1 C3EMSBURC. PA.. FRIDAY, - - - - JUNE 11, 1880. nr.JIOCRATIC STATE TK KET. ron sithevk jcihie: hox. ;ko. a. j finks, 0 J-jF ron i'onnty. cor-. nor.Kux p. deciieut. Of rhitadflihia. Tilh number of immigrants who ar rived at New York during the month of May was unprecedented, being ."t,0s3. The total number of arrivals since the ........ ... v. . ..v. . beginning of the year was 13--,.'i';0, which j ' " 1 ' ' " . , . , ! he not been there the Presidential wran is aoo.it 17xh, more than the aggregate 3COurt ith u presentment m which , lers u, , no ,,nbt have desecrated ,. ,. ,. r, -, i thev recommend the enactment of a law the Sabbath. But for that good man, dnring the corresponding months of 1. 2, ; , ... T : , . . . . . , w-soU. the i.artv of great moral when immigration was exceptionally ,. it I large. The number of arrivals during j June promises to exceed the inpouring j of last month, having landed on I the first day of the month.' j Un Tuesday of last ,veek the Phila delphia "(7 linonl entered upon its third year as a penny newspaper. When the H'coi-'l was litt. started the success of the experiment it was about to make was a matter of grave and serious doubt. It has, however, gone far beyond the most sanguine expectations of its pro prietor, has a daily circulation of more than ;-".. m , and taken altogether is one f the very ablest and best conducted journals in the country. Havini. on a previous occasion dis- ens.-ed the several proiositions to be submitted to the Democrats of this, county at the a pproaching delegate elec tion, we Jnced only urge them at this j time to turn out and give effect to their ; convictions on these important qucs- tions. There is certainly a need for ! some change in the present method of i selecting delegates to our county con- , vent ions, and we hoie that all will avail ! thenistl ves of the present opportunity to vote for the ssteni which to them : serins Irt'st. ' i Ai.Tiiorcii there was no necessity for ' imparting the information, nevertheless when ex-Congressman Klliott, vh ) was a col rr.-d delegate to Chicago from South i Carolina, seconded the nomination of ! John Sherman, he took occasion to in-) form his Rcpublica". brethien of thecon- ' vei.tion tlir.t tliey need not expect to re- ceive the vote of a single Southern State ; for their candi'late, no matter who he 1 might be. No sensible Republican doubts the truth cf KUiott's statement, ' and being one i" tic; most intelligent : colored men in tho South, the Repuhli- ! cans may as well al'anilon all hope of any aid for their candidate from that quarter. i Bi.ANf he K. lliM iK. the colored U. s. Senator from Miisisippi, in behalf of , whoso nomination at Chicago for the Vice Pcesidency a strong and vigorous etfort made 1 y some of the h ading ' t oloied men of tne country, was juit in nomination before the convention and received the beggarly amount of S votes in a total of 7 "'. The collapse of this I'.i uee balhj-ui will perhaps remove the scales from the eyes cf "the man and brother," but the chances are that he v. ill continue to vote t!r. Radical ticket in the future, as he has done in the past, and i ut his trurt for lurk in Republi can promises of the good time stiil to come. Cli i: i.i is to he pitied. During six days it was compelled to sutler tho in flict ion of tho Republican National Con vention, which, by common consent of nil the newspaper reporters, was noth ing h -s than a howiing mob, and right on tho hee ls of its final adjournment on Tuesday rigid, this (Wednesday) morn ing was ushered in as tho day for the meet ing of the Greenback Nat ional ( 'mi vention, with Dl-ius Kearney and the no less notorious Brick Poineroy its two of its leading spirits, who.-...' mission, like that of "Black Jack I.og.m" and "holy Bob Ingerso!!,"" in the first named conventicle, is " to save tho Nation." Burly Ben Butler has sai l that tho con vention will display remarkable wisdom by nominating him for the Presidency, and his inordinate vanity will likely be grat hied. m: of the well known Flanagan family of Texas .vas a delegate from that Slate to the Chicago convention, and beyond ail doubt made the shortest, most cfsVr-tive and most convin- ing sp"e. h ag ii::-t Mr. Hayes" boasted, but cb-oleto. ciil service reform that has e ver lx en delivered. When that part of the platform was under discussion, Fianagan, honest and truthful, lose to his full height, six feet two, and fully appreciating tho true inwardness of the crowd around him, as well as his own Jtarnings. innocently exclaimed: " Yx'h-it 11,1 ir. ,,,,- f',r ,,,,,) tr'ff.' -l!:t't " ; . .. .f .. ,"('. .'.'(.. ,..:;,. This was a neat arid comprehensive way f putting the iirtjHnfntm ' ' hum'' ,rn , :tnd had the desired effect on the con xention. When it is eonsMered that ;gan lives in Texas, where Ropub are few and far between, and are a rely lucky onou.rhtobo elected to there is a great deal of human na- ! : '0 t!:e two questions he so feelingly a--! 1 .i 1 1. d to the Con cut ion. W '-'.Ml i-MMlU-V it is li numbered that George l.r. President of the late R-publi-to plliJ"a' Convention at Chicago, twcl member of the Kiectoral Com bnion, his speech on taking the chair torhanie the proverbial impudence ? lightning rod-man or a patent-right -cut. As a member of that commis sion Iloarsinnedagair.st lightand know ledge by voting to count Florida and Louisiana for Hayes, and in doing so com mitt edan unpardonable crimcagainst the expressed w ill of the people in two .States. Having thus covered himself over with political infamy, he had the tfTrontcry in his speech to the conven tion to make the broad and sweeping charge that one of the studied purpose s of the Democratic party is hostility to . honest f lections. It this was as true as it is false, it does not lie in the mouth 1 of a man like Hoar, who aide! by his vote in stealing the Prod icnev from the lliillt who was honestly elected to parade liimseif liefore the country as the defen der of the purity of the baliot-box. I What RpptiMican paper in this State j I lias not, at some time or other, fiercely j j denounced t lie Democracy of Delaware j j tor maintaining the whiping-post and l pillory as a mode of punishing the per petrators of certain crimes and misde meanors? In his bill of indictment against the Democratic party submitted to the Chicago convention by the Puri- j taniral Hoar, President of that body of j sainted Republicans, ho specifically republicans, no specifically that in Delaware the Democrat-I charges ic party "looks with complacency on ! the whipping-post." Three days after , ' , , , ,. ,f ., : Hoar had thus unbosomed himself the ; r" 1 T . A 1 t M Grand Jury of the Republican city of Philadelphia, the fair inference being that a majority of its members were, loy- . . T , in mil i.iei'isiai.uie vmiicii huuui ciuun : , e - , . , i i l.rt a mode of nunishuient. sub ect to the will of the Judges, to criminals for a , (. tl..it i.i.ir !, .,!! 'n Ihr fitlltf Of" Ih'lft- . . A' -i- ' ....,.-,"! as the best mode of overcoming ; the present evil of overcrowded prisons." i It is true that Judge Biddle did not, in the few remarks lie made, agree with j the Grand Jury in the views it had ex pressed and the conclusion at which it ! had arrived, but the presentment estab i lishes the fact that so intelligent a tri i bunal as the Grand Jury of the second j city in the country is presumed to be ! has arrived at the deliberate conclusion, ' after mature reikctior., that after all i there may be some virtue in the whip ( ping-post as a punishment for a certain i class of offenders. In view of the "com- I placer.cv" with which this Grand Jury j in the loyal city of Philadelphia looks : ' upon setting up the Delaware whipping- . post, a new and unexpected field is open- j ed up for Hoar's denunciation of w hat ' he regards as exclusively a Democratic 1 institution. i The lloor of the Chicago convention presented a most singular sjectace near midnight on Friday last. The report of the committee on credentials was under discusson, and one of the three Grant '"bosses," Logan, of Illinois, was howl ing himself hoarse against the decision of the committee excluding eighteen Grant delegates from that State, being two i'roui each of nine(. ongressional districts, and supplying their places w ith eighteen Blaine nun. Logan loudly protested against "the deep damnation of their taking off," and while denouncing the Blaine men as retailers of the slang and slander of the slums of Chicago, was met with a storm of hisses and yells by the Blaine crowd in the packed galler ies ; and when order to some extent was at hist restored, he in a broken voice piteonsly exclaimed : "If you can beat he old soldier, do it." "Don't beat the old soldier by tricks,"" he continued ; "do:i"t rob the old roMier that led youi armies to victory by stealing his votes.'" Logan said all this of the "Great Silent Man" who at fust was to be nominated only incase of a unanimous demand, not merely by thecotnention, but by the people. He was the only man in the Republic who could save the country an its institutions despite the aggres sive and ilangciou.-; strides of the still rebellious South to get control of the government ; and now the loud-mouthed Logan utters a plaintive appeal against i ruthlessly shattering his fond idol to pieces. It was n it hard, at midnight on Friday, for one who looked at the scene . to distinguish the man in whose behalf , Logan was sorrowfully appealing from ' George Washington without the use of ( spectacles. "Give the old man a chance don't strike him afoul blow." Oh! : what a fall was there, my countrymen ! The Republican National Convention which met at Chicago on Wednesday of his,t week, did not get down to the im portant work of balloting for a Presi dential candidate until hist Monday morning at 11 o'clock. The first ballot resulted as follows: Grant, :io4 ; Blaine 2 I ; herinan, 'X', ; Ldniunds, 21; Wash- burne, "": Windorn. 10. As it required :57; votes to nominate, it will be seen that Grant lacked 7" of that unrulier, while Blaine fell short just 9". " Up to 10 o'clock at night, when the conven tion adjourned until Tuesday morning, twenty-eight ballots had been taken with no substantial change in the vote of the different candidates on the first ballot. It may be here stated that James A. Garfield, of Ohio, received Otif vote on the third ballot, tn-o on the sixth and'ex on the thirteenth. On Tuesday, alter the convent ion met. eight add it ion al ballots were taken, the thirty-fifth resulting pretty inii'.-ii as tho first except that Garfield had .ov, ,n-r,i. On the thirty-sixth and last ballot Hie vote was: Grant, :;00 ; Blaine, 42; Garfield, o.i'.i. Garfield having received 20 more votes than were necessary to a choice, was de clared nominated. Tii' convention then procr-ded to nom inate ii candidate for Vice President, the t ballot iv.Milting as follows : Ar thur, hW; Wa-hburno, 10:'. : Jewell. 44; Mayi.ar J. :': Bruce, : Alcorn, 4; Davis, 2 ; Woodford, 1. Chester A. Arthur, of New York, was thereupon declared the nominee, and at half past '." o'clock, r. M. , the convention adjourned . i( , having boon in session .r dayc. Ir cannot be li-nid that Conkling. win) was the admitted leader of the Grunt forces at the Chicago convention, although engaged in an infamous under taking in which he most signally and deservedly failed, displayed very supe rior generalship in his (ntire manage ment of tho struggle. No ot her man, we think, could h ive hi Id the Grant colufiin together so long and so success fully. It remained firm and unbroken to the very last, an 1 when Grant went down to defeat on the thirty-sixth bal lot, the same third-term phalanx, three hundred strong, that had entered into the fight at tin; start, was there solid and compact, though powerless, with Cock ling, immovable and defiant, at its head. Tur. ( liiciipo hnJ Attcs, afinrat or pan, of Saturday last said thai if Grant should be defeated in the convention it would as certainly rt suit in I he defeat of the Ih publican party, and that "the chances are more than even that the coiivi ntion can nominate no man now who will Si'.ethe IJcp'iti'ican jvu-y from h f -at this fall." OI R nilLADEI.riHA LETTER. DIVIDING OF NEW YORK AND PENN SYLVANIA CLOSING OF T1IK CATHO LIC COUNCIL PHILADELPHIA A CEN TURY AGO REFORMED PREsBYTE- RIANS YORKTOWN PAGEANT DE CLINES A RENOMINATION ADJOURN MENT OF CONGRESS. Philadelphia, June 7, I860. To the Editor of the Cambria Freeman: As I write the Fresidendial wrangle is j f,till in progress. and as to the result at 1 f;i.jcar0 everything is in doubt. Had ! the nomination been forced on Saturday nigni, iiame . ....vC tor, but just now all is uncertainty. On suinl.,v llirht everything was favorable V . . J ' i. for Blaine, hut his managers were not j emial to their opportunities It was a happy thing for the Republican party I U 11 UMMIlllu MH.Tt viiivo-. ...... that Bob Ingersoil was at i lucago. nau ' ------ --i - - r i :i 1.1 1 m V. o ,i i-i-i, I tlo thin! lUI'ilo WVMUH 1 Id. X V llrtLUU'.M inv- , . , ?n after 12 o'clock on Sat unlay night ! it. At this writing the i-ameron i enn svlvania ranks are shattered to frag- ments. titp nirinivc CV X" K W YORK Tii mw lt 1 t tor I snrikp of NWYork city talking about seceding from the j sional skill to his successor. Mr. Mitch State of New York. The scheme is not j dps reason for declining is an excellent a new one, as it was talked about in the j ona, but it is quite likely that it w ill not days of Tweed. The public would be i surprised at the great number of promi- J nent citizens of loth parties who are identified with the movement. Party i lolitics, it is said, is not at the bottom j of the movement, which is more in op- , position to the alleged iersistent hostile or U. S. Senator who honestly, faithfully legislation of the rest of the State against j and patiently attends to his arduous leg New York. As before stated, ti e nliti- ! islative duties. Mr. Mitchell should not ! cal reform society has been organized to 1 bring matters before theieoplein a pub- j i lie address, l lie address win oe a otisi- ness-lik'' presentation of political and economical facts, going to show that it is for the interest of the State entire that the separation should ! made. Would it not be well, if the project of dividing New York State be carried out, to name the new State Tammany, inas much as the scheme is not a new one, but was talked of in the days of Tweed. By th? way, too. if Pennsylvania is di vided, and "Philadelphia city and a few ad joining count ies be incorporated into a State, it wouldn't be a bad idea to call it Tammany also, as a century ago St. Tammany's Wigwam was a famous re sort on the banks of the Schuylkill, in this city. Yes. by all means let both new States be named Tammany. May we not have two Tammany States as well its two Virginias. tw:r Carolina, two Jeorgias, and t wo Tennessees. The proposed New York Tammany would be composed of the count ies of New York, Westchester and Richmond, togethtr with Long Island, which altogether have more than one-half the population of the State, and what is more interesting, thev l..nv.....,o lom.lred ihos:,,,(l !),,, tio inajorii". In spite of the bitter host ility , between the N"e York and Brooklyn ' ri.igs, John Kelly would stand a fair chance of l ing its first Governor. THE CI.OslXO Or THE (HI'NCII.. j The ceremonies of the first Provincial ' Council of Philadelphia, the greatest j event in the anna's of this diocese, ron- i eluded at the Cathedral with an ornate ' ritual of the most imposing character. ! The Cathedral was packed with wor- ' shippers, in some places persons being . obliged to stand on the pews in order to j obtain a view of 4he altar. The altar , was profusely decorated with flowers and gleamed with many lights. Thedraiery was of rich lace, with gold trimmings, ; and the Archbishop's t hi one was hung , with heavy curtains of yellow silk, held up by tassels of green and gold. Tha Archbishop and his suffragans wore robed in full canonicals. The Council officers and theologians wore copes heav- ; i!y embroidered with gold, and the parish I priestsworewhite ornamented chasubles. . Bishop Mullen, of Frie, well known in i Cambria county, having years ago pre i sided over the churches in Johnstown '' and Wilniure, preached the closing ser ; inon. taking his text from the gospel of the day Luke. 14th cliapterand luthto ' 24th verses which relate the parable o!" ' : Christ in reference to thoso who offered ; , excuses for absenting themselves from ' the marriage feast. Tho Right Rever end speaker concluded with a niiisterly and eloquent argument in support of the j doctrine of the chief of the Apostles i having been constituted the head of the Church. The sermon was an able and eloquent effort, and w as listened to with , the greatest interest. The various decrees agreed upon by ! the Council during its session were an nounced preparatory to being transrnit . ted to Rome to receive the Pope's confir , mation. Probably the most, important ! doom; was that in ngardlo secret or . ganizat ions. While I he Council discuss- ed at length Mollie Maguircism in con nection with the Ancient Order of Hi bernians, it did not connect the latter order nominally w ith the former in tho decree. The paper reiterated the fre- quei.t warnings of the ch rgy against the evils wrought by secret societies or bo il ies, and railed attention to the action of Archbishop Wood ill refusing to ad minister the sacraments of the Church to known members or a secret organization in this diocese. In considering the sub ject of tin; Archbishop's action in w ith holding the sacrament undt r such c:r- cmnstauces, there wasgcr.cial expression of opinion among the clergy that the Holy See woind sanction tho course ta- ken by the Archbishop. I'll 1 1. AKEl.rill.V A CKNTrilV AGO. in hist week "slettr r the notes on Phil ndclphia in 17S5 were concluded by giv- I ing the unrulier of lawyers at that "date. I In 17s." Philadelphia had arrinttrn mill- j isters of the gospel, and of the seventeen j ie were i i eso icrians, lour J-.piscopa-lians. two Catholics, two Baptists, one Calvinist. one Lutheran and one Jewish pastor. There are now in this city near ly six hundred churches, meeting houses and synagogues. The Methodists have 112 churches ; Presbyterians, Kill ; Pro testant Kpisoopals, t4 ; Baptists, f'.'.i ; Catholics. 41; Dutch and Geiniau Re formed, 2d; Lutheran, .'if ; Friends, 1.5 ; Hebrews, 11 ; Reformed F.piscopalians, 8; Universalists, i : Christian Independ ents. 4 : Moravians 3 : Swoilenborgians, :5 ; United Brethren in Christ, .'5 ; Dunk ards. 2; Church of Christ, 2; Bible Christians. 1. ami Christadelphians, 1. From a series of systematic investiga tions of the Philadelphia 77,k.s into the number of men. women and children w ho attend church in tho city, it appears that most of the church-going is done by women, and the proportion of men in an ordinary congregation diminishes as they rise in the social scale, until it is found that the most fashionable churches have the smallest number of men. The Times investigation lias also shown that while in Philadelphia the Protestant Episcopa lians are far less numerous tiun the Catholics, they have '.'4 churches, while the Catholics have only 41. Whilethere were but few churcnes ;,nl a small num ber of ministers m l'lnladelphui a cen- tlll-V non I lir.l-o noeo l,.!e .1 . .1 I .1 -. "vn. i.. i.i fi iii.i.i iiim ! ffbs of inhkeepers, of which soniethinp ! may be said in my next letter. T,y the ; it ,., t i. : .... .1.: . . . i to s.,ctii,t .v,. -.....,.-,. " i a . , n lu.ii nui uc ,111111.1 ill I HIS I mi' i no riii'i in Philadelphia, and no pas mains and water pi;es to supply material for pilinp up big bills. T " I I r; H T K o r N K s s diiKorsN kss in xATioxAT. a f- ording to Uef.n rued Presbyte-ians i who framed the Const it ut ion were ; all tinged with infidelity. They i Accor those nearly all tinged with infidelity. tei; us that a great mistake was made at the urganizatiui.s of our governniit be- cause no religious oualitication were ro. ' - - , quired of candidates for office, and that SEWS AND OTHER SOTIXOS. framers of the Constitution were godless infidels, inasmuch as they disregarded i T. W. Titus, a Mercer county far God and the laws of God in framing that j mer, clipped 2S1 pounds of choice wool instrument. These assertions have been ; made in a retort of a committee of Re formed Presbyterians, presented to that body in a lengthy reiort on national re form. They complain that thousands are sworn to violate the babbath, and that bv Congressional toleration for more than fifty years the Sabbath has been desecrated by carrying the United States mails. The Reformed Presbyterians of the United States of Xorlh America number near 17, (wh) people, and having ' - parson Woodsides, they now propose to bounce the "infidel and godless" consti- . . . , T a . c- a fill tution of the L nited States. Ihey further predict that "a dark storm cloud of judgment is gathering to burst in fearful fury and destruction on a guilty nation." declines a RKNOMINATION. Hon. John I. Mitchell. Representative in Congress from the 10th district of this State, declines a nomination for re-elec tlutU their hats and say good-bye to pubiic life, it is a rratter of deep interest to thoughtful civilians. Mr. Mitchell is an unllinching Republican, and certainly W , IL e , "t sferl is s- ! a very honest man. Ve regret sincere- be accepted by his people, and that they j will return him without making him! buy his nomination. As stated in a : former letter, the cold, nnsympathizing j world does not fully appreciate the lie- ; roism and patriotism of a Congressman ! be allowed, now that he has a know ledge cf Congressional bthor.s, to tumble out to make room for an apprentice hand. It is probably hoping against hope, but I nevertheless hope that Mr. Mitchell's Republican snporters will take my view of the matter and give liim a nomination without making him pay for it, and not i l . . . . t ... r , 1 one w ho could not till the bill l.etter, and f i possibly would not do it so well i THE YOKKTOWN PAGEANT. ! ! The owner of "Temple Farm,' which 1 j embraces the spot where Cornwallis ca- : i pituhited, has offered to make a title to j ! five acras of ground for the site of anion- i unient, and the citizen soldiery of Nor- i t folk will give a number .of excursions ; and amusements in order to obtain the I funds necessary to enable them projwrly j . to entertain tho Centennial Legion, i which i.i expected to be a prominent fea : ture of the Yorktown pageant. In view ! ' of the passage by the Semite of the , I House bill appropriating ?1s0,imii ft(r a : i monument at Yorktown, and $:i.(MM for ; the cost of the piowscd centennial cele- ' ! hration in October of next year, the res- ' : i . ,l...t .". it . I ' """o ; pos! t .on t do t hci i" part to wa rds .nak ing the affair a complete success. The sur- ' had mounted in that manner ran three rentier of Lord C 'ornwallis at Yorktown, . times around the field, dragging Har in 174. w;is, in the judgment of our best ! ford's body until it was torn to pieces, informed historians, tho crowning vie-i In f he seventy-two hour go-as-you tory of the Revolution, and it is their j please walking match commenced at deliberafe judgment thai Lafayette's operations led to the final environment and capture of Cornwallis. There is no doubt about this crowning victory of the Revolution being in a great part duo to France. J t is not too much to say that without the aid of Louis XVI. in men, money and the ainunit ions of war with which he supported hisearly recognition of our independence, American self-government would not have been attained for many more weary years, and the col onies, like the Canadas, would have re mained dependencies to the British Crow n. France is now, like the United States, a Republic, and reflects our free popular principles with illustrious cour age amidst the environments of Furo x an monarchies. In view of this retro spect it is demanded by all the proprie ties of the occasion that the centennial of Yoiklown, in a little over a year hence, shall not be merely a national one, but an international one. Tho countrymen of Lafayette, S'cubon. Do Kalb. kasciiisko and Pulaski should all be bidden to niir grand festival of free dom. Indeed all nations may be wel comed. America is. in fact," the free heritage of the whole human race, and it is lit and desirable that the people of every nation should be represented at Yorktown in ls-d. x. S. Tur: New York IF-rihJ publishes a tabular statement of the sums expend ed up to this time of the money contrib uted through the Jl- ra.hl for the relief of th:; distress in Ireland, aggregating S17S.740. Direct supply of means to buy food for persons in actual want car ried away, as was intended bv tho do nors, far the larger part of this total, though liberal aid has been given fo sehools, for clothing and for purchase of seed. Nino hundred and sixty dol lars are entered as having been given to fishermen, and .-r-VlMMl not entered in the account is mentioned as advanced to fishermen for the purchase of tackle. With ail the money thus handled, the camniittee makes a return of only 51,0:54 expenses, which the Ihrxhl regards as an achievement in economy honorable to the committee. A sti; A no k sTort v is related by a lady in tne I'rovidence (R. J. ) .I'jnvwil. One . day she went into a store to purchase a pair of gloves. She tried on one or two ' pairs before becoming satisfied. A few ; (laV3 ilfjf.I vval,ls -slle lniss(.(1 a valuable l gold rmgironi her finger. Search was j made for it without success, and it was j finally given ni as irrecoverably lost I At the expiration of nearly a year she hi, imu me .-.imu iso ire again on me same errand as iielore. In the tinser td' the first pair she tried on she found her ' long-lost rinp:, w here she left it in draw -! inj,' off the plove a year previous. She i has agreed for a consideration not to ! I'dt'lish the numlM-r and street of the shop, the shop-keep r on his part auree i ins not to give up the number of the glove she wears. j . ! i Tiif. Ahmv Worm. A telesram from I I Red Tank, N. .J., says the army worm, j j w hich has just apjieared there," is com- I pletinp; the destruction caused by the ! droutli. Its true character was iiot at first rccogni7.ed, and the methods used : to destroy it were those use against the 1 i potato bupr. Its ravages have been se-I vere around Long Uranch , Mechanics- ! ville, Morrisville, Shrewsbury, Middle- I i tow n and Tenton's Tails. Around Tree- I hold, Marlborough, and on to wards Key j port, the worms are numerous "and ' move in solid phalanx." When thev i enter a wneat rve nrrn ce rrr i I'.. I I they do not leave" it until thev in. d... ! , voiued everything. It is twenty years i 'i""cs Bowers, of Zaleski, Ohio, i since the army worm last appeared in ! was kll,,wn f, a wonderfully frood-na-' that region. ! tured man. That was why "Win. (;reen, n a loafer, on pelting married, coolly went i Hot rn,. r.v.-.v-i-.T, . i with his bride to Jiower's house, and ; &0V&LF?Z ! n1oont!,eret,,e..WOmd "V?' lav next. .June i.-.n,. -i,nn tLk..i 1 : ,-..t..-o ... .... I a ' . . i v..... ..ii nuj leouiui ii.tiii iroin Tliut 4'ity I l,nti.' Sunday cveninp, June 10r.li, will lie sold j 1, it,"'r ,l!illllr or ( 'resson for ?s,50 for i me rtuinu inn m- : i t.. , . . . ''. i-.iu-sr,tii'ii.s'.iur;'ar ii.in,i. m ( VOQ- son at 0.4s a. in.; arrives in Pittsburg at 1.43 p, ni. ; leaves Pittsburg at 4 12 p. in., city time, and arrives m Cincinnati at 6.30 Weii- ncsuiiy morning. F. ,. - . . I iir fill' Wr imr ,.iih ann .....l., .1 ' tiveof v e -J- eVwVvn. i ,o V - i i 1 ""' at public places generally. j The First National It.nV- nf Af,o., Tirrc First National Hank of Mead- ville closed 7t w. " a.. " Ji": of .an hrnairm.: ,t r tn l-Li T, d..,L "u k " TO"" - ".1U.IUVI1 vm ue iMci on. from thirty-four head of sheep. V tract of fifty thousand acres on ti e Northern Tacilic Railroad has been bought for a colony from J3elfust, Ire land. James II. Gallup ami Emma Canter were married at Grand Rapids a few days ago. Give "em time and they'll make a spanking team. Annie La rock, of Kansas City, tho' only 10 years old, has already caused the separation of two married couples and the suicide of two bachelors. Mrs. Daggett of Greenbush, Mich., is 70 years old ; yet, rather than let her blind husband goto the poorhouse she chopjK'd six acres of timber for 24. H. G. Rogers, a memler of the I Pennsylvania constitutional convention ' of 1S."7, and once minister to Sardinia, j has recently applied to the Butler coun i ty almshouse for relief. Mr. S. X. D. North, of the Ulica Iff mill, has been apiointed special agent j of the census for the collection of sta ; tistics of the. newspaper and publishing i interests of the United States, i Joseph II urd had his wife prosecu- ted for running away w ith another man j at Janesille, Wis., and secured her sen ! tence to prison. Then lie went about a "1 her par- don. Governor Colquit, of Georgia, not being disposed to -dl iit on the guber natoral question, is making a vigorous canvass for re-election, and his adher ents have already carried several coun ties. Mr. Waterman, of Dulnth, was so j exasjierated by a corn that he took care ! ful aim with a pistol and shot s bullet ! thrmigh it. The corn is gone, and so is i most of the toe. Waterman for foolish i ness. ; The mother heartless enough to ! deliberately starve her infant to death, i while pretending to feed it, lives in j Steuben ville, Ohio. Her excuse was j that she could not be bothered by a ! child. Miss Rigney, a school teacher at Lincoln, Til., white, married Rev. Mr. j" '0 "uni. on the ground that her love for him is a mania. R. I). Porter, of Mercer county, lias a grade ewe. which ilropied twin lambs that weighed t wenty-three pounds w hen iiorn. Fides Weber, of Venangocourdy, has a ewe, a cross between a Leicester and a Lincoln, which dropped two lambs that weigh twenty-two pounds. Mrs. Samuel Bcales, the wife of a wealthy farmer at Beaver City, was found on Friday evening hanging from a rafter in one of the upper rooms of her residence. Her domestic relations weie happy and she enjoyed excellent health. No cause is assigned for the act. John Harford, a AVaynesbtirg fai mer, used the loop of a Irace-cliaiu for a stirrup, on Thursday, as he was return ing from work. The horse which he Toronto Tuesday morning, Lph Clow, of prin ce Fdward Island, bear FalMi 's celebrated record in Buffalo, covering 78 miles and one hipin 12 hours, Clow ap leared quite fresh when he left thftrack. A special of the I'.th to tin- Cincin nati! ( 'i mnifrri'tl from Lima, ( ., says: "During a violent wind-storm to-day a rhurch near Mount Carry, in Hancock county, was blown down, the roof fall 1 ing on the congregation. Twenty per sons were injured, thrreof them fatally." Tho Swainsboro (Ga.) says there is a negro woman in F.manucl county, known as Hannah Ronntree. who was a grandmother at the age of twenty-six years, she gave forth to a girl when only thirteen years old. and the daughter, when about that age, be came a mother herself. Jefferson Davis' plantation at Hur ricane, M ississippi, is leased by a firm composed of four negroes, w ho were for merly owned by a brother of the ex-President of the Confederacy. They own plantations worth ?7-".00(i, Lire several more ate! do a large mercantile business at Yicksburg. Mississippi, James Mvers, of Concord township, Klkhart, Ind"., had a colt foaled this ; spring which is I."1 hands high. When its brad is raised up it reaches over the 1 dam's back. It has to be fed by hand, owing to its inability to stoop to the ma 1 ternal fount. The dam is a common animal about Id years old. Gen. A. B. Norton, was a siiigular ! looking delegate to Chicago. lie was an 1 ardent admirer of Henry Clay, and in ' a rash moment made it vow never to be shaven or shorn until his favorite, was , iiuide President. He is now S." years ; old, his long white hair and ln-ard at testing his fidelity to his vow. A clock Is feet high.S feet wide, " feet deep and weighing 4, ihm) jH(nnds has leon completed bv Professor Felix I Meiers at Detroit, after nearly a life : time of labor. It is said to be the most ! wonderful timepiece in the world. The Old South Church management in Bos i ton hastfered ?4"..(Kjo for the affair, but , the owners want .?" U if), i A delegate to tho Chicago conven 1 Urn from Chester county, this State, : named Taylor, was the first person who ! voted for Garfield, and is therefore greatly elated at his nomination. Mr. ' Taylor was also a delcgate,to the Chb'a- go national convention which nominated I Abraham Lincoln, and claims to have cast the first ballot for liim. j John Meadow's parents consented , to his marry ing Miss Pinard, at Mem- phis, and all the preparations were made for a fine wedding. Two (lavs be j fore the appointed time, however," they round out mat ner rro i en nan- i:n wen made so by bleachinsj. Itesardiii-T that as a deception, they forbade the banns, and the son obediently broke his engage ment. Kiist of the IJiver -Ionian there is an Arab tribe which has embraced the Catholic faith and is ministered unto by a native Italian piiest. These Arabs wander about from place to place with their flocks of sheep, and when their tent is pitched in any place a tenijHirary luildinp: to serve as a church is put up. Other Arab tribes are disposed to follow this example. John Pnturher, of Scranton. aped thirty-six, and Annie Jones, of Shenan doah, aejed twenty-six, were united in iiiiitrimony at T.iston, by Justice Horn, on Tuesday. The bridegroom is a one leorsed m;in, who h;is lK-en solicitinp; subscriptions to aid him in the purchase of an artificial leg. In walking (hronh town a few d.iys since he met his bride, lie had not seen her for four years, bnv iiij: become enamered of her :tt shenan- '1,,:lh ;,t -''t t'n'c for several days, but the audacity f ti,- m-..t ....11.. .7 ...1 i - h"1,hiiii u.ivineu uion null, and he finally told the couple to pet out Green's resentment took the form of j iiieeii s resentment took the form of I shooting the amiable man in the liead. Aiiie Keith was a pood-looking bov of 14, at West field, Mass. He dressed himself in his sister's clothes, ran awav v 1 .'o .VI, (1I1V1 LVJl, t"l . 1. i : , . ' . rs in mem to sprmgiield, and p,ot employ- '" u! salesgirl in a iMiokstnre. 11 ,,,uu'-ui nh the male customers, tha , soon Wame aprear.attiacliou at th I m?' r".l '?SJ! Ut'' He so that 1 bo place. He was a favorite, loo, w ith the ". . ' "L'' '',,se -,lP rdel. IV!1 ll,e,n 1t he had oo , ,g,u 10 wear it icoats. Hisniother at length discovered and exposed him. ! Rev. Mr. TIavden. wlio lias leen twice tried;iii Connect icut on a charge of murdering Mary Stannard, may have to undergo a third ordeal, as new evi dence liearing aganst liim has been dis covered. Hayden says he would le anxious for a new trial it it were not for the exjense, his defense having already cost him over S7,X0 and ruined him financially. Justice in this country is plainly a luxury in which only the rich can indulge. An innocent but )wr man, wrongfully accused, has no show to establish his innocence. Dr. Wilson J. II. Burch, of Phillips burg. N. J., recently deceased, provided in his will for a monument of granite to ho, erected at his grave at a cost not to exceed 8Vt.tNiOor less than ?4Uoo. It also provides that S10.WU Ut invested for the establisument and maintenance of a brass band, to Ik; called the "Burch Cornet Band of the Town of Phillips bnrg." The sole duty of this baud will lie, on the anniversary of his death and on legal holidays, to march to the mon ument and there perform a funeral march and such other appropriate music as the leader of tho band mav doignate. Tho Cleveland (O.) 7V:s says that a young lady of Marion met and fell madly in love w ith a circus man named Seal ies. connected with Welsh iV. Sands' show. Saturday night, after the per formance, Rev. W. A. Gross, a minis ter who was :n attendance on the high ly moral show, stepped into the ring. Lverylxxly suproseii that the good man was going to ride the trick mule, but not so. Searles and Miss B. stepped in to the ring (a new sort of wedding ring) and were duly'inarried. The immense crowd applauded, the clown kissed the bride and the band played a wedding inarch. The Tendon Tnhht, (Roman Catho lic), reviewing the evidence laid liefore the Ecclesiastical Commission apoint by Archbishop McIIale of Tiiam, to ex amine into the apparitions alleged to have taken place at Knock, in Ireland, and the miraculous cures averred to have followed, says: "We must, of course, reserve our judgement until ec clesiastical authority has pronounced upon the character of the phenomena, but it is difficult to resist the force of the deposit ions : and while the appari tions appear to lx: well attested, there cannot be a doubt that remarkable cures have l.iren obtained." On Thursday night, at 10 o'clock, Frank King killed lus wile in a tit of jealousy at Brownsville, Teim. . bv knock ing her down. w ith au av, then dragging her outside the door into the yard and beating her over the head with a heavy club. King and his wife have not la-en on good terms for several week. On the night of the. murder lie told a negro neighljor th.it he was going to kill his wife, and in about fifteen minutes be came back to the same house and said lie had killed her and for some one to gn up to the house. He thou ran off to the woods, where lie hid himself until 12 o'clock, when he was arrested. Sylvester Raynor, of Manorville. L. L, on Wednesday hist hud a miraculous escape from a shocking death. AVhrn he arrived at the dejtot to mail some let ters he found lb- posiofficr closed and the mail train just leaving the sta tion. He ran fur the mail car ami fell in a fit just as he was within a few feet of the door. In falling he clutched tin stay brace, an iron rod which runs from each end of the car to the centre, close to t he side and under tho car door. His grip Wiis deathlike, and had it been oth erwise be would, by falling upon the track, have been beheaded, as he was dragged along with his neck directly oyer the rail. The train was stoped vs soon as iHjssible. It took considerable effort to release Raynor's hold on the iron brace of t he ( ar. John Slater, of Whitney's Point. N. A ., is dying from a gunshot wound indicted by William Beadle, a farmer. Beadle lives with his mother and two sisters near Whitney's Point. Slater was employed by liim. and fell in love with one of the Beadle girls. His at tentions were encouraged by Miss Bea dle. Her brother disapproved of ht r choice, discharged Slater, and forbade him to come to the house. ( );i Sunday night Slater was driving by the Beadle farm. Miss Beadle stood at the gate. He stopped his horse and talked with her from Ids wagon. Beadle cairn- in from a held and ordered him awa. He refused to go. Beadle went into the house and got nisguii. I i is mot her and his sister 1 l ied to take it from him. He knocked his sister down with his list, and struck his mother on the head w ith ;r gun. knock ing her senseless. He then shot slater, inflicting a mortal wound. Mrs. Beadle lies in a critical condition, and Beadle is under arrest. Tho excitement in the peaceful rural town of A von. Conn. , on finding rally Monday morning of last week the bodies of two widows murdered in their house, "gives an air of additional realism to tin-story of "'TheStillwater Tragedy." old by Aldrieh in the Atlxntir M,.ihl,i. The quirt village is startled by the dis covery of one of the coipscs stretched upon the kitchen floor in a ol of blood. The ImmIv ol the other was on tbe bod in an attic room, the Bible and spectacles at her side, as if thrown down when she dropjH-d off into a nap. The blood stained ax and the tailor's heavy' ;oose." with which these deeds were done, form another phase of the. ghastly picture. When to this is added the romantic ex planation that the crime was not com mitted for the vulgar purposes of plun der, but. as is supposed, at the instiga tion of a relative in order to secure and destroy a will made by these two women, who were possessed of considerable wealth, theelementsof a dramatic storv are furnished ready-made to the hands of the novelist. A t . i.i. ant ItKsci K. A correspondent i writing Iroin St. Louis says : ) The hero nf the day in St. I.ouis- lo a runner 4'in I einnatiar, named Peter Miller. He is a laboring 1 man, who lormerlv worked alon the river at t'lif i einnati. and who is employed here on the liimher . raft. which come up the Missis-sippi. Inst Satur day afternoon hoy was- playlnir about one ot the , raft at the foot ol Henton street when he slipped 1 and fell into the river. The current is fwift at I Henton street, ami the eddies ilanirerous even to ! the most experienced swimmers are at Unit point ! stronif and treacherous. The hoy was sucked down by the current, tossed up auain "further out in the . stream and carried away swiltlv. There were j thirty or forty men and boys at work about the - . '.. ii"i one ,o 1 1 1 e in mi re, i nu in in tne rccup of tho little fellow In the water. Four times he came to the surface, and when he went down the fifth time, lar out in the river, came up no more only a lot ot hubbies fdmwimc where lie ha.! .li -no-pea red. Miller, w hen the hoy tell in. was workm- i .... .o,,it n . uii'i. Hiiracie'l ov the shoutinir. came running to the spot. When he 1 reached the raft the hoy had (rone down the li'th time, but he marked the hubbb-s on the water and plun-ed in with a roar of "rope" at the men about who had leared the venture, swearini: that he I would have the body or drown, lie was heavily dressed, but swam like an otter to the bubbles and then dived. For a binu time nothinir was seen and. lower down the river, a man s head appeared' moviinr slowly towaid the shore. It seemed In credible that it should be Miller with the hod v but so it proved : and then follow ed Hie sncetae'le ol as irallniit a swiiniiiiinr tea! as was ei er w it ncss ed. The man was weisf hed down bv his ow n heavy elotliin, the body was a burden cripplmir his ei forls. and the current something lew men dii-o en ter even in swiinininir apparel: hut Miller never thought ol droi.pin hi, ml linallv, alter a nianinticcnt display ol t-trcnuth and skill in Hie water, real hed the shore auain. No one thontht there was any lile in the hoy. but elh.rts at resu's eiution were mmle. as a matter of course and two hours Inter animation was restored and the lad s life saved. As lor .Miller, even after his desperate battle lor a lile. he did not seem to think he had done anythinir remarkable, and ciiuie out ol the water a he went in chicllv lull of a tine rairc at the irronp ot men whn would stand bv and suo a child s-ueked into the eddies of the Mississippi He seemed to be impressed rirmlv with the Idea that he could "whin any man in the crowd ;"" hut Ins ability In that direction win not put to the test hy any orthe brawny raftsmen. There was a look in the man's eye as he came out m the water drip pnitt. which cowed the pluckiest even ol these Irce nirhters. Fkom the Urn. Tfiere is perhaps no tonic olleied to the people tliat possesses as imich real intrinsic value as the Hep Hitters Just at this season of the year, when the stomach needs an appetizer, or the blood needs piirifvinu'. the cheapest and hest rem edy is Hop Hitters. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure; don't wait until you aie p:otratcd hy :t rib-case that niay take months for you to recover in. p.Vo (w'.che. THK C'HK aoo Pl. Tt oi.M. Referring to the pliitform adopted at the l.'eniihlican X.i tioiiiil i 'oiivenlioti on Fliday Int, the New York World of the day following hns this among other tilings to say on the fidiject : There were several roforenre. In tbe intfrvn!" .f tlio ?iunMl Teter-l:iy at I 'hir.nro. to tbe-i.rinri-iiloj ol the I.'cjmiI'Ui -an party." f""t the v-akrs ho innile tin-in .'eiii'-'1. t- quite rc Hint "the -rii,ri.les ol the Hvoulillran j.nrtr"- h! l t ter he reterre'l to only In term of the larifet ana ..oet jfi-iirmllty. The tinth I", an-1 "hivi:t' h:i onlv revealed It fiillv to i:ll the worhl. thut the i.nl;. principle of the Kepiililiean party whirh r-n I h:. to ha'e :mii rem a:i ii t or --ji.irk of ilrilily l-u ill It i the priiK-iple ol hnlre I tor the .othefi htt. while, the h- elitiir r;oi !i'!.i:i -t t'lm-aa". Deneral ( Iran t. had I a t , 1 y n-on-'l t!.v oiiitrv that there l no remnant or .-park ol v. duty Ii-fi ew-n 111 that file rineiple. 1 he platform wlm-h w a -preetitM at ho-ao venter. lay to mi.ii-e t he eon veption while the serioii work wi" pniaiin how eoiieln-lviy Hint Oen'T.il )rant w i- r.uht. That platform i a final co;,!. ,-i..ii before the "kiin fv that the licptl'l i n partv ha- no poUtie-il opinion. .... . It mlv. eaten popular e.pieat ion. Who oppo-e jM. pular e.lMeato.n? It .le!ioi:.' p.. i.i --amy. What partv ! a or? poi i:.-mi v ? It le.i--.rtw the mulir-pi.te.l iihl.iration- ! '-lie country to the sol diers aiiil sailors. Han t'onare- Oein chary ol pension ? A rol tin illy it iiiii.ctoI- tljei'lioin-l-trat ion of Have.-, w hi -h li.ir rut ire I y ri-irr-.-.l the liepuhlc-an policy ol r il-lritl IHiII a n.l tle.'ie.l tl onlv distinctive principle, that ol hatred of the Smith, to which the parly even pretend--, llc unk'li! pretense of a principle i apparently men tioned nowhere in tie p!.it:orn. It is really wonderful, and i'. vividly -le.n- He conhdcriec. ol plat form - in a kr- in tee jt iili . ei ; ty ol human nature, that a pally whi-h l.a li'tiena more than ill;' to -av lor it-elf ,-hooid he ei n-l--r-ed hy hundred of thousand.- of people to he soii.e hnw valuable and even n- i -s-.iry to the country. There never was a national convent ion of ny par:y which w-a - oOvi(U-!y ri r: -1 shamelessly a mere inabblc lor spoils a- that ii-iit li..!iiiu' at "h o never one but tin- In v. hieh not even a sma.i minority ol ilcleirates pretended to repre-ent any politica l l.ea. or a ny t h i m w h i te ver beyond h w and personal ambition-. The result is that tio lfii.lv, nl r"hiciii;,( i,r anywhere c!-e. except the 'oinmittee on li luhnii". ha iriven a iiiir'.e thought to the platform, .v.. Kopi.-.liean new-pa . per ha- made a sue-tion as to what it shoiiM contain or what it .-IciM not c-.et.:iii. It will n- t eveite the least diseti--!on in the convention, mi b---s somebody speeeluhe about it .'iiram-l fine. or unless sol in-bo. I) sliuce-! - that another bait IL. : J !.t be added which would eab-li more tool-. It tie candidate- c liiUslu il political plili' lple- tb"Te would be less need of p pi : ,-r 111 : but .li hiet le t one of tie- eonspi- -ioi: eari'h-iaie- at t 'lii- .i.'-i r- j. rcsenls anything hut the pou er t- " t ve I. is "l. :e .'i- lliell" oftlees, except lihiilie. who rtpre-a li: the rein lia lit ! la nat :r.: I ha I red t he Soul h t in p-. I e ! with personal rorrnption. W h.at is virtual: ti e evnieal a ndon no-n t of the preten-e ot l-.l.f.n-any pnl it leal op-n ton or if si k t n' I'.-wer ..r ii public purpose i- a "lep away from huinf.i:. and solar Is creditable to Hie I bo-a-o t ofivei,! ion. : I not ol ol omen h-r the pontn-al m-.r.ii- ui the eotintry. I'.ut it : to I iS ni lel nln-'lfr ll ' a o ai w i il help t he parry : t. iei: (":- J r-' e1".! . that is. t he 1 1-in in-rat s in the mean 1 1 u.e -now th it they hae political opinions, und mean to r i.;- " t )ie-:i t- pra.-i e e i n t he ir-.i t rninclo ol t In - eon ii : r;. . The I'assion I'i at. Tin- London Tina. ' ( correspondent at !- r-A iiin.crea n writ.--.ns follows of the actor who i-svis the rule ef Christ in the world lenowtied I'.tf-ioii I'my : .lo-ph flayer portrayed h i s sae red or' z' lia 1 H:'!i w.at in n -1 havi seemed to the L-reater pari o; th- speeta tors a Wonder' ul ileirree ot 1 i : i i r u.l. . a - id ; i li dee. I no one cup; l,;iir s.- n him h 1 1 1 ' I u 1 n 1 1 e er o- without bemo lanly :o:.'7'..l at fi.e :o e.:-;o v Willi whiehlbe tr.ol t onal iie: c-- m a.I t:.:. hal been copied t o t tie very J : 'e : b a 1 . 11 e erl 1 . ' 1 e- -. there was a deebh-d want . s-.n;e eteu;ent m 1: speech and ib ine.an -r w hn-h a b-.!. r a i;! i:1 r- : - ,- , teilei-tual .T-for w .ni l e-say to -apply. At tie seeond repre-ent. item J.-sepii M -yvr. :1 n."i i r:-. had ra t her i u. pro- e-I his h i - h part, t cry a l . ..a -. n part leu lar re.pi ir.no; t he a i.'upai.iineni ot b v. r no words bein- -x.-.-tj t rl w;:i: -:reat ea-e an 1 tiie proper decree of J .ur. i ry. The w a-h i n ' 11 .s is elide-' tee'. His lejonv in the icrl'Tl. II s m.-rk sui.inis-i.'ii to stripes and i!ia!is. Hi- io..k ar.d at titude before his a-. users, the f'T :ble expulsion of the ui' iiev -eiianiri rs f-ot;i the tern e. atei h: b- ar ini! ! th'-ero--.as well as His peTeb-m atfitudi tiiereoii. were ail ixeei-dmiy we,t p.o j. ,; Tn , ..j in a way whieli. while pr-per to t h- . i i : : i : r - o! Tie . character, could hardly i ll.-ii I the nine J-ei:si-ne rei ej ion s i-el i nir. '1'he t k i nir d --w n iron: be r . on the other hand, is no in- .n -; d e ; ;i I ; e trierm I, : what niiobi jiluiost be eaib! c i i: i n i i n si.:';, riotiiin bemir wantii;o to ins'-T the -ee.;t- w.th i id rca'.i-Tii. tf.oiiLrh a .sen-e id d'-.-ob d rejiel : b it w ben t) i- centre! f:" r-. w-th t'.e 1) st.kina mil- el letors. is f if.-ly broileiit To the e-oit,.l -j , ... sound ot a halimu r beiiind the eii-la.li i- a.! i'oat ic-l-b the laney to re al:7e the M'lili- t" tin- er lroie:bly ti.eoniy marked i.i-: n.i e in !.. li M .--r sueeefsluiiy a::i,s ;ii d:a la a ' :- (.'"! i- n with a deep a lid :r".M7e. s ; : h. d . -1 i u--: I .-. a i:.i . : ; -by nil the and', n.-e. he dp p.- 1.:- head and d.( - : and then his riirid -u- p.-n- :.ci (. r .'i l-.iir - - n. i :( e -is ad in 1 1 'ed by all to be a m i-f erj e ,.i y u, a-i :: art, nor i iocs i be -; i d ne-s ..t h 1 . ;ui.- r- i.. x w :. : :. he is bciiiu wrapped in l!r co-tiy i:n. n i, i- -loeph y: Vi una-1 e ... a w ei! played chara'-ler. and earrn d to the .-epr. !.-!. re. A Minnesota Hi i 1 rein M .inkiuhi sa s : ;,. AM.. A -put- ll A P vere rain ftorni that r' d over S-mthern Minnesota on three consecutive .lays cui in ma e.i on S 1 1 n rday tnern 1 nir in a torntee hurricane. To tal .ie-truet i..n re-u ted to ( V' rvdi ni' in its path. Over.-ne hundred house? were i'. nroob-d . t'onr -h cs fel;oo!, ra lr. ad bridc-e--. teleirraph w:r-, tr-- t and !i kimis ol no vabb- property are si-sir l ,n every direction. The l.urncuie was to'.h.ued ! v a l.ea y rain storm wh:- h aiir,"t,'. 1 the terr 1 b ilamikP sustainel by buil linirs and slock. T' e rain poured in torrents tlirouirh ui iootei bu id ir.'s and over ur.pr.it eted mera'C.le ioois. Ti.e est;!r.nt.-d damaire wi 1 be at otit 1 -n.' -o The s; b waiKs n many laces ;cr- tak'n up bodily and r.irri.-d m r. tiiettees. sj:a b tre s. ! winch tS.t-it- a:c f i.oiis.inds. lire torts to pe Several !ioii-c o-.-up:- I a- dw. Iims. wer blewti down ov r : he h ads of h f nn e-. I ut ' ainre to 5a y no one w as per:i.usiy j ., oire i. 'ric- stru t ioi' et limber in the hires! fs i:y,i p ced.-i !. Acres d 'he best wood in the vieuiitv are b v.-V-d ta the ifn-und and the trees torn niid twi.-tei i:i verv core-eivable w.iv. Ti e r..w:ri c-..ps as tar as re ports have been receive. I. are n.-t b div damaj d. The ;cho..l h...usc iu I. in- i w tdi ic a . i.e ytorv nek ic.nldir.B. ens l.h.wn down. All w r. r..ti nectionsxc th Cliinitn atnl thel'.ast w re in-rr-rupted until late last tilithr. The railr.-i ts er-n-t'-r:t.lt at this pia aro .-, ; I h.avv sullercrs. Jiri'iijc? m as yet unknown nnmhi r- v ere earr'e.1 "way an.', the pl bed in mitn'.er Hi c p! ie s p:t.jiv a shed. The ti rs' traia ove- th- N'orthwe-terfi ra; r-.id mce s.itiirdiv ni"-r. eijj ar-ve I here niht Iroin Lake 4 rysta!. The s rm t. k nwav alocj. t w.-t birds ol t ne pra in elevator. rpiMnr.i; von sai.k. The under- J Signed o'fers 1,,r saie .at :i rea-otiabie pej.-,. nM t he ti 111 her on s Ai ren ..' land in l; -h !a n I town- Sl: 1 p. a 11! I Till coll my. a id 1 1 I: i '.er 1 lot on , . i oi: - : -1-lno! ail the .1 iflereut varef.es ....ii-i.e,K m .ie mainl. '.'it heiiv' h e .t.-d w iThin one mile oi a sum mer fort n "iv i ii e.eii -. ,,i ,re : ion. and . r w h i--n a irreat dea 1 .. punt er w all b-- n. e.b d. Tl-i- i-an in vestment that e-innot be -ai n.,, ,. io-re. e-...-. eia i'.y us it i- i be only tra. t ..; any con bra - :?. in the neighborhood and iswiliiiii a :oi uiocs -l .l.ihn-tow !.. V -t t'T'i- .ni l other i n f ..rm a t ..n c i ; 1 at the r.-sid -nec ot Widow Si ci.i.. on ti e I ri .k- I o'.Vi iio id . ll C mile- I 111 .1 i - : . o. ,.r r, without delay. M.U.I I .1. Si I li M." May --'1, l-vi.-tf. Last oiic.iiani; h. Pa. VHMIMSTilATi ;; s Ni iTH'K. r.-tat" of I'A It. lil vOKC. -I'd. Letters- of aduiitn-tration on the c-stafc ol I ia id Hcn.ler. lute ol W'ii-hinoton t"Wii-h,p. dcased. hiniiiubeen granted to the un ders i ;m i . a li person-- indebted to said estate aie hereby n.- i;r 1 that i ni in ed nit" pa) incut nia-t be made. :. nd t -io-.j ha mo i-lainis i.aui-t the same will present thein properlv ailllieillie ned I T nettlelii-lit W KKN'KK r.KMiK.li. Ad:uini-tr:it..r. W ashinton Tw p.. April So. is- i.-c.p 1X1.( TTOll'S XOTIt'i:. K-tateoi Mack Kitit ah a-v. e-d. I.eiters tCstaii.eHt.ir;- on tin- est ale ot .liarl. Kit lahan. la-..-,,! Icartiebl tow n-h i p. deceased have been trained to the undersigned, re-i.iinic in the same township. All per' ns indebted to saol es tate will please make payment w i: bout d.clav. and those ha imr claims against the - ime w:il pf. -, i i them, properly proVst.-d. f.-r t! h :r,e.,t .msi:rii hi i.imii n. Kxecutor 4'learheld Twp.. May 14. l--u.-. ;. JXIXT TOU S XOTICK. listiite of M i. n A t Sk i i t.v. d -eM. i.et ters tc--f a'iieu--.ry u;-. n i-e , t;ite ot .i o-h a-d Skelly. late id 1 r. le't"W n-h'p. ,b ee . -.-.!. ba been granted to the under-m to I. n .i:.-... i-" 1 e-. t U'iven to tin -e indebted to said estate b. iniik- ini mediate payment, and those !iain- chines will present the same, proper! v a nt b.-nt iea tc.l l..r lettlc , ' A M KS SKIJ.LV. i:"xccut..r. .May 14. issn-fit. CAl-riON XOTK K.-Allpt rsi.nsare V..' hereby cautioned airainst harboring ..r in anv way trustinif my son. .Io-ki-h A. Stcvkcisek. .taeil 11 year-, who l aoii stuidrv occasions b-n i'oine Ironi hit h he i now absent, without pist cause t provocation, as 1 am determined n.d p. pnv anv dehls he may contract nor assume anv rcsp,.n lbii Ity for what he mav do. Ah' IVSII'S STINK111SKK. Itarr Tw p., May ".", IKs a CATTIOX. 1 lu'reby give noticethat 1 Iiavc a o.il Itset ... :fj.;.,.iii ;urnii,-t f'r'-e proinissorv notes ev-eutert hv tne in .lime. 1-77 in hivor of William Ilut-joo:!. ,( White t..wn-hn fambria county, each of -aid notes beinu for Sb'i' and payable in en.., two and thr-v years alter their date. Any person, therefore w ho ' pu rcha,--- :n. notes, or 11111 o! them will ,1., so suloe -t to -i.. ofi- !"!; . . . L.. lU Kiii h IN. W lute 1 wp.. .lune 4. l-S t.-at. pooil HOTsi: DlllTt'TOll. The - tindersi"ned oflers himself as a candidate lor the n!hce ol poor House Ihre.-tor. .-n'oeet to t he de-ei-ion of the conunii Iiem... r.i'ic convention It nominated an 1 elected hepb-.!i.-es himself to char.- liie dnio s pertaining to the position to the best of his ability. - S. .1 . I.I 1 11 1 K White Twp.. Alay S. lsu.-t.e. TOIl Pl()TH(Tx(vrAKY. TlTe w7- dersjne-l oilers him-ell as a candid ite i.t the ofti ot rmthonotarv i f 4".:inhrl.i coiin'v snb .ject to Democratic rules, and if iiomin if-.i and elected feels competent to d isohnruo the duties of the position inteliirentlv and :it io.-t. in Iv ... ' n A. Sill IKMAKI li. Fben-our, March -J9, Iss i.-.e. CI A 111). The undersigned offi rs him J self as 11 candidate for the orhce id rn.fin.no tary. subject to the deeisnm ol the cm 1 in; lN-mo-c-atie conntv convention, and. it nominated and elected, pledges hin-ell to perform the dutie-. ol the position honestly and to the be-t ol hi- ability t , A. LAMUIKIN.' St. Lawrence.. March 10, 1 o.-t-. TT'OH Tin: l.T;isi.ATl i:i:. I here- 1 v nnnoun -e myself as a candidate ..r the l.t-oi-lainre. suhpct to Hie P.1.- ot Hie w.i rMic county convention ' P. s. I-T 1;M1NU. tlallitTin, March 19, l-So. c ST tfl I'or tJa' ' n"'nc. Sami Its. worth .i 0. " O-" lr - A-Hrs Stis..Mt r..., l-ort land, M. lino. l!--$,'7.-l v. BlackSift Such a stock 23 P.. ,. allorris the hest test ' spirit of a merchant, i stitutcs too larc a -J.t trade to be triSdv.;.'. as he conducts that"-. : considers it v.i'c to -V thc rest of his hu.vn-: '" have here the clue , t ' licy. If he sells ?hr - at a low price - them cheap hecau;? t'.-."' showy, or if he s s :. silks at a low price them cheap btcaus. i -heavy, he either iy know his business c: -rately chests. ToLe" is nothing ; to he . . nothing. A may be nearly all c'::- -heavy silk i;iav I t rt dye ! We are frank cr.:-: say that few salerr.r. chants can tell a from one that is Lf and ofi.cn, wiicn a lit is sold, neither the rr.e:;; nor his salesman hr- -. picion of the fact. But the p-cat ini. :.L-,-silk-manufacture, u.-t - -lions upon lniilioi.s c f c and thousands u; r. sands of human livts, i r conducted in icricraro.ee' raw material or cf : duct. Few unucrkir.r:' man arc bazed m r.r:. knowledge. D vcu .: gine, then, that ti.Ce be any coniic-ral.le v.-:-tainty about the f.ua'.i;-. .:' silk which v.e pla-.e b:': you ? There is r.-.e-:. just this ground cf l-..ct:; tv, and no ti.cr: a re ;- is sometimes .-pei'.t i last process cf niunuf:;:: and the fact can ! c out only by wear:: - :l The buyer's rr :hr. how to get the cen.: n : and avoid ail that car. : avoided of the unccrtrr. h. And this is the ansv.'-ir: h of a mercha?"it v.hc-e plan of business is t ;r your confidence hv r,- . ;: : tra'ing it, either throu::. .. norance or indirfeier-.i : - whose dealings re L:; enough to give him the 1: in the market at the b-"-' of the market price. This is all that can be p fitably said about silks in general. It c: r the whole ground ar.d whole science uf t uv:r.; l. persons vrithoul 2 i - technical, and vcr." :-" knowledge of goods. But ven liki. iv vcu to know what we vti- -good silk, and v ha: 5": silk costs. By a go:d . we mean one tha: v. Ir-' disappoint reasonahL' i Mu tations as tc r.rrer.'-' cither when new cr A good sill; nu.'' 1 - f" here for a dollar. Th: : silk can be got her: h: ' dollars ; after that. :t 1 matter of weight ai.-iC. 1--best and heaviest we i : - ' plain black silk is shv. -r.--: half dollars. We have no dc-':z any silk that wc hr-'z -" distrust of; and if y:;: to know what v. :!. any particular ; ' v: that we scil, y.u -'" by asking. Catalogues 1 ! if rectucsted ; i'.y follows: No. 1. Ladies' and c . 1' F'jit":. u . is-.c garrncnts. shoes, v tc, c tc. No. s. Mm's zni boi "- '"' cks. No. 3. Piecc-cooJs cf r..i . drcss-pooJs. c'.ti ' ., linen. pr n: . , ri'J.. white-poods. u,-ef-f:i-- ' No. 4. Fancr-gotxfs. l.icvi, ' fries, tr.rtW::r;5. : "1.. wcrs-eds. u.i.oncr.' g-' pUZZ t S, t!C. No. 5. Houe-furnish;ng ps-ic: No. 6. Out-dor sjsurts: s-c't" qutt, etc. Samples of pucc' sent, if requested. I' N for samples please in"! what grade and dT?"' of goods you want. JOHN WANAMAKE Chestnut, Thirteenth. Iirk Juniper Sis.. rHILAPlFK:A. P-