glatto: L7Ailkiimi::::maaMgaa=====--i n. - ItAleruar,'sDrroiti aonttiostr. - 2ismir:. I vircemiis.64 u'irvr. a, T. 3. TUE L0c..11. LAW We tittblith tlaceliere theiaw pfts.s'e4 by ;thist.l.-agislature litqa-Winter a called,, the atotral Option fartly for the rea eon that cm: readers may be informed as to the conditions of it, - and partly because we haVe. felt'; words to ear, in rela tion to it. 11 - c gave" our oftinion j some what briefly en the ,law whelt, was-first passed. We believed then, and we bare had no reason to change our :mind:. that there were no honest temperance motives in the minds of the framers of that law. It is well known by the people that a "Third Party" movement was in progress, and that long and windy discussions were had through many of our joUrtials. es pecially Radical Ones—and we have only to rerer to'our cotemporary of the .Ifout roes ReptiNfean for proof=and the bur den of these discussions on the part of the political journals was, that it would injure the prospects of the success of their party by totally excluding their candi dates from passing an examination on thnt point, as the glaring fact presented it:elf that from the President down al- moat to - at:panty coroner, an honest, prac tical temperance teat would defeat them. All the politicians were awake to the fact - and something must be done to quiet the "Prohibitionists," and none have contrib uted rat s target? for 'this purpose than a certain clique known as the "whisky ring." It is r.o news to those who are) posted that there is and-has beerftfor years fitwhislay ring, and from the very nature of things this ring has been clossly allied with Radical politicians. Hence it became ; necessary last winter to make a move on the chess board to chat krnate the men Tim :we.e agitating the question, that we must have clear headed temperance men for our official servants, and this law was passed as much by the influence of the ; whiskey ring, es by any other temperance inflaence, in the hope of §atisfyitio the demands of these proldhitionistsm the one hand, and gi fining time to secure the I defeat of the measure when brought be. ; fore the people, on the other. We believe the . - .,msres whose hearts and souls are in I this work have an hon e st purpose before then, which is to stay the hand of lean- , peranes :ts blig,liting,mpidanni rest den- course, and God forbid that We should Lay cr do anything that ;ill in Rill' nerretardadie onward progress of this re !mon, but it must be remembered that when anything of a refor;raatury nature mamas the phase of "cue bccotnre a faLatiiiism, and some at the most dirt ini nave' been c.mnii.tted under its banner that the world has ever s• en.— There is no truer manna than aids: that truth often suffera'more from the Ivitt of its defender than from the arcliriciim et it 3 opposers." Deskning men know the ponce of the people when aroused the:r • zeal for any just cause, hence it has be- • come their practice to rise this advantage and impose upon honest motives to foist themselves into parer, and Mill out just er.onth of reform to gain :their point with just enough tares sown among the wheat to . olte it ofit, so that they can pate Largily of their desire fur reform, . while behind the scene they are secretly plotting and combiniag to contoass its defeat. In view of all this, it rutty be well that calmness, and a thorough in vtotiga tion of the designs. and effects of all measures promulgated under the head of " - reform, aitail be had to prevent if posg ble the entering of an earls cooler its cloak. We are cf taw same opinimi that we race at first, that this law was enacted ...by political leaders, strictly for a party purposs, and that that purpose has been tiletaiind if it shall become certain that thepeople are going to take them at their. word and vote no license at the March election, this law will, in our opinion, be repealed at the coming, meeting of the Legislatnre, as energetic steps are flirt-slily being taken, which consist of money, and the people have been' taught that each "steps" have a,very "winning way.' To show conclusively that thb scads of 4es'atiction here sown in this law, and . every one can see intentionally so, we awall give the gist of a portion of it here anit tie:over the"little joker." It provides ,-Oat on-the third Friday in March next Ailie,votars of the savers' cilies antl , cents - ties of the commonwealth shall Vote on the - question of "license - or- no license: . Every ;tin] year thereafter a similar tip - twal.ahall be made to the ballot her on the license inestion. If the majority' of a city or county shall decide against li cense it shall not be lavattlifoa atty. court of boaid of commissioners; to aiaiine any license for. the sale of spirituous, Rini us or maltlionors in such city or counts: No:penalty is presribed in •t his act for its • `Bat When the licenses are all ssrePt awaythe eiisting 'against tile contraband sale of 'liquons;reMains in fall force and wilt'-be; administered by the 'scums l. As-the existiug license-law are ciniteas =Oh tar purposs fist saveiiine is'for polloe,lt may, be iissitrted 212 some quarters that,-their. total, reireal aby a popular, vote wilt- Isaac , the asafC , "of liquors as Deestrid imiiinited ;as • that of any tither iobject:of •traflic, The present' jietialitiiis `tire ileriOnnood ,again :ola- •rtioastofothe jiCenee l fix h ling when Lea . awlmja-licenae ; syration shall lie 'atta;lialied • ittattibtY by-a papular tt - ii - be , arged that - the - peitaq for its vioiatititi is as fulliiitillifiti: . iitS;:the z lEYstorta ; "The loWaliaptien j oitoly tirohibitit,the - courts from issuing licenses on the "pie of a. majority of the citizens of city or county. There is no penny- denounced in the act agAust the !ale okinto,ricating !Clit - fOr tilling withOu L . licence remains ,by only after the whole linens:: ,eyetein is aboliabed. rnal the Framers of dui local option act destgi redly cripple it..:to the:t it could be violated with impunity?. If tbes did nota "Gticrolerherit deelaring - iil true intent cud meaning should bo pees ed when the legislature meet..: That 4.fieandal.” During the late political campaign,says the Harrisharg Patriot, rho administra tion organs cried "scandal" whenever the Credit :\lobilier business was mentioned. That was their way of refuting the charg es of bribery made by the opposition jun.- ! nals in connection with the great swindle. It would have been all the same had they possessed the very best evidence of the truth of these - charges. The.editars pos sessed of consciences sufficiently elastic to allow of the fabrication of the gross ' lihels upon Buckalew and Hartley would I not stop at the denial of any charges against their own candidates, however. well established. Now that the campaign. is firer, thus , journals deem it safe to per mit their readers to have a peep at the truth. An investigation with closed doors has failed to hide the' sorry scandal, and partisan prejudices of the extremest sort has not hetin strong enough to pre . tent all that has escaped those closed doors from reaching the people. Enough is known to establish the fact that many millions of dollars have been filched from the peo ple through a conspiracy batween mem bers Qf Congress and the agents of the Credit Nlohilier. But it is not atiill like ly that any one will be punished. Indeed, the ini - estigation has been thus far so coil ducted that if party success demands.% the whole matter can he successfully whitewashed. Indeed, judging by the history of Pennsylvania's great semidal— the Evans e 111 ITZZlt•rne 11 t—a public inves tigation establishing all the charges made by the appnsrtion during the campaign in connection with the Credit llobilier hoari ness wou:d amount to nothing---so eallems da - the people appear to have became in re gard to such mattere.. Last winter an In- VQ.St smti , in committee, composed of Repubiicans, found that an agent of the State had stolen nearly three 1ml:- tired thousand dollars of the public mon ey, that the governor and auditor general had teen goilty of t ro3s negligencea in ,e-inrviion with the matterand that the former had connived at the crime of the Yct the people electea the one to office and.in their conursatipns commended the other. the money wefts to he tl:c only eritu:, except murder, altnozi, Cs: irely empt from punkhnient. It is tr.e old or" Alexander and the robl.,err Steal a hum from your neighbor to heep y,,qr chihlrm from strlrving, and in.at uclict si..; weeks you are on your way tp or in the penitentiary, for a year at least.— Steal a hundred thousand or a milion front- Stale or nation, and nierdy-eine chances to a hundred you are not tried fur a year, perhaps Lot at all, and when you are an acquittal is the result, or if convicted a pardon is already made out f;.lry,m. And this is called the adminis tration of jasties. How thc.3' get Into the Senatr- The shameful pnrchate of a sent lin the ..Senate of the tThited States by John J. Pet tci sun from the negro legislators of South Carolina, and the venal struggles for that position that are progressing in other States, furnish. occasion for serious of the present political condition of the country. The Public ...Ledgr ssys : There was a time when an election to the Semite of the United States was re garded :is,- ne.:..t to the highest honorithe c.aitry could bestow when none but the ablest h - ,,,a _most her:or:ibis:men ere sent there to represent their States, and when none bat hunorable...nn-ans ere used-at-the elections. -- But how all - his is changed noes ! Them are ieo less than four Senators in that body who are tlir4ct ly charged with having got,thine by cor ruption, and at. feast two of them on trial upon ebarges - of having bought theirelec lions with motley. Another anger hire charges is on Ilia. ray to . the Seno.te, trait- Mg for the re-us:rem tiling of Congress, and at least four more'will nealse their appear ance on the coining fourth of March. In several of the new- Western States there setme to be but One way of settling Seoi 7 toriatelections, and that, is to settle in .cash. In the pocket State of,Nevada they lisivea canvass on hand at this tithe, and so hitter is it that one party threatens to make it .-a conflict-so memorable and thy , ethic" as to geter all future attempts t 9 boy tin: leg - is:atone. But that kgislature veil be bought all the same. _The people of-the State. are lust night or, in ,rho eon test, the whole business -of wini, shall be Senator front Is l ievada beitig _ settled...Ault side of ..the State, In San Francisco, bi l a few individuals.: The next.. .Nevada Seim tor will probably .be the Immediate per sorial.ripririta:tive..of the San Francisco owners of a..ellver mine, jnst'as the pew Oregon.lienator is.-the irnuiciliate personal representative representative of a great builder of_sole. sitlistal g,overument, railways. . Anybody r.my be, I:presentedlu the Senate now who will Spend cash enough.. 'ttz - bLuitox . diret ,tho CraC it obilierlnrettigation Coin ail teeto - bclid their seUsions with. open dors, will ft.reil by a-Dew:cultic member on the te• w..4mblitt 'grit COr.Arress - no clutrbt b Eupperted by ceety Dentocrat in lliUt lA.Alyo-Tl4o resolution . will ha introduced with :notion to suspend the: _rules and if, two thifiit , .9fthertnetnhers,.ne rcquirild, not vote at this luso] ution; tbas been d'otennined ter : offer-it ..daffr,until,4o _sessions' can be obtained. - Aly.tbeir.:voles we shall kneitf whoiar. aft'aid of an- open investigat inn . • '' ' Stokel - Convloted Rdward ]Stakee r was ",arraigned before the court on Sntintay i eyening last, on trial fOr:the Murder of Thanes Fisk Jr., to hear the veliiiet Of the jury, who after a retirement of only three hours, render ed a verdict . of murder in the first degree. On Monday morning last, just one year to -I day from the time he committed the Aleedhe o lvaa to inebrought into court receive 13i9 . esatenoi ,Of death. 'f'll;p, a remarkable coincidence that .the mural.r er should receive his sentence of death on the 'first anniversary of the day.ii, which Ite . look the Nee of his victim. Is There no nener. THE ellica,go Tribune sh a ding to the nsurpation of Grant; hia drunken rod era judge at New Orleans, and*the Lute isan,. eomtnittee'a address aeks: Is there no 'relief and no remedy for such proceedings? Are personal rights, and public rights, and the rights of prop erty all at the mercy of an irresponsible and tyrannical Court, and subject to the decri:e of a single Judge, wi:liont a hear ing, without a trial, and upon the ez-parle state petit of any tureen who may com bine with him? This is a matter which addresses itself to no particular party. If it be allOwable in Louisana, it may' be re peated in any other State. It may he re peated in Pennsylvania, or Illinois, or iseonsi u,or anywhere else, when aJedge of 0? United States Court can h; found who will imitate Dur‘.ll, and, take a jurisdiction and exercise on au thority regardless of law. Are the par tizans of the administration in Congress so paralyzed and subjugated that they dare not speak when acts are being com mitted that threaten their own I,ber ties ? It must.be confessed that it begias to took very much that tray. Ileadlng Chan;cd, The Pittsburg Post tuys : We are in forint:a by tt number of merchants, whose names WeIT attached I," the call for a Hart ranft meeting, that 411:2 , heading as print ed, stating that the und:trigned bad Tllonoudmr and CA NDIDLY esaraincti John F. Hartrauft's record, W:1 not on the paper they signed, but was added aftet wards. This was a mi.;:trat,le trick, and will react upon the Png nuniquila tors of the meet S.:NATOII. MORTON", Of Indiana, is op posed to out prgient moil': of tlectinz President, and• is pow pr. , p.tring a spQeult , in hick he filvora.. a direct rote by the people, with the aboliti in of the E!,•ctor:11 College. It isrzttid t hitt 111 , . , presi.loit the proposition. it.alicalisrn ;iiip-ors de termined to undo every thing done by the framer; of the Coliilitiltion. Amotro the latest swiudh.3 brougi,t to fight is the robbihg of t Le gQv: , rutn, ut of "4 , F.00.000 Khira wits ai , pr.prlateLl lest Eez.:: Io r, for the Teton Sioux tribe of In dilfas and wit , ,A no et :stay , ee. A fur- Cheravp - eoprialion of for the same "tribe" is now pending in t 1 1 ,.. Sen ate. Tns: bill of the proprietflr of the Fifth arenne hotel, show.; that Pr si,l-1:t and his party punished worth of wine on the day of Jlr. funereal. The bill Ears -v:Ino." I,u one knows that hot , 1 pecple . • charge whiskey under that AFTER the governmeni ta!tes ehttrsse of the telegraph, it is predicted that it a - ;3 purchase and rnanagit all the railways of the country. This wdlgive it an additional one hundred thousand appointments, and assist amazingly in cer.tpalizat;ett. ' A NATIONAL bor,nn of natmruliztaivn is nroung the very lamest seherees pr?- posed by the centmlizationiits at Wash ington. A Conaress of Bablea. The Vienna E.:7l"),Sit IOU takes place next vcar is to have a department esPeeally devoted to an exhibition of La hies. :Baron von Schuarzeutioren ins charge of the &Tannn:tit. There is no good andsufficient' reason why the dis play of the infantile -productions of the world on tins occasion should not be im mense in extent and variety, The exhi hitkom is sure to prove interestini , and at: tractive. Barpn von SchtrarzenCoren will undoulitedly Tillie provision for the care and entertainnient of thousands of bus hile.s. and fatliers and mothers from all quarters of the globe should send in their contributious early. Much apprehension is felt lest America should no - . be duly represented at Viettua. but here is an op- Fortin/ay whin should not be neglected for the display of the richest jewels a of Columbia. There can be little doubt flint the American baby might secure the great er share of the prizes if vigor of lungs, precociety of intellect, and,abilitv to cope with adults in conk'sts of whrds or of weapons, are to have their due weight in the -award. 'The New York Mail says this cannot fail to prove an interesting show. Con ceive of, say 50,000 incipient citizens less than twelve mouths old,gathered m a vast pavillOw and classified according to their various eliarsairistics.. There. would be small babies and big bahtes, pretty babies and ugly imps, "btuck babies ,and white babies, with eves of every 'hue and hair of manifold texture: and spelt a cooing and crowing, With intermittent choruses of vigorous yells as there would be, would make a juvenile jtthile'e of most distrac ting dissonance._ And who.eati-tell orthe ‘tpiatititics of stomach aches, the extent of tctething pains, the variety bf natural Shocks which infantile - flesh : ls heir te,thAt, would Make thrita tent of torturing pangs: name his task of looking:after this 'niass Wo.do' hot envy that3iertniin with tliehor rid'of spirt:Wing Inixuanity - aud of dealing with impracticable and cap:Chins mothers absurd. fathers, Mid pZirfectly namanage:k. bit niaids'of . the - nursery.. vvish, him Well through the affair snd hope the baby shoiv will be aisuceeSs,'-`lll . it deserves 'to 'Four. new rniiroads are' projected into Utah. The Grout now Stsoinn' TttE following t mount of the .great snow storm'of 18.57, from the Lancaster Express, will tie read w ith interest 441114 time: , 7 Thi snontlell on Sunday, the `lBth :'of Janunry, 1857; and tli,us recorded in. khe &prim! Of OM , day 0110 n "-Great Snow Stortu.—Wei were Tiiited yesterday with one of the most severe snow storms,cyer.vnited_in this, vicinity within our recollection: The void yes,ter-, day and list night was intense; and 'the drifting — extow , pettetralcd into - •crevcies which' were supposed to have been almost :sir tirla. This . morning many families awoke to find that. they were completely Pnnwed in, the snow in some places being driittli from eight to ten feet deep. The storm has put a stop, fur the present, to all hinds of traveling in wheeh , d vehicles and ellen sleighs will that it ditlieult to get along. From present indications we will have no mails for several days." The next day it is recorded that "break ing toads" had been " n favorite sport with ntir ennti try I;neritls," largo nnaihvri of them tan into lawn from every direc tion, mounted on their heavy farm horse, doing effective stqvitic in openi ng n t rac k ttinia,eil the Leavy drifts. It was also an nomicinl that railrnial rtimminniention to Philadelphia would not be open for sev eral days. Oti 'Wednesday an attempt was mail , to send a tram east, drawn by three loco motives, but they had nor gone no More than six miles before they were conven ed to return to the city, finding it impria sible to get through the drifts. The rec. nol states that "a ntrinh,r of those , n the train were western paps . engerP, who are now lying over. awaillng the opening of the road. The Harrisburg train came in about noon, but has no rroToet of ;cretting baek in consequeneo of reclrirtin,c.t. The Columbia train tint as far as Mount yille, but was obliged to put back, 1:lid wits stuck and the tires of the eagincs put out." On l E t ri[lav, the tlin pftuerkhly Lt. the :innomiceinent that the money had been rebb , d of hag,. :mins ..rm Litae to timo durng toe pail tl r,e tee he. The seate hi tile Taberna cle are iree, bat them w;.o occupy them e,dontard! gt a stuns var,iog Iron $5O a ye , ,,r. suhsci :moms arc enclosed in envelopes and put I+l.l he box w :try pa-mod th at b the the et:h.:A:tors. Tice boxes are long and narrow, a.ut when dialed are set iu a row of pigeon holes on either side of the plat form aml are r moved by the treasurer af ter the eei vice is o'er. The elinrch °Ul cers were greatly invaded fu find out who robbed the boxes, o'r how it could have been dead uunotic. d. .While Deacon Thomas E. Pears , . II was seated in his pea% a few tree ke ago, his sharp eye de tected a mysterious movement of One ut the money boxes. It was observed to quietly slide inwardi itt its r,lace in the 1...4f.ca hole, until even' its long handle was out of and as fluietly Aid back again to its, original position. Subsequent ly another and - :Lumber of the boxes van and reappeared to:the astonished gaze of the worthy deacon, who, alter the service was over, made a critical examina tion of the ruck, 'pit could discover no eotise for the mysterious movement, and neither did he detect the 1015 of any mon ey. Yesterday, however, a couple of do t, etives from the centml Otlice secreted themselves in the Organ loft and watched clin_ , ely for any movement of the boxes.— Their vigilance was, of last rewarded, for when the morning service was nearly over Judson Sltotwell, aged seventeen, a son of tits sexton of the Tabernacle ' was detect ed coming out from under the 'platform. lie was at one arrested, and finding his mamenvres had t.en . watched, conCes , ied the whole, story. ills brother, Lougstreet Shotwell ho said, knew he robbed the boxes, and levied blackmail on Mill on CI (Ty occaskin after making a raid. son very ingeniously r.ntoved the wood work at the end of the pigeon bole, and then drew the boxes toward him, taking out the large subscriptions in the caret opes,and leaving the stamps undisturbed. Uver.ii6oo had bi.;en stolen in this way and shared between the Eexton'a sons. The sexton himself was much affected, anti cried like a child-when he heard of the disgraceful proceeding;. Both the young men were arrested and locked up to the First Pretinet olice station in Washing tun street...--.N.j.T. The Vcung 11Inti with Twins A young man who was asked the other day by a woman in a Petinfilvaniu rail road train to hold her twins fur a mo moo t, w hil e she got out to o btain :mots, was,. ,übsequently much einhar ras.vd 1Rea112,., a,. the fond mother did no t return, but tather took the nix t train back. to tha city. he was ohligtd, p e r. for:11. Chi,: duty 4.kr, bolding those two Whys., ime nri‘m eaen 1.1100, all the ; way out to .Pittsburg, and i t became sotnen hat mo notintoos before he reached that cite. All he could do was to Sit there atathiak- and blush, while the twins emitted the must nnearttly dais and inquired. in vain for sustenance. The passengers s h re d s a dd seethed to reg.,ard 'the ,surifortun:tti youth ax nu , n nat ntarfather, , 2 The ~nintw::,r in irhich . tie soused those:infant:3 into an or phan usylout as soon as ,he got to Pitts indidattid thltt'he Ira anxious to get ifu'of their.;; :And sOhe'wa& A, LITTLE Gill wont into a . f.lrug 'Wore tbe"ottKr day; ti,r4:Pliktto th 9 •proptjetor half_-whisper, It Ifq _grano !;isiv 'ehittrit4 . gum fdtvgiiie nothin,g."' ", • „ „ ..51401. - FiTCrice Papath4t witteen oc-into the conatry to gern breat . .hirit spal frip thilr Newante.. _„ 'Blast • Frail he. earliest times, as among the , Smiths of Africa to-Jay, the blast 1 . of a belktoesi has been used in working iron to,increase the heat of the embus- 1 `4lan,:bv plentiful enpply: of , gena Vl* blast furnace is suppeiea to 1 have been - -first, used in Belgium, atul to have - been "introduced into Engianil ,in 1558. Next,came the use of bituminous coal, urged with a 13Titst of cold uir. But it was not mail' 1829 that Neil Son, aii Englishman, conceived the idea of heat •ing.t4c.airatf. the blast, up,d carrietl. it out at the Muirkirk's (urinates. lu that-year - he obtained a patent. for his'process, and found that lie could from the slime quan tity of fuel make three times as much iron. • His patent made hini - ierY rich ; in one single case of infringement ho receiv ed damages of- one hundred and fifty pounds. lu liiittnethod, however, be used an extra fire •for heating 'the air of his blast. In• 1837 the idea of heating . t he air fur the blast by the gases generated in the process wa*first practically introduced by M. Fuber Dufour at Wasserallingen, in the kingdom of Wurtemburg. In this country, charcoal was, et first used universally for smelting :ran, atithra cite coal being cansidered - unlit for the purpose. In 1820 an unineeessful attempt to use it was made at Mauch Chunk. in j 1823, Fred. IV. Geisehhainer. of Schuyl kill, obtained a patent fOr the use of the hot blast with anthracite, and in 1855 produced the first iron made with this process. In 1341,E. E. 1/efttiold adapted the consumption of the gaies produced by the . iiiiielting to the:use of anthracite; and since then it has become quite getter ' al, and has caused an ill hada incalculable swing to tin commttuity,.itt the price of iron.— I,lNi/scoffs Ilayozine. Sumnsn.ry of ttio 7.lews. Rrou gold mines have been discovered at. Silver it ay. Alaska. . IN Etstern Maine the snow is - nearly three feet deep on a level. ST. Louis bid tw•o hundi•ed and thirty four tires List year. .1.436. i 1r is thought there will baSurthrr seri ous trouhb• ar. New Orlealo.z. growiug, out of the pohtic•al compheatun.s. • Purcr..‘s T. Barnum. Wail rnmtly rob b,(l of It (177111100il 13711, inIMO, While rq rmde in the cart) to New Ifraen froniKobile. . , Wit.t.l.lm M. I?,v.thrs. is b..ing nr(-, , LI for the of :•: - . 2.1.1 , t ray of Str.i, who will rrsign next Al•tr,•!. :bre:di-up nr jee in the O;u ri,er nsithee.: in the ..caking f Vineehng, W.• Va., and :Vali , z , ni. I. •' IT ramoroil that I E. Norton, nat. lona. r!y .New York, will tat elett(ll front Looisstiu. lu Fittitttt.d William Pitt Ki-itlrtg, THE I:loLEtal•mcut lip! f...t.neral and run r,,r1,41 erk return; of the Depriut , t of 'A-T . :Native W:ltt uunle MI the '23,1 uf. l c s ern'rer. Uccemt.:T cot olr 11:) , 1 only a fvw vu'itutary c taL,nrients 0-e r.teeier do war e";,entirtliy c',:ittge lire 7.0“1. FOREItig : RA M11 , 31.11143TE ar, 6:t;10 epee ie in the Ttin,k niZra..ce in ereaed E 4100,000 the past week. Tat: Unite.] States Ateanwr I.l , lel*(f lea li ng has sailed from Calcutta to Cerion. PRIN 4 a I BISMARK Las l a l :Mother order of no b i li t y conferred upon him. TII E LANDON Tinteß thini:s the Sand: wich Ilands will be an nwieti to the United Statea. A TERRIFIC thuncler stonn.Dc-,ompanied by a hurricane, prevailed in :England n noralay night. FIFTY sacks of mail matter.beirg, a por tion of the mails due at I lalifax, N. S., by the Inter-Coloniel railway in the Pruci ionee are non dear. _ : C.! lIERTFF'S SALES—BY VIIIT121:1 OF ..7 wilts issued by the COurt. of Common Pleas of Susquehanna County and to me direeted. I will eximm: to sale by public %sea', at the Court !louse in Montrose, on leTidnv„Tan. 17, 1913, at. o'clock,..p. in., the tollowing picas or parcelaot land,to wit: All that certain piece orparcel of land situate in the township of I.enov, In the county of Susquebtoana and Stafe of l'erdisylvaniahound ell lind , fescrihNl as follEws, to wit: On the north by hula of Timothy 31eLlarty, on the east by lands of John Burk, on the south by Intitiß of Jame. Bought. and o n the west by hunts eon. '' Li - acted by John C. Allen to Perry liosenenuit.. (mut:lining shout SO acres..„, more or leSs totoither wills the appurtenances, one small frame hou s e, one log. barn, one, bhop, onernotard, -and shout 50 acres improved. (Seiaietlaml,talien in exe cution at the suit of Taylor, Walker S. Co. vs. John C. Allen. and S. Taylor vs. John C. Alio; and Perry Eir:engrant..) , . ALSO. All that certain piece or_ parcel nf land situate in the township of Lenox in ilut county of posquebaritta and Stitte of 'Pennsylvania, bounded and described ai follows -to wit : • On the north br lands or TiinothY McCarty; on the cast by lands or IC. Allen, nn the south , by lands of Jeroing Hartley; and on the west by lands of Simon Marcy, containing 'XI acres more or less, together with the nnteartenaneee, one small house, and about 1; acre unproved:. (Selz ed and taken in evecutign at the snit of a Tay lor vs. John C. Allen and Perry Rosetigrant)_ ALSO.—AII that eerttiin piece or parcel of land situate in the toWnship of Silver Lake in the tmunty of Susquehanna and State of Penn sylvania, bounded and deseribed as it,i1011":4, to - wit; On the north Iry Hie York State Line. on the east by Tints Of Tlipmas LatTy,on the south by lands of Martin 'Beaten, nod on the west by Chocnnot Towmhip line, containing 112 acreSof land: he th6,saine,more or less, with the .appur• tenanees, nue frame house, one ham, one nr-• chard. and mostly improved: also the my:livid oil one bidt interest in :all that other 'certain pitminr pared or lantLsituate in the township of Silver Lake en the nounty of Susquehanna rind Stare . f Penrsylytnialsorntleti and deserib ed ns tollow• to wit: lleeintointr at a ;test, the west lino or si!ver T,:tlte Toly 1144,M the north. „west earner of, C. 11. Emehe's latt . , t; thew-et:tang saidline north tine lint - Ansi ' and thirty-eight petrben to a po;t. thence by • lands br Titoutsa Lally nut' John East; eighty-foiir Perches to a, post, thence slam same and lamb of O. McGarr south seventy perches to a pod in faildic mad. theme hy nest south slxiy-six tlegrees west •14 perches to tire place nr, . beginning. con tair.ing 4 . 7 acres Of land be thesame mire or lerss, with the appurtenance, nail all, improved. (Taken lin exert/lion at ;the anti, of hilai. Petition es: . . ' ALSO,7-A.ll that erttntn . piece . or. parwel land saltnate in the townt:ltit, of Iltaila In. the county of Stuatuchatana and State of Petiniyi yaluln, pounded and dmaribed ac to , wit: On the north by lanai of Philip Svfackhanarner wino mat by landi of EiAbet Kinney; on thn t enuth by intids of .ItarAvall W. I'on4 , den, and i t on the west by landti (if Letnatel con,: talninz,Bfaores of laud, 1,6 tbr. Fame more or less/ with then ppitrieninreA,one laruvaivanri shed nno orchard, 404 nbnia't 40 ,nerc-4" prnyed.-- Taken, In execapinn at the malt of Philln SY: Ic harciiner*e of JY. 0. nes"; Austin font nnd Philp S:wueldrun V;utitle lii.hereby gNen that.nllblab rimer be p N aialcalti on tlte.d.tty, of gale. ,` .• - -.M. B. HELSfE Shedd. Bheritre 0111ce,-Nontros,Dec.2tilBll: EL3MMIE Harrisbwg 'Patriot. THE': WEEKLY °F9I . TR) CT: GRATIS ,! To elm net etzh!p•': , w;%o ., THE P4777,107f0r tie ljear 1873, whet, Stites, accompanied bp Two Donors, is melted after date and prior to jaimary nert,tre Iva:send the paper for the 7M MAINDER OP 1872, 01141178. : : • The favorlteNWeekly THE lIARRISI3THIG PATltlirri-is.now a IteiIIIMOTII FOLIO,-and contains moral:calling Matter thaa any- atlitz Paper puldiArd in Pennsylyania: It furnishm all the Poli tient and General news of the current:week in condenSed Conn. It Rives sn neeurtrtereport et the StAILIKETS or New Yorlt", Philadelphia, Baltimore, Pitts burg and Ibirrb,bur,t. Its Literary. Deps . rtment contains Tales, Es say,. Poetry, etc., by the bmt Amalie-1m and Euro:l.lm writern. . It will give 11tH mid accurnte reparts of Legis lotivc l'raceestings end ot•the doings of the conotitift (..n: ti Con volition', Da r i ng . th o „g on of tlteva hixiles it will be of igralior interest to 'every Pennsylsonion.." It will aiso give a cum pictc re:ome of the proecedinprpf Congress, The political aim of the P.t'lltlOT will con tinue to Lo ,the ; elatotion of the Laborin g ChLs,.es, the prolmetlon of the 'People ogninst the encro , ,tehmenis Dr .- 111MT.; and 'Monopolies, Vector:ll 1h I.nn , thsiOnblishment of a sound R y,tem 01' fin•tncc, the reqmfranehisernent of dldranchised Atnerienn citizens, and lost but not l nmt, ...I - Mt•Cstoration 01 Local Self Govern ment. Tim rollottintr, ratio, onellttopled to cheap nue, hero be:u..6xod for sttly.x:iption to the WEEKLY PATRIOT : On:. Copy, one. ............ ito oo CZno Cony, s.ix months . 1 25 onr copleA, one yesr ruck I 15 Ten .Copies. one yeareach• - 150 Twenty Copies, one year. ....... . 1 25 and npnardst, nneyear, etch 1 00 An eN tri fm. Ls furnished to the Agent semihm in einlA - oi (...n or more. A copy orthe DAILY PA.TIItt,T aii he gent, five, to the &gent semliqg in ctahu ni'ffir. 07 mare. All remer.4 lie st•llaratt:ty raldreesed. but must go I, cam pm atilce. Scedirectiong below.) Tl—lti DAILY PATRIOT, Pub 1 1 ,1 1 ,4 EVERY IIOIINING, "Stlndays cx ccptcl. is a first eLtss newspaper, containing 11.11 ;eicgrapliie report - a; special Washitrgton die pattlicz, th'amo , t complete and accurate market rtp , rl , , !nil account, c .f ~rol•cediral!s of the t'an stituthmal Con ventloo, Congress, and Legisla Wt..% .14cy ; one ear, ITmaii , 1`,7; Five Copies :1 , 4n; ; 'cost (*.pies, tiO.,q;CO. Cial:r et 'hi. Inst named rater'. Papers mny Sc aldnosse,l, but must be tab. money MUSS accompany .4-r to izisttra :mention. . _ I ! to Clubs may be r.!.. nay time Li the L .-car at the above thin :•, el. is Chile bist4anatle only on re rixelvin4 packages. stating ll e edition ; • put ollice and yliien it twon preciously scut. in adcznre. Send roct 012. a Ilunoy Oplnt: T.,,12 Ihmisteredl.ette:. Gin. sent by Mail will bn at (La risk of We seri 4F,tin TO. ITOSPECTC3 AND SPECIMEN CiM.Y. Atltir.s " T IE PITRIOT." TREE E,) Coi•ef in!, r..vr rak:m P. D Y row 21721 Throat and Lungs: It is Gr tiftn to 113.tninforrn the oehlto i . th at Dr I. Q. C. Wi:lntrt's Pine Tree Tar COrdfst, 11,r Disensem:, iris gained an eltv:idilt• 'repetition f - ront the Atlantic to the P.- rine rn.na; nn,l - tinto thence to some of the drat fsrniiirs nt -Europe, not thmtr.hthe proms alone, tat 10,- r re o n3 .0t0311 7 -Tenenttetl and cored at hi, e. title he publishes less, ao sac our rportor4hel: nnublo. to supply the demand.— It •^1 his Will 1'.46 ii.AfrepUtatinr).--. Nil he .topping eongh,but by loosen 1...! anti tiatfire to threw , eff the en heti 1 t two.: c :11.1rAlt :ale throat an/ broach I:11 inhes,ylu-S eat?i , lirrttorin , . Seccrel. It vnth":4 - .e- thell‘anie of t:it!"t prr , flice enitgli) of tlle tnlteuamem bray, on.l brunt-111-.4 litho , srliArti't;n' 1. - .nsx net tad throw utf the unhealthy secretions, toad purifies the blond, ,Third.k tree from scinill3, Inbella, ipecac, Sad opium, a whi,thcm,....-1-thront and lung re, medies aro crintorr4.ll. vv bleb allay eonsti only. and diso7:rani.Y.e tlic.t.stoninch. It has s soothing effect on ttle . stotuselt, nets nn the liver and anallymphatic arta nervotts rejf,lons, thus renehingAerevery pirt 01 111 e spasm, anti In its invizoratitur aad porir„‘ lug carts it has gaino.l amputation which it: wait ULM above all others in inarket, . _ NNE TREE TAR COMAE Great Arne xis= _Dyspepsia Pillsl :• AND 'SUGAR DROPS .. , , • Otticitt muter my inimettiattvilireetton, they 4211 not i.id ocircutatire ittmlttiei by Um ' 4 . 43 of climtit upd imp ate tinkle& HENRY' R E WISHART, - .RitOPRIBTOR. FREE. OP ,CIIIP,G E. 'fir. L. Q. 0. Wishaier 0 Moe 'Parlors are OPL .I C7lllloralaya,.Zicaaays a.L.111.0.0,5 p. m., ritreuroult.2;iori by Dr. WaL 1' Ma Wit;i him are •nasociated two con' staling PliYableb.4 uC aulubliviettged This opp,rtialikv /*I;t1t; o',Tirt..Nl by 1...r.S other In htitallou la nits :..iiCs'T-711.;.'.41Dt.DESsED 1:., - . L.1,1, V.P.01.0T,1i. D, as-.) WrIUSIET Ii411•10.qn0 au*