©lie €rtre ( §emaat. BELLEPONTE, PA. The Largest, Cheapost and Boat Paper PUBLISHED IN CENTRE COUNTY. (Jen. Garfield's Credit Mohlller Record. From AT.* oic/i sworn testimony before the Poland Committee, .fan. 14, 1873. I never owned, received or agreed to re ceive any stork of the Credit Mubilier or of the Union Partjic Jtaitroad nor any divi dends or jirajits arising from either of them. From Judge Poland's report, Feb. 18, 1873 —Garfield's testimony perjured. Tho facts in regard to Mr. Garfield, as found by thecommittoo, arc that he agreed with Mr. Ames to tako ten shares of Credit Mobilier Stock, but did not pay for tho same. Mr. Ames received tho eighty per cent, dividend in bonds and sold them for ninety-seven per cent, and also received tho sixty per cent, cash dividend, which together with the price <>f stock and inter* cst, left a balance of $320. This sum was pHid over to Mr. Garlield by a check on tho sergeunt-at-arms and Mr. Garlield then understood this sum was the balance of div idends after paying for the stock. From llu- New York Times, February U>, 187:1. Messrs. Kelly and Garlield present a most distressing ligure. Their participa tion in tho Credit Mobilier utfair is compli cated by the most unfortunate contradic tions ol testimony. Fruin Hie New York Tillies, February :i0,187:k The character of tho Credit Mobilier was no secret. Tho source of its profits was very well known at the time Congress men bought it. Though Oakes Ames may have succeeded in concealing his own mo tive, which was to bribe Congressmen, their acceptance of tho stock was not on that account innocent. Tho dishonor of tho act, as a participation in an obvious fraud, still roniains. Some of them have indulged in testmony with reference to the matter which has been contradicted. The committoe dis tinctly rejects the testimony of several of the members. This can only be done on the ground that it is untrue. But untrue tes timony given under oath is morally, if not legally perjury. it is the clear duty of Congress to visit with punishment all who took Credit Mo bilier stock from (Jakes Ames. From the New York Tribuoe, Feb. l'J, James A. Garlield, of Ohio, had ten shares; never paid a dollar; received $329, which, after the investigation began, he was anxious to have considered ns a loan from Mr. Oakes Ames to himself. Well, tho wickedness of all of it is that these men betrayed the trust of the people, deceived their constituents and, by evasions and falsehoods, confessed the transaction to be disgraceful. A WAR REMINISCENCE. A LETTER FROM JUDGE BLACK ON TIIE EXCHANGE OF URISONEH* FROM SOMERSET COUNTV. To tlm F/litor of the Times. On the 4th of October, 1802. (lolonel Imboden captured companies Band K, Fifty-fourth regiment, I'ennsylvania Volunteers. The Confederates held them as hostages for their partisan rangers in our hands. Company 11 was from Somerset, Judge Black's native county. iSeveral months ago I wrote a short article for a Somerset paper, giv ing a general account of the efforts Judge Black had made to save their lives and obtain their exchange. I sent Judge Black a copy of the paper and asked him to give me all the particu lars. I enclose you Judge Black's an swer. Yours truly, GEORGE F. BEAR. READING, PA., June 19. WESTMINSTER PALACE HOTEL, LONDON, June 8, 1880. Mr DEAR SIR: Not long ago I left home. I got your letter about the Somerset prisoners, but I could not give much information beyond what you had previously received. I knew and remembered very well that a con siderable number of young men from our native county, imprisoned at Rich mond, were in imminent danger of being put to death in retaliation for some outrages charged against Union officers in the West. Somebody who knew all the facts of the case lmd them before me, with an urgent request that I would exert myself to save them. What I learned enabled me to see with certainty : First, that the Confederate authorities thought their right to take this extreme measure a very clear one unil intended to act upon it; second, that according to the luw of war, they had no such right; third, that our government thought it rather desirable than otherwise that the rebels should commit this horrible blunder, lor it would make them odious all the world over. The false and cruel policy of both belligerents concurred in sacrificing the lives of these innocent ami merito rious men, and there seemed to le no hope for them except for the energetic intervention of private friends. Of course I did not hesitate to do what I could, but I found the War Depart ment in its worst mood. Stanton meant toactupon the principle which impelled him to let the prisoners die at Ander sonville when they were offered their liberty without exchange upon the sole condition that they should be taken to their homes at the expense of the Federal government. I think I con vinced him that he had a right to redeem these men and that their delivery would not be refused if a flag of truce was sent down with a proper presentation of their case; hut lie would not prom ise to make the effort. 1 thought he would not be pleased with the interfer ence of one who was not only out of office, but a Democrat into the bargain. Becoming alarmed at the appcarnnce of things, 1 sought the assistance of Mr. I'ulseton, who was then agent for Penn sylvania or in some way lepresented Governor Curtin. lie promised his ut most exertions and expressed gieat surprise that the department should hesitate about it for a moment. I was soon afterwards informed, unofficially, that the flag of truce had gone down and a little later that the men were coming home. I had not forgotten Mr. PuDeton's agency in the business, but I did not understand how important his service was until 1 came here. You know, I suppose, that he was then a British sub ject; that he returned after the war to this country; that he became a mighty banker ; declined to be elected Lord Mayor of London and took a seat in Parliament for l>avenport, a borough in Devonshire. As soon an I met him hero he recalled to my memory the ease of my Pennsylvania friends and told me more than 1 had known before of their narrow escape. It .seems that Stanton was bent on leuving them to their fate and irrituted at me for med dling with n thing that was none of my business. Puleston told him it would not be sale to disregard my ap peal and that I had the case in such shape that 1 could hold him (Stanton) responsible fog the deuth of every man who might be lost in this way. 1 had said that their blood should not sink into the ground without a cry to heuv en. Stanton immediately after this— post hoc and propter hoc, as 1 think and as Puleston thinks—look the measures necessary to save them. This 'is all I can tell you about the affair. I kept no copies of my letters, and 1 atu almost certain that they were not liled, though 1 never inquired for them. Ido not recollect the ground upon which the Confederates at first refused to exchange the prisoners, but 1 am sure that it was easily shown to be untenable, and it was afterwards aban doned by themselves. I believe your brother and his comrades owed their lives to the justice and humanity Jjof Mr. Puleston, without whose prompt and efficient aid all efforts ol mine would have been unavailing. I am, with great respect, yours, etc., .1. S. BLACK. To GEORGE F. BAKU, Esq., Reading, Pa. HANCOCK AT GETTYSBURG. HOW TIIE DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE SAVED IIIS STATE SEVENTEEN TEARS AGO. From the New York Sun. Seventeen years ago Saturday last Gen. Wiufield Scott Hancock fell des perately wounded, at the very moment j that Longstreet's corps had been so | splendidly repulsed, and tho issue of* j the three day's light at Gettysburg] was at last decided. Hancock coin- j maiided the left centre. Loe ordered ; Longstreet to begin the fierce assault j on Cemetery bill by attacking Hail cock's line. For an hour the battle raged. Haucock rode up and down : the line, encouraging his men. The j assault was again and again renewed, j but the left centre stood firm. As j Longstreet's corps wavered, Hancock ! received a bullet in bis thigh, but the j victory had been won. Lying on the j ground, with the surgeon examining j his wound, Hancock called an aid. "Tell Gen. Meade," he said, "that the ; corps under my command have re- j pulsed the enemy's assault, and we ! have gaiued a great victory. The enemy is now flying in all directions in my front." "Tell Geu. Hancock," Gen. Meade I sent hack word in reply, "that I thank him for the country and for myself for the services he has rendered to-day." By a joint resolution of Congress Gen. Hancock recti veil the unanimous thanks of that body fur his "gallant, ] meritorious, and conspicuous share in that great and decisive victory." After j the battle he was borne to the lield hospital, and thence to his father's home at Norristown, where he suffered j greatly from his wound ; but it was not fully healed when he reported at j Washington for active duty in the field. Among the officers under him on I this eventful day was Gen. William j McCandless, who was on the left of Gen. Hancock's line, posted on Hound Top hill. Gen. McCandless com manded the First brigade of Pennsyl vania reserves, composed of the famous "Bucktails," the First, Second, Sixth and Eleventh regiments. Gen. Mc- Candless lives in Philadelphia, but is now on a visit to Col. Kichurd Penn Smith, of Staten Island, also an officer under Hancock on that 3rd of July. These two gentlemen were recalling the incidents of the great vietory yes terday. "It was, perhaps, the most important battle of the war iti all its results," said Gen. McCandless. "Here the Confederacy received the wound which rankled till death, and gradual ly sapping its strength, left it an easy prey to the armies of Grant. And perhaps to no other man so much as to Wiufield Scott Hancock was this re sult due. His command, the Second corps, reached the field on the evening of July 1, 18(13, and took |>osition on the left centre of the line of battle, the key point of the Union army, anil the ground around which the tide of war raged most fiercely. Gen. Hancock personally superintended the disposi tion of his troops, and the line which he then formed was held unbroken until the close of the third and Inst day. It was an hour when the head anil heart of a hero were needed. Gen. Reynolds, who was with him at West Point, hnd fallen dead in the front of battle. Sickles hnd lost his leg. On the night of the 2d it seemed as if the stubborn line would be broken and Hancock's corps driven from its all-important position. "But the cool wisdom born of prac tical experience exhibited hv the brave man nverted the disaster. The follow ing day was the most sanguinary of all. 'lhe Second corps was for two hours under the converging fire of 257 pieces of Con federate artillery. About 1:30 P. M. of tho 3d the Confederates were discovered in the act of moving forward. They were repulsed at both the rigljt and left of Gen. Hancock's line, but were evidently determined to break his centre, divide the army and overcome it in detail, if they could. Heavy masses of their iufantry began ( to diverge from the woods in front of line. They passed out in col uiuu iutu the open ground oil tho Eiu mcttsburg roan. Their advance was covered by 2. r i() of their guns, which were raining shot upon Hancock's lines as Lougstrcct charged. My bri gade received them with ail cufilading tiie, but they pressed 011 in spite of it, led by Gen. Pickett's column. "The Union artillery had at that time been almost sileuced by the dis abling of the gunners, l'iekelt had seized that favorable opportunity to make his terrific advance. He first made a feint 011 the left centre, and immediately deployed to attack. The rebel general, Armstead, mounted a wall and swung his hat triumphantly on the point of his sword, and the next moment fell dead. Hancock rode up and down in front of his line, cheering his men. 'There they come,' he shout ed ; 'stand firm, my men ; stand firm.' His presence seemed to inspire our troops with renewed courage. The fearlessness with which he exposed his own person, and his noble and resolute demeanor, sent an electric thrill of emulation along the line. His men cheered him again and again, and they did stand firm us the resolute rebels approached, and there ensued one of the few hand-to-hand conflicts of the war. It was bayonet against bayonet. Stannard's brigade, with the Nineteenth and Twentieth Massachu setts and the Tammany regiment were engaged in the early part of the fight. It is estimated that at least Ift,ooo troops were in the advancing columns of the rebels. The fiercest of the tight was concentrated within a short dis tance, as if the Confederates were de termined to break the Union lines with one terrific effort. Hut they re mained within the Union lines for only a very few moments. The warmth of their reception was such that they were compelled to retire in discomfit ure and soon they were retreatiug in disorder thut ended in a rout. The Union gunners actual picked up from the field the spent balls and pieces of debris to put in their guns to fire at the retreating foe. Hut the loss was fearful." Col. Richard Penu Smith, of the Seventy-first Pennsylvania regiment, was in about the centre of Hancock's line at the critical momabt of the Confederate advance. He command ed the regiment thai was first led by the gallant Col. Baker, and subse quently by Col. Isaac J. Wister, now president of the Pennsylvania Canal company, who had been badly crippled by his wounds and obliged to retire, j Col. Smith's regiment was stationed at a clump of trees that was about the centre of Hancock's corps. It was in the Second brigade, Second division. In the same division were Gen. Gib bon and Gen. Alexander Webb. Col. Smith's regiment, which four of the Confederate flags, suffered se verely. There were 9 officers killed out of Iff, and lOH men killed out of 2")4, or nearly half the regiment. It was there that Captain Weed was killed, and the spot has since been called Weed's hill. Col. Smith said yesterday: "I was connected with the Army of the Potomac from its earliest organization until mustered out at Cold Harbor in July, 1864, and have been throughout, directly and indi rectly, under Hancock's command. His presence was inspiring always on the Peninsula and on the Potomac. I regard biin as having no superior as a general. "More than once after resuming command of the Second corps, Gen. Hancock's wound compelled him tem porarily to put himself iu the hands of the surgeon ; but the battles of Hpott sylvania and the other desperate con flicts in the Wilderness ; of Cold Har bor, Petersburg and wherever fighting was to he done, did not fail to find bim in the saddle and at the head of bis men. "The anniversary of the third day's fight at Gettysburg will he remember ed by bis old soldiers to-day. His gallant conduct at South Mountain will lie recalled on the 14tli of Septem ber, the eighteenth anniversary of that battle; three days later will lie the anniversary of the terrible fight at Antietam, whore Hancock succeeded Richardson. Last Thursday was the eighteenth anniversary of Malvern Hill, after which the general-in-chief urged Hancock's promotion as major general of volunteers. The anniversa ries of Marve's heights, before Fred ericksburg, where Hancock and all his aids were wounded ; of Williams burg, after which McClell&n sent his memorable dispatch to Liucoln con cerning Hancock, and of Cbancellors ville, w hen Hancock's horse was shot under him, must lie celebrated after the election for President in Novcmlwr next." HAYARHt* BUGLE FOB HANCOCK. Mr. Bayard made a great speech at the ratification meeting, Wilmington, Delaware, on Friday evening. Iu speaking of General 1 fancock, he said : The leading candidate, Winfield 8. Hancock, is a man who iu a lifetime hoa not had a word said against him. He is not an untried man. "I shall show you that he has been tried, trust ed and shown himself worthy of public confidence in away that has seldom fallen the lot of men iu America. In 1868 he was mentioned as a candidate for President, and Delaware voted for him. He was voted for again in 1876, and now, coming again before you, after being in the white heat of parly examination unscorched, he has beeu nominated unanimously for the Presi dcticy, and naught has been said against his fidelity, honor or patriot ism. Now, why waa Hancock nomi nated ? lie never held a civil office, I heur remarked. True; but lie lias a military record as brilliunt and unsul lied as any man whoever lived. Why have the Democrats nominated a mil itary man? It is because General Hancock has proved that God gave him the same character of conscious self-control which he gave to George Washington. [Applause.] My friends, this is not the heated utterance of a stump-speaker; it is the deliberate' statement of a man trying to speak fairly. "Nothing has tended to corrupt men so much as love of power. Our Consti tution intended to check this, but dif ficulties arose which gave men the power to protect people. They have been too prone to use it to extend their own authority. It was George Wash ington who swayed the nation and who controlled the government ; hut when he might have continued to wield such power he laid it down and returned to iiis home. It was that act which made him famous for all time. Where is another man who would have relin quished such power which lie might have retaiued ? I wish you to recollect what I am about to say —for it is the keynote of this man's strength us a candidate. He had gr*at power —the power of the military, which then was great. What was his course? When asked iu Louisiana and Texas to ar rest men, he asked where is the judi cial process? when asked to try by military commission he pointed to the court house. When asked to take the property of others he inquired for con stitutional right." Senator Bayard then spoke of the rarity of men possessing this power ami refusing to use it, and said : "In this ease we see a man who lias had the tempting lmit of power before him, but who puts it aside and says : 'I am a military man ; but I bold civil law higher and res|ect the Constitution, which I have sworn to support.' His powers were ample enough, and be had the same powers to oppress the people as other Generals bail, but he refused to unnecessarily use the mili tary power in time of peace. ('oni nare bim with that other general, in New Orleans, who besought the Pro-i --dem to issue a proclamation of out lawry to extend over five States which were includes! in hit* domain. 'Make the proclamation, and leave the rest to me,' he said ; and the Republicans endorsed his course. We have seen the results. During the great strug gle from 1861 to 1860 there was little law, nor could there be much ; but, the war ended, there was no more need of military law. Yet the Republicans endeavored to retain that which Gen eral Hancock discarded." WOMEN IN TIIE FAK WEST. Loul#C. JoQM, it) l.i|*|>it* i-H Beginning life in a new country with small capital involves many years of hard work and strict economy, perhaps privation and loneliness. This comes especially hard on the farmers' wives, many of whom have grown up in homes of comfort and plenty in the older Htates. Ask the men what they think of lowa, and they will say that it is a fine State; it has many re sources ami advantages ; there is room for development here ; the avenues to positions of profit aud honor are not so crowded as they are in the older States ; a good class of emigrants are settling up the State; that, on the whole, lowa has a bright future before it. But the women do nut deal in such generalities. Their own home and individual life is all the world to them, and if that is encompassed with toil and hardship, if all their cherish ed longings and ambitions are denied and tneir hearts sick with hope de ferred, this talk about the undeveloped resources of lowa ami its future great ness has no interest or meaning for them, in their isolated homes 011 the bleak jirairie they have few social op portunities, and their straitened means do not allow them to buy hooks or pic tures, to take papers or magazines, or to indulge iu many of the little house hold ornaments dear to the feminine heart. What wonder, then, if their eyes have a weary, questioning look, as if they were always searching the flat prairie horizon lor some promise or hope of lietter days, something fresh and stimulating to vary the dull iiio uotouy of toil? "There's a better time coming," the farmer says. "When we get the farm paid for we will build a new house and semi the children to town to school aud so the slow years go bv. If every new country is not actually fertilized with the heart's blood of women, the settling and development of it none the less require the sacrifice of their lives. I we many women who have thus sacrificed, anil are sacrificing, their liven. Their faces are wrinkled, their hands arc hard with rough, coarse work, they have long ago ceased to have any personal ambitions; hut their hopes are centered in their chil dren. Their self-abnegction is pathetic beyond words. After a foothold has been gained in a new country and a home established, a generation, perhaps two, must paw away before a fine type ofhumanity is lutxluced. The fathers and mothers inve toiled for the actual necessaries of life, and gained them. The chil dren are supplied with physical com forts. Plenty of food and exercise in tins pure air give tliciuntalwurl frames, good blood aud perfect animal but there in a bovine stolidity of ex- Ercsaion in their face#, a suggestion of' ijinhtp with the clod. They are hon est-hearted and well-meaning—stupid, not naturally, but because their minds have never been quickened and stimu lated. They grope in a blind way for better things, aud wonder if life means no more than to plough and sow and reap, to wash and cook and sew. Per haps one out of every hundred will break from the slowlv-stepping ranks and run ahead to tuste of the springs of knowledge reserved for the next generation, hut the vast majority will go down to their graves without ever attaining to the ripeness and symmetry of a fully-developed life. Their chil dren, perhaps—certainly their grand children—will attain a fine physical and mental type. What character shall I choose as a typical lowan ? Not the occupant of the large brick house with tall ever greens in front which meets my sight whenever 1 look toward the country. An old woman lives there alone, ex cept for a servant or two, having bur ied Iter husband and ten children. She is worth a $100,(KM), hut can neither read nor write. Her strong common-sense and deep fund of ex perience supply her lack of education, and one would not think while listen ing to her that slit; was ignorant of letters. Her life has been one of toil and sorrow, but her expression is one of brave cheerfulness. .She and her husband came to this place forty years ago. 'I hey wa re the first white settlers, and for neighbors they had Indians aud wolves. They entered most of the laud on which the town now stands, and when other settler, came in and the town was laid out, their land be came valuable, and thus the founda tion of their fortune was laid. Put as riches increased, cares also increased ; the husband was so weighed down with resjsmsihility ami anxiety that his mind gave way, and in a fit of de spondency he committed suicide. The sons and daughters who died, with the exception of two or three, were taken awav in childhood. So the large man sion, with its richly-furnished rooms, is shut up from the sunlight and rare ly echoes to the patter,of childish feet. The mistress lives in the hack part, but exercises a care over the whole house, which is kept in a state of per fect order and neatness. Though she ha* lived ou the prairie for forty years, yet the expressions that savor of her early life in a densely-wooded State still cling to her, and if you find her in her working-dress among her flow ers, she will beg you to excuse her ap pearance, adding, "I look as if I was just out of the timber." Washington in Van linren'* Time. kn.ni an Alionymon. Writer in tlw Atlanta-. Congress had its comedies as well as its tragedies, and the hading comedian was Thomas Corwiu, a representative from Ohio, who was a type of early Western culture and a born humorist. He was u middle-sized, somewhat stout man, with pleasing manners, a fine head, sparkling hazel eyes, and a complexion so dark that on several occasions—as he used to narrate with great glee—he was supposed to he of African descent. " There is no need of niv working," said he, " for when ever I cannot support myself in Ohio, all I should have to do would l>e to cross the river, give myself up to a Kentucky negro trailer, he taken South and sold for a field hand." He always had a story ready to illustrate a subject of conversation, and the dry manner in which he enlivened his speeches by pungent witticisms, with out a smile on his own stolid counte nance, was irresistible. His greatest effort was a reply which he made to Mr. Crary, of Kentucky, who had undertaken to criticise the military ability of Qencral Harrison. .John Quiney Adams went over to Mr. Corwin's desk, and advised him to reply ; without success at first, Corwin saving that he was " something like lhdnnni's ass—he could never speak unless kicked into it." The next afternoon, however, he did reply, and his speech, as a model of humorous retort, has never since been equaled at the Capitol. His description of Mr. Crary as ho appeared on ]>arade as a militia general, aud nfler the fatigues of a muster, when treating his brigade to watermelons and whiskey at a cor ner grocery store, as the ancient he roes assuaged their thirst from the skulls of their slaughtered enemies, was a delicious piece of satire. Then turning to the history of General Harrison, Mr. Cor wi thrive an eloquent picture of his patriotic services with convincing force. No member of Congress ever received such personal discomfiture from a speech, and Mr. Crary never recovered from Corwin's onslaught. Even at his home the farmers always offered him witier-mel ons in their season, accompauied * bv quotations from Corwin's speech. He retired from public life an extinguish ed orator. 1 resident \an liurcn endeavored to restore the good feeling between the administration aud \\ asliington " So ciety," which had been ruptuml dur ing the political rule of Oenerul Jackson. He gave numerous enter tainments at the White House, and used to attend those given by his which was regarded as an innovation, as his predecessors had never accepted social invitations. Kx -1 resident Adnms, the widow of Preai dent Madison, and the widow of Al exander Hamilton each formed the centre of a pleasant coterie, and the I'i endent was open in the expression , rif his desire that the fbemlier* of his [calfect and their principle subordi nate! should each give a series of din ner parties and evening receptions during the successive sessions of Con gress. The dinner parlies were very much alike and those w ho were in succession guests at different houses often saw the sume table ornaments, and were serv ed l>y the. same waiters, while the fan was prepared by the same cook. The guests used to assembly in the parlor, which was almost invariably connect ed with the dining room by large ! folding doors. When the dinner wa ready the, folding doors were thrown open, and the table was revealed 1 covered with dishes and cut-glass ! ware. A watery compound called vegetable soup was invariably served, followed by broiled fish, overdone roast I reef or mutton, roast fowl <, r game in their seasons, and a great variety of puddings, pies, eake and iee-creum. The fish, meat and fowl were carved and helped by the host, while the lady of the house distributed the vegetables, the pickles and the dessert. Champaign, without iee, wa ' sparingly' supplied in long, slender glasses, but there wit- no lack of sound claret, and with the dessert several bottles of oh! Madeira were generally produced by the host, who succinctly gave the age and history of each. The best Madeibi Was that labelled '"The Supreme Court," a- their hon ors and justices used to make a direct importation every year, and sip it a* they con-ulted over the oa.-es Ix-fore litem, every day after their dinner, , when the cloth had Iw-cn removed. Some rare old specimen- of thi- m>. i preme court wiue can still h found ;u Washington wiue cellars. At the evening parties the earjet was lifted from the room set apart ' r dancing, and the tloor was chalked in ; order to protect the dancers from slip ping. The music wit- almost invaria bly a first and second violin, with flute ami harp accompaniment'. Light refreshments, such a- water ice-, lemonade, negus and small cakes, wtrs I handed als.ut ou waiters between eve ry two or three dances. The crowning glorv of the entertainment, however, was the supper, which had been pre j | >ared under the supervision of the I hostess, aided by some of her iutimate friends, who had also loaned their ! china and silverware. The table wa' covered with alamode beef, cold roa-; i turkey, ducks and chickens, fried and : stewed oysters, blanc mange, jellies, whips, floating islands, candied or anges and numerous varieties of tart and cakes. Very ofteu the young tueu I after having escorted the ladies to : their respective homes, would meet 'again at seme oyster house, to go out on a larl:, in imitation of the young i English bloods in the favorite play of " Tom and Jerry." Singing, or ra ther shouting, jopular songs, they i would break windows, wrench off knockers, call up doctors, and trati- I pose sign-hoards; nor was there a night-watchman to interfere with their j rovstering. PATENTS. IJATENTS procured upon Inters ■ Wm Nil AmnnS Tim I* Ifr.*-! -w tl-ua- *a. NtaMiMtiNl in lie-'. W'- ft!- CAYF.ITf and oMmn THAIO. MAKKS, lUC.-IGN PATENTS I I X V E X TO lis m * M'IH of Tour lAvnUnn. Willi ,r! , <taacri|*tfc>t of it. f'.f tmr n *• i • ri j No Al?w**tT> ftXM rJTLSftft PlTttl I* Pwi Mb. 0* j Book of Instruction. Ac., "Ho* to Pnorrtv hn' ftc-nt fr*-* on . I*n ftmj 1# r.j. 1 nnc He diD.Uir Inventor*' Journal B S. A 1* I A < ! Y / •' ' I M .|M ar l*ftt lit t Iflii t , Wkd.li „-t. I I' ' I New York Weekly HeraW. ONE DOLLAR A YEAR- J Tti- cfrmUUdii of 11.1. |opalnr h-OM|#r bw j tban tr-l-l—l iluiing itvt your. It. ' >ti taiw' h- l-*Sing n-w* rnntnln-n In lbs Don llttUftS 1 I l mtH in handy -l-i-artmi tit*. Tb- FOREIGN NEWS l -nilirwM rpwi.l dl.patch--- from nil ijiwlm d ! Under lb- h-i of AMERICAN NEWS ar- gi—ll lb- T-1-graphic lb-patch-* <f lb- *—k ,r ' a nil pnt 1- of lh Colon. Tklr fcatar- nk>n nuk- THE WEEKLY HERALD lb- mint -aliiahl- chrvnlcl-r In lb- nrtd. llb lk ch-np-at. Kv-ry k in gi.*n n tailhful r-|-1 •* POLITICAL NEWS -mhrnrlng r-.m|l-l- and rooipr-b-n-i*- -Its"* 1 ' 1 * fb<m W'nblnyton. in- Inrflng full rriort* of T ''* p—cli— of -m.n-ul lillcian. on tb<ju—ln*' hoar. THE FARM DEPARTMENT of Ih- WHmt 11.8.1f gi lb- lat-rt a w-ll " mo*t practical -iigg—th>n- nnd di-or-n— r-lntiM ' Ik- •lulu-, of ih- frrm-r, bintn for rni-in(r I* lll - 1 ' PortWnr, limn*. Tim. VangrtnLg*. l< . *r •nra—lbin- fcir k<— piny buibllag- nod m-oMb n"" pair. TTii- I- (iippl-OH-nt-d by n *-11-—lib-l df"" uiciil, wbli-ly copied, nnd-r lb- h—d of THE HOME, firing rorlp— for ynu-U-nl Slob— blnl- fd "*'"l i-Mlung nod ft.r k-rt-ng up Ilh lli Introl tok*' Th lon-ml prl—. Kirry 11-m of —inklog or -ngg—l-4 In Ihia d-iiniim-nl I- |ort<jUlr ->port- lp-for finldir-tkai fnon - r V*™ ntnl I—mlon rorr—pomW-i.t- on lb- i-'J li"f ' bm. Tb- lion— l—i-rl tu-nl of lb* *W I"*' Will -r- Ike boa—w u- nior- Iknn on- bondr-d no tba pt i— of Ik- pnftnr. Ill* inl-lr-ir of SKILLED LABOR nr- bkr-l nfl-r, nnd —rylking p-rlnlnlng rlimit— nnd Inkor nnrlng t-rwr-fallt r-rord-d. "V I-n png* d-rof. In nil lb* Ul—t pkn— o|lk 1 '•* mnrk-u. I>nfin, M-rhnndi-. At.. e. ) Id- f—ii- I. f..i,i,d In lb- -p—lnlly r-l"*" 4 " nnd owndition* of THE PRODCCK MARKET k Snontfgo Krwg mhomr nnd ebrond, . nOrooT-r-ir —k. n Snnoon by "•• *•' ,~4 hi—. I.irrn.nr, Milieu, Dntatrtr, pr**"*** _ SM Nvltt Tb-r- in no pnprr In Ih fnln* mi mnrh n-w* m.ll-r -r-rr k *• Uo kt llggiLO, wbbh t* —nt, p*tng- |M, ** Inr. Va onn -abnriiti- nl nny llm*. ) f NEW YORK - Inn W-kly Form, IIKRAI.D ) (A NEW YORK HERALD, l-d Brondrrny nnd Ann Sir—t. X— • W. R. TELLER, Proprietor. Good Sntnplf Root* on Xrtfind Flu**' ISFfti* Ru— in nnd from nil Trnln*. tf**' In oilq.~-. and Juror*.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers