CB 1 glig4era . A.BEM, ' J... A': 'DUNBAR/ ...f'Y'ait?l's.&•Propr,s '0 A It S.L FRIIJAY,IIOItNIicC AUGUST, 13, '69, liepublionn State Ticket FOR GOVERNOR, — Gen. JOHN. W. GEARY. JUDGE OP SUPREME COURT, Hon. -Hi W.. WILLIAMS, .COUNTY CONVENTION! DelegatelEleetions. At a meeting a . the Republican Standing Committee;b4cl in .Carlisle, on Saturday, July 3let, it was ordered that a , County Convention, - lie held in Itheem's ; gall, Carlisle, on Monday, August 23d, 1869, at 11 o'clock, A. .AL, to nominate can didates as follows : One person for Member. of Assembly. One person for• County Treasurer. One person for Prothonotary. One person for clerk, of Courts: One person for, Register. One person for Commissioner. One person for Director of the Poor. One person for Auditor, To be voted for ot the 'ensuing Gen eral Election. :, DELEGATE ELECTIONS In the several' Wards, Boroughs and ToWnships will be held at the usual places and at the usual hour's, on Satuiday,,August 21st, 1869. It is the earnest wish of the Co o mittee that there be a full Convention of Republican Delegates, fretill from the people, that a Ticket may be plac ed in nomination which will command the earnest and united - support -of the Republican Party Of Cumberland cou'n ty, and enforce the respect of our, op ponents. By order of the Committee. A. K. RI:TEEM, Chairman.- We Want Money We respectfully ask such of our pat ' _rens who are indebted to us for sub . Scription, advertising or job-work, to ponder well upon the following : Cash payments are demanded of us for pa per, ink, type, labor, living, and inter est on money, if compelled to borrOw ; we have money enough- due us to keep us going on right eomfbhably, but it is scattered Among thousands of our cus tomers for printing, advertising and subscriptions, in small amounts ' The harvests are now abundant, and biiVe; been garnered, the fruits ofthe• land are plenty, - all the earth's riches have been poured out most lavishly, thehearts of the people have been made glad, and, we hope, overy one will .nOW -be able to come to the rescue of the printer. Your publicsPirited,.live cal newspaper is an iMportant lnetltn timein-a rich - county lilto Cumberland. As - Conti-week Will,soon be liere,lhose of our friends who are indebted to us, and who may have business in town, can call Upon us and liquidate their hr debtedness. Others can remit by mai l Lor_othetwise_the_smalLamountsAtte—u: :ire You ffistered? Let every Republican see to Per sonally, that he is registered. Don't depend upon ally 'One else, but go to the Assessor yourself, and go at once, so that there may be no tuistake about . it. ,Naturalized citizens must present theircertificates' thereof to the Asses- sor when applying for registration, un less they have been voters in that die trict for five consecutive years. JOHN FLOYD,,Esq., has been ap pointed Assessor for the borough of Carlisle, vice John Gutshall, resigned. Tuft HAIMISBunp TELEGRAPH.— •Thiti able and reliable journal, the only Republican paper 'at the teat of the Stater Government, and the central or gan of our party, is, we are happy to say, .increasing in strength and influ ence, and .is daily throwing hotshot. into the Copperhexl camp. We ad vise onifriend's, - desire tO take a liarriAburg iaier, to subscribe for 'the Telegraph. If wjll be furnished for the campaign es follows : Weekly, one' copy, .fifty cents ; ten copies, *4. Dai ly, ono copy, $1 25; ten copies, $lO. .The'CAMPAIGN TELEGRAPH' will be furnished, at, 30, cents singly; fodr ies for sl;. fifty copies for $lO. The Vaterlandr:Waeclaer,' au excellent German paper; is issued from the same office at $1 r pdr anntim. Address George .oergn9r; Harrisburg, Pa: liarGeneraL toscerand cannot swal- low Ohio Democracy. He:declines the nomination of that: party,or' Governor, which nomination he kindly 'terms an honor, explaining . ` that he annet_devote himself to " duties deemed sacred" to his creclitorEi'and - family.!,' regrot that the, General's midito're aro , of so much moment in pfii life but only fancy the ; chagrin of the Ohio , Deroo , - critts whon a than thus declares that'hO ado uld ' rathei .pay his. debts. thamrun on their ticket It IS now thought that, the . Ul 10 Democracy.will nominate Potrolenm V. Nasby as thenr caLdidate for Glovertir; 'Gen. Roseemns'having deeline'd, TAM, NasbY 13 oarpet. , ..haggdil:'" but what of that? ' lteseeiani : f s9 it; Packer in this State; and 'Walk fir in Virginia.:l)eaides, the Demoeracy - nive Petrelenni some. coinpensation. for' kis having', beei.dismissed as Pastataster at the " ConfeAinit . ,g .f'pigger7liming Adniinistration.v, . tar The election darla eoming ou apace, And . ..f r i e o u ,ehould li . a.tllOroughly, organ*erin id! biorpughe,, wards and, towneliips in the contest N , abort, ' • • • ' Thelßegistry La 4 We devote a large.portion of our first page to a full and detailed statement of all the sections of the Registry' Law which pertain to ehr 'The first section, it will be 'seen, sets pace to 'tbe revision of the assessment hits, and the making Of new and re vised like of voters. - The second sew'tion relates entirely to the duty of the CoMmisidortere and Assessors on corn pletien' of the :And . subject we would callationtion of Mr. FLOYD, our AsseSSnr,. who,. by ne-, gleetlilg to oonidy7with the,provisions of this section has rendered-himself liable to fine and imprisonment, or both,, at the discietion of the:Court: He has denn.this hy failing to iiwt On 'the lloor. of or on. the election. plate in each of _our_Wirda_the Heti as-revised by Ifini: The third seetien , pertains 'entirely to extra assessments, and in this re spect the new law has this,deeided ad.. vantage ; over the old one, that the lists or extra assessments can be seen by any one who desires it in the Commis sioner& office, allowing tbem ne eretion in the matter. The fourth„fifth and %lath sections Mate entirely to the proof of citizen-. obi; to the challengesby any 'qualified citizen, to the production of papers by naturalized citizens, to the penalty for receiving or offering second votes on the same papers, and to the penalties attending upon election officers who refuge to require the proof prescribed by law. The seventh and eighth sections de fine the duties of assessorse.in reference to Presidential and special elections. The ninth section gives the penalty for wilful false swearing in answer to the interrogatorlei - of the different offi cers, and the tenth relates to l he com pensation of the assessors, and the pen alty, in case of violation of any of the provisionsrof the act. The balance of the sections may be stated in, subetance as follows : --- On the written request of fifty vo ters in a cennty, - o - r 4 of five in a district, with the affidavit of one or , more of tttem averring their belief that fraud is, intended at •an. approaching. election, or that it will not be fairly or legally condUcted, the 'Court or 'a judge in ...vacation shall appoint for, the district applied for, two sober, discreet, and intelligent citizens titereof,from the opposite political party of theinspec- . tors respectively, who shall attendand act as 'overseers at . the election, 'with the right to challenge-voters,'-to. exam ine them and their witnesses, and -pa pers, and to oversee the countingOf the votes and the making out and sign ing of the returns . ; and if they-areun lawfully:interfered with, So as to -pre vent the execution of their duties,'and if the election is contested, the votes polled shall fie rejected by the board of -return judges or the tribunal pus- sing upon it. If the return judges, or a majority of. them, are satisfied from sufficient evidence, that fraud has teen ciminit ted at ari election, they may reject the entire .Vote of the district in which it was committed, but their action shall not interfere with the rights of others to contest the election, as- delermined by them, or any of the electioe board, 'n - the - nran tier now - allowed by- law If, M adjusting the revised list of voters, differences of (Minion shall ex ist among the members of the board, a majority 'shall determine; and the dis senting ones may. note their reitiois for dissenting ; _and if the overseers, or either of them, are satisfied that fraud ulent votes have been received, or lrivr ful ones rejected, or that other frauds have - been coinmitted, they may, make memoranda thereof; and in either case the election officers shall enclose seal the papers thereof with - the other, election papers, to be used in any contest that, may arise .respecting the election. Au examination' for naturalization shall, be in , open court, and under the immediate cognizance andjudgtnent of its members as presiding judges. Every prothonotary shall keep a -nat uralization docket, in which he shall register,in alphabetical order, the name of every applicant, , the time of filing his decleption of•intenti m, and his pe tition—the place. and • country of his 'birth—hie age, residence and time of . ' his arrival in, this country—the names vouchers and, their residences, mid the date and nature of the court's action and'the dame shall be open for inspection and for copies, as' other re;. cords ; andjif he or any one under him shall act in violation thereof; or shall issue a certificate 'of taturalilation, not duly autluirized thereto, or shall give one hlnrike, or suffer them to be taken from his office, or charge, Jo he filled up or, anti, used, oh conviction' thereof ho shall be fined and imprisoned at the discretion of the cenrt;apd be deprived of his, office, - ; '!• • if any 'one shall sell, give, or use, or shall vote, or offer to vote, or eneottrage another to vote oh a nathralisationher tificate which he knews, or has gocid, reason to know, is net genuine, pr. -knowingly testify falsely in any, matter reloting to .41() right of registering prof' 'Voting, , on conviction' thereof, shall be' 'fined and , imprisoned at the disdrotion of the court, . , „ ' MY' cotemporary very justly "re marks :•. john W. 'Geary, paor'inthil Werhrs' gdoils, is , rich' in the record of. , p'rivate 'Packer, with his untold miliipplheomes before the people, a Pennsylvanian .who • 'dhi 'l:idthing for Pennsylvania, when she Most !needed help ; who” deserted' when 6rti:tie,tj.4.s4B"l•44ll'llq.YiP'o,4oxii§' 'froth quaiters of, the. world ' ', to'.take their , share lier difense.., l -The tire: represent 7well-dehned.,elaSsei in this community, aud. we R4b',i~exy sure that the ; tfaii; ; has act jei• tc!oltiF.ko,d,stid of Aea Packer's, money the " ithl , 6 x, : 1 0 / ! 10 • 4 0 4. 4 1 i,4 1 4,1irt? 'and personal minim. of 4hil g 9474 Pisc?01 0 8 14ergleity..; ; That his money and his reputed lib- Osifity -1 in. the (use of it,seeured Asa Packer his tiendnatfart,at:the,bat‘ds;ot tlie4Hiprisburgo6oention, relnati; be he i HePublicah or Democrat, any longer !; • • lWe haii4e; Munificent endowment of a College at Bethlehem, and, pit now turns out that, he, being the owner of a large tract of 'land near•that plaCe, which was, at highest valuation, worth not -a cent 11217Ef n .hundre d -Oman d, dollars, resolved to do something duit would enhance its-.value. at, least ten-fold.' 'His fox-cunning' in : this' - matter 'lms be'en duly rewarded "fhe,Portiou' of„ the land left, after his,doeatin to the .College, by reason of : its being built and the magnificent improvements which, followed in its course, has increased hi' Value, until 10-day h'is,estfinated to bey _er' lid' leas thin ,two millione.ut dollars. 'fhus has, Aim ,Packer sue- . ceeded in %the! douldy . selfish purpeste of acqairiug a 'State-wide reputation far Munificentliberality, and that which he still More* Valued, a twentyfold in crease of wealth. • \ And in every other instance in whioh• he has-performed what has seemed to be a oharitabhPcir, philanthropic act, upon inveatigation it will turn out that he haa always reaped' a rich harvest of money. therefrom. • Verily does his 'charity begint'at' home, aed end there too. • . In private life his, meanness among his acquaintances is well established, but we were' not prepared 'to believe that he , would be guilty' of an alt so contemptible and so niggardly as is the 'following ote, narrated by the Mauch Chunk. Ga*te, a paper printed at his 'reputed res idence—Lan act which We honestly believe in its meanness has no parallel in the history of any other man within the broad limits of our proud old Commonwealth: _The impression has gone out through lie- papers of the State that Judge Packer's residence is in this county. This is a mistake. It is true that he has a sylendid mansion here, that his family reside in it, and that he regards it as his home, but in 1867 he took up his legal residence in the Sixth Ward, Philadelphia, by having himself as sessed and his taxes, timid there. He' did this to avoid giving Carbon county he benefit of the revenue it was en- .titled - to - derive - from - the legal taxation -- on his vast estate. The county .com missioners and borough councils, how everl.sucopeaed by legal process in collecting -.the taxes for that year, which had been assessed here, but which he hoped to be able to transfer :to Philadelphia. Since then-Mr--Pack er has lived here just he has done for the last twenty-five years, but has utterly refused to contribute, by hi . s taxes, to the support of our schoolS, our almshouse, our roads and our bor ough—dodging the question by a nom inal residence in a distant city. This procedure, which, perhaps, his friends can reconcile with that " honor" of . which We hear so much in - connection with his private character, 'evinced a spirit orpetty spite iind a lack of local pride that We 'people of this county do not pollint6 or forgive. Mr. Packer still cfelights to he recog nized 'as the head and frOnt of the ex- eusive interests of Oarb-m-county-aud he Lehigh Valley. The foundation of his colossal fortune was laid on its soil, and all his enterprises ale hero located ; And yet, by a legal subtei fuge, a trick, he defrauds the eilunty of taxes whieti'xightfupy - belaug to— reasury, and leaves its public insfitu one to the. care of citizens of less übil y but greater merit, by turning over hjs taxes to a county a hundred miles away • may be urged that he has a right to select his residence wherever he may see fit. ,So ho bas i end if lie pays taxes wlitTe he honestly resides we shall have no fault to find. But for him to regain his . actual. abi.de here, and yet preteneto reside in Phibidelphia, for the purpose we havo stated, is simply insufferable, and we protest against his claiming to be of Carbon county, so long as ho refuses to pay his taxes within her The .Difference The Republican party bases its claim • to public 'confidence on accomplished and recorded facts. A nation saved. That of itself should be enough.; but when we add wise laws faithfully ad ministered—individual liberty in all its aspects. preserved—the national debt reduced forty-four millions:since the .3 et 'of March, under President Grant's Administration—and.. when we add to' this a reduction of our ..own State debt, to the, extent of, some millions under the .administration of boy. Geary, we hive: an exhibit of Republican rule, National and State, 'which' comMands, public cenfidencote , att extent and deL gree that riOiliemOcrapc, falsehood, cam shalt°. Now, upon what do the Dim oertiey build ? :VVbat have', they done wise or .nohle that , the people should restore them to power 7 Notttini., oolutely nothing of the kind. But they did. sympathize with •the rebnels,, and they.still.—in 'this State' at leasV---ad herd to the doctrines from which sprang the war . of rebellion.;,; On this ground ; they must rest c if on any:, 'Beyond aside from it. , they have , nothing to of , fer Pramittes, 'ao idle 'andeinPty the Wind. rirMert'lilici - 'fiviot,cd'; the !tont na-: ,tionj l'.)Oughiee for 'lbe .Ir,eflideney . in 1860 Boole how or other atilL fe'el feverißh about AsaTacker p who•boited it the Ohirlestbri Oinventiotia -Breeic'eti 7 ridge: Ho rppy Pi;4:•l%g9inP•if ht,plittied his bands. - • -- , t • rEPThellimocratie,,partx, while 3t 5ii14,10,; takca up' 101,104(Pogi'ii:lic; cddly litick•upon.his dountaty r iu,her dark;„ - oat ,hciura; and' sough,t, crimp . ° from tae i3l3lrotitjone : 6tpafriotteiki ii"aluktaiou's • , The Demberatie Ticket. On Saturdor,last„,lo4)milocratie party of this coiinty)icldilinir primary elei4ion accordng,lo . W)l2at:is called the . COuntiSystem.;' A. groat deal 'cii,excitement was OOMisioned, the s. ,R;ia frit*. • 11. 4 1 • : t much interest iiithe result, and quite . a respectable vote was polled. 'On Monday last ihe Return Judges nuit in the Court Rouen, palish?, fyla aftsr comparing- noteS-iiiil 1 summing up -the' vote oast , throughout, the-county; the' , followin, named gentlemen ,were de-'' clared,duly ,nOminated Aasentbly.:-::-Jtih i p B. .Loidlgi 'Vsr: Spring' Penn' towilab • —.). Clerk' of' Cou r ts—Geo. ; C, Sheaffer, of Silver Spriag . tOw'aelq, , - ',.Reiiitir.Joseph Neely, oitityloAe. County' Treasurer—George Wetzel, of °rade: T • 7 Commissioner—Jao:tib . . Rboside; of West Pennabsrough ' D_ireptor of the Poor,-4Olp Umber ger, of Lower Allen township . . ; ; , .Auditor—r. V.• Kelley. of Penn township.! ... . That the result of this priMary . elec- , tion bps been satisfactory, and, that the 'ticket will receive the cordial support of, the Democracy of this county, no sane mail will pretend to sar. ' Indeed, already it meets with curses both loud and deop, and charges of. ‘‘ trickery," treachery,". 'and " double-dealing'? are openly asserted. To our mind the ticket 'is a one-sided affair, when we consider that Out of eight candidates of which it is composed, Silver Spring township has two candidates, Carlisle twomind Penn township two, while the ltirg,e Democratic townships in the up 'per end of the county have none / In yiew Of this dieristrhus_resiilt,-the Me chanicsburg • Vcaley Democrat predicts' that . last Saturday's ~.primary election will be the last ever hell in this county 'under the newztangledsystem. Next week we shall comment More at large upon the merits of the ticket /aid the m eir7 us Operand? of its' nomipa_ The Elections Last Week Last week elections were held in' the States of Kentucky, Alabama, and Tennessee, and in the Territoryof Mon- tan a,: the resuls , ,,iii_each- of—whic may_ „ be unstanfially thu i s !gated : I Kentucky, like r Lphraim of old, re mains wedded to Tier - idols, although her Copperhead mlijority, is not by Twenty-five Thousaad as large' as it was at the Presidential Election, being Forty ThMisaud now ' against .Sixty five Thousand then. The election was only fora Sate Treasurer.:. • In - Alabama, the election-was for members of Congress and County Of ficers. The result has not yet been definitely ascertained iu all the Con gressional Districts, but the latest re: turns favor the election of fourßeimb linens and two Democrats. In Tennessee. the Republicans ran two candidates for Governor, William R. Stokes, and De. Wiit Seiner', the lat ter at present %ming Gtivernor of the State. Both •'gen !Jewell claim to, be Republicans and friends of the National Administration, Mit :•enier avowing himself-in favor-of ,universal -amnesty in connection with universal 4uffrage, drew to his support. the 'entire i t;x-rebel element of the State, widen] enabled him to 'distance Stok - ei in the race. His majority will probably exceed Fit . - -ty-Thousanik - The Legislature is said to be Conservative in both branches: Montana, always. heretofore Demo , . cratic, has gone that way again.- THE PHILADELPHI4 FRAUbS.—Any Person who has 'read the testimbny of J. Roes Snowden., recently given be fore the election 'investigation commit tee in Philadelphia, must be satisfied that not only Snowden, but also Judge Sharawood by his prevarication, shows his guilt-Land 'if Shitrawood did hot .connive at it, it shows such a shameful neglect of duty as 'to amount to guilt. If our legislators were as pure aa for merly, both Snowden and Sharairood would, last winter, have been impeach ed and removed from office.. But,uit fortunately, party 'feeling is too strong for justice, in such cases now ; but it is a terrible disgrace to the Supreme Gotta of the Stoic.. In noticing this. fact; the Reading Daily Dispatch says: 9reat complaint has been, made be mint:ie.-Snowden has not beenrernoied as cleik. It appears that he- cannot be . 'removed until his 'term expires, which - ia next.Mv, except by impeachnient2" , sarlf we want New, York intereate to prevail in'Penneylvania, why :•moat unquestionably •Aeit Packer ehould be elected GrOvernior. 1 With Brick Poem: roy, and AldarMart McMullin to ;direct the policy of Jtie : Administration, it would not • take long .to onr inte'reste tinder' the control of, the rail-'. 'road kiagg,, the . biille anti bears pf Wall att.° et; - ,atul; the: politiCign is 'of ,the.rgn ptre State.p..ty all:Meant+ if, we. want: Pennsylvania !to be ruled id trade :arid pPlitica''by New -Toriv r elibt• Asa' laFGen. , GEARY, ,was always !lhe rim friend . of tile soldier : be,ivas hi's cornirade lin' war and • his' lassOdilite in PACKR Wai 3 Oiot he Was' ever qte,friedd or : assoeiste of fhe workiogman ;• Of-)the • °pullers ~stid, • rail epaders' nod , roiners• . off idhAm `he: 'nada 'ids, ' re'. For .4'99gP4v.e• the - petnociatie tq . `,7liditi'dts,Oani.i,coor; engaged.inettuVing the taw i9,yelation to 04bribeiy ) " ilhatgain ana'selle," 4e. WO eutpose , Sani bO'Coitaiilieti: • . ,IgrWe:request -our. friende Hub!., scribe forAlialittandurk. , for the 'carping `campaign: Fifty ceittir wififiq'the prise The National Debt. , The New York Tribune says : The country is agaiii g.'ratified and its ene miefilliemestic'; and feeeigii i afflicted wittiiita;Ociali,statement that the NS- Vona! Debt waS: reduced- 'Seven • atediendred Thousand. Doller during'thie last month, and would have bees reduced by mare then Nine Mil lions but ler the necessity of. paying over an c d a - 5 11alf of, isterest -cin-bondeladveateOltlie Ptleiffeißoad (or road 0) .which they are -under.- obli betnot:yet ahlo,th pay. The, .to al reduction, qf tho Debt; Oen. Grant: assumed. the'Freaideney.:(ftire Manthe) falls a'liitle: 'abort of •Fort,f-• *alL. s e , "* es44gitli2;iMtt9l::":fr:llits of Mr. McCulloch's persistent, violation of an imperative, lly- ofi the; land; That law 'OM:en:W:lly 'reituiveithitii to buy Id • up. ati o . a m ug a one per cent: per annunn (beeelr-7611W and Tiventy-eight Millions) of the en tire National Debt. lied 1M :obeyed this law, he :ceuld-have bought Twen ty-five annum Olthe Debt for lesmthan 'l'Wenty Millions, of, gold, .and saved over. Ten Millipna iminter est which we have -been- paying on bonds which 'should: have . been long since snug in the Sinking Fund. By Vicileting . the law, he depreciated the:, National Credit, and cost, the conutry at leaat Twenty Millions of Dollars— ' Ten Dlillidrie that' would have been saved by, buying whelk the bonds were . cheaper, end Ten Millions of interest that would have gone. into ,the Sinking Fund instead of the pockets of the bondholders. ' ' • Mr„ HOntwell seems, to be deiiig his best to regain the ground so wantonly thrown away. He announces. that he will buy Ten Millions more of bonds in the•cottrse of tills month ; and we infer tlit he will keep buying so long as he has the means, unlesS Congress should stop him. Ho would doubtless buy faster,--perhaps_ • Fifty Millions forthwitlint for tie fact that this would raise the price of bonds exor: bitantly. Reis buying, we presume, as fast as he thinks he can and avoid 'this rock in his Cotirse,, The end plainly in-view is the A-tid ing of our debt ails lower rate of inter est. Over Sixteen Httildre'd Millions o' it is in the form of Five• Twenties, , • hereon we are paying six per" cent. .ettMet, "wl - Cu most a rec' - an d the residue anon will be, subject to re-. denaptiolf_at the.pleasure Of-the-Gov-- 1 eminent . It is. a shaine that one bond - should be outstanding on Which this right of redemption 'has acertiN . If we could fund these Sixteen Hundred Millions at Four per cent. (and we hope a long .bond, untaxable, and paying interest wherever the borrowers shall. prefer,'may be floated at or timir that rate),itwould'eave to, the country no less thau Thirty•two Millions per an num—a sum - that, invested in tbil Sink- ing_ Fund, would of itself pay .off, the entire debt within forty years. ff To fund the debt at a low rate.of interest is to' be the great triumph of General Grant's Administration, unless his ene miss, - by their projects of, direct or in' direct " (Greenback) repudiation, shall succeed in preventing it. Thy are . working to ihie end with unscrupulous desperation. hence the swindling re. Alves of their-Western State Convert tions ; lieneelliti various knaveries our dealings with our,, public creditors proposed in their journals and speeches. 1 hey must be met rand beaten. T o the finding of the debt at a low rate, it is an indispensable: prerequisite that we shall go on steadily'and• vig orously pay in .To reduce the Rev- , - enue to the enrrent.needs.of,.tbe,Gov ernment and atop : paying Debt, iti:to .postpone indefinitely, the : prospect o funding at four.,per cent.,:and • thus maintain the present exorbitant .rate of interest.. LetMo friend of the Admin istration consent to. purchase presen ease at tlie cost of a pernaauent'bu den. Let us keep the Revenue up to the present standard, economize Ex penditures to tbe)ast degree possible, and keep on pajlitikoff debt at the rate of Eighty. to Queliiindi:ed Millions per anuuin, and ire shall Sam be able to fund thd rive-Twenties on bur own terms Step to the Pacific 'rho, agora of the Kansas PacHicHail. way present in another column, fin enter prisepossessing 'features which seeni to merit spoolal., comment. Having built their road from ICainia City to Sheridan and found it a profltablo and promising" :investment, tbo lianagers;nove propose to ooatinue,it to,Donvee;•nnd- -thin opon -u the Article to tho Itocky,gountains.a That much, it 5 hOpek, will bb • completed 1 , 3; . . • Juno nOxt;:atid its ':agonto, Messrs. Dab- - . riey, Morgan .64. - Co., 'and M. K. Jessup & Co., bankers aud 'lneichantiOrbi4h'reliu- . .tatloa, now tender, through our colUinne, a'loan'of $4;660:000 ter thfs These: gentlereen statemit t h ;clearness . the reasons which have; induced -.,them to _give • this •lorin t4eir• ; endorsement. The Kansas Pacific. ; Rail wey nowtrune through • ,the centre of Kansas; and is,! in sucedesful and ,I•irotltsbio •operation- Jor over four . und red ;in ilea: iW.o remember ttio' Colin- try tbrbugh whichlt 'Passes sea wide. open *fp; eiparontlT boundless' , nod ;OMIT es-the sea, knol,len Only . to a few tribes. of wild toving:lndiurib,.and 'obscisionailly 't'o' a venturesome', 4 64Tid: stiate.giliu:g4 sod bordenten,at , ho ministered ' a " prinlttlio bosPitality eVorylfteen Topeka,' Salida, "Und iton iittan4kord f tleeaciTo :thtin 'designs- tiaras, of to#nti,,that .boped fe l be, Hays; ''and' ,the itOpplo4laCes' . powiron ' Stta time=table - did hot (haat in the feittfoi of 7.nv,er va's araere, t Otte,ict of, mining cabins, ~ and49yenne4 'FelinciiOr 410, re,yelry„inStillipOre;,, i l'bore' Ppdg•ligm . Ln,dyrig4tied, 00T1,94::4§i , ,gr:be41v 7 , :eye, in ,hab e as sylphs; ti04.34q0))',..11117.. Ziow,; ponv 9 r is '‘ as noat t ,,w,9ll, : built, and. iOotrifcr,tble , :,se'liart , for4;'l'.With, tieboolo; anii:ebti . roli es, rews'of,br,ieratoretribotels. and , tasteful , :dwellitigii, , ,!whioy • recall the' iuxury.and:, con,afort ' , ..Nature :bee , ries Mod. ;an d, fringed it , vitti.• tli mobitl *tidivv4lllB.olsitintin, !sabtv,'lollo ' their' sides 'Atli' , olotheif,ivitl leati,tirid - riolcmiddoinmorxroottery, C l 4, 1 'lt pi nevi. proposoil t up to .t tiff pity' !the ttutt T'Oi" atikisiOn; . 60: fr:•.\ 4 ., 4 1111111 Kansas Pacificlway. To do this, it will bo 'necessary to build' 220. ,miles of rail. The Managers are who not-to,,de . :: ;.• far tho yain tiding able W 11 ), dime Odhheki,to v,citis i lhCM large ettbSi Ales'Tile (iiiilikrnmen!t, has built ohe,reitil t 1:!" Si the ,; Paeffl ... .4 at a' 04: expensp,:',Pri-: vale are espe'cially' when QOM, who ask th r alkenn show us good a bal ance sheet) the Kansas • Managers: - St. Loids is on_ the naturalroute from Now' York to rtha Mountains and San •I'randisch!' ' t ' the Metropolis, of the mighty' Valley -of the-Missiemppi , r: and the extension of this rood iEtp‘ new and im 7 ,liortant'step in iheireitibighWeifitetween St. - Louis and San' Francisco. Th 6 Union 'Pacific ( Oni as 'ltilc• .noss as it can manage,;. and .we have .graye,.,doubts ; whother„it,will )1) o.,ablotp keep open a through-route amid the mid winter sitbvf and'sice of the' ofilerkNeva- Aas. through' read 'mhst ors° the warm countries of', Ilow.Mozieo . , - and - Arizonm - alotig - ‘tireAhliii,flithparal-1 lel nr.below it„, General Palmer has sur.r, . , voyed a route where snow rarely falls— , .every mile of whieh,bpons rich'mining' 'deposits. It embraces tbd 'oldest tow i lls on the Continent. The country 'demands such a road, land this . oxtotliston is, a stop .toward •It is interesting to note the progress.of tvrailway. which draws kg!. business a country ten years conceded to the tiufra-' lo and the aborigines. In April.thelKan. „ ails road earned, in gross ineorng, $217, 914,40, of which $95,291,61 were.balanced 'by expenses, leaving a net, profit of $124: 622;88: In May the,earnings were $222, ,163,46 i-tho expenses $10A;987,77i - leaAilng is:profit of $114,175,0. Two months grog-ate, $233,79 . 9,57. Therr; are few roads in our older and riper States that would net be content with as good I; result. ' But the truth is, these new countries much growth in them. We have' but to touch our Wes4ern preilleslind bills With the iron wand, and cities spring up ;• towns cluster along the streams and' highways, and broad plains 'blossom with wheat, corn and barley; schoolhouses end .churches take the place'of the. block-house and the 'fort, and the great rivers are disturbed by "steam and water. wheel. So our Civiliza tion has Marched dVer the prairies, is ad vancing over the plains, and in a few months wp shall have tho vast treasures of Colorado and the gold contribution, The President, in'his last. Inaugural; - pointed to_those hills as the . ~s trong box," whose 'treasures would pay the• National debt. This railroad is the key to open it. We therefore, look '.vi lit pleasure main- this fort of private citizens to carry another road to tae Paeite. We must enable tho Northern , and Southern and Middle States respectively to reach the furthest West by the most convenient way. We look upon Elie State of Kansas with an interest not far-removed- from-affection, or tears and blood and agony, now marches to the dignitylind grandeur of an empiro, l and - iVeirdesarv;.'!s' the Proud, fond name of "UM illassachusetts of the AVIA. " - to this road site owes Much of hor prosperity ; and, now, thal its owners propoSe to carry it to Denver • and Wed the Rocky. Moun- 'tains to the Mississippi Vulioy, we , hail them us men !loing ,groat National service and earnestly Lope they will receive from our peoplo, protnpt.and earnest support. The loan they off& is certainly a_good one. It yields high interest in gold, has many years to run, is !tenured by - lame grants of land and re, piohtable way, and is indorsed by "Imon whose word givas . it-the force of - arrirrefiagible guar- antoe.=N: Y. Tribune. Itf 1 seeltfine(iiis Vein Omaha hai l a poorhouse which will prob ably be tilled aeon. Tiihothy i drown in Kentucky _seven feat four high. Mr. 111.Zi.0, of Philadelphia, drives the finest team at Cape May. '• Swedish railroad brakemen are taught the nommen ts surgery. A. French man (if Columbils;bhio, wish— es priiteetion against. witches. In tin Illin ns eernoiry is n tombston bearing" the sj.. pie epitaph, 'gone up." $2500 worth of strawberries Were raised on a ..two-acre field-by a Bostonian this Season. . The New• Bedford (Moss.) papers are praising a lad:y who appeared at church in a calico dress. -A lady in Non/ • Orleans is said to be training Mir-self' fur an editor." , %Ye, nro opposed to the '4'. There is a German in Richmond who drunk fifty glasses of beer before dinner time on n tvitt:zn day. An Engl4h pap r advertises for sale a pow which "coraintiads a view dr'nearly the whole congregation." Olive Logan.is• said to be the best swimmer at Long Brunch. Miss Recd has tile honor nt.A.llitiftio City. ' • The Methodist Church of Tecnmseb, Mich., has expelled a member f o r bolting on the Presidentiateleetions. • A man named Towers is in' ihe Brook. lyn jell-for punching his father-in-law in the ribs with hair of shears, he , leading man of a Wisconsin then . . theatre was'discovered changing_ hie quit by thqunexpeated'rise of the drop curtain There% ad 'edi6r in New Jersey, Who in addition to pis editoriallaborit; runs it' hank,: an insurance office and trgrtived yard. , : One grain of wheat phtntedin the Bole& Valley, Idaho, has produced ono hundred and twenty stalks, with thirty grains on each. ;.., , A fortune teller told A, , -young man in ' LaWrenco 7couety - that - her- wouhi find: a fortune, buried in n Certain spot. • Ho is -digging for ft.- • - : • A - man, in Ciamecticut, sevonty-oiglit years of ago hnd infirm, has road the Bible through'seventy fOtir limos since his can= •finomeet to the house. ' • • -^ • ' 'Sheridan toOlc Wino' ith , the s i ßoliemi-, ansT'at the Long' Branch Ball, and - told Ahem 'that one of his porthers'Wds• • pretty as alacrod pigeon. • , , A very boisterous - negro wail arrestod•in idi:Louis on. Saturday., Ho gavo.his,tlani.o. as 'Stonewall JrcksOn, and Seiffl, be, "000.'t care who'know '• , • , •. The,c/opo•COdßazotto, says a rnattesl 7 ,., ding:at 'ltaistonitills,' •Barnstablo; ' has three ithis,--three herSes, :throb eniis ' 'three 'calves,' three hogh,4threp cats,' and three ,broods'af chicken B. • , . f I 1.. t t Conn'entleht railroad etiridiiater wait wi th , his train for it, thee to awl m seines :the:Naugatuck 'river thci other 'day,i the bridge , having been swept away by a flood. ,Trti I v nee? mmodatien tram. • . • .. • (~ A citizeaiof Cmcirmati, ,while on a i v:jai t, to Melina fesontly i, Wrote borne theit it was 'ne'eredli, &the' peonlo that they Wore ton{'- pointer es•ti'class; Since theit'• iVutorwile ao !goottiind their whielryito cat ih, IllinOidndonted Enid iteisied-one of a brood et young'rnts , whinh'shetaught, killingell,'tbo,root.,.iiho ;bad a litter •of ,kittons at the timo,,l,v,ttli, which tho youth,- :fat rodont. established the t!lost friendly , " • ' " "" ' • . The.,Umpreiis tougenio isiproparing for ter:journey In the East.- She will'remitin 'tihent jwislYt) days"in ''C'enstentincii4O;;Th, the' midst-nflh'e 'fetes' tete' , eilobrAted to , her, hondr, both in , the ,CapitaL and on /then .banks oc,tho.Bosphoreus., • .••':;• ;. • Swedontiorgian'•hamed 'Parker' is ate, treating. BOUM bOti,oo in•TOronto. ,bytho" ielationottia,curiouspirttnal,mrporiences„ He ,deoloroslhat ho Was., taken up into Heaves`,' which' tri'diViddd , the oarthP 'The' frigid is'neoillektity Unitarians, Whomear , ilonslakina dd,thotr • honk.. ,tifsers'.skins-on ,thelt ! .bod,fcs f , and., boars' , stins,,on foci, and.,rido in Ohermtinf ice &On horaes, yiithdo j Ap4 ;# lO; ..J 1, • t ' ..CirntgrperDt tn e g ."g-Sarg .g*.a' ,rn'o,..-^"."ATigiliig g '— g 0.' 4 r gi..,Avgi fqhlPfFlt I 1"-lt,,P1S01-7' ij g° I§ :vgF 1 , ~:,7 ,1 rr i 1 li I ..gli */ • .4 0.03, • .. . , . : • . ; ' r i l t .i . i , . . • • . . . . . i • i..i- : i I i : . .. enw-- 'l'd; "., ~" = E - kif-Mf....p,, , V.VihgET, I ' Reck ' 1. E I n.,Bue F W.MI Einn"g . ccr.a.rarco&''.'-tcor.twwa "cir 31limPer'l• t,,-. ' f : tV0.V.E . 154r, , Wherry' =I I :7= ^-Y2t•EV..,i Vißt - . 2, ctia26:& T .V?_&97, - M I • #ine Smith ; ' jleeltei. - - n; I Lyno. ' ^l,- .C.Z..1..--1.00.0t I Sterrett e .L,nt 1 Allison. ca cy; ' - i. 'n.'oerM *hull.' §' Wetza cot.‘l2-0.1. .336sier. H , doodyear. Vogleeorlg. • • fee "Jobb. ! 1 " „tj o ! : Mb. wwl Paul ' oI .1 i ••• • • • • ...... .. I 111111er. HI! 11 1 • 0.:„1 Cornman. 1.1 4 . la.+'eo we_ .O+"- I M ce°mr"°n • Campbell, .c.x.c; en co I E ME rmmmtlllmt, gleiFi.; o .7:t s st.' 4 : : *l Rhoads V. I •-• coa Conner, °ger ' mct umb erger ILehman. yyl ~z i i:w c.~waw~i? m~Z"do~aoom - Trotel boaid is six dollars a duy at tho White llountalus. The ! , value received" fo'r this :ttnount is g iven by a correspond ent of the Hartford Courier - as follows: , •Leath6ry meat, soggy potatoes, heavy bread, rancid butter, hay tea, rye coffee and damp beds." The society for the prevention oferuelty to animals recently compelled some work men, erecting a building • in Now - York to take down part of the aide wall, and - the' whole front, in order' to' release a 'cat, Which had crawled into the hallow iron work, and been - eniornbutl. • Tho Louisville Doprior Journal, coin mending the .prinCiple haVing,tbe.lame Thanksgiving Day for all the States. ea 'lc: _ . "."We are a nation, and we should recog , nine and practice our : nationality." Atli; encouraging to-hear from asouthern DOM.' ocratic paper that we are 11 nation and not a confedemey di sovereign States. • - . , A yaert Centidieri , girl who ran awKr. front home and 'whet to Detroit, hiettoon arrested. bd. vagrancy. 'When - a - Mired her liberty in case she - Would go back home, she showed her good taste by the following reply: ' , Not any, MiAar ; Ilikethetitatei in prison better then en natin at libcrtl. I'll take-io s elitcriopn Col. Gifford, a farmer living near Gale, burg, Mich., who commanded a New York regiment during the late war, keeps his old war-horse, Workirm With his mate on the farm. This horse lufF &en . in thiity-soven battles coming out of than all without a scratch, .whtle the Colonel was knocked off from him twice, An apple tree in Pjttsfleld, Mass., has formed the curious linbit of produc.ng three sets of blossoms the same season. The Second ..s.a is now opening, while fruit from dm first - , set-is nearly mature. The third set generally appears in September.. Two Now York ladles, stopped their carriage on a crossing... 00 wont into a store and the other remained in the Ord; age. • Two gentlemen wishing,to gross the street ordered the coachman to.moyo on The lady in the caeriago fold. im not to stir. On this ono of the gentleinenCiphned the coach door, and with his boots and spurs stepped thrvgli the carriage. Ho was followed by his companion, to the ex trhme discomposure of the lady without. To complete the jest, it party of sailors owning up and relishing the joke scram bled through the carriage.. Washington Correspondence. Washington, D.C: August; 9, 1869. Tennesseo it, seems has gone Conserva tive Republican and elected Senter for Gtiveinor by 20,000 to 30,000 majority with a majority in the legislature, &-c., la Virginia., . , Err Wm. Slaymakor, formerly of Alex andria, but now a resident of Huntsville. Ala, tolls me that cotton lands ,can be had in Mississippi, lying on the river, that will produce on an average 3.4ths bale to the acre, it from $5 to $lO an acre,. He, estimates SBOQ sufficient Working capital for over] ten acres worked in, cotton, ex clusive of mules and implements It will pay the one laboror's wages for cultivating and $00 • to pay fox-the average cost of the land; and for the seed. Each laborer has a patch of groUrid alloted hint to cultivate 'forbisoWn ; and the expense of bailing and hauling is paid out of the sur plus seed of tho crop- At this calculation after adding a fair allowance for the pur chaso of implements and one mule or a horse to , every ten same,' n singdo,soaton 'may, pay two or three hundred per canton ' the whole outlay. ,TllO climate' was, not, objectionable. Hp stained to, ho candid. and caroful inbrs,statoments ; and ho had re) possible 'interests to' bo affected by tbom `nom was, fiscfirchy of labotTis.l39VPY'- er., The negroos, ho said wain disappear ,ing with astonishing rapidity, and infanti cide, by bothvdiraot murder, and murder' oils exposure, WAS a.common der to avoid the expense' of raising' chip' dren,e.hesidav which nreinbloous .intor= course-traria° general , : thatlfdoundity,lvas , very much diminished ; so that no labor ers wero coming up to form a supply for the future. The Chinese immigration was l'dfficed,,ferWarduto,,ong Degrols,merhaps a littlp,too darltly,colorekbere.by the ings , of,fdr,gffilyrritiker,,a;Southern,m an „ Chq,4tlt, n p nital., sehuotatinfest,hold,bare , all last lwe,ffic, ,wes, en. affair: really, worth 'chronicling. atm Park whormthe &say'. ' ties were:enjoyed,•htflo .bonutiful• grove, a. , ,bou Vii„ mile beyond the npr thern part oft he pity a most attractive spot in itself. To the , fnaturalattractions,,aro, added, buildingV via1 1&t . '90 3 ., 1 0i0 4 4 A,Q:i in I:4lB4.Parts., af the Br,oundl Piur4ufing 0, ihaol , riouQ so d a', enterlainments„aboupdad. l Botli sexes,ontor n tho lists for the prince and tionors. fer the ,hest„ shooting Leach ..sea competing by itself, and the best, omench, Bat,. besides rocciVing the first prtacris,al-• ho popintigeil, Bovorcign,,, and dropened with mush citramony. . and jubilation.— Banda and vocal artists furnish,. delightful, music;, a dancing pavillion Is kept pretty occupied,; showmen aro Cal the ground, 'to tu'ru.rinnhonest pilau in Old,COun- , try style. .1 cannot stop to describe. Re ifieliliments are of course to be had, served on any part, of the grove. • ,Soventh street; loading to•tho fie himg with ba,nners,-.Wdepths, inscriptions, &c,Von every etoro and house, for / may sail mile and a half, commencing,• with a chicAd'amyre ofrin arch•striding t the street At-Its intbreobtion 'With' Pen hit, 'll.Ventio. ,By night the arch was lightcd with gan:Betleen its ,painted deviseo, its 11- t Comfort. 4. !.,t:2l.."Cavenaugh. I g. o.hearef IPeffer. MI 4.2. I Fi len rY ~~x~~ I 7iclly luinination flags and strcaniers,it was lit erally a triumphal arch as 'a piece - of work. , At night such Waa the attendance at-the Park in quantity AO quality that thn pression *as made upon the observer that the whole town via. poured out therepro miscously. Thursday afternoon Mayor, and Mrs. Bowen,. and Miss. Nikes - , Mrs. Bowen's sister, .a ccepted_ an Invitation to -look HI upon' the festiVal. . The Mayor tried his hand at . rifle practices, getting in' the-bull's eye Mice in, three, shots ; tried. onu.of the bowling alleys, and howled.off theelley .twice in three times, without hit ting a pin, the 'ltidies e --who also •participa ted In this genie—heating him. They par took_of refreshments, had a little exchange -- of see . tiiiients, and loft to return in the eve ning, to witness -the illuminath3ni ' Some' 61 the Aldernien 'and Common` Council men did similar honor to an invitation oh various days. . . • The weather, save`one sh6rt shoWerda4 vored the-feast; throughOuSto Its close on Friday night. Some of the Temperance ,advocates have been inveighing the Seheu'zonfest promotive of drinking;. Perhaps it is.. Certainly it•is a promotive of hilarity and digestion. On which side the balance ~r good or harm lies, the well-meaning grCwlers do not bring sufficient breadth of view to their aid to determine. The Board of Visitors of WesV - Point Military Academy, say in their report, just received here, that-the institution is behind the-times ; that itahould be adviin ced to the position of schools. of the nature of those in Europe, and • that it should be enlarged, and more pupils admitted. • Chni'r Delano has directed that Super visors change Districts from time to time. Internal BevenueAdministra, tion is driving business, Defrauders era al. most daily brotight te light, . and to grief. The.Capitol' poliCe,•by diredtion of Gen. Michler, Sup't of Public Buildings:order ed Meeting:of the Spiritualists off from 'the :Mist-`front Capitol steps, last Sunday afternoon, where they were eccustomed.to to, assemble weekly sumo the.warm weatti °rapine& Staining the marble with'to ,bacco juice was the reason assigned:: The Young Mena Christian Association gave en ,appropriate entertainment to Big. utilize the opening of their gymnasium la their' magnificent new Wednesday night The room is small; but complete, lyfitted out. . . . • This association are holding regular out door religious meetings, on Sunday after noons and certain week-day, evenings and the Temperance follis temperance meetings and obtuined large and attentive audien ces. Some of.the most deteraiined total abstinence men have just found the nucle us of a new temperance body ; : called the National Temperance Society. Oper-air meetings Will be p preminent instrument with ;them. The Seta eclipie, on Saturday, was waited for 'and looked for hero with very general interest; A common question a mong uequaintances; through - all. the 'pre ceding hours of the, eventful day. was, " whore aro you -going,to see theeeliPse " A strancer might easily hive fancied that. he had fallen into a communityof nothing, but estronomera. ° Lk 'Used limit , of 6:02 and 28 seconds 'arrived, all the accessible Ant roofs were - mounted, and smoked glaiseVcoloree7glasses.' and opera glasses were elo'veated. The tories-, Arial,speotaole.was!inore than' 0ef64,1il though . the weather did •the iicst 46 . 0 ,010' to Make the latter a ditp,c4B.',.. • Dr. Mary E. Walker delivered. an, able and well received temperance address r ot the eunday:ev,enlnemeattiig Oows 'thitionet Totat Abstinenco Society. Commtinleated. . • . ' I• • • • ItigCli.ol.lll4ll7RO,'AUg.l);; v/ 1869. To Oo Eilitors'or.CarlialseßZßALD: GiNT,LBURN;—A Republican ra tine"- tion , meeting 'Wits hold in` this'plaCe ,• od Saturday evening last., in jrce l oiclinf f gal), The %Hail' Wafi l tillia'tttith dirtiest Itcpublf• antis; ihe,te'eet!ng,tinging' beeti..„ . organintid ; hyithe Capt. A -no.. A. Swartz as- Z'tpsidentit and w Vtcw'rileer m ' Ident'e tin& SereietarlA. bad ,stAied ,that th o object ..ot the meeting. was to ratify the ilonlinaticifie erOcecJoitry, W. G Pr.Y.a o 4.J.tiggA 4erlrY. and to. orm A.UniOn between thetwo:Ward' , 'clubs, W. F. f3adlori , et yohr,lpirede;a wati introdtieed,',WAW,,Vai ,Illiamed,.tei very grant; interest , ihroughaiit.,hiwabla ifnd curneettaddiese. 'He *us folkiwedliy: lien. James .M, Wealtiny,..Cleputy Seco-, tut q: Of the Commonwealth, in, an a ble and: - eloquent speech, which attemided :peints'"Ant' ' 40t.ncion „ toe kr, b'tten ßrandt,wds.tliewchosen Per, Mahent .Vresideitor.%tio I ojiit: t4o: •eitinpaign„, r • e ' l l'4o meeting . O q n adjourned. Pit! three °hears fel' GietrY,and • ,sin4 three' cheerslor the , , "The meethig.proVed - a most au,piplons opening for the pit! may exiie4t ma active campaign on the -port- of the Mechanicsburg Itopublicani. Truly. _Your's,. Mirunraeture. 1 '.,i, i After ,00mo oppositns; some Hertford. parents recently consented to the * marriage of their daughter 'youth whose pketensionssth,o4bad. NYorabk.l-rfigard",; od. ,The ';cerombuy -was all . arrangedb , geestsMatismbledv , and the minister About to contiteenoOMien tlMpoxcenakithnhenced 'shpt nothing e tiro WAD nocessarY, ai bikhad, married the girl , throe wooks:agov The re sult Wisfi.Pqfi,qa?'oMlr,gltirsci•-41414§31 ME I CM El i crl. lii o) co BM „ . . ness , and in the number ofileatil plour Own ity,"tiiiiioOeii :waeedina 'means by which the thouilitleas.eciad be ' led to' wait unt 4 il fruit fully riptuTl. ie . 'Offered for!'aistiit'. 4 '. !J! ;-- ', IS , IAGNLTIOENT POTATOZB:—Are tad.; • Lhe plikuinro , ' on ildtaidayrof - looking at a e;Plenald lokof tvaily tioaa" potittata,, ^') ()apt. T.,,Zog: or_ tkiLipliieo... Zug'planted ono pOond : cf aeed—al; , potatoes eu!,,lnto, boa ,kunclrei:l, small , ,—on &piece ,of, ground s 18i 5. feet.. alme, yield was three bushels, short abOut • • peak. , &Idiots `ivelibeCutii.! tutielead) • a q puuOds: lergeis weighed' tiro poundi . l9,4 , ' an:-''. iwentp.two; thirty-rani , poulia; Ehild ahtqf 004d4h 'bekiNlitet"C:' ORIAlit. I atta,ffthanta the ; :28111, the borough of parliale„: : it' gold llodlilace - With Coral netting. A. liberal reward will , be paid the . finder on',lgaving li.at. - tite Man- LIU MU C I ANAULTY.7•43II Wednesday_morn inileoCa`yeilag lad 'named Swlea.ai, was kicked IC110113(3 oil the head, IR the, stable of 1i . ft:.(3130 ;Wetzel. .. Although ao 'reed ved en.agly,and 'painful ,wound, it is not 'a :FlNE Ai 4 iAts::=LWearolildebted our friond ,EDWARD. W. Wpaxxot,..oF Di4insoa;toinashliclor a bag of most oar cellent apples:: They were :11)n, mellow , ;. and luscious', and soon'Were matte to dis appear. For this seasonable prosont:Mr. W. - bas'the'thanks ot all the hands in the.; oiBe . o,'4"ith'tho 'wish that ho may again re".. p&it the -offenee.--: - EZZO SUNDAY EVSNINGB' PaoGßAmble.-4, The programme of inutile, under the di rection of:Prof. P. LIBLD, for Re treat arid Dress Parade on'Sunday evening next will be as folToWs 1 Airs from II puritani. 2 OVerture frOni, Le Cheval do' Bronze 8 Con Cort Overture. • 4 Cape May ,Polka. , AND PifflliAL:;—A, Fair and Festival will be held at Mt. Holly Springs for the benefit of the Methodist Episcopal . Church of-that place.- It will begin on Wednesday the 18th inst. An extra train cireariwill be run from Carlisle on •Thiars day evening the 19th inst., to aceorarnpdate those of our eitizena who wish to - patronize the Festival. ! lEME .LECTURB.—A Green Mountain girl,. who has from early childhood, been depen dent upon her exertions , for a support and equcation, will deliver a lecture in the Court House, on•Mondav, August 16th. Subject—" Nature." As'far as this lecture has been brought before •the public it has been highly' appreciated. .Our citizens should avail themselves of this opportunity of hearing this very popular lactura. La dies aro particularly invited to attend. ME HARVEST • Homp.--The 'public is respectfully invited to attend the annual nerve'St Home, under the auspices.'of the Dickinson . Church, to be held in JOHNSON MOOR'S grove'one-fourth mile West of the Stone Tavern, on Thursday, August 19th. Prof. J. A. McKEVin4.9 will be presedt find enhver. the occasion .with a selection of his choice music. Dinner tieb.ets'6o.nts. MEM DESTUCTIVE rawE• IM CHAirBERS DURG,—On Snbbnth morning lasts-about I o'clock, fife was discovered, in the exten sive cabinet-Ware mannfactory of Mr. SI/CRICR, on King Street. The Building was frame and coVeted_with_the-old----- _Washabaugh brew house„ which is con structed of stone, with shingle ,roofing. The combustible nature of the building and its contents caused a raid spread of 'the fire. The roofing of the' new biew house naught, aid , serirab - .valuable resi-• denees adjacent were scorching from the intense heat, but by the united ofrorts'of the firemen, the fire was connfled to the manufactiiry. The Opinion says that the cause of the fire ie firin . ystery--supposed by some to have otiginatedlrOm'thefire-piscsi. Ober° it is customary to boat glue, and by others, it was 'the work of anlincendiary. Mr. Stuukit's loss is about $5,000, without the building—the machinery, dm., being 'of the most imProved kind. The maehi: • neri was.,cavored byi_an,inaurance-0r52,,...• 000, the building $BOO, and there Was a. Small 'mum nee on lumber. . • =EI LeonaEs.—On the Doctrines and Philosophy of the Nnw Jeruselein Church including a b . rief notice of the life, and writings of Swedenborg—the distinguish ed personage through whom thorn doe triueet and ttatlibliosophy have been giv en to the world,. are this week being deliv ered at the Court Aoinic, iu this"place, by the Roy. Dr. lierrihatn i Minister of that These themes and the way, they are hail died are .to many very. curious ; and to; a few interesting.' • ' • Two lectures have already been deliver - ed, one on Tuesday, and the other on Wed•- netday evenings, last. The third of the coarse, will be delived ed,this evening, ( attlie'court House, ), at. a quarter before eight o'clOok. A: lecture mayalso be expected on Friday and Sat; tarday evenings, and on Sunday next ail/ o'clock, P. 34. and the o voning at 7•1 o'- clock. The subject of this evening was in' the main " The right way of understand ing the first Chapters of:. Genesis, con cerning the Creation, the fall ormai , and the flood." • - SEATa ` Fltuge -- . • I== HINTS FROM A POSTMASTER.- When you call at the office for yotir and the postmaster bands it out, ask him it that is , all. if you eakfor mail and he tells you there is none; tell 'him there ought _td be; then go.homo and send the,rest of the family , to ask. at different ',tittles throne! the day. Don't bring your mail - ttie office until the'mail closes, then Came the postmaster for not unlocking the mail - bag and putting your letter in. Whon ~Vou want a 'stamp on year letter,. toll the post- Master to put it on; if he don't it,. you lick him. in case yolk put the stalriP on yourself, soak 'it in 'your nouth long, enough to remove the _mucilage,. , it will tbarkatlckAill UAL ilry. Ito postmaster to credit 'you for star*, and.if .:hefluts-apy accommodation about bins at all, ife do it. - you be t ive Aber, Standend driinsion lt uhtil•the,postmasterlianda it makes him 'feel good, espeoially if ho is, vatting on s o meone *Asti. • .ONRIPH 'the , slimmer' itiine ono of the grostbet nbiphythe 'authorities have to contend tigel4‘lo.,tiic!;diCeri.Nit, fs tco hdvioo dnd learned ' ; e~labation off' tll'6 effects of. a.toolicarty meal oiimeiim. fri4i are l . c'oncerned;' they their, _ _ .power to remedy the evil, but farther than: iioqb aillotO • oi the unvitnrjr It hid tiitilllf,OtteVal'! l 4.44lerli t 160 fP0s• , andAiseasts r ,'of thatebutltater FM'? ihein usuta;4'ielenee the'yeiki:P'DUilifg : the lAA' the businfskini , untirie Irgit has been ear-. tied on very exteneili, and no ononeed.'i be tur - prised if thamip,4 kaerease iuslek-