The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, November 05, 1880, Image 2

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EBENSBURC. PA..
FRIDAY. KOV. 5, 1880.
It is confinVntly believed frm the ir'tirns
t.f last Tue.ay's election in the different
Mutes that the next Horre of representa
tives, will vont.uu a working Democratic nia
ioiitv. that t!.c new Senator f rom Neva
da, wt!i will he a I.vnocrat, wi.". nv.ilili1
I'ciifrat-. to cniitr.u that boTv also.
the
1:um v.n l.rv:n, the IV. cr itic canrAL
tla-te for Mate Senator In tliis district. 3ms
been de Ten tod hy Unit unr-i ni.uxless jiliti
ral scamp, IJury leiirirs f .Jtilitistivii.
B.ium -r's inaj.-aity la tlii c Minify is 2M wl.'
I5"p'! is liei'srvt'd to liM'.e received ! mt 1.-
'Ji.'U in I Hair county. 1 is an nhl nd an ac
cepted maxim that ''1n; uice or 'lie cople
Is tlie veiii-enf ;IM(" "vo tmmili. vox Dei"
but in this partieUar i:rt.iiicc It is very ap- I
parent to every one who knows the two can.
didates, that the last word in the Latin
phrase ought to be, stricken out, ami another
and a very different word substituted in its
place-
IIavjry -VTmrK is defeated for C'ontcess
by Jies Mo!?rove, ;renbaek-Democr?t;
of Armstrong county, by about .too majority.
A luost richK'ous verdict. H. Milton Sp"cr
failexl of nti election in his district over Fisier,
the present Republican member, by about
Juki. In the Centre district (Jov. Giiftin's
majority is over three thousand another
1'eniocvatii' pain. The Democrats of Phila
delphia -did themselves "n.nnite credit by
pnlliiig 7tyirM) votes 14,0'i more than they
vr pave beforebut the Republicans,
kpiiivr.fag what tin? DeniiK-rats inter. ted do
injt, put -the trsua! appliances of the "ma
chine" in timely eperation. atid prlh-d !.
givinsi tf.em their usual majority in that
clv as well as in the State.
Gknf.bai. Cokfiioth is defeat -u for Con
gress in this district by Jaeo!) II. Campbell.
Joffroth"s majority in this county will be
aiboul :WV), Cr.irpbtll having abont 1ino ma
jority In Soinei set. In Llair Campbell has
I'.'hi, and In lied ford Coffrnth about l.vi, leav
ing'Canijibell with n'majority in tha district of
lxut 1.4O0. AVe e xpected a different result
even though the district when made was in
tended to lie ami still is naturally republi
can. ' ten. CofT roth has made such an evr-1-lent
mou biT, has been s. prompt in attend
ing to the business of his constituents, and
has done o much for a certain meritorious
class of tltem, that we entertained strong
liopes of hi re-election. It has been decid
ed otherwise and we regret it, as every rigid
minded man should.
It won Id be a i.self-ss wate of time to en
ter Into a det tiled Statement of the leasons '
why a portion of the Democratic ticket in
thin county Langbeiu for Vrothmiotary and
Sweeney for Register and Ket order was de
feated nt the election on Tuesday last, or of
Ihe reason why the majorities for some of the
otlier candidates are not as large as they
should have been or as they were expected
to be. We write tin-, on Thur.-dny morning
and ttwjref.jre before th? otlicia! vote has been
rouuted. The m.ijuriiy against Mr. I.ang
h;n w ill not, we think, be much above or be
low om hunurfriy and the defection against
him Is principally confined to two northern
distrii'ts, Cleailield and Allegheny, the wide
spread revolt against him in the first haic-d
district being of itsolf more than sufficient to
make up tiie icajority in the comity for his
opponent. Mr. Gates. Mr. Snrer.cy did not
encounter this oiiponition in the t wo districts
we hare named, nor indeed did he fail to re
ceive the aggregate Democratic vote in the
entire county, save and except in the districts
which once constituted, and are still called
when sieaking of elections, he 'District
Court." In tints; districts i'.ruw n's majm ity
orer Sweeney is t.tL'l'. whh'H U sufiiciciit to
defeat him by someiliing like tihi. Langbeiu
was therefore defeated by enough DeiniH iats
in the northern section of the county, where
he resides, refusing to vote for him, while
Sweeney was defeated by enough Democrats
in the southern part of the county, where he
resides, declining to vote for hini.
We do not, a we said at the outset, pro
pose to discuss the reasons which brought
bout these two results. If Democrats anv -wlisre
refuse to sustain the action of a coun
ty convention or the action of a county com
mittee, they ami they alone imnd take the
responlb'ritty and must accept the conse
queceess growing out of it. We regret very
much the defeat of these two gentlemen.
ine of theiu, Mr. I.angbein, received the en
dorsement of a full county convention after
a prirlonged and stubborn contest, while the
othr, Mr. Sweeney, was nominated in an
eiueraency Uy Hie comity committee. Kach
had therefore a well founded claim to the
united support of the party, but as the peo
ple have decided otherwise we must submit
not, however, without protesting against its
injustice and the wrong that lias been done.
Thk great, ami in the late campaign the
pivotal. Slate of New York haling failod to
cast U electoral vote for General Hancock,
the election of .I.uae.-, A. GarfiHd was the re
sult as a matter of course. The Deinociacy
of the I'nlon were led to believe by t he lead
ing nod beat informed men of the party in
New Yoik city that from the largely increas
ed lepistrstiou of voters there, as well as in
Urooklyn, the majority for Hancock in the
two cit ies would be W1"co( or, as thev put it,
r..ooo in New York and jo.irno in Itrookiyn,
and that when to these majorities were add
ed the majorities In counties always certain
logo Democratic, the Republican majorities
in the balance of the State would fail short
of overcoming them by at least thirty thont
ewl. This was the estimate made by those
who assumed to know what they weie talking
about, and who had every facility for obtain
ing urli information, but the stern results
of Tuesday last .showed that they had over
estimated the Democratic vote by :so,ih0, the
majority in New York Ix'ing about 45,oon
and in Urooklyn about M.ooti. This result
in the. two largest cities left Gaifield a ma
jority in the State of between twenty and
thirty thousand. All would have been right
if New York had voted for Ilan.;ock, as he
has carried New Jeiey, California and Ne
vada, with Oregon probable, and with New
York he would have bad l'.U votes in the
electoral college, which is fix more than is
required to elect. Rut when New Yeik was
lost all was lost.
The country has now tjr its Rresidefit a
man who was n ver elected, but who reach
ed his high position through absolute and
shameless fraud on the ballot-boxes in two
States. His successor will be another Ohio
niau who, only seven years ago, was pro
nounced by a Republican committee in Con
gress to be guilty of tlie high crimes of cor
ruption and peijury an accusation which to
this day remains unanswered and will always
remain r.s an indellible stain upon his char
acter. It is a sickening spectacle to see such
a man elected to the oftice once adorned by
the pure and virtuous Washington, the in
flexible and incorruptible Jackon, ai,( tlie
kind heatted, hoiu-st and patriotic Lincoln.
The verdict of the people on Tuesday will
not in the least ilini the lustre of Gen. Han
cock's fame. He emerges from the struggle
as lie entered into it, without a stain upon
his record, and the republic will ever contin
ue to re. jKx t and honor htm. Who would
not ratlier he Wiiifield Scott Hancock with
an untarnished jiame than Jas. A. Garfield,
even with Oakes Ames dead, but with Jere
miah S. Black still in tl.e land as a living
vitue..s of perjuiy Ufoit the I'olatiCl
committee y
A ft cr i;.irliell. tJraiit.
I'roltablv n iiitcllisreiit person who hit ;
thought about the matter doubts that the, j
election of iier.il ti.utield. which seems to
liavc licen elicited vesior.-av, is virtually the
re-election of ien. tirant. The whole ctxirse
of the campaign sufficiently proves thi. The
":WHi" tielepites t Chiratjo who dm ie.;j three
days voted tor General Grant, and their con
stituents, were disrxwed for some lane after
the nomination to Milk in their tents, anil to
leave the work of electing (iarfceld to those
who had nominated him. They did not en
ter into the canvass at nil. except in a perfect
ly perftinctrn-i- way, until (Kiieral (i.ivtield
in absolute despair had virfvd New Yolk,
and in sonrc manner, of which the public
were of cer.vse uninfotined, had made liis
iK-ace wit. the lenders of the party. What
the terms if his surrender were, ive repeat,
the puM':,'. does not know, and perhaps nev
er will now, except through one of those
disclosures which brim; honest men to their
(ran after the parties have fallen out ; but it
take,-The combined credulity and effrontery
of pti independent Kepuhliean .to pretend
tha there is no evidence of a liarHin.
4 tie.
obs-'-queous attitude which General Gaificld
I ass-.imed m his letter oi acceptance ny -.s-ur-'
irvg the people that he hud no intention of re
! f,i mine the nnre.lia mod civil service ll-i-miidi
r. hich alone it was possible to secti.e his elec
tion onglil to nave Miuieeu, urn mti
rfice, to bring the leadei-s of the tiiKvhiue to
bis assistance. We must wait until -after the.
4th of next March to see how nr.ucti more
explicit and much more dean-adinj; were . i;c
terms actually exacted of him by Coiikiirt;,
Logan and Ganieronasthe price f their sup
port, and the public exhibition tlio true
Kepuhlicnn leader. General Grant, in the true
character of an auxiliary stui p speaker,
riifortunately General Gaield"s career
gives us, as "it pave them, a solid assur
ance that he would revolt a no st'uuila-
j tions which were necessary fr secure their
support. The so-called independent Hepubli-
cans he was sure of in any case.. Their pre
! tense of hailing the break-up of the dead
I hck at Chicago by his nomination as a tri-
uniph of pure politics .-.luv.vrd not less clear
j ly than their acquiescence in the nomination
; of General Arthur that they could be insult
i ed with impunity. Their eauer attempts to
I construct il-tenses of his behavior in his re
i lations with Oakes Ames avid with De Io!
! yer which .should exhibit hi'n in some other
chara ter than that fastened upon iiiei by
i the Hepuoiicans in 1ST3, of a perjurer in the
i one case and of a bribe taker in the other,
were in marked contrast t? the comparative
i decency of the moie "stalwart" newspapers
I which reluctantly came aonnd to the sup-
noit of General Gartieid. 1 he ew lor
7"t'i;i'., the organ of the "t-'rant stalwarts,"
has been eminent among .Republican jour
nals for its refusal to pretend for one moment
that the candidate whom it supported is a tit
person to be President of the United States,
and has abtained, with a resolution which
does it credit and ought to commend ittothe
honest members of its ow n party, from in
sulting their intelligence ami violating its
own self-respect. The New Yoi k Tcj '"',
on tlie other .hand, which posed before the
nomination as the irrecmv liable enemy .of
Grant, has devoted itseif tim ing the canvass
of 1-sso to swallowing what itself describes
as the 'mud" which it ".!eng"' in 17:1 at
the successful candidate at Chicago.
The honest words whicji were spoken and
written by men of alt parties in i never
theless remain, and remain true. It must he
a bitter thought to-day to hundreds of thou
sands of men who yesterday voted that they
would "let well Ciiotmh aloti"," and tln.t
they would not run the risk of "cheeking the
prosperity of the country," that they were
comiciletj, in order to carry Uieir intentions
into effect, to put a tainted man, a person
convicted, by his own allies, of perjury and
of the taking of bribes, into the chair of
Washington. lint the very qualities and
acts of i ieneral Garfield which tuakeso many
hundreds id thousands of men r,shained to
day that thev voted for him, assured the
'machinists'' of the Republican party of his
pliability to their uses. They do not mean
to be taken in again us they were taken in
by Haves, and the personal ehiracter of
Garfield, as well as his declaration in his let
ter of acceptance that he would do nothing
to break the force of the 'machine," makes
ii, ceitain that they will not he taken in
again. They probably anticipate that Oar
held will endeavor to kecure his ow n re-election,
whatever pledges he may have madeto
tl.e contrary. Rut they rely," and we hsve
no doubt with justice, on the anxiety which
Garfield has always .shown "to stand well
with the Lord and well with the devil," to
capture the reformers and to capture the
'machine," to mase him despicable; and
odious before his term closes. They calcu
late that his personal qualities w ill leave him
without a following long before the end of
hi.; term, and render him incapa.de of nul'.i
f ing secretly the bargain, whatever its terms
may be, which they are we'd aware thrtt he
will not have the courage to break open'y :
and this will leave the course virtually open,
with a skilful political organizer as Yice
l'resident, and wiiha political organization
it increased vigor and of an increased tena
ity of gup upon the public treisiiry. for .;n
formal reelection of Grant and the formal
revival of Grmitisin in l:ss4 w ith all that this
implies.
It would he idle to deny lint they will
gain allies in the mean while from among
the men who yesterday oled for Hancock,
and whose faifu in the c-.ipaeity of the Amer
ican people for self-govt i.a'ei.t must havn
been seriously weakened b the election of
Garfield. It is in one sense a matter for con
gratulation, and in another for Condolence,
that the 1 "residency of Garfield, unlike the
Presidency of Hayes, has been s-ocurcd n .t
by tlie frauds of politicians so n".c,i a y
the folly of voters. At any ta!e it i" c. rtaiii
'.hat the cause of centralization, of .strong
government," and, let us plainly say, of im
perialism, h.is been more signally furthered
by the election of Garfield than by any other
event in our histoij. Happily, the contin
ued coutiol of the House of Repiesonlatives
is assured by the election of yesterday to the
enemies ot centializatioti. Let the members
of the House of Representatives devote
themselves henceforth to showing that the
material inteiests not less than the political
freedom of the people of this country are
bound up with the fortuiKS of the Democratic-Conservative
party. Let them mature
and press such measures of revenue reform,
of administrative reform and of civil-service
reform as will commend themselves to the
enlightened judgment of the country and put
upon the Kxecutive lieutenant of Grant the
responsibility of defeating thee reforms.
Thus only can they minimize the public dan
ger and partly palliate the public disgrace of
the election of James A. (iai field to be Pres
ident of the United States. -V. 1". World, 3d.
On some railroad
lik
the Pennsylvania,
says the Philadelphia l.ri:-rr, time is saved
to express trains by providing long wafer
tanks between the tracks from which the
moving locomotive scoops up its nei'ded :
supplies of water without stopping. It has
occurred to a German inventor that some
thing similar is needed for taking up passen
gers from way stations without dclaving tlie
train by n steppage. The passenger would
not like either t. be scooped up like the water
supply or hooked off of a standard iike the
mail bags, so this ingenious inventor lias pro
vided a moter iike a "dummy" and having
a wire cable wound on a drum. When tlie
express train conies along a hook on the last
car c:-t lies a ring, in which the cable tt r
niinates, and tlio wailing car is carried for
ward, and not a sudden jeik, but at a rte
gradually increasing to that of tiie train,
the cable unwound in the drum, until close
connection is made between the waiting car
and the train, when the passengers are tians
ferred and the waiiine car cut loose, to be
carried b.-u k to its station by its own motive
power.
Trk Pittsburgh Pot of Wednesday says:
The claim of the Cepunlieans that they de
sire a free and untrammelled vote was an
swered yesterday at the noils, where their
tickets were marked. This was a menace
and a notice to every voter that lie was no
longer free. If these marked tickets were
not to inform them of the political convictions
of the voter, w hat object was to lie attained ?
The secret ballot means that the poorest man
shall at least express his opinions and pre
fcienecs without being called to account to
any living man. This the arrogance of the
Republican leaders will not submit to. They
first asseitain how the man voted and then
proceed to punish him, while proclaiming
they ate for a free and untrammelled vote.
It would be more manly to have a r,Vt roc
vote than thi sneaking method of maiking
the ballot lo terrorize the working man who
depends for his living upon his day's work.
In Dublin. Ireland, on Wednesday last,
criminal informations were lodged in the
Crown or.ice.cn behalf of the Attorney Ocn
eral for Irtdand, against thirteen prominent
members and officers ot the Irish Land
League. Among those indicted are Parneil,
Biggar, Dillon, and T. D. Sullivan, who with
the others are chaiged with conspiracy to
prevent the payment of rents to defeat le
gal process for the enfoi cement of rents to
excite ill will between different classes of
people etc. The parties Indicated must ap
pear in court and enter their pleas within
fourdays. The trials, if they ever take place,
w ill ho held in Dublin.
Mrs. Sarah McManus was shot and fatally
wounded bv Frank Carroll, keeier of a low
cliil.kil:'? saloon m PH';- cdphi.t, on Morai-u ,
hut, while she who lookin fit her hubbarAl.
A Musk laii's Emit Career.
RKMAKKAM.K HISTOltY K THK (X TO.VKN A
HI AN WHO WAS KOINU 1)KAI IS A
l.O.Nti ISI.AM WH)I)S.
i
The discovery of the dead body of :i Ital
ian musician known in New Yorknd Balti
more a Signer G. George, near Oyster bay,
on the ftu of Octolier last, mirier circum
stances of a mysterious character, has been
again brought" lx-fore the needle by the ar
rival in Baltimore, of tiie deceased's son.
Even after the identification of the conse
there was mystcr-y surrounding the case, and
an investigation is now coing on in New
York to determine wheti-er the. death was
caused by foul play. Yery little was known
of Signor George's early history. The re
turn of his son, F. . Georg'o, however,
throws soip.e litiht on the case and furnishes
most ronnukable rind romantic story -t
Signor rforge's ever tful career.
T he d'-ceased's real name is Signer Ura
naro Primiclierio. lie was born in Naples
initio. At the ngeof ten he was sent to
tlie principal college of Naples, v here be
showed a most remarkable talent f.ir mcsie.
The King of Italy happened to st"P vt the
college one day and overheard Genus' piny
on the key trmvpet. IU was so completely
captivated with the young musician's e'Toits
that he ininiediately'made him leader of his
private band. Although leader uS the king's
band PriiuiclK-rio remained a .student at the
college for four years. During ttat time his
! jxisitam towards the kingand hi superiority
in musical accomplishments niydr him many
enemies among the students, wfew determin
ed if possible to disgrace him. Accordingly,
one day in ls-Jt several keys iu a piano most
dearly prized by the principal of the school
i from its associations were mysteriously bro
ken and Primicherio was ciia.'ged v.i'th the
. piece of apparent i!i;:liciousrcss. In order
to avert this visitation Priniirherio ran a ay.
( In ls-.M Naples was much visited by the
i United States men of war and the officers
the ships were very partial t music. It was
their custom, therefore, to attend musical
: concerts, and Primicherio r:ss well known
to many of them. On the day of the young
: student's flight several otTu ejs of the I nited
i States snip Kra, lying in the bay of Naples.
I were hunting when they accidentally discov
' ered Primicherio. The boy told the officers
i the nature of his troubles, and thev, quite
: willing to shield him, persuaded him to go
i with thein to their vcsm-L On the first of
September, isjl, the Kra sailed, and w ith it
i Primicherio. lie was told that hewwuldat
once be taken to America, hut circumstances
i of an unalterable nature ilefealed this object,
and the young musician became v. United
. States seaman, being tra'Jstenvd I'lom one
to another ship. His term of service lasted
two years, and during that time he was for
' seera! months under the famous Comnio
: dure Perry.
The deceased reached America in 1s'-ti,
landing in Baltimore, lie iiecame a teacher
of music, and married K:izall h Rejiilej.
who died in September, 1 '!. at Kvausviile,
' Indiana. He remained in Baltimore un'il
is:;7, when he went to Norfolk, Virginia.
: and was appointed leader of the I nited
I States band at Koitre-.s .Monroe. At the
outbreak of the Seminoie war Primicherio
; was sent to Florida and sei ved tor si.-iee time
I a a private in the army. On his return to
. N'ortolk in lsrv.i he "n it the annv.
While in Norfolk hi.s father died in Na
ples, snd he was summoned home to take
. )ossesMoTi of the family title and property.
With this object in iew. Pi imiclierioengaged
1 passage for Italy in a sailing vessel, which
' put out from New York- h.a bor, but was un
able to make tlie voyage on account of ad-
verse w inds. ( (including, after three weeks'
! ineffectual efloits. that the vessel would
never reach Italy. Priniiehej-in went on
shore. The musician's life from this time
was chiefly taken up with residences m ilit
ferent cities, where he added to his great
fame as an instrumental mil -ician. lie went
to Indianapolis in Is7a. iind then to L'vans
iile. Indiana, from whi- h place he returned,
to Baltimore in ls7.", and resinned his pro
fession. At tiiis time he was leader of the
choir at Si. John's Catholic chinch. He left
Baltimore for Kvansviile in 1S7.(, and w hiie
there his wife died, lea ing ."signor Primi. -hello
in a Very enfeebled state. It was w idle
living in Brooklyn with his daughter, Mrs.
Watson, that he strayed away and died, or
was murdered, in Mattinjcock woods.
Priinichero's lat her was an Italian noble
man of means, and was at one time mayor
of Naples. The deccaseo uncies, aunts and
several of his sisters were and those that are
living are still attached to the Catholic
Church as Sisters of Charity, nuns and
monks in various parts ot Italy. Signor
( ieoi ge's full name was ( iennaro" ( Inis-ppi
Carminia PriinichTio. hut on shipboard his
name was so h ".rd to pYoiiounee that liie ofli
eers cailci hint George, which le- continued
on reaching t ins country to bear.
A Bi.inu In v kntox. A Washington let
ter says : One of tie- most lemai kah'e men
t:i this country w hom I know anything about
is the blind man 1'iesnient of the HerrcsholT
Manufacturing Company of Bristol, R. L,
from whom ti e company takes its name.
He was here this week to see the Secretary
of the Navy. He is absolutely blind, and
yet he invents and constructs torpedo boats
and sinail steam vr-ssi-ls for governments in
ail parts of the world. His steam launches
glide through the water at the rate of twen
ty miles and hour. He ha a number on
hand which l:e wants to sell to the? govern
ment. He builds a launch in which steam
cat: be got up in six minutes, which can be
carried onboard ship as an ordinary ship's
boat, and which w ill contain coal and water
noiigii to run three hundred and miles.
Moreover, he claims that his new boats will
not sink, and that Hay will tberetoio serve
as lifeboats. S'eain life boats ! how many
drowned men and women might now be liv
ing if such things really existed on tiie great
ocean passenger boats." Mr. HerreshoiT can
tell as much a'oont an oidmaiy-sized steam
launch iu-r lines, methods of Construction,
etc. by feeling as others can by seeing, and
he goes on invi nting and building just as if
his eyes were no closed forever.
Oi;kt Britmn ami InK.r.vNn. From the
resolute attitude of Mr. Parm ll and his as
sociates it is evident that the British govern
ment will meet with a determined and stub
born resistance should it persist in its policy
of force. Thus far the Irish land movement
has been managed with consummate skill,
and if the leaders continue to bear in mind
; that prudence, combined witli energy and
i courage, is their most effective weapon", they
will doubtless succeed in securing for their
countrymen important reforms. A rash nr
ill-considered .step, however, might ruin all :
and in the interest of indand herself it is to
be hoped that th-y will discountenance any
, movement that is distinctly revolutionary or
violent. At the first outbreak Fnglmid
would overrun the Fanerild Isle with red
coats once again, mid universal distress and
suffering would be the inevitable result. At
: present the ad mtage is all with the leaders
of the anti-la mllor.l party, and it depends
iiHn themselves as to whether thev shall re
tain it in their own hands. lin't'imore
zcttc.
Br ainkii w ith an A x P. During a polit
: ieal meeting in Boycrtown. Montgomery
county, on .Monday evening, a riot occurred
that is-ikelv to result in tiie death of Alex.
anderSassainan. of Greshvillc. Tin-Pioneer
Corps of Pottstow n, the members carrying
axes, went to Boyeitown in a specinl train.
, While the addresses wen" Ix-ing made Sassa
man and some of his friends tried to annoy
the speakers by loud .vnd lKiisferous talking
and continuous cheering. At the close of
the meeting Sassaman jerked a revoi er from
his pocket and tired. The ball struck Sam'l
Frjer, a mem!er of the Po'tsfown Pioneer
Corps, in the finger, when he immediately
; struck sassaman a fearful blow in the head
with an axe. Sassaman dropped, and brains
ami blood began to ooze from the fractures
in his scull. Dr. Francis says he will die.
Fryer's friends say he struck the blow in
self-defense. He is about JJ years old, and
Sassaman is about .In. The wildest threats
were made and fears were entertained that
thev would le carried out.
Thbiik are now three vacancies in the
State Senate and all caused by duath. Geo.
D. Jackson, of Sullivan, and Charles H.
Poutson, o Allegheny, both Democrat, died
during the last year," and their vacant seats
were filled on Tuesday. William F.lliott,
Republican, of Philadelphia, died on Friday
evening last: and as twenty la s' notice are
necessary for an election, a special election
will be called before the meeting of the Leg
islature. The next Senate will, therefore,
contain three new members, elected to serve
two years, and twenty-five new Senators cho
sen for the full term of four years.
PriKrvniNCi nut a i'.f.rMnx, A prelimi
nary meeting of graduates of the various
Soldiers" Orphans' Schools of Pennsylvania
will he held at the Capitol building, Harris
hurg, on Thursday and Friday, December
;"nth and ,'ilst, Isko, for the purpose of ar
ranging ior a grand reunion of all the "six
teeners." It is desired hy the committee
having the matter in charge that there be a
huge attendance at this meeting.
Pksnstivania statk Ooti.fc.f. admits
both sexes. Endowment half a million.
Tuition free. Courses of study. Classical,
Scientific, and Agricultural. A thorough
Preparatory Depaitment. Expenses $S to
Jcr week. For catalogue, address
bv-FU'H short i im-v.. A M.,
LS-l. .;.-!;.!. J Bio. SUtg College, IV.
news vm ornr.u noti.m's.
Thursday, November 2.1, has been desig
nated by Mr" Hayes as the day of national
A man lias been r.rrested in Georgia for
I manning his wife's sister. But then his
! wife isn't dead. . ....
j A boiler of the Atlanta, flouring muls, at
' Atlanta. Ga., exploded on Saturday, killing
tlie engineer and nr-.-man.
The Pennsylvania railroad has built one
hundred new passenger ears this yer at an ;
average cost nach of .",-'.
V Kentucky negro married a wn.te wo
man, and had got as fur as Somerset on his
'el idrtl tour when she committed suicide.
' A ladv in Titu-r?i!le became -.usane In
eonseqnep.-e of slanderous stories published
in re-ard to her husband and some wonun.
Fifteen hu:,lr'd leading merc'r.an's oi
Mai-seilk s, France, have sigtwd a -protest
; again-t the expulsion of tl it: religious cou
i r)f ntKns.
' M'.s. Remap.!, who shortly will become
the c-iie of Senator McDonald, of Indiana, is
' divorced from a former .bus rand, ho has
i since married ag.ur.. ....
Thomas Thomas, a boy employed in tne
i Gnlo mill at Columbia, was pierced through
hy a br.r of red-hot iron on Saturday, anu
' d'rd soon afterward.
Mm Ryan.v. bile dish 'icntingf'dhographs
! of the Garlieid Chinese letter fi' -m a hand
car near Elizabeth, Allegheny county, on
: Thursday, was run dow n mid killed.
Wilhelm Fritsch, a ( lei in n sh -emaker,
killed his wife nt San Fraiv.i- co. Cnl., Salm
1 day. He then stabbed khnseif a dozen
; times, indicting probably Lm.i! wounds,
i A Maine paper telle of a man who got
' up, dressed, went to a neighbor's and work
i ed hard to subdue a a tire and then ictuin
1 eil to bed all in u state o .somnambulism.
i A tramp was arrested in Philadelphia
I recently who could beg in seven different
languages and also completely change his
: identity in the garb of t'u different nations
; reprcHMiiei!.
, A religiously insane woman at Barton,
Mass., goes about the neighborhood every
morning delivering personal messages which
she believes she has received from heaven
during the night.
Chauiiey P. R-eve, a farmer, aged --,
throve into Mi Idlelon. N. Y., on Monday
mnniiriL' t see a doctor, :ul ith'd on his w ag-
! on in front of the physicians door, lleait
, disease was the cause. ,
A Butiercc.utdy man nanud Wcimrrbc
' came angered at his daughter, at the break
fast table, and buried e butcher knife .it her.
'1 he knife struck tlie gii I on the ion head, iu
Uictinga terrible wound. .
A California farmer got considerable fun !
out or wiiar nail neen an aiinioiiiin- ,n i" ' -ing
a stuffed deer in his grain field. The
hniifeis alter emptying a large amount of
ammunition into the' ultima!, and discovering
the fraud, never trespass again.
A march is a very little thing, but so
la; go is the number used I hat immeii.se v. oi ks
! atv erected to iii;iiil.irt";c them, in one
factory in Wisconsin, ..e.!0 io, logs a.v saw
ed Bunnally in t heir iii.inu; act lire,
i id Bet., a Sioux fcjiiiiw, who died re
i centiy at the reputed age of more than a hun
dred,' had been successively the wife of r.n
urn-.y officer, an Indian chief, a border high- ;
waynian and a Methodist minister.
A young man named L-uig. residing ,
i lain Uiiionlowii. Pa., w is ariestrd last 1'ii-
isv for the murder ot his father, aged i igcty.
The iniirdT grew out of an order of Court
i'iiiiii) dling the sou to support his fat Per.
General Hancock ;ece:-:ed two gold -headed
cane ore from Bradford. Pi., and the
' other from N'orwalk. Huron county, c lliio,
both the result of voting contests at lairs.
Jt is weli that Hancock bus got .something by
: election.
One of the oldest Democrat s who voted
on Tuesday is John Burdett. of Oconee coun
1 ty, South Carolina. lie v.as born one hun-
died and five years ago nod east Ips first vote :
in Edgefield county, S.uith Caro.iua, in the t
year lsoo.
The Hhrrishurg l'ulriot is right when it
saws Gariiehi's election is simpiy ;rn inita
thin for everybody lc steal nil th- y cm from
: the government, and ihe:i to cotc.mit perjury
in order to s reeii themselves from merited
' punishment.
A very old man voted three rimes at
Washington, Ind., in the recent Stale elec
tion. On his trial it was convincingly shown
that, though sober, he had been so carried '.
, away by excitement as to forget that lie had
already voted.
A woman in Noi lh I.eavenv. m f !i. Kun ,
not long ago rend somewhere that to till one's
ears w ith water will make one more intelli
gent. She tried the epoi iiiiei.t three or four
days, and her nurse now om'nuuie ites with
, her bv means of tlie sign language.
Two dwellings in Bridgewafer, Pa.. '
were burned Friday morning, and Mis.
. Hemps!. ill. S:i years of age. perished in one
of them. Two little boys, who vcie in the
' habit of carrying coal for her, are mi-sing
and supposed" to have a'. perished,
i A party oi buigleisin Cincinnat i enter- '
rd a room in a business Mock. tJorofoi ia :!
a young lawyer, tied a handkerchief over Ids
! eves, bound his legs and amis tog' (her with :
.' cord from tiie window curtain, ami secured
but g.. from the ollice safe for "heir tioe.bie.
--William M. singerly, proprietor of the
: Philadelphia Ha nrrl. and Xalha n T. Jarman,
a coal contiactor. were arrested on Friday
: for perjury and conspiracy against city Con
troller Pattison, in charging that he ae -epl-ed
money considerations to ciuintersign war
rants. ' The Pullman palace car company have
placed on the Pciiusa Ivani i railroad two
sporting cars, one of wliirh is named '"Davy
Crockett" and the other "Izaak Walton."
Both are full-sized palace cais with kitchen,
dining and sleeping rooms. The hunting
cur has a kennel, gun room and private
locker.
John Link, a small boy, living at Six
Milo Ferry, Allegheny county, played about
i the cars at a Coal tipple there, oil Sunday
last instead of going to Sunday sehe.ol. One
of the ears broke loose- from its fastenings
, and ran over little Johnny, crushing the life
: out of him instant ly.
j At the office of 'the Portland (Me.) Pack
ing Company is a can that was packe I with
salmon in 114. The vessel in which tlie can
was shipped was wrecked, and a s'noit time
ago this can was taken from the wreck, it
was opened tlie other day, and the contents
were found in perfect condition.
A society of Mormon giils, having for
its object -the securing of nioiiogamic hns
: bands, has been discovered and broken up at
Salt Lake. The members took a vow- to
marry no man who would not pledge him
self to be content with one wife. Five
granddaughter's of Brigham Young had joiu
i ed it.
A sad scene took place at Canton, Ohio,
Monday nigh!, when Miss Ada Tonner and
Mr. George Reynold were united in marriage
nt the side of tiie bed on which the bride lay
, dying. The marriage was set for Christmas.
but the lady is dying with consumption of
j tlie bowels Mr." Reynold is a hanker, of
Leadviile, oloiado.
i ue siaienieni piionsucn a lew tavs
since that the accounts of the late Col. A. C.
t Noyes, ex-State Treasurer, had been found
i to be short is reported incorrect. His ac
counts with tl State were sntisractorily
settled three months ago, ami his estate, in
stead of being insolvent, will lie woith from
staO.nim to ?T.",ooo.
The town of Contra Costa, Ca!., is con
i siderably agitated over the arrival of a gieat
I eouine curiosity recently i urchased in Ari
zona. It is a horse having a smooth dun or
; mouse colored hide, without a single hair
' upon any portion of it. The horse is 4
years old, weighs about I.o.hi pounds, is
finely formed and in appaiert good health.
The Chicago Tribune, publishes a record
of the ravages of the great storm of letobor
i b'th on the lakes, .showing ihat upwards of
. $.X'i,ihhi damage was done to vessels and car
i goes, and that ninety-three persons perished.
There were seventeen Total wrecks, involv
1 ing a loss of fl.-.i.!Ho. and in all sixty-six
j vessels were damaged to a greater or less ex
; tent.
Wm. R. fin-en. 2H years of age, cut his
; throat w ith a pocket knife and then drown
. cd himself bv jumping over the bridge info
I the Susijuehanna river at Pitt-ton, Pa., on
I Monday. 1 1 is suit hud been rejected .by a
young lady to whom lie was attached.' llis
' body is not likely to be found for some time
i on account t.f the rough condition of the
i river.
i A man darted into a store at Nicholsville,
Ohio, bought the first traveling hag he could
get. his hands on, and hurried toward the
lailrond station. On his way he caught up
I scciai onchs i rom a pne, ami put them m
; to the bag. His object was understood when
j a passenger discovered that his own satchel,
j containing fs.ooo, had been taken from the
j seat by his side, and the one with bricks put
j in its place.
i Leon Belmont, a young woman who has
been representing herself as a man in Min
ncapolis, Minn., by wearing the bifurcated
garment, and who said she was a nephew of
! Mr. August Belmont, of New York, lias had
j her sex discovered, and is in custody. She
j became intimate with the family of Mrs.
; Waifc, of Lead City, and had wooed their
i daughter Gracie.
! A narrow, spiral atmospheric column
I was seen the other day hy the operator in
! the Lewi.-town .Narrows, Mr. Kcllev, ap-
preaching the tower. It did not seem" to be
dangerous, only lieing noticeable because
' strange. It was revolving rapidly and as it
passed over his house it took off a chimney
and a large telegraph pole, breaking it as
easily as a cane. It just missed the tower,
v. hu ii w rt i lut i.y lor kcHcy. It did no other
. daui.iu.
err -flia.il. iMJUSeMwrs -nil
olosicl .I:i:;:e Fair, of Nevada, is ;'
Irish bii t!i and is for!y-iiine eaisold. Whjle
a Imiv he lived in Illinois and at eighteen
went lo California and in time hecji.ie a
fuipfclintendoiit of mines. In addition to his
fortune madrt from the Big B uiana mines
he hwiis neailya hundred acres in various
part of San Francisco He suffers from
rhuematisin. He is of medium height and
heavy, with a large beard streaked with
gt a v.
Leonard Rucit and Hlward llartcain
live in the same lions in Lawrence, iilc, Al
legheny county, and for some time the men
and their famld-s have been on ve.-y bad
terms. Then- was n ccncr.il ijiuure! on s .t
, urday night and Rupert says that ilaitman
i .struck him. Then the fei tree drew a ivvo:
; ver and shot II irtuan hi fie left side, and Un
wound is l-lieveil to be mortal. The ante
mortem deposition of the d;, ing man was
tale n by Dcputv Mayor Poi'cr.
I u ii'i St'oo'-klin.'of Louisvi'le, suffered
mo .t i f the torments tli:-t ordinarily come to
a n old man when tie marries a young wife.
Res 'Iviltg upon suicide, he luaile the pi.p.i
ra'ioi's eai t I ully. I ! drcssei! hi e-e if in his
best suit, sh.i .ed his face, brushed his ii.iir,
i and laid luniseil out. on a wil'n u pistoi
: m oi;
hand and a I azor ill tin
Hi
iisteiithiti evidently v.s 1-i ent his thr nt if
the huliet did u t. kill, hut the pi eeautiot,
proved to be iniiu'eessai v.
A month ago Mrs. Mary M.iyer. of
Fi: st : trect, ,e?sey 'i; y. die. I of t yphoul fe-
v r, sud was buried. The bedy appeared
hfe-hke. and the (hecks after dentil were
, highly colored. This ployed upon the mind
of a daughter of the ib-ceased to .such a i;c
' fgreethat she t-au .ed the ronains to lie e-
liimicil one day l..st week. It was then dis
i ruvered that I'.'.e woman ha 1 turne l on h--r
face in the ctl'iu, ami lhaf i.i her struggles
1 she had torn one ear almost o'.T.
Capt. Bites and his Wile, formerly i!:e
-. gianis ' I Bai iiuiii's sho w, lecentlv maile the
ov". hind
journey from Sin Francis
o. i nev
are i-.i'-li
sleeping r
to secure
nearly eight leel
;i r belt lis aie on';;
a eoaifoi table be.
long, and tic
si . in older
they took the
d the upper
Opposite sections,
iiertiis with an ai
:-oi;oec-,ei
Is'a'ole pi
cc, alio laid
the! i-c'ves crosswise of the ear. the other
jiasseiigers kinely consent ing to the parti. -I
til.st ruction "t 1he passage at night.
As the Southern Express on th" Pi'i
handle r.iilroad was Hearing Noble-town.
Allegheny county
r.O I. i. Saturday,
the pi
walkii
under
ot. of thr engine si ruck a wciii.im
g n'ong the track. Sh wis thrown
he w h. -els and ten ih! t-ianglcd. death
being itistan,au "i'. The u n fort unrif e ladv
tvovi'd to be Mrs. Louis Rieord. a native of
j'ranee, wia it !l been In this courtly only
one wiek. She was t went y--e en years el
nge and lea is a hush in 1 and o le chil !.
All iut lligent dog had for a long time
been --enf every ino-rning to a butcher shop
at Logan, Ohio, to buy meat for himself.
IIe:i!vas brought a live-cent piece ,;i Lis
n.oiit h, and i ' i-l it, d.o-.vn 'Utee n,
ck. lic
it mi w.ig
as t hough
y
he .
:..-i:-d
.r in-tcid.
ted vigor
Ll. iy large:
I! iireved
v, he i, id I
helped hi:
ed Ids t.
: il v.-it .-. mi
:'.' e' i
ag a p: iiuo! t
in:
chunk ot
a i. An inve-i.gati
that. 11
-.(hen int
l-s.-lf to :
tmi-ter l'.u ing gone aw
the money ill a a er and
I'oin.
I).
Brest ;
Aiirred
last voyag" i.i the Livadia to
nt ' .f a -tii 1 1 ling che i aeter o; -
-el
A
man engaged as .1 -fokar was
Id an ele:-tr't.- h'Uip that was he.
for ligli' iig the stokehole. I!"
toueln-d the wire Av.iil oi e of
n-l with the other completed ' he
a-ked to
jlVj vwi;
inc:' Hi ioi
liis hand
cm rent by gra
ing tiie laini'.
f: r.ck hiiii de
sping file brass nnl -uirouiid-'1
1- hi'-T of the en: ivt
id. All efiief- t-i :-evi-! hitu
were una . ailin
id the disint-.-grati"!! f
the tissues of t!e Ivm'v a-h- finud l-.c:! da'
to be so great that it was necessary to burv
him at, sen.
1 1 a milfoil to-. uship. ?I mri-e co-.it t v. was
thrown into ti e w'ndcst state of ecitei"evt
on Monitt'v iiioiui ig on finding that n 17
vi ar-oid daugii'er of s.-mii"l Bii I "tibe-i ler
had lieen murdered, le-r head being pound
ed to a jelly. The girl let; her b-inie Sun
day afternoon to goto .1 a-iVi Mar-h's to do
housewi ; k. Her liltle si -te rs. while on their
Way to school next moi ning. discovered Ler
by t!i" loinlside v.ilh her bi iius sca'tere'",
over fie f.-nee -fici.-s wVcr- she !-iv.
There AVeve several Ir. imp-seen in the vi' in
i'y early that morning ;,:ii it is soppost-il
they eoiiiTiiiUed 1 1 if erinie.
A niiiii ii'.ined Join! 11. Diig.iii. Avhoiive
in Croton. n suburb i f N"v Ca-t!e, the oth
er day f mud an iron pot full of gold eoins.
They are ail 'Louis d'ors" of 1'io'i to
being coined in the reigns of Louis Xlii.
and XV. The coin seems t i have been le.r
iwd f- r a great many a, eat-. They are v.o";L
5J.!'T... The queer part of the story is that
they were dug up at midnight by Dngun.
who found the ph-.ee wie'tePiey were buried
by means of a '-divining rod" obtained from
an oci lndi in This i- Dug in s sorv and as
the coins are mai nest iomibl y genuine it is
h;d !o find out i'h:.- lea! mi-.hiicl in width
they were found.
A mill"" had a v. iui'eifu! ride i:i a tin
pan in o'oi ado. Being at the too 'f a
mountain, and i!esiii"ig lo get to the iiottoia
of the vailcv. he knew thai a t". lions and cir-cuitoii-
walk of iifleen miles wis r,-.-oss.t:y
hv the ordinary rout", while the dist-im e
straight down tiie sto-.y co ered incline aa a s
only three. He had nicli a pan as miners
use in wa.-hing out g"M. S'juat ting iIoaa ii in
this, n'.v-iy he AACnf. faster mi l fa-t-T. iitifi!
the solder of the vehicle wns melted by frie
iion ni'l in; was almost insensible front lack
of 1 reath. But the trip v.as unickly over,
Av'tho'it any mishap, ai-.d the pas-.enger now
ileflates that he enjoyed it.
A sensation was created in Cleveland.
O., on Saturday, by the issue of warrraiiis
for the arrest lor illegal voting of two men
prominent in society and business circles.
One is F. I.'. ChadAvjek. who unrried a
daughter of R. K. Winslow. a large vessel
owner, Insf February, and settled in Clovf
land. The other is K. M. Grant, who was a
eand'dat" for the Senate in Clarion county.
Pa., two years ago, but who moved his fami
ly to Cleveland last May, being now .secre
tary of the Crucible .Steel Company. Both
Voted the Republican ticket at tiie October
election. Grant wis arre-ted. but Ohail
Avick had not been found at latest accounts.
The Board of Directors of the Pennsyl
vania Railroad resolved on Monday t ) de
clare upon the capital stock of the company
out of the profits a semi-annual dividend of
.". per cent, and an extri dividend of 1 per
cent, cleir of State taxes for th-- purpose of
d'Mribufing a portion of the shares purchas
ed from the city .f Philadelphia. The share
holders have the option of accepting the ex
tra dividend of 1 percent, in scrip convert i -hie
into stock at par when presented in sums
of ,s.ro. provided Ihat the privilege of eom-er-ting
thr serin into shares expire December,
L'l next, after which all serin outstanding
will lie redeemed in cash at its face value.
Ivory Simpson, aged eiglity-seveii years,
of York, Maine, has been the father of
twelve children, six boys and six girls, eight
of whom are iioav livine in various parts of
the I'nitcil States. He has twenty-nine
grandchildren and twelve great-grandchildren
and reads without using g?sc. Dur
ing the past summer he has regularly risen
at four o'clock in the mot; ing : in the season
he mowed and raked hay every forenoon,
and Inter employe, I him-elf "topping" and
harvesting corn : and he drives the cows to
pasture and milks them regularly. Mr.
Simpson -anil his wife have lived together for
si.iy-oi;e years. Mrs Simpson is seven yeais
y.' unger than her husband, nnd still retains
full charge of the dairy, and attends to all
ordinary ( (fairs of the household.
Samuel II. Kverett was running for As
sembly in Putnam county, N. Y. During a
discission the other day as to the probabili
ty of liis election, a in in said : "Come, now ;
I'll bet my watch against yours." Mr.
Everett pulled out an old fashioned, flat,
well-worn time-piece, and replied : " Ml, no ;
'' even if I wasa betting man I wouldn't make
a stake of that watch." The leason was
peculiar. Thiiteen years ago he had not a
doilar in the world. He paAvned that watch,
and with the money started a little ten-cent
, eating house on the Avest side of New York.
He soon redeemed if, and went on building
up what is now said to be the largest rest an-
- rant business in tlie country. He is the
wealthiest man in Putnam county, and en
joys carrying his entile original capital in his
vest nocket.
The Chaiv.bersbiirg Volley S),i-it says
that Gettys Mullen, son of John Mullen, of
Loudon. Franklin county, by an opportune
; but serious attack of sickness rece ntly had
1 his life saved. Three weeks ago a fe.it ful ',
collision of trains occurred on the Pennsyl- .
. vania railroad (with which Mr. Mullen' is i
connected) at Pitt-burgh. Mr. Mullen had
been directed to take charge of one of the ,
trains ns conductor. While waiting at the .
Pittsburgh depot he was seized Avit h a severe ,
j spell of sickness and had to he removed to j
his bed. Another employe, named S. W. 1
F.lliott, took his place on" the train and in
tifteen minutes thereafter the accident ne
1 curred, and Conductor Kiliott, with more :
. than thirty other nersons, was killed. Mr. :
Mullen is iioav at. his father's home in Lou- ;
fien on a leave ot aoscnee.
i OktOi t I)(vks. The lisf roii(iiKnieiit
. of all factory win k, oJa-cs t!it otii-rativcs pnl
; liil faces, iiir ai;ietitcs, luimuiil, miserable
; fi-rlinps, jMnii- IiIihmI, inactive liver. kMiicy
ami urinary trnuhlcs. ami all tlie iiliysieiaiis
: ami mciliciiu; in tlie vvtn lil caiiiiot lie'lp tlicni
' unU's tliey tret out of iliHirs or use Hup lit
: tcis, tlie jmivst ami licst If-nieily, specially
: fur sm-li ';ases, havino aluiiiilam'-e of liealtli,
. sunshine nnd rosy cliceics in lliem. Thev
vi k t 11 it. it tiiflt . See aaoliicr coluiQU.
i CV'iiii'in Uti'jd dir.
S.H.VIs.: v Teu-KM. MvsTI'fY. I..VJ",
J. r...-.'..y livi d wh!t Ies wife near L'iingioi.,
i hatau. ia county. N. Y., in ls7-s. About !
eViiM k one night in July -f that yar he
moused a neighbor's family and told them
he hud p-turned home tr.u.i the village aiioid
in o'clock. The lights in Lis house were
out. As he entered the door be was nt-taci-:ed
by two men. They dragged hml
into the yard and heat him t" iincouscious-ess-
When lie reci:rod he found that he
had been robbed. lie s.id he h i I l-eii in
his house, an-! he w.-.s atraid his wile was
lnurdeied. Tiie neighbor went with Crosby
to his house. They ioan-1 Mrs. Ciosoy dead
in he;- bed. She bad been h,-a!t n lo death.
Cri;sb si,i that ti e house had U'cUlohoed
also. "No tr..-e of the aie-ged pel p,-t : i-.tois
of the i ime co, lid ! foui'd. Mis. t 'eb"s
life was insured. The cii .iiuis'aheo. i.iiend
ing her murder cao-.-d ispiciou to rest on
her husband. He w as a 1 1 1 -'cd and lodge;
ill j iil. I le W is tl led h's spring a i 1 ae e.iit-
ted. lie retuineil I. .:ic". I lie f'-epng
in
the lieigh'.orhoo.l st i:i w
sthat he w as guilty.
few
v Br
ii
lit:-
a
a barn (clouding io
.ggs. a la
ighoor i f Cruviv's, was
w as pli b Jy the work f
Hole without. dat or i x-
burn-.- 1. Tiie lire
an i:ii-eniiarv. A
na' ore v
it was ;
loiind pi Ha d on a It ! la-.o- in.
.-sed to Jas. J. Crasi.y. It read
'Yctir j-ocket book is under
hunk at thecuiiei if Wheeler's
lH
as fioho v :
i! oiio or
wo. ds. Your-, etc." The wrong was in a
disguised hand. Search wn- lie.nle for ti e
iH-ket'KMik. A day -r so at b-rw ar-ls a w.ii
I"! wasloiilul in Wheeler's w oods i-e.der a
large maple kind, it wis the Mickerliok
tha' Crosliy said whs stolen from l.im i.y Ids
iissai'ants on the night his wife was murder
ed. '! he circu'nsiaii-e has aw akened much
intere.-t in the trage iy. it i believed !L..t a
clue has beer found t the murderer.
r. urxiifii." ;t svhip.
A pl a a nt. -ii nnil cfb-.-tnn I r-uiel y I. r V.' -nns.
K. V. Ivoitk i I s Worm Syrup urn n- ver kn i!i In
trait in -in jh-i-ne. I--srpn I'm, S--:i:. 'i'hr':el
iltai St.ltl;M-i W.ilitip. 'Il:i- I- ve-y p!il-i!al'ln
lea" "! v . in n rtM n-fn h' ).,rin. mtch us rl'il - Irn n : ! I
i-:i,c It is l-'l!t'!V At-K'-lM'lc 111 I- l-'l. : i ice.
' I pp-n:: T'-'I :n-:-tire . -I 'Z 1, - le- !;i t
1 in i
a etui
it
hie in 1 1 a I lieicenti.-al A 'In-Ill s ry
to s -l iil r. It I tl-' :l- I i V,.- rill'-' 111 f-s it lie-'I le; II I
t.ie.r li;l.-j"l..s .mil ltlll :e-.-.J'l.:ol!ia--li's oel tl
-irp.f tlfCMi i:i a ni'iif imh --t.(r;iTff 1 i! I rMi:itU l -rrii
lh:n in : rni'lf r.if N.i--il l'-v- nr n
i-A, .iwi-, n.tiiwit prihliii-intf t li'-ir.-i ril-ci
la ll'i.- Syr-ip I linn U.i :tcfjve n ot tli
i o-t t ti.M-rti il .-i;rmiUm''f, M'- frm thr unpicr. ,-,,
t .1 s: o -1 11 1 ih!r--. n ut'-re - iIah:-"! cfii;im in us
lit- -in. V.. V. K iiiiUclS nrm Sviuji ii' V-r In 1 1 - t
.:-:.. v nil lui'i!;. . f V'.riii. ( !:. Kni U-l i- il.r
n-a! .- ici f.-t-d p!i; - i'-i:' n l" r--til v s 1
ill IW;. hini!. :lhi Willi ll'VI'l. .Ili'l HO I"
W'.ria
M iif ' I r-
rni-i l
)-r.tv . .
re n" t ll
;n.p-:-n Is
I- h.'H it.
!e V--.! ). A '-.inineli v-,.i--0 te.irl i! T ij
l --iiieA't-tl, ill et her w :rrns r:oi ler'-itli! 1
A il ici" r.l oil:;--ami l.re lo-i-. "I a- li--l
Afc lit-li:T l.r fi' -t
I le n- e t-T ''-riic
r A I :. litre's llllil i !'
a-i- il;, ia J.i.'.y i
lts. Sjni-ei :, ('r,
Sil!"v ' implex i
i'l illl-l l';.ol ill
- r:ini oik el I in- I
l--vi-r. ilchilll; .ii
t ;.' pntit nt ur-.w :
I.i; ."ii in i '" ;i l:e
ccin-. I'-'.tl Her--.
-','
I
t r
i r i ' 1 1 1 1 1 1
K'-ri',. .
. K.-ft ;t--..f- :it NiL-h'.
.Hi.
i In-
n . ');iflt . ! iit iTfiii h.
f !n: --till niuri-.
, , .: i i
.1
K. K ii nfc !' Cam yroji
1 'niT, mt : ii-.
i Key I jij t- iTin- iriTe
Mt. HT' l i! i::- it 11 t.
.1.. N. Nil! tli -! . 1 'i.i .
r. S-llfJ tiiTVU-r.'ii . i-t-iliii..
!:f--. f r Iiiis lii r- 'ituvi' t Ii
l-l si ll'illli'S : ,.- S-V -I.
:i ml i-eli-iii i I ! i 1 1, en : i
1 i till W I"
i-l In 1 1-: I'.. V KlMI
1'... A.Ia i'-.- in ..I. 1 .
E:. 1 . UuDkvri I!it1T Whit? ff !;-..
A sim 'un itr t; -M'ji.t r 1 i-I i j.-t Uhi. Wt'uU
:Iiii;.ti. i Ii'n.r 1 I' t.!;;ji. I 'i-. .("- n( ti;c 2tT
tii.s S i: v;i. 1 ii 1 111-1. A'-i iit ! t !"- S:tii;:-lt.
;ii; T.irjtM :- r-j;ii i T; :i tni'. !-iy :.;'
j-iinri' 1. . th ni'Hj'-v r-!'ni'H!. A k i-r
hnnki-I IWIfrr Win ot Iron nti'1 !;ifcr imitriter.
1 ;! r . t : I . r f .' It -tur tiriiie-
l:;-: !)"- in.t I'm; ::,-ti.l t' ti." i'P'jini-'-.T. -j.'.j
X. N in-'-i S.. I'hiln.ra. !'.. A I ' -o ir-. Kn.-.-w-c
:'. r' ;: s tri. -fh -t I '.1 !i fc. V! lilf-r. S ! Airt-nT
: I ii i ;:i(.-Klii!i St.t f,;i!Urji. i .i. 1 11-1.-1 111. J
tor t.rowa :KKSOs nr l!i l.innirrst ( II1I.!KK.
rc tlie oM iiiifl .siitn
lr. riMfrN Sitriitsr .irmlnntl vr.
I -:m t' irf n v:'i T'r- t u-i v T vmir ,'i;il'V i!
mill in
! lie litl
il three i! ar I'l l. It I
" .- n. t -t a . -iv. l-i'l
a:ii-:ril .. nii-l -!'-t
,i;ni..,'ii,!.i iivs
-ti.ii i.ii--'. in ii.ii-
tl:!-r.r A ;M a -:'ei
h a .ii.' hi'-uhiii-.'". J r chic - I il A I
I.N 1 I H . I'ii licito-r Icia i.l.-
h
.ai ill Ill's. C!of,KH I F N I I M. M'M-
: Ki I ( :.A1 1'J.A I Nl'. IMICOI.H'. n-ttinu a n-l
cl A I -i-., i.i I ii (., . I . IV ii ! 'il i- :t liv.i , . -j -; a ,, i wi 11, ).
(i"i;ia:x sne.i.. sni i; vojihimi. si;kw-
l.l .ssM'ss. tu,, , ..lepliiitits e: I lie st'ini.c-. or
!i.Al.l.s.
I "lii-i . i-l s. :i t , i' I ' e fi Af- rr ni'l ( f fnin ru rc. 1 1
i- I in- i T r- i in n-n. ale! is -i''-"ln rtu-C'l . it
I'-. I'HVSK-i ." S..I.1 lv lia AHJtsi.S a, .il
sum i Ki.n-Kiis.
Ill) SI . o.V s I.I-onto K M O ." I (::'.; KS.
Ti.vy are i-h'iennl. s.if.- .-m-l .sure, "i el-.
Ii.-'o'. 4- N. Tlii-.l St.. fhilVra. l'l.
H f I.,,7'Me.'l's !"r -lii'- I, A" .N..1. i'l'KII'l!..i' Hil l
A . .s. U MiKiai .1. Ihio.. I-heii-hur. 1 l-J-i.-l 1 m.J
Na
:. -"1" .111.1 -il'. Al-lll S-tlO-ft,
I ' 1 1 1 1 .. I ) I II .1 I 1 1 A.
K;a1.
A'AI. I K-C
il hi -i. M ifi- i lay
The tr:l vellin-j- pilhpr w.l! Hi'l
lint t!
II "tel
It is
Ctl'l
'IM'IS
1 1 ,.'.
the miico lil-eral privi-i-ai Vr Their i-"-iM"rt
l'M-ilt-,1 in the I n. ll.P'i w: 1 : i-' M' I-' . t:f 111-: III-
:.mn--n!c!i!. met tie il:IIer-i.t K.iil 1oi:mI i
-ti-II ri - m I ii i rf - if Hi- ei t v. nr" -n - 1 1 v ncr
I.y -tr---l r;ii- i-iin-t
-c-r? sj ecvul in In-'-'i
nllv p:ls-:ltl! fi
,.-ii. t r tli
ve
It: .1 t.lc ci!
hi-. I.
Ii ir iiisiiim- or .';' a
Your p.i'.riiij.iiiL' re.-p- tn.i'
.Ins.. M. H-.'
rinhiilcli l.i.i, Niia. 1. lss.i.-ti.
l-.l.
MlllA ll.-lrniik I.-!'f- IVfoMi. the
icily I i-eiinirratic 1 He.-t rated N'-w-p '(-'-r ei'.l . -i. -.1.
Alll lie s'-al lio-t I'.i ' ier 11 . i W'C, fniilil et.i. !
i-;MlliiAia:a 1r 'I'll trl. T cf. .'4''iils '-int'i
iarAerv town. "'!-'l ciiil- t'T f:v T-i-k-' ynl'.
i-rrii'tien. i-r s cent- in j"'-t:ii:e -1 1 1 1 s Vr siini'-ie
eil - jin-t 1 i ii -I r.if i-i 1 '-if-! I"rie. 'in!:s el l'm
AVlIl ii- s, i,t live "eel.- fer I'lin ilMiir. A,,re-s
I'llAAiK I.IM.Il: IM Itl.lSIII44 '.. II
Ilej ii reft, Vork. l'-l.-iit.J
'Oal!irrnptlii frnsiiiciil (hnt remain,
l-l ltl.A) lo llt."
A History of tte CatMic Cimrcl
IV TIIK
IH0rLSLSOFrinSRnir..M).LI.EGIIFAY,
moM ITS
Kslahlishiiiciit to Ihe Trcseiit Time.
r.v
K.-a-. A. A. I,AMIIIN'(l.
Arithnr nf " Thr Orfrtnn' hrtrttl." "Mirrft Mnrria
tjrr." "Thr St'niiii r-Sl.ool Tru;hc;' Vt: nlii:!."'
svo..
sll I'AlinS. WITH 4 Frt.l T'AOK IlN'lillAA IXC.S.
fun ii. (tl.lMl.
Tliir work nnr:i'r thn IIIt'rv of t!i fntro.titr
tion f ( t lioi int y Into Wc-ipm IVn'ifylv.ini.'i, to
t Mr w it h : :! nci'iiH nt ff It tdc CiiMi!;i:; Tin-i.
iCKl.Kiioi --- Oi:rKi:s. ami Kit t ath x m. nnl 'iia::
IT.Mti.v: 1 NSTiTi'TioN. Ironi Hirir ft;i M Nhirif-n t tf
tlio vrotiit titrr; a lri kv!'h tit M'r. nnd lt-
hnr-s of tint lt.t-i-l H!-!HS Mini l'irif'.NTj OF THK
IMh ksk: Bihl in rp'tn-iti ol tliA irfcnt Tr'ni;th
rnt fti I ii rn pm-'j (! itt ttip i '!itmli in this purt f
tlii- StnTe. Tlie wholi T' upon tiwh a ltN of
civil history Is in'Cp.-vt jy inr a proper iiTitier
.triTiHii; fit'thf s 1 oot.
Tl;r res'-urf's at tin roini-:ni1 if tlio nnrlior irero
the tulift mi'! !it"t rIi-iol t'int oonlij h .low.ro l,
an1 in ntl-liton to c-ciuploTf t 1 - ot hn-W I'.ittmiir
pnpor. hi-turi'-- :ml tiiitjr:ph;pc. !i:i;t ;n:tl K,c
irtorr. Kr. ii'iTi.lHiir inAiiv thIiimIm !rnte
torn nn inn ntMrri pt. novrr hotine lml-ti -"hod. lo-
iilt.v" t lioxo. t ho n ut hor visit oi nojirW 1 1 t ho oh arch -:mfj
int i tut hui-i. n iii! colloctcil (n tlu- f"iHt much
vnlunhlo f i, f Tina tion.
A tin ?- I ioil to te the fnllo? antl moist
oontplete history ut jitiy fMirtion (f tho i'lmn-h ever
i-so.l in tlii! oouii.ry. nml n : m k of this ki
entail-4 (rrnjif l:lir. wlm h. at post. t nt poorly
paii!. it H I'.opoi! tint Iho !Vv. t lrj v. Institution.
nl all Thnt nrr Introistinl in hitortr:tl matter, fi ill
tn h;it th.r run to 1n.roMe the circulation o( the
hook. bi:h iy pnn-h;i-inif for thetn-lvt and re
oomnion'lmi? it to their Jrtehil.
lll.NZICKI! BliOTHr.IlS,
rrintprti lo the Holy Aptntnlic Sre,
Cnri-cs.ATi : TSkwYohk: St. Ixirts:
loin Slrrrl. .-.11 Hroadtray. fi: S. loiirlli St.
VAN DYKK'S SFLPIIUli SOAP,
1 pniicriiiT tn all other 'iaps. t a eeinMnrf with f
S'lliilnirin it puri-, nn:uliilTer?ie, Ftnte. whirh n-
; trr tlie juires el Ihe skin. Iieinij HlirerN-il into tlip
! Iihuiii tlirmiuh llii nnniitp eaitlrii'. anrl thu aetn
i npAin t n c Kin. wlmtlier it ne hpnithy or In a ilis-ens-il
cinilitinn. t'oth lfii-ally an,! renititi.inallr.
i thereby eliminiAtinir hU imjinritips frem tlm IiIih'mI
ntul eTi-itinif tlm "kin tn healthy a-tinn. It pro
lines a ftii;iu:s. jmrity Hini iroshxioBs ol tlm com
ileiim wdirh l unerjuiilicil, ami ran he irnluerd
: by no other li.rans. No toilet, nursery or l'Uthrooni
is eoiniileto willimit It. It muke flic pkm coft,
elar, iiirt. white anil hi-alihy : Is clpnnslnir. rie
' oiioriTiiiic, ijisinlrctinjf. six'thinir. Iienlttiir anil i-ii-i
nlyin: remove lnni!riill. eliafniir. lileer. fores,
I frnpiions, nmhnem ami r'lnt.'! nf the skin: re
j lleve. Itehinif, tmrnlna anil stinitlnff of the kin.
I ami Irritatinii et liitins ami Ftln-tnx inserts; will
Ti'llovr- lrr!iin-j: I'ilcs when notliinir cl.-e will have
. any ni-i-t. Ask lor Van Hvsk's ''Viriiru Sn.ir;
Insi-t ii.iui it. am! lake no imtntion. Sol.l hv ill nj.
iri-ts. Aehi'ii':ti-li fx. Miller. I'miTictorn. No. ai'l
; fallow lull Siren. 1'hil.i Jei'hia, Tn. 1 l-.,.-5y.
Hamburg Tea ! !
( ask ki nt i.yiir.iiKKs'R, my. I'M.v :i M ink.)
The Creat BLOOD PURIFIER
Anil rnr-jative. AThii li w kni.Aii to the tamom j
Aihl AriAlm.ll iihVMfiaii n earl? a thoinnrli rsn. :
t-.n-A-. is ail.i; t,
tion. V'eiiri!
In Ihe rel'-f ft l i vers, t onsl ipa- '
iiiihi-i. a-, nnioi .a ii j i-t it e. Iiriiji-
sy nun Meniori limits. It lias a i ei-lil.-i ailv.intn
rail other inira'i hiiiej leoi-c ttfri nih In
eluansin
out tin- sy.-tem, without lno'l-n-ini: Ihe
ii-4'iiii7.iii. arlpinir pains ami straininir which nc
! company the ai tio.i of other cathartics. IV hen Pi in
: pics or ot her sk i ii il iseases a to a 1 so present, ham-
pun the a lie. -it'll pat is Ihvrou-jlilv with Van 1a ke's
I Siili.linrS.i t;.. As, .n, .,),.,, ii v Ati'icr. .ronrii'-ter
31
ti.ii t-.;Ih'Wl;i!I St., Philiiil a, Pa. ll-6.-ly.J
fELEPiRATLI) II. II. IL MEDICINE
Prrsoi s allliet d villi aches ami pa n , n-t who
have not trieil lie- arrnt II. H. 11 . ie.ie1iie, ,),. not
know its powers in r-sinovtle pain, tfive i! h tr'al
f ,r hheumatism. Neuralgia, nml particularly Diph
theria. A sure cure lor horses sn iierm- wun 1. 'lit
er Hlooil Spavin, Poll Kvil ami 'o!ie. lie sure ami
ask lor the H. 11. H. Mcll'-ine, ii.anufai ture'.l hv
1. I . Touilinson. I'liilailelphia. as the poiilarit'v
ol the ;ame ha- l' l other p-ir'i'- t" put an 'u--" v
ailnie ino the innkci I'tarnn; the -amu UJuiu
Svitl hy UlU tsitU c. c; w ii.-re.
UL4
O
'iTi,l VOI R DM ACHE
l l inn :
iKi . Hik4Ui i;:rri-Ji tiiSJ.
II i- a HA KYI I. ..' II Hl.IX; a
sim r i, ;. .s ; .v s : l
M.v..ss, row i
iu:i:c
!r ' Tlll'SAvHyi-v Ml
It 5:i M.lTli: ! I.I.
K-iae. Ai Miei "i .!.r'--l a! I1
tit lias,, i-: set .ry 1 a. :-rri-i 1 a.
i.ur 111 mis el ).'i-'-!.-A trailih-!
dici--ts. nr sell! 'in le:.,l. nil
.' -K
11 1 I I
r ! I
A
. ,1-
Sell I t-.r
, S .Id l y
.,! fl-. e,
lit 1)1 p
HI.
A texo;
t 1 I hi- i-- 1
i iriiiirml n-l-i 1
Tl:. 'OnlvI.Rns Tatl (X
one IV I UAH 1 IA'. t, II II 1WV- IH.AjCk.
AK ! r it a n-l t
uti.er. IKTKIT.
13. ?! . LY.
:i 1
MannfcJtiror nnl Io:ilrr In
HOME A?1D CITY MADE
1TTH Mirri 7H T7
i
U I l iN s i u i l Lj
i. i f" j tr
L0liGHS. BEh-VrKAD-S,
TABLES, CHAIRS,
Ivlattresses, &c.
lO'i: KLKVTA'TH AVKNl'K,
!hlAV,".ii UiUt niA Kth Sis.,
Altoonn, IPeiin'cX-
r.;,- i-Mi'r
wi-h,r:: I-' '
l .ee -t i.i :.-'
..ill l.-l'-l:- 1
h it I i n n in
I'r. -e- I la- -
A!.."lia. '
!';. .s.e.. n t
" i.' i : - n a
us 1 i
: j.hn-
' evi-r-.
!''-!.
it.
-1 (.
.:Ci.i Vi':t .
(A -Medicine, cot c Urink.)
cont:.i?:j
Iiors ET CIir, 3UNERARE,
IiAMUJUCN,
As-CTTT Tcdv-T A3AD V Eirr Mkt-tc L Qc ALI-
tiij (inu, oiHti. BiTTrns.
A"! r'sraof ihr Jit ntn Pnwi.'!, Tliod,
Llrir. K ii utTi, !! l'nnnry irpatii. Ver-.
SIOOO Iff CCLD.
Will paid fT m r .? will pr-f r-irr or
iK-i. u; ior Bnyxninir i:i;ur or ijurtou
fuuiil In Uit-xi.
A!lc vonr drupefit for T!ttrs nr-! try
Xhcux bcfor yoa sleep. Take no oihrr.
D T. f 1 n io;utrr:rt rrr!itT;'rnr for
DrunkcuacM, ose cf opium, tobacco and
narcol:.-ft.
nSBBI Setd fob Cixtlak.
Bop B:tVr Mfr. C". Ro-r. S. Y.. It Trn
Guide to Success,
WIT!
! l i
OTrsTn ri sim;ss
'1 f."
HIP tU v .1.-
1 ykrd sociKTY!
l- isv f t ii
I sc. I H iiij Me
li t-l's !.,ali '
I HI. in :ii
IPJ'iV i (! I'll I.Vi 1.1 -l
, ,-.v f , ', -ir ii ,va
- c.-r . t v tr l .s.-e.
1! l-i
a.i.:vi h i i ? i i
'1
ti
tn
li. 11. s.'-
lie;:
v - i.
i .1,.. .
tfTTlit. r 'i
.!(((-:
A n-l m
ji'i;"t , i
Iifil IIj."a;
s-. .. Ai.-.tn Kn-
i Ac
ill '.la-
In l-l' r- nn -,. r-
t 1 1
uiniet i.eil ni'l
T-"rs,l., . c ,
cl 'i-k. e. v.. t.i ntt.'i
in ra I w le a a ia : 1;
siteii'l if tin y e i
in I.
.! t' ih- :ial
v nil csrii
el'i-r.
i I a; ! 'it
ii-'t-.l nr
A u i ! : r.
It!,.'
.1 fa I N
i: a Ns.
:!ii-fi?lu:r''. O.-t. :i
! ss ,
y FO!t SA I.K. Thr
r nt ir;v.i
Arrow, siicat'' ! ni t '; Ti,
Miii-'n-jim:;.
t' v" -n er,- -t-.;
vi 1 1 n -k. ;
-)ii. oi..- !mi:- Ir 'i-"--:i. I. in
! n I-ra- tu t.Ty t i:ik I'n i:!
I i.ank .r.u;.! , ::ni nil tirf--u
'I h'rc i - :i!t':tn :tlian.I:ui'c "i .ippl "
tn yWw'y of u m.l ;it r r
l "i: T I'll . : . n
j - i r u: 1 lui:i
M T!:r pm;. ;-'.-.
M t iii;; 1 v U ;
Thi.- j'rt'Tlv i ih- nl thf lf.-t
the jiiir',-.r-; of . p'linmor Ttrt.
ni.i'i-verA lire; ; tn "ie. It i i I he ,M
!'l
tain nn.l on easy ir,or;r-. l-.-r lur'l" r i,f. r
li"n i- ili n:i er ii'Mro-s v -r. aIaiiiikm. Me.ii.
('iitnl'l'i.i Ce., 2.. el n:,!,lv t" tl.e i a :,e!.
Miis. AI.lA i: SMYTH.
Ansr. vv. Isf i.-;-,in. I'lkeM., I'm.- .i.-ti.
Hini' i:i: si:t.i. Asi i;i-.NriAei! N. I 1 i.i.v.r.'?
FAMILY CHOCOLATE!
An nitiele e'ctior In iiinlity jnul nv In iriro
lliiAn uv et I'it in I 'to r, arkel. A r,'i,i ;ii, r,t a :;,
rxjM ri-n-i il New Y erit l livieiiT. itivi-s ,: .
ojHiiii'ii Heit i-h":"latp i- ,re--rn!
Iie,-iin-r il :i,i.!fi sr, riiitfi to the
tlie CAi:fi!, linilli. minis the
lianii"iiiz:-s tlie AAnrkiiiirs 1,1 tlio
mvl tin-- t.'i'itv :' I-:. .ml.
I- lii te i nr r M-r-iv.
ie w li !- to
ln-l oils s stein,
iliesjive i'ii:aiis.
Fur a pi.e-tir,i-ciiili-i-ii'ii. ?A-k A'oiir eiiri v-t: -:-rr
Inr v--r Sweet S.!rel Y!,il! fhiWato. s( ! cn
liaeli .s. Miller, S.l ami a i, whnl S;s.. 'i,:it a.
' ruinvni r rrf'-.
SiO to 6125 Month.tllUltjLU;'LUi;-i
Urf Tk r r- lw t-l forn-
I.-:
IAWV I V iUtn
I'-n. r-ir:i.-
YOUR OWN p"t-
LAWYER
f'M ;( il otic to-rfi, c
ai t
.ir nii tcru.i.
A! ) I.i : f r. 1 A?. V a,
I. V . ZiEGI-LK i CO., 1.0-0 t. h f-t.
r'ail'e, Po-
Ni:v Di.i'Ai: ri in:,
liooks Sita tio:n'ry.
Till! un.'.ers
:n! li
:te S.
i- lu-t i i'orii.i in
Tei'vlt'.-l II :if .- St i!-(
: u i'iM i:y. a;
I IN r'l'.A ' !!' NV:i;i !
fnrrw'
. :. tnil
-. :i l-.l
S. N.i .
1
linn i.J l!i M IKS nri.l S
ot elioi. e f M".l s. A
I he i'rir..:ia'i' i
fe'leite'l. l'l. I; lis l.e
I t!
pr.l'.'C is ri-H-c-!l elly
.! 'Slll'H
r All AllAVOH.
t'liiTollliiwn.
I let. s. vvitt.
;EX
xi: ttoiis- xoTici:.
,ii...-.t
l.-tl-l testamentary en the e-tnte ef.la!ei-s MP.
l-.n tfv. Infill Suminitviiie l".r. tij h. ilcriecil. Imv
iiej U'l-nrrnnii-'lji'i tin- inel-r-im-,). .eri!n m-d-liteil
to :i i estate a r- reeee-ii I to leak - ii-ei.sM-at-
iiayment. mul tliese lavin- finite H-:- ii-t the
saino will present them !- ( rit aiitlu-utirnx-l tor
se.ui.'lllelll. -l 1. M, h i:.A. t
JOHN
, l-. t. -J7
li.
l-lei a"
Silliunltv il'.i
. ISs
'. 'jt.
AD-MINISTKATIOX NOTU'K.
KtiAti- of .Ioiin T.A-Ar. ilf -Vl.
l.i-ttr or nflTnini'trstinn on il
ot .lohn
T.eaii. late o ashiniit-n townl:ip.
mo(i. hav-
In- l"en 'jriinti-.l te the nn.iersirtu' I. n II
i T ' f f ' ' 1 'ii li .'.;.; . at rjre heli;lu- If'!'!
l-er"llS
:ln- Tl"f!l-I t'l.-.l
e. 3in,l tii..-'- li.tv
!l i-rt-sfiit tlim,
llirnr.
inuneiltate j. iviM-nt nin-t he tna
inr flaiins .i jaipit tl.e i!ti f w
jireiierly auti -iitiratr 1. I r settji
IHiKttTH Y 1.1. A.l
Washington '!'.. (-t. -22. l
.Vlrninistri-t! ii:.
Dr. Ware's Pulmonalis
is i:i,te.,.,'ori Fior.i w in iM-ewlii nave ai-1-:! it.
tn-eans it il.- ii k qm-kiv nml eticet-nl'v i ri
ease of fotiah. 'oli'. Ho nr-tms., l-liu-iiA,
Asthma, Pio.n-iiiiis. Va lioei ne feiih. a rn p'
Pain In the lln ast. '"ni'min i-n. nml i'.lc . 1 1 uu
ot the I,hii i-s. (in.. lo cent n l-eii;,-. .kv..ii'
rlrnu-.MSt lor it. WI:,,;. -ui,. li. p.,. ,. VV e..r' r.r l
nml t iiiloKhjli St.. I hiia.i'.i. Pa. iv4.-'.-1 . m. -
OTITl New. f srBryi ai Crls .'
1'iii pinil til l! I A HW IN-
. s ierd 0 cenr Inr l'Ki rwnt.
li.i' " Kr!T R AIM EKOAVAf. Ij..,11 Mi..
ART NT.? WflWTm FvritYtvHFur i, , n
th. (...IV 1.
tl. feimr-. mi:h 111 I I. r.,A frtf. .si ' ..
Vllninini..i I . . . i i .. t f T' .
.-...,... v m -".ii IMJ RIIH n r.nni Vd'l
v. 'irk I r w nif o i li r- am;,v1. , t , , 4 ?, ,
( f nil. A -
! ir si .1 . '
". . I
l I"! I in
i IN,' I n rmtl v
Mua Uiae Ca.!
13
I
A. Ji ' W
f.??;.! VYKT,OH P"ttl tor Uicm,
-'X.S,lt let and Scroll Pawrop, Tnrt:ir,
Y-'.- "C W Borinf, rn-Ullnf.GriivljTn, P.-ilihiDg,
': -53 Screw Aittrn. 1-riee f & to
01 -.:V'
1 ,i.r-I ' t-ASt '
-V l J-
, r-tx.-s-
i'!t:' shy A iJ'-TUlP !f;. .,t 1 1.
ri Is s I 'A i l-iv. -!
liiJiiS IilimiilM; J' '1' ii'v.
ii di'.im s iMi) . -
' l' nr.A AT s 1 iiipi -,'.r ...
..i.- t',.,t i-i. '
'1 it n-a -;n& of I t si i f ( o i ; A i 1 ! a - -
-il Mil REf-ijrs no n.
i'oc't ii : -!i '.::: :
-' A ., : I :. I iiAlitt Kf.t. I ! j ; . ,
I II. !::-.
.-s..i.l . .ai... .... . -
I'l icc. -2.oo, ' :
C v-r I 1- 1 - T)
.'Le'Oi.lv'Lir..--
T il- til. ::i ' . 1 ' --' - 1 . , 1 ' j 1
-rbrr-r mil. aaimi.a,-. , .,
lions a 1 (". r. - t
tree. Il"-'- . . i IH I IM-i 1. t ..
8EUEHS'
COl'flH
SVMT!
-10 YEAI1S TIIE ! ; 1 1 ;.
l'i"ici:'!e-, ! i-y :!! i-, !. ; ; , .. : -.- .
ant r:ai T.l i : - ...
f, .! t ;;" ( 1 11' (....:,-. , .
ho-.j-s'!." . t .
V 1 ir if i 1; ci i ( I- i -. -
Tf ls ; -,v ft I -i T - ;
it "lAcs i.-:: -r a- i ..
in. avi I to pr ;'. lu-ti. 1 : - " ,
fr'i'.ii 1 Ve i " '' ' s . -
1-A all Di I - .:'-:.;.;
sr.i.i.r.i " i ivr.i: i-n - ;
ly ie'-'iniir.c:i'!'l fi i i il'7
eo;i -1 " J : t : ci, si. ',:.",..;,.'. -, .
aial nil ij .):-:. ,( .
Si. I I I.y all Iiriic.i-1- :.;
J. Srller A- Co.. I'His'trrn. i'.i
I ."..! t 24. IsT-'.-ly.
jj.semiBiGiiii
- i)i:.i.i.i.s
Dry G oods.
Fancy Goods.
CLOTHIX
'.GllOCERIKS, c..
CAUKOLLTOWN. 1",
NEW GOODS RECE1VD WEEFJ
AM) U,V,1VS,vi.;i w ;n-
VKI1V LOW" I r i lli- I
' e- ' I'viD r :: or : -i
II i't II ! rn i;ooix .ii e r- nt :.;--.:.
.?. v . s'l -!! a i a-.
s;-r.;.; e ..'.'. . . ' ; s- .-
STRICTLY m mill H
Will I ifCiiiiA.tL'L wlir.:i
OF EBENSCUnC, ?A.
B ! 1 !
"i m ' 1 1. Ijifian -
1.1
rt
Cii'v Tive As(vs;:
i I i ; !i! i :
NO STEAM ?a1!LLS T.KL'i
Good FARM PRGPE3TI!
GEO. M. KEAI;K. Yj-.-L
T. fr. ;)Ci'. Scrrrlufr.
l-.l'ClV
urt. n. r:. is
T?TT7TnTTnT?T7"C Villi
CARL RIYINIUo,
: Practical WaicMer ad K::
EBENSBURC, PA.,
UAS fthv:T on ! r. 1:.r-
v.rt : :-f . t W A i . 1 - '
.H.WM.KY.srKl r.A' I.1 . 1 i :
Kc. whi -h 1:o rfcr 1 r : irt r ;
i my her d-'.-iK-r in 1 1 - c"r y. 1 ' "
' ar. vt h; ire ii Im f 1 in w : ; I ; . . ; : ; fc'
t'PtT1 I'liT'f'isir.i- p!'"t'wt.'.'r
Prompt at -n m i 1 . - '
1 AVairLe?. .lpvrlry, cM H":-: t J . : " - - - - -,
tccd in t-t.th w-Tiv n 1 i r-T.
.1 1. i t. i-i k:sTi i
! WIIITElfibV LiHSHD Qll
" MIXED PAINTS Kv:
tfl"ll R stf fi'f'l' '
; Vfi.V'.irs, in iUVtsUii'i, kf.it;'-'-
l'l "IT V. N I liil. t.M
I Varnish and Faint Brushes
! A;r A Ft i t. iia: er
' 1'IXIJ '.;; I.."' M -V '' '
t'lieaper tlian hca wii.-r - cl-i ii'. t '
' HENCH, THE P A i T E r.
ISIh Avriinr niti l tl Mtcel
' f-l ALU X N.. l'A-
CIDER Ml I.I--
! 1 II i T ' 1 tl l i I Vt V l'l K I -
Best Cider MM
IN Tin: ( orM
A nl a n v Tr ji -I ! t ' i
Y,:l CfiT'ii! 1:1- in'c;'-.- :
my r.1. f .tiM : - : i -
ORDER EARLY IN THE SH!
tiuc 1 1 me with t:.i nr ; n. : . j 1 i' v
(.Id. IH'N T' 1 '
tt'onshnri;. Ar.. . 1h ' -".i.
Efetot Fire zm
rV. W. DICK- (
; General Insurance A9e,;'
i:r.i:.si;i J'A.
1 Policies written ft ( 'rt i'i"'-t sn (t
i OLD RELIABLE "ETNA
AtMl nlkrr l lrl t Iti ! ''
' n-ensl urr.ei't.iJ,ls.-J.-ly
' Tt)HN Ml'liril V. . -
fj rilVSKUNAM'M l':
I ifliee in l-.i i! lii s- rc-rnl'A .v.
Ke in. n 11..'. --I .- ' - "
;.!" -.:. : , i.i . u..-. .
m i--..- l-.s . re.