r IMMENIIIMMIIPIMII Yttigij Pgbitt. 101 IT. IRIMILL, Ja ALLIINTOWN, PA., OCT. 2,7, 1871 CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM!. As the question of holding a Convention to revise the Constitution of Pennsyliania, has been carried In favor of it by an overwhelm- log majority, the attention of the people will now be directed to the reforms which are de manded. New York has had experience In the work of revising the Constitution, which work was good, but which did not suit the plundering schemes of Tammany, and was voted down on that account and because the Constitution was made by Itepublicans. The New York Tribune thinks it was high time that our people decided that their Con stitution should bo revised, and is impelled to proffer some suggestions for their dispassion ate consideration, is follows 1. The Legislature just chosen should, when first assembled, proceed at eller: to pass an act giving effect to the popular will. And, in order to keep the Convention, so far 'as eossi- Me, out of the whirlpool of a Presidential ' elec. tion, that act should provide for an election 01 delegates no later than the let of May next. 11. The' elegates thus chosen should mee early in June, end spend a month in laying ant and distributing their work among the ap propriate Committees. Should party spirit threaten to run high, it may be wise then to adjourn over to the second Thursday in No vember, when the Presidential struggle will have been concluded, end the waves of party spirit will have begun to subside. 111. We judge that it will be found advisa ble to increase the number of representatives in either branch of the Legislature. Instead of U in the Senate and 100 in the House, there should not be fewer than 51 and 151 respect ively ; and we should prefer 75 and 201. A numerous body is far less readily corrupted than one composed of few persons. Pepula tion has largely Increased since the present numbers were fixed, and n Serrate of 75 and a Rouse of 201 members would give n larger constituency to each member than was con stituted when the Senate was first fixed at 33, the House at 100. At all events, have each House consist of an odd number, so as to pre clude a tie between the two parties and a con sequent inability to organize. IV. Do-not fail to give what is improperly termed Minority (hut which really is Com plete) Representation a fair trial. 'Co this cool, we would divide the State fairly into 25 Senate and 67 Assembly districts, each entitled to choose three members. Authorize each legal voter to cumulate his vote if and as he thinks proper. For instance he may vote thus or or John Williams, John Williams, John Williams, John Williams, John Williams, James Parker, John Williams, James Parker, Charles Wallace. In the first case his vote counts three for John Williams; in the second tree for John Williams, one for James Parker ; in the third, one each for Williams, Parker, and Wallace. Under this system, a majority of the voters could always elect a majority of the represen tatives, but a minority could make sure of a minority of the representatives, unless it were less than one-fourth of the entire electoral body, which it rarely is. Every voter would thus go to the polls with a reasonable assurance that his vote would tell in the election—that it would not prove a mere ineffectual protest— that it would help elect at least one Senator and one Assemblyman. There may be ad mirable talent for legislation among the Eight Thousand Republicans Of Befits County or the Ten Thousand of Nortlinmptmi Congress Dis trict, but it lies smothered under a relentless Democratic majority, and eau never make Itself manifest. Just so with the Piftren Thousand Democrats of Allegheny and the Eight or Nine Thousand of Lancaster. Why should not these have a voice in legislation as well as though they lived in otter r counties? They are citizens ; they pay taxes, and tire drafted in case of need. Why gag and fetter them' We predict that the local minorities, If allowed a representation proportioned to their numbers, will elect abler and better men in tire average, than tiro majeritles do. We entreat Pennsylvania to accord to nll her IWO ple, and not local majorities merely, a voice in framing the laws under which they live. V. As venality of corruption In .Rice, more especially in legislation, is the giant evil of our day, the Convention will amuse deal with it sternly and thoughtfully. We submit for the nansitinratinn of its nutintiona tits art tole on subject matured by our State's Convention of 1867—as follows : ART. VIII, SECTION 1. Any person holding office under the laws of this State, who except in payment of his legal salary, fees or pet tpti• sites,receives or consents to receive,dirr ctly or indirectly, anything of value or of personal advantage, or the promise thereof. for perform ing or omitting to perform any official act, or with the expresssd or implied ttittlerAs whit! , that his official action or omission to act is le be in any degree intlttencr.d thereby, shall be deemed guilty of a felony, and on cons icti to shall be punished by imprisonment in it State prison, for a term not exceeding live years, or by a fine not exceeding five thousand dollars, or both, in the discretion of the court. This section shall not affect the validity-of any ex isting statutes in relation to the nth rise of bri bery. _ . SEC. 2. Any person offering a bribe, if it shall be accepted, shall not be liable to civil or criminal prosecution therefor. But any per son who offers or promises a bribe, if it slmll be rejected by the officer to whom it is ten- dered, shall be deemed guilty of an attempt to bribe, which is hereby declared to be a felony, and on conviction shall be punished as provi ded In the first section of this article. Ssc. 3. Any person charged with receiving a bribe, or with offering or promising a bribe that is rejected, shall be permitted to testify in his own behalf in any civil or criminal pro secution therefor. SEC. 4. Any District Attorney, who shall fhil faithfully to prosecute the violation in his county of any provision of this Article which may come to his knowledge, shall be removed from office by.the Governor, after due notice and an,opportunity of being heard in his de fense. The expenses which shall by incurred by any county, in investigating and prosecu. ling any charge of bribery or attempting to bribe any State officer or member of the Leg islature within such county, and of receiving bribes by any State officer or member of the Legislature in said county, shall be a charge against the State, and their , payment by the State shall be provided fiir by law. —The Constitution which embodied this Article was voted down by Tweed and his confederates—defeated by the votes of men who qualified themselves for the task by tak ing care never to read the document they con demned. Had that Constitution been adopt ed, our City would have owed Twenty Mil lions less than she now does, while Tweed's fortune would have been Millions less than it is. If a vole could be taken this Fall the Amended Constitution would be overwhelm ingly ratified. VI. Finally, elect your ablest, wisest, ri pest, purest men to the Convention, regard less of politics. Our Constitution was voted down because Republicans made it. We trust that reason may not prove conclusive in Penn sylvania —We infer front partial returns that Ohio has also decided to have a Convention. The above contains good ideas. We op prove of doubling the number of represenat lives and are In favor of short sessions. Large legislative bodies are not so easily corrupted as small ones, and providing for the passage of general laws, and removing special legisla tion, will render long sessions unnecessary. !Another improvement, we think, which can be made, is to have separate legislative elec tion districts, the same ns Philadelphia has, in place of grouping counties into such districts, as is now the case, We heartily approve of the suggestions in the Tribune's article in reference to the pun ishment for venality or corruption in office and legislation, which should engage the ses sions and thoughtful attention of the mem bers of the Convention when it meets. Tau. Williamsport Gazette devotes three eel. umus to bringing out Gen. Galusha Peony packer, of West Chester, for Governor. We know the General personally and should he re celvo the nomination there is no man in the State we could support more ardently. Ile is a true gentleman, of fine culture and as honest as any man we know of. Ile is young, able and energetic, always a Republican, cud was cute of the bravest soldiers of the war,but there are probably older shoulders upon which the gubernatorial honors' will be thrown. We have no especial choice for Governor. We have a great admiration for liartranft, but we hear an almost universal desire among our Le high county Republicans to vote for an old line Republican once more, which will proba bly account for Ketclium's popularity in this county. NORROW AND 110 l E OF CHICAGO The vision of the burning city still haunts our minds. The fiery apocalypse will not fade from our sight. Over and over again, we keep seeing In our afflicted fancy the raging flumes, the flying brands, the falling walls, and the fleeing multitudes. What a spectacle rem of horror never to be forgotten ! What a havoc of destruction, never to ho amended 1 Tho city will be rebuilt, but the dead will not return to dwell In It. The human lives on which this conflagration has executed sentence of mar tyrdom arc not yet counted. The five hun dred burned, blackened bodies picked 'from the ruins arc not all. There will be deaths daily, for many days. 'The great pageant was holocaust—a funeral pyre. What imagination can conceive the sum to— tal of misery which' pervaded the breasts of quarter of a million people during that lurid midnight I They were overtaken at the most unconscious 01 hours by the most sudden of calamities. They were asleep. In the midst of their sleep, the whole city had wrapped It- eelfin n sheet of flaw. The continuous alarm bell awoke them, itinl in fright they arose, gathered their children together, nod amid smoke and flying sparks, took their flight, chased by the inlvancing flames, which were lashed into fury and goaded into miraculous speed of a gale of wind. Here and there one had not slept, but was sitting in lonely grief by the loved body °Ellie cabled dead ; but the watcher was driven away from his charge, and the dead' was left to bur) the dead, folded in.a shroud of fire. Others were sick, expecting death soon—on whom the unexpected blow came, not by na- lure, but by fate. Women, in the hour of trarail ; and birth and death joined mortality and immortality in one. The aged, who could not be lifted front their pillows and car- tied away in stout arms, made a struggle of helplessness, and ended it in an agony which was strong aud brief. Babes, left in their cra dles while their parents strove to heap togeth er a few household tren3ures before escaping, were crushed, parents and all, by the fulling of roofs which the inmates did not suspect to have Yet taken fire. Prisoneys in the lock-up had it fiery sentence and instant execution. Orphans in the Asyltim escaped by multitudes, and yet left many of their little companions to he fiercest of dooms. Sound minds were make nominee in a moment by the overwhelm ing weight of their sudden woe. Rich men found themselves beggars in n moment. Sleep ers rising from luxurious couches were driven pell-mell, in crowds treading upon one anoth er, to the open prairie, where they sank ex 'misted, and fell to sleep again for very faint ness on the cold ground in the open air. Hunger and thirst—twin assassins sufficient to slay the stoutest courage-seized on thousands who knew not where to get a crust of bread or drink of Water. The horrors of that hor rid night can never be chronicled In tale or history, nor has the human mind capacity to comprehend in full so stupendous tr. weight of humtau woe. rho calamity instantly tonclied nil hearts throughout the land. Not since the shot at Sumter have we witnessed such a universal generosity in inen's breasts as toward the suffering city to whose relief all other cities are; now contributing. The telegraph, for a week past, has been freighted, hour by hour. with a continuous record of . good gifts, of money, Mod, and clothing, sent from all parts of the country to Chicago. This stream of bounty recalls the days of the Sanitary. Com mission. At such a time, how delightful it must he to lie rich—to be able, fir instance, after reading of the suffirin_ts of the houseless and home], ss citizens of the burnt city, to draw one's check, as Mr. A. T. Stew art did, for lifty thousand dollars! This is princelimss itself. It may be that Mr. Stewart is close at a bargain, but Int is open in a charity. be enterprise which n e ttle Chicago a great city will re-make it a greater. Hardly had the rains quenched the Me, when the promi• Cent businis9 men resolved to begin business at once. 'Title is pluck ; anti it will win. In some plat , s streets are still blotted out ; land, marks are gone ; men cannot tell where their grounds begin or end ; but the ruins will be speedily brushed away ; busy builders will relay corner-stones; and the new city will arise—like a phenix from the fire. So the stricken p,:ople of Chicago do not sorrow as "they Mat have no hope.".—Gel. den Trui effort to make Norristown the 'birth place of a President has signally (idled in the outset. All over the State, in the past cam paign, " Pennsylvania's favorite son," Gen. \Winfield Scott Hancock, was nominated for the Presidency by the Democratic comity con ventions, and it was expected the movement would create such enthusiasm among the people ne to cause them to forget the fast and present record of the Democracy and carry the State by an overwhelming majority. It was re fair testlof Gen. Haucock's popularity and now no one cares Whose 'son lie is. Gen. NVDS a good soldier, undoubtedly,but besides being preaniinendy incapable of mak ing n good President, he is cc Democrat—and sound ernmgh on the questions which are advo cated by t ha t party to receive the support of all the Democrats from Tammany to Jeff Davis. \'u matter what Ids past record the people look calmly at the present and no man of such prin ciples, he he Gen. Hancock, or anybody else. the " favorite son of Pennsylvania" or the son of any other State—can ever create:an enthu siasm among the loyal people or Pennsylva nia. The Presidential chair will again be fill ed by Grant—the practical, true and brave. Cuudirt:LNESS UNDER DIFFIC Mr..l tunes T. Fields, in his excellent " Plea fur Cheerfulness," cites no . incidents which are more telling than the facts which we find In our Chicago exchanges illustrating the noble efforts which are being made to be Jolly and contented. A sign-board appears among the tai is which reads as follows: "Moore & Gore, I I use and Sign Painters. Removed to 11l Doseleines street. Capital $OOO,OOO 30." Another sign reads: "(Jiving to circunistan oes over which we had no control." An edl tor of a daily paper has received several poet ical effusion: suggested by the late disaster, but he declines them till on the ground that It is wasteful to print anything, which requires every line with a capital, when capital is as scarce as it is now in Chicago. One mer ;,chant, who found his safe and its contents destroyed, quietly remarked that there was no blame attached to the safe ; that it was of chilled iron, and would have stood, but that the fire had taken the chill all out. With pluck and such cheerfulness we shall expect to see Chiengo rebuilt in three years- Osumi to the destructicin by the fire at Chi cago of an institution calling itself News paper Union," which, withivafew years past grew up in that city, and which has been fur nishing a large number of country newspapers .throughout the west with what are technically known as "patent outsides;" nearly all the newspapers which were dependent upon it for their outside pages, have been reduced to si lence, many of them failing to appear. This otoglit.to teach the publishers of country news papers to print their papers in their own of lives, and under their own supervision. Mn. PARRISH, who was "Counted out" of his election to the State Senate from the Lu cerne district, will contest the seat. The Democracy having set up the, Senatorial Dis tricts to suit themselves and having been fo'oled in the election, are determined to keep control of the Senate. If they are defeated, too, in their plans to defraud Republicans out of their seats, we should not he surprised to see them again resort to the same old game which gave them the Presidency in 1801. They will not stop at anything to gain power. THE LEHIGH REGISTER, ALLENTOWN. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 25 PENNSYLVANIA OFFICIAL. • AWAITOR 01111 FURY. One. Rep. Deter. Rep. Dent. Connarj. Blatneo.MoCoodCoo.Besth. Cooper. Adams 2,491 9,035 2,493 8,034 Allegheny 14,708 11,134 17,019 8,500 Armstrong.. " 3,515 3,144 3,517 8,135 Beaver - 2,991 2,323 3,006 2,524 Bedford 9,810 2,832 2,826 2,892 Berke 5,1106 11,137 5,161 11,124 Blair 3.382 2,813 3,382 2,832 Bradford..... 5,737 3,067 5,750 3,069 Bucks - 0,902 6,948 0,916 0,939 Butler 3,092 2,885 3,089 2 ,809 Cambria 2,294 3,029 2,263 3,007 Cameron 389 339 390 338 Carbon...... ....... 1,935 2,106 1,920 2,168 Centre 2,078 3,470 2,975 3,470 Chester 7,1308 4,053 7,337 4,011 Clarion. ........ .... 1,443 2,511 1,449 2,512 Clearfield 1,441 2,744 1,445 2,739 Clinton ....... ...... 1,616 2,139 1,617 2,139 Columbia 1,506 3,282 1,507 3,280 Crawford ...... 5,172 4,213 5,107 4,223 Cumberland 3,901 4,368 4,003 4,373 Dauphin 5,383 4,134 5,480 4,065 Delaware 3,737 2,130 3,750 2,190 Elk 568 967 568 967 Er1e.......... ..... ... 4,284 2,066 4,285 2,064 Fayette.. 2,921 3,864 2,029 3,858 Franklin... 4,406 4,011 4,406 4,612 Fulton 777 1,114 782 1,111 Forest 254 218 254 217 Greene 1,370 9,854 1,375 2.851 11 untingdon ..... .. 3,140 2,389 3,145 2,192 Indiana... 4,348 2,109 4,333 2,154 Jefferson 1,866 1,785 1,807 1,78 r, Juniata ...... ...... 1,204 1,647 1,294 1,050 Lone.toter... ...... 10,740 6,045 10,767 6,035 Lawrence.......... 2.432 1,283 2,214 1,496 Lebanon ... ...... ... 3,660 2,380 3,085 2,386 Lehigh 4,420 5,635 4,435 5,627 Lucerne... ...... ... 9,106 10,501 0,102 10,023 Lycotnlng 3,986 4,406 3,999 4,393 M 'Kean ... 903 751 906 748 Mercer 4,041 3,225 4,033 3,197 Mifflin 1,716 1,706 1,715 1,796 Monroe 735 2,503 739 2.586 Montgomery 6,551 7,315 ' 6,557 7,324 Montour 1,026 1,366 1,005 1,370 Northampton ... ... 3,248 6,102 3,252 6,006 Northumberland.. 4,004 3,706 4,016 3,607 Perry 2,478 2,407 2,482 2,405 Philadelphia..... 62,005 50,511 62,046 50,366 Pike 249 1,013 249 1,015 Potter 1,350 789 1.340 787 Schuylkill 6,093 8,499 6,1182 8,480 Snyder.. 1,755 1,301 1,740 1,377 Somerset 3,005 1,877 3,005 1,876 Sullivan 407 700 400 706 Susquehanna.- 3,555 2,457 3,564 2,458 "1' ioga 3,612 1,741 3,615 1,741 'Union " 2,013 1,332 2,011 1,329 Venango 3,722 3,154 3,124 3,156 Warren 2,128 1,027 2,188 1,622 Washington ... - 4,854 4,888 4,857 4,894 Wayne 2,081 2,100 2.077 2,400 Westmoreland... 4,706 6,041 4,725 0,030 Wyoming .. ..... .. 1,331 1,546 1,388 1,551 York 5,701 • 7,196 5,703 7,109 Totals 0 83,909 269,500 287,105 266,737 Majority for Geary in 1869, 4,590 ; ditto for Stanton in 1871, 14,439 ; ditto for Beath, 29,- 368. The total vote for calling a Constitueir Ce nvention Is 832,231 ; against, 72,07.1; majority for Convention, 260,158. Barr Spangler, Temperance candidate for Auditor-General, received votes iu the follow ing counties: A dams, 18 ; Allegheny, 43; Beaver, 135; Bodftird, 26; Blair, 360; Brad ford, 50; Bucks, 13; Cambria, 69 ; Cameron, 39 ; Carbon, 7 ; Centre, 9 ; Chester, 153 ; Clarion, 5 ; Clinton, 10 ; Columbia, 09 ; Craw. ford, 22 ; Cumberland, 24 ; Dauphin, 308 ; Delaware, 53 ; Elk, 1 ; Erie, 62; Fayette, 30 ; Franklin, 99 ; Fulton, 1 ; Greene, 10 ; Hunting• don, 132 ; Jefferson, 3 ; Juniata, 30 ; Lanese. ter, 353; Lawrence, 40; Lebanon, 39; Lu zerne, 73; McKean, 8; Mercer, 122 ; 62; Monroe, 4; Montgomery, 130 ; :Northam. berland, 28 ; Pike, 1 ; Schuylkill, 217 ; Soya , r, ; Somerset, 81 ; Sullivan, 3 ; Susiqueble,na, 23 ; Tioga, 27 ; Union, 12 ; Vetoing°, 97 ; Warren, 13 ; Washington• 30 ; \V,t3 tee, ItO ; Westmoreland, 56 ; Wraping, 32 ; York, 02. Total, 3,248. The total vote for Wheeler. Temp:nuee eawlidate for Surveyor General, I is 3,012. The Republicans bill short of Geary's majo rity most notably in Allegheny amid Erie Counties. They have greatly increased their majority in Philadelphia, in *which city there is also an increase of over 15,000 in the aggre gate vote. Outside of Philadelphia the aggre gate vote, including the Temperance, falls short about 34,000 of 'the total cast two years ago. The Democratic majorities in York, Wayne, Bedford, and Carbon Counties have fallen off enormously on account of corruption among the party leaders, bad local adminis trollop, and bad nominations. Elllirlll - iplaillll /L•nzii-Srenr+ ill the ill'atib• (hill Sell,. le. RIO OE JANEuto,Sept. 27.—1 came tills MO men!. from the Senate chamber,where I arrived just in time to be a witness of the closing : scenes of the great debate on the Emancipation bill. The bill has passed, and the first fatal blow to slavery in Brazil tins finally been struck. As I entered, Silveira da Mona was concluding one of the characteristic criticisms, fall of bitter personalities. After it short and sharp reply from Nubile°, the President pro posed to proceed to the final vote if no one else desired the floor. No one responding,the for mal question was put, whether the Senate should now proceed to the vote? and it wasde cided almost unanimously in the an mative,the Senators signifying their assent by rising. I noticed that Lacharios, whose opposition tins been unremitting and powerful from the be ginning to the end, remained in his seat. The vote was then taken on the final passage of the bill in the same way ; and, as the Senators re sented themselves, the President arose and formally announced that the bill had passed. Immediately the galleries, which were literally packed witli spectators, broke out into deafening cheers, and, at the same moment, showers of roses were discharged upon the heads of the Senators below. As an Instance of singular contrariety, or Injustice If you will, a huge red rose balanced itself conquettishly upon the white head of Caxias, who has not said a. word for or against the measure, while not a single flower came near the President of the Council to do - him homage. The venerable President of the Senate, Visconde de Abaste, whose tact and impartiality, all through this exciting debate, has been the theme of universal praise, in vain tried to allay the storm. The cheers were repeated again and again, and not until threats were made would the spectators be still. When I came away, which I did at once, that you might receive some notice of the event by the strainer to sail within the hour, the ante-rooms of the Senate were crowded with people, congratulations Were exchanged on all sides, and already the floor of the Sen ate had been nearly cleared of its carpet of flowers that will hereafter be religiously pre served, I am sure, as cherished mementoes of the great occasion. There is no doubt that the effort of Salles Torres Ilormen will pass into history as the great speech of the session. Its effect was marked. For the first time I observed none of those interruptions so com mon in Brazilian legislative• assemblies. No one wished to check the flow of impassioned eloquence • no one cared to break the magic spell 'which held him a rapt and willing list ncr to the last.. The session will certainly come to an close on the 30th inst. Indeed, the upholsterers are already at work 'arrang ing the decoration and getting ready tier the ceremony or closing the Chambers.— Tribune. ONE of the greatest outrages the Democratic party has ever perpetrated has been commit. tea by the Return Judges of Cumberland and Franklin counties. They acknowledge that J. M. Weakly, Esq., the Republican candi date for Senator, had a clear majority of the votes cast, yet they refused to give him a cer tificate of election. The penitentiary is tbo good a place for such rascals. It is a bare-faced villainous scheme to defeat the will of the people, to make Democracy a farce and main tain their control of the State Senate. Not content with a sound thrashing, the leaders of that party,since the election, aro doing their best to drive all decent men away from than by their infamous course. . One of the Deinocmtic delegates to the Rochester. Convention has been sent to Sing Sing for Ave years for robbing emigrants. If the Tammany leaders get their deserts the neat Democratic State Convention will prob ably he held In Sing Sing, to whinh institu tion they will have been sent as perpetual delegates. THE ESCAPE OF THE HORTON, Preparations firy hey neeepetari—Fral N,rHnt• Wars orecocricartie Out. 01.0CcEsTErt,-Mass., Oct. 18.—The story of the escape of the little schooner from British durance is an excitingone: It will ht remem bered that the Edward A. Horton, a fishing schooner of 100 tuns, owned by Messrs. W. McKenzie and Harvey Knowlton of this town, was seized during the latter part of last: Sep• tember by the English revenue cutter Sweep stakes, while on ti cruise off Pictou, N. S., on the alleged charge that she had violated the fishery law. The vessel Wll6 taken Into Guys borough, N. S., dismantled of her sails, and, to use a nautical expression, hauled up, The captain and crew remained in Guysborough for a few weeks, thinking that the court would soon investigate the case, when they hoped to be able to prove that no violation of the treaty had been committed by them, and thus to be enabled to return home with their "catch," consisting of 250 barrels of mackerel. Bffithis anticipation was not realized, So the crew re turned home in another vessel. Thus the matter lingered along. The owners wrote to the officers of the Admiralty Court several times, but no decisive answer th the case Was received. The firm of McKenzie LC: Knowlton had previously suffered from the seizure by the Dominion authorities of their vessels, one of which, the A:D. Wonson, valued at $lO,- 000, being seized toward the close of 1870, on the same trifling pretext, and kept several months, until a decision was rendered by the Court, from which the firm appealed, anti, to release the vessel, gave bonds in $3,000• to prosecute the appeal. The next time their property was seized was in the case of the Horton, and this case appearing to take about the same course as the previous one, it was determined to try a practical illustration of Butler's theory in the ease. 'Elie plan was concelxed in that nursery of American ta a men, and the master•mind to execute it was Etund in the person of a gentleman whose name, for obvious reasons, is withheld from publication. The person alluded to suddenly took a trip to Guysborough, where the vessel lay, and soon nppeared among the'' pellets," as an agent for a newly discovered Vermont gold mine, having specimens of the precious quartz to exhibit, and soliciting buyers in his stock. Times were dull in the Dominion about that period, rind when our agent ex patiated in glowing terms upon the prospect of the new stock _company, the liberal induce ments to buyers, the chances to accumulate a rapid competence, etc., he naturally drew around him a medley, of the genus limes of Guysborough ; and being a good judge of hu t man nature, was soon enabled to pick from the number men to w horn he could broach the ostensible object In view, which was to assist hint in cutting the vessel out of the British clutches. Having gained a sufficient number of the natives, his force was soon augmented by a detail from another fishing vessel which was . cruising about that vicinity, and which has since arrived with her cargo at this port. This part of the plan being matured, it was to eess try to get the assistance of some person actominted with the harbor, and an old pilot was found ready to lend his aid ; but, unfor turret ely for him, the day before the one set for the consummation of the plan, he had his ' leg broken, timid it wan li !tied that the attempt wtotif ; list the old pilot wus loth to part o fin so gotal a chance to make $lOO, and he called his son Jim into requisition, saying, "Yore, Cap'n Jim will do the job as well as the old So Jim was engaged to perform the 010 man's part of the programme. All the arrangements for executing the bold plot were thus lie• per reeled, and the time set for the no dertaking was 11 o'clock on Sunday night on the Bth inst. At length the night arrived, and under cover of an almost Egyptian darkness the men engaged by the gold mine agent,with those volunteers from the American fishing schooner, assembled on the wharf', and in a few minutes afterward were in the Govern ment building where were the sails, running rigging, charts, coin rnsses, and all belonging to the Horton, the guards had gone home, one of them being henrd to say, ' l oy ! 'taint no use hanging round yore ; them yere Yanks would no more think of coming round fur this smack to-night than they would of going w lib 'out their Sunday morning baked beans." But after getting the sails on board it Was discov ered that they Were not the right ones, but those belonging to the Nickerson, another schooner which he held for the stone cause as the Horton was. Although the mistake occa sioned considerable delay, It was rectified,and by Ili o'clock mainsail, foresail anti jib were bent, and an effort made to get underweigh. Again the fates seemed against the expedition, fur it was now ascertained that the tide had ebbed and the Horton was stuck in the mud. The little party were not disheartened and with true Yankee grit the anchor was tender ly transferred freon the bow to the long-boat and shortly afterward buried in the deep tin ter, when with a long pull, and it strong pull, the Horton glided into steep Water, and the effortsof the brave fellows were so far crowned with success. Sail was now made, and by daylight the berth at Guyaborough, which the little vessel had so tang occupied, was vacant, while the late occupant was flying out of the harbor. Mr. McKenzie states that immediately the Horton shaped her course for the norther ly edge of the Gulf, then across George's Banks through the south channel up home. When the gold mine agent had so success fully carried out his plans, and seen the vessel safely out of the harbor, he resumed- hie avo cation as master of a first elaSs vessel, and soon was homeward bound. When he:was within 48 hours' sail of Rockport Light, he wasover hauled by an English gunboat, which ordered him to lay to until an officer could board his schooner. Of course the request had to be complied with, and soon one of her Majesty's naval officers was on board of the Yankee schooner, when the following conversation took place t Officer—l say, Captain, wbere• is all your crew ? You seem' to have good luck, and here are only three men beside yourself. Captain—Well, Sir, I had ten men, but 1 hired them at Whitehead, and paid them off when I had finished my catch. Officer—Oh, you did, did you? Well, you are pretty lucky and pretty d—d smart, too. Captain—Anything more, sir ? Officer—l have no further Instructions: You' may bear away. It will be 'remembered that three of the men belonging to the gold agent's vessel were transferred to the Horton, and that accounted for the deficiency In the otter vessel. The number of fishing vessels seized within one year has been five. These are the Nickerson, Samuel Gilbert, A. D. Wonson, Horton, and Franklin S. Schenke, the aggregate value of which, including cargo, is about $lOO,OOO. Three of these vessels have been condemned and sold by order of the Admiralty Court. During the past season the schooner Otis D. Dana, while fishing within the prescribed limits, was fired Into by a revenue cutter and hey fore rigging badly damaged., The general sentiment among all classes of the citizens of Gloucester, and, In fact, among MI the rest dents of the Eastern Shore, is that something must soon be done by our Government to prevent these outrages by the Dominion crui sers upon our fishermen. It is now the in. tention of the fishermen to assist any of their brethren who may be molested in the future. They say that the Horton is only n begin• talus; of a series of "cutting out." The latest news in regard to the Eomphisn cruiser ; is brought by the revenue cutter Ham lin. She reports that she spoke a fisherman, who had been spoken by a gunboat on Tues day at Ba. m., and risked if he had seen - the Horton; Ho described the gunboat as along, low steamer, of about 1,000 tuns. There is but very little doubt that this was the steamer from the Boston Navy-Yard, and that her Bize was exaggerated. The Hamlin also re ports speaking another fisherman, who saw a bark-rigged steamer ou Monday night, lying eight miles south•east of Eastern' Point. Collector Russell thinks that this report is trustworthy, and gives more credence to the matter. The Hamlin has coaled, and Is again ready to start at it moment's notice. FREE lowa's majority for Carpenter, Republican, is 87,701. There are only seven Democratic coundas in the State, and one of thesewas carried by 22 'and another by only 20 majority. There Is no more hope for the Democracy in that State than in Pennsylvania. BUSLNESS NOTICES Trust Whitt Time has ,Sanctioned.—The maxim .at the Yoko of the people Is the voice Of the ,Ilv lay to some ream , be upon to doubt, but tile test loony of onset nod onllghtenell wititergea exionding through rules of yearn, and nil to lb. sate• purport, In worthy of redline, u•lmlta of no question. Upon such testimony he reputation of Iloatettor's Stomach kittens a• an aili• ate and cute for ninny ailments Ix 1.00011. Dining the weilly years , that It Ira. been I efore the worl.l, In unto,- ble preparations intended to compel,' with It, have gene p 11130 rockets, nod come down the extinguished stu,. lean, bite thin pr./atom of Out It comparable tonic lon won swift and sl•adt —Alva) , upward and onward like he eagle . .. Llighl. IN introductine prodttrod a revolution lu therapeuticr,•aml it proved to be true of ml. so 8.1i01:11) rev.3lutions that cannot g backwardn. To-dity ilostel tor'el3 Mars Is one of the most popular retwollee dais ; tendon', and conanabda a larger male Il.o' any olber nn.,l hinal prepardtlon, domestic or imported. on this 1i le of the Atlantic. An a cure for dy, popala, bilious diaor dera, nervous afiert on, general debility. nod on n pre ventitive of eribletnic fevera, It 111.01 prec d..nro or 1 -01.13. other remedy 11110 fact Mil Mid tench the a minnow. country draler , who nude tvor to folat Ir local ItiMr tiOLlM 00 010 public in In steed, how futile their entail attempts to cnjolo the cmmnuu•ty 1111111 necessarily be. Where the mime II eve Galled tiode Is no 11130, far the "'inciters." riOICSEMEN, ATTENTION RELt.D TIIE FOLLOWING ! 23,/ Wor , t, l'hflrr. 3A5105 WELIA—DRAII Stitt I Dasoll4oll Or. Fells Mettschke . s Prussian Momentoils mars of mho., At hick had it it calming 10tt0.... I used Witt bottlo wt,i,ontlromtrecAti, eitrillglittr completely. April 11 Mei% JONA. I'. lIIEU ELL. This Invaluable Lltelumnt to ob' by I/roughed, soil Storekeepers. Wholesale by JAMES WELLS, N. E. coc. of and Spring Gorden Sts. Plelltteleelplels. For al se lu Allentown ley SCII all ItT co., East IlotnilDm Street, Dr. W. E. B A SINN,: tk SON, LAW A LI, At MAR TIN and JOHN 11. MOSER. isirntirrs ERRORS OF YOL"FIL—A gentleman who rultered (or year,. front Sergo, DeWitt v, Vrente turn Decay nod nll the ettret , . of youthful todi•eretion, will, for the mai". of Wintering hn oniony, rend free to ell who need it, the reelpo liir,tlllll hlr tho pie remedy by whleh he was cured. notteret , wishing to profit by the odverti•er's experience Con do by ad. drelothig tuperfect confidence, .101 IN onp EN. N. 42eedar N., York. 1, 1 11 . 1 ( ITTIC WATER FROM DAVID'S Tar stroat DIURETIC, TONIC an.' ALTERATIVE rcto ly {l{.l 0,10., 13.1d:tin mllltlion tho vttl.inl.l° r0n1P.11111.1.1. and In proved the unerring to.o. or ropentod al{ 0111' olt the 1., it1:51111/11 1, for Kitt eop Pus, Oltryrrhal rli,rrlx. C o n. limy, 111{{101{Tly Kt.otaa, Dieth , tey. hob Om I Pim rflo rs, nod 11,11,111 114,110 y. It : , 110 , •hto'h Ow Howl, Ike am.°111.., prontol... Ftlllllll3ll.i , the ~ r lcrellon., .ku.l ~•• {{ {{{ h igh 111 recoortuir Ito o I..lllnniitl... rrf 1nva1..1. , r•,...t1114 .., Itt Om t'ri'o a 43 MI pm. 1.1% ~1 6411., .I°llvore.l at tirktol, ha., to I , point, ArirThe lIIIALINO I NSTITETE at DAVID'S WELL I. demi:nod 1., nrcomniod.itn •.1 'ilia year, Who pro,for .11.11,1;1,1g Ow v,ric .01'1.1, It,. Om WELL. I). A. CADWALLADER, 1005 litre St . 14.11,1 I. j3tllB.6in • .0-°- DEAFNESS, BLINDNESS AND CA TARIM treated with the ntinast -meets—, Ivy J. ISAACS, M. Professor of Ilinerry , ye/ the Kyr ',rid Enr, (hl. specialty) In the .It , Coellr i p , ~j P. , la yourn orinerly el Leyden. Hol land, I Nu. 6115 Arch Street, Testimonials can be neon at Ids atlleo. Ti,e Medical faculty are invited 10 ac company their patients, an he ha...no secrets In his prat, ilea. Artificial 'yen Inserted without pain i Nii chtirge for examination. nit WALES VEGETABLE SICILIAN rt, ' RENEWER. 17' 1171.1. POSIT! VRLI RP:STOUP: ORA Y 11.1111 TO ITS ORIGINAL COLOR It keep% the hair from rolling' not. It la the le.t.t dreg to the world looking Ilfet•o., 01 11. l,r.ohy h,lr, healthy, earl nod yluney. For eale by tell druttgbda.. It. P. HALL S,s CO., ,Nlvlnia, N. 11., Propi Ittr.rs fIONSUIIP'rIIIIN. ITS CURE ANI) I'ItEV ENTI'FIV dIY J.ll. SCHENCK, .l. D. Arany a human being hos possed ttway, for who,. death there wos 110 other re:, on limn rho neglect of know tt on Itolisput .fly proven means of dire. Those near Will 111 1 111' to family and friends are sleeplug tI e &on:oh:tot slumber tut . which. had they stiltoly :oloph ti Joitmi H• ESC E.'S r It EA T3IENT, told availed themaelves of his wonderful...Meat:ions med. wines, they would nit Moro fallen. Dv. Schenck tills in ids twit tome prove I t hot wherever sufficient vitality rent tins, that vitality. Icy los 1111 1 11,111, alit his directions fir their use. la toickened into Iteolth ful vigor. In Mk stotament there is noth:og prestunpluon, Ti. the faith of the avail I Is mode r pre4ent ohm that meta thousand thnes sol.stantioted by Ity tog amt yltilll works. The theory of the mire by Dr. Seltenck'K medi cines lo tot Moog.. as it Is unfailing. Its philosophy re nut es no argument. t o o l s self-ossuring. self-cohy attong. The 8 1. 11W111111 Tllllle o Mandrake Pills ore the Ilse, too weapons with 1,111011110 C11,1010(1110 lottlaay I•ossotl. el. Two-thltdo 111 the 1 . 111 1 • of consumption original.. in do's tutu n functionally disordered a ll With tilt coodttlou the bronchiol tubes •. sympothiga" with me stomach. They respond to the ntorbilir action of the livar. Here then comes the culintuatlng re null. mot the setting In, with all Ito diNtrassleg s‘ tophoto., The Mandrako f 1 f, ore a d me.l of ono of Natnte's nol lest gifts—the Podophillul Deltotton. Thy). p ss o il the Idomi•seart MP - native propartias , ; dme', hut unlike calomel, thoy " LEAVE NO sTt NH 111. 111\1,," The work of ripe Is litllT 'WOI/111114. 11111C011/ 1 doilll/114 - fu Ill°horr• In 111 the sro ijdeted. The knor, u clock, ..1.1.1111 nr. It arrovis• (non torpalltY• 'rhe moo. rssp I,,Pertp,fr.4l rkat . kr at htsa EMElZZaasuizto . • The Seaweed 'frlic, In conjunction with the Pill, por iento. and as.lintlitton with the food. Phylitioation I now pvggvesiong without It. pronoun torture, Pier...thin become,. lapilli..., owl the nu, on ti h•. ot bond Ti 11.11) to no nor llotitiettee, exacerbatoin of taeno notch. An appetite .oPi In. Now ennui.. the Itrioileot Blood ever y•t elven lip an inditigiait father to Hultering num. Sei ourk'n Indyrp rattles in caree r It Ito function. and to n eiunploto the care. It eider. at oticii upon it- pork h Nature cannot tio cheated. It coort. and 01..1.11- p:tired and diseaved inirilono of the limo. I, thii form of uoihevingi, It prepare. them expietoriiihin. Io tn very ehort timothy malady in V3,11111117•11t.d. the rotten Janine that it iiecopled is rionivateil and I11.1.1..111•1V. 1111t1 ilie pittlout. In all .11gully of regainod tallOt u 011tioY the jatinlilhi . dpr thewinituinioil !kit MnIMSIM The recoil thing is. the patients must stay In a wart. roost until they get well ; It ix almost Indio - slide to pe el t ',no cold ohm, the lii,'s lint it must be prevented or a cure roanot be effected. Fresh alpd riding rut, e.pecillly to Oils section allot swats y in the till and winter season. are all wrong. Phydeltitis who 19C011100 . 12E1 tbst Co.lano lose their it ttient, if the, lungs are badly diseaseti. and et, beeitinitith , y are In Umbel: they must not sit down deist they must n ;ilk about the rattle as notch and Iss fast a. tli,sirength well hear, to ge' up a good circulation . patients lutist k fu good spirlts—be determined to getwell. This ii is it great dual to do wall the appetite, stud Is the omit paint to gain. To despair of•core after such evidence of Is in the worst eases, mill inoral certainty all oglio i• Or. !Schenck's personal st , ileillont .11;41 F,tcllll3 of his ORM cure was in those umiliod word+ • Malty years ago I Wm lit Ills last tages a c•intintalt ; Confined to , to In It and at one lime my itt,yter tans thought that I could not live a week ; thou, like.:drown. lug man catching a. straws, I beau! of and obtained the pre; lif.illons WWII I off, It pablic. and they miade a perfect 0111 e of tile. It seemed to uni that I could !eel them Itettetrate my whole system. They so". Ilpf•11- 01 the to tier In my lungs, and I would spit up liu.r..ll , as pint of olfentsiva sallow matter every meriting fur a ong time. As aeon as that began to subside tiny conch, fever. Pain aini night sweats all began to leave nu% and toy idipetite became no great that it was with ditlirolty that I ran d keep Rom eating to., much. I soon ~aimed my etre:opt, antilnive grown in Mist, ever since.' " I was weighed shortly after my ree. very Doctor. " then looking like amere skeleton • was only ninety-seven my 'Ioe• two linudred au 1 twenty•five P2tl)l Pen tits I have in:doted tltillitarritlitrol Dr. Schenck has discontionod prafassional visits to New Fork sad Boston. Minor Llkion, pr „I. Jr.. still continue to .5 • pati , tlol al ll;sfr No. 1.1 Nortb Sixth street, Philadelphia . , every Saturday front It A . M. to 3 I'. Those act.. wish it lltorotistli exatann tlon 411111 tho linspiroinecer will Le ehargeti sti. The lies torouteter declares the exaet err navalngs• and patients eau readily learn Whether tin'Y are ale or tiot 'rho directlens ter taking the medicines are ctili led to the Intelligence even of aohild. 1 otiose' ea tike dwec , 1101 i, and kind Nature inill du the rent, syor piing titat In some rates the 51amirake Pills aro to he taken in Jungian rid dose ; the three inedirinett need 110 other accelerant. moues than the ample lustructiouti that acConipany them First create appetite. Of returuing bruit') Lugger Is tit.. 111 oat welcome symptom. When It rotors, its It 'vets come, let the despairing at once hoof good ch01er..1; ,, 01 blood at Once fil1110‘; A. the cough loosens, the night sweat Is abated. In is !inert Mao balls of these tourblai byttip• bons are gene forever. Dr. Schouckbs medicines are constantly kept in true of thonitanda of fantillea. As 'it laxative or purgative, the Mandrake Pills' aro iii.Jantlard preparation • while the Pahnunic Syrup, on cursor of ceughs c ;ids, may be regarded as a prophylacteric against connumption In any of Mx forma. Price of the l'ulnion le Syrup and Seaweed Tonic, titl a bottle. or S 7 :.0 doyen. Mandrake I'l'ls, 33 e• tits box. For tale by all drugglals anti dealers. JOH SON, IioLLOWAY hi COW PEN, it) Arch street. PlMtlelptana Wholesale Agents. 2^1.1Y on K. WITTMAN, .VOTARY PUBLIC AND CIVIL ENOLNALB T. B. UISENRING INSURANCE AGENT, FIRE, LIVE, AND LIVE STOCK WITTMAN & LELSENRINO Real Estate Agents and Scriveners 70s HAMILTON STREET, (Up-Stare.) liave ninon (heir Lonkn Pollle very desirable proper o• whin's will ho void ♦l. I rA. , nuki to eSAY twang which nye the following 142 N. Eleventh Street. I .7.2) N. Ninth Street. 311 N. Fountain Street. .Lii N. dev.srth Street. S!1 Hamilton Street. 111 S. Ninth Street. 111.1 Vacant Lot+ lu all parts 101 North Troth Street,llhr clty. 141 9. Filth Street. I DUN. JOltn,l,N d DA,VIESON. Prorrictorii of the Gallery of AnaioMy and Museum of Science, f§o7 CHESTNUT ST., PUMA Iln•ejoiit pabliclied a new e titian of their lectnreA,ron. tainting meal Vltitlithis infortuntl.in on the ciiiid,i. conho. queue. unit tieutuiont of dlleatiev of the reproductive cycieirs. *Oil REMUS. ON MA11111,101: unit Om Vittiolls cicuseicof .ho Loou nr st,vuttoon, With lull luctructionii for b Its complete reidordtio.,,• ult., it rhanti, on vto /in ESL IN ISIIPTION, and tits NEAR/. OP 01 . 11 s, baltlll tits Most et, , NtEllltNottli WWORKoII tho nuluect over yea puha-hod cutuprising 200 Tvigeu. Mult i:ll Iran to Roy whitens fof Twenty-five conic. 1 Address Drs. JORDAN & DAVIESON, CONSULTING OFFICE, ' • 1835 Filbert Street, Philadelphia en , 01-1/ d&w N . e — lo :fo b s g Unde rs igned , I ge e .: Indebted to Schreiber Pros. 'to ...pie thrir see,. soon an ponrible. and those hn•loa claims naalo•1 lli,• firm shall present thrm. at the OM ce of H. 1...K..1110m0, Km. second story at First National Bank, whore one of the firm will be present to attend to their nl.l putrons. eepe-dewl SCIIREIKER /MOS. Xrim ,4b6nrtcsrmento CUNI)URANGO ! =I ASCLR, A.l" I'll 11.15, R IS, SCOFUL ULC A, FRS, S ALT RH I UM Aud ALL OMER CIIIWNIC TALMO) DiS EA,ES. hiving root vi (tithed from Fenador 41.011 trolutht with him 0 rthoutlty of the genuine Cliff • DithANthr 11.011 K, recor;ol through the ollielal roeom mendAttort and geolstonee of Tile Ereellroley the Pr, nldret of lirmider, ohl the ti.;ger ;linen( of 111:tt ifopulolp,we u r e propothd ttofill orders f. r It to a limited extent, nod at 0 pilee about otio-quarwr 0f that which 11.0 con( or the II it y )' nhovll so 0h.17 c.;;;;polloul lo charge. A SPY !W.V. , vetidi.l4 n,o,r :olvertb.,l and mold no Cut,- dan.nda. V.'. h ove. t a e ahnlde gable .I‘l,oooo, and with the ;;;- toot.;11;;0 of OW nethori tins of La} I, the proving° alhoo the wig t .; grow., 1.0 dlr,elel the rhoungl of our ;.;thp'y toee th it 110E0 Ina 110. GIiNUINN A li.Tl rhall tor -ol nsurd by uo ; 00;1 ire purtiettlarlY ur I; tug . :r. , 1": 1 2"2: 1, :)1 . . i ...9 . ,':%,P ru. 5 t . i y_ . • to thin foci. ..... ICEENE & Co., GO Cedar SC, New York. I) Nt I).. 3V hloatoo, I). C.: Z. E. 81.1110 AI. 1 , .. Now York I'. T. Neer°. M. 1).. Nev York. d i) j©Cif. c .1,1,111.1,4; 11,1, Suld I.y nll tirtlggi,l =INA 11 l'F TRY SAMPLES •r our gra all page. st (1) fllrteirat , d week y-30 yar,. ' J e.tnt.tto,..d. ntell et,gra•lnga Lao to .uhavrita., Agentm make Oa day. baud: SATURDAY (7AZI,TTE. 1l niluaxll, Mx, 1 ) -, / - --i:/ The alliont owl tn't•t reliable Itotitotton iMatning a Me. eantlin toluention buitiomot men I Inetrndors. For info' motion o nto ror it clrenlor to P. DUFF dc. SONS, Pittsburgh, Pa. tiolicited by 3IUNN .% CO., Pub ,EN Schntiflo A mrrienn, 37 PAT•TS I PARK Row, N. Y. 'Mealy-five yo.riii liow to coo •ning will full direction. P,it m, nts. fr. A liouriti velum., allB containing Om NEW CR!, finalities and large citifet,l4nlingraeing. of M e . lit tl to Movenaihts, Patenel 2.1 Ceuta. t Loa,l mica forolitalaing I.7olltTit CLOSETS.—Get the best. J FA lITII I.OSF.T CO.. 215 firrrtt Sr.. 11 totrenttr. CT.. S 010 S. It( 11mdr7P. oil to Wr it r4,,yl' Warning'B, Netctott'a anti Dora if l itoo.ttto only I:lo-, to that have Proved istroc t.vii. 11,0 Earth by pr. Ito•• il a k ofectlim of fittri , ii. tt lb. not VIII11 . 111) 1+ 1,4,111 . • of dult r , torp.tvl of ch 0 ,1 othl 0111.0.1111 K• fiir circulars. Age7lll, erfrforh• re. :,1.1,1101111 - : 19 !tootle 9L, Motto.: t; 14,ind toot I. 1211 Jlitrket dtreet, rpttlt SALE.—A choice farm of 183 acres In ft ' i o r 1 0 ' 1 1' 41' 11d' ti &Ira. CliE, , \ PEST AI)V F, I trr [SING IN THE WORLD! F.. iS4 r. , kr , 1... T. Month. Iva NV ;II lit•ert an a..... Pa. N•ar.papara. nela.lll.: 1.•ar,.. , , a.ili.—. Prapartl.at-ta r.c, far •111.11.a.a.1v..rii...,..a.t,. 1.1.4 .rut Irv , . ,1 da1...m.4 croacl,',E r. ROW ELL at 11111., .10 and .11 11'nelE 1101 v, New York .. . \ VI.: \\ ILL l'.:\ Y $3 , A 0,1- .1 ,1 1 , , xve .k to -.. , 1 our grvat mncl valuable tl r ..v.,,..., II 3 .., ,v,.nt ,11.1utt 11,. t, 1.1.1r.t1.1.• .1.1 P 1 ,.: .., ‘ , .•.1:. , 11.. v f , pi , tr:ctil.LlK. A.ldt,.• I , YEIt &CT NE \ CARD A CI , 1,1111 , , Iv I.it.. ill S 11111 11 II tt rioliedy rot th r.. ot 11- 1..11 iy ray, 1 , 1,..a•un0f th 4.1 -.onititi! :viol tho Whole train , f di do r , . 1.1 I...tiotia 111 1 vicion. 11111111 K tinnitioi • 11 Itrolll ...I toy It to 11,1 , 111 Ow anti iinfortounto, ,on,l tp.. for proi.ring tising thin Title, in iinviilopo, any, ono who It. fr Acl.D . rs+ 401. 'F. laft Av, 81,Dou D, 11111 N. Y. City. A 1il)1111 4111ACK.S.—A victim of curly In d'otertdlotottm-Itic 110,0114 dr.blllty. pt....tort , In. •ty. rtr.. huylnc 1111,1 1n V+llll rend.dy Idtt. dl.rovettttl oink mem, of ....It cutto,lll..ll Ito sod) t.. ?id tdtv.stitioror, Atldrotty J. IL ItEEVES. 78 =OE EAR EXPERIENCE. IN TIIE TREATMENT oF Chronic and Sexual Disease A rin'Slohr) , :lrAL MARRIAGE. Tla• cheap' •t I, ok ro r ptil.ll•hod—contalnhot nearlY three hundred p utee. and one hundred and thirty flu» pinlrs and ou u ) ucing, of the anatomy of tho human or •• In o -roe of Ie alth and d 0.1),e, with a lr4ttlra Oil early crror, It• deploroble couoronence4 upon alai body, tt Ith the author's plan of treatment—the only rat! , I trot onece••fut nook of earn, u , N h ot eu u passport of rao !rested. A trothfal otviser to the married o d ))o t tempinting marriage, who eotertslu doubts the irphy.:ral e on Stilt free of 110Still0 to any addle•,o)) receipt of twentY'll'en rents In snoop)) or p‘imt.l min.)). by addreoclng tln. LA I'ltttl X, No. al Malden Jar,. tbahy. 'I he oath, may be consultedOimn ahy of the hwi, hit book treats. Other lly or by mail, and inedici,n rout to ally part of Lumensld. .. ....1.1-71; y,;/,. ( 7 7-- : . • V ~ Ai .' v ,., ; 1. ~ -n , ili , ~, . , , 4osnast - LIQUIDATION SALE OF 1)1'1'1 I ER EMAN.N Toys, and Fancy Goods, 15 Park Place, near Broadway, Nov York. or Ow 5.0.1 , 11.1.•ati, of Mr. 11. Dlthinrr the tch .to •t k to. r.. 1.1 .”It at ....i prirr Ulf Janu ary. I. lict Ictr will find It in Owre hi exoncoo thr , ck heforo cnrchoolug el hew here. s I.:in, +44 and * - A, sent C. 11. D., to any port country. (rirplti.2tadiw WOOL. 60 cunt, per pound paid for goo ol Wool in exchange fo g ail i Alway on hand full line of Casimeres and KIZAMER'S CoItNER STORE THE NEW HAVEN I M 1 . 110 VED 1,0 R'-PI SaUIIE STEAM - HEATING APPARATUS dried th , . And I or 3 ca+, I, , en In ',1ce...4M opor.ilion Juno:: the pAnt SIX TEEN y,tar. And ttxtotrttottot It at proV..ll that ttlo totttyttol..pi t tn.!, tor littatlng 'lttorOtt. ttWOlittlitt• Ittibite hn.hliugn nn J .1110,. I. the 310 ST EFFICACIOUS, Th.... v it are unaultaatta in their many that It rtatait... prOlitlCeS tIO 114 111,0 CONII 3.1 1,0 itn more thoranghlY tha miler beatitaz apparatga. uul 1-urh Itnprovfratenta boon 111.1.11. In their ratilator• that they no great add to the or or flue nu d ar. , beg aubstantex far 11.10.414. r4or I, a row .11ht, many who now ha,. thin appn rains in I. Let I.Ula ',an, Dr. .1. F now. ; Noilsou Chitlins Noble •• ih.or.to I•tvinnietp, Hon. Choi - Inn It. bin non. w. t,1,11 . .1, , r, U. urge V.% ittht, Dr. F. U. Pole, Nor A. T. COLT`, 191 BROADWAT, NEW YORK JAMES IsPE: 4 IC,E, Enp't. Norristown, or add M , r , ..s g p i ce 'At Eagle llotel,loutuwo CAA_) A LOT .()1? cURTA INS SLIGHTLY DAMAGED ON THE VOYAGE OF IMPORTATION. Sold under Warden's Inspection on account of Underwriters, for oash, and purchased by us, are of fore4 this day at scarcely one-half their value. WALRAVEN MASONIC HALL, NO. 719 CIIpiTNUT STREET eerl , J.LW 0. GETTING MARRIED.—ESSAYS FOR Toting Mitt, on great SOCIAL EVILS awl ABUSES which rt. with M .% I{ it IA O nom innsnn nI relict' fur alto Errim and Unfortomtc. tlismmil and debil itated. Adair.... HOWARD ASSOCIATION. No. 2 South Ninth street. Philodulphis. Pa. 1871. X di X% I. r• =I .”•11 , !1. e 111111,. , ) 9 7 , ST EW RT'S Marbleized Slate MANTELS. Very large 11.11.1rim,pt, Including a great variety of elegant, now and nrip i nn I figgigg/r. T. R. STEWART & CO., t;‘11 Sixth Avenue, bet. Slth and 36th streete, New York. Aug2-3IIIILLW Cl=il AND ECONOMICAL 12531:1 I'IIIL.IDELI'III. MUSLINS ! At Wholesale Prices STRAWBRIDGE & CLOTHIER, N. W. Coyne Eighth and Market Streets. sept 18-Gin w Legal Idaticess. A • DynnasTuAlroivs NOTICE. Notice Is hereby given that letters testamentary George been granted to the In t o In the estate of George Frederick, dot...led, late of the ilorongh or Cat, angos. Lehigh county. therefore all persons who know themselves to be Indebted to said estate, are requested to make payment within six weeks from the date hereof. and such who have any legal claims against said estate V i l t h ir ms e elt y llr . T .,,e welA t t i t m ut o henticated for settlement FREDERICK. eor 6.6tw Administrairlx. _ AEDITOR'S NOTICE. In the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County. In the mutt. r of the ['lodgement of AN:ahem F. Koons end wife to M. H. Horn for Hen benefit of creditors. June fith. 171, Account flied. Now, October 2, 1871, the Cowl appoint F. A. R. Bald win, 8,4.. Auditor, to Itlldit neCOUtli. resettle nod re•tste a it necessry, end :nuke di.tribution. Wont the Record.. Atteet :—J. DILLINO6B, Ptoth*T. The ni Iliweigued will stiend to the duties of the she eppolottnoent et hie otlico, No. CO6 Munition street, in the City of Allentown, on SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4th, 1 , 7 t, on o'elck a. in.,"wben end whore all portions in tereued alley attetul. F. A. It. BALDWIN, Auditor. Atitiesrowx, October 14,1571. ADIIINISTRATORS' NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that letters of ndministratio have been rted to the uudersignel in the estate Chr,stine Dorismow, deed, Into ot Hanover tournshiP Lehigh e , unty ; therefore, all persons knowing thernselve to 11 1.10 to said estate are reuestd to ake pro men Wlll.lO aix weeks from thedate he q reof, e and so m rb who hay any legal claims against the said estate will present the. well authenticated for settlement within the RbOVO sped tied time. MARY DERII AUM ER, 0F.1.709 DERHAUMER, tont 13-0, • Administrators. 1 - 1 4 ECIUTORN NOTICE.—N4ITICE IS JJ HEREBY GIVEN that lettere testamentary balite" tenon grlmllted to the uuderelgeed to el m matte of HEN 11. I NECK Eit,deceased, late of t 0 City of Allentown, Lelliuji county; therefore all persons who re qu est ed eelvell to be Indebted to the eald r estate are to make payment within els weeks from the data hereof. and thm Ironing claims will present them duly authenticated for settleniuut within the above specified time. net tiw J. S. DiLLINUEII, Executor. VNECUTOR'S NOTICE. Notic, is hereby given that letters testamentary heeling been greeted to the undersigned to the estate of SUSAN B. STINE, deceased, late of Upper Macungie township, County of Lehigh, Penneylvania; therefore all persons wino know themselves to be Indebted to said e.tote are requested to make payment within six weeks from date hereof, and NUCiI who have any legal claims against said estate will present them well authenticated for settlement within the alio•e specified time. OLIV MOSSEII, E:lliobEEkt. Executors IMMII fßiocellaileatto JUST RECEIVED BY DIRECT IMPORTATION FROM ENGLAND 33 CRATES' NEW STYLE CHINA & GLASSWARE! NOW FOR SALE WHOLESALE AND RETAIL AT EN GELM AN'S CHINA STORE 706 HAMILTON STREET, C33E ALLENTOWN, PA ALSO, TEN CAR LOADS OF THE CELEBRATED OHIO STONE WARE! CROCKS, JUGS, POTS, &0., Sir - Srecial bargains to Coontrt Storaketpers. ,O 1 CALL AND SEE.-VD 122118 $l,OOO . 0 0 0 $ Br the malsority of tlso act of t h e Legislature of Kon lucky. of March 13, 1671, the Trustees of the Public Li br,sry I f I:cotes:11y Neill give a GRAND GIFT CONCERT. AT LOUISVILLE, KY., On TUEDAY , Octob3r 31, 1871, 100,3 O.TICKETS OF ADMISSION. +lO EACH CURREN CY"; RALF Th.,KETS, ; QUARTER TICKETS, W. 50. 'rickets tvill im sent by registered letter ; the money for them may ho sent by P. 0. money order, greenback., Or draft. Each ticket consists of four quarters, value 42.50 each. The holder In en to admison to the Concer, the value of the ti tled gift awarded to si it or Its fraction.t and to +.110,00 IN GREENBACKS will be distributed to hold en; of tickets, in gifts of from +100,0.0, the highest, to gllO. the lowest. b log T2l gifts in all, The Concert in for tho bone ft of the • • PUBLIC LIBRARY OF KENTUCKY. THE CITIZENS BANK OF KY, IS TREASURER. And the Corporator.. and ;•uhervisers are the Hon. Themes E. Brandette. Into Governor of Kentucky, and twenty•rer. en of the most distinguished and respectable citizens of the Slate Chu understand. late principal 'business !I:onager of the very sliccessftil Gin Concert for the benefit .4010 Mer cantile Library at San Francisco, has been appointed Ageet and Manager of this Grand Cilft Concert. • rho drawing and distribution will takepl•ce In public, and everything will be done to satisfy the buyers of tick ets that their luterets will be as well protected a, If they were pei nenally present to superintend the entire affair. For tickets and information apply to C. It. PETERS. 12 Main St., Louisville. Ky. No. S Astor House, Now York. 11. N. Ilemported, No. 110 liroadw•y. Milwaukee, Wis. M. A. French I. irglnla City. Pevade. M. A. Wolff, Ito. Sid Cheetnut Street, lit Louis. Tickets also for sale In every prominent place 10 the U. /sep27-4t LADIES' SUITS I SILKS, LACES, DRESS GOODS • HOSIERY, • GLOVES, • LINENS ! AND ALL ARTICLES FOR Ladies' Dress or Wear. J. M. • AFLEIG 11AVINO REMOVED TO 1105 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA, Is now prepared to sell the above Qoods at lower prices than the same qualities can ho furnished by any other House. NOTE. T. if Hafleigh begs to State that he has organised his business upon a most economical basis, and will sell to purchasers out of the city at extremely low prices. act4.lm w • Tu CONSUMPTIVEB.—The advertiser ionriflegk i h o e i ti n !l f i r. T . gew w e , e by 1 , 1 Wi r tra l Te r vere leinl;ffection, and that dread disease,e%. th e anglouste make k nown to hie fellow sufferers the means of cure. To all whodesire It, he willsend © of the prescription used (free of charge), with the dime lions for preparing and using the same, which they will nulnsure curator Consumption, ■ thma Bronchitis, he The Only obj eel of the advertiser In sending tb•Prescrip: ti o a te lo benefit the afflicted, ►ad spread information which he conceives to be Invalable; end he hope. every su ff er er wintry his remedy, as It will cost them nothing and nu prove a blessing. Parties wishing the prescription will plea. address. ROT. EDWARD A. WILBON,_" Williamsburg King. Co. N. Y. PHILADELPHIA jror Sale anti go lat. TO LET.—A REASONABLE LEASE will be given on the Swann Slate Quarry, situated In Plainfield tuwunhip, Northampton county, Pa., near Stnckertown. It connints of number one flat-vein, bine never-fading nista, fully equal to the well-known Chap man Slate, with a good water power and a full rigging of pumping and !minting machine.. Person¢ dextrous of an opportunity of thin kind will plenne examine for them- Replan, H nod apply to Renben Koch, Stackertown P. 0. mar 3 'O9 O. L. SCREIBER, President pILIBLIU SA LE A GOOD FARM. VIII ho pold at pobilo AMA on SATURDAY Um itS day of NoVENIRER, IE7I, at ono o'clock. t. m., lb. row , . - log VllllllOlO rent estate, to wlt : A farm containing 49 ACRES of lend, (formerly the property of George Knecht,/ ult.- ete about °novelle from the Egypt Chord], In Whitehall townehlp. Lehigh county. Tho land In of the beat genii ty and fr in a high elate of coltivation. The improve trionta thereon c. nel4 of a good rod enbetantlal BRICK DWELLING HOVEL • a good barn. wagon house, and other neer..ow/ ont buildinge t an orchard, a never failing well of COO Mt tor, a good gardeo, good fence., Sc , all in the boot con dition. A lime-atone quarry and two good kiln* aro on he premise!, There 14 • good market for the lime. Terme and condition. on day of sale and duo attend ance given by BENJ. J. lIAGENBUCII. o W ct l l ie , .&M lIITTLE, Auctioneer. PUBLIC SALE • OS YALU-4MM RE AL ESTAT F. Will be Rohl at Public Bale. on PiATUIIDAN, OCTOBER 28, 1871, nt i°'VietlT. onbtmgt': yo o'c lock taoirioll Heal Inlet.. to wit : No. 1.-A LOT OF GROUND, oltuate at the corner of Third and Linden street. In the First Ward, arty afore said, cootaiolog `32 fast in front on Linden etreet, and 8D feet on Third street. The Improvements thereon consist of a GOOD dwelling FRAME BUILDING. which coo be used as a email o r sho p. No. 2 —Adjoin Lot No. 1, containing 38 foot in front on Linden street, and 122 feet in depth. rho Improvements thereon coolant of A good Two.story BRICK DWELLING HOUSE, MOS feet, with Brick Kitchen 13g2D feet, nod porco at tached t also, Summer-honse,•Entoke•honte, Ac. The lot also contains a good well of nev-r-failing water, good Mateyo with pump, plenty of frult•trees Terms easy. Condition. made known on the day of sate ' Being the cool estate of JOLIN DIREIL, late of the City of Allentown DIEUL t WILLIAM R. IlellL, Ex"' ore plat LIC SALE MEI= TIMBER LAND. On Friday, the 10th day of Novem ber, 1871, will be sold at Public Eale,at the Public House of BIMON 510111 , near the premines, the following described Real Estate of PETER KOHLER, deceased, late of Whitehall township, Lehigh comity, altnete in Booth Whitehall township, county aforesaid, to wit: Six Contiguous Tracts of Land. No. 1. AdJoining lands of Peter Blank.idanassee Oath, Charles Bele, Nos. 2, 3. 5 and ; containing 10 acre. and 43 perches, covered with heavy white oak and black oak timber. No. 2. Bounded by lands of Daniel Deny, Asa BOHM, by Nos. 1 nod 3 ; containing 5 acres and 71 perches. cov ered with heavy white oak end black oak timber. Thin tract contains in all p obabillty a large body of Iron Ore, a mien having been profitably worked on the name. No. 3. Adjoining lands of Calvin Cloth, Esq., Nos.e 5 and 1 ; containing 7 Korea and 74 perches, covered With heavy White Oak timber. No. 4. Adjoining lands of Calvin Ruth, Esq., Nos. 5 and 3 ; containing 13 acres and 94 perches, being covered with good White Oak and other timber. No. 6. Adjoining lands of Calvin Cloth, Eeq , Hiram Balllet, Noe. 4. 0, 1 and 3 ; containing 12 acre* and 143 E erchee, covered with Chestnut and other valuable Om- No. it. Adjoining lands of Hiram Ealliet, Peter Ringer, Peter Plank,. Nos. 1 and 5 ; containing 10 acres-and 113 Perches, mostly covered with Chestnut and other heavy timber, It is believed that all the above mentioned tracts con• lain extensive both es of the best of Iron Ore, If desired I by Purchasers all the tracts will be cold In the whole. Persons &growl to view the premises Were the day of ate, are invited to cation CALVIN RUTH, Esq.. close by. who will give all desired Information, or on the an. dersigned executors. . Sale to commence at 1 o'clock, P. m., when terms end conditions will be made known by AARON KOHLER, I v _ ecutor .. WILLIAM GEoltoE, f " WM. RITTLE, Auctioneer EXECUTOR'S SALE. VALUABLE REAL ESTATE. Will be sold at public sale, on TUESDAY tho 14th day of NOVEMBER next, at 1 o'clock to the afternoon, upon the premises , to South Whitehall township, Lehigh county, shout ono mile from the city of Allentown, and two miles from the borough of Cates:toque, the following described velnabto real estate, to wit : No. I.—A certain tract of farming lend, hounded by laude of Jonathan Marx, Henry Newhard, a public road leading from Allentown to Cetasanqua, and by the public rued leading to Sharer's tavern, containing about 60 ACRES, . 13 The Improvements thereon !omelet of a Dirge two. etorY BRICK DWELLING 1101:1811, a never falling wallet the door, a large stone swine barn. wagon shed, corn crib, pig outdate. and other necessary outbuildlog,.. The buildings are all in good repoir, and the land is of the best Limeetone, in • high stated culti vation and ceder good fencing, No. 2.-1 certain treat of land adjacent to tract No. 1. bounded by the public road teethed to Etherer'• taveru.by the public road teethe( from Allentown to Catamount., hy d o s e o n f t a l tZ b e d an d kg ' . ' more i nior. d provementa thereon are • euestantial pall built ATONE GRIST MILL, ' known a. Grlin'e or Deshlers Mill, It wo 501 ham three pair of burr atones In running ' • order. The building, and gearing. are In good condition, with story d water power. Alm, HI large and commodious two BRICK DWELLING HOUSE. with a kitchen attached. stable, wagon house, pig sty, brick smoke bailee, and all other necessary outbuilding.. A large variety of fruit and ornamental trees on the pram lees It hoe all that would make it a One and deeirable home. Nu. a —A certain tract of WOODLAND. attest. IniM the township and county aformald.hounded by lends late of David Eberhard, late of Pater Roth, and oth er,. the Allentown and Catamount road cutting the Wool in two parts, containing 20 ACRES, • more or Tee.. The timber thereon Is White and Black (Lk. The nature of the land Is cock as would make It the beat of fanning land, being 'leo limestone. Nos. 1, 2 end call be cold together, or each singly, , s May bort nit purchasera. Being the real estate of Ellpticceth Deet,ler, doceatteA, late of the Wallah ito and county trotesaid, Terms can he ramie yen eau ir deeirah The conditions trill be made knows on the day at the Place of sale and duert i n . dma l fae l t by Executora. octll.6w• I D. 3. P. DEMME% OUPIIIANW COURT•SALE VALUABLE REAL ESTATE, By virtue and fn pursuance of au order leaned cub the Orphan.' Court of the County of !kink., there q be eNposed to public sale, on THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1871, at 10 clock to the afternoon, upon the premises, the fol lowing valuable real estate, behiginuparte Nom, 2 and tl of the real estate of John Haupt, deceased, late of Spring field townehlp, Ducks county, to wit 2 No. 2.--Belug bounded end deeeribed a. follow,. wit Adjoining lands of John limit. Jr.. Abnhato Bonet George A. and others. contAining 145 ACRES and 11 PEItCIIEa. The improvements thereon consist of a DOUBLE STONE UWELLINO HOUSE, 25. 01 60 by St feet, with doable atone kitchen •ttachod. by 25 feet, a three story stone barn 50 by 43 feet, Cofti crib, pl. Ole. and all other necessary outbuilding., Tb farm I. we l fenced and divided intq conveniently. site T ere is a T he re)fing fountain of spring water *1 the door of houso. are a large cumber of frstt tree. on the prem'mea. About one hundred acre. or the above tract in clear land; In an excellent state of cultiva tion, and the balance heavily timbered, for which them lea convenient market. Mont of the farm land Is Under. laid with great bade of limestone. Oa the faint la one ref the beat Iron Ore beds In Mucha county, It having been worked for two years and yielded au annual malty of 114,484 to the Heirs and worked by stripplngunly . Ther e in plenty of w a ter for washing the ore from a never fall ing spring at the bed, which is distant from the Durham Furnace only about two miles.and from the North Penna. R. It. about five miles. The whole being one of them. at valuable properties in the County. and a rare chance for onlf,o i , l , ll ljeing bounded and described al to will Adjoining land. of William W Long. estate of m. M. Long, David K. Limbach, 6 - Campbell and oth ers, coniaintag 121 ACRES *NV OO ipEnvingo, The farm land ha. swarm southern exposure. Tim mP " beiTaltargirritralfl7l a HOUSE. 40 by 2014,1, with • •15ne kitchen attached, • three F aloe l.n S k o s_e," litiriihi;Tbuyilres7l:4 Cifi r l i gliffi d . " Vh e e ;Li; m an teuc a eo and my toed mto pi:meanie:l.y sired lielde. never failing well of water le at the door,and • tanning stream at the barn. There is also on the premises an ex (*item water power, with 21 feet bead and f Thai att' formerly heen used for Saw Mill PUP.... I. one of the most highly cuitivat,d. prodeclive and convent ently [ceded ferule In the upper end of the County, Terme on the day at the place of sale and doe attendance given by JAMES PRY. Surviving Administrator. Springfield, October 4, MI. 'oetni•itig IMIZEZIEI
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