! I !: V4 EBEMSBUnC. PA., FRIDAY. DEO. 3, The Con it U Quftri's Hewt, sMin In Uut'rtn on Fri l.iy -.tit, r.rptint'.l t!i. 2d.h of D-f ret"f ac the 'i.iteti.r Jie ccraninooiEC-nt f tr.e tr'.p.t? cf P.trf.ri: fend tbe ctv.er Indict-! ! of mi'iiX'z rf f'.e Lar 1 Lcr.rv.e. j ; Ir Cvtt tr.e Br.: -'i government k. .-"), or ' i.V.OOO, to i irv.-.l ti.e fall crops of Boycott, tl,e agent cf r.i:.l Erne. In May. covrity, Ireland. Tt.-j vvik was dune by a body of Oracle-men uti-Jer trc-nml'itary prctsUvi. T-iK II.'la.U'rLu .ore', b; yap'r in tbe onutry f r ibe pr f.r te.e Kit -e, laa'r.ut r.a .t-i a very :it- :d b.t? lie V ll an ertire lie- ihcs tractive a;.peru;ite daily c;r:a!At-'. of attertir.g V..:-.' iti ?.: :nd P r;.o leSO ' a:'.y ; .(., ;u undantly ;y, e'it I'i'pi i-i'j and jro- not:n-ed !.ideper.Jei.ce wa appreciated as tl.ey deserve to V.e a:.-.l ore nntet'ng with their proper re w.rd. We re clad to welcome t the ranks mut i'.rro;:ial our RrahaV.e friend Oeo. F. Kribbs, tie C'ai. o'Td, one of the !iiu:ted country bos", paying and best cc nr-svspnpers in the Jig gc-i.tloTiii:-. pers . row that he has with Mia Martha vil'e's fairest uja; stt-.te. (.ieortro is a Ui-serr-:.na'.Jy and politically, and into a lifo partLershlp P.odt,er, one of Broh-;:t-rs, there will probably --tig : 'he price of cribs of t? an va e f rt; P.noti.er k::vl. In:, j-'-c-r gross wili c Mr. H.iy, ' wl 1 deliver, ate i:i h;m ; aJ;-rd.-.! a:: 1 j-.ir'v four r.evidvnt.:-.! ioei'.t at: ! rv ed ti it, knr A fc.d-v; f the To: ty-a'xt'a Ccr.--,mt;.-!:o- on Monday next. .4s i,: -.;' .i- stIV. he t'.o t o;c he vo;.ld t '! cnil:: ni'v ar prcrri- t'.e opporturtly thus .ek::owic-d that for J V.L. y.v. :s he I..;; phtjc.l the rart of a iic.po-b --. He has a -ted as Tics--g'ilatly drawn the salary attaeh-.-.vir.r fall we:! all the time that he tit v e r v. f.'e ir'-l. and v, hat he has fared fro.c hi.; C J, oil,;: tf :i;n;.- . .ary, h jil J. Til itim-.b-I to amount tol"0, .! itc'.y it le in tbe packet TU! lack . ei ... : liro-v. e-.l iff niuie 'J-.i:; ThoO timi o : s'.nrh Pis.'-V-.-h has a violent at f '"). T. 1-:. Mo.-re!iea.d, of .Aigh.-r.y U S. i.kt.T. if., -ceh-ad, hke is a re:to-i.le. Dei.i.ocrat, and suppcrt cdoy in 1 again-1 Oraet, whom k forei'nt'. than po'.it.-ly denotinccd as a hen loaf :r," or w .-rJ-, to that effect. .1 C.r-.t.t cr,o tins ineidoii wo a ;.v y reco..eJ 1 the J.diustown Trt i t or.an, takes open ? f . . r.'l .op, -l 's can- tei as an i;:,nl atid -i "..".: c ; didaey. IV. will be the -1 d's not tra s i man car. den't. Crv 1 ::.;:. ti .-::ak'-r C.-.n.ey t t'f.t nt M.'o.-chr,d W.iihue. lie n crow d and .-rof :1 vv l'i ';-u in ::i the i"-i-t-i tak-j '.cca 1 a'.i'i'y, r. it p. urn-'.! . o.o-i oPiiie; .iem ..:-! our next bnri Dai ion to say living the tly entitle '."-r.eioui t : - ; ro-pe more than lih-p.ayed .li-:l i! C '..C! jy ar that teip !at--it io t n.. r:5 '.. L ,v i 'o'i 1.' i: 1 . th-T -of t .c'-I.Pe. M : .: v a," In on- i'. m:oe::i: ' t;e J' , . on; it, proprietor :i t .vo or three e.; s.-i-.r.c reason entir-; .. we re. ;-r. or h r if. til the el !-: . , :-.! .. If th- re 1 .' r. w'ii grr-,it: :ere-' rtu.r, t.oe Ing : o.'i::.-t-f th.- i.;;ri l::te ! 41.1 : Ha:.c D-.-.v. 0 10Z. -a ;. ! .. . r: ArSio i:. 1 tub--.-.-.:: ::. Ve t i . . r over J i ir. -. -the f. 1 o be ...I Stat.- at t.:e 4.1 .3.- We iver, -Tetai ).V- se l:ur.-5 a.e c-'-rrc t, or l-u. -a leg 1ha: in a p.-pul-r oil o..s ; Pinb l.i's plurality ..".. lid. isn't it. ihuuttin-e i: ri.voi'ifoVr.. -::: .:a: -.: ! evas proolaiming to that a:. 1 oi the vva When one' pa t ro: o i 1 el 1. !.! .-, - -. sa.-'P re! I'nal tie D the D.-n r-;! nociatie party is dead. .rv,:o rtviri a Presidential ip.t c again-t the p c.-. r and e Tovernnient repres.-uf : d by t. eol t" a".' of t its hor -- jr over e holders, a id v he e.l agah.st i t'.-.c t men! d r w-r all bcndre.l tho-i-.md effhe- a h: mer..h vr-r th-. it has arr ay lueuee cf th'i when the Democratic ratty, we say, c.-mcs cut cf s-ich a t r.i a '.uii.i I sho-v-i ti-a aud -an.! votes. ; ar.d tha Demc: sn-1 cr.: :l cf Wf.c. w- ll vo tl d anywh. t-a-f- I hnt 8C5S th-2 :'.. u I'am. of : n. 11 -u, r cn bA gv Ar ! ve - :ch r-art- i to Weh to p d. to a ; e f the p aftre nr ptr-ou A dicer.so was oprlePjr of a f.t n, but was sulv lhre Ce-inn:ission-ia. cn the ground TVious Washu.gtoii c'rv 5 at,-. S'pKr'ly r-o !;."lhyi'. T, f rs c f o Dh-'.rh ' cf Cobr.nh that nn-ler a ral- - r.i -pi e.l by the-) tt.ev can X grant a license fo a person r.f't and wi to s''.l ;;.pi r, u rrires the yr,:.t ir.ii in w i.i-h t: c-.ri 5. 7 a !':. (.. in the Grtma:i ton and the ar u'.ess te petitioner for b;pr t.t ' the owner of the build e hoil'-r ii !o ho f-,!d, err hut W.' hiker's s P.oo-a is located legation building atWashing pl'.eation for the itcerr-e lia-1 been signed Py Bar-T. Seii'o-7er, vvhojoccuptes the building and is the Mriister to this coun try from tie-, many. In vain did V.'elckt-r try to get the C rr.mit-iot.ers. to relax the rule in Ms favor, which they stiiboorr.lv- insisted must be H'ei ally complied with, and now be fore Wel- ker can lawfully supply his cus tomers with strong drink he must present his application l earinj th.e s'cnatnrp of th.e Gor man Ihnpeicr. exec riled i y himself, 'i'i'.is he ! tvill oh'.rtiii as sv,.--r. a- pe.,:PJ,.. j No risr., tess to w hi State Inr.vli l.l.rUarlon r f the utter abj-ct- .i-h Republican itif-thods in this i.b'.y !rad oul.l he wanted, ti.an le of two candidates for the t-Cire thf sr c.-t i'- cf Chief Cork of the m. it House at Harris- burg visiting ad toe Bep ub'dean counties in ' the St at. 1 n. t ; a personal appeal to re from for their votes i" as. Oae r-t there pa i n .rry Ili.b.n, of Phib -. a;.!. .1 by J -,. Sender. ? i. fj "i "V ' ' ' -1 iii' !r. the 'rstii-.g cav trl .rs i, tl-e r: adcirhha. who is n"" v r... ! :- vo ex i! rer of tho House fro.rl th" sa..,e city, who wad no doubt share wl.ate .e; tie ;e is in the cfh e ia th' event of H-jhr: 'r ' .::. Tw years ago this satwe Jlohn ws c'-'ik to the special comm'ttee r f whtc'i th: .t nu .i d statesman, 'Llsh Davi, aleo f.ora Phi aihlp'eia, was chairman, ap-j-riiit-'i! to investigate tiie loss of certain tones from the irtaie treasury, and the per fect looe:ies with vviricia Huhn raided the treaaary in the shape of lulls for traveling trd hj'o l i ivpeiises was something that was as cod as it was unprecedented. Tiie ottier arphcant Is M'ajor Jhnil, of Allegheny coun ty, who Is rept e.-etited as being a very rthTer nt man from H uhn. If he is Lis present po litical r ;!e:'rna.gf? drags Lim down to Hahn's !vel. He is a fool who in thcfe Bepublican nM s :rp'.- -'- that t"P oric e-as tn rraii. tr F-r? 1 ' p ir 11 ! A given OarfieM n majority over Har.oovk tt n fit.l. and rlrnr'v show, as the Wcwii hi-.ve i tiut tt Stat w.u Kst to n.u.ooek In thut.va Cit'rstf New York anl lltookljii. Tbe in- j create in tlis total vele of the State over that ' Cf XS-.t is S3. 442. Tte Inciease of the Demo- ; crat'.e vet ia tbe SUt over the vote of 1S76 is otiiy 12, IT-', wl.ile the Republican increase J is or In tle proportion of Jic. to cn. ! I'.r.t liat is stl'i ciore fingtilar l the fact tlat the tC,X7 ii-er. ase lathe Republican vte, j 45.i"K.0 t! erecf i in Xc.v York and B..-vk!yu alone. Hr.ii cock's vote in Net York City exceeds Tl) leu's oi.ly ttn thoin.l, wLile bis a over TiU'.cn in Kin tea county (Urook- The ofr.ei.i! vote of tiie St at -f Sew York I lyn) is only t.ree fiouaanl. those are very siuificant Sanrc-s when Tve coniidcr tl.c im ! uienet rpjristrat'.oii in tlics? two Democratic : 6troiigbo:d, w!:ich foi tified the H'crM r.nd ! tie loading Dcinocruts in predicting a major 1 ity r both of t'liem of ?0,000, wherms it tui::ej out to be ouly 50,000, or .10,000 les. How is it jc-sib'.e that in New Y'ork and . Brooklyn, wl.ore tbe msss of the Democratic : w U-r.i are laboring men, that there could be : &;i bo'.iCut Increase in the Republican vote in ! four yesrs cf 4",Ot;o, and an Increase in the I Democrat- vof of or.Iy 13.;0? Brooklyn, : or KiniiS county, elects three members of ' C-ncress. and it i shown by tbe'rct'.irns that ; while the apgrepat majorities of the three 1 Democratic candidates amount to about 1V ooo, F t in ockV ma'oi ity is only 9,000. The j investiiration ir.bi this tie.Tson most foui Is 1 still going on, audit Is to be hoped that tho ; Pf-onndrcis. vriio bnniht about Hancock's de ! feat to uloerve th'r own rrrsonal aims, will i yet be unearthed and exposed to the Licmo , cu.tic p.ie and scorn of the country. "On ! f r fv tor!'-.? t-i :arfl tl:-i rl.iv) W hoe irAMin, l:k, x iK-roiiy ll:v,t. o-rc Cc r the bra-. AnJ s,t th :;eir 1 5?is vtoi: YoouHr.Es, of Indiana, is cied ited with the .st'ite".:n-i:t that th.e great Demo cir.lic mistake i:i the late campaitn was the d-'cisi-.tn of the Snpreui'? Court of that State re-i'.s'iln the election for State ftieci.s to he 1;. Id in i 'v-r. It vrill be r"Ji::ei,-,bered that ' at the last Spring elections in Indiana two or , three const. tuts-nal nicer, hncuts were sub . ni'.tttd to a vote of the people, for ratifh aiion or rejection, one of which cb.ar.geil tl-.o time e-f holding t late election from O. tober to wa declare-l rdeptd, but ' di-put' -I the T.iesthm was November. It. th.i? fact being Oirried to the S; iv-mc Court ami the dcis- in of that tributial, for reasor.s not necessary h-Te to liier.t lo:i, wa.i aaint the- b-gality of Its s.an-Hion by the people. The October election became, therefore, a legal necessity, and the Republican leaden at once sei-'.e.i the epp- rtmo'y t'e.ns presented of making tint State their Presidential battle-field. In diana be-Mine the camt. -ground, literally the Mecca, cf nenrly ever- leading, active Rc publtcati po itician of the Northern States as soon as Garfield was nominated money to catry on i:ie r,epu::ie.ir campaign, wn:ch f. meant the buyingof votes, vva- subscribed in tin Fast.-in cil i.-s b rich Republicans and w. a'oi.y corporr.t'.o'.s with a Dv'whness never hr-f.--re eoiia'Pwi'., and the result was the elc t'.on ' f th-- KepuMi-Mit S;ah- tiehet. Th-U wn.s the beginning of ii.e cn-h a:.-l ca.-t a dark cl-md over the hopes ...1 the p) onociMi-y of the I'tilou which ivi f.c.'-seqoent eiT.-rt on their part eoii'd ospe'.. The D-.-m craU in Indi ana who vv ere h,-t: loncut,.! in procuring this a.'t.on of t! At was the Co :rt were gui'.ty el a binielei 'an a erimo. Senator Vmr md the shadow of a liouht. rs t h- is rikibt h- p. G ( e: gre- irt'KKAI. . l KH, S'.'I sas, will be pre p.-re 1 - the rettir:: of th- 5 .-inter.. lent of the j submit to t'uii-j'Crvis-vrs in tn.e ;e meeting of that is sld, 1: )iVei'er, i -t-. rnh-o-d to rs r:it !he pas-'3i;e of or.ing tl;:- number -. s f..r 'he next oil n.ay 1 e cstah .li'.mlt to i-r.neeive different S: r, .on niier.t -dy cn M n.i.tv uevt. j : : 'a its hnve ?.r-irds vrev 1 at : bill at this t.'sii.-.n appo.-t: i" ir.ernher- among the r n years u:'i!sv the rah-) t' -le d. If tins is -, it is d even an rv -e for sc-h a coins-. Congress ih".". not ..i'.-trict the States, whi-h is the v.orii cf the State Leg:-.latiires, h-it merely es'ab lihes the ratio ef j.optdation en titled Ij a m -'.i' er, and thfs tlx 3 the number thai the II . s. Khali he : .p,----i . f. The wh" pro- cr -s pis!: ty :v e-f i is as simple ar. I as easy of . o.u '.on as a i -pi'.'-'i -'ii :;: division. N'or cart any p.r iv.rn'age r.cciuc, I'.u'.e-s it he in disposing e f:a:;i mi of population in some of th.e States, v i:i-d is etiti.ely too ins'gniftcasit a matter to be seriously considnied. If the Per e.bh'-uns s'jee ei d in carrying out their ti.icat, the i resequence w ill be that in many if the States tn which Legislatures will not 1 in fesvi on in ls--g, Pen!!ylv.tni being eric tig them, extra sessions whi have to be corsv-r.e.l to pa-s the Congressional ar-por-tior.rn-nt. To h . so would co.it this S'ata not lesb titan ?irivi.;.,. The Democrats in Con gress "navf a pl.-.hi duty to perform. Let them fix the ratio arc! the number of memb'-r.-i to which each. Slase. is entitled, aud if the F.epah.licar.s provc-nt th.e passage of the bill the country will hold th:n respon-iole f. r th" worse than b' under. Wi lr or tu t 'he soot e: n Statv s wi.l li-i" iti the ft; rrjlnrd by th.e cc-ntinue to la- I'oPtlcally ' -'.urc U a o-;c t;o ; t ; i.e del treatment o; t..e sontnern people I at. 1 his ad i-T-i-s. The South was lr. hi ; t M-Be'd iiced to Pee. rue "so.'td" purely as a matt, rot self-defence against the Corrupt aud pica Wing State governments put over it during the first f"Vr years of Grant's disgraceful administra tion, but having got rid of the last of them soon after Hayes came into power, there will exi -t no necessity for maintaining their pre sent anomalous politic tl statu, unless Gar fiehi him.-elf and the men who counsel and adv;i him bhudly ignore the past and madly furnish the excuse. On this question of a future 'So. id South" Senator Butler cf South Carolina, who understands Southern feeling and sentiment as thoroughly as any other prominent publto man in that section, in a recent interview said : 'The Tvl.ire .nj-'- n' th Srurh nre s .p.l to ?rn. r it'-n--ivi-a against t'.e nezro Commaoon wn'cti th Ka l"-' - .'t 'ip ivrr th"-. That is the only l!nm?ii.nte i.-.ue in tl, S.uirh. sn.l iut ?o Kmt: ss thr-ro Is a menr-.oc or poyinilirj cf ne"0 K"roriimnt beiie; re-lr-rd In the S.ejfh jost pa IcniTl.l her white population remoln solid. And n tii other han.5. put so ! n as we hsvc irnrn. f rom ntiy n-u h'.r.tiTe onrc. north ..rn Ksdicul nr le.rThrn lMin't.-rnt., nciiinrt a re-toration of ctry.-'t h l.esrro S"oe ir,jvernnunt. ju.-t s. soon will that ,.h. arv di.uvr, cn nr.t helere. It n PMrs tH me that ties is on tact nli.tut which the N'orth'-ra t -:ert eec !.t t.i :-vc heen convinced be- tlts. I.rr.'r i rnrirv.1 tA h is a.lvi?nrs show Se to- treatment "I t!:e s'f.n'a tht hs Jo-i not lu- t n 1 to rt:;.i.-r -::i l(- urh rl-'wrUreful State p..v- i " : i; mi r. ; h.ire h.l un lr q.lieal rjle. nn.1 i th: r.-trino'.-nt c-".i:- of our -.il-hty is rorr.ov-,!. ! W v ir.: r.s p-o-- t:-h t.ivprr'niTiij'in So'ilh Cnr - n. cr an yil.lMK l'k llicui, til l do not intend lo l.s-.v tl e-n." Tke Nevv York World says it is interest ing to be informed on good Republican an l thority that tf the Republicans sneeeed in or pe rs w'ni -!i thus ae-ume that ef the one hun dred and fortv-odd Bepublican RoDreseuta- I lives in tl-.e next Hon" not one wiil be found i who rvill v.'-i v- te with his party, right or j wroita, ani. ounce that r.o less th; f.ve of j the forty-three Den:ocrat!C Senators would i r.-f ;:e to act with their part v should its cause ! favor the unseating of Mr. Kellogg. Tk tho Critholic rf ineteiy at Brownsville, i I Fayetto cor.nty. this State, lie the remains of ! I the father and mother of Senator Biatne. I J.v.t week a monument, ordered by Mrs. ; Y'alker, a sister c f the Senator, was "placed ! over th.e remains. It is made of Richmond granite, four feet square at the base and t Ftp.nds fifteen feet high, both base and shaft. It contains but a single in-cription, which will be on the opposite side of the graves, as I follows : "Fphraim Lyon Blaine, born Fey- ! mary is, lToti, died June is, ls.W. Maria! Gille.-n!.-. wife of Fphraim Lvon Blrdro, born j May 21'. tM, :ed Mivs, Jf71. R -i-.-t ' at 1 tn face' talUZtllg til? next House they will Proceed vennr lefties are non.a'n -kv!le. n.l tl.ee wr, i -.-'.. . ' . j .... V ' to steal itbodilvbvthe eimnie and easy Pr- t.T aea whet-.er th. decree, were hem en'roreV. ! -, lo I po iilt- i vr. -L . - niv I , is, rf ousting fourteen iawfc'dv elected Thv touad th.msejves tn th. cr.ld-t oi a munbor i ,12 r'K But they have a six-year old i 1'emoeratV Cor-nemen from C, iherneon ro:r... and p..!leemen. The former shouted 'A . daughter that weighs 3.0 pounds, who Is I 1 !, .,' ,r '' o. r , e Ti r 1 hs.. I.c. ! A t.al calotte: Abas iominicin. i' about as tall as other girls of her age, but i t.'W'nete- Of ccure ftom a business point, j ur.e of 'he yen8 Udiea. ra-ried away by youthful ' measures eighty-four inches around the l : of view this womd be n direct, invitation to lmun'.ne. h.nted : 'A ba le; decrets r wherramn ; AJ l.w ' ' -U- . f i, ..' . V - ! the DU-.o.Tats to OUst Mr. K'-ilogg from the ' the police, who had lett the roughs tinmo-oHted. ; ",7 u- ' T , y'rH" , v-t .1. t-..To.,i' " 11 . Fe n'd on her and were about to ,-arrThee oil -Kn ' 1. weighing 200 pounds, and Some younger Calm Kt 5e of the New Tort Fleet Ion. A New York KepuMii-an who voted for !'us ' u'""l!-v nd l"-PHMontoly re- V:tn l!it r-:'.it or tin: re.eril e. eeuon in tl.AL Mate : I uo Dot aoy icc.ii eau-e njiTu-ient lo rae- count for the lo of this State and of the vie U'ry. It is easy enough to say, "If New York city bad fTiveu 00 000 or Co.Ooo, as was expected, we should have won the day." But this is only another form cf saving : ""If the cltv of New York had uot fcit the infln-enct-s tnat elsewhere d:uniiishod tLe Deuio cratic vote, fla'icock would liave t ec-u elect ed V It was obvious fiorn the outst t of the c ar. vass that the best hone of the Repnhllcai'S would he found in the-"onfidence fo'tby cap ital and trade in their cimuiei.U and tariff pol icy, not In the distrust o thoe groat and re spectable inteiests towards a etiange in the administration of the Federal govemtn.'ist. Hut so it turned out : for after tryli all trie !d aspirants and appeals, the "republican leaders found these i:u Jeetive a.id tnen tiu-y charged froTit and with signal ability put us on the defensive before the ousinesn men of the North. We did the same thing in li..VS, and thus elected Buchanan ; Fierce was elected over Scott in loS by similar tactics: Harrison beat Van Buren in lSint.y 5 he same means. I: is absurd, I think, to'put the defeat on the head of John Kelly. The Democratic loss In majoiities in tins citv was relatively le.s than in Brooklyn, where Keliy is power less and 'i'ilden is'potentiah In the adj-jin- ing countv of AVest Lhe.jter we lost J.'-OO out i-M-,i n,i!nr',ir nf " whi in 1 1 U-.c nt i- ' 1 er eed of the Mate. In Central and Western ' and Northern New York there was a large i ; increase of the Republican majorilv in near- i . lv ail the countie Fverv where, in tin towns ; '. and eitics esneria'dy, the tendencies of c.In- ' ion l.e'jcd the Republicans. liy tlfn con la i it he expected ti.at this city the centre of capital and the e.it of eomuieree and f eu orfuocs and mcrcajirg nianufaeturins in das'rv shouh! fiav- Lien untouched by in ; flae-net-s that hbume.l tlio s.iice interests else v. here 7 Ahh.ujh vv saved New Jer sey, the Democrat:: U-scs in that State v. ere : su" grent that a similar ios in New "V ork would have civen her vote toGar6e!J by ' 0'jo 'oaiority. i It is tme'that t::cr- were ceitaiu catiscs at work in ths state fnat impair, d ur srengh. If the bat! le could have "been fought under more friend. y j-.uspices a- respects organiza tion, lecal leadership, patronage, money, ami a more perfect union of our forces badly demoralized bv the divisions of J-S7! and the deteat c-t 'lih'.en In I1-!) for the l ominaion it is ou.te eeitaiu we would liv saved the Slate, in spite cd the fcieat diilicnhy always uu t in an att.-m; t to put out a party that is in power in prosperous limes. The truth is, tiie Democratic partyiof New York never v.-.'.s in a woi" condition to make a suece-s-ful i-ir.ws, and it never had a more, dii'aoult canvass to conduct that in l.s. Fiider ail tho circumstances 1 think Han cock made a m'lynijir'ut f.'jh-t- Wht-n you Consider th.e load K.iglish was to carry, how unscitcd Barnvni was to inana-e a canvass for anybody else than 'I'ilden a cons-immat.? polit;e;tat controlling his organisation and never guiiied by it, as tla- c ck was forced to hi-, to unused himself to this sort of thing: when v(-u consider th u we undertook one of the t-i"w--'.t-' '' of j.&'t'.? to change par ties in good t", iv.es and all this too in pre sence of th.e Jar: that the battle ground was to be New York a state in the enemy's pos session w hre cur forces were disorganized and the friends of the ablest lest.er eiiss.it:s- d. I think it follv for the Democratic par ty to feel discouraged about the future. It has now tin best record it has made since th.e war. It has shown that it holds a major it vo'" the " 'p't t'i iff ormtizati'jn, notwith standing the enormous oi-advar.tiiges it bad contended again-t in this exceptional diffi cult canvass ; and we see that a change of 1-t.oco votes would have given it control of th- government. So far as tiie Slate of New ;York is con cerned. 1 hold it to be to-day a Democratic State in its popular vote whenever our or f auiz.'-.tiuii and resources are even i-t.y as ef l. -ftp.-- as ti;ns, of th.e Republicans. ( Look at our rt'r:-i in rm n'.b.-vs of Congress and members of the Assembly.) W h..t nom.er.se it is for th.e Southern press ar.d politicians to talk of surrendering to (rant or O.nkling for l'J,H. Does this mean tli at the South he-, rot recovered from the i. r.:osaii7.atioii that !d to the rebellion, and has s.j r.ften siiown itself since the war'.' 'V ;.!: lir.-i'iTcsiiis kvom Wask;:;:to: m- f.-rni us that General Garfield U sending his library home to Mentor, probably because he km. tv-th a: Pre-ideuis have no time to read. But if among the books he is thus packing off i.e happens to -tumble on the first volume of De-.i New York Report-, we advise him without lo-incr his temper at the number to tu'.n to page :':', vv heie lie will find recorded a ca-e oeiu.ie.l at I ti.-a, the home of Boscoe Cot.khng, who wlc ti th- case was heard had Pim begun the -tu iy cf ii;.- law, and may havo l-o.-ii present at the argument before t'f.lee I'M f ile:.- R.-:n .er::' iJ 5 .u! ges. The case i- th,.t f s':-.er!.-.;n a.u-.im-t Garfield. The pii'intifjf was a h.dy whos-'iir-t r.aiue ii. es i-.et occur in the lepc-t. It may have been lle-e-n, a th.e dread: ul cause cf the strife be gan at 'i'rov. Light years before th.e suit itegan M.e ban joined v : t . t !.er nu nand m conveying a i.ieee f land to one Mr. Crarit ' (how history repeats itseif '. and in the deed she had "released ali i or dower," u-.i ui on t the e'.isp.-.uary cxclu-ive examination by the -r.ckuo P. .f!ie,-r as to the influence of : her husband. This Mr. Grant conveyed the sauicv property, unincumbered as he thought , by a Siiorina.il hen, to a certain Mr. Garfield, who forthwith considered himself in pencoa- ' b!e pos-ossion of the old Grant property and pro. c- led to improve it. A few years "laT, ' when ih.e Sherman-f . rant (larfield estate had ; increa-e-d largely in value, Mrs. Sherman ' became a widow and for'. hw i! h coniun uccd an ( p.etmer.t sr.n .-.i.P.nst (Jarfteld for the re- cov ry of Iter nower. Translated from the leual jarg. n of thirty-seven wars ago, h.-r ch'.'.m may be stated thus : '-Vhen I join d 1 "in tb.e deed I n as only t w cut v years old and . "an infant in fact ami law. although a kgaily ' "married woman, wherefore thai which 1 did "is vt 'iP" This r.;- p ..-hi.ej was sustained bv the Snpvei.ie Co-at sitti-'tg at Utiea, and Mr. (sail!-.-' 1 was compelled to .-atisfy the. Sherman hen, failt.-.g back upon Grant for ; r 'Coii-.in li-e, VTV.n na-.t T.Q W last ps up"ii, because the male sherisiftti was es 1:0 ct. ,it j niore. I ho moral is obvious. In fa iw is ai -ud. Suppo-e tn.tt Snerman. who was w-.h.iwed of a nouii:atio;r ! tiie Presi- ol- aoy in t and at Chicago released his lien it'ooii lite nonuu.i'ion to Grant, who surren dered ;t to G.irfieid. should in issj turn up at I ta a, avoid the old release and call upon Koseoe Conklinsr to serve ejectment uiion t olii Garfield and Grant who will set tie "the damages between them ? In tiie mean time : is m t the Sherman lieu likely to worry th" Garfield of to-ebiy as much as the Sherman dower-lien worried the Garfield of page ;;g.t in vohtrr.e fi.st cd Denhs Reports ? .V. '. World. Tun most d.'scourarhng feature for Repub licans in the poiiey which the present Gov- . : eminent of France is pur-uiug towards the Church is the absurdity of that policy. It is ' impossible to imagine anything at once more . i lii-.:icrons and more disgusting than a crusade i against priests and women in the name of civ- j : il and reugious fieedom. The s-n;daious ' j attempt of Henri Roehefort to blacken the j reputation of one of the most distinguished of living French soldiers will he treasured i ; up in th.e pnhiie opinion of Europe against : i republican France should the complications i of European polil ies afford the great Oierman ' Chancel. or another opportunity of letting loose the trained and iwagnigcmt armies cf j the. empire, upon his weaker neighbor. And i what sympathy can intelligent Americans ; feel with a so-called repuhli -an Government , under which such proceedings can be taken 1 1 against two youne American fadies ss those which we fiud chronicled in a recent Paris- i ian journal : "The M!ei Your.-r, two danrhters of wcll I knewn and highly tstceme'l resident in I'arls. Jlr, 1 1 William Voutoi. fornvriy editor of the New York i J .'tfinn. who !lvrs rloso to the- I.ioinlnir.in t.' invent ! in tho FaKhour St. H-nore. were aroused at 8 o'- i her tis'er interi.io.l and Fail ther must arre't her too The pota.-eTnon, who were vry clril.de-i'ned to do tl Is, as fh- hud don. nothiniV. and so, to nt company her sitor. ho had to cry 'A bus fon-sf.-iti? ." " The ye-inir lnd:c wore then tnken to ti.e Ci-n-.T.inary ot Police, ar.d they remained at t':c ftntiou six hour", when, through the kindnnrs of Mr. O'Connor, of Her Ma.iesty'F Eml.-(-?y. thev r'e rrlej'e.l proTiaior.sily, which means '.hat the Ci overr.nient re. r.rveF its r'irht eit t-.er of prosecuting th. in or turning thetn out cl tno country." Kealh, if the French Kepuhhclcan only be maintained by allowing the police of Paris to arrest ar.d exile voting ladies who 1 so their temper w hen they hear a gang of street ruffians shout "Dow n with God I" it is diffi cult to see why ar.vbody should object to a reorganization" of France by the Fhlans of the t.irtrcror Wiiiiam. -V. World. Tbe Yoi.thc Bfi.t Co., Marshall, Michi- can, w ill send their ev lebrated ElectrrvYerl taic Bel! to the afflicted upon 30 days trial. Speedy cures guaranteed. They mean what tr.ey tr.r. IVrfe to them wrrhout delay. 3-i:,-f.'jru.J . elo.-k t he nt her uiornir.-j- bv ni'iifi'ial tnin ul t Thn.0 i ro-Ilv. 'iv.r i T!arr.,n AAi,nl,- r.' n.Anv, . M,i'. A5D OlilF.E NOTIX.'S. A man l aue' d Idrr.feif at ilcdfi-nt, Iiub. ' be'ansc his danhtn's husl.nnd rii-Kcitcd ' : her. (Jen. Hanco -h' v:e in Indiana, as of ! Gcially declared, rends backward and fur ward the same i:-Ji."trJ. A company is about being rg.inbod in ; Clinton county for the purpose of uiannfac : turitig sewiiit; thread from wood. Potter, (ireen and Fultuit are the nuly . three counties in the .'State whi.-h are not ' more or los traversed vj raiiroud". At Columbus, .. Tlunsday, a postponed wedding caused n girl to take poic-n. The 1 ceremony was then held, but her recovery is 1 doubtful". Weavers popular voie in twenty-one 1 States heard from is 21, and may barely ' reacu MO.OOO in a total vote of t,.M" 000 for all the y..tcs, Mrs. Mary F. TYeieher was fi.und guilty ; at I.e Sesuer.'Minn., on Saturday niaht last, ; of murder in thei lirt degree for killing her husband in Anril last. ixty laborers were buried in an ave lancheon the lienrer and Kio ihantle riad . on Saturday. On man was killed and all the others more or less injured. A railroad train brake in half and was ! ran into twice within half an hour on M0.1 ' dav last near Maon. Ga. Two lives wcie lost and many persons were injured. Sheriff R:rlin. of Westmoreland county, : has made an asicnment. His liabilities are ' ftjo.rinii, of which S'i'o.noO represent official obligations. liis assets are unknown. Two men were killed and another se verely injured by failing into an Immense snowsl'.de on tri.iav :asr, wi ne in rneir wa Trom Jeorgotow n, Co!., to the North Park. Mrs. I.ittleCeM, of F.ast Stou.iion, Mass.. poisoned her husband and son on Saturday last. The ftither d;ed, and n-st moruir.gshc shot herself dead. Insanity was the cause --Joseph Pare, of JeffersonThle, Montgom ery exuiitv. was cliopjii.g wood for dear !ifo the oflier day when sud'ilenly his axe blade : ch.ipped off his ear. The blaile had struck a clothes-line. Carrie Haines. 2) years of nge, !n a fit of despondency caused, by unrequited love, threw i.erseif in front of a passenger train at Faivmount, 111,, on Saturday, and wa. in- , stautlv killed. Governor-elect (.bittei'den. of Missouri, , is to wear at his irauguiation a one hundred dollar suit of clothes presented to bin bv Colonel D. Patrick Dyer, bis defeated Re- ' publican cnipotltor for the office. Clay oodley. of Long Branch, . .1., dr:4ft'.i his store in mourning o:i W. dm-sdav' , after tbe election because of the deft at i f I Hancock, and John ( '. Cltrk T-araded Main tret vvitii a verv heavy mourning bnml r.n his hat. Fianeis Ib.tchkiss. a retired merehni.t and banker, died very suddenly t New Ila vou. ('i.iiir, on Monihiv morfiing. A few ndii'.ites before his death his w'b-, who had , Core to see him. fell dead on being informed thai he was dving. (icorire Block, a fJermr.n, living in Chi cago. t:-d a chain ero.md the neck of Thus. M.'i.overn. placed a red cap upon his head, and ied him around the block upon which they reside, to th.e tune of a hand rrgan, in pavinent for a hot. Mr. and Mrs. Smith Ilayden, of Mar- , shall, Texas, quarrched about the doctrine ef bsudUm on cetiing home from church, ' where thev had heard it preached about, and h the w ife in her passion btruck the husband a fata! blow with an axe. The Reading lheiary society th.e oilier evening debated t'.e question, -'Resolved. 1 That en oi l girl makes a better wife than n voting one." The discussion was entirely in ! rhvrnc and entirely original, and required neaily two hours to finish. A boiler exploded in Andrew- Moore's ' f otindrv at St. Charlotte. Mich., on Satur day, demolishing the building and killing ; outright George Moore, his son and another man," unknown, and -cvrly injuring four ! otb'os. one or more of whom may die. The body ed e.n unknown woman was found on Frfday h-t i'l the back yard of a houe on Buttcihehl street, Chicago, frozen ', stiff, and lying by her side, also, nearly fro- ; en. v. ss a msn named John Kean, from Gtcen Bay. Both had drank to excess on the night before. A bloody encounter occurred on Satur ilav nigl:t at V'erona bcroug'n, near PItt- . burgh, between Peter Skinner and Joseph Verio, re-ulting !n Skinner cutting a cash in ! Verio's "m ad with a knife, fnun the effects ; r f v. h.ieh wound the latter lied Sunday even- 1 ing at f ..'clock. Skim.er was arre-ted. ; At Suh'iu, a, Marcus Haw ley, who was executed on Friday la-t for the cold- j blooded murder nf Zso-'iariah Hsyes, was married i-i jail th.e day previous to Minnie Hawkins, who has borne him two children. He was subsequently baptized. An l.pisco 1 pal minister ofiiciating at both cereinonie. The details of r.n elopement which lias ! made a sensation in Montague, Sussex conn- ; ty N, .T. have jus'. bvn made public. Will- I. am Philips, UO years old, the father of two children, eloped With the young and pretty vv ife of John Middouch, a prosperous farmer. Tii.'j- took with them her only child and ad their eiothing. jewelry, etc. Mi-s Kate Haiin, daughter of James II. ii.ti. Sr.. of Saluvia. Fulton county, lot her life a few days ago, by a singular acci dent. Her cousin was loading a gun. pre paratory to going hunting, w hen the hammer fril, and the gun was discharged, 'i he bail cut ored the young lady's brta-t, and penetra ted the heart, causing instant o.eatn. As John Harrigiui, of Blissviile, Long Island, who was employed by the truileesof ; Calvary cemetery, was digging a grave in section 8 of the "cemetery, the side of the ' grave caved in and buried him. As soon as i the accident became known the earth was i removed, but Ilarrigan was dead. He was . t'.o years of age. lie leaves a wife and one ; child. j Michael Kurtz, a youne unmarried man, of Detroit, Mich., celebrated Thanksgiving , forenoon by filling up with rheap whisky, ; and iu the afternoon accepted a. wager to riiink a pint more. Soon after lie lapsed ! into a state i apparent helpless drunken ' nes-, in which condition ho was laid away in ; a barn t n sober oil. At six o'clock he was found dead. 'Squire John A. Sylvestf,-, f;f Perry coun ty, Mi.-s., planted a, pc-plar lice in hit. vard ar an apr .c tr,-. ' p pe two trees blossom ed Si liitt fc'.me time and, strange to say, the popir.r here as fine apples as eve r grew in the . countv. This is vouched for bv an old ana reqgctcd citizen of Perrv county, find if any one wants to know l is iuin.c let him appiy i to the I'ascagoiii.i star. The following is the In test intelligence ! obtainable in regard to the wholesale poison ing case near Knoxvidc, Tenn. of the i poisoned, live are dead , tiie rest arc improv ; ing and will pircbably recover. No clew. ; It is generally believed that arsenic was put , in a portion of tho dishes that were prepared ' and left on the dining table the previous ! night. The excitement in the neighborhood continues, On Thanksgiving day the Sfventeen year old daughter ot Wiliiam JetTrays, of . Long Brutn.-li, N. J., wa attacked by a I iarge dog, which tore a piece out of her arm and throwing her to the ground tore a gash 1 three inches long in the girl's abdomen oo , tore her screams brought assistance. A stout pair of corse's alone saved the girl's life at the time. Her oc-ndition is now pro , nounced critical. Particulars of a repent Tenncsee pois oning affair forma shocking chapter. Col. Dale, whose daughter was married, and at whose house the wedding feast was given, bought arsenic to kill crows, dumped it in hi kitchen, and the cook, mistaking it for salt, seasoned the chickens w ith it. Six per sons are dead, and several eithers, Including Col. Dale and his wife, are expected to die as a remilt of th.e t.-rrible mistake. Mamie and Annie Artis, aged respective ly seven and five years, were playing on the ice on the Morris canal, in the rear of their parents' homo at Jersey City, Sunday after noon, w hen the ice broke and both girls fell into the water. John Barton, aged twelve years, ran to the assistance of the girls, and succeeded in getting them out of the water, but before he reached the shore, Annie, the younger of the two, died iu his arms. Smitnland Chamber, the father of a members of the family arc growing fat rap ier .j. Monday night William Barnes, of Farm land, Ind., who had all day been drinking and quarsoiing with evety one he met, es pecially with Ids family, took up a double barreled shotgun, and while his wifo was sit ting with her babe in her arms, shot her through the head, killing her instantly. He was arrested and taken to Winchester. He says the shot was accidental. He came near shooting her once before, when he was drunk, with the same weapon. The Roman Catholic population of the United States is estimated at 6,143,222, ruled by 67 bishops and archbishops and S.OSS rriests. who minister in 6,407 churches and chapels; 1,136 students were in theological seminaries last sprinc and 403 "'25 pupil" in J parochial schools. Catholics hav also 1,728 mission stations, besides their regular i churches, r(7 colleges, seminaries and acad- crcies, 2,24i parochial schools and 373 charl ' table institutions, all indicating hard work and plenty of it. r m-n in NcTtiit ustei r. P i,n Ivan!-;, has jt:t accoinphshed a feat never b' fore r.tien.n'ed. A few !ays a.go, as the rafting freshet in the Delaware" was beginning to decrease rapidly, Lord started from i'qiiin nuk. VVavm- coun ty, ut daylight and ran arc.!: two hnmlreii feet longami sikty-fiv e feet wide through t Eaeton wiihoiit making any -s L- j for sleep. aecomjiishing the entire d Usance. 1-4 mile by river, in less than twenty ho::!.-, eating all nicals vti the reft. 1 1 was olei ced tv ac om-.ii-S tho extraordinary fral in order to j-ave Lis not from ch-sii uction. Muiiv hoc rafts are now frozen up in the Delaware. das. Redt.atb. who arrived from Ireland on Monday hist, r-poke in Nevvatk the -amc. evening at thelr:-h Land l.eagoe nieeli;T. Ilrt suid all this year there nave beer, only five cr.ses of accidentia! death liiat any one can attribute o the lennnts. einecf the men killed v as laird Leiirisn. "if be had not tw-eti shot it would have been an eternal dU gra. e. He ruined tliinv purr girls and aiie blether of one of thTn went to Ireland from Chicago and shot him down like the dog that lie was. A pjilause. J I profouudlv is.u. r him for it." continue,! th j"aker. "and if I meet him in ( iiie.-go I wi-l congratulate him on being a g"(i.j; shot. I hope h will ehs c'.ose his name, so that we may jrive hn a tc.-limoiiic.:." H. B. Haves i'-ui'S one move ntes-age and then quits. The occasion will afford ?ir. Haves an opportunity to make public confei-sio.i. and the future, if he ! i v s long enough, say one hundr ed yi ars, to repent of the trn'at wrong which for four years he has represented by occupying a stolen office. In his hist meeajc Mr. Hayes might put em record the number of misTe.ints he bns re warded for helping him ohlp.in the il"ic of President, Mild the amount of money they received. Having done this, be miuht hard over to Samuel J. Tilden his salary for four yeai i f 'J0ii,o. to which he is Ju-t !y entit lei, and then clothing himself in r-ackcloth retire to some cu:t-of-thr-w.ay place, mid l-cmoan his leai.ifohl transgn s-ions. '! i.e Huly Name cathedra! in Chicago w.is nn Sunday last, packed to the door mid the Pish!" bud to be protected by the police tost- p tiio refh of those unable to obtain entrance to vviti.e-s the inauuuratiou of Ar. Idii-hon I""ei B op the Cstl )- lie i n.veese e; t. tue.-.i'o. to tiuceeca too m' it Bishop I', ha. Dr. M Mutter., the V. -. .--ci.cr.-d. dire. -ted the cer. monies, which were of an e'aborate and '.h mn character. Aft.-r tiie keys i:d s; ::, .;.)!; .f the diocese had been delivered to the Archbishop be de livered s.n impressive sermon. His formal corsf eiat'ton as Aivhbi-hap is deiaved, ow ing to the n.-ui-nrric:. i of the pallium from Rome. Ti Mime evening A rchbhhop i'ee han read vespers nt the ealhedrei. Two ehi; iren of O.-org.-' Mai'oy. son (,.-) daughter. Were burned to deslhin lhe house of their parents near I.puihiburg, N. C. on Saturday, under the most painful rircure staneesi. The children were ieft in charge of thei; grandfather, who tied them c!o-e to the f: replace and went nit into the field, half a mile distort, io pick cotton. VVbilst thus engaged the clothing of th children caught lire. Tiie flames w-nre Ojininuui'-a-t c . to the house, which was burred to i-he ground before any assistance coul-1 be had. The children's eries were unheard. 'I here was no one near to rescue them and Ihey perished in the flr.mrs. Their bones were found in tbe debris by the agonized crand fatber ur.oti his return to the spot where pis u-e had stood. - ( n Tuesdav of !a-t week a pig behmginc to a colored nian living in 1'ike county nn-t ' with a singular adventure. The young , rooter wa- doing some ploughing In a swam py part of a field and came aene-i a tin re : snapping Untie sleeping qti'etly on a hog. Piggy didn't know a turtle from a tea-kettle and lie promptly put his nose under one side of the turtle-' shell and turned him over on his ba.-k. The turtle was rntitr.illy in dignant and as the pig's nose came near hl h.-ad he promptly faster, rd on it and r-ottied down to business. The pig was frigMeivft nearly to deMh and tried to run away, but as t s tuit'e was nearly n- heavy as lb pig the running was slow. The squealing of the pig finally I roug'.t help mid the turtle was oapLur rl und found to weigh twenty-eight pounds. The police of Jersey City en!--! tain -us-pieiot r that Mrs. Martha Km inn IPticfc, who was borna l at her home in Jer-'y avenue and First street early Thur.-day morning, did not meet with an accidental death, she was the wife cf IVter Lehhai h. barber, and it is said mutual jttalou-ies have embittered tho couple agahist each r-thr. T!:e ch-m'ner of death, when the Ciiief of Police isited it Friday morning, everywhere bore marks of the woman's horrible agony. She pressed her hack R'-iinsl the wall to put out tbe tire and the imprint of her fingers is buried into it. At another p. int the form of her hand is burned into the vva'l. Suspicion was arous ed that the binning wa- not seei.ieidal by the facT that tb.f-Jseat of the chair on which the woman had been silting was burned en tirely out. Henry l.enaon, a young man residing with his grandmother at th.e Temple, a little village five miles from Reading, was arrested a few days ago on a charge of having robbed the old hulv of some money and other valua bles. While in the ofliee of 'squire Butzand before being taken to prison in default of bail, young Lemon became very much agita ted and in piteous appeais declared his inno cence. f,f the crime, saying that he hoped the Almighty would paralyze him and strike him dunio if he was guilty. Lemon, de-'ite his protestations, was sent to jail ami while here confined was stricken v. iih paralysis. Ho shortly after obtained the requisite"!. ail and wag taken to his home The sudden and startling answer to his petition lias cre ated quite a sensation In th.e community where he lives. The steamer Ortigia enine In collision Wednesday morning wi J) the French ste-am- ' cr iturlc Jo-epb, near Spez7iii, in the Medit- I teranean. The Om-le Josepih was "o much injured that she aimest immediately sank. The Ortigia has arrived at Leghorn, having also been badly damaged. Heartrending , scenes followed the collision, as the Uncle Joseph was wanting in means to save the liven tt the large number on board. F.ye- .' witnesses of the collision sav that they can- , not satisfactorily explain tha manner and cau-'e of the occurrence. The passenger list ef the Om le Joseph (.hows a tolr.l of two hundred an.', sixty-four persons on board, End tl-.e sailors imtiilfr thh ty-three. Her cargo eoTisisted of eighty tons of merchan dise. At the roi! call of the survivors thirty five passengers and thirty-three sailors only . answered to their names. T he Captain also : perished. ' Tl jattst erratic a:;ival in Washington is Mr. Eeiw-flrf! iflrMtn of Canton, Ohio, "who has been deluded into the belief that he is : the Presidio. t-elect, having been so constitu ted by a compromise between General (ar , field and General Hancock. Mr. Simms is a thick-set gentleman about forty years old. with bristling red side-whiskers. He went to Washington for the purpose, of taking the i e -essary titeps to have his claim recognized. . He began work on Wednesday of last week, ; and was most industriously engaged all day. The alleged compromise between the Presi I dential candidates was entered into on the ! morning of election day, and was, in sub i stance, that all votes cast for either of them j should be counted for Simms. Mr. Simms, who evidently lias not been at a loss for per sons to encourage him in his delusions, ev ; hibits letters purporting to be from both ; General Garfield and General Hancock, I stating their concurrence in the arrangc ! ment. i Says tbe Boston Po' ; "Tiie recent con : test more than ever has been a contest of the people for a covetnment by the people, for . the Democratic, party more than ever has ' demonstrated itself to be th.e party of the people. What has been accomplished has j been eione by individual effort. What small ; sums have been collected have been the will ing ami free contributionsof ptatriotic private, ' citizens otily desirous tor tl-.o welfare and ! good governmenf of the whole I'nion. Of , rice-holders, monopolists and traitors com , bined were but little too powerful to prevent the triumph of constitutional principles Let the Democracj stand shoulder to shoul- I der. Purge the ranks of traitors : serve a i notice on all woo would desert the grand ! army of freemen to go now, dot stand on the order f their going, and when the day of deliverance comes, as it surely will, no man will regret that he stood by the great Demo cratic party in its hours of defeat as well as In its hours of victory." How SnR Saved IlF.nDiRLia. "I shall i never again feel so awfully nervous about my babies teething, writes a grateful moth- "We almost lost our littie darling by a Mantr T till nlaeo infot-G, m Ivnf I long attack of cholera infantum, but b.app"ily ' heard of Parker's Ginger Tonic in time. I j took a few spoonfuls myself, which soon j cured my nursing baby entirely, and an tie, ' cevsional doso has kept me and baby in such j perfectly good health, and made us so strong 1 and comfortable, thai I would not he without this reliable medicine for worlds." A Moth er of Brooklyn. H-13 -lm. j Bob Ikc-epsoi. was the most distinguish- cd citizen of Washington who went to the nepoi io receive i resinent-eiect; ivarneht. Bob is looking out for a foreign mission, and it is quite likely that the Christian (V) and the Infidel, like the lion and the lamb, w ill lie down together. TJfadache, Dyspepsia, Filionsneas, rid Constipation cured st once bv Dn. M ET TA URS HEADACHE A'D DYSTEFM A TILLS, it ice 1'5 cent ril-i?.-irr J P.:o! LoriL cr.e of t.'e cid it l::t: A Prolesfunt Rhine on M.Klsrn .Mlmrlrs. Rev. Dr. rt.pHeti tl Tyt g. Jr past r cf : li.e Ctiur. it of t.'ft Hoiy i ri.'i.ty. N 4ork, ' preached a rruintl a "few rveidngs ago on the numerous mi;a h. wrought of ir.te yetf , t the shiine of Notre Dame dn Loardes. In j which inr..'ng otlwr tldLg-i lie said: "Tle ' Roman Cat iioiie Church i- wise above all . other societies of believers. I do n.-t fiud tt ' in n-.y heart to impugn their motives, fttid in ' mv puny impotence 1 am 'riving to attain j tbe snnre ru-utts. I n 1 hi.i age wf rw'iotialiam, : when men muke merry oer miracle, lot us congratulate ourselves that G1 ha left us -ome impenetrable mysteries. So long na there Pi e facts that cannot be plained by prse'iit phit'oj-hy or pr.'scnt science so long I will theie be litt ie opport unity f.r the poop'e being lerverted lr.-m the faiih tnat haa had its jilaee for o iii.ii.v cel.turie in human iife." Adopting this sei toon of Dr. Ting la it text, the Nevv Y'ek Tt'Ht eliscoutsvs a the subject r. follows : On Sunibiy !t tt e It'-"-. -oe,.hen .11 Tync Jr.. ' p-e a h fo fr.f.11 : n w ...-ii be ip r: t-, hi. v e a i oi -:!y y p. i .i thst jior.c. ilvas r.o-e t.v teo lert-.itnrd n' Ixier-b-f r..l ct Knui. II' u l ol 1 .'.ur.te : --No one vi.are Uniptto,!ny tli.t mjl-titu-!" ol cures took place thero. 1 he lamr i-Hpr.l, the esf hwrt. the r'lnd -a. It will revrr do in fh Kfne-u;iiin to de.is ttn.e wetl-authet.'-lea'c! !-t?. " lie :IJ that ihs lullll tf l-fl rr-i had -been honored or I. id" t y V.rp cures, ae J he fi-ire.-ei h' : t nee tl.er. f r. U . l cut, tat Mr.lvOK'i stnuen h-t teen ti"ur rcciiv rpo'tJ ; hut, uktesa frventl o.-wsp-tp-ra . hare united to .-petrl a eriwi.s t-tua.ir, the reaUlvrf the ,-ei'ed mlrwelfi rf J-urdi i.n.t Kno-k has bi-n luily adrnu'e 1 ij .tr w hu baa hltliert.i l.-en ha leii lerol tueI rcne i'ro'.estant , pfcrty in the r.pl$''op:-.l C'buren. Jourde bus b.n el la'.r jear a r..wln- o-mhln block .n the jiath rift ot.1t of rati'.nM.itfia 1ml ol i.il 'iisere eae-ini-ao! the kotsan 'lion !i. HiiB lre.ls of ..ple rle'-n t- tinve Peen tuU.leo.y aaJ Biirncuiov y rtirrrt hy viltir lAurdc aa-1 praTlBii it the iru!to "(.e:e the irl Heread-tte w her aliened vtiuni. 1 ri cur'i were not. merely these of lai nglnnry J.reae. y.Q slig bad t e-.o n.tor;euly ; b.lod i-.r earn rert.st-r -d their p.ient ; rrti.plei -wh-...-e ! ..r vric were wittieri'.l were crj I. te!y r--tor.'.l, Hf J .laf pe -pte rc-uverrU V e -r be.ir.n(r. It will do: do to any thrft 1 1 vc curre were th werk ot the ln:ifiroitton. t'uai-a t..l 1-tmlness hat never been rurt.1 r the i.ni? '.lima, tinr tins that v-stue iiill'-e .ce ever eidJenty rou-sU the mup et aod r-!t..i el tt.e -t-".g'..i O' a withered irz. So t in as eula lew ut the.e eo ra'ied au'rnrtee ' ba.i t eca wru-Jtit II nai ciuite -.-s.r.; t-j rimm that the endeia-i lo f upport of lue.u wr.e irina--c'.eat. At tho pre'eit i! . lir.w-, er. the root that -a t !- a ii'i wo-lcrf ji ct:re h ve Ceeii r.otit at ; iy ur-a Is r--'-s!y ttie SA.ne in 1' -..'-tcr hd-J uunrl ,y Ki the pr-..! U...I l.oi:r 'M -r Ip'.f. '1 o a ,y itiut it la Inipf if :'ie that a i-'i.hl horn t l r J tu.uid re-.. ver i's gh- Py prav .i.jf In the jeiro-' pcro'te ' ,--.t-re.y to der, tiie p-oi.i.l:itv of n,ir.r:e: a : der.i.l I.het iej te i?-ver iu chr p'ii-iii; :ii con-iet-iitty mi-ke. ,iiiii.'r wlii a dt, to a -- t-.t r-o eiiio.o.i ul Smuan t'- nt-.T y w,.ul.l I.e ea ie,u ' to prove thai a wl'Lered le If. io 1 1 vu - !y cured at a H .man ' 'atli.ilic f iTitte : r. r t.:.i rrcplil i f.itipty Ue to net aen:l one re; ol toir 'let the I :.ro w.th v. hl.'-!i ll uiot- I tcs e.l ait ' r.c.es. V, lie. her eitra'jrcinery riii.-s t.rs .-r i-a.e o t ta-.en j-iac- at l.'ir.ie? and K.no.W Is n.ere:y a . ' question ol ev-..ie:re. If le e l.ie:;.-e f of the :me cat a re rj t r, - er'iiem-e thai i.eur.les ci'ets, ' ar.d If it it i'lfm-ient ! qu-.Tittty to "i:;sfy erery r.ft!onab'cdftit.in l.t.iee. n-lonon that il.ea'e zed -eitrei have :asru vac ean&ot be rra "td Mr. Tyi'P taa t.ee i !u l.nurjr. and I.e Is u.ly con- j Tt"m-e. I tui-l a; r -clea unve ben wrought tt-.ere In ' anse r to the pra er o! te.ith. I M r. urFe, the a I- 1 deuce wl.l. h -..ti.Ce Mr. 'ijtiyof the ruiracn'i.aa nat'i-e "f tl e e i-omf rny not rutta.'y otner i-eop:, 1 bu. that .-urei alleged to b- m .rjculouf a nd Ll-b are ccrtaloiy locxplieaoic ry any tiieory of thtr - But:ii, have heea wroejhl t.t I.onrde" seeuiH t- udiy eitaol -he-.l. a he t,;$ LiU.-ance o' M r. 1 y ny FPr.U(jD. ml uk . it tr,.uier.ewtol;apFov:8o- ouety ope retnrkat' rr-tlv n.li e.-d tie- t 'a: hotic pprly 1 i h cfi n r.-ti . ia e. If I'm emu wr. urhtat 1 .ii-.je a-e i.,ntoi;i.B!wi.ip i.'H'ni l.'-a'.ie.t l eottier I'reteFt.'' ul Iticr. that t.ie l;ouiu u 'u ihoiic f. 'bu -rh in ii -at i ' ':iri-t fait to the ground, for J-vl docs not work m iiicies Vr the benefit ot tat it 'i. rift. More over, if tutractes e-r wrought at a Iloini,n CaUioU? thrice, tii" l:"-t t the rii-ir-C .oi.:t e evi-lerre that a dcT'eof J'lT.ue lav..r it extended to the fiiun-h t.i l.ctne ivli'ch I nrtth.wn to ar.y I'ro testant ctojrch e-r reel. W hut, then, bee-anea of ?J r. 1 y n's iirFrt.r protrsteni iu it tn.e J o.irdet cures are true n.ri IcfT Hew can lie any louver regard the Potn-o e'uth.-Ii? 'hurcU atf aa'eneno ? Vitainst ell tea l .rtter theories of the apoetate cliHfact.-r o' ttiet t'hur li he rnut now et wiiat I e t'elleres to he thw f-lft. thnt .,e rlit! 1.- the wlf I,ef t.1 nnrae'F. Se'ine y-re a:;-, when H:hoo 'un:Riln and lei r e- ntcs leu '.he Kptseupal e' liti teli he-" nee ttie;" eo us -1 en: : u -1 y I- -IteTe-i mat her jc.iruje'itu 't i-oie tiie t 'lat -i i... nan error, r.t r. lyntf uti'ud-1 a r.i--t:u el ti.e sc'.de-s end withed t'i. tn Oou-ipecd. lliw l il (etohlo for Intr. to lay to t. el any tj:r.o..;hy w.il. a hedye: men who !'t the r i t.sr-apa l r-.jn.ui union h'-au-e -f ll.eir lu-rr.-r of iit 'linrch in w:.:,-h, n.-r. r.tihjf to Mr. T utf. :f f. ual a t.:!i -hoie rt-'l cl 1 iod ' w.th mir.u i ? I' rot ably Mr. Tin? i r!:fct In ai-ioctng that :t will r.ct oo to Lt-iV tt f '.ct tti.it the .se e. the h.'.r.vt nd t':u :f ire cared h t 1, rJ-. V. be: ti er, however, bin I'rotvitunt aiiuirt-rs will h.--atue. at he has doee, ttat t-e tue tuese cerei. are tni-x-pll'-ahle. tberet.-re they rc iuir--c.iu.u-. reiraius to he ffvd. Sjlicm &n a.suru t o" involve 'nr n-.ore ttian any t'roto.'.atit csa pr.c--e.te. ll loicien'.iy in-roive-. amon ether 1 1 . rjr. the c ueersU n t f Mr. T; n'z int.. a Orind and -I'pii'.r'er of the p.etran 1 'arhett'" '1: a-rli. No tiiirhcr wi;i.-ss to the rruth .1 the rlstm tunde by that I'utm-h cotii.i t.e c'.vpu than the wn ne ol m t r.-I ce . Itowsaa Mr. I'vri remain hcFtite to a t'hnrcii wl.t.-h chc. s!i w thus 1 neo'iteFtd- pr,ot ol 1 e v ine fn vor If the I.eur.tes cure? are niirMcit'oi's. the Konian t'i'.tbolie I'tnir.-li h. in ii-?al piiTHSe, nia.le out 1:j eii'e. If tfiey are niersly i lcii-i a l-le, !STr. I'yns has tnrtee a urave niitinV..-. uri.l tos led ""Ci',5 h:if lupire 1 llif- I'r-a. Ftaat cat.se. cf whirh l e h.12 h. reto'..ae been n eu-inrnr .l'-:er.iier. A Nkw Pa yint, Oo ttation von Ladies ami IJtNTi.r.Mits. The handsome Nickel Plated New Home Lamp, being introduced to the pub'i.' this season, is the most n.eri' orious article ever offered Agents to make ' money with, is safer and more onvei:'e it ' than the Student Lamp, which hns hereto fore had tiie reputation of being the Safest Lamp made, und has a clamp to attach it to i the Sewing Machine, Piano, Oiuan, Desk, 1 etc. 'Flic f.-ar of the ordinary lamp being nc.'jiionta'dy upset or thrown from the table ; is entirely relieved by this simple clamp con trivance. It can b adjusted to throw thti : light hist where it is wanted to tnit tho eyes, 1 and can be converted into n handsome wall lamp. It has the best argand burner, a ti'.l ' ing indicator, and convenient mao'h-box, and ' its price Is within the reach of every erne. It has heen fully tested and editorially endorsed by the "We-tern Christian Adveicate," "Am. i Christian Review," 'Herald and Presby ter," "Journal ami Messenger" and "Chris tian Standard," the leading religious papers of Cincinnati, and is embused by the Mayor and Potm.vt r of Cincinnati, th.e Agent of the Ameiieftn Kxpress Company and I'resi I dents of Insurance Companies, as being the Safest, Most Convenient and best Lamp made. , There arc three reasons why Agents should seek such an article to canvass for frit, for Its absolute safety and great convenience it is needed in every home : second, its low ; pi ice make its saie immense ; tint. I, it vri'd i lie a credit to handle inch an aittele. Oue ; Southern A rent wiites, it sells faster than ; Gen. Lee's Portrait sold right after the war ; ' another writes, it beats the palmy days ol j the .ci-w7lg Machine; its rapid sale, its low price, and liberal te!msSrpr!?e A.'l AZ9"'s. , Address Home l.ninp Co., Cincinnati, O., . mentioning our paper, and they will give you full particulars and exclusive territory to 1 canvass in. 19-17. -13t. How to Mark Soat a Cfnt a Pnrsn. Shave into smail pieces five bars of Dobbins' ! Electric Soap, and boil iu three ejuarts of j ' water until the soap is thoroughly dissolved, ; so that upon straining through a scive noth- j ing remains: add to the solution or "suds") ; three gallons cold water: stir briskly forsev- I ; eral minutes to mix, and set It away to cool. ' ! Though it will look like nothing but soap ; suds while warm, a chemical reaction will j take place, and in 24 hours time wit! develop t 40 r-r 0 pounds of magnificent white sent ; soap, costing ies than a'eent a pound and as j good as many t.f tiie adulterated compounds ' j called soap, and sold at seven to ten cents a ' i pound. How long would it take for any oth- ' j er soap used the same to become any thing I ; but soap suds ? Any housewife knows that j ' it cannot be done with any soap she ever used, j Seedf it can be done with Dobbins' Klectric. ! j For tale by all 6'roccr.i. j J. Jj. Craoin cV Co., Manufacturers, i Fhllnd'a, New Yoi k. Boston, Chicago, Cleve- ! land and Kansas City. l0-8.-e.o.w.ly. I i O.vp. Fxrr.MENCE from Mast. I had j ' been sick and miserable so long and hael i caused my husband so much trouble and ex- ! ; pense. no one seumingto know what ailed j i ine. that I wae comnletelv disheartened and i i discouraged. In this frame of mind I got a j bottle of Hon Kitteis and I used them hiiTi- i known to n:y family. 1 swn began to im- j I prove and gained so fast, that my husband t , ar.d family thought it strange and unnatural j ! but when , I told tlieni what had"he!ped me, j they said "Hurrah for Hop Bitters! long i . may they prosper, for thev have, made iimth- ' i er we'd and us happy." The Mother. JIom ' : Mourned. Isaac W. SrKAOi-B, "Hie living skeleton," is now thirty -nine years old. He was born in Massachusetts, and whs until twelve , ol,i healthy boy. The disease of . t I musouiar wasting then came on gradually, 1 and after a few years lie was compelled to i leave the shoemaker's bench, where he was j working with his father, and seek some oth- I er mode ef earning his living. lie engaged i himself with showman. When twenty-six j years old he married, and lias now three tine ! healthy boys. His height is five feet nine j Inches, and" his weight foity-six ponnds. j An Iisvai.ttabi.e Article. The readers i of the Araut have no doubt seen the adver- itisementof Ely's Cream Balm in another column. An articlo like "Cream Balm" has long been desired, and now that It is within the reach of sufferers from catarrh, hay fe ver, etc., there is every reason to believe "they will make the most of It. Di. W. E Buck man, W. E. Ilamman, drnggist, and other Eastonians have given It a triHl, and ail re eommcrd it in the htg"e-t terms.- ,? ! (re.) i-'rt-'y A us, C". 7, 17?. OAK HALL, FI i ILADCLFi IIA. Worth Knowing. Tliere is: acc. in Phlla tlclphia where a stranger may buy his clothes, and fare as veil a il" he knew the whole city by licart ; and if he knov.-s noLhing alxiit the value of cloths, or of clothes, he is as well off, as if he were a good judge of IxDth. The reason is that every thing to be found there is made there made and sold under a system which rarely allows mistakes, to occur, and which corrects them, if they do occur. Oak Hail is the place: and its practice may be summed up in a few words. If you get there what you don't want to keep at the price, you return it, and get your money back. This means a great deal more than appears on the surface. It moans that you are not going to get what you will not want to keep at the price, if the merchant can help it. It means that the clothes you get there will be of honest cloths, honestly made ; and that they will cost you less than as good clothes can be got for else where. It means that thcy wiil bo every- way better worth your money than you can get elsewhere for the same money. If it means anything less than these thing:; if it means poor cloths, trimmings, cut ting, sewing, or in any way dishonest or illiberal dealing; the return of liis goods wiil plague the merchant, injure his credit, and dissipate his trade. If it means these things if it means liberal and honor able dealing, valuable and trusty clothing, ease and safety in getting it. Oak 1 1 all is the place for you to go to, or to send to ; and it is worth year v. hue to know how you can send, if it is inconvenient to go. Write ; say what your occupation is ; say what sort of use you intend to make of the clothes you want, whether for evcry-day wear or otherwise ; what color you prefer, or what color to avoid ; smv about what you want to pay ; say everything that you think may aid a stranger in choosing for vou. You . wiil get in reply samples, of cloths and prices of what ever you want made from those cloths. You will get also the means of having your measure taken by an unskilful person. Th.e re is only one di." 1 culty left. Somebody h. got to take the risks oS . dealing; for thcrer.ro risk. Send vour nionev elvpr with your order. mat covt-rs tl.' JrOOvl Biitll. risk as to your Wo risk every ; tiie fit, and lint ok, your satisfaction every way. Our trade by mail amounts to half a million dollars a year ; there's no reason why it shouldn't amount to five millions. JVanamaker & Brown. Oak Hall, Sixth and Market streets, Philadelphia. In. ,. fit 24 XJ VJ ELASTIC TErsg Hm a Fa4 il'ITi' m fren el I cik-n, I k cphsiw,wi-.h I Belllo enwr,s4altwl'(l.ll ' nlOeas el Itt b.Ht, ) tke Bsl Ii a th. rs- itiiij bu IS. Iwttt. ' a M.f 11 mum eeia4 wtik aha Fknrse. wek ttrkt lnullttKltMUrinmla. 1 1 le esr . 4an& aa ff Seal aoeli. IDrcota liw. E8ULIST0H I BURS O, CUcaffO, IOf d srxsmtrf ooo.oon ACRES of LAND ix wis.o?atisf , 01 TnB livv or TBB Wisconsin'Central Railroad Ter felt r-arUc-ulart ad d r re rHA.ni.rn i.. colbt, ZastS Ccj: Jrs;iicr, :JInaa, Wis. O. WOT.p'- Ip B EL1AEL5 (?TK:: OLD JU ELI ABLE Clothing Hous In Centra' P a i "It ia jXEXT TO 1UST-0I7ICE AIIOOXA. Y j I F.O', t 1 v r-7 V . . s 7 ito.v c. las r nn 1 I 11 el;. J I J 1 Urttt ve t.y Sa '- lt -,J: , , Ff.y fo-vf-eii'r rroVTl tj r , lr,ti ati:-r-r 5 7 i ; h i ; - A!r it o"i h.ut e.i l ark ,v le;. b-.' 1 ttr.-y - i fr ,( ... Flit l:mgr-ai i 7 A b"jl 1 ; . ; -Suptrjnt Jiecca7 ISO' K t oji T fi Good rt n- f.j, .Tfjltf J.v.j 7V;t fe riMvn fi,, o'i t j.'.'-hv"?; nxstj -i.vjj r j 7 a 1 1 ks s (, ,:: . .y : , 5 f"ilrl 7-ft, r;-r,j e; i. -1 - ' It. i .': ' Special BARGAIN j Jt'sT ULCLlvp.i, FE'JM OUR LAKGK Vmi U.turj C r i i. :-ir.-i BLUE, BLACK and 3P,0V. all nout nr. vtazz O 'jlRCOATS, j ":'.!. tvanU. 5"k V.r;-..- -.t. r.. Stre I. : i T3i:"Nr DOT.l.AIIS! r, ai. ikVi ". ,i Miti4 uion ifawa a ,, i :.,JT, OPEN EURi l!iVLM!L!i : ! Reversible Overcoats : 11. ..-Terf tie ore-v-a: --. .. ... cn. year t.j. ta: C. 5 ict ttl u ? t fav.-r uiil i tl: prrt;-: c.-: 1 :';... , -i iiv t ii . ct e--uns. a-J lie if::- , '" ?' s ncb a way tr.nl tt-eT-c la n- : - , fi le ! tt,e e'.eth la t;tel tu a i-.,:- ,.. lu .b Rf 5t:: gor a's. ct ie 1. i :: . e.. . . L ; . . . ! csaa'. j a quip.sj p'.a ! ,:::.... ...j too, are to lsgec: jufty rtl ;: ;: ; wl.lch t.-.c-f th coat I'-.-. tlot::,,n., ... . p:aco. rta-.:r rr t vf.: "j vv . , -j week all ti-e Rsvs? :'-'e .':&: w r .v - s . thtiiK In our liri that ju alt ;.r ; Jiu tc- uk f.r ary'.P r.,: : ; n . l ' : , . ; WEntTEJtlil roH HI I AT ASSIGXKI75 SALE j a i.'.koz a: i si.:.- " k : I Overalls and Shirts, caae ofltivy J-.uk. tal ai I keep I' ear ru:y 1-r.x we w. .1 k 1 " - , i'-"--i j t-enefstcf :r,e tatalu we go: -. ; .....; : j setlttR tl etu a'. FlfTT LXMs 1 r:t TWKNTY-F1YE ' ZS '..r tr... , ratety. TLev are .r:i; ai t-t i " i l l. ..-I M .-V I Y . THIS AVT.d TC ! vlll r.enii.t. ever .h:;: l I SUITS AND OVERCOATS j a-i espe:!a"y oVKr.CCtTs. Tr ; ;-?: I ti how a':::c--t an v:-l .nol 1 s'F "'-o..t tr.7 I I t'Orz tn fU-thti j( r.n! V:. r -'.t . t '. tnt v3'jC-y.rl.cw--: .? i ' i It !s a leaant t.-latk ar.-t t: e r. .: .. i ." e .i: e . : t . rnest thiciTE as it is :c. w.: :Ltx. l you war.t t3 I st f .- tl e m W.e:. i J to fell a cficap (ir-:ect at t'l 7 -; ' . iscji bcJ eold.tve- tlijl. a.-' : j r-inali. Th-;-unJ at.' w!.' ::..' :. t-e giaJ to learr. tiai a atxnt satix 01 i:n( lieary a r 01-ah to toe a ' w-l-: - t'al actiptt fr the rc-ugt wa- ari 1 ir.f cnri-jj h for l?t:-r ue. cir. teli.; tn roit e'.oi' 01: ??. J2, 1 ' 'I'.-.T c.er-l.ar : w'.t : t . t- : -, : . j Iwr Ef;uixaux i'.-..-cr r.t j: - ' i'-i '" 1 ehlrchlPs c-tr-c-b . a: : : We have no t:a: U rlu '-: ' .' -ta reaJ ar.ytfcit.p l.Ve a art ' - -iff tLia wesk. U rt : t. e p t . r ' " -' year jntr.er.r. litre w .' r:t : ." dfserlf t!or. tetr rrhsri. nr.MEMnr.it t HI; : - J AVI at.Tcr tou tt;-. tttt i n : I ld at a'.!. Osfr.e t.-k .: '-' - :"' yea csa. Tou ar. as free as i y."' --." ' j '" . vul ' 1 '- - ' " - - j In yonr pecket if you wsr.1 f. v ? - ef the garment for uf to P.v: tt "-' " them eon; uuej. GODFREY WOLF. I. If. I.1TKKTK, One cl Uie! "" Grand Oparaing OHESlTsPRINGS: S. M. DOUGLASS & CO. u at f ji st errsirp FIRST-CLASS HOI1- roa -s f 1: a 'T MEN'S AND COYS' KTfl ntVUfl! i (Hi U 1 i-ii - Gfnts' Furnisliing G-s SLITS MADE TO OUDER ON C:TiT Here are a Tew f-r r.r rrlr Men' Salts frem R4.00 j, r OterrniK from ni " . Iloya'Splla from - a.0 -riea. rememt-er tbe f''' and don't fail to buy fr-y 't' "' ' V R TV .eerie tcr ' " iia t-anila a lot of rew Opti nn 1 . - at pricf raaicjt from tvj o tt.v ' h t purefca - . Clieft Springs, N.t. 16. lfsO.-f w OFFICE OF CRPSON v. 'tiMrArv. No. fftt i. letan. - ?v'o. 10. Scoid I liy. , raitar-rtrwta. V'J ' yoricK ro sjoriKO.ri.- f A rri.rtiria- of tli ffkhs! lers t J" . - prlBea IVrapanr wqi he-J at t. -. -., : limany, on the ft 4y .'"""'l "' . rloek. M.. f r th purii'e ol at-e: r . aenibly of th. Stat, of i'ernyln . "'rf.: " ". act anthoritinn eorpc-ations to 1'"' -i-vri ' 1 ohllicatlirii and capital ""' , r'.Wr " eember 20. ll'W, aoj to autiior n tr ' bonri.. oMtaatlnos, urn! it "r;, f-:c '' ty rer-rtf a je. ar c r tra:- - .r' J ?'C". f
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers