Miscellaneous News. Cornering Me Market* a Conspiracy. ALBANY, 3SL T, M tf i. -The house this morning psw* 3 Mr. Finn's bill defining ooMph*#- The bill provides substantially that two or more persons, efWlt>*hfei corporations, or indiyidMUa, directly or in directly to Withhold from the public martniocoriUwßy qbifinels of trade in the state*for any any staple artiakn of merchandise, food, etc., on ly and shall agree m the market only a limited 01 sp Wific quantity within a certain" time, they aball be guilty of conspiracy. Ex-Rev. Morrlaou Get* Seven Years For Horse-Thieving—His Down fall Caused by Drink. BALTIMORE, Md.. May 7.—Rev A. M. Morrison stole a horse and buggy in this city April 5 and a few days ago was arrested in Brockton, Mnss. He was returned to Baltimore Wednesday In charge of a detective and was put on trial* yesterday. Conviction followed Mid he was sentenced to seven years in the penitentiary with hard labor. Mor rison was formerly a Methodist minis ter, and was once well known in New England. Liquor was the cause of his downfall, his last pulpit haviug been in Williamsburg, Ky. Last year lie auf fered imprisonment for forgery. He swindled several religious concerns in New York City last month and came to Baltimore to escape arrest. Here he got hard up and proceeded to raise monsr kyAj*i|)ga team aud making a ; A Justice of the Peace Unites the Wit nesses Instead of the Lovers. BETHLKITRM, Pa., May 4. —The Hun garians employed at the Bethlehem i -1011 l|iiguuge fre- trouble, and many seri ous ndpjlpjf are ooide by them as well as those with whom they transact busi ness. Their latest error was rather a musing. A couple of that nationality desiring to be married, called ou a jus tice of the peace, and took along a Hungarian couple to act as witnesses. The strange names confused the well meaning justice, and instead of mai rying the OrtMsentioued couple be u nited the WIDtW "for bitter or for worse." Sometime afterwatds, news of bis mistake having reached him, he sent word to both the couples to come before him again. When they appeared be divorced the coople he had already married, and then joined the right couple. He then wound up the appli cation "of ceremonies by sending in a bill for two marriAges and one divorce. Armed Tramps. ST. Loins, May 7.— For some time past the city of East St. Louis has been infested with a lot of thieves and idle, worthless fellows, who spent most of their time peddlmgsmall articles, which the police were satisfied were stolen. The tramps bad a camp in the outskirts of the city, vnd yesterday Chief of Pol ice Walsh ordered it to be broken up and the tramps driven out of town. Lieutenant Irwin with fifteen officers went to the camp far the afternoon and ordered the tramps to disperse and leave the city. They paid no attention to the orders, and the police then ad vanced to arrest them, OtiDg two or three shots in the air to intimidate them. To the great surprise of the police the tramps returned the fire, but luckily without effect. The police then charged the camp in force, firing as they advanced, and the tramps fied in all directions, some of them plunging iDto a slough near by and swimming for tbeit lives. All of them were final ly got outside of the city limits and joined another camp where the consoli dated forces defied the police. The lat ter having no authority outside the city made no further efforts to arrest the fugitives left a strong guard on the spot to prevent them re-entering the city. On going over the field again the police found one of the tramps groan ing on the ground with a pistol ;ball in his spine. Hq was taken to the county hospital jmfr* Will probably die. The sheriff of the county had been notified of the congregation of armed tramps in his territory, but it is not known what action be will take. Arizona Shaken Up. TUSON, May 4.— An earthquake oc curred st 2.12 yesterday afternoon. No person was Injured. Considerable damage was done to buildings, goods were thrown from shelves of stores and maDy bouses were more or less cracked. The shock was acorn pan ied by a rambling sound. Many clocks were stopped and yp entire population of the city took to the streets terror stricken. The Court House cupola swayed like the mast of a ship iu a turbulent sea and the buildiug itself seemed as though it were toppling over. When the shock struck Santa Cata lina Mountain great slicasof the moun tain were torn from itssideand thrown to its base. Vasfc clouds of dust arose aboye the efcfc, 7,000 feet above the sea three different points from three to four miles apart. It was be lieved for some time that a volcano had burajb Qut ou the crest of the . mountain. One towering peak, known as the Castle," a prominent land mark frfip Tuscon, has entirely disap peared,. The extent of the damage cannot be told for several days. This was ttfe first*earthquake ev<r experi enced in Tuscon. The public school building rocked to and fro like a cradle, and some of jtbe plastering fell creating the utmost,consternation among the scholars. The school was at once dis missed for fear of a repetition of the shock. Accordiug to a gentleman who timed it the shock lasted just four minQtfS. Cue or two slight vibra tions have since been felt. Shortly af ter the earthquake it volcano broke out at a point twenty-two miles south of this place in tho Total Wreck Moun tains, Tha sky was brightly illumina ted. Washington'* Knynl GneM • WASHINGTON, May 4. Queen Ka iolana. Princess Lilliuakihtnia, and the members of their suite called at the White House at noon,to day and paid their respects to President and Mrs. Cleveland. The queen's party was ac companied by Mr. Carter tho Hawaiian minister; Mrs. Cirler, Mr. A- S. Brown, of the state department; Cap tain Taylor, of the army, and Lieuten ant Uodgers, of the navy. They were tnet at the main entrance by Secretary B.iyanl and Assistant Secretary Adee and escorted to the blue parlor, where President and Mrs. Cleveland awaited them. The room had been decorated for the occasion with palms, ferns and fljwers, and the joining parlors were similarly adorned. Tho queen was presented to the President and Mrs. Cleveland Secretary Bayard, and the other metubeis of the party we:e presented by the Hawaiian minister. Thereieptior was rather informal in character. No speeches were made, and the visit, which lasted about fif teen minutes, was devoted to general conversation The queen was elabor ately attired in a black satin dress, the entire front of which was thickly em broidered In gold. The prinetsi who is inraouruing, was dressed in plain black. The gentlemen of the party wore rich couit costumes, of which gold lace formed a prominent feature. The rep aentatives of the army and navy wo re full dress uniform. The rest wore plain civillian dress. After the recep tion the queen and party returned to their hotel, and devoted tlie afternoon to receiving official calleis. WHITE HOUSE MAIL. Letters from All Sorts of Applicants for Pension or Place—Epistles of the Children. The President's mail,says a Washing ton correspondent of the New York IJcraltl, contains an average of from 100 to 150 letters a day from persons whose claims for pension are pending before the department. These people address the Chief Executive in the'be- Hef, probably, that the Pension Office is next door to the White House and that theirs is tiie only letter he may have received iu a week. About one-half of these letters ate sent to Mrs. Cleveland. The writers iu such cases are usually the wives or daughters of the petitioners. Some of them bestow upon Mrs. Cleveland such titles as "Her Majesty," "Empress" aud other appellations of royalty. There are few of the letters that do not contain some touches of iiuraau nature. They are evidently written in the sin cere belief that Mis. Cleveland will as sist them if her sympathies can be a roused. With this object in view a great mass of detail is set forth iu the communication, which, together with the obscure chirography and bad spell ing, make its understandiug a matter of no incousideruble lime aud labor. It may be said in tkisconnectioii ttmt neither the President nor Mrs. Cleve land is even aware of the existence of these letters. They are opened by an unromantic and unsentimental clerk at the Executive Mansion, from whose bands they fall iuto the waste basket and are neyer heard of again. The women who address Mrs. Cleve land furnish her with suggestions as to the better method of presenting their claim to tne President. One of the plans which a perusal of the letters snow that all women hold in common is for her to wait until Mr. Cleveland has had his supper and then, when lie is en joying a quiet smoke in the parlor bring the matter to his attention. Many of them tell her that this is the hour of the day when a man i# most amenable to argument and that they (the writers) prefer this as the safest time for pre senting their own requests. The applicants for pensions who write to the President are. as lias been said, old soldiers, who write in a more vigorous style than their helpmates and their language is sometimes of so ro bust a nature .that it frequently pro vokes a smile. For example, an Illinois man who addresses the President iu a letter, says : 4 The pension officials tell me to get corroborative evidence from "some ot my comrades. I want to say to you that it is a of a hard matter to get evidence from men who go into an ac tion and never come out again," and then he continues by saying that his company went into the Wilderness a hundred strong, and at the end of the seven days' fight there were but nine of the number who were left to tell the tale. Sometimes the letters are written by children, who begin in this fashion : "Dear Mrs. President I am a little girl only ten years of age. My papa does not know I am writing this letter. If he did he would not permit it." Then follows a pathetic tale of want and misery .touching enougli in its sim ple style of treatment, but rendered doubtly so by the fact of the writer's youth and innocence. Several months ago one of these touching missives chanced to reacli tiie President's eye. Its simple pleading touched a sympathetic cord in the Pres ident's heart. The little miss begged the retention of ber father on the Board of Medical Examiners in a New Eng land town in which their home was lo cated. She said he was very old and dying of an incurable disease. The jo --sition paid him a salary of about SI 200 a year, and in view of the fact that he could no longer practice his profession the foregoing sum was their only source of income. The latter concluded na ivelj in these words : 44 Papa must not kuow about this. It must be a secret between you and me. If you decide to keep him mark an X on the back of the enclosed postal card and then I will know that you are go ' ing to grant my wish." The President sent the letter and en closure to Commissioner of Pensions Black, with the endorsement : "If there are no charges against the examiner in question you will oblige me by retaining him iu his present po sition." General Black investigated the mat ter, and found that the examiner was not an old man, but, on the contrary, a luety young fellow scarcely thirty years of age, and that so far from having "a little girl only ten years of age," be was not even married. The telegraph after this couldn't car ry his dismissal quick enough to him, i and since that time letters from little girls who write without their papa's | knowledge are incontinently destroyed. A CONFROKRATF. CAPTIVK'S AD VENTURE IN PRISON. Five Thousand I'rUouor* Trying to Keep Warm—Digging a Tunnel to Escape—Why the l'luu Failed. I made my entry into CampDouglass, near Chicago, the 3rd day of January, 1863, says "Ex-Itobel" in the Detroit Free Press, and I may bo pardoned for the remark that it was a cold day for uio in more senses than one. Two weeks previous to my debut in Chicago society I was in Arkansas, uniformed in tho Imp-hazard fashion of the Con federates of that period, and when I came to bo railroaded up North and found tho thermometer down to nine degrees below zero, I could hardly hold my teeth in my head. There were about 5,000 prisoners in the stockade, which was simply a board fence twelve feet high, and they were provided with rough shanties and stoves. A North ern man would have kept comfortably warm in the quarters, but it was hard work for the prisoners to keep lingers and toes away from Jack Frost. In deed, there were many cases of actual suffering, though the Federal Govern ment made the best arrangements pos sible. The trouble was at the camp instead of at Washington. After a certain hour of tho evening all lights must be out and everybody in bed. and when the stoves grow cold the frost and wind drove into the shanties at a huu dred points. There were only six of us in the shan ty to which I was assigned, while some held eight, ten and twelve. Wo were within seven feet of the fence, and as we were all men from one regiment,and all captured at the same time, we felt that we could trust each other. The idea of an escape was broached in Feb ruary, but it was the lath of April when tho tirst Veal move was made. The only show was to tunnel under the fence and come out by night. 1 here was a guard stationed on elevated plat forms about the enclosure by day, and at night a chain of sentinels walked regular beats outside the fence. We calculated on a tunnel not less than thirty feet long, and it was begun by taking up some of tho flooring in the back end of our shanty. Visits of in spection were held twice pel week, but there was not a day in which some otli cial was not liable to come poking n round. The floor of our shanty rested on sleepers clear of the ground. We could therefore stow away a great deal of the dirt under the floor. We worked only at night, and that in reliefs of two. We first went down four feet, and then startid off on a straight line for the fence beyond. We were almost at the fence before we had to carry any of the dirt out doors. We managed to scatter a quantity around our house without exciting suspicion, and the rest had to be accumulated during the night and carried out in our pockets. It was slow work when we reached that point, and on two or three different occasions we came very near being exjuised by offi cials dropping in on us. There were several rainy days about the time we were under the fence, and for a week our tunnel was full of water. When that soaked away we wont to work again, and ou the morning of tho 14th of May the last man to crawfish out of the hole reported that our tunnel was well beyond the sentinel's beat and ready for the breaking of the crust. If we had had the making of the weather, we could not have planned for a better night. It was dark and misty, with every chance in our favor. During the afternoon we drew lots to see who should go first, and it fell to inc. We had nothing to pack up, and the whole six of us had only eighty cents in mon ey between us. It was planned that we should separate as soon as clear of the hole, and each was to take care of himself as best be could. That was a long afternoon, I can tell you, and eyen when it wore away and night came we had to wait many hours yet. Some were lor going at 11 and others at 1 o'- clock, but we finally moved at 11:15. We fastened the door of the shanty and crept into the tunnel one after the oth er, and I was soon at the far end of it and digging upward. I was hard at tins work when I felt the ground break through behind me, someone uttered a yell, and then came the cry : "Corporal of the Guard—Post No. 13 1" This was repeated several time?, and pretty soon the corporal and a couple of guards from tho relief arrived. The sentinel on the beat, who was a big, heayy man,had broken through into our tunnel, and in the fall had broken his leg. While 1 was held prisoner in the hole, the others crawled back, knowing that the jig was up. It did not take the corjioral many minutes to discover tiie true state of affairs, and then I was Hauled out by the neck and made the butt of ridicule. When escorted back to the shanty, the five men were found fast "asleep," but were turned out and sent to the guard-house to keep me com pany. We were reduced to half rations for thirty days, but no further punisli rneut was meted out to us. "WHAT'S the difference between a piano and a gun, Charley ?" a9ked a young wife of her non-inusical hns band. "A gun kilU thequickest, that's all" was the staccato response. "Will you trust me for a cent's worth of gum ?" asked the small boy, the top of whose head was on a level with the counter. "Why, yes, I'll trust you. You look like an honest boy." "Oh, yes, I'm honest, but you'd bet ter giye me the cent and let me buy some candy next door. I prefer candy to gum." Rheumatism and Neuralgia enred iu 2 Days. The Indlnna Chemical Co. have discovered a compound which acts with truly marvelous rapidltv in the cure of Rheumatism and Neural gia. We guarantee it to cure any and ev ery cases of ucute Inflammatory Rheumatism and Neuralgia iu 2 lIAY3, and to give Imme diate relief in chronic cases and eflect a speedy cure. On receipt of 30 cents, In two cent stamps, we will send to any address the prescription for tills wonderful compound, which can be tilled by your home druggists at smull cost. We take tills means of giving our discovery to the public instead of putting it out as a patent medicine, it being much less expensive. We will gladly refund money If satisfaction is not I given. THE INDIANA CHEMICAL CO., I 4-ly Crawfordsville, Ind. \ VIVIO PM TI'HK OP OAPITAfi IM'XISIOIKNT IN SPAIN. The I'rlsi r'* Iron Collar of l>ratli. A Madrid letter to tho Purls Figaro describes the gurroting of Alvarez Oliva for tho murder of Juan Xitnenes, u no tary. Says the writer : The foreigner who this morning saw the Fnorto del Sor the first time would have thought Madrid hud gone wild with noisv mer riment—just us upon the occasion of some royal ceremony at the ancient church of Atitoolm, or of some great bull tight exhibition under the manage ment of Cartlio Mnizantlnl. I tiding superb Andalusian horses with small heads and finely arched necks—horses that seemed to have step ped out of some canvas by Velasquez— the elegaut young men of tho city pass ed by at a canter, all delicately gloyed and wearing t tuberoses at their button holes, as if they were going to tho Ke tiro to wait for the advent of tho open carriago of some bel'e. It was 9 o'clock in the morning when I left my house. Although the heat was already overwhelming, I resolved to go on foot from tho corner of tho ('alio ed Alcala to the placo of execu tion. The nearer i approached the square the more compact became the crowd. To proceed at all soon became impossible. Tho crowding and .push, ing, however, only Increased the merri ment of the mischievous girls of Mad rid. Suddenly the crowd halts and a great silenco falls. A close carriage, with blinds down, escorted by a picket of civil guards, slowly passes through the press. We can follow it without hurry ing ourselves. In a little while tho place of execu tion appears before me, thronged with a multitude swaying like a tide, and up from the sea of heads emerges tho white mast of tho scaffold. I approach. Lying upon a stool, covered with a snow white cloth, is the garrote itself— shimmering like a crown of steel. In a little while the executioner will attach it to a post against which the criminal is to be fastened. The final prepara tions consumed considerable time, so that I was well aide to make a leisure'y examination of the sinister locality whither curiosity had drawn me for the purpose of studying the physiognomy of the great pushing or fquetzing crowd. As always, and in all places, the women were tht most numerous. The pl.izi where tho execution took place is on very high ground, and the pure air one breathes there must in crease the criminal's regret for life at the moment when his respiration is a bout to be cut short forever. The hous es surrounding it, mostly of humble aspect, are widely interspaced, Ue tween them a stranger who loves class ic landscapes can obtain a good view of the sunburned and yellow plains of Nueva Cast ilia and the bluish moun tains of Guadamara in the hoiizon. T!ie deploy of military forces about ihe scaffold was considerable. I count ed no less than six detachments of diff erent corps. There were lancers with Prussian shaped helmets of brass, gen darmes in black with yellow straps and belts and white trimmings, blue uni formed light cavalry, infantry, provin cial guards with red caps. The mar tial department of men, nearly all young, strong and handsome, impress ed me very much. Now there is a great movement a round the scaffold. The soldiers close their ranks and three men approach the scaffold. One of thein ascends it. It is the executioner. lie is thin, low sized and looks about forty years old. While waiting for his vieti.n lie keeps walking nervously to and fio with his hands behind his back and his head down. From time to time he stops and looks at the orgolla (the "garrote") with a suspicious expression of counte nance. Perhaps he is afraid of the power of resistance possessed by the cervical wrtebia; of Alvarez, and is therefore afraid of losing his bounty. Noisy as it was a little while ago, the crowd now suddenly becomes silent. Some women are turning pale ; and one can feel that a nervous excitement weighs upon the {crowd. A low rum bling is heard. It is the black carriage that tiears the condemned man. It stops at the foot of the scaffold ,* and the criminal is soon painfully climbing the twelve high steps of the dismal scaffold, leaning on the arm of a priest. Another priest precedes him, lifting very high an immense crucifix, towuid which the condemned man strives to turn his terror-stricken face. Alvarez Oliva is not yet twenty-five years old ; and it was believed that the savage en ergy he had displayed in committing his ci irne, together with his vigorous youth, would give him strength to face death. But nothing of the kind is now shown bv him ; and really it was too much to expect of a man who knew his fate forty-eiglit hours ago. and who, while listening to the funeral chants in the prison chapel, must have beheld all kinds of hideous visions passing be fore him. As I stood on an elevation overlook ing the scaffold, I was able to observe all the details of the last scene of the tragedy. The condemned man mechan ically yielded himself up to the execu tioner. The latter sat him down at the foot of the post, with his back to it.and then tied his hands and feet hard and fast. lie did all this without hurrying himself 111 the least, and with all that dignified indifference which character izes the Spanish functionary in the dis charge of his duty. If the preparations had lasted even a few seconds longer I believe I should have lost all my power of self-control. 1 could hear my heart thumping in my breast, and every mo ment or two something like a veil came before my eyes. You could not hear even a whisper in the crowd. While one of the priests pressed a crucifix to the colorless lips of the sufferer, another was murmuring words of consolation and hope Into his ear. But the wretched man was not listening. His expressionless face had a waxen pal'or, and his eyes, as they wandered over the ocean of faces before hira, already seemed dim with the dim ness of death. lie started considerably when the ex ecutioner placed the iron collar about Ins nock. and I observed Ins BOttth contract. Then, however, a white cov ering thrown over liis features hid them from furtlter observation. The execu tioner then gave two or tlirio turns of the screws connected with the instru ment of death. The bones of the neck cracked, a long tremble ran through tha whole body and the arms twisted outward. Alvarez was dead. When ll*br wu nick, wo Rve her ("Miorlx, When the a Child, alio criod for CMtori*, When alio bocaine Miaa. alio riling l" Caaturia, Whoa alio had CUUdrou, aho gave lliout Caaioria, —Fiist class job work done at the JOUUNAL oliice. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. TMK IIKHT HALVE hi the world for Cula, Bruise*, Son's, Ulcers, sail Itheiim, Fever Soros, Tetter. ('lmplied 11111 H Is. <Mi ill >lm Ins. Corns, and all Skin Krujitlons, and positively cures Files, or no pay required. It Is liiiaraulMd to give perfect siit- Isfaetlon, or money refunded. Frlce A r > cents per I>ox. For sale bv J. F.lsenliutli. STOVES STOVES [New Advertisement] Jacob JJisenhuth wishes to inform the public that, hae• ing purchased the machines and tools, together with shx-h of Stoves, Tin and Ilolloware, formerly the projierty of I). I. llrown, and having the services of that gentleman who is a practical mechanic, is now prepared to fiWjnll orders in this line. House & Ham Spouting A SPECIALTY "FC* and satisfaction guaranteed. Just received a fine assortment of the best makes of STOVES, Ranges, HEATERS, (fee., &c., &c. Any person in want of a stove for cool ing, bak ing or beating purjstses will find it to their interest to call at the shop or sale room, under IK I, Proton's residence, Main St, MILLTIEIM. PA where Mr. Ilrown mag be found at all times to attend to the wants of jta trims CJTItKM KMHKIt THAT KISKNIIUTII'S STOVES .MUST HE SEEN TO HE KIOHTLY AITUECIATKD Keystone Hotel, Sclinsgrove, ----- Penna. This Hotel has U'tui remodeled and refurnished, and flie Haveling I'ublic will find if first-class in every respect. -OF —-A -JOF l.iitesf improved Wafer Close/ and Wash lloom on liisf fi>or. IIKADgUAUTEIIS Foil STOCK DKALKUS. Terms lteaaoimlilc. tluoil Livery attached PATENTS Obtained, and all t'A 7'K.V T Jit tended to I'HOStI'TLY aud fur MOVKfiA TK FKKS. Our office Is opiKis.te the IT. S. Patent Office, and we can obtain Patents in less time tban those remote from \V ASH I XdTOS. Send MOVF.I. OH V/tA I VISU. We advise as to patciitatiiUts live of charge; and we make XO CItA It OK V.XI.KSS PA TKXT IS NK CUitfil). We refer here to HIE Postmaster, the Snpt. of Money Order IMv.. and to the official* of tlie I". S. Patent office. For circular, advice, terms and references to actual clients In your own State or county, write to C. A. NXOW A CO.. Opposite Patent Office. Washington, D. C, $1 13 WEEKS. The POLICE UAZ ETTE will T>e malled.se rurrly wrapped, to any address In the United States for three months on receipt of GNU DOLLAR. Liberal discount allowed to postmasters, a gents and clubs. Sample copies mailed free. Address all orders to RICHARD K. FOX, FHANKMS SYI AltK. N. Y. 8100 A WEEK- I-adics OR gentlemen desiring pleasant profit able einplox ment write at once. WO want you to handle an article of domestic use that REOO MKNUS ITBKLF to everyone at sight. STAPLE AS FLOUR. Sells like hot cakes. Profits 300 per cent. Families wishing to riucrriCK ECONO MY should for their own benefit write for par ticulars. Used every day THO year round in every household. Price within reach of all. Circulars free. Agents receive SAMPLE KKKK Address IIOMKNTK Ml' U CO.. M ARIOS, OHIO. WORKING CLASSES ATTESTIOK! We are now prepared to furnish all classes with employment at home, the whole of the time, OR for their spare moments. BUSIIH-SS new, light and profitable. Persons of either sex easily earn from 80 cents to F>.oo per even ing. and a proportional sum by devoting all their time to the business. Boys and girls earn nearly as much as men. That all who see this may send their address, and test the busi ness. wi make this offer. To sueli us are not well satisfied we will send one dollar to pay for the trouble of writing. Full particulars and outfit free. Address GECKO* STINSON A CO., Portland, Maine. mm FT UI PA ifto lie made. Cut tills out Ml 11 Mb Valid return to us, and we IFL USI R I will send you free, some ■ ™ ■ thing of great value and importance to you. that will start you in busi ness which will bring you In more money right away than anything else In this world. Any onu can do the 'work and live at homo, hither sex tallages. Something new. that Just coins money for all workers. WE will start you ; cap ital not needed. L hls Is one of the genuine, lin porta NT chances of a lifetime. Those who are ambitious and enterprising will not delay. Grand outfit free. Address TUUE St CO.. Augus ta. Maine. Iff fa ■ |can live at home, and make more VILLI money at work for us, than at any- I Mil thing else In this world. Capital " W W |,T needed ; you arc started free. Both boxes ; all ages. Any one can do the work. Costly outfit and terms free. Better not delay. Co stsvoil nothing to send us your address and find out; IT you are wise you will do so atouce. 11. IlAUjrr* Co., Portland, Maine. F. A. NORTH & CO. EVEHVTIIING IN THE MUSICAL LINK. Sheet Music. Music Books. AH the foreign and American Editions. Pianos and Organs, by the best known makers, sold on liberal terms. Catalogues sent on application. Mention this paper. MfUMBHMHfsqCii rn guaranteed | 911 fiVJI I• J iy Dr. J. 11. May- I |\*l ■ I II "lir. BJI Arch Bt. Pa. Ease at once. No operation or business delay. Thousands of cures. At Keystone House, Hea ding, Pa.. 2d Saturday of euch month. Send for circulars. Advice free. 5-ly PAY WHEH CXJRED Cojindenco in lionuaty of lnvalida. Wo trout ALL DIM euseM, either Sx, liowruverouutted iintl receive |>ny after cure is effected. L>-cril>O case fully, und uend Htumu for instruction*. DK. HAKEU. BOX lot, Buffalo. N. x. SENSE LIFTANI) FORCE PUMP Makes a complete Fire Department for any Country Home out of a common wood pump, at a very small cost. WorlU Flfly Time* It* l out If you need It to put out fire, and ex tremely handy for lots of other thlnas. Ht'sidy for action In Oiie-el*lil* of n Minute. Energetic business men who will Rive it prop er uttrillion are wanted to handle this pump in every town In Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland. Delaware, v'irttinla and North Caro lina, and will l>c accorded control of suitable territory not already occupied. CHAS. G. BLATCHLEY, MANUFACTURER or all >IIM andflty lea ol Wood Pump* Office: 9.1 N. F..CITY HAL L SQUARE. Opposite Broad St. Station. P tt.lt.. 17-131 PHILADELPHIA, I* A HARWOOD'S CHAIR SEATS •go £ HHBSHHH S WANTED IN EVERY FAMILY To Replace Broken Cane. RE-SEAT YOUR CHAIRS. Anybody ram apply jj&\< So Mechanic needed. yW mold BY ny Fuitiire & Hardware TRADES. lu buying new Chairs, ask tor tboao witb HABWOOD'S Red Leather Finlah Scats. They never wear out. THE CELEBRATED Reading firgan, OVER 10.000 IN CONSTANT USE. Buy Direct from the Manufacturer. Wliolc.K.lo Manafaclnrins Pr'ce. from —sll it 51. — ELEGANT DESIGNS. LARGE SOLID WALNUT CAGES FINELY FINISHED. BEST SEASONED MATERIALS USED. VOICED TO PERFECTION, TONE IS UNSURPASSED. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. EVERY ORGAN WARRANTED FOR FIVE YEARS. SK.XD FOR CJRCCLAKS. Addrttt READING ORGAN CO., P. J. KANTNEB, Manager, BE YOUR OWN DOCTOR. THE GRANDEST Remedy of the Age. - CUSH MAN'S MEHTHOL INHALER, AfTortla quick relief of Neuralgia, Ileaclacho, Hay Fever, Catarrh, Asthma, ANC BY Col<T!,<U£B VZZ EFriCTS A C7SX. jyStli.fMtion cnrnt—<l or money refunded. Six mi OmtrnaL -nl lur 6l cvnli^ II your druggist h m not Die Inhaler In tock. .end fi3 -enta in Ktani|>. .ml the In'.iah-rwill he forwarded by ■i: iil, paid, and If, at thee\piratii'D ot five dir. Ir< nn It a receipt you sronnt antinfii'd n'.lh it. effm-la, .u tiny relitrn it, ond if received iu ffood condition, your money will ho refunded. Circular and toatiuiouiaU moiled free on application u H. D, CUSHMAN, Three Rivers, Mich. MARSHES CYLINDKIT BED = FOOT LATH El= An J-* This is a aev f* Lathe, and on ; irTP n t^plaa.having 3 "••■aima .. .1 Cylidicr Bed. >' -3fCN. Lu ° which is much E J/fctiß -a - x V'-'M u moreciapleand < f alUa ||| o caresleat than •2 Jflw \ | 3l>asitUcbutl ° aISSi NJ A o for Circular ami ' Awl „ ifsJA 4 3- Ctroll - Satritj. 2 IjrjL AjU 3 and for Bficlet r If* i, ui,- " Poaliiag, New, W tsrel. inl TM BEST iare&tei. Price 530.00 and upwards. Manufactured and sold by the Battle Creek Machinery Co., CArf if c ?,V IR * r.|>< r i kept oc lilt* at the office ot ADVERTISING J \GENTS TIMES BUILDING PHILADELPHIA. -QTIUATFS FerIFWRMITX iBVFITISHC CDCC CO I IffiA ILO a t Lowest Cash Rates mtC d£l?r..r AYER & SON'S MANUAL XX pes M nko over 100 per AGENTSe®'# . er. . Durut)]e, perfect in operation, and or dqmtwtlo ptility. Write for circular. FAMILY COFFEE ROASTER CO.. BT. LOUIS. MO. GREAT BARGAINS -IN rr.rrrr jaouujoaauauaiJiiuuwffEßMißmMiJU jEUkiyauauq EOPTJE.ITI TTJBEi —■nnnßfiniwirM m *M m -AT -W. T. MAUCK'S FURNITURE STORE, WE ARE OFFERING GREAT BARGAINS IN Chamber Suit*, Dining Room A Kitchen Furniture, Chairs, Lounges, Patent Rockers, Bibles, Stands. Cratlles, Hook Cases, Bureaus, Rattan and Reed Chairs of all sti/les, Bedsteads, Frames, Mattresses of the finest curled hair to the cheapest straw. All kinds of SPRINGS. (UrNOT UNDERSOLD 11 Y'ANY STORE IN THE COUN'i F. GIVE US A CALL. W. T. Mauck. G| PHE LIGHT RUNNING* UPIJX CORN & FEED MILLS **■*". THE BEST MIU HIDE WkA |Br\ For Grinding * ± V world th at grinds onboth • : grintfiig surface of any BENO FOR DESCRIPTIVE CIRCULAR. THE DUPLEX XKEFGr GO, SPRINGFIELD, OHIO. s TEE ENTERPRISE VAPOR MEDIOATOR. Mli&Qrs, A NEW PATENT STEAM MEDJCATOR, INHALLR, DISINFECTOR, Ac. | EapeciaUy couairucLd tor the treatment of such di*ea* a aa ■T'jw y CONSUMPTION MASAL CATAXIR EAT AOT XOBI rim CIFHTHXXIA, VECOPIMO COUOE. LUIU3T, COLS m TOHZAI, BCXCmLA SVILUS9I, ASTEXA, / : fif PLIUEI3T, 7X17X011X4, NXUULSU. ICVX7B, SrSXWOXIHXA. Jg* TheJlrU tin* "SOLIDS" eoutd U used in MKDICATISQ ST SAM. {tr~lßri N'aial Catarrh, Hay Paver, Asthma. \\irW/ In all these diseases the Modioatur U worth ten times the price asked. \ 1 .17 £ Any Lady tac ScantlfV herCaaplulea after uia| * ftwinn. Itdm J IIAKHLEM BUT CERTAIN. " C4S -* 8 K7E3I or LUNCH LAXF, kiTtig u txtn stUekant of i Cap. Pi tea. Complete, 83.00. By Mall, 83.43. AGENTS WANTEO.-Oood reliable Agent, wanted to handle oar dk-- Meditator;—farue Profit*,—Sella at Sight One Agent Bold Twenty-seven MM in one day. Write for term* and circular, to the - IMN'* ENTERPRISE VAPOR MEDICATOR CO., Jim 1 30 UNION SQUARE. NEW YORK. rTTT n WILL WORK EQUALLY AS WEIL -VAAAB ■ OIJ HODUH STONY LAND AS OX - ___*> 103 |/ Tlf fITIT THE WESTERN PRAIRIES. IT IS VI I ITTTIf £ r I■ II W UNLIKE ANY OTUEE SULKY IN Hlffnilßrl % I IUU 11 THE WORLD, CAN RE ATTACHED 1 H ill BIT I- \ i TO AS * COMMONS WALKINO UXLIIIIjII U STTI.KT A ijUuuli ijUuuli INCKEASE THE DRAFT ONE ill POUND. 80 SIMPLE A CHILD STRONG ENOUGH TO DRIVE A Z 7 ! I TEAM CAM OPERATE IT. WILL W 1 \ I ft JL TURN A SQUARE CORNER WITH, m. A \ OUT RAISING THE PLOW. THE B XUiiWMIW QNLY PLOW MADE WITH A FOOT * NS \ I LEVER TO START THE POINT I / OF PLOW ABRUPTLT IN THE WIX 1 f\ W\\\\ It I r 1 In GROUND OR ELEVATE IT TO -c "1 ■ SKIM OVER THE TOP OF FAST NtoatJh'' 1 IWPI STONES, AROUND BOOTS, ETQ, agent la every town In the D. 8. I \ fj Write oa for our liberal terms and A | ■ nf . \jy prion#. L 81 D & co., jvrfect nn<i full Munlr Strength anaVlgoroai Health. . —— _ TMATaaT.-^iy.e.twin.anya Work, or too free ladulwne, we a>k that you eend ne HARRIS REMEDY CO.. BPI CMEMMIh BSalpackaoe 1 RUPTURED PERRONS ctan have FREE Trial of our Appil&noe. Ask for Tswwsl I Organ. 0-olidly Made. ■J-one Unrivaled, jj-legant Finish. of Popularity., ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES BJCXT FREE. Estey iDrgan iDo. # u rattle txm>,Yt. lviAnis AM VDIBiUTI WRIHJM DICAL A Life Experience. Remarkable and Quick cures. Trial Packages. Send stamp for sealed particulars. Address Pr. WARP A CO. Louisiana, Mo. RURNETTS ESSENCE OF fjSMAIC^I LgingerJ (Blue wrapper and whits label.) An Immediate Relief for Cramps, Colic, Dyspepsia, Motion, and all Stomach Dlaordcn. Powerful Stimulant Without Reaction. BOON TO EVERY FAMILY. Used externally will relieve Muscular Rheumatism, Neural gia, Toothache, Headache. For sale by Giooen and Drnggiita everywhere. TAKE NO OTHER. JOSEPH BURNETT & CO.. BOSTON and CHICAOO. Idecteetoeall SPEClALAl*uafeme, portent points of excellence fennd only la THE CHAMPION LAMP. i. Combution fe—HO 4. A SA.* a' Perfect. KXTDTODIiaXB llt !■ tlm — *T MAiiiTiSai f ** *' 'f lamp giving CW|ri lamp that the light of koopc d*T SO IMt Mt Efer 8. only Argand fIAK OSLY . which has a Lamp which eurreat of air BanwAlAtho circulating OUT and twMB the holds a well aad FULL bonier H|M|H FLAME I thereby when I prevent. the wlek 1 log over- •• tfert, heating WgMV thereby of the on ' avoids fin* and making TPMBMF lag OURINQ EXPLOSION JESS9L THE iMPossi- Made In nil forma, Plate or Tmner, Table or Hanging. Send for Illustrated Circular. A. J. WEIDEITEB, M $w of Pdtd, *e. 30 8. Second Street. Philadelphia. Pa. | The Palmer Boss Churn. OVER 150,000 / Now In Use. \ $60,000 won Mt las TBT. ■ifyo Largoet Barrel Churn Fan lory In the world. ■ . it makes mere batter. a superior quality of bufc. chum BOM. MCbnra works ao easily. Churn deana oo easily. sit koopa t o)d air: it keeps out hot air; tils perfect, so they all air. > Asfcyourdealer for the "Palmar Boas Chmra," ana if no does net keep it, send to us for circu* |ar and testimonial letters. w H. H. PALMER k CO., Rooktord, tH. THE BEST WASHER. Ladies and Laundries thould A Investigate this machine at ones it"' Tftfi Jtwillaaveyou time,labor and i njA money. Tho only washer built f H3) on the true principle. Will save fl Xdß( its cost in throe months. Yon. -Atp Twil have same oontrol of clothes as KgBR|HGH?\ With yonr hands and wash board and will wash them in half tb e time, as yon can nae hot soda I mUdj while rubbing them, without putting your hands in the water.' t ' Don't spoil roar hands gad temper or allow your laundress to rain your clothes with acids. 1 Ask your dealer for * The Best Washer," or send tor circular to - —* ' H, H, PALMER k COrßockfaHtT lK* Warranted the moat perfect Poree-Feed Fertilizer Drill In existence. Send for • 4 "" Ur ' 18. FABfIUHAB, fort, Pt
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