5 Fjrjn- ' " -t.-"' '.- M ' ... if r v 9 -:. ' THE LANCASTER DAILY INTELLIGENCER, SATURDAY, APRIL 3. 188G. - a IV fc k h .-3 THADDEUS STEVENS' WIIKUB THE 11KMAINS OF Whatever llie v.irylnc estimates or tlie character (r Thaddeui HtevenH, one llower wilt bloom percnnl.illy ever IiU grave In Nliralnnr'M cemelery-hW unwavelriiK refC'trd for the momeryof hli mother. In hi last days he prevlilctl carerully Ter keeping her grave In k' order, Maying: "1 ! tliN out et rencet te tlie memory of my mother, te whom I ewo what llttle of prosperity I have hail en earth, which, small an It !, 1 deslre emphatically te acknowledge." The men who have lea thelr Impress en the nihil el thelr tlme have nil been bleased with renmrknble mother, but few havolelt behind them sdncore leitlinnny of the beno bene tlclal results or maternal hifluoiice Mich as the "Olil Commener," who lived hUactlve utrenr in tbii city, thus earnestly rocenls. Hhreiner'.s cemetery, where the bones of Stevens lie, located at thocernor of Mutherry ami Chetnut Htroetx, within a tdone'H threw of l.nni-nster'a handsomest puhlle school hnlhllnK-thehlRh Kchoel-1 a most proper rusting pUce for him wlione vlgoreu view en the public achoel system and devotion te the rrngre t,ve werOHtrlkhiK characteristic el hN ciroer. It in an mid (tort efn Bntvo Bntve yard w hore the Union of whlte ami black bleach In company waiting the Kosurrectlon trump. Hteveus chese thN apet for himself In preferonce te Woodward Hill and I.au I.au cailer cemoterlos, Ter the reasons that stare out at yen from hW Kranlte tomb. Deep eniirravcii there, unatlected by tlme a ravages, they ilx themselves en the ronder'a. mind with Mich vividness that ene fiela he wen d net be much startled te hear them again iilven out In sepulchral tones from tlie silent occupant of the tomb belew. Hern they are: "I rcpoae In this quiet and necltlded spot, net rnim any natural priirereiicii for solitude, but llndlutf ether cemeteries limited by ehnrtir rule as te race, I have chosen It that 1 might be enabled te illustrate In my dealt! the principle which I have advocated Ihreiili n long ltre eiuality or man before hit Creater." ... , ,. They aren fair Inilex of the type or the man who uttered them. Dogmatic, unl-end-inir, cnrliiK llttle or nothing fortlie amenltleH of lite, Thaddeu Stevens had an overpower Ini; ivorHeiiality that would rule or ruin everything In iW path. What he could net conciliate, he would attempt te crush, and It It in this light hit public career must be Judged. Ills grave hat llttle te suggest the prominent part he played In the athilrw of hit time, ll preaches In uvery jnut tlwny. The Iren urn that stands sentinel at tlie eastern end or the llttle plot has seen many a spring and Hiiminer eonie, and the thick ruf, tlMt has gathered upon it unmolested, measures their nuuiber well. Its fellow urn at the west end Is even in mere dilapidated condition, neodlngte le.in forsupiert en the granite pile, near at hand. The withered soil is still waiting the vivifying Inlluenccs of sprint.', and a lew bare and untrained rose bushes tell tlie Ule or kindly attention In time s geno by. HIS HA III. Y ANTKI'IUIBNTS. A rovlew of Stevens' career explains In somedogreo the nature of the man. Ills lather left behind ldui no ethor record save that CLKfHhAMlt'S M-KVUI.lARlTlKli. lie In Meilr.t anil Clirtltl. and D.rllnrn All Ollla, r.irrpt Cmira. Washington Sclal te lmlliAapella Journal. ' De you knew," said n friend of the president te me, the ether day, "that Drever Cleveland is the strongest man.lii America In regard te receiving presents? Kver slnce 1 have known him, and It has been a long time, dating back te tlie tlme when he was a young man, unknown evon In Hulliile, whero ha 11 veil, he Hoemcd te have a dread or having te accept n gilt Hven when his clients paid him his lee he sometimes re marked that he was ufrnld he had net earned It, This It ene or the reasons, I think, he is working se hard new, because he U nrrald seme ene will say he Is net earning his salary. He believes In the Ilible teaching that 'It It mere blessed te give than te receive.' Have you noticed hew often he has declined gllta?" i' I could tell you numerous llttle Instances where he has practlced what the Ilible toaches. Clovelaud H such a modest mau In regard te hi own doings that he hates any one te tell ulMiut his deeds of charity, yet he Is charitable. Yeu have no Idea el tlie num ber of loiters he gebi from beggars yes, 1 call them by that name bocause they are no lietter than theso we meet en the street, except that they use pen and paper rather than Hit en the curbstone with tours nnd an outstretched hand. Mr. Clovelaud often, wl..m lm Is II roil at his dav's work. COOS Inte Cel. I.iment's room and picks up a plle or ' nssorteU' loiters. He reads them for re creation. The letters are usually pecullar nr inr J-niiina ones, selected elllier rer future use the president's perusal. He often comes across a begging letter, and I have known him te sit down, after reading a touching ap peal, and dash oil' a few words of sympathy and slip a bank-nete botweeu the leaves el the paper, fold it, ami direct the envelope. I he elten roelodr Yes, I expoet he is Imposed upon as much by beggars as he Is by iKililiciaiiM, and you knew that is elten. "Talking about his refusing gilts I re member at Albany, just nrter his election, what a time he had. He refused overythlng. Why, he actually had te employ a mau espe cially te work In retacklng the glrw sent llllll irem ail evor luu bjuuhj. tm mm hardly uollevo It, but from Kovember te March he had eighty-nlne dogs sent him. Clovelaud Is fend or dogs, but he made It a rule never te bee ene et the gilts. As seen as they arrived they were sent te the stable of the executive mansion, and the proleasleuul packer reshipped them. One day M r. Clove Cleve land happened te be In the yard when au express wagon arrived with a deg. It was a splendid Newfoundland, I can tell you. When Cleveland haw blui he loekod long ingly at the shaggy, black creature, as If te say: 'Hew I would likote keep you,' but 110 passeu en, aim ijiu ui'k Ytun seiii uuuk wbence he came. During that tlme he re ceived no less than six eagles, spleudld birds, but they were all seut back. Mr. Cleveland always sent everything back that could lie returned, but thore was ene thing he could net return they were embroidered hat bands. Why, 1 Je no' exaggerate in the least when X say he received as many as a bushel basket full in a day. I have often seen, ut everling lime, during November or December, 