M- TCCl-H?l3t ! EBENSBURC, PA.. FRIDAY, - - - MARCH 12. ISSO. Tns l.wlies of Hnrkeville, Va., have suiiKiiinceil an Kasttr entertainment, ... tne proceeds 01 wimu .uc w ..j.v. 1 1) the pmvha&U of a new steam printing , press for Mr. Alphius Dolling, of the Smith Siik Smtiutl. Hope the disease will become contagious and that even the pure air of the Alleghenies will not le proof against it. press thei: determination to maintain it at every A'l' Williamsport, on Saturday last, cost. With this secession, or revolution, or rebel ling Cummin Sentenced ten prisoners, '" or ''' whatever name it may be called, the ei ht of whom were sent to the hatern Penitentiary While lerusillg tbisitem the leader will probably be struck with the fact that while the Judge is Cummin the prisoners are going to be punished for their crimes. More's the pity for the prisoners, though no doubt they all deserve what they got, or are going to get. It is a handy thing, even at the risk of being occasionally shot at. to be an Emperor, a King, a Queen, or a Presi dent f a European Republic, but it is terribly expensive to the people. The income per day of the Emperor of Rus sia is r.i:,0"0 ; the Emperor of Austria. 510,J : the Emperor of Germany tV ..: the King or Italy, ?r,4'': ; the Qr.een of Great Britain, 5'5,3'A and the I'rc-ident of France, 5"00. Wjikn the friends of Blaine in the diiTcrent Congressional districts in this state get through electing their dele gates to Chicago, the business which is ju .t now engrossing their earnest atten tion. Don Cam ron's unit rule in favor of Giant will be whittled down to a iv small stick of timber, and the gr-.te.-t effort of his life will be to get more than a hake's dozen of his dele gates iidinilted into the national conven tion. One of those tilings which no man en n ever find out is why some of the jewsp.tp:rs, notably the Harrisbuig 1'a tri'it. Lancaster InU U'ojiiver and Altoona S"4. never capitalize the word State when referring to a commonwealth, and jet invariably use capital letters when speaking of the United States. They :r.e evidently not impressed with the fact that ''what is sauce for the goose ought to be sauce for the gander," and i -f M .-"t, Wk notice that our friend and brother ouill for pencil, as the case may be.) George D. Herbert, who for several Months past has been editing the Mead- illi' 1 ilhi ll'pmkr, which the Phila delphia rJ"a,ns says v. as a very spicy and entertaining paper tinder his adminis tration, has severed his connection with that journal and returned to Sharon, his former homo. We hope, nevertheless, to hear id Geoige eoming once more to the front in journalistic circles, and that i t fore ruaiiv d ivs. Tin: following statement taken from tne Philadelphia ll c-n of Tuesday last shows that the country, in defiance of all the bitter lessons of the pas!, is again entering upon a career of reckless ex travagance, the end of which it requires no prophet to foretell ; t.a-t week the hupoits ;it the port of New Vnik amounted to s l:t,sT;,44s and the ex ports to hilt J!::, 1 v.i. The fnt figures represent the heaviest hiisiness ef any week nli record. One of the inu-t significant feat ures of this exhibit is the fact thnt siiks, satins, velvets, laces, feathers, Bowers, etc., to the vahn 'of s.".,ii.:.!.:;ii'.i were among the im ports. This is going into luxuries witli a enL'eauce. Thk New York !!, all fund for the relief of Ireland amounted to ?2A'.r. 79 up to las' Saturday morning. In ad dition to this liberal contribution, it is safe to say that nearly half a million ot dollars, collected in this countiy through other agencies, including the amount received by Mr. Parnell, have already been transmitted to Ireland, to relieve her suffering people. Of this sum the banking house of Eugene Kelly & Co., of New York, received and sent to its agents in Ireland, for distribution, an aggregate amounting on Monday last to S141.T:.r..4o. A r;oor deal of newspaper comment has been indulged in during the lat ten days regarding an alleged visit of James P. Burr, of the Pittsbu-g V-r. to Mr. Tiidcn, and what Mr. B. said after he left New York about Mr. Tilden's can didacy at Cincinnati. Mr. Barr in his paper of Monday last arrested the further progress of this story, which was assum ing very large dimensions, by announc ing that he has not been in New York during the present y-ar of grace, and that he has not he'ui any correspondence whatever with Mr. Tilden. After this emphatic denial by Mr. Barr. one inay truthfully exclaim with 1'alstaff, "How 1 his world is given to King 1" N the principle, that everything is f.iir in politics, the Johnstown Tribune to k oe-.Nision o;i Monday last to give Blaine a home thrust by asserting that 'the Young lb publicans of Maine, in convention ass, inbied on Saturday pass ed resolutions against the nomination of I'. S. Grant, or James (1. Blaine, since many con.-iderat ions will lead a large portion of the Kf publican party to vote against eiil-.er. " It is no doubt true that there are thousands of '-Young He : i:M:f:inu-' all nvcr the count who -.vould 3 ".i:;v never vote f-r rea.;on r either Gr:;i.t or el I ire ly T-.li iT .ic fci l i' hini-elt is to th. iii. but so far P. aiiir- iiceined we don't t! there are very niar.y voters of that sort i,i M.'.:;:e, wheje the Republican crowd Fueius to be always ready to condone anything that he may do. The Ti Vm.ne, le-civcv'-r, might ju-t as well have told the truth by saying that the convention 1-; which it referred was held by the 'Young Pi publicans" ef Massachu setts, and not by those of Maine, the former of whom are well organized and mean business, and if either Grant or Blaine should be nominated at Chicago th'-drt bent s of Republicanism w ill rc- e such a shaking up in the "Old Bay Stat J.-te was never given to them be- I- Juno. 1P6I. nearly eiuht years be- ; fre llKmiafl F. Bayanl took his sent in t the Senate, and a moran oeiore oiigreas : declared war against the Southern t states, lie addressed a public meeting of ' ate of the nomination of JamesX. Kenis !the citizens of Delaware at Dover, in , as U. S. Marshal J or the Eastern dis I which he said : t trict of this State. We need not tell The question for every (food ma.n now to ask is : t our reatlerS who and what Kerns is. It I 'My country, what rani Jo to restore your peace i . . . ., . . . , : .'n.ihapplnV..r TL. pt and it. le..on. .hould ' 18 n0US to t,iat hl3 n;ime 13 Tint tin li4t liitfrt it lutt tit in.mlr r ito-r It-if.t ttiA Tl.iT,.rll v,b,a on,1 throne-hout the be within the scripe of these remarks nor useful at present. The practical question before, us lorbidt mere speculation : U "tares us in the face-a hard, stern fact. Kleven States have withdrawn from , the Federal Vnion with solemn and deliberate ac tion, anil have united under a new government. They have made their declaration of independence of the f rovernment under which wc live, and ex .,;,,,, ,,.,,...., .k. vuiioiiiuiiuiiiii i-t 1 1 1 , col it nun ct ci iitv iu - berof the Union we have been faithful in all times. Never, never has a thought, a word, an act of ours been unfaithful to the t'nion of our fathers in letter and inspirit it has been faithfully kept by ug Hut the stern fact is still before us. and but two alternatives present tbemse'ves. Shall we make war upon and subjugate this new confedera cy, or shall we peacefully treat with them and con sent to their self-government, trusting to time, which it the great healer of all wronjri and pas sions, to briny them attain volunt irily into a com mon government with lis ?" This speech of Mr. Bayard, the great . purpose of which is indicated by the question he asked, '-My country, what can I do to restore your peace and hap piness ?" is now being used by his ene mies as an argument against his nomi nation for the Presidency. The views i . - , 1 1 - f T. 1 : . 1. t-iiLti milieu t -mi. i;iuu in Liie taiiv part of and opto July in that year, when Congress declared war, were the same as were held by the best men of both parlies, who were anxious to save the country from the horrors of a civil war. Stephen A. Iouglas in a speech In the Senate deelared his belief that war meant a dissolution of the ; Union, final and eternal. Gen. Scott, Mr. Chase. Iloraee Grely, Sianton. Mr. Tilden. Horatio Seymour, and. others of like prominence, were all advocates of peace as long as there was the least hope that an amicable settlement of the difficulty was possible. Was it a crime in lsiil to plea I for peace ami its bless ings, and to protest against war and bloodshed, as long as any prospect was held out of peace and reconciliation be tween the sections? Demagogues may say so. but such is not the judgment of the country. After war was officially . declared, Mr. Bayard was for the Union, and his state was the first of the south ernmost tier of the Northern States to furnish a regiment of soldiers for the Union army. President Iincoln in his message to Congress in December, lSt'.l, speaking of the attitude of the States . north as well as f-mth of Mason and Dixon's line, said of Delaware : ''South f'f the line, nohlc Unit D-h'tare lei ;,'" ri'jht from the first. As the Bayards are said io ow.i Delaware politically, and as Mr. Lincoln seemed to be proud of what -'noble little Delaware"' had done in l'il, we don't think that Thos. F. Bayard's patriotism will suffer ma terially from the vei-omous assaults that are now being made upon him. The record of no public man in this country can tie hss successfully assailed than that of Mr. Bavard. I r will be remembered that the notor . ions bribery cases growing out of the at tempted passage of the Pittsburg riot , losses bill at the last session of the Leg islature were assigned for trial in the Court of (uaiter Sessions of Dauphin county, which met on Monday last in Harrisburg. When the Court convened In the afternoon and the District Attor 1 ney called the case against Charles B 1 Salter, the defendant's counsel caused i a genuine surprise by withdrawing the plea of "not guilty," w hicli had been eli te red at the former sessions of the('ourti : and entering a plea of "guilty.'' The same plea was entered in the cases against Win. H. Kemble, Jesse R. Craw 1 ford and William V. Rumbarger, except that in Kemble's case his counsel want ed to accompany the plea of guilty with a protest substantial- affirming that William, although he "acknowledged thcorn." wished it distinctly under stood that what he had done amounted to nothing more than the customary le gislative "log-rolling."' Judge Pearson refused to receive the plea in that form, 1 and it was amended and put in such a shape as to take the sting out of it. None of the either defendants Petroff. Long, Loiscnrhr, Smith, Shoemaker, Chirk, and McCune--propose to plead guilty, but intend te stand a trial ; i.nd on Tuesday a jury was cmp .tiihelled in the Petroff case and th examination of the w itnesses commenced. No sentences will be passed bv the Court, either on the four who have put in the plea of guilty, or upon any of the others who may be convicted, until the whole batch , has bee n disposed of. As regards the ; motives of the four defendants named in pleading guilty, the theory of the prose cution is that they did so in order to prevent disclosures seriously comprom ising several we li-know n persons, who have r.ot yet Inn publicly implicated in the scandal. We expect to be ble to state the result iu all t lie cases in our next issue. Anpkf.w JIonciNs, an able and ex perienced Democratic journalist, died on Frdiay last at Washington, in this State, in the fifty-fifth year of his age. At the time of his death lie was the edi tor of the Washington Riricir a.il Ec o.hiner, and in his younger days not on ly founded the Hairisburg PutrbA, but was the editor respectively of the Pitts burg -on, the Erie Osf-i-cr and the Wi!'iamoport 7'tn? tl all 1 emocratie organs. He was a son of that fearless an(i t nist,.,i Democratic leader, the late William Hopkins, a former Canal Com missioner, and was a brother of James II. Hopkins, the well know n Democratic politician of Pittsburg. A loiiKKsroxDKXT who signs him self ( . W. '"('. F.'' (C- d F 1) would have, been more appropriate is informed by the Philadelphia Hccor'l that a Catholic does not pay for a con fession. Hope "C. W." will breathe easier no w that that terrible bugaboo has been disposed of. : -.1 x. i me r.iie pa-rs lepori mar. large numbers of Chinamen are passing thro' that place en route from San Francisco to Boston and ew loik. Notiiino that has occurred at "Wash- ! inpton during the present session has! Deen a mauer or so rnucn surpuse as ; the confirmation last week bv the Sen- j stench in t tie nostrils or every iemocrat country. In his able and exhaustive ii . ... A- -..-i At.,., Af,- l".l- . speeru in me senate i:it -tiv, -:. " : lace held Up KemS and hlS deputies to richly-earned scorn and execration for thtir villainous conduct at the election in Philadephia in l7t; and the infam ous character of a large number of these same deputies, as well as their lawless acts, was afterward conclusively shown by the testimony taken before the inves tigating committee, of which Mr. Wal lace is the Chairman. The Democracy of this State, at least, had a right to ex pect that Mr. Wallace, in ti e Senate, would lay a h?avy hand upon Kerns, and they were fully justified iu this ex pectation from the bold and vigorous spoech'to which we have referred. Now that Kerns has passed safely through the Senate, the question to be solved is. How was it brought about ? It is well known that when Kerns' nomination was made and referred to the Judiciary Committee. Mr. Wallace had influence enough with the committee to prevent any action being taken on it. The plea - i H..I f 1 1 ' is now mam nowevti. iiiai -ii Miiuaur could not have prevented the committee , from acting favorably on the nomina tion if he had made an effort in that di rection. A man can believe as much of this statement as he pleases, but we don't take any stock iu it. Rumors are thick of an understanding regarding the case between Mr. Wallace and Don Cameron, and that certain results mutu- Ally satisfactory to both will hereafter take place touching other Pennsylvania nominations. Gen. Garland, of Arkan sas, and Mr. Bailey, of Tennessee, were the two Democrats of a sub-committee of ore members of the Judiciary Com mittee which had Kerns' nomination in charge, and thev can tell cxactlv wheth- ' r fr U':1ll:,eo"rPoi,Psterl them to make a favorable report on it or not. Mr. 'V ought therefore to lose no time in get ting Messrs. Garland and Bailev to re lieve him. if they can, from the very un pleasant position in which the confirm ation of Kerns lias placed him with the Democracy of the Union in geueral and of his own State in particular. The Pottsville Chronicle feels called upon to acknowledge, as we do, the re ceipt of two important political docu ments. The first is entitled: "The Life and Public Services of John Sherman."' Being blessed w ith but a limited portion of this world's goods, we have says the Chronirlr, glanced over the phamphlet in the vain hope of discovering how John Sherman became a millionaire in fifteen years on a salary of five thousand dollars and all the while lived like a prince. A biographical sketch contain ing such information would be of some value to mankind : but unfortunately on that topic this little volume preserves a painful silence. Among th distinguish ed "public services" of Mr. Sherman was the purchase of the electoral vote of Louisiana for Hayes, in which he parti cipated as one of the -'visiting states men." Exactly how the result was brought about would be a matter of in- : tense public interest, but strange to say : this biographical sketch sas nothing ; whatever about F.lia Pinkston. Agnes I Jeuks, :r old Madison Wells, or led- ; headed Jim Anderson. Possibly the j copy which has found its way to our i sanctum is an expurgated edition, the full text being reserved for the special newspaper advocates ef the party of , great moral ideas. The other phamphlet, is entitled a "Biographical sketch of Gahisha A. Grow, Speaker :7th Congress, with Ex tracts from his Speeches and Opinions.'' ' It is a very modest little boom this, which seems to have had its origin pp in i Susquehanna county. It is not a Presi- ' deutial boom, so to speak, for Mr. G row's present ambition is no higher than the United States Senate. The cover is or namented with a portrait of the ex speaker, from which it is very apparent : that the locks and beaul, once as black '. as the raven's wing, are now grizzled with advancing years. But a limited portion .f the pamphlet in fact, only one half page out of sixteen is devoted : to Mr. Grow's public services: possibly for the very good reason that beyond two years in the speaker's chair his pub lic services have never been visible to the naked eye. It is a pleasure to learn that he was one of the most vigorous advocates of the war for the Union, and i w hendrafted underthe.'irst draft prompt- ' ly furnished a substitute to fight the battles of his country. The fact that a ; sketch of Mr. G row's public life can be condensed into such limited compass i must not, however, be taken ;?s the true measure of Ids merits, for, like all other men of ability in the Republican 'party of Pennsylvania, '.he has been crowded 1 to the rear by the Camr rons, and i J-earys, ; and Ilartranfts, and llovts, and Mack- j o. ituu iuay s, who ne, canieuoii me . . 1 l . -. I - I ,T il. . mimu.1 anil emoluments oi omee. SoMi:nci)Y has been getting up a de scription of the proposed court of Ulys ses I., conveying his picture of it by means of a clever statement from the Court Journal of September, the TruiKri'il St'irtfln cr7, and the An:;y "nrl JVnri A'fcs, all published at Washington. Senator Cameron figures as the Duke of Pennsylvania, while hisdad is in as Earl of Susquehanna, attached te the court as Ear! Marshal. All the Grant ites re ceive heavy promotion, though our f: i' tul G. V. Chibis is badly treated in g' tting no higher elevation than thatof Lord St. Ledger, while Col. Forney is still more shabbily used in getting no sort of title and being hung upon "ex pectations," of which the gallant colonel has had a surfeit in his life. The author of the brochure rather rushes things in getting tne imperial family seated in so short a period as two years from date, with Beauregard in couima.nl of the im perial army of the South, and Mahone, "Duke of the Blue Ridge,"' '-tinning the military machine in the West, with all the red-hot rebels, such as Tommy N'ast and Dennis Kearney, hung, the New York Snn suspended and Dana in hidinc-. !H,i 'p1 a ,lf'ad anywhere showing in of position tothe dynasty. When 'tis done, twill hardly lie so quickly finished. 7. '. 1 1 s it r !,)' :Ui(cnrer. Ax explosion of gas occurred at No. 2 shaft, Nanticoke, near Wilkes-Barre, on Friday afternoon. There were ten men in the shaft, and the following were killed : Edmund Morgan, a miner : James Henry, fire boss : Joseph Ander nott, laborer, and David T. Watkins, miner. John T. Watkins, miner, was seoionslv ininred Thf pvitlnsion vn , caused 'by the accumulation of black j damp. Matsk News. Hop Bitters, which are , advertieecl in our columns, are a sure euro ' tor aeue. la hoiisncss and knlnpv ronmlninte rj..- ,la i,a . " i il " ,1. 1, I Those who use them sav thev cannot be inn ; highly recommended. Those afflicted should give them a fair rnal, and will become tliere- qualities. Tortfand A. NEWS ASI OTHER SOTIMJS. TAHidon has 4,0i0,U0J inhabitants. A Reading grocer h;is a, well-preserved apple eight years old. Daniel Pierson" of Crawford county, has just died, in his I04lh year. American wives have made them selves notorious in France by six elope ments in as many months. George Hilton, postmaster at South Farsonleld, Me., is SI years old, and has occupied that position since 1S30. Mr. Cutler, of the Nova Scotia Ig- jsi;llure, has been a member of that body r.-.,. f.M-t t- f vrn vpurs nod i nnw Of. vp:irs n-i w , - j ,, of aire. A boiler exploded in Glasgow on Friday. Six persons were killed out right and thirty severely injured by the explosion. By a notable coincidence, the 2"th of March this year will be Maundy Thursday as well as the Feast of the Annunciation. Six young women, armed with shot guns, recently accompanied as many young men on a rabbit hunt in Georgia. No one was hurt. A countryman attracted considera ble attention "at Titnsville by stopping his wagon in the middle of the streets ami engaging in prayer. The Pittsburg iolice made a raid Saturday night on three disorderly houses, and arrested seventy-six er3ons of all colors and both sexes. Joseph Vicker, of Reading, who is 22 vears old, has become deranged from grief over the afflictions of his mother, who is suffering from dropsy. There will soon be sent out from the State hatchery at Corry letween 4XUkhj and oUU.imo brook trout, for stocking streams in Western Pennsylvania. An owl was recently captured in the T i: . ir;H.. nnr i.n cl illl'l that i iui-uu mwa, mn . iiwiw0. bad a white head and one white wing, 1 llllt: lll'J ItOU Mil- ...... -A cow lx-longincr to Mr. Charles Shipe. of Birchrunville. Chester county, recently gave birth to a calf without a tail. Otherwise the animal wasjierfect. The adhesion of theCatholic bishops of tho United states to the Pole's ency clical relative to the philosophy of Saint Thomas Aquinas has been delivered to the Poie. Tlic bod v of Dr. Samuel Hahr. "'j years of age, 'and a Hungarian by birth, who died in New York on Saturday, of erysipelas, was cremated at Washington, Pa., on Monday, Smion J. Diller. of Hanover, has a monster Poland-China hog weighing over 0") iounds. It is said to be the largest hog ever raised in Southern Pennsylvania. John Ranch and wife, an octogeua- riau couple of Merri weather county, Ga. have quarreled and separated, after liv- ing together for over half a centur and r rising a large family. A Boston man claims to have dis covert! a method of making paper boxes directly from the pulp, whereby lie can turn out wO.tKift a day at on?-th:rd of the i cost of the usual method. ! Mr. PariKil sailed for England' on Thursday, in consequence of the dis- ' solution of Parliament. After his elec tion is secured, he will return to Amer ica and continue his work here. An orphan bov named Swatzfagger, employed in the family of a Mr. Dales, at Shippensville, Clarion county, blew out his brains on Wednesday afternoon. No reason for the act. is known. Maine lumbermen recently from the ! logging camps report three feet of snow and excellent sledding. They say that . this has been the best winter for hauling logs in Ma;ne for a number ed' years. C. E. Cooley. of Char'emont. Mass., lias a cow X years old that has borne eighteen calves. She had eight before she was '1 years old, has had four at a time twice and three at a time twice. Friday afternoon, while tearing down the lieno breaker at Centralia. Pa., two carpi i.ters, Andrew and W. Wolf gang, were instantly killed bv the falling of the framework, caused by high winds. The Hon. John A. Cuthbert, of Mobile, is still practicing law in that city, although !'l years old. He was an ofiicer in the war of 12, and was elected to ( "ongress from Georgia in IsP.t. The right foot and leg of John Young, of Mount Joy, Lancaster coun ty, are petrifj ing. These members have no feeling, and to strike them a sound is given like that produced in striking a stone. The London 7V, ,trs says it is stated that on Parnedl's return from America monster meetings in favor of his scheme, for peasant proprietary w ill be resumed by a series of county demonstrations in ail parts of Ireland. Christ i Grassinan and William Car son, the Delphos (O.) roblers, who at tempted to murder Pickens, and who tortured his wife, have been sentenced to twelve years each in the penitentiary at hard labor, and to be locked in a dun geon every night for six years. - Three white men and one colored man were drowned by the upsetting of a skiff at Oaseyville, Ky., on Thursday morning. The whole party had tieon drinking tee freely at saloons along the river, hence the catastrophe. The German population of New York cilv is estimated to be 2.":i.()(M. Of th is number So, (too are Protestants, r.i).(Kii) ( 'at holies, r.ojHio Jews, and ."iO.oini are classed as indifferent, infidels, etc. Thenumberof Protestant communicants is 5.Ki. Hon. simon Cameron eeh bratod the eighty-first anniversary of his birth em Monday by receiving his friends at his country residence in Donegal. The ven erable ex-Senator was lotnid in remark able vigor of body and mind for a man of his years. Delegates from various Irish socie- -pS and Ilibernian organizations in Brooklyn met on Sunday afternoon and decided not to parade on St. Patrick's Day, but to send the money usually ap propriated for such occasions to the suf fering poor of Ireland. A negro barber living in Norv alk, Ohio, named Hawkins. 'attempted to kill his wife, his stepfather and himself on Saturday. He put two balls in Ids wife's head, shot his stepfather through the arm and then himself once in the head and once in the breast. Pure elevilishness is assigned as the cause. Mrs. Schuler, of Catasauqua. went out to wash em Tuesday week, and left a woman in charge of her three children. The woman left in the afternoon, and the two (ddest children went out to play. Soon afterward fire was discovered in the houe. and the remaining child, a baby, was taken out burned to a crisp. Mrs. Martha P. Graves, of rsouth Killing!-, Conn., who had leen deaf for thirty years, dreamed, on the night of Jan. ;o, that her hearing was restored. The next night she went to bed deaf, as usual, but awoke in the morning with perfect hearing, which is yet unimpair ed. Mr. John J. Havcrstick, of East Hemplield township. Chester county, is the owner of a motherly old (.'Lester county pig. Last March she gave birth to twelve pigs, last Octoler ten more, and on February 2-' eighteen more making forty pigs in three litters inside of a year. Old Peter Goelet didn't h t his heirs, Robert and Ogden Goelet, have much fun while lie lived, but now eac h ot them has taken costly villas at Newport for the coming season. The two young men have S20.0f.,(xXj to spend, and yet the probabilities are that we'll never get a cent of it. In the town of Harrison. Potter county, diphtheria rages so furiously j that a panic has seized the people. The 1 public schoeds have been closed, and a i i -i , : i, . '. ciinu is, heiuom seen on me streeis A number of families have lost all their children, and many others have been de prived of one or more of their little ones. The Dennis family at, Beaucoup, ' 111., found bits of glass m the sausage at breakfast, and that day t lie children's ' teeth crunched powdered glass in their , luncheon at school. The mother con-; fes-ieel that, wishing her lehitives to die in the most horrible manner possible, she had planned to kill them with the i glass. j Stephen Barrett, an old resident of ; Buffalo, N. Y.. and a fisherman by oc- cupation, has rescued from drowning no less than eighty-seven persons, besides bringing to shore 7i number ef bodies of persons who had been drowned. Appli cation has hepn made to the Govern ment by his friends foi a life saving meelal. The daughter of F irmer Hawes, of : Clayton, Contra Costa county, Cal., lost 1 her voice three years ago from diphthe ria. She was a devout girl, and prayed ; for the restoration of her voice. A few ; days ago, when at prayer meeting, and j thus fervently praying, her speech re- ' turned to her. At least so says the San j Francisco I'oxt. i John Knerr, of South Coventry, Chester county, while standing on the ' double tree of a lime wagon which was being unloaded on his field, slippetl and , fell between the horses. They started ' to run away, when one wheel passed ! over Mr. Knerr's head, fracturing his skull, and another wheel passed over his Ixidy, breaking several ribs. He will hardly recover. While the Democratic State Cen tral Committee are casting about for a place to hold the convention, attentiem is invited to the peculiar fitness of Read ing for this purpose. The Republican organ there says: "Here Democracy is at rest. There is no Randall crowd, no Wallace crowd, no Bayard boom, no : Tilden threnody, no Hancock hoop la, ne not anything." bout sixty Chinese arrived in St. Louis from San Francisco on Monday, and all lint ten or twelve passed through en route to New York and either East- ; ern cities, where they will seek employ ment in shoe and cigar factories, laun dries, etc. Largonunibers of these peo ple are said to be preparing to leave the Pacific Coast, and will scattei through out the Northern and Eastern States. Catholics everywhere will regret to learn that a private letter has been re ceived at St. Louis from Paris annonnc- j ing the death, mi February l-'th, in New Zealand, of Madame Bandreaux, Yicar ; of the Ladies of the Sacred Heart. She ' left St. Louis last December with six : Sacred Heart nuns, and went to do mis sionary work in New Zealand. Madame ; Bainlieaux was well known throughout the ( 'alholie world. The folii.wiiig commission has been named by the Pennsylvania Millers" As- ; sociation to look after the interest of. Pennsylvania exhibitors at the coming Miller:.' International Exhibit ion, to he held at Cincinnati, Ohio, in June next, viz: W. Latimer Small, York : Isaac M. Thomas, Wilkesbarre ; S. L. Levan, 1 Lancaster; F. J. Schex-h, Selinsgrove ; John Buffer. Harrisburg ; D. M. Bare,' Ro.uiug Springs; Frank Hays. Lock Haven. An attempt to rob the sub-treasury at Philadelphia, though made nearly a year ago, has just been divulged by the officials, who mistakenly supposed that silence would lead to the detection of th- thieves. A wall more than two feet thick was dug through, but the vault containing S1o.Ooo.(hki in gold resisted : the attack and the burglars secured only a few dollars' worth of pennies. Five . watchmen in the building declared that : they heard nothing. Rowland's is a small station on I lie Ilawley branch of the New York. Lake . Erie an 1 Western Railroad, in Pike county. Pa. A few days ago the inhab itants were astonished at the mysterious disappearance of William Kirkliam, a well-known citizen, hitherto regarded as one of the model men of the place. He was a deacon and a pillar of the Union Church, and the father of a large fami ly. Mrs. Bangnier, the w ife of a neigh bor, also disappeared at the same time. A. II. Munsem, of Utica, and a daughter of ("apt. Anderson, of the Lake Champlain Transpoi tat ion Company, at tempted, on Wednesday, to cross the lake from Essex to the Vermont shore in an iceboat. The craft broke through the ice. and Miss Anderson was rescued with difficulty. They subsequently dis covered that the ice was breaking up and their retreat to the shore was cut off. After Moating on cakes of ice over an hour they were taken off in an ex ' hausted condition bv boats from Essex. A Cairo (III.) dispatch of March 7th savs : Two weeks ago George Kohl, a farm hand, iu the employ of Fred. Whitcamp. Sr., reported that Whitcamp bad been drowned by falling into the Mississippi river. This statement was at first believed, but later suspicion led to an investigation, which resulted in the arrest of Kohl, w ho to-day confessed that he, assisted by Whitcamp's wife, had murdered him. The body was found buried in the rear of a stable on the premises. Mrs. Whitcamp was ar rested to-day. Patrick Lar.igan.a well-known resi- dent of Pittsburg, was killed at Statirn street trussing, Pnnsylvania railroad, on Saturday morning. lie was driving across 4t he track when the Cincinnati express, west, running at the rate of forty miles an hour, struck the wagon, hulling it and the- horses some fifteen feet distant. Lanigan was thrown for ward and fell on timber under the head light, and was carried sixty or seventy feet before the train stopped. lie died ' in a short time after the accident. ' Indications ioint to trouble in the I lalur market the coming summer, j Strikes are unpleasantly frequent, and combinations on the wages subject are j being formed in all directions. These : are mostly confined to the large cities, where great numbers of skilled mechan- ies are massed, and where labor societies : are numerous. It will be a matter for I deep regret if any of these movements i tend to impede the steady progress of ! the count ry towards general employment ) at fair wages and assured prosjierity. I On the 27th of January a tremen 1 dons explosion took place in the artillery j barracks at Saidiago, Chili, killing ; twenty-four men. A part of the. build ! ing w'as in use as a manufactory of ! sheila, cartridges and other munilionsof : war, and it was supposed that some of the workmen employed had carelessly ; dropped a loaded, shell, w Inch, exploding, produced the catastrophe. Fragments of shells and grenade arms and portions j of the buildings we.e blown in every di I rection. causing many wounds to people : and much damage to houses in the vi j einity. i Waynesville, Ohio, was excited on j Saturday over the rearrest of Daniel X. i Anderson, as t he perpetrator of a triple ; murder committed there in August last. ' His divorced wife. Mrs. Halte. Iter sis , ter. Mrs, Weeks, and Myrtie Shaw, a ; daughter of the latter, were his victims. Their bodies were hacked to pieces with , a hatchet, and then covered with epiick I lime. The lodies had Wen lying three j days tx fore being discovered, and were I partially eaten up by the lime. Ander i son was arrested at the time, but was ' discharged by a justice. He has now ; been committed for trial, j There is a child in Bangor, Maine, : that has quite an eventful history, al j though still less than five years old. J Some two years ago while painters were at work in the house the little one swal j lowed some of the paint, but a physician j was called who succeeded in remedying j the evil. Not long after this the child tried some laudanum which was left in a bottle within reach and again the physician repaired the evil. Its next exploit was near Belfast during a visit, l at w men time a Kernel ot corn was m ! trodnced into the nostril, and it was necessary to ride nine miies in order to i gel a physician to extract it. Thp instances are rare in which a newspaper has had one editor for fifty vears. and that editor so constant in his devotion to his paper as to siqiervise each issue; yet this has occurred. The Gerrnantown, Pa., Tdojraph last week : observed its semi-centennial, and the : oeeasViTi was made peculiarly interest ing bv this statement of facts. Theedi- , tor. Major Philip R. Freas. now seventy- . one, founded the pajer, and each w eek's issue since then lias contained the pro ducts of his pen. The Major is thor oughly wedded to his paier, and be has good reason to be proud of his biide. Not even the tempting offer of public office could entice him from the sanc tum. He lias well shown what honors may attach to the profession of journal ism" if patiently and conscientiously pur sued. There were terrific storms of wind, rain, thunder and lightning, at various points in the West on Thursday night and Friday. In Toledo, Ohio, the wind reached a velocity of seventy-two miles per hour, and great damage was done to property. John Hassell and M. F. . Doyle, policemen, were killed by the falling of a chimney, and another man was severely injured. In Cleyeland. buildings were unroofed and otherwise damaged, and the wire mill of the Cleveland rolling mill company was wrecked. A workman named Julius Brown was killed, and others were in jured. In Indianapolis many houses were unroofed, anil the Central Avenue Methodist church was almost demolish- ( ed. Two or three persons were injured, , but no lives were lost. There were vio- lent storms in Louisville, Ky.. and R- , Chester, N. Y., on Thursday night. In ; Rochester a coilin factor-w as consumed by lightning. Sr.niOL'S OlIAItCiF. AOAINST - llAR- lfisFtrp.ci I'll vsie iax. Dr. John Wes ley Beohtel, who has been in the courts twice previously on charges of criminal malpractice, was arrested in Harrisburg on Fr'day afternoon for causing the death of Mrs. Alice Englt bright, re siding in thai city with her husband. An examination of h-r condition l.y three physicians convinced them that her death was rapidly approaching, and she was apprised of her critical situation lie-fore her death she made a stattment in which she implicated Dr. Beehtel, who. she states, saw her em Saturday or Sunday last previous. The accused de ; nie.s the allegation made against him, and says the deceased acknowledged to him after her husband had called on him to pay her a professional visit, that she had tampered with herself, and that Mr. Englebright had prepaied the h, strument with which the opt ration was ' pel formed. This con versat ion. the Doc tor declares, occurred in the presence of the husband. The accused was convict ed of a like offense abuL live years ago. in conjunction w ith the alleged seducer i of the young viutim. and both served out a large portion of their terms in the tienitent iary. Seven or eight years ago. Dr. Beehtel was tried for causing the. death of Lillie Mason, shf having made an ante-mortem statement implicating , him. He was acquitted. An examin ation i f Mrs. Englebright 's lxdy will be made. Meantime Dr. Beehtel l as been released on .$s,(mi hail. OSF. OF TUT l'KT FAlM IN KaKAS. I hnve for sale the Northwest tjunrter of Sec tion 12, Township i.-. Itange :i, n; i acres, ly ing jast four tr.iies due south of Snlina; all the ho;.--et ol bottom land; every font can tie plowed : 121 ncres under cultivation : 20 acres of line pa-lure : p.t and hoard fence : osaire orancre hedge hi:de of fence : g;:rdeii fenced: choice fruit; Cottonwood (poplar; grove on north side ; two wells of splendid water: good ciMeni: a two tory frame house, L'Jx-S. and a kitchen, 1S21. well built and in excellent repair: stone miik house, granaries, c.u n c:i!, stabling for eight horses, etc. There nre i jtps in winter w heat, which goes with the place. This farm is in a very tine si;5e of cultivation, arid is in one of the very best neighborhoods in the country. Price, ?';.".V0 : ?l eon cash, balance in three equal annual payments, with intere.-t. In writing about this farm please refer to it as No. "..-.g. See Salina county map in the Fth.F-Man office, on which this farm is mark ed with red ink. Wm. R. Gein. Land Agent, Salina. K. How To Kr.uH Kansas. Person mov ing to the West should consult their own comfort by selecting the route by which there are sure connections in I nion Depots, fast trains and comfortable cars. There is no line that can compare with the Pan Han dle Route iu these particulars. Two d.iilv tivins leave Fnioli Depot, Pittsburgh. vUi Pan Handle Route, which run through in many hours ipiicker time than by any other hue, as follows : I.envi) I'itt-lMi-i o ity tun".), s i: h . m. 11:47 p. m. At rve a! St. l."Ui :it K ;oin? 'i ty . . . . lit I.fVO el: wur:h ' a. in. ' e. 111. iu. in. . . .V 1 1 -to l. in. Iti l.s a :o Atehisen at St. .to-cih 1 a. iu. ll J i a. m. -X'b a. iu. 12:c!i ). in. I rotnpt connections are iiiaole in Union nepotsai points naineil lor all land points. For further information, time tables, etc., address W. L. O'I'.kikn, (ieneral Passenger Agent, Pan Handle Route, Columbus, Ohio. CoNsvMrTiON Cl' red. An oiilpliysioian. retired from practice, having hairpl.Kedin his hands by an Fast India missiunery the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure of Consumption, Iironc'hitis, Catarrh, Asthma, and all Throat and Lung Affections also a positive and rad ical cure for Nervous Debility and all Ner vous complaints, after having" tested itswon derl ul curat ive powers in thousands of cases, has felt it his t.uty to make it known to his suffering fellows. Actuated by this motive and a desire to relieve human suffering, 1 will send tree of charge to all who desire it, this recipe, in (ierman, French, or F.nglish, with full directions for preparing and using. Sent by mail by addressing with stamp, nam ing this paper", W. YV. Skkhah, lPi I'owers' Jiiork, liochcrttr. A'. P. ( lJ-.t.-."iii. J The doers of good deeds have seldom an opportunity to make their benefactions re munerative to themselves, but nn exception to this rule may be found in the terms of the advertisement of the ne book, by the late (General. L B. I loon, which announces that (. T. Beauregard, whose post office address is New Orleans, La., will send any kindly disposed person a copy of "Advance ami liETr.EAT, Personal Experience in the I'ni ted States and Confederate States Armies," an octavo volume, handsomely gotten up, worth more than the price, and t e entire proceeds from the sale of which will be de voted to"The Bond Orphan Memorial Fund," for the nature, care, education nnd support of ten little babes of the dead warrior. Read the advertisement, and send (ieneral Beaure gard the Three Hollars. New CofNTERKKiTs. The public in pen eral and newspaper men in particular are cautioned against receiving ?loei notes on the following banks : Pittbiirif National Hank of t'onimeree of I'cnn fylTanla. fheek letter "A." Series 1S75. John New, treasurer. Imitation fibre paper. Seeond National Hank of Witliamsport, I'enn Fylrania. The National Itevere Hank of Hoston, Iasa eh uett The 1'ittsfielil National Hank of IMtt'Scld, tas ffachnsetts. With the exception e.f the counterfeit on the 1'ittsburg National P.ank of Commerce of l'ennsylvania, the spa. ions notes are all o!rl issues"; nevertheless, they had better be re fused. The editor of the Memphis Appetil, after , having read .lud-e Black's anti-third term article, thus refers to him : I "We thank tied as devoutly for .liidire I'lack as I the Church does for the saints, lie l; n Krcat I Kemoeratie bulwark. H 5 pfe is an rxemplc if ! Jterlini' Indepen tenee, of the hizne-t inteirritv, and I ot unyiel.linir devotion to principle. Oeeujiyi'ne'a j position In lii f.roressin, which compeU a con ! ftant and enarosini; labor, there has never arisen I a erisis in the affairs of his nuintrv or the lienio I cratie j.arty when his services have not been leelr offered and his irr.-at abilities been exerted ror the j greatest of the srreatest number. No man ! living wields so trenchant or so powerful a pen 1 He wastes no words. His sentences are compact j and lull ol meaning. He jrr.es strai.irht to his suh i jeet. He neither turns nor Teers.' He belitvei j thut what Is worth doing is worth doing well." i Thk Litchfield fill. ) Democrat is the au thority for saying that a few days ago a young lady of Cailinville sent the following note to a young gentleman of that place : Ikkr Witx : Ivant kn.in to sec me env more for a whial any way. Kauthcrhas Rot uwfull'v skcered alH.nt huriihirs. anil he sits every nite till late with a double-barreled shot irun. w'atchinir the hni-k 1 yard. He put morcn a pound of lead into Hrown'd i niieoundland doir which mas kutnin over the fens ' altera hone last nite. i The T"t i red. the Tiolet blew. 1 Koubin't Wiiui now if 1 wr you. I TTTTTTTT TTTT TTTT TT oooo iTTnTn ih (KKHIO TTTTTTTT II H UO OO TT HI! 00 K TT MH m? rr.BLJ: HH tEkKil. II If YK 1171 IE TT TT TT TT OO OO OO 1 ) OO Ol IICBBMH KKU HiiaaiiH KCBK TT Kit l,H tin BII 1111 KB nn II H teinc HH l ltltt OO OO oooou oooo T r TT JOHN GRJANJDi 1? Jrl I Iu r All ladies know that it has not l-eu ea-y to set Fhst-C.n, Underwear in Philadelphia we im an Muslin and L:::'-., P.. ;i.r. wear such as the French jeop!e indulge in. Ex. e;.. ;: - ,.. , ; the e.ld Chestnut-Street Houses, who have made it a ." , v..T. others have kept stocks made up principally of j. .1 . l.tsthut -. usually, for some reason or other, been advertised as bar,..: s.- Desiring to answer the question s often asked l;l:..s 'Why must we go to A.'s and elsewhere in New Y ik ; yn. dcrwear ?" we have to say : You need r.ot go. uj.'.e;-.., y.-u ; . br to go on some other eriand. The time is past for s, i-",..r.-, ... cities than Philadelphia for shopping. Referring to Underwear, we set out several m e.th -.-, get ready a lirst-class stock of Undergarments of every . ;.. tion. We have not said lunch about it. and ; i";i s(. , work and not our words speak for us. This is sln-p'y C' .j: .i -,-tention to the fact that we have allotted a large space in :!. m tion of the Grand Depot, to the b ft of the Che-; M.t-s-r, trance, where we locate what will be. in julM of f.t' t, A jSTEW department: The old style of dealing in these Goods we have aba:; ! : taken up the business AS MANUFACTURERS OF UNDKRWKAI; Fir.sT In our own Workrooms. Sj-xo?l By special order in Underwear F.s-.ab'.:s.?:;e. Instead of taking jot.s or reoeh ing dozens and d :-i r; 6t.. ises. Drawers and Nicrht Shirts, and putting them on . c: . , and counters, we r.i)l t ut forward 'nlv Kip.vr CAREFULLY MANUKA" URED. Skcoxd NEAT AND HAMniMK M-IWING. Tmiti UNQUESTIONABLE and WA1! IIA XTA HI V. TERIALS. This charm of cheapness will not be the first i 1 ; ness and charming work. After all. people- cann prices, it one person advert iss a i;orse lor -tI '.; advertises one f..r SI1', the buyer will Vcid. !:'. 1 ; tised price, but bv seeing and judging of the U'r-'-s horse may be w. ri h two of the other. We .-ibm.': v.V. . ;; to this test : What is the actual merit and value U'.-::;;, well this new work w e have r.ndertak n. I ! e :.: v. ;; whatever patronage we deserve. So greatly have musbns tunl labor rdvanced since -. ;i c began the preparations for our present stock tl nf v. - c i p.. believe that Ladies cannot have the sewing at ! anything like the prices marked on our lirst new . : Ladies' MUSLIN UNDERWEAR, Ultru latUrs cannot rome iti pprsnn to make m-la tion, let ters trill he ftfl nt!if toi'itli fltleHtif tnitl protii pt nt .. -Mail orders 'or tht-se Coolt are not p'lf .lfiy hoys, httt litter the he-fit care f' hitliet. vj good jmlgmtnt ami taste. Grand Depot, - - - 13tii St. P TI I H, A.3D ITj l, i i i , v . A Teukm'.i.e FlOHT WITH Woi VKS. A farmer in the northern part ot this State had a desperate strr.2.:le a tew d.ivaco with two luii crown woives. c.u a find in one of our exch.i: V:irit'.p.-' Wlii:. :i r-Mr unit of which we I . c.v Hn lliis s!al' I:i-e (u :i :.irn' iif-ir whir !; ;i .'.'.: ! Tel. in 1-ivK-. i!"it ::n. welt hic lO'ineialiT. In f .r r3r et White's li-.'i'o i- a Inur" trarne barn. re.i! rr.i'-k-. o iu-t-,i ty .le?i i ; ni: N:ir A lew ini.rii:nt 'is'O W hit" w.-nt "Ct the t nrn to fee-l lii M'M-k. Ashe roie-icl the barn li liir.l nn unu-iml ri.iniiifti.in !n:-ie. I h;r.k:n- ome Xhn animal? tin 1 I'-' trn h .-r. lie 1;.l imt ejM-Ti the fr'r;t il"nr l --t thry hi".r. 1 i crii i".it .0711 liiiiiso'.l t(trt-ih h 1 ire :ij.(i-ti:rc' ! .y a hrekn h '.irl. A :! n !.. i-atercl thou; r.i:ir'in.-raf!. air', l.e ?aw la the mi M;- ef th" burn ' r :t hfiter ' which h:el tern hrsi'l! :r"i:i 1 1: sin n . -! . i-i i t y ninin force, ami hrokfn oie- horn In the nc-t. ' 1 1 nl; nir to fier mii77e wa n i.-oo i:rny w-.li. with it h-rn:. ph.nrpteelh laTen...i in thy :in!in:ii nu-"c witli a tiiill dot; uril'. while another wu trying to liam ftrinir the poi.r i-re.itnre. 'l"he heUeTrinu ol the heller, the luirhn ef the Trolre. nn.l the ran". 111; et the hv.-e ha: n -r. inaile a leafe:ii:i r i. ke. a:i-l the fiiun.in :;itn; 1-r . wiis uniiviiee'l. The o. w ! k the wi.lt i.ke a limp ra:r, nn.l poun h '1 t he m ,!c o! t he s:a b! Both it. I i:t in vain. nM W'!i:te - stiirr nt the a't.irk nn lii i.i."k overmaster. .1 r. il : '. i t-i;- ( r rn h rce. , and. sei7.in a .;t -litork. he proparoJ hmi-elt i..r an attack. No o. rn r 1 i.l the wo; ve .er-ci ve him. than, mu.blenetl h tlie taste ul Mooil. thev turne i I from the heifer r.n' i attai kc.l him. As one ef t!ic . inlerin rcl ar.ima! .rati t-.w-ir 1 the ehi -nan. t;e dealt it a mighty Mow with the lork. er. !:!iir it into a earner. Il.it the ct'ier 11 i 111 1 ear.uht its teeth fn the oi l man's riht ceit -ieeve art in fu.-h ele-e ijnarte1 that the weapon was of 1. avail. After kicking use!c.-MT nt the animal, he cra'pe.l its throat with l.t leit hand nn : ph .ki-l the wolf until it let if o. 1 lien crna nu on i! e . )it--tifork . lie dealt a well lircct'-.l Plow an l tf.kt tl.eleiriil oneii the animal--, wliich then Io l... 1 , throui-li the hole Pch:n.l hiin.nii.l limped oM. hiw!- ' in ipmaliy. The other ivo'.t 1c M its croun.1. and whenever oportuniiy was oricred sprnr.s at the e!d ( man. n"W and then fastening its teeth ii.to Ins . arms. Thoiurh tdeedin protnselv. AA'hitc eontm- ' ne,l the fiul.t. and finally, with" a w.-;!-d-rc-: -d tlirut el the I'iichtorl;, sent the tine through the . animal's heart, killimr it almost mt:mtiv. The lend wolf is ot lare i7e. iranr.t w;th hiinjiT. and with a hairify 00:11 of liyht uray. AV iiite s' clothes were t"rn into shred-, and his face, neck and 1 hrensi were scarred vb epiv Pv the claws el the an- tmal. ' ' The Electoral Commission of s to 7 comce ; 1o the front this time as the great original j "Game of Fifteen." Npeakine of this new i and exciting puzzle, the "(Jame of Fifteen," I of which ifiuch ado is just now being made '. in the papers, the following ''tin iiling poem," , clipped from the New York U'eWJ t Moli ! day, is entirely apropos : Little blocks shall nil remind ti What MiM-i. heads ore yours Kn.1 mine When we depart mid leave Pehiud lis Still unsolved the final line. The problem tl. -.t perhaps another Honkey r-ill with mi-lit and main Sweat and toil and swear and bother, Tr to brinu out riirlit aain. lief then be up and doinu. Wrestle now no more with fate. Cense the phantom rem plr.stlln. Throw the durned ttiinir in the grate. A Hint to Isfjr.nsoi.i.. As the proeceds of llobertlngerso'ii's lecture on 1'aine ( l.;o) are to be applied to the erection of a monu ment to the memory of the author of the "Ace of Keasoti." the New York O'.jcrrcr submits the follow ing as a just and appro priate epitaph : ! To the momorv of 1 The man of whom John Adams, President of the l iute 1 States' recorded this opinion : "Worthless." "unprincipled. "proniiate." "blackguard I'nine.'" j The man io wrote a letter Iu j !Kor.i:K W'ASMtNnTOX. i and thus addressed the f ather of his l'un!rv j "Treacherous in private friendship and a hvooerite 1 In public life, the world will bo puzrlej t ' 'decide : whether ron are an aostate or an importer I This cenotaph is erected to T. l'auie bv the mu- reticent liberality o his nieud and admirer Col Kohcrt lnrcisiill. NEWsi-Ai:n Dead IJkats. The Colum bia Cotirant grows somewhat waspih over what it is pleased to call "newspaper dead beats," whom it thus describes : What do you think of a man who will take a newspaper for lour or five years without p.ivinsr for it. anil then request the postmaster to not : tyv.u that 'he doc not w.u.t it anv lonirer.' W e l.avc some half dozen of this class.'we are forrv to say. The man who does so is more ilishonost thin the midnitht biinrlar or the loot-pad who meets tlie traveler on the highway and demands h:m to "stand and deliver." for vim can defend lonrse'.i asramst the rascality of the latter, but while vou ileal with the former as If he were an honest man tru ;iinr h.m to the amount of JS or 10 voU are suJJenlT appriecj of the fact that he is a thief. An Invitation as is an Invitation. This from the Cincinnati Enquirer ain't so slow : The Pari of America Presents the compliments of the season to Messrs. Tilden. Hendricks. Sevmour, Bayard. Hancock. Thurman. Jcwett. and friends. And boRS leave to request the pleasure of their company n Tuefday. June K. 1890. Will ! . the ban !""ii:e tli i K t a yen ot retst a Bti. 4 A ill A-J. It -A HA AA A A A AA. II. IX 1 1. 1 1. IX A A A A ' .HI A U. A.A LI. 1-2 LIJ- AJl LI I I ILL A A A A A A IU I WANAMAKEH. D ft P Q t IS LP T-T I j V . well udre by an a-'ve: J"!. A Kkvoi t Aoai.v-t C AVi.r.i'-: The : pi:'.:icin t ' -.! .y have issued nn a-1 lrv fr w' tract the follow i:;:: : In t?ie H'l;t ef re-er.r : :. -: t! icoiiiitr and st.ec r.. It ha" . op;, d-emel de- - adopted bv the Kepui. !!; :is .! di-ttict. C"tar.s.i!u the cetoit.i ? "Y ' b'i:d and A.:!im. 1 :.: e. :: t ,... .- : them at the He nldi-'.h t:T.. : hel-1 at 't.i -airo :n Jure r.ce. :: 1 - :.-a- theircho: -e i t i-re-. le: : . :. t'c ri-me.i. io cOTi.i j. . ,r,. .- - ... aw:y :r -til ' he :r c :.S-1 1 "i c: T w . : : i- 11. . er w .se ; t ' e: 1 : 1-1 .:i w : - tl' Ii- c. ntr.irv I., the c. J'-c ,J. . - ; t y thetn w.. I t' e !. ' b B'i"y on-t.tutvl author. t 1 : struct d'-ieira'cs :n h:s Teaf'.r ' 1 e:( .. vc 'er ot t tie c ati'.c .11 ; - - ' : Ido -r v.oce iu tl. i? ref-i c -t c--.! . and ar.y j-reten led a': po-tv - :- ." en n ii.it: no f. :. it .. . ;jr H. . . . . and .ip; roc.i. are who;;-.- 1 --. .. Co action has ti:i;s i.,r ' :. I s-.:.:' '. bv the j r per 1 art:es. ;! c Ivi: ' : ti.tit no de.eirc-es tr' -n ti.i- , -'. : 1 e;c. '. ti:: T:. e. l f-r - r!! I lo view : tr.i-e imi -. a con: :v ,. :. t be hi-:d it. t) e co'.i-t hous. it, tt..';. on rr;day, the e--onJ day . O'c'o -k. p. 111., to Cul'S.St o: lo c';-::;t'" r:e-:on ,1 --t ri-t i n the con:.'.. r .:.. o''t-i nii:y the preva l.r ::' :r-.. :. :."r j-nolicans "t V-li mi:', as t '.' -1 'n 'olet tin I nom.ni. ::.. ! a s . t . .,. : t.-fe 5 v. )-o a-e t . 1;:-. t a : . :., : : j::.1 c rf the co.int e- ot -.itaberi-tr 1 ;.::! it a ne two i ci.:: t e : . r--- r. t " ! - 1 ' ai d net 1 ri the e..n; : i.o . u. -n . - r. ve:it:on an 1 :r.L: u-t t'. . -t. It :, Bertin:ent epres- 1 l a r:-. ,.r.:- r i 1 ican 1 oter- 1 n S3 .d .;";- . . Mil. K. S. Mkn m:n, the r.-; the Vi'iiVri' C:rci"nr utid i 'M". ' tary and Trcastirer of the 1V:::';,. itorir.l Association, r.iaws a i to life of the nverr.ee jiewsji.-'jr that we cannot refrain f;onig,v:: : in our columns. Here it is : 'Tn 5 tee 1.-. sterii 12.- vi.iv he put'!. slur) is a-scciated in the p-:' i: - : univera! I enet.r. tor m l..i 1; 1::!;' : -in-iiid. I n re . ; : 1 1 . hr i a Par Jn .: 1. . w:th a small ca.p;'al an: .1 Ir.r- - cotnpelle! to pay ! .r li.-i.-t ..; 1 v a; other mort.tis at... "1.. le sun- . produced a lew oi.i:!etit ut-!i-!.crs . . ' men wli.i have worked ti.e.r n av t ' cf industry by d;nt o! cctd-is. ru' . perseverance, further as led. :s !.-s . a o;id lack mi: 01 ca.ta i . 1 mains that the treat t:::;- -1 ,; io threuirhout the lint, 1 s:i':. - ar-i.- lno.trt.ltc ! if.;p;C.,3-. w,!l. e - : wealth, who labor diliL-eatlv .u . -f'-irther.irjee ot atro't-s.: ,n t:,:; : 1. arrow ti:ir:a t! print." A Vl IrNo IN THK Vno;-. - 1 ville (N. c. ) Lavlmnrl says . lr. AU-vnnder eour.ti .M :"- ' 11 day last week, a ill arr:1;:,. . :: siliuiilarcir-iiiBitance. Mr M. l.a Hcttie Mii'er were trie h:e:, ... : t and T. A. !li.s.,n. l;- p. p. : . rn e i The bride. ti:e tr..n. t! e n::.i: - r.e.e met :. t a eel :a : n . -: 1; 1 1 n t ;i c .: . a nd 011 tile ? :-K- el lilt r :ol. !t ::, ,; of the trees the "Squire pr- n-.;io - 1 ' is hi'.eed tKai th'-cp cn-rootv! r..nc. f..r th- Dupt.aN ac".id;ua to r. 1 d iv nt 1: -1 . " at t;.c i'. '". - ;; :; an.i was ij,ns , nt .. iii t'-c r.i ! were aiiioii- tin quists. 1 1 . '-: :' : ' ' were tiirown iq.cn to t'e l. : c o ' e.'.'l mir wa s I! : 't cceie . ' .oi a . ' -C -A quantity ,.f A ! i i n. i e' -sea c t ' ' . proi ideiitiy broiii;!.t to 1 1: -1 , t . : ": - ' IneiulH-rs o! tl..- br. la! t -:1.:: I ' ontil they could 1 r- t al 'y ! ;' t . - ' shiner iroui a r:.i'cr a. ro-' the i '' ' 7 Mill nn nt rtimltT to Hecnre W ca dcrful Harnaln.-llvr.: .. ' J' b t of tirt tint Heatirc S-.ots 1 ; inic to tell at the fame prices askcJ '.r''" the recent advance, or u!--ut -re 1 ' . are really worth at th:t time. A'.-j. a '" 1 Stoves and Kane?, w !..!! 1 - than the prc.-crt wheie- e jc' -': ' lot of Sieiuh Hells at the n .l i w ; ' ' ' p,. abetit one-half w hat thev v. .r '.; ' " . . winter : a full fock .! il. i .' f--' ,. and 1'ocket I'ui'vv, Tea " 1 1 - s ; 1 i ted W are. lcvo:ve-. .v e . j, ' ' ... am seii.na at les- than the px-. ' " V, ' 1 ' Also. I liave a J.-w fcrst class ' . which will be sold f..r cash at a -i ' . s prices, or ex. harce-i tor t. .. 1 . i'. i v 1 "; ' t opportunities are oi.Iy .':te:cd '.:' '- - ;v , n.'s- Spring t..-. 1 ; re h'. -- tbensbnrn. Feb.u, is i. rive Hundred Thousand St n ". ; In the past few it- -t' ere h:i ' r-' -N'o'U tvttle? of Shileh'tnreolil. the vast imii.beroi pc. t e ' 1 1 -r ' ,,tlea than -l.'A' persons a rfii ! .:'' ""' ,:; ha e been cure 1. Ail .:-) . e'ro-i'. .'t ,-Hronch-.tis j i hi nt etu-v : heji.-e it 1- 1 ;. f - : body speaks in its pra'-e. To tto'c ( . , used it, let us aav : ll eu but a t . i t child the Croups and M il : ! ' " i.. ' trvlt. Kor I-an:o Hack. S.K or ft c-t ii'. ,r Porous l'laster. Sold bv K J l-b'.-u. 1 Kher. bunt. I 'a. -'.": -t - .mm W e hno. a sjieedT and pos tirr core r Diphtheria, fsr.kef-irciits ard 1'ea.iT e - .... 1.DHS CATlKKHKfSlH'Y. A "; . :: free with eh lottl. l is it if - "','. K .' aed a tweet heea'b. J'rlee. ctf ' ' rr . Llsd. rt eafurr. !-" t'. Vs
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers