EDENSDURC, PA., FRIDAY, ---- JAN 11 1880 "i - ; .-. r m a , i - w- ,."c the i 1 Tit this number v.e commence the n.,HiMtinnnf the f.n.rlemth volume cf thVnvflv nnevPlit ttllicll Sl'tllOllcll ? - of no special concern to the general pub- ! lie, is not devoid of i-eculiar interest to our -if If. Since we took charge or ine ( Taper, then known as the Dunmrct end j Xintind. just thirteen yearsago, wehave given to it our undivided attention And our lx-st energies, intent (Hily uiin fur ninhing our patrons with a reliable and useful home newspaper, a well as a firm and consistent party journal. In this latter feature of its careerthe Freeman i ha-i endeavored, without fear, favor or i affection, to discharge its whole dtitv to i the Detnocracv cf the entire county. and has studiously ignored and will con- linnp to Urtiorc h11 -jeft ionnl ffliii-T in ' its advocacy of what it believes the liar- mony, vigor and success of the Democ- cracy of the county demand. There have been occasions in the past, as then. may be in the future, when we felt coi ( strained to dissent from certain conci sions of county committees and courJ" convention, and we have never fo? a moment h sitated to express that disfnt iu plain but temperate language. In loing so, however, we kept consVtlj in view whnt we honestly believc'to be the true interests and ultimate welfare of tht; parly. In some instaces we m.iy have l?en mistaken, sine error in judgment i.s one of the intimities of human nature. But of this enough for , lde present. j In end( avoring togiveon subscribers full value frr th-ir jiatrniage we are justified in saying that dure we pro- cured onr 1 :-v press the J kekm.vn, as a gen.-ral rule, contains nirre reading mat- j tf-r than any other paperof the same size ; i;: liie tate. W'ev. i.'l continue faithful- i ly so long as we remain to "labor in the good cause and to make our paper more acceptable than ever. But in order to do this o-ir subscribers must be prompt in furnishing the sinews of war. We Jtever yet sued one of our patrons, al though a good many of theJi who are fKirfully in arrears must often have felt that they richly merited t?" ,,f of a summons. In entering upon "lg volume we will only say, in coiici,", that if our subscribers will lei form thr part t iwards the I'iieemax, it. will always honestly and faithfully disrhavge its whole duty to them and to the party it represent s. Tier. Johustow a TrVntn of Fridav !.iL having aildressed a;i editorial letter to liistrict Attorney Hose, alleging that ' tb:- iniiueiliate cause of Joseph Gibb's death i.iti n '.count of wl.n.-h is iv n eNe ThtTc was the 'iuhimian and brutal : treatm-nt of the ' '( iHiiiaugh borough IM'.ice,' au-l informing Mr. Uose tliat it i- liis bui.'ics. to indict the policemen. the Johnstown Itrm'rnt of this week contains a h-ngthv and wellwritteii re- ' piy to the 7V.''!'ii. ietter, in which the following are statcii ;ts the facts in the ' -:i. ,n:d as they appear probable they ruliifly dispose of the TrOitmr' state-m-nt : 'jt iK ir.auch 1 K.uuh policcmnn ''i d .iM"-l mi; 011 tlii-stot-t on Vtil ' oAV'ni'o't . ' '" y.'. ;:.i,Vt"no't know liim ' nl supposed; him to lie ihimk that he put ii!'!is it: 11 ia,".n ami Willi another police man roti eyed him to the Johnstown lock- '. up, and. alter putting him on a bench in a cell, left bini tluit the Johnstown poiieo were y,:i-i ;!inl furwaitl in the 01 it corridor from that time until fr,r o'elm-k in the vp rr.injr, an 1 heard the man lie:llie that ii5 to that time none of the policemen of either horonirii had heard of l.ihbs having, l.en strtick with a shovei on the h.'ad t'i 'I li.lt t th.it they suppor-eil (ohhs was ecp- iii'.', nntii 111 the mi'ininir they found the poor fellow dc;'d. Assuming all this to be true, as lh It, j;cK-,-.r( asserts, we fail to see any evi dence of inhuman treatment on part of the ('oni-niaug'i police. It was unfortu-nat-j that they did not know that Gibbs lad been struck by Malatt, but so it . e-.i:v ;m-. ; tinrefore no phvsician was called in To see him. If the Jh-mnr rat's statement is not true, the I'rib'.'nc has a plain remedy, and that is for its editor to make information against the Conc maugh borough police, and have all the facts thoroughly ventilated before a J'Hdice of the IVacc. It w ill le seen from the proceedings ' f the County Committee, which met at the Court House o;i Tuesday last, that otr propositions relating to the method of nominating candidates for county of fiecr w ill be Mibnuttcd to a vote of the Kni'vr.it ic elctors of the county on S.iturlay. .lime 10th- -the day appointed by the Committee for electing delegates to the County Convention, which will me; t on the follow ing Monday, June '21st. l'.ctuctn now and then theI)emo rals of the different districts v. ill have ati.ole t'lie t j dl-M-is.-s (he different plar.s, or systems, and to arrive at a wis" and corit:::l eonclnsioii. o far as we are 'onor-nicd. we are decidedly in favor of t h' ( leaificld s-t in. with one" import -.11. t t har.ge or modification, to which we wtil hereafter direct attention, and will .ogam pnbli-.li the rules and regulations f the sysicia iin.b r whi'-h Clearfield has 'come r,e of the best organized iH mo "ralic .-untie. i;ithe S'.iite. The f lec tion Irv tke Commit tt-e of delegates tothe tate Convention was n doiibt nccess. 'ir- l.;r oiii onic 1...- jiisti.'h'd on the gro-.iu.l tl :t the State Convention this year wail putty certainly ;;s.-enib!e le. f'if the tiKetinc of the County Coi veil. 1 01 tire 211 of .June. Instructing h-) u gates to vote iu the convention f.'r J. 11. Hancock f"i" President was well nio'igh. a- Hancock is a 1'ennsylvaiiian. an l. alth ush a military man. injs.ses-.es the ijti.i'iti s of true ta'( ni;inship in an eminent degree. As a quest ion of fact, t?iowt -vcr. the man don't live tln can tell o-day with any approacli to accuracy '"ho is ia!lv the 1 ho!ce of the IVmoc 4 A- f tiie county as the next candi 'l.tfe for the I'residencv. "1 lit i- r.II.I.s w :-re louml l.y me. lau- ph;n comity Grand .tun la.-t Tuesday -Tiiic-t Ki mble and his lobby agents. On Wcdi.ri-dav when the case against -Saitrr v as called Ju-Ie I'earson made nn ordi r that all the caes ero over to an adjoui-e-d t'ouit, coninienciii. March .th. :.i:d lasting tu weeks, and that no t'orthe' -': 1 1;. will U- j-raiitf.l for ai.j ; t - e. Tiir editor of f Johnstown TViiW, ' in his paper of -stcrday week, repub- J lished Grant's ,,ow J'a e Jt and now ; Po don't" iff r to Harry White on the :;. , estion written in Mav third term fvmiun, wruien in ii, ' , i a 175, and cr'"ae some nurouuciory 7 . remarss in iiereimn ifict iu. ; "I ike all 1.1 lranl,a) letters, it reads l t ' :i ' 4 . as yell lour t:a hu 11, wa wiute.. . j I.. ... ... ,1 lit. W.,ln. it aid at tU "--""6- 1 tr farewMress, Webster's reply to .Hayne, or Jncoln's Gettysburg speech, . :n x M.l otwl rnlniiri(l for nil fntlirf "in - time. 