1634, a bushel basket rult of these things In the library or the executive man Ien at Albany. What did he de with theuiT He never saw them; tbey were carried out by the servants and sold for waste paper or rag. I often uwd te think bow inaey hours THE "OLD COMMONER" KfcST of Lelnga dUslpated man nnd nllne wrosller, and he wes in nil probability net very much delighted when at Danville, Caledonia count r, VL, en April -I, 17112, his youngest aen, 'fhaddeus, Mopped Inte the world with a club feet. HIsfatlier'H trade was shoemak. lug, and at this young Thaddeiis worked for a time. In 181 1 he was a shutout at llurllng llurllng ten college, and In 131ft he was graduated Irem Darmeuth college I.lke many another man who lecame prominent In national af fairs, young .Stevens taught school for a living, being an Instructor pt an academy In Yerk. Tiring et that, he determined te put Inte use the tlme he had given te the study of law, nml made application for admission te the hir. Te his surprise he found the deer clewed. It Is said that certain members of the Yerk county bar, passed resolutions te the ell'ect that no tiorsen should be recognized as a lawyer who followed any ethor vocation whilst preparing himself for admission. Stevens Haw that the blew was aimed at him, and he quletly went across the state line into Maryland, and was admitted te the Harford county bar. The particulars of that admission are very amusing, and Stevens was went te tell them with the keenest relish. He was examined In the evening by the committee, Judge Chase, a(terwanis impeached by the Cnltesi States Senate, being the Judge of the court. Ile receive! his certltlcale after answering three or four questions and orderlng in at the suggestion of the Judge four bottles et Madcrni. ' Fin I.oe" was played then for a geed psrt et the night. Slevens, when he paid his bill the next morning, had but WW left out of J-15 he began with the night betore. The young barrlsler practiced law for n tlme In (lettysburg, burning the midnight oil te peer pecuniary advantage, until in a big murder trial In which he was employed, he established himself as a brilliant and forcible pleader. Undid net make much or a show en the elltlcal arena until 1KJ!, when he threw hlmseir with all his natural voho veho vohe menco Inte the anti-Masonic mnvemunt. In ls.1I he was a liiemlier or the lower heuse of the state legislature, continuing as such until is-ll, oxcept during the tlme he served at a member of the constitutional conven tion or IS.T7. "T1IK Hl'CKSIIOT WAlt." Stovens was nppetutcd cmal cnninilssloner In 1SW by (iovernor llltner, who thoreby thought te make his victory ever Perter In the gubornatlenal struggle boyeud porad perad porad venture. It was In thatyear the celebratixl " Buckshot War" occurred, whereby the "Old Commener" narrowly oscaped with his life. Twe sels of returns were forwarded te lUrrishnrg from the Nerthern l.lbertles district of Philadelphia, the Democrats and Whigs each claiming success. The decision had a melt imlierlant etlect en the com cem com plexlon et the Heuso and Senate. Secretary el Statu Themas 11. HurroM,es certified te the election or his Whig allies Irem this ills trict, and a contesting delegation of Demo crats were en the ground when the legislature met. There was Intense oxcltement at HHrrisburgalthlt time, at the governor, hi. spired by Stevens had summoned the mili tary te defemt hit proceedings. At the afternoon sosslen of the Sonate en the first day of the meeting, Hanna, one or the had l)een wasted by ralr hands in marking the "O. C." en these hat-bands. 1 was mistaken when I aa!d he returned every thing. He did keep ene gilt canes. Mr. Clovelaud had the Imest set of caues of any man in the world. He had a cabinet made ter them. i here nre ninety-six In all, nnd such beauties He receives n large uumber voted te him Irem fairs all evor the country. He had oer twonty-llve geld-headed ones number of them very handsome. "Clovelaud has no pets at the Whlte Heuso, and his well known trait of returning all presents has stepped, te a certain extent, hit being bothered by receiving any. ir, however, ene doet stray into the Whlte Heuso, It generally gees back the way it came bofero he sees lu Ills orders nre te this oiled." UAHK ilB.V.fO.V.SO.V.i ItUBU Hew the I'uet, Ills Hut fur Stiakrnitre' tSliaileir, (let a T en 111 Thumb. Of the many documents that have ceme Inte the hands or Jehn Cordy Jaollrtsen few aroefgreator llterary lntorest, none is mere painful, than the record which proves that in his early manhood Hen Jonsen was con victed et felony en his own confession j that he escaped an Ignominious death by plead ing his clergyj that he was punished ter this felony with forleituroof his goods and chattels and was moreover branded en the brawn et his lett thumb with the letter T by the Jailer of Newgata in the Old Halley court heuse liofero he was onlarged, In accordance with a well-known statute of the lSlh el' P.lizabeth. The lotler was known te Laud Laud eners or his porled co less than te Londoners or much later tlme at "the Tyburn T." The felon v was his manslaughter of Gabriel Speiicer, Ids fellow- actor at the Hose theatre, commtlted en the 2M of Hoptember, 1508- the very mouth In which " l-.very Alan in His Humeur" was produced, William Snake. speare Doing among me ivuers ei me cuui pany. It is furtlier loarued that the peet fought with a three shllllug rapler; that he wound ed Spencer iu the right side, and that Spencer diedlnshiutly, lu the dueling Held. There Is somethlng grimly rantastlc In the notion of he geed a scholar at Hen Jonsen "asking for the book," lu order te preve himself capable or reading his "nock-verse" something grotesquely horrlble iu the tueugut mat urn ler tne noneui ei ciergy he bright a genius would have been hung nt Tyburn like any unlettered rascal convicted ei naving sioieu n norse or huiuoeu an enemy In the back. One would llke te believe that Jonsen was iiiarKcd with nothing Horrer than a lukewarm Iren. If the satirists efn later period may be belleved, it was net uncommon ler a Jailer lu the mlddloef the seventeenth century, from regard rer a premised lee, te mark a felon with cold steel. It would be pleasant te ceme upon evidence that Hen's Jailer marked him accidentally with a cold Heal. PASSION FI.OWKH4. Fer Ilia Intelueknckh. " What are theso," you Mk, I wear " With such mil te solemnity T" They are passion (lowers rare, Gathered In Uuthscumne. O'er that Burden's aiiclunt wall j Purple blosseun droop and etill j And where mystic shadows fall Mournfully tlie night wlinj, wall On each p&islen Uewer'4 breast, Lies the cructflclal sign And above tut i heart's u crest I new ircar that bloom divine ) May ilerrqw. TOMB. IN SIIKEISKR'S CEMETERY. Whig senators, whose seat was disputed was alieut te be sworn In, when the crowd in the lobby broke Inte thochamber under tlie lead el Washington Dartnn and oliient, and Mr. Stovens, who was present as a spectator, had te save hit life by makluir his celebrnted escape through the liack win dow. Fer three weeks the legislature was at a deadlock, and men's passions ran high. The Stovens contingent or the Heuso organ ized a limine) orthelr own at Wilsen's, new the l.oelilet heuse, but finally rccognlzed the Democratic organization. Stovens was ox ex ox pclled rer his conduct, hut was reelected and took his scat again a few days before the session was ended. COME.S TO I.ANCASTIin. The flery politician removed te Lancaster in 181'J, whero he seen built up a large law practice. This must have been ve"y ne3s sary, for It Is related that at that time he was JiMiO,000 in debt, which amount he redtlced te $30,0)0 In 1SIU. In the latter year he took hM seat In Congress, there remalniui; for four years piling up additional Indobtedue-ss. In that Thlrty-llrst Congress were seme nota neta nota ble men. In the Sonate sat Hannibal Ham lin, of Malno; Jehn I. Hale, of New Hauiv shlre: Daniel S. Dickinsen and William 11. Heward, or New Yerk ; Salmen I. Chase, or Ohie ; Jeffersen Davis, el Mississippi : Themas 11. Hen ten, of Missouri : I.ewls Cass, or Michigan : Sam Housten, or Texas, and the great triumvirate, Webster, Clay nnd Calhoun. In the Heuse also were some brilliant light : Kldbridge (lorry, of Malno ; ltebert C. Wlnthrep, of Massai!husett.s ; Alexander Stephens and Rebert Toombs, or Georgia : Jethu.i Olddlngs, of Ohie, and David Wllmel, of Pennsylvania. With these skilled sbitosmen Stmens had te ceh te make his way, mid In this his en orgy and rugged personality largely aided him. It is uulruitful te go ever his con gressional caroer Irem his dofenso or the Mlsaeuri compromise through all the vary ing puases ei ins mionse nun slavery ideas te the Jehnsen Impeachment, as they nre a matter or recent history. In all hedlsplayed rare nbllltv, united rrequently te rare un un wiseom. His dogmatic ideas and total nn nn scrupuleusness uulltted him rer ruling his fellows, and It Is Just us well ler them that he never had a very geed ehanee In his nub ile lire te oxercise arbitrary authority. His hostility te the Seuth was ene of ills greatest hebbIes,nnd had he roumlned longer In public allairs, he would probably have tlone what lay In hit power te delay the era et peace and reconciliation. lluchanau and hlmself, political opponent, were also lar from persenal Irleuds. The story of their last meeting at Meuntville at Dr. Henry Carpenter' wedding in 1S07 has recently been told In theso columns. A year atter both were dead, Stovens expiring hi Washington, August II, IsfK. The colored race found In him a warm advocate, ami he provided genereusly in hit will for the establishment of an' iustltute rer their in struction. Through the waiting rer the bequest te accumulate te the required mini, nothing has yet been dene te carry out the testator's purpose. O. J. Dickey and An An teony IL Roberts, of the executers, are deatl, and "Hen. F.dward Mcl'liorseu is the sole survivor. Frem prosent appearances, many a year will roll by botero the walls et the proposed iustltute rear thelr faces upward te the sky. V.WI.K.iX TIIKATJllC.il, I'USTKHS. VJgoreut lleimnrUtleiKi Irem n Catholic UUhep In Canada. In Kingsten, Ont, tlie billposters painted the (own with placards announcing the coining of a travelling show rrem the lulled States Some or the lithographs wero con sidered Improper, nnd cilled forth Irem Hlght Kev. Illshep Cleary (Catholic) ,-t sovcre pretest. Te hit peeple he said : " Hew shall our young peeple possess the spirit or Hauctltlcatleu and be kept clean from bad thoughts In their minds, If wicked men, cemim: from another country, nre permitted te bosmear the walls and fences el the city with the most hideous obscenities? Net one, net even the most holy nml Gedfearing among us could jiesslbly proservo cleaull cleaull nessnr soul or shut out bad thoughts ami lllthy misgivings In presence of theso colored representations, obscene ami Ioathseiuo in tlie last degree. They nre the worst I have evor seen. They would ha a disgrace te Sodom nml Gomorrah. Why is the fomale thus porslsteutly selocted for such ropro repro ropre Boutalion ? I'agunitui did, indoed, ruiluce women te the condition of beastliness, hut the Catholic church, alter centurlet et teach ing und legislation had changed man's Idets respecting the fbiuule character ami the honor due te it- The manifest tendency of theatrical exhibitions such n H'lie' is te degrade the leiuale sex nml bring back the pagan aoemmauous ei iiomesuc ami social lite, ' Why is religious Canada se exceedingly tolerant or outrage he unChrl-tuu nnd he degrading?" The city council ordered the city commis sioner te remove all placards or nu Immoral toudency, The performance was given te it crowded house, and the piny was found us ciean as auy eiuer piay. Hnlmlllnt; the Amerlraii. An American gentleman, who was spend ing some tlme at Naples was nttucked with a malady or the tiyes He was advised te apply two n young native oculist who had already gained seme reputation by his skill. He sent for the young Neapolitan, who paid him te visits only, the nlloctien or the patleut's oyes having preved n trilling affair Hiiur mi. i in iiiua.) mu vinius iiiti miuilir brought In a bill of flMO, The Amerlcau re re ro fused te pay any such sum, and was met by the cool assertion ; Yeu nre an Amerlcau, and of ceurse a mil lionaire ; and il I did net make Heme money out et you, hew could I manage te llve at allf" Ourceiintryiiinnwas proof against even hucIi potent reasoning, nnd was sued bv the doctor. On helm; called up borero the court, the Judge asked the oculist what was his usual feo for a slngle visit. "Twe dollars" was his reply. On the ether hand, the Amerlcau ollered te deal libemlly by the physical!, nnd te pay him J-i) for the two visits Hut te this the Judge would net hear, condemning the grasping medical man te rocelvo only his customary feo, namely f I, and expressing a 'courteous hoje that the aggrieved patient would net Judge all Italian prolesslonat men by that single sample. Utbtiila, eurly en the lawn, Steals roves from the bUunlng dawn j Hut when Myrtllla aleeps till ten, Aurera steaJ j them back again. Anen. HERE AND THERE. One of the llnest and perhapM the most expensive of the houses yet built along the line el the PetiiiHylvanla railroad, running through beautiful suburbs this way nut rretn Philadelphia Is the mansion nf Mrs Matthew llnlnl, en an elovntlen south or the railroad ; that or Mr. Clnthler the dry goods man, near Ardmore, Just llnlshlng, Isauother splendid cdlllcp. Kither or them Is In botter taste than the Heck and HyocastleofthoOlbson the tally-colored French palace In a growing grovenoxt le Owen Jenes' line oldplace; that has nover lest Us comferlahlo and homo hemo home llkonpiiearauco. I'eur heuses llke theso of Ilalrd, Clothier and (llbsen, 1 am told, eat up a million dollars. Thus we go. Lancaster will be ene or the suburbs Heme line day, and Iho electric meters will take us te and fro lu hair an hour. Sidney Dillen, the great (leulil railroad lawyer, ex Judge nnd nearly everylhlngelse, was also a tavern boy. He attracted the at tention or Judge (Irani, riding the circuit In Iowa; stud led law, married well, get along and (leulil get him. Dillen nnd Hoxle are a team a tandem team but a pair of put put lern. .. Down nreund Wayne nnd Deven they keep building away. The Doven company's ground Is being rapidly occupied with cot cet cot tages and sutniner homes of mere or le-ss magnlllcence, and, though It costs somethlng llke tl.OOO pur acre, there Is a big prellt in the sales or the ground. Some years age a man bought a farm down that way for 1,700. Thore wero 60 acres In It- The ether day his son sold eir I ncres of the tract fertl,SC0. Wayne Is seen te have electric light. The peles ure ti When Henry Askln, who built the big heuse there, owed ?C00,000, he thought he .wan bankrupt, but after Chllds and Drexol lieught ?700,000 worth or land rrem him, It Is the easlest Hum lu subtrac tion te figure out hew he was worth 1 100,000. He is blind, but as radical a Domecratns lr he had all his Hcnses Intact. The whilem Heverend Oliver U Ashen Ashen Ashen folter, whose intoratate oscapades were a nlne days wonder In Massachusetts, New Yerk and Philadelphia last fall, is living quietly whero anybody can find him who wants him. There seetns te have nover been any Herieus cllbrt te onrerco the law's processes against him. He writes me that he was the victim or malignant misrepresentation and malicious prosecution. This does happen sometimes, evon te the ciergy. While Ege is writing Ids reminiscences or the war and spreading hlmseir and his ex ploits ever many pages or magazlnes week lies, dallles and ethor periodicals of every de gree, It Is well te romember and te recall that ene modest man, years age Bomewhat near or the camp-fire, wrete seme vivid war sketcbes worth reading. 1 tefer te Cel. Goe. K. Warrlng's Whip and Spur," a little hook that Is new out el print, made up chief ly of sketches first published in the maga zines nome lllteen years age, They nre sim ply stories or the homes he rede In the army, and are very charming In style and senti ment. He is the most modest hore I have yet encountered In his war tales. Ills tributes te the neble animals who shared his camp and Held experience nre beautirully wrought. Whero Is thore n mere conclse, graphic and torrlble picture el war as it Is, without the glamour or a raise light, than In this extract, truotetho letter? "Here we struck the marvelleus prairie region or Northeastern Mississippi, literally a land flowing with milk nnd heney. An interminable, fertile, rolling prairie lay berore us in overy tiirociieu. me siuru mie or the Confederacy had coinpelled the planters te ellset every small Held or cotton with a widoarea of corn, until the region had boeenio known as the granary of the South Seuth South ern army. Net only must overy land owner devete his broadest Holds te the culti vation of the much-needed cereal, but one eno ene tenth of nil his crop must be stacked for public use iu crlbtat the slde or the .railroad. It was an Important Incldontet our mis sion te destroy overything which directly or Indirectly could atlerd subsistence te the ltebel terces:and during the two days fol lowing our arrival at Okolona, whlle we marched as far south as West Point, the sky was red with the tlames of burning corn nnd cotton. On a slngle plantation, our Hanking party burned thirty-seven hundred bushels or tlthe corn, which was cribbed near the railroad ; no sooner was iLs light seen at the plantation houses than hundreds or negrees wlie Hwarmed rrem thelr quarters te Jein our column, llred the rail-built cribs in which the remaining nlue-tenths of the crop was stored. Driven wuu wun tue inieciiiiu, they set tlie torch te mansion heuse, stables cotton-gin, and quarters, until the whole vlllaco-IIke settlement was blazing in an un checked coullagratien. Te see such wealth, nnd the accumulated products et such vast lalter, swept rrem the race et the ewrtli, gave te tlie aspect et war a sauuenniK naeij, which was In streug contrast te the peacetul and harmless lire our brigade had thus tar led. In all this pratrie region there is no waste land, and the evidence or wealth und fertility lay borero us in all directions. As we inarched, the negrees came en maste rrem overy plantation te join our column, leaving only lire and abselute destruction behind them, it was estimated that during these two days' march two thousand slaves ami ene thousand mules wero added te our train. , ,, "The incidents of all this desolation wero elten sickenlug and heart-rending ; delicate women and children, whom the morning had found in poace and plenty, and glowing with pride in the valor of Seuthern arms and the certainty or an early Indopendenco for thelr bolevod hair-country, round them thom selves, borero nightfall, homeless, penniless, ami alone, In the midst or doselato land. "Captain Frank Moero, the Cossack of our brlgade, weut atnlgui te an euiiymg plantation, of which the showy mansion mansien mansion heuso Htoed en a gontte acclivity in the edge et'a flne greve. Here lived alene with an only daughter, a beautiful girl, a man who had been conspicuous lu his aid te the rebellion, and whose arrest had been ordered. The squadron drew up In front or the heuse and summoned the ownerto ceme fertli. He raniH. armed. huIIeii. stolid, and determined, but obviously unnerved by tlie Terce con cen con Irenting him. Heliind him follewod his daughter, dresaed In white, and with her long light hair railing evor her sheulders. The sight of the hated ' Yaukee crazed her with rage, nud before her lather could reply te the quostlen with which he had been nccested, she called te him wildly, 'Don't speak te the villains! Sheet! sheet them down, sheet them down!' wringing her hands screaming with rage, The oxclto exclto oxclte ment was tee much ler his j udgmeut, ami he llred wildly en the troops. He was riddled through and through with bullets; and as Moero turned away, he lelt that tlne house blazing lu the black night, and llghtiug up the llgure of the crazy girl as sue wuuuoreu, desolate nud beautiful, te and fro before her burning home, unlieoueu uy tue negrees who ran with thelr hastily made bundles te Jein the band or their deliverers Moere's description et thisHceue In the simple Ian Ian guage that It was hlsunprotendlng way te use, gave the me&t vivid picture we had seen or the unmitigated horror and baduess or war." A bumlle or old pajiers almost anything lu that line, aay, bofero the war, Is nutore. heuse or precious romlnlHcenco. What will net the big newspaper of te-elay be te our great-grandchlldren el a hundred years heucel Hew they will ransack theso .Satur day oditlens of the I.NTKi.x.ieiKNi'i:u and gaze with mingled wehder and admiration at the haudsome men whose portraits adorn theso columns 1 lien. Jehn 1). Stlles evor at Alleutewn, has the only complete tlie or the Congressional Jleeerd, Ulebe, etc., Irem the noauwaters mat i uave Been in mono pans. It Is a Jey forever ir net a thing of beauty. Dogs iu Alleutewn, by the way, grew le greater age than any whero else in the state. Mr. .Stiles' deg, the ilglitlngeat deg in the l.eblgh Valley, a llttle, (dump-tailed, homo hemo home mado.dog, IslU years old, has fought ti,000 battles and never was whlpMl. At least he nover knew IU There are elder elder, net better tlegs in Alleutewn than he. Te get back te the old papera the Washington Ulebe, publlsued uy juair cv ltives, in ltHU, was banging away at Harrison, the banks and hard elder; In the number of September 19, 13IOAtnett Kendall's personal reply te Dull' Green's persenal assault Is "mighty in in terestln' readln';" and in another number of that period the exposure et Clay and Web ster's fees from the United H tat en bank and the Indebtedness of nearly sixty members of Cougress te the Institution, tells or day when share and leans wre pnt where they would de the most geed with latter-day sa gacity. Here Is a roiert of the Domecratlo national convention which met In Haiti Haiti mere May n, lsie. It had hardly get under way lalrly when Cel. Heah Frazer maden Hpeiech, only te call out Felix Orundy, but bofero he quit he had succeeded In earning a geed deal of applause for hlmself. This wns something after the fashion et a rattling con vention spoech or that day : Mr. Frazer, or Pennsylvania, resn and ex pressed his hnpe that the dolegate rrem Ten Ten Ten nosseo, the friend or Andrew Jneksen, nnd associnte et his early years, who had batlled with that hore in the cause of Democracy, and who had no ollen successfully encoun enceun encoun terodlleiiry Clay, the great champion of our openont, would new proceed with his re marks Let us new hear that voteran hi the cause of Democracy, whose volce lias be eften choered his party In the political con test, and rrem his lips let tin catch the Inspir ing war cry, that gives assurance of victory, rixniil anifonthusiastlcchcerlng. I can tell him thnt hore thore are no Kucker delogates among us. Hore nre nene but these whom thn assembled poeplo have sent te represent them. The Kmplrestatolshero fully ropre repre ropre Hentod, nml her delogates have told you that she will nobly de her duty. Loud cheersl The Keystone slate, that gave Andrew Jack Jack seu MUHW majority, Is hore by her sons, re peated choerlng,! and we pled go eurselves te our Democratic foltew-cltlzens, that when the day el trial comes, the land el Peun will rully sustain her high renewn. We hce, tee, the represen tatives of the Democracy or the G ran I te state, that can never be beaten, (continued applause,) and or her sisters el the North, together with the chivalrous sons or the Seuth and the West. The whele nomecracy or the Union is hore ; and we will speak trumpet-tengued te the people, and tell them that tlie cause or the equal laws and equal rights must triumph, when the nrblters are ludoncndent, virtuous and Intelligent free men. We " hang out our banner en the outward wall," when we proclaim that the poeplo el this country are capable or soir seir soir gevernraont, and that, by the blessing of Almighty Oed, the people shall still rule this froe and happy country, and neta loague or money corperatlonsnnd foreign capitalists. We proclaim that the party which Isalrald te speak te the peeple which entertains de signs nnd principles which they dare net avow which Insulta the Intelligence or rree rree nien by a resort te tinsel pageantry and show, instead et appealing te their under standings must meet with that discomfiture and dlsgrace which such wretched charla tanry doserves Yes follew-cltlzens thesa eternal principles of truth and Justice, which eilr party clings te as with the leve of a mother te her child which they boldly and openly avow te the assembled universe theso sacred princlples which guided our fathers In the stormy days el the Kevolu Kevelu Kevolu tlen, and which they bequeathed as a pro pre pro cleus lnhoritance te thelr children, shall still triumph, though avsalled with all the art and all the power el a selfish nud interested faction. "Hang out our banners en the outward walls; Will laugh a eiege te scorn." Ulll uv.ud nsiiuNBii. In tholauguageof Henton, "if we fall, let us fall with arms in our hands, irthe gal lant ship orstate is te go dewii, let her go devn with her Hag nailed te her mast- Set every threadbare sail, and glve her te the god et storms." Mr. F. concluded by Hay leg that he had net Intended, en rising, te have said this much. Ills only object was te move that the veteran statesnyan and Demo crat, nnd rriend or Andrew Jacksen, should addrcs the convention nt this time. Mr. Grundy again rose, amid loud and en thusiastic cheering, and preceeded. A memorable spoech in the annals of Penn sylvania politics was the " great speech of Cel. Illgler" at the Heading Democratic state convention in 1351. In that cenven tien, it will be romemborod, thechler ques tion was the contest botween the lligter ami l''ra7.er delegates irem Lancaster city and county. " The interest excited by this issue was profound and universal," says a relater. " It was the topic of conversation every where ; and when it was at length reached by the convention the lowest murmur of conversation ceased, and silence and ab sorbing attention at once pervaded the large assemblage with which the court heuse was threnged. The credentials et both sets or delegates were read by the clinks. In these or the lligler delegates, James I,. Reynolds, esq., was substituted, as senatorial delegate, for Wm. II. Forduey, esq., nud lu these of the Krazer delogates Cel. Krazer was substi tuted ler l'eter Martin, esq. At this stnge or the proceedings Mr. Sterigere, or Montgom ery, suggested the propriety or hearing two el the claimants from each doleeatien en the merlts of the case, which belhg en motion agreed te, Mr. Amwuke, of the Frazer set, proceedod te state thelr case. The detalls wero very voluminous and involved refer ences te a great number et inaccosslble papers. Sgl9at issue was this : whether the comlSTiltteo, which called the con vention of m.jIi, 1S51, by the action or which the Fordney delogates wero elected, was at the time or calling that convention a living and a regularly organlzed and author ized body, having the right te act for the De mecracy of Ijmcaster. air. AtuwaKe, m a very respectable speech, contended It was net He was follewod by Mr. Swarr, or the same county, en the ether side, who alter a brler reference te the necessity or saving the time or the couventlon, read, In a most ele gant and improsslve manner, the printed statement or the claims or the party with whom he was acting." James Patterson, ulratn H. Swarr, Samuel l'arker, Jes II. Haker, N. . Welle and Jas U Koynelds wero the lluchanan-lllgler dole dele gates; and after Mr. Swarr had presented the case, Cel. Frazer Bpoke for several hours until the oveulng adjournment. Alter the reassembling ei the convention, Cel. Frazer resumed his argument, and ongaged the at tention of the delegates some two hours longer. " His address was marked by great earnestness and feeling, and general propri ety ei manner." He was followed by James iu Reynolds or Lancaster, " In a masterly and convincing argument, supported with a mass or facts that told with great effect in the couventlon." Upen a vote tlie Dlglermeu were admitted by 75 te 47. That or ceurse euded the Frazer campaign. Sam. Illack, the great campaign orator of his day, with drew in a letter which he concluded in this fashion': "I couslder the American Union the greatest human Institution that was ever formed. and next te the Christian religion, the greatest blessing our misfortnnes have evor met, te IliaKO easier me uurueus ei it weary lifts and 1 regard even the danger or its ills solution as a disaster most deeply te be do de do plered. " We can groan and sweat without much agony, tinder the lead of life's sorrows, se long as we have a country. Hut take that away and we have no heart for anything, and no manhood te meet anything. "When the Mozolle ex ploded some years age, en the Ohie rlver, the arms and legs, with the heads and hearts of men were seen ttylng through the air. That was very like a Union exploded, dlsmombered and de stroyed. The mere horrible after Its destruc tion, because or Its beauty befare. It Is Imnosslble net te leve the thought nnd thn moil who made tlie thetlcllU as well expressed as this: ' The mates ej the Union, distinct as the billows, and one like theata.' And may we net add ; the waves of the Bea roll In thelr appropriate spheres wrapping themselves daily and nightly around each ether, ami are breken only when driven against the rock or the shore. The wisdom of our fathersrislng from the mighty doep or the spectral past, uoseecuos us te nveiu tue breakers which tliay carefully and safely Hiiimneu." Well, lligler was nominated, anil when he was Introduced te the couventlon, Just bolore the ballet that nominated SetU Clever for cmal commissioner, he made his great speech. And this was the poreratlon : The erdeal through which our glorious Union has been struggling for seme tlme past is net yet evor. The distant notes or discontent are still hore. like the recoiling surges or a mighty son. The haven or safety is net fully attained ou the ene hand, nor has the Uubiceu been entirely passed ou the ether. The crisis is Mill critical, and calls for the oxerclso ofgreat prudence, el skill, or leve, of Justice and of firmness en the part or ihose who are new at the helm of our ship or stele. If well directed she will weather the storm ; II unskilfully managed, she may possibly be stranded. Seveuty-llve years age she was launched en tlie troubled waves e? political experiment, with hair masts shattered sides open seam, lattored canvas win, .iiiunnsiens in the crew. While thus weak aud her crew inexperlenced, she en countered the waves of prejudice and doubt, and ever and anon the mighty breakers of monarchical hostility. Her very helm, and canvas and crew, are demanded by Urltlsh tnsolenee. Hut she glides onward. Mho next mounts the billows of Internal dissen sion tormented at Hartferd i the bead winds of nullification next threaten her iHh tha less el a star from her Hag t thonext encoun ters the ndverse winds and broakers of state rights territorial rights and the extension of slavery. Tlie violence and confusion el this storm well nigh unmanned her seamen ; her canvas Is trotted by the breeze her majes tic masts bow (e the resistless winds and her vast preKirtlnns are plnyed with by the " raging billows." The alarm came all hands te thn loscuewns the common cry, ami he who hail heretofore rested en lils couch came ; and he who had Inclines! te mutiny came ; nnd he who had tlllTored with his fellow sailor came : theso all united thelr ellbrts i they sulslueil and Ixmnd the diso bedient nnd turbulent of the crew, righted thn masts adjusted the canvas and guided the glorious old shin orstate te the haven of sxfety net quite. She Is In full view, how hew how cver, "masted, and canvased, and llagged," as was nover vesse 1 seen bolore. Her sides are sound, her bottom copperod, and her helm works well. She extends her cable for the shore, nud thore Is hut ene bar, and that a sand bar, in the way of her approach. Who, let me ask. with an American heart in him, will stand hynndnee her stranded enthlsT Who will net reach out his hand ler that cable 7 Who will net sacrlllce a tlthe et his peculiar notions nnd Interests te bring this glorious vessel Rafe Inte harbor ? Te main tain n geed faith, my fellow cltlzens, the sev eral measures or compromise, as adopted by the late Congress as a final adjustment or the vexatious slave controversy as 1 am deter mined te de and as the Democracy of the whele Union are constrained te de, may be te reach for the cable, and te tie the old ves sel tip safe In harbor. . I recall these specimens of the lervld ora tory of the old masters of a past geuoratlen, se that when the Yeung Man gees out te Fldler's Green nnd depicts the green sorpent twining Itselfareund the root or the Goddess or Liberty, you will net laugh. And yet even in that day I am net sure that the "ship" speech oscaped seme quiet satire. The Whigs made great tun of It Jack Ogle said Illgler would make; " a geed canawl commis sioner," judglngfrem hlsknowledge et navi gation ; and lluchannn Hald the speech was geed enough, "ir he had only lelt his d d ship out." This is an editorial from the New Yerk Herald of Novembor 17, 1SC0 : Or.n Ann's Cam.nkt. We see In vari ous quarters pregrammes) or Old Abe's cabinet put forth, and in seme of them ap pear the names or parties who endorsed and recommended Helper's Infamous book. We hope, however, that he will net give a seat among his confidential counsellers te any or these gentlemen. If he does or If he ap points them te any ofilce under the govern ment, it will tell what the character of his administration Is going te be far hotter than his Inaugural address which will be but it'ii rtlu siirrlu jrrriIe rh(ln an Mi enrtrtltit. I ...! ..,111 i1AO,ta ( atD u'n n.ft.iiuu 1 ., '' ii.f r thn'nml'r' Tnf thn ' uZr book, for the Information of our readers. Times change, change. (2. K. D. Things change. We all Referring te the netable contributions or "Unces" in the Saturdey extra Intklli ciKNOKit, n Southern correspondent writes me thus about the criticism or Cable In "Drllt": " I find much or Interest in reading the depattment or Drift' in Saturday's IntKL Mfir.NCKii. 1 agree with Uncas,' In ad miring the ' wholesomenoss ' and ' artistic finish ' or Mr. Cable's writings. But as great acharm is his dramatic pewer. In ' Dr. Sevier' ene can almost bear the drums beat and see the Confedorato troops as they march elf te the war ; then in the last words, faro fare well and final departure by beat en Lake I'entchartraln ; and in another chapter we have the arrival of the Federal Heet ' when tlie bells or New Orleans struck twenty.' I am by no means sure, however, that Mr. Cable is really conscientious lu his delinea tions or Creele lire. Many who are unpreju diced tell me that he does net faithfully held the mirror up te nature ' In writing of these French Americans. MonsignereCapel says that Mr. Cable has outrageously mis represented the Creele I I expect that he de picts only the outside of their society, as he acknowledged te Judge Oayarre, the histo rian of Louisiana, that he (Mr. Cable) had nover visited even ene prominent Creele family ; and many New Orleans people be be be llove that he has in his books slandered them because of thelr exclusiveuess and flavored his wares te suit the Nerthern market. In the Orandlsslmes especially he soeius te have catered te the Northern taste for the sake of meney. " It is net entirely correct te say that Mr. Cable was driven from New Orleans by the hatred of the Creoles, since the Amerlcau is the predominating influence thore ; aud If he had the respect of his own poeplo in this city he could associate with them, for much of the American soclety there is quite dis tinct from the Creele. " Thore is one characteristic mentioned by Mr. Cable, however, In his Creoles of Louis iana ' which is true of nearly all Southerners; It Is that federal self-completeness which op poses public co-eporatlvomoasuros ; Individ uality has se long been festerod among us that net until recently have we valued the common weal or roallzed the necesslty of combination. Even new you will constantly llnd a lack of ' that community of feeling which begets the study of reciprocal rights and obligations and reveals the individual's advantage In the promotion or the common Interests.' " Kugene Field, a native or Missouri and a naturalized citizen of the world, says erMr. Cable ' that he is cut out en a small plan overy way ; he is a typical Yankee narrowed down ; he may think he is a Southerner, but he is net ; he must have originated away down at the tip end or Cape Ced and grown smaller instead cr larger ever slnce.' " What de you think of him ? Si.vnnAD. KUI1DF.N CIIANOK.S. If the body receives dally n proper amount of nutrition, and expels the wcrn-eut parts, health is the certain conseeuenco; but by a sudden change of weather, the pores of the skin may net perform thelr oillce well, and matters ure retained which should have passed off by that avenue. Alt causes which impede Insensible perspiration are fraught with danger, because matters which should have passed away through the skin nre turned again Inte circulation, llninareth'd Pills will roinevo all Impurities, Irem whatever cause they may come, curing pain, intlanimatten and colds arising from above cause In a few hour. ausz. T II. MARTIN, WHOLKSALH AMD RKTA1L DEALd IN All Kinds of Lumber and Geal. S-Yaiid: Ne. 4M North Water and Prince Street, ubove Lemen, Lancaster. nlHyd OAUMGARDNKRS & JKFKERIES. GOAL DEALERS. Ovnus Ne. 12) North Queen street, and Ne. Kt North Princu BtreeU Yakus : North Prince slreet, near Ueadlng 1)0l,et- . ....., ... am.'15-ttd lOAL. M. V. B. COHO, Ne. S10 NOllTH WATKU ST., Lancaster, Pa., WholesnloandHetall Denier lu LUMBER AND COAL. Connection with the Tolepheno Kichaiige. V..r.l .ml lltlU.li! Nil III NIIUT1I WATKlt SlitKKT fubai-lvd E' AST END YARD. 0.J.SWAER&00. GOAL. - KLNDLINQ WOOD. Oillce: Ne. 3) CKNTKK SOUAKK. llethyard nil orrlee connected with Tulopbeuo Kxchauge. aerl.T-lvilM.tr.lt (IKAIMIKO.XC. TNDKSTRUCTIIU.E GltAININa. NO CUACK1NU, NO PKKL1NQ, NO UL1STKU 1NU. We have a system of graining vkw weed that must. In tbe near future, take the place of the old system en all new work, Its merits being us fellows t Total i abolition et a painted ground work, speed and cleanliness In working II, bcuutyand transparency et finish, smoothness and durability, and tbe capability of receiving ils hluh tinlali as hard weed by the same meth ods. This process Is the nearest approach le natural wixxl that has ret been discovered, call and see samples. UUTlllllK a SON, Bele Agents for Laucaster County. Heuse Putntlnicand Onilnleg Kmiierlnm, corner el Chestnut and Nevln blreeu. Always a iurge stock or Mantles ou land. Telephone connections. uuurwmd , " . '. annuii PHYHintAKH AND imUfKUNfttl 131TLUW JIM'S IRON BITT ASTHEBE8TTONI0, 'Hits ineillMnn. rnmlilnlnir Iren with tram elaliln tonics,, quickly and rnmnbMMC of liVltfKpMIA, ' INIlfellCSTlON, maxaU W.!'..KNKMM. impuuk iii.oen, ciiu.Ti w KKVKIt.nn.l MIMHI A 1.111 A . I Hv rapid nml thorough nlmlltlmwNMMl '";""'. ii raRciicii every pari or tee irwikiQi rli nml nerves, nnd tones and rnvlfttmwftMr. A line Aipctler-llcl tonle known. AU- v win 1'iiin me wnrst en eet liy mevlnir nil nlxiM.ainir ..., .!.. ., I tig the reed, llclclihiit, Ileal In the iiitanuitm.ete. j,' inneniy iron nifincine Hint will net l! wr iiuuni inn lenwi. It Is Invnllialllu for lllmnara rarnlir In and te nil lml-Hnnn Whn Infill ttpilnntnlr !!. Y An inilalllng remedy lordlwursef the Urtt and Kldneys. .,- Persons mirrertnir from thn nrfrata uf work, nervous troubles, lnt of nppetlta, or , 31 uimy, vixpnrience iiuick reuci unit renewML enery by Its one. .-A It does net rausn Headache or prednee CW . stlnatlen-OTIIKKIrnninndlclnesdn. A, It Is the only nruparnlten or Iren Hint eaaM nolnlnileuserfects. I'hyatPlnna nnd drnMltuV, .. recommend It ns the bent. TryH. -',' inn genuiae nas Trnde Marie anu crensea twt ,ssi linen en wnipner. Taku no ether. MadOenly.iV by llltOWNiJllK.MlUAI. CO., linltlmere. Met. c,f- (l) mU-lydAw 'ay. ir.Hiiuir.nui i-i-.uiuitivij. --t "IT SATED MY LIFE" Ia n mm m mi nrnrnnfllnn. often hnftrd fram E tbote who have reHllzc1, by persenal ue,tbe f&m Cherry l'ecteral, believing as I de that, but for 'S;,.?I un iivt., i. buuuiu iuhk allien nnvu uitiu iium mug troubles. K. Uragden, ralaatlne, Ter. , About six months age I had a severa homor hemor homer rlingo of tlie lungn, brought en by a dUtresslas Ceugli, which deprived meet slce? and rest. .J, had used various cough balsams nnd expSB rnnts without obtaining l-eller. A Irlind ad vised me te try m, Ayer's Cherry Pt&teral. I did se, nnd am happy te say thst It helped me ni nnce. uy cenunueu no iuis invuicine .-; cured mv cemrn. nnd I nm satlsllcd. saved mr ral t n .: a ii u uBAr4 awm T niBall " fiin'J iiiu. Jim, a. ivUllilll n evluiiu aticuti wemeiij I'fe'i f linnn n..ni I i.Ia 1tAw tlnnlnml fVtl A ik JtV.a t'fter nnrl alniiutnlii vctir, und sincerely believe 1 should havn bB f in my crave, had ft net been ter tbIamoUlclneJM :" -- --- - --.. -. --- -- - --- - ., ud cureu uie ei 1UDK9, rer which I baa almost uesnairea ei wer- ir rnrwhiih T hail nlninat. i1Ann analng a remedy. D. A. McMuUen, Wlntlfer, I'mvriirn nf OntjiHn. AVer's Cherrv l'ectnnil saved mv life.. Twe year, age I toot a very severe cold, which Mt;. It hn niirpil inn At n. ilanmnrnn nfTitctlnn Of th yk".! j --.. .-.-., ...- . , .. . - -;y-,R-,H neu en my innga. i continued pnysicians iiiibw. took the remedies they prescrlliud, but fulled te : W 1'uu.iii leimi ii n. ii & iiutiii lining .jrm n .mw.. j l'ccteml. Twe bottles nf this medlotne com pletely restored my health. Lizzie M. Allen, West Lancaster, Ohie. Ayer's Oherry Pectoral. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer A Ce., Lewell,' Muss. Sold by all druggist. Price, II t six betf Ues.rV". apr-2.3,4,6,0,7,8 HOPPIiASTKRS Ucmove pains andjereness quickly. Com pounded from fresh Heps llurgiindy Pitch and Canada ltalsam, they are. ns thousands of people testify, thn best and strongest porous plaster ever made. Always seethes and strengthens weak and tired parts, ltackache, Sciatica, Crick, Kidney Diseases, Kheumatlsm, sharp Pains Sore Chest, Sldonche and all pains, local or deep-seated, are speedily curea. A insiwiu g. uemensiram ineir wenn. nom uy. V""5B'""' 2SC.5 for tl.OU. HOI' 1'iiASTKIl. tJlill'Agi "J """ ' ' ' '& 33 "KTO DOUBT ABOUT IT. .'iffi i The strenci'st and best nei-st and bent noureus wsiiinrMBB known, the HOP PLAUTKIt Is blgll jr y-f fi cure et rains ant a??:a find tbe strengthening et weak pars. Pre- ' irem ireauingreaicms. uurennuy rncn, -, & luiisam anu me cmire metiiciu quiuiuv , --, is. iiveu nre ireuuieu wun local eraten- ' n,: anlSl nnln a.i.-un. wren.hna ltnf.ahn M9if.ll. T mit&n. Illllntiiu UnA f.h..-, nf anpAn abb nt an,r il nattVre, apply one or theso plasters and note Its magic efrect. All drug stores, 'le,, 5 for $1.00. HOPPLA9TKKCO., llosten, Mass. (14) A GREAT SUCCF.SS. . YOU WILL SAY 80. What la the use et snft'ertng with Uacksehe, Sciatica, ltbcitmatlsm, Hldeachu, Crick, Kidney Troubles, Bere Chest, or soreness In any part, when a HOP PLASTKIt will Rive Instant relief. Apply one directly ever scat etpuln and note Its seething, Rtlmulatlng nnd strengthening elTtct. Virtues et Heps, Canada lialsnm and Itnrgundy Pitch combined. Hosts of peeple use andree andree emmend them. Sold everywliore. KSc., A for $1.00. Mailed for price. HOP PLASTKIt COM. PANY, llosten, Mass. (IS) pURK GUARANTEED. RUPTURE. Cure guaranteed by I) It. J. It. MAYKR. Kasoateiico; no operation or delay from busi ness ; tested by hundredsnf euros. Main once, 831 AHCI1 ST., PHI LA. Send rer Circular. m-lvdftw A FTKR AliliOTHERHFAIL, CONSULT DR. J-OBB, 329 NOKTH riKTKBNTH BTKKKT. (Uotew Cat- lewhlll street, Philadelphia.) YKAKS' KXl'KUIKNCK. Gnaranteedtecnre the atlllcled and unfortunate with Purely Voge Vege tablo Medicines. Heek en special diseases free QfMni ferlt- Advlcefrua and strict! v cenfiden tial. Oft! co hours, II a. in. te '2 p. in., 7 p. in. te 10 Treatment by Mali. ml. U-IJl i-akw DR. DAlEX, OrPlCKS AND DUUO STOUK, ' l.sueN.sth St., Phllad'a., '. Keelstered Physician and Uradtmte JofTersen CeUeKO, guarantees te cure all llloed. Skin and Nervous Diseases; also Private Diseases of either sei, with purely vogetableremodlos. .... Olt. UALSKN'S llOI.OEN 1'KUIenlC PILLS- u -.-.-. i...i.i Ami irtriiHiiial M linr Ma nil teTclrcu'lar.' "" ifil i Bill ST .V PblladeTlVhlaV- J Treatment by Mall. ra-iyn aMS """.a rxVTAHRH-IIAY-FEVER. "Sg ELY'S CREAM BALM IS WORTH $1,000 TO AXY MAN, WOMAN OR eniT.Dt surrKitiNU riteM CATARRH. A. E. NKWMAN, Urallne, Mich. A particle Is applied te each nostril and U nuniiuihin te use. Prlce BO cuuta by mall or .at drURglats. Send for circular. KLY UUOT11KHB, lirilgcisu, uwege, n.i. luly-illyeedAlvw MACniNMMT. TtTACUINERY.etO. STEAM HEATING'! Latest aud Most Improved EN6INES-Tr(ioe, Portable or SUUtwy';,-J New or seeena-uana i BOILERS, WATER TANKS, SEPARATORS -J Maebihb or KsTAim Weu inch utimcu4 kunt in UnrhlnaShens. J OAU. 0 OB ADtrtBBft, Ezra F. Landis, works aari north cherry I.AHOASTII. PA. BTIUWiy "g MUT1VMM. ri RANI) DISWiAY OF NECKTIES. . .i ? ....: r. ' oew -STTMlll . .. niuar.q VATH VWDBKWWUL.. w- - (inre M(W AJIISfc r.. nm'UTKTYLIM a wu&ism&m, TiUKAfBHT AND BPMT HCABIiVC DNDttl AT ERIJ naifwaniuM. -M li . . . JU V'AIV W; WS -fVUS Iti sa Stl - "?,. J- ft. t - i. ., vH . vwM's ., w
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers