thitir'on era special notice!...iu>n[iltod, that the nmoker b e biquku4 in a in; that will not be...
TRANSCRIPT
-
voEix.THITIR'ON ERA
I*L!BE.U8KI> ETBBT BATCSDAT Er
BENJ. II.VOGT.EDITOlt ASJ> PBOMEmu.
Offloe on Morris Street near Bleokwell,
TKO.IUR *>V aHIllSCIUPTIOM
INTABUBLY IN kmivur..
O n e Y e a r , - - - - - - - - 82 .00S i x M o u t h s , - - - - - - - l . i tuT u r e e m o n t h s , - - - - - - - DO
A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S .
I*11228(G
X.
7/>afi7r.2.17.1fidMlfill
10 00
2w
* iKH.
"an1)07fi5(1
f>!)0 0
15 Oft
.()2 r,u8 fill4 m» /in7 nitH 00
l!l 251!) 00
$ 3 50n 00S Ad8 (Id
10 0012 fiO15 (MlIK .10»2 (III
—£ 4 .'ill6 no
y oo11 0013 001(1 25111 02as 01141 00
• S T S10 iE.
ilUtof cl*rg0iwill be ftirnialiodoi) npillbntlnn.L. C, niEUWlBTH,
Dovur MOITJH Cmmty N. J .
Berkshire Valley Hotel!A BOAT) HOUSE scar hunting and fich
ing grounds; a pre.ty spot with largo airyrooms, good stables,' Hnedii,&.is. TLh liounehas undergone thorough repaint, in dulylicensed, situated on a croea-roadu, 4 nillenfrom Dover. Sporting men, pedlani, andothers leaking for a good. place to stopshould bear in mind this hotel is the cheap-crt place in the Blato with good b«ds, boun-tiful table, BAR well stocked with i ho boutof LIQUOBS hi th» market. Alw POHTERon draft. "DOO.-nODOKIsa.Berkshire Valley, NOT. 7th, 1878. 46-ly
SPECIAL NOTICE!We have just purchased all the
Spring samples of a first-classfine shoe manufacturer, compris-ing 125 pairs of everything thatis made, at a reduction of 25 percent. These goods are very littlesoiled and being samples are bet-ter than regular goods. Comeearly and secure a bargain,
KOBEBEB & HEAGAN.PASSAGE TICKETS
AT
ORAM, HANCE 4 Co.'s STORE,PORT OltAM. N. J.
FOIt all th" nriueipul lin^a of MenmHlii[.Hfnmi Sc,> YVvk hi Mverp'n'l si LOWEST11ATEH. Ala.. DltArrt] OH OllEAT I1UITAININD [1UXAN1K 1C
lVOOWPOItT HOUSK.T H O M A S l l l t l G U T , I ' r o p i Itrfll
WOODPORT, MORRIS Co., N. J.
imati 'tL iniuiirpaiMei! Ity nil}' Iu that n-^'iin
For Sale, Rent or Exchange.The iiiio iiroiiorty on Uio cornpr of Bhck-
it'ii nnd EHSOX Ktrootfl, recently occupied IJJ
Daniel Q. V/i^ina, V*•
CHAS, BUCHANAN
SMiTH & MEGIE,ATTOKNEYS AT LAW.
OFFICE OVER I'lEIWOh'S HAT STOHt,BLACKWELL HTHEET,
or f blniln.id Enttrtftinlargo, well neatoj with oomtorlnli
and maj be had at rcanonal"!.* tcrnin.Apply tu WHITLOCK i LEWIS,
41tf in tbo builtliiic
Notice of Settlement.Notiuo in heroby gircn that the nccountBlb» aulwcrifcer, Adminiatmtrii of Gubriulin Dura*, dBowwcd, - i l l Li audited andited by the Piiribgato, And reported forttlciucnt to t'ao Orphnns1 Court cf the
nty o( MorriB, on Monday, the 4th dayuffUiN[ilTod, that the nmoker be Biquku4 In a i n ;That will not be mauh to Ul> lfklag."
Bu they seized on bis pipe, which tliey bid intho inud,
Ami thnn they detertninod lo BOioko him J 'And. buildins a fltu of peat and of wood
Itight under lua nose, they awoke him. -o uprftug will) » tiop aui) bo didn't fl"flo
atop—Ho friKlitened be was by tho flre-
i'ill ]>u came to a lilll with a very high top,And bo climbed till he cootdu't got blghtr.
!e v, undDted three dnye, till ho sighed for bi(pund
A|)ii hu plcaaaul life under the water;ml tie tliouehlof Ma green'litiTowlft,'sofonfl,Aud hii browu little pollyvog danghter,
Then back to hi* borne one morning he bopped,Ito | muting witii sorrowfal oroikiUK,
ml like a respectable fmgKie he droppedHu uuuatural habit uf amoklng.
51, V. B. SEARING,CARPENTER and BUILDER,
ELACKWEI-L ST., DOVER, N. J,Pliinr-ndHpc'oifil.-a(iori«rpented tale of their fathers borrowing
money to buy land, teams, and every'i.ng else necessary to make a crop,
i&3 repaying tbe (pan in one or tworoars, 1'bese yoi ' ' "
:loh virgiu soil of Kanas
otlihig undnr
o lifted tbe ffclli
. Solomon's C»y irJiurBfBill.fiiUnd.n along the WBJ ?
Will Uio Rood HamnnUo oomo nnIi thu itrunftlh of tho choicn wire fftilii and hope and oharitj oIn It only lore that die a ffhcti c
Nay, luvoAnd gC
l
Hurvitea, and br»w soul* I I» ,BrdUB deoda aro dono bj tho tow,many accopl what the martrra givthinB nnilcr tbe BUD 1B ueir I
YIXDIKI BMOWK.
EBA-D1ATI0KS,
r, tby name is Savings Bank.Job »as probably the flrsi aoptor. as
bo bud patioDte.Lawyer's motlo—"B» trntblnl »na
nultiply and replevin tbe earth."'Tis bettor to buve boomed and lost
;ban never to bove boomed «t all. p
Tho urelob «lio stole ii pincspple onda bancb ot bananas got bis uossert.
Wbil. tbo lamp ioUs oat to barn it isliable to cxulodo. I sball therefore diveit to tbe vilest sinner.
Tbo vulgar wnl "bost" is not heardin Boston. Tbat article is allnded to asoallnary symposinm. :
Tbo Bradford Era thinks tbe onlrdifforeMO between a; sainlt boj and agloss of soda-Wet is five *n jK r,«
CharlBs-"Wlut did Ibat spring suitoost you, AIT Alfred-"Can'l say,dear bo;-baven't been sued for It yet."
Tie clambakes of Mod.! Island; arenow in order. Wben tbo 1«1 men • « •tbelr. they tbrow tho shells over intoConneotioot.
A stalno h!> jmt bean ore«tea>t Syd-ney, Ne» Sontb Wales, to the memoryof Osplain Cook. Wo believe be |wascarved there once before,
Claaol-So yon prefer my medicinestoTblofDr.Pill.bnry? MrvMWli-mn-Ocb, indade, dootber, ddiir, ye'er »deal better than tbe other old. Win* .
A snrgeon.ni.ior tronbled wilb tbespleen reraarka in a melancholy tone :
feel any plea.nra In ampntallW a limb."Baid Hiss Dolonart at the Art Mu-
JZ. "Ton. I «a aodelighted, Oba.lea;rbrtntaMhfnltaWH tbat oppo-
site 1" Mo«« •""H"'' fo"1B n 8 r '" '°siiylDg "bust"
Bpeak of a man', marble brow and heB,o.7witbcon«l.».prid*b»t11>
wooden bead and be'e mademinute. LangnOKe lilo fool wilb mneb.
> slippery thing
went into » iwt»or»nt
The subscriber bavins: th< lie«t arranpd C A m i l A Q K FAOTOBY In thUaction ufcountrjr, anil sllll believing that the
Best Work is the Cheapestin t i e end, la n o . prepare] to Sll all order, ta tba
LATEST STYLES AND IMPROVEMENTS*,Vi*aotlr»Mj»atto Mi.dartbiiltt will ptrmit ud atai low I r mnay to debtor and endllor will aUov. Onr cvatoncn wtr dmtad wnon cmiuMom h tntr ^rtlclar la rrtUm »P • riBBT-OtUSS UDOOt.
ALL WOBK WAttHAHTSD AS BSPKESENTED.Wia»»b»adCkrrla«a.ofta» tKcaJ u d IkM daaa at utr»n»l; low Inna,
kaj «i not «UfM> UB«JB-U»I» an aaadaoM la apptanm b«l lac* itmnUStj.
IEPAIIIMS utf PAINTIM9 4tM tt ItWMi H«»W« n t n .
W&OOm TO LET oa nunubU k m , UHI OTOBAOE BOOH]
Dr. nolmeaaayai "K>«ni a rennrintad oorreolb/ ta Mwapapara,
poeU di . JoiiIiB. Wto « | i I W ! "
Ta«akmi • B
atrupk ththoroughly
imbued with the belief that a mortgagenot a dangerous creature, not even
,who boldly embarked
all farpoing qpep-ions^that of raising wlieat, a cropat tecpiires high-prioed lobop and ox-msive maohinery. Tbe IHSHUU uf thii
ipnrt in that to-day almost the entire[Vest is Govern! wiili mortgagee.
iB rich creek and river bottoms,in tho slopes of tb« lulls, over rocky
idt, acroga the aaudy, gravellywaatca, one ca
bqrse will
rido &nd tbe hoofs, if eve
land, Timtread on
a nnimal eats is owned, actually•nfld, byraenlnNowEue'a"J * lh
Middle Slates. The ninjority of thesewere placed when wheat was
orth 81.80 per busbo! iu St. LOUIH,a worth from fl*o to eight ct-nts per
iound. and Oattle from fl»e to sctenand there was a fair prospect
;bat tbo mortgages would be paid wbenmatured. But the fall in prices
aame, »nd in }B7B wlimit ww ud,] jn tbs3olden Bolt of Kansas for fifty cents per
bushel; and this wbeat had to be hauledjm five to fifty miles in wagons to getrailroads. Hogs were worm but two
oenta per pound; cattle from two tojree cants per pound. Every farmerrboaoldhogaattwoortwo and a ballsentfl per pound lout money. Corarorth twenty-five oenta per bushol can-
jot be profitably fed to hoga worth twoBents per pound. Tho name ia true ofjattle. Tbe farmer who borrowed onethousand doliaiu when tlie debt could„_ pnia with TOO bpsbola of wheat, orwith 80'bogs, or with 20 steera, now hasa sell 2,000 bnflbels of wheat, or 160logs, or45 steers, to pa; i t ; and heinnot raise this amount of stock or.•oin on his farm. Taxes are not lower;
'he price of the expensive machineryibd in tbe wheat fields does not fallid the untrngeoris freiglit tariffs of the
that wero bnilt by tbe Govera-__jt nnd given to the Kansas Pooifioind Union I*ao.ao Oompanica are asigb an in tbe fluab timetTbo o o r i M N that were pbced on
. J B rocky aplaDdsund «andy- wastes ofthe W«t axe to-daj virtually lost, " h -5astarn opital il represented by « par-;iatly caltiTar»d farm ot lean, unproduc
tjveK>!».t."dng out,"oracheap Sliauty.fThe morfgagor is trying to pay Ihe »-»owMtontbe mortgafie aad the taxes,,t h« wrdy iiuoceflda. By dint ol/orking loog hours, atMTing bis familj.roing poorlj »nd coldly clad, by greet" my, in fact, he is barelj able lo
up tba interest money. The taxesifteD go oopaia. Many o( th . o t.(these Kanaai fams wan. unable toiaj the teeda ntcfs«ary to plant gardens
>bis laat apring, so as to hi?a * hmltnyTanetj or food for their growing lam.-Ilea. I t Is a commw thing all overKaniu to see children barefoot ID thewinter and dad in thin cotton olothea.The interest money of tbo mortgagesmt np tbe sarplas ot the turn thatshould be upended for food and n n .ganntnU.
on tb* rich OMek u d
riw bottom- unThty bat* HOfttar *ft*«rtheif ten* pnd"btwl lor ttu « W I B | winlei loan*
earn and aave money enough to openform* of their own, These men arenearly all Kepnblicaiu. Their labor isas reliDble as any in tbe United Stales.They are accuotomod to hard livfp'g, andcheerfully endure tbe poor food of Kan-sas (arms wllhout a murmur. They are'honest, intelligent, faithful. Tbesemenare from all tbe Slates east of Kansas.I bare had Vermont, New York, Penn-Bylvaoia, MaBBaahusetls, Indiana, Illin-oibi, Ohio, Iowa, Kentucky, Weat Vir-ginia, and Wisconsin all represented oninyfiirm during a hart-oat. None ef tbemen were over thirty years old—a brightclean force, nnd seventy-five per cent, ofthmn Republicans wlio voted tor drank
These {laborers own lands under tbeHomestead and Entry laws of the UnitedStates, and wben work is over for theyear, end they are unable to get theiiboard for their wort, tbey retiru to theirclaims, aad, clubbing together, 'through the winter us cheaply u pbui<ble. Iu the spring tbey again go towork on the forms. I unbeflit*ting]y
that they ace tbo bent class of farmhands in tba worlds Tl»ey tb(ffon_understand tbe qse qf thu expensive
ir «aviHg maohinepy qsed In tbe West;capital bands with teams j are nsnally
men of oourage \ are o[ free and jndepen-dunt bearing, and andoritnnd tbe raisingnnd saving of onr standard crops. It itwise to displace thla labor with that fromtbftcotton fields of tbe South? Thisblack labor that threatens to doncend onis has worked nothing but cotton, rice,
nnd iugar caoe. It knows nothing ofonr crops, of our fflotb.o4 Qf ploaflbing,or of oultivetian, 'i'be negroes have
iver seen our atanJard grain-cnttinginaohines, headera, self-binders, self-rakers. They have never even heard ofa threshing maohine. The only machinethey are capable of mi ^
^ y . a hand oora prapker. Xbope,welfare of Ramos, thatoqr young
white men hove not got to enter ID tocompetition with this miatulloa labor.
To properly, or improperly, open afarm under tbe Hnmeutead law in Kansasloata as follows j
United Htatnii foe )(t ^nnfl Of6oe.191800
Team of hoi15000
,..,.aooooBanking plough , V) 00Koodfor fifteen months 300 00OlotliiuH for .arally 40 00Seed wheat 80 00Harrow 30 00Horsofecd 40 00
Total
Tills expenditurecan he r*>3noed aboutStWl bj \\\o flaa ol ft I'dtig-out" Insteadof & louse. Lot this be done, and thefamily bos eot to bave $668 in cash, as
di i K f ththe credit in Kansas for thesetbiugs, Suppose 20,000 families (andthese are not large figures when the talkif Mia Rympnthifiers vrith, thia moyeQent9 oonqidared) ooino to RanBoa during
the next year, It they oorqe m poorlysupplied witb money as those who camelast spring were, instead of having 818,-960,000, as they should hare if they areto farm, thej will bare, at tho bighoatfigures, $150,000. Instead of being able
open farms, they will at ouce have toaearcb for work, nnd being iu nuud ot it,
, braid for their starringfamilies, they will l]s bittprlj disappoint-od to find Hinro la no work to ho done in
s or Nebraska iiftor tlie IDth ofiber. Agrionltural work is then
ended, and will not begin again untilIf the plnn of bringing this peo-
ple to Knnaas as soon as the growing cotton crop ia picked iu adhtintd to, themanagers will bripg the deluded racento » frozen country, where hotu climateind people are hostile
It is bnrdiy (iredjtablp ta the men at:he head of thin movement to expend
Bympathy on these foreign paupers,while tbe North is full of Tineniployedriiito labor, aad we of tbe Southwest,* middle Weat, fail to understand wliy
juu or tbt) Kottbeaat nrgo on tbia exodus.Wo cannot understand why a farmer ofMaine or Massachusetts living on cold<barren lands, who, as his children grewnto strength and manhood, saw tfiem
joe by one go West to earn a homosb.Qulil now, while his youngest or old-eat boy has just left him, and he has badehim godspeed and good fortune, snivelover tbe condition of the late slaves, andurge tbat the labor of the cotton-grow innSouth, where it Is needed, be transport-ed to tbe food-prodaoing West, where itis not needed, and there enter into com-petition with b!s sons. We cannot un-derstand why be should let a false senLi.mentality BO far change the duties of afather to a child as to urge as a poHtioalncDoasity that the children he begotsbul! be forced into a compaction forsheer existence with tbe most ignorant,worthless labor known to man. So onewho has looked at tba subject of cheaplabor haj a sound argument to offer inits favor. Cheap labor is a curse to anyand all lands. I t inevitably resnlta iniheap men and cheap women.
Human nature being the same on oKansas farm as in the offlce of a Pennsvlvania iroa company, given two men.mnting for «ork,th« man who will workthe cheapest will net it. So will U bein Kaunas unit year if this movement iscarried out. The blacks will get hereiu winter an.l early spring, and whanwork begins they will »onr the countryin wnrrb of it, and, from my knowledgeof the Jlausus farmer. I can safely sajthat tliey wi" g«* '*« *° t h o a t t o r o x o l n '.inn of our intelligent white labor nowworking our lands, if the blacks willwork for a wople of dollars leas per
ontb. And the young white wen whowmehere from the E»st, foil ol hopeand joyons io U» expectation of gutting
home of their own. will find them.K\m oonaoripUd Into that vast w a y ofliborsrs who tramp to and fro orer the
North In search of ™ *
The Urge proportion of this food isdrawn from Illinois, Ohio, Missouri.Kentucky, and Kansas. Tbe Month inthe best market we have. It is delib-erately proposed by tbe promoter* ofthis exodns to erippJe tbe consumingcapacity of this market by 6,700,000buskin of corn and 46,000 hoga per year,and to set the people taken from thereto raising breadatuffe and meat—toohftnge 'bets from consumers to produc-
The 100,000 field bands in the cot-Um fields now produce 800,000 bales ofMttoe, worth to-day 852,000,000. Th'iias At the Southern market (aod lose itre will if this exodus is carried out) will•tmoat ruin the great food-prouncingItatu, The distress prodneed amonghe imaH furmera who raise corn fornarkct win be very great, They, underthe lo* prices tbat will than role forbret^tnlfc, will be nnable to pay tbeInterest on their mortgages. TheH^rill
foreclosed. If such a blow was struckat the manntactariDg iateregts of the&ut by the W«t, the East would revolt.Bat when the manufacturing section of joar land urges on a raovemeDt that isalmost certain to reinlt in our deatruotlon, we are abused if we protest) even.If we Insisted on and passed a free tradetariff, and then invited tbe so called pau-per labor of Europe to cross tbe seas,and flooded tbe East with 500,000 ofthem, you would naturally protest. Cut
are doing worse than this; you areirging tbe late stavoj from tbe South, aice notorious for pilfering, utterly void
if virtue, cowardly, lying aud lazy, togo to ua, when we are actually nnable;o supply our white labor with employ-ment. To-day there ore thousands ofrlute men ia Manias unable to got'orb, and, thia in. the midst of oar liar-
vest,
You not only urge these black peopleto go to us (not come to you), but tekanp subscriptions to Hid their going. Theproposition to aend us a race that busks
i at night from neighboring fields,that steals ohlpkene and pigs to suobateat as to almost drive the growing ofcorn and hoga out of the cotton belt,does not strike you as unjust, We ofthe West believe that if a race of people
numerous as tbe negroes of the South'where in many localities tbey outnumber tbe wbiteH) are unable to pro-tect themselves, .they are unworthy ofprotection. Honest, oourofleoua white
who aro willing to work, shouldlot Ue thrown oat of employment, or
oppressed, or In any way injured, toaaks room for a race mentally andorally weak, wretched, and cowardly,do not mean to be abusive, but I doean to show plainly how the mass of
tbe 'Western people regard tlie negro,We dqn't want them. We have no use!or them, We strongly object to thacoming among ns of these ubjeota of po-itioal charity. Wu bave a plenty ofilaok men and women hero now, and if
these are a fair Bam pie of those to come;ana I claim tbey are), they will be a
curse added to lite in Kansas.o wo linvo aro utterly worthless,
They hang around tlie little towns, Tbemen waah out tho low drinking ialooDB
abouml In Un> West, being paid fortbis ennobling work with drinki
welfare of nations. But in direct «w-tntdiction of their ubiloaopbj when a lowtariff is being debated, they now advcate a measure that in (be first year ofits fulillmeut will dej-rivi of 852,000..
You men ol Iba East wbior encourage tiiia txoJaa will b* reapon-ribls for this ruin of yoor i
100,000 ««W l - o k «•* • ' U w
ngioa awl p»l « » " lato U" * -*»"•dagnfiol.
a. baalwd ikoMaaa ».W^ S l S
K « « . wMWWt » e a * or ̂ •*»u m toew jpMfwlfy I* IVJ «*"• "*•
t*, tmtlr, 0o4 w MJ ***>•.•tKiMxIfrlltui "»o4^
aaabat ol atmnaebt will Wtva toa Bo. Ik.Ova hai aaJ a aaak au had mata m ol (an) toUea hod. AaeaiMlbaf
U»Uy ol tto Btfsma m\ oa« fciuWl 4 t j
a U»Uy ol tto Bfol «°va aaaal aa4 tor, jwM'iaa ot
J U t ifc aaUaaU %b»iaaataatlam
OOB of export*. A vast industry, in focithe fundamental oue of i, conntry.largeennngh to be a untion, is threatened bythe reckless conduct of the Republicanswuo ugo on tbia exodus. As tbe Statesthfit will bo direatly offeeted arc Ueruo-cratio, they care nothing; but indirectly,if these plain, aro carried out, ther aregoing to seriously cripple the BepublicanStates of Ohio, Illinois, Kansas, und Ne-'iraflka, by injuring their markets andlooding them witb a cheap, etujiid, de-
based labor.Suppose the Demneratle pnri,
advocate aa a political necesaity the mi-gration of the iruii workers and mioersof PennBylvnnia and Sew York, and tbesotton and woollen mill bauds of NewEngland, to the Western prairl«8.Suppose tbey should use every, deviseknown to men skillful in tha •we '
ivfjrsoorching whiskey. Tbey blackboots, they whitewash outboustts nnd
ioe», fbey bury tlia carrion tbnt mayfound in tho towns, tbey cut heir,
ind they steal. The women, putting upsign of "Washing Done Here" onune tumble downnbanty, take invariablyprostitution, poll* sexes follow tbeir
laineua uptil tlio outraged communityIrives them forth. They care for nothing,imply going to another town, they re-
sume tbeir evil vocation^, and their,aces aro quickly occupied by anotherit of fugitives from some other town'slatice. We have a full supply of these
siodists. All our drinking saloons areFull handed. All tbe boots that needlading can be Maoted by our present
'oroe. All the hair tbat will ever growKansas can be cat by our present
barbers. So the men who come herenext winter and spring have got to go to,__-k on our farms, or else be supportediere in idleness by personal. State, orlatiotml charity.
If they go to1 work they will throwrhite RepnbHonna out of work; and tbe
,/hite man, when be considers that helost lrfs^tork because a negro underbidhim, and Hut tbe negro sent here bylepubiieans, will inevitably vote theJemocrotio ticket at the Presidential
Jeotion of 1880. The workingmen ofjthe Went, wife* sympathy is with thfilrjbrethren, will desert the Kepublioanparty nearly in a boily. Twenty thou-aud black men coming to Kansas, andlisplaoing tbat nnmber of white men,rill bave tbs deserved effect to change
Htate from Republican to Dem-octstio. • -- .- :-
I t is well known thst the experimentJ growing cotton in Egypt and India.as been an expemive failure.' TheIbra Is short and harsh. Though the'
labor nBcd there was almost unpaid, tue|jarmers, when our « r of tho rebellionended, were at once driven from thenarkefs of t'-e world. TbB truth is that;h« cotton belt of tie United SUtos is.be only tnw cotton land In tho would.it tnpplies the world. No cotton fromother fields can be sold as long as a full•npply of American eotton « n be bad.This is acknowledged, and being so, it isto the interest of all Western food pro-ducers lo keep the labor of the Sonlh intbe field growing ootton. We don'twant the Booth to raise food, and shocannot afford toraUe it whin cotton liworth 18 oenU per ponnd. What w» ofthe Weat need ia to have tbs 8nuth develop her nwonrcea for producing cottonto tha utmost, while we raiseoorn, meat,and wheat U» l « d her. Realiting this,w« dont want the n*ro .x«lna to takeplace. Itthamov«mwtshotildUk«the
•htpa of eolonising IHM !>»«• willilithe poUUc«Hy doubtlol SUtes ot SewToA N«* J t w j * t a * Oonawrtlent, w-Jt th, Vert wo.Id t i l l co».id« Itwithdrawal ol tbrif labor from Ute eotton
• * *•-•— B a t u w e( 4 J . u a M l l o n yeooM aliU aall I!:* lo»» aa»sauj to fe«ltUm, it woald ao» aaVt us ta Kaaaaa K
l as UwoaU to briaf U-o
•tie balanw of liada ia rat larar„«),, . M l ; to laa wtu» •» aiport.I I lb« proJ»«UoB "• !»•• alal* I 'Iba waaUj wwiU laijort » « • H
aaJ IVia, aocorJiol lo Ik*Mtblaia at UwMataaawa »bo urail-
ol «°va aaaal a 4 jfat waak, a»J U.at ifc. arpium eating has increased to a fearfultztent. Not long since from Staucton,
II conference of druggiato reportedhat tbe ratio of increase of Bales in 1877iver 1876 was 92 per cent,, and in 187ftsver the preceding year 64 per cent,md in 1875 over the preceding yeer 50per cenl\ That was another section ofbbe country, and was ttiougbt to be pc-uliorly elmrncteriatie of the Sbennn-loah Volley. Bat we will venture theisflertion tbnt the percentage ot increaseIn Maine has been Quito na large, andhat the sales of druggssts since the pro-
hibitory legislation has been in vogue
ill so show. If sach Is the fact tuuihange from tlie nsc of intoxicatingliquors to opinm in far from being animprovement.
The Christian at Work Bays : "BishopCox puts forth a letter in the Church-man in which ho says of the new BibleBevisiun that 'it will be a. moat usofulgift to scholars, but for taking the placeif tlio common version it will prove nn-atiafaotory iu an alarming degree. Weshould like to a«k why a work which it
esaerted will prove 'useful to scholars'will necessarily prove unsatisfactory andilarmtng to tlie common people ? Coignorance and popular safety go handin hand, and h the road to learning aforbidden path for tbe masses ? Woknow such doctrine publicly waa pro-aUmod and "practised dnrinfr tbo Mid-dle Ages—bat in our nineteenth oen-t a r y l l t h h t h d got bn
d
gwell we thought we had got
W h id it ill tt a r y w e l g gyood that 1 We havo an idea it will takobetter and more logical reasoning thantbe Bishop's to stem tho tide iu favor otBible Revision."
Cant. Logan ol theschoonerKatie E.Stuart, which arrived Saturday, reportthat when off Wuitehead ho wlinln
bear I He rryr time li
'deck,ncK>r
deek, clctili I1
op cry. Den!Pleatj too much true din word I tell.Ebery hit trap- All work done flniMi <I nut fiu hack i)nt bnnRahiw." Add hp
A bridfRroomtry«liBlue In lh« rn.l ibai • • » « * ' ' *«**iMWlaoff.
Tbf W t o « mt* all Ia lo» «itl. Uw»r. and. sine* Ib* «H
abont fifty feet loug cotninK townnl tliovessel. Ha threw & billet ol' wood at themonster, which seemed to enrage il, andIt dived nndcr tbe schooner nnd etime upalongside, blowing water on to tbe dock.It *ns strnck by several missiles, butdid not seem afraid. Then bilge wntcr
pumped overboard. This drova thowlale off for a few TO inn ten, but it oamobacltt and was evidently about to strikotho vesnel when it was struck closo toho blowhole* by a WKI> lamp of nanl.
Tliin vwemnt to take tbo ranrugt out ofwhale and it swum off in the direc-
tion from which it bad first come.
Bpwking of We*ton'ii wonderful walkIn England, Wilk.V Spirit of tbe Times
i : "Thi* i» an Hiwdnlteratwl Ami-ri*riHnnr. and ft in not likely tlutcuij
T)c«"pn|>or will t » infmnioiiseoongli to prove WcMon an FIVnik is English, Hanlao m>Cknadiani, OTrary >» Irish, Eunb i i
; btll no oat> *liall »tcml Wmtnnfrom hli Dative |>lnc« IVvidenc*, BhoJohland, Uuilnl Sutr> "f Arorrlm.'1
A poc(k«l Aowricaii wnclo.lma letter
Uadtttlys JUanh, ,tmly b«ni Out ' W « B Jewl r t r t ,"•b* WU ht .!*!««*''*' •""*• ln* *«>**** •"
with tlie ii.llo*ioc btilliant ofniU i " Ih»vr Jatt retuniMl from a drive in theR i wlwr* I M I jrem in y « r taloche
otlwr f»,r awnidm tth hg
Ut ram*tiJfd Vw nriBmh pttli«r way »f ftp
-
Co>Uol|dfttlMiofth«B«niiB.of tba two banka rfTHE IRON EKA
HENJ If. VOUT, Editor anil l'r«|i'r
lli, ISfi).
'Jim littleMandham.iye in vary mtive now, ours tiro lift* injiiving tlieiu-
hLivi'S to till iiiiHearunetP, and uuiuerona areof ttitiKfacticm we hear from
U i u t i b t 'Y l>u>
The National Gala Day.'Ilio natal dny of the tountry wan jojfuiij
Ivcj I iu mnny parts of tin? section IiiJUner tlie observance wiia iuuujjumkil bjthe t-oja who, witU drawn aud uaiom, fill-ed thu hours af Lho jirucaJiug mj,lvL withf-1 tiurtb IILiug uf v
.ould not pull U. JeiTj, atlurit tou much ptrsuusiou, was comphimed
of, Hud aftur liaviug a hcuriug was boundiver tm the next tuna of Court, when w<tope bo will reciiv; fl good lesfloa for it iimytbiug but a heuvea for horaen at btBplace. We doubt not that more than
' ' r baa retired to live on a goodfort'iiiR niOilr from •K|rry'« cemetery.
'ilie Uov. I, \V, Cochrnu ftud family ileft ou their Hummer vacation. '•
Death of James Devore.Jlr. JIIIUM Devore, formerly of Dover,
but late of Berkshire VtiUuy, and a life lonirodent of this section, died »t bin home olTiK-ftday morning iu the 73d your of his ago.
He lud bera iU font lODg time and thereunihtimcoa of hie death w*re peculiar.i exnmiimtion niun< made reroute tlis caased by a large caacer in the stom-
ach, which bnd choked up tha food pnHsngeB jused him to endure a fil"w process of
Btan-atioa. This he bore witu ofllm forti-ttiile, BMxtuimd by a fnith in bis Makerwululi lmd cslstcd from his earliest years.He wan a truly good mati, leading a lifu "°consist-mf. Hint it amst leave a blessed in-fluence with hit family aud friends. In 1»»fU'uonifiMtioufil Ixlic'f Iw wiw a Methodist,und for many ypnw had boon a strong aup-purtcroftlieclniri.il. ]ly nil tlio old peo-ple of tliitt vicinity bin death will he mourn-ed ns.tlmt of a riiiccre friend, He leaven a
Te and tight ehildn-n—wont of whom areirriert, \brepairs, Htock-takUig, flic., etc., and thu ap-proach uf July 4th, b u bad tbe effect of pro-
oingn very qolot »W*et. Tho indiua-. iw, howovur, attt favorable to a very active
lull trade, aud mnken are very firm In ihelrHigher prices are looked for in Mo,r.V won, which in becoming heryWe flfeoold not be tmnrtse*i«ri
goaorul ndviiuce inutile of the next tbirtjdajs. In fast, one or moro brands are nownt $21). ThOrtn trying |o pnnibnss iron findfew willing to listen to present prices for fo-turo delivery. Wa continue to qnota No. 1Foundry, nt »18.C0(!P;*1»; No. 2 Ftran.I.y
idrorge.at»lfl.B0(Vf.*17.mitiB, long nnd favorablyThe Tilly Fo^tor
Scrantou, lWe
purity of ita orea, haa bby iwtie>t in the interest ofa Coid auil Iron CoUH«il»y, of
u, ln .uderntaua that the mine in lo be
The Clendon Company's Furnacat.Th* following, from tne Eorioa Free
Press, will be of interest to many hew whonrc intfflpflrted in the dlendcm Iron Oom-
nuy, which has lnrge minina intetertl inliHBtutiou:The first furtmce waa oomplBtad In 1«*8
uud the imttth appllftd by tha late Wflitanistoue. BSiruaoo No. 1! wan erected In
„ . . ( No. 3 in 1801; No. 4 ia (lie furnaceat South Eaaton, and was purcliased by theiltsiivi Company about twetv* yejirfl ago;i1}. r>, the new slack, was couplsted iu 1671.Thoro are 20(1 men employed in the fur-
aooi dirfwt and nt the minM, qnarriM, ma-euhie BhojJ, an te»niBtarB and blacksmithstbe number ewelis to about BOG.
Tluro are four blast eugiues, with a totaluipocity of 1,000 horse-power. Tho com-piiuy is erecting a flftti ougtue with a capvtiiy Df l.'iO horse-power. Beuld&i tbdHfl nn-glut'* there !B a powerful statiiused to hoist oindere up the inclined plane,
ncfi of the fallowing mines,uutrolled by the oompmy; UratEman'a,
Tbe npreBentmvM of tbthis town hava mad* «n agreement that b u
lMxI in the ooasolldaUan of tbe bualneilb d l dof both, w
largely developed and tho output of ore more**" alT h otbau doubled iu tho near futi
wax made ilirough the agency of A. F. Wendt,M. E, Tbe eonfiideration was caah j andUDMH. J o " " H. Cheoverand C. W. Durand.the former ownon* of tbe mine und proprie-tors of New York Belting and Packing Com-pauy, which wet with serinIIM losses by thedefidcatiim uf Joiiu O. Tappan, tho KoatonDelting Company's Treasurer, iu July, 1878,unvc announced to their creditors that theywill iwj- all their notes in full on three days'sight drafts. At the time of tho Bostonparty's failure, the Now York company wiisgiven three ycaw' time by their creditors iuwhich to meet their obligations. They pro-pone, however, to take up al! notes withoutwaiting for them to mntui
h-will bereafterbe
Preshyk'rlau ChnrThursday and
ml took place from thof ItarkKliira Valley 0largely attended.
Enterprising Port OraPort Ontin IK coiiBtuntly developing Uie
[lirit of go-iibeafgirjninB to fed its beneficial stiic •ilus. Tho erJarKcm-'nt of tua nlrcwly largotteara forge, which will duublo its presentnnpaHty, I* under headway, nnd ita comple-tion will ndil coauiaerably to the bnsinosB ofthe town. That U wiU be followed by win
rolling millB, matins n sucoesnive Umof inanufiiotiiro fMm the crude to the finishediron, theruia nutimicli room for doubt, andnow we learn that tha bonilholders of theTort Oram Fumnuo, eueournged by tbe signsof a revival iu tho iron business, have de-termined to take the tide at its flood and
noro Bot these large works in raolioiFor tliia purpose they bavo organised a coixmy under tlie general law, elected a Hoard(f DlreetotH, and with their capital alreadyin lmnk and what will accrue from unsoldHtock. believe that tho furnace wiUnoon be
«Nfifnl operation. Welilro to bearncoumging things as these and wiah
the proprietors the largest success.
Tha Summer Resorts.Tbe cool weather tbnt extended so far into
the suinmtr lias delayed tlio rnsb of citymitom to this seciiou to a Inter peiiml thanrr>i--mat>y yenm [mat. Mr. Zuck, theproprietor of the Lake Viuw House, at Lakefopntcong, is making that well-known plnceB&'ccuKs Ihin netiKnn, nnd lms at Ihe presentme nt'iirly three hundred vinitors.The fiucciwunua Honse, under the roan-,
it of Mr. Vfinnier, is heoominff one iation, and pondi(urci for bridges, and thamount Is coimld*nible, to thn direct atten-tiou of tiio whole Boon!, aud will rutiralyprotect tbe Dipclor in iHncharsiiiB the re-Hpoiuiible duty of orderingOf Uie public Bjonryn."
Aotlng upon Uila&dtico IHrector Howellwill herc«ft«T ajgn no bill*. u>l the Collector
will pay (, wwept nt)(ph M bi i
, p^ n d ' b r ttai Boardio««iaii Itw Ulm.tor him aim «1W • tpwUl meeting of thelk*rd Of Fmhoklen f»r TunxUy nett, thelAtb Itut.at 10t30*.M.,lo enable tha-mvita har* «WIM »g»it»t tha county to tptUtMB In U»p» for pnmy* »«lU.u»ou
Whtt CalUvittion WIN Do.At UM BOOM of Ur. Uh*«.
caused tho Indiims tig -Water," or Hniikniiauuiug.Theao Jmlirtiis duriug th» Kevolutloiiaryar, had tln'ir lodges near whoro the For-
est House now atnuilH ami on the nortlieimtof th'Make, and the hint soeii of them at
hut time was their lust Council fire, or bigilk, in thfir war paint. They disappearedi tlii) uigbt, aud the old Fettlors iu this vl-
•inily said thntthesd red men Joined Braulthe matwacro of Wjonling.—Bftimer.
Pedantry In JourndlBm.In tho conduct of the Washington Star the
ditor IH apparently hotuattid by a duairo to;ive hiitmolf prominonce at tho exjieiiKft
of othern, and a goodly part of his jwi-por iH ftllud weekly with carpiugs opou thereal or imaginary defect* of others. Onnnid-emMo Bjxicu was gtveu by him lust week tocriticisms upon typographical anil gminmuti-ciLlerrorB committoil by eoutoiupornries ortheir correnpontlents,which were nbont us no-ticeablo for verbosity iw erndilIon. The reallyaipahlo jonrnaliKt hiw nlwiiys domonfitmteJAn noilily iu a 1MS person*!, but mora for-cible m»utier, and our friend of the Star,who ix a ciijiijvimUvt-ly, recent acqoisilion tothu rntk-ruily of the quill, will doubtlosH
in (lie future that popularity ia thebsioii mnuot W. ntlfiliirtil by a dinregarti
of the amenitioe that have always chameter-
ized i t
A Suddan Death.Mrs. John Regan, of Mine Hill, attended
St. Mary's plc-nic on the fourth and return-ed homo feeling somewhat tired, but in aday or two (teemed to have perfectly reoov-ered. Oa Wednesday morning hist she arose
tho cooicent icBorts in this tI is enjoying a fli
Uiut'i hotel, at Huccaannna, is also welivorod.At Schooley's Mouutnin tbo neoson is qnite
backward, but the eupigementa pT rooms ine Indicate a bn*y time nt a vpry early
period.At IluJiV* Lake tbcro ROCIQR to lia a s
oudilioti of thiiigc. Tlira Forest Houeo haaIOW 1cm than a hit ml rod gucats, but tbeleiir future in proinUiog,Th« cnltapers at i l l . Tubor are constantly
arriving, iinil withiu a week or'twotbe rthan cme lmndrad cottngen at tbat placeall be filled.
popular h'ostftry nt l i e dville wo lenni has but oco anengtiged n
stepped into the hound of a neighbor, andwhile thWcoughid up some blood, whtoh
iada her feel 1U. Her daughter assisteder home and a violent hemorrhage follow-
ed—the blood flowing in a stream from hermonth., J)r; Wiggins, of Buccniiunna, hap-pened to be passing st the time, but his ef-
The Monnt Tabor ft'eoord. .This popcr vfUl again bo i»uod dnil;iriDg tho coming camp meeting, vrhiiBms August 10th, by lit. Fred. Leport, o
thia place, who laat year furaisheil the reportsof the sermons for the paper. Since then behas devoted hiraself clostly to the stndyphoungrnphy, then partly completed, and isuow ii cnnipliito phooographer. Under hilirodions the reports of tha sermons may b<relied upon an acctirato. In t i e . work olpublication ho will b'o rfisiatcd by J. S. Gib-son, the editor of the past two years, whu
ill e.lit tho pon sketches or pastors of thiinference und notes of intoroet about thi
groiiudn. The paper will also bo issued froitbo r.fficQ of the IBOS EBA, as hoiotofore, andwilt lie rut neat In appearance nnd prompt idelivery an of .old. Iu fact, tbo I l e c dthix ;enr will bo by far the most entertaining
me yot i*auod.
A Cosily Rids.I.iat Ruiulny nftoruoon Mr. Miwe King
drove to I«ko HnptiteoHg nnd left bin horse,fltamiiug at the door of the take View Hutuwwhile hs vent Inside. While gone » ooupl*of young chips from the aity, who llka'manyof thelr-lrffMHiauginB they flan da just Mthey plenM wheu among oonntry follu,jnuiped tnlo bin bnggy without permtoalouaod started ofl for a ride. When Mom re-turned and found bis hone Ronebe obtaloeda rig of a friend and with Lim started In hotpursuit, overhauling the young gentlemeniioartbe Ik-rtraud place. MOM compelledI)n< Ninart jouths to return to ths I/ike View
>UKt>, and tnld them hn would fhargi themit 915 for their ride tn the absent* or anyuvioiiR aKreement. They demurred, but
when tbpy found arrest wan then, ly alUtnut-tlva Ibt-y paid over the raquind »1B-alMiiit Si per minute for their fan. Theydon't liku the oonntry as well a* they did.
ATypographloaJ Error.Veier Kelchnur. formerly editor ani] pro-
j.ri.-lor of the {'hillipHbnrs BUwUrd, butuow ihroiUjb love of tb« srdsnt * ngnlwmndiiter. rwid Dover one of h b tieriodiaUvixitii on Mamfe? ereulug, mnd beg "ontticitt iu lb« MrMt, which cost htm %^iu the lockaT. Deit>S brought ap foz uun l*twtiun D**I morning Jndffn Wood l ( d
l>Uof him hl« pk«>. upttjr
i inl error.«t 1'etcr, iu tot nniMvtar of Iba e
t/kie hi< vxut alaliu^-a t;poffnDhi(«l»
APUatantSekMimni ie .Mr*. 4, C ivh guv* I U pvfUi • ( Wr
Seuecawauua is not the Indian namo ofludd'a Lake; It belongs to the Beuec10 interior of the Stale of Hew York-rim Indinn nnmo of Sudd's Lake is "HAWK-
tUNNiNa, meaniug "Talking Wat#r." Harethe tribes of Koxiticus (»OW Chosler) Ala-mucky hocking (now Alamuchy) and thutribe nt this phtoo. branohesof the Action-piin family, met hi the spring full moon anilall full moon for Council tnlb, at whichItno the waters wero musical with echoinc
y pyMc-Keen, Jones, Nolf, Wottring &Thoy also own two shifting locomotives andforty hoad of mules and horses.
Four large Worthington pumps ate usedto furnish wat^r for tho aualers at the diff-erent stocks,
Tiiere ia a Jorge force of men at workdigging die foundation for the new boilerhouae, t b ; stack of which will he ninety feethigher than the old one.
At each stack two men are employed be-low and two above the nllors. Twelve bor-rows of coal, twelve of ore aud six of lime
•e used in each rouud of filling, aud fromreive to fifteen rounds of fiUiug uro made•ery twelve hours.The Hmestono Is transported from theHarries by cars drawn by mules. Therernge amount of stone usod each day is
ibont 125 totm. Tbe capacity °( *'« »TOIs I.flOO tou>i per week, and tho
[piotity of irou made by the Oleudon o
doubtIiiko 'Talk.
Temperance In BoontoriiBooutoi) neeins to bo unsteady on the tcm-Lmnec question. In fnct thov Ret a tcin-enmco seizure every once Iu a while nnd It
affects tiem differently cnoh time. Tillsi[uostion acoms to act upon Boonton very
ch like the old lndy's favorite bark i If•led up it's nn etnetio; if peeled down a
thyfric. A year ago last spring thoy votadlicense, bat the next dose of the niedl-
line acted the other way and they conolud-
-
THE predicted.Joliu Huff, i>{ Mottitttowii, Itwt a bon
OreiitCloning ontMiilo or the rtonaimKncoinl bargains mat wIn PMMOI". Linen ftudA ..a G d HA. the
flliich bfl feud Ja4 refused «3CW;All genutoo Fatout Uediuines aald »U ,A ,
GaodiUe's Btd Frout Drag store.A Pwt of the (j; A. 4b, ^ift W orgnpfetf
at Hcifbiuwii, w&l Mofld*^ ••rening. - Jfares bare bcea mule between
Camp Tubt* and New York apd Newark. ,Gov. McDollau umjlady drt>Vc from JSar-
•iHtown to Kulinoloy's Mountain on Thurtday
ummer Gw>dH of *U * .Ury Oooda Hoo» rf MLH Diduw
t t ' £ " u i U o i l
Jit. Tabor,llcv. W. I. Gill Is
Oi'fiiu Grove.club with a large
TKbpTILOK. Cwlrr Anil family • » mat ingaelXJMstU.
IFUI but ono arrest for dmuitcuiujw In tbe Fourth.ini. Trox.ai, GucriD aud Bticklo lwv
ut
, Jtalriin|.]«willr
w of alu$tautlaced, llio food boxboto^diBoovoredjiuit iu lim<> pn.vcut it. ;.-. ̂Tim new fnrnaooj^ Chester wan lighted on
i.c morning of !tBo Fourth, nndjiturning out about 16 tonajper day'd| jray
The niitaufwjturetiuie pospiqeil.,
^ for a
XX Bittern, they are sure to regulate thiels. Samples, * 10 cents; regular size,routs, nt Vpui&t & Klllgore'B, oornei
n the 4th ofdveutut the
wi l l l»o
Nuarly the whole of tbo flock of sheep offlnnmel Swacklinnuiiur, neur Ironlu, weretlii;troyf!(J by doyi. m, Sunday n i ^ t .
Mr. S. H. Tlerry will Inftd tbe Y. M. C A.lirn.ycrui('iiliii[« to-morrow lifttiruoon, which
ih l lu iher i rh tM. E Clmwli... . _-.; OoltfiBclnst wct'k W. M, Wood, of
I^IorrtHtciwi)! tthurcd tb^ m»thi"'ti)fLticQ.lwith Titu Yow .Ttmc, ntiiro of 80 deBW)"*-
>Ve direct altoutkm to tlio artiol«fi™t pnge renpoirUiiB * • l l t '« r ' ' l'X'KIMIBOH. It will I'" fo«ml good rt'nmoil of aU political parliei*.
Mrs. John Hoia™, of Mino Hill.witly « Btroug, healUiy woman, wawith,ili™.orri.-S.o,.WCa-CHd.Vaf.
nn««tf ««> »»-"» "
take the plnco of tho crnaio, tbo wm.! iu towerhas cut out the scytlio.At tbe Annual School Mooting Mr. Jam
Dwling wiw whee led Tnwt.
Ufwton thuii took \>\we on raongnf!•liur It wnw doubtful whothcr Inm i ' an he- hud received better f >fl'i-wlH.re. l»nl nno B[>tiUcman wud M
CInrkwiwnot n dollaw anil «!iitR IIh e b
g.mcmint- of thodch inhplrca orury ",urr«tu-o »f tiiiB BK'iiOur fontititl, »H " 'bi
lito ft BUCCfiSM, lli
in of Mivtitity-fi'T h 0 f,Bliv,d and ̂ u e ^ r t at l'oml.lon
iuued on the Katinrilnvfollow-
inuivtiftary.^B oonsideri'd, •
ieU(=iI tho hanl'.i
lain, wnc and
with htH
LINEN and LAWN SOUS
An informal
eonRftRiuB the
tbut lU'ftii-Clcrk
ropriiition, mm ud dolln
nk tbnn
oi'iM prefer to thiy h«od tlm p Thoy siicinnd tney i-onld bo raiwd, and u \i»Vd that thoy might retnin M
M0RRIST0WN,
Gap J.nt Suturday by theliGbie of tlie pay-master's oar oraahing in(/the hind end of
(tttboOfiB.I>: was one of the beind tnoat genial of
n-.i oonductore who nuPre from Scranton—and they are all goj fellowa. He van
airisd on the 20th of at June, and wasiried last Monday. l lm»w«
i Saturtlny,(w.llm«"B «~ ™leur Hit. Cation.. Obureh, wlln i inloilc«««d, WdOeolj «
.volior. pointed It »t Henaenon. >. . O c ^ w U n t f HMdenminpl
„„..!»»Hmitli.
not * .» .« . . - o *
• tMiMiiriMfe@s
JIOBUISTOAVN, S . J
THE FINEST ABHOBIMENI OP ^
{•ANOT aOODS,
KID GLOVES,NOTIONS, HOSIERY,
CORSETS, FUCHINGS,
PARASOLS, F A N S ,
VWLISGS, TIKS,
GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS,AT
M'GUINNESS, DUNHAM & 0o.'«,
M0RRIST0WN.
THE LOWEST PRICES,
THETBESHfPT.1
I) TUB PIJIIBT AHBOBTWIIT TOSELECT FKOU AT TOE
teriiiua liad ftjipoiulpd This statementin not true,aB the witn who were presentwill affirm. What I say vus, that I
IdnotmyueJfhrtebrass band, MI have hitherto done.ioBft after uoticobod hefn Riven In yocer Bereral weeksbeforehnnd aa "1"° tbo pulpit, ItboaRhtlt ankind to i another festivalthe previous week to Tho invitationhowever wafl voted at rolimiuary meet-ing ii> which InTitatlovJe no gbjectiou.It was written by Ueasurer of thoBoRrdof TniBteeMt ai render tho ei-0UHethathaw«wnotBrofthe cbnrchis trivial indeBd. J aurtned that flrevoteB wen cast ftt the aeetinu; in faiorofaltandinBandptayitur fwtivd, BO
l ^4 i l ^UiBV OU.jI^ I" •^™— TT — —V-"otbebatifl"-/ot«d'i1t««ny nob to go."The authority by wbics nd?ertined onthe poBtera that the band would at-tend and Iumidi 'mu&iho occasion ofoor foBtival WM rioipl;coiitnictwhich the monoy-w-al whereby tlieinstrument* ir«rt namely, tinttbe unntt nhoald play a\orobin tula Tillage iroo of el Thin contractbaviuR been broken lorlbu of thipromntboml, itrenmicne rtockbold-
lo taU in tlio inrt» Horeoimrb d 1 I 'l m . o( U> J
n.ttli . l l tali"1 » "l»»o.""uJ"i oa lb.«7 • * » ! « •
d l t o U" " • '
* » * • K ' " "•""• - McGUINNESS, ,
DUNHAM & Go.'PtrkPltcuuMl.i-rtiet:.8t,
3I0RRIST0WN-
Thetdto-taioopr *l >
a n |Wl l r . H~rj U.IJltan la fm, im, h •"•.VIMMMIMKIX*1*
Snlwl
idPE'Si SURE CORE
FEVER and AGUE
CUR ES EVERY TiME.
£S6SC&ui°'-^^
VOOGHT & RILLiRE'S,CORNER DRUG STORE,
D O V B R , 3sr. ar.V V V E lire the ruanufocturerii' aguiito fur ATLANTIC WHTTG LEAD,wnf warranted strhtly pure mid rocouimended hy experienced
punters as the belt and most durable White Lead iu the marketNo w is tha time to paint FBICE i LOW at
VOUGHT & KIILGORE'S.
RE M E M B R R T H A T ATunimuT o inil KllLGORE'S DRUG STOREYou can boy |1.00 PATENT MEDICINES at 75 cts
.. .. M• « 25
WZI MBMTIOK A.
Vegetine, - - - - - - - - - $1.00Ayres' Cherry Pectoral, - - - 75
" Barsaparilla, - - - - - 75Schenck's Tonio aud Syrup, - 7550o. size Pond's Ertraot, - - - 38
" " Gargling Oil, - - - - 38" " Jamaica Ginger, - - 38" " Moore's Pilules, - - - 38
All 5Oo. LINIMENTS at - - - 38Mother Noble's Healing Syrup, 38
ETC., ETC., ETC., ETC., ETC^ ETO.
Our Ext. Vanilla an j LeiiiIs tlio best. Families who have used them say oue-third the quuutity is more than equnl to the ordinaryflavoring extracts and cost 110 more. ' They are Hietrue rich flavors of the fraitH. The mtu-ket is full ofclieap and adulterated, extracts. Ask yourmorcbantfor V O U 0 H P & KILLGOBB'S flavoring extraot,uud take no other.
TYe have them nil. Insect Powder, Liquid Bed BugPoison, Gum Camphor, Powder Borax, CayennePopper, Alum, White Hellebore, Whale Oil Soap,
HIRE PARIS UREEN.
Shallenberger's Pills; Sholl's Pills; Hamilton's Pills;Deshler'B Pills ; Bloore's Pilules; Hedges' Fever nndAgue'-Annihilator; India Chnlnflogne; Ajrea' AgueOuro; Oliinoidino in stick and pills, Quinine in pow-der and pill, imd various other
DO NOT FORGET T. 'LA0E.
VOUGHT &Corner Drag Store,
KEEP IT 13M MINDTHAT
E. Lindsley & SonHAS JUST NOW A Blll'EUll STOCK OF
DRY GOODS,including everything new uml fiiHliionablo in
SILKS, CASHMERES, LAWNS,GINGHAMS, CALICOS, etc., etc
EIDBONS, HOSE, FAKASOLS, UJfUBELLAS, BUTTONSHANDKE11CHIKFS ami all ollior nowltira.
CARPETS!' tho aid ol tlio eiUiliitor win RIIOW tlio BEST STOCK ami
GREATEST BARGAINS.
CROCKERY.THE FINEST AND UT.ST WAltE AND I.OWKST ]l t\ci rhilb«T.tr4 catkeu ttti ru!Hn> In bUi-k or »bit*J rrrtT a«)en. M»lah« c««n> «»UIML luttdtff*, CUM,ttwr C«r»., k.,1. ull atxl mtlim | k m , t r .
ht l that w« ttnWvitblj nn^Wmutl tfa«
r r*l* Bpos »ar tkar«** Wi»« flKMfcm* In;s*n. Waaukrk B|«nBll£ at Uki&i; itfvii
«rtt>l(M Ibr ratin tfa»rf* tig ID t**rnU wbm rtqimhpd to da *»titwrabf nNntiig lu>iiw« «>« «*r t n* Ibr i u <
O1«H!N1> 1U-.ASTKU
t>alt**4ltttb»tt. UjM|
-
Scorpion rs. Tarantula.The greatest event which lias takeu
pUoo in BonaoEa City since the towuwaa born was tbe flglt on Sunday lustlielw a scorpion ami a tarantula. AQeye-witueaa ot tUe affair gnv« the follow-ng description ofttae great itrugglo to
B reporter yesterday :"I've t*eod a guoj raanj fighla einte I
E truck this sectiou of tlio cuuutry, butjpalerdoy'H ta.v out ntuJlie bosa. Forfua ilnJ excitemeot it «qiaaUed,;Ja. tuy
ciiinu that Tom Duilly took a baud :years ago. The line: was broken op.imj every fellow with a nix-shooter jiull-cJ tiuj turned louse ou everything inBî lir.
"Wa put tho twowashbowl, and when they hoth sliildown to tbe bottom they had to fight,and no mistake. There was a little flatplace in the haftoni nf tho howl whitliey con IJ stand about foar indiesnpmt. Well, 113 soon as they woro putin thfVHt.ipivMl back a few paces amibegun to pipe eaob. other off.tiirit!.tuln, seeing the scorpion, jaetreared up on ita hind legs and sbjok binfist at him, with al! bia iiair on end.Now. there is more of tbo solid quinces-nance of hell in a tarautnla to the squareeighth of nil inch tlmn in anything <curtb, ami when I saw the critter reup and give the scorp the diff, I laiddown fivo twenty dollar pieces on him,und a tall feller covered 'em in a min-iite. Iknuwedl hid that money dead.The scorp didn't Beem like he wantedany of tbe pie at first, but, after a spelluf thinkin', he sorter shook himself outand got ready for business,
'•The 6rst thing we knoweJ, bifflwout the 'tula plum into the scurp, sodtliep the fun began, The Bpider grabb-ed him by the beck of the neck, nnd wes'posed for a while bo was goin1 to chewIns head right off. His teeth—teethwimt I said—;t qmirier of abuzz saw, end I began to feel sorry for1
Hi.; other fellar that I bet with. Iwouldn't been in tho linln' o* thatrtcorp's boats for tbe Sierra Nevndamine. All of a sudden, however, tbe
ihack! wenttell you tLe
Hpider let go too quick, and went turn-blin' across the bowl like a male badkicked him. I thought he WEB gone,but you bet he waa on deck quickenough, aud be came to tbe scratchfigaiu with blood in his oju, ThBn camethe Lip bout of tbe wbole liusiness.Both of 'em sparred around a speli forau opening. The spider was workin'IUB left nasty for s biff p.l. tbe scorp'soar, hut whenever he lot looati the otherthrew up bia claw and couutered onbis slomnob, jmt like Halltntra andLynn for all the world. -The spider flawthere were no JchromoB for him in astand-up fight, rind BO be jnmped inrough-and-tumble. It would tanks yourblood run eold to see the way them fel-lers cbaflsd and clawed each other forfive minutes, aud the crowd ronnd tbe
Cullferuia'iAt C52 Broadway, New York, a lectioi
of ft treo was OD exhibition last Saturdaywhich beloDjjed to what waa oace, doublless, tbe largest Irank in the world. XIwai a specimen of tbe Sequoia Gigaotea,aud grew ia Tulaie county, California,at hn elcvatiou of 8,000 feet above thiterei uf the sen. It was discovered i1874 by Prof. Kuowlcs, who found tbiat a height »>f 2*0 foot above the grout)itn top had heen broken off. Itecironj
>piuiou, the big prize liglii down the] tcreuea at the buse waa l i t feet, and hail
e out of his mouth forinch, and grated like a
bcorp braced Limoelf, and wbin tail into the 'tula, I t
, in.the German forests andtheir neighborhood, there is always a:numerous traio of smaller ones to lot-'low in the rear, $nd apt as ansillaries inthe work of de8trnction.."!fwQ largeiwolves are sufficient to destroy the rao^tl| powerful borse, aod seldom ̂ ^Jlbtwo ever Wi l l the assault,
[thwe miy be a eeore in the gang. Itno less anrioiiB than amusing to witnessthis ingenious moclp of attack. If thereutuoBQow, orbatlitUfion tbe ground,two wolves approach in the most playful
bowl went clean cmzy with excitement. I [larger wolves associate together, forthrew up another hundred on the . . - • _ • •spider, for I oould see be bad the, dundest grip ot the ucprp that ever was.Why, ba had bis bead ia chancery innine places, and about eixteen grape-vine lochs on Ilia legs.
"They wrestled all. tbe etytabeard of—Cornish, Lahoaabire, QreaeoRoman, and collnr-and: elbow. It wasa regular tonrnameat rolled into one.'The tula bad tbe grip be bad been hun-tin' for some time. AU of a aadden,jtmt aa I was reocbin' down in mj pocketfor another hundred dollan to plank tipon the spider, tbe scorp switched bistail round and slammed it into tbespider's belly.ojxrat a quarter of an inch,held it there awhile, and then began toInn* U ronnJ, like ha was boring a dia-mond drill into a quarts ledge,spider got pale around tbe gills andlooked like he,wanted a doctor, and Iquietly let that$100 slide hack where itbelonged. Then tbe spider let go (onr-teenunderholdB and laid down like hewanted a rest. He rested for about amiunte or so like a liltle piece of woolshrivelled np, and the scorp struttedTonnd and round like a dram mnjor ona dress parade,
"The bets WON ten to one on the scorpnnd no takers. All of a nidden Dpjump) tbe ipldtr and goes for him again.It appeared to me like the h«ut bad
;ht,
tlie wbole treo beea chopped up it wault'Lave yicWei not leB* than half a millioifeet of lumbar.
The noted bauiuu tree of India spremits branches over an enormous extentground. One of these, in Howdah, oppuaite Calcutta, could, it is said, affordshelter to 15,000 men ; but this immeniclrcn inference of foliage is caused by tingreat branches drooping to tbe grouufund springing np again in a new growth.Neither the banian tree of India, nor tbigum trees of Australia, growing to tlvast height of 400, and, it is said, somitimes to 600 feet, bear any cnmpnmoiin point uf extent of trunk, with ttgiant of California.
Arboriculturists have computed thetbi) tree whose suction is now in tbjcity hud attained the extraordinary egiof 4,810 years. But ibis did not savefrom destruction.
Tbe first out waa made twenty-five feetabove tbe ground, aud at tltis heightfour woodmon plied tlteir axes for ninedays. Then tbe upper purb ot thetrue fell witb a tirash that wad like at
trthquake. Tbe soand was beard mileiaway,.and all vegetation beneath it icrushed flat to the ground. Tbe greattrnnk, which was of very soft wood wasbroken into fragments.
Tlieu tbe work of boring began, andin nice mouths' time tbe tree was hol-lowed out within twelve feet of thiground. Aifs soon did tbe reet, and allthat remained of the largeiit tree ou
rtli waa tbe stump standing upon theground, and tbe hollow section now onexhibition, Tbo latter is thirteen feelhigh and eeventy-six feet ia circumfer-ence. It weighed thirteen tons, and was,of course, too large to be trunsportedwhoia. It was therefore cut into anumber of segments, which were sent toSun Francisco, where Ihey were put to-gether end exhibited for a month.
Jmt one year elapsed from the tinthe axe was driven into tbe tree until thegigantic fleatlon was exhibited in JYork. Much of the bark lias beenpulled from tbe trunk by careless or cJoin visitors, but the pieces all fit accu-rately into their places, where they oreheld securely by iron bolts. A carpetcoven tbe floorfiu tbe interior, und n,piano stands at the. furUift side. A1
hundred and flfttf personB can comforta-bly find room in the'spaee hollowed out,and McKelvey cays that, in Han Fran'cifico two bnndred often crowded in.
TTolTes and Wild Hvmm.It I'B said that whenever several of the
only just made np bis mind to Jand tbe way he went for the Boorp waslike a tDouiand o' bricks tamblic' intoa obild. When I saw him gel downfairly to work I bet the thin! hundred,and felt somehow like when be beardmo cbiuk tae coin it would give him alittle morel baefcin'. You could hearthe scorn's shell crack like a schoolboychawin'peannta at a chnrob fair. Thettpider hail it all bis own way for a spell,and was gittin' his work in fine whentho pesky soorp banted tip the samehole his tail was in before and got itthorn again. He'd been licked in an*other minute il bo hadn't, but that savedhis bacon, and the spider gritted bisteetb a few tlmei and kneeled over anddied. Tbia don't shake my faith intarantula*, however. I'vo got a two.onnco spider tbtit I'll motet* again anyscorpion In Storey Conut; next Sundayfor five hundred a side/
Here tbe man produced a box andallowed a tarantula that looked as if Itwould be abt» to whip s ball-do*. Whenha left bo wared the reporter, confi-dentially, that baUInft on tU tpidert t i "a dead sum thing."— fea d U k
Tban ia a tpM»« of stinging soorpt-on found in Uie rfvtr bottom of was-leroTetia. Immediately after the birthof ber young, ihe female ulaoes thorn ina bukeUbtpftJ reccptabto on tier back,wfanre th»v at one* attach tbtmwlvenand begin taektaj bar blood. Ofcourte, tb« mother MOD ««Mtnb« tothta unflltal treatment and begitta U>droop. Tfar roaitg ODM art by thistio* mffleJ«l)y BOttriabed to draaBduore sabt/jutial food, aa J UI«T kill l . t irnotbflf and iflrbor b*r. BboaU ODS ot
and frisking about, nntil the too credu-Ions and nnsuspialona victim is campletely put off his guard by curiosityand familiarity. During this time tbegang, squatted-on their .bind ^uartenlook on at a dUtinee. After some timespent in tliifl way,' the twoseparate, when one npproapLca thohorsa's head, tbe other bia tail, with' ashyness and canning peculiar to thaisolves.. At tbis stage of tbe attack theirfrolicsome approach)*, became veryteresting—jtisciifb^food earnest ;former is a njere decuy.tbfllattcr is tbereal assailant, and keep* bis eje ateail-ily filed on the hamatrinff or Hank ofthe horse. Tbe critieal moment is tbeiwatcbed, and (be it luck is simultaneousboth wolves spring at their victim at thesame moment—one to the threat, tbiother to the Sank—and if successful,rbieh they generally are, the hind ouo
never lets go bis hold till the boreo incompletely disabled. Instead of Hpriiig-ing forward or kicking to diicngngchimaelf, tbe borse turns round andround without attempting defecThe wolf before then springs behind,to assist the other. The ain«ws are cut,and in half the time I have been de-scribing it, tbe bane is on bis Aide : hisstruggles are fraillew—the victory iswon. At tbis signal the lookers-onclose in a gallop • bnt the small fry offollowers keep st a respectable distance,until tbeir superiors are gorged, anfthen they take their turn untnalesteY
W1.J HhcDIdn-t Trjlt-It was plain enough to all other
saogers on the ferryboat that the tw<were in love and engaged, yet tbe giseemed to doubt bis fervor, just »little.Therefore, as the boat reached mid-stream flbe'reacted over und leader!'said:
'Jouniiie, I am, goiug to teet joulIOTO. lam going to jump overboard,and if you really love me I know yojump after me nod save me."
'Yea, I'll jump after you," he slo<replied, "bnt, but—"
'But wbnfc. Job n me V"'But if I were you I'd take off̂ m;
sbuua first. Just the minute they nan!you of tbe water every, woman in,_ tbicrowd will rush to see whether you weaiNo. 2a or No. 5s nnd if you are in you:Blocking feet they can't get the sice.1
Tho girl drew her feet under the efaaiiligbed oace or twice, anil did notregaii
her old enthusiasm until tbo boy camibug witb peanuts.
Tbe Cfiriitian Inletiigencor Buys ; "Thimost insidious form of tlie denial of tb<constant fnith oftba Churoh in futu:retribution is thnt which is known as tindoctrine of conditional iamortality. Itadvocates make eternal life tbe rewariof the righteous, but ionist tbat tbefinally itnpenitant are annihilated, am?this passing out of ciistence Is, theysay, what in meant by everlasting deathWbat makes tbe matter worse Is that theadvocates of tlie error are sincere tineuevotit men n*lio write ID a reverent toneand are for tbe most pattBotmdon otfapoints of theology. And they profess icdeduce their views from the literal senseof Scripture undisturbed by dogmaticprejudice. They bare thus contributedno little to tbat weakening of faitheternal retributions, which is one of tbisaddest features ol our time."
Mo DBAWBACOL—We often wondered'hy glrle married. Ak^Anabin yiid; npoii the subject sePfr: "Well,
I don't know^a^I'd marry,'for moneyalone, but bad plenty of moneyallied to a sweet dlspwltiori, und mous-tache that ourlad at both' euda, audnice blue eyes, mid a respectable profesion; and hia father was rich, and biamother and sisters were nriBtucratiu, andhu wanted to marry me, and wouldpromise to let me bavo my owneverything, aud keep me liberally sup-plied witb ooin, and have a nice furnish-ed bonne with a big piano in it, andwould give inn two diamond rings,would pay mv dry goods and millinerytilla without grumbling, and I reallyid truly IQFP4 him—1 wouldn't conilef bis money any dtwb.opk to fop
match."
"We received a turtle a few dayi ago,>n tlie back of which waa tbe dato 1700,tod also tbe Spanish coat-of-arms, iedi-
oating tbat this old resident waj in exis-tence one hundred ind tsyputy-nine/ears ago, A tey n'onja in 'Qpanisl) onthe shell were traoBl^ted, which says ;''Caught ia 1706>y Heraasdo Codex,ja the Bt Sebastian, and was carried toUatttneos by Indians; from there to theGreat Weklva," (which is now tbe 3t.
iy, the 17th offed sdrift in tbe
# t l f lhe :
'ohn's Biter.) On'une, tbe turtle
Bt, John's River at
nli, Falatka, Florida, 187J." Jt n)ii> heinppqsea that by 'bis time tie odj lel-J.iw has scouted suit water, and gonerer the bar at high tide.—Patnilta Her.
old. _
Colino was reading, tbe other day.to*foH»»ipii »f oaielile. "Ths means
if suppressing, or at Ipaflt nl diminish*ing, the results ol tbla malady-^for. mii-ide is a malady—U ol Biblical .implim-
j , " be obsorved. "Kcally ?" aslted tbelersons present. "Certainly," he wi-ilied. "Let tbe Nutioud AnKtnbly'oto a lav thns worded : 'Every indi-
vidual who ieido shall bocondemned to a year's imprisonmentand a tlim nd fninn' line, mj you'ill alia that hefcre facing death he will
look at it *#ice."
agle Creek, Qroul County, Ey.,e 22.—is Dr. MUeham and J. T.
Mann were nomtng hero from Witliums-a they BHW a iinge Hnake lying acrossroad. The Doctor drove to crush it,
iut did nut tincoccd in doing BO, aud thesrpent wound itself around one of tbeheels and •truck several timen at tbotoctor's lliroat, who finally grasped it>y tlie ncek. while Mann mashed il
id. It measured ten feet four inclitn length and RIX inclicx in diameter.
UM yoaaf «B4M tm. . itadnd Iron,b U U > l a | M U , U U u Me. kill*] Mdf«ut«dopo. by t b . ut-thar. Tins It
b «bll« Out tank williajlyto h«r olafriag, yrf
aWilooaot lwiuUlot i I IUm3sbi .sk]tb»y b» •> o m U el IMiaai u is n f iwto u m l n r W w At plsoa Otm sftarUrtk. W b i k l U a b f o i M M h tpumt ibKWalona ) , *tUmttt
Wtb-
Th« QrutMt ffslh en Rword.v. Em. Bell, of the Colored
Bethel Church of WaM]iir,Rton, madthe walking mania tbe aubjrct of bdisconne % few nights ago, ami sboneithai we of tbis day are but pour wiimiUtoi> at bat,, even in "pedal muv<
lOti." To show fak liearers that theseIstterdkj walka «r« or anmll momei•od nnfal, b« nld ha would "wcipa:d«p,^iih on* prffhrroanw dat tuk plaribiraiuds of years ago. It was thiSnttwtiportln'miUih, as dey e»1U ildit «b*r come off on •!• fac* of dii year]Wow, jess lorn ober your Bibles, in.freos, an. lookV flft chapter of OuoutwaBty-a an* what do yoiflua r War/, jroa Una ilat 'Enoch—walked—wid—Qod (alter ba bei'allaiJtettocaalyl-tbraa bumlred yeanTkraa hanjrad—y«.ra I Oar waa a valktor yoaljes, shot yo'«y«« and -San onitl Tbr.a-hundr.d-ye.rel Talk *boolro'lIultUolulouraiioa' after dat! Batdat ain't 111 obi t If you'll jaaa look alJ< twanly fimrUi vaas ob da saw cbap.tar, j o . win l w , mt b i o n l M a a a '• ta taorfa lwaralxis ia • U f i f c to7«'loolUaanalaraivlWkaallssa«la4a Itrlaa fa Ik. Uhw
TUk U i kif u a r i T k . U mt tt kwaataa*t)«IM>irn,s»Mi( nwaba.m l wtM> m k Mt fcaafeia Us iMbta.
hW
A pnlc you nit Hiicf, who, nothwith-nnd ing his lioyisitt appmininco, hiul L\No.ly nrrive.1 nt hiI . ; aua.OT V. M.; ThroiiRh Mail. , ,acora, 8;*^ H, M. | OUWBRD Expnwi,, ; Eutau AL'oommmlftti86.33fl.31)6.25
CheaterHortacIrouia 7.6aSiiDCMnnna 7.07MeCaiwvllli- 7.10
J I ; 4 E . Jnnot 'n7.t4PflrlOrani' 1.18Dover 7.9S
A.M. f.SlCM 9.U6.67 4.16
4.304.404.505.055.105.10S.9S
T BAINS.. M. P . M,.45 4.00
B.S26.5H».O3
, B.0FHEWJfiRBBT.iaraE BBANOH.
INSUR.NCB AGENT
Legally authori|l agent nf tho foil?wing Hi
>iaaa oompuni—tho beat in tbe wo,-ld:LONDON anillTEBPOOL nnd
GLGE, Capital S20,Ot,U,0U'LAKCASHIRi)! MANCHESTER,
Capitol 810,000,001
ROYAL OF LIERPOOL,• Capital 810,000,00'
FBAVKUN OiPHILABELPHIA,
Capitul 85,000,001HpDSON OOtTY, Je
PEOPLE'S. Ne\rk.HIBEBNIA,
•fley City,pjlal 8300,001
" - 300,0»
" 200,0tt
Corporation
Co , Uaa8acli
The London JurnuoiLondon, capital ĤM),tMh
Springfield Kireifiumntte, capiteJ $1,5(000,Bt. Mluhoki Til InSuranoe Company
New York, capital too.OOO.Vestoheater PirtoHHranca Companj
New York, capital UX.,00O.Kew York CĴ f' te Insuranoe Comi«u-
of New York, capltiJaoo.OOO. '
>n
art le,Flundere,
Pott Orain,
&M 8.130,M 3.55a,as 3.30
JOS. YORK,'he House Furnisher
'HREE D00HS ABOVE IEON
BANK, MOBKISTOW, N. J.
ijn.tr, mnuf actor]
WALL PAPER.t̂ »dO pjecce, oomptiriiiii; 100 new and eloft&nt
fl*. Also, a fine Block of BORDEHS in« -111.!,.*. 1 hive >1BI> Ibo UrKeBt ami;ock of OPAQUE CIXJTH
WINDOW SHADES,
York. HAIIT^HOIIN'S BP11INU FIX '
f[>r {viNI^'wallADKH.1"""1
.verill's Eeady-Mixod Paints andPrepared Kakomine.
I L . i l y Kir u s e at al> i iTt i . i . i l J i w . VU1II
In FRENCH CHINA and Hand-some TABLE GLASSWARE,
Mj atork in roni.'lcip in nil ir«s.,ctH. al
JOS. TORE'S,THE HOUSE nrilNimiMt, '
rLUMIJISO ANl> TINNISO ,l..tif »« usual iUii'UKM'iMiANNEIi.
SPEING,18T9!We are fully
j stocked with the
! newest styles in
S I DRESS GOODS,
i which we are
;able to sell much
B jcheaper than any
lofourcontempor-
» aries. Our Carpet
•""iRoom is filled
,with the newest
[CARPETS,MATTINGS, |
OILCLOTHS,]
ASHtTD, - - -
CAPITAL - • •
S3,GOfl,00
- 600,00
HEAL 1STATEPURCHASElliand SOLD
Choice Lotjin Dover,
'O LET.
OOOK, I'AlLOIl, HEATINO
STOVER RANGESi»a,arialj.f
The New EmpireHot-AIr, Oas & Base -burn
NATIONAL UNION SANKOK DOVEK, NEW JERBE5T,
Capital, - $100,000.i L Q S r f i m 9 A.at . taO.M. Ptuiupt
ittenticn sivtu tu iLu uurcbn£ii nud sale olBondi and other Socuritkg; the aullootlon of
lcuacddoineiiicpotwr, drafts, cliecka.Ao.
HUDSON HO AOL AND. PnVt.OEO. ltlCJHAHUy, VIOH PnwlJent.
JAT a. TREAT, Cashier.DIRECTORS,G P
HDDBOH HOAOIIAND, JAB. W.BBOTHEBTOKAliBpBT B, BlG08j, COLCHBU B EIHAAO W. BBiHtfQ. 1«A«O B,BiijmaD GAnftOB, Joan Vf. JAOKSO
ESBtMcPillLiK, atoHIAH MEEKIB,V. 8.4 pnr cent, Bonie eouftantly on livid
and for sale st beat market ratei.9tf.
The BUncr-H' SnvinSR HankOF DOVKR, N. J .
B I T n n i i v *H« KanoNai. DKiaxHaa
f alorrat will lie paid on 4euo.iu made oabefore tbo QrHtaavaurMAauu, ivwttH*
ABNDT
SUSSEX St. GROCER,
baa aa naeKaaipled atocfc of
Groceries and Provisions,
C A N N E D GOODS,
Foreign and Domestic FRUITS,
Vegetables,
Oulvaaleabifi gwija liopt anil esorytliingsnliipou oorrt-ot rt'pruaoatallcn..
BUSHES St., ilBar lUeOnner of BLiCE WWJ,ap DOVEII.N.J.
trOpea dall.r frt'Oi 9 o'olook . . V. Io
D'QlDCkP. U.
1 I A S 1 O E 1 1 S :
HENRY McPABLAN,GEOEOE EICHARDS,EPHKA1M LINDSLEY,I. W. CONDIOT,JAMES H. SIMPSON,COLUMBDS BEACH,W, H. LAHBEUI,I. B. JOLLY,
HENHY McFAKMS. Proeident.EF1II1AIM LINDaLFA'. Vice Proaldeut.
1LY 8. TREAT, Treasurer.Ooior. Feb. 17,1B73. U-tf
MalarialAntidote.
M0I111I11 M'lsi>a from nnyImpiiri!)- in llici air. lliasin,Deuivin? Ycgetntion, Se>verUas.uamp Coilora, Bwl Ven-tilation, and oroa Fill I ystreets produce it.
ETBryDOdy is subject toIt. Tie city 1ms 'it, thecouuiry has it, wo broatlie itin the air, and it becomes a
Soison in tho Mood and pro-uces almost every hindof sickness, especially, itattacks the -neukest orpinin tbe body, mid peopleeverywhere are constantlysuffering with Malaria.
Moore'sPilules
Are a positive Antidoteto ail Malaria In tho systemTho/cure Chills nnd lever,and all Intermittent dis*eauw at once, and all lin-gering Haiurlul Complaintscan iii> effectually eradicat-ed by the nue of MoorVsPilules, the Ureat MalarialAntidote. SO Pilules, 60 cts,
50. 50.Sold "by all Drug fiat*.
$•• Faunphlft"Dr. ft a Moore on IWari*,"
IB CMflutt Rmt, V«wT«k*
VOUGIIT A KILLQOKE, OrumiitJAS. A. GOODALE, "W. H. QOOUAtE, "
BEEMER & PALMER
COAL, WOOD.MAflOKS' HATEEIALS,
BLUE STONE, FERTILIZERSHA11D AND PALE DRICK,
UMB, OEMEST,OALUIHED 1'LISTEB,
FliONT IIKICK,PIKEC'FAV, FIBEBIUOK,
FLAU STONES CURBING.
CIXLA11 Bmrt, COPINO, SOiS, LINTEL8. AND CISTERN HECKS,
WHANK'S PHOSPHATE,Bone Dual, Guano, Poudmte.
LAND PLASTSR, tc.
WOOD sawed In stove lengths.
STOYE, EGG, CIIESTMJT.Ti,«a Mirm iritVd*^
• liHki tu a liialti»"»t tLivo ttfiin!
1 * t o l ' a
( ( t»j (T) BOUtl,
i
u l m U t . - i
nuili^ifilM ..f mi _iieH,if iamUjt-thi;
i.ye.1 in Isrse! Hculli by\viMUm'U(i'i'ihrk
1VILL1A3III. MCHAVIT, BLiTaMUIay ]r,IMS79. (
Korrii ,iiffllj."togat8'i B&
On npplirntion of tliti abovr mini'il ,-xn',,t in iirtlmd hy t!ii; SnrroKittu llml Lti«'u, u>'I H M . h l l l l f H I Hi .aU ( I I T N I I ' l l I t ( ! l l l l H f H I t
of Morris f.ir 'u
CIIAltLEtj A.OIUJ.N,
Sewing Machine!WHILE THEY AHE CHEiP.
The Singerho oOk-u „; tlilH tnadi'ilii. 'I^H' bmi'n'in'jvt
3 A I N B U I L D I N GSUSSEX STREET,
id all mi wing niachiiiu fqnip.nfitlK.iucIiid'i
Needles for all Machines.•Itonii, Hllkri, T WM tlilv Ini
REPAIRING 3 specialty,
P, I BURRELL, Apnl.N. J . Mar. L'tiUi, ](r*n friler of tlio Cnartor Oh*n-ccrr of Nt'ir Joraoj, ntfttle aa ilia Ig
j\«, rniKD.STEWED,
INCSMAJtH AND CIKtlUE Ft t l ' imVtuU ()T«U-r (Wkrn.
tti* . 1 1 knap ol iloUti, It»
Adjourned Master's Sale !
STEAM ENGINES, GREAT REDUCTIONINT TICKKTs,
FOR SUMMER a WINTER USE. RAILWAY TURN TABLES,BATUaOAT. Jnly S8th.12I J. W.SKEELE,
Olareland,Ohlcajo,
FOlOgOrfaJ, IMBanMPIIOHB.
KtHU, ColerirJc, Daksti,
O. ft JEN8EW.