4
VOL IX. THETRON ERA BENJ. H. VOQT. BI1TOB tm njOUIETOll. Olfloe on Uorris Street sear Blaokwall. TKltMS UP SUHSCIUPTION IKVAHIAULY INADYANDE. Olio Year, - - - - - - - Si I bii Montlin, - - - - - - - U Tun* rnoiitlu, - - - - - - - E ADVERTISING RATES. BP1OS. | 1 WK. | 'I V 1 n 2 as 1 •i n a r,o 4 to 2 (HI 27C 8 flu 4 25 5 25 B Sill JOOl 4 no 6 mi 7 (to 8 Illl 10 2fi, l'J 00 » 8 001 BOO -6 *>' 8 001 10 00 12 fiO] 15 (HI 18 60 82 01) ».| 6 a » » r,oi» r, no; 8,« ,11101) •9<Ml| 14 IW 11 001 18 001 18 mi 211111 MOO -~ "r, m\ u or i ss| : 4r, ()': r,r, i! li)l) 00 ESTABLISHED IN 1851. -nuimnjtvas «mi MEDICINES, p.im X OilH, Glrtw, UniHlK's. I'nrfuiut.r.v, t, .,,1,1 by JAUE3 A. GOODAUS, tlm I'iiim. DruSBtBt, «r Dover. Btoru 0|*m,,n SUNDAYS f,,r Ibu Halo or MertlnliioH only frtiu, Ulo 10 J!,, mill from I to 5 1'. M, 41-ly (JOHN F. STICKLE, Counsellor at Law AND MUSTEK IN CIIANOIUIV, __ HOCKAATAY, N. J. Cornor ol XlukiroU mil SIMMI Ht.. DOVER, N. J. I. B. JOLLEY, Proprietor. Homo, mid earring™ to Let. WO0DP0IM 1 HOUSE. 'IIOJITAS Bit [GUT, Proprietor. WOODPORT, MORRIS Co., N.J. T hin old (UtabllsliK! H ami La pM-tioulurly i (itlrt'iUit/nmerTtmWuure. Situated" UialK LnkoH opal WHIR Its fuutiiroR of lake and (pcti ill HI!UU* | ryv UXUrJilOlit llllllllfllF And ftfllllDRt Uld ti sniitf (1 by toy tu tUnt r b 1 V9*<i.rUcuUr. TTT T. LEI*OHT, 'Counsellor at Law, AKD MASTEtt IN CHANCERY, Unira In tbo National Union Bank Building 3LAO*-W,£,LST., DOVER, N. J. rvU VBH lj.VUOHATOItY. ya anil Annlvnen f>f al) JoscriphonB of O11E8 AND MINERALS CABEFULLY HADE, iliit of cbargoa will bo fumlBhed ou applion t|on L. 0. BIEBWIHTH, Dover Miirris County N. J. Berkshire Valley Hotel! A ItOAD HOUSE near tunftng and Rah lag grounds; a pre.ty Bpot with largoniry rooma, good atables, shcdii, Ao. Tbi-* IKJUHO lua uiiaorgonc thdroitgjj repairs, is duly licensed, situated on a ^ross-roails, 4 miloH froii Dovir. Sporting; men, pcdUra, und o((i6rt looking' /or a-sooi] pffloe to stop Bbould beAi in foiutl tiilu; botel is the cheap- est pj»cfl in the StaU witji good beds, boun- ti/ul tftblo, BAB weU Atoned vitb tbo bent of LIQUORS in thfl market. AI HO poill'Elt ondraft. "DO0."HODGKIH8. y, -Nor. 7Ui, Ift7t*. 48-ly JOHN DRUJIMEIt'S SHAVING AND HAIR CUTTING SA. LOCUST, SUSSEX STREET, Ibotntson tbe MANSION HOUoE and Dep<>t,) DOVEB, N. J. riio pUto hu boon onllnili r»Hl'fO 1" ' "' iTmso AspEcui/n r NEIOHBQUR & SMITH, ATTOBNXSB 4 CODNSELLOHS AT , LAW, Cor. BlRclrweil and SIISHCX Sis. DOVER. N- J. L. W. THURBER, 8DPSIUNTISBDEST OP I'UM.IO SCHOi . OP uomtia oouHTif. DIUCQ otur ORO. RICHARDS ACo.'tt fiTOrtE, DOVER, N. J. .1 effics b o o n on BftturiUva tim^t A flMcl U. Ml ltl effic nil. 1TTOK.NEVJTI.A1V, tic MADTEB1M OHASOHlt, BOVEIt, N. J. OIQM a w A. WlKfatun'* |tu*u wil tin v IMl Blulnil .Ii.tl. MAr^Tc7 FORD, M."b., Homoopathlc Physician, OBn • ! U» i«U«<» if Hi. opi«»iu HL ii"fj. lun. r. i). Aiiimi: s BOX UP, DUVEU, N. J. JllJ "SPRINQ" PATTERNS Morrl«town,N.J k Ml 111. «»». D«>MWl'' riflilK! I'"' .i w -rortioiio. «!•' vu - al '• 3»Ulo|f<.« Im y »* i j,™,,'^ 1 SKVKHAI. DOVEB, MORRIS COUMTY, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, JULY 20 1870. SPECIAL NOTICE! We have just purchased all the Spring samples of a first-class fine shoe manufacturer, compris- ing 125 pairs of everything that is made, at a reduction of 25 per cent. These goods are very little soiled and being samples are bet- ter than regular goods. Come early and secure a bargain. RODERER & HEAGAN. PASSAGE TICKETS ORAM, HAKCE & Co.'s STORE, 1 J OKT OKAM, N. <T. TJV.HI all tli IT from Nui tUTflH Ai NO GEO. MANN'S New Billiard Parlor fri.in N,n» Yuri IN i.iv,,, J at LMYKHT : •„ .„„, ['fis. A1H,I UltAtTa ON (iKUiTJJKITAIN; «„•„., ,^' otnl Urincn for t K'Hlrah]i> for UIO re. Situated" tiiroR of lake l d (1 by t »buv« t reffiur 19-tf For Sale, Rent or Exchange. Tlio fino property on the comer of lllaoh- p iill nud EKHOX Ktreotfl. recently ocuupieu' bj )snlol O. Wissim, Raj., t\i\ctt ijieln.li. Iwelling aud storo. Apply to lt M. V. B. (BEMtINp, Agont. U. A. UENNHTT, M. D , HOMCEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN &, SUHGEON, or. Blackwell & Warren Sts., (Oj-poaitu Dover Bank,) DOVER, N.J., latinos of TVonum ami Children, and of tho E}i> and Kar Bpuuiultiuti, •- . 30ioBHoarti:7 toUA.IT., 1toBflml7 t d S P , & IH-ilOpil ' .: ;" SMITH & MECIE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. OFFICE OVEH riETtaoh'SHAT KTOKK, IlLAOKWF.nL STItEKT nr .ar WHITLOCK'S HALL Con. BLACKlVJiLL 11I01U1I8 BT.., DOVER, S, J., HAS leeu put in ocdor liir the Bcasnii ami 1 will he Let tor Concerts, Lectures, Exhibitions n Kindn. id EnU'tUinim-nt tail In larKi!, «*Hl ftcatwl nth eoii'lcrlt iHirn, am) may hv I mil at KUDOII^SK trrm Appl? to WHITLOCK ALEW1H, iltf iu tin' Lmltiini Tli Notice of Settlement. Notice is hereby givun that tlio nrptrants if tlio mibwirilier, Adiuinintmtrix of Gnbrifl in Dozer, Jf^ms.ui, will l>o amu'tnl nnd it i'd l>y tho HiirroKiUc, and reported for icttlomeut to llio Oriilmiin' Cuuit of tho 3oimty of ilorrin, ou Mondny, tbo 4th duy uf August mit. SARAH M. MCCOHMH-K. Dated May SUl, 187!'. Bl-Mw R0OMS~T'6~LB!TI i PPLY TO M. &f. SEARING. niui H.VLOON, IDocItwi'lI Ht., Dover, jurt Jiticd ii); with new olid cligftut appoiutuiente, olk-rri lo tbti iilmiHure Hoelicr out) of tlio qui- and uio*t pl«uwiit J>1IICCH of eujo vine ut THE UILLIAHD PARLOU cou- two fluo carom tablet* and Is fittedup orytliiug ntcexHiiry for the enjoyment of tbo sumo. HUPFEL'8 LAGKH, tbo fin- ant li|.veruyo tlrnnlt, nlwuj'H kujit iu froali pupplios, find nfull stock of Gtrnmn vheeneB, ilini>ml watora, Pins Apple Cider, l'rotzcls, Sardtuos, etc. George will bo always on hand to please Ma friends, and will moke every stranger fed fit borne. 62-8m DENTISTRY lNALLITSnilASCIIESAT S. B. JOHNSTON'S ROOMS. INSERTING, EXTRACTING, FILLING, 4°- *VT0 additional clmrgo [or liKtractlng nliorb ll newleelhara lunorted. Wuareuowmalt- jjitftrautjlitl not* of teolh lur FIFTEEN DOLLARS. ALL WOUJC, IVAKKAJVTED. Dover, Boiitombcr25tU,'l87S. V: M. V. B. SEARING, , CARPENTER and BUILDER,, ittAOKWB&iI. Bi., COVEi ». J. ' r!nn«andHpcclflcatloniir.,rbnild!ngli,Oo!itraet* taken audniaierialBfurnlBliijd, SlateBoofing I hnvo ina.lu arriingnments with one or tbe bust quarriuH in I'ountiylvania, by which I can puiunnlRta roofs muoh cheaper tlinn o?er bofrtre-in Inct abont as luw BB good shinnlfl roots can be put ou. Dovor.N.J., 8epteraber23J, 1878. H.P.SANDEESON, dealer ID WA0OS MJII 0AHIUAOE WOOD WO»£, Ol'I'DHlTK DOVER DKTOT. WJIEE^S, OHlow aa *7.U0 jicr set. All kinds of FINE CJOLOHS for wirriuco nnd wagon paiiitiut;. AIKO OIT.H mid VAKN1SH, both ForwyiiftHdDoiiiLsUc. I'IIUI-KSTINE, WHITE LSAT>, uU:. Vaiut, Coloring mid Vuniinli IlniKliDH andKtriiniif; T.Micilr., n full Htoek. All of the nliovu gooil.s from thu hval iimk- irn tnown l»y uainbTS, TUtHT-OLASS OAJtlUAGEftinl SLEK1H OIINAMENTS. Hinii.R had u Urfia exiiiTM-iiri- f.ifi.icrly us i ofirrinHe buldwr, from ii knowh-d^ of it iuvo advnntimieB ov^r -*nv othiT iWler. OAPETWEAVER, BASEMENT, TWODOOltS FJtOSI POST OFFICE, DOVEU.N. J. [Innwt WeavinK, in fill wi'tltlis, dmi( *t.cla«H stylo at lowest tntL-i. The bent "ily um>d. Ne»r carp«ta on The faigheKt price peid for kind hRuil for kind ef •wun- only lined. and MEDICINES! OLD ESTABLISHED STAND! {DrrnuK VHOUHET* liitu*. H.ifci)**Bi: 8m»B ASH N«H>J:AL IB»S 1J*)*«.) CHAS. H. BALRYOTPLE, DRUGGIST AND APOTIIECVRY, 3HORRISTOWN, N- J. Dealer in Drugs and Medicines, Chemicals and Dye Stuff AM) AH, i'llAHMACr.tTKAI. I'KKPAHATlO.NS, ,,i..f-H)iLi:r \i:n>-iv. POETIC. Patchwork Philosophy. I've bean tbluking IOBIC, Ke*i»u, White a. wjttjjjtf atmy trnrk— Though I ain't tbe aort of wginaa To lei ihiublng maku mo thirk— En I say, I'ra i;aBa ft-tbuiltiiig WbAt u very cuiiooa w»y Our livtH in pitolied uy togetbor, Cut iiud lit 'cm an wu mayI It's ii sijuare orbluu or criimon, T/itn a sqitare or dirk* and light, Thm a. liulf of reU Mid yollow. * liUirUd Ami witd all our ttlUIniioiii, En tobow tlio patterns rufi, " Wu can ntivtir lull t-gmokly Until Ibo quill li dono. Tl^n's a bit of blue, jen yoiider, "i'iu ai uriybt at * June afcy, yet- 'Tuim yuur flimsy kind otcMobrii) Tbat you daren't u niuoh ai w«t, It nhum Jivo-and-twonty^mamen Bitico that carabrio gown w»a i«w, And those wltliured eUeoka liad rom TliativurobeitlBtoffby bide/ ' Then tut Itylook.oii tboUrne^A It bubiified to Uetooy Wtdu ; J | Klio nan allus tort ofabil'lDH,: ' Buufiht wLat woe sure to fade. Jlut Bbu Bomohow took folks' ftmflda; l'ur UIL-U art* co'or o'erwise, jlurf tjjv wuakfc'it sort of wJtnmen > Cnu throw aawdast In their eyea. And tint abock, ' t w u off a weikit Tbat X tuado for Abel Green, Wo wan-yen, chile-nlgh to be married, Vfhun—when Ueleef vugs hetn&eB; mi.'taln'tworthtiilking^vor, , I Hownu'er ibo gqnares mayfit,, Ye bin neyer toll, flllj^nlngl .; EatobowtboeolorBflt. For tlio bias will spits tbopurple, : Anil tlio liylgck oplle tbe ([r»y(S [ And tlie squares ye matched BO cirtifq Will matoj] jot the otlior.jjr i '™ ' And witli all y our oarefatp Ifon tro tiloB iiiru tofind fl That tbopattern, when it's f Ain't exactly to your mind. : '{[ 8o Ktulili, I've been thinking, '"' '- Herett-dtttDsatwywork^^. : ThonRbIftui'"tttio'icH9l|sfMgri{ -•-. To let ranriea make me'ibirk^ ; ,' Tbat onr liven aro Hko a patobwork,' ' With itEiqutres of dark and light, Abd thore's only one above us ' • - Wboctvu dotbo fining rlgbtl Somehow^or Other.' , , are lias a bnnien tbr every man's sto(ilder( Bomo may escape from ita trouble and care j Miaa it in yontU and '(will coma nUenWr* oldor.T • r * -"; T TM-' ' *• And at us at clnap as the carmcbla #o wear. BonWcbineETJntci*6tirriv6B unlnvlEed, , EobbniR our hearts of thoir j tot [ asur I M Id ind friendships tra Blighted, qrjpther wo worry aloqgt ETcryday toll 1B an everyday blessing, Though poverty's oottagu und cruBt na may ibare;,f^ N'/r ' • . . . tbe bidk on yUph burden* ire pten- Butntoiitlntlio heart that ia atrangtheued byprayur. ^ j... . Somehow or other the pathVkygrowi brighter Just when we mourn thera v^er* nono to be- friend; • " " , Hope J» tbo heart B»ke» tbo burden fael lighter, And BOmoliow or otbvr we get to the end. A grcnt tatl-beaier—tiie peacock. A niuu'B love—notes payable at night, When a mule weopa doestt Bliod mule- teers ? "The best tliiog to do tfith mociiroDi— obeesfl it. •' * A fixed taot—one that gets intoftwo- inn's head. •"- WomflJi'MSpbero-that she will never gpt oiarried. H jiftjs better not to do wrong than to Ou it und them repent. One my Just Mwell be In tha dark BB to IMI witlitmt a ligbt. Min CoaBtmotioD-whaiebono, ^ilht! jiowder, auil BO fortb*-- / '• The tain that bos DOmndo ia bis sole hrojs nil oW«hM«.^ f : ! ^ WhiBkry in about tbe only enemy man aa eiaeceaHeil in loving. -- £vory mmi ims a tool Itt h!» i>ot etw/ooe keeps Wm^ttoro. N» mBD uver yet looked on the d«k if tie of life without flodiog it. When tbe longs are In any way affect- «1 tli n pulse bath wo»«pidly. Soiaobody M T I wry beaa(«o»y, "A B,H«1 Ufa *Wblo pUlowphy." After ill, (clrgwpWe Hptlrea t tx*t wire p a l k n in tite aouutry. Tb« bMaRaor f*»* tenptaUon ii U, kwp ont of the range of Ita g a u . I V do«-rt*r Ins thrrr an »hooUugfta» Uat ar^ n Then-»» eighteen 'Piw j*on FORD/SMITH & Co., HOUSE AHU SIGH PA'NTEM. Geo. McCracken JM.M I'M rriiKii <>»• j 'CARRIAGES AND SLEIGflS,!^ THE LOST Slt/ERKINE. I waa mtning coal en the Broad Top in PeausylmaUvrhenl was commission- ed by tbe Northern Pacific Railroad Oomj)BHj Mone of a rutty of three civil engineers to make a barometrical survey of tbe Skugit ana Sank pussea of tho Cascade mDnafafna fo WasbiDgfon Ter- ritory. This was ic 1870. 'X'he Skagjt P*M g No white man bod knowledge of it. The Cascade ore a coctinnatiou of the NO. 33 Sierra Nevodas. . The Skagit Pass, if it I what was dug from tlio ground and cast existed, ffa|the most northerly one in f:i '- 1 - "^-" - Clifl range on American territory. Xt faaappposed to be about forty miles etl itt tlieir domain WAS a vast tract of tlie probabilities of our ever gettingout arid desert, really thebed ofabino long, of tbe country. We had reason to b< eitiuot BHa, surrounded by mountains. Ttiere were tnauy smalt valleye leading from tbe sand to tbe mountain rooks. Every year a putty of white men came up from the far 8outfi, bringing a large train of pack mules. Theftnimalaoar- fied watBr-eii8k8Hfuel, ond tools. Estab- lishing a camp, some dug ia the ground; others packed wood and water to tbe camp; others tended aflmund melted south ot the British boundary line, and to be doe east of tbe Fidotgo Island in Puget Soand. and ot Ban Jaau I&laad, vhfoh is better known. When this surroy was ordered thi directors ot tbe Nortbei-n Paeiflo Bail- rood Company, as well as the United States Government, bad not anffioienl knowledge of the tremendous mountain harrier between the Columbia Bl?er and to (IfliemiBQ the route by which the projected road could best reach the tea. They had to feel theii way in the dark. This will explain tbo long hesitation iu fixing the western ter minus of the railroad and tbe seeming incertitude of policy nbown in the large is of land on Puget Bound foj account oJE the company at BelHngham Bay,WhatcomtWhidby Inland, Utsulady, Seattle,,,0]ympi&, and elsewhere. N< man knew where the railroad would, could, or should terminate on Fugei Sound; and these purchases were Boat- tered to ioeura the speculative netting of the terminus lomewhere. Well, onr business is to find out if it railroad of standard gunge can be buill s the Oasoade range through the Skagit Pass or the pass channelled by the 1 Sauk Biver, which la the louthprn branch of theBkaglt* The party organ- izeHftt. Whatcom, on Bellingham Bay, We embark in three canoes, accompanied by tenIndians, Thepaddlesuredipped In the cool salt water utd we have started r trip, across tbe bay, then throngli "loughs, over Boantily covered mud flats until the Swjnopiish Flats are reached, There tbe : Bwinomish elougb is taken. i we are soon at an Indian agency. Here we camped for the night, a dresd- iulplace, damp, Bwampy, and Rfllicted with moaqnitoe?, These were so thick ie remark'of one of , f the niitires but little exaggerated.' . Moviug indft "emodgc"fir6 I'fiad built, BO a^ to keep in the line of the smoke, I lujected &a exclamation or'two into my )bversntioii with him, about the trbnb< oomenesB of the Northern mosquitoes. Hardly interrupting bis story, the native saia. "Wo don't call them thick until a club thrown up fn the air comes dawn bloody," andwithout a smUe he kept on 'ith hU tale of an elk as big as amole. Next morning we Btart for tbe Skagit River and get as far up as tbe settlement below the "Jam." Though it id far from nightfall, our chief baltn and makes camp, and stalks majestically around tor the admiration of the settlers. The camp leing pitched under aome wide sprend- ngcedun.I strolled off to thfl river, got into a cuuoe and crossed to where I iw Home men clearing the forest. Ttiey stopped work nud we seated ourseV on a log, talked and smoked. They told me thai it costs two hundred dollars pur acre to clear this lnnd, aud m I at the largu trees from four to six foot k diameter I believed it. I askod them if they koew ot tho passes through tbe mountains. They did not; they had Loard of theSank pass from tho Iodiaus, but never of the Skagit pass. Hoon tiring of the wood cutters, I wander off. and wnnderiaff come to a log jut in front of whioh a white man is Bit- ting on a stool, watching two tittle half- tarted cbjldron play in the sand by the river. A couple of eanocs are tied to Howe stakes and float round and round in an eddy of tbe river. leaning ngBinat great cedar, I watch lbs children play, _atUuuk*itheoldman. Thero is some* ibinff In his appearance, as ho situ before me, tint bnpretsea me as being different Irom the Missouri Fikos I havo juat left. So I tUnd ODtoen by liim, iDd look. Aorou the river ia a jolly parly of Indffw. They laogh loudly, ulk looet- •ntly, •• Uiey cook ireab ulmon They nkke pwy p Ml •round tlioir flro, shiulod by the great A neatly ftrnwd, Bat-bwul< Fr&iaeutiy those wliita men had i misunderstandings with tho Indians; but they wisely conducted themselves peacefully, and, on the whole, treated the Indians honestly. Our Indian's father noticed that always tbe same men come book—never new ones j and if one of the number WOB missed, ou inquiry tbnladiaus were tojd, 'He is dead.' "These strangers from the south work- ed all snmmer. Oa the approach ol winter they loaded the mulea with tin rittto brick* osd silently filed offtowurd mountains to tho south, and soon were lost to the tribe for another season. One spring thejreturnad with new men among them, aud a larger pRr t T than before. They were overbearing and insolent. An Indian was beaton with a stick, and that night runners vent sent out to gath- er the clans of the tribe. A counoil va& bold, medicine wo* made, and it was de- cided to kill tie white mbn from the Boutb, to fill up tho holo they had dug, to taar down tlieir fire places, aud keep their mules, Anight attack was deter- mined on. Tbe night wnsfixed,and intercourse with the ivhtteB was resumed. p''On the appointed night the braves attacked the sleeping camp, and all the whites were killed. The hole was filled up, tba fireplaces torn down, the mules divided, bud the triba went to & favorite camping ground. Tbat night tho modi- cine man prophesied that if any member of the tribe should ever reveal to any one tbo whereabouts of tho dead white men'B treasure, tbe tribe would be devas- tated by disease So every man in the tribe was bound by oaths not to divulge tho Eiecrot of tha mine on pain of death. From that day to this no white men came up from tbe south. "Tbis is whet tlie lodieu told us," Raid Jackson. ''AlUbntwiDtorwe turee partners sifted and oroavexamined and led up to onr:Indian's story by many ways; but as originally told, it was re- told, and told again/' "Jim, the .Indian " Jackson was continuing, when I interrupted him with, 'Hold oil ! I wants drink.' 