ESENSBURC. PA., FiiDlT. FEB. 4, t8Sl. .. lil -JL'i Bit' JgI,M"lgJ--"J-J i TriK Washington organ of tbe Grant t'onkling element in the Republican party, seeing in advance the troubles that are cirtain to surround Garfield, says : "The party ship is drifting on to a lea ehore, and will soon Le beached, unless mutiny and greed bio throttled by tho whohate bean intrusted with her narration.'' The messenger who carried the elec toral vote of Oregon to Washington was paid $'JG2.7 mileage, and the California messenger an amount nearly as large. "When Congress has a little time to de Tote to the real interests of the taxpay ers of the country, it wonld bn eminent ly appropriate if it would give this mile age swindle its earnest attentien. Pince -cur last issue the joint conven tion of the Legislature has tahen one ballot each day for Seuator, without any change worth noting in the outtome. The ballot on "Wednesday, the latest re ceired, resulted as follws : Wallace, 82 ; Oliver, SO; Grow, M.; scattering, 13. Old Scattering might as well withdraw, although hi3 chances ara probably as good as auy of the others. , , L seful and convenient for reference , as th annual eailton or the 1'hiiadei- phia Times Almanaa has always been, its edition for is still more so, for the reason that it i. considerably larger than its predecessors and contain, a mrch greater amount of information. It is very neatly and tastefully baund, and without attempting to give 3 general Idea of it. contents, wa will simply re mark that its election statistic, for 10, both Presidential and State, are thoro and complete and eminently satisfactory to a newspaper man. There is fair promise of a surftit of prohibitory legislation during the pre sent session of the Legislature. Last week Mr. Emery, of McKean county, offered a bill in the Senate which pro vides that every petition for license must be accompanied by a certificate in favor of granting it, signed by a major ity of the persons, male and female, over the age of twenty-one years, who reside Id th ward, borough or township in which the proposed hotel is to be kept. Some of the other provisions of the bill are equally stringent. 1on Camerox is reported to have said in Ilarrisburg, on a Jay last week, that Harry Oliver's friends would stick j to U;e s,,eaker of tLe H(niSft at Wash. to him until "hell freezes over' As the j inRlonj anJ to be conclus,ve of the re- vent to which Simori proface son re- j S(lR. ,he Toteg to he counted by Con. ferred, the freezing over of hell, is not j gre?g in joint convention, and the plu likely to happen even durin- the Siber- j ralily of thg vote to elect Thesp are ian winter low upon un and as the Grow , th . features of the bil, antl aI. . 1 .,.lcl,...l .,.,'1, r.ov-oe ,,r,- ' der any circumstances to vote for the "Duugannou lioy," the ballotintj prom ises to be kept up daily without any re mit until the 4th of next March. Such is tbe lupreme control exercised by one man of no brilliant parts over a major ity of the Tlepublican members of tha Legislature. It is a satisfaction to know that the last, or supposed to hi the Inst, of the colored servants of George Washington has passed into that bourne from which there is no return. Mrs. Sally Hunter, at th! ripe old ae of one hundred find f.fUtn v'""s, died ia "Washington last week. She was born in Westmoreland eounty, Virginia, in 170 ' three years before the birth of Xapo'.eon, and only 1 thirty-four years after the birth of Wash ington himself. She belonged to the "Washington estate, and was one of ti e eervant 3 manumitted by ttia uenerai 3 will. She lived 111 irguua until tlie j ;., Tennessee over the election of United breaking out of the rebellion, when she . states Senator was terminated on Wtd ramoved to Washington city. If tin- Les.ay 0f jast pt j7 tne election of other "lat servant" of Washington does j ii0Well E. Jackson. The new Senator, not take a notion to di" between this j who is a member of the Legislature, and the meeting cf Congress next De- j was not a candidate for the Senatorship. camber, an appropi iation ought to bo jjut was elected on the thirtieth ballot, made by that body for the erection of a ue S a Democrat, and is represented to suitable monument to the mornory of j 1 e a m,n ()f Veiy decided ability: and fcaliy Hunter. The statement going the rounds of the papers that Jesse I). Uright, who died about ten days ago in Indianapolis, was the Senator from Indiana who was expelled from the Senate in 1 -01 for dis loyalty, is clearly a mistake. If our memory is not entirely at fault, and we don't thinK it is, ex-Senator Jesse D. Bright died rather suddenly in Baltimore several years ago, and we presume the death referred to must have been that of his father. Senator Lright's expul sion from tha Senate created a marked sensation at the tim, and Hon. Fdgar Cowan, of Greensburg, who was then a member of the Senate from this State, acquired a great deal of prominence throoghout the country from tbe fact that lie had the courage to take open and distinct ground against the passage of therresolution of expulsion, and op posed it in a roost eloquent and vigor ous speech, which caused a vast uuinber of vials of "loyal" wrath to be poured out on his devoted head, A bill has been introduced into the House at Ilarrisburg repealing the Jury Tommissiocr act and authorizing the Jounty Commissioners and the Sheriff fill the wheel and draw the jury, as .ey formerly did. Since both political arties are represented in the Hoard of ,'ounty Commissioners the reasons giv n in favor of the passage of the Jury Jomm;ssiorer act have been deprived of all their force, and there has never been any rersonable doubt that tho popular sentiment demands its repeal. We trust that the preeent bill will not meet with the same ridiculous defeat that a bill of precisely the same Dature did at the ses sion two years ago. That bill had pass ed the .Senate, if we remember rightly, and had a large majority in its favor in the House, but ou the day of final action x deputation of citizens from Lancaster, cppoBi for some reason to the repeal of the act, went up to Ilarrisburg, and actually ;.ersi!ailed a majority of the House into voting ajrair.st ;t. The bill ought topass. arid will pass, if its friends An not permit themselves to be bull lo7ed by another delegation of Lanc;,s- i bull-rinejs. Towki the cVse of last week the Johnstown Tribune published an Inter view between Daniel J. Morrell and a reporter of the Xew York Triburxt while the former gentleman was in that city. There is nothing specially worthy of no tice in 'anything that Mr. Moirell said, except that while he expressed his own confidence in GarSeid, he also assumed to speak for the Democracy by saying : "Even the Democrats have faith In him (Garfield). They look upon him as a statesman and a fit representative of this great country." Mr. M. is a reasonably modest man in his utterauces, but he displayed a vast amount of assurance, 01 a downright ignorance of Democratic sentiment, when Le declared that the Democracy have faith in Garfield, and look upon him as a statesman. After Garfield's admission to Judge Black that lie had received Credit Mobil ier stock from Oakei Ames, and his subse- quent denial of it under oath before the j Poland committee, no Democrat conld have any more "faith" in him than the committee themselve. had, which wa just none at all, although it may suit ; Mr. Morrell to repose any amount t "faith" in the President-elect. Nor do Democrat., as Mr. M. says they do, look upon Gaifield as a "statesman." There i. not a single act in GarCeld's entire Congressional career which will support this claim to statesmanship set up for him, unless the fact that he was the ad vocate of all the legislative "jobs" that wprn nrpsspd nncn ('nnnTSM rnnsti'ntes 1 ---- - l O statesmanship. Then his title to the , l. j j.euiecraiic pariv in v leiioi seon more tnau appellation is clear aud without dispute. one J Uie Kreatest importance. I Garfield's great weakness, as Judge J Such men are unfit for any public position. ! T'i..i- -" oM .i,i l uir,,. i They are a dissrruce to their constituent., a j I.lack, who knows a.l about his true ; reirJuilch tQ th n,,nif, an affliction to tbe j inwardness." said of him, Is tliat he loses ; countrs". A man who will risk the uccess of ! his "-rip" on his conscience. He is ir- ; W party in a crisis, rather than wait for a j 1 drink, 13 just about a. contempt:!. ! as tue j resolute, and jike another Ohio man, holy fellow who "rises above paity" in onior I Hayes, repudiate, to-day what he advo- j to be patted on the back by the Ke.vjbiimn 1 , ' . 'pres.. If tbe mmoritv in the XI.N lltk sbi! j cated yestetday. The receeming ior- : JUow it-elf of compact, spacious, and cuard i tion of the interview i3 Mr. Morrell "s ' ediv ajjres'ive a has the minority iu the pre 1 i r- : sent Coneress. there will be a change two j opposition to the one man, or Cameron, , M lf,.ft 'H js nu. lb Etre,,!U)f Ite. : rule, and his belief that Gartield has CO i Dot ion .whatever of giving Cameron a ; seat in his cabinet. Mr. WALLACK.introduced a joint res- o.ution :nto the Senate, on I riday laat, J proposing an amendment to the consti tution of the United states, changing the mode of electing the President and Vice President. The bill dispenses with the Electoral Collego and provides for the election by the people by direct vote in districts. Each State is to have as many districts as it has Senators and members of Congress, and each district is to be entitled to one vote, the vote to be canvassed by a State Hoard of Can vassers, consisting cf the Governor, Chief Justice, and Secretary of the Commonwealth, thr-ir return to be mada ' though it has not tho least chance of be ing acted on during the brief remaining period of the session, Mr. Wallaco de serves credit for the movement lie lia3 made in reference to aciuos.tioii which promises to b? thoroughly discussed dur ing the. next three years. The regret is that Mr. Wallace will not be in the Sen ate to take part ia the discussion of the matter unless either Grow"s "bolters" or Oliver's "regulars" simplify the .Sen atorial contest at Ilarrisburg by voting with the Democrats for him, thereby, as suggested by the ritiladvlphia Keening Telrgrnph, a Republican organ, returnir.g to the Senate a man who "is a teal Sena tor, with real knowledge of Siate and national needs, and real ability to say his proper say on the lloor of the Senate in an.ch a fashion as to command respect ful bearing." Tiif. exciting and protracted contest I rominp from the State of "Old Hickorv" hi3 name (Jackson) is of good omen. More than ordinary interest was felt in the result from tho fact of its bearing on the strength of the two parties in the Senate after tho 4ih of March next. If a Republican is elected by tho Legisla ture of this State, the next Senate will stand Democrats. 37 : Republicans. 37 with Judge David Davis, of Illinois, and (Jen. Mahone, of Virginia, who call themselves Independents. Davis sup. ported Hancock, and in the Senate has (generally acted with the Democrats, j while Mahone, who was alwavs a Denu- r . ,,:., , ,1,. c,... 1 ocrat, owes his election to the State debt readjustine nartv. Sinoe the election of Taekson ir, Tennessee be Ttennhlicn jach.son m lennesaee, .tie Jwepuoiican leaders do not seem to entertain a very livelv hone that their Dartv will be able as they confidently predicted a short time ago, to control legislation in the next Senate. TnE latest sensatiou in the ever sen rational political world is the statement, coming from New York, that a thoro1 investigation made by a Wail street lawyer of that city, foitiCed by affida vits, establishes the fact ttuit Chester A. Arthur, ice President elect, :s not natural born citizen of the United States but that he first saw the light in Cana da. The proof, at least it is so alleged, is that in the year that Arthur was sup posed to have been born his parents had a child who was christened Chester Abel Arthur hut that be died and that an I supenisors 10 a.ieno 10 mis iiiauer 01 open Arinur, dui taai ne atea, ana mat an- , , d hPf,,r anT accidents occur wi.i, !, other son was born two years afterwards, while hi parents w-re living in Cuuada, and that he was the Arthur voted for last Xovember for Vice President, and that he was given the. name of Chester Allen Arthur. This is the story, and while, awaiting further developments it is only necessary to say that if Arthur j proven to be a Canadian by birth, and therefore a foreigner, he is ineligible to the office of Vice President under the constitution. If this charge, however, should even turn out to be true, it would noi pass tho Vice Presidency over to William II. English, tho Democratic candidate, for the plain reason that be received a minority of votes in the Elec ctoral College. A JUST CRITICISM ox thb rrHor or csrtain democratic The Wafhingtcn Po.r publics a vigorous editorial on " Certain Democratic Blunders," mil handles th Diinocrntic Congressional I . , . . . . -., i , - ; By independents fc refers to Stephen., Speer j andFelton , of Georgia. The Port .ays : , in almost an tne party contests 01 ine TJouea a few members of the majority party bare played into the hanuxur the opposition. They have put on high and holy airs. They have been proud of tlie commendation of tbelr oiponenU. who have uaed them and despised thetn for being thus used. Thy have mouthed mouldy platitude about the r "oblieations to their own aeticc of duty rath er than the dictates of a caucus." When thy y have flapped their rhetorical wings and "isoared above party," their silly soul. bar. been delighted with the incense of Republi can praise. This is the record of men who were elected by DeaiiH-raU elected as Ieni ocrats men who had begged Democratic votes from county t county, and who have prated long ami loud of their zeal for the success of Democratic nrincinles. At the i first possible opportunity they betrayed their pSV.Vnd k-e easv ! the enemy an enemy tliat cajoio. i constituents, betrayed their principle., be- j l 1U T III and flat- ; ters such creature, while cherishing a robuat ' contempt for them and thoir ways. Demo- ' cratic absenteeism has been another and a j very fruitful source of Democratic dis'iotn- j fiture. The alleged Democratic majority has been an actual minority for weeks in ' ; succession. Victory upon victory has been : j given to the Republicans by a few Democrats j who hav cared more for personal conve- 1 I nience than for public duty or th interest, j ! of ttieir party. Scores of times a quorum ; j ha. been broken and the passage of a Deincv ; cratic measure defeated by the absence of a ! j fw men who, at that moment, couid be , ' found iu a barroom ! i A party in in a sad predicament wr.en it. ' success or defeat depends on three or four or m' ' ' bait 1JL,) Will 11' !L i: L C LO NI:T 1 1 L L, U t 1 ?-uc. And to this complexion has it come with th publican principle h:ilf so niuah as ti-.e weak- neas of Democratic n.an.t;;euieni th!. b.i transferred the sceptre th; tin.e. ilean- j time a fVw Dotroeratii; districts will do w-:i ; to drop into obscurity the men whose eotiui, weakness, neglect, and apputites Live ni aoied a tainoritv of i;pubiican. practically . .. :... t; r...;.. II .... . .1 v retne t!:e Democracy to Ue minority ide. Copporatio! Sf.nators. The rreat cor porations continue to strengthen sheir pow er in Conjtress, .and without respect to par ties. Tlieir politics are controlled by tiietr own iaterefts .'one, and shifted according to existing necessities. Mr Camden, justelect ed Senator by tha Democrat, in Went Vir ginia, ii Vice-riesident of the Standard Oil monopoly, with a saiary of $J5,ou0 a year, and is identified with the interest, of tli Hal lioiore t,d Ohio Kailroad. His future col- league, the present Senator Henry O. Davis, j was former v a conductor ou the road, and ' ' ' " ' ' ,,",,. . , iH. ,.,.. I Mr. fee well, t'.ie new Senator from New Jersey, who will bucceed Jir. Kand.dph, may ' be said to rt-pres::iit the r-iiiioad combination cf which the Pennsylvania Central is the main trunk. While be might untaonie the ; Baltimore and Ohio a.; a formidable rival, on i all questions touching the powers of corpor- i a'.ions and their alleged lights be and Mr. i Camden will doubtless be'ound voting to- Kethrr, though one i- dabbed a Democrat, j nd the other is christened a Uepu'!iean. Mr. Knir of Nevada stands for the silver i monopoly, and Mr. Mdier of California ; stand for the A'aska ttir Monoply, on ti. ' Pacific coast. These freshly chosen Sena- j tors of opposing politics will hardly separate j on any vote thai would ciipple orpotations. ; I'very one of the new Kepubiicau Senators ! is '1:1 soma form the-jlave of coiporate power, i Piatt. Hawley, Coeer, Sawyer, and Hale are all on that side, as will be set 11 when any i subht.Mitial test is maue involrini: the princi ple which underlies the coniing issue between consolidated capital, with its watered stocks, and the rights of the people iu tha great high ways of commerce. The Senate may be packed with servants of corporations, and tlie House may have a subservient majority for a time. But mon opoly, sooner or later, is doomed to be cheek ed In its a??ressive career; and when the rea.-tion sha,! come in earnest, tha party that espouses the cause cf tiie people will carry the dav, bv whatever name it may be called. X i'. Sim. ! Thz startling discoverv is made that our j Bill tbnilish will pet in itfter all. .Arthur, , ' vice president-elect, is foreign horn. Thn ! I matter blls a paqe of one of the Xew York 1 ! morning papers and has a look of reality ; j about it, which not only warrants a scrutiny i j of tbe business, but makes it imperative 1 Tha letters cover affidavits from the town : j clerks of every county in Vermont where tho : ' biographies of Arthur allege his birth. In j every instance the record shows that bis par 1 ents did not icsid in those places at the time , i specified nor at any other. His own state- ; i ment of tbe year of his birth is confused. 1 j He claimed, in s,J, when admitted to the ' 1 practice of law in Xew York c-ily, to have i been born in i;'.0, whereas tlie records show 1 I that he could not hive been born earlier than ! ' 1 S.T2 or IS.".'!, w hile bis lather was living at ; I Dunham, in Canada. Another child bearing i ! Ins initials C. A. Arthur, bin brother was j ; born while bis parents were living at Fair- j field, Vermont, and the confusion seems to ! j have arisen through the similarity of names. , : The tirt boy, who died, was named Chester ' Abel, the second Chester Allen. Tlie for- 1 mer was so named in honor of a friend, the i famiiy doctor. The authorities of the town ! in which Arthur alleges himself to have been i born deny that his birth i.s recorded the year j he asserts. or that bis parents lived ;her- at '.be ; time.' Arthur has been at work writiiia let- j ters since be received a Lint that some one 1 was on the track of bis genealogy endeavor- j ing to make old residents recall things that J did not occur and in other eae becloud eir- 1 eumstances tw simp'o to be susceptible of doubt. I.a neat'n- IntrlHgmrmr. t Let Tksm Ki.kct Wallace. Why not elect Wallace to succeed himself in the Sen- 1 ate, as a sort of ctMopromise candidate? ks , th. T'hllMfL.lT.fcift Fi'r'ninrt Trlmr r.h Per ll ! i,a3 as much abihty as "both of bia principal '. j competitors put together, he i.s as vii tuoiisas ; either of them for be is not wickeder than a 1 practical roiiticin of the Democratic taith is i ; expected to be, as a ruattet of course -and he i ,s evidently the fa voriteondidate, for he lends th(, ball()t (iltv after ,Uv- 0:ie tIlinj, i3 rer. tain : the Republican members will commit t,ie worst kind of a blunder if they 00 not lce in ability, and w ho is his superior in j in her commitment to await the action of the well, let lis say, in piety. Mr. Wallace is a 1 grand jury tor the ailccre-1 crime of adininis real senator, with real 'knowledge of state j terintr poison to Mi-s Manning with intent and national needs, and real ability to say ; to kill. Miss Manning's condition does not his proper ay oil the floor of ti;e Senate in improve. Her limbs and arms are paralyzed such a lashion as lo command respectful Hearing. Reo a'pdix Ro..rs. Supervisors of town ships where theroads are blockaded by snow duftsand made in:r assable must not fpcet there is a law recard Ine obstruction and hin derance of travel, and tbe township is respon sible for 2ny accident resulting from such a j caue. V. e quote the passage : 'Tublic r';i'i or oiiiway-. tain o-.i. approver or en tered on record, shall, as soon as practicable, effect ually be opened and constancy be kept in repair,' and all public roads shall at all seasons be kept clear of all impediments to easy and convenient passing and traveling, at tbe expense of tbe respective townships, as tbe law shall direct." Act 13ch June, 18.V., Sec. fi, P. L. It would be well for all might fall heavy on the township for dam ages. Pii.ocatt'tt's rN Diphtheria. Last week fifty-two children died in Hrooklyn of diph theria. Sad reports of similar mortality comes from other quarters. It is onr duty to call the especial attention of American physicians to t he ex traonli nary success which is now reported in Germany, in this disease, from the muria'e. of pilocurpin. It is given in ordinary doses, internally, and a large num ber of eases have beea reported by different physicians wherein the results were astonish ingly good. As soon as the pilocarpin exer cises its specific eject on the salivary glands, tho false membrane detaches, the inflamma tory phenomena disappears snd improvement begins. We particulnrly request nr readers to try this treatment aud report their results, whether good r bad. hedirnl and Surgical T!'jortT. A THOot ssnd safersreedv is Dr. Mrr Tirs'i Hpvdachb am Dtsp.i.ia 9ill. oi ty an iTTTiRgtstB. Frte T5 eenfs, A KENTUCKY HORROE. A FA milt nr FEvr.X rau'sors TU TTr:: TO DEATH SrSPIClOSB O? FOCL TLAT. 1 Caskttillf., Kt., January 'JJ. In terms- tiou of one of tln most horrible tragedies rier onnctnil in this ( lia Vfti:B l COlintV teat 11- ' . ti.i. r,io.o ..iri tha mor-eire-v heir,!? no ...! .1 . (.:i;i unn wrwiw. whether the Z the l Jtnpresion, howevr,,avri tha , former theory. .... ., , ! tour miles east or tlji!p;c tneie rrs;ueu, i no to the time of tbe event. Mr. Wiley Emery . aud seven children, three bovs and tour girle, , tbe eldest a cirl. beiuff seventeen years oi aee. and the voungest six, Mrs. Emery, the wife and motui-r, having died several years ago. iir. i--tnerv, as ueiore f.aieu, wwdh- to-do, aud owried a larje stock farat, the j products of whi.li annually brought hiin a haLKMome smn. i A few days sinoo he soid several tlioa-and j dollars" worth of stock, and, r w.i t;e nw- ; torn, took themnnev lintae with )iiin, inite.i I of ularine itin thebank. About ume ociocK laftuichta Mr. Ureen. the ieret neit'tihor i to the Emerjs, saw a bright lict-l m i mrre- tion of the lattr's houe. aud raiiins; bi.- j htn bntntil over to render assistance in extinguishing l;'e nnien, vi;n .i u? mr n.m. of their ai rival, wers eotnp'eieiy enve:onmg th ftnl Imitiiinr. To tM-ir horror, n reaching the house, tliev discovered that th family of seven souls wre inside, and th bodies of tbe entire family consumed, to gether with tbe bouso and its contfnis Notacry ws heard from the victim, by "tiag whi ran try t.'ieir .i'ist iice. and from v,ij ft ;t inforrr.l thjt after the inmates : had retired the. bon was entered bv some j fiend or nVad!, who first murdered tbe faniiiy, secured the money and other valuables, and ! then fjiedlthe liousefor the purpose of wiping j r.nf oil nvl.l.n, i.f tl'i!r infamous crime. t The entire country is tnorouehiy sronn and a thorough invet'c iticn of t ie tracrdy will bo made', and. should the murder theory become established and the usper:ted per sons captured, short wotk will bn made c.f them. Thk CANiniAn Charley Hops. It tr.n pireB that the boy, suiposcd to be 1 bar.ie Kc'", found iu the possession of Tu-':iroi a Indbm in Canada, mentioned in '.be tele graphic dispatches of Saturday, i! tbe ?aius "bov referred to bv Teter L). M' tallum. a far mer, in Aldhonn'itrli township, Canada, in a letter to the Chief of Polite, some woks uu.". Mr. Itos said be bad been in coinunicHtion with persons in that vicinity for several months, and tbe coi respon',Pi.,ce bad eiven him no encouragement. The 'il lettvr !.c sertMf('ii!nm, iiuU.sms a litd ol tot ','ies tion". bad bren just answered, but i; n t -.ined mere !enet iit ie m.d untii'Mii: f-oei -ilic. The history if tbe boy as p. veil nv Mr( a bmi is that be vhs broueht to tbe camp of the In dian, tox vearn frii bv a innn und woman. who said if the Indians did not tike h:iu uiev woubl sill him rattier than keep him iti in-ir ei:t'lv. Tbe tribe was iinM;liiiii to take the child, but an Imiin 11 nil b:s sijuiiw 1101:1 an other reservation, who were at the enrup on a visit. thiuUin he would he u ni"-e i-oiii-: panion for their little girl, took loin to ;!n :r i home and kept him for tour yeai s. At this j time lie is sain to have had fair hair, cut short i with a tendency to curl. Aster four year : he ran sway from Ids protector, since whivh time he lias led a wandering life. 'I he iad ! in now in t!i hands of a German, who says he ' means to jrst any money that ii to m-ide ' by restoring him to his parent!, i If. most of t!!i- ce.-t, Mr. IIo-s says, the ! controlhiic rmttive.eeiiK to lie t mike luoii ! ey. Accordingly, rr-rj thins; is exaggerated tiiat tends to ef tahhsh an identity an I every- tliir.s ieiiored that militates a?ainst their or-T, 1.0s. oencve. nonimjj rn,;i. ta??'1 fTom c r,,lor of t)'ft,Ur,- ''P'," build or ceneial appearance ot the child, lie theory. Mr. Ross believes nothing could be ' relies cbieflv ou the child's reeolleet ion of ti.e past. He thinks the bv wid retain notce memory of bis bom-, and is sure te-? sense of Ion! ne-s thit niust have taken possesion of him when taken mnnn; strangers wu never leave, his rainii. As yet lie has not decided what course he wili pursue about the Cana dian br.y. For tbe present be will wait de velopments. Philadelphia Record. Thf.T have a sharpshooter in Sn Francis co, Otto by name, a son of Chief Joseph, t ie Nez Perce, whose performances, in shooting at the paper figure of a man, a S.n Francis co paper gives this account : "A nickle five-cent piece was pined to the. figure, and tbe you n it sharpshooter, blind folded, turned nound in various directions. and was hnallv m a d. line of t :i, o.ii-ct. ! with a rifle minus a siuht, and at a distance-of some tweiitv-five feet. The first shot Sent I the nicklw flying around the room, and on 1 examination sn indentation w r.s found ou J its edge. The second test eonsb-fed of p'ac ; incr a small piece of tinted paper on the cla'-s i used ti an eye for the f.rure, and then plae j ine a hrsr.! piece of cardboard iu frout of ! and toucnin it so that it vhi complete! v I bid len from view. 'Ph.; sinister v.:is a:ain j b-i'idfoided, and tli first shot iuttere:f ih:? j pl-vss, the buiict having pa-sed through ine very centre or uie tmiei. p.vper. l lie.n were vsrioua other tejts, Mn-h as br.ikinj; three swincin? balls by 01, e shot and break Jug a bali placed immediately l-clrnd the at tendant, the nail, owit.g lo previous coi.iaet with tLo brass knobs or iron pUtes, taking a circuitous course." ElETRANTS Pl.tTINO Tos-tM. "Tbe;e are om' very ciiNnint: feilows amonc our t wen'y elephants," said Mr. Darand, asjeut for tlie combined Barnum and .London Ftie.ws. yesterday. " The other day Chief tain and Maudi ie, the top mounters in the pyramids, and the most cunning of tie flock, suddenly took a sbiverinir chill at tehearsal. Tbe keeper sent out and bou'd-t four ciIots of whiskey, which the monstrrs devoured rapidly and with grrat ieli.-h. The bill caiueto Mr. IJ.iriium, whose stronsr temper ance predilections yon know. Alter paying; the bill Mr. Kurnuni insisted that nobody in his employ, not even J is elepbnnts, should tirir.K winskey under any circumstance. In . a little while the e!ethaiits. when Th effects ' j of the lirjuor bad died awav, commenced j shivering a train, and apparently b-it another : ' chill. They looked lonsringly at the keeper, j : and attempted to caress him with tiieir '., i trunks, as much as to say, (;ive us another j 1 drink.' The keeper fhook his head, and : j told them positively 'No.' In five minutes j ! every appearance of ague bad vanished, and ; j the aaima's were quietly munching bay, as i usual. Tb.ey bad bean playing 'posmn'." V. Y. Sun. ! j lIi-nDF.RtNo r.v Inches. For som time ; ' rumors have been freelv circulated that a ! j youna lady nameiMiss Gertie Mann'uiir, re- I nidinc: with her uncle, Warren Ii. Manning, j in Malone, . ., was beinj systematically ) poisoned by Mr."Mannins's housekeeper, a 1 voune woman named Miss Eminj Davis. I Miss Manning complained several times of i findinsa pioenish substance repniMinir Paris j green in b"r cotTee. and several times has had all the symptoms of poNonint; by arsenic after partakmijof food at Miss Davis' hands. At last the doctor alt nidincr the sick ladv ! unanimously declared it was their firm belief ! i that poison was beinc administered. A I nurse wis then employed who was the only i , p,.rS!)n allowed co prepare food or hand's ! ' medicine f.-r Miss Manning. Miss Davis 1 -: was arrested, and her preliminary examina- : ami 11 is tnougnt mat sue cannot possioly re cover from the effects of the poison. Ktohtt -Five Dols Lot. "Too do not tell me thut your husband is up and about njrain, ami entirely eurcit ry so simple a med- ieine as Parker's Ginger Tonic V "Yes, ii'ot-eu, 1 00, pshiii jin. i.njnnn 10 ner en quiring neighbor, "and that too when we had foolishly paid eighty-five dollsrs in doc tor's bills an'd prescriptions, and after he had been given up by hit nbvsieisns to die. Now I my husband feels a well as ever entirely i cured by this exetlent Tonic." And many ! a siek tnsn might be wU in a week if they i would only try it. 1-21. -lm. ! William T. Toliev, tbe book-keeper at James o. Merritt's store on Wall street, says the Kingston (N. T.") Fryman, is an electri cal marvel. Mr. T0HC3- is so full of electri citv that when he ylides across a carpet, even with his boots on, be can light the gas with his fingers, and when a person touches his ( noe or an ear with their nngerj a shock is re ceived in the arm and a bright spark is emit ted. Mns. Partinc-tot says: Don't take any of the quack rostrums, as they are regiment al to the human cistern : but put your trust in ITop Litters, which will cure general de lapidation, costive habits and all comic dis eases. They saved Isaac frota a severe ex tact of tripod fever. They, sre the ne plug vnum of medicines. Boston Globe. Sold by M. L. Oatman, authorized agent, f.behsburg, Pa. Mr. William Utti v, of New ton rTara!!- ton, Pa., haR been watching on the Pennsvl- j vania Railroad from Newton to the deep cut 1 west, 01 wie station ior ininy vears, and has i traveled over .HC,,oo miles, fie was never j i reported, nor has anv accident occurred en i his beat tkrottgh ite-gfect pf drtry. 1 j M'.tth A.l OliH'.K NOTIXtrii. Two FbilaJelphians skated to Xorris- . town bf.clt Oil MlUl'.'ST. , Newfoundland dog serves s earner , for the UaMsiuqu Jjapotcu "r the CaUsuciuR Jjitpettu. SSSH-IJAIUARY tsV . - . i;..rr i lulnriu? iu M( Koa". COUDt i. 1, Bie.y. ,.rllM,vl - ' ; .Jj ,! i jn. : i,(lUi.,ni,(U caster, l a., on Friday. ; -M. V. G. D.vtri. It, T Vkyom.r .. r .. birth to thrve- fciiis and a tny on i ue- Ouv liisbt of l:it Mr.' Il'-ti.er Kfg:'jt, a whoiw. t ' dclptn. isiieaitat theuijaof I'lO years. Her mother attained ttm age of ii(. Ui:i:be, tUs j;eilci!ii.in, liiade a more or 6S mile in the hix tiava" wnikii'e match in New York iastwek, beating Itowe!!-. recoid two m:le. . T'.ie bouse in wLi'.h A n.is'tii Teun osi w...,.,i tl.i- firKt JVi.ioViVftLia l,'L'iil'ttii: e is still staiidme in Cheer, r.nd is i:feJ ci - oper sn-p A tie vn ' 11 CK !lV, t. Mary'. 1 k d :ii-. a ?d thr Stt 'f : ( l.l.rrh. .".eve- lo.ouo. 'I lie ori.". n land. O.. to the extenttn of the 'ire is a ii;M; rv. i io upi" 'ed to be. hyd-;.pho.ic, wai '. tUiei on TLiiUeiiih .-Incf, Nc .nU, o:i Tlnirnd.iy attertuHUi, fUr it h.d bitten foi;r ! men in a teiiiii e manner. ! My,. Shrnusrd kil m i er twoihuh i'otf, I one aed tt jeai. and ti e .1iies a ta Ki-va ui-iiitli. ul WbUeva'e, Oi.t , on V of ri- ri v and then committed Miiei Ii Through tbe ftTf-rls of Dr. Keai-.e, ; Otbol.c fiUhop id Kiebm.ind, aluioK every , n(.;ier tf int'.xicntinc dunk- of Unit !;t.i bus j given his fledge not to sell en Sunday. , f.,1. Th.. I'.ufor.l. w -l:o e ''l.t'Tii cior.t.is ; atn .hot at'd killed J.ilinlt at D'.Vrfli- ton, Ky.. wa. H'.q'J dav iatTt bv tbe jury ;e 1 murder oa S.in- im the tfro'.tnJ of iiih.ia- Dnrins the U-ii.r-oiary R"uev:ce -f Mis. , ! Racpti;b from her t.ou.e at Alton , N. V., , one 0 eiiinjr last week, tbe Iiohmj eanbt fire -and four y.uini :.ioiieii r:e;: bun.ed to; j deaf-. i The IlsiiTiil.! lntMqri-cer i;oe witta ! ! at:srct! in that the Democrat, c i,ic;:i!iers of , j the I.et;islature recline theie id 'I'-tliicn t-- ! i pain oy ir.terferinjt the Ilr; ublicau fipbt j t over the niator-bip. I .Mleo ('. l,aro. tbe Eafton wv.rdcrer, ' who is laid to be tea'-bintr scliool .c.mer. l ere j . in tbe Southwest, is e!so rfpfited to bnve ! rnnrried M"- Pi-aine, the uv;rdvrer of her j hust.and, Writ. P.in'iie. , A j i.d I'.i.r; fun. ace in the i'Lo-rr Iron : V10: k . riei-nix ilie. near I'hiludelptiia, -x- ' pioded Kri : v evening, severe y irjurin? hv ; men. two of whoti, Michael bianco and j brother, are dangerously hurt. j T'.' y. ram ids be.,:t by a kinj: f f t!:e j Siyib lh':i-ty linvr- ! f-n li .covered to the 1 i.ii!i of .M.-'i. ;.),'. Tbfy tc;c buried be- : . Tir-ath t'te .;!'!!. 1 tie vauitM ana cnamuern 1 ttre covered w i'h insei 1 lis. I Mr. T. Mofber, -f I.i i-dfo; (1, anwer- ied Vio-ck st brr trort d-.or "! Friday j ni'bt. when a tall mr.n tbn:st a t-.by into : hcmrt!i and quickly bit. Tbe patent-ge j : of t':e li'.t'e (: e is rot known. j An ;!d fanner .sys tt.ct f.nners w!io , ; left their coin .tandime ovt will find it d:u-- ; : jrerous Itii.ki'is in tne sprint, n. tbe kr.cVs will be fu ! of sriakes, wbi-rti Rie ad to J ' f.tber in t'ncpi for rcititer qimlru. ; ! Wi liam Fer;uson. of liailvi! e, I.rr.. j ! ter eounty, Rjrel ko years, and a widov.-.-r, i '; has lust married Mrs. i'arciret Woodisic'e, ! ! of Wilmington, Del., who in m widow 70 j years n!d. Th' v were lovers in youth.. j Dr. W. t . li iri;ancn, a I'eniist 01 1 tons. Ohio, .hot and hilled his wife on atuirlav and mime I iatrlv t fter shct and ki leii inm I pelf. lie was dl.'ripated and many tiu.es bis I wife had to t. es froJi the bouse to save her ! life. A correspondent ril th's ?wfn? vv.n . to the 1'bi a te'i-hia K'niiiii .Vu; ''it is 1 : Crow-inir d-.ubtrul Ol iver the State who j will be elected Senator : have Hw--t f.xed : i in vour mind, if ro let Snow dt u who it Is to i be."" I ! There is hard' v stiy doubt but a bill will ! pas Cnnjr at this session providing for ' ' trie removal of tbe tax on matches, .'txvinjs j j I'anks deposits, ba::k cbo,-V.. a!ni on a,i y,ro- j ; prietary articles ex'; f.t peri ii'ee; .- and cos- j j meties." I Tom Tavis har1 some phob-trrophs taV.cn . at 7ai:e-vi!!e. ':ii. : rd gnve our to l,i.:e j ' Mm ray in Pie pree!voi lla Ui idneil, who ! ' war.t-d .,-,, too. Trun would not j-?.rt with I i ano).'-r picture, and Ida at once -lanmdfed j ; suicide. 1 : Chis. G. and Herman II. Zeigter, brrtii ! er. tellers i i !l:e Dctrot sair.!T- bank, nt : Detroit, have embezzled over ?J.,00j of the i batik's fund''. The stolen money was spent ; in speculations nnd in the Fiinpoit wf an ci I travasant family. i V'hi!e two (ioj v:ere camboiinc; oi tbe ! frozen surface t-f a mill pond near West j Chester ruee;-.t!y crt of tbe cRnii.es broke ; throurrh th ice. The other promptly cautbt. its imnier-cd eompar.ion by th'! ear and puiVU ' it out of tbe hide. ! A church sterd" at Ionia, 5fich., is 1 tboui't.t t- be bewitched. ' ( iiie r.iabt it np pearc 1 to stretch up p.v.A b're a hole in the ; i louds. At another time it speiued to vah ' b e rhont and b"n nv", and it.s 'a?t ttick ! was to appear!1 l,e on tire." j In the rni;r?i of a debate in tbe '. S. ' Set.n.e on Tuediv last if w;i stated, and not dented, that the pen-ion roll f the war ! of l.'d j contained the ram:- of ten thousand survivors and twentv-hve thousand w idows, j The wir occurred sixty nin vaars aero. I There is a pmse at l.itt'ecote Farm, in i Wiltshire, Kntrland, wticl is known to be ; nearly r.ir.etv vears r-bt, and may be a good ' deal o It war. r,reented to tbe father of ! ?s present owner on bis tenth t,i'tbd y (in is 'S. tt;i tben considered aped. Ticf ; f .' il men t hat tbe M-Kf an coor.ty )e!t oricinatesj in a deep sea underlying that reaion. and a stock eonij any j has teen fortnetl at Parker for the uiriose of ! sinking a well to test the truth of tb! tbcoiy. 1 They eifiect to f in'.: the shaft 2.00 feet. I -In tbn pootbo:e cf the Middle Coal Field district, of which Carbon county is a pa:t. is an old man nameit i.ia;an, now in 1 his loeth year. lie is a native of Iieland, and savs lie we!! remembers th Irish rebel lion f f 17'.'S, as be was then 2.1 vears old. Tbe barn on tlie Ismous n;ia"teth farm, near Lititz, recently horned, was once a prison for eaptcted "Hessians. F.iron Stri pe! founded the farm a century ami a half ago, and tbe bii'diners were 'occupied by Washington's arni during the Kovolut inn. Tbe jury in the cas of two brothers named Taibott, who were on trial at Mnrvs- i ville. Mo., last week, for murdering their j father last Spring, returned verdict of 1 murder in the first degree on Friday night, j A motion for a new trial was made r.rii ; morning. i Mis Sarah L. Weir, of Washington i county, was wooed and" won bv .Joseph Me j Donougb, widower. McDonnueh married ' some other woman. Miss Weirs sued for i breach of promise ef marriage and on Friday j a jury at Washington awarded her $1,000 ' damages. Frank Thomas amved nt Rochester, Minn., on his wedding trip, and there saw the opportunity to steal a mule. If he lied with tbe beast, he must leave the woman be hind. The mule was sleek, fat and hand some, while the bride was scrawny and ugly. He deserted his wife and stole th mulo. Karly .Saturday night s a freight train on the Chicago, St. Louis and New Orleans Railroad wss nearing McComb City, Miss., a branch from a tree burning near tlie track fell and ignited a flat car-load of cotton. The fire spread to the adjoining cars and ilOl bales of cotton, valued at U,000, were de stroyed. John Cummins, who was arrested near Newark, O., for running a tack through his boy's tongue, was bound over to the Pro- hate Court at .Newark on 1 rulay. His f.ond 1 was fixed at St.ooo, which he furnished. During tbe trial there were frequent cries of hang hiin and similar expressions from tbe excited crowd. Mrs. Emily Careless died in Philadelphia on Friday-morning under peculiar circum stances. "One week ago her husband died of small-pox, and th wife was so prostrated ny grief that before ti.e body was cold she sbot herself in the breast with a revolver. She then became a raving maniac, and made other attempts on her life. The San Francisco CArontci savs that ! Calvin Ronbam, of Graniteviile, Nevada 1 county, while working on the Milton ditch, ! lost his footing in tbe snow and tumbled ! down the mountain side for a distauce of half a mile, when he was saved from drop ping over a precipice into tbe Vaba river Dy being caught in a drift. He was painfully injured. The Philadelphia 7"imej says that the Land League is understood to have under consideration a plot for placing percussion torpedoes under the throne in such a man ner that when Her Majesty sits down she will instantly get up again in several sec tions. This plot is not to he used if the plot for blowing up Windsor Castle with all on board is successful. A despatch from St. Martin's Ursuline convent, in Rrown county, Ohio, reports Archbishop J. I. Pureed paralyzed as to his left side, but in full possession "of his mental faculties. The feeling of friends is divided between hope for bis recovery and fear that it will be speedily fatal. He has only recent ly recovered from an attack of pneumonia, snd within a fortnight stood at tha new grave of his beloved younger fcre-ther. FOR ? and ' H TTP TXT T SM Ui I I I ijj. UVU UMil i i 1 BARGAINS IX OVERCOATS! BARGAINS IN BOOTS SHOES ! BARGAINS IN HATS I CAPS! BARIUM IX LADIES SHAWLS 1 COATS S imm IX TWILLED I PLAIN FLAXXFIS! Ba ains in all WINTER GOODS! .rgains in Tinware ! Barp;air 5 I )uc l':'iS( v - A t JN lor oil' i.s tlip.t wh -. tivstock ol Vv lv in I'.cfvw i3o : : IK I ill 3t; B&THERTIUH C&BRTTHlia QYEBTO SE&SQR vfi: !iatk cftM'Lrnri) t; in t Tit; t at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. . 1 1 ijict. "v iiEkA't; rx cuoirt' lot of rsnoes. V sts. Iar'l 011 our l - Pricev MU l YA:.A)SX the MUST CO T cf th. Gotvls. Our cf'jf't is to fjft if tf the lr7s, :tnl if yen thiril; fttr griefs at-e twi Ihii- ettowjh irr trill ri!tnr yit to name your fljttrt-s. B's: carry inn i.rtt. im AvnoKTr.vT i LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S SHOES in I-'beimbury, finnl fou iritl ultra its fituf t'-7i f.s mtf izef sry or i "al- itt; at the very lowest price. NOW IS YOl'It COME Aii GATHLii ICl.! IN riEFUllE V. S. nan nrr '-i I , T - lv Ifllr . HI 7-fr. jonn vv anamaicer. DRY GOODS If you cannot risit the city, tend to r by postal card for House keeper's Price List,nd Under' wear Price List for JANUARY We 11 orders by letter from every State and Territory at same prices charged customcri who visit the store, and allow same privilege of return. The stock includes Dress Goods, Silks, Laces, Fancy Goods, and general outfits. Grand Depot, Fears are entertained of an epidemic of sm.'.Mr-o in New York. There were otdylt j deaths in that city from snisVpox in 17, 05 in t.s70.and."l last ve.r,htit there have already been this year as snr.ny deaths as during the entire pievious tv.e:e n, i tl'S. and ai the prescid rate of increase tie mortality wid reach the figures of bilf a d.'Ten r ears ago, when smallpox was an epidemic. An an- ailing accident occuiied at Free dom. Leaver rountv, on Mon.-'av which cost the lives of two little boys. Tho'nis Kognrs and William K'atr, vears old. were coast ing that tsiornitie and were on ti.e railway track when a train passed, cutting thetn both in such s hnirible manner as to cau-et ieir death in an bour. The a'vi.b ;:t was oeensvd unavoidable on the engineer's pait. Representative (ied les. of Ohio, who was recent 'y manied to Mrs. Amelia It. Class, at Mansfield, w; s warri-d tl ere iu 1S4S to his first wife on the same evening c f tne year and at tlie ume place that his pres ent bride was married to her f ormer Unsound The two survivors of the double wedding. after an interval of thirtv-two vears were married by the clergyman whocfliciated at their former ceremonies. Tbe Frie Herald says : The eyes of Jus tice are bandaged, as nstnil. The hoard of pardons offers a repp to a psir of imbecile murderers and a pardon to a wealthy and in fluential swiniller. Geo. Smith and Catha rine Miller, two simple persons, murdered the husband cf thw iatter and must bang ; John S. Morton, the Philadelphia swindler, is let loose. The two former are poor tho latter wealthy. This is a beantiful world. A sad case of destitution and disease has come under the notice of the health de partment st Chicago. Mr. snd Mrs. Feide, with their five children in a squalid tne mnt, were taken wiih'smallpnx. snd one of tbe children is dead, after two weeks' suf fering without medical sttendsnce. The other four are in a critical condition. All have now been removed to a proper place. Smallpox snd diphtheria are repoited to be verv prevalent in that city. A man in McDonald countv, Missonri, has a natural kaleidoscope. It is a dark green stone, nearly transparent, about the size of a turkey's egg and nearly that shape and somewhat rough P,y holding it to the b"bt and looking tbrouch it mig'orieent 1n:sing butlalo, moving caravans oT camets, j fields of waving crass, mountain scenery, ' cities and villages, vast stretchss of prairie, etc. It was found in Buffalo creek, near the home of its owner. George Smiihson and Mrs. P.ettte Putin were married a few davs ago in the Nash ville jail, where tbe bridegroom is spending J h ten-year Term ior norse nieanng. t onnrry gossip had it that the horse-thief was a very handsome man, snd Mrs. Dunn, who is the widow of a physician cf Gallatin, went to the jail to test the truth of the report. Mrs. I")nnn fell in love with him, and despite the bitter opposition of her relatives, married him She is waiting in Nashville now for her husband's term io expire. James Vail, of Carbondale, having been struck on the nose the other day with a snowball, it begnn bleeding. It bled a quart and could only be stopped by plugging. At times since the flew has leen resumed, ac companied by bleeding from the gums, throat and bowels. Small blood vessels un der ti e skin have becom dissolved, and strange lookine spots are formed rtpon the bodv by the deposits of blood. The rase puzzler tbe physicians. It is called purpura I'rmorrnagiea," and is the first cae of the kind on record In tBntsetten of th country. FEBRUARY, '81. rrT T T t ,1 I II 111 Y ! 1 ! I I I V i tl. ,( ii - tit; ft WO uiV;i fill. C-vOOflw, V..v ?L oial- I 1.1 Sm - jjniii C'omitcM- ; t ill V.T i w Sk i! F? V F' VW3 ? ciiANCi: roi; bargains! THE r,E$T HAVE iiEEN 1 ;,T! ti ru .l UKLtV 13 a il v e!. v tfc Bro, This tr thcparticular s;2on. in w hich to get and prepare Honse fcecpin Dry Goods Sheetings, Fi'.iow Materials, Liners, Nap kins, Towels, etc. It is also the season for Ladies' Underwear. The Grand Depot contains the greatest variety of foods in one estA';i:sh:ner,t in the United States, and exchanges or refundsmoney for things that do net suit, upon cxr.muiatjcn at hme. and FEBRUARY Philadelphia. Wbi.e tbe F.e :'! Ticer, witii her t w as lavinr up at a:,f, rn.a. titre miles a' ve ( ir.cinnafi, an.d while m t of the crew were aslcen, one of tbe stcam-dra::! was blown cut and it was tb.oiicbt that one of her boil ers liad exploded. Tbe boat c.id not late fire anl was n d serio-.m'v damaged. The injured are all fron T'ittt'.ntrgh or its vicini ty, and rre as follows : Chaiics IVrcival, pilot, badlv scalded : b:s rtanghter, serions'v i scalded : Mi-s Ai ;:a I'i ii i; s. siigl.t'v sca-o- ed : Frank We.tNor. pilot, hoth hands s -abl-ed : Sam FaVer, wp.tchman. 'ad!v s ai led ; 1 Milton Mr-Call, steward, t-il:v sr.at!e.l, it is I feared f italiv. ; Unless some cf the Republican nii'.lion j aires hasten to tVe imcw the r.iagr-.if.cet-t ' preparrtior-s for tl-rfi-lri's inauguration wi 1 I pr e m failure. The ana:ii.t:i--nts were j tnai- to 't-.ei-il forty tbo;iar.t lol:a.-s in tho ! grand affair, but, ceorlir.g to a detailed re i port of e,-,: ,-ct o-s mad-. b s tl .ui tiiree ; t:iouand riolins h.ne been raise,!. Mr. A. I M. Clar-p. after tbe lal orrf fi ur ii;ivs, T; ised 1 about two hundred and fiMy nollars from ti e government o."icjs!s lv.iiress men of Washington, lie nid he would rather saw wood than perform such labor. The tidal amount of bis collections in tbe internal rev- , snue bureau was ten dollars. 1 On Saturday morning a pat tv of citizens ; from Kiozua, McKean countv. went into the 1 woods to see a well t'-rped 'e-i. Forty quarts of nitro glyt-rine were put into a ban e! to thaw. Steam having b-en turned on tbe j presure of heat became so great that the ticklish stnT exp'oded, earning ruin and I havoc in its ttack. The engine bouse wi.s ( blown to splinters, and the engineer, Andrew Leather, was torn to pieces. J. O. Ci:hing, . one cf tbe spectators, was killed by a flying 1 piece of timber. F. M. Rlvst, ne." tbe con tractor, John Franklin and l'eter wreny were injured by flying frarmerit-i. Six men ! were standing in the derrick, where one of the group was killed cutrigiit. l eas', "r has , a wife and family in enang-. 1 was postmaster at Kinzua and bavt- 'ifmm lrf" family. s a lsrg? Tstr.K is no use talking, no ce t 'Tis s'o now everywhere : talking, T.. ...w.V - ...1.3 V j (Without much trouble or estxs l I v Mnse ) I pense, ) rrfinary You must use Srn' Srsr? ff United State or Ca., iv ss l l vuleo wi " n twr MlS rATiRT.I,, Sitl KI.l., Slll . .. - M. Miiliva ir sh sgit it from f- f tn lfe of t!,e n,f snd Mrs. A. of Par'iament Ladie-.' Land Ieague n r CHBe.RT ash HcjtRo tf Taw, 1 rome may oe incuned to c: f f -x . .- -tre. but the idea we want t -ieise oir me ' t- your mind! is, that St:. Cij, jir.prs upon 1 wf" v cure any Throst an;';r,.,, --';au. ,Vo., will - than nv ot hr dk 'ro' .T((,tii ouicki r : S crvs i-- ''fti are forming purpose of confmuing, a , London for the e :-tk of Telirf . f ,'h.wers t e ar- of the Covrcvn ".v..-,t. Miss Par 'rr.f fhe league snrl should Mr. Parnell e.nd; rested under the provis, bill now pending in Pan-, nell will he the I're-ideia Mrs. Sullivan the Vice-I't ?r,e.,..le,-t. Bt far ttir nr.T ki' ment ofca'sr'h snd it-t r' ' f,-r tbe F.lv's Cresm Balm, whi'lticcnfj A dncaes is est sales with us of anyfti Yictft p0.vlr.g the ls:g- ; fered. The renorts s-r lunation now of- ' we do rot heitste to -L-i' tvpr'i!(, and ren 111 11 1 to snv and all other r ? '-"v- it as i?peri-'r j The Balm is pleasant rtin the market, I are La vail. A Sn, 1 , 'A m, y to use. t t- l , i'rtsti, ls;n, Pa. V i ! Clothing Jri Ctufsitl 1't ;; NEXT 'W IVST-f ALTODNA, 1lCJt kil r SLUM 7. '(. tiST flSt ALl (.:. 5 i III .. 9 - tat r . $ a 9 ; '; j r .. i.I . -T P 5 .' 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' tnread ar.jti.liiij '. k- ;-a t v.n -Jt'.iJttk. llsr ! t f - yft; ;d ont H-.r. -ol i Wk-'r vrn b-,. :b-t c 1 -. i:d .x .;. rex t-v - : i t cs. Vi - ;i 're? s .. 1 c Tsir j I'nift. Tt-i s; a'.', ba 7. la tc: pf k.; ; v.n', !'. : t i .' th grwr.tf frr n.if iir; r.' v 1:1 n lai nnr.:. or- of t.v .-v llll il ' rs3 fa - W W V LOST ir.ANHCOp, R.STl A w .t i el io- 1 11 - .,., l.-T. V.. IT, 'TIS IH -V I r, vrrv.i s ;n-ple ' ' to 1 is 1 rr 43 1 !-.att.n:- '1 I-? ' .- i-. va- - . -1 - - .tor, ,r,ber l 7 r.i. tlAdl'v' V ' 1 1 . S I -I W 1 1 iiO I V 5 I. lr? 1: eo-r: f i 3'- i",-o ' ' - nt e e'v o Itifi -nrt oi 1, " 11. tre t- TIT :t i : treat ' " ft rTir..:-. . .... 0&-7.-v--'";-:',-',-- ten . l'..-lv. , VMWtur,. I'.- TT TAT: IS It ,S. -.-, . cr-r ta ttie ; trj 4TSVi.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers