Carlisle herald. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1845-1881, March 17, 1870, Image 2

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    HARRISBURG LETTER
. Ilinnronuno, March•ls,
Llitt-weeklho-Tffasury invOtigatin.,
businOss culminated, The Wusal
General Irwin to . be sworn anclnprnitted:
before the committee -came.* to tbq :
. knowledgo of the Senate ratlaor 11;1'0=414
• in. debate. Mr. Colwell then offered a
_resolution discharging the committee
front the further consideration of the
' , lit:legion. This was voted down vigor:: -. 1
eddy, only six Senators voting_aye...,9, , ,
rtho
o — Pliviiadd
Committpo, reported the AptiOlolf GIPI I I
• Oral Irwin formally, together 'with a,
resolution 'requiring the Speaker to issue
• his Waiiritnt to'theat : Gentiral Yrwitl; `arid
.• bring him to the bar of -the Senate; "to
. 7be,6uhjectto suth further orders as the'
:Senate ,may make . in the premises,"
This.tesolution"rasr-passed, and iti obe
. dienee it. Speaker Stinson -issued his
warrant, rich in whoroases and details of
causes, commanding Sergeant-at-Arms
`ilainbot:o'lning the recalci tract witness to
' the bar of the Senate. Every one was eager
for the scene that would attend
.the
execution of the warrant, but
for idle egriosity, the power that
' 'can creato can also On Friday
morning kr. Mumma, moved to recon
sider the, action of the previous day.
This gave rise to a debate,: which (level-,
Oped the fact that'many Senators were.
in doubtas to their power to use such
, process in such. cases, and finally the
, motion to reconsider prevailed by a vote
sof 1 0. to 1 0 . Xmas - hole question with
then postponed. ' • • '
It is scarcely necosary to say that-this is
the'ealneall - this:noisoattd bother. It is
'unfortunate that Gen. Irwin should- bade.
declined to appear after the investigation.
bad been Oommeneed both for himself and
.. othets. And after baying arrived at that
point it Would havO been infinitely:better
fol the Senate to lia•Vo'closed tiro inyestiga
'''tiOnthan to have resorted to the appliance
of fordo' to • vindicate its aintherity, and
then baCk doWn- from that, All aron nd
it luts been an - mitortuitafb set up, but it
is a relief to know that 'the end has been .
reached. Thd coritmittee • have worked
earnestly at the natter, t and dOvoied
much time and patience '4,6 the work.
They have acedmpliShed nothing, and it
was manifest from the first they could
Accomplish nothing in that direction.
It was a penal offence already for a
Treasurer to receive money for the Use
of the Treasury funds. Nt? Treasurer,
who might be called, would crimlnate'l
liiinsclf by atbnitting thaUchad violated
the law. This was patent from the-first,
d is establtslratrifilwe itive
some 'action soon that will place the
-fonds in such a position that they can
not be used, or is this possible? The
consideration of this proposition is wort"
, .
' many investigations. . .
The House not having a Treasuryju
veStigation on hand, though it raised a
committee for ttuit purpose, is hammer-,
ingthrough local bills vigorously. An
•act was passed last week preventing the
, _erection of
. public .buildings, or others,
• on - Independence Sqnare, in PhilaieTpiiiiir. -
For this the House deserves great spreise .
There was a tremendous pressure from
' some quarters iu favor of covering that
venerated , spot with the new public •
buildings that Philadelphia 'finds neces
sary to erect for her courts and public
t offices:- This would have been not only
desecration, but almost theft. ' Phila
delphia has no exclusiVe claim to Inde
pendence Square. - It is the obliamon
property Of the' nation. On account of
_ • the memories_connectedith.-it-it , should
'remain' forever free from local use or •
ownership.' •
- TIM committee appeinted to inventc
,gate the charges of corruption in connec
tion with the Metropolitan' Police bill,
bas•been discharged, on their ownire
, quest, for - the reason that it 'was impos
sible ,• for them to •get a meeting, • This
committee was ordered in the excitement
over the veto of the bill, and-when 'Gov
ernor Geary was charged with having
~..?• -' - received nil sorts Of fabulous sums for
vetoing it. It is remarkable that •the
gentlemen who knew so much. about
this corruption business at the time have
not been able to make some disclosures.
If any rational person ever did , believe
the' absurdities Set afloat the day the
- veto' was - delivered, this action of the
committee would clear up the case. But
•• as no one ever - believed that story, the
discharge, of 'the 'committee can .do no
more good' than its appointment did.
The bill for payment of damages to
the people of the border counties for
. losses sustained during the war, has been
' ,reported from the committee ? , with some
% -- . --- ilimorfailt - amendinents. The amended
...• _bill provides for the issuing. of cortill
• • cates of indebtedness in payment of the
..- • olainis, Which are to bear five per cent
. • intoi est, and the revenues of the counties
" of York,•OurobeAtinckAdams, Franklin,
. Perry, Bedford, and _Fulton, tihe, , to lie,
, . appropriated to the payment of the cm ,
' tificates. The bill will be taken Up and
disposed of during this week. •
' Mr, Adairo from pollens() Committee
terinvestigate the charges of corruption
_in connection with the election of State
Treasurer, reported that haviiig discov 7
_cred, -the- -financial -committee- of' -- tho
• Senate engaged
,On the same matter.
it was unneecessay that the House
Commiiteo shank thniu ' its • la=
rm
hors. ' The repot also states , that
no' vidence of-chertuption :in connection
With'' the Trelisuretaii election cot ld - be'
• 'diScovered..„The COMmitteo ' was 'tbs
. • ' ' Charged: 1 A new Metropolitan Police
' Bill his patled a second reading in the
Senate; 'allotting quite an elaborate speech
froni Senator IltinlizeV, and a very; Oar
acteristic one-from -Mr: 'l;ce,vrie. Tho bill
- 7 will certainly passtho Sonato. • Among
the prominent • visitors' to the - Capitol
•'during•the • last week, arc lion. A. 11.
~ -11cClive,-How I. 13. •Gare, and J.' Rus
, yv selhyoung.. , ltis doubtful whether the
~ lawmakers will disperse beforUthe mid-
. . .
An out 14eyr,Yeyk 'merchant
placed a largo oyster basket full of
,silve r
coins in his show case,' eve' r which. vas
placed
jalaced the inscription; "specie P"ayinenti:
resumed:" . 13eing'afrald tlie.tnaptation
'would betoo ' innell for tlui.eppidity . of. ,
Osiers ,. by, `lie stationed oil the step a
7n:iT iri O4a,vof. Lcar
Ang'a into*ot to gtiard the Sn i vel.: It is'
doubtful which exelted theinCigillittezitfen
a'Soldier r oi the silver:
'briliforniri soerns to havo, more than her
sham of„, insriutty.., P 4 ring, !riot yorir
sho had .I,M) lunatics .under trOatOlont i
or one for every 'odo 'Of 'the. inhabitahts•
'ilie'siuldi*tois- with,
Which . PooPlO brivo'friadd
reauced'to poverty
tie :Citizen's of -Cincinnati aio pFppar.
frig for tlio German, iiileligepfet,, ,to by
';iutiitu or. , log
costinq poo p4o,
ocep,sopi ,and Niill,bol49.
bi*O . fpei,fwgAti9dPßAY)*giq l(3l l94i .
stage,
A BEETOIE OF OLIVE LOOAN.
From Fbrn;yyjyfis,,rhiladclikfa, Pa.'
4
:X., in the slnuner of 183 D: ,Her fathor,H
',Cornel,ins A) , lto an W'' ... ele . hreted
distinguisheefOr his talent :in
2comedy ,, , eagaggnent.
IlielO'iiilll6lline. After a few days she
was taken from that place and never
visited it again, until to fulfil a lecture ;
engagement in 1868, under the , auspices
of the Young Men's Christian Associa-
She says that she cannot remember,
When she k vas net familiar with that
curious ` place,' dVellind the Scenes."
She inusthavelmen" dirtied there when .
she was a baby, ttl len' clothes, as she
cannot remember when the Musty stage
trappings and pasteboard goblets, the
wooden thrones , 'and canvas tombs were
unfamiliar. 'She first appealed on the
stage, very much against her will, when
only four or five years old. Her child 7 '
hood debut was i in thecharacter of Cbra's
child in Pizarro, at a Cincinnati theatre,
'When her father was stage manager ;
'then as panme's child hithe play Damen
and Pythias. "Theshild had nothing to
say in these ,parts, but was nevertheless
sadly frightened when called upon to
play. 'Fancy a girl baby being fought,
over with broad Swords ,by a party of
actors 1 Although the actress who pre-_
'rented Cora gave her sweetmeats, noth
ing 'eeifid recericile the child to the stage.
Her mother tried her best to relieve the
little one of the irksome task, but it
often happened that the child who had
iheemengaged :to play the part failed to
appear. Then little Olive would be
: routed out of her sleep to go on the stage.
By and by tilMgot into speaking parts;
but the whole 'subject was always dis
tasteful to her; and , to this day she
never can Scep. child go upon the stage
ithot(teperiencing, a throb of sympa
thetic Pity.
Her father bad a large family—six,
`girls and two boys—and` strove manfUlly
to fit them all for the battle cnlife ; to
that end Clive was sent to the Wesleyan
Female Seminary, and for some time
enjoyed all the 'advantages of flirt inati
tution. Soon her father died,
.and the
family was scattered. All of the girls,
ciriven_by_nedssitY,- one by one, took to
the stage. Of the boys, one became a
doctor; the other a lawyer. Thus, at
the age of fourteen, we find Olive Logan
supporting herself by 'playing uPon the
stage at Philadelphia. After that we
find "traces Of her at the different thea
tres in the country until 1.867 i when she
She remained some 'seven years in
France, residing id Paris all that time,
but making frequent trips to London
she was the guest of various members 'of
the English nobility at different times,
including Lady Palmerston, _the Countess
Crowley, etc. In Paris her own house
Was Abe resort of numberless Shining
lights in the worlds of art, literature and
fashion, and she was in constant attend
ance on those imperiaiMestivities Which
-analie.Paris so brilliant and dazzling-to
the votarieg - Of - pleasure. . There she met
Thaekeray, who was - ono of her most
enthusiastic admireis, speaking in glow
ing terms to many of the lady's friends,
in praise of her beauty and wit.. There
the Prince Polignac, count Ostroski,
Edinund_ .About, the novelist, Michel
Chevalier, the political economist, Both
ell:eel, the artist, Greenough, the seulp
tor,. Gardonk and TambUriii; the, eele-
United operatio tenorel, Mcllenry, the'
(,capitalist,-and.otbar-distinguished;men
rallied around her—with a liberal sprink
ling of lesser lights. There the Princess
Nett:in-inch openly exprizst..,l her
mlmi
ration Of " la belle Americana" saying :
"If I. had that face, I would have the
world at my feet"--a snot that was buzzed
about the Parisian saloons. There the
Ertineroy's Chef of_ Cabinet,. the cynical
old liteequard, was softened-by her sweet
dispo-ition, and becameA7most earnest
ally. 800 Mocquard a_ i y),l.ded himself of
Miss Logan's intelleb culture and
dramatic talent for what the playwrights
call "construction," - , is naodestlY shad
owed 'forth by 'the lady herself in her
article in Harper, with the celebrated
Chef's name for a title.
MUM all the gayeties. of `istichki'life,
Miss Logan did not neglect her literary
tastes, but wrote profusely for both
French and English journals, besides
getting out two volumes,, entitled respec
tively "Photographs of Paris Life," and
" Chateau Frissac, or. .Ilome Scenes in
France," These books, were published
in London by Tinsley, and in Now York
,by the Appletons.
On her return to this country, Miss
Logan yielded to a generally. expressed
desire to see her on the stage. After a
brief starring season at Wallack'S Thea
tre, New York, sho made the round' of
the - other large.cities.
But becoming disgusted with the ob
scenity, Vulgarity, and immorality which
was constantly crowding upon the legiti-'
'mate drama, and being:satisfied that no
pure minded person could follow the
.stage.without being contaminated, she
left,, fissile trusts, forever, the prom; of
an actress, and made war upon the inde
cencies . and immoralities rsliich have'
nearly or qulto overwhelme'd the modeln
stage. , .llor attacks upon the Wide .
women - perforinatices of the last 'few
years have drawn on her head the ven
geance of. theatrical managers and per-'
formerswhe 'were intsrested in there; so
that she would' have been- driven from
the field, had; not the better claSses'of
the people 'rallied ,to her • appport, and
:wrote her verde of cheer, bidding her
God speed in her determined
_efforts.'
Clergymen and the .religiousPreskluive
nobly added their influence to that of
the' warm hearted and
. pule- minded
women of-the land, until to-day she has'
the hearty sympathy of all who love the
elevation 'of mankind. Pence, the im
mense audiences at her lectures, aiidthe
flattering , notices of the -, press,''Eler
latest and:piobably best effort 'is . "Be.
Meetl.) footlights andbehind the scenes."
It'is destined te e . sell iu unpieeedented
mu:fibers. .
: „Recant French:medical statistics, have
,deMionstrtited.two faeteverthy !the, sri
ous Aterition'of the hotter" half Or, Man-
The ilrSt is that; since Worrian have
loosened theirmorsele the ;annual mor
tality has deoreased.'lBi per cent:, The
second is that since women have leaded
,their heads With hideous' ehignene sere-,
hral ; fevers, have increased 121 per eentr
" An ave,rago hi fifty
hushels per acre, which may ,boput at
$2.50 perblieliel, aggregating $1.25; so'
that it appears that at; ode half thb'pilee, -
or one half bf• the product,': the Ipetiliut
is as ,, prolithble' cotton or
.tobacco.,:., • ;, •
A.,Bae•Francisco ludgo rtotoperod ,jus
:tip° trtth meroy by fining a starrid'eri,'
i 25, cents for oteathig hcan of , milky ;'arid
;then ',raising 420 her Iva tliol spot
.40111 AgaPittiliati , Bitiotaters. ;
-. 1 -- .AS' Id Mi NA TiOliii AY: F,A
plcur#fttiondoy is onit
atis kiiicti
- it#Minto our*tahere, - I* , l7if -- ..hya4, 1
attiele ~ I ay liiduce , 6-01 1- to try OA
;ia
realities o A - 4 object 01. be 0.04111
•Plished.„ . Once hi the kibitory . of iio
s4.hoolS qt'Alljs ,itionnt,y,94Minationsanil , ,
exhibitions were of common occutrence,
many teachers considered it a .part,' of
their duty to drill their pupils for exami-.
,nation. With a proper conception.bi
what an examination should hayebeen .
MIS - diftlia,9 was perfectly justifiable,
• but many of. the teachers 'sale eted.; ; enter l
taintng topics, from, the diffierent.gtextl
'books, and so fro quently rehomiscd them'
that they became rt.-matter of songf, Such
preparation-was verse, deoideffiy worse,
. than,rione, 'width° examinationof mils
thus prepared may ' have been , pleasing ,.
but not profitable: ' PupilS thus pro,
pared,-could not, n. i_.ur estimaticin, ac
quit themselves creditably :on examina
tion day. ' Inlorining_ an, opinion as to
the success Of-ali examination, we would
take this into consideration—the ability
of the - pupils tolearni the amount learned,,
tho.tyie occupied, and-the, thoroughness.
of the work as evinced by the answers on
examination clay. Forming an opinion
from the aboVe data, parrbt-like answers
would but' indicate a small amount of
.
work overdone. Different questions are
frequently brought, to examinations` to
be put to young America to test the, abil
ity of the rising generation., Such a
practice would be pernicious. Scholars
should not be subjected toastrictexam
illation on subjects not contained in
the- text books: The answering of pracn
twat questions' would only „indicate
thought on the part ofthe pupils, or their
ability to apply text book knowledge.
If the 'object of these examinations is, as
it should be, to find out what the pupils
and'feacher have been doing_ during ,a,
school session, the difficult questions
shotild be excluded, and only such given
iiE are warranted by the subjects stu
died. These examinations bring about .a
number of good 'MS'ultS: 1, First; a pub
_
lie examination held at, the close, of each '
session of school would be a great stimu- .
lent toward the advancement of pupils.
Examination day would be looked for
ward to by pupils with eagerness ; 'its
certain approach incite pupils to:
greater energy. • While preparing their
daily-lessons, pupils feeling that on '.ex
runivatiou day they Would be called to
'an account for what they were then -do
ing, Would be more anxious to. master
every desSon—more anxious to retain
what they learned that day. Second •
- theTWouid.cause pupils to be self reli
ant. Pupils very well know that to' pass
a creditable examination they mustdem
onstate their own .theorems, and their
own examples and memorize their own
lessons. Third ; they would test the
ability of teachers: Not only would pub
lic examinations be an incentive to eXer-
tion for scholars, but' they would induce
teachers to renewed exertions. Teach
erqtnowing that the success of nn exam
ination would be attributed to them and
their own efforts, they would double their
endeavors to have their pupils acquit
themselves creditably. Knowing, too,
that the examination -would determine,
their positions as teachers; that a failure
on examination day would lose them'
their place in the publio, l / 4 ." estimation, no
pains would be spared to succeed. A
certain proper ambition would prevade
the whole 'corps of teachers—a desire to
excel-their- colleagues. Fourth; Exam
inations would give school offiCers av oP
-portunity-to-ineasurcr-the-work—of
teacher: As the pride of an article is in
accordance with its worth, so the salary
of tonolicr aldiuld be in accordance with
his work. Regardless of the class of cep
tificates held, tea certain, extent, each
teacher should receive pay for
services rendered. Though n good cars
tificato Shows an ability to, do-a good
work, Yet if the' holder fails to do that
which he is able to do, do IA pay for
what he can do, hilt for what he does do.
Fifth ; 'they would tend to enlist the'at-.
tentiort \of patrons, school officers, direct
ors, and teachers, can do much to Make
our schools successful, but schools can
never 'be made to do their whole work,
until every boy and girl in the county of
a groper age is within them.
NEWS ITEMS, '
Salt is made near Weatherford, Texas
Texas is raising a tea crop this season
Silver coin is in domn'tid :. et the Mint
It is believed the new postage stamps
will be ready for sale by the first of April.
The Pander is what a new comic pa
per at Mobile is called. •
When . theatrical managers -mako
money they thank their stars for it.
The population of Cuba iS estimated
at 2,00;p0b.
The flow of silver from Canada has
commenced.
Colorado coal can be used for smelting
purposes. ' •
lton, lie., annually cuts 400 cords of
beach wood into shoe-pegs.
Paris is to have a gigantio gymnasium
and sWiritming school costing $600,000.
The city Of Elizabeth jvants to be the
eaPitarof Now Jersey. • ;
The' "lifting cure" for depressicni—
raLing greenbacks to par., • .
Wool Manufactures in .the • United
States are' valued at $175,000,000.
Trout raising has been successful and
profitable at TroutdalC, N. J.
Minneapolis has begun to build - its
fifth $lOO,OOO school-house.
Cider brandy is yielding to liquor
made fromswoet potatoes in New Jersey.
Pop-corn is popularized' under the
Patronage of the royal family in Ldndon.
It took four days in jail to persuade a
Hew Hampshire - ,man to_pay'hisjaxes;
At' the last cOunt, there wore 1,288;000;
000 human beings on the face of the
..,Wisowisin won:Jeri did nol vote often
enough,or
,oarly enough for fomolp su!
• . A vein otfire_.el4; , :twenty-one fbeti
thick, has been giscoverod at Now,Caddo,
Lalireneo county. 'of
A Missouri) man ' named' Amor 'still
.advertises velocipeded. It ,is . ' Love's
labor 105t..--Ev.' •;, •
' The slave trade his understoad; ill still
carried on , ttlonw 'the coast or Zatizibter,
'The Ifeehaides.'''baulc,' of Bt.' LOWS,
resumed specie palinerds yeStorday. It
has about'll'so,ooo, eireUlation.
' The'sea and a half miles dpep
in some plaCes• In Others ,no bottom eau.
lie roaalied. " . . •
If ietfOrpostiO is 'reduced to ono cent'.
there two.sent whore theirs is ono
nent.'now. , • ~
.One firm in a Minnesota town: shipped
forty thousand rat skins. to' snatket•last.
week. , .
,- Allassaohusittslutper Pnbilelies daily
whatit calls " licsial.notes at hosrie:tind'
abroad." , ;
A passongor 'train V' us ing
(L, 1.)411111r6ad wail 'tired inin on"Friclay
night,' and' sawiraT Prol e sepwirp narrowly
osonrea being shot.
New' Orleans pickpockets send up a
host of India rup v eiliallnqiii, and
- the - c rowd gazcsileenArd - go thinuglk
its pockets. t4
The'Kentuckian tikr‘hOltliinks ho 14,0
discovered on htgifairn richest sit
"Olt mine in the
elusions more promising than his prem
ises. ---."
Living is Obeap t plerra, Lopniß yrke
oailsybstit jut i)itizinasAii throb oeiitOti,
day s _
-. l3lo atc!:l4o, 9 iPPrats pay,oighteents
a day for board. - -
Tapprs, kOop.
statidlugi,,:atorob-.
typpd,, in9„pago to !kilt aboaf two'
a rook thoFq,, 44; ,that ! colobPatod,illu t
tP l i ni k ti P . l; :h,•, i;o: • •
iana, itLis said
fininshed a Party,,of„ congeniaLipirits
with a bviqia.4l ) YroPeqallicAl exhibition . ;
his breath taking, fire .front tho stove, and
burning 'with „.„
One of the your Astors; of,NowYork
city, wim is studying scnipture...wlth'
Tadohni, in Rome, is said ; to, display
considerable artistic 'ability, and is:men
tioned- in society as. the " "American.
Alaronis of Tinto.,
Lenclim .has, OS King streets, and ,N
Queen streets; • also". 78. Prince, .1.09
Coolie, 91' Charles, 87 1 i James, 1.51
Church, 120,Thdon, 110 Now, 90 North,
90 Sonth,, 90 East, ,I) - 9 West, 88 _WAlliam j .
if Grove, and 198,Park. .
The .Central,Paoille Railroad. Company
of lowa. aro building a road north and:
Seal' through that State, tp, connect St..
'LOMB: with. St. Paul and the system of
roads„_including thc-Northent--PaciflO—
which win centre at Duloutli, at the head
of Lake Superior. ,
. • PERSONAL,
all Polish ,g6i)tlemen.
' The divorces in . Clevelan'd last 'week
es. . .
outnumberei. the marna g.
A - church revival in New Ytwk has
broughtl2o shiners to repentance.
Parepa-RoSit is only thirtyL, one years
Of age.
A Now York rag pickettlaSo ? 000 in
Boston is agitated over the . sehenie,i.of
lighting by electricity. • :
4-Mr. Seward is said toqm looking' ten
gears younger, after his travels.
"She Stoops to Conquer" has run ono
hundred' nights in a London theatre, and
by this time she ought to have done it.
. A Juan in West Chester has been on.
tanned to a two month's imprisonment
gotealing an umbrella.
Miss Nellie Raymond, the newly elected
engrossing clerk of the Missouri Senate,
is not yet sweet sixteen. 4
- -A. drunken man who, had slipped down
thought .it, singular that water always
freezes with the slippery lido up.
Madame Vanzini, Signor Blitz'S (laugh,
ter, is singing in opera at Glasgow and
Edinburg.
Miss Hosmor has among her treasures,
a diamond necklace valued at twenty-five
thousand dollars. •
Boucieault - has been - offered - , 220;000
for au engagement of two hundred and
fifty nights in this country.
An. Trish coMpositor hunting up a miss
ing theatre advertisement paid he was
"looking for the lost play-ad."
At Mount Sterling, Mina's, Rogers,
the murderer, was on Saturday sentenced
to twenty-five years' imprisonment.
The old geutloman whose memory
carried him a long ways bac, is re
,quested-retoirri—tc-hlis—dise-oeWco,.
1 1 friends, •
An Ohio widow of 30 was obliged to go
to tifn probate office Tor a license, because
her intended was to bashful. She gave
his age at 18. , ,
A burglar was lately arrested in Chi
cago with a miidon in his pocket . . The
Times suggests that ho send'it back and
have the date changed.
TIM' "steam man," which caused such
a sensation, is stowed away at the „Indi
anapolis depot. on account of non-pay.
mod of freight-
The Ohio Tegislaehre has passed a bill
to protide "subjects" for medical stu
dents, and there is some talk of .taking
measures to supply authors and editors.,
A legislator lately wrote to his wife
at home to find out what his religeous
belief was, and she replied "he'd Letter
call if Protestant, and let it go at that."
In New Orleans 'Mrs. Dr. nary Walker
has been threatened with arrest if she
appears again on the streets in her half
Man and half woman costume.
A wealthy 'Chinese merchant of San
Francisco is now, in Chicago purchasing
goods. Ho will shortly visit Philadel
phia and New tork.. -
There: is an association of ladies 'in
Uniontown styled the Anti-slandering
Society.:. They meet Once every , Month
at the residence of ono of the members.
. ,
Ben Godley, • a negro, was ( hang at
Wanesborough, in Burke county, Geor
gia, Friday, for thO murdef :Of Adkins
Lewis. The murder was committed last
ourdinor: ' , . •
The white laborers employed 'in' the'
city oflNfebraska, Colorado, having driven
off the Chinariiii - p laboring on, tho Pacific
road, 'destroying theii . .teuts and
Miss Emma; Janes has vanquished
fifty-one'competitors for the State edue,a,
.tiooal clinic-no of California,: and boon
elected to a professorship in the T.Tnilier-,
sity of the pacific.
A Cincinnati reporter woke ( on a bride,
groom at a hotel'in' that city to, get the
particulars of his. wedding.... Ho .o_wos a
neighboring • apothecary.. fifty cents. for
court plaster... , .. • .. . • •
QoargeMoriison, alias 6, ChWagO.fach..."
alias ''Stoughton Burglor;" the noteirf
ous outlaW,• has boon sentenedd at last to.
thirtY;years solitary , conflneitiont, in the
,Ohio Peidtentiary,'itt hard Tabor, '
'Nettle Chase; dangliteriirCh lefJusilde.
Chase, is' about to publish' a` on the
theriorSOryblinVllß 'Soiibial lands, each
nue' with - lui,'Original .her
he 'lady is said, to do an,unusual-
artist.
JO)) Harnott,', a pcdler,, wad Murdered
neat; 'fiewieenwcrtli, 'XiMea6, l l ll'Adtty •
Osorning. DhOm,,nlltltely-ilil4-
Charded ' , 4e,te,Prison corivict,i, haft ~ .bebn
?arrested op, suspfofgli otl4oorid.oomplikz ,
the mrinirSi. '
Thiee h'iindred and . tibixti-sevoit '4;1604
tors ornnictldhao graduated, last week by
the' fotir mgdfoel "colleges . In Phifadel- .
phia, including foartbenbythO Woman's
'Medioal't'cill i eg'e,''aneloo' yesterday by
thrc.defferson ~; :
The ininer;'Of 'the:thee thitt several
yining p`repaihyT4 enter: Am=
henit Coll,ciee'nekt alromly:
PrOdueed'arOnitraerdli:TryiraprovorpepS,
Di the persosal4pPetiranoci Of .the
.:"'
has Prc!-
peSed
, to build; a grßd hotob aod:opera
house inqinehmath . mho,qmiaro !upon
Vrhieh thp:groat pavidson : fenOtaiti is 'to,
be erected, on; certain' . cOnditions,,', ( .'.ge
'Ostiniates tho qoAN of th,e,
6'0,000: - building
' ' •
4negi:o woman in Virginin t seventy-
One'Reard - old,ly pokltl
ho to leayn - faead - ,Twrite bpd ripe ;
t o ishOliii*eFedtii school, anklregubirly•
e v elhdaytaidheteachekl Oho 6t
al4ng veryl:welt iintil4tear elosek , i nf
theSecona iteetiVwblin"Sho"'titissintiker
lesson," - and was ignoininously kept in
daring recess, much to her chagrin and
greatlx to, her disappointrapiA at not
leg peitinitied the'reit'a
tutioig*evald.
vor, 70 ,Vit,
'HOW' IS IT?
' The .. r otuidee, : fia t , yentilating the ; ex
'Penses3.of don. 6rant's latiMinistr4ion,
This is right. • If tlio . "PECi3faent can run
the'inachini3 with less expense he should
do it. 13nt ;the Volunteer's• statements
provoke conMax:isons. 'Loolc'hrst on this
piCture
Tho,current cumonses of the White
louse for the years,•lB62 and '63; under
Mr. Lincoln, were, including the Presi
dnt's salary,, $34,550, ~chile ;Chant's for
the ; years 11 ; 370 and '71,, will reach ,the
enormou t l figure of , $132,800 an excess
Over tlie former, of $08,250, w4ich ad
increaio of $2BO a
; day l". . ; , ,• .;
e
• . Yohmtear, filth column. ,
. And then on this : .
Liveriedflunheys_wait'upon Grant,
And groom his: horses, and four Brigs
dier-Generalsi- paidlry - the - peopleTact as
his lackeys in general: The ;expenses of
the White House, .are $27,000 a year
more than they were loader. Johnson's ad-,
minietration."
- —'--Volunteer;lsOvetith column.
- Now we thinkit'pretty easy arithme
tic, that if Grant's 'administration costs
$132,800 pet• yea'rould - that sum is .$27,-
000 more. thatrAndrevv Joh neon's; .Me.
Johnson's Must have cost $105,800 per
rannum. !It is equally easy _of ,cortquita-.
tion that if;Mr. Lincohripent' but $32;-
000 per year, and. Mr. , . Johnson spent
.$lOl,BOO per year, Mr. JOhnson's expen-:
.see must have boon $73,300
,greater than
. if Mr. Johnson found
it necessary to increase $73,000 on his
predecessor; .we .can c imagine.fliat Mr.
Grant might.. be excused- for increasing
$27,000 on Mr. Johnson. But further,
iii the Volunteer items we find $30,000
for re-fitting and - furnishing the •IA lifto
House. This has no more riht to bo
placed in the expenses of the President's
'household, than • has the appropriation
for the extension of the. Capitol, or
any other appropriation for the public
buildings or grounds. Take out this
item and Gtant's expenses are $B,OOO
less than Andrew Johnson's, the Voluaa
kir' a own figures being . the authority.
•We have said sonic rather savage tkings
bout Andrew Johnson, but we never
thought of itemizing his. household ex
penses to prove that he was a bad PreSi
dent; •. We have tried' to say some-o.
thing—in—support— -of—Gem — - Grant's
administration; 2 'but wo don't think
we will be under the necessity
of going "-into the details of ..his.
expenses of living to find out whether or
not he is a statesman.. If ho administers
the affairs of government' So as to pro
mote the welfare and prosperity of. the
country, people will not question greatly,
whether or nit-he has more clerks and
secretaries than his predecessors. If his
ist4tiort-tines-nob-aecoraph:4h
tho.peoplo will condemn it, no matter .if
he dispensed with all the secretaries,
-gardeers,t butlers, cooks, an4. - VootUlUcke
about the establishment. As it, is, the
'tendency of the' Democrats to get up so
much troubleshoot the expenses of the
White House, is the-strongest evidence
that there is nothing else that they eau
convenient - 1y attack. They must be
careful, however, in future, not to make
it apparent that the expenses under
Grant are -less than they were under
Johnson. z •
The Phlladelphia Morning Post speak s
as follows . of the - bill for the •priyment of
the, damages sustained by. the .border
counties : . .• .
l,Under.the bill .as :reported by the
Committee it is proposed, instead of de
priving the State Treasury of the coveted
millions by ono bold pull, -to make annu
al sorties upon the funds for a number of
years, compelling the State to pay ann,u
al. tribute until- the full-amount shall be
realized by the speculators who have,.
bought up theinralid claims of U 161301..
dor counties, whose sturdy yeomanry.
abandoned % their lands , and chattels
to the common enemy, and who .riow
sock,, damages_ for the rebel visitation
and indemnity for the occupation of their,
lands, by. the bravo men who drove the in-
Vhders ..from their abandoned, - hearth,.
stones." , • . • : •
The statement that the clahns have
been. bought
,by, , speculators, and the
tumrt that the border people abandoned
their lauds to the common enemy; aro
both gratuitous.. _Bo far as the claims in
this county are 'concerned we 'have not
„heard.that.a , single one has - been bought
prOm, tho'claimadts, and Wedoubtifthere
is a:single bought claim in the.wholedis:
triet.. We tnow a good many clalin
ants Who would have beedWilling to sell
on, (Mite moderato terms, but have yet
to hear ida purchaser.
The people of the border, in all respects
did their'tlill duty during the war. Their
i strppert and devotion to ,the., common
cause,. was equal to that of the,people of
and, ther, section, or district.. Ale quite
true that the 'sturdy, yeomanry did, not
. .
risoln their
. naight,„.and. annihilate ,the
grey clad veterans of ILeis'4laiipy as soon'
as they crossed the , Potomac; but as an
offset to this it might be hrged that that
experiment had been tried several. times
before by largo, armies of braie and dis;
soldiers,, without any very great
success.'
. The twuddleabent abandoning
landslo - contmon - ,nrietny, when , that
enemy had demonStrated, its ability ,to
go practically' where it pleasod Jul spite
the I powei 4 iir is not'
• , „
'li;becaine'a r iteeessity''td the. Govern; M
ont,` or' titiOdits donwa f idenee,that those,
border should be'rxtrde the thek
tin the"; Operations principal
,
`arn4;' andalse that the
i•opoi G o v ern .
'lntnduring' . the, most' important (khin
tti -
'Pa in theretellion,' 4e4r time this
, was practlealdestinctiOri to every inter
'eat in Went; 'TIN wad imposed iti.nddi-•
thintcl,thalnitthena:,t4y , had , borne
equally with all' citli'er“ Oitizets •of ~ .the'
, Commonwealth,, and of tliOloyal-Statese,
They have asked the Arad' 4.cr-appropri ,
ate:money to comOnsath 'to .sbme extent
.this additional hardship , . there
'imitionalbutidect inUttetle&andigeOd `pot ,
: icy wliy , thle siiproPriation ehotdd Mot be .
'Mad!), \thoseivho oppose it have had ant=
'plc Unite to dlkaotdr . adif-ihnouie&theni:-
, ;Gitesiivbont , bodglit nridtanutti
of a faltning`emitituiilty'which had sant
its flOquotti of 'llghtltig; man into sor
ylc9, gat ,thpy, abandoned. their, Janda
nno,otilio heat armies .I'. On fhb.. planet . " ,
don't make out n caso'agaitist the
•
HPW, 'THE '7. O LOIL"`I4ADE MONEY},,
-
----Orohunt-dgivn- and capture .Teffortkon'
D tut
ais, after:life, surrender of Lee, cpat
t el: Goverriaent,"sloo opo. His irn 114
~.-,
1 .0 ent and court; charges cost $75,00
rkki,.anditimp lmAyas set'free,,arte the
song,. "we'll hang- Jeff Davis On - a sour
apple tree," was no longer dung in the
parlors of the "loll." Davis' persecu
tarCoe're *lid to try bim on the charge
of treason or on any , ,cther
,eli,arge be
iii
Vaiist - th dieCevered, that Stanton,
Ai l tjor,, l i ogan,and,silvdral other . prom
inenilT.ridicala would ,b 0 summoned by
Daviss as,iyitiMsses. ,These "loif" beast
tieShad been Davis' advisers before
~ • .
boatilities - brelth,out ; they bad all - been
1 '" 'rebels," but bac : iced out just iii time.
;."„The capttirc of,,John!.H. Surratt cost
the Government •something like $ 2 00,-
090. 'lie was innocent. of complicity in
th ssia
e assantion of Linc oln n as the child
• ,• •
inibora,'' bat, , yet ,certain Radicals had
demmaded r his 1.4100 d., They had 'our-
deVed his mother, and they wanted to
Murder liirn.' - But their hearts failed
th'ern arid aftei*good•deal of iluibblng
and wiggling, be , too was.' set at liberty.
. "But, notwithstandi4 -the Radical
bid c;diouitcls were afraid to shed the
bldod of either Davis - or:Surma, they,
Yankee' like, by arresting them, made
a good, pile Of greenbacks. Some four
hundred thousand slollars were divided
by the fifteen or tiventy ‘.' loyal thieves"
who'had been miiiiged in hunting down
thesetwo "arch rebels.' l The job paid
well, therefore. Money Making was the
_granil_object_Radicallenders had in view
during the "rebellion," and our "trooly.
loll" patriots who had arrested Davis
and Surratt, bad made their pile. Thy
W•ere satisfied, indeed gratified'With the
res Ult.. They bad accomplished their -
Odes!, and_ ,at was the most theyeared
for."— Volunteer. ~
P:l l F„eighbor, will - pardon m' for re
freshing his Memory.: The reward for
the capture of Jefferson - Davis and:John
Burratt was offered , by oneliidrew
Johnson, whose administiation Tke Voii
umteer supported with, its accustomed_
Warmth and vigor, for at limed, three
years, eleyen, months, and twenty-one
days of its existence.. Both , these some
what remarkable .scoundrelS ' were ar
rested, confined, and discharged under'
,that'adikkiilistraion, ; ,and firofficers who
were either Democrats constitutionally',
or we're bribed by office to workAn the
interests - of the born ocratic party. • Sur
ratt's mother was also executed Ir
7111rP said 4.iia: -
/r e - 9 - .11 mire* Johnson. We do n't
care to characterize any part of the per
formance. If all these parties were
guilty of the mdder, of the President
they were n't a whit worse than those
whose repeated slanders made many
weak and ignorant persons believe that
ho deserved killing, or those who from
the stump and the newspaper demanded
his assassination. If they wore innocent
of ,that charge, it will
. hardly be pre
tended that they were not piing Of en
gaging in a war that murdered many
theusands__ot.good_ men,- -for- no other
reason than that Mr. Lincoln' had been
4elected contrary to
_the wishes .of , the
Democrat .
As to the money it was also disbursed
'during the immaculate administration
of Andrew Johnson. If any' of it was
paid to any Radical it must have been
done during the illness of the Chief
Magistrate. Ii it was not paid to some--
body With the express agreement that
..the.par-ty-wlio 7 received;it-slionidriy - hili
vote and voice, bin influence and his
knavery, contribute to the overthrow of.
the 'Republican party, and - the success of
the Democracy, then it. was disposed of
very differently from the ,manner in
which all other monies and offices wore
farmed out during that,period. If there
was any money made out'of the Davis-
Surratt performance the fellows who
made it were stiffly taxed to elect Demo
cratic members, of Congress in PAW, or
to pay the expenses of Johnson's swing
ing rotind the circle, or else they had
better luck than. everybody else who
robbed the government during those
memorable years. •
TAX COLLECTORS
"We understand petitions are circulat
ing for the passage of a law to restore the
old method of collecting the state and
county in this county. Wo hope
they. will obtain but few signatures. The
present system of collecting is much7less
expensive even with itsabuses, than the
Ono sought to be established. Even with
the present very salary to 'the
Treasury, wo doubt if the whole eXponso
of collecting ainounts to throe per cent.
The collectors will consume five per cent
for their services, and then ,there will be
a handsome'salary paid to the Treasurer
in addition. If ye revive these publi
cans we will simply double at least the
expenses of collection, )and of course in
crease the chances Oflosiu,g Some of tbo .
funds,collectod,!without in any Manner
adding to the convenience, of the tax pay
ers,-or
~ h astening,, , the -collectioth - of the
,nioney.
. .
minstrpl,troups,wasoranisecl in a
l'irestdri city last, Tuesday week ; it
played, ~Wednesday night; Thursday
Morning, it was disbandsd,. and Thursday
afisrnOon tho ‘ lpador was sawing wood
; Captain Fredorieir .Laybmsh; of New.
YOrk," kasjnst entered. his clno• hundred
and fifth year., llgAervod iii the. Perdu:
Bul a r War,:N° 4lB ,4t W 4.0009, And guarded
Napoleon, St 4 Helena. , ~qati. J. Watts
do geyster gad'e an elegant breakfast in
hislioner. • „
spEciAL NaricE.
" - COYLE
,BROTH
ER5' "
• ,• ,
kie;l3 removed thou largo stoo, oti NOTIONS and
DRY GOODS tothe 'nevi etore room of the
, Odod qu4l4l:Efaito'rn.
• iroot.,Carlialm r ' '1 . ;• , •• ". t • ' 6
plpaled. to, ,oci.thoir:oil 'frl °ode 'awl'
nitliFplyTt • g.inpFillly t ,, 1, „.; • , ,
'EPISTLE TO 'THE I:
eari`bY all you . rCI tti‘tat:A. C QueOtietecit'o;o ILp
watt, Dethir?wo re; TO'beecohl Datric! Safi'kali; 'Cde
01.1,arD1teeeartbInF Ole ID thole: ' !' I
I', FROM ,Wm; -BLAIR a SON.;"
\t'IIOhENALD AND 11.1TDAL'DDALEBS,b.11ttB I LE
qpQ bmewittovoy by the mho at :thole retail
Pri9e. l ,4?:" 1 • • 11 %
, „ •
XpriiEfiPtiiii3B; • I.IIINDNEiiI3 , oAVAlettlt
treatrld wljb, sbe.,9,4o.4jiacer)ii, ,I,lBec'ec;
p tt !tad Proffresen of, DiXaffilit; 4e
, and Ran (U.
ipcildiiiiiinAV'ietilCat:bolitilje of Pitienry/varrie, 14
years "isp'er4'ner:'tekiarti - iforteideni Holland.) No:
skis , : Aron Teallaperibihr'eati:bo'seei:
ppb.te pie pie
. direp, face tty Are itieo,
company their patierita, 43 be liam ; ne epla j le Ma;
practice. Artitbilal !yea ineoriOotitbouppeln.
.
• • .;111 , • • ,
1 ' ''NkittlJ; 'BiOre
Pronti;To7lOiati: t f o '' /"[ ke4ite l ldo.kire
anoe'p Ana pOilikri: x ards, nryte#,enll Troz,
.41 1 . 0 data neiiel!lret4re,Ei4;3llter''eo e i; eree
'*anti) tei xyitk siwites4
4.4400n0ver Vito for Yhodoirlil ko., raper Makers
W . 1 1" 3 1 , Piro flirPta Itpoe. Bee*, loforois
Non by 44.daegdagur'411,11Y:firYfIT \V24iPiLLI•III'
ilONE{' No 11 Nbrib Wet 'Orbit lado/pnuo
44feb70.11. •
ALLcocivo. BORCi,Up.iIdetTERS., I
-,-sore :and --Dry 47tr?td: ctted - brhtdrk - Thiiii - er, -
neunlly two or kbrei bourthl
Dr. Omen, No, P 63 Dpciadwari NM Yyr Infon4..
us he sold on Monday; Juror .22, 1862,ttiro Plasters
to 11 young W 01111313 BU2011114:, POI y iliftre/y
lumbAgo. On TlUt r itiday:ehe . iraTod lO4eTtiio moia
for a fib nd, .and then stated how the two oho had
ptirchosed on.hfonday had r - Hovel bar Immediately
after putting them on, and cured her fn two day,rof
a most distressing pain In her hack and lolne.
,„...esllcp,k's,'oroie Plasters kayo bosh found epoeiflcs
for Rheumatism of the 10(06704m
BOTTLED PARALYSIS
, ,
ThieleXlir4roper title, of the horrible metallic
hair dyes.. Worse than tholato s , of Absalom slay ho
the 'fate' of those who, tt.. thrte. Ono wholesoine
preparation for chanter{ the hair to nay • derirahle
. shiufe: from_ blown to Jot black may bo procured
everytvbere, v 1;.: ristrulttro'a Excelsior Ilalr Dye,
After carrful exult ale, fro mrsor Chtiton, the distin
guirhed chemist, has oath• rix;tl the proprietor to
declare, on his behalf, net it c stains nothing doe
tatiOusto health NO other belt. dye In the worn
has the like guarantee. • Orlata toro'. Hair Preserva
tive, se a dressing, ante like a charm on the hair
after dyoing.• Try it. 10feb70-im
" WHO WOULD STIFFER ?"
3 tie now 22 yenrs tin eDr Tobbro first Introduced
the " VencWin liniment" lo the United States, and,
never in a slnglo lostarice has his medicine failed t 6
do all, If not snore tbata it stated lee 'bin pvniphlot.
As external remedy In cases of Chronic Ilhourna,
Hein, Ileadaohe, Toothacho, Burns; Cute
Bores Swellings, Spraine, Stings of roseate and
,Parns In Limbe r Rack, and Chest/. its wonderful cura
tive powers arc miraculous. Taken internally for
the cure of Cholera cholie, Dlarrhout, Dyeenferyi
Sick liordocher, and Poroltlnd, Its soothing and pen
etrating *qualities are felt [micron as taken. The oath
m 10,011.11 each bottle la rtecomyatiled will show
that there fa nothing i frirloue 1n Its composition.
Thousands of certificates have boon received vposklng
of the rare virtues of this voldabin. article. Any
person after having urmd I. r nee will never be with
out It. Every bottle , of tile gopaine hoe the signa
ture of '^ . Si. Tobias" on t h e °lstria, a rapper. Bold
.by,ttre.Druggisto end :at...keeper. throughottt the
United Sliver!. Price, GO cents. Depot, 10 Park
PladoiNerV 101'0,704 m
JamitScittrre—Deal 81r. I . lutve been afflicted
fir the last ten - year's with the Rheumatism and
°aut. — Sam recommended to me. I
hayelused it, and I am glad to Bev It has effected' a
perfect cure In a vary , alibrt time. 'Therefore I re
'commend It to all persona afflicted with the same
Clef:egos. • 1 consider ft:111e bast Core in use for any
diemse tha•huroan body Is SllttiectoJ to.
E. DaYOI,INO Philadelphia.
TO COTEIIIMPTIVES
The Advertiser, haring been rooter ed to heel
to a few w. eke, by o very klmplo remedy, atter Imo
log suffered korona ;years with a severe lur4 off,
tie, , and that dread dbeaso,consompti a is sexism,
to make known to his fellow-surbrerk the moans o
•
To 'ii who desire it, ho will senz., a ropy of the
pr"ecrintion used (free of harge), with the Direction
for preparing and acing the Name which they wilt
find n SURE CURE FOR CONtII3II . TION.I,IIIIIIA
_BRONClittriS,—etc.-,The-obfeet - of - thrandverticer Ih
sending the lireirrlptionlc to berrafit the afflicted
and 'graced information which henenoelvW, to he In'
valuable; and ho hopes every etifferer will, try hie
remedy,as it will cwt them nothing and may prove
a blot/deg. • . .
g order
Mulles wishing the prescription will please ad
I=l
REV EDWARD A. wusinsr,
Wllllronaborir, Kluge County Now York.
Ney7 )39.1y.
ERRORS OF YOUTLI
gentleman who aufferod for years from Nervous
Dtbllity, Premature Decay . , and all tho offsets of
youthful indiscretion, Will for the okri pf suffering
humanity, Bond trap to all who neod It. the receipt
joy fnakink .tho_siruple_ remedy . by-which—he—was
curad. Suffet'ere wishing to'prrtit by tho advertis
er's experienco eau do eo by edifreseing, in perfect
confidence, JOflN B. OGDEN,
- N 0.42 Cedar St. New Yolk.
May 7-604 yr.,
MARKETS
CARLISLE PRODUCE MARICET.
Corrected Weekly by R.' O. Woodward.
CARLIetz, March 10, 1870.
FAMILY Awn, - • - ss 25
SUPERFINE EYE FLOOR, • • • - 440
Ill t rE WHEAT, - • - 110
RED WHEAT, • • - 10b
— RYE.
CORN, . - -
OATS. -
CI:OVERSEED, -
TIMOTHYSEED, -
FLAXSEED,
RARLEN,
CARLISLE PROVISION MAILIEIIT•
Corrected 'Weakly 11 William Washmood,
comtn.r; march 10, 1870.
BUTTER, $ 3!
EGOS, -
LAUD, • -
TALLOW,
BEESWAX, . -
BACON, HAMS, • -
BACON SIL , OLDEI29,'
BACON RIDES, •
WIIIIEIIEASS, -
PARED PE ACLI KS, -
U PA , IED PEACITEW,
DM ES APPLES, -
RAGS, „ -
MONEY MARKET
6LWING PUIOFB OR DE HAVEN & 1111.0TIIER
40 South Third Street, Philadelphia.
Throo o'cl.ck p. m, March 15, 1870.
U. S. 6.. of 'Bl, - • - • 11474 115 7 0
02 • - 1106 110
- 108, • 109
•• 'O5, - • 104, 1 , 9
- - 104
•6' , tua Mt/
VO ‘ t CC 0. IOW
r 0 56 111 '
Ye, 10-40 , , -
6
U. S. I'.'nr 6 par cent Cy. 112 . 4 112,
On • C.o.pouud Internet Notch,
10
Col t, 112/
111 112
8. F. Int M. Fonde r 855 8135
Conti of I actlic It. It. 95.5 045
Union J.',.cirao •Lond Grant Bonds, 740 750
First Mortgage bonds of eldcatto, Dan% Illa and
yincenne. , Astir, ad ;(7) : seven per cent gold, foCeala
at 90 and l&ar, et.
Viral Mortgage t onda of , tti'd Chicago and• South,
Western Railroad, (7) moven per n, t! gold go , rat•
lead bjr }hick lei ind and P.in fin Stall
rood, fur talo lain and Intoroet.,
Vir;t Mort dto bonito of tho Cheeapeake and Ohio
Railroad COnicony, paying (t) aix per caul gold, for
solo at DD and lfita I eat.. •
On thy Chessiisalaispil Ohio Ridicon 1, et d Chiongo
sod South Wo , tcyn b. udu too pay (1) one pur cent
'cominlssioa to'bsukois and banks
%y pay (2J too and a hal( -per cent commiceion.
on Cli:csgo. Morino and Vincennes Railroad bends,
to bulks and bankers .
,„
DIED
CREIOII —ln ibis borough, on EtonianlAA, Afro
Rachel Crelgh, widow of W. L. Crkgh, In the forty
ninth year of her nge,
• - - -
.Licit of-unOlainiodlettoio romaining in
tiny postoffico 'at Carlisle, Pa., for Itho
weok ending March 10, 1870 :. •
• LADIES' LIST.
;Deldler, lidlsaNne B • NaU, Mali , "
Du;er. Miss 741515 •,, kt
,re Mary .
'transom, ktiati - Luolisda• Illagwott, o Ann'
toinvor, totes Ntisg'P. , ;,"I4 tigers ittra Margaret
Balser, NLlt Ellie ((um t, Mrs Ells .both 0 '
Coover,loles kiery'A BnYdet, Mrs B.iito
O eppor M.so Mary 4: • 8 roe; it, Betsey II •
Boson Miss' Annie' ' '* 8t,.. tier, Mrs A:nes - •
Dlek, ;rifest Sarah ;.; ; lETSatn. Betsey '
Parenbauch, B Berl ler. Mee Betsey
ir r ioo,,r,,,,noy • . ; • St Clatr,'M en Oetarn,9,.
Garner, Mks Ma y 0 Scott. Mary,dana
'Grinson, rdintrad° ; Tobin: , MLa Nate' • .
;Keinr, Mr.. Basso X ..,Weggonir, Miss Annie
(Cromer, 5155 Margaret Wheeler, Mrs "Melo
Hldr ; Mrs Atabkv ,INiTeirey, Min John
"Coll, Mrr Barak , ; , Woggidaer, Mloo Mollie (I ''
' Linker. Mies Nellie Min-Aguas"
1.6t00T-'l.ll4iit Nellie ~uork.r, Miss Jaoec; ;
Morton, Ali. Btilelluda Walser, WAI
as aty A
1511iCord,•M;s1tachol ' Clirollne; ,
Myers, Mn Dolmas% A. Zeigler, Idles nag 0
• Myth, Mrs Atari Ann ' ZolgTer. BUB6IIIII
• OENII22E/4 . 13 1.4181'. • '
• I n
p Morlett, Gideon
Debrone.L.Jaeols ; ,Petter,•Nowton
firolvo, ' , Pol Tor, ; Yolk P
I; • , ;;' Parker, 'Wm
Burkholder, 0 A. .„ Porter, Win If
Cromer, II II lain •'' ' Paton, Jett '• ' ••r. •
Bones, Daniel N
'Tltt ItTobergor„ ", ;. '
Ittneliart,Thomos F. • .•
Ditlowi A. I Wm's,
: ; Swigert,
;Dena; 0 W . • •"' "i-iOteltter; Joreyk ,;
r.rt 9 rd, J, ,J . , tkpltlei ,
NOoto,, °QV V Eisner:Jacob ,
Grooms, . • Opotts, W,Il ' ~• . ,
Omni; A. 77 • ~ 1 31111rb,my; CbTiottiox
X iTi d %a h i ) t w o',.?;l7 , l: ' '
• I !Wean.; Jelin ' • '
"Jolinsorc flog van Is _wise, GO. " ~,
listitlatikaort ' 'Wenity, "Jacob •,. ,
Mora, Bornisel..; • ,; , gia
'Morro; Wm' • • '
Walliar.-1.011p.u.
Muititu.' l os o .;; •; ; ; ; Walker ,
A • •-• • •
:Partin, Peter. , : 11flin , • • ;
IlLeeter;N:di • • .•"' 'Wedlet;er., Geo ,' , •
konordetd, A i
Jedui ‘' Wstsh ;VW',
itynki; E ' .•
d. 3 ..SHDICDi, P. M.
.Ni/Afr .2'o4DAir.
FOR BRDAIFF.—At the solicitation
of a nutUthir of 11. , publicans throughout, the
S.hystY.l offer tutself as a cancheato for rho nornina.
eritfu n 7 r hu next County C•nventton, sub
ject to ite dectsfeth
JOtlll IMAM
NOTlCE.—Notiee is hereby given
th*t the fel:owing nom I,ert.ollB hue- bled
n for hotel liquor restaurant, and read•
or'il 11 crises uuder th., - bevoral ae. a of ens°
latlng.th reto, iq the ofaco of the Clerk of the Court
or. 'Quarter .13cesl,ne. of Cumbe•lnnd county, ohlch
n•dd application. vat I he pre , ented to mad Court, on
az,mday,, thnolore n t hday,orApril,.lB7o;.. _
HOTELS
. .
Gebrito.2.3lonta, Carlielo, ~ teat Ward. -
Lewis Fr" cr,'
John Hall. " bleat Ward.
Ja• oh Thddlurty ' - .. •
• N. W. Woods, ..
George w olio].' n „.•
, .
11. L. Burkholder, ,' 0 •'t -
•
William Crozivr, .' ' Pleklesno , Township.
James M .y, . . Ea t Pen osbo:o' .• .
Wilde:ergo, .0 . ,
.. : "
..) • n
Jtv•ob Swlizer,. . - , :
John Bret zor, - Gampflou - . I.
John a Ile 0, , Loa or Allen
'John P Sholbly, 11Vddlesai
A. L-Itursh, Idonton
J hn Thompson, Mechaniudnirg, North Ward.
boo ”ull, ": '
J. W. Sander., '. o.
Georg- L Sponeler, "
J. 50 . Laidig, " Snuth Ward
IL 0. Blattenberger, Newton Town.liip.
J. 0 Deoch,r, North Middleton
Williro. C. AksrP, Newburg . Borough.
CI Orion llounehergor, Newville
George Baltzhoaver, "
Elias B. EL titer, • Poen ToweshilL
It.nry A narld II ursh,Shipponvlt" rg Borouvh.
John Wynkoop, sr., ; . " '
memen Oro,. •
Barman Baughman, Southampton TeArnahlp.
WI•1lam Clark, • "
David Z Geycr, South Middleton
t• 11. n Rupl y,
Gvorga PI ler,
Willnint H. Mullin; . " ) "
John 0 Iteeeer, Silver Pp ring
.3 W Le dig,
C ja I
....
:6 o hv r
, g. : e av K. ei
.r .
,li,.
tinny , ' " "
.." ,
Peter Coealin, . Upper Allen ' "
• '"
Jacob Chboall, West Penneboro " '
~ RETAILERS. •
1
Jacob Livingston,
henry robly, ,
John Feller,
Frederick Bohner, - East Wall:
i•finmel Brown,
Tho Ure Jones, _ 4, - 'West-Ward.
Adam lloilleen,
VFillinus Bens or, Bhippen she rg Borough.
All Ilconso4 most ho' lifted wittln 15 days" rifle
granted, or they will ho Or torolD d .
I=
(EST 1131.16111(D 1630 )
WELOn & GRIFFITLIS,
BAIN'S I AXES I I SAWS! I I
Sawa of all dencript.ons. Axe., Bol.lng, And MII
I?”.rni.hings. Circular ,ituot, 'With Solid To. th,
with P.tont Adjustable Point, superior to All In
sorted teeth taw&
Hi' Prices Reduced. — a6ll.
4flir Send for Pr;c4 List and Circulars. ..Eli
WELCH h (MIFF 'kin',
Roston, Muss., or De trui t, Mich
limLtt'
THE DOLLA.E. SUN !
CHAS. A. DANA. EDITOR
•
Thetheepe-t, notarial, an eot York newn
pspor. klvelybody likes it. Th. oneil Dolly ,
$6; Bend-Weekly, $..; 1131t1 Weekly, td a year. All
the news at bell price. Full reports Of rnirketsi
aOrlcultu, a, fartnette and fruit aroiterio clubs, an
complete story in every We lily and B,n• i it erlay
tiumbvr. a present of vn104,10 p ants and vines to
wary subscriber; Inibiceine to to courns•ers unsur
passed. SI 000 1.1,1 insurances, CbatAl Plan. s,Noe
log
tlncldries, Parlor O.6vue, Sewing actilues,
alttenCi . ,llts, Premium.. Specimens and lists froo,
',and outollar i,nd.try IL
tiNadiAND, Publoilicr4un, New York.
17 mL~t,
•
AG ENT 4--CA NV SST G DOORS SENT FREE.
S ECRETS of Internal Reveran, by a
• Prominent °Meer of tho Treasury Service,
showing up the sorrels and •inn.r workings of the
Revor.no Peportment,The It hlvy Ring, O,.id Rin g ,
and Dra.WbackFrsurb,e3stornatio Robbery, Depreda
dons, Conspiracies, end holds oo she Oover. ment,
NIMiiO.OIIIICO Tyranny, and Corruption of High OM
chis• The mo•t startib•g and smportant book pub..
Its, ed. Containing about 500 well filled pages,
epaitedlys illustrated. AOE vl'S CI ANT. D. Can•
vasei,g, nook and complete outfit seat free, Address
WILLIAM FLINT, Publisher, Philadelphia, Pa.;
Ch.cago, 111 , er Cincinnati, Ohio.
17mhtt
908 PRIZES, WORTH FROM 4.,KB 1 . Cl
awarded to en bsottbero, and agents 6 r Wood's Howe
bold Mug aloe, the largest and beet Dollar Monthly
In the N.:arid Bludlar prises to be rep ated soon
Full Particulari In March—uutuber.—For-rale -- by - alt
neicadetCerii,'efiedt with Catalogue fP. am iums. on
reco.nt of 10 ceuta Address 9. 8. WOOD, New
burgh, R. Y. ,
1;n1134;
LIST OF 2,500 NEWSPAPERS FOR
ONE
•
O. Y. ROWEL', 8. CO., Y.
risisbit
7 28
. •
• 8 60
- 1 80
AROMATIC VEGETABLE SOAP
COLGATE & COE. TOILET FOAM NEW YORK
ESTAOLISiIk.D IN 1806.
For the Delicate Skin of Lailie# and Chlidren.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGI:TS.
rinbSt
„AGENTS! ItEkD TRI?11
WE *ILL PAY AGENTS A SAL
MRS ON THIRTY DOLLAR: , VER wr.}:l
and expenses, or allow a I.rge counitedou,lo Eel
our new wonder ul Inventions. Aadre,
N. Midi
ECM
2M A DAY.-40 NEW ARTI-
R... CLES SOS AGENTS. ,ALIPLES FERE.
G. B. sunw, Alfred, Mo.
17m11 t
"FCONOMF is WEALT,I.''—FRANKLIN?
WHY will peoplo p4y $5O, or more,
for a sewing MuChloe, when s.:d will buy
ono that Wig' a standard reputation, is double
thn ad, complete wtb table, constructed upon en.
tiroly new and pr p incipfen runs by Erich n,
ender es all tubers Thee : . a-lab:Wed Machines,
fully lie ns, d, are Intend,' t fur pour prop]. who Want
to save time. labor, and m uuy. Agents wanted
acbiner rent to agents, an mvou away to it eedy
families. For etc titans end reduced prices. nedress
.1. U. Ottis & Co,, Franklin and Diamond S. M
& Co., boo 397, Boston, Mass.
17ruhdt ,
PSYCHOMANCY, FASCINATION,
me SOW. CUA.R)I.INti.-4.at wagus; twatp
wonderful book ban full instruction. to et.abra";
the teener D. Marinate Direr hes, orany at . imal, at
oil!. Meeniejain, ,Spiritualiern and htindr de
other curl ',se cap rintoi,te. It, can he obtained br
sending addr- es, with 10 cents poi tam to 'f W
EVANS, A CO, No. '4l, Louth Eighth 'treat, -
dclihix
17 whit - '
•
DR. WHITTIER, 617 §t. Charles
'rew, Sc Louis, of ()Moo wide mule
tiou treat- all 'venereal emi—
tiotie:ltepOteocy, ..•,,tho moult or self abuse. .Seed
two ettonhe for seal& pamphlet. (who. No matter
who maul, state :ate. Cottaultallon free.
171pbtt
.
MAI‘TTIOOD AND. WO3IANFIOOD
.:Essupt or Young 61.-n, nee, in synod ei,.!
open. 1101TAILD •SSOUIATRM, boi•P, Philadol
sinia Po:
17mtat ..
• . •
. .
npRIRTY - YEARS' EXPERIENCE
...IL — IN THE 411EATillkNT ON, 0111t0 lAr AN ir
SEXUAL DISEASES —A' Physiological Prow of
4berriario' ',no oh aped book e•Or publialred—con•
;brining nearly 300,p and Ilso fine plates, and en.
gravintor of Um anAtorny or the human organs in a
state of broth And disease wrth q tr , ails. on early
or•ore, Its derlorshib e cot:Sequences upon the wind
and body', with' the author's plan of troatmont—tho,
only ',Dona and oncressfril ',rude of cure, as shown
by a rep it ef-crses treated." A truthful adviser to
tho married and Moss e. nE•mplatine mar/Ingo, who.
entertain doubts 01 their pile eke condition. Bent
free of p stage, to en!r• ad rose. on ro, dot of 26
carets. in stomps, or re shit- currency, by oddroosing
DR. , LA 0 d ()IX, No. at, At ,iden Lana, Albany, N Y..
'the author tray b. , core.ultod upon 'any of the dip
owes upon, Whlchhis boobs treat. tither personally,
Or by eualLond medicines
• ffent, to' noy part of tho
P/tuldit , • , ,• , ,
EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. "
_
Lettere testamentary on the eetata of Jilol . oll
10 i
•hldny,-docea•e.,lace of the borough or Nowbdrg;
having been grented.to the undordaned, a I permeate
knowlugallthemselree indebt , d thereunto. , are re
querted to make payment, and those having olalme,
or demande,-to preheat them, duly authoutleated, to
'the uneeralgoed.
;T ; •
ROO , RT 11. hteHLIIINN X,
• aeoutorrof the estate of . James alcElLlony,
• de
oraemhdt'" ;
CA.RPETB I 'cAnrErs 11 CARPETS
FItY,OI . II6NA IVETOEItt '
W. V,
.4.11 PE T BT .0 117,1,
- N0.:23 iCuiileln area, C:nr/Ifile, In Ilia Bentz
EMI
.TIIS 1.4131GE8T AND OIDWIPTT
ASSOTMENT
," pARPETS,
.81.1ADE8,
LOOKINO 0p.4116138, VATS, arid.
lAnd. ,
1;0149B are rtepared :141 tuplfeh tpurcbsierd
GIyApES •,c.inrirr,s/
~„
iiirAT7TELE :LOVVEST 1tAT113.4111
11mhtlm
P.orough
Carlini°
RESTACJIIAN TS
6EI/11.01 , , C.
Clork of Quarter Saisions
BRX&IISGER &
SPONSLEkS COL i
A . L. SPONSLER,
Real getate Agent, deriven,, Conveyance
nem and Olean Agent. Office, I'deln Str
tles.dre S mare.
VIRGINIA LANDS in the S.
dual, Valley for a .10.—A number of
and highl3 imp.oved fm me in " thu Valle,
tined fur sale The truce .us frum Du to :5
Thu Liu/ is of Ilir best qu.llo - ff Human
eqns , , if not impactor, to OM land in Oil
Valley, and will be d apnea' a us as onislin
figures. the eXI orilinti of the Cumber and
thulrosif luta Virginia,. now surveyed, v
immediately,through the cc Lion et we
which tilet•O lands me located, which, h
plired, t .gether aI, h the advan ago of the
dealniver tra.np rtation will glee thorn all
ni
cI
, gon of -Nortlin 0 and .k.: mask
1
mk
et °nal& tinpertualty for lucrallso Investu
h ru offered.
A full and minute ascription of the leen ,
wit Crc of the vatious boom May be laid
plying to A L. sVONSL
17mh70 . - final Estato Agent, Ca.
(ARE BANK FOR SAIt
deposit of the test quality Ilermxti
yielding 10 per cont. comprlsibg about 18 .
located In Monroe tow °ship, about. 2 miles u
Iron Works of 0. W. & D. O. Ahl. un Oho sot
of the Yellow Breeches creek. There 10 a st
water running through the tract cultist
washing the ore and furnishing water pic
aides, A portion of the bank,ls under ale
Will be sold snifter. thereto. The balance It
cambered.
einia &damn of „viewing the b,ank to
upon Co -go W. Lehlleh, at “Leidlch's mil
warty known as ISrleknea milt , Mourue ton
Cumber land county, or upon
30jung00
A. L. a P0N.111.1
Real listato Aggut, e
ORE WASHER FOR SALE.--1
sellout Oro Wmbur, et the Oro Bank of
W. Lcldich , nearly new. Wlll - be QOl,l vcoy 10.
PLY to -- A. L. SPON:
njunio
FOR RENT.—That commodious
Watt redatonen situated on South 1
Street. Into h.-114)01g to Ilunetfict Low—ou
W ohm od—comsrl-mg 90 foot i,f ground
vilth all .tho modern imprjvuuteuto, nod aim
of fruit, Is allured for rout. Poem,. n given
'grit next.
17m1170
FOR RENT.—The brick resider
James Holm,,hoot d U roath
rout, no opp alto Earl ) s hotel, will be
for ono year flow tint of Apt il an t.
FOR-RENT.—Tbo north part o
dw. fling 11 .001150 Hanover s❑
, longlne to tre b. ire of Ilaniel K. 11. r, d.
-a tillable for n lotein. es tt ace, or priv to r.
will bo legend tor no yens 'to first of Apr I
Also, a two etory b. Ick °well n tltuat, 0
trot street, between Ilitrover nod It, °rot d
belonging to olcltato Dawson.
A Iklo, n tonimod eon tot. story bri k redid.
Snot street, et v. 1.. MAI, a d Louth, st
a lot of ground ou the a et t ide of be Lotto t
belonging to toe tplt Shrotn, d.
will dot n eo leue:d for 'one „Year fitou the I
eprll next. . ' •
mhZO
DISSOLUTION.—The . firm of
Eberly la OIL. 41.1.1 elseelved 1..) WWII/
on t, John t Lo honing bought the I t• rest
O. therly in to o. concern. lir , :Anne, Is nu I
to receipt for debts of sold firm All those
to the firm of- Leo et Eberi. nre regneetett tr
huntediete it.ytnent John F: Leo and It or
log ehdaos lignlnet the sold firm till preeent tl
bin: for et ttletuont.'
Sew• Curaberlo,d, 711 arch 1 1870
I
I— Tlterl. t tt` . SS will be carried
licrotof er, et lbe old plo r, Il t...•• sobrconyt
co ro ate 0.1 hie at I fnends, and Icy
ustaloernro c ill
hail whoa wonting, ohythltig, in ills hl-.
JNO. F I
`
17xollat •
DR . I . Y. REED,
I=
to locnted in Catlinla Office next door •
Panes hvangellc tl Chora, 111. st Lorttlier
Palim to Irons a d.tat,ce pleas.. tall In tlio fore
, 17 lid, in
DV SKIRTS
ME
I.IOPRINS . "OWN DI AIM."
In all the - Now Spring Bti Ire, for 31
and Children , ; the qua ivy and pricix Of which
;submit, them rives to every cu. tomer..
SETS I COs SETS I I 1 OItSRTSiiI Joel stir
down to gold at p ; makint on- pt. sent vric a
than they can e ail riled, until g .14 declines to
point, a.ol 8 5 per cent lota than the pricy one
e.g.,. We were the first in Ph ladeiphie give
In change to Our customers, and now take ,tbs.
In givlo,i them full ads ants e of the return itra
tie basis, In whence if the gold market; which
ho fully tippreinat•d by oil t., examine our
tremvly low prices. !loop Skirts, our own ma§
37, 40, 50, 56, 60, 70, 75, Mi. 85, 00, 6, $l.OO, Or
II•nd made Whalebone Coriots, at 50, GI, 75
$lOO, &c, to $1.75. ruperi,ir Ft elicit W. ci Co
at 75 rents, reduced from $1 ill; at $l.OO, reds
from $1:38. at $1.2%, reduceo from $1 75, 4.c., Or
It. Werly •Coracts at $2.00, reduced from $2 50,
&c.
Thompeon's ()lova FP ling Cornet. at 51.75, 'Tilt
from Vial, ac.. 'Lc Mrs. Ee.f
Jueting Aid nano' Cornets at a reduction of 05 c
to 11 - .00 ear pair. arcordlus to on tlity. All ce
good. proportionably ri da - ed. Sell. 9 and Cm
.Inado to order, altered and r;ralted, nil* sale
r. tad—one price only—roll, or bend for deictila
eircutar.
SS if T 110PN I'M'P•
No. 1,115 Chentnut n r rot,
l'lnti3m
IRON IN THE BLOOD I
I=
THE PERUVIAN SYRUP,
AN IRON TONIC WITHOUT ALoOIIOL,
Assimilates with the blood as easily as the sitopl
food, Olt lining nett Inelgoratizu the whole fly-b
It 81.1triliblteti WithOlit telt. ties, :mit& op
1 ro ken down, erbew. Dyspepsia. Debility, Livet t
pl , int, Flonteo Weaknesses, Dtopey, 11111notto
nod expele disease from the Sybienl, by Illtreas
Naturo's own vitadainge oment—lßON
Pamphlets fr o. J. P DI N.MOoIt, Proprb tor,
loy ,tre . t, Note York. &Id by druggists goooroli
17m10.0vowly
„,.
EAL ESTATE AT PUBLIC SAL]
•
Tedneaday, March— 80, 1 8 70,
' virtue of a Plurios wder M: vale, 1.1,1113 t.
0.01 on' Court .of Ottather , on't county. I will rap.
to pal I.l.—awitcr ou the to eutinec, the following ,
scribed real estate, whittled In tho vill,, of :.:1
Bill, In &tat Peonshorongh township. adjolw,
lands of Otto ,h , o re, Jolt , W If David II Wad:,
and the imblle r. ad, co, tai •Inc about 1/ e 'Oil th
an acre of ground.” The improventen a ronsiat . f
TWOSTORY FRAME HOUSE:
Frame Stable, Blacken,ltb oh p, n a i l other r Cereal
011tialitiling , lie lot contaltet pp en, poaches, to
gr poe, with a good cbtere tnerurn
into to COMM. o 111 0. o o s Li. Ck, p. la.. when a
tend/nice WLI be glVen ant turas ma I'. keowii by
a' W. riu WELL,
Executer,. I - laimc
EMIEM
FFORSIIERIFF.—I hereby offer my
- - aelf ail o ciandidato for thq °Mee or 1m 1 , 11.111
auldeet to the drcialou of the Republican Noniinatin
Convention R. K, z•PANOLER.
Corlitole, March 2, 1870.
3 tubto
DENTAL. NOTICE.—:I have take)
a))1(1 of a card it,' our Carlisle p pers, cat
t,on ng the public from °mph%) Ing a ny nen.ist
'lnak . e'br Felt tittific.l treeth,..o plates on hard rut.
her, who Is tiot New's.' by the coinpa,y, be. I tab
thin method to , nrorm my friends, and the puf.li
generally. that I have , al rungemen es with Jr
°fah Bacon, t,ea.urer or too Mod, ear Dental Nut
j:nrupsny, and have. taken Out license up t
January I, lair. I lira. therer.re leonlly I.utl.nriret
turn ke artificial t-eth on hand rubber, in e
and forum I inrlte alrftlends, at d the public
general, to Ore me a ea I, 'where they can bane te. rl
.inado on Rubber plateau heap no ever. Office.No
1141 dime, oppositl the First National Dank
enrage., Pa.
C, NEFF, Dentist.
201arifira*
Ayer's Cathartic Pills
For all the purr ones of a Laxative thhileino.
Perbays,„no Imo -reedielne is en An 'TOMMY re'
gutted by everybody as a - cathartic. -nor Was over
say 1P101.• so aniveraally adopted Intr use in every
country andnemoa all. classes. an this mild but
efficient purgative /Tit The °brio. reason Is, that
It Ina mom reliable nod far more eirectvial reme
dy than any other. Thum who have tried it. know
'that It etfred them,-dud the.. Who been not know
tint it cored their neighbors and friend., and all
i lt t e n s o w „ t r ha f4 t l w lo h t e b t ro it og d h eee . u . n y r
I. l u t it do o e r s .
n a q 1; 1 73,-‘4t r h i a t. t
composition. .We have thousandanpon thousands
of certificates 'of their, remarkable cures t.l the.
'following complaints, but Such auras are known'
In every nelghborboodownt we need not pnblisl
- them. Adopted to all age. and conditions in all
climates; containing neither., calomel y any
deleterioud drug, they, may be taken with. safety
by anybody. Theh anger coating pre emu them
ever fresh and makes them Weasel, t to tato, white
being purely vegetable no 14031, can arise (MIN
• their ueo In any quantity. '
' They opera's by their powerful influence on Ho
fate, ntpviecete to purify tlyi blood and stimulate
it into' healthy Rea a—remove • the obstructions
of the stomach, bowels, liver; and ether began. of
the 'body,. restortng ' their Irregular action to
health, and_by correcting, :wherever they ealet,
ouch derangements as era the drat • oriklit 'Of,
disease.'
•
Minute directions are given in the wrapper on
the box, for the dotlowing et/rupiah:6, which these
Pills rapidly cure
For Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Listlessness;
Languor and' Loss of Appetite, they ebould be
taken moderate y to stimulate 'the stoanacht and
restore lie healthy tone cad action. r
'For Liver Complaint and its various symptoms,
Bilious' Headache, Side Ileadaelm, Jaundice or
Qmen Sloknees, tilde,, edit° end , Bilious Severe,
Should be itylleionaly taken Or each cam, to
cottons t h e di mo md'lrtmy ; or remove the obatruc
'Mona Which ceude' ft
For Dykentery or'Diarsbceit, but one mild .dose lit .'
' •
11. 70711iL r ut i t " ist, • °WA.' Crovel; Palpitatioa ' of
tho Heart, Palo In the e. Fatkand Loins, • they
change
-Ise! . Moth:mu itian; ; es required, to
, change the diseased , anion of th e system, With '
inch ohmage those complaints disappear.
r Dmpay mid Dropsical A 1.41111 0, they should
be taken Ingarge And frequent' dens' to realm
the effect Ofd 'drell,llo ;sold ,
r .
For Stippression large dose should bate, e',,
'at
produce , the - desired Affect by eiro - nethr. •
Al a innurr /V; trie one or two PM, - to n re
mote dloeatley And rail are fitOmach.
'. An oecasionpi doe etlmulatea the stomack and
bowels ihte healthy action. Materie the rwectite,
and Invigorates fhb' /Totem. Herm° It le etten
advantegeotts where no '1410911 durnucemet.l 'm
ists. One who , fettle tolembly yell, often f.ndo
that 0. dose of Wan tills locket) fuel •••••elde, ly
bolter, trent their Aleanslog and renovating trod
on the digestive synergy,
DR. J. 0. cl PAR 0 CO., A-actical aemitie, )
LOW/CLL. XL% U. J.4, ,
1110 F L
C. E.11k.111.