r:f r0 , !c Scffcvsonicm, TrI aaSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 18C8. GV-VICAT MAKES YOUR HAIR SO ItsiL riri.L ? Mrs. S. A. Allkx's ixprov i o style) Hair Restorer or Pressing (n one hoi lie ) Price One Dollar. Every i)ru.t -ciio it. Ci.Mr. Coerce E. Eurd recently sold hie Mill pmir(y, in Stroud township, to Win. II. II. Wr.koiruft llnton, J., for $1-2,000. if .Mr. John L. Thomas, fold his Hotel j-r. j-i ri v. ia Iat Sirondnburg, near the Depot, to Ji u:i Kro-,20, jr., of Lhestnuthill. Mr. T. Mr. K rv-ije's farm as part of the eoiiside-ruti-.ii. I;i;"V ..bstrve, by handbill around town that the hi. J mil'- Evangelical Lutheran Con-Trtjra.tioa.u-icn diiiM-.ting of two valuable buil rt'.nc b'tJ. at public sale, on Saturday. The lots ;.i-o r-itsiatc in the mont pleasant part of our lxv r mh, adjoin the nor Lutheran Church lot, bvc a front c:i Simin htreet of L:o feet each, -i.l extend bifk 1 feet to a public alley. The s-ile i well worth the attention of partien ik-lrhij to secure valuable building loli. f --j"" Tlie. tirr-l snow storm of the season visit tliis .-ection on Friday evening last. Snow. cor.mKnr. il falling at about 9 o'clock, p. m., . eontinm-d falling, without interruption, until alxut S o'clock next morning, when the proiin.l was found to be covered to the depth of melve inche?. Another storm visited us on Monday, commencing aboit li o'clock, a. m., vi-.d iv-.M'.inuing furiously and without inter mission nntil about i p. m., at which time a bout thirteen inchts had fallen. Thw last flow ihT.ed t me, 1 i;t not enough to mar the ITo-pcct for mo!t excellent sleighing. Sad Accident. O i WH.iy l.i-t, z.n infant son of Llizabcth rihivdy, waa accidentally drowned in a tub of water, at the residence of T. Carey Phillips, in Siroud t.vn.-iiip. It appears that the mother, who is living as a dur.ics.ic in the family of Mr. J, had aiOL;t finished washing, and had gone into the yard to hang up her clothes, leaving the chil l, which vas about two years old, in the room with the tub of water on the floor. D-iring her aWr.ee it is supposed that the hlid g.t up beside the tub and, leaning over r prtid: i the water with his hands, lo.-t his timet r.n i u ii into tr.e tun. un me return ;" the :.i iliftr to the room, she found her child in the wutcr, dead. Every eSort was made to r v.jci';it' him, but without arail. What a tr::;;i' ihis to mothers. tr-The Phu-nix Fire Company, at amcftir.g h!d a; i"..e Engine house, on Wednesday ev- :ni:ig of la.-t week, elected the following offi cr to nrve for the ensuing term : President. Peter S. Williams, Y'e Pr-jsidcnt, Peter Iiorn, " -rotary, Morris Smiley, ."-:::: S-vretary, John A. Gro?, "'rf .! -v.-r, Uoliert F. Rush, l .uif- i ..I Master. James M. Poster, ; c:: - r. l-.;ne N. Merrii, .---!-: t I'iliucr. John White, I -cu. r.fir.. Janis P. Buskirk. r ni;. it of Hose, f harln- R. : r . bu T. . .'ii a: rS-J l N. Stvkes, II. S. Wajner, P-ilr-.K-r. .-.icratubtte the s'.:;-(r!sf;il or.es, all of ire uccrving, on their promotion, and :jp:j.ny o.i having secured a board of ac 1 merged,. o.lirvrs. t: t-'"V. rve that a movement is lc- 'tn C.3 ic in several of the States, looking to- wrli th gaihering of proper timber out of whrh t j form a Cabinet for Gen. Grant, it wo ihlKo well for all interested to know that Perui'vlvai-ia hs. an abundance of material, i :-!: r .;.cr iu every respect. Especially, in r:i; j.ii- ,:i of the Hon. Edward McPherson, of c-j'inty, have wo a plank out of which u ru .-i. tiasi'.-i.t PofetmasUr General could be fx-bliyi. -..I, viihiiut lalor, and without the sV.i jw i:' n d-ju'.'t. The JIcu.e of Represen tj.i".vv Vi'aihii.tC'ii never had a more effi cient a.il popular clerk than he; and we are mtii-li'.-l tl:;t his rare administrative ability, Ms untiring energy and zeal, his unwearying witriif jess cvtr the public interests, and his c ms'iininate hon-sty, would make the Postof-Ji-.? Dcparlmcnf, under his care, what it has rrvr yet reaily been, a true conservator of our post.il interests ami a paying institution. Pennsylvania h:is certainly earned some con sideration in the division of the honors con Tcted with the incoming Administration, and " e hjje to sec her claim recognized in the ;pohur.K.nt of Mr. McPherson to the position iu the rj!jjnt named. Cf-We have, in two successive numbers of our paper, endeavored to place before our read ers, and the business world generally, the ad vantage, which nature has, most beneficently, bestowed i:pon us, as an aid in making our sec tion of country a complete business eldorado. Nor do we propose to end with this. Aided by the awaking enterprise and liberality of our citizens, we purpose continuing on in the work until means ami business energy from a broad is, at least, induced to look in upon us; falu-Ged that if wc can wcure this, the opening will be found to be no brilliant, and the argu crit o conclusive, that the day of our true prerjtriiy will have really dawned. Newspa per articles alouc, however, cannot effect this ; lut newspaper articles backed up by united ef fort on the part of all interested effort having a reali'y ia it cannot fail to prove of the fxcatofct ptvu.ney. Bees, it fchould be remem bered, gAthor Loaoy only by incessant labor in the fefcaions of blossoms and flowers ; and com munities can or.! hope to secure wealth by eynaiant Ktrivir.g and toil. As blossoms and fiowem arc supplied to bees, so arc our grand turroundings supplied to u. They are most llberly bcaueml all around us; and if they a-re eaxneetly taken hold of with our hands, as the beets of more than one hive arc attracted to the fcame bush in blossoui, so will the wealth the enterprisf. and the skilled labor of mor ii,:ju .u,itu iiitv :t f iaw n hither to parti-1 VV,.k ripate in our advantages and to build us up. A very Email beginning, properly made and persevered in, will soon demonstrate that our resources for great things have an existence other than uiou mere paper. This done the rest will soon, and certainly, follow. o Another Democratic Victory. Democratic Delaware achieved another tri umph for Democratic principle?, on the 3rd hist., this time vastly more glorious than the victory we made a note of a couple of weeks a or. Thrn it was nnor white 'mudsills" who t , .. were cawolloied ; this time it was genuine "nig gers," as Democrats so dearly loved to call them a few months ago. And they were not onlv whipped, but th very achme of brutality was wTiiml by "pillorying" them out in the cold until their hands and faces were almost frozen ; and thus they were prepared for the operations of the "cat." What a State this for Xasbv, Deacon Pogram, Bascom, and Demo- ocrats generally to migrate to. Read, Demo crats, read, and then shout of "another triumph of Democratic principles in gallant little Dela ware.'' Read, Republicans, read, and mourn .is we know you will, that in thiadecade of the 19th century, and in this land of christian civ ilizath-n, such barbarism is permitted to be practised ; yea, demanded by law : Till-. PlI.LOTiY AND TTIE WlIirVlXG POST. New Cas-tle, Del. Dec. o. The whipping post and pillorv were to-dav the scene of the pun ishment of m-.ttv offenders. The weather was exceedingly colli, and snow and rain were fall in!" while I'umishnieiitd were being executed. Joseph Shirley, a colored boy, was kept stand in" in the oilforv for one hour, until his hand: and face were nearly frozen. He was further punished by having twenty lashes inflicted on him, after which he was sent back to prison. . , . . , iii Jonathan u raves, also a coioreu lau. receiv- the same punishment. Several other cn ninals, convicted of petty offense, were pilloried and lashed. The Kisa or Bavaria, kindly permitted Doct. J. C. Aver to have a copy taken of Rauch's celebrated collossal statue of Victo tory, which belongs to the Bavarian crown and stands at the entrance of the Royal Pal ace at Munich. The Doctor had it cst in bronze, and ha? presented it to the city of Lowell, where it stands in the Park and symbolizes the triumphs of both freedom and Medicine. Her manufactures are the pride of Lowell, and foremost among them Ater's Medicines make her name gratefully re membered by the unnumbered multitude who are cured by them of afflicting and oft' en dangerous diseases. Boston Journal. Vote by States. The official majorities at the Presidential election, so far as they have been ascertain ed, are as follows : GRANT. Slates. Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Vermont, Illinois Indiana, Ohio, Massachusetts, Rhode Island South Carolina, New Hampshire, Minnesota, Maine, Missouri, Nebraska, California. Iowa, Electors. 26 Majorities, 23,603 3,0-1: 6 5 16 13 21 12 4 5 4 32,122 51,150 10,146 41.190 77,361 6,449 17,1 63 7,147 15.519 7 11 3 5 8 SEYKOCR. 3-1 7 3 0 6 4 3 27,712 21,325 4,290 506 46,270 New York. New Jersey, Delaware, (Itory ia, LouUiana, Maryland, Oregon, 10.000 2,6S0 3,345 45.263 13,447 31,913 169 Washington, Pec. 8. Twenty five lady clerks, in the ofJicc of the Secretary ol the Treasury, were dismissed yesterday. Many uiore are to be dismissed. The Secretary of the Treasury jester day issued bonds amounting to $1,280 000 tothe Uuion Pacific aud $040,000 to the Central Railroad. The forthconiiojr public debt statement will bhow the amount of coin iu the Trea sury to be about 688,000,000 including $2:J,000,000 in coin certificates. The judgements reodered in the Court of claims lor the past year amount to 800,000. One amounting to $123,000 was for captured cotton. The Republican Senators in caucus ap pointed McsfTS. Kiliuund, llatnsey Conk ling, Trumbull, Sherman, llice, and Potucroy a committees to revise Standing Committee. The Supreme Conrt to day was occu pied in hearing the reargumeut of cases involving the coustiutionality of the Legal leuder act and the application of the act to trusts and contracts before its possage. Hon. IJ. It. Curtiss argued ia favor of the validity of the act. and lion. Clarksoo J Potter against it. The argumant will probablj occupy several days. Eric Mr. Jay Gould, President of the hne Railway, in his recent card to the public says that he has "made a contract with the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company, for the entire transportation of the Western coal, amounting to 500,000 tons per annum, a tonnage equal to our total through tonnage last year. Thi. embraces the use of eight miles between Honcsdale aud Ilawley, and also a new road between Carbondale and Susquehan na Depot." These ftatcments, taken in connection on with the recent purchases of coal lands by the hne Company, show that we are to hve another powerful element in coal operations. Scran tun Republican. . A Mrs. Crane, of New Orleans, died verry suddenly last J nly of what was sup posed to be sunstroke. She was hurried and her mother was almost broken hear ted. Recently her mother dreamed that he hae been hurried alive, and h troub led her so that the grave was opened. The body, which had been placed in a metallic coffin, was turned over, glass eovering the face was broken to atoms, the ends of the fingers being beaten and battered all to pieces, the hair torn out in handfuU. sod the shroud torn io many places. We commend to the many friends j of the deceased in this County, the fol lowiD"' fitting tribute of respect, which we have tat en from the Lulhcrn and Js- sionary of the 3d inst. ' THE REV. GEORGE HEILIG. The intelligence ot the decease of this active aud successful pastor, though it may awaken a sense ol sadness, can hard ly tail to call up pleasant memories in many a heart. In our own case the sor row that we feel in view of the fact that we shall see liis face in the flesh no more, is almost lost in the agreeable impres sions produced by the rememberauce ol his worth and his many personal exceleu- cies. The miuistry of Mr. Heilig, which in cluded a period of about forty years, was cotemporary with that of the Rev. Drs. Demuie, Raker, Ivrauth, and the Rev. Benjamin Keller. With these venerable fatheis his associations had beeu most familiar; and the sympathy of joy and ol sorrow that uuited them was most inti mate, as together they bore the heat and burden of the day. Mr. Ileilig was naturally a gifted man, and no one could associate with him with out discovering the originality of genius about him, the energy of his character, and the purity of his heart. A childlike simplicity, a cultivated taste, a high re fiucment of mauners, a boundless charity, and an unfailing habit of hospitality7 made his presence aud his home ever attrac tive. Offered to the Lord by the faith of his parents ia iufaacy, the offering was ac cepted and sealed in his baptism, and af ter the needful preparatiou of heart and mind, he eutered upon the labors of the miuistry of reconciliation in the full vig or ot his Youth. Ills pastoral care was exercised successively in large charges in Cumberland, Montgomery, Monroe and Schuylkill Counties, Pennsylvania, and a blessing rested upon his labors, and the savor of the knowledge of God was inaui fested bv hiui iu every place. With rare personal meekness he had a high ap preciation of his office as a minister of God, a Christian sense of the value of souls and of the power of the Divine Word, and though by no aicaus a Strang er to the trials of the Gospel ministry, yet he uever fainted nor grew weary nor lost his chcerf ulucss, nor failed to show the possession of u heart inspired by the hope of the glory of uod. The apostolic test of fitness to take care of the Church of God was fully met in him. He ruled his own house well His home was an abode of Christian peace and love, a scene of ever generous hospi tality, where the graces of the Gospc might be observed iu daily exercise, and the Churches successively committed to his care, by the divine blessings upon his ministry, seemed ever to be growing light in the Lord. Looir accustomed to eudure hardness as a good soldier of Jesus Christ, his physical strength at last began to yield ; aud, admonished by growing infirmities, he withdrew, not long since, from the ac tive labors of hi3 o&ce. His children trained in the ways of life and enjoying the blessing of the Eord which maketh rich, cheered his declining years by un failing tokens of filial gratitude and love ; and so, surrounded by many externa I ft f e comiorts ana wun tuc peace oi uoa in his heart, he entered into his rest on Sunday evening, Xov 22d, at the age ol sixty uiue years and seven months. His mortal remains, followed to th grave by a large circle of relatives and friends, rest iu hope, in the beautiful cemetery of Catasaurjua, on the banks ot the Lehigh. The religious exercises of the funeral were conducted by the Revs J. I). Schiudel. S. K. Rrobst, M. Rich ards, C. W. Schaeffer and C. Karle, pas tor of the Presbyterian Church in Cata- saqua, with whom the persuual relations of the deceased had been especially in tima'e. California does not seem to grow very- fast, if we take her ajrirreirate vote for President as a standard. That was In 1852 76,033 In 1SG0 112,023 In 1850 110,221 In 1864 105,975 In 18G8 108,070. Hence it appears that California con tains fewer voters in 18G8 thau she did in 1850. And, when we consider that she lost scarcely a man by our late Civil IP 11 i . u ar, wiiiie sue uouutiess guinea eome who fled to her to escape the draft, it might be supposed that her population was dc cltning. We judge, however, that the fact is otherwise. She may have fewer Ameri can-born Cor naturalized) men than she formerly hud, but a great many more wo men aud children, to say nothing of thous ands of Chinese who never seek to be come citizens. Her diggers and washers have mainly passed on to Nevada,' Mon tana, Idaho, Oregon, Alaska, or the un seen world but she has twice as many families now as she had in 185G, while her growth in wealth ,civilization, com fort, has been rapid and secure. She grows far more Grain, has more Cattle, Sheep, &c., vastly more and larger farms, orchards, gardens, vineyards, and is, in everything but voters, far ahead of the California of 5b. Tribune. We have a report, which seems to be authentic, that the scat of the Hon. John Morrissey in the next House will be con tested, iu spite of his large majority. The ground of contest mentioned is that he has not been loug enough a citizen to entitle him to a seat. We believe a like objection will be made to any colored Representative or Senator who has been emancipated since 18G2. If so, the de fense of the right to sit of either of the Members whse seats are thus disputed, will doubtless be able and exhaustive. Tribune. Leading men of Virginia are now peti tioning Congrees to continue the Freed- men's Rureau there, as a measure of ab solute neeessity for the protection of the blacks, until the Reconstruction of the State can be accomplished. Texas and Mississippi feel the same want and arc like ly to K:ke the saijjc petitjeq. - m iTyj- .nr r r--;i The unexpected production of odo of the Congressional Reconstruction meas ures as a bar agaiust punishment to Mr. Jefferson Davis was answered yesterday by Mr. Dana, with the striking argument tha t to admit this plea would te to p!&' C a premium ou perjury, by leaving the oM Constitutional punishment of treason in full force on those who never held omce, while thase who had taken the official oath to support the Constitution of the United States, and had broken it, would be re lieved from coy penalty save disabilily to hold office again. The report does tiot show that Mr. O'Conor made any satis factory reply to this. He did, however, in turn, press a strong point against the Government by holding itup as repugnaut to the world's idea of huuiauity to deal for four years with the leaders in a war as men in all respects equal in official rank, and honorable enough to be treated with, and then, with the coiuiug of peace, to hang these sainetnen as traitors. The country will not be surprised to learn that the Court was divided on the motion to nuash the indictment. The Chief Justice was disposed to grant it Judj;e underwood disseuteu.' Ihis re This sult is scarcely to be regretted, since now, on the certificate of disagreement, the whole case comes up to the lull bench of the Sutreme Court in Washington. make of them one prayer : Don't spend there three years more over this case. Settle it some way. Convict and punish the man, or acquit and let him go. In buna. Soldiert' Bounty Claims. The claims lor back pay and bounty and for the additional bounty to soldiers under the act of 18GG, have been so near ly exhausted by the Division of Deferred Claims in the Paymaster ueneral s omce, that it is expected the additional paymas ters engaged on these claims will be tnus tered out of SDrvice on the 1st of January next, and the Division abolished. Out of the 0,500 claims for additional bouuty remaining to be adjudicated. G.000 are ready for settlement, ouly waiting for the soldiers' receipts on voucher Xo. 5 of the Department. Soldiers having claims o this nature arc advised to sign the neces sary receipts, and transmit them to Col onel Gibson, who will at once dispose o Iheir accounts. Forms may be obtained by addressing Paymaster Gibson, or the Paymaster General, in ashington city Sad and Fatal Accident. Our community, at noon, yesterday was shocked at the report rapidly cir culated through the borough of the ac cidential and instantineous death of one of our townsmen, Mr. Denjamin Mertz Mr. Mertz was engaged for some time in passing slate to the slaters at work on the roof of the Lehigh University buildiu and yesterday, as the noon bell rang for dinner, bv some mishap, in walking to wards the ladder, to desccud, while step ping over an aperture on the upper floor 2 or o feet by 4 feet in width, lost hi balance and was precipitated a distance of forty-four feet to the ground below. His skull was badly shattered and the lower limbs, at both knees, were broken into splinters. He was heard to mourn slightly, and instantly expired. Beth limes. During the progress of tearing down an old chimney in the hou?e belonging to Mrs Johnson, of Lsex, v t., receutly a fur hat containing an old-style blue an white home-made linen haukerchief, wa found buried in the hollow portion of the chimney 1 he hat was in a good state of preservation, and after a burial of six ty-fivc vcrrs is uow in style again. The chimney was very large, containing four fire-places, aud was built iu 1803, as was determined by marks upon the bricks. The house was built and occupied for ma ny years by David Tyler, one of the early settlers of the tov.u. ihe hiudkerchie is now in tha possession of Miss Maria Ty Ier, a descendant of the family. If a drunken man could, in the midst of his inebriety, be made conscious of what a contemptible fool he makes of him self, it would be apt at least to shame him into moderation, if not into a total rejection of tl e iritoxcating cup. A drunkard docs uotrclize his own degrada tion, for the reason that at the time the degredation is at its greatest depth, his seuscs are steeped in obscurity. -o Until last week nobody knew how Ore- gon iia-i ueciaeii upon me rresiuenuai question. Her Electors met on Wednes day and cat their three ballots for Sey mour and Blair. The popular majority for those candidates was 1G3. California gave 508 majority for Grant and Colfax. The 41th Congress, which goes into otnee witu Urant, on the 4th of March next, will be constituted as follows: Senate Republicans, 57 ; Democratic, 11 ; Republican majority. 46. House Republicans,144 ; Democratic. 85 ; Republican majority, 50. Mrs. Grant, as well as the General, has trials incident to the high station that has come to her. Already she is annoyed by persons who want to be employed at the White House as servants, and the de mands made upon her charity wonld ex haust a millionaire's purse. The Golifid (Texas) Guard, of the 7th inst.. says a herd of one 100 horses sold for $7. 50 per head ; saddle poles from S20 to 25; lands three cents tosevento five cents per acre, on the 3d ult., at Goliad. The boiler of one of the Erie Rail way engines exploded at Port Jervis, instantly killing the engineer, and badly demolish ing the engine. Eight thousand sheep perished in a snowstorm in south eastern r ranee re cently, causing their owner a lost of 825,- 000. Three men were killed by an explosion of blasting powder, near West Point, N. ., on .Monday. MISCELLANEOUS. xt.vi- i---i j v:-:; New York is honored with 10,000 thievej. Chicago consumes over 38;000 quarts of milk daily. The Rritish museum contains twenty- live miles of book shelves. Urigham Young won't let profane young men visit the Misses loung. ,n. . t. , . There are GOO old clothes deaaers in New York city. o:..-.i..4 v.. f.iinm wntoTimnl-prR. . hi i L . (: 1 IlIIJLA lids VJV.WW ' - -. . :n: f ...nloc vo.plo aaU lUlUS UUl a UlllllUU Ul navvun;v".;. ,4, . . , . , The population ot unio is . cacuiaieu closely at 3,000,000 A Night Refuge for homeless women is to be established in New York city. Counccil Rluffs city calls herself the City of the Sunflowers Coal has been discovered on the line of Central Pacific Railroad in Nevada. About 5.000.000 bricks havo been made in Lftwistou, Maine, this year. New York city speut $3,020,832 for school Durnoses, vear. " rw, . ci nnn J ' have just failed. A voung married lady in St. Louis ha brought a suit against her father for beat- inr br Moustaches ana no siue winskers are the order cf the day for the coming win ter. The Texas cattle disease has appeared in Southern California, creating an ex citement, The stockholders of the Tribune have had Mr. Greeley's life insured for from 550,000 to 100,000 for many years. A resident at Lcipsic has been imprison- cd for promising to marry 141 women and failing to redeem his promise. Gen. George R. McClellan is one of the engineers engaged in constructing the bridge across the Hudson at the High lands. A new hat shop, 80 by G6 feet and four stories high, was started up in Dan bury, ('odd., recently. A furnished house on Fifth Avenue rents for two thousand dollars a month. The occupants are Cubans. They have a fifer in Boston, who has seen seventy years in the United States army, and has fourteen stripes of honor on his coat. An Illinois shopkeeper ingeniously fix ed a pistol iu his money drawer to guard against thieves, and the first man shot was himself. Apple trees in Florida have the advan tage of holding their leaves all winter, like an evergreen, but it is a drawback that they bear no fruit. Rrigham Young thinks he has suc ceeded iu giving his theater a "sacred character," - but regrets that boys will whistle iu the gallery. Indiana has eight" thousand square miles of coal, averaging ten feet in thick ness, Enough to supply one million tons a year for seven thousand years. Gov, Fairchild, of Wisconsin, having lost his left arm in battle, recently presen ted a number of odd gloves to Gen. Stan nard, of Vermont, who has lost his right arm. Hereafter they will probably do their glove buying in partnership. One firm in Columbus, Ohio, use 2, 000,000 feet lumber per year, and beside their own force employ labor at the 1 em tcntiary. They turn out fifteen parts of carriages, tweutv fic dozen carriage shafts ten dozen poles, one hundred sctsol hub: and bcud one hundred felloes per day They have recently introduce a new solid Brewster patent carraige seat, which is cheap and haudsomely fiuished in popu lar wood. The Doom of the World. The North British Review, discours ing on the doom of the world, has the following remarks : "What this charge is to be we dare not even conjecture, but we see in the heav ens some traces of destructive elements and some indication of thir power. The fragments or broken planets the descent of meteoric stones upon our globe the whirling comets wielding their loose ma terial at solar surface the volcanic erup tions in our own satellite -the appear ance of new stars and the disppearance of others, are foreshadowing of that im pendiug convulsion to which the system of the world is doomed. Thus placed on a planet which is to be burned up, and under heavens which are to pass away; thus residing, as it were, on tho ccme teries, aud dwelling upon tho mausoleums of former worlds, let us learn the lesson of humility and wisdom, if we have not already been taught in the school of re velations. Record your Deeds. Wo havo no doubt that many persons in this county are holding unrecorded deeds which it would be well to have recorded, as directed by the provisions of an act of Assembly, which requires that "all deeded aud conveyances for estate io the Commonwealth shall be recorded in the office of the recording of deeds in the county where the lands lie, without six months after the execution of such deeds, conveyance not recorded as aforesaid, shall be judged Jraudulent and void against any subsequent purchase for a valuable consideration, unless such deeds be recorded before the recording of the deed for conveyance, under such claim " This is very important notice, and those holding unrecorded deeds will see the im portance of having them recorded with out further delay. Trial of Deacon Andrews. The public will remember with can ous mtercst me strange siory ui mo mur . ..i e i trie citizen of Kingston, Massachusetts some time in May last. The murder it self was a bold and shocking piece of villainy, and the subsequent develop ments were such as to giv the whole af fair an interest and mystery second to no other crime ever committed in Amen- ca. 3lr. lioimes. m uuiuhuumib t;ro wa3 a wealthy man, but of weak ia- tellect, and he had lor some reason of other formed a friendly feeling wun Andrew.,, also a prominent citizen and a deacon in the Cmthox Church. The two were very intimat - hml together much of the time, and the - . -" C - , . attachment became so iraternai inai wueu Mr. Holmes drew up his will, some time . m 1 . 1 t . i . 1 previous to ins ueatn, ne nequawieu Mr. Andrews about one half of his pro perty. It was on the morning of tbo 27th of May that the body ol ir. uoime was found, shockingly mangled, near th cemetery in Kingstown, and about forty rods from the main street oi tne vmage. That the murderer had accomplished, tha. deed by the use of stones, nd pe?ftops hatchet, was a tact not to DC denieu, lor the skull was beaten to atoms nd tb brains protruded in a manner nt oaca voltmg to benoki. inc u'covery of thi i ....... r . wj and mc story that there had been a I ait tvciAb Annk s r n i t K. . I . 1 , A - a. town, and the piob.oa tA wko tW pro-. pctratcr of tie foi detd aig3it b u Piny, hot unsatikcWy saktlad by alL rLe aJresi -ituLa & days of Deacon, I Airdrew and" the Strang eonfeasina ; which hi made,, alleging that Mr. Holmes- attempted to cgrnrait an indecent assault upon him, and that he killed biru in selfc defence, are also-still fresh in the pcidift iminu. Ibe general excellence of the re putation of the accused, his high stand- I ing in the social and religious community K and the peculiar friendly relations exist ing between the accused and the mur dered man, all combined to render the case one of unusual interest and give to it a mystery which the publio will to xionsly await to see explained. Andrews is now being tried at Plymouth. o Spurgeon as a Wine Drinker. At a recent meeting of Baptist minis ters in England, to consider the subject, of total abstinence," Mr. Spurgeon ex- pressed himself as follows on the subject: I may be allowed for the moment to be slightly egotistical, and say what it my position here. It nay be the posi tion of one or two others. 1 may illus trate it fiom my brother's case. Some two years ago he was an avowed teetota lar ; some nine months ago he was con sistent to his pledge, but again and again,, from time to time, he found that he wu literally failing, aud one day. so close w he to the verge of the grave, that I said r "Young mau, there was one man who went to heaven in a chariot of fire, but there is no reason why you should go ia one of water," and 1 went myself and fetched a glass of wine, which enabled him to finish his day's work. He said. "What more is to be done ?" I said, "I will tell you my own experience. I trie! conscientiously to be a teetotaler for uio months myself, but I found I was obliged to give it uj. (at least I thought no), and determined to take what I did take in secret. I bought some wine and sow medicine glasses-, and I think for a year I drank no wine but out of a mediciuo glass, and with a locked dor. But, of course, it leaked out, and I found I was doing more harm than by my open drinking. I fmnd some hud go U hibit of secret drinking, who confirmed tncmselves in what I was doing ; so I put the medicine glass on one side, that no one should suy I was ashamed of doing publicly whit I did in private." A nurse girl, eighteen years old, at Coming, New York, being left, la-t Wed nesday, iu charge of three children, in a fit of rage at tho youngest, a babe, who Iretted, threw it on the floor, stumped up on it till it was almost dea 1, and then roast ed its hands ou the stove. The child died iu a few hours. Advertising ArnonisMsr If yors don't mean to mind your business, it will not pay to advertise. Bread is the staff of human life, and advertising is the staff of lift in trade. Don't attempt to advertise unless yoa have a good stock of a meritorious article. Newspaper advertisements are good of their kind, but they cannot take the placs of circulars and handbill's. Handbills and circulars arc good of their kind, but they cannot take the placo of newspaper advertisements. No bell can ring o loudly as a good advertisement. People will believe what they see rather than what they hear. Bonner, several successive years inves ted in advertising all the profits of the preceding year. Now fee where he is ! Quitting advertising in dull times it like tearing out a dam because the water is low Either plan will prevent times from ever cotniuir ' Tho wise man of Scripture v.ycnlly did not refer to advcrtisi?,g wbeahesaid. "Cast they bread upon the waters and after mauy day's thou shall see it again," or he would have added, "with interest." If you would add to your business, put your "ad." into our list lnsile Track. TO 'CONSUMPTIVES. rpiIE KEY'. EDWARD A. WILSON'S JL Prepared Prescription for the cure of"'. CONSUMPTION. ASTHMA BRONCHI TIS, COUGHS, COLDS, and all THROAT and LUNG AFFECTIONS, h-ia noV fceew in U6C for over ten years with the most marked tuc?e&s. The Remedy, projmrd under Mr. ii son's personal Euperisiu nlso a pamphlet containing the ong nal Prescription, w?ih full and Kudieit directions for preparation nnd use, together wilh a short history of bs case, may b obtaird of DKEHLll & litlU., Pngffisis. Sim.idshurg, P., or itt,v. liuwauu . u ii''. 105 South Second &t., Williamsburgh, N. V. Pampfi fts furni'hc.i frre of hrjf.