Ji!IiJll.lg3JL.''Ji!lj'i jotis o. "n tt.. tnrrrm r-RnraitTos. j. r. Muonr. nnusiirR. TIIU15SOAY : Marc-li:::::":::::;yth. 1807. A GOOD MOVE. The Lata Krie I'ws Association at their meeting a few weeks ago, appoint. ed a Committee to prepare ft bill provi ding fur the publication of the laws in every count in tho State, nud to get such bill enacted by the legislature In j ursuauce of their authority the com. liiittee have prepared a bill, a copy of which we have received. The lit tec tion- provides that a certified copy of ev ery general law, eseopt the General Ap f frriiiin Hill, well as of every pri- vato of local law spccinl'y relating to the county or its citizius, shall as soon as approved by the Governor, be scot by ihrf Secretary of the Commonwealth y -to " the Coumiusiouors of. each county The ' 2d sectio.1, makes it the duty of the County Commissioners m soon as said laws arc received by them to cause th-jai to be published in not less than one newspaper of eac of the two political parties if there be so roariv published in the county, not less thau twice. The publication of the laws in this manner has been practiced for some time in New York, New Jersey, Ohio, and many other States.nnd we are iuforrucd with universal fatisfaction to the people "We believe their publication here an ab solute j,iiMV nemsiVy. To inflict puis-is-hmcit for acts committed not iu vio- Jatiou of any law when committed, but ' tnly pronounced criminal by subsequent legislation, would be to grci-s an injus- ticc as not to be thought of for a mo uieot. 1'ublie tcDlimcnt unhesitatingly . approves the wiidem of the Fathers as expressed in that provision of the Fed eral Ctustituticu which f maids the pas. tape of an e.r pint facto law. It is one of the glories of our laws, theoretically, that thoy are j riser ilcil. In fact, this prescription of our laws is a mockery nnd evciv dnv we violate tho spirit of - - j . i.he provision against ex post fucto loirs. Dur acts of Assembly usually take effect from the date of their approval by the Governor. The pamphlet Laws do not usually reach us until July. Iu the meantime wc are subject to tie provis ions aud liable to the paius and penal ties of laws we have no opportunity of knowing. Should we unwittingly be guiltv of an iufiaction of one of them, and be brought before a court of justice (?) to ausvcr for our crime, and offer as a delence that wo did not kuowof the Jaw, and that we could not have known of it, it will avail us nothing. The learn ed judge, will iuform us that tho pro ound and concentrated wisdom of ages declares as an axiom, thai '' ignorance of the law excuseth no one" tor " every man is presumed to know tho law," aud uprn this very violent presumption we -will be convicted and punished. Our laws between tho date of their publica tion and the date of their circulation, are presciibcd, iu about as true a sense as were those of the ltomau emperor who had his laws wri'ten iu very fine baud and hung on the tops of high pil lars, so that while he made a public show of them the people necessarily re mained as ignorant of (heir provisions .. hrfure. The people have a right to know what laws are to govern them ira mediately upon their approval; such. knowledge is a publio necessity, which bill nn cW consideration U very well calculated to supply. '. Another consideration iu favor of this mode of publication is that the laws will come to the citizen in regular instalments from week to week enabling him to read them all and carefully; and inhis coun ty paper he can preserve for future ref civuee the whole body of general and local laws of each yoar pertaining to him and his county. Xnw no man, has the nerve to undertake to read the ponder ous volume of pamphlet laws which is bues yearly, aud to bunt for any pnrticu liiract, is almost like hunting tor a uee !lo iu a hay stack. We believe as we havo said that the iill is an absolute publio noecsMty, and we hope it will pass. I IU8OTESS AUD JUECONSTBUCTION. f "Iia inlimofA " mint irklic fcvintint Ka. 1 . ween reconstruction ana Dirsiuess are ot sufficiently Considered in the North.' They jiru deeply pondered in tho South, tor there the wolf ot want pushes its pinched nose into almost every house hold, ana men aro compelled to lootc at every avenuo ot escape Irom their pres ent condition that is proposed, cither in Congress or out. 1 he bt. Louis hcjmb. lican,n an article upon- business and politics, thus speaks ot thc.tuture : Let all who are forecasting the chan. ces for business in" 1867 take special ac couut of tho political elements which may affect it. Never was caution in that direction more necessary than now. The measures which ore finding favor with Oonzrcss are the political ruin of the South, a.id they invoke with it tho commercial ruin ot that section ot the country.- These measures will do more j to tend down a bliglit on the liclda ot the South in lifUT than did in 18GC a disastrous season almost without paral lel. There can bo no prosperity at the South tinder the withering touch of suih legislation.' If these measures pass even if tho menace of them is not speed ily withdrawn let no man look to the South expecting to find paying custo mers' there. And if there is no pros perity at the South, will there bo pros perity at the North? What reflecting man does not anticipate . the auswer to such a question ? The political aspect warrants tho ex pectation that we shall have a year oi more of commercial gloom, depression and disaster, l'rudent men will as all should be setting their houses in order. Thoy are not at tho mercy ot men, who, in aiming at the destruction of constitu tional government and republican insti tutions, would laugh at the ruiu of the whole mercantile class as the merest bagatelle. The .-lye adds these remarks: These are plaiu thoughts. I hey can be understood in tho counting house, in the work shop, in tho manufactory. Thev are based upon a course of politi cal action, the shadow of which is al ready lengthening upon the history of our country. The adoption of the mili tary reconstruction biil leaves no room to doubt the real meaning of the Radi cals. ' They intend to destroy the polit cal importance of the Southern States at all hazaidh. For this purpose. . white men are to be disfranchised, aud uegroes raised to the elevation of lull citizenship. Under the system now advocated, not more than one-sixth ot the white men of the South can have a voice in adopt ing local laws for the - South, while all tho adult male negroes will be brought to the polk This will prt the couth under u netro government. . That class will fashion tho laws by which property and business aro to be regulated, indus try managed and labor made prosperous. The cotton nnd sui:ar interests of that vast reaion will be at tho mercy of un educated freedmen, or speculators and adventurers who wll look to present profits at the expense of future substati tial results. The elevation of colored men and the degradation of white citi zens will also prevent a' proper labor system from being matured and put in operation. If the negroes are armed with tho ballot' aud allowed to outvote the whites, they will not suffer such laws to be enacted bearing upon labor and laborers as are absolutely necessary in order to meet the altered condition ot affairs in that section of tho Union. These aro consaoueoccs that will in evitably follow the adoptiou and enforce, nient of the Radical scheme of" recon struction." Add yet the political pro gramme will be carried forward, regard less ot its business aspect, ineuoiui iiaut party clamor for protection to honut industry lrom foreign competition, while at the same time they are striking down the business interests North and South by despotic and unconstitutional legisla tion with reference to a considerable por. tion of the na'ion. Tbe planters and merchants of the South are afraid to em. bark in business when they aro threat ened witli- negro rule and domination. Capitalists will not invest their money in States whero th legislation is coo trolled by negroes. Tho blow aiuicd at the South thus rebounds and strikes tho North ia a most vital spot. The dimi nution of products in the South is fol lowed bv a shorter demand for articles produced hero, and that fact operates upon all the business interests of the North. The Re uhlicon wisely declares that the political ruin of the South will briug with it the " commercial ruiu of that section of the country."' If, therefore, the Radicals are determined upon the Grst, as is proved by theii acts, they will be responsible for the latter, with all its atendant consequences upon the busi. uess of the North. It is fears of this kind that are makin stagnant the stream of trade at this tima in all por tions of tho North. Business is waiting upon reconstruction. The labor and capital of the nation are enslaved by a few ambitious men in the Radical party, INSENSIBILITY. A friend, who is by no means au ex treme cartisan. but a thoughtful and loyal, (usiiig lhw woW in.jts true sense.) American feitisen, remarked to us that as he sat, tho other day In ; the balls of Congress, and saw tho military, tho Sherman-Stevens bill pass without sub stantial resistance, he felt disposed to do as Frenchmen in Paris are wont to do, take off his hat as tho funeral of consti tutional liberty went by, But ho looked around and saw that few felt as he . did and he came hone here to Philadelphia, and ho went among hig buisness friends tho moneyed met) of ThirJ street arid of the hiiuk narlors. and he found all : Tier. fectly tranquil. - The -truth wks, nor one cared either about the burial, or the pos sible resurrection.'' And this it seems to us is the terrible reality. At tltin uio- meot, there is building over our heads and all around us the buttresses and ramparts of a l'arliamontary despot ism, the like" of which has not beeu seen since 1610 in England, and 1793 in France. The processes are actively going on. An uncontrolled, because sectional, majority, not ot . tho people, but of deputies, . who do not always represent majoritcs, now opeuly seeks and is likely to obtain absolute control, and vc, the descendants, in but the second generation of those who went to war against the mildest ot Farliamen tary restraints, look on, and acquiesce quieting our consciences or our imagina tions occasionally with a trilly ceremonial about an old chair and table which, it it had any significance, nnd we any aeosi bility, would stir us op to mutiny. A benumbed sentiment is the American characteristic now. Occasionally we failcy we see minute signs of restlessness ot hesitation, of doubt, of irritability, in quarters where we have no right to look for them, but thev are very sngni, When one grave Republican Senator rather of a conservative typo, on. tho floor of the Senate, calls a It adioal col league a liar, and anotherspeaks of him as a foul-mouthed calumniator, it shows that there is au uncomfortable state of feeling underneath appaTent unanimity We have nn doubt that the ruffians who murdered Ranquo were on perfectly good terms of-fellowship aud as littlo that those who fought about the habes in the wood had ugly wotds bofore they came to blows. 1 he irritable man is al. ways tho doubting one. Sumner,' who is as dcstituie of sensibility as he is o courage, and who thinks all that is doin is riglit, did not mind being called a liar at all. Mr. 1-essenden aud - Mr. oner man used the words aud gave vent, to their temper (at leas', we hope so), be cause they are begining to pause an to doubt, i. Then, too, . though this shows no ma'.tcr of feeling, or, cx cept in its consequences, of temper, the sudden breaking asunder of the great, hard, frozeu floe of republicanism, the West from the East on tho tariff, Penn sylvania being of course crushed to death by the grinding, is a sympton of dis turbance. This can hardly be healed now. Stevens of the iron works goes home in unappeasable wrath at the Western wool gatherers, and grain raisers our littlo representative's birds will twitter fiercely. . Then again, at this juncture comes the remarkable decision of the Abolition Legislatuie of Ohio not to strike the word "white" out of its Constitution, to be fatlowcd sooner or later by every State that has the limita tion. Rut most remarkable of all is the sprouting up, tbe cropping out ot fears and uncasincsss about tho publio credit, in viw of the progress of political rum. Mr. MeCulloch in his last anuil re port thought and said that the restoration of the Southern States and the rehabili tation of their industry were as essential I to the restoration of financial Seourity, as mere contraction oi me currency, in anything else. This is his 'ctiine" in Sumner's eyts. But every sane man - knows this as well ', as the Secretary -and yet a whole session of Congress has. rolled by and we are further. off than ever, and in tho next matters will be worse. Does any one wonder that funded capital is un easy, and this alarm, in spite of every inducement on such a delicate subject to be silent, finds expression ? We were much struck by nn illustration Democracy of the North, strong in num bers, stronger In discipline than , ever, because the timid and worth lesa and cor rupt are purged away, shall we submit; sharply and dont pre- 'IciMttpKid Age rupt are purged away, shall we a This is qpstioh(wt put j sbrp Vdirrctly') otteadersKhm dor. aumo to answer it. I'hild'rtttylilA like Wade in hit place. Shall we, tho A Column for the Younj FoOt. The FrtkidenV Veto, WAsnitroTOH, - Marob -2. Tba-fol. lowing bs a eynopsia of tbu Presidents" veto .mearage on tho , MuUarj Recon struction bill : He submit whether that measure is not', Tn Its "whole character,--scope and object, without precedent and without authority, and ia palpable conflict with the plainest , provision of toe Constitu tioo, and utterly destructive ot those great principles of liberty and humanis ty for which our ancestors on both aides ot the Atlantio have shed so much bloody and expended so much' treasure. Lie says the bill would teem to snow upon its face that tho establishment of peaoe and good order are not its real ob- lect. He alludes to tho conditions which must be lululled betore tbe peo pie of any Southern State can be rclicv. ' A .1, I 1 I . !. J ea irem me nonaageoi military uomiu atton. The military rulo which it es. tablishes is plaiuly to be used not tor any purpose or order, but merely ta a means of coercing the people into the adoption of principles and measures to wbicb it is known thev are opposed, and upon which they have an undcniablo right to exercise their own judgment. . lie eon eludes by saying : " At present ten States are denied representation, and when the Fortieth Congress assembles on the 4th day of the present month sixteen States will be without a vote in in the House of Representatives. Tin grave fact, with the important questions before us, should iuduce us to paus in a course of legislation which, looking sole iy to the attainment of political ends fails to consider the rights ot transgrcs sors. the laws which it violates of the constitution which it imperils." Wilcox, Mar. Oth, 1 807. ifr. Kditr:X trree with J. In placing th lever 7 feet from the end of the stick. Then one-half the weight of the stick woutd rest upon tho lever, end tbe bearing of tbe other half on the ' lever 7 feet from tne centre of the stick would equal one-third the weight of the other half. One-half and ono-third of tho other half of anything annals two-tmrua of the whole. TrortrTr1err-WHl-b8 any doubts aa to tho correctness of the solution to Ostran dors problfm No 81, will call' on roe per sonally, I will.chcerfully pilot himjhrongh that problem from beginning to ena &jr Double Position. It would be extremely tedious to solva that problem by Douhl Position, using all tho figures necessary, with explanatory rcmtrki from beginning to and, and more than would fill the col umn allotted for the young folke. Twenty years ego when tiiai prooicm went the rounds in the city of Pittsburgh, and only cue man in the city who could n n it bv Double 1'osilion. l preKuim- thero were gentlemen in the city at that time who would have willingly paid f 100 for a solution no fuller than tho one al ready published in the Advocate. If anv one of vour correspondents i ict iljoe especially) asks questions they can t aniwer themselves, nor get any one else to must count them in for the i' mi A '.1 answer, you beer. TTAINE8 TWO'S PIAN03. XL "'TUB PIANO OF iUtr.JtlCM i l'be Pianos are universally ecknowl edged by oompeVo'nl" Judge's 'equal til1''"' best Piano made. Tor-refermc s, they have many thousand eity and country reti dents, including largs numbers of tho 11 if, ft, Schools, Seminaries, Ae.- i-l !:.:'. .-. ! These I'ianos'have not only stood the continued use and heavy practice 6T on ' yonr, but have beeft usod Mfio lnnt Tflaeit years to tho utmost satisfaction of thoso sing them. - . - J They have taken premium and medals Wherever 'exhibited.- Such has been the demand for these Pianos, that Meiiri. Haines Bro'S have been compelled to en large their workato iho. CJtlcnUtf . to 80 Pianos a week. Havinc now one of tho knost extensive and complete Factories in the United States, Factories alone covering over three- lourth or an acre of ground, comprising a frontage of 219 feet on Bceond Avenue. : i They are undoubtedly the cheapest first class Pianos in market. Fully guaranteed for five years. Send for Illustrated Circu lar. HAINES IIKO'8. 350, 858, S60, 302, 8C4, 8G6, 808,870,372, Second Avenue, mar718GC3mos New York City. INTENSE EXCITEMENT! A. B. IIoRiuBi.E Murder is Lebanon County. A terrible murder was com mittcd at the residence of Michael Dut weiler near Anuville. in Lebanon noun ty. From tho confused reports we Rath er, that tho family went to church; leav ins the premises in charms ot a servan "irl named Gaunten, and a German Tho latter had been in the family but short time, lie had attempted som time aj;o to make lo7e to the girl, aud been repulsed. On Sunday morning the 7th inst., he entcrod the kitchen, and asked the girl if she was still cross. She told him to clear out, that she didn't want anything to do with him, when he struck her on the head with a hammer, lie repeated the blows several ' tunes, and then left her for dead. She revi ved, when ho .repeated the blows until he had struck her no less than nine times on the head, broke her chin and jawbones, and several fingers on her hand. Ho then took a hat and coat ot Mr. Dutwciler's and made off. The girl again revived and managed to reach a neighbor's house-, '(Mr. Kreidcr's where) she was cared for, but subse quently died. lie is described as about O teel t luches high, IZ years old, witn thick saudy hair, aud very shabby cloth, intr. Tho. murderer was arrested in Slouchsburg, and is now in tho county I piison. . i - . Voices What Thev Indicate. There are light, quick, surface voices that involuntarily seem to utter the slang, "It won't do to tie to." Tho man's voice may assure you of his strength of purpose and reliability, yet thi tone coutradicU his speech. Then there are low, deep, Btroog voices, where the words seem ground out, as it tbe man owed humanity a grudge, and ment to pay it some day. The man's oppooeuts may well tremble, and his friends trust bis strength of purpose and ability o act. There is tho coarse, boisterous, dicta torial tone, invariably adopted by vul gar pcrsons,-who have not sufficient cultivation to understand their own in signi Gcance. There is the incredulous tone, that is full of a covert sneer, or a secret "You Mr..EdtoT .-A, friend of mine sent me the following problems, requesting me to send him their solutions. He said they were handed to him by a gentleman wno said he did not believe there was a person in Elk count v who oould solve them. let. Suppose a-liberty pole i ieei high, standing on a level plain at what height from the ground should it break off so tlfot the top would reach the ground lust 40 feet from the base, and the end wbers.it wnouiu nreaic rest on me uprigni part; If my friend will subtract the square of the base from the square of the length of the pole and divide the difference of those squares by twice the length of the pole, he will find the quotient. 63J feet to be the exact height from the base where the pole should break. 2nd. A man sold a horse for $40, and by so doing lost one-half what he paid for the horse, and three-fourths of the differ ence between what he paid for the horse and what ho sold him for. Required the prieo paid for the horse. My first supposition was that the man paid $120 for the horse. Then one-half (S00) he lost. of the difference 80 would be $60 he Ion. $120 dollars loss. $40 the horno sold for. $80 total loss. The answi-r itaulf is solution enough for this problem. " W. H. D. Riiiowat, March Cth, 18G7. fir. Editor : I find the following an swers to last week's problems. To A. It's first, the whole eaiu was $ 000, of which A s sharo was $140. U had $100.1.0" j. C $153.S3J, and D $200. To his secnud, the square of land must contain 1U;1. 810 acres. Tho height of Log Cabin's building was 43 feet, aud the original base 24.05-1-feet. Yours, ' WILL. ' Uincw.vv, March Cth, 1807. Mr. Editor: Required the greatest pos sible number of hills of coru thnt can be planted on a squ ire ucre the hills t occu py only a mathcmiiticul point, and no two hills to be within three and a half feet of each other? i WILL. CLOTHING ! CLOTHING! CLOTM.YG for the Million I GEO. i(cli) ftJucHis.-'toKilte. ipOIl SALE1 heavy SPRING WAGON nearly new. Also OXK LIGHT BUGGY. Inquire of II. Si BELN'AP, at the Hyde Mouse, mar" It ltidgway, Vs. N TOTICE. The annual meeting of stock holders for the election or omcers oi tie Kersey Coal Company, will be held on MON1UY. Merch 11th. 1807, at the office t tho Secretary at So. 6, Hanover street, ew iork. f . A. IASblLMAa, mar? 18001 Secretary. A AVell ' Di-fcssed M an BU YS H IS Ci;OTIIltf G : AT THE STORE OF ' , IV, MNTENACII, IN ST. jrAUY'S. ' BEST IS ALWAYS THE ; . Gr. IIINTENACH having taken en- tire control of the establishment formerly occupied by G. V. .Hintcnach t Co., would respectfully inform the citizens of Elk county that he Isprepajcdto furnish thcin with tho TJestKind of Clothing at rates which defy competition. - lie has on hnnd a' large assortment of READY-MADE CLOTHING, Consisting of VASTS,. VESTS J- CO ATA', which helms lately purchased in the Ent, and which he will dispose of nt a slight ad vance on cost Ilis .Gentlemen',- Fumising. Apartment is specially a'taptea to me warns oi nn customer. He lms also s largeand $xlenivi stuck of dtOTII'3, CASSIMEltES. V EAT INGS of the latest style and pattern, which he will mn&e to order in a neat ana durable manner, and na CHEAP as it cii be done any place ia the country. GIVE HIM A CALL. Sitisfaction rm I anteed, and goods warranted. AH asks is a FAIR TRIAL to prove it. St. Mary's I'a.. Feb. 1 1. 1807. ' TIHTSILVER SK1UT. - MURE DURABLE, MORE ELASTIC, ; MORE GRACEFUL! ' And will keep its shape ana return itsp!ce better than' any otter okirt. TjXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Notice is hcre i by eiven that Letters Testamentary on the estate of JOSEPH EIIRIG, late of cnxineer township, deceased, have been granted to the undersigned. ' All persona indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment, and those hav ing claims against . the same will present them duly authenticated for settlement. AUA.M JfcSUtUUr.K. mar'Gt Executor. of this in our usually cautious and loyal can't dupe uie'V in tonation neiehlor. tve J uO'ic Leilaer. In re viewing in Friday's paper the assets of 80Oie of tbe large Saving Funds of the country, the Ledger comments on the alarming fact (so he describes it), that relatively a small portion are mortgages the bulk being government securities aud bank stocks, "now dependent on government credit." "If any aeci. dent should happen" so says the Ledger, or such is the obvious tenoi of what it f-ays, ''to goveruinent credit what would become of the poor depos itors 't The assets should be mortgages." Never put," this is the . illustratiou, "oo ruanv eaas in one basket." What Schuyler CoUai has beeu re elected J-'peaker in Congres. The iuipeachuijut (m!ini:te re ported nothiug, but reoiuueiiJjl thsir it: tiuuancu. . The. King if Prussia has been -!cdd by" the Diet, Luipcruiuf Ger. jn.iny. ' The Ilo-onstructinn Hill making inil'tury d-pi'iiJeneies of the South has ' I i hi ,n , JP,1flf'''H nj' who, for the sake of success, are willing to overthrow the whole commercial and industrial fabric of tho country, and pro duce general distress among all classes. Woman's Lovk. No woman ever loved to tha full extent of the passion, who did aot yeucratc where she loved, and who di l net feel humbled (delight ed in tho humility) by her exaggerated and overweening estimate ot the superi ority of tha object of bur worship. 1 What state could fall, what liberty decav. if the real of man's noisy patriot. ism was as pure aa the siient loyalty of a woman a love f - Woman's ' love ia a rohe that wraps her from many a Storm Ben. Wade has been elected Pres ident of the Senate which is virtually There is the whining, beseehmg voice, that says "sycophant" as plainly aa if it uttered the word. It cajoles aud flatters you its words, "I love you ; I admire you ; you are everything jou soould be " . Then there is the tender, musical, comDassioniite voice, that sometimes goes with sharp features, but always with a trenuino benevolence If you are full of affection and pre. tensti. vour voie proclaims it- If you are full of honesty aud strengtn of nuaDOse. vour voice proclaims it. I " i - i ... j r. It vou are cold, ana caiin, auu unu, ioolisli, and consistent, or fickle, and ...... . , . ...... f. .. i i t i H..initiiii. vnnr VIIII'H Will Ut3 CII UUI' wo ask pt the L,uUtr, no. It mo Dasaei " :., .... i i i. '..,,; It firm I Iv truth-tclliuir- footed, and the eggs of that peculiareon- ou cannot wear a, mask without its .......: . .u.... i.:i, ,,c mnM beine Known mat you ro wmiih puuiiiuu as uunt3 iui wnvi. jt"-- . ., u killed r Vh n..t carrv nothine xou cannot cua.igo - v i. i - . t natural toue WltllOUl lis ueiuz auowu Itlll. Kill II P(r(N r a. ssi iiM iiiiL f.J 13 uiiniiuuur -S-F-." -" I 1 Bi,l U'a !, m. nf imnutinir to that VOU are UOing so, tha Leilaer anv intention to create alarm or to hurt the public credit. Far Almost simultaneously with the i i . , ' . . : .? l if ir Q f.n..k.. ITOIU It. It 18 till notiesi, . ii reiireaniuio i proBTTBUOU vi uuu, u. u. h.()..it uneasiness, and we refer t it. we re- naralvsis in Washington, his brother peat, as one of the niiuute signs of pos. s bio setting to rights or thp arrest of ru'i that we are striving to detect. It may be only "out of this nettle danger, we pluck the flower safety ." But of any other, remedy we despair. The Fortietii Congress opens with an afCTessive ohm ot ruio cut and dried. Military govcrpment for tho South, breaking down the Supremo Court, im. j. Mainiw, who resides hear Baltimore was stricken down by the same disease, Should he die, four of the Magraw brothers ariU have fallen from the same cause. The only survivor islr. Samuel Msgraw, ofBellair, Marjlawt-t If-is- probable that ClJarles Pheiraan, Eq . will be' nomiuated as United States District Jude for the Northern Distaiot of Ohio.' Mr. Bher peachmentaod deporition of the Presi. man hi a brother ot Geo. Sherman and irt it yI.'?.'', J dent, nd tb substitution of a taoatie I f3nator 8hrao i This new and heaiiful style of Skirt (P-il end March 7. 18ii.j,) was awardtd by the Urcat American insiiiiiie rair, uem iu York, October, 18Co, a SILVER MEDAL, illOPOSALR ! PEN N SYLVANIA AGRICULTU RAL LAND SCRIP FOR SALE ! The Board of Commiseioneis now offer for sale 620,000 acres of Agricultural College Land Scrip, being the balance of the Scrip granted to the Commonwealth of Pennsyl vania for tbe endowment of Agricultural Colleges in this State. Proposals for tbe purchase of this Land Scrip, addressed to " The Board of Com missioners of Agricultural Land Scrip." will be received at the Surveyor General's office, at Harrisburg, until 12 o'clock, M.., on WEDNESDAY. AP1UL, 10, 1807. This land may be located in any State or Territory, by the holders of the scrip, up on any of the unappropriated lands (except mineral lands) of the United States, which may bo subject to sale at private entry. Each piece or scrip represents a quarter section of ono hundred and sixty acres, is issued in blank, and will be transferable, ithout endorsement or final assientncnt. The blank need not be filled until the scrip is presented for location and entry, when the party holding it can fill the blank and enter the land in his own name. Bids must be made as per acre, and no bids will be re ceived for less than one quarter section. Ibe Scrip will he issued immediately on the payment of the money to the Surveyor General. On all bids for a lees quantity than 40,000 acres, ono-third of the purchase money must be paid within ten days, and the remaining two-thirds within thirtv- days after notification of tha acceptance of tne bid or bids by the Uord of Commis sioners. JACOB M. CAMTBELL, Surveyor General.'' (For the Board of Commissioners.) lUsmsBrBO, Feb. 27, 1S67. mar81866tds being the Highest Premium ever given a Hoop Skirt. . . The Sted Springs are wound with a11 plated wire in place of a oolton coverine wbieh will not wear off or become s-nile and I lie whole skirt may be woshed witlio iniiirtr ni- four nf rustintr. and will be- good as new. The Combination Silver Skirl Thin invention combine with the onli'l ry Skirt I lie advantages or our Silver SlJ the bottom hoops are the same as in""' l ed in I lie Silver Skirt, the coverinir "f cannot wear off. while the upper onosj covered with cotton. No lady havin? worn one of our Skirts, will be will' i wear anv other, as tbe lower hoops other kinds are soon injured and soil" - Tbe best mnteeials are use ! in m?-' ' struction, and, from their durability neatness they are destined to become M Favorite Skirt. Manufactured, solely by the , Silver Skirt and Wire Mart . facturing Company. ,80 and 32, 15.4UCL.lY ST. NEW ,YOUK. 1 T. S. Ersaar, Sup't. Aug i'ih-1 1TNERSU1J etofore T The Ctrard Life In$uranee, Annuity & Trust Co. OF PHILAP.'A. CHARTERED I.Y 1S36 CASH CAPITAL $ 300,000,0ft. ASSETS ' $2,455,855,69. Mutual Insurance combined with tha sa. eurity of capital. : .. - ( For insurance apply to. j,9 i hjuj; JOHN O. HALL, fkl7tf Bidgwsy, Pa. TVSOLCTION OF PARTS' I The partnershin here between George P. Hintenach ami t'c Imhof,' under the title of IUSTK'A CO.. is this day dissolved by mutt sent. Tbe accounts of the late fi'm. settled by G. P. HINTENACH. " continue business at the same plae. - '. G. P. HlNTi-L Feb. 12, 8t . GEOUGE lMllt rnilE AMEKICAN COW-MlLKI' I' flllVP' TI,.ORPlT.STW successful invention of the Aae ' ... . . . L.cJ Every pruUf farmer suouw ' I Secure your owu territory. Apr'J tha offletf. EXCHANGE BlIDin- J Feb. 14. St ' Harrin-1! TTOB SALE.-r-Tho Store houf I"' occupied by Burke and VouJ ' thriving borough of St. Marv'l to CIIAS. .MeVEAl HeuiiuL'er If Jan. 3. G7.tf. Kl CABLING ! CABL! K TONS Eest Quality jus-t re". lei for sale at the LOWEST a' r " end in your orders. 4? char APEU ItAQfl sngs for Goodi st - W t.ll'l T'; .-e I ns-