EBENSBURC, PA.. FRIDAY, - - - FEB. 13, mL TnF. Kmprefs Riigfrilewill Wve Eng land for South Africa on March 25th. te will l accotnpaniNl by thelhike of KtsKino, and Mr. . TiPtrie, who were arm pr!on;il friends of her husband, LonU Napoleon. One object of the K.mjr-s visit to Zululand is to ascer tain the exact circumstances of her son's tragic death. This contemplated jour-r.v-y to a distant and barbarious land, and H.e object of it, will form one of the iiKt melancholy incidents in the ro mantic career of the most unfortuoate tvowaa of the century. I'KTtn II. Leterqood. of Johns U'.vn, one of the delegates from this ounty to the Republican State Conven tion, votc-d in favor of instructing the J legates to Chicago to vote for a third telm of Giant, and William M. Jones, j ter and man of all work for the Came--nf this rlace. the other delegate, who is ; ron clan. John Cessna, was chairman of Blaine man, voted against it. We heard a thick and thin supporter of Blaine remark on Saturday last, that Levergood's vote in the convention in favor of Grant didn't represent any Re ynLlican in thi county of whom he had any knowledge, "except the editor of the Johnstown Triton and Lem. Davis.' The Dutchman in an Illinois town at nhich Grant stopped a few minutes, on Siis way from Galena to Chicago, who called for "dree sheers for King Krant," ad hid counterpart at the late Republi can State Convention. William C. Morelaud, a Pittsburgh lawyer, who was 1 machine delegate, in a etar ppaugled I banner speech in favor of a third term, j declared that "Republicans everywhere j rot.?, rtjoi'i. if' (.' "-vM j'l'.ct a crown ; tji..:! (.V"! he cff." The Grant mana- i jrtrs thought no highly of the outspoken j way in which Morel.ind had championed j Grantism when pushed to its legitimate j results, that thf- concluded he would ; niaken admirable delegate to Chicago, : and H w? co ordered. j Mr. Hayes appears determined to j put the patience of the Democratic ineinlrs of the Senate to the severest i tet, having lat week nominated to j that botly, for Surveyor of the Port of j New Orleans, A. C. Wells, who is a son ! f J. Madison Wells, the man to whom Mr. Hayes is indebted fr his present occupancy of the White Hou.e. Old Wclla himself is ihr- present Surveyor, viiii his son fir his deputy, and Hayes, re tra::!Hi only Iv the fehr of -uM:c opinion from resppAii.tlag the failier. t'.e th" n"xt "i. thing hi oti i'ic him by apix-inting his Lopefu son. Of course A. C. Writs lori"t stanti the giiOt of a haiK '-f Iting coatlrmed; and in order iba; y.v. Hayes, win baa thus deliber ately ii.sii'ted the Snat, may frel the full for c of the rfbukc. the Democrats should take up the nomination without a moment's unnecessary delay and by rejecting it ay t-t Mr. Hayes that it was not fit t- have be? r. made. Tnr Republicans of Chester county . whi in the p-ist have never sworn alle Jianee to the house of Cameron are in ' Open revolt against the action of the Iste third term St3te Convention at Harri-burg. i-nd at a meeting in West ; Chester, on hist Saturday evening, a commute of five was api-ointed "to cor,- j fcr with the Republicans of other conn- : t'f3in the State on the propriety and ; rccr f-'sity of callinj a State Convention. to take rv.ch action as will injure a fair and h-jnet vote of th Pennsylvania de legation in the Chicago Convention." We do ni suppose that there w ill be a new State Convention called, as above uggestcil by Cue Republican bolters of Oirsttr county, but it is within the power of Blaine's friends in this State, if they see proper to exercise it between row and the rrfet ing of the Chicago Con vention in June, to call county conven tions ar.d instruct at least thrtc-fourths i the delegates appointed by Don Cam eron t his Ilarrisburg Convention to carry out the clear wishes of their con stituents and vot at Chicago for J5hine. Lancaster county proposes to do this in May, and we havenoeloubt her example w ill be generally followed. It will then be seen whether the delegates will obey th demands of Cameron, or whether Ibfj- will carry out the wishes f thedis tincts they represent. The moderate and subdued touo of the Johnstown Tribute of Friday last, in its article o the State Convention, is a meek ceinfession that Cameron "6 third term feast was not the one to which its editor expected to Le invited, He an ticipated, no doubt, that admiration for the "strons man." to whom he is in the ' habit of constantly referring, would call ; forih ia the convention a i-naninous de mand, accompanied with shouts of ap pla'ie, f r (Jrant and a third term, and that before the potencj- of his name all v '.hcrs would 1,-e hushed iu awe ar.d sil ence. He i:e. r, or hardly ever, dream ed )! the deep arid profound respect felt t y tho ptvplo of this country and t.f this iat". oi all political parties, for the un "riltcji law of the Ke.public acainst a : li'rd term of the. ' by W .! tvgiori Presi-.lency, etab!ish and acquiiscctl i i t y n'l hi? T'Te'r'-'is :1 Gran ,1.1 t':sr , T.T.O r:j cf It was t.'ri. tindcrt'ci to rtvers It. arytLlrg but f at i-fiictoiy. therefore, to j '-rv.-t. and i ron 0'ri.cu an a lvocate of 'laut's riivinii!4lioH as the Tiib',- " hen it hr.ur.ed that it? idid, instead of having been shattered to pt-.ces, came ''it of tlie orit-al of the cenvention with a l-egfenr'y majority of t'W.y votes in a tctal of The Trf'v. . takes refnge 'ud'-r the i'a that "tlie Gra;it men al nj st ai'owed tie tiling to goby default,' j urt as if D'ii Cmn.ion ever a'lowh a .iy th'r.g h undertakes by default, and spee-jaily in the te?-th of his rejeated !tclaration at Washington during the ,'sst, ruorith, that 1 is f.iilure to carry Grant through the convention would bo his fCaniert n's) political death. If the TVaine rjen throujhoui the Slate could have held county convetticcs to elect 'lelegatta to the cc:ivf-nti?n: they would ftars beaten the Trib.n's "strons r.an,' i. i. Tfivvs the Bpublieau County Coro ! txre en Jannary 2tth and eVet tetega!A to Dob Cameron's Ttarrtefcnrg Convention, it instructed tbem to Eurxnt Ianlel J. Morrellas one of the delegate to Chicago from this Congressional district. "With a yiew to Mr. MorreU's success, Harry Boggs, who has a rough and ready way of ac complishing political results wtien he puts on his war paint and seizes his tomahawk, was recommended a Sena torial delegate. Blair county, however, had a short time before elected A. S. Stager, claiming the delegate this year as a matter ot right, and the claim ap pearing to be well founded, Bogg9 didn't i (TPt o hn. nf nlaTino "hi-r Tniin" as ft i delegate, and Stager, who was a Grant man, was accorded the seat. "Without knowing anything about Mr. Morrtll's Presidential preferences, we classed him as a Blaine man, and have since learned that such is the fact. The gay and fes tive Boggs, therefore, could not have been of any service to Mr. Morrell in the convention, for that unsurpassed trick- a committee of nine with power to se- j lect the delegates to Chicago, and Mr ' Morrell was not the kind of a man to suit Cessna's owner, Don Cameron. J Cessna thought it would be the proper j ! thing that he himself should go to Chi- ! cago from this district to do the bidding of Cameron, and of course the thing was j or the Union of the States and honest done. When Mr. Morrell read over the 1 elections, and congratulates the Repub lic of delegates made up by Cameron, j ot Maine on their victory After and adopted by his convention, and , found that it embraced such well known wn I El- ! members of the Philadelpnia ring as liott, Douslass, Leeds, Lane, Rowan, and the immortal Adam Albright, he concluded, we imagine, that in this in- stance at least the post of honor is the private station. It is related of James T. Brady, the celebrated criminal lawyer of New York, that after the judge had charged the Jury in a murder trial in which he was counsel for the defendant, that in dividual asked him v.hat he thought the verdict would be, and that Brady, after a moment's reflection, said to him : "If Providence has left any one thing in 1 this world more uncertain than another, j it is the verdict of a traverse jury in a murder case." The truth of Mr. Brady's I reply to his client has just been well il- j lustrated in the criminal court of Jersey ! City. Some time last autumn. Covert j D. Bennett and Mrs. Jennie R. Smith were tried for the murder of Mrs. 1 Smith's husband, and the evidence was ' so strong and convincing that the jury ' had no difficulty in returning a verdict j of murder in the first degree. A new j trial was afterwards pvanted. ard at th fi.cotid trial, which cr.ed two wpfct ; ago b-:ore the same jndge, tho same i "lawyers, and the same witnesses for the 1 common wealth. th jury promptly re- i turned a verdict of acquittal, and this. ' too, alihotigh the counsel for the defend- ants refused to examine a single witness, ' but rested the case or. the testimony of- ' fered by the riosecution. This was cer- j tainly a most singular conflict Ktween j two juries, and has few, if any, parallels, j The weight of public opinion in the city i where the trial took place seems to be i decidedly iii favor of the conclusion ar- j rived at by the second jury. Such as- ; totiishing results are not calculated to strength?n ene's faith in the ability of j twelve good men and true to draw the j line between red-handed murderers and ; persons entirely innocent, upon precisely the same evidence. i For the first time in fourteen years i the supremacy of Cameron isra in Repub- ; lican politics iu this State received a ' staggering blow at the State Convention on Wednesday of lait week, which ren- j dtrs its ceimplete dow nfall only a matter t of time. On a test question of strength j between Grant and Blaine, the former j being the Cameron candidate, the ma- j jority in his favor was only tirenty out t of 246 votes ; and this, too, In a conven- ' tion in which sat forty-six delegates j from Philadelphia, eighteen from Alle- j gheny, and eight from Lancaster mak- ' ing seventy-two in all the votes of ; seventy of whom were thrown into the : Grant scale, but ail of whom, it is now . admitted, would have cast their votes i against Grant and a third term if they j had tec-n elected by county conventions ! reflecting the popular will of the Repub- j lican party, instead of having been the I spawn of county committees. We have ' often wondered in the past why it wan ; that leading Republicans in all sections of the State men of brains and influ- : ence would tamely submit year after : year to the remorseless demands of the Cameron cabal, without making one ; vigorous and detet mined effort to a-sert their peditical manhood. The appropri- ' ato time for the exercise of their power in resisting the domineering political methods of a man who thinks he is ora- i ripotent, simply because his name is ' Cameron, because he is rich, and, above all, because he occupies a seat in the U. S. Senate, which was transmitted to him by his father, came last week at the meeting of the Republican State Con tntion. Cameron, it is true, succeed ed in carrying his Grant programme, but the small margin Ly which it was done shows that the days of his leader ship are numbered. The most princely contribution tothe cause of charity that has ever leen made in this country by a single individual - as tho f-ubst r'pt ton last week by James ?'7'T-'fi lVT.t. tTorit r rf i ? -c New i'o-(t J-r m hwlrf'l th'usnnri Unr to the famine-stricken ieop!e of Ireland. ueen Victoria's contrilmt ion to the Irish relief fund amounted to her ofScia! income for just one day. 1 her? is a slight difference between that and Mr. Bonne tt "a splendid and generous gift. Some people are disposed to question the sincerity of Mr. Bennett's motives in making this more than queenly bene faction, hut that is neither here nor tiiere. His motives are his own and are : presumably worthy and sincere. It is j only the fart of the great amount of snf- ! fering it w ill relieve that is of any con- I sequence now. A Dublin dispatch to the Ifrrt'1'7, vouched for by both Prote--- j ; tant and Catholic clergymen, as well as ' ; public officials, gives tbe following re- ! turns by counties wherein the chief dis- , tress exists of the number of those who : are suffering. They tell a dreadful tale, j and are as follows : Mayo , Gfway.. .... Si'go ; Keiry.- Donegal.-... ; Roifoniuiori Cik ' Osara 64,.r09.Ttpperary - 4-3,2t0 Leltrim ... 42,a-VVieklow S3, 100 Monnchan ... 2ooo:Westmeat 2S.i.y: Longford .... ... 23, Ki'ke,v"! ... .. 6,3e-0 1 .. 3.fV0 .. 2,500 i .. 1,900 ' - 1,73 .. 1,7'JO i Tit TlFprrBi.icAw ?tatb Ccvsyfs now. The Republican State Conven tion, as our readers are already aware, met on Wednesday, the 4th inst, at Harrisburg. Rusaell Errett was chosen temporary chairman. Mr. Ossna offer ed a resolution for the appointment of a committee of nine to report, subject to the approval of the Convention, a list of delegates and alternates to the Nat ional Convention, and a list of Electors. An amendment offered by Mr. Stewart providing for the choice of district dele gates to the National Convention, by the delegates of the respective Congress ional Districts, was lost yeas 100 ,nays 150 and Mr. Cessna's resolution was adopted. A resolution was offered by Mr. Ilerr instructing the delazates to the National Convention to vote as a unit and support General Grant for President Mr. Stone, of Crawford, ottered an amendment reaffirming the declaratoin of the Convention ot 17(5 against a third term. After debate Mr. Stone withdrew his.amcndmect, and Mr. Strang of Tioga offered another to substitute the name of Blaine for that of Grant. The amend ment was lost yeas 95, nays 154. The original resolution instructing the Chi cago delegates for G rant was then adopt edyeas J33, nays 113. John A. Lem on was nominated for Auditor General and Henry Green for Justice of the Su preme Court. The list of delegates to the Chicago Convention was reported and adopted. The delegates at large a e "anllel' 3- uy James jiciianp.i, 1 i.inn iiarinoiornew anu tnrisiopner i. j Magee. The Electors at large are Ed mund A. Benson and Ilenrv W. Oliver. The Committee on Platform then made ry rmwrt whmh u.-ft o1titefi 1 hA re- solutions declare against any new finan cial or tariff legislation, and in favor rned The num vention adjourned nnt he ber of delegates in the Chicago Conven- I tion from all the States will lie 7o4, ; making nation. 375 votes necessary for a nonii- ; Free Trade in Paper. The way ! the "boom" is striking the newspapers J of the country is a subject or general dis cussion, particularlv bv the Western ! journals. The recent advance of print- ing paper fifty ier cent., as well as the advance in fuel, type, etc., has not been i followed by a corresjionding advance in t subscription or advertising rates, or by ! a marked increase in business. Of course ' in the end, the added cost of production I will fall on consumers, but it takes time j to adjust such points, and in the inter j val the newspapers are heavy losers, j The demand comes up pretty .strong from j the West and Smith for the repeal of the I duty on printing paper and on the chem- icals entering into its manufacture, i The latter will give the paper manu- facturcrs all the "protection" they need i and the rejeal of the almost prohibitory j duty of twenty per cent, on printing pa ; per will introduce the element of com i petition in the paper supply, and bring : the combination that has put up prices ; to an extravagant figure to terms. The duty on paper is so high that it is J prohibitory on news paper ; it is not I merely protective but absolutely pre vents importation and deprives the treasury,. of revenue. It is one of the jobs and robberies of the people, like the quinine, salt. s!eel rail, and other I axes th.tt are rapidly making the principle of protection olious to the great m.'.ss of the Amtriean je"p!e. Representative Fort, of Illinois, a Vading.Republican member of the House has introduced a bid repealing the duty on chemicals entering into the maun facture of paper. The paper makers are handicapped by this duty. For the benefit of the few makers of papers and the manufactures ot chemicals. Congress maintains a high tariff, which is a tax upon the hundreds of thousands of pulv lications of all kinds and upon the read ing public. It is a tax on knowledge on the spread of information and it might almost be said a premium on ig norance, for the benefit of certain inter ests and certain monopolies. I'itizlwr'j JV-sr. A SraoNf.y:R Government What Does It Mk.n? The Geneva f.wrtVr, a stanch Republican pafer, in discussing the present aspect of public affairs, em ploys the following language : "Th'rt is nf denying the tlatftncrtt thnt the b'tt thought rf the country favors a itronqer Government than the country ui yet tnjoyea." What is the meaning of "a stronger Government V" ays our ; "A stronger Government, contemporary, "than the nation has yet enjoyed." Stronger than Washington's. Stronger than John Adams's. Stronger than Thomas Jefferson's. St.onger than James Madison's. Stronger than James Monroe's. Stronger than John Quincy Adams's. Stronger than Andrew Jackson's. Stronger than Abraham Lincoln's. A stronger Government does not m an merely a stronger administration of our pre-ent form of government. It cannot mean that. There would be no signifi cance to the phrase if employed in that sense. It would be iimossih!e that the w wiuiciii u.uiu i,u A'lUMmMtiw more siiongiy uian n was aominisierea nv Uie great first Presidents, wlio were among its original founders ; more strongly than by that iron man, Andrew Jackson; more .strongly than by Abraham Lincoln, who abolished slavery. Xn ; those who speak of a stronger Government mean a lifTererit form of government, in which greater power is reposed in the Executive. They mean z. monarchy, and they can have riootl er mining. Horn fref, they would become com parative slaves ! Such men have t:o fit place on American sc-il. Degenerate tons of worthier sires, they have not. the manhood to stand erect, but would vol untarily how their necks to the yoke and hail Grant ?s King. JV. Y. Sun. A teir'Me accident occurred at West Milton, one quarter of a mile from Milton, Pa., across the river, on Thurs day evening of last week. As the 6:14 r. Catawissa accommodation train going eat was about to cross Hoffman's crossing, within almut one hundred and fifty yards of the depot, it ran into a two- horse sled, containing nine voung ladies and gentlemen. Miss Sue Benage who sat on the front seat, was instantly kill ed. John Shedle was fatady injured, his skull being fractured and left arm broken, with no hope of his recovery. Tt omas Criswell sustained two severe flosh wounds alwve the left eye and on ti e left arm. The remaining six ese.ip ed unhurt. One of the horses was also killed and the other so badly hurt that he was shot. The young folks were in the heieht of merriment, on their way to the Sunday school teachers' institute, and heard no alarm whistle given by the coining train. Whether the engineer gave me proper signal or not is unknown The jieople living about there, however. say they heard no signal. It is hardly possible, however, that some indication would not be given when both crvssincr a prominent country road and nearing a station. The Pittsburgh PofI has a plan for getting the preferences of the Democrats j concerning Presidential candidates. It j wants the Democratic election officers in ; the various precincts and townships tcr j take the sense of the Democratic voters i as they :ipiear at the polling window s in ' the coming local elections. The Pout will print thfs retrrns if they are sent attested by responsible natnts. IV. e- l-i k S'' Vr ? ? 3. SEWS ASD OTHER SOTISUS. An earthquake was felt three miles east of Ottawa, Canada, on Sunday even ing. A German attempted to commit sui cide at his wife'B grave in Pittsburg on Saturday. The iron workers at Fulton's Mill, Norristown, have struck for an advance of from $' to $5.50 a ton. Four Wisconsin men blew np a stump with gunpowder, and each man went higher than the sturrp. On Sunday afternoon a schooner was capsized in a squall at Grand Man an. N. B., and five persons were drown ed. The body of Miss Hartman, of Pitts- , burg, was cremated in the LeMoyne Furnace at Washington, dav. Pa., on Satur- j Two hundred families of Philadel- phia (Quakers will form a colony in Min- nesota on the Northern Pacific Railroad, j i next snrine. i Thomas Sloan, of St. John, N. B., i has at various times saved eighteen hu ! man lives in that harbor, and possesses J the freedom of the city, j Four Chinese converts have just ! ioined the IVesbyterian Church at In dianapolis, and ore of them has taken out naturalization rapers. At New York the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick will donate $2,500 to the Irish Relief Fund, instead of buying a dinner with it on March 17. Another case of "didn't know it was loaded" is reported from Charleston. A girl of nineteen is the victim and her younger brother the shootist. An American woman writes to the English Queen that an American farm er's wife works ten or twenty times as hard as an English farmer's wife. Henry Fellows, of Bradford, and several of his children were nearly killed a few days ago, from partaking of cheese that it is supposed had been ioisoned. Mrs. Abbott, a widow, of Smyrna. Del., remarkable for having married seven times, and each time, with one exception, a widower, died on i. tiursday. The steamer Bengore, laden with coal, from Penarth for Gibialter, found- pred when two days out of port. Thir- teen of her crew were drowned ; 8ix were j saved. The Hon. Mrs. Ronald Campbell, j whose husband was killed intheengage- ment on the hill of Kambula, will ac i company tho Km press Eugenie in her i pilgrimage to Zululand. i Mrs. Donnelly, of the family bru ! tally murdered a few days since at Lucan, i Ont., by masked men, is said to have been a sister of Jack Keho, the Mollie ! Maguire who was hanged. ; The Irish societies of Chicago and San Francisco have decided not to par- ad- on St. Patrick's Day, but instead ' contribute to the Irish relief fund and i have entertainments for the same pur j pose. The Harrisburg Pair lot says that I the Republican nominations forSupreme i Judge and Auditor Central will be j known as the (irecn Ijcnwn ticket. It j is just possible that it may sour on the ! Republican stomach. j Near Bradford, Pa., on Monday, a ! sleigh occupied by two men and 100 pounds of nitro-glycerine upset and the j nitro-glycerinc exploded, killing one of tho men. both the horses, and wrecking ' two houses and h barn. Chauncy Slater, a foreman at Hit ; i shop of the Elastic Frog Company, in ' MansfiVhl. Conn., recntlv tell hir to j $ 1mmki. The ether day he got a check for ?W, (, and sticking it into his vest ; pocket kept unconcernedly at work. A Chinese wash house, on l'inp : street, near Taylor, San Francisco, was i destroyed by fire on Thursday morning. : The nund r or its cceiipants is not ; known, but the bodies of ten Chinamen have been recede red from the ruins. ' A colored girl named Glasgow, aged ' 12 year, was playing with svtral ehil , dren at I'nirinville, Chester county, re- cently, when oneof her companions pull 1 ed h'T arms back with such force that a ; blood vessel was burvt and the child ! : bled to death. A widow, who lives in a secluded ! part eif Michigan, talks very imperfectly ! by reason of having lost her palate, ami j i her two daughters, aged 8 and 12, can ' only speak the strange language they ( have learned of her, though their vocal ; ! organs are perfect. ! Joseph Bailey, of Lancaster, Wis., j ! advised his son to break his engagement i j with Jennie Farrel, and marry herpret- I j tier sister. Jennie resentfully set fire to j i the old man's barn, and has gone to ! State prison, w hile her tister has become young Bailey's wife. j Charles Wharton purchased eighty five sheep from A. S. Rrainard, of Bed fast, in the Bradford oil regions. Mr. i Wheat on drove the sheep over a road studded with laurel, and the next day found tiftv of the animals dead ordving from having eaten the laurel. " There are in Pennsylvania Sf.o towns havinar from 1.500 to V2 (hh) inhl;t.'.r.f in which not a Kolitary Baptist church is to be found. There are also entire counties without a single li:u.tit meet- ing house. The Haptists are to make an effort to remedy thin state of affairs. Official dispatches have been recei ver! CMlHnrr f urt lur 1 . 4 1 ; 1 , . T i 1 . . 1. : rane in the I'hilippine Islands. Twenty five vessels of vftrinnp'aw w five vessels of varion? classes were wreck- i ed. Including four foreign frigates, and : a large number of other vessels were ', damaged. Forty-six persons w ere drown- ! r. - i Cardinal Manning's brother, whose j death has just leen announced, was a ' man of cultivated taste and a stanch ' Protestant, fo much so that he had pro- I Tided the money to build a Protestant j church. He is pabl not to have spoken to his brother the Cardinal for many i years. A peculiar velocipede is used on j railroad tracks in Kansas by telegraph j usurer it ins iwo wheels, like a bicvcle. which inn on one tiack and over which the rider sits while a Btnall- er wheel, for steadying, rests on the other trick. Twenty miles an hour is practicable with it. ( - - wii.i nvrti ue unit's t southeast of Indianapolis, and who had just finished a year's imprisonment for larceny, was shot and killed on Friday night while driving a buggy alon? the j road near hts house. His wife and her i paramour ere suspected of his murder : an navc hrf'n arrested The f :hicago Daily Xfirs thinks that j when the Queen gave a few pounds to ward helping the starving people of the j country which her government hasruin j ed, she thought she was doing enough j for that misgoverned iortion of her do ! minions. Her beggarly charitv is only j equaled by her ignorance of the copdi i tion rf her people. j John Didion, a farmer, after de ; livering a load of hogs at a market in ; Eancaster, N. Y., on Saturday, jumped l from his sleigh, and in doing so struck i his head against an iron ruling on which meat is hung. One of the hooks pierced nis eye ana eye and itenetrated to the brain. ! fanning a wound which it was expected I woum prove iatai. I -urg. t r lanerty, owner ot a vaina ; bio farm opposite Boston, Ky., fell on a j railroad track on Friday night, while intoxicated, near Falmouth, Ky., and was cut in two by a passing train. Her I drunken son was walking ahead of her ! and did not know she had fallen until after she was killed. 127 were found in the dead woman's pocket. Julius Radke was ariested at Dav- ton. O., Thursday evening, charged with derexl his victim. having caused the death of his child, an 1 infant of four months. He came home i Mrs. rAttTir.TOx says : Don't take ny under the influence of Hqnor and seizing I ot tne qnack rostrums, s they are reglmeri the child dashed it to the floor and then ! t!tl.to thf human cistern : hut pnt your trnst kicked it across tho room, crnshing its skull. Another child, six vears of r;ge. a- t7-e rTa find t rt'.i t--v the Bucks county claims to have given the Union army the youngest soldier for Pennsylvania. David Kleinman, now of Denver, Colorado, but in 1801 of Spring field township, Bucks county, enlisted when only eleven vears old and served with the Third Pennsylvania Rorves. A few nights ago a demented old lady, aged about 80 years, named Mrs. Anna Mellott, wandered away from the residence of her sjn, in Belfast town ship, Fnlton county, about midnight, with nothing on save her night clothes. Her Jifeless body was found on Monday some distance from home, where it was traced over the frozen snow by her blood markrd foot prints. Mrs. Durham is left alor. most of the time at Seymour, Ind., her husband beine a railroad official. It is well known that there is always considerable glars visited the premises frequently. but of late they are shy. Whenever she hears them working at a window, sh nrrs Hy ;it rauuoiu wun a revolver. Three times within two years the es caping robbers have left blood in their tracks. The latest case of absent Handed ness comes from Tennessee. A younff gentleman of Memphis loves a girl who ines in ine country, up the railroad. Wishing to see her, he hired a horse and buggy and drove out to her house, hitch ing the horse at the door. After a while he came out, happy, serene and delight ed, walked down to the railroad station, got a ticket and rode back to Memphis, leaving his horse hitched near the coun try gate. Father Martin Masty, at the early age of forty-two, has just been conse crated Bishop of Dakotah. For several years he has been working among the Indians. Alone and unprotected, he wandered among the most host ile tribes. Hs has studied the Indian languages, and so thoroughly acquired that of th Sioux that he has written a grammar and dictionary which have leen of great use in instructing the teachers sent to the Indians About four years ago Samuel C. : j Cad wallader, of Upper Wakefield, Bucks ' j county, sold a horse to a man in Phila j delphia. On last Friday morning the ; same horse, having escaped from his Philadelphia owner on Thursday night : and traveled thirty miles, trotted up the j 1 lane of his former home and went into ; his old stali. This is regarded as a ; wonderful proof of attachment, seeing that ? long a time had elapsed between ' j the animal's sale and his return. j A newspaper man has interviewed the Rev. Mr. Cowley, of the "Shepherd's 1 j Fold," now in the Tombs in New York ! j and the shepherd asserts that lie is the ; : victim of a grievious wrong perpetrated j by his enemies, who taught the children j w hat they should say to the legal author- ' ities. Mr. Cowley claims that he is I guilty r:f nothing which was not conduc- ' ive of the spiritual welfare of the child- ; S ren. from which we must infer that he : j is an ardent advocate of the efficacy of a ; crucifixion of the flesh. j At Lucan, Ontario, oa Tuesday j night of last week, a gang of men, with ! blackened and masked faces, entered ; ' the dwelling of a "somewhat notorious j family," named Donnelly, and murder- '. j ed the father, mother, son and niece. ' ; A ly named Connor escaped by hiding : under a bed. The murderers set fire to I the house, which was consumed with jthe bodies of their victims. A of ' Donnelly, who lived three miles from the homestead, was called to his door 3nd shot dead about t lie same hour the ; j others wore murdered. i j --Dan IIybe.lt started for church, at l Frecsville, Minn., and on the way ask- ed a neighbor w ho wa to preach. "Par- : j son Newling," wa-! the reply. "I'd ' ! rather die than hear him. " said Dan. ! : a: iis. iLiu.t u "ii i v n. i. a t t. j . 1 iv v c ; sftfrward found han.cinj; lifeless to ;i i tree. The helief is that, as the ciergy : man w;is delivering a coarse of sermona j on the dreadfulnes of sin, and as Dan i was an iinregciierate sinr.cr, an awakon i ed roiifrieneo led to the suicide : hut j the scoffers have a th.-'firy that death : rnirrht reasonably he inferred to hear i in.? one of Newling" long discoursfs. i Sympathy for Ireland, in a practical way. is" nianiftsteil in India, where ne ; banking firm of IJoinbay has given ?.", ': (n0. and in I' ranee, where the clergy are ; rrak:ng appeals fur means to ail the ; starving. It would not be fnrprising if ! even African potentates nhould give to ! rflieve a friifTf-ring that has awakened ; th ympathies of the world. It isright to give, but in giving it oueht not to bs forgotten, says the (Chicago Dnibt Xers, that the starving are starved because of 1 the JaiHt-systf-m of the English owners; ; j The world is heiping to redress the i i wronjrs rf the innocent wrongs inflict- ' I ed by English aristocrats. ' j Dr. W. VT. Hibben. of Emporia, : i -frt. has just come into possession of , ! an nM 'rench snuffd.ox that was pre- i i ff.ted to George Washington by Iifay- , i 'ttp 5n Philadelphia in August. 1777.' The presentation was made at the first : i rneetingof the two men of ludoved mem- I CrJ- , .Tl,e box particularly delighted " a?ningion, ior u coniainea men ana iiii fun a correct iiKenes" fi a fayette as he appeared when a young man. After the death of Washington General Israel Putman leanie owner of the lox. Uefore Put man's death he en closed the relic in a chimney-piece in Cambridge and there it remained a hun dred years. At a recent dinner party in New York fashionable circles an 5?,W0 dia mond ring, recently purchased, was passed around for inspection among eighteen or twenty ladies and gentlemen, and, the conversation turning to oilier topics, was gradually lost sight of. When thought of again the last person handling the ring could imt N deter mined, and it was given up as lost. As the party were about separating a gen tleman found the ring, minus the stones. in his overcoat pocket, lie called for ! the production ot the jewels, but no one ! ""hi help him, and the robbery still re- l mains as great a mystery as ever. A negro cabin thirteen miles north of Columbia. C, was destroyed by fire on Tuesday night of last week. Two men. a woman and six children, perished in the flames. The fire was discovered by a colored woman, who ran to the burning building and pulled off a board, when she heard one of the children attempting to awaken its fath er, but without success. Before other assistance arrived the cabin and its oc cupants were burned up. The chimney, a crude affair, made of clay and sticks, is e'ipposed to have ignited while the negroes were asleep. The cabin had but ere door and no wiodowR. Mrs. Sarah Dillingham, aged 33 years, was murdered by Frank Dilling ham, aged '2f a nephew of her husband, at Iyondonderry, Vermont, on Saturday. The murderer, after doing the deed, went to a neighboring country store and said, "I have shot Aunt Saiah." There was blood on his face and clothing, from a wound in the left side of his fore head. When the Dillingham's house was entered, Mrs. Dillingham w as found lying on the floor with a bullet wound 'n her head and a rope tied tightly arornd her neck. She was unconscious and in a dyintr condition. The murder er said he accidentally shot her while cleaning a revolver, but he did not ac count for the rope around her r.eck. Af- ter killing her. he attempted suicide, 1 but his courage failed, though he woun- ded himself in the head. It is believed he feloniously assaulted as well as mur- in Hep Bitters, which will cure ceneral delap- Idation, costive habits and ail comic diseases. Tliey nved Is as 5 from severe extract of tripod fT er. 1 !ty a" th -" rv.- of t!:''"iv 'rf. Ireland' Former Famine?. Ii! view of H, .ke.-nlful distrewt new pre- j 1 vailing in Irrlnnd, th following Jr rpp.ird to ; : previous visitations of a similnr clisnuter, i whifti w find iu tN Chicac.") Itoih. yvi of J Fr day last, will read ith R ureat dral of j interest : ! The failure of tbe potato ercp In Ireland in IMS. j j anl rabefqifut yeara. did not ooma w it boat ; warmer. A diseased afate of the plant elld tbe t j "curl " teni prevalent previoua 10 m ui, t ii univ, j Si '. ' ahowinir that the eDiitullon r to tuoer ! endangered. In fact, a early a l-4 ttoubeu called the pota'o a dirty wrfl i w nl. be a euree I" Ireland : ht th.re ; yo." 00 of male in Ihe .-oentrv, anl ,".' O ' of on ' cultivated acrea : that thl? land meat hi drained : and broua-ht an ter eul: Ivat ;.-n. iik! ro with ' irraln: that the potato would not la twenty j yeara lor.arer ; that It w.nkl ork itself ont : that then Ireland would be reduced to a wretched etate : but thst tr the e nntry returned to irrain ' eropa, lnftead of being: ibe mort degraded. It would ne one of the finest eonntrie In th worKl. The Dotato failed. t'obhett predicted : the f1 -me nd hundreds of thno.an.ii Peri.bed The Inithlfa! effect! of thU famine may be ap- prerlatrd when we cay that prTKiu" f IMC tbe tenant hold lnni In Ireland were 118.337 : oi thee "0.3S7 w,re under 4 per ananm rent, and 3. 3.111 over 9 : while the holJirirf in 1870 were but t2. 00", of which &12,0S) were valued at ieM than . It Pr annum. Hat even the lar;e number of bold Inif of !M6 dc-ei not repaent the extreme d tri llion of thattimc.au many of the mill boMlnat were tab-let and held by separate familie of fqnat ter. 1 here were a' no potato famine in Ireland la I?. and 1S23. In tliore yeara mn'.tuude of bu rn un beinv were In a Mate of destitution. In i the Oonty of flare 90.t"9 jeron(i were nb"ted on charity: In 1'ork. IM.oo-i: In Limerick. .000. ; out of a population of 07. 0. The irovernment of . KDf!an1 placed 500,0. 0 at the lpofal of the j lrnU Government la 1SV3: in aUitioa, S.ZM.0 0 wag futiecribed hy private tndirirtualt In Orem ; Britain, and -Cl&ojxn raised In ImMiD. Another , failure of the potato cr p occurred in 1S31. That ! year 2O0. 0 per'onx wre wifioat lovl ; tlielr i aurlerinifS were aleo aurnirat'-d hy the ceverity of ; the weather, and want of iriothlns and fuel. I I'arliarnent voted .bujfO for the alleviation of , Htnmediate want durinjr that year. j Neit w have the fr ghtlal frttnloe of IMfl and j ; 1847. The failure of tne pelato crop commenced . , In the autumn of IB-t.'j. tut ita totaldectruction did j ' not occur until 149 and 1S47. Not ! than 8, ',- ' 1 000 of persons In tlieae yenrf received ratWm" up- pl'.ed hy the p-Kr ra'ee, pajlie allowance, and . ' private charity. i , The rivilliej world wa appalled by the reporti I ; of (tnrvation, dlreaae and dea-h. tin tfcti occsion I : the Government. onder foor d iflerent Farliameot- ' ary ac t. advanced 7.13..,fS lor the rcliet of the 1 i iiiBerert. About half of tble was a free tit. ' : while half wi to be repaid in ten yearn. ;v nt- t i ually, the whole wjj made a free At the ' I aatue time, 1 .107. 9 wni nuhscrlbe.l by private individual!. Jt may he fated, in tb.i connection, ; ! thai much of tbe money voted by fat llnment and 1 ; eoatril-"'i by private cliarl'y wa w r3 thn : j wa?tet. In hit work on -l he Condition of Ire- : i land," Mr. I'im, of luf lln. shows that tliero were ! maladministrations, corruption, cp .tism. airk. ' ln(f of worn, and numltr!ri o her forms of int : manafremect, to s;iy nothing ol roads commencing , nowhere, and leaoir.ir to the same place, in con- ! ne-ti'n with IS d"tr rut:oa ol the nwney. since liH. :a Ireland, tbe potato crop tat J sanered more or lr f'.m d:seae. The Inft- t-rt'. lty of f.'.i crop in i "sT Is due tj Imperfect cultiva tion and nnlaroraMe we.jthcr. wl,i-h have pre reoted It from belnn properly matured. The famine of 164T accustomed the Iri'h people ta oth er descriptions ol food. Tbe country cow Imports annually over 2c,ooo.oo0 ca ts, of what, corn, and four, tit this. par", is use 1 for leeJinn cattle. The imported oarley Is used f.r diftillioR and brewirp. Still the wheat and flur Imported are nearly ll.wo.ooo ofewts., or about 3 t9. b.r each he of the population. Tte danger oi the country In elirijtlnr to one principal crop l msnitested by this one fact alone : one such winter as we have in northern Illinois or Wisconsin would destroy every potato t"re 1 for the winter aid luxxer tioi of tbe peo ple of Ireland. And su ?ii winters hare hen-toiore neen eTpenenced in b.th Orat Hrita a and Ire land. Poor Ireland liirh Kneiand. auOjO-.'O )Tak ino rtorLE of ip.rust) ap- l-KA I. l"'tr. HI I r. Mr. ri)'!i. .f f''iinect!.'.:t, l.u- Introduced a biii into t'oi.2rs to appropriate JptoMX" for the relief of ln !?.iiil. Whilst the motion may e eomiaendeii, the um m inadequate to i.ffrd re'ief f..v more than twenty-four hour, wi;i tin' principle it-elf it wong. Tlie pracil'.'al smin'e oi relief must eouie tiironyli private lienevulenee. Concress could protest Rfi iiiiot the ii.iquitnus system of land law whii-!) disgrtu-v Lusjian.i, nd the rapacity of lnlUrd in reducing th-'ir tenant- to a enndiMoti of starvation, which would le liir.re e;T-ctive t'ian subscribing fl(Mj,0"0, which sin lias been piven l.y a hii:!'" A Met icrtn tiuzen Mora! intervention is always in or.'.cr, and it is bee'cning the greatest country on the fac of th? earth to lead tie way in behalf f life, liberty and happiness. The f hii-azo Tribune F;tte the case eloquently in this w ise : Tfc" reports f api'illlca, Dd & tbey come frrm Tarious s,-'.irce we lav e n. ri?on"to dn eTfli'. them. Thtr are ially ; ",0 hj i 'i'le In that nil ict'."l Itl,in1 oo :bi mice o! :arvatlin. di1 the n'liatior is r.-ntan'.iy iDcrean Inir, f'jr fam ine trav If ft. Ti' cutiooK in Lnrril. let thrt r'(roj'!o Ua.vh betn s-jueei!" ! try. I'n!c hrlp roine to thni prompi.y t!;-y lnat 5tirre. It Is nil that 'Ta Ibein are living n one rcal cf turnips a day. and ibtTinn1 arc c.nunonff tne!r l.st p'.ita'.'f. r ron Riirot i Tf i&rt of I lr'laii J ths auuaizInK fry K-cs U; r liKip.and Try iity ihe are.i ol drsutuii-jT nrea!!. while ; Kritlch lan'ilvpla l"ok coil! 00 an1 take 113 ttry.t torlicro tt. Wliliiw.- Oi lisTe ttat lh peojiie ot ' tblt t'tntry will ' v quick to forioir to the reliel of i lrrlrinrf . r. thpy li!iv lcne ia t.aies jtnat. tbey Luu;-; not !oe mbt "I tlie ch tii:i; l:aa j ro- ' duel th.s hrrr itettitntlou. It may ara-mr- .p in tlie rta'.Ptnent t bt the liril i?li lan'l h'T-l have que'i'xJ the lr:ri tenant! dry. anJ tiiat Mi I lttpr. ratlicr tbun rlulc eviction. LaTe iclvea up eTrry:hin)c Ibey poaea to aatlpfy the ajtr; rU uf . their ta-k-taa.-t'-ra. They base t.oen c Qiri)a! lei? i to psy these lan cMs. wljo hold tbeir title? ly oou ticCHl f' a. a itiiilion t.ai a quar.er ol collar' , worth per wecit il cattl. htK'. 'heep. calres, '. Iotat'-e?. egjca. hut'er. liueD.aiid fim. auat ad ilia t their ct.uctry ill j-ro-Joce. and nearly ail of ? wiiich t feed, vitboat which Ir 1 they re now , ptno iUK and dyina;. ll takes this larue amouni, 1 and ien thia it not enough, 1.1 pay rent la tea lii.Bsan'! KniclD famiiirn w hu h.iu tlicm tn tbe ; ttrip of a rise. Thia i tb IieYii-Kiah tbat nas i arral ed them with ita powerful arms and Is 4ueeiiTiir cat thoir very lue-t 'OvNl. ive millions e! miserable people living In their own country, 1 upon lanJa wnich tbey i.or their erostor cvir voluntarily a;sve up. are absolutely iivlnir by the . (utterance ot ten inou'sn t laiu;iia of kn.-land I who have tlie whole miii'ary. police, and contab- I oiary power of that country at their back witn ' which to collect their rents, and w hen the entir : prmluce of a fnant il irsnttlciect to pay that rent ', they hare the aurance to lean on the people of j the I nltei states lor tne remainder. 1 bat it ! the pu-ishmei , nt l.ncland baa been IrOict.tiif oa : veara for llirbt.n aira'Dt fcer. not indepeiidouc or at-parate from lb ! I'nt'er! K incJom, but almply epou-iDit t be caura ' ot one Kira; aa aayainpt ano;lier. la it uot time 1T th Knarlipb tJov rninect to put an end to the acar.dalou "pectaclo of thout.indr of it people ' tarvln t c.eth, and, even in the Vet ol tiujes. " livlcsr in mierni! muaior and piteous!; calling to their friend In thia country evry year for ! belp? If t'Ti'a dra-n of f.Kvt frjin Iroistnl" n paj ejrbitnt renta were ttopppd, tne teuarts would i bave enough to livo on and the Irth people of ' thf country would not have to contribute el-j,"0O 1 a weak to belp ibem pay tiiese rent;. i The Lancaster Xfc ia, ore of Mr. Hinine's most prominent orguns in thin State, tskes. the following view of t'anieron-p roa cbine conv'!:tion which met at Jinrrisburg last week : What tbe (Vn'eilerale fco; were unnMc to do durina: year? ol tlis piot d"pernte birbtinc tbe world ever paw whst even Kooc-t E. Jer? ciiild never acorop!!"1! wa done on Wedue.viv ; for the Brat time in h! i fe fJereri! tlrant met with defeat, arci. wort cf all I', was nnta-nrd at the hands of bis lriends. Thosro who proffie! to lovi him moat bave proven wor"t enetni-a. I'm 11 an weeks reo no man In thia Kepubllc t'ood. fair er befire the people of thi" State than he. ile ! had jnat met an ova'ion surb as waa rev-r before accorded to a human heint. not even to the Kather ol hiat'ountrr. The entire populace at one ma a did birn honor. Full of honora at home, tho recip ient of royal a'.tentlcna abroad, be aa hailed as ; the Ural maa In the nation. Twice hal th ? hitrh i est proifol confidence a free people can beptow ; been lven bim. That would bave aaltPtled tbe ambition of all raa--nabie men. Hut it d Id rot ! aatipfy the ambition of a msn who b-id hisu aims ; of his own, and who thonirbt be could attain them by upica; he ex President as a stepping arone i I d aPtray by the syren whi'pers ol amtntbn, ', Oen Orant lackd tbe mornl c.'ursite to say nay , tn hts indiscreet friends, and firmed troru the peo ' pie of tbia State an eipreiPK n ot opinion which . thy would fain have kept to thoinselves. t What, was thereault? To day ( lencml Orant I knows that he Is no longer tlie Idol ol the people olthlsSta-e. Krlnctantly but mpbatical! v they have bad the courage t. tell h.ia hs a'.r.iined ! their admlratioli beyond the point ol prudence. He ccn no lonerr rally them around his colors. . 1 be press of the fta'e. with fw eiceptlons, g-mndsd the note of warninar lon before the actu 1 al tept came. No sensible man doubted what tbo result would he. A wiser man would h:tve trlm j need bit aails In tiu-.e to avoid the shock of the im ' pending storm. He chose rather to lisien to tho voice ol flattery, and f iroel literally forced the j people ol Pennsylvania to repudiate any lurlher I claims he may make upon them. I True, bis Indiscreet friends tlironsh wav pceu. I liarly their own, and of which they are such cn 1 aummate masters, declare! him the choice of the 1 people of tills State for the I'ri-siiicn.-y a third . time, but there is hardly a man In It who knows a ; broader taroe was never cnartcd ; even that pack ' ed convention waj hazily able to forco anch a dc ' eiaratlon : a bare maj .r'ty couid be found to en ! dorse this monstmes lie. and all of thorn knew ; full well that tbe preponderance cf voters was I lanrely on the other side, tjeneral Orant bus i met his political dtath at tne h.inds of his impru i rten lriends. Thonam'.s ot men to whom he ha ' been until now an object of rcpieot and. adoration I have against tholr will been Toroed into an ait I i tude 01 hostility. What will it avail him 11 he : ahoald now deci ne the nanttldacv? Thaideclar 1 ation will come too late to reeiifv th biunricr to ! wbich he so readily asctitd. fie has lived to j learn that even tbe liupuiar Idol is spurned when j he undertake to rnn counter to the entiinenK 1 which ore hundred years '1! free ovcriimen. have implanted In tbe brea:s ol a tree people. lie baa ' tei'n uselessly and uoavailfna-ly aaeriflced by bis ! principal, who ws nevor known to spare friend or foe when his private ends could be served i thersby. That he can ever aei'n bi the randt ! dat ot the K publican psrty for the I-resldency I Is a gnppopition to purely lde:il, that the most ; ere Inlous man In the land cann'd be brought to : believe It. All the sincere friends oi the e l'res ; lder.t must sincerely rearct that he has bTn thns needlesly Compelled to stand bclore the American ' people In this nntmriahle plight. An uacqnivo. I cl declination two months ano vr..nlt have left i htm ia tba Jofty r!ch he once in piitt:s ti'.i Ba'.fco ; he doV Ice!. J to ipaik the ! ri -!; -'' !, sri-' ir-.tf.-u 'eret fr'-.fp 'ni. IT? IS SAID 500,000 IrPIEZESO.lxrf Witnessed the Crant Reception In Phnade!PMa WE WOULD . Wen and Boys to Call at Oak X-3,,1 - . . f r. w . . immrdtaieiy aim m n-mw( f jot the GOLD WAVES OJ i88(J The Singularly SMALL PR 1 1' IIS e slarttd the AnnDsl VI let. r vaI( stirred all the stores to do their best. Rnt we ecllprtf thf ru td they know It, and the People ce It. too. Theae are the rriee for Chir Own bought in the ew York Wholesale Store. A few 1-1 of the rto.OO Fine Overcoats. ren-ed to Koyal Kerersihle I'lald Bscits, sold everyv. h'r at rjs.no (I c!l Ir. j ,-''." . Woven Hacks). Unr I'rlce Nevt ra le ' F.stra Sues In Blue and Brown Worumho B-aver tlTercotu Ncvt Orade A ood Strona: Serviceable t'loth-Hound tivcrcoat Kvervdav Working tjvercoat Men's All-Wool Suits The Anbtirn" I). B. Salts. foT Buslnc-s and Itos F.xtra ynnlity "Sawyer" Snltlnfrs ' " The Finest of e'asimeres Sulti " " iTen Suits of B-at Imported Clubs reduced to Men's Kvervday I'ants All-W ool Business and Ifress Iants Kxtra Fine Ires I'antRloons f..rmvr:y 10.0-j. nw Oenuine Harris Cassimere Tants Tbe Very Iatest S'yles in Children's t ivercom ' The Iktuble Shouldered Cape Koral KTtriMs Bsck f ef ts ' (The Nicest Little Ilnys' tlvercoaU tak Hal; ecr i--da--; j Children's Suits as low ' Higher (trades and Moro Tabt-m'! y 1 rTiiTned Sui ta A Grsit Specialty tn Boys' and Youths' 1'ants '.'"" WAX A "MAKER & RROWV OAK Hill, S. t. COR. SIXTH iilD ISIARRET. FIIUIl The Largest Clothing House in America. ALL (KKK1 o t ) o o c o o o oooo V V T V IXFXE K K FEE F. E EEEKE RBRBR K K It U KBF.BK R H R K K K V V V w V i A - - A A A a A aW A HEAVY WEIGHT C10TH1NC! i NOW 0T IIsTD, TO BE SOLD AT PRICES LOWER Til AX EVE TO MAKE K'.KJ.M FOR A LARGE AND NEW 9 TO-' sv iT SPRING AXD SUMMER CLOTHING IT WILL PAY YOr TO OIvE I A C.1.I AS TilT (.CUDS 0V I STORI POSITIVELY BE SOLD REGARDLESS OF THE ADTiXCE fit EE SO TAKE OUR ADVICE. AND AND 1KO.M Young America Corner ELEVENTH AVENUE and !. e, aso.-tr. 7cM t fat EIS, FOST si I 113 k 115 CUMON" STUKKT. JOHNSTOWN. I'A.. ALWAYS ii.ivt: THE JL.rn-grest niul Cheapest ftoclt T Drv axicl Dress Goods-! NOTIONS, MLLINERY, CARPETS, ETC. to be found In Csmbria or adj"liinp counties. ITTorpot rot tlie street a:: I r and fail nt to call, buy and 5o h3j; y. RUPTURE CURED Py lr. M. A. Sherman Snpperl and ( nrathe. with . rt V.ie in'u Ctot "r hauler?. nee from ibr. li'-'ic wt h 1 krne.rj ul t':ni ckm- ben re h'v OBlee '.51 Broadway, w Inrk. I'a entx receive :rc! meet an j S-a e ' rive Hundred 2'housaml Hrong. In the int fi'W Tnnr tb there h" t een 1 re than f.O.Hj hottloa of Krtllnh' arc olcl Kuttl tbe vat number r-f veojie who bave Urffdit. m-re tlinn a.iyyi jerwrts ami' tel ith ( enannplien hs e been ctire!. AiM'"intl.. 'roui. A-tiutaanl llmncliiti yteli nt onee : ben-e it is tblt everj -boil v ?ie:-k in its -rxie. I those who ivo not t3ent, let m sy : If yiu bae a ii'jh,.ir ur ebllil th? l"rouj n.l Vna valti-j life. hnl f- i I 10 try it. Kcr Ijimr ll:n-k", St.le or I'bet. r-.-r-'b lnl. ti li)ruii Ilater. SoU by li. J. I.loyd. bunul-t, Hbenburs, l'. " (-li,'7y. e.o.Cai.l Strange People. I)o rr.n know that there ire c'.nm2e pr-oifc .n o-ir e-jmrnunifyT We any strxnsre. because llv eein wtlline to ufTi-r and pa tbflr d;iya mitrlilv mie nt by lye.Mv L,:ver t oinplaint . ladies ttoti. 'on-tiP-it in. P!!'! trenerol IH-t-ilny urn Slllbdil'S V1TAI.17.KK t Riianutci-a euro them. Sold br II. J. LJovd. EiH-neim.a;. I ave a peely and tvytitlve Mire fortarTh, rirlithena. t'ankef-mcain and Hod tcbe h SHI I.OII'S CATAKKH KKMKDY. A naaal l.ieotor free with eaoh bottle. T'fe it If ron drwirct-enlih and Fweet breath. Price, S-x-is. Sold l K.J. L-loTd. Eren?burr. ?-12. a.o.elin PIANOS OIIOANS. ChiaTW Hnrsl iv Aumi-A. lft-em r fstrn - ire-it, all reiv. forca.-h or in-tnllmeriU r. forca.-h or in-tnllmeriU s trant lllntr.Hed eata!ocne free, t-en'f ed aix vears nted. T. I.t KIS W Al KHS. Ao'tI No. 'JS We-t Hth Street, 'ew Mrk neto A(c'r'. fin ..III THAT LIKE ALL THE Carefully Manvfacturcj q 5 . i .. OTXR CX'CO f"CHti C CO H C f o C f C H t C C U CCCC tKL'. A A A A A A AAA A A A A A A izt:-. t t , . .. . io-.i. l.i 1:. BUY YOUR CLOTHING IS. at tij; Clothing House, ELEVENTH ALTOONA. IA Dvw Goo ols. jn tutI r&r 'A 1 LT 7& s MiA tCcM. ER&QUIN ,11 f Satfreeto ll vrbe rv'-TT2'. I Uvl-lvtri"erf. ptTHrf S5 Con nent t: ' r,-.- v.w i - k. .-.tn0 I i:l";' IHr !1I.K, a " CHEAPEST BIBLES ,.::,V-;;- Ml' 1 I 11 1 11 S&XZZtftri b ?5? i I a ih. IV.r a Vea-er. Sr- 'tr.: -" 1"" ' mfa-.i dhrllil 1 ' '5,' 1 vT ua If " ami rAnirrv 0 FARMERS ". to )10 l l.H MONTH artd S penis;. Ft part ipkia. d!v at hrme rfd"" t r J i 'ftSltCKtl. U THE 0 rd Y'P