his knife and put a small quantity, of the sediment on his tonne, pressing it against the roof Of his mouth ; there was a strong metallic taste, so strong that It remained in his mouth till his dinner, which was about live o'clock ; being convinced by the taste that the deposit contained metallic poison, he returned to the General's room with his doubts changed to conviction that Ketchum bad been poisontid; found bias growing rapidly worse and left the room to notify Mrs. Wharton of the General's impending death, and after doing so was returning to his room, when lie met some one coming down; asked how tile General was, and was answered "Ile is dead:" witness went to the room and satisfied himself that Ket chum was dead. • Witness then detailed his examining the pants and coat of Ketchum; finding a poeket•book, watch, knife and other small articles, and his giving them to Mrs. lint ton. lie did not examine his vest. Witness then detailed his meeting Ueneral Brice at o'clock that night, and obining from Brice nerniiiision to make a post-morteln examination, which he diii tile next day, assisted by Ors. Chew and Mills, both pro fessors in the University of Maryland ; tint ed to find ahything in the brain that would account for his death; the liver, kidneys, and spleen were found healthy; applied a ligature ahore and below' the stomach and retnoveiNtiat organ andtcontents; remov ed the bowels and opened them, and found nothing notewortOy except points of con gestion; the heart and lungs were not ex amined then ; the SI.OIIIHCII ; was placed' in a glass jar and taken, by Professor Chew, to Professor Aiken ; COMO time I.IIIIISISIIIBIII, alter the t•rand Jury had indicted Mrs. Wharton, they went to Washington, exhumed the: body Ket chum and examined the heart and lungs, which they found healthy. At 3 P. M. the c.turt adhturned, with the witness still on the stand." ANNAPOLIS, DSC. B.—'the court mot this Morning with a full bench. 1.1 rs. Ve'harton entered the iiourt with her daughter and three other lady friends. Dr. r,rain -11011. tieneral letchnifti'S - pulse, on Monday afternoon, ,vas feeble atlll rapid, when neater the influence of all (pinto; it was slow and labored on Tuesday morning, and his whole condition Nvas improved; hails Idol "good bye ;"onWellfloada.Y 11,1211(1 his condition Ir item]; his pulse WILY the same ns on Monday, only ill a greeter degree should ill 11,11111 0i the iudiral 11 . 111 S (11111 k hs I rod ht1:011 all over dose of laudanum ; the „ lily itelicathei was a stilloor; an ordinary 110,0101 npi tw 11101, its 1.11 . 1.ia 111 eight or nine hours ; 511 oV1.1•-111.51i uduug cliect very soon death takes 111.1., in a state it 10011 111,11:11+1- bility ; Iliiteri,lll hVluplumn in eitSeS of 1,11,- 11111 are extreme pallor :eel muscular re laxation g pupils light.; breathing very pectin:, :ifs"; al most apparent bi Silo who hits 50011 a great many cases; saw no evidence of a !Mal doss; ytl.m the stip ession of mini . ; tartar emetic —large 111.111.1111, ; to a 1111111 nig in or taking iL 111101141 list, or six grains, I. dallgUrells ; it ii, he ni yellow . os/sallies , won elltailleil al inall's; 11+0,1 that heed whir, tell years: it Is prepared by sows rating Our minces of root in twelve minces diluted alcohol, used upon Myself; the eilect in a dangertets dose is 51.121 I,l' 1115 ki Withal of t ill• I.IIIIIIS ; the evwluls 111(1,l paral ; can't open min's eyes : the , .kin Nv.eilil be bath ed in ~,eati evilosiers Iltr relax Hlluil ! 11l a great degree is experienced; a person cannot walk ; the ilreitthillg 1111,1 the heart are out aborted at lire! out 1111111 0 Lau 1111- ,riod ; the breathing :old heart are mock ; ..ate, , no symptom ., of ieneral Ketcham lit !siring under a d 1,40 . vedoW jasnuwiuu ; the lir+t ;1./seen Wednesday; had it OM vorsialan with Mrs. \ VharLon ill reference to the clone; aver lint, she hail stud I ;lateral l'etchtitii (Vile (Vora,+ and Lnuu rusLiesB Llireittelled with 0/.10.'11i/dens; ',aid I war surprised ; sled I 1.011111 110 L under- Stand she'll a result; "you tiliserVeil the effect of the first dose; it soothed him; that might to he the ro+llll itew ; +l/u replied, "I lain!!! not i• X ;" Stir lisi still ; elieral ; the last dose given the t 411teral was it lit Is., c,f :Ili- ministered 11 ,1 nlyseli; he, was in violent. convulsions ;hail It !Runny 11l i4e,ltilig .1110,111 ill Ills 111, nllll Is, 111111i0,1 011011,1(111; If the vial had been full (011i011 Mrs. Wharton gal, tile it would have been a fatal dose; li,r one led 11,1'11 111 11, the ill . - met urn lad...mons ,lose becomes apparent soon ; he limonite , intensified till death ; had inferred Ilan on Saturday and litinday his was sofforing tinder Ile" ellects of cholera nimbi,: he 1, 11 l v had I 'll Nhillilay till, sick • 011,1 st1(11111! II; 1;1 IllyrUiist ae and hill° ; lir“Siaa ilTltallle Shpt./I,h ; . iiiirli1'111111• 10.611 it y that t,151,1011 torhulrnt till 11.1111, ill I talt.lllllll,l ; It the lillant it y hail h,”41, nknu the 1 ;11,teral would have boon dead or dangermisly 111 .liy :1 e'elock 1.110 next I,olllllg ; tartar ennsir is used as a vertitlfuge I,r I,n 1•111• I 0' ; all tiVerilese, its 'Mildew. ill die i+ a 1.111,1111111 S 1111,0, And tvunld lin attended hy pain in ills throat, Milan. pall 1.41 by very strong me tallic ; I (nay net vomit: then , Is tiStiall V IL pain in the slisliaeli ter 110051 s ; it Sint)! net Is, accompanied by diart . h.ca ; relaxation of the imiscles Lo a certain point; It Mtn, rigid multramiiiii, especi ;illy. about (Ito es (relent., ; +0111L111111, , ,i ('mitt' early; there would 1,0 a 1/111ish. livid UN...ranee, result ing from the action 101 l the he: rl producing . latssive congesttpli flirougliont the system; uponjhe lewd'? v_ 'lle derided ; this la 11 1011 is lhaailllpaniol by n stupor wore, (a . 11•,,, 111,61111111 ; there in all iIIerOILSO rather 111:11111 iiiininnlloll ill the ••aillellill or mine; never ordered or said anything to NI rs. Wharton [lector ler 'lielleral Ketchuw : u pest sieotesi lutVealloWil hod it I m• 11 urine poison, also, if paralysis or apoplexy : !adore death he thought he had been poisoned; the ,nerhvn SLI . ,(111401,311011 the previous opinion. A NNA1.,01.1,, lir, 0, In . . Samuel testiliell that the symptoms indicated/that Lien, Ketchum did ma die front natural rilll n. There Was 1111 UV icielhai iii Ito nyulpinurs to ilnlivuts all overdo,. of "pi ton or poisoning by deposit. 111 • it tumbler given him contained a white sediment, which he I.Xalllilloll and look to bs tartltr emetic. lie thought the adminis trathm of chlorof, , rin fiollowed by chleral, as administered by I , r. ‘,V ill suns, proper antler lilt. eirellinslailees. Thu stelliaoh nl lion. 11-lLellll,ll, lvil h I+llllol l / 5 , LVils 11111 111 a Alassi jar the litheratery it Prei s . The htboralury 1112,1 1110 re 1111111 inlli 41,11010, 11011 (vss not SI riel iv gni/Inlet!. Pref. the , tlolvorsily meeyhoei, who e-eo,ted at (1, immt me Jr lelll 05 /lllllllat hill, gave It /IS his old lltllll Ihall :en, IV dill net dill !rein uatul:- al Ile Wadi, up his opinion 111(11 facts testified to Ily In . . Williams, the at tendant. physician, ill eillillecliell with ap pearances of the the testy er pest marten: 0 X 21.111 illat Tartar caustic gen erally operates speedily, Enough linty be , absorbed to f )1 . . , 1111011 111.11111, anti the balance remain in the stomach. Prof. \Vino K. Aiken, Profes.mr of Ana lytical Chemistry ill the Aledical College ,if the University of , :%larylanil, was next called. lie testified. Ile first made an ex ainituttion or the contents of Gen, unt's M.olllllol_l, to See Whether the preSellee el Aryelmino could is delisSild, tut failed to find tuty traces or 0. feuding the ex eiloilethe‘ of Prof. Aiken, the I ',mut ad journed until Nl , ottlay. • A sNAgokts, I,ec. 11.—'1'110 court met at in o' clol:. Professor Aiken ra ' sinned his evidelive, which coneltided on Saturday with it narration of his search for stro,Thilt, ulI true°, of which were wanting, 401 Ile 110,' 111,1C1 0 00101 10 1101101 his analysis and tests for arsenic iu the material Lad hhbn illft alter the search for stryelinia, resulting in a brownish precipitate, IL I/011 .- 0011 Of which he teSied with aqua ammonia which satisfied hint that no arsenic was present, lie then proeeeded to usnmine the portion of material ‘vhieli had not been used in the te...1 The resillt led him n, suspect the 101011110 0 itllllllloolly, it 111011 is 0•1:0011,1101 by LwU or three re-alts c leo neleristie of antimony and of nothing else. The list 1 , 11 . prat tired seen results that 11‘.0.11111 not ,Mention' It dun la of its presenen. Witge,s here detailed the process and treatment for dottirtnruttn; the pteseneeolanlinenty. Ile itnule no tests to aseertain in what partieu lar 011111011111101 MO11110 0 11) . was 'present. Tire onlyel.gtainiv was the ill'eSellee or all 1111- 110,10010,11 that hartividar 1101 - ry artiele of o.l(ltnerve known tartar einetie. - The result or volupoilini obtain ed was sulphide 111 . Nviteess heing asked wiad..ll,llllll.,\' Of tartar eniet ie was 00111:tilled ul the Nll4lllitie lif awl 101011 y, said in his 0111:111111.y Otis Itnt 0,1 important as 111(1 ellitraCt,r. - lie never at:tithed linporttinnee as to 111141 111110111 lelitloll was lilund in 1.11(1 St.:0,1111101, ex - Veil( ill casts where t i med iu very sinall quamtities, which !night aevidentally get in ins , Leeni.rll, 011011 its very ninuliteness SVOLI lii IA X pliti 11 its ox hal p reeve re lie Leek lie !Mille t., drturni e the tome Lity present, regarding it unimportant, and proceeded to give his reasons why Ito at, regarded il, whom the witness WaN stfliTli Ely the t'u,trt. lie thee Bahl the iiltialitity could net have been loss than twenty grains ; it yen call the article tartar enteric, there were lolly twenty grains or more; the ten grains of sulphide of antimony present wut,ld make twenty grains or tartar emetic; tartar emetic, as such in substance, was never found in the stomach; the only evidence of the presence of tartar ton'etic was the evi dence of same antithonisi this is not pe culiar to antimony, but common to all poisons taken in the stomach; he based his idea of the quantity or weight of the tartar emetic found on obser vation and his knowledge of the lleite - tity contained in a given weight of sulphide of antimony; all authorities ' regard tile tests used ty him its per fectly conclusive as to :in Li entry. I•he examination relative to the analptis,of the contents of the stantach was concluded, and witness examined concerning the sed. intent found in the tumbler at Mrs. What.- ton's. A tout bier containing sediment was placed iu his hands by Dr. Chew, which he tested for tartar-emetic, verified his tests, and round not less than ten grains of-bar tar emetic in the sediment; think the quint tity was twelve grains; it was not less than . ten. The process of testing Wee e X phl ih ed. The examination in-chief ended, and the witness given to the defence. The crass-examination was conducted by • Mr. Steele. This witness was on the stand the entire session of the Court (live hours), and has crossmxaminatthn was not concluded at the hour of adjournment. 'Throughou t the protracted and urinate questioning o witness,. involving his knowledge and skill as an anlytical chemist, every juror gave earnest aud„pdivided attention. M=l Mayor Stokely, of Philadelphia, /8 to have a high reserve police force--nothiug under az feet. That fore ought to be effective THE LANCASTER WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1871 Still Another Delimiter The Washington Patriot says : The defalcation in Marden's case devel oped other frauds of heavy sums of money, and the books show that by means of ab stractions at different periods within about two years an amount of over sixty-five thousand dollars has been stolen from the Uovernthent in the cash-room of the Treas ury, the offenders being Marsden and Seth Johnson, interest-teller in the cash room. The discovery of Marsden's guilt led the way to the discovery of .Iphoson's crime. There does not seem to have been any col lusion between the two in the defalcation of Johnson, and it appears that neither knew of the crime of the other. (loth were discharged from the department last week. Johnson has been for about eight years in the Treasurer's office, and was highly es teemed by all his associates. The know ledge that he has been guilty of the abstrac tions which are-now shown to have occur red through him creates great distress in that (Alice. It was noticed that Johnson has been rather despondent for some time past, but not until Monday last was - it discovered that he was implicated in frauds upon the Government. The whole affair is now in the hands of the officers of the law. John son is now sick in bed and utterly pros trated. When he learned that his guilt was discovered Ike stated that it had so weighed upon his mind, that he had designed to con fess his crime. Both Marden and Johnson are very respectably connected. Pardon has a wife and two children. Johnson is married, but has no children. .Iplumon has probably been engaged in smirk transactions for several years, but the particular matter fur which he has now been brought to account is the sum of 3:,e,- 000, which he drew from the Treasury at one time in March last, and which, it is be lieved, he had accounted for by false entries in his books in connection with the ac counts of theredemption fund. Manual' a transactions were more • impositions on Johnson, to whom he would present cheeks for small amounts, with a re quest that Johnson would ~ a sh then, on some pretext or other, that lie wanted to advance money to some needy clerk, or sonar such representation. Johnhilm, who was unsuspecting perhaps, or prob ably tilt that, with the knowledge of his own transactions On his mind, hecould not afford W refuse these request,, would easn the cheeks, and account for them as so much cash. When he would ask Maiden about them. the latter W1111:1.1 say it was all right, and thebleneral Assistant 'Treas urer knew al about it, and thus the mailer weld on till the cashier had has attl.lllll/11 1,111- 1 11 to the matt 00, 1111011 inquiry, found that the Treasurer AS,111•11,11111. Treasurer were entirely ignorant of the proceedings, and Manion was at 011111 1 COO • fronted with the Assistant Treasurer, who handed bon the ,•hecks, whereupon 11011111- r 0,1041 11111 whole thing, and t•X1 1 111111110,1 • 11,1,3 body in the odic 11'1,111 11111111•11,1111 with 111111. Nllll - 111111 as a native of Roston, :Old hi, 110111 111 the 0111,111111 e years. - .1,b11, , 1 I,a native of Herb inier county, k, and Ins been hiee.vn tu Gone 5i151.111, Iron, his 'Joyless!. He was a clerk 111 1 ,01111,1 Sl/11111er'S 1111111 i in that ,seitibx , 11 bere by 01,1 1..1.1••• 11 his ,1 entire belie: nl his :111- 4111110 10 , 1,0nal integrity. Ili. I raii,itl . LitniS Commenced several yrais au,o, allit was mad" through Lurk ed A New Yerk, threii,th houses.] tinselly, first with Baron, den A and icoldly through Vant, Washingten 'file suspicion or the latter house haviiiv, been aroused, promptly netitiod Johnsen that hisareetint with them should net be disturbed until they were satisfied of its eorreetiiess, ./ohnnen having previously stated that the money (vas furnished hint by man, a patent lawyer, of NOW York. Sherman then wrote a litter to I .l a NN'il.shiligton A Co., dated Nov. 11, 10 1, fully reeognizing Johnson's nevi/mil:is his I/WIl. TllO 111111, still !lilt biting pushed their NTHt itrri her, .litllll2 , oli, finding !lei 111111,111111 1111111111(1111, eon fessoil to them that 110 %V.( using Gov erinninit funds, anti had 111.11,11 1.11/1 . 1,101114 iii 1110 "lb, houses llAllied. rant, IN'aslillgton reporteil the filet Dwain lair liimeral :Simmer. 'rho amount to his credit rant, Wash ington Ai Co., is about IU,IIOII, his delidcu- Lion running Lurk sciveral years. Johnson confesses thin ie ill reach :nil have tbe born ab sorbed by AVtAI Street. The, htinilies of both parthil: are I/I Vi)111,1 iu thogroatest thstrt•ss al thocalawily whist huts :1,1 Martlen Will 11(4.11 tutee a hearing ut thttl . lrlit . o Coal 1 on Tuesday next. The t!orrespondenee between Secreta ry of State mid 'Minister Curtin was 1,111- 111,11,11 by the Milner on the 114th of .1 info Last. .lie said he seas directed to inform Curtin that the conduct of Cutacazy, the Minister , If Itucsia lfere, both officially and personally, Mel Par 511111' 11,1 been such as materially to impair his useful - 11/ his own lioverunield to render intercourse with him tor either liusinesq or social purposes highly disagree-able. inter those circumstances the President inns nt the ~pinion that the interests or the coun tries would be promoted and hi., 1'01:L -60110 of cordiality with the tionernment of the Czar, of the importance of which he is well aware, would lie placed upon a nnu•h surer tooting if the head of the Iths,ian Le gation here would he changed. The adds: It is hoped this intimation will he suffi cient toeause the change, 1,111 to insure the restoration and the continuance of their op portunities of free and cordial, official and tither intercourse with the representatives of the Emperor which the President earn estly desires to meet, and which have a. ways existed with the esteemed predeces sors of the present Minister, but which Mr.Catacazy's course has made till possible to he maintained with hint. The President sincerely desires to avoid any step which may show a want of confidence for the per , son whom his Imperial Nlajesty has select to represent the interests Milk t went ; this has made into hesitate long before directing tins announcement, and he deeply regrets the necessity which at length compels him to make it, You Will read this to Prince tiortsehakotl, iir, if re quested, you will leave a CORN' with him. July 17, Minister Curtin telegraphed to Secretary Fish: —rho Prince was in tier litany till ticuffier. Shall I present the despatch to Wesfinann, Ada tint Chancel - liiror to the Prince "' Fish telegraphed to Curtin: " Present the des .1111(1 or .1 uly IT, to ‘Vescinattn, should the Minister be absent." Nlinister Curtin telegraphed trout tit. Petersburg, July 19, as follows: " Westniarin cannot treat the despatch very seriously. Did not take a copy.— Asked the to wait the return of Lee Prince. Said lie would not mention to the Emperor iu absence or the Prince, as it !night post -1.111. Lull visit of the tirand Illlka , which would lie agreeable to those trying to disturb the friendship of the 11111 countries." :qr. Curtin innirmed Secretary Vick that in accordance with ilistrUctiiiiis he hail in the aliselice of Prince Corti.oillakoir, Chainielliir the Empire, lireselile:l the request of the recall of Catacazy to \ mann. who seemed te bo much surprdmd, 11101 treated the Silliject as Very neriuus. lie said the sillijOct, was too grave for his rnn hidennien, and declined to aer, ill the ali• :menial of Prince ilortsehaktill, and ill i not ask till it copy of the Secretary's despatch es. 'We:4l . 'lllnm said he would write to 1110 Prince on the subject and made a cc or the conversation. Seeretary Fish telegraphed to ti inister rtirtin, August 18, that the ilOSILilLiu,ll do•iny tit votnplying with the rag eat di rorird 111 the 110:11M , C111,1 (ICJ itit and dis;lppuiuunou t. 'l'nr rear+on teas not qateilltetory, as 1,111 111111111,11011 %Vit.!, 1110 inister for Foreign .‘ifittrs ruuhl lat reached. A tleviNion Wes illipOrLalll heforo the telvent of the I; rand Doke, as the l'resitlont could not be ex peened to receive as the principal attentlaut of His Il ightloss one who has 1)0(41 abllNiVit Of hint, )111,i is personally unaeceotattle. ASNiNiallt SecrOttiry I )avi,, A inni,t IH, to .Nlinister Curtin, urges hiul t reeelVt. a reply from NlM , ,nuanu. Finally, alter Other eorrespnudenim, received a reply, in which this was is, tolerate Until alter the iirtistilliation of the “I•alid I hlke to Ono Pres ident, and to this roiliest. the Govern uu.ut ('lttalinky ceased repre sent the Russian Empire iiiter the priesiiii- The correspondenee is voluminous, in elnding a long letter from Air. Visit, cir iminstaidially suiting t ho reit,ll/11 why Cat, aeazy rendered himself unaeotiptahle bi this 1;0%0111Mb:1i. lit hut, itI.H.rlio , •111,1110 following paragraph : I hi his arrival at 'aLa,azy gave promise or tieing a u.etul and very acceptable Al Mister, and made a very agreeable impression. Nunn, hoa over, he began to make himself very oilieions in terfering in questions nut appropriately eonnected with his legation, and in those pending beim() Congress, importuning Senators and Representatives:Mil resorting to personal interviews and solieitations un usual on the part of the representatives of other powers accredited to this Govern- meat, distasteful and annoying to the legis lators thus indecorously approached, and tending to embarrass the tree course legislation on the subjects, With respect to which his interference was obtruded Ho did not hesitate to use the newspapers of toe country to influence public opiu icni upon questions pending before the (toy ernmeut, and indulged in much license in his denunciation of measures and of indi viduals. In his conversation he was even more severe and unrestrained,aud employ ed abusive and vituperative language to ward very many persons, including several in public positions and enjoying the re spect and confidence of the community. The impropriety of a foreign minister thus attempting to influence, and to misdirect the public opinion of (Jib country, must be admitted as sufficient ground for his ceas ing to bee proper agent between the Gov ernmeut which he represents, and that to which he is nceredited. The entir4korrespondence, in w4ich is a letter front Nit% Uatacazy to Secretory Fish was sent to the Senate to-day by the Pres ident. The Senate ordered it to be printed but afterwards reconsidered the motion, hence a longer notice of it than the above could not be obtained. A Ali Ife-Ilurderer_ I . lralweg l —lutem per, RICHMOND, Dec. 9. —Jacob Brock, color ed was executed yesterday at Louisa Court House for the murder of his wife. On the scaffold he made a full confession of guilt, attributing it to infidelity on the part of his wife and to intemperance on his own. tongreaslonnl TUESDAY, Dec. 3 In the C. S. Senate, bills were introduced by Mr. Cooper, to amend the laws giving pensions to soldiers of 1812, by removing the disqualification for having engaged in rebellion ; by Mr. Corbett, restoring the office of Director of the Bureau of Statistics and by Mr. Kellogg, authorizing mail steamship service in the Gulf of Mexico. Mr. Blair moved to take up a resolution offered by him the day previous, asking in formation concerning the suspension of civil law in South Carolina, but the motion was rejected— yeas, 11, nays, 45. tin mo tion of Mr. Cameron, the official corres pondence relating to Catacazy's retirement was called for. The House bill declaring the meaning of the Eight-Hour law was considered, pending which the Senate ad journed. In the House, Mr. Farnsworth, from the Post-office Committee, reported a bill con solidating and amending the statutes rela ting to the Post•office Department. The President's Message was taken up in Com mittee of the Whole, and its various por tions were referred to the appropriate com mittees. A motion to refer to a select com mittee that portion recommending the union of the telegraphic and postal system gave rise to debate, and was finally de feated, the postal telegraph proposition be ing referred to the Post-office Committee. The resignation of Mr. Washburne, elect ed Governer of Massachusetts, was re ceived. Bills were introduced to facilitate commerce with China and .Japan; pro• posing an amendment to the Constitution; and for the erection of a public building at Chicago. tin motion, the Committee on Education and Labor were directed to in quire into the expediency of establishing a Bureau of Labor in connection with the A gricu It oral Department. Adjourned. WED:: ES AT, Dec. 0. In the I', S. Senate, Mr. troll, from the l'Olninitteu on Southern I tutrages, reported resolutions directing the arrest of throe recusant witnesses, which were laid over. Mr. Anthony introduced a bill to amend the Enforcement act one to prevent bribery at elections air President and members of Congress. Mr. Robertson made an inenectual attempt to have the Amnesty bill taken Up. A Message was received iron, the President, with the cor respondence relating to Catacazy's re moval. After a short. Executive session, the senate adjourned. Ili the ,Ilon.e resolutions Were adopted directing the Committee (in Railroads to vonsider the expediency of a ship oanal be tween the >l ississippi and Lake INI iehigan; rei t nesting the President to transmit. cur respondenee relating to the Spanish-Cu ban tronhh•s• and calling for a copy of the the carve of the court-martial on I ieneral Itindl iu Ish'2., The Select Com ndttee on Civil service was announced, with Mr. Nei ley, of I'a., as Chairman. The Apportionment tail reported last session was considered until adjournment, . The President sent dumber of 110111111a tions bt the Senate yesterday. Among them were Ilon. George Ilaticroft, or New York, as inister t 0 the t;ernian Empire; iefirge 11. hiker, oll'efinsylvania, as Min ister to Turkey ; Thomas Biddle, or Penn sylvania. :Minister to San Salvador; A. T. Torbet, of Delaware, Counsel-tleneral at Havana ; 11. M. Armstrong. of New York,. t'onsitl-Heueral at Itonie; Ilennet, of I tuliana, I :overnor of Idaho; :Marsh I iddings, of Nlichigan, /overnor of New 31exieo ; Frederick Watts, or Penn sylvania, l'onitnissioner or Agriculture ; Chester A. Arthur, Collector at New York; 11. I Slckel and D. It. It. Nevin, Pension Agent, at Philadelphia; Francis A. Walk er, Commissioner ,if Indian affairs. TitunstiAv, Dec. 7. In the Senate, Mr. Pomeroy presented a kill to unite tlNostal and telegraph ser v w es. Ile de. cl' bed a bed it as modification of the bill fur th(.sati.ke purpose whichwas be fore the ,ia.txubmi l'ust offices at the last session, tunl nail that he introdueed it fis an earliest effort to unite the services. 'fa Mr. Sunnier gave waice Ilea bill 1 , 11,11111 . 01 a Xatimi arid abolish the office of 'olutilissiolier neVelitle,and said that as theehief duties of the Cotillnissioner were to be abolished, it was right that the office should he also. Bills were intro dilced and laid Mt the table, as follows: By Mr. Scott. to regulate the pay of cum Mantling officers in the navy. The bill gives Hie Admiral 2113,5011 ; Viee-Admiral, $1 1,11111 at sea and 10,0e0 on shore fluty, and i,I II 111 all leave or Si siting orders Hear- Admirals, at sea $7,51.111, on shorn on leave or waiting orders z. , 1,:a111: Cotintio dor., at sea iS - k,.. - 1011, oli shore Zstaien, 011 leave or waiting orders ; Captains, at, sea shore l,uuu, an leave or waiting orders ; Commanders, lit-ea sl,ellll, on shore duty .3,71111, on leave or waiting or ders $11,..011. By Ilrownlow fixing the salaries of certain officers in the Executive Department, as hillows: Assistant Secre taries, Solicitors, Second Comptroller, Reg ister and the Supervising, Architect M . the Treasury I ieparttlient, Secretary of the 1 work or, Commissioner of Patents, Com missioner or Indian Affairs, and Commis shiner of Agriculture, eaell ;!;:i,llOO per 'ln finiti; I . llnonissioner of Customs, Auditor of tau Treasury, Commissioner of Pensions and the Assistant Postmaster , leuerals, $.1,.1U0 earl) ; 1110 cider clerks in the sever al departments, each Assistant Itegister of the Treasury and chief clerk of the several bureaus of the Treasury 1/epartnient, $1!,...00 each. By Mr. Itainsey to reduce the rates of cor respondence by telegraph, and to con nect the telegraph with the postal service. It provides lor the incorporation of a Pos tal 'Telegraph Company, muipusediiffitird tit.r C. Hubbard, of Mass.; A, S. 1l owitt, of New York ; .1„ F. Tracy, of Illinois, and others, fur the performance Or a postal tel egraph service, under litlntraet with the Postmaster Honeral and ill his behalf, in aN•Ordaneti With a large number of detailed requirements. The Postinaster-fleneral is empowered to lix the ;,compensation In be raid to the voinpany, and' the rates to be paid by the public Mir the trans mission of messages, provided the net in vol.+ in the e,iitipaity shall 'not be re duced below ten per vent. of its capi tal stock, which at the organization of the company is to be $1,00U,000, and may be afterwards inereamed by the amount If actual oost of the Imes constructed by it ler the transmission of telegrams. Said company, as agent for the I'ostmaster-1 len oral, is to have the exclusive privilege of tI ..srliittilig eorresimildellee by telegraph, and fatrforining the telegraphie correspon dence or the cOuntrv, exeepting telegrams ni the Itolli,wing description, namely :-- Telegrams transmitted by any cotripa ity in operation fur the public at ilie I Lillie or the approval tir this act. 'Fele grains for which no charge is made, transmitted by the pr sate lines of tqamor ations, etc., anti all other telegrams on wnion a telegraphic Main') for Sr. , as post- age, has been affixed and cancelled at the tune or the transmission thereof. The charge for the transmission •of 'telegrams by the Postmaster general and said Com pany, in the I.;,nited States, shall be uniform for equal distances, at a rate not exceeding fur this first 120 words of each telegram, including date, address and signature, be tween ;offices list over ":in miles apart, and rot)C, bt4WVOII ill and ..(111 miles, with I:a% additional for each additional rot, miles. or part thereof. Night messages are to be sent at a rate not exceeding I:sc, per I,eno miles. Mr. Scott called up the joint resolution for the arrest of recusant witnesses in North ittel South Carolina. 31 r. Edmunds moved to make it a resolution of the Senate alone. Mr. Scott argued that, as the committee for which the witliesses had shown contempt was a joint . continitlee, this resolution should lie a joint one. This discussion was continued for some time by Messrs. Edmunds, Conkling, Frelinghuysen, Min ton and Shermatioind then the Senate took recess till '2 41' ehh•k. After the recess, on !notion of Mr. Ruck in 211.111, tlieSellate ap pointed the committees, and on motion of Mr. the. Senate at hi a ent into hioneilimely Mt,. the Extietitive session tile :sen.tie until Monday. In the House bills tier' inlrotllleed and referred as tiillows : By Mr. Pierce, to make Thanksgiving Bay it mitiould holi day. By NIP. Bale, to relieve the masters of coasting vessels, engaged in trade on the t runner-, of the I'u iteil States, f roin pri non r ing and presenting manifests of cargoes as umv relittirt‘d lly tae. Icy \I r. flay, to proVitle no' the payttlellt cdf pellsitniS through Postmasters. M r. Lynch was ex cused at his own request from service on the Pacific Railroad Committee. The I liaise then took up the bill to revise and consolidate the Postal laws, the Clerk then resumed its reading, which had already iionstuned the last two morning hours. tho close of the morning hour, and before the reading of the hid Was concluded, the I Wise at la lu ad jonrned Until MOilda .. ):lloXt. :\IONDAN", Dee. 11. In the S. :senate, Mr.Siiinnerasked to ridieVed front tile eliairmanship of the Colliallttee till Privileges and Elections, and then. hieing 110 ObjeCtil,ll his request was granted. AI r. Ito !Jeri-son, from the Committee on I fisabilities, reported the I;eneral Amnesty bill. Mr. Sumner intro duced his Iteventle Heiorm bat, and it was referred to the Finance Committee. It does away with the Internal Revenue Bureau, and abolishes all internal taxes and duties except from the sale and use of stamps, the duly on spirits being increased to SO fits, per gallon. The collection of the rev- Cline is transferred to the Treasury De partinent. Bills were introduced by Mr. Scott, relating to examination of witnesses boture Congressional committee: Mr. Ramsey, creating the Territory of Ojib way, in the northwest; and by Mr. Hulse to refund certain taxes on dividends and proti Ls added to the surplus of corporations. Mr. Con kling culled up his resolution di recting an inquiry into the legislation nec essary to prevent defalcations in the Pay master's °dice. Pending its considersition, the Senate went into Executive session, and soon after adjourned. In the House, bills were introduced by Mr. Cox, for a general amnesty; Mr. Mer cur, repealing the laws giving shares to in formers under the Internal Revenue law; Killinger, to "facilitate water commu nication, and promote a cheap and uniform system of railroad transportation ;" Mr. Shanks, establishing a Bureau of Labor; Mr. Hoar, to protect the elective franchise; and Mr. Ring, to amend the Constitution so as to prevent the intermarriage of the white and colored races. On motion of Mr. Lynch an inquiry into the condition and ex penses of the Treasury Departmlont was or dered. On motion of Mr. Dawes a joint rea• Minion adjourning both Houses, trom De cember 21st to January Bth, was adopted. Mr. Woods asked leave to Mier a resolution declaring that the Republicans, having a large majority in Congress and the Presi- dent, should take measures to at once re duce the taxes and tariff, restore the origi nal rights of the people under the Constitu tion, reform the Executive,ete. The House refused to suspend the rules for its re.cep- tion. On motion of Mr. Kelley, the Secre tary of the Treasury was asked for infor mation in regard to the number of employ ees and expenses of the Internal Revenue Bureau. A bill was reported and passed appropriating $lBO,OOO for deficiencies in taking the census. Mr. Campbell asked leave to offer a resolution looking to the annexation of British America and Mexico, but it was not received. The Apportion ment bile was considered. Adjourned. Senate Committees WAsitiNoTosr, Dec. 7.—The following is a list of the Committees elected by the Sen ate, for the second st...ssion of the Forty second Congress, the first-named in each Committee being the Chairman : Privileges and Elections-Messrs. Sumner, Morton, Rice, Carpenter, Logan, Hill, Thurman. . . Foreign Relations—Cameron, Harlan, Morton, Patterson, Schurz, Hamlin, Cas serly. Finance—Sherman, Morrill, of Vermont, Fenton, Scott, Ames, Wright, Bayard. Appropriations—Cole, Sprague, Sawyer, Edmunds, Windom, West, Stevenson. Commerce—Chandler, Corbett, Kellogg, Spencer, Buckingham, Conkling, Vickers. Manufactures—Hamlin, Robertson, Gil bert, Sprague, Johnson. Agriculture—Morton, Frelinghaysen, Robertson, Lewis, Davis, of West Virginia. Military Affairs—WilSon, Cameron, Mor ton, Ames, Logan, West, Blair. Naval Affairs—Cragin, Anthony, Nye, Osborn, Ferry, of Michigan, Stockton, Al corn. .1 !wary—Trumbull, Edmunds, Conk ling, Carpenter, Frelinghtlysen, Puul, Thurman. Post.Odices and Post-Roads—Ramsey, Pomeroy, Gilbert, Cole, llamliu, Ferry, of Mich., Kelly. Public Lands—Pomeroy, Tipton, Os born, Sprague, Windom, Logan, Casserly. Private Land Claims—Davis, of Ky., Ferry, Caldwell, Bayard, Blair. Indian Affairs—Harlan, Corbett, Buck ingham, Frelinghuysen, Wilson, Cald well, Davis, of Ky. Pensions Edmunds, Tipton, Pratt, Brownslow, Bainilton, of Texas, Logan, Saulsbury. Revolutionary Claims—Pool, Browns low, Corbett, Hill, Davis, of West Virginia. Claims—Howe, Scott, Pratt, Stewart, Boremau, Wright, Davis, of West Virginia. District of Columbia—Patterson, Sum ner, Lewis, Spencer, Sawyer, Hitchcock, Vickers.' Patents—Ferry, of Connecticut, Carpen ter, Morrill, of Maine, Windom, Hamil ton of Maryland. Public. Buildings and 4:rounds—Morrill, of Vermont, Sumner, Stockton. Territories—Nye, Cragin, Schurz, I:ore :nen, Hitchcock, Clayton, Cooper. Pacific Railroad—Stewart, Ramsey, l far lair Rice, Fenton, Scott, Kellogg, 11 itch taxi:, Cooper, Ferry, of Mich., Kelley. Mines and Mining--Rive, Chandler, Flanagan, Tipton, Caldwell, Alcorn, Sauls bury. • Revision of the Laws of the United States —Conkling,, Carpenter, Stewart, Wright, larnilton, of Md. Education and Labor—Sawyer, Morrill, of V t., Flanagan, Patterson, .1 IAIIISOII. 'ro Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate—Fenton, NVindom, Saulsbury. On the Library—Miirrill, of Me., Ilowe, Sherman. On the Removal nF Political Disabilities —llohertaini, }foreman, Ames, iixwil ton, of Texas, Vickers, Clayton, Sherman. Oul issismippi River Levees—Kel logg, Trumbull, Nchurz, Alcorn, Blair. on Alleged Outrages in the Southern States—Sent t, Chandler, Rice, Pool, Pratt, Bayard, Blair. Unsneeessfol Eltoris to It •Ile the President and the Disitlieeted RepaDli- C.u.Nwlatars. fly Telegraph to tic N. V. Tribune., WASH I NOTON, 11e.. 111, IS7l.—The efforts to reconcile the President and the !mist prominent of the dissallected Republican Senators have finally been abandoned.— Those will/ were most active in this move ment feel considerably disappointed at their lack of success, and think that a good opportunity to heal the most embarrassing dissensions in tie Republican party has been allowed to Pass. They urged that, in view of the late successes of the Republican party inn the Nude elections, HMI its ac knowledged strength with the people, One President could afford to be inagnaniMolle, anti make the first advances toward a re conciliation. Much of the bitter feeling, they said, was the result of misunderstand ing or of mistakes which the President has since, by his actions, if not by direct declaration, admitted to be such, and done something to correct; and now General mint, with a party behind him such as never existed in this country before, might forget the past without any danger of hav ing his 1110IIVPS misunderstood, and make friends of those who have always been looked upon as the leaders of the party. The greatest ellorto, as is already known, were directed to the bringing together of NI r. Stunner and the President, but those who approached One latter found him as immovable as a rock. The President claiMed ever having taken part inn any movement to impair the influence of the Massachusetts Senator in tine Senate or elsewhere, and said that he had no share inn the removal, last Spring, of Mr. Sum tier from the Chairmanship of the Foreign Re lations Committee; but he thinks that Mr. Sumner has done more to injure him than any other too men ever did, and, inn perfect harmony with his character, as generally untleri4ood, Is too obstinate to make any move toward peace. The President is re ported to feel most sorely a remark attri buted to Mr. Sumner, and extensively published last Summer, that Gen. Grant was "the lowest man will/ ever occupied the Presidential chair." Mr. Sumner, on the other hand, feels indignant at the treat ment. which he has received at the handsof the President, or of those who are supposed to represent him ; but, while he asked no one to assist in returning him to his old committee, and while no position which could be conferred on him would stake Liar approve much of the President's pol icy, generous treatment at the hands of those Senators, who are understood to rep resent Gen. Grant's wishes, would doubt less have removed some of tine feeling on both sides. But, when the Senate was carefully canvassed and only seven of those who stood by Simmer last Spring were found ready to vote for his restore ' lion, though it was thought that a majority would favor it, if they believed it coal , ' be done, it was seen that further effort was useless. The efforts to bring Gen. Grant and other Senators together were not so great, and hate now also been abandoned. There are, as yet, no signs of a breaking out of fresh hostilities; and, as it is not understood that any of the appointments now before the Senate will be strongly op posed, a truce may be expected fora while at least. Work In the Seuuile---'I runlbull lilt. I gIK a Baud. Under:the above startling caption, For ney's/W., publishes the following special telegram: Senator Trumbull succeeded to-day in calling up his resolution—which is of a very sweeping character—calling for infor mation relative to the expenditures of the Government, the distribution of the public patronage, and the management of the civil service in general. 'there was some ob scurity about the resolution when it was first introduced, but the speech of Mr. Trumbull to-day in support of it has removed this..\ Ir. Trumbull is one of those who do not believe in rotation in office; lie regards the Jacksonian theory of what lie calls the spoils doctrine as an abomination, and asserts that it is sapping the foundations of the Govern ment. The logic of his argument to-day, was that we should !MVO a sort 1' aristo crcy of oilice-holders, anJ th.c a man once being in I .11i,e should remain there through all political changes and under every administration. He , failed to show how,unde our form of government, any po litical partyis to be kept together upon such a piatforin. It ie the opinion ofS enators who support the administration that the Introduction of this resolution is nothing more nor loss than an excuse for an indirect attack upon lien. rant. Mr. Trumbull read largely from the evidence taken by the Retrenehment Committee last Winter to show that the public service, as now con ducted is not only inefficient but corrupt. In this he was aided by Senator Schurz, of M is souri, who protnpted him all through his speech and supplied hint with material. His purpose is to get a special committee, endowed with extraordinary powers to enter upon a general investigation of the affairs of the Administration. It is sus pected that the report of this committee, should it be appointed, would be used as an eloctioneering document against the re nomination and re-election of General I❑:rant. As a matter of course, the friends of the President opposed the resolution. Mr. Trumbull's arguments are very thin, and some of them. followed to their logi cal conclusion, are simply ridiculous. It is the purpose of some of the friends of the Administration to reply to him, and to ex pose the absurdity of his proposition. The debate which was inaugurated to-day will probably open up the whole qUOStiOn Of civil-service reform. A Judge Appointed by President Monroe Fifty Years Ago. Hon. Willard Hall, Judge of the U. S. District Court for Delaware, has forwarded to the President his resignation of that po sition. Judge Hall's resignation is an event out of the common order of things. He has been, for nearly a half-century, continu ously on the bench, and is, without doubt, the oldest man serving in so distinguished and important a judicial capacity in the United States. His term of service, too, certainly exceeds that of ally other United States Judge. Judge Hall was born in Westham, MaSs on December 21tb, 1780, and graduated at Harvard University in the class of 1799. In 1803 he removed to Dover, Del., and en tered upon the practice of law. In 1816 he was elected to Congress, and in 1818 re elected. In 1817 President Monroe appocrit ed him United States District Judge, and ho has served without intermission to the present time, except that within the last year tailing health has prevented him from reghlarly attending to the duties of the place, Reforuilnir Bontwell The present understanding is that Con gress, unable to regulate the finances, will undertake the lesser, but equally necessary task of reforming Bontwell. This will cer tainly be a great step of reform, if not in the revenue, at least in the civil service, where official neglect of duty by the Presi dent and Secretaries goes far to demoralize business progress in the Departments. Loral _rintriligenre TRIBUTE Or RESPECT TO JUDGE Lomi —MEETING OF LASCASTER BAR.—After the adjournment of Court on Saturday last, a meeting of the members of the Bar was held fur the purpose of taking action rela tive to the retirement of lion. H. G. Long from the President Judgeship of the see• nod Judicial District. On 'notion, Hon. 'l'. E. Franklin was chosen to preside, and W. 1.0111n:ill to act as Secretary. After a statement of the object of the meeting by Geo. H. Kline, Esq., on 'no tion Of D. I:. lAIIOIIIIIII, Esq., the Presi dent appointed a committee of seven, con sisting of Messrs. Geo. M. Kline, N. Ell maker, A. Herr Smith, D. G. Eshleman, S. H. Reynolds, Wm. Aug. Atlee and E. H. Yundt, to draft resolutions expressive of the sense of the meeting. After withdrawal, the committee report ed the following resolutions: The Hon. Henry G. Long, late President Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster county, having refused to be a candidate for re-election, and having re tired from the bench after an arduous and successful career as Judge for twenty years, the members of the Lancaster Bar, desirous of rendering a just tribute to his merits as a conscientious, upright and learned magis trate, do resolve: Ist. That as members of the Lancaster Bar we cannot permit the occasion of the retirement of the Hon. Henry G. Long from the bench, to pass without some ex pression of our sense of the many merits by which his judicial course has been distin guished. 2d. That we recognize and profoundly appreciate the purity of purpose, impar tiality, industry, extensive legal knowl edge, and sound sense which have so con spicuously marked his performance of his judicial duties ; and that we shall ever bear with us in the future a grateful remem brance of the kindness, urbanity and readi ness to accommodate, which all of us in the conduct of our professional business as well as in our general intercourse with them, have uniformly experienced at his hands. - - . :ird, That he carries with him our sincere wishes for his continued health and wel tare, and that we trust for many coming years to see him yet among us, happy in the consciousness of a faithful performance of his duties, and contributjug by his ge nial presence and society to the happiness of his many friends. 4th, '1 hat the Court be requested to enter the proceedings of this meeting on their minutes, and that a committee of three be appointed to convey these resolutions to the .! • edge, and that the Secretary be in structed to have these proceedings pub lished in the papers of this city. The resolutions were unanimously adopted anti the President appointed B. W. Patterson, 11. 11 Swarr and D. Bak er, Esqs., the committee called tsr by the fourth resolution On motion the meeting adjourned AFT iffcrin lionnNs.-Inn the Common Pleas on Wednesday last, was tried the remarka inle.lBo of tie°. M. Ktine and W nn. Aug. At lee,Trustees of the Union League 0; Lancas ter, vs. Euntnuel Erniantroint. It was all action of replevin brought by plaintiffs against the defendant, as tine late leader of what was formerly known as the Union League Band, to recover the musical in struments in the possession of the Band, or their value. It seems that in the month of November, Pali, the then Union League agreed by its Trustees, the plaintiffs, with the Band, that the latter should have the use and privilege of the instruments—then owned by the League—on tine condition, however, that the organization of sand Baud Inc kept up ; that they, the members of the Band, play or pertorm gratuitously for tine league or its successors, anil keep the musical instruments subject to the in spection of the League and in good condition. The plaintiffs alleged, that under n his agree ment the Band had but the use of the in strumento as a loan, subject to the orders of the League, or its representatives, and that tine Band broke the conditions of the agreement, under 5, ilit•il tinny held thein,by not playing gratnitiously when requested by Its Executive Cominnittce—that Com mittee con-isting, of Major R. W. iiinenk and S. S. Spencer. The defendants con tended that the organization of tine Band was kept intact; that they never refused to perform for the League, WllOll requested; that when they did refuse to play, without pay, it was for other organizations; that the I nn ion League was bang sinner' (1 i”solved, as shown by tine non-election of officers ; that by the terms nnf the agreement, the right of property was inn tine Band at any rate; that the present or late Committee had nn right to SUP, because the League had ceased to exist. Major Shenk testified that the I land bad refused to play without pay, when request ed to it, so by hint, as the Chairman of the Executive Committee, and had also re fused to surrender their instruments, and had refused to allow them to be inspected. Mr. Erinentrota, on the other hand, teati tied that they hail not refused to play, and had not refused permission to inspect the instruments; in this he was corroborated by other members of the Band. Mr. J. a. Shaeffer, the Treasurer since INA of the League, testified to the defunct condition of that once glorious institution ; that no election of officers bad bet held since January, IS17; that since that peri od, no money had been received into or paid out the Treasury ; that the last, moneys paid to him, Were paid by Ex-\layor Atlee, Major Shenk's prede cessor in the chairmanship of the Execu tive Committee; that the moneys received by Maj. Shenk had not been paid into the treasury, and that the Major bad never set tled his account of receipts and expendi tures, although he had told the witness that he would do so some time; and finally that there was a balance of three dollars and some cents in the treasury. Win. It. Wilson, Reynolds and Am wake appeared for the Band, and E. Franklin, Leaman and Shenk, for the plaintiffs. The jury were evidently of the opinion that the League was entirely too dead to be resur rected by dulcet symphonies or the trim, pets' blast, and that they had no use for the brass instruments in dispute ; so they found for the detendants. Our friends Fred. Smith, Shultz, Stein man A Co., and others who have out yet seen their money for the hats, capes and coal oil they furnished to the Wide-Awakes, had better gin for these three dollars in the Union League Treasury, beforclbe plain till's lawyers gobble it up; it is a small sherry, to be sure, but it is proper that ,t should lie applied in partial liquidation of the heavy indebtedness of the Bepu [Mean party to on r APer a Dr,in. Another case grew out of the difficulties between the Union League and the Band, Wherein Mal. R. W. Shenk was plaintiff and Emanuel Farman trout de fendant, the former seeing the latter for the value of a bass drum and cymbals, used by the Band, plaintiff having furnished the purchase money out of his own pocket.— Defendant professed to think that the Major was not entitled to recover, because the drum had had its head knocked out, and the cymbals had been banged and battered to pieces in his service during his candi dacy for State Senator. The jury, however, returned a verdict fur the Major in the auto of IL, thinking, perhaps, that if the Band had banged the cymbals and beaten the drain more vigorously, the Major him self woo id not have been so badly banged and beaten in the Senatorial contest. A Wu tisk EV Case.—For sou,,: days past the V. S. District Court, at Philadelphia, haSlSeell ell4aged in the trial of a rase be tween the United States vs. Jacob S. Hos tetter a distiller of this county. The issue was to try whether the United States has a right to a still, a quantity of grain, and whiskey which was seized for an alleged violation of the revenim laws, for selling whiskey without paying a tax thereon, it icing alleged by I deieudiiiii that the li quor removed was pr)perly slnuiprnl, amt all the requirements of the law complied with. The suit NV:LS iminmenced as long ago a: but was pm MI from time to tune. A large number of witnesses were examined ou loth Sides, and after argu ments by counsel and it charge by Judge eadwalatler, the case was given to the jury uu Friday e‘mhing. in Saturday they re turned a sealed verdict in favor of the nited States for the sum of 87;i0U. D 1010 N young man named Val entine Gardner, son of John Gardner, aged about twenty-one years, was drowned in the Marti.. Forge darn On Thursday. fie went down to the dam with his skates for the purpose of enjoying a little recreation. Shortly after getting on the ice he broke through and struggled in the water, which was about live feet deep, for more titan half an hour, the ice breaking under hint at each attempt. he made to get upon it. His cries finally attracted the attention of some of the neighbors, but before they could save hint he sunk front cold and exhaustion. It was some time after sundown when the accident happened, and the body was not recovered until the next morning. De ceased resided with his father, about three miles below Conestoga Centre. Ho was a tine young man, and his untimely death has caused much grief in the neighbor hood. ARRESTED ON REqUISITION.—TiWSCIUM- G 011( Va.) l',tolica for says, that on Tuesday last, Mr. G. J. High,of Lancaster, Pa., arriv ed there with a requisition front Gov. Geary, of that State,for Gideon J.Wenger,of Augus ta, charged with fornication and bastardyM Pennsylvania. On Wednesday, he, in com pany with Sheriff W. L. Mowry, arrested Mr. Wenger, and on the same evening left with him in custody. Mr. High and the lady's counsel, Mr. Davis, speak in kind terms of the assistance rendered them by our Virginia officers in the discharge of the unpleasant duty they were called on to per form." LARCENY OF oN EY.—BeRRURRI Butt was arrested by Officer Kißinger, and had a hearing before Alderman John M. Am weg, on complaint of Frederick Lipp, who charged him with having stolen from his premises iu Petersburg $.162 in money. At the hearing Butt confessed to the larceny of $l5O of Mr. Lipp's money, and said that he had spent it in the purchase of clothing, and in gambling, drinking and carousing at the saloon of Charles Cheesernan and other disreputable places. In default of :3500 he was committed to answer at file next quarter Sessions Court. The grist and merchant mill of Joseph M. Showalter, in the Borough of Hopewell, was entirely destroyed by lire on Sunday the 3d. inst. The structure was of frame, about 40 by 50 feet, three:and a-half stories and contained three run of burrs. The loss will reach nearly $5,000, on which there was an insurance in the Chester County Mutual Company of about $3,000. The fire is supposed to have been of incendiary origin. AN iNCENDIARY ATTE3tPT.-011 Than ks givingday theattention of Dr. J. M. Deav er, who lives in Drumore township near the Buck Tavern, was called by men threshing grain in his barn, to a gallon stone-jug tilled with coal-oil, which they had found standing in the middle of the barn- door. The stopper of the jug was the end of a candle, around which was wrapped several layers of brown wrapping paper. The jug was full of oil up to the stopper, which was partly immersed in it. 'I he candle had evidently been burning above the jog for some time, as the neck was cov ered with melted tallow, and the light had only gone out when the candle was con sumed within a quarter of an inch of the oil. There had manifestly been an at- tempt to burn the barn—the incendiary supposing that the candle would burn Until it reached the oil, and would then set it on fire, white he would have time to get away before the explosion took place. He does not seem to have known that if the candle had burned till it reached the oil, its light would have been extinguished.-- Dr. Deaver has gained a gallon of good oil and is anxiously looking for the donor to express to him his obligation. A PktsoNEß.—On Friday last. Constable Kirkpatrick, of Lower Chanceford town ship, passed through this place,en route to York, with a prisoner, charged with being an escaped convict from Lancaster County Prison. Before being arrested he made a confident of a person residing near Shen k's Ferry, saying he had escaped front Lancas ter County Prison, where he had been con fined on charge of passing counterfeit money. The prisoner exhibited a roll of the "queer," supposed to contain about $7200, but it was missing when be was ar rested.— lC,'gl.(sril, flu'. REAL ESTATE MARI: ET.—Heury Shu bert, real estate agent, sold at private sale the property belonging to John tie timer ling, situated on the East side of North Duke street, between Orange and Chest nut streets, to James Kelley, tor ;Mo. CAP CLOTH I No.—Wahatnaker S Br ia the proprietors of the great ready-made cloth. ing house, at 6th and Market,' are noted a• one of the largest advertisers of the country. They bare been advertising very extensively ever since they started in business, but a few years ago, and the consequence is that they have:now the largest establishment in the country. They use newspapers as their ads cr uising mediums almost exclusively, accom panying their advertisements with a profuse distribution of handbills. Their experienee has manifestly taught them that newspaper advertising is in the long run the cheapest and most etileious method they can adopt to make the piddle ,acquainted with the cheap ness aud the excellence of their goods and to obtain their patronage. By reason of their ex. tensiVe sales, they can buy their cloths and dher material in immense quantit les and mn seqUently at, the lowest prices. In the vain.' reason their clothing is made ups cry elica ply and in the best manner, because each Mind has tin special work. ThiS is the secret their selling such good garments at so low a price. They do this and let the people kno, that they do It by such extensive advert ise meld, as that which we publish in another column ; call 1.11 ai is why they prosper. ltd&w lia.f‘vs's Bronchial Troehea for Pulmonary and Asthmatic disorders, have pow,/ the, ef ficacy by a test of many years. an.l have re eelved testimonials from eni i bent men %via.) have used them. TTS Moses' Sir James Clarke'n male Pills. Theseinvai s uable lhUsurp unn\llllll,lll th.• cure oral! those ptiotrut and dungen.. thset.e , which the faunde eon.titution is huhje o ct. They - erme all k,et`,lBl,l and rent.ve oostruction, whatever cause. TO MARRIED LA DIES they are partimiliwir still'''. They gill, in a short bine, bring on tbe monthly period with regularity; ; and although ver) powerlul, contain nothing hurtful to the constitution lu all caws of Nervuus and Spinal Affections, Prim; in the Back and Limbs, Fatigue on slight exertam Palpitation or the Heart, Hysterics and Whites, they will effect u cure when all other means have tailor The circulars around each package give full directions and advice, or will be sent free to till writing for them, ,ettled from observation. SPECIAL NOTICE.—It Is the fate of every truly valuable medicine to be counterfeited. Job Muses Sir Jo,u,s Clark's Female Pills are extensively coon terfeited. The genuine have the name of “Joit upon 1.3.01 package. All others are mmrtfiless. Druggist, emli•Avor to soil the counterfeit:. to make greater it Is. \.l:.—ln all en.ses whore the on:NE . INi, cannot he obtaito,l. One Dollar enclosed to the Sole Proprieli, Jolt MOSES, Ii Cortlandt street, New York, will 0, sore a bottle of the t /minim, containing Fifty Pills, by return mall, securely sealed from lay knowledge lit is contents. 457 - Tine Great Pictorial Annual. liostetter's putted states Almanac for 1572. dis tribution, h HAT le. throughout the lulled States, and all civilized countries of the Wastorn Hemisphere, will he publis hed about the first of January. in the English, German, French , Norwegian, Welsh, swedsih, Holland. Bohemian and Spanish language, sod all tolls WISII to tinder:Ulan.' the trim philosophy of health should mud and ponder the valuable silo gistion, it catitains. In addition to an admirable medical treatise "tithe causes, prevention and cure or great variety of inseam,. it embraces a large amount n informatio interesting to the nierchmit, the Inechanic.the miner, the farmer, the planter, and prof 01 e , sii .11 : and the calculations her.. been made fiir sm.!, tneridians and latitudes est suitable for a correct and ,comprehensive NATIONAL 1.F7 , 11, The uti ore,uses, nail extraordinary sanitary elTei is of li OsTETTEIt's sTOMAiII itrpTI:RS, arc staple tvnie and alterative of more than half the I lirutiati orld. are fully set forth in its pagi, are also inter , Persed xvith pictorial dist rations, valuable recipe, for the household and farm, humorous ane dotes, and other instructive : and mousing reading matter, "rumba and selected. A twine, Ito. Annuals to appear 0 ith the Opllllillgof the year. Ili]s will he lOW Of the n... 4 Mehl, and tzm be hail tor the ask proprietors, MLII.STIN y II Put., on receipt of a two cent stamp. will tbrwaril a copy by mail to any per ion who cannot procure one m his neighborhood. The Hitters are sold in evury city, town and tillage, and are es surely used throughout the entire civilixed world. lieafnesa, Blindness, and Catarrh treated with the utmo s t success, by J. IS.IAL'S, M. It and Professor of lAseases of the Eye and Ear ( Lis specially ), in the Medical College of Pennsylvania. Ll yea perience. (formerly or Leyden, Holland,/ No sot ARCH. street. Pldia. Testimonials can be .4'll a. his Mllee. The medical faculty are invited to account puny their :iatieuts,ll.4 he has no secrets In hLs prim rim. A rtilicial Eyes inserted withixid pain. No charge for examination. a . 2t, ly A I =EI • Thc tnplcat..l . 2heapeat and He, in U—! Ilas bat One Needle! A Child can Kull II! Dc,icaed . . • pissally for the use of families, and Ladius w hiJ di, re to knit for the market. Will doevery stitch or li,. knitting in a Stocking. widening and narrowing as readily as by bawl. Are splendid for and fancy NVllrk, TA FIVE DIFFERF.NT 51511. 0 ip t Are very easy to manage. :ma ma lia ble to get out of order. Every Family should we want an .k,ent in every Town to intr”.inr. to whom our the t or t lilivral trt .Incenients. Send for our Circular awl ,ample , log. novl .v HINKLEY NITTIN , ; :sIA.III.NE CO., Bath. NI, IM. Needles' Special Rl' PT CRE TRUSSES." " BRA CES.:" ''SU POl )1 ERS " A ND " MECHANICA I) REMEDIES." His Laces for the same are conducted with skill and ability. Tire duties pertaining to this line of trot merit, made familiar, by many years of practical e perience, winning fur his Departments the confidence and approbation of best Medical authorities. ' • " " The LA DIES OFFICE .o No. NORTJI TW F" I'II sTREET, is conduclol Proirmionul ly, ~ y FEIIA LE PHYSICIAN. 11.1 S PEDLES, Phartnaceln, W. (Sdr. I=ll and Rare Street., jyt-lytel Philadelphia MARRIAGES the 7th tust., at liorbug I o tel , by the }Lev. W. T. Cierhard. Mr. Jo.ieph If. a Pens, to Cl ism Anna N. Mumser, of Ere,. Ilempiteld. Banu E-,E.,aeKti—i , INIEI..-011 the sane. ,try. and at the stone be the sane., Mr. (iris ', M. 81,111, clorrer, to Me.s harbitra E. Intake', both of .Ea at H enLie beld. _ 'l'a asa it Boa rra.—Laa. 0. 1 , 71 at tho rehal”ra... of W. L.. oil'e'r, ,nty, lb,. Dr. 1 ,I.I.t11• waltl, Dr. Joan F. Tro-lichard,ol Ph ilattelphat, to Mary A. Booth, of Vca NI a N—Zl,ll. , 11Ell.-1 /11 DN.. ill, 1471, at Fagan s F.matal 11111. by Rey. In. 4;1•••ena'alol, Eck -110•11 , \Veal .I.aaliaaer, to :111}.1 1..111111.1 Zerclo.r. u( l•rli 1 . 1 1 ,1, ,. T7lltla.l.Vll-11,.1t•••,,, pLrE.I I ,., '0,1a.r . , 110- od ie , fry o in [his city, David Kutht, tt the ciur ot hts ace. ItAt thts eite, at the re,itionre of Mrs. T. o. K !ph,. No.; Nortu Queen .stree t . on the 7th 111.1 ru. Anon 'lt. Rauch, fort terly ot Lilt, to the 91st year ol ,•ItLt:u'lt.—ln 11115 city, John ,tileich. it. Ow with year ut lii', use. 7th inst., i t Larte,t , r tow John John+, in the 52c1 year of his tee . ligba.g.—.ln tins elly, on the 6th lust.. Mr, Ili. bet It Hedgl, , aged N year, 6 months, awl dupe. II this city, on the :11 itua., Mary Hig glib , in lilt•taht year alter age. lIHKEVL Philadelphia liraln Market- PH I LA DEL P 1! lA, Deeenther 19. — Bark Iy •lull and freely tottered at lttloo per ton for:No.l quer citron. Clover S..ed is In be' It•r demand, and I. held with nlore tirninese; at • Per pout)d, a• in quality. Tindhy iv steady at Si Flitzse. , l at 551 SO. The receipts of liner ore very 111,derate and prices well sustained. The Mg u i ry ie limited to the Immediate trusts of the home consumers, whose purchases foot up 500 hubs, embracing Slipertine at $5 75; Extras at P65r6:15: Wis consin Extra Family at $7 ; for Mtn nesota do do e 7 b7!(4,11 :ri , A • for Penn'a do do fib 7.7w7 511; for Indiana and Ohio do do s7ati7 and Fancy Brawls at $7 Wa.B 50, MS in nuall Nye Fitter Is held at $.", In Cornmeal nothing doing. The Wheat market Is steady and the volume of huslue4s light; sales of Penn'a and Western Red at Si 57.41 39, and Amber SI 61k.1. SS. Kye is held attic for Penn'a and Western. Corn is in good supply but there Is not !ouch activity; sales of 2,ikto bris at ,4le forold Yellow ; ttsst,72c Ric new do, ituti 7Se for old Western Mixed. Oats are unchanged :I.OM bn , 5.. , .% al for White, sad 5243.:) , 3e for Mixed. Whiskey to Ann with sales of Wegt.•rn iron bound at sls I Ul. Chicago Produce Market CH1,4,0, December 11.—Floor In fair 114,- mond and firm. Wheat dull and drooping; No. 1 ~ p ring, Sl 2.5; No. 2 do, SI NI!.; rejected, Si Cs'it.l oa; - No. 2 December, SI :WO 20 , /, ; last half, SI 3i.); January, SI 2 . 2*February, Si 24 , , rwl 245.. Corn is In fair demand, but at lower rates; No. 2 mixed 42VA42 , 4c; rejecte d , 19 , 44, '_WAc; No. 2 mixed, January, 42 5-6 e; April, ; May 48€045!,c. Oats In fair demand. but at lower rates; No. 2, :tt4c ; rejected, 29VS.:ttls7; No 2January, :3.1c. Rye—Demand light, out holder, firm at ti , :;!'s for No. 2 Spring. Baltimore Produce Market. kter.rurune, Dec. 12.—Flour steady With :t moderate demand, and unchanged. Wh..t, dull. Corn firmer; Southern white, triaonc.; Southern Yellow , 711071 c. Onla dull at bek.,s3t. Rye steady at 904100 e. Mess pork steady at 1314 Zi. Bacon very quiet; shoulders, rib sides, Sc; clear rib, 5 / 4 0. S u gar cured hams, 15e. Lard. ler, Butcer In good demand and Whiskey quiet at POcoi,Sl Lancaster (iraln Market. MONDAY, Dee. 11. The Flour and Grain market Is quiet. Family Flour V bb rip Extra o .. li 10 Superfine " " 1 90 White Wheat "f bus 1 n•: Red 15 Rye 11 bus $5 Corn old V butt 6$ Oats, new M bus —. 48 Whiskey iii bbl $2 DETERMINED THE SHORT.SIIDITED ppLicy ta , I‘V., , ItIN NH3 AND MA LICIOCA PFALSONS, WiDi DANT. s,,D,:H F To IN.ii!cLE THE TM %DE AGGE I? TE D 3N D .1f ALI(II () US REF() T S N'.dulltake alvantage or ollr very Fort anale Position. awl Orgnnlzn Tiilnien e z - t n(1 LT - 1.1 a p () acha 1)1 Which will eamie a tire:itm his att,in. WIIO h m uying at t ay ake Purchase and s with wn u out knoig what ea lie SaV!)et Unusual STUPENDOUS SALE! STUPENDOUS SALE! E C() MMENCI Friday, Decdst , the Unreserved Clearance of the Largest Stock ! WA.NA.MA,I=P , & BROWN NEARLY ONE MILLION DOLLARS'; WORTS OF SUBSTANTIAL CLOTHING! o o It BEST N I , A ("I' E, FOr Alen, Boyr-4 Child - pen, PART 01' WHICH WAS I'ERSONALI.I :-ELE('FEI ) IN VOREI4;N MARKEI'S BY MR. WANAMAI: ER IVA/V.I.IIAR E BR 0 W.) N.l\ AM A KER a• BRO RIIADYI/10N1'1 3tIYI I IS AT ASTONISHINGLY LOVI PRIGS A VISIT .\ NI) INSPE("PION UP ('t):-Ts NOTHING. PRo\"E t-s(11-EsTIoNAM.r THAI \!ANN" AIZE NV()11:111 THE B I 11) G e El•s part me n - =OEM .961 Men's OrerrOVlS. 6,649 Dress Coats. :516 Garrick., and Clines. BasiiiesS Coals, 71.311 .linsifless ;X3 Doable.breaslcil Orer,aal•. .1 *.t3 Eaylish Diagonal D. B. 1.513 Fine EMI. Strip'd Pant, t..'75 Doeshin;l'ant... ?..719 Black Cloth 1,4 , . t;()2 Velvet rests, :::"S Cash Mere Vests, 11.196 Cassiincre 1.111.5'l FIAJOR !West —Arranged 1.. r I'menishine . I:oo41,4 apd FIRST PLO , )1; Fa , i s. 'tool and I.re , s Slut, and [Attie Idol- . Coats. The .let., Lot,. "Le. than I 1 :di -Prire Lots." firer G‘ual. Clothes.. for Cl:Ioni Work, whirl, sliar. it , ”ill . LZ , •11 ,,, / n-iill,i kill ill' ,irici.s. .41 . :( . I , N I ) VIA )( 11:- Laroem/ed t;o4”1. aild Ilalf-l'riee Lilt, tiE(st IN It 1 , 1,04)}:.--.; lIEPARTM ENT-,.: 1.. P PER F1..00 RS---Reservtql St(a-1; mad Extra Fine tiode. DRUBS PA X'l'' , , NiTE- - , These Mill al! our timmlm arc tea bought from SI , ,COTs:II I)P,ES,4 PANTS, I ‘vi.,,le s ain 11 mese, hot are of Mir 'WI, 1111{111111lVitIll• —twiny or W011.4:12 , :t; PA NTS. .11111 Li i 1.,, thew mill,' ill IIIII • tie' II hill hi lIIV, Illiiii.l • iill I . o‘vn eye and huller- TIM RI) FLOOR—O\' EI:COATS, Ti ll' I't )AT•4. I Vl,ll/11- of materials earefolly examtlied and Nponged, Mill Made liA RHICKS. CI /A l'i 1 \I EN'S t'ir.xTS I .Fttly or our Regular Retail l'nele; :,,, li11 . 1 . oi.111,11.•11 eau laki , FM . irill. rir"rli AN I) si vrit vc.4 ~.1:-,. r m.,. ~.,i, 1III• nu..., .•,,,,tld, , ,u, lte , erved Surl.ll, Stork. I , IItST-4tore open frofm 7A. M. tt,l; M.. exrepl kl 11,1 up. A. M. t.. la I. NI SECOND—AII Ofaals Egrhangtal fa . Nltawr !Sett. third. THIRD—A large /flat! Salf.sinen and If, the ,1111,frat Depart luenta. in waft Ifu• It. reeel, l'a,haffer fIIRTH-o,ler , In' T,lrgraph 4.4 . Let ler ii i i nW.,juarter fait htully at 4 ended to. FOR So 1,11) AND !..j:IirrANTIAI , RARGAINS THIS IS AN I'NPRECEDENTED 01•VoRTCNI I ter; bi or..uto front tot) put of Ihr country. or to make up (•Ittic, in Tosvio. tool Vlllitu (:.IFE 80IIE1:01)1" ALL THE GOODS WE 11:11'L I. r 1..1 I lie 1.1 , 4,11 Sul., 1 . . a• 1110 , 1 • %, Icnnwn, and LI/ Wall/ up wr van a1n.r.11.•a1n..1 shut oil! .•4 Ilia 111 - Ik•,, WANAMAKER & BROWN, AND SIXTH Pi I tsbil rch Produce Mark of Pirtsauson, I leernl,er 12.—We have mil:, Ito; new lo nole; Ole demand was fair, and sales were regular. Wheat—Red Winter has au upwand tendency, and buyers are ollering Sthal 45; holder , . want SI 1, I: While at jl .Waht OaLs—Markets unsettled and des b .ers apart In their views; we quote Mixed ILI ltim I7e; While lit .17selSe. Corn—Ear sear., and warded; sales of bulk at .584tiao - Shelled at tliadl7c, can report it good demand at lope; otTerlngs light. Barley—steady. hid not so :tat ice; sales of Common to Prime :Spring at Slpagloe; 0,111111011 01 Cloire Fall al Sigalhk•: Western at SW. . . Flour.—The ruarket wow wtendp wltlr IL good 10,1.1 lif.1:1114111I ; the suspension of navigation has rearmed. the revel its; the rates for stand ard brauchi ; we quote good Spring Extras, at Se , 7 2.5; choice :Minnesota baker's lion r S 7 7 73; gond to choice Red Winter Wheat r -,o ; Rye Flour Si i'inat litit4 per barrel. Buck when. Flour in lair supply with sales at SI 254.4 at per cwt. I iressisi Slog, are corning In more freely sales wene made in a regular way at StOCk Mnricet. LANcAsTit, l a., 11c,c. 12 Jaoob 2.oug, Stack Brnket : ,.lo N. Queen St . . . _-- • ! , )::,1 ' 11:10 12:3 , 1 1,31 2: 'AI U01d....—..2,0Y., 109', IVO , 1t , t . .; 1 , 0 .. 1 ,,, 67 , , W UL lon.. t.,`: 6. , ., Ceeksily'r ...... ...!r., - , ~, , ~. P. Mall.— i 1 ,., .1 , I , i .. . , ~ Adtallt:- es OP , Well s s di,r. , ..., . - y;' i An, p 10.... 40 2 U.,. d 0 .... N Y Cent.. !Q . , ~.. !,',. . ~ ,‘, : „ Eric '''., ;•4', .:2. , ...' % ?- ....: .N1c.13 11 111. .... Do South ../ •,1 I. .111 EIMIEMINEEME do p • td... 61. raul , Pre'ld .. 77 :; 76', 7: Wabash ... Do Prerd. n 1 Ft Wayne. , 0. and M.. 42, laud AIL 117 I In Prerd.. [LH lied I . ; °V1:1.7531C, U. ri'. •". I & V Kl, & BRO.. 1 . I.AMELPHIA, Penn 'a iteadlng I l'a and 1, , , , / ........... -New 11.14 5.4 " 1,1 . 2 •• •• 1,12 11565 ...... ..... Ii1 , ;.)111 1 , , , - 'l/565 . , new.... 11.1, , ,kt 11 i - leibi _ 111m11', 1 ., .. ~. 1 ,,, L . , 10-10 a. ' li)9lviltr ,, , Curreiney 11 3 '.411: 17 ., Gold. Union Pacific It It, tut 51_. Ronda 91 oil alt.; Central Pacific R. a-. . .... _ Ja.1 1 4',..1m , 4 ' !Union 1-'aeldu Land Grea tßonde. 7.11,,r4 711 Phlladelphla Cattle Market. MovnAv, Deo. 11. Ileef cattle were In fair demand this week, at about former prices; sales of lf";00 bend :it 70, Tlf.c for Extra Pennsylvania and Western Steers; 6465 c for fair to good do, and 5/, in gross, (or common, as to quality. The following are the particulars of salt , Head. 07 Owen Smith. Ohio, 5?N(a71.4e, gross. 21,0 H. Nlaynes, Ohio, 5 , 4'41,61ic,gr055. MI Alexander Christy Onto. ,Kl/.7%c, gross. SI) James Christy, Ohio, 7(6754,c, gross. 131 John McArdle, Pennsylvania, 6yq,74.ie, gross. 26 James McCleese, Pennsylvania, s. 70 P. g llFillen, Kentucky :and Western Vir- . ginia, 6!/ 4 @74.4c. gross. B. F. McEillen, Pennsylvania and Ohio, Iles 714 c, gross. 75 James MeFillen, Pennsylvania and 0100, 1114407..4c, gross. S!I Philip Hathaway, Pennsylvania, 5! , y,47c, gross. 50 James S. Kirk, Pennsylvania, .',(4.6 1 „;e, gross. 60 E. tri..McFillen, Wetdern Virginia, 64,;(4,1, gross. 112 B. Mooney S Son, Pennsylvania, 1/!.7!., gross. 426 Martin :Fuller h Co., Western, 4,4,7 c. gross. 107 Daniel Smyth dt Bros., Western, .3454,6).1c, gross. 103 M. Ullman, Western Virginia, le :ft_“' / iC, gross. 10 Dennis Smyth, Pen nsyl Van la, 5! (Ej,7! e„ grow, 77, Theo. Mooney Bro., Western, 644..,.;4,, gross. • 50Frank, Western, .5‘,41 , 16! 4;e, grow.. (ins Schen:there Co., Pennsylva gross. Is 2 Hopei Levi, Western, 5y0.74.i'v, gross. 311 James Clemson, Pennsylvania, C grw ows were unchanged; 150 head sold nt 6) head. Sneep were in fair demand ; 12,010 head sold at the di tr. rent yards at 36.447 c p a. , gross, as to condition. Hogs were rather dull ; 4,500 head sold Elk 14 100 Ms net, . . . pLECTION Nirrick. LANTAsTka CouNTY NATIONAL RANK, December -I, 1,71. An Ele•ttot. for Thirteen Directors of this Institution, to serve during the ensuing year, will be held at the Ranking House In tile City of Lancaster, on TUESDAY, the 11111 day of JAN GASY, 1372, between the hours of eleven o'clock. A. M., and 2 o'clock, I'. M. de 13 ave let W. L. PE'l PER, Cashier. ORPHANS' COURT SALE. --Tit E !IN dersigned Actin lui.trator of the Estate of Rachel McCardle, late oft he township of M ac tic.. dee . d • will expose at jmblic sale, on SAT URDAY, J N UARY 130, 1,72, , m the prom ises, in the village of Martleville, all that certain one-story and a half DWELLI.Nft 3:IIICSE and lot of round containing ONE ACRE, sit in the village of Martieville, on which there re erected a small Barn or iitulde other Improvements. Fruit Trees, never-fall ing Well of Water, etc., on the premises. Any person desiring to view the premises can do so by Calling on Washington McCardle, residing thereon. or upon the Undersigned. Sale to commence at 2 o'clock, P. M., of said day, when terms of Sale will be[made known by JACOB SHOFF, de 13 tsw so Administrator. I , HILA DEl.l'll I N. BY cONroCTIN“ AND N 4 EVER HEI.t , , REIN( ItEI , ORE THE IMMENsI. RISE IN W 001„ AND CAN DP SOLD TO 78,259 TOTAL GARMENTS R, '1" I IT IA A R. _ C()NCI.I:KION OAK HALL, `MARKET STREETS, PHILADELPIII A, NEW A DI - Eli TIS EN l'S. r - NT OTICE—TO A LI. tato wEits OF LEA ll' 'ri)llUiii IN LANCASTER la Sir) . The undersigned beg leave to In torsi the I :rowers of Tobacco, In the county, that. Iloiy are again In the market. Or the purchase: or Leal-Tobacco of all grade.. Partici( boding large or small lots, and wishing to fell 111,111 may address FELLER lilt. /Tll ERS, .1 13-3 t w (Indwell Hl,Unc, Lancaster. Pa. LI (STORY OF Tif GREAT FIRES 151 i (1.11•;i14. and the West hy Rev. E. 3. (OlOtl .ped, li., of Clocago. The only complete History of these great. eN , 111,. 111, Sy, 5 , 1 Ellgra v inv,s prices 1111.50; ont Mt, 51. m. 70,110 already sold - Profits go to ,lillertirS. A v..•tit, ALdresn H. S. 1.1 11 1;7 Perk Row, New York. or .1. W. Goodspeed, Chicago, tit, Ltini., or Cincinnati. el 1:1- - tinw F I l E O IF JACOB B. LONG. BANKER AND BROKER., NU, la, Ni 11 . :11 I QUEEN STREET, Idpriniug A,sessors 01n4, Drug Slot, EITAISM= npatEsT PRICE 4 PAID PPR (P)VERN- M ENT 1i0N1,3, win), sli,VEit., AND 01,1,1) ST01•1:s ANI) OF EVERY 1 , ,,11 GIIT AND 54 , 1,1) SIN CON- . . I,OANS NEUuTI.. I tTED, .IND 1.111E11..\ I. ADVANCES DE ((N ((KS AN!, 110NDs I-lAVINO A IIARI:ET ,•1 1 1'1" LOANS, AND Al.l, 1. , .(1A1, sTut•l:S BODGIIT AND SOLD. CERTIFIC.ITES nE 1 DEposuT IsSI•El• EITHER IN I•DRRENcy 11K 111. D, (Al.. ARI,E DENIAND Ot< AT A Fl N ED 1/.kTIL 11EARINtl INTEREST. INVEsT,,IENT sE7'1 1 111T111 1 .1 A SPECI.% 1.- TV. 1.1. THE 1 1, )1 1 1•1. Alt 11-A11,1“A 1, 11 ,, NDS FURNISHED AT slll-IscRIDNDN I'ItICI.I9, FREE Fl'l.l. I , I•IsCRIVI'D)N D 1. 1 ANY sEI'I'RITI' (IN THE A1.111.1:E1' “IVEN AP1 1 1.11•.‘- 110 N. N IL- THE ArI'ENTII I N ()1. 1 IH 1111-I.l.ll'l'ED To, THE 111. 1 1-0.1N(ID)N, 1 - 1.1• DAIi ItA .\ ND MINNEsoTA It. R..1 7 s, GOLD: 1 1 1 - 01• E ../.. AND INTEItEsT. AKIEK .IA.N DA Rl' I, 1 , 72. 111. 1 ,, P.% MPIII,ETs AND INFIIItIATIIIN ((N A1 1 1 1 1.1- C.\ TION. II MEE E STA MAKI!' El) 20 y EARS. HOLIDAY GIFTS! =BEM E I .1 Ncy OPERA AN 1) NEck SKIL DINGS, LOCKETS AND CHARMS UV THE FINEBT QUALITI Al /'rims Ju 1;i10. Ever) Article Warranted as Represented! F. W. PARRO'T'S, sru ST., BEL 4 )W MARK K! PH I LA DELPHI A. uw - di 18 O'C LOC K I), 'ILES, SHOT-GUNS, INEVOLVERS LL (inn materials of every kind. Writ., for Price List, to Great Western Gun Works. Pitts burgh, Pa. Army Guns and Revolvers bought or traded for. Agents wanted. ,111.4 w IT HAS THE DELICATE. AND RE freshing fragrance of genuine Farina Co logne Water, and is indispensable In COLGATE'S EAU-DE-COLOGNE TOILET SOAP. the Toilet of every Lady or. Uerdlenotu. held by Drugglata and Dealera in Perfumery. • AGENTs WANTED FOR coNvEvr Life Uri veiled•' By Edith O'Gorman, Es caped Nun,whose disclosures are thrilling and startling. Franklin Pub. Co., Phi l'a, Pa. nll-1 "DARCHEESITTHE ROYAL BACRGAM. [ tuna Board of India, the most fascinating and carting game ever published in this coun try. Popular edition $l, Medium $2, Fine Also Brlsque, Zoo Lo and Kings and Caval iers, for sole by . the trade . generally. (James a Publishers, :(f john street, New York- dl w ;A-NECTAR IS A PURE BLACk rout, with the tireen Tea Flavor. Warrant ed to suit all tastes. For sale everywhere In our .. trade-mark" pound and half-pound pack ages only. And for sale Wholesale only by the Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co., 8 Church street. New York, P. 11. Box ..51$, Send for Thea-Nee tar Circular. A _ GENTS WANTD ER A NE o W BOK E to !dories of Travel, Adventure, Miscellanies Ac., by Albert D. Richardson nnelyilluatrated Very large pay. Address Columbian Hook Co. Hartfc— , dll-4w AGENTS 8, C w N e j r : ' l l 'l " k „ ( I ) . H Cb r t a l r C y L o of f i r!r 4 l3 l- 17- tam pe nettling to Ito institutions and Obiects of Interest. By a City Missionary. ..niengrav lugs. Agents sell 10 a day. J ant leaned, E. B. Treat, Publisher. SO Broadway, N. Y. ill-lw fiSYCHOLOGIC FASCINATION OR Soul-I:harming, 400 pages by Herbert D. A. HOW to use this power (which all possess) at, will. Divination, Spiritualism, Sorceries, I temouology, and a thousand other wonders. Price by mail 81 ter , In cloth ; paper covers 8100. Copy free to agents only. 51000 monthly easily made. Address T. W. Evans, Publisher, 1l South POI street, Philadelphia, Pa. rIIIIE GREAT BEY QIILIE.—TILE HAND. :nod most valuable book to an American ever published. 231 elegant illustra tions on steel and wood. V lewsoi cities, Lail Id ings, rivers mountains, etc. Did - tides census statistics of 1870, has 1120 large 8 vo. pages on superb paper. Written by James D. McCabe, Jr. One volume, price, 88. Good agents wanted everywheee. Bend for terms to William B. Evans R Co.. 740 Ransom street, Phila. TO COUNTEU ACT A N. Boy:' Departwent 960 Youths' Or( prey, h', .7.000 3 - o„! /,.' 14 Youths' Vest, /,572 loll! Its' Err rpdu y Coy ;". 2:1 C'h Uri rey's Overcoats, - l:;.'; Child rvii's I SO I'll lid pen's I; Y Ch !Id rt. y's ifs, .7,? .S"! Boys' I;yys' .1 rl.cfs, Bill COWS. Bir, Per S'l; y co'. I "pass S UI I. Z A Fi II OTnEu HATTERS i i.~• ra:~~•.~ ~: t: DIAMOND:-‘, Ott 1e W.I N.1.1/.1 iiER BRO WN h E .1• I: I) WA' =MEM PEN N 'A IV D VERTIS EM EN TS FASHIONABLE FURRIERS, and Nori Quern Streel, I. Nr.\STER, PENN'A =III VUI . Tii:" - ;' A NI (1111,1)1tEN'r4 HATS AND CAPS, lE= K. -. LADIES' FANCY FURS, 111 1)SoN BAY SABLE, SABLE, BLACK ANI , WHITE ASTRACHAN SIBERIAN s(guRREL, ALASIA ALASKA SA BLF, Russian, Lerman and American Fitch BEA 1:11 Fl . l. ASSORTMENI M kse,' and Children's Furs, BoBES AND BLANKETS, 0 IA) V ES AND GA LNTLETS, LA DI 8.-1.,1N ED HOODS, All of which wear proparod U. Mier ftf ht RITISPitiLY LOW PRICES. E LEc•rioc NOTICE. I , AltSF.Its . AI LIT 'Ai. INSURANCE CuJICAN Y. All Eleetion Zro °Meer+ Lo conduct the al• rs of tile ".E.'arruers' Mutual 1 nsti ranee Com pany," will he held at the Pubtle House of Jacob Frey, au the City of Lancaster, (Ex change Hotel), oil SATURDAY, the 301.11 day of DECEM BER, 1571, between the hours of 1U A. M., and 2P. M. Members of the Company are respectfully invited to attend. By order 4,1" tale Board of Director+. de S ANY Is .101LN &rum:lm, Secretary. T II OM AS F. ItIcELLIGOTT, ALDERMAN, OFFICE Ifs MAYOR'S OFFICE. LANCASTER. PA. Scrlvenlng carefully executed. Collections promptly attended to. nl9-tfddiw
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers