r A - TBI CM1BBI1 (RUMM. EDEM9DURC, PA., FRIDAY, FED. 21, 1879 The TiUsburMi JW of vesnlay j ' wek state! in a somewhat lengthy ) I ......... ..ir.u. :-f : . , article tuai it nan icnauie miuiiuauuu from ITarri!iurg that it was the pui- pos of tie present Legislature to ig nore the provision in the newconetitu- j tion for biennial sessions, bj so ehap- J ing legislation as to compel the Got- ernor to call an extra session next j Jaminry. This scheme, the Post saj, ; is proposed to be accomplished bj j limiting the necessary appropriations In the Senate of the United States, yi Tuesday last, when the revenue bill was under consideration, aa amend ment wns offered putting a tax of ten ?tnts a pound ou tea, and taxing coi- c tnu wcuLa Aim n -" t i . o - fie proposition was defeated by a to me year, insteaa oi extending inem vote of four yeas to fifty -seven nays. ! to tico years, as contemplated by the ;- - framers of the constitution wuen iney i IIartrantt uas not yet iniormea : ided for ft ses8ion cvery othcr iht authorities at Washington of his f.ommCnciCg in January, IST9. acceptance of the position of post- . u .9 tQ WiT tbftUhe Leg.$. master at Philadelphia, although hit BO abuse the public patience was confirmed several ,,;.-..f-ir f,,.i. to r,rf0rm There need , . , ,. " , , . .,, piain ana wen uimciswun nuij, JL llitn into Kansas. A FEW WOUD8 ABOUT THE NEW CAMBRIA, OB DC5MYER, SETTLEMENT. FOURTH PAPF.n.) Hftring spent odIj a few hours iu this pleasant and prosperous portion of Central Kansar. it is not to be expected lhat know much about it, though we deem it Gary's Magnetic Motor. With an ordinary horseshoe mngnet, a bit of soft iron, and a common shiiiRle nail, a practical inventor, who for years bus been pondering over the power lying dormant in tli9 magnet, now demonstrates as bis discovery a fsct of the utmost importance ...,nt mitfitop. which has hithero es caped tbe oW.vation of IxjUi tcieutists and practical electricians, namely, tbe ex- 3o More Cliinese. The Senate on Saturday passed the House bill restricting the immigration ol Chinese to the United States, by the vote of 39 ayes to 27 nays, lu the affirmative ote there were 21 Democrats and 18 Re publicans, and in the negative V Demo crats and 13 Republicans. Tbe bill goes back to the House for concurrence iu a few amendments made by tbebenate, including ' - s.:w::An Pi. ; and nrnctical electricians, usiubij-, , - . - .. " know much about it, thougn we aeera it ; 7 of . neutral line In tbe magnetic ; one excepting irom us pron.umu... u.uC due to a settlement so peculiarly Cambrian j fle,dD-a line where tbe polarity or an in- wLo come to this eountry for educational . nmTrMiiTD ! j..-.i etea- and bevotid which it . purposes. 1 r?"!: VIZ. i;l. : irWitl, equally simple rplince. . The bil r.omination iavs afro by the Senate be no fear about it, however, im t n the eamedft, of the appearance rulinc passion is love of ofltce, anl in . t. , . . MlA u,rr;,. - til lug niiiwic m - - lue time Barkis wwl be found to be rftrP(nn,i,nt of the Fhiladel- willing l'"ia T'f'mes wrote to tliat paper that -xiEEH millions' of" dollars in frac- several members of the committee on ,.n d currency are .till outstanding, appropriations in the House had m of Iiich it is estimated not more than formed him that it was not intended f.ur millions will ever be presented for to report any appropriations for next redemption, leaving the government year, which means, a, the correspond tV ..ainer bv about twelve millions of ent says, a called session next January. 1 ..;I!9 Of' the amount in three and The difficulty is that if such a purpose tive cent notes issued, two million, of : is really entertained, there is no way dollars are outstanding, the greater to arrest it unless It be through the ... , ;r .. .1! i, f.n power of public opinion, which has portion ui "iun.il, ii ivu . - lost or destroyed. been known Bom- t,m"-to 9t7 tb i -t- r madneBS even of a Pennsylvania Le- SknatoB CiibibTIAScv, of Michigan, gislature. It is just as easy for the recently appointed Minister to Feru, appropriation committee to embrace has written to a friend in Washington two years as oue, and every voter in that he has sold his property in Lans- the State at the election last Novem the oipital, where he resided, for bcr distinctly undostood that there 11 ""0, having offered it for sale two would be no meeting of the Legislature months "o tor fi.OOO, without re- in 10. For the members of the ceivin- anv bid for it. The morbid present body to render it obligatory smiety of Zachaiiah Chandler to get on the Governor in this way to call it Clnistiancy out of the Senate, in order together again in order that the wheels that he (Zachariah) might step into of the government may not be stopped, his shoes, as he now will, coupled with would be a plain and palpable viola he f.ict that Chan Her is verv rich, tien of their oath of ofliee. .till perhaps account fur the sudden This Legislature will di.'Ier greatly and unexpected lit in the market of from those which for several years . vt..to in T...inW. have preceded it, if it is not weighed IUI-kt.lll.t v ....... - - - . ... f : : - - MA11 mm ilown witn sins oi ouu5iu aa sins of comission, when the day of its final adjournment arrives, and al though the taxpayers have not on a'l ,.ooc;rn , nrnmntl v and inditrnantlv .lay a repetition of what it did last resented the criminal expenditure of ... . .1 1 t - ... Al 1 4-n 1. . and hoFpitable to devote at least a little time aod space to them and their surround ings. Reaching New Cambria by train from Saliua about nine o'clock in the forenoon, we were soon after very kindly received into the good graces of Mr. Jereruiah Wea ver, a former citizen of Somerset county, this State, ho now owns and occupies an elegant farm and a large and comfortable house within a few yards of the railroad station. This gentleman, although until then a total stranger to us, very generously changes. With equally simple nppnnnces be Bhows the practical utilization of his j : .,,1. x ira at to rroduce a ' roagne1. motor, thus opening up a bewil ! dering prospect of the possibilities before us in revolutionizing the present methods ! oi motive power through tbe substitution or a wonderfully cheap and ' saf" agent. ' By his achievement Mr. Wesley W. Gary has quite upset the theories of magnetic philosophy hitherto prevailing, and lifted magnetism out from among tbe static foices where seience has placed it to the position of a dynamic power. The Oary magnetic motor, the result or Mr. (.ary s ! long years of study, i, in a word, a simple " - : contrivance wnicn iui"iuc" """" hitched his fine team to a handsome spring , wiU run untj) worn out by the force of wagon and took us across the country and beyond the "blufls," a distance of five or six miles, to the residence of Mr. Jacob Stiffler, a warm friend and advance paying patron of the Freeman, whom we deemed it a duty as well as a pleasure to visit. But that was not all Mr. Weaver veered con siderably from the direct course in order friction, coming dangerously near to that -l 1 Via r narnatllkl motion. mwiLii ltv. , 'i- xi r w Th Kill ia ri imnln in itu DrOTISlOUS. It prohibits any vessel bringing to tbe ports of this country "any number exceed ing fifieen Chinese passengers, whether male or female." The other sections im pose severe penalties on the master or auy person in charge or vessels who violate the provisions of the law. The law goes into effect on the first of July, 1870, aud tbe President is directed to give notice to the Chinese Government of the abrogation of certain articles or our treaties with China, which were designed to encourage emigra. tion. The strongest objections made against the law are that it is in coullict with our treaties with China, which guarantee "the Tree migration and emigration" of the citizens or the respective countries. This . ti,. law Hi-tAa so conflict : but the courts have decided that an actor Congress satisfied, from bis experiments, that r he oould devise a "cut-oft," tbe meausof neu tralizing the attractive power of a station- nr annthar raised above it and to afford us au opportunity to loos: iu on : ,jjuted on a pivot, uuniin poie Prof. N. N. Keeuer, a former principal, if and so arrange thi cut off as to work au , ... ,i t,-.mtirIlv he could produce motion in a mi.talm nnt. or at least a teacher in tbe tomaiicauj, ne cuuiu A t Huntingdon, t 'ennsyivania, -ir. vrrj J" - r , aVe his fint prte i must prevail even wbea it conflicts with a maae nis iiri piv. , T. rlJ..on8 fortius are obvious. allnwart his discovery io u miuiu ; - auowea ui uiw..i; ( rw,,,- ti., anf senate, as the il,. nnhl hed. lie naa lone ueen wli.ci 7 7. . : . , - . . i'Le Tl.o'e thing has a very Char.dler- '.Wc i o',k about it. - - - - Tim adjournment of the Legislature . .-ii . . ii-. i J. fO tdilW until last eiuien rear will cost the State between ten siid fifteen thousand dollars, anil is an act of folly for which there can be no possible or st least no adequate excuse. The plea set up in its favor was that t would afford the members an oppor tunity te attend the Spring elections on Tuesday last, but it was really meant specially to accomodate the Fhiladclphia delegation, whose pre sence at the polls in that city was deemed neex-ssary to insure fair play and an lvn".t vote. A precedent is being established in regard to this matter which it will become the duty llr nir.nv ns tllCV Olllht tO liave done, it is not difficult to predict that if an extra session becomes necessary by making the appropriations cover only one year, instead of two, then the last straw will have been placed upon the earners (people's) back. Tin oil producers are about to have administered to them a prtlty strong dose of the ingratitude, not of the Re public, but of the Republican party. While they cheerfully acknowledged during the campaign lnsu fall the earn est and unselfish suppoitof their inter of some Legislature in the near future e,t,5 by Andiew II. Dill in the State Senate, and while they were compelled to admit the want of such support or. the part of the Republicans in the Le gislating, they nevertheless accepted the promises of Hartranft, Mat-key, Quay, and others, of future recogni tion and protection voted against pill gave Iloyt neaily one half the majority he received in the State, and elected representatives every one of whom, with two exceptions, voted far Cameron for United States Senator. Their reward has come quickly, but not in the shape they had been duped Cameron betrayed them most emphatically to reverse. mn - m- Thi bill intro luted into the House by Mr. Sherwood, Democrat, from Noithumbetland county, reducing the salaries of the State officers at Harris burg, as well as the number and pay of th officers of the Legislature, has been reported with an affirmative re commem lation. The bill fixes the salarr of the Wovcrnoi at f7,500, and uikt?s a reduction of from twenty to twenty-five per cent, in the salaries of all the officers in the different depart ments. If we arc not inistaKen, il ru- tQ oxpec; duces the ray cf a ni inher of the Lc , t b in tb. rnate on the bill sislature from $1,000 to SS"". which agftin5t discrimination in Height of touise is right r.nd proper in a bill cjartreSi ari,l ju the Legislature a Re genernl in its application, as this ono pelican member from Allegheny is. A number of offices arc abolished conntj has offered, and a Republican altogether, snd among them that of comraittee has affirmatively reported, Superintendent m Fublic luu !i!igs no ,:ll3 against which they vehemently protest as utterly destructive ot their I'ulii:.' (Jronnds six acres, more or less to which Cen. Hartshorne was icte itly appointed, and provides that the duties of the office shall be di charged by the Resident. Clc'k of the House, who shall be paid $300 extra fjr tho work. Mr, Sherwood's bill is ine of the measures of retrenchment demanded ky the people, and tLey will expest their represtntatives to give it their willing sanction. Till investigation by the Totter Committee into the cipher dispatches, as well as into other matters connected business and hopes of future pros- psrily. One of these bills imposes a tax of five cents on each barrel of crude pctrolium, and the other requires the payment of a license of $500 for all new wells bored during the present year, and $250 for all wells put down in 1 SO. It is estimated that if these bills pnss through the Legislature the revenue they will yield to the Stale treasury will amount to over fuo mil lions of dollars. We do not propose to discuss the merits of these two measures, nor the prospects of their passage, but simply to state the fact and the source from whence they emanate. The oil men claim to be ex ceptionally smart and boaat of their ability to take care of themselves, but with the Fresidential election in 1 S 7 i , shosr very conclusively that the vote of their Bppeiiralice in th- Legislature cf thiee States was for sale by their , . f i,0.A .i,.. respective Returning Hoards that Mr. Til.lcn didn't get, and therefore didn't buy, the vole of either of them. although such vote would Lave eiecte.i . effectually vie- him, whereas it required the votes of all br Uie i$ oftheRcpUb- thrce to give Hayes precisely the nam- ,earit... mst,e only to the ear to be broken to the hope. Lvery feeling of gratitude and every dictate of honor appealed to Uiera in support of Dill, who so gallantly came to their rescue in the hour of their need, but they put him aide for IJoyt, and are now the objects, as they piteouly bowl, of Re publican wrath and oppression. The verdict of the Democracy will be: You made your own political bed, snd in it must lie. ber (l"o) of electors necessary to his success that the votes of all three wera eentiially counted in Hayes' favor, and were subsequently awarded him by the Electoral Commission, thereby placing him in the Resident ial chair that he has sinoe rewarded with office every scoundrel who had a hand in faUilyin the election returns in ft least two of thee States (Florida and Louisiana) that whether he knew of thre frauds