'ins eiegain, Hiiaa i.u 1 mwa ?a mrows compieieiy 111 me shade, a' the previous efforts of theJTYt hime in 13 disguUn? adulation of the : man wi according to its startling an nounf ment not many weeks since, had , "a bl on his left hand." AVhat Grant me:i'- y nis leuer lU uu strfd, as he intended it tole, by one-ha.f of nc Republican paix rs as . cppofiUon tc'l ly the other half as m furor of a trd term, and no man to-day can road ' and say whether "The snake that made the tragic Was coiner South or coming back." ThjS n0.,vcver? j3 not important now, g9 Gr.int id 0,,eniv in the field for a third t(rnK aml rtiVwH thfc Cameron clan to .v,:vpr him the twentv-eieht delegates from this State, in the very teeth of the resolution passed by the Republican State Convention at Lancaster over which White presided, only a few days before Grant's letter was addressed to him. Washington's farewell address and Lincoln's speech at Gettysburg are both models of their kind, but what shall ' we say of the relative merits of Grant's i inconclusive letter toWhite, and Web- ' sfrer's speech in reply to Hayne ? That swech, delivered in the Senate almost ! fifty years ago. is regarded as the finest, j grandest specimen of American oratory i and equalled only in Kngland by por ! tions of Burke's and Sher'ulan'ii speeches 1 on the impeachment of Warren Hast ings. And now, such being the fleeting ! nature of fame, the country is told by a ! newspaper advocate of a third term that , j Grant's non-committal letter to Harry White, will pass down in future history i side by side with Webster's immortal ! replv to South Carolina's great champion : of the doctriae of nullification. 'Shades i of Washington, Websterand Lincoln ! is ! it thus that your earthly glory is to le : eclipsed by the author of a double mean ! ing letter which was received by the country when it was published, with a i general expression of derision and con- tempt? , 1 , v Mi: MAN.vixti, who represents the ' Uli'lly Springs iMiss.i district in C'on- gress-j. states that the jK-ople in the Morth who brieve the negro does all the work j in the C'ltton fields are veiy mu.-li inis 1 taken IfVtt. on t lie contrary, the white men of tlJp South, prodticed three-fifths of last year"':- cotton crop, which amount ed lo nearly net milli'm of bales, and that it i a fact well known in the South that : while labor can. and does, rnise from twcnty-five to fiyj y per cent, more ton to tt-Tacii' than colored labor. cot Mr. Manning believt s that owing to the fer tility ofy the soil in the South, if white men cau l,tJ convinced that they can cul tivate more profitably than any other kind - f labor, they will set tie there. To briii;.' about that result, he believes that if certain statistical facts can be placed before ijio country in an official form, by mt ns of a fair ami non-partisan census tbi.-vear, it wiu'.d be worth millions of di'.lais to the oiith. (Jen. Walker. S tiierinteiideiit. of the Census Uureau. stoutly assorts that he will not appoint any lull liont st ami cnmieiont men as superviso.s of the census, and if he does so Mr. Manning w ill be able to get all the facts iMMin which he so confidently reiies lie fore the people of the country. Oi'it town was honored on Tuesday last by the presence of two henchmen of Mt.Tilden. onr: of whom. Atweilbj name, ha'ls from Philadelphia, and is closely allied I'.ilitical'y with Sam'l .1. llaudall : and the other John Downey, formerly a member of the House at Harrisburg from this county, now clerk to the Pen sion Committee of the House at Wash ington. It is no secret that thii.-.J two distinguished gentlemen came here for the purpose of .securing through the County Committee, at its meeting on that day. the election of two Tilden del egates from this county to the State Con vent ion. Their mission, however, was a failure, the memliers of the County ! Comm'.ttt'u being of opinion that they were fully competent to select the dcle ' gates without any dictation either from Philadelphia or Washington. When "Old Hickory" was President he told James 5uciianan, who was interfering in a matter which Jaekson thought did not concern him, that he i Jackson ) "once knew a man who got rich by minding his own biisiiu.ss." Mr. Tildei-.'s two agents might do him good service by following J ickson's advice to his friend Ihicliamtn. It is aniHnimjed from Washington ' that the eiei tion committee of the House j will make a report invalidating the elec tion in the Centre district ami st-ndi -itr the Ciirtin-Yocmn contest back to the i people. The editor of the riiiladelphia Thiir says that a new election can be held on the day of the Spring elections. February 17th, without additional cost to the people of the district, and that Curt in and Yocum will of course again le the opj-osinp; candidates. This may l-erhaps prove to be the ense. provided an elect inn can ! held at the time refeired to, but Gov. Curtin's failure iu Novem ber, 1ST?, to carry beyond all doubt or civil a district that is strongly Demo cratic should admonish the Democracy, when they come to nominate a candidate to be voted for ur.rl November, to take some other man than the ''War Govern or." The Democracy of that district can't afford to 1 isk another defeat at the next general election with him as their candidate. Ttn. people in Maine ought to be hap "py iu as much as they imw have two Governors and two Legislatures the Senate having on Friday last elected Smilh. who was the Greenback oandi-dat'- for Governor at the Si'tomlicr elec tion and the Republican stnate on the next day having elected Davis, who was their candidate, lor the oilice at the same election. The Republican Legislature meetsiii the state JiOuse,and theGrecn litickcrs. or F unionist, in l.'nion Hall. Thus l.ir no .ollision bet ween the hostile 1-odies has taken place not even a list light but in the very nature of things Mich an e.eep!i. ,!,:;! condition of a ft airs n. r t -o-'u h it e an i nd. Ir the Democratic party can possibly be defraaded out of its chance to elect the rext Prudent, the Republican lead- ; era will leave no methods untried, whether fair or foul, to accomplish that wiw.ineri.ui vi ivm, i purpose, -auci h. oc.i.ovi , . ii.i,i:.... Voa' "Vm-V , . 1 n 4 1. X .. . 1..,.- aIa,, w.i wncn mr iwi-uuiunau - through the aid of John Kelly and his ; TI fo . Wti i - u.uuiu, , - ilir CrLrcrnAr in aficnrpil ft arfrft ma- i"" v. o- jority in both branches of the Legisla ture, there was a good deal of very se rious talk by leading Republicans in that State, as well as outside of it, in favor of the passage of a law at the present session of the Legislat lire giving to that body the power of choosing President ial electors and taking it away from the people. The bare suypyestion of such a ' course was an open admission of the in ability of the Republicans to carry the State, and the swindle was of such large : proportions (thirty-five votes) that fear- : ful of its damaging effect on public opinion in other States, the New York leaders abandoned the project. Their scheme now is. and a bill with that pur pose in view was introduced last week ' in the lower branch of the Legislature, to give the people in each Congressional . district the right to vote for one elector : for the district, and for two electors for ; the State at large. If such a law pre vailed in all the States it might not be so objectionable, but to apply it to one State only would be a gross outrage. ; As New York is now districted for the ' ' election of Congressmen, the proposed ; change would give the Republicans ; . about Ocety-thrce electors, and the Dem- , ; ocrats tn-clvr. It is not believed thatthe ' Republicans will hazard the passage of such ,i measure through the Legislature ; in opjiosition to the warnings of the New York Tinas and other i.itlucntial Re- publican organs, whose editors predict the most disastrous results from the : movement should it be consummated A itKCKPTioN was iv'11 011 Wednes day nitrht of last week by the Bepubli can menilnrs of the Ohio Legislature to (ieneral tJarlield. who. on the previous day, had been elected to succeed Judcce Thurman in the C. S. Senate on the 4th of farch, 1S.S1. In referring to -lnli;e Thurman, Gen. Garfield paid him a high and deserved compliment, which is alike honorable to himself and eminently due to his veteran and distinguished com petitor, lie said : I should he base did I not also take rcc oKiiizance of the frre.it man whom you have Hefted me to succeed. I say for liim that Ohio lias few larger minded, broader minded men in the record of our history than that of Allen G. Thurman. (Applause.) Differing widely from him ns 1 have done in polities ami do, I recognize him as a man liifrh in character and firent in intellect, and I take this occasion to refer to what I imve never hefore referred to in public, that many ' years aero, amid the storm ,f party strife, when the air wns tilled with all sorts'of mis ! sites, aimeii at the character and reputations . of jdiolic men, when it was even for his party interest to join in the general clamor against me and my associates. Senator Thurman -aid in public in the campaign, when ni"n are more HKeiv to sav uiikiiiu miners as at any place in the world, a ".most generous and earnest word of defense and kindness which I shall never forget so lone as I live. (Ap plause.) 1 say moreover that the flowers that bloom over the garden wall of party ' polities are the sweetest and most fragrant that bloom in the gardens of this world, l Applause,) and where we can fairly pluek them and enjoy their fragr.inee it is manly ami oeiightful to do m. A I.ADY WITH A Fri.I.-GitOW.N IK.U!. There is now residing in haw : renceviile, Allegheny county, a lady whose face is covered with almost a full i grown leard. and there is a singular storv connected with the freak of nature -which, to a certain extent, mars the la- dy s otherwise leminine appearance.--She is said to have been born and raised on the Allegheny mountains at a ioiiit where the locality was very sparsely settled, so that the singular deformity was scarcely noted by the people. As the lady grew older the beard is said to have become stronger and more luxuriant being a growth which representatives of the sterner sex would have envied. About a week ago the lady removed to La wreneeville to take up her residence with relatives living in that locality, and it then became apparent at once that the beard, owing to the restrictions of soci ety, should 1m? suppressed, if such a thing; were possible. As shaving would only lie an encouragement to the future growth, the lady's friends were at quite a loss as to what they should do, but fin ally a" gentleman, who had been given to understand 1 he 'pressing r.tcessity of a remedy, promised to consult a drug gist to see whether there were not com pounds as well adapted tothe destruc t ion (.f v. Inskers as to make them nour ish. He was informed that there was, but that, being in the form of acids, the remedies might have the effect of injur ing the skin, in wi.irh event it might be more desirable to lit the beard nave its way wilhout interruption. The gentle- mail accordingly let., and as lie has not i since npplied for any of the acid, it is supposed that the lady has cencludetl to allow the beard to remain. A SiiMNAjiia i.brV Dr.Ain.Y Dfi.d. The unconscious and fatal shoot ing of Mrs. Helen .1. Ward in Rust on, a few drtys ago, by her daughter, says the Low ' ell (M iss. ) J.o7. has been the cans-; of much comment. Rut it docs not ap proach in inarvelonsiicss the case of the , boy Fitts, of this cily. Some years ago , this boy was stopping with a family, ' friends of his parents, in New Hamp shire. One ni.ht he arose in Ins sleep, got out of the house, the doors of which it was thought had lc!i securely fas tened, went more than half a mile, on his way crossing a stream which, we be lieve, he wp.s obliged to bridge with a board that he somewhere found (but of this v.e are not quite sure'!, and went to the house of a boy of alint bis own age, with w hom he had lietn playing the pre vious afternoon. In a shed he got an nc made his way upstairs, and through several rooms, to the bed win re his . friend was sleeping, and with th axe inflicted several blows on the head and face of the lny. from which it was sup jxised he could not recover. The lad esca;cd from the house, went back over the same road he came to his home, and was found in his bed in the morning asleep and unconscious of what lie had done. The victim of the somnambulist is still alive, but young Fitts died a year or two after. This stranere affair, which is snscept ible of contirmat ion from man v sources, entirely eclipses the Ward trag edy, and is an evidence of the unac couiitability of tioople for acts committed in their sleep. R. F. Kennedy, iate I'rothonotarv of Allegheny county, left Pittsburgh for Leadvillc a few days ago, and it is now said that he is a defaulter for .rJC. X. His jrojertv has been seized, and his two bondsmen are good for the de falcation. He leaves a famiiy behind, and it is said he took a female with him. Howarh R. M i i.i.iT., of Somerset county, was nominated to the Senate by Mr. Haveson Monday last, as Supervisor of the Census i:i this district. AVe never heard of him Wfoie, but that is no rea son whv h mav no. ! a onmptirpt man f. r the i-!a-.