New A(I rertisements. TREASURER'S SALE / \F UNSEATED LANDS FOR V f TAXM roll 1870, AM) FRKVIULB YEARS. Ni.tlri-1. li.-r.-Kv clvt'ii. Hint In |iuru*nm of An Art ~f A-.'Uil'ly, K.MI-.I th.! Wih ||M Jul!*, A. I). IS|.\ • nutlet An" Act to nini-int n Act ifirrctml tb* mih- f •riling !iin*.l"'l land. In (Vntr* c-intity," .ml tin •"V.r.l .lip|ll*ntrtll. tll*r*tn, tll.r* Will I*- .sposwl In tmMir *l* or outcry, th* fnllnn lnR trert. of umtoatel Un l. In Mid county lor th* tnx*. du .nd uti|ndd tl,-i at th* Com t Hull.* In th* Uomtigh nf Ib-lli* fnnt*.' Hi* SKCONtI MONDAY Of JI NK, A. U, isvi. ' tirssts. Act*. A l'*r. Wiirriiiil**. T**.. *4O Thnnm. .1 hh.tnn, J'-'t (St .VI And IWti, I HO ;.H R'dn-rl llnlmr*. 'J Ot VI John Moor*. 1 IS, vt J. I). Ilitrri., I HO ' Jidin Dmvl., t 44 loi ViMcr T*t* |nwu*r), II do Boons. lira-. } of I'm k-r 4 1.nr.., It 4 I .'•i II- Jidin Cocutnn, '£\ 44 ..111 145 D Kxcktiddcu, IB) tb. .. I liV. .linmtliau llsrvrv, at In 4.1 40 Miw*. Ilnnd. Id |H 41 s 40 Willi.lll ll,Hid, .12 IS 4.11 IRS .h.-i.th llrtiiim, 11 4n 1.1 ;s llnrifl I oihiigr, IU Ul VH) I'iHiik McCoy, 'sl 1- Bt'SSUbt. *•) Wllllsm .Miller, 0 S>i I ; lra Hud U llmin, 21 V7 itn ll*nry llhiH*, h ns Mlrh.n l O ltry.n, I 50 lin Iv' John llugg, tl 74 4|.i Jrlni shy in, n 44 II , Kit Crauhy, 0 44 ICE 1 r.'l Snnitiat t'.nmAst. R 75 .-i luvtd L-wi. as 41 , Julltl linrinn, 0 44 ill Thnnm. F. Whurton, 12 75 it W,ili*r Mew.rt, 1 ntt II 12 hul Cot, 4 > IM '.'2 John Vxiighn, 31 oo ill IHI John lioticliy, 11 44 I '.l Ml! .Inhu Kuld. *2O HI 4U list Henry IHmrlly, -/rt s4 4-I Dill K.ilmtt Itinny. 4n *n 4 '.i IKII K*h*rt limy, 20 so 4-1 101 Willinin I'ew.rt, 11 44 *ll Ml Jubn Dewnit, 11 14 4.: D*l JiiUieH loe.m, 1.1 14 4 .'. IKI Wil Mm tlr.y, 11 14 41 1 John 4* *ll**l, 1* mi 415 Jnin*. Ilhirk, I*l si) 41- J,**|di J. w Hilar., 12 su 4--I D>l M illiMin C„nk, 13 44 4.11 Ml John cuwden, 11 44 4. '. lilt William I- llrdy, 20 •,, I I D'i H*nry HhalbT, m> 111 D.I John llouhcl, 20 15 ,*i Jihl John Lyon. 2*l 15 4Ci DC! I 'lmil*. iiul,*n, 20 Ho I D*t Tliuiii.h Urntit, 1144 I : Did John Hiadr, 13 14 41 , John Hnyd, 25 73 4,11 D*l Alex. Urenve*, 13 44 411 lot J,n*|ih ilutrla, 1.1 44 41.1 D-1 IhumHH llauiiltun, 1.1 40 .1 IRS John llyr>r, 1J 4n •l.ctdi Weldner. 12 H*.i 103 Ih-tijaniiii Yunnft, 11 40 4-4-1 101 Alex. Illlliler, 11 43 i I DU Eiinui-I llnoter. la 40 4-i DC! Th,-nnL ti reave., 13 40 41-1 151 I'mnrlH Tench, 1140 4-1 15.1 (iwirge llarriann, 11 40 4-1 151 Jehll Nichulauli, ]1 4,, , I I 15.1 Rlalr Met. lanahan, 13 40 I 1 1.5.1 S'e.nioii Hunt, £3 si 4 14 tieurge M-Clannh.n, £3 s| 4 1 I'CI Full* Mr 1 lanahan, .',.1 *| 4.1 I*l Ann Mnlei,nlian, 51 HI I--! 151 U,h* ge Mraile, 53 HI 4 '.! 11l An.lr. w F- tttt, 53 S| I*l 151 William llitighaut, 51 HI 115 Nathan Levy, 12 Ml 415 JiM*|>h Ttiurnaa, 12 HO 411 Dl 3 Job*(ill Wallace, 13 4s 4-1 101 J,,*,p1l Wallace, 13 |r, 4-1 1-ii William 44*11. 13 4n 4-1 IS3 Samuel M Fnl, 21 27 41, Sanb .M.Talmao, 21 h5 210 S3 of Jeremiah Father, 3 .34 411 145.4 Alexander 11*11. 24 *,4 413 I'd Alex. J. Dellai, 43 40 n HTI3 l "3 Reheera K*lao, 5| no IJam, a .Miller, IH on ICh Janiea Irrln, 24 S4> "J Ed. Ilalluwelf, 5 53 415 Father r.il'tv, 53 in 415 r*|a>r W iatar, 53 (k) amf .l,**|,h Kelaw HSB IMil t'aleu la. w 114, S ;U; IF'iJ lrawr- lamg*treth. s 30 4XI 103 Jam-, W lute, 9 56 X" l.tndley Coala, 3 en 415 William Ulllert, 79 jo 4X3 153 Samuel Scott, 3S to 415 Je*a W-10, 20 40 41 5 Mully W harton, 27 tm 415 Jnarph Wain, 27 (Ml Rtrhard Wain, 24 Ft ID 40 Jnbn A. t'ural, 2a On 4.13 103 Thomas llal*. .VI 20 415 Jacoh Wain, 23 79 *2u Jonathan Willi., 24 HO InTl Itnl-ert Alnaly, 13 RR 415 Jobu llct'anley, • in 27 415 Charlea Allen, 27 2H 217 Fi.hhnru Wharton, | 14 59 2"i hi*liar,l Tnnia, 47 m I 2(71 Caleli Lamia. ( 3 ;,s 2tßl laaar Lnugatreth, 1 3 .',s f lis K1 Job W. Fa.-ker. 27 In i IX', Ucnry is,nail. a l,j '-"11 Robert AI n■l (, J 3.; 20 I Richard Tunia, 14 OH | 4x; IR3 Thniuaa Ml Era en, 23 62 j 217 Fiahlairn Wharton, US ~,*. | J. W. A S. C, I'arker, 2 20 Fhlllp Myera, 35 ,jn ! Siomn Jleyera, 13 40 1 4J* -It .Michael Meyep., 30 9(1 i A'l J'—'pli Dealing. 19 |ii J 120 Jot, W. |'a< k*r, ore l" W M Packer, 7 T, I X'l J Jehu P. .Mitchell, t Oil I 110 JOII W. Packer, 2 3* 15 Jof J. W*. Parker, ]3 J /.. le nc. 15 mi 4XI 107 Renj. K. Margati, 9VI rnmitOH laaar Bnekley. 3 CO j JuDah Luehhy, 3 On I Kh hard Moaely, 3 m i Ahraham llirka, 47 | r*oo. 29 35 John F. Price, 42 John Knte , ~(anar), 2 51 H-TnarO lliibly, C 4a W ill,am Taggart, 2 |(i f"*' David Taggart* 2 10 W'liliam I- gan, 2 10 Julio Painter. 2 10 ttaiHg*. J,*hn Sini|raon, 4 R1 1 1-5 Jubn Knbl. 2 oi l'.n William Moal.y, 244 ; •II <•< Adam Holinder, 3VI I O, Albright Mvioeford, 319 1 C'hatlea Hall. 27 73 itacr ttoov. 50 Abraham Elder, 2* 44 11 Ibua. Ileyiklll (nwn*r), RlO 1J Jar. Vaii(eed,owner). 4 42 Hi t'. Vaiip-xd e*t(e (owner), 144 ' * .fi C. Yarapoul eatate (owner 1. 4 fin an 10 Peggy shearer, 380 HVRBia. 4", R Kearney Wharton, 873 John I twin, 2 91 J. C. Flatter, . | 90 John Irwin, 2 k7 William brown, 7 ft) . 1 Michael Rraonen (owner), 19 I*l I'*,,lg r..X, 3MI John Irwin, | 59 John Irwin, 05 HOWARD. 20 William l'r,>**aian, I 17 l"4 03 John Brady, -. j,, |g, 4* 112 Samuel l,.ti 11 —r 5•( 25 Joseph tirar.oo 8 m-w a. 1 Adam hulto |4 |o I4BIRTT. J. A D. (Innaaulua, 2 85 Pari Jidin Potter, IS an Jamea A -Joigley, K "23 30 It, -"a Baker, 4 23 '■s Orange I). Ilea., a 23 Koia-rt A Jamea Hayae .32 90 Imu'rl Kronaa, 161 to Samuel P Shenh,(owner,) 4 70 l*anl*l Darfd, | oct 7 HAS log. ' I* J. D Mhiigert, 220 W . A. Thomas, 24 <A) Alexauder R.-olt, 53 2H 129 Abraham rnyiler, 29 52 William AI Drain. ,3 So .M, Calm.>l.t. A 20 44 *0 John Corman, t>4 Jacob Ifi lti, (owner.) 2 40 .. MII.U. "® Henry Toland, 7 54 Darld W llllama, 7 M Samuel Norton 7 54 Kit-hard Parker, 5 78 Jeremiah Parker, 5 7 Thomas ."on—, 1 33 llfl John Mar-key, 751 7? 80 K*"J Youttg, 276 • William Hartou, 1 33 l" Robert Oray, 7 h-'Dim (Irani, | 43 Alexander Hunter, * 16 Jeremiah Jackson, 7 63 William Rteadmati, 2 Ik 9 Riiliert Taggart, 2 81 Thomaa Smith, 3 ,75 Aaron l*y, 6 32 Robert Itradr. 7 ect I Hannah Urady, 7 62 Robert flrey. 7 2* HID Abraham Krotf, ! 77 ft* l Mamn*l Sct|, Hw 160 Ahrwhani Mmti, 2 7 W Samuel fkott. 1 AO 2M Jane Hr*.ly, 4 ft'J Joitu Utiui> .* r6 4'i* Oeorge Calhoun, 7 /V.l John SlgfrliHl, 7 4ft IhW . \Villmni r*rkrr. ft 32 left John IHM-.-V, J# /j I -Moore Wlmrton, *| 22 4trj |:i| William Mile*. 7 12 20 Wlllinni Packer, 4S IMO Jqneph Tearon, ft ->n Wi IIS Uwirgf Kitu, & 4<> IftO WJ S. hen 4 Jar Stahl, 40| fOTTSS. 400 Wlllhim lloffnmu, II ho 4*l Qlitllifl he* v, || H4) I W M John Stoner, 27y 4ft Jaroh Coetaltonler, yg DO John fllttier, Sr. (o* n*r), I h'i fM) i'arker, !"0 Paiker, 3# M 2 Carothera. j 54 4<# Shi Tea Fulmar, |2 0U J127 S. A A. Scfitt, in 34 lUH 13.4 thnirge Fot|e|, j ;yj •ran. 433 Ifta n H Morgan, 07 w •l-*-! Ift3 Thomna Ureare*, 17 ;|g 4.U l-Vi IMV|.| |e\%|a, 17 3,) 4::.l 1-ft.l Philip hlierman, 17 ,-w 4'U |fts Jacoh WeVrler, 17 30 ftO JtihnWelU, 2 o| 2<l Jo-i. ph Strong, a 00 koO Paul Well#, 10 01 4"U Jamea ltuh, jft 23 'WO Thorn** Kr-kin, % 12 00 4.'Ut 133 H*>nnet Loom, 17 800 Jhn Hurg, H • 4;ti 163 Henry Pinkerton, 17 ;id 4IWI V Jamea Kanrv, 17 21 3** l Malthiaa lira*, 12 UO IM h-'l'.ri Irvln, 6' 6ft 43J 163 John Funk, 4.-, 383 llutfh Patton, 33 ft# 4fto 147 Jaroh Kuh, Oil ID 422 44 John Wohlmnn, r,/, go 402 116 Jaroh VVeiWiuan, fj 62 7ft J.iMi j h llnrriaon, 3 vil 43,1 l.ftj Jacob Kinlealll, 17 ;p| ■l.tl 163 Paul llur-h, T7 ftft 4k! 133 Paul 111 ~k, *; 4:U 163 Paul Such, #>7 ftft 4 U I*J John HorlanJ, f>7 6i 4iCI 163 John K. lljr, #7 ftft 433 163 John Huah, ti7 5,% 4ii3 160 John hurli, <l7 4 < *J John lllttrk, 62 4<J 31 i Joaeph Well*, 4H 33 *!:! lftJl Kn-hard Malone, 7 ftft 4J3 lis! Janie* Toner, 4ft 02 43,4 I&t John llamhrlght, li7 ftft 4.13 |ft.| Ainlrew Hi aft. 37 ft,', 4>7 137 Chriatlan Miliar, 93 oft 4 1 * Samuel t'heatniit, 3 24 lft Carper Uwrrncr, 2 .4 ♦33 164 John llopkina, au 72 4-' M |.Vf John Wilanu, 12 20 433 163 haute! Huekley, f7 ftft 433 lftj Hichanl Peter*, jji ftk T ll ' John Copenharer, In 10 100 John Co|a-nhaver, ft 2U 2AO cf And re u .\llia.*u, 62 00 3"* i af A AllUon A John Lilly, 62 40 433 133 William Hrav, 103 gg H Jaiuae WilMin etata (owner), ft 20 MOV H". 40 William P Mitchell, 2 C 6 360 John Pim, 4* * 4iU 163 Karnev Wharton, Ms 6 4 ki IkMt Waltm, ftH 36 l'* l ha*il t % arrad<lon, |.; 00 4.1.3 lAJ Andrew Sunnuer*. 14 04 4-1.3 163 Moore W harton, .'aft 411 Llil lft.4 William Parker, ftrs |i 413 IXI R.'brcra Wain, t*\ 433 |V| Vii-mamln 11. Tnlloiau, V*. 4D W 163 F.I 1 Whrton, '4 |vi 43.3 1.V3 A S. Valentine, 4D •33 l'*3 M. T. Mllltk<-n, | V N J Mitchell, 042, CO t.enrg# Kddy, 37 Jamea T llale. 49 79 CO Jatue* M> Mmnu, 66 2D CO Samuel LlUli, ft#j *9 CO Benjamin R Morgan, 60 26 4-l lft3 Thoinaa llrearea, MM CO Andrew HivaH, ft 6 26 434 | of Samuel h01.%,1), 24 lo '4ll 4 of Jeieniiali Parker, 7 20 3rto Job ReJlty, w h. Karekaden, 26 00 I'O Sarh Hitllvbell, 6 ftQ 406 73 N.J Mitchell. 21 66 41J 44 hatld Caracadnn, (3 t3 412 44 harid Careradn, 63 63 2**7 SO I ?M't < Hr-M adot), 37 34 4.3.3 120 Luke Miiw.t, 2a f| CO IM Fraocia W'eat. )4 )o CO lA3 William II Wwl, 14 10 CO 163 John Weal, f4 111 C>3 163 h. 11. Cunningham, 14 In H 71 John M Nr.bit, II 10 3*) 111 Hugh Pfm, 46 t7 300 144 John Reilay, 44 tr, C 33 Bard W ilenn, ftO CO 103 Kearney Wharton, .VI :n mno. 16 John I. Kurtr. 1 47 Thomaa lUrriaoo, (owner ) in •t 102 Thomaa Tbomtmrg, ft 7V Tvu>n. M. w ,T is wv Jamea Bn*h, 31 90 j CO IM Thomaa MrCommoo, 33 77 Ckl IM Kly ll -.Tnien, 77 J amen Mu**re, ,l 90 60 Vincent Stephana, 3 60 i 4''-3 163 Lftlv Malone, 3d 77 I j 433 IM John MH'oiumon, 14 77 ! I 17t M'mm (Wu, }t 34 J'weph Y*>irr. .10 VJ i C3| Hugh Hamilton. 22 14 W. W. Motitfcovneey, 44 2K CI4 J"hn Montgomer>, 44 l John Onrr, 17 46 Jam-ai arr. Hit 6" Michael WeJdner, 12 76 1 HO Michael WeJdner, 40 Ml Jacob Reck, 7 36 tleorge MoiiK. ft 10 i 433 133 Mary Smith, .33 lft 1J" William Wham, 16 3u ! HO hand RaUtuti, lft 3n oi! 1 A M 12 76 Clement Iter kWith, ft.3 76 Trat N.. 1 4.t r< I*l Tract No. 2 4ft 60 1 is® Tract No. 19 4* 'jft '*l Tract No. V 3ft (W 210 Tract No. 12 g-j on I 71 of Thomas McClnre, 7 2ft C. Vanpnol, 9 |a *7 William Bell, 102 00 raiov. W R Molhrdland, 20 16 H" SO William Hrower, 7ft 2iV Ann Deal, 41 %.% P. A K. Kuhna, 90 go H*> Jane lllnke, 21 60 1W Samuel Pblppa, 21 t Doyen Itatta, 0 lo CO 163 RiX-ert Stewart, 22 ftk 3VSI Rla*neter Bnnham, ft 20 Samuel 1 hlppa, 1l 41 ISt Ji'hn Cooper, 14 66 Hi of Roy re Isu*. 6 61 62 IK Jtudrdph Miilhollatid, lft 66 UM. 71 WJ Chriaf Rohrer, 26 00 H i Samuel Hark man, g 0* 133 Darld Need, ft ;n 60t Mary MrKami, ](| 64 3'l 133 Jamea Nntlar, 770 John haker, 1 41 John Mcfotnlng. hf, 7v lleury Duck. Sr., (owner.) • 3 (2 VMfl. 174 Iloonnr A Reene, 29 7* IS) William ehipen, Jr., 12 CO 433 133 Samuel Ncott, 13 4*; Th- turn of fifty rente, coat of advarllaing, will he add**d to the talc and coat* In each raw. A. VK A KICK, 7Vs<umrer. Treaaurer a OAte, Relief.mte, Pa , 1 April 10. I*6o / Outre County Farmer*' Home. THE BUSH HOUSE. PRICES TO SUIT THE TIMES. Improvwl MaMln, ai..l • '.r. fiil H.ntl.r, Ix> 0prl,l Katea for Jurymen and W ituaaaea. Cteanllaeaa, Com* ert and Table Cneacellad. NO DISCRIMINATION th- l-rorinr-r* of oar Fnnd, than whom BOO* oe worth/, or m.,r -nlltiM) lo u*ailoa Th* h " ln " T r lbr* urn.* lb* ca|rft/ of .1 ■ 0" "".-< or iU*po>ni.ia to ptar* th. o*rt* In atilr Thta OOCOUMU f.w ll* (rowlßf Uoool Tr.l. w* d.. ant traM /.ar bun** lo lb* rwr* n4 pr-.flt of (Mrtir* with th* 'e<tl J || MUM. PNfwMnr. MONEY To Ijoßn tfi per ct! Z, Z, : THE MITUAL Lin IMRCR f?p. OF SIM YORK, oa tm owrtß***. oa liupr >.* d farai i>n>p*rl), la ram not l*a, lh*u fc.nno, aa<l not nrrmdli,, on* third af lb* arnwal ..lor „f " prop*ry. An/ Rorllon of th. priaripal ma b* p.ld ..If t o/ tliii*. otirt It b*. Iw*a th. raJtnra of tb* rompay lo F*rtaU th* pnorlp.l to rmwlo .la,, lb* lrrow*r wUb**, If tb. Int.rmt It proauril. mid Apply Pi r <nF"J ™ CHARLES P. MIKRNAN.Attore.y-.t-lm,, 'iff Coart .tr**t. p. or to PAVID I. K LINK, Co. Apjwi*. *•" adl-foat*. F. r± A UMAX'S HOTEL, V>* Ovporfl.Ooart HOOM, ■KLI.KPORTB, DA. TKRMI >l. NCR DAT. A rxnl tl**7 .turbo.) J.Jy ®he Centre JPfmccrat. BILLEFONTE, PA. Th* Largo.t, Cheapoat and Boat Papo I'ITKLIMIIKII IN CRNTKR I-OONTY. Our Mi tit-ral iVoaith. TIIK AMOUNT OF dOLti AN I, SILVER MIS Kit IN THIS OOt'NTRY—TIIE OUTLOOK. In tho opinion of some experts the rroductinn of precious metals in tiio 'nited States is Imt just beginning, in the lust ten years tve have ativsnceti from #17.320,000 in silver, and #;-i3,7.'i0,- 000 in gold t<i #45,840,100 in silver an<i ♦44,880,223 in gold, hut it is said that the next census (ten years) will more than quadruple this production. Dur ing the tirsi seven years from 1870 to 1877 the production of gold exceeded that of silver in our country, but since then the production of silver has ex ceeded that of gold #5.562,595. This was canned in patt by the discovery of tho great silver mines at Leadville, Clolorudo, and in part by the decrease of the gold production of tho Coinstock lode in Nevada. It is a fact not gener ally known that in tho production of the Comstoek lode 41 2D-100 is gold. The decrease of yield in Comstoek was #12.464.481 in silver and gold during IB7H-1870, while the increase of silver production in Colorada was #8,000.000. The exact production of gold and silver during the last census, as near as it esn be ascertained, was as follows: Year. Silver. (Jold. 187 $17,320,000 $83,760,000 187 19,280,000 84,898,000 187 ID V2-M2O 88.177,306 187 27.4H8.302 8W,200,668 1871 29,009,122 88.406,488 187 81,686,289 89,068,194 1870 89,292,924 42,820,986 187 45,810,10(1 44 880,223 187 37,248,137 37,670,030 187 37,082,867 31,470,202 In this country $4,000,000 in annually consumed in milking jewelry and lor the arts. Last year about $74,700,000 in gold wan untrained to America, ami this added to the home production give* an increase ot $100.170 202. If we add still further the $37.032,8.67 in silver produced, we have $143,202,119 of a monetary increase lo our national wealth. Large a* this increase may ap pear, it is as nothing when compared with our future poi-sibilities. The sud den influx of Eastern capital to the trans-Missouri country will meet a want long felt and cause the great mineral wealth of the West to be rapidly de veloped. The rich deposits of gold and silver there bidden in the eatth will now be brought forth, converted into money And made to administer to the wants anil conveniences of mankind. America will astonish the world in the next ten year* and perhaps shake the value of precious metals by her enor mous production of them. Oeneral Ibis bin, oi the United States Army, **): "I have lived ten years in the West, and I sincerely believe 1890 will not pass without giving us an annual pro duction of $400,000,000 of gold and sil ver in th'iie United States. Tarns of Fortane'a Wheel. Upsand down* in Leadville life are not as they are elsewhere, the up* hcing rather steep and the downs decidedly perpendicular. A few months *go, ac cording to the Leadville Democrat, John W. Wilson was regarded as one of the wealthiest men of Omaha ; one day last week he called at the Sisters' Hospital for a crust of bread. He had attempted to become a carbon Ate king. "So quickly sometimes," said Sterne, "has the wheel of fortune turned round i hat many a inan ha* lived to enjoy the benefit of that charity which his own piety projected." A do/en years ago a New Orleans banker, the founder of one of the principal railroads in L"ui*ana, helped to build a charity home. He was induced subsequently to enter into the scheme of establishing gas works at Havana. He lost his whole fortune. Dater he became an inmate of the estab lishment his fortune had helped to build. Now he has recovered and accumulated another fortune. During the flush timet of InCQOtiaa Bailey was one of the richest men in Kansas. He didn't know what to do with his surplus money and so put it in -St. I/hi is and San Francisco I tail road *tock. The stock was then selling ai three dollars a shsre. When the hard times followed Bailey lost every dollar of bis money in one way or the other. His fortune was at (he ebb, and he only continued to hold his Yailroad stock as so much worthless paper. Recently, upon the consolidation of the St. Ixniia and San Francitco with the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Ke, he sold out for a round million. The three brothers who have just struck such rich gold in the Nachooliee valley, White county, (fa., have reason to believe the lines : "Many Wrath**, thrnigh with a Utile ale. Hew down and fell tb* hat,l**l Hint,* red-oak." They had been digging for months, with the rudest kind of tool* and with out a sign of gold. Tbey were thin and haggard hut persistent, and now they are taking out SI,OCX) a week. The vein struck is one hundred Teet wide and it has been tested for threrf miles, in one "pocket." no larger than a man's head, they found $l5O worth or nuggeta. The Louisville Courier-Journal tells of a lady living in that Slate who bought a lot of Louisville and Nashville slock at $.38 a share. When the stock had advanced to #4l she wrote to her brok er to sell. She forgot to send the cer tificate of stock, and the broker replied that he couldn't sell without the oertfl cate. Meanwhile the stork had ad vanced to 50. The ladr found that the certificate had been mislaid. She search ed high and low, her heart hounding as the stock kept bounding, until when the latter sailed into the nineties she WAR frantic. Nowhere could the certi ficate be seen. Meanwhile the stock went to 110, 120, 130 and fust as it reached 141, 260 per cent, above what ■he first desired to sell, the missing cer tificate turned up. She sold at 141. Washington and Adams. attar bain* President, served M Justices of the Paaoa, Onr Hoys In Idleness. Vmm ths N. V. Tribune (ft.p). Application* are sent in, far beyond the u >|>ly of emigrants to fill, for mechanic!* of every grade, carpenter*, weaver*, gardeners, worker* in every kind ol metal, etc. An our reader* know, hodiea of skilled workmen bav* been- imported during the last six months by our manufacturing lirrns t.y the hundreds, to so large an extent as to close many of the mills in Kngland. Yet every American town and village is crowded with idle boys and young men ; not idle of tiieir own choice, but seek ing vainly to Hud work as bookkeefiern, cleiks, or perhaps starving as briellcsn lawyers and patientless doctors, (aim fort and a competence await the foreign mechanic, while the American of the same class goes hungry. The principal cause of this is that our trades a gener ation ago closed their floors on appren tices in order to keep down competition. The owner of the largest printing estab lishment in Philadelphia tried in vuin, a few yeura ugo, to'find admission4or his son as an apprentice to his own establishment. '1 he same rigor has been observed in almost every trade. While, however, they can keep their own and their neighbors' sons out, they cannot exclude the foreign mechanic, who, as we have shown, is coining hy the hundreds and the thousands to step quietly into Hie comfortable places from which our own people are shut out. It is lime our working people should waken to the folly of this sui cidal policy. It is all very well lor us to boast that America oilers a refuge for the oppressed of every nation. She has done a in the past and long will con tinue to do it. Hut it is hanily consist ent with such a character of universal benevolence that her own children should be the only ones forbidden to j earn their bread in the manner which I seems best to them. She Needed no Ticket. j I'nun tli'" Rw 1,#.!., Ismwml. | Among the crowd that surged forward I toward the gntes n* tlie .St. I.ouis ex j press rumbled into the Central i>e[*>t j Isst evening was a little old woman j dressed in black, with ft little white face .just visible beneath u rusty old bonnet | and HIJOVP a great comforter wound higb j around the neck. Jostled this way at.d i that by the hurrying throng, she was j about to pass through the gate when j ihe gentleman stopped her by a motion of the hand and a demand for her I ticket. "1 nrn not going away," she i replied ; "I didn't buy a ticket." "Th. n ! you can't go through here; against or ; ders, you know." "Bui, sir, my son is ; coining, and—" "Can't help it," was the J hurried reply. "Stay here, and he will come to you quick enough." "Ah, sir, if he only would." was the reply ; and 1 the tremble in the little woman'* vetre arrested the im|>atient murmur of tho*e lehind. "Oh, sir, if he only would ; ! but he died in Cleveland last week, and now they are bringing my boy home in a coffin. He was the only one I bad Oh, thank you, sir." The gate wa* thrown wide open, an unknown friendly hand assisted ber on, and in a moment the sad face of the little old woman in black was lost in the crowd. - —■ ■■ ■ Noah's Tomb. A road practicable for wheeled vehi cles, writes a traveler in the Holy Land, along ihe plain to Baalbec, distant about lorty miles—a pleasant road, for the first hour skirting the lower Lebanon -purs, and winding between hedges of roses in through a richly cultivated country. I turned off from it liefore it became hot and dull, at the i village of Mualnks, celebrated as con taining the mortal remains of Noah, • whose tomb is shown to the credulous stranger. Its dimensions are 104 feet long by ten broad, and it conveys some idea of the sue of the human race before they evolved backward, as it were, to their present dimensions. As Noah lived to the age of 9">o years, and j built an ark large enough to contain sjiecimens of every diving thing on the 1 face of the globe, there seems to he no reason why he should not him*e!f have been over 100 feet high. Tocrntxr; the divorce of Joaephine, a subject which seems to grow in inter- j est a* it fade* in time, there are curious ' and almost painful details in the last ! chapters of Madame de Kemusat on i the emotions of Bonaparte, on his ner- ( vous state, his agitation: "My poor Josephine, I shall never lie able to leave you." The terrible man, wh<\ felt tin-• mover! on the battle-field, and who played with the livea of men as a child < plays with sand, cried easily; he loved 1 nd tormented his "little Creole ;" he 1 wished to see her covered with dia monds and to tear all her ornaments from her. He did leave her after all, and the "Memoirs" of Metternich show that he regretted deeply tbe "felly" which he committed when ha abandon ed his first wife. The Archduchess Maria Louise was, in his thought, a lie between his dynasty and the old dynas ties of Kurope. |{ soon saw that she had been sacrificed, like Iphigeoia; that the old dynasties did not and could not forgive him ; Marie l/ouis helped them and gave tbein a little breathing time, but the coalition had become inevitable, and tbe days of the hmpire were alreadv numbered. The fiopular feeling in France justified the instincts of Bonaparte; even now you will find among the feasants, the sol diers, the poor, a vague notion that Napoleon's luck was tier! to the "bonne Josephine," and thst when he left her he signed his own condemnation. CaUnal loffprxoll a ad |, e Devil. fltraak o li K htnin' fo' mile* long, Soma d 0... .lav. awina hit htm. Ing'urtll *inp t nufltjrr Hour Whan the dohhil act him I Debbll watch fo' *irh M him— Kotrh him in hi* collar ; Choka him black an' hit htm >4tm _ B"'} Bim twill him h hollar I Pabbil tan' up kimho Mraighl, Lnoth at Ing'aoll pranctn'; Sun' him In a rod hot plata— -1 at whila Bob'a a dancfn' I Our chief wisdom ronnitu in know ing our faults and follies, that we may correct them. Closing Days of the Widow of Hon. U. N. IMikliiHon. from lh Nr Vork • Mrs. Lvdia Dickinson, wife of the late Daniel K. Dickinson, lihm for weeks jmnt been lying dangerously ill at the residence of her daughter, Mr*, Samuel S, Courtney, at High Bridge. For week* pant the life of the vener able lady has been despaired of, and yesterduy her physician, Dr. Ilciiry I'aine, said that she would hardly live the week out, and, in fact, was liable to drop oil' any moment. The dis ease from whieh she suffers is dropsy, aggravated by other oomplications in cident of old age. In early life Mrs. Dickinson's social and personal ac complishments, added to the high po litical position and deserved lame of her husband, made her a noble figure in the society of New Vork and the National Capital. .She was Ixirn in June, JBO.I, in the township of Una diila. Her father, Dr. Kolby Knapp, was a leading citizen cd' Southern New Vork, the founder of the village of knappsburg, Chenango county, twelve miles from I nadilln. Her ma ternal grandfather, Colonel Elihu Murray, wu an officer of distinction during the Revolutionary war and was attached to Washington's start'. His daughter, Rticind, (afterward Mrs. Dickinson's mother*, was a noted beauty. In her girlhood, Mrs. Dick insoii attended the well known Oxford Academy, at Oxford, X. V., where, among her fellow pupils, were Horatio Seymour ami Ward Hunt, afterward Judge of the Court of Appeals. Daniel S. Dickinson, then unknown to fame, was a rising young wool dresser, who, though lie ha*! never gone to school more than two weeks in his life, was ambitious of doing something better. He fell in love with Lydia and married her, she being ninete-n and he twenty-two. Woman like, she was quick to discover her husband's talents, and urged hirn by every means in her jsiwer to persevere in Ids law studies, and fit himself for a high position in life. The Rev. Mr. Garvin, of Guilford, was Dickin son's tutor. and taught hiin lattin and surveying, and other branches, in the evening. Dick in v>n worked patiently at his law-books in the day-time. In winter, he taught school to pay the expenses of his education. For seven long year* he lal>orrd, cheered and en couraged by the smiles of his voting wife until, at lat, in IH2P. he was admitted to the bar of Chenango county. Three years later be removed to Riiighamton, where he speedily out distanced other competitors, and be came the aknowledgcd leader of the har in the southern counties. Hi* fame quickly spread to New York nnd Albany, and in half n dozen years he served successfully as State Senator, Judge of the Court of Errors, Presi dential elector, nnd I.ieutennnt Gov ernor of the Slate. In 1*44 Governor Buck appointed him to fill an unex pired term in the I'nited States Sen ate, arid the year following he was elected to the Legislature for the full term. Mrs. Dickinson entered hearti ly into all her husband's projects, and rejoiced as became a devoted wife at his unexampled advancement. She accompanied him to Washington, nnd took n promint part in the social life of the Capital. Their summers were passer! at the Senator's beautiful homo, on the outskirts of Binghamton. Mrs. Dickinson's fame a* a hostess was wide spread, and the mansion and grounds on the bank* of the Chenango were the constant resort of distinguish ed guests from all parts of the country and Europe. Dinner*, entertainments and other social festivities followed, in rapid succession, and few persons of note visited Binghamton without par taking of the Senator's hospitality. James M. Mason,of Virginia ; George Pea body, the I/mdon hanker; Charles O'Connor, J<**e D. Bright, of Indiana, and several of the foreign Embassa dors were frequently guests. In IH.V2 Mr. Dickinson was n deb-gate to the I>emoeralic National Convention at Baltimore, ami ph-dged to the nomina tion of Cass. After fruitless ballot ings Virginia led off with a solid vole for Dickinson, and would have lieeu followed by other States but for the splendid fidelity of the New York Senator, who, with a coveted prize in his grasp, was too loyal to his pledges to accept it at the expense of Cass. After a short pause he rose and with drew his name iu a abort speech of grace and eloquence, which aroused i the enthuiasm of the audience to the highest pilch Hnd caused him to be fairly pelted with boqucts by the ladies iu the gallery. His devoted wife, who but for this incident might have been mistress of the White House, sympathized with him through out this trying ordeal. At the close of his Senatorship she retired with him to their home on the Chenango, where their declining yeara were spent amid troops of friends. They had four children, two of whom died and were hurird on the banks of the river. The two daughters, Marv and Lydia, be came resnectively Mrs. John T. My gatt and Mrs. Courtney, The former, who reaides at Fort Washington, i* known among her friend* a* an au thoress of acknowledged repute. After her husband's death, iu 1806, Mrs. Dickinson removed to New York, where she has siuce resided. She was a life-long member of the Episcopal church, and is remembered as one of the Ave original communicants of Christ's church, Binghamton. In person Mrs. Dickinson was tall pnd slender, with dark blue eyes, dark ' brown hair and gentle manner-?. Though naturally of a modest and re tiring disposition, she possessed great . spirit ami determination, and which shown forth in times of trial or enter- I genoy. \ ears after Mr. Dickinson had attained his fame he visited the ' little academy at Oxford where his ! wife hail Ixvn educated. To the as sembled magnates of the village who , eatne to greet him ho said "that though , he had never studied at their institu , tion, he had carried off its greatest prize." A SK\s4TIOXAL IMCIM. For ingenuity of all kinds the Yan kee race has Is-en -o characterized that ■ it is synonymous with the term of in vention. A New Knglaudcr and a novelty generally go hand in hand, and it there was ever any doubt as to the genuineness of this popular belief, • or any dispute as to the vai ied style of , their notions, it should Is- dispelled by the remarkable self-guiilotitiing, on Tuesday last, of Stephen I'illsburv of , Chelsea, Massachusetts. 'I lie young man was scarcely thirty years of age, of most excellent char acter, a great student, a fine ternjs.-r --anre advocate, but morbid on the ' subject of crime and criminals. Fine ; looking, an<l of good social and cheer | fnl distention, his act is the more i remarkable, especially as he was an unmarried man. et, on the day and date aligned, his head was lying loose alongside of his body, mid his lifi hlood had welled out. und all by his own handiwork. lie ha.| biiildod him in the farm barn a rmh hut perfi-elly-working machine of death, on the style of the 1 rench guillotine. Two uprights of joists twelve feet ip length he had set from the floor to the ceiling. The upper ends were spiked to the ceiling ; the lower mortised in solid blocks of wood alkout four feet long, and in the center of which he had scoojied out a j neck rest. Fitting between the up -1 rights in a snioothlv-sliding hoard wa a carpenter's broad axe sharpened to a razor-like con<lition. This slider rested on a lever, which worked upon n pin secured in the left upright, from | the end of which, suspended by a cord 1 some three feet in length, was a water : ing-pot which had been filled with I wat* r. Ihe bottom of tliis |w>t the suicide had perforated so that the water would ' gradually leak out and release the ■ lever, and the uxe would drop. The , fall of the axe war nearly seven feet ; ; hut, to make things dead sure, Fills bury had placed on top of the slider a box of stones alnmt fifty jKiunds in weight. To prevent any charge of suicidal j intent, he had at the liasc of the up rights inserted a piece of broom-handle, running through both joists and com pletely imprisoning his nook. By his j side, on the block, he had dug out a ! hollow, in which he had.poured about a pint of ether. Having finallv per fected arrangement* by placing two large boxds of stone close against the sides of his murderous machine, quiet ly smoked a cigar, filled the wateriug |Nit, placed his head in (tositinu, with his nostrils closh to the ether fumes, and, as the water leaked awny, the lever was sprung, the slider started, and the thud of the axe announced j decapitation. Being a temperance talker, it was hut consistent anil proper that he lould die by water. The Hjinu Hoof. : THE aoor WHICH LIT IN A ROOMER'S DOOR, YARD OR RIM. LAST N SIR'S STORM. I TRX'OT LH* CLNRITMAU RR.<JLRPR. I hiring the awful storm of last week, which swept over so wide an ; extent of the Ohio and Mississippi Valleys, and which carried such woe i to Marshficld, Ma., farmer Columbus .Inquith. living on the Manchester pike, a few miles from I.awrvnceburg, Ind., was visited in his door-yard by a pro jective roof, which came near crushing his house, and for which he has as yet foiled to find an owner. His bouse is surrounded by a lot of cedar trees, two of which stand about twenty feet from his door. In the midst of the most violent gale of the storm, his whole i family was roused by an awful crash, which ap|>eared to be on their very i thresh hold. On going to the outside door, to their dismay they found a roof fourteeu by twelve, to which was attached a heavy beam and a long rope, had fallen upon the cedar Irm nearest the house, stripping off the limbs and totally crushing the trunks. A variance of tweuty feet and the flying missile would have struck Mr. Jaquith's house and no doubt left it in ruins. Inquiries far and near hy Mr. Jaquith have failed to determine where the roof came from. The pres ent possessor is preserving it subject to the call of the owner, and as a re minder of his very narrow escape. Did it blow all the'wav from Marsh field? __ "MAMMA, where do the cows get the milk ?" asked Willie, looking up from the foaming pan of milk which b had been intently regarding. "Whfre do you get your tears T" was the answer. After a thoughtful silence he agaiu broke out: "Mamma, do cows have to be spanked V THOMAS NAST wished to uarne his son Jaince, but Mrs. Nast said she did not want him to be a gymnast. THE jewel for a frilled shirt bosom is a diamond in the ruff,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers