`teeldfotd Arportn. E.. 0. GOODRICH,' EDITOR. Towanda, Pa., Thursday, Aug. 7, 1879 FOR STATE TREMATRETI, ' Gov SAMUEL BUTLER, OF CRESTRR COUNT?. TnE Bellefonte Republican is responsi ble,for the misstatement that SAMUEL F. BAER, Secretary :of the Republican State 6mmittee, is a brother of the Democratic candidate for State Treasurer. We t l ust the recording angel will be charitabl dined, when SAMUEL reads the an nouncement. . , 'Tun advocaiesef Woman Suffrage will not gather much encouragemeutfrom the course of the women in 3lassachusetts. ThelLegislature Of that State made a law allowing women to vote - for school direc tors; lint when the time comes for regis= tering and paying taxes, but few: of the - dutler sex appearJo be anxitx. themselves of the privilege. Wetnan, like man, "never is, but always to 'be bless• cd,'P and, when. they arc accorded a long clabned right, they don't care for it. THE revival in the iron tinniness is very decided and satisfactory. At Pittsburg from a reliable source comes the state ment that "the manufacturers cannot supply the deinand for iron from ..the East and West, running * double turn; at thirty-eight dollars per ton.._ E4rytliing ,loiV toward a period of prosperity, and healthy development of our industries, prOving beyqud contradiction that Pitts burg is and *lll continue to !be thweat center of supply for iron and its nuttier- Tn.make a canal across the Isthmus of Panama is a stupendous 'undertaking, but it now seems thatAhe project is seri ously entertained. A company has been formed, of which M. DE LESS LI'S is the President. The capital stock is 00,000,- 000 francs ($80,000.000). An office has been opened at'l2o Broadway. New York, and subscriptions for shares are solicited. The company Submits a schedule of anti cipated receipts after hie completion of the canal upon which a promise of eleven per cent. dividends to the shareholder is based. • IT is no use offering us a mission to England. Respectl i ully declined, with thanks. The isalary is only 67,500, and the minimum additional expense is placed by those in Washington, who have the t best means of knowing, at $'44,0041 per annum. The added sum triages provis ions only for such style of living and en tertaining as are inseparable from the pis fiome of the American ; ministers to • England have expended about $49,000 aho‘e their salaries, but`it is regarded as possiole to do all that .the' position calls for by au extra outlay of $2-1,000. TuE Wallace 'lnvestigating 'Comtnittee are pursuing their arduous labors at the sea-side. Listening to the murmurings of the sad sea wa+,. will be pleasanter than to be obliged to listen to the' perjur ed evidence of the 'Hinters and rowdies who crowded, the Meetings of the Com- Mittee in Philadelphia for the purpose of canting their witness fees. T 4 follow ing persons connected with the Commit tee arc at Brighton Beach Senators . WALLACE, KEHNAN, MCD Ll 5 ONA, BIAIR and PLATT ; JAMES J. CitAnsTitF., Sergeant-at-Arnim W. W.• Kil.;Oshunr, Chief Clerk : .1. B. CM.AHAN, .Assistant Clerk ; and 1). P. Mi nPuv , Stenigrapher. TILE- resignation of Hon.-Joint Minister io England, and also. of Mr. I . STIOuGtrroN, Minister to Russia brings forward the pilules of a number tifproini.: limit null as their successoys.slt; is admit ted that if Mr. Glow- would accept, ha o c;cculd have one of the His appoint ment would he creditable to the Adminis tration, and mould secure to, the country 'the services of a man of ability, sound judgment, and business qualifications, such as havecgained for Mr. WErsu the excellent reputation he now enjoys. lint we doubt much if Mr. Grow is ambitious or diplomatic yreferment. The people ..f this S,tate.desire to see him in a station where his abilities and eloquence can be of service to the cotrntr and to the Re publican Tarty. 1 THE Ohio hemocrativ ign Committee have sensibly in deciding not .ional speeches throng campaign documents. speeches as : the eorinnittee think the poople will read, are to be printed as supplements tp newspapers ; :apd the I , •ason given for this action is, that Con gressional speeches are not read as •a rule, bilt_tind their way to the stores and stops, at which they ai•e sold for wrapping ' paper. Their example is worthy of Uni t tation3 by the Republican Committee. Coder the practice of late years about the time the toter was fettily to go to the polls he would' be Aelngel with Congres, sional speeches,' which came too late . to be of service,-allowing that all such atrium nition is not wasted. THE Democratic party of the State of New York is not a happy family, nor do • they obey the injunction of "biethren to dtVell together in unity." Goi, Honrfi so:c has made a -good Governor, but ho is in the interegt of TH.DEN, and so antago nizes Jon.N and his partizans of Tammany Hall. KELLY has lately been inti.rviewed,`and evidently has put on his % , tar : paint and flourishes his scalping-knife In thefolloing faShion. lie says_: "If Itont:cs: , 0::: W.. nominated by the Conven tion, it will& allot:lin:aim' unfit to pre sent to the t:•tate. dt would lose us New i York, in thei coming election and give the Republicans immense political power. We are toAdeet a Governor, Lieutenant- Coves nor. fzeeretary of state, Comptrol ler; Engineer, Treaskirer, and Attorney teneral. Our defeat now means a Re publican victory in ISSO. - I oppose Ron- IN , ON unhesitatingly; and '.ay so, deliber ately. Ile?is the only objectionable can didate.— We arc .Democrats, and expect to suppo r t thii candidate to be !named ; but. 3S runsitier it, HomNsoN as not with tie party. We will not support RomsseiN." This is bold talk, but when lhuu.S?..t IN is nominated tin; "Big Injun " will lie found leading the braves to battle and ca g I,ir scalps anti NIA. CuNk.iirssmAs RYAN, (late of this place.). now represents the 'Topeka (liansas) district, and being in New York, Las been interviewed upon neL , ,ro exu(lus question. Ile does not think the colored people are, bettering their condition by whole sale ern igration.- He says--" all that . possibly could be proVided for in the I' - at• of work in the' State has been iitovitied for the negroes. Yet'when: I left my home there were hundreds of freedmen on the verge id' starva tion, with little prospect of receiving any immediate or permanent relief. Nearly every train from the - SoUth brings more of the deluded people. Most •of them who go to Kansas are of the more ignorant class. Nine-' tenths reach Kansas soil without a dollar in their pockets and hecome objects of charity from the day of their arrival ~among' us. When I left Topeka there were hundreds of them encamped oni;the outskirts of thecity, who were being fed through the charity of the l' citizens of that city. The colonization societies and the societies have long ago ex hausted their sources of relief." Ile also judges that frOm present ap pearances thou - sands of colored per sons will leave the South within the next year for the northern states. Oddly enough the fever now' is to go to lowa and Nebraska wL :re the climate is even more severe than in Kansas. Unquestionably the wholesale emi gration of such brae numbers of an ignorant and, destitute population would be the occasion of much suffer- ing, particularly as the colored pop ulation•of the South Are not adapled by habits or .education to become pioneers. Whatever effect the exo dus may have politically, or by bet tering the condition of the colored people, who remain 'in the South, there can be no doubt but that those who emigrate will have to suffer privations and want, and will not improve their physical condition. The exodus'•will continue for some ime, as the causes which produce it have thoroughly impressed the colored people with a sense of the wrongs and oppressions they have experienced, and filled them with un defined and exaggerated apprehen sions of evils to come. It will he impossible to remove these appre hensions, and the colored population will continue to lice for years to come in search of the promised lands and the year of jubilee for which they have been so long and patiently waiting: IT is true that there is but one State officer to be elected this year. We have not forgotten that, nor is the public likely to lose sight of the fact. Whoever opens a brevet Democratic journal will be reminded of it. Whoever c - inverses with an honorary aid-de-camp of the Demo cratic party will be assured in dulcet tones that the election is of no consequence this year - that it will settle nothing and soft nobody anything ; and that it is not worth while 'to- get excited, or waste time over so trifling a; matter . . This sounds so familiar that almost every body will recall the fact that the same persons and papers ,have been saying the Fam'e thing about elections every years since that party has been in a minority. •But nobody ever heard a Democrat tell a Democrat anything of the kind. When a brevet Democratic editor assures his readers that an election is of no consequence he addresses his Repub lican readers. • His readers are chief ly Republicans. Republicans being the Alain support of all enterprising and able newspapers there is no risk whatever when a Democratic editor says that an approaching election. is' of ne.‘inoment. And nobody ever hears` nuch of this sort of shallow talk when the Democrats have any prospects of winning in A square But Republicans ought by this time to know -that every, general election is of consequence. Other wise, why hold an election at all ? If it makes no differenceiwho wing why have the Democrats i"found it necessary to hold a convention and nominate a candidate ? If the elec tion is of no consequence to Repub liCanalwhy should it be of any mo nent to Democrats ? And if no principle is involved why have the_ Democrats formulated an elaborate platform, - and framed a long indict ment against the Republican patty ? An 'indictment involves pleading on the part of the party indicted. The Democratic platform is a demand upon the Republicans for a plea of guilty or not guilty. It will appear, then, that the leaders of the Demo cratic party are not agreed with the aentlemen who declare that the election is of no consequence this year. They evidently think it is of some importance, and they think so much about it 'that they are deter mined to win if possible. After reading the Harrisburg platform it becomes tolerably clear to most people that the Democrats ask the people of - PerMsylvl;nia to endorse the revolutionary course of the Demo dratic Congress. The people are asked to render a verdict, either ap proving or condemning the attempt of , Congress to compel the President to, abdicate his prerogative. They 'are asked to go to the polls and pro nounce upon the demands made by ,the Democratic caucus npon the President that he should join ; in nullifying acts of Congress which lie is sworn to - e:4orce. They are asked to approve or condemn the removal of Crippled Union soldiers from position and the substitutiAm_of confederate bummers: They arc asked to ap- prove or condemn the nullification of the election laws in every Southern State. They are asked to approve or condemn the nullification of the excise law in all the South, and the consequent robbery of the Treasury in so much.- And finally the result of the election in this State will be claims as an endorsement or a con demnation 'of Democratic misrule. F4prybody knows it. But then it is nvessary to state the case, and re Executive Cam- P!acted wisely and to send Congress the mails, as Hereafter all such TUE STATE CAMPAIGN state it every day, in order to coun teract this shallow talk of shallow men who act as decoy ducks for the Democracy. The especial function of the officer to be elected has little to do with the importance of the election. The question that inevitably arises is, how will the result of the election be taken? - What will be its meaning ? -We lave already set forth that in terms not to be misunderstood. And no man of intelligence doubts that .the election of _thei Democratic-can didate would be claimed as an en dorsement of the course of the majority in Congress; of3lte alliance of the, northern leaders of that party with the Confederate Brigadiers; of the heresy of paramount State Rights, once more revived and brought forward as a - firebrand by the Democratic leaders. Hence, the election is important in every, sense, and whoever does about stating the contrary is in the pay -of the Demo crats. The people may rest assured that no election can take place in any State this year that its result will not be . manifestenough to every body' so soon as it shall be made known. -If any Democrat believes that the election is of no momept he can stay at hornet • • Tne.troubles betwejn the Vatican and the German . Goeriinent have been settled, according. to. the• latest reports. That the Pope is satisfied with the terms made indicates that BISMARCK has conceded 'muck' that was at first insisted on. The dispute dates from 1870, when the Old Catholic movement was inaugurated. Alter various offenders had been excommunicated, in 1872, the Reich stag suppressed the Jesuit Order and expelled theft! from Germany. The protest which followed from the Catholic Bishop was succeeded by the closing of •the churches of Gnesen and Poseif for contumacy. Germany declared open war against Ultramontanism and sought to in terest the Powers to take . steps to in .fluence the next election of Pope. BisnAncii declafed in a circular that a new Pope if ndt recognized by a majority of the European sovereigns would cease to be a Pope, but would stand in the same position as a Bishop appointed without the con sent or'approval of his flnvernment. The power of the Pope in Pussia was anulled by th'e Fanik laws, en acted in May, 1873. This soon brought about a conflict between the Papal and the Imperial powers, fur the representatives of the former re 'fused to follow the latter against the will of Rome. At the time ; of the ,death of Pope Pius IX seven Bishops had been 'deposed, two - . sees were vacant, about six hundred tnembers of . various orders had been expelled and four hundred- and eighty.six parishes were without priests. Since the,accession of Leo _X 111 negotia tions have been continually in ElEll TILE fight over the payment of the life insurance of - the late Col.. DWIGHT has advanced another step in the filing by .the companies of their- answer to the complaint of those representing the estate. Among other reasons for refusing to pay over the money, they say that on information and belief they do not think Dwtour is ilead, and'eon tend that the plaintiffs are not the executors• of the Colonel. They also plead that when the policies were issued the deceased did not truthfully answer all the questions asked him ; that be concealed the fact that in early life he spat blood, and that, if he is dead, his death re sults from some eause.excepted to in the policy. - They further say that Dwuurr either committed suicide Or procured the taking of his life with designs to defraud the cOmpa ides, the benefits of the frauds to true to persons unknown to the de fendants, and who furnished_ him with means of paying the premiums. They, admit, tacitly,- that if he had lived longer and paid more premiums the contracts would have been valid, but hold. that they ought not to be obliged to fulfil Weir contracts since he died 'so soon and since /much of the'money is to go to public institu tions. Colonel Dwnuir's life was insured .for $265,000, and the com panies that are found in the present action and the amount of insurance in each are as follows : United States Life, $lO,OO ; N'ew York Life, $lO,OOO ; the Germania, $10,000,. and-the Washington, $10,000.. M g. NAPHAYS, 7110 was injured som time since, on alighting from a train of the Delaware and Lackawan na - titilroad Company, at Strciuds burg', entered suit for damages sus tained," alleging negligence on -the part of the company in not having a suitable platform. The Court aflirm ed a point presepted by. plaintiff's counsel, that if Mrs. NAPREYS, with out any negligence on her part, re ceived an injury in descending from the,cars, the company were prima facie guilty of negligence and the burden of - proof was-.on the defend ant to show that it was not guilty. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania recently reversed this decision of thedower court, on the grdund that he wh4 alleges negligence is bound to prove it affirmatively. TBR Cincinnatti Gaz-fltfr boldly charges that the • Dr. LUKE P. Bl.Acii-• itunx,,now - running for Governor of Kentucky, is the Dr. LUKE P. BLACK BURN who, in, st;4, sent the infected clothing from Canada, with the in-, tention of spreading yellow fever and small-pox among the citizens and soldiers of the North: Thus far no denial has been made of this charge. Neither the Courier Jour nal nor any other Democratic paper in Kentucky, has been able to show that they are not one and the same 'person. .There is not only a general. suspicion but a general conviction. that they are the same. - If the De mocracy of Kentucky cannot show that their candidate is not the small pox and yellow fever IlLticituuntrof 1864, the Courier Journal should de mand, in the name of our , commor. humanity and of ordinary political decency, that his name be taketrociT the ticket at once. Under such cir cumstances the nomination of such a barbarian is a disgrace to the Ste to of Kentucky, and his election would be tantamount to a 'hideous and re volting crime. Tn following is a statement of appropiiation's made during the third Session of the Forty-fifth Congress and first session'.of the Forty-sixth Congress for the fiscal year ending June 30, IsBo, and f6r . definiences for former years, prepared by the Warrant division. Treasury Depart ment: 1 Deficit Ingest *1,633 824.55 I.eglitiallve MIL., • 18.138.230.31 Sundry civil bill 17,03.1.11118.813 Army hill - I.'o t 7,300.00 Naval bill • - 24.028,468.95 Indian bill 4,173,47848 River and harbor ldil 9..=,494.01 Forts and fort lllearn - ma bill ramm.oo 11111tary Academy bill l'a.t °Mee bill lIInT Pension at restage bill . 31,597.200 00 Consular and dtplotnat lc bi11..........10.097.735.0, Expenses of United States Courts... 2 090,090.00 lliscellaneous 27995,123.77 Total Mississtert seems prolific of plank, of bull-dozing. Up to the. present time, intimidation and outrage have been measurably reserved for election! day. Alw a new system of—tacties has been adopted, and objectionable candidates are notified to withdraw before the contest, under penalties. prescribed in default. HENRY DixoN, a well-known citizen, who was recently nominated, In a county in that State, as an Independent 'can dilate fOr Sheriff, against the regular Democratic nominee, was the subject of a notification from an armed mob, inviting him to renounce:the canvass, quit, the country, or (lie. GENERAL Vi r ALKEß,SUperbltClldent of the Census of 1880, is sending out circulars to the Mayors of the different cities, asking for infoima-. tion respecting the social statistics. industries, and general s:characteris tics of the cities of the United States. .s_ -loux W. FoasiY is to go to Kansas in September to help eat brute the twenty-fifth anniversary of the entrance of that State into the Union. He is invited by his old friends who. helped him in - the . anti- LECOMPTON struggle. PERSONAL AND. POLITIOAL. Tumn.ow WEED is just recover ing front ai recent severe illness. EN-GovEn - min Reuben E. Fenton, of New York, is visiting in Bradford, Pa. PRESIDENT MCCoSII of PHEW is )3SSilig part of the vacation at Lake Mo- Ell SENATOR LA-MON is reported to be lying ill of malarial fever at his residence iu Hollidaysburg. BISHOP O'BRIEN, -of Kingston, died suddenly Friday mornir.g at the, St. Louis Hotel, Quebec. Cori. JOHN V. D. Dunois, 1. 7 .. S. A., died at his residence near Iludsou,..N.Y:, Last Thursday morning. THE Pittsburg Dispati;/i. suggests the name of Chief, Justice Agnew, of Beaver county, for the English mission. GOVERNOR llorr, who arrived at Har risburg on Monda,fly from Cresson, is suffering from a, rheumatic attack. A ORAND-DAUGHTEIC of ex-President Johnson, Miss 13. M. Patterson, is said to be - preparing to enter the lecture field. Arni Ton GENERAT. SCIIELL is in Colo ritdo, and State Treasurer Noyes is at White Sillplir•Springs i .West IT is said Sir garnet Wolseley took with him to Zululand instructions to send Prihce Lduis Napoleon back to England at once. Tim. Minnesota Republican State Cen tral COniniittee has called the StatetCon vention to meet at St. Paul on Tuesday. September 2. THE , Demoemtier -- -Congressional Con.. - yention of- the Fifth district of lowa, nominated B. E. J. Boardman, o Marshaltown, for Congress. AT Bangor, --,111e., the Democratic County Convention nominated a straight ticket, and refused to wait for the Green backers to name candidates. THE Massachusetts Republican State Central Committee voted to. call the State Convention to meet September 16, at Machanics' 111 . ;11, Worcester. .T. M. PORTER, late Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Masons of Pennsylvania; is dangerously ill at his residence in Eas ton. His recovery is doubtful.. • JUDGE NATHAN CLIFFORD ,ROW over 70, but still a justice of the United States Su preme Court, is sp'ending the summer at West Rummey; N. 11., his birthplace. (\' MN. J. - D. CAmEttox occupies at the ;_%Vliite Sulphur Springs, W. Va., a cot tage that was. built before the war by Senator Wade Hampton, of South Caro lina.' • POLICE Commissioner' Wheeler, of New York, has been cited to appear be fore 3layor Cooper ,to explain the alleged deficit fn tbe accounts of the Police De partmenfir 31E. Gnontu: C. GORHAM, ex-Secretary of the Senate, has joined the Honorable 1311k-Demucratic coalition in Calif:wnia, much to Bre relief of his former allies, the . Republicans. • Ar.E.x.l.3:nEtt STErunris.says he still be lieves in ;the right of secession, but op poses its policy. That looks as if be thought State soveMiguty was still something of an issue. Tilt , : famous solid silver vase, two and a-half feet high,. and elaborately fabrica ted, presented by the Whigs to henry Clay in.lSll, is of for sale in Boston by the great man's grandson. 110. s. lonx .I.kv Comptroller of time Currency, has accepted an invitation to address the Bankers', Convention at -Saratoga - Si - Wings next week upon the financial topics of the day. Is a recent interview, Ira P. Sankey, the . singing evangelist, gave a glowing' account of his work in Switzerland— where, he said, his songs had been trans lated and were sung in French and Ger. man—and his meetings at York, Darling -ton, Newcastle and ether English towns, • On•the Sunday before his' departure bp sang in the evening at Mr,. Spurgeon's tabenmele, and the enthusiasm was un bounded. • Tun County Committee of Greenback era for Alleghney county have agreed to coalesce with. the Democrat& General William Blakely will be their candidate for Judge of the Court of Common. Pleas .No. 2. • Mmarmt Lowell. complains that his business at Madrid is to ten people when the museums are - open, what theatre to go to, who are the beat milliners and tailors, and when presentations are to be made at court. • .MIL& How Ann, wife of Rev. Mr. Howard, minister of the Episcopal Church, Dunmore, hear Scranton, cgm rnitted suicide Thursday by drowning herself in the Lackawaurrt river. Insan ity was the cause. _ , Di:limp the month of September the following gentlemen will speak in Ohio according to promises made : Senator Blaine fqe two weeks, Senator Chandler for one week, General Logan for one week, General Joseph R. Hawley for one week and Stewart) L. Woodford for one week. • the Republican Contieen in Penniiivania, the lion. Galtisila A. Grow, who presided overits deliberations, gave utterance to sentiments that went to the heart and • mind .of every honest man whose igo(sl. fortune it was to - listen.to them:—[Nee York Commercial Adverti ser clter) ' SEC , ETARY Settenz has consented to speak in Cincinnati about the middle of August, and he' contemplates making afterward a tour of .inspection in the Nortlivrest. But Mr. FostPr's friends hope to persuade him to return to Ohio, and speak in Columbus, Cleveland, To ledo and Sandusky before the electimi. 311,847.33 1i.g7t376.10 tt.9.ann.000.00 - ,..5162,404,6117.70 GOVEnNOR Herr, - Judge. Harding, of Wilkes-Barre, Senator Cameron and a large party of prominent men of both the Eastern and Western portions of the State, with their wives, will leave on Au gust 6th for Camp Iloyt . (pained in boner of the Governor), Grand Island, Lake Chant • plain. Mr. Isaiah P l age, owner Of the island, has fitted it up with all conven iences, and the fishing and gunning in that vicinity are said to be excellent. AmoNdthe notable people at Greenbrier White Sulphur Springs are ex-Senator Cameron of Pennsylvania ; ex-Senator Roberston of South Carolina ; ex-Senator Toonibs of Georgia; ex-Senator Clingman of North Carolina ; General Fitz Hugh Lee; Senator Cameron, of Pennsylvania; Governor Mathews, of, West Virginia ; Wayne MacVeagh and family and Cap tain Goodrich of Philadelphia ; William Calder and J. M. Foster of Harrisburg, and Col: W. B. Fordney, Col. James Duf fy, : John A. Iliestand and Samuel 11, Reynolds of Lancaster. LETTER MOM PRILADELTELL The Public Record haii unearthed what it denominates a great outrage and fraud, perpetrated in the Coroner's Office. It is alleged that the Coroner. has received s3,_- 000 in excess of the sum legally duo bin by the city of Philadelphia; that 112 bo dies, instead of being buried, have been sold to the colleges ; that no return of the "fees" paid to the Coroner's subordi nates has been made to the City Treasur er ; that the .attaches of the office have been created a - chime of " professional ju rymen ;" that the large majority of in quests,•instead of being held personally by the Coroner, are held by his deputy, and that false representations have 'been made by the Coroner and hiS clerk in sev eral instances in swearing and affirming what they know is not true. •It appears that by laW, in certain cases, the bodies of the persons dying in the public institu tions may be taken to the medical col leges, and are placed in vats for use when the season of lecturing commences. * This privilege has been grossly abused, and several startling disclosures have resulted in cases where the remains of strangers of 'respectability dying suddenly had been taken from the Morgue to the pickling vats, when by law they were entitled to interment. The Record is doing its res urrection -cork with energy, as there is a political feud between the Coroner's and and Sheriffs offices here, though both are Democrats. It's an illustration' of the old and trite.saying, "" When rogdes . fall out," etc. A prepossessing young man visited a house on Mount Vernon street, on Mon day last,. which as for xale. Expressing his wish to purchase he was taken_ through'the building. !When in 'a room ho took off-his hat and laid it upon a bu . - reau covering a gold watch and chain val ued at $ll7. Ile then took out a tape measure and secured the dimensions of the room with a view of arriving at the amount of carpet required and left. ter some time it was found that he had taken the watch and chain. He was ar rested on Wednesday, while'tryiug to ob ain a loan on it a pawnbroker's. - About two weeks ago, John O'Byrne, Esq., of Wilmington, Delaware, while sit ting in the garden of- William B. Mann, Esq., was bitten in the leg by-'a spider. The next day the wounded member' was greatly swollen, medical aid summoOed and the necessity of-amputation was' dis cussed. The patient though somewhat improved in condition, is yet corifinedl to his residence,:and it. is believed that the surgical operation Proposed win not be necessary. The I'ennsylvania Railroad Company last week, purchased between thirty-five and forty acres of ground at Bryn Mawr, paying at the rate of $2,500 per .acre, or about $lOO,OOO for the whale. • Mrs. Mary Hancock WithingtOn Allen, died in this city on Monday last, in the eightieth year of her age. She was the grand-daughter of the sister of John Han cock of Revolutionary fame. 'The deaths last week numbered 405, a falling of fifteen from the week preliious. In the list of adults consuinptiouef the lungs leads the way, thirty-six persons having fallen victims to that disease. Business in the United States Mint is still brisk, and as the :coinage of the standard silver dollar Will be some OA,- (XH) shoie tit - IFt month, on account of the want of bullion at the Sin Francisco and Carson Mints, there is no probability "of a let up in the work for some time yet. Thu law,demands that two tnalions per i_tainth * coined, and to make this all st4tight our Mint is running full force now both night and day. Meanwhile. there is no demand for the bright new dollars, and they are stored in the vaults of the Trea4 ury here. So large is We accumulation it has been necessary to build new vault for their reception. ' The Permanent Exhibition Compal has. been notified by the Park-Commission that they must remove their building and its contents within two' years, and that the license be revoked, according to the terms of the license granted by the Com mission. This order has come unexpect edly upon the Eibibition Managers, and at a time when they were laboring suc cessfully to make the Exhibition attract.- l•:!hottld the Tesollie of the Park Com. PHILADELPHIA, August 4, 1879 missioners be carried out, it wotild be a ,great loss to this city. The building con tains much that is well - worth' seeing—= works of art and exhibitions of the mann= factures of the country. In addition to which have been added attractions in the way of concerts, etc., which have, proved immensely popular, and have' furnished innocent and rational enjoyment to thou sands. When the Exhibition building is closed, this great city will not have' apy place of resort for the many people who need recreation.. A vigorous and earnest protest will be made against the actioniof the Commission, but probably without ,avail. - • • A petition asking Congress to pass a_ joint reBolution authorizing the return of the money appropriated by the Govern ment t& the Centennial Exhibition, • and which was diverted into the United States Treasury •by a decree of the Supreme Court, has been circulated in this city; and received the signatures of nearly all the bank presidents and prominent citi- ramm Francis S. Maybin, an insurance agent doing business on lYalnut street, and well known to the business communit4, has disappeared under circumstances . rhich indicate Maths is financially embarrass ed, and has not the courage to face his creditors. Philadelphia haw been steadily increas ing its export grain trade. Last year the receipts for The first half year were a lit tle More than eighteen per cent. of the total for the Atlantic ports, and less than twenty million bushels. .Thil i s year has been received almost one-fifthta gain of more than one per cent.—and:she actual gain has been over three mill en bushels. The gain has been principallyjat the ex pense of Now York and No Orleans: The port shows a study And healthy growth from fourteen per cant. of the whole in 1877 to almost twenty this 'year. The National Educational Association held a convention in this -city the ,past week, at which various problems affecting popular instruction were discussed from the stand point of the members; who are teachers. A warning to those who wear dia monds: At the leeelit meeting fif the Academy of Natural Sciences, Dr. Leidy balled attention to alit-Liken rose diamond set in a sleeve-button. While the wearer was recently sittin4 in the sun, the dia mond exploded with. sufficient force to drive one fragment into his hand and an other into his forehead. ' Francis S. Maybin, an insurance ageot, disappeared from his office in this city on Monday, and has not since been seen or heard from. It now turns out that he had become financially involved, and ru mor has" it that he had failed to meet ac commodation paper to the amount of $40,000 or $.)0,000. The losses fall prin cipally upini his fn ends. The newspapers of Saturday contained a notice that Rev. John Graham, the Congregationalist minister froin Brighton, England, would preach in the-South Pres . byterian Church. • The same paper chron icled the sad death of the distinguished divine by drowning, at Cape May, on Fri- day afternoon. Batwing with two nieces, one was carried out by the du - rents, and in the struggle i to save her the uncle was drowned. It is supposed that apoplexy .was, the cause of his drowning, as he was an excellent swimmer. The twenty-third grand festival of the North AmeriCan Turnerbiind commenced on Sunday, and was participated in by the Germanized portion of the population of this city, and numerous visiting :Tue tons. The, Sabbath saw several pro: es sions with banners and music, and the Scheutzen -Park presented scenes which-. were not exactly of the camp-meeting stripe. Tile Puritanism of - New England which did not allow a man to kiss his wife •on Sunday may have .been somewhat ex aggerated in its strictness, but it is ques tionable if, in the long run,it was not bet ter calculated to preserve the publicimor als, than the liberality 'which demands games and. dancing, and .unlimited beer guzzling on. the Sabbath day: A steady-going, reliable thermometer on Chestnut street Sunday, marked nine ty-six degrees, and it wasn't called an "aWftil hot" day, either. A lied Fate CLAYTON, N. Y., July A pleasure patty this morning chartered steam yachts . 4 Farrington " and " Josephine " for an excursion on the St. Lawrence. The boats were lashed bbgether . , •and the party left about half-past nine. They had parted not more than twenty rods, when the head lashing loosed, and the " Josephine " capsized and sunk. Mrs. l'ersells, of Binghamton ; Mrs. Sarah BostWick, Mrs. and Miss Burkelew, of Kirkwood, and Miss Hattie Pollock, of New. York, were drowned. The party which met with the ac dent here this morning was from Binghamton and vicinity, and num bered about 150. They spent a few days on the St. Lawrence, and this morning hired the steam yachts " Farrington " and " Josephine," with - a view to visiting Kingston ; Ont., and other - points. They steamed up the river from the Thousand Islan.l Park to this place, and as the Josephine,,was a slower boat than the Farririgton, it was pro posed to lash the two boats together and thus keep the party together.. Soon as this was done they proceeded on their journey, but had not gone forty rods when it was found the ,stays were not properly adjusted, and 'the Josephirie -commenced taking water. Without lessening .speed, an effort was made .to loose- the stays. A bowline was let out until the Jose phene had swung around sideways, when it :caught in a knol and she capsized and sunk in 80 feet of water in half a minute. As she-tipped over every one on board fell into the wa ter, and many were drawn down as the boat sunk. Nothing happehed *to the Farrington, and many were taken out of the water by her, _and others by .small boats, which pushed out from the shore as . soon as the accident occurred. Five ladies were drowned. None of ieTs .the bodhave been recovered. Divers arrived to night; and efrotts will be made in the morning to find the bodies and raise the yacht Josephene. Great blame is attached to the captains of bhth boats for their mismanagement and lack of judgment. , Ilydrophoblo. CHESTER, Pa.., July 27.—Little Nettie Cox, the six-year old dAugh ter'of- Crosby M. Cox, of_ this city, died at three o'clock yesterday morn iff:r, after suffering for more than five' days the greatest torture from hydro, phobia. The little' thing bore, up bravely under her affliction. ,% For about- twenty-four hours before she died she became very restless, toss ing from one side of the bed to the v i other and writhing in the most I°l- cut convulsions. At times she ,ould become quiet and have all appear ances of goilig to sleep, when kt3ud denly she would start up in great x citement and remain so for a long time. : The sight of any object, the appearance of any ono in her room, passing a hand over her, or even a gentle breeze would !throw her into a spasm. She had intense fever, and when she would ask for water to wet her lips or brow, it was with the greatest difficulty she received -it. She retained her reason throughout, and knew she ought to takeliourish ment, but when she reached for - a glass l or c\lp she would catch hold of it quickly in a giasmodie manner, at tempt to swallow its contents hastily and sink back'on the billow exhaust ed, 11er most restless time was dur ing !Friday night. Saturday morn ing; she sank rapidly. The frequent and Continued convulsions were too much for, her nervous system and she be'igan to -lose strength. lier eyes grew dim several hours before slie. died. By noon on Sunday she was thoroughly prostrated, and three hours later she-passed away quiet ly. Her parents are almost' wild with grief from the loss of their only daughter. -The citizens sympathize very much, for little Nellie was known and loved by nearly everybody. - Mr. .1. Rowland 'Cochran, the owner of the dog, was bitten by it .about three years ago, and he is much alarmed since the fatal result of the bite to the little girl.. AL Falai Disease Raging. DUIIiTQUE, lowa„ July 30.-A dis ease akin - to cholera is raging at Cen tre Point, Lynn. county. — - Fully 20 persons nave died from .its effects during the past 13 days, and an equal number have' been prostrated by it. It is also raging in Walker, •a little town seven miles from Centre Point. Several-deaths have occurred there. An order for forty coffins was re• ceived from Centre Point yesterday, by a Dubuque undertaker. The physicians at Centre- Point are worn out and the residents are fleeing from the place.. Pennysylvatila'4 Flood. pirrsilulin, • PCnn., July 30. = Trie following is a partial list of losses at Petrolia by, the flood of . .Saturdayf : Whartley, $1,500 ; Boltner's jewleiy store, $5,000; White Fawn ie r sturant, $1,000; Sternburg's clothing !Ouse, $12,000 ; Levine's cigar store, $4;000; Foote's drip store, $9,000; Sesiion's grocery, $3,600; five vacant build ings, $5,000 ; Central drug store, $2,- 000; Marks dry goods, $2,500. I The loss in that neighborhood is roughly placed at $200,000. The scene dur ing this destruction was terrible, men, women and children rush ng hither and thither in search of , elevated positions where life might be secure. Many people lost all their effects, and are hft in a state of destitution. Mysterious Disappearance. Ori Sund4 afternoon, says the Wilkesbarre Record - of July 31, a young girl named Ryan, twelye years of age, went - after huckleber ries with a number of other children. She was liviti7 in the family of a man named O'Toole, t Mill Creek While the girls were passing throti7h a piece of Woods; they were met by a man, who, in a stern Manner, Order ed them 4 to return. The children were frightened and retraced their steps at once. In some way the Ryan girl got separated from the others, and did not return with them. She was not at' 0"roole-'S -house dur ing Sunday night., and on Monday O'Toole went to her- Mothers to see if she was there. But no one had seen ,her, and her mysterious disap pearance caused great anxietyton the part of those most -interested in her welfare. Monday passed, and Tues day, and still she remained! away.- - The heart of the poor mother - was now torn. with anguish. for she could not comprehend the meaning of the strange and sudden disappearance of the child. She visited all the neigh bors, but. none could give her. any clue as to the whereabouts of the missing- one. Yesterda - v the !police of the:city were notified of the facts in the case, and it search was begun, but up -:to a late hour last night, no trace of the child had been discover ed. There is a .faint suspicion that the man who drove -- the children out of the woods on' Sunday may -know something about the Ryan girl, but no one has yet been found to identi fy, him. The case is 'Veiled in Mys tery, and the most stenuous efThrts should be adopted to ascertain the whereabouts of the missing girl'. STATE NEWS SMALL. Pox ix prevailiug in NeKeai count) !rim Pittsburg car works are running on full time. • Tits,Ainerira n says there is not an idle man in Danville. • Diu:if . ..6AL and Marrietta Furnace No. 2 will he'blown in in a few days. DriftNo the month of July the IMperial Oil Refinery of Oil City shipped over 100,- 000 barrels-of A Pot - NI:MY for the, manufacture of iron and bras Castings was started up in Lan caster on taturdai-." A WlHramsrofit firm Las an order to manufacture fifty thousand toy pianos for the New York market. • • Mu: DA VI D 11. SMITII,Of little Gerrhaby, Perry county, claims to have three bushes in his garden bearing coffee. Tits Catasaqui MannfactUring Coin patty, Lang!' county, hasi increased - the wages of its hands live-per cent. SAMUEL. BINGAMANi a hostler, of Lan caster, has been so badly bitten by a mosquito that it feared lockjaw will en sue front it. Mns. REMICK, of Pittsburg,' ,sues another niman for $20,000 damages for having estranged from her the love of her husband. , A rattlesnake, twenty years old, Was killed near Lewistown the 'other Nay. His age was ascertained by the number of his rattles. . , A urn•::n boy named Reese, was run over and killed by a train of cars at Sloan Mines Thursday. TUE Harrisburg Telegraph says that Lindley Murray, the great grammarian, was born in. Derry township, Dauphin county,. in June; 1745. A FIRE at Karns City, early on Friday morning, destroyed property to the value of *25,00(1. It is thought to have been the work "of an incendiary. GERALD W 1 IERNAN, a Bedford coun ty map, who for the past four years has been hunting elephants and ostriches in the wilds of Africa, arrived at home a few days ato. wife of Ilev. Mr. Hew: ardoninistcr of Episcopal Church, Dundaff, near Scranton, euminitted sui cide Thursday loy,drowning herself In the Lackawanna rii , er; liiatiny _was the cause. THOMAS L. FREEMAN, a colored man, employed in the Samily of a Mrs.ls at Wilkinsburg, al suburb of Pittsburg, com mitted a brutal 'assault upon a seven year-old laughtim of that lady up Wed, nesday afternoon of last week. Tie was chased into. vacant house, where ho was defended by negroes, • and while a Compromise was pending between them - and_the whites the offender escaped. • GEOP.GE kit HE (SER. - and old resident of Norristown, committed suicide o Ft iday 'morning by blowing his brains Out. Ho lost his wife three weeko ago and it is believed that grief drove • him to do the deed.• ALL the idle labor in Schuylkill county has . been absorbed by mills recently. start ing up, and a large manufacturer at Pottsville is hesitating about taking a contract for fear he cannot get the labor to - complete it. Ocittxo the thunder storm on Thurs.: day afternoon a huge tank of the Vesta Oil works, eight miles :from Pittsburg, was struck by lightning and soon after exploded. 'Other tanki were 'mtnieded, and the loSs will riach abOut - Mns Manta IttcE, of ,Saucon township, Lehigh county, has attained the rile old age of . one hundred and seven She is quite active, and when in Bethlehem, a few days since, the band sernaded her,i which. she acknowledged in a few re _ _. marks. Two children, living near Turkey Run, Schuylkill county, wept out on the moan= thin to pick berries, and not coming home, search was made for therm. They -were found safe in an old sink-hole, into which they had fallen, and *here they had re mained sixteen hours. THE land at the mouth of a little stream emptying into the Ohio river, about eight miles below Pittsburg, is said to contain a-rich &Posit of iron ore. Cleveland men have been prospecting iMthe vicinity for several weeks, and the farmers have iected some very good! offers' of pur chase. • • JAMES MADISON PORTER, SOH Of Hon. J. M. Porter, who was Secretary of War under President _Taylor, died in Easton, atlln early hour on Saturday.. The de ceased was a lawyer, and at one time. District Attorney of Northamptim coun ty. In 1876 he - was the Grand Master of - the Masons of Pennglvania. TilE Titusville llerald rays: "Mrs. Thomas, of Philadelphia, an old lady over eighty, and an aunt to General Kane, has built a new Stone church' at Kane, at a cost of $20,000, and presented it to the Piesbyterian congregation. The old lady each year spends a part of her immense income in building a church in some part of the country." THE corner-stone of the monument to General Anthony Wayne Was: laid at Erie Thnrsday with -- imposing ceremonies. Get eialayne's reulair were exhumed in 15.;09. The flesh was boiled frinn the bones and reinterro,, the bones being taken to Chester county. The_!monu- . meat is to be on the Site' of the original interment, and where a portion of the remains now lie. NINE car loads of immigrants, mostly Swedes and Norwegians, .passed through Pittsburg on Weduesday of. last week bound for the west Some thirty men, Women and children, however, settled in Mcli:eau county, where a muniaor of their country people had already futn i ld homes. The fresh art ivals' say that hundreds of their friends will immigrate to this coun- try in the course of a year or two. PETF.U. PCIFVER 7 -Esq., a {tell-to-do citizen -of Pittsburg., left his ptrrentS thirty-three years ago to, do for himself. The family moved away, and since that time Mi. Peiffer, notitithstanding he ham repeatedly advertiseid for. them, was an able to hear anything'oft.heM.until a few days ago.. He then discovered that two of his sisters, all of the family left, Weir living at Shamokin and 'almost in 'desti tute circumstances. He has. provided for them handsomely. 'rid: Republican party of Lackawanna comity nominated the following county ticket, for judge, Alfred 'rand ; for Sheriff, A. B. Stevens-; Prothonotary, Henry Sommers ; Treasurer, Ezra 11. Ripple; District4Attoiney, E. W. Simreil; Recorder T. R. jLathrope ; Clef]: of the Courts, W. G. Daniels : Registeref Ceorge, Farber ; County COmmissioner, 11. L. ll:instead ; Auditors,. A. C. Sisson and W. .„W.. Williams ; Cofoner. Dr. Daniels ; County .Surityor, Richard Evans. A vouso married woman, living in Lancaster aunty, received, among other Wedding ; presents, a few years- ago. a piano. tier musical ,education having btetrueglected, and being of too practical _a disposition to lock the instrument up, in the parlor, she determined „to .tuake use of it the ofily way she could. - So she had it placed in the. dairy, and _while the children are amusing , themselves' pound ing on the keys on'one side, she pounds the buttermilk out of her - butter; - on the -- while the music (?) attracts the cows in from the tield•to be milked. Tim ERE is consider able talk, says the Williamsport Bulletin, about a cave of im mense proportions having been opened 'of 'tato in the vicinity of Warrensville. Mr. Thomas StatTotd says it has already .been explored to a distance Of tWo thou sand three hundred anti fifty feet, With. ceilings from forty to one hundred feet•in height. A stock company has been form ed for opening it up more ,tally for visi tors, as well as for , mining purposes. A very valuable clay suitable for thesman ufacture of porcelain ware seems to be abundant in this (-we.. Thi . .4.,-st, 111 sullies in itself to pay stock - holders handsomely on their investment.. GENERAL NEWS. AT Long Branch ThurEdaythu Iloche§- ter Encamment Ilattalliou'of uniformed Partiarcli4l. 0. Of 0. 1., -won the prize' drill vase. Bingor, Me., Thursday the. Demo cratic County Convention nominated a straight ticket and refused to wait for the Greeribackers to name candidates. . EAStERN . railroads restotO their pas senger rates on Saturday, and the Mis souri Pacific and the' St. Louis, 'Kansas City and Northern Companies have with:. drann from sale through , tickets . from Missouri river Doints. G. A. MENION, of 7.\rtNt- York,: waS found in his yoom at the Faller (louse, Gouverneur; N. Y.,-on Saturday morning nearly dead from an overdose of, laudanuni purchased ostensibly for the toothache. lie died iron after. THE fifth and last body of those drown. ed in' Thursday's disaster at Clayton, N. 1., that of Mrs. Persells. of Bingham ton, was recovereol on Satnrday mmniMz. Monday the remains were taken b.x train to romthatnton for into went. CA N iel Dotson, a prominent pitizen of Petersitrg., Va., who,. with his entire family, was I:4.isoue4l. by eating ice cream. flied Thnrs!lay morning, aged sixty years. no leave,..a.•large all of whom are quite ill; . IT is stated the Dominion Government has determined to renew the order in Council prohibiting the importation of American rattle 'imo the live eastern Provinees.• Thu pretient % osier will ex pire oil the Ilth of t"eptembar next, _ . B. R, BOOT r. , of Hempstead, Texas, . ex-co - untrAttoreey, was bhot and kijled• on Wednesday night of . la4t wc . eo 'by It. T. "Springfield, - who shot 'hit - la-five • times in the head . and once in the hedy. The unirderer 2.3 at large;.but two Sheriff's IiOESCS arc in pursuit: • Owl:In to heavy. deminds on the t: solidated Dank;of 'Montreal, Thursday, which it was unable to meet, the direc. tors decided 'not to have it - reopened for busiuess. The failure will seriously effect some four hundred widows and orphans who hold stock. Tim' War Department- is informed by telegraph of the death of Colonel ThOmas J. Treadwell, of the Oidinance Depart- - ment at Governor's Island New York. The vacancy created by Colonel Tread. weirs death will be filled -by the promo tionlof Mayor James . Whittemore to be Lie9tenarit Coloncl,'aid Captain Isaac Arnold will be prompted to be Major in `the Idler's place. • THE St. Louis Journ7l of t'oninier,e contains. extracts from : . letters received from all sections West,„particulary (win country. merchants, all of which note a lafl•ge increase in business, rapid re:Aura - - tion of confidence among allclasses,ahtin dant crops, general prosperity and bright prospects fur the futu i ! t! in all departments of trade. • < • • A rw.stwrcti from -New Brunswick, \..J., dated July 31, says, that a row boat containing a pleasure party„of live persons, named WM. Guise, George Ken yon, Mrs. John Dannigan, Miss Kate 3ran, and ;Miss Jessie Gould, was run into by the schooner Hayes at ten that morning in Raritan river,.about five miles froM that city. The boat capsized, and two ladies, Mrs. John Dannigan awl • Miss Kate Doran,.were • drowned. Their bodies were neyrecovered. " ~cgn[, x ) EG I STER'S OTlCE.:—Notice t... 15 Liereliy given. that thertlitiss liven filed lit r.trire of Itegtstvrtif 11 - 111 s In sndtnr the comity of I:fallford avo.nots i,f ailmint•trationmiudi following e.tatr.s, vtv: F'in:tl ainnuint of It. W. Cuolfiaugh, guardi an o r Attit , tnit: Pool. . aCrolllit, of r. 4 ll9S`itiie,, ••seculns of Janies A. 1:11t.s. ,I,l•ea‘JA. intal . 2,l)llnt of \I iron Capron, administrator of Iljo.na Ramos. deek.ii,eli. • 5 , ...c011• iota:11 account of Philemon Son.. and i Align:ens execut,fs of Heixicco 1. Perry,* der—asmi.• Final acrount Moigun, guardian of liar ry Morgan. .Fin'tfacwount of Delo+ Rockwell, administrator Of. John E. 1'.o•-kwell. deceased. • Final a.•rnunt of•Angu.tuq Y.. 131elleran.1 Frank. lin P. Weiler, executin of Fleur) . f , hemnan, ~enjor, tteeen‘Fol. ' 1 . Ftu:d arrouni of D. 1.111. y and Poe , eroy..ml m Ist ra rs of D. F. Pomeroy, de•,rear••d. , . Partial aCroont or B. S. Tears mot (t. S. .Itorse, ad min istra:ors of Aaron Kmipp. fli:mased. Final account of : 4 11111'01. A. Yuck, g l oardlan of Rhoda Setpoo..rer,'lmi., derea,rd. • 1. 4 4 , a) ant of Freeman Sweet, ndinintstratur of Robett Les%ls:, dereas'ed. Final account of 11,:1.t.ry 1)Ixon, gnardl In of Fred 3t. lirtotks. . aceimnt of J.S. WestbroA. executor of parp.a? amount of. E. S. iiort.ft;. admtnir trafor of Asa F!ztal ar•eor:ot of r' • S. Mullet, executor of Ste phen Partial of Heyails Uramhall, guanljan or Eglwaid .1. 311,1,1;mg1i. ~,,, of It Bram!:3II. gt;ar4i3n I,L•v• 3h(141., TBtr , l r:tt:la.:lretalitt of Jr.,prh I.Ow,AL adui I,trlta a C. L. War?l, Final account r.( 314•Kinn,y. jr., tohnin'.s trttor 1! , race Mch.:ltiwy, }:.'lFlux! aaeo~ntt n(- I rox. executor of •lattys Fincrty. ,Iccoust•sl. acf•••l•nt.ot .1 , •11n F. f of 11!Ntili M. W.4lfilln,. Istnal n•••••.11:tt of Aa•lr,w Ar.e. N. M. 3f••11t31:3....'admini5trat,..r•••••,41.2. P. Bush. ,;•• • Final al cot.tit of 3f. F. In•usm.f, gimrdiai, of torc!:er. Final avvraint of J. I. Wheaton, I..xrcutor of S:31111:.•1M Final :.ev , :re; of F. If: Marsh, executrix of Mary ICee:cr„. F.l:: l lare ,- int of Ifeninth Young. adininfstran;r of I g.• 11ornn.der,a,,1. Final amount or I'. V:. ..W I. 3faynartl :11).! 3!. L. .., or Tlitquaq . . Final a. ••• , -n s. exceutor:ot %! rt!l3l Itit 4)f •TaliJ•as 11. W , M., :viittinistranir of Etltynt del,a•eir. . . rinat Jame. 11. \{ • V•101. and 34.hn W. =N1,1:t1.11. of I lonry S.•ll.itton, th.f .ppraicenoltt of pr,perzy , s et oit by oxto:ators. :ol%l‘l,l , tinto'r, TO 1% affit chji, ! 1,1 1.J1.111 , 4:: /1 4 •1 . 14!••:/t. , . Vit . ENtaze of xvoisali, worgan. C. ELZOIN 11 , "• CA1111:114 `• .. k•ot , jol W. "•- `` Litkr.P4l%iti. . • . . Anil the w In 1., 111- I )9.l,.trri Pour: of Itrailforil ('aunty IY;at '.. p , for co:it - in:I:0u ti 'A. C. - FltlriilllE..llegl,ter. Tivauila, Pa.: .l sigl.t. tt. rrits; 11:1)II ANS' couRT SAT:E.-1:v . 7 - virtue of au order Issued out of the , Iriihaus• oyrt of 11taolferi1 County, 3lay IsPi. the Ailadulstrat.ir of the estate"( (Willa .1; Rowley. 1:1:4• 0 . tilt'. Townshlp.of Iferriek. at pu'ille sale. it the I:nit - I:lse,. on wr:Wc Y. Al - GUST 27. 1S71:. YL. ("11.w:tug pril , rtr. to wit ' A li r ir of gioun,l Thtvtu.tlip, • ptail iota t'iionly, Pa.. beuri.hill or: the 11.•rth and west Lc law'. of .Iruia , Lear, on' 1101 east by the littlilie highly:ly. and on 'the. ,south by laaily of W. A. We ith a story ; . ifiti half frothedhotuie, slop. aliil a few fruit treey tr oirroo, Tr:lt M'S -r IF SA L 'ivit , ll the property it qfliek ibiwn ?lOU on rkollfirnlatlOTl, and balaNce obe year from rinifiruueli U. VA ith intere&L . . w. A WETMORE. Atlinthistrator. Herrick. August i2.7.1.3w. ()II /11ANS ' COURT SALE.-By frith( of all ortltr iNsui.4 oat it! 'the (Irritate. elan.: Or County, the itioltoNichrtl Ad initif-ttaN,r of tit...a . ..tate of Jai.. of !... itittllfietti Totraship. N-il at phblie cl.. (II the pteinlNe.. (lAATI - R p y, I,; i;t. at I ifelock r. 31, tln d foliteahhg property. to rut t d. of .r.uot .iroatt , In sm!rhri..rd Tow o o op , iria.trord 6 ,,, nty. honnded. followF, u.lt vin the berth- by land, of Aildlson. I: rare; uui: tho •••a-d: by lands of A. i 1:. Mutton ; the soh by lanlhVof theory Eigitt and "George pnibevt, and ou, the svtod by lands of couiti \\'.. it. and ,i,pre-hol to nentaln seveiny- , it ;Ler,: and twen•y-,ix. about t-ilty•five avrvc. Improved, olttl a frame Inm-e, one frame ba . rn. -an shl building used as, a tdoreiifon , e, and apple orebard thereon. .TEKM 5.11.E.—.50 when the properly Iv rnek. duel;; on. veldt rasa t ion of safe; shl,ooo one yyar after calt4mallim, with the bal;mee- In Its year,- after vonfLrniarlon. it fhb annnalliderest froln the (tale of thus eobtirmat km of said ANL It }:)V 31.1.;:..:•1NG. Administrator. Smith fi,til. l'a., A ugn -t 4, I e79-3‘v. 11 MI ANS'C OU RT SALE.-Bv . • . irturo or an order 1,1114.,1 out of the Orphan.' 0 t'..irt of 11 NW:pro Couniy, the Under,igned ait. inii,f.4,eor, of :Michael Ilirr. In. dert;as.ed, will ~,,. I..—e to 1 , 111.11‘. ,ale. ,•11 the prr wise:, mit : 11111AI. ...I'tlt*r•T '29. A. U. 1,1'9. at I "'cloy!: V. M., MO e4.ttli Iran "r trf. r,q14,,,,ng d,ribed lot, piece or 1.32. -. r...1,V rand. lyii4; and t"•11:g ill the Towned4 of Tosvuoku. County ot Itradr,,hl and Male of rig', 5y1 , 371171. 1.1.11y.1. , ,1 at fiol,,ws. to wit: - Ilegituillu; at the south-oast corher of a irtt pur r:Ll, 11 11% .110,11 1t.0.1 ,, y.%1r.: 11,11 re north I , to r.i mnr h.vired and :tilt ty•tive perches to the north east I'll 7 I ler of said 14ti.s 4ot: thelMe smith ss. 2 o tact thu ty:eight aryl orm-half perches to a stake: thence tiorth east' forty-eight .Perches to a 111:110e : itlVltUtt •Gtlot b. e. O east twmity-ono ant perches to a maple; thence 'south nest one It:netted : v ol rilie•ty•tnao ts•rehrs f,; - 3 phue I, h . )t ; them,ssl z o vrt fifty perch.-. to OW Ware ;.gin it 'g . , containing forty.ekot arre, and lift } -two -I...n.hes. The- !mutt; halh of the Mt ;Mare .lesm thml, "m•umilllnt; twenty-four aeireS ana twcnty-sl port•lms 41111 y to be skid--.lllar T