1 ' ' Walking down to the rapidly-flowing Skapjt I leaned, aver and drank my fill ot liquid ice. Rejoining the exile from Philadelphia, he started anew with his story. I held up my hand to check him. I filled a pipe, wrapped nblanket around me, then lying on the floor on my buck, I (old him to go ahead, "Jim. the Indian, agreed to take m to this miuf>. Of course you understand that those southern men were Spaniards working e silver mine, the ore of wliich was rich onough to pay for packing i-utcr and fuul iuto a Oeuort. If it pniJ ;hem, how much more would U pny UK, wlio could command capital to work :t properly. By spring wo Iwul sold our claims on the American, had boiiKlit lixteeu puck anil aaddlo mulea, hnd alarmed at the extreme reserve of the Indians, and feared they might, in a moment of fear and rage, kill HB to avert the prophesied calamities. Jim was Been approaching our camp at a sharp gallop. Tne bearing of the man was more cheerful. He rods his horse aoyecoa&ieat)y thm oa yestarday, and direotly was with as. He smiled and said that tlie Indiana, ou his representa- tions and after muoh debate, had agreed to leave tho revelation of the hidden mine to their old medicino man, who was C3iii|iud by himself some tweuty mites uwuy, Incidentally he mentioned, as though it were of no interest to us, that a large party in tho camp were in fetor of fcOiug as ont of hand and sum- marily ending the trouble. The nr- rangemet now was to go to the valley where the medicine man lived, and there Jim was to urgae our case. If the prophet consented to tho discovery of the mine, it would be shown to us. If uott thtm we would all be killed if wc> moved ia the direction of the treasure. 'So we packed up, mounted, end were off. Tba trail ledover hilh, across dry vallejB, and finally into tho mouth uf one of tie ravines that bad water in it. Here, on the buuks of a tiny stream, hid&oa among the willows, stood a ainnll Indian house, and in it was tlio oldest, most bletr-eyed male Indian I had ever seeu, and the most witherod and de- crepit old bug that ever gnashed tooth- bought Pcargo of food, and only o tailing of tho river hunt for that mine. to start aa On<> night wo slipped out of camp, and Jim piloted us across tlio mountains, into tin 1 lund if bis fathers—a dry, find country, ibonnding in sago brush, jack rnlibife, hens, huge buffalo crickclfl, and gi- gantic grasshoppers. Issuing from tho base of tho mountain were a fowstreams [it water, and iti tlio little valleys lauda by this wator was fair grazing. •.'As yot we saw noun of Jim's people. One day he halted htn horse, nnd, pofnt- lug tu a cleft iu tlio lulls ncruns tie dry A Good Uhost Story. Here in a ghost Btory which has a lightf ully old-world air about it, and y it concerned a liidy now livicg in Be] gciivla. She dreamed a vory woadertt druain, iu wliich she heard a voice "Gotolfletflher." fitaudthis, us i Bhecuuldnotuudi know no one called rietcher ; and she related b«r dream am spoke of her perplexity about it to s ami persons, until at last a friend, wham she van jelling tljn stoi-j, mbl "There is some one called Fletcher win a eeer, or clairvoyant." Bbe thei is y wont to call npuu this clairvoyant, am d au appointment for him to comi to Jier house, Mr. Fletcher w<iut ac cordingly, and was admitted to thi house by it ttruuge -looking servant, who eyed Iiira iu a very puzzled manner. Hi wan shown into tho diniug-room, wbicl was jimly ligliteil, auJ as he went in fci noticed that itn old gentlemen was sit' ting in tho room at a writiug desk busy with some papers ; he was dressed aa s clergyman. Mr. Fletcher excused him self, apologizing for interrupting tin clergyman, who, however, paid no at- tention whatever, but continued to write. Atter Mr. Fletcher bad waited sotni time, tiiloutly observing the old clergy- mnn, the Imly of the bouse, whomwi 11 call Mudnui(] Z , came in. Thi clergyman retained Ms seat, tnktag nc noiico of her entrance. Mr. Fletcher, liile speaking to her, looked round, aud was sturtled to sea tLat the clergy- man bad changed bis dress, and woro lew garni at a whito. 'Wo camped, uud tho diplomatic James negotiated with tho medicine man, At first with no euccesn, but after muoh talk and Home presents of tobacco and sugar, he was rewarded by being allowed to take us within half au hoar's rids ot the closed mine, tbere to leave us, and if we could find the treasure ourselves it was to bo ours. But on no acoount was he to show ui the place, aa in that case the spirits ot the murdered Sfmoiarda woald Jmanl tbe tribe would accuse them of robbing them, and work their destruction by pestilence. 'This Traa tho beet we coulil do, and 'ith it WQ lmd to be satisfied. After a night spent here, westarted to the south, leaving our paok animals in charge of the old man, but carrying greatflasksof water with UB. We rode into & rough, broken country, full of little cross gulches. Leaving this formation, wo rode np Intoftt&ble country, wheretbe ind gradually rose to tho BCIUU, until "There ia no one sitting tberp," n'acl the plain s-nrfaoe saddenly teriniuated iu prove her words correct nbo west to tlio the uniform of a chaplain. Tbis BO as- tonished Uini that ho quite forgot the lady's presence and the words be was in tha not of speaking to lier. He stood stupidly gazing at the clergyman until she said "What are you looking at?" He at first did not answer her, feeling ashamed ot staring la such A tray a! tho clergyman, who remained quietly at the desk, lliit as he continued to look at him, und grev very - agaiu asked, "What flo you aee P" He replied, "I am only look- ing at tbat (sentlfiinan who sits at tbo desk writing" As ho replied to her, he noticed Hint MadniueZ changed col- or, and begun lo tremble very muoh. Allalio said was f 'Yow are mistaken; there is no one sitting there." But looking round at tbe clergyman again, ba replied "Oh yea, thero is; /be has been sitting there ever eince I cntna in, but be must bavn left the room for i moment, as he has changed his clothes. 1 Madame Z rinsfferaJ B> range of brass mountains. p toward tbese rnountains, and witlitnf | couple of miles of them. Jim trnlk Telling us to bnnt for tb( is horse nnd rode 4 toward the medicine man's h j chair by the desfc on?, lifted it up, si. vdy tlitit it was epipty. Slit' mely ngifiitud, und BHIHIIH put ohuir EIIO oxeluink'rt, "Tliitu } really urn;!) biju." It wns tvi- Dt tiiat »ho uuilcrstaod who waa re- 'We hnnted not for tlio mino bat 'iort'fered to. "I think n plr.ee to establish ft camp, nnd found inc. It woa a dry enmp, witli no water there or anywhere that we could dis- sever. So we rode buck to where our puck animnls were, and there matured r plan Jim refused to bo of th irty, funring deatli from liis tribp. We tbroo white men were to Jivida our ork as follows ; 'Iwo were lo prospect' nil tbe oilier io puck water, food u.uil cauip ueat ^tl will (jo upstnira, sh.o 'then said, and moved to letive the room ; bnt thooler^ynyn ab onco sap- l bfo h fllillth t f perl before her the do pliinly, way ant of , M^ P i l f e r eeping him so folloffod'-him, and Madame Z kfpt c]oea; bdiind. The elfrgy- uiini weutliefuro'tliem np,the stairs ami sfoppeil id (tie buck tlrnmne-Toom door. 'Mr. FlfitcluT followed tki'apparition, f"b«u it ijiiusud ut tliisifcof,. opened Every week one of tlio prospe6--j^ii, w&ulil peem under onli as to relieve tlie man altha mules. ' ' '-- : *-••---* "- »,.,.,, casks M'sdatan , p htrnngely" enough sin, swd tliflt his tribe was Hit*' it moroiug we nulled our water; and started orer tbo divide., Making our camp, the two who. wen -> prospect went ont at once to wprtf was one. Knowingt if tbe tale •were .rue, nnd tho won enrae up from Mexico in tbo numbers the Indium asserted they did, tliet-tbu oil trail would still be in existent wt mountains, aud tti< e9 ia opposite direct ions. I was •nrded by flndnig an old trail, almoat " " " * i 1 it led tlifl wajinlheliouBo—ii which )>e hod s y buen i iarf cinIUDl- •r while lie house, before. wing-n. too, Iu >oni, apparition Mde right into the j jj, c r,-,otSi , separating, search-1 jj fi mu ti cne d | t i I ^ they ent-crcd th Ntch was dimly lit. ifudame Z all tho tirao was trembling violently, and much agitatcil. They sat down by n sruaii table, tint iao pparition had gono to llni other end of j 11Sstiil ataniliiig there. Mr. Pletcliet ID come till-^bowing that tneo it i li|U baa Iwen a hmvyt wfll-irorn pnth. , it led right into tlio mounr to (]lt . tublc- by wbioh lio stood, 8 i, owj, 1B uy tliia uctiun tbut he eonid J id U d ^ Flttcber miid toUadnmoR "Mar I go to him?" and w sjiint mad w»a about noon, and, lining exceedingly hot, Jimadvised us not tu try to c l i I h until nighL wo c , ami I h To the nor'ia it j |, n leil—where? I aaU along tliis trail, | y ti i»(ififl«l ttist I VMHB the track ot tln^ 1 ovt , lort mine; bat I was dis»«imiDtoil. ] ,, ne Tlio tmil soildt'iily »j>rt'iul l cd into tha wuldrun of beat that lay be- foro UK. Thff tint air row from the grouud in vast WOT«? Kid drifted slwlj inlo many little trails, ond the mrt before ognilto wind. louold «»" > M * " ot!l «pl«M- ^ alm«t »*> Ho a-^cnt om w«tcr ».., "•»'• »W» »«'" « • »' p *'£'•« again there—B raustani changing, &• if, * l>w "? I* 1 . 1 ™?*' uf watur on a fake, FT> tmns, intbe direction of a pass rtntj Bwtnrc wtbongh he wished A large sl- wliich lay IIIWH the table opened. rU-tirbiT o b ^ c d him, and turned (he h'i\rcti and finally utopjHN] at pictun*. tu which the fj'irit pointed- Th'tciicr will U> Mudatne Z~. '.idi 1 niuu li> mi', liu h u polnlwlto tnti', and yuU UXAJ rcc<igniB9 wlmt nans." Hhafii'*itatiogly compl iiiK furtiM'U ui tin' r>>rncr in wliieli tini\tin*}- j ti N tin- WOKand w down it lhf> I'flgu of Ibsalbi :-••!, "Why. that is tho pictum uf r fiithtt, «tii«w spirit you have guve her courage, to wait upon h&r mis- tress. From this eventful night the hauntings began to diminish, and grad- ually ceased altogether. Bet even vow, though tbe house lioa recently been en- tirely renovated, none of the Bervauia eon be persuaded tolive there. _—,—*-»-* . Japan In the Inland Sea. We Were nailing among Ihn three thousand islands of tbe Inland Sea, Tba isluuds were ofteQ little more than a sin- gle rook with probably one tree peering over tbe summit, but there were num- bers of them big enough to allow tbo brown roofod villages to nestle among the rice-fields ortolie at the foot of tbu iteop hill-sides terraced up the very top; md sometimes there were glorious moun- tains, range behiud range, till the high- est bad a delicate crown of clond, superb mountain amphitheatres, and mosses ol :umblud hills, and the suft light of the grass apou tbetu all, like Killarney on a mnuner day, blended with tlie mighty iweep from Mull to Ben Craachan. . It the most ehiitjag^view I ever aaw, and sky and sea and land all shared the Now a calm strait that reached for miles between two islands in our right, apeokled with boats and 'ringed with woods and little bays of •ore white Handfitfor the feet of fairies, >nd thebeavenssbovesolearpeorlgray; 'ien a blue sky and a merry breeze, icattering foam over the son bad sweep- ; on tbe ungainly junta with their >ite. fall-bellied saih), the bills gray ad blue sad purple, and dim and ligbty islnDds, like clouds ia the far iutance; here w>cloBe to the shore u we were under the shadow of the iliff, the rooks and wooded points oar- awing' in on both dales till we ooutd be- leve ve were sailing on some Eastern Shine; then, ip a moment) out iuto an open sea, with space and light and tar- iff land. And this procession passed us unceasingly from sunrise until sunset, might have been Loch. Linue or Boss Fstand, Arrochsr op Wind>nnere, until 3 rubbed OQF eyes aud saw tbe jnnks anchor, tbe spectral fringie of trees nng tl)B bill-top, the brown roofs, aud curves of country temples. Then, jiit.-lKlc efleraoan, ve raa below a ;MliotH9 rock, and the lightkeepcr - -]) bfs flag; and, looking back, we ing stretches of the loveliest green •liter, changing, us wg looked, under ery |>lay of light and shade and color; lino of tulegraph poles, a greeu iiut jutting ont on theleft to meet tho Us upon tba right, BO that the steamer s little moro than room to vasa in the •ar fitil! water, andwe were in a land- jlied Itay, anchored off the pretty town SiiDonasaki, and the setting sun lit the tvondsand sea andnky with crim- r»nd gold., We supposed we muat nni out again bv the strait that we had tcreti, but when the ancliorwas lifted ! dettmer held on her course, appsr- tlj agniugt the opposite shore, then irped a sudden comer, and we were 'TOging in the rough, waves of a tron- 'daeih Whim tlie evening falls, and ie sea is calm, tho fishing boats crowd ilh tlio sparkle of thoir lights;bat ray from Bhurc tliere are JHEDV junks at carry iio lights, and ure slow to iwor their liolm, and. a cause of much ploaive speech among sea-captains. Old SI is Sound lo Celebrate Old Si dropped a piece of watermelon -ind out of tue back window of tho anno* tntn, wtpnl off his chin andasked : •He? you yung gou'lemen got er book 'round byar wuar's Je d^uktamasban of ace iu hit dat wus published 'fore lie Wuli V We assured him we hod tbe article in itock. 'Well, ef yer ttiot gwlne to use hit ersel I'd like ter git de konatderanhun rt hit U>1 do mornla' oh do Fit V Is it poMiblfl that you are going to celebrate the Fourth of July f' 'Hit^e pnrint o&Wuin'widmy* self dat I ihell ot I'te ttill hyu fo' v r-tiiu atari turns denex'page in < kl' 'Whj tbb change In your political d urnn?' 'Bigbtdar.Iriieitorw pint ob or- der 1 I>,\r aiut ao' mo' politicki in tbe in de'bund- ai»et ot Uia walwmillioo onip er de gin* end prebalawe ob blickberriet In do country. Nobody nebber ibODgbt Tioot in de m.Mlcr 'wptin' mm oh (lw b*l[ Jmamc'd poUtuboni dtt'i trjin' iw dmff il* VaUm 'rcuJ Jrft* o n UttU tnek by d.> t«lL Do fake* j down in mj trtUmwot dour mollf «d dil ehtfjbody kin wnB de «osg> -iU ftMdiiB, rcgjranl }CH wedfler Jej'» not tordimoent or ndifci} w r t n ! Uu»V d«tr you ktwHr UMvarraUwMpMtUMroartli fa lbi« MMft•ttmofe two. I ioirwSnee mymlt. Witb anniU be Myi Hut hi" nan* Is TUB .HATKWAL &j#rz CBASTBUCHANAN Beat Work Is the Oheape* t UT1ST STYLES AMD mPROVfHIHT8

SPECIAL NOTICE! · nr .ar WHITLOCK'S HALL Con. BLACKlVJiLL 11I01U1I8 BT.., DOVER, S, J., HAS leeu put in ocdor liir the Bcasnii ami 1 will he Let tor Concerts, Lectures, Exhibitions

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  • VOL IX.

    THETRON ERABENJ. H. VOQT.

    BI1TOB tm njOUIETOll.Olfloe on Uorris Street sear Blaokwall.

    TKltMS UP SUHSCIUPTION

    IKVAHIAULY IN ADYANDE.

    O l i o Y e a r , - - - - - - - S i I

    b i i M o n t l i n , - - - - - - - UT u n * r n o i i t l u , - - - - - - - E

    A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S .

    BP1OS. | 1 WK. | 'I V

    1 n2 as1

    •i na r,o4 to

    2 (HI2 7C8 flu4 255 25B Sill

    JOOl

    4 no6 mi7 (to8 Illl

    10 2fi,l'J 00

    » 8 001BOO

    -6 *>'8 001

    10 0012 fiO]15 (HI18 6082 01)

    ».| 6 a

    » » r,oi» r, no;8 , « ,11101)

    •9 and Kar Bpuuiultiuti, •- .30ioBHoarti:7 toU A.IT., 1 toBflml7 t d S P , &

    IH-ilOpil ' .: ;"

    SMITH & MECIE,ATTORNEYS AT LAW.OFFICE OVEH riETtaoh'SHAT KTOKK,

    IlLAOKWF.nL STItEKT

    nr .arWHITLOCK'S HALL

    Con. BLACKlVJiLL 11I01U1I8 BT..,

    DOVER, S, J.,HAS leeu put in ocdor liir the Bcasnii ami

    1 will he Let tor

    Concerts, Lectures, Exhibitionsn Kindn.id EnU'tUinim-nt

    tail In larKi!, «*Hl ftcatwl n th eoii'lcrltiHirn, am) may hv I mil at KUDOII^SK trrmAppl? to WHITLOCK ALEW1H,

    iltf iu tin' Lmltiini

    Tl i

    Notice of Settlement.Notice is hereby givun that tlio nrptrants

    if tlio mibwirilier, Adiuinintmtrix of Gnbriflin Dozer, Jf^ms.ui, will l>o amu'tnl nndit i'd l>y tho HiirroKiUc, and reported for

    icttlomeut to llio Oriilmiin' Cuuit of tho3oimty of ilorrin, ou Mondny, tbo 4th duyuf August mi t .

    SARAH M. MCCOHMH-K.Dated May SUl, 187!'. Bl-Mw

    R0OMS~T'6~LB!TIi PPLY TO

    M. & f. SEARING.

    niui H.VLOON, IDocItwi'lI Ht., Dover, jurtJiticd ii); with new olid cligftut appoiutuiente,olk-rri lo tbti iilmiHure Hoelicr out) of tlio qui-

    and uio*t pl«uwiit J>1IICCH of eu jo vine utTHE UILLIAHD PARLOU cou-

    two fluo carom tablet* and Is fitted uporytliiug ntcexHiiry for the enjoyment

    of tbo sumo. HUPFEL'8 LAGKH, tbo fin-ant li|.veruyo tlrnnlt, nlwuj'H kujit iu froalipupplios, find n full stock of Gtrnmn vheeneB,ilini>ml watora, Pins Apple Cider, l'rotzcls,Sardtuos, etc. George will bo always onhand to please Ma friends, and will mokeevery stranger fed fit borne. 62-8m

    DENTISTRYlNALLITSnilASCIIESAT

    S. B. JOHNSTON'SROOMS.

    INSERTING, EXTRACTING,FILLING, 4°-

    *VT0 additional clmrgo [or liKtractlng nliorbl l new leelhara lunorted. Wuareuowmalt-jjitftrautjlitl not* of teolh lur

    FIFTEEN DOLLARS.ALL WOUJC, IVAKKAJVTED.

    Dover, Boiitombcr25tU,'l87S. V:

    M. V. B. SEARING,, CARPENTER and BUILDER,,

    ittAOKWB&iI. Bi., COVEi » . J. '

    r!nn«andHpcclflcatloniir.,rbnild!ngli,Oo!itraet*taken audniaierialBfurnlBliijd,

    SlateBoofingI hnvo ina.lu arriingnments with one or tbe

    bust quarriuH in I'ountiylvania, by which I canpuiunnlRta roofs muoh cheaper tlinn o?erbofrtre-in Inct abont as luw BB good shinnlflroots can be put ou.Dovor.N.J., 8epteraber23J, 1878.

    H.P.SANDEESON,dealer ID WA0OS MJII 0AHIUAOE WOOD WOȣ,

    Ol'I'DHlTK DOVER DKTOT.WJIEE^S, OH low aa *7.U0 jicr set. All kinds

    of FINE CJOLOHS for wirriuco nnd wagonpaiiitiut;. AIKO OIT.H mid VAKN1SH, bothForwyiiftHdDoiiiLsUc. I'IIUI-KSTINE, WHITELSAT>, uU:. Vaiut, Coloring mid VuniinliIlniKliDH and Ktriiniif; T.Micilr., n full Htoek.

    All of the nliovu gooil.s from thu hval iimk-irn tnown l»y uainbTS, TUtHT-OLASSOAJtlUAGEftinl SLEK1H OIINAMENTS.

    Hinii.R had u Urfia exiiiTM-iiri- f.ifi.icrly usi ofirrinHe buldwr, from ii knowh-d^ of itiuvo advnntimieB ov^r -*nv othiT iWler.

    OAPETWEAVER,BASEMENT, TWO DOOltS FJtOSI POST

    OFFICE, DOVEU.N. J.

    [Innwt WeavinK, in fill wi'tltlis, dmi(*t.cla«H stylo at lowest tntL-i. The bent

    "ily um>d. Ne»r carp«ta onThe faigheKt price peid for

    kindhRuil forkind ef •wun- only lined.

    and MEDICINES!OLD ESTABLISHED STAND!

    {DrrnuK VHOUHET* liitu*. H.ifci)**Bi: 8m»B ASH N«H>J:AL IB»S 1J*)*«.)

    CHAS. H. BALRYOTPLE,DRUGGIST AND APOTIIECVRY,

    3HORRISTOWN, N- J.Dealer in Drugs and Medicines, Chemicals and Dye Stuff

    AM) AH, i'llAHMACr.tTKAI. I'KKPAHATlO.NS,

    ,,i..f-H)iLi:r \i:n>-iv.

    POETIC.Patchwork Philosophy.

    I've bean tbluking IOBIC, Ke*i»u,White a. wjttjjjtf at my trnrk—

    Though I ain't tbe aort of wginaaTo lei ihiublng maku mo thirk—

    En I say, I'ra i;aBa ft-tbuiltiiigWbAt u very cuiiooa w»y

    Our livtH in pitolied uy togetbor,Cut iiud lit 'cm an wu may I

    It's ii sijuare orbluu or criimon,T/itn a sqitare or dirk* and light,

    Thm a. liulf of reU Mid yollow. *l i U i r U d

    Ami witd all our ttlUIniioiii,En to bow tlio patterns rufi, "

    Wu can ntivtir lull t-gmoklyUntil Ibo quill li dono.

    Tl^n's a bit of blue, jen yoiider,"i'iu ai uriybt at * June afcy, yet-

    'Tuim yuur flimsy kind otcMobrii)Tbat you daren't u niuoh ai w«t,

    It n hum Jivo-and-twonty^mamenBitico that carabrio gown w»a i«w,

    And those wltliured eUeoka liad romTliativurobeitlBtoffby bide/ '

    Then t u t Itylook.oii tboUrne^AIt bubiified to Uetooy Wtdu ; J |

    Klio nan allus tort ofabil'lDH,: • 'Buufiht wLat woe sure to fade.

    Jlut Bbu Bomohow took folks' ftmflda;l'ur UIL-U art* co'or o'erwise,

    jlurf tjjv wuakfc'it sort of wJtnmen >Cnu throw aawdast In their eyea.

    And tint abock, ' twu off a weikitTbat X tuado for Abel Green,

    Wo wan-yen, chile-nlgh to be married,Vfhun—when Ueleef vugs hetn&eB;

    mi.'taln'tworthtiilking^vor, , IHownu'er ibo gqnares may fit, ,

    Ye bin neyer toll, flllj^nlngl .;EatobowtboeolorBflt.

    For tlio bias will spits tbo purple, :Anil tlio liylgck oplle tbe ([r»y(S [

    And tlie squares ye matched BO cirtifqWill matoj] jot the otlior.jjri'™ '

    And witli all y our oarefatpIfon tro tiloB iiiru to find fl

    That tbo pattern, when it's fAin't exactly to your mind. : '{[

    8o Ktulili, I've been thinking, '"''- Herett-dtttDsatwywork^^. :ThonRbIftui'"tttio'icH9l|sfMgri{ -•-.

    To let ranriea make me'ibirk^ ; ,'Tbat onr liven aro Hko a patobwork,'' With itEiqutres of dark and light,Abd thore's only one above us ' •- Wboctvu do tbo fining rlgbtl

    Somehow^or Other.' , ,

    are lias a bnnien tbr every man's sto(ilder(Bomo may escape from ita trouble and care j

    Miaa it in yontU and '(will coma nUenWr*oldor.T • r * -"; T T M - ' ' *•

    And at us at clnap as the carmcbla #o wear.

    BonWcbineETJntci*6tirriv6B unlnvlEed, ,EobbniR our hearts of thoir

    j tot [

    asurI M

    Id ind friendships tra Blighted,qrjpther wo worry aloqgt

    ETcryday toll 1B an everyday blessing,Though poverty's oottagu und cruBt na may

    ibare;,f^ N ' / r ' • . . .tbe bidk on yUph burden* ire pten-

    Butntoiitlntlio heart that ia atrangtheuedbyprayur. ^ j . . . .

    Somehow or other the pathVkygrowi brighterJust when we mourn thera v êr* nono to be-

    friend; • " " ,Hope J» tbo heart B»ke» tbo burden fael

    lighter,And BOmoliow or otbvr we get to the end.

    A grcnt tatl-beaier—tiie peacock.

    A niuu'B love—notes payable at night,

    When a mule weopa doestt Bliod mule-

    teers ?

    "The best tliiog to do tfith mociiroDi—

    obeesfl it. •' *

    A fixed taot—one that gets into ft wo-

    inn's head. •"-

    WomflJi'MSpbero-that she will never

    gpt oiarried.

    H jiftjs better not to do wrong than to

    Ou it und them repent.

    One my Just M well be In tha dark BBto IMI witlitmt a ligbt.

    Min CoaBtmotioD-whaiebono, ^ilht!

    jiowder, auil BO fortb*-- / '•

    The tain that bos DO mndo ia bis sole

    hrojs n i l oW «hM«.^ f: ! ^

    WhiBkry in about tbe only enemy man

    aa eiaeceaHeil in loving. --

    £vory mmi ims a tool Itt h!»

    i>ot etw/ooe keeps Wm^ttoro.

    N» mBD uver yet looked on the d«k

    if tie of life without flodiog it.

    When tbe longs are In any way affect-

    «1 tli n pulse bath wo»«pidly .

    Soiaobody MTI wry beaa(«o»y, "A

    B,H«1 Ufa i» *Wblo pUlowphy."

    After ill, (clrgwpWe Hptlrea a » t

    tx*t wire pa lkn in tite aouutry.

    Tb« bMaRaor f*»* tenptaUon ii

    U, kwp ont of the range of Ita g a u .

    I V do«-rt*r Insthrrr a n »hooUugfta» Uat ar^ n

    Then-»» eighteen 'Piw

    j*on

    FORD/SMITH & Co.,HOUSE AHU SIGH PA'NTEM.

    Geo. McCrackenJ M . M I'M rriiKii »• j

    'CARRIAGES AND SLEIGflS,!^

    THE LOST Slt/ERKINE.I waa mtning coal en the Broad Top

    in PeausylmaUvrhenl was commission-ed by tbe Northern Pacific RailroadOomj)BHj M one of a rutty of three civilengineers to make a barometrical surveyof tbe Skugit ana Sank pussea of thoCascade mDnafafna fo WasbiDgfon Ter-ritory. This was ic 1870. 'X'he Skagjt

    P*Mg

    No whiteman bod knowledge of it. The Cascade

    ore a coctinnatiou of the

    NO. 33

    Sierra Nevodas. . The Skagit Pass, if it I what was dug from tlio ground and castexisted, ffa|the most northerly one i n f : i ' - 1 - "^-" -Clifl range on American territory. Xtfaaappposed to be about forty miles

    etl itt tlieir domain WAS a vast tract of tlie probabilities of our ever getting outarid desert, really the bed ofabino long, of tbe country. We had reason to b<eitiuot BHa, surrounded by mountains.Ttiere were tnauy smalt valleye leadingfrom tbe sand to tbe mountain rooks.Every year a putty of white men cameup from the far 8outfi, bringing a largetrain of pack mules. The ftnimala oar-fied watBr-eii8k8Hfuel, ond tools. Estab-lishing a camp, some dug ia the ground;others packed wood and water to tbecamp; others tended a flm und melted

    south ot the British boundary line, andto be doe east of tbe Fidotgo Island inPuget Soand. and ot Ban Jaau I&laad,vhfoh is better known.

    When this surroy was ordered thidirectors ot tbe Nortbei-n Paeiflo Bail-rood Company, as well as the UnitedStates Government, bad not anffioienlknowledge of the tremendous mountainharrier between the Columbia Bl?er and

    to (IfliemiBQ the route bywhich the projected road could bestreach the tea. They had to feel theiiway in the dark. This will explain tbolong hesitation iu fixing the western terminus of the railroad and tbe seemingincertitude of policy nbown in the large

    is of land on Puget Bound fojaccount oJE the company at BelHnghamBay,WhatcomtWhidby Inland, Utsulady,Seattle,,,0]ympi&, and elsewhere. N<man knew where the railroad would,could, or should terminate on FugeiSound; and these purchases were Boat-tered to ioeura the speculative nettingof the terminus lomewhere.

    Well, onr business is to find out if itrailroad of standard gunge can be buill

    s the Oasoade range through theSkagit Pass or the pass channelled bythe1 Sauk Biver, which la the louthprnbranch of the Bkaglt* The party organ-izeHftt. Whatcom, on Bellingham Bay,We embark in three canoes, accompaniedby ten Indians, ThepaddlesuredippedIn the cool salt water utd we have started

    r trip, across tbe bay, then throngli"loughs, over Boantily covered mud flatsuntil the Swjnopiish Flats are reached,There tbe : Bwinomish elougb is taken.

    i we are soon at an Indian agency.Here we camped for the night, a dresd-iulplace, damp, Bwampy, and Rfllictedwith moaqnitoe?, These were so thick

    ie remark'of one of ,fthe niitiresbut little exaggerated.' . Moviug

    indft "emodgc"fir6 I'fiad built, BOâ to keep in the line of the smoke, Ilujected &a exclamation or'two into my

    )bversntioii with him, about the trbnb<oomenesB of the Northern mosquitoes.

    Hardly interrupting bis story, the nativesaia. "Wo don't call them thick until aclub thrown up fn the air comes dawnbloody," and without a smUe he kept on

    'ith hU tale of an elk as big as a mole.Next morning we Btart for tbe Skagit

    River and get as far up as tbe settlementbelow the "Jam." Though it id farfrom nightfall, our chief baltn and makescamp, and stalks majestically around torthe admiration of the settlers. The campleing pitched under aome wide sprend-ngcedun.I strolled off to thfl river,

    got into a cuuoe and crossed to where Iiw Home men clearing the forest. Ttiey

    stopped work nud we seated ourseVon a log, talked and smoked. They toldme thai it costs two hundred dollars puracre to clear this lnnd, aud m Iat the largu trees from four to six footk diameter I believed it. I askod themif they koew ot tho passes through tbemountains. They did not ; they hadLoard of theSank pass from tho Iodiaus,but never of the Skagit pass.

    Hoon tiring of the wood cutters, Iwander off. and wnnderiaff come to a logjut in front of whioh a white man is Bit-ting on a stool, watching two tittle half-tarted cbjldron play in the sand by theriver. A couple of eanocs are tied toHowe stakes and float round and roundin an eddy of tbe river. leaning ngBinat

    great cedar, I watch lbs children play,_atUuuk*itheoldman. Thero is some*ibinff In his appearance, as ho situ beforeme, tint bnpretsea me as being differentIrom the Missouri Fikos I havo juat left.So I tUnd ODtoen by liim, iDd look.

    Aorou the river ia a jolly parly ofIndffw. They laogh loudly, ulk looet-

    •ntly, • • Uiey cook ireab ulmon They

    nkke • p w y pMl •round tlioir flro, shiulod by the great

    A neatly ftrnwd, Bat-bwul<

    Fr&iaeutiy those wliita men had imisunderstandings with tho Indians;but they wisely conducted themselvespeacefully, and, on the whole, treatedthe Indians honestly. Our Indian'sfather noticed that always tbe same mencome book—never new ones j and if oneof the number WOB missed, ou inquirytbnladiaus were tojd, 'He is dead.'

    "These strangers from the south work-ed all snmmer. Oa the approach olwinter they loaded the mulea with tinrittto brick* osd silently filed offtowurd

    mountains to tho south, and soon werelost to the tribe for another season. Onespring thejreturnad with new men amongthem, aud a larger pRrtT than before.They were overbearing and insolent.An Indian was beaton with a stick, andthat night runners vent sent out to gath-er the clans of the tribe. A counoil va&bold, medicine wo* made, and it was de-cided to kill t ie white mbn from theBoutb, to fill up tho holo they had dug,to taar down tlieir fire places, aud keeptheir mules, A night attack was deter-mined on. Tbe night wns fixed, andintercourse with the ivhtteB was resumed.

    p''On the appointed night the bravesattacked the sleeping camp, and all thewhites were killed. The hole was filledup, tba fireplaces torn down, the mulesdivided, bud the triba went to & favoritecamping ground. Tbat night tho modi-cine man prophesied that if any memberof the tribe should ever reveal to anyone tbo whereabouts of tho dead whitemen'B treasure, tbe tribe would be devas-tated by disease So every man in thetribe was bound by oaths not to divulgetho Eiecrot of tha mine on pain of death.From that day to this no white men cameup from tbe south.

    "Tbis is whet tlie lodieu told us,"Raid Jackson. ''AlUbntwiDtorwe tureepartners sifted and oroavexamined andled up to onr:Indian's story by manyways; but as originally told, it was re-told, and told again/'

    "Jim, the .Indian " Jackson wascontinuing, when I interrupted him with,'Hold oil ! I wants drink.'1 ' '

    Walking down to the rapidly-flowingSkapjt I leaned, aver and drank my fillot liquid ice. Rejoining the exile fromPhiladelphia, he started anew with hisstory. I held up my hand to check him.I filled a pipe, wrapped nblanket aroundme, then lying on the floor on my buck,I (old him to go ahead,

    "Jim. the Indian, agreed to take mto this miuf>. Of course you understandthat those southern men were Spaniardsworking e silver mine, the ore of wliichwas rich onough to pay for packingi-utcr and fuul iuto a Oeuort. If it pniJ;hem, how much more would U pny UK,wlio could command capital to work :tproperly. By spring wo Iwul sold ourclaims on the American, had boiiKlitlixteeu puck anil aaddlo mulea, hnd

    alarmed at the extreme reserve of theIndians, and feared they might, in amoment of fear and rage, kill HB toavert the prophesied calamities. Jimwas Been approaching our camp at asharp gallop. Tne bearing of the manwas more cheerful. He rods his horseaoyecoa&ieat)y thm oa yestarday, anddireotly was with as. He smiled andsaid that tlie Indiana, ou his representa-tions and after muoh debate, had agreedto leave tho revelation of the hiddenmine to their old medicino man, whowas C3iii|iud by himself some tweutymites uwuy, Incidentally he mentioned,as though it were of no interest to us,that a large party in tho camp were infetor of fcOiug as ont of hand and sum-marily ending the trouble. The nr-rangemet now was to go to the valleywhere the medicine man lived, andthere Jim was to urgae our case. If theprophet consented to tho discovery ofthe mine, it would be shown to us. Ifuott thtm we would all be killed if wc>moved ia the direction of the treasure.

    'So we packed up, mounted, end wereoff. Tba trail led over hilh, across dryvallejB, and finally into tho mouth ufone of tie ravines that bad water in it.Here, on the buuks of a tiny stream,hid&oa among the willows, stood a ainnllIndian house, and in it was tlio oldest,most bletr-eyed male Indian I had everseeu, and the most witherod and de-crepit old bug that ever gnashed tooth-

    bought P cargo of food, and only otailing of tho riverhunt for that mine.

    to start aaOn night

    wo slipped out of camp, and Jim pilotedus across tlio mountains, into tin1 lundif bis fathers—a dry, find country,ibonnding in sago brush, jack rnlibife,

    hens, huge buffalo crickclfl, and gi-gantic grasshoppers. Issuing from thobase of tho mountain were a fow streams[it water, and iti tlio little valleys laudaby this wator was fair grazing.

    •.'As yot we saw noun of Jim's people.One day he halted htn horse, nnd, pofnt-lug tu a cleft iu tlio lulls ncruns t ie dry

    A Good Uhost Story.Here in a ghost Btory which has a

    lightf ully old-world air about it, and yit concerned a liidy now livicg in Be]gciivla. She dreamed a vory woaderttdruain, iu wliich she heard a voice"Gotolfletflher."fitaud this, us i

    Bhecuuldnotuudiknow no one called

    rietcher ; and she related b«r dream amspoke of her perplexity about it to sami persons, until at last a friend,wham she van jelling tljn stoi-j, mbl"There is some one called Fletcher win

    a eeer, or clairvoyant." Bbe theiis y

    wont to call npuu this clairvoyant, amd au appointment for him to comi

    to Jier house, Mr. Fletcher w range of brass mountains. ptoward tbese rnountains, and witlitnf |couple of miles of them. Jim trnlkTelling us to bnnt for tb(

    is horse nnd rode 4

    toward the medicine man's h

    j chair by the desfc on?, lifted it up, si.

    vdy tlitit it was epipty. Slit'mely ngifiitud, und BHIHIIH put

    ohuir EIIO oxeluink'rt, "Tliitu} really urn;!) biju." It wns tvi-

    Dt tiiat »ho uuilcrstaod who waa re-'We hnnted not for tlio mino bat 'iort'fered to. "I think nplr.ee to establish ft camp, nnd found

    inc. It woa a dry enmp, witli no waterthere or anywhere that we could dis-sever. So we rode buck to where ourpuck animnls were, and there matured

    r plan Jim refused to bo of thirty, funring deatli from liis tribp.

    We tbroo white men were to Jivida ourork as follows ; 'Iwo were lo prospect'nil tbe oilier io puck water, food u.uil

    cauip ueat ̂ tl

    will (jo upstnira,sh.o 'then said, and moved to letive theroom ; bnt tho oler^ynyn ab onco sap-

    l bfo h fllillth t fperl before herthe do

    pliinly,

    way ant of, M^ P i l f e r eeping him sofolloffod'-him, and Madame

    Z kfpt c]oea; bdiind. The elfrgy-uiini weutliefuro'tliem np,the stairs amisfoppeil id (tie buck tlrnmne-Toom door.'Mr. FlfitcluT followed tki'apparition,

    f"b«u it ijiiusud ut tliisifcof,. opened

    Every week one of tlio prospe6--j^ii, w&ulil peem under onlias to relieve tlie man altha mules. ' ' ' - - : *-••---* " - »,.,.,,

    casks

    M'sdatan, p

    htrnngely" enough

    sin, swd tliflt his tribe was Hit*'

    it moroiug we nulled our water;and started orer tbo divide.,

    Making our camp, the two who. wen-> prospect went ont at once to wprtfwas one. Knowingt if tbe tale •were

    .rue, nnd tho won enrae up from Mexicoin tbo numbers the Indium assertedthey did, tliet-tbu oil trail would stillbe in ex i s ten t wtmountains, aud tti<e9 ia opposite direct ions. I was

    •nrded by flndnig an old trail, almoat" " " * i1 it

    led tlifl wajinlheliouBo—ii

    which )>e hod s y buen i

    iarf cinIUDl-•r while liehouse,

    before.wing-n.

    too,

    Iu>oni,

    apparitionMde right into the j j j , c r,-,otSi, separating, search-1 j j f i m u t i c n e d |

    t i I

    ^ they ent-crcd thNtch was dimly lit.

    ifudame Z all tho tirao wastrembling violently, and much agitatcil.They sat down by n sruaii table, tint iao

    pparition had gono to llni other end ofj 11S stiil ataniliiig there.

    Mr. Pletcliet ID come

    till-^bowing that tneo it i l i |Ubaa Iwen a hmvyt wfll-irorn pnth. ,

    it led right into tlio mounr

    t o (]lt. tublc- by wbioh lio stood,

    8 i , o w j , 1 B u y tliia uctiun tbut he eonidJ id U d^ Flttcber miid toUadnmoR

    "Mar I go to him?" and wsjiint mad

    w»a about noon, and, lining exceedinglyhot, Jim advised us not tu try to c

    l i I huntil nighL S« wo c , ami I h

    To the nor'ia it j | ,nleil—where? I aaU along tliis trail, | y t ii»(ififl«l ttist I VMHB the track ot tln^1 o v t ,lort mine; bat I was dis»«imiDtoil. ] , ,n eTlio tmil soildt'iily »j>rt'iul l

    cd into tha wuldrun of beat that lay be-foro UK. Thff tint air row from thegrouud in vast WOT«? Kid drifted s lw l j inlo many little trails, ond the

    mrt before ognilto wind. louold « » " >M* " o t ! l«pl«M- ^alm«t » * > Ho a -^cn t om w«tcr » . . , "•»'• »W» »«'" « • » 'p *'£'•«again there—B raustani changing, &• if, * l>w " ? I*1.1™?*'

    uf watur on a fake, FT>

    tmns, in tbe direction of a pass rtntj B w tnrc w tbongh he wished A large sl-wliich lay IIIWH the table opened.rU-tirbiT o b ^ c d him, and turned(he h'i\rcti and finally utopjHN] at

    pictun*. tu which the fj'irit pointed-Th'tciicr will U> Mudatne Z ~ .

    '.idi1 niuu li> mi', liu h u polnlwltotnti', and yuU UXAJ rccite. fall-bellied saih), the bills gray

    ad blue sad purple, and dim andligbty islnDds, like clouds ia the fariutance; here w> cloBe to the shore u

    we were under the shadow of theiliff, the rooks and wooded points oar-awing' in on both dales till we ooutd be-leve ve were sailing on some EasternShine; then, ip a moment) out iuto an

    open sea, with space and light and tar-iff land. And this procession passed

    us unceasingly from sunrise until sunset,might have been Loch. Linue or Boss

    Fstand, Arrochsr op Wind>nnere, until3 rubbed OQF eyes aud saw tbe jnnksanchor, tbe spectral fringie of trees

    nng tl)B bill-top, the brown roofs, audcurves of country temples. Then,jiit.-lKlc efleraoan, ve raa below a

    ;MliotH9 rock, and the lightkeepcr- -]) bfs flag; and, looking back, we

    ing stretches of the loveliest green•liter, changing, us wg looked, underery |>lay of light and shade and color;

    lino of tulegraph poles, a greeuiiut jutting ont on the left to meet thoUs upon tba right, BO that the steamers little moro than room to vasa in the•ar fitil! water, and we were in a land-jlied Itay, anchored off the pretty townSiiDonasaki, and the setting sun litthe tvondsand sea and nky with crim-

    r»nd gold., We supposed we muatnni out again bv the strait that we hadtcreti, but when the ancliorwas lifted! dettmer held on her course, appsr-tlj agniugt the opposite shore, then

    irped a sudden comer, and we were'TOging in the rough, waves of a tron-'daeih • Whim tlie evening falls, and

    ie sea is calm, tho fishing boats crowdilh tlio sparkle of thoir lights;bat

    ray from Bhurc tliere are JHEDV junksat carry iio lights, and ure slow toiwor their liolm, and. a cause of much

    ploaive speech among sea-captains.

    Old SI is Sound lo CelebrateOld Si dropped a piece of watermelon

    -ind out of tue back window of tho anno*tntn, wtpnl off his chin and asked :

    •He? you yung gou'lemen got er book'round byar wuar's Je d^uktamasban of

    ace iu hit dat wus published'fore lie Wuli V

    We assured him we hod tbe article initock.

    'Well, ef yer ttiot gwlne to use hitersel I'd like ter git de konatderanhunrt hit U>1 do mornla' oh do Fit V

    Is it poMiblfl that you are going tocelebrate the Fourth of July f'

    'Hit^e pnrint o&Wuin'wid my*self dat I ihell ot I'te ttill hyu fo'

    v r-tiiu

    a t a r i turns denex'page in <k l ''Whj tbb change In your politicald urnn?''Bigbtdar . I r i ie i torw pint ob or-

    der 1 I>,\r aiut ao ' mo' politicki in tbe

    in de'bund-ai»et ot Uia walwmillioo onip er de gin*end prebalawe ob blickberriet In docountry. Nobody nebber ibODgbt Tioot

    in de m.Mlcr 'wptin' mm oh( l w b*l[ Jmamc'd poUtuboni dtt ' itrjin' iw dmff il* VaUm 'rcuJ Jrft*o n UttU tnek by d.> t«lL Do fake*

    j down in mj trtUmwot i « dour mollf«d dil ehtfjbody kin wnB de «osg> -iUftMdiiB, rcgjranl }CH wedfler Jej'» nottordimoent or ndifci} wr tn! Uu»V

    d«tryou ktwHr

    UMvarraUwMpMtUMroartli fa lbi«MM ft •ttmofe two. I ioirwSnee mymlt.Witb anniU be Myi Hut hi" nan* Is

    TUB .HATKWAL

    &j#rzCBASTBUCHANAN

    Beat Work Is the Oheape* tUT1ST STYLES AMD mPROVf HIHT8

  • THE.__ffiQN ERA1IB.\M II. VOUT, Editor ami I'mp'r

    J1AS WJIlfiEf IS TUB

    OTHBJt MAN BBI.T--A

    ; CHIJiE SfKWH FiiUM A

    h\\ ltlllUJKU MA-

    OI.lt JilMlIiEKT.

    JoLu Nicliols, uliiu " J ^ k the wiUor,'" vhfle reosnily rcinoviug some Udders froni, B car, In Ute bottom of tlid Dlcksrsan tuiae,

    ; slipped, ond by losiug U s balance, cftuswlone of tbe ladders to fall on him, tbu reoitlt

    ' of which was ft dislocation of tliu ebuuMur,uud n fraoture of the fcutneim Duriug Uiuplat few yaars this man has beta vt-ry «"-furtiui&td in getting injured while wurkinj,1

    under groatid; his many friends deepljsympathise with him, and hope that ha tiiuy

    , rapidily recover.A Imly residing in tlia Wuinity of the Mine

    Hill hotel, iiimn ..Mmidiiiti her fctnin, attiifl early hour of 4 o'clock, a few morniuuHBluett, discovered to her surprise, astonish.moat, and vnat ion, a niarriui. boarder,

    , ahoul iiii y?*™ of ago, in company with h*ryoung daughter, lfl years of uge. Upontlieuovuriug the suite of affuirH, diu culled toher husband, imd her next movement wan topick up a heavy digging bout, t in t was for-tunately near by, with which she stnher daiighter'B uiarrieti lover iu tlio fine,tills time the girl's father had arrived, iwas no Btwner made acijuaintcd wituboarder's lntBdemeanor, than he spnupon him, end (using the void* of myforniant) after patting a Vteueh rtwf ocliuh of bis eyes, and a hen's ncrt belliIUB ear, the man escaped. Doctors who hirthe charge of his case, think he Ia tfutlii

    , "no better" very rupiilly. I t imwid thatfur a long time pu t , Las been eudcuvoriito persuade thin young girl to leanreKpectable home—kind and loving parenland go with him to the Lakes, where hodoubtedly iiiluudud to live with her foiHliort time, and then leave her, iu ordersenrch for another victim. Had lie not bewjnrrlonnly injured while engaged iu Itombnt at bin boorditig plauo that the youmen of this place deemed him KumVitndisfigured, he would oertaiuly ,buvo bitarred and feathered. This man is km>by the community in general, and os-pocltliy the blackBinithH at tho Dickorsou miu

    Themannger of the Dickenson milsecured a machino for drilling by steam,atr, whioh theyeipeot !o place near the Itorn of the mine. It will drill feetground per day, and Ute miners look ahwith great anxiety, as it will make workBtvornl more men, and they will bo eirnblto rnifio a muoh larger amount of ore, dailSir. Win, Huron, a very skillful yok the lino of machinery, Las buen choseius operator.

    Dr. J. W, OollinB, formerly of this pinebut now of Pussaic, writes that he linsffood practice, U comfortably situated innew home, and 1B enjoying tbe privilinot'to be found on this bill. PBEHMSTH.

    •: WHITEHALL.' On Saturday of Innt week Mr-NnthauOi

    ! W discovered a Iramp faxt arise]) onrailroad track near MontT.i.0. be was usiia rail for a pillow and seemed to bo enjoy iibin nap aa well as though in a boil and gruibled loudly at boing wakenad,

    There lives in thia neighborhood a dwaiby tbe uaine of VanNew, who ia thirty.yearn of age and is lesi than three feet LijSho has a well developed body exceptheight, and is finely proportioned.cLildreu unacquainted with her thiuk heinatural companion for them because ofdiminutive ntaturs, but are surprised atsuperior wisdom aud mature wnjs.

    ." On Monday the Boonton oocommodatl, killed another cow, tho property of Bielulitiftk of Montvllle, which was being pastuiat this place.

    * Tho thief who last week stole propeifrom DewittDunn atLiDcohiPart,tencedto oneyearandkhaUin Btatopriso

    Lemuel and Haron Cahari who wererested for sending obtwane letter* throitho mails have given bouda in the tram$• (̂(00 for their appeu&noe at court In 8ttoraber next. Upon returning homowhile attempting to Jump from the cam neithe telegraph office, Mr. L. Cirhatt full upchis face and injured himself riM> the old IVtpununck KutMUy febool A^orUUon,will U brhl Iu UftiuM* Oro«, IJnonJn Pvk,Aw»t tfTtb. Hi« occwion will to enliitwl hT pMMl votml nod imtnitn»l «i>«HnB. If U» WMlhtr « . thai daj•IxwM bf QBhTonbla Uw ptcpfe wiU

    g psure, nud I had to laugh.

    It wiw nil AI'H hull" Kev. Jlr.the bants of Lak

    Hnpfttcong nnil ̂be tiajn ouo is iLie dim yet but it imtreiwes iu Atreuglbxlunlly, which lor nutuy Wunja iu tbidi:jbborbuo to t.isk th.r oilier dny for inthiT prnuiiH'iiniix uso of the nucieut am

    honor.tble hnudk' to a nuiuo—Professor.\\'A\,1 was boru vith n goml sizedmil of vi'iitrrutiou and I rumembo

    •dllliot tvilb which I regnrtled tbe I'rofes-tn wbn laii^'bt tin.' young idea hovr to sivlit'ii I wont lo school; ivhose wordsl* Iviiniwl luiRlL iiiid thuuiltiriQg Bonu!ii:izwl the gitziny rawtica Hcjittered vound.

    ULd still our wundeiAnd Killgrew

    How oin>

    Bui tlioM

    mnall hcud could carry all hi

    i were dayn when a hauOlo tnine niciiot uomelhiug ; when bovti(jht to luve, honor and obey tht>i

    piirints ; [o hiive some uort of revureuue TorolU ugo. They were uut ullowod to sit

    theBtorenni^lits and liHtun to mentelling tuu>ty utori^ and laughing in clioruat their own (smutty jokes. It would not bihealthy for a boy in those days to be canghinajualica'BConrtwbilea Irinl for F . £11as they phniae it >n PeuuRylvaoin, wnsgoiug on, with lawyers liko Otle Vulintimon ono aide and Auk. Young ou the other.

    Iu thoae (toys a minister of the gonpel ofwhatever dem>roiuulion wtu* renpeotud byeverybody, uml he did,not deem it neeto take his wifu along when he went on hispiwloral visit* lent some evil disposed per-son should start a scandalous story abouthim. Iu thoHO clays I nover heard opa min-iHter'saj of another, "Be liM H k ^ a thlet"—an t-xprestion which wajaetualljr1 made tome tbe other day-ami the pity of i t is,urn afraid the Rev. gentleman ijtho made itcould prme 1I!B ansertion by more than onewitness. How vastly things have changedRinoe than 1 Now the Keycrend John Jones,if hetdou't preach to suit everybody, is onlyold John Jones, aud we are ell educatedhiglpy that we know a good sermon whenwe bear i t If a minister hi extra smartH»y he in pretiobiug either for pay or to cre-ate a sensation, anil he wants to draw a big-ger crowd than tho fellow at the otber ohureh.

    No* n-day* Colleges make Professors out ofMill confer degrees on anybody. Tho manwho succeeds i n narrowing his mind andgiving to A sect what was metr t for mankindis Btire to 1« a D. D,

    Tho biggest blower on the staff of somilii ncwsjmper is snre to he m Ph. D.Tlio bms walker in a nix d a p contentimttilititoly dablwi] a Profenor of Pedes

    triiiuiuu; the inventor of the latest cunt fi;r aud ague—though It rany never oareIwdy—U an L. h. D. and why should

    not tho tniin whoblnw* his own hoin load• «t 1., „ 1'rofewor or-on»lhinH be pleawi-Still lu liefpacs to my frlendN wi»b. I willbo more careful how I confer ProfeiBonhlpn

    Mr. McMnlien'i thrw-year-obl child wnburiwl, fr»in the l'n»bjt*iriim cinrch, onHands? nrtiraooti. fp

    mlaetor UcKinwy bat Uw "DanbAger." Hilly II«rriUh»dtTOthllUB*rar.Uy1•ma going down lailobokMi uul to* otherat KlopUtul on hU niam trip. Ikn.Oiborae IIM it too—Ul a half «

    ] not mflca to m o i d tbe WUBM oftb»M win -re baTioti atUcki o( BMhii* inlu vari«M fonna. it b a moat netlle&l

    nicfortlortotaablpaUtilIU lb« way wtto Rfte Uw W M M nf UM it-

    .lifll^inf tariff on l t d te

    Thommlron(i). h «*»(• *2U for ILo mime . , / , ,

    Tiios. T. Simouwin, kte Sheriff and iher of tie present Bf»rd of Freeholders ofHUBBUI Couuty, diud uu Friday atlU week,from the efiecta of an otutok of Ofiolera mor-bna Ha wasaraau whoae pnblio#and pri-vale life v/aa ubote reproonb. -Ho was plum-inantly named for the office of State Senator

    gntdQ of iron. Tltete is a Euir buwiuesH doingin ordinary lots, and a very Rood incjuiry.The market Is very strong. We quote No. 1Lt. 41A nm! $20 ; No. '2 Foundry, *lK;i.txlForge, at $iCm aud 417. • :

    A sftlo of 8000 touH of Bteel rails, for deliv-ery duriug the wiuler, is n^Mjrtud to ha1

    taken place at a price equal to $45.5(1, attida-wator. It i» said that transaction*!umoimtiug to more tban 40,000 tons, forduiivory during tbe winter ond spring, haveliken place since July l*t, and that theiire negotiations for fully 100,000 totrn pend.ing. Iti iron niila we learn of no tmnsaclions, although the mills are not in need ofordure. We quote iron mils at tide-water at$37 and $30, aud steel at SJS.60 and U7.H0-

    Fire in a Powder Mill.About 10 o'clock on Wednesday inorn!ng

    there wns a slight explosion and fire ia tbiLufliu i Itaud Powder Works in Mead'sHftfiiu. I t seems that the old kegs are tarredover acnin by dipping them into a kettle ofboiling tar. The grains of powder in th<bottom of tho kegN dropping to the bottomof the kettle in time accumulate ia tbo formof sediment, BO tbat when thn kettle gotii toohcl au explosion in the result. This is whathappened yenterd»y moruiug. The boilingtnr wns Kcutterod over the bnildiug, setting

    to it and i t s contents, and seriouBlyburning a workman named Kelly] onhaudn nud tacs. The flames weretiujmifllied before (hey had obtained mn<hendway. Tlio damage was aboat $300.

    FOR SALE!

    A. Moving Muoliiue.

    A Hay -Rigging.

    A Good 2?ann Wagon,

    fl©- A FINE LAEGE HORSE

    sound and kind. .

    A. JUDS0XC0E,

    BERGEN STREET.July 11), 187U, DOVER, N.

    tfti ( 3 ,

    , llmiltkir of itic IluttiesUiai) F i n n vf uiil TimulLiithinlloril, IIDC'II »i«

    •oltl inlijxt to Hut life u*Ui« of Harah E,tioulUnl, wntuw of Mid Tiinulliy Hot 'drt-M, Kmnul. Ttii'"Huiitti IM, mnkboot HIXTV iCHKH; ul t l I"I lu In* »o)i) In" inru. Fitit , Ibit | » r l Ivioff «« 'be «>,tl.. „ ufthnbnmk rnimiiiK ibr.iORli uiil irmrlHreatKl, t in t i»rl Ivinjt un itm uorih Hide i

    paid. Cooiily nf Jli'iTi" KUII Kiatti ot New Jer-nO biitivd, bouiiddl awl dercriboduful-

    ' lhr Tract, being part of iloti>(27OT-'1U1 « r « .TOnyiHl to fitsman KUcllo b jd U l iriitn Snsau A^oott, datHl f i b . *U UtSfjaiul ruuorduit iu Muri'i^ CuuntvDmO* ill Book O 6, "« pagw « 3 , (.«.; wS,uat«iKJiul In the iirnt linu »f tbu whole tracttUrue bunar*.. fat < flfitt Una of tliu who'lul; lUtmrv (4) iiortli, f«rty-tt'Ur dfurei-i eawt,oiuhmidie.1 tevl to the ploet- of beginning.cunfaiultiif tivuut,* tlntumiiid Kqu«rft foot ofIn ml, strict nuwtfure. Unnir itif (•««« pteiujn-1-nciiiivtvMl to tlix said J*nm UiK|[iu» I'JTlr-atuan Uhtikle a nil wi t , liy ix dranica and thirty mfnutti weii.lliir-

    uoba iu i and thirty-four links, thence (5)_ j l b , twentv-six di-greegaud thirty miuute.witit, ilxtHD'cbainiand ftltj liaka.Uit-tiM (G;tuuth, lixiy-ivvtu degree* east, flTty cluici totbe beginning, containing one hand red andiwoaty-elgut acre*.

    Tbe SecouJ Tract, beginning at a stake li•aid road imdlnK ftora'Sacrmtntiua miae t<- - ' • *' - - • - • urly corner a

    ._ the«lxllilioof tlio abovo dpRcrltwd Irir t ; thence rnnniii;(1) loath, lweutv-twoileKr.*i »ud a lulf w.nl*U chains; thence 13) in.rtli, «iitv-i.oTen dr

    grot* went,Hixchains: thi-ncc (3) ixirili, twintv-tffo d.cgrtit'M anil a half mat, ten cljaltmthence (4) «uulh, •iity-tievi'i, •..•grccK VM, i l iehatustol l ie bepflnninifT cotitaitiini; «U icrror Imd, But [rum the Hut diwriUd lut ilii-nlalo ue deductt-d a ci-riaia ln| t.T lanil thatiorton oonroHtd to Henry U. Byrain, ci

    acre, ffliicli l f i r n to lm IIng tw«utv-funrdredths of an te

    d 109 35confeyed 109 35-100aoreiof laud- Dei tie tbl•anwland and priuii*i dtmrib*-d In a I!CLIrmm Hars*lia» C ll-rt; n ami «Ho t» llcnrAtno. dated Jannarj 18,1*M, rKurdml to thiMoiru IJOUDSJ lUcuid ol iHttla, in Book A C,|tage 428. AT.

    WILLIAM H. UcDAVIT, Bti*r.fl.Dated June 17,1073. 1)3 00

    HOPE'S SURE CUREFOB

    FEVER and AGUE.ad all Ualariiiaa PUcam. CcrnUiM utiibtr

    CURES EVERY TIME.11 IIUH not alMply w t f r up Itw • «-•»&>.•(»% installedi»his new place of business, (Lo MANSION HOUSE BLOCK, SussexS t , opposite Cain's sliou store, where hu hns opened the finest ClothincHouse ever seen in Dover, nud with iirst-cluss ivorkmen and enlurgeafacilities is prepared to do a larger

    CLOTHINGbusiness at LOWEE PEICES thiui irore ever before known in thisend of the State. Call and seo my new stock of BEDING und SUM-MER SUITINGS, embracing everything that is new, stylish andserviceable for the Beason, including Fancy Cassinieres ond Cheviots,Scotch Goods of all descriptions, Doenkine,' Meltons and Tricos, andeverything required in the line of Suitings, for men, youth and bomAlso n handsome and entirely new lino of GENTS' FUENISHIKGGOODS, which contains all the new novelties in Shirts, Ties, Collars,Cuffs and everything else for gent's »ear. I am also agent for theWHITNEY SEWING MACHINE, tho best iu the world. I meanbusiness, and for s&yle, durability and low price*, intend to place nrnew clothing liouso beyond all competitors. A cull is re,sp( etfully sol"cited. THOS. "WALSH, tho OXE-PIIICE (JIOTHIEII.

    THE GREAT CONFLICTIX TI1K

    CLOTHING TRADEAT MORRISTOWN CONTINUES!

    M. L. FELLHIM PRICES

    LOffEB THAU THE LOffEST!NO COMPEOMISE!

    The Elegance, Jixtont and (licnpiicss ot our Stock

    Enables us to Please Everybody.

    Don't fail to try our Custom Cutter, Mr. II. DODGE,

    who will be pleased to see you, and

    GUANANTEE A STYLISH FITTING GARMENT.

    M. L. FELL, the People's Clothier,

    , N. J.LOWER THAN EVER.

    U

    GEORGE •EHRET'SCELE0BATED

    LAGEEBEEKSOLS AT

    D. ROLLER'S.ALSO

    Wines and Liquors of all Kinds.

    TBE 0E3T EBASDS OF

    FOREIGN & DOMESTIC CIGARS

    AlWAYB ON HAND AT

    OPERA HOUSE and

    BILLIARD ROOMS,

    1IOVKII, IV. J .

    linH ut a largo exjienKu jirocuroil BU

    ORCHESTRIONII t]j!Lt V

    C E N T E N N I A L E X H B I T I O N

    It is of great powiir ami iu volume of toneeijual to a I1UA3S BAND OF «) V1F.GEH.It will Lo on eiliibition on unil afttT tbe 4tljof JULY. All ar« invited tu utUind thiiexhiMtion. Yours retipeetfiilly,

    D. MOLLKIt.

    NEW FIRM.NEW SYSTEM.

    Insurance a Specialty,E.&G.H.Ross&Bree5(|

    MRE AND LIFE

    Insurance Agents,me, Old Iron B8Bk B U , , ^

    Morristown, N.J.

    iiiife' in .Mttlomoiit.

    Ays^td uver *33,'o(jo]boa ^ ' " " H

    » riik will Mn,t5'"«B

    Utter and KGUIVO t lo Himm M U - i i t Happhciitjou woru made iu [lerHon,

    A. JUDSOX COESurveyor and Collector, I)iivtf s j

    ARNDTTHE PUI'ULAH

    S U S S E X St. GROCER,

    but in uueismplfd Block u(

    Groceries and Provision

    CANNED GOODS,

    Foreign and Domestic FRUITS,

    "Vegetables,

    MBER

    OPFOBTIITfu Ihe i>ri.r« of I,niul« t i* wi tow tlut t f [>rofita1ile.

    THE DOVER LUMBER COMPANY•nU I,Tiii-lj low

    ' KI'MMKII T I U I i K a f 11 kind, of luit:Ur, iutpi»bpr and Decembor, which CUT >LI11rnt happen n e i t »ftcr the deposit ii mtile.. D . GOULD, - . . . Tmiurr .

    arntliDl'cl>. 11. !B7!

    HOHEI OF fiOREHOUHD iHD f l lFOR THIS CURE: O>*

    OOIJI, Iifi.uit, BiuitBiH, PibiH* n Af tU r t.* Tw.ii,

    U OeuuipUn.Thii uUlifalc itmedj t% tamped

    HoxiY of the i>Unt Hort-huund, in twnioa wilh TAK-BAUI, e*lr*i-irJ ' 'IjrB PmNCiri.ft of llie finr»t !•«BAIUIIEA, or litlm or Cilcw).

    T>>« Hunt/ «rf Ilnrclifiuwl V - T »UTTIM sll irritation! •nilifl'Urri n> il n .» u ts

    "Pike". T

  • BATUUDAY, JULY SJOIIi. 1B19.

    LOG .AX NEWS.

    lewis floult ^ 4 imur !„,„ Kmoteitarn l i t rrcodom to Irouhv

    AtOust!Parasols, !IaoW »nd OhitoWa Bute.And nil Bnmmer Ooodt to b« jClosed out at oral at the Jjry Hood House

    both Idle.

    There are s w BUteen persons in tbeoounty jail

    A project la on foot to rebuild tha feltmills it Stanley.

    b crop i» said lo be the

    About fifty men are engaged rebuildingtho Charlotteburgb dam.

    Five deaths occurred in Chatham.town-ship »lthia Bte dajs hat week

    -~. — — tbti begiuuing of'dog day,," whea evflryllung goes wmw

    forairiroeki.Jndga iAthnp t* hiving an uieslim weUg p t a r i n g an

    bored oa Ids farm near Greenare down ISO feet.

    They

    •Ion neit Monday are requatod to be at the4ejwt at a quarter to 7 a'dook, JL M.

    Samuel Janw. 8r., ot Morrlfrtown, IIBS agold[watchand chain'.>to.ra from him at

    oa Friday of hut reek.

    Mnj-or A/era of Monrfotnni in at OceanGror«.

    LowyarE. 0.Lyon, of Mcrriiitowii, Is attiatntoga.

    Mr. B. XlUgore wtu Bt &fanhattan Beaohon Wednesday.

    Aloat s down Morriutora people are at

    g WatolMUOTMinoiram. dump baton—alfr, Jto and »12, OoioHairfionae, ttejewalar, and too for jour.BeWe*BeWe*

    Joy .art week b j Mi. Duniol T. Matthews.MaJlsoD rejoicfu in a post mlntrcsa—tfiat

    in, tbe post oiniot haa been getting mar.ried.

    Tha new ruMio: factory at MontvlUe om-ploys about forty men and is rumring ovtsr.time.

    Thou. O'Niel, ot Madison, parted conipauylast week with a tflj>e worn, twenty-live feet

    The prineipaiobip of tlo Now VernonRohool has beim offered to Mr. Frud. Loport,oftEJspLiee. ', ;^-'(\1 'TTI-J Mudlstm pflt>li« stebool building isJajjidJy approaching coiujdotioii. It vllcoat about $y),(HMi.

    It iu wciulerful liow ninny mad dogFtllBcovered about BoouUm. Ouo V/M fibottbere last Sutorday, t

    Mr. Thos. I)EO1 faw returned from Nevadato Mt Hope, mucii to ihe pleasure of manyfriend •) in Ibis vicinity.

    TIID attention of builders is csillol to theadvertisement ia another column of propos-als for tlie new ocgiuo tower.

    "Watches 1 WatcheH! Wuh-Ws! Over onehuudred gold imil BiJver wctcliua to Befoolfrom nt Hflirhouso, tbe jeweler'*.

    A little spn Of Mi*. Jn». Boserow, of EBBSJSt., cut hia fout eo badily upon a piece ofglafia as to Buffer severe consequences.

    Tbe New Jersey Historical Socloty willmeet on Thursday, August 21st, in the For-eHt Grove House, at Schooley's Mountain.

    A beautiful speoimen of tha equine moef* en halm pony brought to town onTkuwtoy to tiffuwof U«children ot Jus.H. eimjHon, E*j,

    Danh>t HigRins, a UtUe lad nt the Dan-ville Protectory, had his leg broken the olh-erdaybyaUderfaUfnij upon it. He waataken to St. Michael's Hwpttal, Newark.

    A writer In tha "United Prmbyterian"potBinBpItaforuiifenHonted wine at tbeootnmiinbu table. "Can i t be," ho asks,"that that wliicb w nda gouhi to bell U aproper »yn,bol of tho blond of Christ?"

    Tbe10t.ro 1,000 peopla to Morrie countywho lave tiaed KiiJgore's Son Cholera Mix-tures and not DDO failure reported—Far-eHls Rhould always keep a bottle on hand-tho Ronuine at VouRbt «fc Killgore'B, Dove*.

    A house of ill fatno was mided inNewarktho otiicr day and among the innmteR wagfonnd one Llzzffl Gordon, %,'uo claimed Kor-ristown as her home, and said tbe was ft re-

    o girl and had only betia there threedays.

    Hie editor of tho "Mothodirt" Bdvocatesthe election cf colorod binhopfl. "Wera V6

    «r?g nrna," ha Bars "we shouldn honor to bo ordained by * bishop ̂

    d t h t J l l d l d

    ' M(,' -.0. Onti

    tif al lili

    rinl fever, but we aro glad to notice is about

    again.

    GonBtable San »1 M. Button has beenconfined to his bed for five woofea from anaffection of the knee by inSAmmatory rheu-matism.

    A new surrej of the Passaio Eiver and Its' ' ' " JM one,

    has teen coramenoEd undnr tbo direction p)Gen.Nflwtoa.

    Tte State Temperanee CopvantJon willbe held at Mt. Tabor on tbs 12th and IStbof August, the two daya preceding the«amp meeting. ' '

    A. P . Borbanfe, the reader, who has sev-

    l and otherparts ot Enfihad '

    Tb? report that II. C Wbitlock, £ « ] , Uabout t o remove MB residence, from Doverto Fargo, Dakota Territory, Is without, anyfoundation whatever, , , ";

    The black ban flxhliig nt Budd's I&ka inthis seawm eiotsiiW. A cumber o\mesa weighing oyerthmo jiouada iTOoenUy been captuieil.

    A litUc aon of Mr. W. F. llorrospftl of tho ftliiOJ ]>nb\i o HcUQol, tdenjy but wwji while hit, \wrcai*

    , princi-

    &t>-

    face showed that Methodism does not atopnt race l i im"

    Wm. E. Budd, of Cbaiha-ra, has lnvcnt«da now gun wad of allernate layers of thinwood nnd paper, which aefc as a perfect goa•leaner, and h&B Bold tbe same to a proinf-aent gun manufacturing flmi of Bridge-port, Oonn,, for $500 andtenper cent, royalty.

    The Freeholders of Morrifland Essex arepropari»ff to erect an iron bridge at Coluuj-bia iu place of tho wooden bridgo there,The length Uino feet, a pier in the centreof the river making the spans 76 feet eituh.It is thought « fitKUlass iron bridge can heput there for $3,000, or aoost of $1,600 toeaob1 county.—Banner.

    The ladles of the Oermna Valley LutheranChurch will hold a fair afid festival on tbegrounds of tbe church on Wednesday andTbumisy, Aug. Oth and 7th. Unner andten will be served, ka-croam, poaohes. andother delioacieBwHl be supplied, a BplendidTariety of fancy articles will ho offered,addmoes w>U be made by Bpeabers fromabroad, cud the Lehsnoa brass band will

    I ittflfikB Ofrbiw uliould be chrrkwl nt once,

    by KUlgore'n Sun Cholem Hixturo—ifl «Up « bottle at Vought A, Killgoic'ri.

    The "MnatearjoonialmW srctlmounciiiL-PotlBiuUr paocral Ku> tor ruling that theirproduction! cwitv* tnvf ) ut n-K»lnr u*wa.psuer ntssS tbroutib tha mails- l*n fnta apound.

    To till burdock* and 'out oil IUD vteini ct*MH) tipour * epoouf.it of

    We observe that most of our exchangesBtlll continue to asaort that tbe »O-BOIILBcopy of the Naw Jewey Journal recently•ant out by i Mr. W. 0. McDowell h tbeoMe«ip*j>triutheiitatB. ltffate is Aug.8th, 15*81,Und we have recently hid in our

    n through the kindnees ot tbe own-er, Monroe'Ho well, Esq., of Wblppttny, abound file of the New Jersey Gazette, pub-

    d at Treatcu, from Peb, llifh, 1T78 toJan. 4th, 1761k

    Late Hopntcong rrefiante a lively tanaethizmonth. ThehotclB atro all filledwiLb boanl=rs, and the white tents of oarap-ingp]rti«ffara to be «oen a t differcut polnt«of tbe Lake, seven partloe being tncnmpadut Bbarp'b llock. Two now cottages havebeen erected this Bpritfg by Mr. Tbarp ontho hills on tliu Suwcx side of tho Iako, for

    g y i ! from Hew York, which, vthh atfainl cue eriitted last your, are occupied byininis^rs und thi>ir fmnUiea. l l r . Tlmrji,who ri'ttiil'H iii'iir Sliari>'H lUwk, him four,tcfu bonrilerx. K lUHntitir of »iil I>oatuhnre ainoln-tu pUcvil on Ilia U&t> ihinytnt.

    Tire (hughters of Judge Murrsj", of NtYork city, have been visiting Dover thisweek' and were gnetts of Mr. Chu. H. Uun-Bon, thair uncle,

    A large load of Morriatown ladies tndgon

    I, I). Ooiilil, Trc

    Hltstt'IIII'lU of ilH AwrH'trt RUllIfitb ttf JuJy, IHT'.I.

    Ken with tuvJuly i.'., JM;

    r of Tho Dnvir Snv-:• fnltQwiaKiliticH up l»

    awatoga Hpriuga.

    Oinid'sLake is a favorite fUbiug rcsoi-wltb MotristowL Waltona.

    Mrs. Say B, Treat and her aou, Payuon,are (.topping at Mendliatn.

    W. G. Uthrop aud wife, of Boonton, hav(gone to Verona Springs, N. V.

    Her- W. 8. Wright, of Gteen Viliage,spent lost weak et Ooesn Grove.

    VlyikatBioueOomtuiayaud thoir fiieadigo to Manhattan Beaoh next Monday.

    The hotels and private botvrdim; honaes aBudd's Luke flUed np rapidly laafc week.

    Miw Kate Leport Dzpecbi to stirt aboutAugust 1st for a visit to frfondB in Michigan.

    Brother Garrison, of (be Boontoa BuIIitin, is enjoying A vaatlicn in Soutliero JerBey.

    Rev. Geo. M. Boynton, of Newark,spending bin auramer vacation at Lake Ho.patcong.

    Prosecutor P. A. DaMott and wife nt lanticcouals were rtopplpg at Vialiy Springs,

    Franca.

    A parfy of young nitm of Boonton are pre.parldg fora fishing excureion to iAke-Ho-

    Among the Tlsitors to Luke Hopateonglast wetk waa Mr. 0. EL Dalrymple. the 11tiatown draggirt.

    Threfl.hnndred and tweaty-flre pflwengorepassed o w tfie Uidland on Thursday lastfor Long Branch.

    It is Raid that parties who have left Mem-phis In consequence of the plague are atop-ping in this county,

    Cornelias VanderblH Rod family have Mltheir Morris Plains residocoe for a few wcclwsojourn at Lopu Branch.

    Miss Lillle Buttz, dauglitcr of Rev, Dr.BUUE, of Madieon, it visiting tbe family ofBfihop FoBtar, in Boston,

    The Sforrietown SI. ?.. Nabbatli Balioolvriii mnke an excursion to Manhattan Beaohon Wednesday, AuQtiat tith.

    Mesiire. 8, H. Breose, M. C. WUtlook andJ. E. Hurd, with their families pk-nicked atlake Hopatcong on Tuosdny.

    Every roop a( the Vannter IIouso, Sucoa-sauna, is taksn, there being mw about BOY-enty-flve guests at that placo.

    The Good Tflmplara of SnocEWunnn mita pio-nio excursion to Lake Hopatcoug,way of tbe canal, on Thursday.

    The Dmkeaville Houee and (he bonrdihouse of Mr. Scfteer at Dmkesrlile, ororowded wilh Bummer boardors,

    BBV, S, B, Timmona, pastor of tha N<Vernon itL E. Church, is vacating for about

    month at his early home in Ohio,.The annual ejoursinn of Protection Hook

    and Laddnr Company to aianhetlim Benchhas been axed for Thnradsy, Aug. fth,

    Hr. Fred. S. Sb&ff, of Newark, pud Hen-ry Dickenon, of Bomnton, aro spendingtheir summer vacation! with friends iu this,place.

    Meson. Edfftn Didceraon, Whft. Q&]. Qoty and other Poverites look a gparty of ladies to Lake Hopatcong on Wed-nesday.

    Hardly » day now passes but what a pri-vate pionio party mar be seta leaving Dovifor Lake Hopatcong, or some other favored

    Death of Mr*. J. B. Jcliey,Afiur a long JIIUWM MM. H»i»b JoUm. W1fe

    (if J. li. Aolley, E«q., deparied tins lift «Uoearly hour on Monday lnoininj last, agtd &tyean. Mw. Jolley mw the daughter ot %$late David H.Gary, of Morriiti,wn, and m-to^tbllhiit' M w" *• ̂ *- bestir, of ibi-i

    twenty-tiioe years ago, and during hflf loWj'rfisidonco here bccaiuo BO idtntiftefl yHh[this community that tho low of ber prepensewill be felt oadeeplyas that of any ladyxasi.dent of the place who conld have been feilbdaway. The excellencies of her chanotpwere many, aud particularly prominentamong them \taa a beaevcleueeand BjrmpertbyforsnBeHog, which, although tiwaye exertedquietly and nnoatentatloosly, wu Deverthe-less acti?fl nod widespread In its infl^inoe.la many poor homes she was ofteu foOBd̂ a"laJy bouutlful" Iiy reasou of contrbolEonito tin; iitu(3i«ilies sad comforts of the flickroom, while in otbers, where auoh wefce notpecossary to be Buppliad, her ayrapithy wumade equally grateful bygtftsoffloweii«idmany Rets of kiadnegs, and a marked appre-ciation of these long continued kindnew WMmade apparent during her lllnesa, whan kllseotuod to vie in giving evidence of a reci-procal afluoEion. In her family the influenceshe exerted was ot the moat baaltbfn] incfloving oharacter, laavfng behind it a dftfipImpress for good, and the ooie viUi whiobsliB itwayu looked after the welfare of theguorfti of the house caused her death tg hi

    aejily regretted by throngs of people whotve enjoyed llu bonpltality. Shortly afterimiuB hera she united with the Pcesby.

    teiiin CdaKh oi ttita place, of widefe *iiiewas Always B oojoslatent member, naweUtmODeofiUBtrongestBUpportan. Herfioe.BX<ecutive abilities and charitable dispositionnaturally mnde her a le&der in most of thebfluevolatit and other enterpriseschurch and all her labon were performedmodestly, but effloiontly. Her gr«at altnoh-

    •RUJMJUI Not,,.

    «'«• at ltuuiu «t:u continue

    •what fmprov«d( but hu physician ebterilunjBffoopw of recovery.

    I. 01JJ will prench id ihs SecondiiTtw«>oiiiDgon'tWitdi-

    hatloarJ'^ft^f'od 1.I1I1 ['• * r . » . J, FC &» will U d ft, , l r w m

    I,X» ̂ * 0. A. to.m(.rn)v siler*

    >»' of Trenton, ms resna stroke.

    amcomTHECORNER DRUG STORE,

    tlemen, drawn by four horses, pnasedthrough Dover on WeHiw&lny morning forLake Hopatcong.

    Mr B, K. Slicklu, ofBook.WBV.hanbeeimnkiifg a jiltanaut excursion in hi* own conf ryanco to tlie Deltiwaro Wntcr (lap, T ren-on Mid otlior placus.

    Hrhool^y'tt Jlountaia U fillingweek tlie Ilc.-.th Hmina bad i-'ii) visilora, (lieOi-iiunnt 12.1 and Fomft Urore 60, wbiltMn\ih Cottogo WBI full,

    Tim room* "t 0)0 Trimmer House,ffl)t*illi*. am rnpidly filling up with Hirni-rr tuvtnliM. Tbu bnntie hiw rrrpiilly been)]irovul B!id the ^rauiidi Iwmitifif J

    IKv. Dr. 1'nrkrr of r.Wpptviy, with hi'iiiKhtr-r, i1* r>l«'inlini; lift four wrk* vmn

    0! Maine, u idMoutiUioB ol New tlamjwliirc.

    A hirgo farty o! young turn fnnn Morris-jiftuuril throu|;li DovwnK for I/iki> IIo]iateoni\

    iininii, or HIJIM-, with

    n tit* « nn>oni;

    it to flowars, which were always KymbQlshve to her, speaking most eloqnently

    •ben woida neemod poop, was ever evinced'ith Rood taste in tha dtworation of thelurch tit Eautcr tide, and ,n floral triboteeat grncod tlie pulpit at all otherlie simple story of her life is sufiiaietit m*jy, and better than A iiicture of words; shi« in every way worthy of the high eateem

    a which she van held by the qhurch and[10 community. '= (

    Tho funeral services ware held Is iheraabjterlon Church on ThuisJay morningadwero attended by 1. great 'number of

    towuHpeople and friends from abroad. Thetiemrers were Umm. Oea, Eickrds, BfchntdGeorgo, A, Btaisoner, Ja i H. fflnipson, Dr,C. Beaoh and ltoliert F. Onm.. Tbe floral

    appropriate tokens for one wholovud tbera Boninoh—were of the* most beau-tiful aataro. Vpou tkeaujkk vsta a crown,cromtand anchor, nnd upon etandu were alitrge crose, a and pillow vithtLe tnsoriptlon,"Jin at Beat," suriuounteiby a dove. Thecluigy iu utleudauce weto Eoya. HaJIownyaud Boiler, of Dover, and Memtt of MoJ-rislown. As the cortege entered tb« ohorohUev. Mr. Butler read a port of tne Episcopalservice for. the dead. A voluntary by thecliblr followed sad then Her. Me, HaHowsyread tbo Fresbyterlan burial «erviee, and

    toki&ghUBum-which wiU occupy the month

    It* Morrii CJounty Sunday Assooutlwiwill mwt'.tn (be Presbyterian Church atPleasant Grov a m the flrrt Tuesday of Bep-tembernext. r

    FiwltimK Eldw FitKml^s Jiurict I. MJuke M It o&mpif* til ot hi* toe, and therjgorwi3 efflotency with which bo makeshiHmlniftratwiufictanwtWof wonder., Quito l namber of our euhaoKes havettiivx Into tbe error of enoonnolng that

    Aug.

    *P»l'«8»rrl«»Ulbelu]d in the FIntH B. OlUral) lo.ialinow-^inmjy-CTa,.l»l,«tliaMi|»lbpBr, when KoeBent mt,sialMjrlH) aijHKM ajj4 «Unsts< b, U.'putorAolothen. T ^

    ^ew.U.kBinraMl.HiiiieMd ,obofc 1%aealulaad thesinglnga! B t Ta-bor during the ooolng oa»p jnertlng-aplma «f t u n wllot all freqaentaia of thai

    rsr. ar.XXFE m tha m«nnJiioluwtb' aS™ts for AnAsno WHITS LEAD

    WWtL^jff*;^^ I fitsa the time to paint. PKICE.j LOW at

    VOUGHT & KILIGORE'S,

    pEMEMBER THAT AT11 VOUGHT & KILLGORE'S DRUG STORE

    A CtarooU ef Bapliat Ohnrohaa KUJTIUBI

    ot Soriptow, ntter v ha maden oddrew diploticg the worth of Uie deoeas-

    oJ u a membar of the comnmoity and of theehuxeh,'tuii aHachrixtian., Another sdectionby tbe choir and the brief tut appropriateBtMoB,vnxt oudad, and theiieuiaiiiBVeretakes to t i t 'Orabuil'street cgmetery for in-teromt.JfjL.ttht, sdre, thi including partsf-H* E{ii»Hipal>bBriol fMtrMwv>aa read hyRovs, Martitt and Sutler.

    ' 'wttm Aiflw fcy Drom)ng.aie/alittli'soDonWiU'iamlW

    aged aiiye«n»,.wad4Kiwnediji the basin ofU U U i this place

    boilier bojdaixad

    soow which had beta Banting there, and baddriven away. Being mined In the

    ty DvonlnB MB mother at ones susnloionedit ha had been drowned, and aome friends

    proceeding to the scow fonnd hie hat nearJt,They then searched the basin, and very closeto tho scow fonad the hod; of th» boj. Itia supposed thiU in pushing the HOW awa}from tho bank he hadaUnpedand fallen intothe water.

    A. summer hoarder .at .Soonton, namedHGINOII Ooer, a gentleman aboat 3^ years ofngo, wtis drowned in a singular manner io(be lloaiatraj' rirer at tltkl plaM oa Monda/

    last He bad been foiling neartau blast furnace, and ft geBlleman passingtlio place obaerred bis hat and flshlng-taeUaring opoii tlie rooka and hi, rod and fine InHI valet. I'jwn trying to taka up tbfl Uaae found it fast, and obtaiulng help dbioa*rt̂ l tho tiook to be fast In the clothing of

    tliu owner, Tbe body waa drought aabore,autt effort* mude to redora- life preyed Una.

    ling. Prom tho stopping of % watch Inpocket of the toxmi II w « found thatbody had been In the water about an

    hour. It waa tieluneit thai b> oad b~0 at-tacked l>y a I t awl bad slipped from Iberwks. ^ # _ >

    Tli, T.jtber, ol N«t Year.TlieTnateeaotlH Dmer paUle acha.il

    nganidMr. r1an|htl«al as fTbKlpalatwlbrryw. rbr>l»prlncipsl • lit.

    roe»*ofHn«»i«>» , te»Ms>( t jnd toU l r l b . | J a c o r l l r . VuDujn* who g o -u B o o r i n . Was XaUUf«l,bntii, SpDd«, Ft'rtiliiern,An. Vtit.m, Oils, QiflKs, L'tc

    WiLTZB A, WOOD'S OolskratedMOWZBS and 22&FSSS.

    zosox jt. rooaaiEs. JAXSS B. VOOUEXICS,MotrlatofB, Doc. lBtb, 1878.

    CO All YARDBERGEN St., Dover, N, J.,LOCD opt-ned lij G

    ... rtafly for bniine

    U

    JtrCraelfon, am] inKarat-elm COAL

    rre*i>i-(j will livtays bo (,,•[)!;bt ami auM lureuli, clviiiii:nlWe a,i I lowwt pmn* toFiret-olasR

    Bituminous or Blacksmith CoalMMtiullj- tfa hand. C»al il*livw«l lo IUV*rt ot Ibu luwu orlmiueillilu v.cinit;.

    Cord Wood, l a p Wood andSawed Wood,

    ways in itock Tor deliu-rj. All ordum for-,»l mil b* ten at McCrmketi'i offiup, curtibr.1 Wsckwell au.1 Jl«n(i.u itirota, or may bt,•ut by mail. 21-tr

    CARPETSlWK orru m

    IMJIENSE STOCK OF

    Our Own Manufacture

    VILTOKH. AXW1SKTKIIH, 1UIDV MlL'IWKlJiTAl'ISTHV, lUtttttKJA, TlUtKK-

    t ctuuaf In- fount! eWITH BORDG1UI TO 1 M 7 . 1 (,

    idji tb* fut»JitciH«i uf imr own /»

  • iliwuUa ofa Kohaiiuiieiiatii Siieikii.

    A eiUTSSponJent of Hit; Sun, writingfrom Damascus, gives an account *>tBO Bit' (>f iliB ''Ulinll'los" IHTfotttllHl I'.V U

    l,r.ulmm.iieclau Sheikh uf ihutcity.

    Ian Alwului, froui u-litvli W'L- lulu

    foilcwi&g'

    *1Tiitiii{j.» liiiinllttl *iJT IUBV^I'I* si)

    iiljotit tt ivotluug, lit; called tillinilf-striiiltt-il dibci])le lo him, und upon

    :- jugliismouth, raiiUeriiig the while nil*

    : y r e « t apjiariint iutt-iiijitj- ,u4;eonaeutralioli it prayer or invouatjou, he withbiuid'̂ n jwk forced iliu poiiit cli'si

    ;• through lie cheek no that It could be" hcifif prfljocljii'g on iho otlier nidi1. H

    rcjKiated tho process with iht* nllicclietsk, tlio Diiinshowiug no sign of u«iijnid iioto tjF0J> of hlooi] -fluv'iug frum

    • liie wound. HB ibtMiweiit to hi*nliQCiilmlfgnzodjit hinsi »i|hli |sSrtiraiufug ejfiSj opened shis fawnMH:(!oivud a stab through the rhtek with-out Ihti "quiver ut an eye lid. I wnswatching him closely uud couli! uut «b-bL-rvo tho slightest muscnluxlion. Tbo point was clearly

    ii 4i:cskin. »bd ileceptiun \wisim-possible, pa there was every opportunity,HVr.su iu

    His enrliost yeara were pnBqcfl.iu hiafather's jiuiiit-rouui, where ha had to

    -h ami carry, grind the colors, washUiu-shcH, or go upon the stnge in

    ehil-treii's p.u'ts, forhe pluyed RHLLA'ShiW when only tlir«o years old ; Itllom* Imd no chance to spoil him, far ho•us alwuyH too bnsy for idleness toitch tip with him. Olio of the mostigurous and original tliiukprs we tnow, oiie of tha most brilliant unil iin-ressivo lalkera we ever listened to, withmind eimom*!}1 cultured, nud in cer-tiu diitetions pruromitlly so, with »aate in art nml lileratnre refined andjcnqtifil!. Joseph Jcfterson never hadjoie tbiiu ttree mouths of wlmt vfe citll'shooting." His father nml mother.lUrsning their pruft'ssion, were wander-ng up uud down the Missirieiiipi Eiver

    with their little company of players, amisekbin more llmii a fow days inone place ; onue, however, ill for-sli-.inded them at Jlubile, nnd there

    fur a tpiiirtor of a year Joe wins sent toj]; tlicitiho w«a matricnhited, thfTtaiatei..1 His parents were gnutlo,

    loving folks, fond onongh of tlioir hoy,mt'Vorli for Hienniml him was a nu-:essity, and when they emild gaiii thelime they taught him its best they could.

    u (lie Jury Sfxlriii.Why aboulil nut tho tuajoritj oontrol

    in law OK in politic*—in juries as in. appeltate conrta ? Too often some fool orknave frill fluil a ploca on the jnry, vho,throngli intellectual opneity or from pe-t'nninry con*id*?raiion», will 1m .'faithfulunto tlentir and prevent a rerdlct.Trial by jary h u become mcb a lutlerytliatitliiti gk«o riw In ttiii maxim:'If you haw a Mlmug cam*, Iry it beforea jtidge t irr tferw; if you uave a vmkcam, try it beforo a jury.' Might notincnmiMtoua; be avoided aud justicemow Mirfftv ol)Uiu«d by oaotmiltlnn Intbr jitdgtwttie(li>cui(>n of ceMiUito ait

    U tlirrr

    ;iiiuify. i l has ln'i'ii aiK-erLH1 s:i! irizi'd and IHIU|I"UIH?.1 nud cJiidpt'rihavt' (-iiublied it, aud

    | likt Ciirrau. havit riddle.! it wilh mrcuaniin.'ii ciinrl. Yut H luistakei* eonsor-

    its

    itjr'i)mi«uy«liuaj,'e' or iuiproyunient iui t t l t itlie jury K.v̂

    prubublo

    hii« yuiiit?

    i i.s, ti> suy tue lwist,many years to comu.

    It was at tlio St. Louis Theatre, andi> u-ft.s tbeu in his fuiirtueuth your, Tho

    occasion was a patrintic one, probably aFourth of iTnly et'lobration,- and Mr.Field, n mrmbpr nf the company andfiititer of the sparkling writer and in-lifferent ttetifss Miss Kate Pio!fl nf ourJay, had written nud set to the nof "Tbe Stfir-SpauEjlod llamnir" nntriate ode in part8,wliii!h went II*d totho;vBrion.B nctors mid notre:,nd ono of which, was given to Jef-

    B. Hfo namV^tis honored with a)laoe on thftt night'fi bill, nnd opiiosiUO'lJtieie'tlie^worda, "Hia first appearufaij ou utiy stage.1!! Tho part assigneelini was not a great one, but lie Imd an

    exquisitely beautiful voice (even novqotuo of its ordinary speaking tones an

    iralinvc Hinging;) his mother—anilin \\t\H a widow™ had trained him in

    ,lio music, uords anil business -of thoodd for weeks, and. Doth hoped thnt thedebut \vonl3b6 aucedssfut. (£0$ were

    The Bright Side of lhe Trade Dollar.

    The >V'v:uU Bunk yp"it«rUa,v oluut its last tr;uli> dollar?, consisting of?2,000afc par in gaifci Previous gab-huve l^u recently oiiid'e at 9S, Thelmve In')1" lit trade dollars coined sin.\l-nl, lb7U. J>uriu^ tliia iuUrviU. audJW Hume Mute befoto, the Ntvudu Ruih;ib Imd it monopoly of tbe market focoin. Hut for this monopoly the slut-on hand would have been closed otiitouch S(,ouur. Mt» better evidtfiicathe jiupu'iirity of the American tradedollars enn bu given than the statementthat they havesnlil for two to eight pet

    abovo Mexican dollars for tbjaat yi'iir.dnspite tbo 8iui.ll diflfftoaci;

    iu nt-ight,/r o at\U iu domanJpar, while Mexicans can be oought tui)5. Horenfter tire Chinese mnst tak

    n dollars nr nothing. Prior Uie market was in the same cou<na iiowJ- feie inlrodtiction of tji

    fltnnda'rd dollar has brought aboiit Aitpresent result. The OUiuoap will u»tiika the staucliirtl dollar. I t wUs nolpopular with them years ago, when svtr was on u. better basis us cotnpanwith gold than now. There is tlna diX-

    bctweeo tbe two COIUB. Of tho$37,000,000 coinal into trade dollarsover *[}0.000,OOU ha& found a natkeabroad, while or 833,(100,000 coiued into siamlard ilollarH during the past fif-

    •en monthfi nearly 330,000,000 is Btii tho vaults of the Treasury. It is, ofmrse, impracticable to keep up tbi

    coinage of both dollars. The mistakewas made when tb.it trade dollar waa re-

    ed nud tho stnndm-il dollar authoriz-H îd the reverse beim tha case -we

    should have had alt tha silver coin need-ed, without a dollar's expense to thegovernment, nnd slionld have rataiacontrol of tbo China and East Indiamarkets for coiued silver, thus givingoar mints plenty'of employment anil the same time furnished ourselves with:iereuuial outlet for our surplus ailrer.

    try poor, and—Llio fiiahion of i

    0$she loved tlte'boy aftuitbei's. The night oamo

    d b t t hifhoonrtniu went up, aud lie-toot hisplace upon theetage, fncin^ the crowd-ed house, more dead than alive with.

    i.f nowgr HAiuiljr vxirniliit nary j n rI d lb U h htnt Inrow and lb« amotiat Um hy

    f i l U b i llatttilrrt0icltajanin.lf Uw

    4 U b

    louum

    It cod la buy % JlJ|» tUfi * jarort4 a l

    aff him, and, although

    half blindefl.with fenr, lie saw lier handstremlile UP to her mouth, snw the 'tennfiling ]\ejc eyes, and saw her trjjiog l<Bride enooiiragemeut to him totougLthem; yet after the first line or two hbroke down utterly, and amid a stormof patriotic hisses nejtottered off at; thowing, to which his mother was clingingfor support, so great was her distress.Ho flung liimsolf into her arms, cryingout throogfli his sobs and liers that belad toiled—that' he should never,suo*-cued. Wo, Lave sat before tlio portraitof that lovely lady und loving mother,aud, recalling tbu bitlerpasa to her>[ those wretclifld dnys nf ̂ stniggidovliooJ mid of that night's failure,e lifive wished thnt she coald have Hi

    ed longer—long enough to witness anshare in the success that baa come tiher ln>y, and to sit dona with blmthat beautiful home in an atmosphorc

    f uQection, where instead only ber por-Ir.iit hiuip in an ntmosiibere of roverent

    id tender rfCdllectious.

    The Virginia (Ner.) BtterprtM tbiwribes thft meeting ot two Teians i

    tint fetnla recently: "Two men baitedeach, oilier from tbo opposite banks of

    rram and exchauged grcetinga; manyfrioodly ««r Ml km,at utimtnm ham*, **i lb«B IHTC tor*tt Is ibk wiy. ( M yw plMol wtlfc

    r

    India-Rubber Tree.We enu fi>rm some opinion of the useIIIGHS of the oaoutcboue or intlia-rulj:r tree, if wejemeruber that there are

    wore than one hundred and fifty mniiufactories of- india-rubber goods in Eu-rope and America, oousuuiing about tenmillion pounds of the gum per anmun.Not a hundred years have elapsed sincesmall pieces less thau Jialf an inch squirewere scml in Luudua for about ninetycents L'ncli, nnd called 'Vlastio-gtini;"

    ft) it was found that it would rub oatnil iiiiirkfi, it wus called "india-rub-. " Tcaii have been expressed lost(leiiiuiid K] ton Id exceed the supply ;w« an- told that "tho bolt ol land

    around tho globe, five hundred milesLOTth nnd extondinR five bandied milesBoutii.nboniidsin trocB producing thisgum, nnd Hint they can be tapped lor

    ty Kiiceessive scasouB," Each' treeH on mi average nbout three tabte-

    N|)oonfnls of sup daily. Fura', In;Brazp,lias mighty forests of thcsV treeBf soiapgrowing to a. height of one inindml feitvForty-Hevcn tbonnand india-rubber treeswere counted in u tract of country thirtymiles long nnd eight milen wide. Thetree itaeif is quite n picture, us from theextreme top the brunches spread -put,clothed with hug, dark, glossy leaves,and flowers.

    Nearly'Kllied to the india-rubber. ;tree! the gutta-percha tree,'Wnnlivei of Bor-

    neo and the Malayan Peninsula, Tbegomiiiot^libiiiJeJtilHlictTeaiTtLitty

    ^produce the gam'tietree iii destroyed. AttempU buve beenmade topersnade the native to tap (hetree'; but they say the'gum congerfla toofast to obtain it in paying qunutilies

    ithout clestroying tlie tree. Wu arcnot on the spot, and should not hazardan ooinjoa [^bijt tlie .deatruotiun of atkeeWhicb ta3t,6a tliiity years to grow i sworth MItcrestea,

    ftit y J gB consideration by partic:

    t Tlier«n«iHnffTaliUy.In 1877 I waWsliseut from MaJraa [or

    two months, anil If ft hi myfiirei: cats, ono of nhicli, nn Eutflinh tub-by, was a very geutlu and afft'CtiuuaUcrefitdre. During iny absence the quar-ters wem occupied by twojroaDg gentle-men, who delighted in 6teasing out'frightening the ccU. ^ Abopt a week before my return, the English cut Imtl kitk'UB, which she carefully cpticealoil behind bookshelves in the' librnrv. OuUrn morning of my return I Haw the cat,and patted her as urail, and thrn leftlbt>house for about nn hour. On ro-inrniiiK to drcus 1 fonnd thnt tlie l i ttons were located in a corner of miun^mniifl foont, vnort* provioitfl broiKl.'hud been Ufiiositfd tuuf numd. Oii|ticitionlug llieeenunt as to how tti>-y

    thero, ho ut ouiw n-plit-i]: ".Sir,Ibooldeat tnkmK one, nut) in oioiltt

    i l irti ." In ulhtr wimlstho mother had carried Ihrm one hy onrin her month from tli.> library > th.

    Jtn, *l)pro t)n-y liy (jnitoilu not tli.tik thnt f Ii

    licanl uf • mori'n'pArkublc mstjinco of

    ling soil nflrt-'itiiitla

    I, vuil I iir*Kl hsnlly wtv (Vatthe hlirr tuaalfMUilon c t ngroat jtlraaura. Tlie train ol r.-anniinn

    tu hare Iwi'u u f(>llo«*:tb»t mjr BuMi. Also, u flue much of BOIUiMlU. iu

    . Hagxiinilcs. T IIATU nlno luG lart-fbt in UOVEIt, N. J .

    Dover Savings Institution,

    OFFICE IN DOVEB BANE.

    SHERIFF'S SALE!In Obuworj of Sow Joricy-Ff, f*. for note ot

    mort«*gea pnnnUu, where n Tim I)o*«rBivtugg Iuit tallon It cumpliluain. nid &J-

    mini*tr»iorofPr»iioli A. Ouflsld, deeeiiad,sad othon, t te defendaDti. ItcturotHe toOotobor Torro, A. D., 1879.

    SiUailllOUli A SMITH, Bul'ra.By virtuo ut tbt» alwve cUt Itm lot dmfgnatud ra Lot A of Him

    OPFlCEItBt

    JOHN IIANCIJJAMKH It, LEWIS •8. D. QUULD, • -

    • - president.• Vico-Pwsiiluiil

    TI tUBTEEHt

    Uciiry Lakur, Jolili Haoca,M. H.L ,Tlinx.lt. Oritti'iicleD,David J). Jardiuo,

    David Junkini,Sylvester Diekoison,A. C Hinilh,lllcUnril aienltns,

    JBH. H. Noighbo'ir,Chu.M.TuuiH,SlontionO, Porrj ,Simon Mliel,Uirtm HuUe,CuurU'H K Clark.E.N. Norman,Qdurito Piurson,Wni.il.MnDsvIt,H. 1'. Sanderson, ,

    ChnrlQB J, Hkellongcr MnrttdV. _J[,U. Wlitlock. JfiMKdJird.il.

    TbU Institution 1B now org»nizod andopnnfor Inislui'BS.

    Office, in Dover Bant.lutcrual fllmll comniL-nco rnuuli

    gum? (jjimsiteil on tlio flrnl day of sfaroli,June.Supienibur and Ifcuocilscr. wliiuh over »Lal!" " " ' i m u l e .

    TroaBiuer.

    . JJCCOCIIHT, wiuuu ullrstlia[)piiinuxtnfturthuJepoaitfi lH.D.OOULU,

    THE

    ,, tlitiiwe (4) loulli, liilru-nertin OOLTOIlour HifliuH anil fifty liubito is tako i

    dieast, Jour chain* ami fiftyttie funoo; thotici) (S) mirlli, nctoflty-neve

    it, uiiie Llialiis and fifty Ituku tloatlierly ooroer of B lot of sevun »nd nine one-buudredtli tores, detigiutud *n Lot B ut HinNo. 9 on tbe mip borore rflftjrroil to, maJoKid CommiiBtoiiorii: tlieiieo ranning iluthe 4tb line MonseA ot mid lot {«) nonIlilrty degree* « d thirty minutei weit, tbichahiHindteTontoiin Until; (luuo« (7) nurfiftv-Beren deifreei wen. two eli ihn n_Iwentj-twu lintl to tbo souiliero comer of LoB of Share No. 1, berelabefuro raontioncdttienoe iloojr tbs 3d of biid hut mentioned lo(8) north, fltiy-ieveu duifreci tiHt, niiie ob»iand forty-five links to tlio place of bugiuuineoutaining ibont ten seres of land, be tlio *;mmore or IUM, It boms the intention to mattil thu lands included witbin the bouutUrlof thoBfflire descriplion, witlioat regird to tcouteoti in lore* of tbo HHUIO. Btiofj tbe Bamtract otlana which David C. Hnrumiuit! Miconveyed tc Edmunu Candeld, by ilct-d d(.tSUy B], im, and rouurded iu tlie MorrlCoUDty Rocord of Drwls, In Book Q 8, pa

    ' ' WILLIAM II. MuDAVIT, Sheriff.Dated June 5tb, l»7l>.

    HONEY OF HOHEHOUND AND TABran THE CURE OF

    Congli, ijjidsi InSnsDia, Hoarieneu, DifflotllSrcatbin^, and all ABootUnB of tbe Thro it,

    Eronobial TDIBB, and Lnngi, leadingto OoBiamption.

    This JHfiillible remedy is composed of theHONEY of the plant Horchouiul. iu chemicalunion with TAR-BALM, extracted from theI.IFK J'RINCIPLE of Die (brut tree A:liALSAMBA, or Halm of Gilead.

    The Honey of Horehound BOOTHR3 AMscATTERfiall frrltalionsandlnflamtnutioiis,theTnr-balm CLEANSES AND HSAtS the throatand air passages leading to (he lungs. F iv iadditional ingredients keep the organs cool,moist, and in healthful action. Let no nrrjudice keep you from trying this great meddne of a iamom doctor who has saved thou.sands of lives by It In his Urge private practice.

    N.B.—The Tar-Balm has no BAD TASTE OIBmelL

    FUCES JO CENTS AND $1 PER BOTTLE.Great wring to buy Urge-iiie.

    •• Pike's Tootiiacho Drops" Ouroin 1 Minute.

    Sold by alt Druggisti.

    0. N. OEITTENTON, Prop., TH.l,

    Insurance a SpecialtyE. & G. H. Ross & Brecse ,

    FIRE AND LIFE

    Insurance Agents,mice. Old lion Uank liiiilcliiig,

    Morristown, N. J.

    Itrpris-nlfl Ihc fi.lhmiiij; firxt-clnKH companic.KT.NA FIIIE ISS. Co. or Hirlfiinl, On. Cap-

    itul timl Kurplija ^vcr 1.1,0(10,000.AJIKIIICAK JIUTCAL INK. Co., ol N.wark

    N.J . Asiu'l. IIVIT I9S0.MHI.KIIUiMEN'S MUTUAL INK. Co., nf No»ark

    V J. l!ai.!UI ..U SurUii. ov«r MOO.OOO.MJIlCllAjnW HDTOAI. IS3. Co. of r W r k

    ^. J . Ua|>ilal atidHur|ilu.about IJM',000.aEIIMAKIA MUTUAL ISS, Oo. or N«. . rk , N

    Ml'TtlAL BENEFIT LIFE IMS. Co. or S«wnrli.N.J A.ml.ovcrMO,00D,«».

    ironed effpctotl on all dencriptions ofrly in aujf Mvtion ft? the Htato, at Mawn an tlio rink will warrant. AllPAID P K O m i X Y , and no conium.

    vttleincnt.PitrwiiM . t a dintancD can aililrrn. tia In

    Mltpr and r t cv i t . Uu mini] atu-ntion aa i•Iipllcation n n mad. iu rnmon.

    KXKCUTOIl'8 SAI.K [•'

    EUUU. ESTATE!Thi>»uWriUr, Eirmitir of tl». IwtwiU

    MtdtMluarnl "f VitliMii Il.r,iiUrn.r. d c

    tb« (Vniitjr tit S!orri«, m>,\ Slut,- ».i"j{. w j t t .~ ' irtii* tf m,\ Wt will M.4 i,,unirnl,

    [ma at Uw Ulc WUIHU" l>rnti.«!>r!l l?^Wiadnagtoti 1o«it>bi|>, in '

    SATUKDA7, August 2d,1*19, UtWMB tl» tioum ut 3 and •, . • . u i

    SHERIFF'S SALE!Iu Chancery of New J t m - y - F i . fa. for ante

    njortgiificd lir&miflfrt, wlit-rcin Dufld MiaiWHB uonijilaiiiiaut and Edmund CaiiRitlTboniiK Muilinaii aud • then , arvdofondanltutuniable tu OaMier 'It-rm, A. 1). lB7y.

    NKIQHISOUn A SMITH, Sol'm.Hy virtue oftho abiTO stated writs of fli

    fuL-iax in my hands, I KIIBII expose for HalePtib.it; Vt'iiiluo at tlio Court HOUBO, IQ Morrtown, N. J,,ou

    MONDAX, tbo Uth day of AVQVHT next,A. 1). 187!), ljct«'t>on the burnt or 19 M. and Go'dix'k I'. JU., t U . I, lo Huy at 2 o'clock in thuttfJornnoTi (if saiii day, all that cor I kin tractor pari'd uf |nnd and premises, «tuatiu Ihu Ttiwunlijii of Hoxbury, in the CountyMorris and Stntn or New Jertev, coutaliiiniftLnml an tunu of land, be tliP aame mote oIUKH, Jiui HE tlio samo promiuru ilenorlbod iicortuiiHluitcl uf cuiivoyaiice, mado and (JIOCUl>y AiiKuuttit O. Can 11,-1:) »nd Jacob Vaua.

    1 wife, (Itarinjt date Jannarj 20th, IWI4il rocurdt-J in tlio Morris County Itucord codB, In Ikok Y S, pajjo 24!), i o . J to tbo eaii

    I^munil Uiiiifli'll, and by e&id Edmand Caiifield morteigcd to complainant March 20,187.1), ahDiiFd be lold id tlio following o r j Othat is to u&y, In tlio Jint place, all t int pirt osaid mortRBRfd prurainos Imglnnlng at a poimin tlio easterlyIliio oftho road loading IronFuno Bloulo to McCiiiiBvillo; tbenou (1) N17 30 W. 17D feet along tbe easterly linelaid road to a paint in the line between lin

    formirly of Tbontas Post aud the Ferro MonRailroad Company; tlionco (2) aloog laiii IanN. 52 win. E. 136 ft.; thence 18) ilonE landii

    id Ferro Slonte llailrottd Oompauy 8.46Ui8 ft. C in.; thence (i) 8. E3 W. IS2 foot to tbabetfliinliifr, containing about one-balf an acreof land. Aud ID the socond place, all thato f s a l d n i t l r i W l h d i

    from as III Edniucil CaDfluld to tbonua Mnlllgun,and begini at % poiut la the m t e r h linior tlie rokd lending from Form Moutt UMeOifnBYllIe, aaid point b«: jK in a line ternbetweuu Itncli of Baker and \%aitndcdii follows:

    Tlie Dm Lut tx-glim i t a itako In the 10thlie ill a T,l Rnm trant n.inTtijwl by John U.utinan and Fifo tu William Green, Jnulor,id I,ym»n Dcnnlion.tn May, 1M2, whieh tali

    uuro« this tot ii part, m d aud i t i he beingRiant tvulv. llnki In •, eonne inDtb.forty-ur (legruui vei l , from tho l l th ocrter or w!d

    acrcii; ihfcace (1) suath, ililj.iB»on de-•cta and furty-flTB mlnutci eait, ona cbiln

    ,ud siity-four U.ik- to Male : tbunc« (3) aonlh,ulrtj-tbruo ilogrtti end thlrlT mlDUtva w*itonrchaiDB and uii.et.v l l n t i ; thence (8) •onlh,orty.»ii dtBr-t t anil thirty minulei weit,- b a m i , tbuuto (^) north, aiity-cifbl ile^

    • ii ' l ihirlr mint- -[It liuks; Itii'lico (H) n

    t-it, twuchtiDii:

    iu, U|N>D orThe Htet

    d l l i

    r , uiintniler -siil lo

    mtalnlDgmi a and mineTtla Ijlug

    l ot.l Lot bceliit in tliu middla of (he

    id luttliiiK Irom laid Mlllen'i to Joacph Cirv.y'n, tud ne«r thn old Uinu Htlll Hottw>H