-. SEWS ASI OTHER NOTIXKS. Thc Gnnt boom flegh peems to be losing Sixteen farmers were fro7en to j death in Minnesota on the same day, , . WI1 it LUIIIU IV ILIrtllvrv. . T,7 iexican Government has or- t . ,. ". I jered the Castle 01 i napui tepee 10 in- re- lUte1 for the reception of General Grant ' Qr,., .jr... ; T Tlimwn nri(, of PittS- i.r..v,vn .... i,nmia l.rrovf o-i-jko mnnnfactiirers. ana : 1 J tm N ....... - - .- J 1 and Thomas Phinney, fireman, seriously injured by a railroad accident near Bethlehem, Pa.. Friday morning. It is said the Curtin-Yoeum eon tested election case will lie relegated to the eople of the district and a new election ordered to take place in Febru ary. At Viiliamsnort,on Saturday, Judge Cummin sentenced Eliza. Boyd, a color ed woman , ".. years of age, convict of arson, to the iienitentiary for five 3 ears and a half. A stranger entered the Congrega tional House in Boston, several weeks ago, gave 1 for foreign missions and .?"i,tHX for home missions and then quietly withdrew, refusing to give his name. The Charleston, S. C, papersjinfonn us that strawlierries are quite plentiful in that city, and that they have lieen selling for fifteen cents apieee. Again, we say, who wcnldu t eat stawlierries at that price ? Two tramps undertook to rob and murder a man at Tuscumbia, Ala., but they were weak from long privations while he was robust, and the consequence was that he killed one and fatally wonnd pil ttic oilier. Jacob Bombergcr, a rich JIarrisburg i 1 Pa. 1 hanker and a liberal contributor to Republican campaign funds, says that Grant's nomination will cost the , Republicans l.Ooo German votes in that eountv alone. Mrs. Maria T,. Crew, aged 2 years. Wiis feloniously assaulted and murdered ' during her husband's absence, in their farm house, at (J rot on Ridges. Miiss., , on Saturdy afternoon. A tramp is sus i peeled of the ciimc. Mr. Hayes has nominated James ! Russell Lowell, of Massachusetts, to be Minister to England, and John W. Pos ter, of Indiana to lie Minister to Russia. Lowell, is the present Minister to Spain, and Post it to Mexico. Upon representations made by the Ree-hocpers" Association, the Post-Office Department has decided to allow qui en lieestobe "carried in the mails with their necessary attendants, as long as no per son is injured in handling them." Cvrus Morrison, residimr nearP.ear , town, Lancaster county. died a few days ago from paralysis, caused, by juisoning his system through the extensive use of hair dye on his leard. He was about "0 years old, and haves a wife and large : familv of children. Arthur P. Gorman was' on Tuesday hist elected by the Legislature of Mary land I". S. Senator to succeed Senator Whvte. whose term expires Match 4th, next. There is a dead -lock in the Mis sissippi Legislature over the election of T'.S. Senator to succeed Rrucc. ' Archbishop I'ureoll has lieen failing very fast of kite and has returned to the 1 , convent in P.rown county, and entirely given up administering the work of the . church. He is reMrted ery weak and prayers for the restoration of his health tire offered in all tlif churches. Walter K. P.rown, 10 years old. the son of an opulent citizen of New York, shot himself through the heart on the step of his father's house 011 Friday night. No cause for the tragedy is known, except that he had suffered some what from morbid melancholia. A deer was seen ;!oating on a small cak of ice down theWilliamette river, in Oregon, one day recently. The piece of ice was about as large as a door and it rocked and tossed on the waves like a boat. Ice-ship and deer-captain drifted on out to sea and what became of them , no one knows. The Irbh societies of Washington, says the Pittsburgh I'nst, have done a sensible thing in resolving not to cele brate St. Patrick's day with parades and banquets this year, but to turn over the money collected for the usual cele bration to the poor ot Ireland. This is a good example to other cities. Nat Smith, a negro confined in jail at Jonesboro", Ga., for an attempted outrage on Mrs. Gay, was taken out by an unknown party of men, carried live miles into the woods and hanged on a tree. When found he had a gunshot wound through his breast, apparantly made after he had lieen hanged. A destructive tire occurred on Fri day at New Rrighton, Reaver county. It started in the dry goods store of J. 15. Whiths, destroying it, together will: the millinery establishment of 1). Hammer. The building was a large- one and the stock was extensive. The loss will be ;?1h,(ki; insurance not known. After the ceremony had been er formed at a Pall River wedding, a for mer husband of the bride presented him self. He had lieen away four years, and sue nai snpjxjseil herselt a w idow. Ih ' offered to leave her to the new husband it she would give him hcrchild. and she closed the bargain on that basis. Authentic reports lately received from the iistiici.s in llosnia where fam ine has prevailed for the past month, describe the situation as heartrending. Resides many other sufferers, over Smhi persons are actually starving. The number of highway robberies has in creased alarmingly in consequence of the famine. A cable dispatch from Rome to the New York I'rti .liwn's .lourvt1, states that on the loth inst. His Holiness I'ope Leo XI If. approved the appointment of Rt. Rev. Dr. Fide, heretofoie Rishop of Natchez, to be Coadjutor, with the right of succession, to the Archbishop of Cincinnat i, and to Ik; Administrator of the Archdiocese. Rnrr Robbins, the proprietor of Robbins circus, was killed in a shock ing manner near .lanesviKe "Wis., on unday afternoon, while riding in a lit tle steamer on the river. The swift current carried the oat under a bridge and his head was caught between tiie smoke stack ami (he timler, crushing the skull and lifting the whole top t il" his head. Mrs. Smith, aged "s years, was in stantly killed on Saturday near the sig nal tower a little west of Newport sta tion. Perry comity. She stepped from the train at the st-j.tion and proceeded to walk up the track, and as she round ed the curve the engine of the day ex press coming east strtick her. killing her instantly. The unfortunate woman belonged to Newport. Hugh Ramsey, one of the oldest settlers of Sullivan county. N. Y., died a few days ago at the age of SJ years. He had lived in the same house for six ty years, and during that period had never been out of thelioundsof Sullivan county. He was a great render, and could reieat all ot Rurns's joms. H was born in Ireland, and came to this country when three years of age. Monday afternoon the Ilayden urv came into court and reported that, after over seventy-four hours of deliberation, they were unable to ayrree on a verdict. As the foi eman would would not say that an agreement was imimssible, the Ooiirt sent them out again. In the evening the reported that they could not 'agree and the Court discharged thein. They stood eleven for acquittal and one for a verdict of murder in the d-.gi-.t . a prominent Democratic politician, died reports that a man named Russ arrived on Saturday. at Little Traverse 011 Friday, who tells of Bradford, M'Kean county, boasts of ' the loss of Charles (J'Dt ll, his wife and having more eonfiimed drunkards on its , two hildren in the ice in the neighbor assessor list than any city or through of ; hood of Wangoshance lights. Iike Mich its iM.pulation in the State. . igan. They all started in a boat with .Tames Dal v. engineer, was killed, : him from Beaver island, or little Tra- The recent State convention of mill- era at llarrisburjr adopted a proposition hf mmmilt ,nr,W,l of one mem- ber from each county in the State lie an- pointed to agitate among ine miners. aiirt farmers a movement looKing 10 an , :mrr,vpmpnt of the varieties of wheat I and the establishment of an equitable -i- - .. i t-i, 1 - - . . . vaiue in uiu i mc - , executive committee of the association j was authorized to carry out the above i vipw. ... ..... ,..... A iiesnaicu trom ueiroit. jiicnicrpn. ' . . verse, on the i:ith inst.,but were caught lietween two liodies of ice. He was separated from them, and he believes they perished. A dispatch to' the Cincinnati Ka quirfr from Owentown, Ky., reports the fatal result of a family feud in Owen county, theotherday glowing out of law suits. After acase lietween Mrs Daniel Lewis and her nephew, D. G. Garvey, had lieen submitted to the jury four sons of Mrs. Lewis and Garvey and his two brothers became involved in a fight, and upon Frank Iewis striking Garvey the latter shot him fatally with a pistol. Garvey was arrested The Washington Z'osf in its issue of Saturday gives Hon. Horatio Seymour a ' boom for the Democrats nomination i for rresutent by the publication 01 a fine picture of New York's great states man, with a sketch of his career and the opinions of many Democratic repre sentations that he is the man to lead the party and save the country in 1KS0. Rut the Post cannot sa that it has received the assurance from Mr. Seymour that he will accept a nomination. At Armstrong, Kansas, two miles from Kansas City, Calvin Thompson was adjudged insane by the Probate Court on Wednesday. On Thursday morning he arose early, and shot Jan i s I . 1:. ..,.f.t., i .1.. r Morris attempted to rle, when the lun- atic tired again, striking his victim on the'back of tin .head, causing a proba bly fatal wound. Thompson ran out of the house and eseajed. He was to have lieen taken to the insane asylum on Pri da. lames I'll i s and his son John were drowned in the St. Lawrence river at Morristown. on Saturday night. Villis had lieen across to Rrookviile, where he purchased some goods, which were bro't over in a row Iniat and left on the edge of the ice. Ellis returned home for his son, who put on his skates and pushed his fat her before him on a sled. In this manner they proceeded until they reach ed the water, when ljoth fell in. Cries were heard, but when assistance arrived father and son had disappeared. - A woman at Nvaek. N. Y.. sub- ,lol ui -Kloof..! -rill l.v w liio-.ite' ber ! i. .....i ii...., :. .' i.;,,rr l, i..l V.ll.1 III1 I II.. 11. M l. II Hill IIMI II- I I'll- V with vinegar and salt: leaving her all i:ight on her feet, tied to a bed-o-t ; rubbing red pcer iu her mouth, and va rious other tortures. One day she told the child to go up stairs and undress, preparatory to being whipped until the blood ran dow n her legs. There was no reason to doubt the promise, anil the pirl therefore jumped out- of the s -cond , story, tied naked to the woods, and froze r.f ailv to death before she was discoyer ' ed. - A fewdavs ago a daughter. ?ixears 1 r.ld.of Daniel Roneer. of Middle Valley. AVavne count v. P met a horrible drath. A man who was in the employ of Mr. Roneer was t hopping wood in front of the house, and a little girl was near him pk-jcing hip; As the man was chopping, his axe glanced, flew from his hands, and st ruck the child a glancing blow fin the side of the r.ick. making a fearful gash and severing entirely the jugular vein. The child bled to death in three minutes. Had it iw-en a direct blow, the child's head would have been i idirely severed from the body. The death at Seneca Palls, N. Y.. Jan. 14th. of George P.dson affords a strange instance of premonition. He arose in the morningin apparent health. During the forenoon he gave his sister-in-law a ring, sayirg it was his last gift. Then he called on his most intimate per sonal friend, and with tears bade him farewell. He visited four young men and asked them to be bearers at his funeral, and invi'ed the mem)ers of the village band, to which he belonged, to , attend his funeral in a body. Seeking bis brother he made arrangements for i the disposition of his projierty, ami at 4 p. m. on the same day died. He was j buried in exact compliance w ith the pre : pa rat ions which he himself had made. ( ATiiot.tt; Colonization Scukmi:. The Directors of tiie Catholic Coloniz ation Society of the United States have d ci-led to call in the subscriptions to the capital slock, which is more than fully taken. Land for a colony in Gree ley county. Nebraska, of 2.","0) acres, lias been purchased and will be ojien to emitrrants and colonists by the loth of February. Contracts have been made for the necessary houses, which will be shipped from Chicago. These include a church, a house for emigrants, etc. The town sites were determined on and named n sjiectivHy O'Conor and Spald ing, in compliment to the two Rishops. The colony of the association in Noble county, Minn., established originally under the auspices of Rishop Ireland, was reported a complete success. Near ly three-fourths of the land is already sold to parties, chiefly from Roston and vicinity. The project of a paper to lie published in the inteiest of colonisation was proposed by Rev. Father Rj rnc. of Newark. N. ,L That subject was re ferred to the three Rishops and Father Rvi ne. Tin: subject of entertaining and wliole souie rcailitiii for the family circle is oner of practical interest in every household. It cannot be denied that the tendency of the American press is in too larce a decree to ward sensationalism, and in some instances even the sentiments of purity and sncredtiess prove an unsufticient barrier against the all pervadine desire of bein? novel and startling in the presentation of news. The exceptions to this common nil" among the metropolitan journals of the day are so few as to be worthy of notice when encountered. The Cuicaoo Wkf.ki.y Xf.ws is one of the few papers of which it may tic strictly said that nothing objectionable to pure thought and morality ever appears Sn its columns. It is an enterprising paper none in the West more so but more than that, it is a clean paper, one which it is safe to take into the family circle The Chk aoo Wkkki y News and the Cambria Frfiimax for52.eo ayear, postage included. Send subscriptions to this office. I5ai l.Ol 's Monthi.t MAO.V7.1NE rot: Kkii r.rARV. Tiie February- number of the charming magazine the best and the mo-t popular of all the serials in th" country is issued, and can be called a model tmnilM-r. There is not a dull article in it. There are romances, stoiics, adventures travels, poetry, wit and humor, excellent illustrations, nice engravings and a tine view of Nassau, X. I, and a very readable article about the same place by the author to ' Running the Rloeknde." With its improved appearance, enlarged form, new type, and so forth Ral lous Mag.17.ine is gaining thousands of new subscribers, and we are glad of it, for it is worthy of support. Ptib'lNhed by Thomas Talbot. 23 llawley street, Roston, Mass., at $1,o0 per annnni, postpaid, and for sale at all the news depots ic the country. R We will furnish Rai.i.oi;'s M.ui.l- 7INK to club with yonr paper 1,2 n um, postpaid. per an- AssWM Thi. Hid yon ever Vnow iinv . , . - ... . , . - ' i isiui io in- in, wiiiriui ma"Tion or tne stomach, liver or kidneys, or did von pvpr Know one w no was well when eitl er was ohsinicted or inactive ? Anil hid you ever : Mich., -want an acerit in this rountf at onee' i lftFJltt'lirtii(.r"f.l.!tliii:imt?,isiii)jl ! -know or hear of any ease of the kind that at a salary of Siftrt pr month and'expenses ! 10 cun"" J,,NESfc '-. a. V. ' a1m' a,,,,,, ,: , ... - lloji Hitters xyou'.d rot cure.' A-T-: onr paid. For full partttilai-s fioldrv-w as abov- -.-c . a .T : r iS 10 S ! ,!'M " " 1 " ic ?t i 111-21. ly.l M-..tfittrf A14reTrnek".. Ar-t Mi ... jiuiiimio $ v I'mler he Taj. -rn POL" 7 DIVEKS WHO KxrLOKJtH THE ffcTTOM FOR DEAD BOrIK- Tie Dundee correstH.ndimt of the Indon Tim 0ye9 an account of the operation m the four 1 vers employed in the portion of the river lay wnere ine train is rnK.mr... Of their investigations it savs : . - , i 1 - . . The belief 7 m-jr" hn eraiir bnione.i. ah of tbm, it . Ihoniht. ron bar. b.-r .pt -w.y l.y the Mie. rvt 11 tbr tim In aiinrnartiltiff when tliry my he expr'1 to flout, tnranure r bain tkn lor ro-overlnir them, fome fifteen boat from the ' ! whulinir fleet lire to beirln ereh In U the j ' mtndiinnks and bay of tho Irtth t-'r orrow. and ! ' Mr Walker. General Manager of the Ninth 1 : Britloh Hallway Ct)nnnr. hai written to the t hief "imtablr of Knrtiirshire. Kifcuhlre. and ; Iterwlckfhlre, nklra: them to Instrnrt Ihelr orrl- er To ke'p n i!lli?eni. lvkont aloni; the hor. ; Mr. Walker has also asked that '.lie KieateM eara . ahnnld be taken -n tbe treatment of the bodies. and has nth-red not only 'o pay all the eijwnfei . ; no Incurred, but alfo to aMve a gratuity ol 6 tor evrrv tuiny fennd. Kvhienre Is already to hand ' lor the identinratlc.n ol nearly every paptenirer In ; ' the lost train. Many relatiye ami friends of the : dead have come tronia distance, and are patiently ' ; waiting In the town. Others have cnt photo- ' arraphs. In sevcra 1 Instances the number mark- i cd on kayg carried by the mislnj? pa"cnjrcr! have been furnished. ucn a ounntlTy oi wreraae nas now come rv rlaires can sMH he remalnlnjr inside the irlrders. The action r.f the tide Is evidently brcaklnic them up more a,.:d more every day. THKOIJIKS OK THE ACCIPKXT. The Pnll yftiV Gazeitv thus discusses the , aocidr nt : The first point ascertained by the disc . very by the divers of a part of the wreck of trie train Is, ; that the brldee did not tall bef..re the moment j when the train was upon the lortton tha' fell. If , so. the Me.i or nn independent abstraction of 1 ZrV I lie Bine , and tram into the c!mm. tnni He denniieiv I abandoned. Nel, it is iti evidfciice ilia' li-. train was proceeding at a biot pace if three miles or i thereahoiita .er hour. Ths theory of a violent i concussion oftho t-nalne asrainst the Rirdt-r must, therefore, be -riven up. ll would be loo much to declare it Impossible (or the train to huve left the ' rails (provided as they w're with nrd) at that speed: bic it M extremely improbable tha. su-h was tho CRe. We have thus to rcicard tlte a;lr ' derf that jfave way nv supporting a slowly movlnsr . weight of some S'J or 1hj :onn, distributed over about the lens?:ho( the span of the bridge. As far as weight I concerned, this would have added , to the ptiitol ;ty of t bridge, unless r,, ronsl lera j Tdc an amount of osrjlatioii had ben s-t up as 1 wonld have passed the limit of safety were the ! bridge unloaded. We are t'.:us led to regard the i bad effect of the train on the bridge an mainly limited to the addition o; a surface of some 2.10 .""i.'i-ioiii-- rcsiHi fiia nrra "I oiicur itoiKii 'in o at a time. ! The Gi:kat Mii:iu i: Titi.vi. Enhkii at 1,st. The tii.i! of I.'ev. Ilayden :-t New . . Haven, Conn., for the allreeil murder by poison of Mary Sfaiinar-l fwlioin he was nr. . ' cuseil of seiliii-intz I. which has jut ended after being in progress lor many vseeks, will take rank as one of the memorable trials of ; the country, as it has been mainly a conflict between eonteiniing scicnti-t a"d physi ; eians. The prosecution examined H'-i wit- . nesses and the defence seventy. In this ar ' my of witncsi-s, the prisoner's wife, a hih- ' ly cultured and l-eautiiul w-'unan, stands the 1 i central figure. For two days she retained ; remarkable self-possession, and broke into ; I tears only when the prosecuting attorney : blnutlv asked her if she did not think ft . would le right to commit pcrjnrj to save her . ' husband from death on the scaffold. Among , the witnesses were twelve distinguished ' ' professors, eigtit of whom were from Yale ; 1 ( "ollege. flf.e of the professors was sr-nt ' to I'i.topc l.y the State j"vct!gat the tiKUHit ;-et uiv of ar-enn mamifact are f arsenic, such k.iowieilge be ine ee'"e--;irv ia the an.ilvx ef the arsenic I I found in the murdered woman. Speaking , I of ;i- examination of two exports a cerres- i pomienl says : I The l.ol.y iMtli the.e expert; was M io l eor pasrhs. 1 he Hos'on Dian was eertain that he ; eouhl restore the irieJ e'n-iinIs. and then ".e- i tt-miine whether 'h-y w-re the onr) uselot of hu man or atiunal hlou-i, and thi Vas.mt-n nan . was e.iially (wi'lf tl a. I c cout-l not. To thor . (Highly rtjii.ti-fiiitp T he nieri", . oT il;- d(.u:e, the . reader shouhi take Into a-c .unt I he amount of i l.loo-l disfarerl. Tak-all t ho eorptis-les saht to I t have hen lotin l on the Hayilcn knile ami nhtrt. ! : and they ..r,l. inr.ke a 0 of h'oo.1. 4 .o-.hi $.79 timed smaller than this degree n: ark : - Vifteen physicians were examined, of all grades and shades, and b-nr Metiiodi.-t cler gy men.. who were each contradicted by mem bers of their ow n flocks. The prison- r nay den was 011 the witness stand three whole days and a paii cf the fourth. He is de. sciUu'd as follows : lfe anfwere-l all ipir-sth.ni promptly, qnslifylne many critica! replies with referv'a lions, 'lin cross. ex tminstion was .ff.r .nd persistent, htit ' he nv-r lost iii terope-r. His tne. would ltuh un-ler insinintive i(U'-3t ions, and his cy s flash, hut his replies were soft an : j laintire. At r tain periixls .Mr. linviloi leaned forward in the t-ox, apparently to give emphasis to par;ii-ulr portion? 01 his testimony. 'I his done, he r-fUmrl his hmiI eaty jioitlon.wlth h-s vgn cros.d ao-1 hi." tiaht arm twunir orer the hsck of his eoair. I hire he persl-te-l in makitn: an explanation of an apparent contra.! ietion ol hts f-t in. hit in the pr- hmiDiiry -Tii-nination at Mad:s.m. n he refused to ive an ans-vi-r th it he thouirhl w -ol l plre loin in a false position: hnt. t the request of his counsel, he hrnily answered til- tn-U.ry, in ' .he trust that Mr .tones would f it Ir.m ri;til on I the re-dirvct examination. The I: lti kino State St:n at Qiis. Tv. en 1 t-live ol li.e Pity State Senators retire from JVice in isso, and their successors are to be ' chosen in November next. Jn aiMiii ui to the Senators to be elected by reason of ex piration of terms, a vacancy in the Twetitv ; fourth district (Sullivan. Montour, Cobim i bia and Lycoming), made ly the death of George I. Jackson, is to be tilled. the fol lowing is a ii.-t of tne vacant SemitoMiips : 1 . lieo. II . Smith, R. P.C.H. Spvni.,nr. II. il. John hiraon. K. '27. i. P. Vi'lrori"!i. I. 6. .Ino. I;. Kevhuro. II. v. Iuther H.Ke,-fer. K. 7. John 1'. tJradT. L. .'d. I. M. ("rawiord. Ii. 9" This. V. ' oper. K. ."-'1. Horatio t: . Ki-lo-r. K. 11 lian'l Urtnetii rout, H Jclm A. Ienion. K. 1.1. A. H. iMylin, 11. jS. A. J. ll.rr. 14 17. Oeo. F. .Meilv. H. in. (loo. A. Hvei'lmrt. Ti ai. K. C. Wnlhvns, K. 13.. Wra. T. IiHVies K. !.7. Thos. M. CUIr. I .TJ. Js. !. C lrk. 1). 41. John M. drier, 1J. 4-1. Jos. y, . Iinn.un. il. f John OIlMlliin, K. 7. eo. W . vVriirht. K. 24. (jeo. 11. Jnekson, I). 4;i. Henry llnuei ni lil. K. IleioI. iMtmbcr of Consress. Kcpuhlicans, 21 ; llemoerats. 6. The Pliiladelphia Ti)nrn remarks that the five districts now represented by llemoerats will p.ll elect Senators of like political faith. nnd it is probable that llemoerats will also ' , ehtffrn to smeeceil Wad hams, Keeter and Lemon. It so, the licpuhlieaus nili elect is : and the Democrats s, making a I lonxws atic : gain of three. The present Senate stands;:!' i Republicans and is llemoerats. including with ireenback vaiiations. The next si-n-, ate will le likely to contain 2!i Kepubiicans ! nnd -1 Democrats, giving the Republicans majority. With such a majority as we had i in the "House in 1ST4, this would give the : Democrats the Legislature on joint ballot. The Philadelphia llccnrt of jMondav lat has this to say of the attitude of : it airs in Maim; as thej then stood : It l.i-li! er-.l.t 'I'll- to tl.ei.-oplp of lU.oi.e. ' ilivi.ieil n- tie-;, srj into t v.. -rv" eveoly-h.i Inn'-fil tactions, each ol ssllcl eiiiti-r'y x-eks tie- poiitr-'l of t he Stat'-'i tnoest r:tl ion. t h:i't no m-t'ini l;hv,e:tl coliicion li.is .i-i iar eci-nrii-ii. nu, fcj im'other stromr argument inl.ooroi Ire? popiimr (toerti . moot. So inii4-h t-Mritetin'as on eitlur .-i-ir. woli I so jrrettt a l-ree ot iii'nu-U Iorl"-r;o.ce and scir-rvtn-.ii.t. slo.w th -; l.!rtv inl oy:i:ty to law ;ok , order are si-,,iur(.r um-i to ke-.-p the pen- ol a : e'-intfiiin rty !h:in :oiv ntel Hi! ol the repressive :ip ; plinnes ot deripiiti-m eomtiim-.l. l l.-e-ii'pKrtv eeTii I !-te:eJlly to have Imiur in view that pnone opinion .' e.mnot in this country lie s.io-ly .Jorri::ir.iri!, nmj I enoli tins lieen apparently ( .1 , c i'i . i s tl.r.olu Collt to ffivp Its mm. ui n p i :ifam-e. m liit.oi coiitorin ; lty to lair. .Nettiu-r lias ttiu- iar ir.in-oeiole.l tiie lou:i,i:iri--. l.eii,i. wlm-li oe liurpiitloli alj.l anir- ' ehy. Tliat ti.is isise tli-co-toin kimI c-ol i-ihh n , sense mwy 4-ootiiiue to prevail in Maine i eirnot : ly to he i.ope-i tor tor every xtriotic i-it'7- n. o . Miu-jes'.ion ol .artii;o nl t itni.ii-e shmilil l-e viiit r . eil to hetray titlier .-ile into violence ; nn, out ! fillers who do t.- t propose t i rik thenoelves in ! any eontlict wtiieli their rasti -oio:e inifjlit i re j eijiitate should enrelully keep ouiet. ! NKvvrrF.?t Votk vor thk PijKiiKxrv. ' The Philadelphia 7"iiis says it is probable that nbont all of the new-papersof the Mate having any opinion to express upon the next Presidency have made returns to the circn- ; lars sent out some days rpi by the Times. The list, as it appears entire, mav be sum- : marized as follows: 'an:lid.ites. lien. Ilein. lnd. Total. lor Hiain :v Vor i i runt "J4 Kor Shennii n 4 Kor Tilden 17 Kor J iyar.1 i t Kor Ha ner-k : Kor Seymour pi Kor Hemlri'-ks Kor the riioi 1 7 7 l or the r.oininoe i.'i 7 1'ornnyli.nly tnie:it ( r,ra:it. .. ISo clo-i-'e y 1:1 Total in M V'l Jl 14 :;T 10 4 1 li 1"J2 Thk New York Tim's condemns the bill j in the New York Leeislatnre for the choice '; ef electors by onsjrcssinnal districts, on j these jrroiinds : Whatever may ne said In support of the plan e-f t election l.y eonif resslonal rtistriets, which Is one that lias its merits. It is obvious that it ran on!,, ir n -hj cpi'hrH orrr thr rnlire l iuoint onrr, and j that can only he done by the amendment of the ; National fonstitntion. Kor the Kepuhlicana of ! New ork to adopt the scheme for this si.t. j lo"e l'" make a prest-ntto the nemocratgof ths cic .... 11 -.in .n"-riii,irirowncn tnfv mar carry shonld the Kepuhllcang carry the State " It is moreover, an implied confession that we cannot I ".V: r.7 !' .ur!Lflv'" .- confession men ii won IU bo extremely foollah to make at I A5TF.T). Mierman .vr Co., Marshall ITT IS JSyYir THAT 500,000 sisonsrs Witnessed the Grant Reception In Philadelphia. WF. WOULD LIKE ALL THE Men and Boys to Call at OaJ: Hull Immediately aiul IJruip Themelvet for the COI-JP WiWSS OF 880. The Sltifrnlarlj SMALL PRICKS vie dar1cd the Annn&I Wintrr Sale- ith hf , stirred all the Mores t do 1Uefr best. IJul we eclipsed tliem all. and they know it. and'.the Teeplc ee if, too. Theeare the I'rlre for Our Own Carefully Mfrntfa'-tnrel Go,,,,, ,f bought in the Sen- Xorlc Wholetnlc Storen. A few left of tl,e f lO .'" I Ine Iver-ost" Koval Keverii'le I'iaei H-Is. "M e rt-'Ineetl to. r wl.rre i;t Woven Itju-U'). Our I'rl'-e Next Onxle F.xtra Sires p, llliu- an1 Hri wn Woniti.t'O H-.oer Uifm-s Next r:e!e I loo t St rnni S rv! -call! 1 "k tie Homo' ivereoat Kvervilnv Woikinir er-oat Men s All-Wool suits The "Aormrn" I. 11. SnCs. for Hnines and lTes Krtrn tlmbty "Sawyer" Siiitins The Flnet oi ! -rc S-iit' lores Suit" of !! IioiM.rfcl "! itli r'-.lu'-e-l to Men's K.veryilay Pant- All-Wool Htoiec.. .m.l Ire- r-.Mis Kxtra Kin- lir- I'roitnl . n-i formerly : ri. 11 .w fenuine Harris a" i mere l"anr The Very I.ntet S'vle- in M ! Irn"r t eiw.a's The iKiut'li- Shotil.l.'re-t "ape K-val Kever-:! ! Hack ' iv. (The Vici-'t I-lt:le floys" ei' f n t- ink HhJ! f 'hltdren's Suitsasi'wa- ". H teller i Ira-U4-' nor! M'-rr- K.iattorao-ly l r:mui' d Suit- A Orwat Kicia!ty in lo' rl "i otitti-' WAN AfVl AKER & BROWN. M HALL. S. E. COR. SIXTH AHD HftRKET, PRIUD'I The Largest Clothing House in America. ' -V 1 $53500 WORTH OF (200DST0 BE SACKIFHTJI CLOTHING, HATS, CAPS, Ladies" Coats. CJent's Funiislrg CJoods.Af uSJr vrsi bki.oav cost. VS n.y c n-tr.ti 1 1 y 1 :icri'r.i i:ir 1'.: -1 ..c- ' n: n , - ti - a n. "-h i r; - r -'. -r-,' r - . 1 i' h 1 r. '. .1 .iiar.i t- o.-. -.ij.v In- :. - n n ;:. .-' : :o.t 1: ,v : .- - : i.c t . on III kvksth AvtM e. A T 7. i 'N . 1 :.t" ii ;--h 1 CM-' .-. t c r m' -.-1 "'. rtcl hl-h will mj.pitt joti..!i; y he the? lirf-t t rc r. .i'-. in t 'l n , n t ' i wis, i inj the l-et oi Iii.rt.un in my iinf ?-li -1 ir r:,f ::n .-.rlr -:i -; . s - 1 i j i of my i-re-ert 5t..-k to ll.v m-s- hui i-l ir. i ; lanehterlns Ir ire- v. . ; : , .. Kery .rson. thereS.rr. slii. siiiii . 1-uv irorv.; m i- 'tl cii.-..:-..T Ui:.n tt-r-v - , hollil iiv me a vi-il r-rthwlth. i? lhl anii-jtuircinciit H r.-j hien'-ui; l-m'a 1 to sell if Ion prices still lo it. T 1 limiisijut m nini.y ctit'-tr.er f.-r :lit kia-l tr.d I ' - r..; van -u:-t:e l-.-n snd -olifitttiifa eontinus nee anl inrrfR-e of tl ' i-.iiuc i-. the lu'r tiro. 1 r--:n:i ir. OXH-?-, I t(V 1 M'cl 111 1 1 V . CHARLES SilYIQN. C orner I'lcientli Aienne nnd 1 hirte; i.tli M.ett. Altec "DON'T YOUJORGET IT! R-nft forget to Wnr in mii-d rial keep in rrn".embr-i-e.. ) a GODFREY WOLl'1 has iAT.i Rtrrn .t his "PALACE OF FASHION. next iMunt to tiik 1'om-oh io:. altuoxa. A GRAND CLOSING-OUT SALE OK HIS r.NTlUK STl'CK-l!!il T SIO.COO WnI.TH-np OVERCOATS S AVINTEU CLOTHING Generally, AT COST AND LESS THAN COST. CALL EARLY AND GET FIRST CHOKE AND BEST BAR.1AIX3 ! the Goods trill 1'ositivtlt be Sold at a S 11 1 1 CAMH1HA FliKEMAX $'2.O0 .4 YEAIU POSTAGE IMM"Im. Tnr.CiiK AilVn-KiT .rr,fiAirt,iTcr.'.v j ounired ss a pa.-r unnrpss.-. in all the reoulre- ' nients of Anieri.-nn .Tournl'm. It etnn.ls c- n- ' sph-ooiis ninomsr the nn-tropohtaii journals of the I ; country a a complete nnrspuprr. Its trl.-trr-.ph 1 j -cn ice c..nirie- all the .iyT.st-h of th- W ,-T. ! i:r.x A(ivtri. I'lir.-s aml'the N.u,. ,i As..- 1 1 OKI. 1'iotss. I.esi.le a very evtenive aervice of l" i. o-nr:iin iroin an important point" A a ncicipHper it has nn an peri nr. 1 1 i 1 uri-ks ivnt ' 1,1 l'ot.iTK- presenting all ...i tl.-nl new free from , partisan b. as ,.r eoh.rinu. a ml nl.l-iidv w,th..ui Ic.ir or lavor as to parties. ; It i. in the lalitrst ene, a rsvin rt-Ei:. :-h lsie r.fains Sit t'onri :tki Sienirs. he l Ics a rich variety of com!. sis, -.1 n.itrs n Kam- i-.s!s. nr.T. ixni smiKS. I.ri kkati iir, S ik ft Kr... KTC. Its lHl:nll CT.UlliNOirPf nnl to Pe reiieil uion. I pi etc ' j It is iinsiirpnsse.1 ns no enterprising, i.nrt- nn.l ! . trustworthy km-ii l famov w.iwr m-kk. i'r j rp.T-i.ii rMii ooitr icriiis orinst it within the retch r,i nil. Spei-inien copies mav l seen at this ..ti.. -.ti. sut.srriptions to tlos . ftlec. rt preseri neni a lire- tor fln iiii.. si anv ad.lress It s th. K...i , i.'.... . ." make who epiirermtes coiolort. A.blress "j li. r.lM.. I. o. Row .1 krnlnrk) i Til ABTT BTKIIRK.. T'I TFRTsi RS Send in els. for Olir loo tmirs I pamphlet, ali about Newspaper Aiivert siaj. ,. dre-f ttso. V. Kon ell i. Co., lo Spruce -t.,S'. . nilCUid VK!:KLVM:VSi!;(iH:s n SAUii!! Ers n tt n V"p.i,.i,o.n,.troUi.wi A I,,:K' i 1 ;1 x! . .; liSJ ial . 'crns. whirl, are the ; "l-HK is: 1 Hi: 1 1 KI A' !' ' N El ! Ill e.nic ol inueh hart tempT. j 1 SI.W INil v.icillMs "s. ' .v III 'IJfaB remotely the cause of i ei. n-1 h: in s...-kifL-. Nai-k. . 1 L$.lXV Wjf '-v"I "I" nd re:i.-Ml III kin Is of B .1 I-lii-n. I'rlre. " cpiiiili. !irn thiviiin get I v . . 1 1 .-i 11 ptmn whieh is a los-ros- nH 1 fWV iu A I11U' V- ll'11 r- -.V.lf' J ' r roods. " I. -t- !i . ' - l. It t "1 arch etc I STT "rrijrrr. POUT iF. litt fllli TUT. I!!M Port'Ms ENGINES z' liWS j la tl e market, fot'l I GlUFFITlK:AM:il- ZANESVILLE, OHIO. A LAKUII M HUM 1; ' I I ' - EXGIXKS am. AlH.t? Are n..n in oi in Kci!'.-l-. -"entire atitac: -on. 1 y i.i- r StATIuM ;y I.M1N! - W Of from 4 to l.'.O Horse r 'or f r . I I r- III t 1 1 1 11 IV.-. i7:.-";ii , I iii,l -i.1' I 1 liVI'li I Vll V' ' 1 1 Vj 1 It I'. 1 1 - V . 1 ' -i 1 1 . " n re of ;h- r vs 1 n.-. l ie a' r - ! " speak, as w I "1 e:o.. .i us t h i- r t.-.l.;" ht ir.rc :-t, t i.i- sut-cr!"--r ' i a ltHri: am Mi-m-o ! any ktn.lil iS" o-i Ma. l-:nc. ::t low pries ,s,i, i - r will be et:,rs.-u 1.1 -. u'- T . ' s A .hires- CAMHIIIA ! rj U r.f A S cr ir. ttf". '1 U b 1 ": e t . . ' : t - t ' t-vi-l E t t; , i t . - '.-: tA t .! ' ! -r 1 O; i- i..:v. I..,. I . a. I to 1 r. Ii !
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers