mm EELENSBURC. PA., FHIDAI. - - - - FEB. 25, I8S1. An appropriate farewell address by Mr. Naves to the American people will founl c,n our first raze. In this ad dress, as every one who reads it will discover, Mr. Tlayes neither extenuates norfiets down aught in malice, but sim ply unfohU a plain, unvarnisneJ tale in language which is a like creditable to himself and eminently befitting the oc casion. The census office announces the fol lowing distribution of the total popula tion of the country among the several classes : Males, 23,.Vt',.S2 ; females, 24,032,21 ; natives of the United States. 43,475,55 ; foreign born, 0,077,300 ; white, 43,404, S77; colored, i,SI,lA; In dians not in tribal relations on reserva tions uuder the care of the government, C5,122; Chinese, 10 ),103: other Asiatics, The offieial majority of Eckley IJ. Coxa in the I,uzerne Senatorial district is 3,S0f. At the election last November his majority was 1,00". There will be an effort made by some of the Republi can roosters in the Senate to prevent him taking hii sat, based upon his ad mission.? as to his having used money at the November election in a way not "ex pressly authorized by law," but the ob jection will not prove to be an obstacle in his path. The nomination of StanleyfMatthews as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court has not yet been reported to the Senate by the Judiciary Committee, and the chances now are that it will not see daylight. Matthews left Washington for Ohio at the close of last week, regard ing himself as about the only visiting statesman who helped to cheat Tilden out of the vote of Louisiana who hasn't received his reward, although Hayes did all he could in that direction by sending hii name to the Senate. The exact popular vote at the Presi dential election, which has been a sub ject of much disputp, seems at last to have been ascertained by the Cincinnati Enquirer, whose editor placed himself in communication with the proper oCicials in every State in the Union and has ob tained from them the full returns of the whole vote. The result is as follows : "Whole vote cast, 0,100,213 ; Hancock's vote, 4.421, lit) ; Garfield's vote, 4,410, 534 ; "Weaver's vote, 313,P'.:3 ; Dow's vote, 10,7'.'l ; Phelps' vote, 1,133 : scat tering, 2,122. Hancock's majority over ' i . .vir,, ' ; Garheld s minority, , Garfield, 8,10 330,015. TrrE Ilarrisburg TJ(jr"ih, Cameron's organ at the State capital, is completely disgusted at the failure of the machine to control the election of United States Senator, and has reached the conclusion that through the protracted struggle of the two contending factions "the organ- ! izaiion oi uiu iiepuuiicau I'ariy is ruin ed, and so thoroughly ruined, that an election of anv mail to the Senate will not be able to repair it." This is un- ; doubtedly trn, and it is equally true that no Republican piper in the State has done more to brinj about the ruin over which it now howls its lamentations than did the Tdojvih itself. A sad and melancholy interest will, iays an exchange, attach to the 4th of March next because on that day the venerable Hannibal Hamlin, of Maine, wiil for the first time in the history of the Republic become a private citizen. Perhaps the Legislature of Maine will elect him to the vacancy which will be caused by the accession of Senator Blaine to the cabinet. The people may depend uiwn it that something will happen if Hannibal Hamlin is left out in the cold. What the Wandering Jew is to the old en time Hannibal Hamlin is to Ameri can politics. He must not be permitted to retire for a century or two yet. Owing jto the rapid progress of the Appropriation bill in Congress during the past week, and to the passage of th? three per cent, funding act, all fear of an extra session has been removed. It is true that the Congressional Appor tionment bill has not yet passed the House, but it will probably do so to-day (Wednesday) under the o;eration of the previous question, of which Mr, Cox gave notice last Saturday he would avail himself should it become necessary. The projH)sition to fix the number of members at 307, an increase of 14 over the present ratio, seems to meet with more favor than any other number, and will pretty certainly be adopted. 0r last Monday evening, at Cooper Institute, Judge Black delivered an ad dress to a large meeting of the citizens of New York who, in the language of the call, "believe that the principles upon which our government is founded are worthy of preservation, and that corporations should not be permitted to run this country for the benefit of a fav ored few." This is a subject which Judge Black is peculiarly well fitted to discuss in all its length and breadth a subject that is fast enlisting the earnest consideration of the people of the coun try, and which will yet stir them as no other subject which has undergone pop ular agitation during the last quarter of a century has ever yet stirred them. Nearly all of the Republican poli ticians in this State who have made a pilgrimage to Garfield's residence at Mentor, Ohio, concur in saying that his preference for United States Senator from Pennsylvania is G. W. Scofield, of Warren county. How perfectly natural thi? is ? ScoCeld was in Congress with GarfieH, and both were tarred with the same Credit Mobilicr stick, the testi mony of Oakes Ames showing that when he paid Gailic-ld a dividend on bis stock of t-i-2'J, in June, lS, he paid Scofield at the same time a dividend on his stock of S'A A fellow feeliDg makes a man wondrous kind, and why shouldn't Gar field cliug to Scofield and want him for the purine of playing Senator to his Presidency ? Is the pursuit of a big office under difficulties John Cessna possesses won derful powers of perseverance. During his crooked political career, commenc ing say in 1S04, Cessna has done as much dirty work to promote and build up the supremacy of Cameronism in Republi can politics as any other man in the State. Of course he expected to be re warded, and believing that now was the time when the Camerons ought to do the handsome thing for him by taking him under their protection and sending him to the U. S. Senate a3 the successor of "William A. "Wallace, he went to Har risburg early in January and has been hanging on the ragged edge of the Leg islature ever since, hoping and expect ing. Micawber-like, that something would turn up, through the interference of Don Cameron or with his acquies cence, that would make his calling and election sure. But Cameron didn't feel like shouldering such a heavy load as he knew the Bedford demogogue would prove to be, 8nd Cessna's Senatorial hopes have therefore been rudely blast ed. He must now turn to Garfield for his reward for services rendered as chair manof the Republican State Committee in the late campaign. The Philadelphia litcor'l sums up its estimate of Cessna as follows : "If there is anything in this world that little John Cessna would like more than any other thing it would be to sit in the Senate for Pennsylvania, If there is any place in the world for which he is less fitted we can't name it." B. K. BnrcE, the colored Senator from Mississippi, appears to be the unan imous choice of the negro politicians throughout the country for a place in Garfield's cabinet, and Bruce has said 1 that he thinks he is competent for a sat ' isfactory discharge of the duties either of Postmaster General or Secretary of I the Interior, but would prefer the for I ruer. Bruce has made a good reputation in the Senate by his modest deportment and strict attention to his business, but he stands a far better chance of being translated some night, as Mahomet was, on the back of a mule to the Seventh heaven and returning before daylight, than of ever sitting at a meeting of Gar field's cabinet. Senator Lamar, who is Bruce's colleague, entertains for him a feeling of genuine respect, and on more than one occasion has given emphatic expression to it. When Bruce's name was first suggested in connection with the Cabinet, the Republican papers as serted that the Southern Democrats would regard his selection as an insult, but Mr. Lamar, in referring to the mat ter a few days ago in Washington, sai l: "So far from objecting to the appointment of Senator Bruce, the Mississippi delegation and I think most of the Southern inembers, would choose him as the representative South- i ern Republican. Neither I nor any other; Siolltherln i)omocrat lms taken an active part in his behalf, but we all feel enough friend- j voice against the suicidal act of the Commit ship and regard for him to make it a plain ree 0f two years ago when it recalled a de as words can put it that if; a -Southern Repub- funct convention for the purroseof perform- lican is to go into the cabinet no appointment would please us more than that of l!ruee. He is modest and intelligent in short, a noble negro." Ox Wednesday last the joint legisla tive convention at Ilarrisbnrg elected J h j Michell, of Tioga county, as the successor of Hon. Wm, A. Wallace in the V. S. Senate, the vote standing as follows: Mitchell, ir); Wallace, 02; Brewster, 1 ; McVeagh, 1. The Camer on and anti-Cameion committees of con ference settled on Mitchell as the candi date on Tuesday night, after several in effectual meetings had been held be tween yesterday week and Tuesday for that purpose. Mitchell isalawjerand is 43 years old. He was a member of the lower branch of the Legislature from 1872 to 1570, inclusive, and now repre sentsthe Sixteenth district in CongTess, havinc been elected in 170 and re-elect- i ed in 1S7S. He possesses very respect able abilities, and although he is not neary so rjnisy as AVolfe, of Union coun- j ty, we think they are men of about the i mental calibre. Just who Mit- ; chell "belongs" to is a conundrum that the future must answer. The Cameron clan claims him as one of their own, while the anti-machine men declare that he is the veiy man they were looking for. As both these claims can't be well founded, it is a legitimate pre sumption that one of the contending factions has been badly cheated. Wheth er Mitchell is a "Christian Statesman," as it was claimed Gen. Beaver was. we are not able to say. (treat indeed is the Senatorial fall from Wm. A, Wallace to John I. Mitchell, Tuesday last was the one hundred and forty-ninth anniversary of the birth of George Washington, of whom it was said by one of the prominent actors in j our revolutionary struggle that he was j "first in war, first in peace, and first in j the hearts of bis countrymen," This is j tha highest eulogy that could be pro- nounced upon even so great a man and patriot as Washington, and it is as true to-day as when it was first uttered, and will remain true as long as the Republic which lie did so much in establishing continues to exist. Since the close of the civil war an attetrpt has sometimes been made b3- his fawning admirers to place Grant alongside of Washington in the affections of the American people, and one of thera, Governor Cornell, of New York, lately so outraged public opinion in Grant's own presence, and without any rebuke from him, as t3 re fer to him a3 "more than Washington'''' in the esteem aud love of the country. The people everywhere, from Maine to Oregon will, however, instinctively re sent such an insult and will continue in i the future as they have in the past, in common with the civilized world, to hxk upon Washington as the purest, greatest and most illustrious man this country has ever produced. "What is the duty of a member of the State Legislature?"' was the weighty quest ion recently referred to the Judi ciary Committee of IJrother Gardiner's Limekill Club, a debating and literary society in Toledo, Ohio, comjiosed of colored philosophers and statesmen. After a patient investigation of the sub ject the committee submitted the fol lowing report, which is as applicable to any other Stafe as it is to Ohio : "1. To take a free pass from ebery railroad in de State. This puts him in a posishun to wote against railroad monopolies an' sulid- les. 2. lo be absent as otten an as much as he kin, an' to draw his salary wid prompt' ness an' dispatch. 3. To puh frew bills favorin" de interests of bimejf au' friends. 4. To spin out de seshuc3 as long as possi ble m ordr to draw de saiai v. .S. To lot no I ncc.-wlmn r.ass wi.h.nt n-.atin' - r.,.n,.h to bavceberv one ob dose speeches printed un' sen ho-jie to sn anxshus coDsrituenv." Thb proceedings, brief and to the point, of the Cunty Committee meeting held at the Court TJonsc last Monday afternoon will be found in our local department. The Com mittee, or at least a majority of the members, as is more apparent than encouraging, were fully determined to make short work of the Crawford county system, notwithstanding it received a clear majority of the votes east at ! an election held in June last for the purpose of either continuing or superseding the pres ent delegate system, and as soon as that ob ject was attained the meeting came to an in glorious end. That this was the feast to which the Com mittee was invited we leave our readers to judge, each for himself; yet we doubt not that a large majority of them will agree with us that whatever motive actuated the Com mittee, it assumed a role for which it was never created and accomplished a woik that will not redound to the welfare of the rarty whose interests it was appointed to serve. It matters nt how honest the members were who voted to table the resolution offered by Mr. Fleming, which, or something akin to which, it was their plain duty to adopt ; the fact remains that they acted as if the Demo cracy of Cambria have no rights which they arej bound to respect. If they were not willing to do the work that the Democrats of the county made obligatory upon them by their action last June, they should at least have had courtesy enough to draw up an ad dress setting forth the reasons which prompt ed them to disobey the will of their masters and at the same time referred the question back to the people for their final decision. We are no advocate of the Crawford coun ty system, having voted against its adoption under the firm conviction that it is a delusion aud a snare, but when it received the endorse ment of the party, as it certainly did when a majority of those who voted on the question declared in its favor, it was little short of revolution for the County Committee to adopt the desperate tactics of the late Thaddeus Stevens and treat the election as though it had never been held. It won't do for the men who have committed this glaring and grievous offense against the unity of the Dem ocratic party to take refuge behind the plea set up by themselves that the vote given for the system in question did not express the will of the Democracy, and that therefore they were justified in refusing to put it in force. A3 well might they claim that a suc- eessfui candidate tor on.ee was not e.ecieu because every voter in tne district out not see fit to exercise the right of suffrage. Hut even admitting the validity of such an excuse, how does it come that the wise men of the Com mittee rejected a system that secured the ap proval of 472 Democrats and resolved to con tinue the present system, which had only 137 votes in its favor ? Certainly t:iis conclusion could not have been reached through any de sire to obey the will of the party. We don't wish to speak of this act of the Committee in as harsh terms as we think it deserves, but we have no hesitation in. saying that it is as shameful as it is unprecedentedj and if it be true, as not a few honest and earnest Democrats are prone to believe, that it lias been egnineered in the interest, or supposed interest, of certain seekers after po litical proferment, then indeed. In the estima tion of as wise men as any of thein, have they sown the wind of deplorable discord only to rein tlie wli'n ,' 1 e I beks lnrlwlnd of well-merited defeat. :mas did not hesitate to raise its ing a work which had passed beyond its con trol, thereby assuring a victory to our polit ical enemies, and the Fuekman is none the less emphatic now in condemning the want of judgment, to put it in the mildest form possible, which has characterized the course pursued by a majority of the Committee in doing what an equal number of Democrats, not members of the Committee, would have fully as much right to do. We don't assume that the Committee was packed for the pur pose of doing what it has done, and yet there is some reason to believe that several of thos who voted with the majority were prompted by anything els than an earnest desire to serve the party. Khers there were, no douot, who acted from honest and conscientious mo tives, but nevertheless they played into the hands of the opposition, ai.d our only hope now is that the damage is not too serious to he repaired, mid that there is still plenty of time to avert the calamity which has been invited if not assured by the unpardonable f""y of thoa who ouglrf to be the servants of a party which has already suffered too long and too grievously from the bartering, bickerings and blunderings of selfish politi cians. Tennessee has a Republican Governor ! and a Legislature controlled by Bepublicans i and Kepudiators. Yet Tennessee within the last week has been the scene of .terrible and I unrepresed mob violence which, if it had j occurred in a State governed by the Demo cratic party, would have caused a howl of in j dignation to isue from the Republican press i throughout the country. Not in any Sonth i ern State lias there been such disorder since j the war as that which disgraced Tennessee j last Saturday at Springfield, in that State, in , the lynching of ten persons charged with i the crime of murder. The victims of the j mob were negroes, the crime of which they I were indicted was clearly traced to them, i and they undoubtedly deserved the gallows. But the law was cheated of its proper vindi cation bv the. unrestrained fury of the popu I lace. It has been urged in behalf of the res i toration of the Urpubliean party to power in tne rsoutn thai tne negro iixs no chance under the administration of the laws bv the ; 3, But it seems he has a poorer show right under the imse of the Republican Governor of Tennessee than anywhere else in the South. It is only lair to conclude from this that the Republican argument just referred to does not rest on a sound basis. llarrisburq Patriot. Killed bt a Maxiac Father. Adam Ilessler, with his wife and pretty nine-year-old daughter Jennie, have for eicht vears re sided in a neat farm-house near Mines' Cor- ners, I'a., whence they moved trom Ivhocte Islar.d. In September last a large payment came due upon the place. The funds reali zed from the sale of grain and prod jce were found insufficient to pay one-half of the debt. Hessler thought that he would lose his home, and feared his family would suffer. lie be came despondent. On Friday morninc his wife went six miles to her brother's, in the hope of getting assistance from him. While she was gone Ilessler rayed like a madman, and declared that his daughter must be got- ten out of the way. He carried the frighten- ed, crying child to a well at the rear of the house, arid binding her wrists together with a piece of heavy rope, threw her in. She fell twenty-nine feet, striking upon the rocky bot tom with a force that was fatal. An invalid lady neighbor saw the proceedings, but could do nothing, as she had not been able to leave h:-r room for twelve years. Ilessler was gone when his wife returned, atid nothing has been heard of him since. It is believed he wandered ta the mountain and perished in the snow. Garfield a Minority President. The Cincinnati F.nqnirrr has been at pains to pro cure from all the States the official figures of the popular vote for President. The result is for the first time accurately determined. As regards the total vote Democratic, lie publican, Greenback, Prohibitionists nnd scattering (ion. (iarfield is in a minority by more than three hundred thousand ballots. His vote was aliout eight thousand less than Gen. Hancock's. This showing is of interest, but really of no practical importance. Gen. Garfield's title is perfectly good. He was legally and fairly elected by a majority ef the Kicotoral Col lege, and that is what makes a President. The trouble with Hayes was, r.ot that he lacked alxut a quarter of a million of a ma jority on the popular vote, but that he lack ed nineteen votes of a majority in the Elec toral College. These nineteen votes wore stolon, ard we have had for two hundred and six weeks a Fraudulent President. X. Y. Vun. Headache, all Bilious Disorders, Dysppp- i sia. and Constipation cured bv D1J. M KT- j TAL K'S HEADACHE AND DYSPEPSIA PILLS. Price 23 cents. 2-21. -lra.j FmrlaiiJ and Ireland. WHY THS IRISH HATE theik orrREsons Thonias Kelsey was crushed to death by and spoilers. a lop nearrCarbondale, after being thrown , . ., . 227 feet down a mountain. Ireland hates England, because in the nrst Four students were burned ta death, place the Irish are a conquered and conrisca- fmir fata-lv an(i four slightly burned at a ted race. They have been despoiled or a.l f t at Mimjrn last Friday, they possess. They have, as part of their i,n;amm Sei-lcl. a resident of Slioema conquered condition, been deprived of every fcervii,cJ T$erks county, ruptured a blood foot of the land. 1 nat laim was mivrii nu ( them and its ownership given to their con querers a foreign race, speaking at the time a foreign tongue, and residing in a foreign land. The Irish, reduced to practical slav ery, have always been dependent on the soil for the necessities of existence. The non nuwisnt lann.nuiipri bv the aid of bntisn constabulary and regular troops, gathered . the products of the land, took thorn to tug- , land, sold them, and expended the money in England, or elsewhere out ef Ireland, in the course of centuries, the privilege of cul- j tiva'ing this land, and of producing from it j the food sufficient to maintain existence, as- I sumed the form of a rent-charge that is i instead of taking the products, tne i.inui....- , I dictated a sum of money to be paid him semi- , annually in lieu of the crop itself, this money ; tribute being exacted without reference to ( the fact wlietner tne iauu jiruum-cu . alent or not The most productive seasons leave tne or- , naiits but a bare subsistence after meetin ! ll!4 forced tribute-payment, and in bad sea f ,i .1 . sons tbev are reduced' to destitution, and fre i nuently to famine. Without t he cash remit tances sent to Ireland from this country, ! Canada and Australia there would bealwcst annually the sickening calamity of a nation of five or six millions of people dying of I famine in a land full of food, within six hours' travel of London, ana in wuai integral part of the British Kingdom. An English journal, in the light of this ever-recurring fact, professes to be ignorant of any cause wbv the famine-cursed people should cherish an unrelenting dislike or those who hold them in enforced and perpet ual indigence and beggary. Ever vear the resid ent agents m Ireland of the nonresident, oontiscut hit '-ndlonls col lect from the occupants of tlx Irish land the enormous sum of between sixty and seventy millions of dollars of tribute-money for the privilege of living on the land of which they have been despoiled. Every dollar of this monev taken as a whole, it is a tribute en acted "by the conquerors from the conquered and dispossessed people is remited to Eng land. Scaicely a penny of it finds its way back to Ireland, or is expended on the land, in any works of improvement, or in any branch of manufactures or other industry. It is carried off in the shape of grain, cattle, swine, and butter, exactly as the Turkish Government has collected tribute from Egypt, from Greece, and from all its con quered Christian dependencies. Under the law of Groat Britain, these lion resident feudal chiefs exact from these five million of miserable people an annual tri bute that strips the land completely of its substance, and frequently leaves the farmers dependent on the charitable contributions of food from other nations to save them from death bv starvation. A refusal to py this raok-rent-tribute-nionev is followed by forci ble eviction ami denial of the privilege of re fuge on anv other rack-rent land in Ireland nothing save the roadside, poor-house, or grave. And yet the editor of an English Liberal iournaf is bewildered bv the mystery of why the Irish hate the British Government, whose laws enforce the payment of this tri bute. ller present Maiesty ascended the throne in 1.17. Placing the "annual tribute gather ed from those poor, conquered peasants of Ireland at only ?.-.0,oim),Ooo a year, there have ben collected of them and carted away to England from is:57 to lftxo a period f forty three vears two billions and one hundred and fifty millions of dollars s-.?,v.i,(mhi.ooO), an amount exceeding the National debt of the United States, Is it any wonder that under this annual stripping of the land Ire land has lM-en five times stricken with famine, even during her present Majesty's reign? When her very Christian Majesty began her "glorious reign" Ireland numbered nearly nine millions of people. Depriving them selves of the food they produced to pay the enforced tribute to their conquerors has re duced ihem by famine stud expatriation to five millions at this time : and yet the editor of the foremost Liberal paper in England is unable to comprehend why t'ueli i-ii io not love the ?h-itirh Government, which main tains, and upholds, and enforces this system of remorseless plunder based upon whole sale confiscation, and is filled with amaze ment at the pei petual longing of those in comprehensible Celts to escape from the beneficent hug of John Bull. Chicago Tri bune. Thacic Fate of a Yorso HrxTnF.ss. A number of our exchanges contained an account cf the killing, recently, of two black bears by Lottie Meirill, a young huntress, aged 18 years, of Wayne county, this State. The following account of her de.Uh is from the Elmira Gazette: A fearful tale is told.in the Port .lervis Union of the fate of Lottie Merrill, the young huntress of Wayne coun ty, I'a. According to this account she met a mor-t tragic death on the sth of 1-Vbuary, being attacked in her hut by six bears, kill ed and e.Uen by them, and her body burned with the carcasses of some of them in her cabin. A parly of hunter-, it is said, at the clo.e of the day found her cabin still burn ing, and the proofs of the horrible death she ' had died. It appears that she had been liunt- ing that day, and hail killed a tine buck deer, i which, alter she bad removed the entrails, j she had dragged home on the snow. Six i hungry bears, drawn bv tne smell of blood, ; had followed the trail to her hut, and after j devouring the carcass of the deer attacked j the huntress, killing her and devouring her I body. The girl had evidently made a heroic i defence. An examination of the carcasses ' of the six bonis in the cabin showed that she 1 must have killed two of them before being overpowered. The carcass of one bear had fallen against the closed door and imprisoned them nil within the cabin, which took tin? ; and burned the others to death. In the ; cabin was found one of the huntress's heavy j boots with the foot still in it. a bent hunting ' knife near the bones, and the antlers of the deer she had brought home, which with the 1 carcasses of the bears furnished a complete : key to Hie mystery. Her funeral took place ; on" Wednesday, the nth. At.least .too people ! were present at the funeral, and the old ' preacher. V- illiam Bunwiek, preached the ! sermon, relating the story of her death and j extolling Ijer bravery and virtue to the skies, t The remains were buried near her burned ! cabin, and over her grave was placed a pair i of antlers and a hemlock slab with this rude : epitaph : ; Iottfe 3IerrilI I :i y s hearphe riident know trot ; :itwiizto ne ulcered tmt she h:i hfM hxr Inst ; :tu?elwith tho bnrs nntl thcyve peooped her; :she was a ool Kiri anil she Is now in heaven.; ;lt t'Kk fix ti' bars to get away with her.; ;blie was only li years old. : Jt r.iT.F.E Okg xs. There are makerswho seek to earn and fix a reputation for first class work which shall be for all time. Among these may be noted the Mendelssohn 1'iano Company, manufacturers of the popn j jar Jubilee organs, which are rapidly beeom- : ing .Known, aim which no not, jail ro noiu i every men ot ground tuey once occupy, i So thorough is the inspection of the various ! parts, and the whole, that when an instru I ment goes out of the house a guarantee for I five years long enough to break down and I wear out two common organs is given the purchaser. The .Jubilee Organ is eminently ! an organ for the people jjouuvuie, Ay., tm- ; mrrciai. j Having had occasion to purchase organs j of this Company for our own peisonal friends, and having found thein to be all that was ' claimed for them after years of thorough trial, ! and having repeatedly visited their factory in New York city, we are prepared to assert, from our own knowledge of the manufactur ers and their organs, that their work is not excelled by any manufacture now in the mar ket. In short, the Mendelssohn Tiano Com pany's instruments ars eminently the peo ple's organs, and are worthy of the enviable reputation they so certainly enjoy. Wc cor dially recommend them to theeoiifidence and patronage of the public ; we advise them to communicate with the. Company, at its head quarters in Now York, and look over their circular and price list. Tfte Independent. Why Shoi-lo They? No man or woman can do satisfactory work when the brain is dull, the nerves are unsteady, the svstem re laxed and they feel generally wretched. Why should lawyers, merchants, clergymen, doc tors, mechanics or mothers often 'miserably drag through their work in this condition, when a small amount of Parker's Ginger Tonic will always, at a moderate cost, clear the hrain, and give them the strength and the will to perform their duties sat iof acton ly. We have felt its strengthening and bracing effects and can recommend it most highly. See other column. E'l. 1-21. -lm, Here is a item that will interest some of our readers : The township auditors, under act of Legislature of June 3, 1S7!, shall in issi. and thereafter, meet on the second Monday ot March in each year, (except to audit the accounts of school directors, which shall bp done on the first Monday in June), and of tenor if necessary, and shall audit, set tle and adjust the account of supervisors and treasurers, and of such other township olli cers ss sha'l, by law, he referred to them. KEWS AKD OrilKK Viix. vs..i wnjP coughing and rtien msramiy. lii;.,Krt Wolff shot and killed Alfred Cart ; at Daneville, W. Va., Monday, because Cart j refused to majry his daughter after betray- j iDfThe bullet which was shot intol'.illy Car i ter at Clerburne, Texas, did not hurt him much, but the powder ignited his clothing, ' and he burned to death. The Executive committee in cnarge oi the inaugural arranercinents have been ad vised that ien. Hancock will be in Wash ington on the clay of the inauguration. Kentucky claims a woman who has'g'ven birth to nineteen children in sixteen years. Although it is mean to say so. continually rocking the cradle has probably rendered her bow-legged. -piie village of j;revieres, in me i'i'u- n,pllt o savoy France, has been rompu-ieiy destroyed by two avalanches, ritteen per sons were killed. The damage is estimated francs v Mi.ldle.wet. a well known and wealthy stock ' - - ----- ' . . .i kman. was found twelve nines rail, Colorado on Friday, frozen 'wo of a four-horse team which from 1 eer T to death. T in wns ili ivin" were also dead. The wife of Wilson Fowlkes, colored, was sentenced at Lunenburg. Va., on Satur day to be iianged. Last January while Fowlkes was asleep she brained him with an axe and threw his body into a well. Mr. Vennor has put his foot down. He now declares that come what may he will make no further meteorological concessions. If the weather goes tack on his almanac so much the worse for the weather. On Saturday afternoon Joseph Diehl and Michael Worth' finished their work in the Mount Pleasant Mine, Hyde Park, and start ed to leave by the slope, but were run over and killed bv'a train of loaded cars. While catching drift wood during the re cent thaw at York, two boys, Henry' Arnold and Isaac Simmons, caught a root which they mistook for sweet myrrh and ate of it. Two hours after, they both died from the effects. I A man who once attempted to kill Fred- I crick William the Fourth, of Prussia, died last week at New Orleans. His name was Charles Frederick Edward Viscount Yon Ke- ; ooatski, but the name, lor.g as it was, didn't j cause his deatii. j August Menzenheimer committed sui- I ride, in Louisville by freezing himelf to j death. Going under an open shed, on a very ! cold nii'ht, he removed all his clothes, laid-; himself down on a board, and was dead j when discovered. Mrs. Irene f'randell and her child were found dead in the road near her home in the I vicinity of St. Paul, Minn. It is thought her I husband drove her from the house and fol- I lowed and killed both her and the child. Crandell is at large. Mrs. Augusta Peers and Mrs. Joseph j Meitz were run over by a gravel train while j picking coal on the Lehigh and Susquehanna liailrond at Siegfried's Bridge last Thursday j afternoon, the latter being instantly killed i and the former fatally injured. j At Nanticoke on "Saturday night a Hun- j parian named Lafscluiski broke a bottle of j alcohol in his pocket, and the contents satu- i rated his clothing. He afterward lit a match, ! when his clothes caught fire, and he was so 1 terribly binned that he will probably die. j Adam Foropaugh, the showman, offers j a premium of f H),ooo for the handsomest woman, physically, for thirty weeks' sor- j vices as a show piece i'l a great peccant. As brains are not nn essential qualification there will probably be plenty of applicants for tha place. couriinmi iicniner was kiiicu in uie j barn at his farm in Newiin township, Ches ter county, on Saturday, by the bursting of I the flywheel of bis threshing machine. A Hying fragment tore o!f the top of his skull, ; w'hile another passed out through the roof of j the barn. ; Michael Maroney, a founderyman in ; 1 Pittsburg, went into a core oven on Saturday j to warm himself, when some one ran in a j large core on the truck and closed the door. Maroney cried loudly, but the noise in the ,' foundry drowned hisVoice. He was fatally i ! burned before being extricated. : j Mrs. Mollie Utz. of New Albany, Ind., a ; i little oyer a year ago noticed a numbness in ; j her fingers. "Since then her hands and arms . j nearly to the elbows have hecome apparent- I ly solid bono. Her physicians say that ossi- j ! fieation will continue until some vital part is i reached, when death will ensue. ' Mr. P.irnell says he has made arrange- i i merit:; for holding a Land League meeting in j i every county in Ireland next Sunday to cele- ; ' bra to the passage of the Coercion bill and to ' mske a fitting respone to it on the part of ' the people. Thirty Irish members of the ' ' nouse of Commons have agreed to speak t , ; these meetings. ! It is said of the late Father Edward j Puree 11 by a correspondent of the Cincinnati ! I Coinntrrrial : "It is within the positive . knowledge of hvi writer that thp fish in the lake of the Drown County Convent came to I the edge of the pond upon his approach ; the i swans, wild to all else, came to the mimic i ! beach and sang to him." i The cremation of the remains of Dr. i Konraden llirenzberg, who died in Indian ; apolis some days since, took place in La j Moyrio's furnace at Washington, Pa., on ; Saturday afternoon. The Ixxly arrived on I the 12 o'clock train and was immediately ; placed intbe tuvnaee. This was the tenthere 1 niation and created no excitement w hatever. Twenty years ago Stephen A. Douglas j stood on the eastern portico of the capitol at i Washington holding Abraham Lincoln's hat j while he delivered his inaugural message. Those pr.pors which think it strange that ; General Hancock should attend the ir.aug- j uration of iarfield may reflect. s-,ys tlie'l'hil- I adelphia Times, on the course of Senator : ! Douglas. ' j Captain Allan Henry Bclingham, Con ' servntive nnd Home Ku'e meniber of Parlia- , , menu for Louth and private Chamberlain to Pope Leo XIII, writes to the London Timet i protesting against interviews of Irish mem- bcrs of Parliament with continental revolu : tionary leaders, and says he must completely I dissociate himsHf from th sentiments ex- : pressed at such interviews. A correspondent of the Pottsvillo .Tnnrnnl at Frackvil e s.iys that a family living there ' lost an interesting little girl by inflammation of the lungs, and nothing was thought of ; 1 the matter until the wife and mother of the j household accused the lather of poisoning j the child. The man demanded a post mor- : i toil examination to prove his innocence, ! and it is being made by three doctors, i Lizzie liallagher was a prisoner in the ' I Arizona Territorial prison, sol ving a sentence ' for manslaughter. But she was pardoned I the other day on account of her youth and ' j good conduct in prison, anil because a mar- : j riage to a worthy man had been arranged for j immediately on her liberation. The petition t lor ner pardon was signed geneinllv by the citizens of Y'uma, including the Judge be fore whom she was tried. Adelia Chambers, the baby giantess, daughter of Mr. Smith Chamber, living npar Monby's store, in this conntv, savs the Glas gow (Ky.) Timrs, died last Tuesday. She was a sister of Dero Chambers, tha bov giant i that died about five years ago. Delia was j six years old and weighed 210 pounds. An- I other two-year-old remains to the family, it I having the peculiarity, physically, that were J possessed by its remarkable brother and sis ter, now deceased. A tight occurred in thp township of Casco, ! si. Liair county, Alien., on Sunday night, be tween Michael and Louis Bauer on one side nnd John Hubbard, jr., and Anthony Mena fer on the other. Knives and clubs were used freely with terrible results. Hubbard was stabbed m the left side and is injured seriously. Mcnafer was? stabbed between the shoulders and was beaten on the head with clubs and cannot live. Young Bauer is in jail, but the old man is still at large. gentleman who was in the vicinity of Upper Strasburg, Franklin county, a few days ago, says the Shippensburg (I'a.) Xerx, declares that there is a place on the North mountain that is giving evidence of volcanic action. The mountain at times gives foith peculiar sounds and emits heat and vapor and exhibits frequent indications that its in ternal structure is undergoing some kind of transformation. We cannot vouch for the truth of the statement, but give it as related to us. The credulous people of a portion of Tuscarawas county, O., are very much frightened at the. ravings of a young girl who has become a monomaniac from relig frns pxcitement and constantly dwelling on Mother Shipton's prophecy that "the world to an end shall come in 1881." She insists that she has been shown in a vision that the prediction would surely come to pass, and some twenty citizpns who have no hope of office from the incoming Administration have joined the Church. Colonel W. N. Armstrong is one of King Kalakaua's eom tiers and is chief! v renowned as the possessor of a suit of clothing that cost ?i20. The suit was made by a San Francisco tailor, and is described at length by a newspaper of that city. The front and borders of the coat are ornamented with a mass of gold embroidery, six or eight inches wide, consisting of leaves and sprigs worked by hand with gold bullion wiro. The pan taloons have strir ftu'iiied of leaves of tho gsmo eosiry material. The Kennebec (Me.) Journai records i the capture of the "spectre locomotive liht," the appearance of which on the Maine Cen- 1 tral, near Ilallowcll, has given rise to much , talk lately. It proved to be a smail ieflector : lantern carried by a young man, a resident , in that vicinity, and carried in such a man ner as to completely conceal his person. It gave a very huge and weird light and would readily be inistakep for a locomotive head light. The young man allowed that he was only having a little fun, with no intention of injuring any'one. 1 he attention of a I'resiiyterian chinch near Macon, Mo., was called during a recent protracted mooting to the case' of Ada Whitehead, a young woman of twenty-one, who had been" confined to her bed for five years, unable to aid herself. A day and an hour were fixed upon when ail should unite in piayerfor Miss Whitehead's restoration. When the time came all the neighborhood joined in prayer, and before the hour had expired the young woman arose unaided and declared she was healed. Such is the stoiy told by the Macon J.'"ri.tfer. A young physician settled at New Al bany, lnd., with "his wife and child, ami un dertook to build up a pi act ice, but he was modest, friendless, mil could not make him self known. He had hardly a paying pa tient, but was himself a subject for treat ment a few days ago. Cold and hunger had made him ill. His wife, be said, had begged nun to Kin nor and the elnld, and then com- mit sui(.ilU. ,,t he ,la(, rPfu'S(,(,. x, ,m exeite,- a cr(at (ea! of svnu,atliv, ,le is v,.ganled as capable and wort jiiui Kr niii i ri aim i iiir I'lnill. illlll l ( I he case and as capable and worthy, his ! professional career looks brighter. I Mr. Parnell addressed l.VW people at j Clara, King county, on Sunday. He was I received by large crowds with great enthusi- asm at several railway stations on the route. I He advised the people, especially tenants, to : remain firm, and congratulated himself on i j having, by obstruction in Parliament, pre- ! I vented the suspension of the habeas corpus j ; act for seven weeks. A Catholic priest pre- i j sideu at the meeting and the Stars and I j Stripes waved over him. Mr. Parnell started ; i for Dublin after the meeting in order to be j in the House of Commons on Monday. Bridget Murphy, born in Ireland, died I recently at Buffalo aged one hundred and : one years. When eighteen years old. during j j the "rebellion of IT'.is, she was sent seven j I miles by her uncle to hide a large sum of j money "hi a bog hole. She was met by j I British soldiers on the way, but supposing j she bail nothing of value, hey let her piss. ! The money was recovered two years later. She came to Buftalo in 1x44. She leaves j x-vi-ii t-iumreii, i no oioesc oi v uoin is ovci seventy. She lias sixteen great-grandchildren in that city, and probably a number in Ireland, A curious marriage took place at the cantonment in the Bad Lands, Dakota, on Thursday, between Frank M. Shoppie and Henrietta Louisa James, the Bev. Mr. Ste vens, of Bismarck, officiating from that place by telegraph. Frank S. Moore and Kngin eer Deutseh were witnesses that the parties responded to the electric marriage ceremony at one end of the wire, while the I'wneer I'rcx correspondent and several others saw the clergyman perform his dntyat the oilier. The questions and answers were written, telegraphed, and responded to, and a bless ing was pronounced in the usual form. The Cincinnati papers are telling th! following story: "A little girl of this city had a spine disease, so that her head hung to one side. Her mother gave some bread and coffee to a starving tramp and he rubbed the child's nock while he muttered some inco herent words. The child was cured. The tramp disappeared." Something similar to this occurred recently in Chicago. A little boy had the diphtheria. His mother gave some .bread and coffee to a tramp. Just j then the boy's father came along and bal anced the trump on the toe of his brot. The boy cot well. I he tramp has spinal disease. Thirty years ago James lioyle left Ire- j land for Australia with his wife and one child, leaving another child, Mary, with her eraniif.it her. He was very successful In the gold fields, and invested his money to ' great advantage. His wife and child died in Australia. Mary married a man named I ilen, and moved to America, where she has i been living in a poor part of Philadelphia, j Py the miscarriage of letters incidental to j her moving at the same time as her father they ltRst trace of each other, and each thought ! the" other dead. She now finds herself, atter i a life of hum struggle, worth a million of dollars. Two Titusville doctors the Franklin Spectator omits their names, for fear they be long to the Crawford County Medical' So ciety, which forbids advertising removed a bullet from the head of a Mrs. Chrittenden . on Tue.-day of last week where it had been j lodged for" thirty two years. When the pa- i tient was only two years old she received the ! leaden keepsake by the accidental discharge i of a gun in tho hands t-f lier father. From I that day to this the wound never healed, and has been a constant source of pain and an noyance. The bullet was chipped away by piecemeal, the operation lasting three hours, when the last particle was removed. The lady experienced instant relief aud the pain in her head ceased. About two weeks ago a lady living in Providence dreamed that she saw an acci dent on the New Kugiand Hailroad between that city and Koston. It made sm li a im pression on her mind that she related it to two persons iu the morning, describing the scene, locality and nature of the accident. A few days atter business tailed h.-r to Bos ton. YhV!l she was ready to return her dream occurred to her. and she hesitated whether to take the train on the New Eng land road, as was usually her custom, or to go by the !$oston and Providence route. She finally decided toco as usual. Atter pro ceeding some distance on hr way the train was Mopped, and on going foiward to ascer tain the cau-e the scone was exactly like that she had dreamed cf several nights before. A Cat. of Interest to School ?oat. i A case of more tham ordinary interest h is j been decided by Judec Jonk, of the JefTi-r- i son county Court. It was the petition of Dr. ! M. B. Dowry for a mandamus to compel the 1 School Hoard of Brookville boroueh to admit , his children to the public schools, they havinsr , been dismissed by the principal because of j a refusal on the part of the father to allow I thf-ni to comply with the rules of the school, ! the point at issue beine the desire on the part : of the doctor that the children should not take lessons in writing while in attendance ; at schvd. The case was ably argued, the ! whole scope of the teacher s authority being I reviewed, and creat interest surrounded the case. The opinion of the .ludje was quite I lencthy, in which he cites the law relative to ' t lie case, and concludes by refusing a man- j damns, anil ordering that the party shall pay i their own costs, but no personal responsibil- it y on the part of the directors. This ending of the case -will be valuable to other Boards j of Directors and to teachers generally, as it i defines their power, and parents wiil also be puided by it. the conclusion arrived at being that they surrender all authority over their children" when they pass within "the door9 of the public school building, the teacher assum ing authority to dictate their studies as well as their deportmeut. Disappearance of a Young Man. Christian, son of Mr. C. Oberho!t:er, resid ing one mile below Greenvillage, disappear ed from his home on Wednesday morning, the !Uh inst. He is aged 18 years, is about 5 feet high, rather heavily set, has dark hair and wore a grayish coat, corded pants and woolen shirt. Through a severe spell of sickness his reason has been somewhat im paired. Any information that will lead to his return to his father wiil be gratefully re ceived, and should be addressed lo Christian ObeihulUer, ireenvillage, Franklin Co., I'a. Exchanges please copy. A family living on North Front street, Kingston, X. Y., were startled recently by queer sounds proceeding from a room in which was a child's rocking horse. Going cautiously to inquire the cause, they were surprised to see that a number of rats had jumped on the horse, causing it to rook, and were evidently enjoying themselves. As they were not molested the operation nas been repeated nightly, and has become the niaivel of the neighborhood. Fees of Doctors The fee cf dor-tors is an item that very manv persons are interested in just at present. Ye believe the schedule for visits is $l.oo, which would tax a man confined to his bed for a year, aud In need of a daily visit, over $1,000 a year for medical attendance alone ! And one single bottle of Hop Bitters taken in time would save the f 1,000 and all the year's siekne? . Pott. Is isr Illinois f rniitifod one-fifth of all tlie corn prown in the T"nit'l States, and ao cordins tu the latest advices the crop of 1H,s0 will bear atwut the same proportion to the corn crop of the country. Ttie value of th hois marketed in ls0"was $22,lo7.000 : in 171 it was $lrt,i;i0.(i0i. The value of cattla in 1J0 was ?17,OJti,(t-io ; in 179 it was 10,- F.i.t'9 Cream r.ATiM for the cure of Catarrh and Hay Fever is bavins larce sales w ith me. 1 pronounce it the hot article 1 have ever sold for the treatment of these diseases, and take pleasure in recommending it to my pa trons, as I am from day to day hearing the most favorable reports of its berirficial effects. I Hekhy B. irtMrLK, Drupist, Eaton. Fa. The .Mirnonlon Power of rrnjer. The Eric Dispatch of recent date contains a lengthy account of the marvelous cue of a young lady from paralysis. Her name is El- Ion .Mrt.hiinlin and her nge about y ears On Sunday, the l".tti of .January, her friend : say, she was smitten with naralysis, and was in a mo,t helpless condition. "Her natural I fair color at once became very dark, her lips i became pink and closely compressed, her ! eyes became much larger and more glassy and storing wide open without the least item ' of sight in them, and remained immovable, i The whele body became motionless and as ; cold as a corpse. Around the wrist of the i ! lelt arui was a black circle, and from there I to the tips of the fingers was as black as ink 1 ' and as cold as ice, without the leat particle ! of life. The fingers wera firmly clutched j ! around the thumb, and so tightly oompress ' ed or squeezed together tht they ap;enred : ' to be welded together and formed one solid ! i body, without the least animation. Several j ! attempts were made by constant rubbing, i bathing, and chafing with oil, but ail to no I : purpose, for it was impossible to open or sop- j j erate them, or cau-e any circulation what- I 1 ever in them. 'Ihev could not be separated I 't tin ess they were torn aunder. aud then it j I was the opinion of every one who mw them ; that if tiicy were forced'thev would break in i : pieces like rolt'Hi blanches." In this (lepU.r- able condition lay the iostrate form of this ! j young lady, stti founded by her family and friends, with lile scaicely iiscerr.al,-le in her frame, nnd every one expecting evorv im- J j tnentthat diMth would com.- to her relief. I ; All the day and night nnd the next day I ', (Monday, the 17th) they watch her closely, and not the least ray ot life or hope w.is vis- i i '''e, and sometime they thought she was ' I m-ou ! ,imi;. .iM-mg mat a;: nopes were : j gone, the broken-parent:, sent for Father ' ' Malonp, the Catholic pi et, to prepare her i ! for death j He came, and before him vnon the iK-d liv tne cold, ghastly, p.-.ralvzed and win, ere, I ' form of the ming lady, and at first sight, lie thought that she wasdead, but si-on found th:.t l:fe was still extant. At once he orde red a lighted candle, and, ei-oning his book, com menced to read, lie continued so for about five minutes, then laying down the book on the table, he went over to the b,-ilv,k on which the lifeless body lav. At this moment evry eye in the house was Instantly fixed on the priest, and we stood within three or four feet of him. He gazed for a moment on that fearful spectacle bofoie him. Then suddenly, as it under Divine inspiration, he raised bis eyes toward heaven and fervently implored anil besought the Kternal Son of the Living (jod and IPs ble-;ed mother to ! hear his humble prayer. He Continued pray ! ing in that attitude for about throe minutes and then raising his right hand, he made the ; sign of the cros three times over that pros- trate, lifeless form, and at th.it very instant, ; oh, my Cod '. could wo believe the sight ot i our own eyes, when she resumed her own i natural color before us? The paralysis to tally left her w hole ho ly ; lier eyes and eye lids resumed their natural course, and the sight returned to then: ; her full and entire senses returned : the disease altogether quit ted the head and brain ; the withered, dead hand and fingers were once more restored to I lite, and Dcconie as sound, as fresh, and as ' natural as ever they t ere. she extended it ! forth before us and that very Distant sat up ! in her bed, mid in loss than two minutes af ! forward she walked into the next room un j aided .by any one, and then called for souie I thing to eat. The priest himself, as well as the rest of us, I was so thunderstruck at v. hat he saw before ! his eyes this moment that he shoo' like an I aspen leaf and turned the color of death. All recognized the altorahJe presence and majesty of the great Creator. The majesty of the eternal .od was visibly seen and left there in ourmidt. and from every heart and lip burst forth that moment : ' ) ! glory and honor, and benediction and praise, be to You, sweet Heueemer of the world. 1 lie pnest then at once took up his bat and iu a very low manner said, "He careful and say uoth- iug of this to anyone," and k-ft the house. The above statement is sworn to bv thirty ' persons, maie and female, who were present ' in or about the house at the time, and who ! are said to be entirely reputable and truthf ul. ! The priest hes not claim to have preformed j a miracle, but says his humble prayer of faith j was answered. " " j From a Phominknt Pfiymcian. Wash- '; ingtonviile, Ohio, June 17th, lss,i. Heading ; the advertisement of Kendall's Spavin Cure, 1 and haying a valuable and speedy horse i which hail been lame from spavin eighteen months, I sent to yon for a bottle by express which in six weeks removed nil lameness and enlnrgniont and a large splint from another horse, and both horses are to-day as sound a colts. The one bottie was worth tome one hundred dollars. Yours truly, II. A. Dert- OI.ett, l. L). Head the advertisement. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Our Questions. Are you a buyer of Men's or Boys' Clothing at retail ? Do you need clothing for the farm, the office, the work-shop, the court-room, or the pulpit ? Do you want boys' clothing for the school-room, cr for dress ? Do you prefer to buy clothing ready-made r to order ? Are you in need of shirts ? If yes, to any or all of these que ries, state your needs to us, that we may send you samples and prices. YourOuestion is, Will this pay for the trouble ? You must judge. We will make tip the case, you must decide it. But we must tell you that we have created the Largest Retail Clothing Business in the United States by the simple method of giving the best clothing for the least money. We mean that it shall pay you to buy of us. If you buy and arc not pleased, return the goods for exchange, cr demand your money. Wanamaker and Brown, S. E. Cor. Sixth fit Market Sts. PHILADELPHIA. f) PE N SI GN S 1 adc DAir irorr BVldir disabled In ARE PAID wt oldier l , W i f ri-i-.i . I.t -. lU or c.th-r . A . , f iIm:i l.T Cr. 'nt or .t V O r rf-rw ln-ll - fj'i v1.irer Is1"! -i'.tlrj to tin iarr i! it . ran and 4'' 51 " w:ir! -f i -u -T HiWiv fct a I'fnt'en. f f'-4 iV flurf for v uml. i new i iiivt:.nji d i-Tidtil Tnt'.r-s UOl I i ' i - 4 en fTlli hnr:riT. Sfi fi 5tff I lf -t Cl'f W K. A . W . I i". rr"'t Inrlisna Banking Feb. 4, ISSl.-Sm. Wisconsin T A "iVmS 500,000 ACRES UXill JJhJ ON THE E1NE Of THE Wisconsin CENTRAL R.R. S-For full pantenlar.. whh wi '1 t "ent free, ad tre., I IIUII K 1.. VB Land Commissioner, Jlimaukee, Farms for Sale. ISO AC-KF.K; VRICF. 3 PfR ACTF..-- .! hiil land: 1 rleirrii, t.alanre tira!..-r: 4' 0 t-u r.fi-hit anil fusi tut. of corn rrclueel last year: plntv of water; fruitof all Kimts: house and farm. AihirWss A. KimiKii. Barlow. aslunctnn "o.. 16 Acre for snie; rnrr i" " 120 cultivated : i l.ottoni. 40 uui.w; r 9 rooms; 3 frsm-bams : plenty water. K. lir-AHiv, Barlow, Ohio. srKCin.ATiox.sisKv.K.-;;; : I i. tiir oniv ant..- fair and hei one I yen. tiered investors to m:kr n"'.n.-y. -"rt tor entar and in.e-iia ito A-ldre 'M'I. MAN. 114 L.1S.1 lie t.. Chirair... Illinois, otj-i. nlyot bung in every way iror'ii v ft publu confidence, A U' Spmee St.. New York, cm n lcrn ti e "lart cost .f inv t.ror..ed Hr.r of A t V t K T11 N in Ameri can TSewsj apcra liO-pe ramthlet. the. rAikA a veartr. Asrnti. and rw: ense 5 Outfit i . . i : i fre. Addre-s P. 9r, vi i., Augusta. G. WOLF'S ILD 1) ELIABLE !LD it ELIABLE Clothing House In Central I'cMityli-aiiia, NEXT TO POST-OFFICE, ALTOOXA, VA, STROSG LASy SVITS STSO.KG EJSr SflTS ALL HOOL SltTS Great variety SACK ant 11 TA U .1 ' M77 fancy lie vrrtil ,'e H'OKI KD 5.1' A illls l.arie a'rt "ci.t cf Sill 1H VI 1 .S I ; j All- H oot H.'-te ar.d ;.' : i XFLTVS i 1 11 v.. Double-Breasted fancy SA' HITS Fine Diagonal t VTA HA y SllJ S-.iperfinc iHuyonal lUOi K 4 OAT SLITS... Hood Every-Lay H'OhklSG i.4.N7i Best PASTS in the city or IUe money All-Wool KKRSKy PASTS I-.'j f ti $ t. PASTALOOSS of all stales end quditut vjj to thefnest Drcit yKbrict ot Special Bargains di sT itl.ci.iv i:i FROM OUR LARGE WORKROOMS, COSIST130 F A COMTLETE LlSE Or BLUE, BLACKand BROWN A I.I. WOOL lilt IIEAVIIR OVERCOATS, ClotL Bonn,!, S:Ik Ye'.vc. CV.Iar, gtK-J Serire Lininir, f..T TiST DOLLARS! f tV"fci oVpni P ?ffV ft m f Mm,, vliitii4 hat km kk it I J OPEN EVERY DAY UNTIL 10 O'CLOCK, P. I Reversible Overcoats ! i The Kcvcr'iMe Overcoat Erst luaiii '.e h:ei : j . one year ago, t ut tlij not c-t a f:ilr toM os jii; j favor until the j rctcct tea?c:i. It 1 tiltn.:; : I lining, of courfc, an 1 ti e sciiiie are srra.-j--i ic ' each a way that there is no wrui: t le t. ::. (Jit ! f! Je of the eluth is finished In a var! ty ' I vji ; such a? diaeuca!f, inixej. ft?., e!o.. aDj the r'v I : is usually a ju:!tej ; ia:d or ciicck. The pocke.! I t K), are fo lEgeciouf.'y contrived ti.at em ls"v : which SKI of the coat is out they are al a rigM plaoe, ren.ly for bu.-ir.es . We tU: w ;i i I week ail the K.vcr:lleCu.it? we Lave : -.w,ie ! tlilnir in our lice that you a-k fur. It w .:'. f.;i . ! you to a?k fjr anything wc l.avcn't sot. WE H AVE J I ST BOK.HT ! AT ASSIGNEE'S SALI A LAr.OB AND SELECT ST Or I Overalls and Shirts. ; made of heavy duck, ani a we La.,- ! o r j s: : i kctp them very K ni; we wl'.i give cur pi-T"T- '- ; bent-tit cf the bargain we j.ot iu the pu- Ue ' sellir n them at 1 I1TY I'EXrS l hll SUi TWENTY VIVE C13TS fir ca"h a-: ? e; j rate)-. They are worti at lea?'. DL't fcLE TV. 1 MONEY. THIS We ar showing, as fully cu cr-w Je c. tj.: -will iermit, evcrvthirn; c L.f in SUITS AND OVERCOATS ! and tfjMK-iur.r (Vi:i:' ' US. V;t i rc : to fhow aimc-t an unlimited sw.isvM -f j tiling in Clothing ac! ViHlcrr;.-.tii::iK. : t t: i general difp'.iy of the wpi-i 1 ia U' e.-j.;- -' j ery r.rt. ' It Is as vl-iFH'.it to telle ii cut U.e ctff-t t: j fincft thines as it is to wear thcia. rut n.t j you want to pay fT then. We have e ;u' cf j to sell a cheaii tarincut that sin; l; oat t- j daaipanJ colJ.even t'u-;gli they way he a I 1 rc-ub. Thoi.sin Is who wiil re.-.J tL: t.-!J f be Md to loam thmt i a v.ooi satix on:ncoAi, ' fc-avy tncanh to g:c a f-.-c -! wnrrr.lh : f.s: tial cr.-Ui;n l-.r t': e r-uhe-t wear, t::-i s o4 ' a lne enough lor l-tucr use. can he ha J hc:o FOl! ?5.oo OK Sii.oo. I Other n.erehants '"i'l lovk with the sac-.'. 1 lor Esquimaux Braver at 10 to f.r.;. tzl it . Chinchilla ovcrc-: at !".' to We bare no timet:, write c r ha- e ; c : r"--' '' j to read anything tike r.n a-v.ut.t ol whafes'-' i this week. IWe ti the i.ia.-c to use ycr.i ey.it: ', your jmiirment. Here we w.H cot ure y:u , descriptions rietore'innj. j liF.MKMUKK THIS! Whatever you buy that ! es cot suit you.ir ! sold at all. Ci.tr. e ta-k with it the fr'i it you can. You ore as free as If j- uh.-.l -.jtc---in your pocket. You hail la ?o-.i u; u-J ts n your pocket if yon want it : ut tkke e' n of the cancenis for us. to long af cur !r.-.ert;-them contiuues. GODFREY WOLF. C. II. LATEKNEII. One or the S;il' r: B. J. LTNC1I Mannf act nrrr anil rrn' HOME AND CITY MADE FURNITURE till lH Btt L0UXGES, BEDSTEAD: TABLES, CHAIRS, . ! Mattresses, cc m ELEVENTH AVENUE. Between ltoh and 17th Sts., Altoona. Penn' 5- Citir-ns of Cam'T-a l"'nf","',i,i' wishinft to pur?hac I. M .. .,:,, V,.l.,f - mrr- e-'tl!':T iPVI'el ' t ' call helore luyi:;j ! ht-r-a? 1 tht 1 can mi- ry rrul an--. V" -a--l'rtcrs the crv l. wc-t I a- -'- Altoina. A4 -1 16. IrrJ.-tl. TC'I t McNEVIN Sl YEACEfv m -'-iC-rrv k -Asm rti: i 1- cookixc & hkatinv. mi 1 cir- t-- ' KAIka, H KX A4 1-5", 110S EleienUi Aumif. . A It. ." One Tnr Wt .f Opera Hnue. RVTAIKS FOR ST Me. t AIWor.,tVl.l0.t!' '..-tf. C TORES I uTORES