before his inauguration or wot, is immaterisl, since the posses sion of that knowledge afterwards is a Tiolcnt presumption from ths fact that The Lancaster IniAli'jmcer thinks that Senator Blaine must be a convert tr a new svstem of r.obtical ideas dif- he I ns rewarded their perpetrators forcnt rrom tuat which he recently es- with office. No staiu or blemish there- pou5ef Wc rend in the North A meri- fore being attached to Tildeii, and ran yjr ,.,. OVCr his signature : "Any Hayes U-ing in possession of the office p.uty of A mcritan citizens can bear to to which he (Tilden) was elected, who i, defeated. No party of American can doubt or hesitate about a conclu- fitizens will bear to be defrauded, tion as to the purchase of the vote of The men who are interested in a dis- . . , i i honest count are units 1 he men who Florida and Lon.sana, by whom the ,:nf orrstc(1 , honest coant are purchase was made, and the cousid- millions." So say we all of us rail etation. money or patronage, orjioth, lions. Glad to see Blaine coming out which sas paid for it. ' fi'om among the units. nublic schools of Johnstown, and a kstnt and better one, we have oft been told, never wielded the birch in Cambria county. This gentleman ne found pursuing tbe even tenor of his way, surrounded by a couple dozen or little gills and boys, and occupy ing a sohool house on the open prairie that would put to tho blush many similar build ings in most or the country districts or this State. Here we spent a pleasant hair hour or more, during which we were not only entertained with various exorcises, vocal and otherwise, by tho pupils, but learned incidentally that Mr. Keener, who pointed out his residence to as a mi! or two dis tant, devoted his time duiing the sum mer months to the cultivation or the soil and duiing the winter months to the culti TStion or the brains of his pupils. This learned, we bade our pedagogical friend ffwd-bve aud ere long camo to a halt in o rront or the humble but comfortable resi dence or Mr. Stiffler, rrom whom and from whose good wife we received a joyful wel come as soon as we made ourself known. A pressing invitation tore main for dinner followed in due time, and as we never knew how to decline a bid or that kind we of course aocepted the situation very cheer fully and did ample justice to a good meal. Returning to New Cambiia about 2 o' clock in the afternoon, we had the gratifi cation of meeting S. V. Donmyer, Esq., who is and well deserves to be looked upon not only asjthe representative man of the settlement, but as one of tho most prosper ous and most respocted citizens of the State. He too gave us a right hearty wel come, and, like Mr. Weaver, had us ere long snugly ensconced in a comfoi table vehicle, behind two spirited hoices, with which ho diove us to the elegant farm of his falhor, Mr. Lewis Donmyer, the patri arch of the flock, who, although upward of eighty years of age, is ft ill as hale and hearty as most or men frilly twenty years his junior, and seemingly as happy as a king in the possession or as fiue a home stead, to say nothing of other lands in profusion, which emprises one thousand acres, all in one b dy, of as productive soil as cau be found in tho State, the beauty of which is unmarred by a single break or gulley, while its vaV.e is enhanced by the fact that theie is little ir any unproductive lixnd in the entire tract, immense tho' it is. Previous to this visit and while yet at the railroad station, or which, by the way, Mr. S. I'. Donmyer is roaster, and where he also has a neat and well filled store, besides a hair interest in a large grain elevator, Mr Geis being his partner, wo bad the pleasure or meeting the old patriarch himself, whom . we round engaged in shipping fifty one as ; fine hogs as we ever saw, not one or which j weighed less and many or which weighed I considerably moro than 300 pounds apiece, j The modest sum or two cents per pound, live weight, was the price realized by tho old gentleman in the sale of this fine drove or porkers, all of which, as well as some sixty or seventy additional head, were of his own raising. Not having time to visit other portions of the settlement, wo were very kindly ta ken back to Salina by Mr. Donmyer, who entertained us on the way with an interct ing account of his own experience, maiked as it has been with unvarying piospciity, since he took up his abode inthe "land of promise," as he certainly has good reason to esteem it. What we gleaned from his conversation duiing the pleasant drive of ten or twelve miles, all toid, over smooth and level roads, it is not necessary here to repeat, as Mr. Donmyer has on several oc rarions publicly proclaimed his admiration for Kansas, which has certainly been to him a land literally flowing with milk and honey. Suffice it then to say that Mr. D.'s enthusiasm is not without the merit of sin ceiity, and no one, we are sure, will ques tion his right to be enthusiastic when wo assure them that he has not only bought and shipped through bi- elevator 150,000 bushels of wheat in the course of a single, year, 24,000 bushels of whch he purchased from six of his neighbors, besides looking after his mercantile and other interests, but he himself raised not less than 5,000 bush els of wheat, to say nothii.g of other pro duce, cattle, etc., duiing the same period. 5Ir. I), was also unselfish enough to assuie us that another store was greatly needed at New Cambria, and that there was no doubt but what such an enterprise would pay and pay well. And now having said our say as best we knew how about Kansas, wc close with ihe assurance that we have endeavored to give a tiue and faithful account of what we saw and heard during cur brief sojourn in that goodly State, which is now tbe Mecca of so many hopes, not a few of which will cf couise never be lealized. If we have erred in any 'if our statements the error ha been of the judgment and not of the will, and if any tbcte aie who desiie moro light on the ubj ct all they need do is to go and see for themselves. To this end bo persist ently experimented, and it was only about four years ago that.he made the discovery, the key to his problem, which is the basis of his present motor, and upsets our phil osophy. In experimenting one day with a piece of soft irou upon a magnet he made the discovery or the neutral line and the change or polarity. At first he gave little attention to the discovery or the change or polarity, not then recognizing its signifi cance; being ahsoibed entirely by the dis covery or the neutral line opened up to him. Here wss the point ror his cut-oftT. For a while he experimented eutirely with bat teries, but. in September, 1874, he succeed ed in obtaining a movement independent or the battery. In June, tho following yar, Mr. (.iary exhibited this continuous movement to a number of gentlemen, pro tecting himself by covering the cu'-off with copper, so as to disguise the real material used, and prevent any one from jobbing him of his discovery. The publication in the local newspapers of the performance of the little machine, which was copied far and wide, excited much interest. But the inventor was by no means satis fied. He had succeeded iu securing a con tinuous motion, but not a practical motor. Ho hsd invented a unique, plaything, but not a machine that would do man's work. So he made ruither experiments iu one di rection and another, using frr a long time the bsttorv ; and it was not until some time after he moved t Boston I which was about two yeais agoj that be was convinced that the points in the change or polaiity, with which he was so little impressed when he first hit upon them along with his dis covery of the neutral line, were the true ba i- wnrlr 11 nun. Thereafter his oro- gress was most rapid, and in a little while he hsd constructed working models, uot only to bis own satisfaction, but to that of those experts who had the fsiines to give them a critical and thorough examination, cleaily demonstating his ability to secure motion and power, ns they had never be fore been secured, from sslf-feeding and self acting ninchiues. His claim, as he formally puts it, is this : "I have dis covered that a straight picco of iron placed across the poles of a maanet, and nesr to their magnetic field, and bcfoie it comes i n contact with tho magnet, the fact being, however, that actual contact is guarded aga'nst. The condilionsnie that the thick ness of the iron must lio proportioned to the power of the magnet, and that the neut ral 1'ii.e, or line of change in the po'aii ty of the iioi.', is ne.uer it iniro distant from the magnet acrording to the pnwer of the lattet and the thickness of the foim er. My whole di-covai y is based upon tiiis change of pt.lai ity in tho iion, with or with out a bat eiy." Power csn be increased to any extent, or diminished, by the addi tion or wiihdiawal of magnets. Mr. Jaty is foity-one years -id, having been born in 1837. Duiing the years 1 voted to working out his problem he hai sustained himself by tho proceeds from th sale of a few useful inventions made from time to tina when he was forced to turn aside from his expeiiments to raise funds. From the sale of one or these inventions a simple little thing he realized something like ten thousand dollars. K. M. Bacon, in Ilarper't Majaiin for Ifureh. treaty-making power might, impose intoler able burthens on the people, without the consent and in direct opposition to the wishes or the elected representatives or the people. The Supreme Court, in discussing this very point, has declared "that the Constitution was designed to place our country in this position is a supposition, wholly iuadmissable. It is not only incon sistent with the necessities rr a natiou, but negatived by the express wcidsof tbe Con stitution." The Court continues : Xetva and Other 2,'ottngs. A man from MeadviUe, Ta., has found a 73.000 lead mine in Colorado. The Town Treasaier of Keuuebunk port, Me., ge-s 25 a year, aud gives bonds ror f 12, 000. . , Henry II. Crocker has just died at oi- tutnwa, la., or saustroke, He was suu truck last July. In a single county in Texas there are 956,000 sbeep, a larger number than in any other county in the Union. Morristown has a David Puskey, aged twenty-five, who has wooed and wou bis step-graudmother aged sixty. Already three claims to the $lo bounty offered by the Princess Louise for triplets have been made within a fortnight. Lewis G. Goldsmith is to start from Boston Dext summer iu a boat eighteen feet long to make a voyage round the world. Mrs. Reed, of Patton township. Cen tre countv, accidentally smothered her six months' old baby while carrying it home from a neighbor's. Heedless burglars broke into tbe house of a Geotgian gentleman of the ominous name of Ledslineer. and ho fired two bul- lets into one of them. Pope Leo XIII. has finally decided to accept Archbishop Purcell's resignation, and ha now the appointment of his suc cessor under consideration. The wound Captain Samuel Claik, a well known coal operator of Allegheny county, inflicted upon himself several days ago with suicidal intent, has proved fatal. p. Mayue, at Cromwell, Union county, Iowa, traduced the character of Maggio Rowen, a milliner, whereupon she cow hided him, aud the admiring citizens gave her a new dress. A Norwalk husband oiscoveied pioor that a neighbor was in love wuu uis wue, 'J.-oirp A. A beit, of Milwaukee, for merly a StatH Senator, is said to have fall , r:i in l.-vo niih the wife of Chari.'s Asmn. She asserts lhat he asked her to desert .ier husband f.-r him, and :n t!.' giound Ad ams has Mfd for fG.000 d.m;ges. I ' J not claimed by the pinin that his vrifo s affections were obtained by Abe.it or that she for an instant entei tained the proposal, yet the damage to his peace of mr.td can not bo repaired be thinks at a lower figure I than f fi.OOO. ' ! Oil City, Pa., has aa energetic priest, , ' Father Carroll, whose church has a con ! gregation of 2,000, with a school of 300 1 children, taught by six sisters ; a Sunday ! school of 300 scholars, a temperance socio ; ! ty of 75 members, a rosaiy society of 100 . members, a boys' temperance society 100 : ! strong and an insurance society of 40 mem I bers. The church win its edifice, priest s ' residence, sisters' house and school house and a cemetery, and is out of debt, witn money in the treasury. j Chier Justice Pierrepont, of er- , ' gennes, Vt.? had a trying duty to perform i when be gave bis opinion against John I . 1 Phair, tbe Rutland murderer, the other : day. The lattcr's mother, an estimable ! womsn, lias been a nurse in tho Judge s , ramily, and watched tenderly attbedeath- bed of his youngest daughter some tune ago, but now the accuses him of cuiel pre- , judice against her son. Phair writes his : mother, however, that he shall loso no sleep on account of bis daom. Information wa rece;vcd on Monday ! last at the ofrico of the Madeira and Ma j more Railroad Company in New A oik of ! the final appropriation of four hundred : thousand pounds to aid the construction of ' tbe railroad, so long piosecuted by the ' American contractors under the severest i A Rio stiecial dispatch to the London Timf announces the final action of the Brazilian government extend ii;iimiiiii'iii(B! that a neighbor was in love wuu ui wiit, . aw"u mi. ...... and agreed to keep the secret for f 100; but , ing its credit to the amount o Dwonii, . t .?i -.o l.rnnnoii f in of dollars to the enterprise, and tho prompt Ityclnpedia of Literature. The new eight volume Acme Edition OF ('II AMllI.Ks' CVf T.OI'F.ltlA OF F.SOI.ISH LlTEn TritF. is meeting with the largest 6ale which has probably ever beer, given to a woik having only hiifli litemary merit and nothing of the sensational. A second edition of 5,000 copies one month afier isue of the Hist edition. Vohimo 2, jit ready, gires the history and epi oroe of our literature, from the 'golden afj" of (Vioen Elizabeth to 170" giving in its 416 beautiful p"R?s biographies of and c'niica selections from the writings of all noted authors of tha period, among which nie Lord Bsc n, Sir Walter Raleigh, Burton, Bishop Hah, John Knox, Milton, Dryden, Jeremy Taylor, and others. The work is of s'.ieh well known excellence that ' every peism of literary taste possesses or desirrs to pos'spss some edition of it. This sdit ion is complete in eight handy volumes. excellent in lypograpny, paper ana mim ing, icviscd to date, and sold at prices so low, that a common question which the publishers havo to answer is, "whether the price is for each volume or for the ent're work?' It is sold only to suboribois direct, the large discount usually given to dealers and agents being allowed to tho subscriber instead. Tho publishers make special inducements lo early purchasers, the igh: volumes complete being sent, pre paid, to those who subsciibo before March 15th, in paper, Tor 2.-, in cloth. $3 fiO, or in half morocco, gilt top. ? Specimen pages are sent fiee on request, or a speci men volume for examination, with piivilege of purchase of tho remainder, for nominal prices : in paper. 20 csnts ; cloth. -T conts; half morocco, gilt top, 50 cents. A veiwav Book F.xchanoe, Publishers, 55 Beekman Street, New York. A specimen volume in cloth can be seen at tho oflico of this paper, and those who desire cau add their names to a club which will soon bo forwarded. - - -m . m- I- the heart of New York State is what is known as the Ontdia Community. The Communists number about three hundred persons, and the property controlled by them; is woith about 1500,000. They dif far from the Mormons, in that they have a common propel ty and use the "no wife system"' instead of the "mauy-wife sys tem." They classify humanity as one wife, many-wife and no-wife peoples. Meetings aie being held in Ncv York to securo a law that will break up the Community, as their jci nicious doctrines are contaminat ing young giils anil men. There appears to bo no law on tho statute book that weets their cato. They raise children on the pi inciple of stock-raisers. the family has no existence, and although prosperous and iiidiisliious, iho Community is a bad lot. That (the Constitution! (fives to Congress tn o mmv wonts, power to ilorlare war- nn nci which i,w f'U-l'i rep(-Hls all tremws incninnsleut wiihn state of war. To refuse to execute n treaty for reasons which approve themselves to Ihe coneientions ju'ljrnient of n nation a matter of the utmost gravity but the power to do so is n prerogative of wlilt-h no- nation enn be rtepriveit without deeply nffectinir its inde pendence. That the people of the Cnrred stales have deprived their Government oT this power I not believe. That il must reslOe some where and ho applicable to oil eases 1 nm con vinced aid 1 feel no cloubt that it belongs to Congress. The eutire legality of the action of Con gress iu abrogating certain provisions of the treaties with China having been estftb tablishcd as within its power, the single question remains whether it is expedient to do so iu this oase. Or that we do not think there can ba any doubt on the part of any ono w ho has studied tbe present aud prospective evils and dangers of unchecked Chinese emigration. The law it a proper one. Tho Chinese who are hero may re main uutil they voluntarily return or their bones are carried back to their native land, but the Hood or Chinese emigration will be stopped in the friture, and American labor thus relieved or a crushing and in somo respect degrading competition. ntttb-nrg ret. Tun Kniohts ok I.hr. A Poltsvil'.o dispatch oi Monday lst ss; s : The expo sure of the doings or the Knights or Labor in this county, and especially I l.lt poiliou of them known as McNuIty'a fang t She nandoah, whom it is said thieaiened to in augurate a general strike iu the coal re gions unless the miners are paid more reg ularly, iu particularly by the P! iiadelpbia and Reading Coal and Iron Company, has caused great excitement among the minus who belong to the organization in different parts of the county. Since tbe publication of President Ooweu's letter tho miners bavo stood around in gioups discussing the situation and swearing vengeance uu . i. .,.. Mr Conen the iuforma- buo uuc r - - tion. It is said that a gatheiing or knights will bo held this week at GiiardvilH find Shenandoah to tako action on the subject. Thieats aro made that iT tho squealers iu tlie ranks are discovered their coffins will be ordered. In some of tho distiicts the Cntholiu priests yesterday donounccd tbe Knights jf Labor from the pulpit, and said ;lint if any of their congregations belonged to the oiiler they must either wilhdiaw from it or bo excommunicated from the Chinch. P.L-v.. James F. O ileil'.y, of the Annunciation Church in Shenandoah, re fused to allow members of his congiepa tion, nbom Piesident Gowen named as belonging to 'h McNulty ciowd, to enter ihe church edifice yesterday morning. Tins caused an uproar. Peter Gallagher, Pat lick Mack and John Haiey, three of the men on Gowon's list, made oath that tin y i i ver belonged to tho order and know nothing of its inner workiugs. and that they will make Gowen suffer for his chart;.! iu a suit for slander. Tor. wed ling guests were gathered all, tho minis er was in tho pallor, the mar riage feast was piping hot, and the bride was peeping out of her window and blush ing the while but the biidegroom was missing. They waited two bonis and then dispatched a brother of the bride to Rod tho biidegroom ; and meanwhile, lost the victuals should spoil, they all sat down to dinner. Now, tlio biidegroom was the most bashful man i:i Goshen township, aud possibly in Ohio. He was discovered in his loom with his everyday clothes on and with one side of bis face shaved. Wh sr. asked why ho had icmained away, ha repliud that he attempted to shave him self t.i.t was so scared and nervous that be could not accomplish it. Ho finally told the brother that if he would finish shaving him, and help f him up, ho would go and repoit for duty, The brother kindly assisted, and the two thou started for the homo of his anxious rido. When within a short distance of the house, the young man's heart again failed him. He declared that he could not race the crowd, and re luctantly retraced his steps. The brother wont home and reported tho issult of his investigation, and the preacher, tinning to the lady, said. "I'll never tio you to such a man." On the following Saturday the father of the voung lady whs mot with the ssme plea, "I can't stand lo face such a crowd, but if you will get a 'squire, and let ns get msnied after night, I will tiy it again." The old gentleman declared that the ceremony tr ust be performed in the day time. Finally, the bashfe.l young man was led into the parlor by the arm, cooped up in a corner, and brought face to Taco with minister and maiden. thm y.x-mr oui v r.0. vrheiouDon tlie husband divulged about half of tbe truth. At Georgetown, Mass., tbe son of a , widow nsarried a girl whose brother mar ried the widow, while a child born to the first couple has an uncle and a grandfather , and a grandmother and an aunt in tbe same persons. In Detroit, Thursday, Marie Aiur'me, a trapexe perfumer, while swinging on a bar eighty feet from the stage, was seized , with vertigo aud fell headlong to the floor, suffering a fracture of the collar bene and . three ribs. There is n young woruau in Jefferson county who has never seen a lailroad, has never been inside of a church, ar.d who, the other day, saw a newspaper for the first time. Foreign missionary societies take notice. At an early hour Sunday morning the house of Geoigo Shorer, in Franklin town ship, about twe've miles from Allegheny City, was burned down. Mr. Sherer man i aged to esoape, but two farmers perished in the names. In Norway a hoise carhelp himself to water as ho does to hay, fioui a trough kept full of it, and accordingly drinks like a human being at tneals a sip, then some hay, and soon. Broken winded horses are almost unkuowu in Norway. The Pope has been fairly inundated with abusive, offensive and threatening letters from Socialists in all parts of I'.u rope, who have beeu moved to anger be cause of his recent encyclical. His Holiness is making a collection of them. Tbe soldiers' orphan home near Xania, Ohio, was entirely destroyed by fire Sunday morning. No lives wore lost and no seri ous accidents are leported, but several of '.lie inmates made very narrow escapes. The loss to the State in $75,000. rOfv c,t Philadelnhia. could not, in consequence of beait disease, lie down, nor even sit down comfortably. Ho had a bed made in such a way as to sustain him in au upright position, aud in that contrivance ho slept for uiue years. He died a few days ago. A fo v small boats are said to have gathered some $10,000 worth of sponges in twodavs, w ithin half an bom s sail of Flo lida whnrf. A Key West paper says that the article was supposed to bo extinct years ago, but it is discovered that tbe bats in tiio bay am teeming with spongo of a su peiior quiil ty. Down in Tennessee they bftva been dunking buttei milk thirty years old and good as now. It was dug from a well which hsd caved i:i thiily years before At that time tho j;ig of milk, safely coik cd, whs Landing by a ropo far down the well, to be kept cool ; aud there it had staid bin led for thirty yeais. Seven pcisoi,s were poisoned by eating buckwheat ca';cs at, (Jueensvill?, Ind., on Saturday, but ail except one are expected tr. ,-oeover. It miipnrs tnat a laimei The New Yoik World says : An article written with much feivor is now going the rounds of our esteemed Republican con temporaries which cleaily points out that tbe Democracy throughout the country are breaking up into so many aud such fierce ly warring factions that no matter who may bo tlie nominee in 1S30 the nomina tions will be bolted by 90 percent, of the party. We are familiar with tbis article. We havo known it for years. It is as good now as it ever was. It is usually followed in tho July of each leap year by another article beginning, "Is there anyeaudidate whom the Democrats will not shut their eyes aud support tbe tuomeut he has beeu . pvu.Uisted R e m a n k a m. v. Fatamtt. Last Satur day morning. Miss Mary Ann Toole, sged 07 years, one or a trio or aged sisters living at No. 140 Con way street, died or consump tion. The day previous to her demise Mis. Sarah Vernon, her sister, a widow lady, , aged 94 years, was taken ill and died Thurs day night or heait disease. Saturday, shortly after the death or Miss To -de, tho third sister, Mrs. Jnlia A. McCormick, also a widow, was seized with pneumonia, and died yesterdsy afternoon at 2 o'clock, thus completing the death roll of the three old ladies, who had lived and been associated together for years, within a week, and in tauciug a fatality at once remarkable and ' seldom witnessed in oue household Bilti- A New York Herald letter from Brazil gives a frightful picture of the drought, famine and pestileuce raging in the north ern portion of that country for more than a year past. It is said lo bo the greatest ca lamity in two liunurea years, iini -lion or people were swept away by starva- ; tion and disease. The small pox and black plague carried off their victims in appalling numbers, and thousands or bodies were rotting in open trenches at Laeoa Fnnda. Thousands or other corpses were toiu and devoured by wild animals. The starving peasants are their owu offspring. Some places, including the city or Cerea, have been depopulated. In the terrible strug gles for life, children wme abandoned aud the young souls sold for bread. Thous ands or l:ving skeletons were to bo seen. The Government aid is tardy, The letter presents a picture or woe, such as can scarcely bo paralelled in history, except by the siege of Jerusalem, and the black death which desolated Kuiopo ibtho Four teenth century. - .... A frightful catastrophe occurred in tho village or 5mnmerville. thirty miles fiom Augusta, Me . ou Friday. F.phiaini Hystei and wifo left homo in the forenoon to do some trading, leaving their tinee children, need four, two and ouo half, and eight months a', home. By some means the house caught tire, and before aid ar rived, tlie building with the consents was destroyed. The three childien perished in ihe (lames. About a year ago another child of the ssme persons was burned to death. There was a raising bee in Spencer coun ty, Ind., followed by a ball in the eveuintr, aud a rule was adopted that nobody should dance who had not worked at tho raising of the house frame. Nathaniel Woods had not qualified himself in the required nian- S ner, but insisted ou dancing. A row was the result and Woods was killed. placed arsenic in his barn to kill rats, and that part of tho ai sonic became mixed with the buckwheat, which was aft :i wards sold to the persons poisoned. When Senator Shields, of Missouri, drew his pay and mileage some 400 the other afternoon, he laid it on his desk. Toward evening a pgo found the money on tie desk, lying aiound as loose as though it still belonged to the Government. The strmitoi' did not know ot his loss until bis attention had been cal ed to it. A barn at Stamford, Conn., was binn ed recently by an incendiary, and the truly pious father prayed lhat the unknown scoundrel might bo paralyzed. A man subject from his childhood to epilepsy has just had a stroke of paralysis, and "scvcial superstitious heathen cf tho place"' think there has been a wondciful answer to pra ver. The Cincinnati Knquirr states on high authority, that "tho Pope had deter ( mined that, taking into consideration all the ciicumstancs or tho case, it would us inopportr.no at this time to receive the res ignation or Archbishop Purcell. Official notification of this determination of tha Pope is expected in a few days. This nsws will be received with joy by Catho lics generally." Two miners of Humboldt Wells, Nev., being drunk and jovial, went to the cabin or a"wood chopper to havo ssme fun with him. He was a silly fellow and the com mon butt of the neighborhood, but ou this occasion he refused tbe fooled with. The drunkards resented his lack or complaisan cy, and tried to scare him with their revol vers. Then he cut them dowu with an axe, killing both. At Madisonvillo, near Cincinnati, on Saturday night, Rev. Peter Waite, colored, was shot and killed by Andiew Knd-ey, also colored. The latter is iu the employ or Charles Jewett, a farmer, and bad been left in charge of the house. Waite ap proaching in the daik to see a servant girl, was hailed by Endrey but refused to an ' swer, and moving round in a suspicious manner, was shot, dying in an hour. rnhherv was iiometrated tn i, ri:ti'lirht ou Filth avenue. New v.-ir Wirl.iir afternoon. The wife i Adolph DeHary, a wealthy importer, was walking on the avenue with a lady mono. of dollars to the enterprise, and tho prompt completion of the work is now assured, A dispatch from St. Charles, Mo., says a cold blooded murder was committed a few days ago on the farm of Thomas Stouebra ker, about ten miles from that place. It appears Stonebraker had gone on a visit to a lelativo some miles away, leaving bis farm in ehargo of two hired men James Matson, a Swede, and a mulatto man, call ed Tom. Duiing the morning the men bad an altercation about feeding the hogs and Tom went away, but soon returned with a shot gun and fired a ehargo of buckshot ioto Matsor.'s head, killing him instantly. At last accounts the niuiderer bad not been arrested. The owner of a steam sawmnl iti Ne vada was until lately a member of a Meth odist church, from which be was expelled, as be says, to gratify the personal spite of tho pastor. Ho resolved to bold religious services of his ow n. and, to make them ef fective, he obtained a poweiful calliope, and attached it to tho steam boiler of his mill. On Sundays, the voice of the Metho dist preacher i drowned by tbe sound of the calliope, as it screeches "The Sweet Py and By," and other Moody and Sankcy tunes. Tho clergyman has applied to a justice's court for relief, but the magis trate rules that tho uso f the calliope i n Sunday for sacred music is legal. The qnebtion has been earned to a higher court. Dr. Bertilloa has published another statistical etude in France to prove that inatiimonyis moro favorable to longevity than celibacy. Between the ages of ton ty five and thirty tho annual mortalitylper thousand in Fiar-ce is ten bachelors and six married men, and tho sime dispropor tion is ovservable later on, diminishing however with advancing yenis. Between forty five and fifty it is twenty single men to eleven Benedicts. "S idoors die wilh peculiar rabidity, the figmes :n the twenty five to thirty year class being twenty two to six married men. After passing the nge of twenty five married women die off less rapidly than spiiiters, and the ruoita'.ity of widows is by no means as great as is that of widowets. Mr. and Mrs. 'Jill had woiked very hard for a year at a lanch i:i Nevada, saving eveiy cent that they could, and at ih end of "that time started to return to Virgin City, where they intended to buy a little home. They decided to make the journey afoot iu order to avoid expense, but they bought abottleof whisky t drink on the way. "Come on, my datiing' said 'oil, as thty set out together," "wo'il be hapry hot." Their tiist elV'it to bo l.ypj.y i'. s to di ink the liq-ior. It was ex ceedingly coin and late that night Gill htacrg-iei! int ataveiu thoroughly intoxi catd. sniii that his w ife had frozen to death back on the mad. .-ho was found dead, indeed, but Chiliad murde'ed her in a di ni. ken quarrel. George A. Ormiston, of New burp, N. Y., was taken to tlie Hudson River Stito Hospital at lY.ugbket ; tie. one day last week, on an order issued by County Judge Brown, a commission to i-.iqu'rc into his fcanity having pronounced him a mono maniac. Oriniston believes that a'.l his thoughts are known by others. He imag ines that he ii suffering from a disease of 'ho head by which his thoughts escape him through his nostrils and ears, and that every petson can tell what he is think ing shout. 'I'o prevent this ho keeps his nostrils and cars plugged wi'.h cotton, but this seems to d i him no good. When he imagines b a thoughts o;o thus escaping he t-huts his eyes ar.d g'es through ail sorts of facial contortions in cider to stop them. He ia apparently sauo in everything else. A br.v eleven years old committed sui cide in Philadelphia Friday afternoon. His name was William shier, living with h:s grandmother who left the house to vis it a neighbor, and during her absence he locked the door and went into the cellar, wheie he piled up a number of blocks, and ' standing on them, tied a ropo to a joist. After adjusting tho rope to his neck he kicked tho blocks away. His grandmoth er returned in about half an hour and climbed through a back window. Afrer searching the house she desceuded to the cellar and found the boy hanging dead. His knees touched the ground. The only cause assigned for the suicide is that the child had lately been reading religions books which interested him deeply, and ho had been heard to express a desue to goto Heaven. ANOTHER GREAT n'ltiii: iv nnmrn .4 ' uu: i:n t:sb ma Harare & Honse-Feisliini Sere OWI.VC io (lis lsrus inereaM In niv ; 5!r-s the last ro luciluii In prie- "J the U.f.ri n of ths cash rrfirm, I find mvelf mM to t.t-cf.t mv cuomers ! a still Inn tier re-iu-tlou in u,, jTlcei of all C"inprl?eil tn my lar '." k. jusi1 tu ix.iv of rr: A od No. Cook Stove, trlmwitd c.ii.p'.et " f,,r onlv !?!M'i. Good liouatnl V.17ee lit -0 eti. per lb.; bett do. It Si ci. per Ih. No it. I rri-.r rr dmti- airci c.ffet' sold a tins store. Cootl IK alit'ir rtoves low tt . Good 1 1 a ffTi :', lo M !. per it. The larirc-i stor k of Klooi -Oil luth in tti.v rt-uo-t T, from 1 to - yd. w elu mi'l 1 101:1 ,w t T'i c! per ard. IKit iiii(i':t Ki!hi.!i Anviii t IS ets. ptr ib. Ne'er! V St f et. per psi er. tiood cast ;ee! T'! Kimrl und 1 ork lc ps ets. per tel. I'm t S (' --r 1'itper. Best rpmlitv !:tlvkt!tti V !. t 15c. p-r lb. Oot.tJ r-J rup Moi 1 nt from 4J lo ' ci. per ration. Oouii Iioor Locks an-1 Xim- compJcte, fit !- rtj. eaeti . (iood Cotton Tfir- irl at 4 et. ft fl'onl. Ht-st iinalltv Wineli Mii, -" i w J ( if hi 4') e.t.e ;h. ";- o 1 l'.ii e nt K el. per H. I5 qua'itv So!? I.etHher st t- to :!. per !b. ' nojtne-t.iUed Axes nt l.'enii ur'nM. Largest slock i f nir i! Cloth In ihe count? nt et. per yi. 4 dor. bard wood 1 turned bead, Clothes !',! 1 f ;r pi ets- Clark's O. N. T. Machine tvtton at 5 is. per spool. Ooodlonir lisn.))s rsn: tee) ehtrt 'S f 'M-tOc!. eai ti. r,-vfl rine Vh JP.iirds fin- ?i r. Lsraest (UHk ol hookmaOiiiM'! In towr. t-tj iw.v. W!itnf ?oda nt 4 et. pr H Hfit quBlilj tour-tliiuJ Mmium t 01 ks l ; each. Good Con! Shovels. 7. 1". 15 R;id ets.ei-.iii. Pearl Starch ets. per lb. lur the l.i:ft block of guen-iire In tn, nt verv In I ncrg. Hul B!:Oiir SoJft at S c'. lr b. Distoc's ti-!t riunuty foot fro- Cut at i.V. 1 have the lai r-M srock ol Spice In town. Tr lw. Good Door f.Atelies n low n T eis. eti. LuiKe stock of Ta'.ie ho.! Ited 4"ntcrl lew- t mi' a. 6o.-)d Tlourai !.'!-'. pr aek. Largest atuck of t:aswiue and Lfucps.r, ti. verv low. No. 1 Turntture Vanish at I1.4H per si. tlood Cm-act btfeis at ets. a ptr Over I'M length and 'x-s 'lire and Cnr;-g P.o.'tskopt in stock, verr low. T5et Tol.acco in lire mxi kel. at i'o ets. p"r SOU kegs Nuii now In stock. reus, i ctel ...,i tmHn i.r Ski tniick Iron. liner- lor or scrap iron nniis Kei t In stoc. I have the hest Cienri in town for the m-':eT. 0er m sizes or Wmdf.w Uluss k:l in r ok, verT low prlct s. Large steek or liuf fron and II ne b-rs -nn on hau l, fit low rati s. (iio1 f:no il.im Co'nt at 8 c!. fsch. Lai" Slock f T.st'ie .: Clot lis r,n hand, very low. Rest Linseed "il, !:rect from Factory, ft t :s ct. Duponfs .ft F. r.T. K-fierow-ler. 40 cf p '?. Ilrop Shot Mt J 1 ol"- Per Ih. n.-ft Green C. .-rr. e i-.t 1". cie. per IS. r;a!vtiizc1 Con 1 Him k.-i. us low us !.j cs. fa. iood (M een Co T. e at M ct. 1 -r in. Hest pure White I.r .1 I si K' to per keg 1 f T, !! . 5tove Tipe. niaJe of the test Iron. teJucd to 8 Ct!. 3tT Itl. A larie nsortnif r:t of Triivaie on ban:. vc elK-ip. 1.' pupere K-'"ni'C rt 4'ofTo for "5 e!. Largest stock of Triin!-' end Vaiiici 111 t--.w, virv ef ftp. A largo assort men t "of u.:a,l it slmn cn list at l.'.vrctt pricea. Taper Wind'-'T SI at :V et-. per ml. Toilet and W!iinir S. nt t in enJ!es v ?!' r Cofk Stores 1 10:11 f... ip to & Large assort tin nt or IU;r. clothes ant Ti-.tb Hruhe. Heating Ptovts fiom C'Mup tn ;Ji j:rr rtii n p. Fx I ra No. 1. i':itt. tl .flt per Pri re I . Berolvers.flveaniisevMi nots. t ;:ir.'nif: ek from 1 u-,i I" '-.. T!ei Carbcn Oil at 10 cis. per gal. Tho a n.-.T art or.lv a few if th ti'-nar-: of rttelas in th bardwara a-..t !Ke.u turi.ifUir.a ::ta wh'.c'j I am fiirtoshirg l eui'.ir P w iri--.f 1 iP,n't adveri:e f Mi: at per cent, el.-ea; er. -r indeed icv cheaper, than ether men !. aa 1 think It Letter t" let 1 lie put. it? iu.!a that ( r 'l.tm aelrc . Pi" 1 .!. drert!f U sei' K: "' ! " thcrean he dl and ii'TH hundred t-f-r.n.n tha'dnliar. Ne therw.il 1 threw -nt a !' pla article "f i:'lomtt' d'OciTH'. tril t'''. n i-a on.' i..n rl-t ?w- .,r three l-r t on -.mtU:ni.' else to r-at n;. tor tlia lc-s. tt it will he niT en '.eavr-r t.. wvc'lf at the! t livina rr. tit. and I pr-.'mfe t his ei aue I know lh I .-.in furr.iM. n '! hi pr: :h:i! !!! he "a-eri-i.il t'j h. '.h i'.-r and t-.jyer. and Tt--: t ( : Sc whieh w...uld her.eht ,fo '.M r. !n .he ' -r rTt.arkii'!f y u all f .r the ll'eTa iT.-rii heret..tere eeafirred up'-r. me. and b- i;n Ira cont'.Quauce and ip.-res f ti e air.f. I r--njaia l-.cspe.'ltal.r 'ir-. Li. HVNTLKY. tbei.f-'Jrg N-v . 2. l'T1-. 1 'J g EVERYBODY! AS I h nun HOW ISTHiS FOR CHUP? S.TEITELBAUM, r ( AnitdLi.Towjc, nrrEM W Tetlre to inform the jtubllf- in gent nil that u-c tore Established a Store AT TUNNEL. HILL, And reiptclful'y inite p.ttntion to tht :st x'hfxt it in! rsa? Mnci More in Qnantit? ana Variety t Jan i lisuallv kt-pt in store of t! e r. 1. It is everytrhrre concerted by tho;' irho have given us a ctill that TS NOT F.vil'A l l-tii T'H QUALITY, YiEIETY aaJ EXTENT by nj" other nock tn t ne:clit'i t hn 1 --'. we hall Trom to:.- t tri.i- 11 ! 1 r.vrr fu ture and new lines rt p ds shail aliTS t i:y in IhisC qiiani I! Ie hi d al low 1:0 ro ciictii'n in s: ck wa li.-pc I v strict udher enee to nuoii linol'S. l.'S MAK.K oL It SI'OllU THtCHEA 1 Pel I- I A" HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL KIND OF GOODS! M-ite lhaQ tat. ha!i en "ra v r to Di -! ' : the micre-t i f a.i c slv" to DEAL WITH US PERMANENTLY fcjr earefiiHv eatei inir to thetr want? ml aod treat 1 mk I tiP m r s we on 1 sf U 1 ' : ; wish to he trenli'd inali niRttr5 I'crlftlnlug to tuii:ie!. 8i lbs. Green Coffee for - 7f ! 15 lbs. Brown Sugar for - 10 boxes Essence Coffee fcr walking on tue hvoiiub w mi ' '"j when nn eleeantly H!ire.l man darted b- jJ pure Japan Tea 10T hiud Mrs. Dellary, raiiKlit both other dia- no. z macKerei. per kii, &i T O FAHM 1Z f We would tav we bare an nnloritet A-r.-z3 for all kinds of grain an 1 produce, at: i . , can oner t r.eni pi 10 - 1.00 of others in Itis tu'iit- - 1.00 CASH PAID FCR GRAIN S3 B.Gt.MD M n- !?VVearnellva .:ieit the H'fUre; '? 'hs - 2DC. rnt'lie and de igo our best e!t ni in a.i i-a. - actions. ri - 50c. B. M. JOHNSTON & CO. mond earrings and endeavored to tear them from her ears. He succeeded 111 tearing ono out, lacerating the ear, and escaped. While Peter Schmidt and his son in law were -walking along the railroad track near Port Jcrvis, N. Y., on Saturday night, tomceta aon if Schmidt, who wen about to arrive from Germany, they were struck by A passing tmin. Schmidt wa killed on tho spot and his sor.-in-law seri ously injured. Young Schmidt had ar rived at the station beforo the accident and reached home in time to meet hia father corpse. Xancy Wa pa-coona is an Indian maid en of the Miami tiibe, living near Wabash, Ind. She desired a white husband, and advertised for one, hinting that, tbe ac cepted man would get a comfortable home by marrying her. John Madison llazel ton, 00 years old, exceedingly tall and lean, with his nose awry by means of breakage, and very lame in one leg, presented him : self at Nancy's dwelling as a candidate. Shea:d not a void, but drove him out with a club. P.mhop Foley, of Chicago, died a few minutes beforo 4 o'clock Wednesday morn i ing of typhoid puenmonia, combined with severe dysentery. His mind was perfectly clear and he prayed constantly while able ; to articulate. As bis speech began to fail : he tinned to Dr. McMullen and FaiJ : "I ; appoint you administrator; I have tried to I do mv d-'itv; I baw to the will of Almighty ; God." The funeral services will be held ' in Chicngojto-day, after which the temr.ins will be lal.en to Baltimore for interment. - 1 - 1 50 ,20 10c. 16c. 50c. Lake Herring, per i bbl., at 1 lb. Goshen Cheese for -1 gal. Non-Exp!csive C. Oi!, 1 " N. Orleans Molasses, AM A I.I. oriitn .IOOl AT PRICES EQUALLY LOW I l-ff-pon't pais tliis announeemsrt unnonrfJ, tmt read and profit, by it l-jr our own Pen. -fit. Meantimn permit us to state ele.-rty and distinct. It that ii telio..ve.- all parties in llee times ol de-irr-a-on to invesr tholr money wlifre It will Prinir tlie be-t r"tnnn. Hence il istl.at all v.rpi-il to Imv their 1 'ry (loo I. Owriri. t lotion, and ail oilier V ind of ,,ierch "''."';", H XVM Feb. 7. 17. H- Carrull'i'wn, I'a. BlairsYille Ladies' Semmary. Second term haian futcitr 1st, 1ST I'ot tarmiacd Informatiun ai j.ly to Rev. T. R. EWING, Principal, r. 1, lT.-li. HI.AIRSV1LLE, PA. W IHU wthlirf. 1 , Mckae's. Toanel Hiti- FLOl'IilNO MILL Wir.1.1 AMSBCfia. January 24, 1ST9. 6m. PTflDCP ' noUI1a)i'rr o I unto IlfCORPORATEI IX 1S5T. STRICTLY ON MUTUAL FLAli PR0TE0T1CN MUTUAl FIRE IHSUMHCE COMF N1 OF EBENSBURC. PA. VanwM.'w Vias "T ai A. SHOEMAKER, Attornit- AT-Ivr, 'Hbeiiaburg. Office on High ll si, , -1 1 F. itraet. eaat Tit of residence : ; r MIXKDrKls,withtiatn.tuc. qJ fit Only Five Asscsmenis in 22 Yeai". NO STFAM MILLS TAKEN. GOOD FARM PROPERTIES GEO. M. BEADE, PrtsiJf- T. W. DICK, Secretary. EtieniMiTf , Jf n. 31, 1ST -lj-. pe. 4 a -r. f " f.nt. JuNLS k I'O., S'n-.tu, N. V. nr Fan-y t'ard. Chrome, fn ;,,,5m;t k'e'r " OU 1 alike, with naira, '-0 tt. 3. I . K :i m, M . II
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers