of the Big Conestoga bridge. The body was terribly mutilated, both legs be ing cut nearly oil; the left arm fractured, the jaw crushed, the face considerably lacerated, and the neck broken. Of course death resulted instantaneously. It is prob able that the on fortunate man fell head foremost from the car, broke his neck and was then run over. The remains wore taken to the Pennsylvania Railroad Depot, where an inquest was held upon them by Coroner Dysart, his jury returning a verdict of ac cidental death. The body was then enin \Jived to the undertaking establishment of Mr. I lenry Bwentzel, in Market street, and placed in a neat coffin; after which it was sent, on the 11:15 train, to Harrisburg,where deceased resided. Mr. Diffenderfor was a young man of 23 or 24 years, had a wife and ono or two children, and was a son of Jon athan Dittenderfer, proprietor of a Harris burg hotel. lie had been railroading fur two or three years. l'usr X VA 1.1.EY HA I I.ltOA D. —A. meeting or vitiZOIIN was held at Fairy'lle, )11 'Tuesday, tor the purposo of ~ n isitiering Ow expediency of constructing the contem plated Conestoga Valley Railroad, to run from Springville, Chester county, to Litiz, in this county. *70,e00 was subscribed, Which renders it certain that the road will be built at an early day. Au organization was effected by electing For President,ll ugh E. Steele, President of the \\'i in ingtonjuni Reading Railroad ; and essrs. Levi S. Reist, Daniel Overholizer. Joint Plank and other well-known riti'/.ens are ammo; the Directors. Fifes.--f to Tuesday ONTlling last., shortly after six o'clock, the lug dwelling-houso of .1,11111 I I iltun, about two Iniles north of the Borough of Maztheim, and which hail been vacated by the removal of family on that day, wan entirely consumed. It is supposed to have been the work ,if all in cendiary. I'UTATE rm. McCoy, who was Re cidentally shot in the arm by her son, some days ago near Coatesville, had the limb amputated. Mortification set in making this painful surgical operation necessary. The atom was taken off near time shoulder, and at last accounts the patient was doing A TTOINTFM.—MedicaI pireelOr MI,SCI.- SMitil, U. S. N., of this city, has Vern ap pointed by the Surgeon-lleneral of the Navy as a member of the Board of Exam iners, which sits at Philadelphia for the ex amination of applicants for aduiission into the medical corps of the Navy, MIROLARY AND Itonnmty.—The house of Isaac Weiler, of Smith ville, Providence township, was entered by a thief, or thieves. on .Sunday evening last, while the fam ily were at church, and robbed of about SSS in money, a gold chain, medallion, and breast piu and several other articles of value. DISTURBING A RELIGIOUS 11fEET1 NO.- Jacob MoCorkle and Eliaa Klinehaus had a hearing this morning before Alderman Wiley, on charge of disturbing a religious meeting at liehm's Church, in Pequca township. They were held in bail to an swer the charge at Court. 800 DISEASE.—A disease is prevailing in West Cocalico township among swine, and quite a number or animals have been attacked, and several have died, SALES OF REAL ESTATE--Etenry Shu bert, auctioneer, sold at publie sale' on Tuesday, the property belonging to the es tate of Thaddeus Stevens, dec'd., situated on the - east side of South Queen street, No. 457 to Mrs. Lydia Smith for $7,320. A farm of one hundred and four a,res, situated in East Conant.° township, owned by Samuel Duch, of Reading, known as the Mishler farm, was sold to J. K. Over holser for the sum of $14,000. Ezra Becker has sold a farm of 73 acres, situate midway between Schmneck and Co calico, to William F. Stuber, of Sclueneck, for $4,700. Isaac Wann has sold a tract of 15 acres and 2 perches of land, situate near Keller's mill, in East Cocalico township, to Joshua Rollitian, for $1,500. John Gring has sold a building lot in Union Station, GO feet front by 330 deep, to Samuel Wiesser, for i 450, upon which Mr. Wiesser has already begun the erection of a house. The last issue of the Mount Joy Herald wntains the following list of properties recently sold in that vicinity: Farm of Jacob Sink, i 1 aeres, in Itapho township, to Christian Shitz, at ',32,506. Land of Amos L. Baker, i acres, near Masteraonville, to David Baker, at f,iTti per acre. Home of Nathaniel flood, 10 acres, in Itapho township, to Nlr. Wane, at $l.OOO Farm ofJaeob Geri or, 119 acres, in Haply - , township, to Jacob Engle, at ;‘,lltril.lo per acre. Farm of John D. Hershey, Si acres, in West , Hempfield township, to Andrew Metzger, at $215 50 per acre. Farm of Benjamin McCutchen, about 30 acres, at Roaster's Square, to Levi Weaver, at $4,450. Homo of John Gelb, deceased. in Rapho township, to Jacob Good, at $451. House and 1 acre of ground of Jneub ilubley, demised, in Newtnivii, to Susan If obley, of Philadelphia, at $7lO. Wood land of John Iliostand, doc'il, 15 acres iu West Hemplield my., to Tobias Stauffer at $276 per acre. House and one lot of ground, of the ,alTle, near Satunga, to said Stauffer at $1,02:i.-- I'hestnut sprout land of the same, 3 acres, in Rapho twp., to Joseph Detwiler at $155 per acre. Sprout land of the same, 7 am - es in West 'lymphoid, to Christian \luacl man at $155 per acre. Graybill tarot of the same, 13 Imre-. in East Donegal twp., to Benjamin Breneman at $876.50 per acre. House and lot of Daniel Gingrich, in Centerville, to Christian Moyer at $17,10. _ . . Distillery of Jacob llamal:er, deoenseil, a acres in Hapho township, to E. W. Ila maker, at $1,750. Mick house and lot of same, in Mount Joy borough, to Javiili Stoner, at $2,100. House d lot of same in same place, to Mrs. Chu nth, at $l5O. Farm of Christian Eby, ersiaspil,33 acres in Hapho township, to Joseph Trout, .it S'PI 50 per aerie.. . . ... .. Brick house of Christian i Graybi .1i:- ceased, 7 acres near May town, to I lahleman at 1;2,450. Brick house of Noah M. Nissloy, 4 acri s iti Raphii liii.rnship, to 'Martin :Nis:Ay at House :mil lot of the Sallie, ill Mound Joy borough, to Jacob Hollinger, at $2.,000. Farm of Jacob H. Musser, 11l acres in East Donegal twp., to Prof, S. S. Halde man, atf,4170 per acre. Farm of S. L. Brubaker, !Ni acres. ',in Conoy twp.,to Christian Hoffman, at $101.::.3 per acre. Chestnut sprout land of /Samuel Strick ler, decd, IS acres, in Rapho twp., to John M. Engle, at Ifouse and lot of S. Fry, decid, in Mount Joy borough, to David Eshelman at $1205. Six lots of the same, in the same place, to Benjamin llostetter at $.15 per lot. Brick house of John Patterson, deVd, in Mount Joy borough, 'to John Moore at $4OOO, The aggregate amount of these sales is $135,52D.W. SHERIFF'S SA LES.—The followin4 . prop erty were sold on Saturday afternoon, Nov. 4th, at 2 o'clock, at the Court House, by Sheria Myers: No. 1, a lot of ground containing 491 perches, in the village of Warwick, with two-story brick house, one-story frame house and other improvements thereon, as the property of Charles W. I: reiter. Pur chased ey ti. It. Reynolds, for $7. No. :I, a lot of ground in the village of Litir, containing 11. acres with frame dis tillery- and other improvements thereon, as the property of Charles W. Kreiter. Pur chased by J. M. Kreiter, for $3OOO. A tract of land in Manor township, isin taining 31 acres and 147 perches, on which is erected a li-story stone house, one-story frame house, as the property of John S. Bare. Purchased by Lee i It rickhart, for s7,Pati. A lot of ground in Elizabethtown bor ough, with two-story brick houso and other improvements thereon, as the pro perty of Jacob B. Brubaker. Purchased by Jacob Greybill for $1,2.01/. Three acres of land in rolerain township containing a one:story frame house and other improvements, as the property of Seueker .1. N irk. Purchased NV. 11. Whiteside for Let of gremet in the village or Bain bridge, with two-story frame dwelling house and other improvements, as the property of John B. Bowman. Purchased hy Samuel Eby, for A lot or ground on East Front street, Mould Joy borough, with two-story brick. dwelling, frame stable, Ac., as the property of Andrew B. AleFadden. Purchased by James 11. Patterson for 1,100. Tuesday last, Mr. Jae,.b Let!, in company with his son, Icit his residence in West, Earl township, in a two horst) wagon with some apples and an empty Carrel, with the intention onnaking cider in the village of Now they were about half-a-mile from !ionic, in a private road leading through the woods, the horses 111011110 ft:100011a and ran; the wagon passed over a sunup, and Mr. L. teas violently thrown out. Ur. 11. Reeni snyder, rat Nose Berlin, was immediately summoned. Mr. L.'s injuries are internal, and he is now lying in a critical condition. Last tiatnrilay while .Ir. John Getz., Levi Zellers, and another young man whose name we tare not learned • wereout hunting rabbits, Mr. Zellers and Mr. t :viz were ox amining the other man's gun when it ac cidently became discharged/ the load strik iiit,Mr. Getz in the ankle,/ A wagon true procured, and be Was takellia . o his borne.— now doing well. NEw RAILROM , .—The 'ca tion id the extension of the East Brand,- wine Railroad to Note Holland, hits 1,0011 completed by Mr. Samuel tlarrirines, civi l engineer. Ili. report is entirely favoraliki to the complete success of the project, mei its early construction is now a certainty. It is designed by the projectors of this en terprise, to extend the road further west by way of Earlville, thence making con nection with the Reading and Columbia Railroad, awl the Pennsylvania Central. RonnEnv.—The house of ()Led Shirk, at Shirk's Cross Roads, one mile south of Sehteneek, was entered last week and rob bed of a pair of pantaloons, a pair of boots, six yards of muslin, and a quantity of meat. No ohm to the thieves has been dis tt\ emd. CORN' • 11 N ti.—.At a husking match in Eden township, recently, Edwin Bushong husked 102 ears of corn in :1 minutes and 10 seconds, heating six competitors. St nnEs ehgnge , lu the weather are prndue (lye nt Throat liket,es, l'oughs and Cnltla, There a no inore eneetual relief In be found than all l 'ol "Pi , 1 II TO., •,.• w 11. k, 1; ‘v envil or sprrnr.. Have. u r litutint i•IFL ally I , k 11 1 Hay, you WHY eek, or Laincla, van.,l Lv tannunal la pains . " r ./o/,it A f/f i.n slaqativ rvbavdy, and 11l ako the 1.5,1 1.111 killer in Ih•• vorld. We Often see 'arm , stocks of OM Ile whir), do not 510111 to thrive, and (mom out "spring ill for want of seniethin, to stnri I hem the right direction. 1111 e dollars worth of Shorielmi's 011,1;7/ ~nriehool of , r., giVell to such as stork occaolt tally during the Winter, WOultl lie worth more thou an entra ;et, Ilf Inn. "c Renoir .—The following pre arffille null resolin lolls were iiarced I, Kos ciusko Lodge. No. 771. . F'., on the death of Mother William 11 O'Donald WHIM.KAK, It h . Almighty (1011, In his Prov Menet-, In remove by de.llll. our be loved brother William 11. O'llotmlil, There fore, be iL 'That In the death of brother IT Donald, Kosciusko Lodge_ No. I, 1. 1.1 LIP., sincerely and deeply deploros Ihe loss which Into been sustained by the brothel-111m1 Mot by this ilkismsat ion we have hod :doable and Lutist:oil ial member. SOI VI (1, That o the ?Imre d„•lily syrup., title., with the wile, relatives unit friends of the deceased, in this their sad bereavement • on account 01 ',Phu; seittrateit at too great a distance from hint during his Hine, to roll der hint any assistance, excel)) in 0 financial 1.01111. 11,volvcd, That nor Lodge Room he d rapid In mourning for the spurn of thirty days and that the brothers wear tho usual liagge of mourning for t satin spare or pimp. Rm./red, That. In testimony of the ro,peet we Ile, In Lis THOMOry, as a will-tried and devoltsl friend, momeiate and brother, these resolnl ions he minted lo Iwo of the principal vollnly Flavors. and I trill 'moles of the same be roman/4 , i to i he wife of the deeeasetl. P. 13., F. BRENNEMAN, B. 11., Jolly MONTEITH, BRO., A r.uxicr Control) Ire. Oa Job Muses' Sir James Clarke's Fe. mule Pills. These invelimble are unfailing In the weof all those multi end dein:emus dieuesett to hich tile female eanstitittlun Is subJect. They mod erate ell excesses and remove all obstructions, front whatever ramie. TO MARRIED LA DI Fs) they are particularly suited. They will, In a short timer Ming on the monthly period with regularity: and although very powerinl, curtain nothing hurtful to tile constitution. In all cat.got of Nervous and Spinal Affections, Pains in the 'Melt and Limbs, Fatigue on slight exertion Palpitation of the Heart, Ilysterlat and Whites, they will effect a cure when all other means have fulled.— The cireulara around each package give full directions and advice, or will be sent free mall t‘ riling for them, sealed from observation. SPECIAL NOTICE.—It is the fate of every truly valuable medicine to be counterfeited. Job Moses Sir James Clark's Female Pills are extensively coon terfelted. The genuine have the name of .. .lon Mom.' upon each package. All others are worthless. Dis honest Druggists endeavor to sell the counterfeits Lo nuke greater proliXs. N. B.—ln all eases where the onsu INK cannot be obtained. One Dollar enclosed to the Bole Proprietor JOB MOSES, Id Cortlandt street, New York, will in sre a bottle of the Genuine, containing Filly Pills, by re u turn mail, securely sealed from any knowledge or comer W. Julr-Xl-lydaw AT Batcholor's Hair Dye.---Thls Su perb Hair Dye in the best in the world—perfectly harmless, reliable and Instantaneous; no disappoint ment; no ridiculous tints or disagreeable odor. The genuine Wm. A. Bachelor's Hair Dye produces Iw. m diately a epleudid Black or raga' Brown, leaves the hair clean, soft, beautiful; d not contain a par. ticle of lead or any injurious compound. Hold by al druggists. Factory. It BOND S'I'IIEET, N. Y. :s.29.lydeochtw Airlltidscley Knittinrr Machlldel - The aimpl.t,Cheapest and Best In Use! Urn but One Needle 1 A Child can Bun It! Designed es tooiallyfor the use of ihtnilles, and - Lodi. who desire knit tor the market. Will de Wray stitch of the knitting in a Stocktngovideningmanagefer. and narrowing as OF readily ea by hand: Are splendid worsteds and fancST ITCHy work, T !. Are very easy AKLNO FIVE to DIFFERENT KINDO , and not ble to get out of order. AY Every FamßY should have one. Aar We want an t in every Town t PAiroduce and sell them , to whom n we o ff er the mos t liberal in ducements. Send for one Circular and Sample Stock ing. Address novldYw HINKLEY KNITTING MACHINE CO., Bath, Me. /Qr Be Guided by what you Know. There is an old proverb - which says " / - Perienco is the mifsst guide." To this guide the sick and Wllng naturally turn when casting about for the means of relief. They enquire what a medicine bas done for others, before they adopt it thenaselves. Of all the remedies and preventives IEI use. TIOSTETTEB'S STOILACII BITTRIIS meets the test mast truenpn nntly, and hence Ito Immense popularity and vast sales. The sufferer from Indigestion is sure to find sorne one among his friends who has been cured of this ailment by the tam°. vegetable stomachic. The victim of fever and ague,. litre complaint, constipa tion, nervous prostration, or general debility, has only to make Inquiry In the neighborhood where he re sides in order to discover what this standard reslora tive has effected in cases similar to his own. In tire Published testimony to Its merits he will 11114 a voL ume of proofs of Its military properties, whiCh It is impossible for his common sense to resist. tie tries i t, and the effect It prodnces on his system adds anoth er to the host of witu.ses lu its favor. Thus, its reps Union. founded on facts, not asnertions, continually grows and spreads. Charlatans and imposters. some of them mere Meal tricksters, and others who Into a somewhat wider rouge. attempt to thnott Into the hands and down the throats of invalids, their hair hazard commetions, at stastitu lee for tile tonic which for so many years has been a medicirni staple throughout the l'ulted States, Spanish. America Canada. and tha West Indies, hilt enly succeed to very limited extent. In tills re:mooing age, the pet pit., having ww,wlahh , l what i eally deserving or titeir . cottudence. " running after strange gods. Look, Latlie,4 ! Look ! rut Stockings. t 401 regular Stockings. id.,-ceild superior fabric SPsiktars. Tlic• . 2.l.crolSto‘iikiug oldersal dss a special bargain id price. It :Orli:ply law a lanai .:Jr. Mr. Finn 101.4 also 01 , 0101 lines of liner grail., which will pe sold cheap. Also, l'lohlrell's regular extra long,'?, Issas, and rip. iliildroo , 111m.'-c010r...1 stock ioas. 2.lcenis. CelllS, Men's snperior 101 l regular Stockily, au cent, good, roll lorintsl Jeati;Corsel. 7.l.cent, superior woven Cons 1. I , re tlarioit r n Shirt Bosoms, Carrel Prlr , r 12 rent folk rs. Napkin., Tatile Towels, Itiroleye, M. 1 1 11 , 1 N. F. Corner Arch :oel Se eeol I, St S.,s•gsr 1. SPIES' \' r. I•EN r 1, solgs' VE4 r. g I . EST. Th 1,1 I. 051 s'elglll,ll4laly. I i \'e,l, sod Lliough Isto'y to trodseed, rs r. list has al,o °posed lines of Isclltni, anti t•ltLl,lres's s ear. which 55111 be sold al 1150 5•1,5 , 551 prs I.stlies' very soPerioe el esxogy wool Vest. 41.0 euso Children's lirilish Wiens° ss:,ls. lost ass :molt.. 11stits' good woiglit. NI Moo slit, ;sots Ilse Merin,. •,. Sa.enny .I,IIIN :%1 FINN, (2,rner !, is. ea_ Needles' Special Branch For the adjustment or ltl'l"l'l'RF. TRUSSES," •' ItRACRS.',”•• SITPUIZT ER S" A NI, 31ECIEASICA ItENIEDI KS,•' II Is 011 ires for the same are conducted with skill and ability. The du this pertaining to this line of treat moot, made familiar, by many years of practical ex • pericuce, winning tor his Department.% the con fi dence and approbation of hest Medical authorities. The LADIES OFFICE. at No. FA Noimt TwELFTif. STUFACT, is conducted Professionally, by o accomplisbod FEMALE PHYSICIAN. 11. NEEDLES, Phan/laceln, K. \V. Cur. 12th uuil Race Streetn, Destinewt, BIIMITIOIOI, and Catarrh treated a itli the inmost success, by J. ISA Al.'s, M. D. and Professor of Dise of the Eyo and Ear ( his specialty ), In the Medica ases l College of Petinsyl van hr. 13 years' experience. (formerly of Leyden, Holland.) Nu. SOU ARCM street Phila. l'estlntunlals can be seen tit his odice. The medical faculty are Invited to mecum patty their patients, 1111 lie Its, no secrets in hi.s prat rice. Artificial Eyed imierted Without pain. No charge fur examination. u .21i MARRIAGES Hl' ILE M--Cit,Vl,ll..—Nov. 9, 1971, by the Rev. I, ireettwald. Are II 1. Huber, of West L.:impute, to 1.17.7.11, B. I. rawlord, of Lancaster ttep. Plea xt.—lt a a E . res.-011 the .Ith Inst., ho the Rev. J. C. t regg. at St. Paul's m. H. Church Yasuo Inge, No. Ski tiermatt street, Mr. Nathaniel Picket. to 310 s A RlCket.. both Of this fsty. 1.6 PayliK—Fttsltsiswar.—On_ thu tab last.. at the Exchange 111.101, by the Itev.l). Ibsa•totoller, Mr. Christian Li' Fevre. or West Latopeter INVp., to Silos Murtha Reinhart, of l'equta. I..f.NbtaNEeK.lsit-1i 000 LEV.-01 . 1 the 7th 111.., StAlioll ,4 11 orting's Hotel. by Res. NC. T. tferhabl. Mr. Henry 11. Longebeetcsr, of Penn, to Miss lAss.e N. iierllll,, of Ranh". a . t.t_s—ltutt ea.—tto the same Any, at the same place, by the Solo". Sir. Joseph V. Charles 10,11,50 .st /try 11. Rohrer, both of Manurrsvp. Ills:oat. - the st1111l• day, at llorting • s Hotel, by the Rama, NI, hn Jo S uqt S. ttrtela. Polk Iletoplit.ith to lifs.s AMR+ M. 11011, of Mount Joy two. Ft.s.—Olt the smile tlay, the same place, by the:fame, Mr. Ezra 1.. Landis to Miss !fettle h. Hess, both of Ephrata two. Nocr—M er.l..—On the sante Any. at Konsenle's flute!, he the same. Sir. A hraltunt Nolt, of West N:ar I, to 111,0 11,1110 s. Null, of E.Arl. fITF.IL.-1)11 lilo 1301 is city. Ilarry, son ol William and I:alharola I.l.•lzamlichlor I yoars, 10 mouth.: and 13 days. VL— 1 n this city, on Iho 1111 11 1,1., 1. !mon lien ol Simon and I'. ISnydyr, agell a yr, .12 days L.K11.-011 the 11th Ittnt.. John A., son (ICJ ohtt A. Milt A 11/llt. nyder. S t btl.l 111.,... F:A.,..1.,..111,411.1 . 1.W.P.,1).01t 1 V. , .“k .111 the 7:41, } ear ot het MARICKTS. fall LA DELPII lA. Nov. I I.—l'lhverst.h.l Is 11l I oderate requeiiit ; 110 hus sold Iti loin at Tiouithy i. Wren , ' at at Si Uo pvi. 't lie Flour market is extremely i.lllOl. and "Illy 011 !.Illy sold, 111 101, 111 SIIDDIy I DP DUMP 11,01S Of lAIP home consumers, at 65:iiiciti 10) for Extras; 37 73(.7 for W cousin Extra S -- woe MlOllOOOO di: do: it. 75..7 do do; 7 11,1111110. DIP! 'DPI allki s for Ilratols,. quality. E.) e inay lie quoted MI There Iva !Inner feeling; hl Ilia \Vliiett mar h 111111! 101rileinanil for prime lots, hilt other den I'llli ions aro negleried ; yalrymf :{,IMO Potill'a and NV'estern Slot :It I aud stone While at 31 0 ranges from Corn Is It-ss Relive, Ina, in i 1 .05 nra %cell suS tained sale, of Old l'ellow al 7 New LI., of t;:ifi (.7e, and Old Western M I x,.,1 ILI 714 , 7", l lulu lit steady rt , :ttest al 110 for \Vllite, and 51e for 31Ixed. In Parley no sales were rercal.•ll, 70 , 11 m. Barley said al $ll4. Bark Is dull. anti In 1110 al”Lone , of sller Lvo quote Nit. 1 tznereltron aL $ \Vlllskey it !Irutt, Hales "r ' , mod at Stock Market.. LANCASTER, N. I. Ftn.clsheil by .711.,/b B. Long, Stock Broker, o. 1.1 IN. Queen St. 10:30 II:00 12,30 1:30 2:::0 . . Gold mnl ll'nlon.. 1/1 1 A 11/ 1 . C. Mad .... 17', 17:, 17 17 Adam/. ex Aetna do. 57‘, N Cent.: 1121 , 1/2 112 32/ LIo . 57 1 ...37/ , 7/ , 47/, Erie 0 1 ,4 311, .111. 1 4 1114 Reading... 35.11 Molt Coot. 121', 121: D 0 South.. sOO4 h!• ^ ll l4 01, 4 111. (;out... 132 1.12 and P.. 1211:i 121 121 121 121 N. ull, 10 1 .., 3114 1/1 1 / 1 do 30 'JO 0!1' 102 1 , 1112 1 4 1021/ 102 1 . St. 1%111... MIME Do. Prefd Ft Wayne. 90.19 V j,p 4r) 0. and M.. / ,9 t 4 " -'' - , uoVEll S3l ICNT SW: OS. U. S. iii IShl 117 " " ISA 11 " 1665 new 114', IMN 110. i Ls 11AVRN @ 8it.0., 13,4rixx.4, Nov. 11. Penn's Reading ii -1.4-100 Pia and Erie New I. S lull_ U. B. 64: 1881 1111',,o4117!,, " 626 1862 110 7 ,121111, " " 1864 111 ul,lll , , " " 1865 111',1 , 4 , 111 " " 1865, uuw. _ 113;;,,,811.1.,, " " 1867 II 6,1,41111.., " " 1868 111!,261117,, 16-406 10.1),,ta,110`.1,, Philadelphia Cattle Market_ MOM,r. NE,. I: le 'Were dull I lint tv ok,and orlon. re Triton :Wont the Maine on last quoted. About :i2Ol, head arrived and sold aL ;lm7hc for Extra l'ennnylvanta and Western metro, fit fair to good It, and 4t.Lst, It lb, gross, for until tnon, Itv lo totality. Tho following are the part traitors of sales !lead. 1:!:, Owen Smith, Western Virginia, gr.s. 65 Janie, y, uh in, grne. Aluxituder gro,s N) Ft. Maynes, OIL grosm. 91./ Jahn, ttMeljlein;e,' Pennsyl Vail la, a , n ow gnos.s. 125 John MeArdle. Kentucky, lko7c, gromk. Ind P. M r•Pi I len, NA'esi ern, .o c t n. g 1. 0 ,11.1. Philip liathaway, Pennsylvania, i%1u.l it,o gro.t. 50 B. F. MeFillen, We'stern, gross. 75 Jamos ,M 7 5 Won ern, gross. 1:11 Janus S. Kirk, Penusylvinna, gross. 391 Martin Full, t'o., Went ern, .4..6 4 4 c, gross. 7 M. Ullman, Western, 6,41;!!,c, gross. 55 Daniel Smyth Se 13ron.:OV extern, 5 i.4.IiNC, gross, K 2 L. Frank, West ern Virginia, 5.411;,i'e, gross. 120 B. Mooney Z.: Son, Penunylvania, 5!/,(47c, 50 Dennis Smyth, Pennsylvania, .1A.45 - ;.lc, gross. zo Thomas Mooney a Bro., Pen nsy I van ia, 54 Go, gross. 11. Frank, Western Virginia, 546 c, gross. ST (.11 4. 1 0, S ,..e c , li g a r i o n . be . r , g Pc . nn , ny 334 iro vie Levi, len an la, groan. M. Duna's, We2dern irglunt, .I,gac, groan. Cows were unchanged; 1.01 head sold at $404 GO l head. Sheep were dull dull and lower; 17,000 head sold at the dillerent yards at 434,.0%e 14 lb, gross as to condition. Hogs were In demand at on advance; 3900 head sold at ill 2;.,..47 s 100 ILs net, I=l • New Year:, Nov. 13.—Beeves In fair demand and arm at a decline from last Monday; sales at sm,l2;ie ; receipts of the week, 8,015) head. Sheep fairly active at 466 , 4 e.; lambs, riVoc,; receipts,:la,Uoo head. Hogs firm; dressed, 647 e; receipts, :KW), ==! NOW YOOO, Nov. 13.—Cotton firm; sides 4730 bales at 181 Flour !navy and declined 5410 c; sales, MOO bbis at 05 1040'25 for superfine, state and western; 00 4046 70 for common IA good extra do; $6 7047 21 for :good to choice do; $7 2)47 40 for common to choice white wheat western extra; SO 0047 20 for common to good extra Ohio; 16 9645 23 for St."l,ouls. Whisky firmer, at Dity,493c. Wheat advanced 142 c., and closed dull with the advance lost; sales, fal.ooolbuithels, at 81 52.01 50 for No. 2 spring, the latter for choice Milwaukee; $1 8.8 or No. I Spring; 11 5741 00 for Winter Ned Western; 810164 for amber Western; 810301 65 for amberStatr ; '1 Biter amber Canada, In bond. wru rather more steady; sales, MAO bus nt 78c, for mixed western In store, and 80%®81c, afloat, closing at 81c; yellow Western, In store, 79%c l new mixed western , afloat, 79c. Oats firmer. but dolled dull; sales, 50,000 bushels at 63(4154C, for western and Ohio, closing with sellers of western at Petroleum steady; crude, let4i'lleefe: refined, i2;ec. Jless.Pork steady at V 9124413.25. Beef dull. Lard quiet and steady at .8%@9141c for kettle Lam . ..aster Household Market. LASTCAsTKR, Nov. 11. The following are the average prices asked and obtained on market this morning: Apples - IA linlf-peck..—...._ 10fa 15 Apple Butter crock..... 75(8)1 00 pin L:.........._.. 18 1 I 164 IGO 18 :la 5 600 90 •Itla slil 1700 15 skis 70 Butter p lb Beets p bunch Beef, Iresh, .......... Beef, corned, II lb Cabbage p. head Chickens—live it pole do —dressed "ti piece... Chestnutsit quart.... ........ Corn In the ear - 0 bushel Dutch Cheese 11 lb Ducks alivep pair " cleaned p piece Eggs p dozen Fish—Rock p In Perch p string "Eels and Catfish - 0 1b... Fox Grapes p quart Green Corn p ............. Honey p lb [tome-mmde Soap p lump.. Hams p lb Lard it lb Mutton p lb Oats it bug of 3 bushel Onions p half peek Potatoes p bushel " p half-peck Pears p hall-peck Radishes p bunt Sausage Sides coil Shoulders It lb__ Sweet Potatoes - 0 half-peck. Latub p tb Soup Beans p quart Tomatoes p half-peck ...... Turnips - 0 half-peck Turkeys '0 piece V.'lll In Wall1111:1 ..... I.2tnengiCer Grail. Market MoNuAy; Nov. I. The Flour anti liraln mailzet, fa tilde!. Family Flour 1 , libl :Super(lue " " .1 so White Wheat V hus lied I 1\ (Lye V hus ,o, Corn old - 0 1,10. Oats. ti... 111 hits .16 Whiskey IA hbl so NE II" AD VER TLS Eat EN TS DIVIDEND NOTICE ocs jr' Novemlwr 7th, 1,71. The ltireehlt , have thlg (lay thielared n 111%1 dent, of It Utie-lialf per trill. tar Li, six Mouths, ra)'ahle n 1.5 II w Ii W. L. (*ashler. I,lM't'A FE OF J.COEM 11 LEY. I.AT ri of r'oliirairt township, decriaseil.—Letters cif Administrai lon ant sprit estate hat Intt been granted to the rinderirlainisi. allpersons In debted thereto are requested to make ilionedl • are payment , and those Lat trig claims or de mands ?hi. arsine trill present them for set element rintliii•signisi, residinit In r'rid LOWliship. SA ltA It BARKLEY. rat rl n li-tiM In C ll 011' E C 0 1 , E E . 01.11)1)1:1'c'll J.\ V.\, ; 1U(, ?lO(Ii., EXTRA FINE TEAS, rz.; a=BLACK AN (;IZEEN ^1 ;lISIIISIZNA l'A;-,1"11:AS And a Uenr!:ll Arc , n unenl of 'l3tt Pi I•' E (.1 It U C' E I. IE n . WH EitKAS, The Ifonerable li EN it 1' ILIA/Nll, President, am! Ileum:l.l4e Am:xANll,l‘ 1.. HAyES and Joust • .1. Li nu ART, Associate Judges ofi he Court of Common View+ In and for the County of Lancaster, uud Assistant .1 es- Hues of the Courts of "yer ❑nd Terminer and fitment! Jail Delivery and Quarter Sessions of the Peace in laid for the County of Lancaster, have issued their Precept, to me directed, re quirite4 me, among other Iliiuds, to !nuke pub lic Proclamation Ilireili.theiit my bailiwick, that a Court of Oyer and Terminer, alai It gen eral Jail Tali very also a Court of lieneral Quarter Sessions oet he Peace (toil Jail I ery, trill commettre in the Court House In the City of lAncaster, in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, on the In NO VEM (the 1 , 71. In putstilince nr which l'recept NOTICE Is 11E1<F: ta UIV to the Mayor and .Iltlerition of the lily l,ancit.ster, in then:Ml County, and all the Jus tick, of the Peace, t he Coroner, and C011stal)1,1, nt the sad Cll3' and Cranny ill Lancaster, unit they be then aunt there 111 their own proper persons wtth their rolls, recordsandealualnn- Ilons, and in.,tllsil lons, and their of her 1,111,11i b1.11111,5, 10 tl4, those 1.1111114 S ,1111.11 to their others alinertaln, In their behalf to he dour; nun also all those tilto will prosecute agaillst the prisoners who are or Limn shall lie in the jail of said l'ottilly of Lancaster are to he then and thereto plosecule agalust liimmis shall he 1 , :itol at I.at,t , ter. the 2lth clay of Jtily F. MYERS, nt It.itti,k liw Sheila. F 0 1". , z. N 1' El. Ell It A T E 1, 110BSE AND CATTLE PONVDELIS, c4:,-Aok This preparatlnn, long and favnett bly ktiown,telll Littman:loy re-Inv 1,:- erste ertthen down anti Itnetsterlted . hteltes, by strengthening and elestn.,• trig the stomach tnel Intestines. IL Is a sure prevent I% e hi all diseases InPident to this anima), nuell :is 1, l' Nl7 I , F. \' ER, GLANIOI , ,I4+, I'Er.I.MV \V Al ER, II It:A V EA, Et It'li lIS, It NTENI PER, FEVER-ti, It'lll N. D1.:1t., LOOM ()V APPETITE AND VITAL EN- Eft( ,te. I s use I mprov., liewind, In erenses I 1,1• appetite-1v ves sinnet 11 and LOW.) . I rallslOrlUS 1.111• SkisielOlL 1111" IL 1111••-lt,011111;4 11111 1 npi11l1d 1101.8 v. rftTO keepers 111 l'uutru, lilts iut eputruttiuurt Is Ins 111. it Sal, 1 , 1,•,•111 nstnlll4l Itlttulcrpcsi, II lIIIIW Ileum, 11. 1111.1 Is 1,1 proven by utritial experiment tO illerea . a • t . . 1 •• 14118101 tY llf hffilk un.i urestut twenty per cent.. abut make the butt, firm and street. In full cubist vllllll% It ifts . u. , 1111'111 all niustel Ile, lustsrtus thrir abut 111111,1 them thrus, mulch fussier. In all .11sea , os of Swlno. ,noll Cough, l'lrent Io the Lungs, I,lvor, Sc., this 1111101. acts as it xpecille. lly pulling from one-half it paper to a Inner In a barrel of MITI 11, the RIMS, ill.l,sem will ho eradicated or pin troly proven toil. • II given In I I tar; a certain preventivo and on: e for the flog Cholera. I) A I . II) T , HA Li' 1111 / M For "I' by On' s:111. 10 no , ) 1-:l;lrekeerel , thrimglrml the I U)).,.) 0)01,0, Canada, Illld ISL/rill Anwrlca. 81.000 REWAItiI...FOR ANY ('ASE OF 11,111,‘ or I'lecrrtted Piles Mal IPE I'l fall lu cur,. It to propared ex prc,sly to curc the Pllcs and notlung to,, and lin , cured l'n,em y'ent'a standout. Sold by :ill Drouylsts. Prico $l.OO. 11. 1.. PAI:ItY, A ucni, Lancacicc, novli ly u. 17 3FOLIF MALE OF VAIXABLE REAL S TATE. The z‘Jslgnees of N. P. Boyer nil Wife, will sell at puhllmm le, TUESDAY EDNESDAV,DEUESI HER 12th sund 13th, the Real Property of null estate, situated in Highland lownshlp, l'lnc,..ter county, eon -Ist Mg of Sir Tracts of Laud, as follows, vlz • Tract No. 11s a Farm of 7 7 ACRES, Ten of whleh Is Woodland divided into 9 en closures, and well watered; FRAME DW LINO, Water at the door, Frame Barn: Stone Stable. Straw-house attached; barn-yard well sheltered, and Rtnlllllll4 Water; other ueers sary out-buildings, plenty of Fruit, Dever-Mil- Ing Spring near the holldings, with M Ilk house over It. Adjoins lands of Ellis Phipps, Benjamin Bailey and others, on the road from the limn Tree to Errttldoon or Doe Hon about a half-inlle east of the former place, Mid IS known an the ''Dann Tree Fans, - Tract N 0.2. Is a Farm of 50 ACHES, Divided lobo o enclosures. ST..NE I , W EL NO, Water at the door, I,arge Earn, Stone SLable ; Straw-house, barn-yard well sheltered, tool rump at he Bart.; other 111,1,- miry out-1.111.111ms; A pp1.0....1 Peach .relmr.l.., with plenty of otie Iron; iron Inm on This property" locale , ) or o, rt....roads on the road Irani l'oehranvllle to the Goo. Tree. Moan. I miles (non em!. plaee, amt adjoins lamb. of James U. I tarn...0r...1, nnJ 'l'nons Nos. ; ;old 5, knowit as the ''Curlier Farm.' Tract NO. 3 is a ...ad Far.. .A A E S 111 of Excellent Lunt, under good fence. FRAME UNVELLINti, p ut the tmr Frame Stable; on the fowl from t oeltrativille to the (Mtn Tree, :Ilia adjoins "Itraets tt.thl 5. Tract. No. I Is OF \VIP )111,.1 NI I. Young 0ut,1j. , 11, la tuts ‘,l Jam.,li Flao I.ar zt, arld 0rh0r..:.1.1c•J0.. tty Nos, 21.1 , 1;3. W r.4.1c1 altcr4.•ther (II vltled It suit pureillt , ert, Treaq No. ", is I of 1 I 6 A I' It E S, Ten Mwlkieh are Wle.dland, 1114 . /.111 lulu In ,•nnlo.nree,and WM, Irl ntnstof them; PRICK .AND 11WELLINt;, Large Dnultle. 11norol Frame Barn, Lars, 541141/1•111/11.11/ ILL. 11{Viled. with S/011e Stable, yar 1 41 , 11 shulter ed, and Running Water: tlevessary nut-build ings; gold spring near the Hoose, with yillk housenver 11. Apple :mil I'ea..ll Ore ward, .11.1 plenty or all 1(11.14 n 1 ft ult. Iron Ore 011 thlx property. Atljolipt Minim of !sane Seltzer and Trawls Nos. 2, 3 and 6, and is 11/4 the real from Coehranvllle In Ore guar Tree, and Is 611.11v11 as the ••Seltr.er P arm. - Tract No. If Is it Farm - of 1323 A E S , Twelve of which Is Woodland, alt Idol Into Ito enclosures, with Water In neea of them.— F'ItAME DWELLING, Dirge Frame Barn, Stone Stable, yard well sheltered, and Rum CI log Water ; Apple Orchard and other kinds of fl ult ; Spring near the dwelling, with MIllt• house over It; a Frame Tenant-house and Sta ble. A die; na lands of Samuel G. Hallett, Tract No. 5 and others, and is on the road from Futhey's old Tavern to the Gum Tree, about miles West from the (lam Tree, and la known as theHallett Farm." Tl,seproperties are In ft it 11 state of culti vation, land smooth, slight ly y rolling, under good fence, in a very healthy part of the try and surrounded by a moral and Intelligent Coolllllllllty, near to mills, schools. Stores, shops, post-offices and places of worship. They would make good and convenient Dairy Farms, an there are Springs. of Water near the Dwellings, over which 3111 k-houses are now erected, and all of them are within I miles of the Pennsylvania Rallroad,at Parkes burg, Pa. Tract No. 5 will be sold subject ton mortgage of 37,0011, and Tract No.ll to one of 811,800, each pay•able April Ist, 1574, with interest annually. The sale of Tracts Nos. 1, 2.'3, and 4, will be held on No. 1, (the "(Juni Tree Farm,") on TUESDAY. the 12th of DECEMBER, and of 09. 5 and 0 on No. 5, (the "Seltzer Farm,") on WEDNESDAY, the 13th of DECEMBER. Fuller descriptions of the property may be seen In the hand bills, but persons desiri❑g to purchase will view for themselves, and will be shown the earns by calling on the tenant, re al lug thereon, or by mall to the subscribers Cochranv I I le, Pa. Sale to commence at 1 o'clock, en each day, when conditions will lie made known by ROBERT L. McOLELLAN, JOS.E,BIi P. IVALTON, Assignees. I=l STRAY.--CAME TO TILE RESIDENCE _EA of the subserMer, la Penn township, on the 9th of October, 1871, two Steers, one of them red spotted, and white at the belly. The other has two cuts ou the right ear, nowl-aw.l4 OFFICE OP JACOB B. LONU Lassicasrau., Pa.. Nov. lu, 16"..1 The successful negotiation of TWO HUNDRED MILLIONS New Government Five Per Cents., Demonsi rotes the fact that Five Per Ceut. be the highest rate of Interest paid by the Uov• ernmeut in the future. LIOLDE RS OF CR) V ERN SI ENT BOND:? must,therefore,either accept from the Govern ment, Bonds bearing a lower rate of Interest, In place of those held for take 1110 high price which may be realized by a sale of their bonds, and Invest In other securities which will pay a greater Income. To parties contemplating 'mating an en. change, the following Railroad Bonus offer many guarantees of safety and profit Barimpten, &dart Rapids arm! .11innesoar Gold. nt 90: hI. Joseph and Denver Land (luau(.. N's, Geld Si Chicago, Danville and rtneenlo, s 7's (told, nt St!,.; Chesapeake and Ohio 6's, Gehl at 93. Pamphlets and Information furnlshod nn ap pheatlon. BONDS, Whether you wish 10 buy or sell, go to STOCKS, JACOB B. LONG, I No. 10 North Queen Kt., GOLD. I rp stm nlO-thbtw FALL AND WINTER DR] GOODS! JOHN D. SIiLLF.::; now rervls mg from tine DI. , ern 111:11 . 1t el ni I.A.D I ES' DRESS UODDS, lot 12 I iri ,1 1 , 1 1. IN ALL Ti*E LATEST STYLES V 1 , 1 l•V NS 1:s; BLACK Oc. COLOR, (M 0.% I: tNt; WATER-VP:OOPS, N PLAIT AND STKIPE, SACI: FLANNELS, EMISHOIDHRIP.II SKIRTs till.kWl,B! SIIAWLS! ,00 lON ANF SQUARE 811AVVI.:.. ll= riIMIWIE NV II IT EAN GREY BLANKET:I, AT WIEAT BARUAINS! I NTS, All l Sl.l NS, I N(is ci,orTos Fr,ANN.F.Ls, A 11111 ino Uhtlerwear kuul 1 , 111 1s11111.: 1 I'llll 1,1,1 I•vztlil 111 , 111 y 11.•forn purelm4 I g. .11 rIIN D. SKILES, 1,1,11 MEN'S AND BOVS' WEAR! JOHN B. 6H.ILES 114 1141N1 In store the largest and moat eleganl Hoe of C 1,0 1 .11.9, COATI NUS, OVER-COATINUS G.A.SSINIELLES AND VEHTINUS, ever offered to the citizens of Lancaster. AII bought bolero the late advance In Woolen., and will he sold at the LoWes I Prices. (heel. ode up to order In the Intent Myles nt Kinn 1 oily°. CLOTHINUI CLOTHINU ! y stork of /i.eadv-Mado Clothing_ 114 eon, pinto tor Men, Vonflui and Boy, We malt, up all our owu lloods. Every k.;arment Will - muted to give satisfaction. All at Popular Price, I but, also a full lino of Under Cloth ug and Furnishing (hunk at Low Prlcel.. Cull mid examine any stork before purchns ug. JOHN I). Mitt KS, il:itlthttwtJanl No. 'Li Emit King atreut. - - - TAT/'II FREE. TO AUENTS4 TO IN trod nee articles that moll In every bonne Latta Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. AUENTM WANTED FOR "CON VENT LIFE UN VEE LEI)," y I.:(11th rUOrIII/111, &Will. II Nun, whose dln lusurnn are Llirilllng and startling. Onnii. unll,lllng Hat (lord 1 . 01111, 111:1-1W - - I , 8 O'CLOCK.. c);) r A mosiTir.....nonsE AND CAR 10,00 rlage iurnlslast ; expenses paid; num len) ere. li.B. tillAW, 11i3 M —isv Alfred. e. 1)I I' LEM, tEr•u IT NS, REVOLV URN Otto materiels of every kind. Write tor. Price List, to Went, Western Unn Works. l'lils burgh, la. Army lions and Revolvers bought or traded for. Agents wanted. n I:I-1w T HAS THE DELICATE AND DE frothing fragrance of gent - tine Marlon Co igno Water, and to I utlispennable to CO LG ATE'S EA U-DE-COLOGN 14; 1 3 1 y) ei.)l;!4i;;ti sts uud j L e V e y rs of n B old 1113-4 W )ARCIIEESIL, 'IIIE ROYAL ISAC1117A111• 111011 Board of India, thelllo4 rllllCillat nd .•xellutt game ever published lit thin coons ry. Popular edition til„Medium $2. Floe Also Itrisune, 7, , 1100 Iloi 1\ Ingm and Cavill ers, ror sale by the trade generally. Unities 0 peel:illy. F.. U, SIiiI,CHOW etc CO., Publishers, 11':.Iw :;"; John 'drill. New York, 17~1l 18 A PURV. BLACK TEA, W air THE GREEN TEA FLAVOR. WARRANTED TO BUIT ALL TARTER. For sale everywhere In our "trade-marl," prom,' and half-pound paelsages only, Aud for sale Wholesale only by Um Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, P.O. Box, 5506, 8 CIIURCH ST., N. Y. SEND FOR THE VI EA-NELTAR CIRCULAR n 13-4 w Wyr4),Nl A N KNOW TIITHELF The great puttllealion by Dr. ( mow, "%Yuman US a Wife and Mother," will Nave you looney and suffering. Agentw wantxt4l every where; hones preferred. For terms address Win. It. Evans & 710 Hanson, aired delphla. UNTRAY.---CANIETO TIIEILENIDEN( E EJ the .ttl..•l . ll)er, In Penn township, on October Ilth, 1,71, a Cow about. 11 or 12 years nld; I Red, with a white earl po along her back, and belly while; high horns, no% 1.:11w• 11 SAM UML A NAIVE AND PROFITABLE I N VESTMENT FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS, To a Inn I ted amount, upon a railroad which Is well located for huslness, and which has been already largely constructed with the (duds of Ile Stockholders, cannot be otherwise than safe, This security Ix Increased If the Uou ntructlng Company In composed of men ()thigh character, and Maniple means for successfully currying through any work that they under take. The New Urll.llls, Mobile and Texas RAILROAD COMPANN Offer for sale a bond which combines 1110,10 uJ vantaages to ail unusual degree. The root, lien between Mobile, Alabama, and Houston, Texas —passing through New Orleans, the New York of the South. Of the whole line of 475 miles, about two-thirds are already built, and the Stockholders have expended nearly TEN MIL. LION DOLLARS in the work. The bonds now offered are secured by a mortgage upon all that partof the line went of Now Orleans,which has au enormous traffic assured to it from the start, this being the only rail connection by which the cotton, corn, cattle and other pro ductions of Texas can reach New Orleans. So Important Is this road considered to Louisiana, that the State law made very liber al grants in aid of the enterprise, by direct do nations, by endorsement of second mortage honds, and by subscriptions to the stock of the Company, amount l tmg in all to over eight mil lion dollars. Time First Mortgage EIGHT PER GENT. BONDS Now offered are llrnitrd In amount to 1112,500 per mile, and are for SlOOO or .OX/each, Interest payable January and July, at the rate o(8 per cent. Currency or 7 per cent. Gold, at theoption of the holder, Bonds registered if desired. Among the leading Stockholders of the Cont. patty are lion. E. I). Morgan, ox-Governor and en-U. S. Senator; lion. John A. Griswold, ex- LieutenaaLGovernor. Troy, N. Y.; Hon. Oakes Ames, M. C., Massachusetts; Messrs. Mortoni Bliss S. Co., L. Von Hoffman ck Co., J. A. Seligman St Co., Harrison Durkee, and others, of New York; Benjamin E. Bates, President bank of Cunt meree, Franklin I (ovens, Prost dent .Merchants' Bank, ilo.ton, and othertimlso well known. The above statement rf farts proves Use SAFETY of these Bonds. Their PROFIT Is equally manifest upon examlnation. They aro sold for the present at 90, and accrued interest from July Ist. At this price they affitrd a cer tain income for forty-live years, of nearly 9 per cent. upon their cost. Ouo thousand dol lars Invested In these H per cent. bonds will give the purchaser more than ...umly-seven per cent. greater annual Interest than the same amount invested its the new Government Five Per Cents, while holders of Government Sixes will find a decided profit In selling them at present high prices, and re-investing In the New Orleans, Mobile and Texas Bonds. Subscription“ will be received In Lancaster REED, Mc) RA NN Ar. CO., Bankers, STEIIMAN, CLARKSON It CO., 1M ECHANIW' BANK. Information concerning the Company and Rood, and pamphieta containing map and fuLL details of the enterpriso.uan boobtalued of the undemigned or any of the Company'n wirer. Used agenta. W. B. SHATTUCK, Banker,: FlnanolnkAgent, N. 0., M. oft T. B. R. 00.. WO. Z 1 NASSAU -1 ritEET, N. Y JACOB BF:IIM li= =MEI TOILET SOAP BONDS
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