M AMY' EAGLE. Tog' ' I:0 t It WA READING, PA., NOVIO4IIIIR 23, 1868. .1661114:TWO11111 10 * 1 1 110 OUT• Daring the rebellion, and immediately after ite close, it was quite fashionable to make lions of alt those impudent individuals who, too cowardly to meet the rebels in ,the field, sneaked into 'their lines. and returned with stories of . imaginary movements, of troops and plausible accounts of hair-breadth est i ispCs and . desperate fights with rebels. Among these "Union spies" were several wotnen of questionable character, who were elevated into female saints by the "loll" scribblers of the North. It will not be long, however, hofo!e the Northern people will discover that these spies, from Gen: Baker and Col. Jacques down, were a set of lying, sneaking scoundrels, as spies generally 'are. The character of Gen. Baker was notori• oualy bad. Col. Jacques, "the fighting preacher," seduced, under promise of mar riage, a beautiful and estimable Southern lady, and then- killed her by an attempted abortion. Capt. Carpenter, of Gen. Fre moat's)lonce boasted,"Jessie Scouts," was a humbu in fill respects, and a knave besides. After ho was dismissed from the service for misconduct, he was arrested and punished in Pottsville for unwarranted arrests and extol , tion in the ,Relirer 'case, and ,for swindling the father of the missing Ciipt. Rohrer out of a large, amount of money. A woman known as "Major Pauline Cushman, the Union spy," was arrestedin Now York last week for . robbing a prominent citizen, who should have been in better company. , The fact is that a spy, generally speaking, is a speaking scoundrel, and the sooner our people cease to worship a class of persons who ; make their living by lying and false pre tences, the better it will be for the morals of Our nation, Hero Worship is lied enough, but spy worship is inexcusable. ILLorREATMIENT OF FOREIGNERS. The practice of ridiculing the foreigners who come amongst usmore especially their language, is quite common, • but none the less reprehensible. Of late years this prae ticii tete become so prevalent that specimens of "Young America" consider themselves vastly superior, in all respects, to spy one who vas born in a foreign country,aed treat all such persons eithoi with ridiculous con descension or downright rudeness. This pride of nativity might dolor . our people if they were the descendants of somo enlight ened and powerful race on this continent, bat as such is not the caae,thia assumption of superiority over foreigners is silly and con temptible, 'Salf-conceit is one of the great foibles of the American character, This trait is more particularly obserVed in the descendants of English Puritans, The idea of the superi ority of Americans to,the natives of any oth. er country, originated principally with the New It;nglatl Yankees, who, by thrusting thehislves forward on all occasions, bavo caused themselves to be erroneously consid cred model Americans in nearly all parts of the civilized world. For many years past, "spread•eagle" ora tors, especially in . Fourth of July orations, have exalted the American nation to the highest pinnacle of greatness, and have threatened with instant annihilation any for eign power which might be so imprudent' as to incur the wrath of the great AMerican eagle, They boasted that we bad twice con• Tiered England, and that the American mi litia, armed with fowling-pieces, could put to flig the best armed and drilled regnlar trtnali of tpiy foreign nation under I:eaven ;, and ii:is'humiliating for a sensible Ameri can to acknowledge that this silly braggado cia was always received with applause.by nearly all the Americans who happened to hear it. • If the American people generally were not so wise in their own conceit, Oily would be wiser in many other respects. If they did not imagine themselves too wise to be taught, they might acquire much useful knowledge. A careful and impartial study of the history of their own country, even by their own par tial historians, would tench them that% the Americans were always defeated by the Brit ish troopi in the war of the Revolution until their raw levies had been thoroughly drilled in foreign tactics by foreign drill officers.— Any soldier knows that.inllitia cannot stand before veterans in the open field, and the fact is notorious that the Americans were al circle driven from the field in every fair fight, Until the Prussian Baron Steuben and other foreign soldiers had drilled the American troops so thoroughly that not even the Prus sians could exceed them. Even then they would have been defeated at last but for the aid of France. In the war of 1812,the Ate ricans,theugh much better marksmen than dos British, were. generally defeated with loss, until Oen. Scott and other officers had thoroughly reorganized and drilled them on the French system, and even - then they were pnahle,to conquer Vanads,while the Itritish, three thnuAttn.d strong, sent the Ainerican militia flying in direutioni at pAdetis • burg, .capturing Washington end: Alexan drie, and•burning the - CaPitol and the public buildings of the United States. Besides, is there a man of •pare white blood in America who cannot trace his an• total back to some foreign emigrant? Are notoni citizens all of foreign bleod? Is not pn 'American, sa helpless in ,Turkey, as a Turk is in our country ? Are not Americani, as a general rule, less hardy endless healthy than foreigners? Are they not more easily led astray by false doctrines and unwarrant ed enthusiasm? Is their Caucasian blood more pure than that of their trans-Atlantic fellow-men ? Do they not all claim descent from European. ancestors? Let us not, then, ridicule or despise the unfortunate foreigner who comes to Ame rica to find a home. His language may sound strangely to us, but it is older and more pure than our own. •His actions may sometimes appear singular to us, but not more so than ours do to him. He comes here because be has been taught that Ame rica is a land of freedom, of democratic in- stitutions, where no man is : born a peasant or a lord. Receive him, then, in all kind- ness. Teach him all you can, and be wilt ing to learn all you can , from him in row turn. The probability is that he knows more than you do, if he understood your language aufriciently to express his ideas properly. Such men, fleeing from monarchial tyranny at home, can more fully appreCiate the bles sings of a free government, and such men are therefore eminently worthy of all the rights of citizenship in their adopted coun. try. When you feel inclined to ridicule foreign ers, think how you would feel if suddenly landed on a distant shore, far from those you love, and unable to make yourself under stood by 01 ,1 r around you. Strange things, happen in 11413 world—your own country , is not at peace—there are many elements of discord at work continually—and the time may come-when you will be a homeless wanderer on a foreign shore. Do as you would have others do unto you in such . a case, and 'be hind to the friendless for eigner I A GLORIOUS SIONTIMENT, The heart of every true Democrat in Ame• rica will feel a respondent thrill in reading the following Stirring sentiment of rather Ryan. It expresses what is felt by every . true patriot in our . country : • - "There are men who desert the raters, of a lost cause round which they once stood with the blood in their hearts panting for. libera- tion, and who kneel to offer homage at the altar of successful wrong. There are men who trample under foot the very standards that once floated proudly over them. There are men base enough to lift their hands against the very rightn s for which they once, uplifted swords. We are not.such. For us principle is.principle, right is right—yester; day—to-day—tri-morrow—forever. Submis sion to might is - not a surrender of right..— We yield to the one, hut shrill never yield up the other." THE TREASURY liniu at Washington, it is asserted. relentlessly pursue 'any member of Congress, no matter what his polities, may be, who ventures to interfere with its schemes, and in only a few instances has failed to defeat the reelection of the honest Cougressman.—Phila. Ledger. Our I}larlb6 We think of our earth as a solid substance, and an abiding thing, while.all else is chang ing ; but, in fact, it is only an egg=shell, with a yolk of liquid fire seething in it. What if there should be a sudden rift produced by an earthquake, and the ocean let in upon this fidry mass? 'generation of steam and pines would blow this great. terrestial bomb- shell into millions of fragments in a twink. the surrounding space with new asteroids) just as we see now seventy or eighty fragments of an exploded world moil ing in their orbits round the earth.—Evening ,Herakt. Dencripilon of General Prim. A correspondent of the Neue Freie Presse of Vienna thus describes the the leader of the Spanish revolution: " General Prim wears a common military, tunic,with two golden stars on the collar, and a white kepi similar to that of the Spanish cavalry, with a broad gold border. This is all that shows him to be a soldier, When in civilian's dress he gives you the idea of a drawing•room dandy, with a hobby for rid• ing, hunting, and love adventures. There is nothing martial about hini; no roughnesi —not even soldierly plainness—in his character ; end his manner.is not in the slightest degree • that ,of a awash-buck ler. 'He is slight, well formed, barely above the middle height, and when on horseback looks like anything but a t Jars. But, his head is far'more attractive than a dozen or dinary soldiers' heads.• There ii a mysteri ous brilliancy about it like that which dis guisrldi the fancy portraits of, a Tintoretto. The deep, intense , blackness of his !nip eyes, his hair, and his silky whiskers and moustache, are striking even in the South, where dark people are not wanting, and, combined with his olive complikien, gives an impression of strong passion. His cowl tenanee is constantly worting'under the im• pale of an internal restlettsness." It/Ski:UDR for the Emu* • • • e fELEGRAPRIOIST: ~; ` 1 4 11 4M (4) `:C:1047: 'Seven persona were flogged ping posit in New Castle; fleikwate' ,on &tar . day, for various petty nffencts. 410 pajr to steal and act the rowdy in New Jersey or 'intimate. Laird's coal oil refinery, at Race street wharf, on the Schuylkill, in Philadelphia, was partially burned on Saturday. The two men, Headley And Morse, ar rested for the Murder of theyoung girl, sup'. posed. to be Amanda Broadhead, whose body was fourid,on the road near Accord, New York, recently, have been discharged. The body has not yet been fully identified, and the whole affair is shrouded in the deepest mystery. Hannah Myers, of Philadelphia, aged aliont forty years, has been arrested in Balti more for forging a check for $2,430. She attempted to swindle the Penn National Bank of Philadelphia out of $B,OOO, about a year ago. It is stated that the course of Minister Johnson 'in England, with reference to the matters in dispute between the two countries, has thus far.met the approval of our dov• ernment. Later advices as to the Paraguayan trouble are published, from which it appears that no fears need be felt for the safety of the Amer icans seized by Lopez. The news from Cuba, respecting the re bellion in that island,is contradictory. The rebels claim to have a force of 12,000 men, but the authorities still report the insurree tion as dying out. Gen. Sherkdati's force to operate against the Indians is stated at three thousand men. The Indians are estimated to number from three to five thousand warriors. A committee waited on Bishop Duggan, of Chicago, last Saturday, and asked that a re quiem mass be said for the Fenian' hanged at Manchester, and the Bishop refused,. on the ground that it would have a political beating. The committee has adopted reso• lutions disapproving of the action of the Bishop. The financial panic in New Brunswick is unabated. The notes of the Yarmouth Bank, of Nova Scotia, and the Prince Ed ward's Island Bank are refused at St. Johns. General Grant has returned to Washing ton. • Hon. John B. Pendleton, formerly mem• ber of Congress from Virginia and Minister to Chili, died at Culpepper Court House, Va., last Thursday. Later dispatches from Bear River City, Utah, say the city is quiet under martial law. The mob which caused the trouble are in the Mountains, and have threatened to burn the town. Twenty of them are re ported killed and thirty-five 'wound6d. No light is thrown on the origin of the trouble. A fire in Lowell, Mass., on Saturday, de 'greyed two buildings. Three men Were suffocated in one' of them. A cargo of coolies baa arrived in Galves ton. The Detroit river is to be tunnelled at Detroit. The eruption of Mount Vesuvius is in creasing in violence. Many houses and farms in the vicinity have been utterly de stroyed. The,market town of San Giorgio is in imminenf danger. A new catdo disease has recently made its appearance in England ) and is said to be caused by the sw,ine feeding too. largely on acorns and horse chestnuts. Post mortem examinations show that the blood is disor ganized. The symptoms are dullness, end ing in extreme prostration, loss of appetite, small and frequent evacuations, colorless urine, discolored and ulcerated membranes, and a weak but not rapid pulse. - \ The city stables, at Memphis, were yester- day destroyed by fire, with a number of horses and mules. A workmaiewas so badly burned that he is expected to die. A fire in Nashville on Saturday night (le stroyed $30,000 worth of property. ' .► t A special police force has been'detailed to detect incendiaries in New York. • The Fenian prisoners at Ottawa,in Cana• da, are to be released on bail, excepting those accused of the nunrar of D'Arcy Mc• Gee. -1_ The project of tunnelling the East river between New York and Brooklyn, it is stated, will be vigorously carried out, and plans for laying down an iron tube between the two cities will soon be advertised for by the company, which was incorporated for the purpose last winter. Colonel J. Whitehead. Byron, late of the Eighty-eighth Now York volunteers, and now a prominent member of the Fenian Brotherhood, has been appointed Brigadier General in the United States Army by the President. The special vote of Brooklyn is as follows Seymour 39,838; Grant 27,707; Hoffman 41,410; Griswold 26,149. A Noted Lobbyist In Trouble. The New York correspondent of the Philad'a Ledger states that on Thursday night "the police made a descent upon a house of bad character, 209 Wooster street, kept. by a Mrs. Jay, and arrested various parties, who were then taken to the station• house to give bbnds for their future good be. haviour.. Among them wag Mrs. Jennie A. Perry, who figured prominently in the im ,peachment testimony against the President. Mrs. Perry says, in defence, that she is the victim of a conspiracy, and that she was not aware of the true character of the establish. meat in question when she entered ft.!! Mrs. Perry hi a well known lobbyist daring the sessions of Congress, and has much in fluence with certain "foil" persona high in authority. At the time of her arrest she gave the.name of Angelina Martin • SHAWL' . AND ,:ICLOAR 'DEPARTMENT ,• & CO. BLANKET SHAWLS, BROM: SHAWLS, CHAIN LAIN SHAWLS,: PAISLEY SHAWLS, MISSES' SHAWLS, BREAKFAST SHAWLS, MOURNING SHAWLS, GENTLEMEN'S SHAWLS, Also iu Stock, a full assortment of Silk Ye will be sold by thu yard, or made to ordor in at short notice and moderate prices. TUE WORKING PICOPLE. The clothing cutters of New York have resolved to resist, by all the means at 'their command,a proposed reduction by ono firm, of the wages of their hands from $2O to $lB per week. The Qerman piano makers of New York report that the difference§ between the em".. ployers and the workmetyare not fully seti tied, seventeen members id one shop being still engaged in the strike for the ten per, cent. advance. ' The President of the Asso ciation, who had been dismissed by his em ployers on account of his position, has re signed from the chair of the society, fore the reason that he had engaged in other kind of bnsiness. Tha strike of the journeymen stone-cutters in New York,against a reduction of 26 cents per day on their wages; is reported totbe successful. The men demand $4 60 per day of nine hour's. The masons employed in the light-house department, on Staten Island, N. Y., have struck for higher wages. Their demands, it is said, will not be complied with, as the au thorities have facilities of obtaining all the hands they want. The Society of Coopers in New York re. solved 'Ala general strike to-day, for the standard prices of what is called "liquor work," current l ast winter. At the'present rate; they say, journeymen can only earn $2 per diem ;_ many of them do not earn even $lO a week. Not a few of the bosses, it is said, have signified their attention to comply. The cigar manufacturers have resolved that on and after the 27th instant, no man belonging to the Cigar Makers' Union shall receive employment from them. It is esti mated that sixteen hundred persons are net ing within the said Union organization, and the action of the manufacturers, therefore, will gravely affect their interests. As soon qs the resolution of the manfac turers was made known, the. operatives had a meeting, on Saturday afternoon, in the City Hall Park, to consider the situation.-- Most of the speakers (principally Germans) advocated the establishment of. co-operative stores. The operatives could easily -- muster $2 50 eaclr ► and with this ► it was said, five shops could he started: The men could manufac ture and sell cigars cheaper than the manu facturers could. • It was resolved - to send a.telegram at once to Commissioner Rollins, asking, him to ob• taro permission from the Treasury Depart. ment to have the cooperative cigar mane• fneturers ; also to notify the Secre• tary of the International Union of Cigar Makers' to semi on ,all the traveling cards' in his possession. The meeting then adjourned. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. NOTICE.—,The members of W. C., N 0.61, B. of A., will please attend a regular meeting on Tuesday evening, Nov. 24th,. to tako action ou the By-Laws. By order of the l' nov23-2t JOSEPH SUMMONS. A. It. S. OYSTERS, FRUIT, TRUCK. &C.—The subscribers have,opened an Oyster, Fruit and Truck stand, in the basement of the City Hotel, corner of Sixth and Cherry streets. where they have constantly on hand the hest quality of Oys ters, Peanuts, Apples, Lemons. Arc., which they offer for sale, wholesale, and retail, at the lowest market prices. - .eih - Orders from the country promptly attended to. novZI-3t ESTERLY & BRO. GRAND RAFFLING} MATCH TWO FAT HOGS At thelDrovers' Hotel Or. Eighth & Washington sty., ON SATURGAY EVENING NEXT, NOV. 28TH, 1868. The highest number of bade thrown Mho drat choice, lowest number takes second choice. Tiek -ets 25 cents. nov 2,i , A ULENBACIPS ITALIA • _ REV. CALVIN FAIRBANKS, WHO WAS SEVENTEEN YEARS A PRISONER IN KENTUCKY I , • Will deliver a Lecture in the above Hall, ON TUESDAY EVENING, NOV, 24TH. SUBJECT': "PRISON LIFE IN KENTUOICY, 4 • Presentidg. Arreit, Trial, Suffering:in Prison, Effort§ of Friends, Kentucky Policy, the Re. hellion, Incidents, Release, etc., etc... Tickets' 2.5 cents, to be had at Strickland Bro'a book store, on Penn street, and Knabb's Journal ofce, office, on . th ,street, above Penn, and' t the door. Doors open at 7% o'clock. nor 23 2 t `TORE ROOM TO LET. 544 Penn street, in SchmuckerifonSobnilding. Apply at ADLER office. BOOSBLA:NK,1( he have eale a large varlets of nk ooke which will be 12014 cheap. B ITTER & CO. M= .. ----o- FOR OF BLACK CLOTH CLOAKS, OtHKOHILLY CLOTH CLOAKS, ; WHITNY SHAVER CLOAKS. FROSTED BEAVER CpARS I WATERPROOF. CLOAKS, CHILDREN'S CLOAKS, °KIRA CLOAKS, • SILK 'VELVET CLOAKS. - vets, Velveteens and Cloaking Cloths, 'which the most daiahle and fashionable manner, . nor 4 11110111111 E 111E111411,1111A70, Cornei of Fourth and Penn* ALLENBACH, Proprietor,. .Havint taken. passes alma of this saloon, and hiving on handl% EntAtcom pieta Mock of everything in the eatintviud int line, we are prepared to meet our, friends - and accommodate them in the beet manner. Oyster. ser+ed,in every agile. nov 17-1 mo IDEADINIO BELIEF SOCIETC—Tbefan 114ual meeting of the Beading Relief Society, (coruinonly called the Soup Society) will be held at the Odd Fellows' Hall. on Monday erentag,•Nttv. Md. at 7% °Week. , A report of the operationcof the Ifootety the past will 'he read by the bleoret tary, pad an address delivered by John H. Richards, BK. Several other addressee may also be expeeted, A Board - of Maners for the ensuing year will be elected. The pu bl ic are respectfully invited to at tend. nov 20 GEORGE W. OAKELEY, Secretary E 4111ILLER, UNDERTAKER., NO, 829_PENN--BTal ET. All khideof Coffinsfurnbthed,attest notice. Funortds attended In town or cou try, nl7-Iws • . , FIRST ORAND ROP to TUN ' • • \ L. .B. ASSOCIATION, ILALL, WEDNESDAVTVENINO, NOV. 2!,,1888, Doorkoien at 7%; to commence at 8 o'clock. Prof, Rocholl's Votllllon Orchestra has boon en cased for the °emotion - . n0v21.-41. BOCKMUEHL'S COLUMBIA HALL, WINE AND LAGER BEER SALOON, Penn street, between Sixth and Seventh. All kinds of best Rhenish wine always - on hand, and sold at the lowest price. nov 12-3 m JOSEPH REBHOLTZ, • • NO. 1 .710 'PENN STREET,' IttADING;PA4 . as constantly on hand the BEST ,ll'E E as well as all kinds of meat and Falloageti, liver gundgdointlF,Arbel.o. all tld iv d t i i r o t Frankfort ' a l t 3Vagr: w te e n l i prices. nov.fi-3m GEN. TAYLOR HOUSE I 341 . North Eighth Street, Wahl+ Sguare:ogthe Upper New York Aped. AUDI*); PA. J. It fiIItAEVEER. Proprletciill '6lO-3m RITTgR CO,, BOOKSELLERS , 1 STATIONERS, 351 Penn , Street. Grialpltcw.2tobrolhel'Pr. Ai m TIONAL SNOB 1z HAT STORE; Übe aim, No. 341 Penn street, tbreo doors below the HOGS Olßeejo buy • • cheap and well-made BOOTS. SHOES and HAM • ,oct,9-3motod I L. LICHTURRN. NEW GROCERY& 'ROVISIONSTORE, J. D HIGH Announces to the public that he has opened a GROCERY * PROVISION STORE at the N. E. Corner of Eighth and Franklin Sta., where he will keep pgpstantly on hands large and well selected Stock of Groceries. Provhlone. do.. which he will sell at the lowest market price. A share of public patronag is respectfallY Iced'. Country produce boug ht and ao a d i J. D lon. N. E. Corner Eighth an ' AND r4: 0 410K 111 . "OLD a.ft.lL.te (liner ROA aid WasAslostult stint. , Readier, Solo Agent for Borksinti UlnaOn contlin, for tii, celebrated SAMPSON SCALE COMPANY. The moat rellibts durable &Wes tires %Iwo betethis public. land sea them berg purchasing osei t k its, uperibr Indutementa atiarial to bout 'A 10t 0n111011441101/ PLATFORM 80,ALE'S on hind and kr silo aeon. STOVES, RANGES I •HEATERs. WIL4AM BRIDEGA No. 242 Ponn St., Reading, The ianderesned noPectMir invites pelts attention to hie newly Invented Heater s tuatel REYSTONE HEATER!! - BEST lIEATED, EVER INTRODUCED, THREE SPIES. It burns less coal, mated IF heat , takes tip Ito room s and gives better utis Hon tbtak any 'at latinvention ever introdue 14 ike public. The advantage of this sitper or beating man. Ws will be IltilY I/1014V bit a re9Prisisr. who guarantees that et will e sle to musty la wh o ti n v d e him a call t at it is superior to inle t . t em . The advantages are so manifold, a d la easily comprehended. that it needs only to 6 1 ", ilo convince the :goat skeptical. In kw „ta li e res.peannly refers the pawl°, by Prfrudutoo, to t *following named persons who, are now tiling li i ossi eatArs: ? ago. R. Faux, Nes. J. ftllllOX, 0. D. stole, rut, A Co., .A. :came. 1111 MY AMON, Out! 'Kniour„ coons Ram. 1011101 ADAK& WIC IlleßtitiL. J4OOB K AUFAII AN, „Ma'am^ °ramps! Home. Womelmint. • liege* Invites special attention to the BEAUTY RANGE , Whieb Ito' WI Isaiworred, fluperlot Reit. 14 walling ita,c4 Gyr width I the Bole Aunt, i 4 ado Mt. Reno can e seen In operatiAo the hue alt LW, No. 42 S e nn _ etteet ;et roto High's, frialstis ettiet above Youth, and Moil* Owes. • • Partitahr sltitstkm paid to TIN ROOFING AND UPOII3TIN6I, . AND Plastic Slate . Roo i H. employs non* but MUNI Mesa ulot—oll order. promptly executed. smil_lrarrout to tics satisfaction. WM BRID AM may 22 - No. 242 cm At. KAIELY. WHOLESALE A HATAIL DEALER IN LUMBER, READING, PA. Keeps constantly on hand and for sale at the LOWEST PRIOEB,. A general assortient of - WHITE PINE, HEMLOCK, SPRUCR, CHERRY, OAK, ASH, CHESTNUT, INDIANA BLACK 1 WHITE WALNUT, CAROLINA YELLOW PINE, MICHIGAN PANEL LUMBER,;: Thoroughly segeouod sad under coru. WHITE PINE, CYPRESS, AND NORTH CAROLINA GREEN SWAMP CEDAR SiIINGLES. Orders respeatibily solletted and protriptli tended to. hor prices, Aro., call at the NEW BRICK OFFICE, On the Corner of Fourth & Pine tilt, Or, address, J. KEELY. ) Read febllly GREAT FURNITURE DEF.OTO SCHREDER & FELIX, Waroroom, ooraer Fifth and Wmlkea streets. MANUFACTORY. 'VANN-MOTOR BTREIt BELOW FIFTH. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. pint UNDERSIGNED RESPECTFULLY IN rite public attention to their splendid stook of first-1)1am furniture pow and constantly eland, and made to order to suitcustomers. Among othor articles, especial attention la vited to their unsurpassed • , EXTENSION TABLES, DRESSING BUREAUS, DINING ROOM CHAIRS, CENTRE AND OTHER TABLES. BEDSTEADS OP THE LATEST STYLES. and every other article in their line of busineu. Every article is manufactured by themielvel i l l is their admirably arranged manufactory, with most'perfect machinery, and skillful meekan ew and finished in an unsurpassed manner. Also prepared to execute all orders for CARVING, 7 TURNING, SAWING, Ina MOULDINGS. All order" promptly eieentedi and warrinted to ilyofiatlefaofton. sp.lo - CITY OF READING ll BONDS for tale. at • Diseount. Enquire at, FARMERS' NATIONAL BANK. 02E0Mo • • _ 4erinit qu Castile. this splendid 133ap, &WV to ALDEN BiIIICAL WOlBllB, 48 North Proof street.' Philadelphia. in CITY MOTEL, 80:ITTIC SIXTH' OTRBVIT• (Near Pen%) . Apeppip,, PA, 103.Cborges moderate. A. Ns JINTIABI4I4 Proprietor. =I and ALSO. 0