(talma gttf mmu EBENSBURC. PA., miDlY. - - MARCH 4, 1881. a . J -l-M '.- - L 1 L! Gem. G ARrir.LD arrived in Washing ton from Meetor. O., on Tuesday morn ing at 9 o'clock, and wa3 received in a brief address by tne notorious Robert G. IngersoH "Royal Deb," as GirDeld is in the habit of saltrting him as a mark of special honor and distinction. Tn report of the Auditor General of this State for the seai year, ending on the 30th November, 130, shows that th ost to the treasury of the National Guard war, 5281,775.73. From this it would ap-.-ear that our army is rapidly becoming quite an expensive luxury. The friends of Stanley Matthews now assert that he will be renominated to the Bnae as Associate Justice of the Sup reme Coi rtby President Garfield, at the request of Mr. Hayes. Well, suppose he is, will that, in the estimation of the Jcdiciary Committee of the Senate, ren der Matthews aty more fit for the posi tion than Le was when he was nominat ed by Hayes USiilf ? The English suffered a most disas trous defeat cn -Sunday last at the hands of the Iloers in South Africa, nearly all of the British troops engaged, amount ing to between seven hundred and a thousand men, having been slaughter ed, andCen. Sir George Colley killed. Gen. Colley was the commander-in-chiet of the British forces in their operations against the Boers, whose Dutch ances tors emigrated to that part of Africa and established a prosperous settlement, of which tho English government is now, withe ut auy cause except her own sweet will, attempting to appropriate to her own grasping us. Gen. Colley, who was only forty-live years old. was one of the most distinguished officers in the British army, and lika so many other brave but unfortunate men who have done some f England's beBt fighting during the resent century, was an Irishman, hav ing been born in the county Dublin. The outrageous and plundering River and Harbor bill, after having passed the House by the well-known and corrupt practice of "log rolling, " was loaded down in the Senate by additional appro priatiots amounting to about a million of dollars, and passed that body finally, on last Saturday night, by a vote of 32 yeas to 12 nays. If Mr. Hayes had only backbone enough to put the nns:chtly bautling in its little bed with his veto for a covering, ha would receive the ap pliusc of the whole country. That, however, would be expecting too much of a good thing from such a source, and he has no dubt already made himself a party to the fraud by giving the bill his approval. In the final throe3 of its pas sage through the Senate, Judffe Thur man and Mr. Wallace vigorously and eloquently protested against its passage as a whole, and pointed out the down right robbery and glaring fraud on the public treasury of many of its features. It was alike creditable to both of these Senators thus to mark the closing hours of their terms in Congress by sternly re sisting si'di a giant wrong, fcr the per petration of which both Democrats and Republicans in Congress must be held equally responsible. Today at noon Rutherford B. Hayes retires from the Presidency, the powers and duties rf which he has been exer cising and discharging for the last four years, although he was never elected to the office by tho people. If one could for a moment throw ont of view the base and im famous methods through which Mr. Hayes was elevated to his high position, there would be a feeling of t lea.it tome satisfaction in commend ing certain of his official acts and in ex pressing a kindly approval of some of the features of his administration, Thi?, however, is simply impossible in the face of tho ever present and over-shadowing fact, that from the beginning to the end of his term he was nothing more than a Presidential impostor. But be ing even so, justice demands the ac knowledgment that his administration of the affairs of the country has been conspicuously exempt from the corrup tions and scandals of the last four mem orable years of Grant's disgraceful rule. The peculiar position which Mr, Hayes occupies before the couutry at the close of his official career may La said to be identical with that of an old line Whig Governorof Kentucky who was unequal to the occasion, as described by a shrewd, intelligent darkey of that State when J-e aid of the outgoing executive : "De Guberner he came in w id a powerful opposishuu, and he goes out widout any." During one of his recent flying visits to Faris, Mr. Parnell had interviews with Henri Rochefort and Victor Hugo, both of whom are avowed revolutionists. Rochefort is also a rank communist and was prominent among the bloodthirsty 3Coutidiels who inaugurated a reign of terror in Paris after the defeat of Louis Napoleon by the Piussiaiis at Sedan. This alliance, or association, of Mr. Parnell with French revolutionists has caused a good deal of unfavorable com ment in Ireland, but Mr. Parnell insists that bo went to France, as he had gone to America, to enlist the aid and sym pathy of the whole nation, and not any particular section of it. Archbishop McCabe, of Dublin, the Catholic Tri xxtate of Ireland, regards any affiliation with such wen as Roche fort as an insult and au indignity to Ireland in her pres ent stmggio, and in a pastoral address issued on .SutvLiy last, refers to the mat ter In the following i-oicted language : "We should pray with great fervor for our Aour.try, over which the Almighty has per miued'aore trials U f!!. Her history is still to a grU ex'ent a record of sorrow. But a calamity more terribic and humiliating than has yet befallen her neems to threaten. Al lies of our country in her ttrugele for jus tleii are sona'it from the rank of impious in dls yiio baveplunKd their own unhappy la-ii h:to rr.i.crv and who are "worn to or troy the foundations of all religion. Will Ovhollc Ireland tolerate Mich an ind,?r.ity ? W i.l Uo give her confidence to men who ha?e wu A.-i'iy p'miied it ? Will she break from all holy tiiditions whieli, during aces cf persecution, commanded the veneration of the Christian world ? Let Ui pray that God may forbid it." For the second time during the ses sion of Congress now closing, Morgan It. Wise, who represents the Westmore land district, was instrumental with oth ers, on Thursday night of last week, by their absence from the House, in leaving it without a quorum for the transaction of business. Wise, together with the other members who absented themselves, was hunted up and captured by the Ser-geant-at-Arms nt the White House, where he was dinine with Hayes, and brought before the bar of the House to state his excuse for being absent. Mr. Klotz, the Democratic member from the Carbon district, listened to what Wise said by way of palliation, and knowing that ha was lying, asked him through Speaker Randall whether when he (Wise) was about to leave the House he did not say that he was hungry and was going to the White House to get his dinnef, and that he (Wise) didn't care a conti nental d n what the House would say abouc it. Wise, in reply, said that Hayes had invited him to dine with him and that he had done so, but repudiated the language imputed tohim by Klotz. Mr. Manning, of Mississippi, however, on being appealed to by Klotz, declared that he was present and heaTd Wise use the language charged by Klotz, thus putting Wise in a very ugly predicament. The House, however, saw proper to ex cuse him instead of imposing a fine on him. Morgan It. Wise must be a very important man at Wa3hington when he is invited to come at a late hour of the night in full dress to dine with R. B. Hayes. But such is the life of a great man like Wise. He was a laughing stock when he represented Greene coun ty in the Legislature, and he still holds his own in Congress. And yet he repre sents the wealthy and intelligent district composed of the counties of Westmore land, Fayette and Greene. The death of Matthew H. Carpenter, United States Seuator from Wisconsin, which occurred in Washington on yes terday week, removes from the Senate one of the ablest and certainly the most brilliant of it members. He was fifty six years old and started in life as a poor boy, the son of obsoure parents in Moore town, Vermont, Having been adopted in the twelfth year of his age by the then Governor of that ."state, whose daughter ho afterwards married, young Carpenter when he was twenty years old entered the law office of the distinguish ed Rufus Choate, in Boston, and after having been admitted to the bar settled in Milwaukee, where in a few years he became as an orator to the Northwest, what Rufus Choate was to New Eng land. It is unnecessary to speak of his career in the Senate. He appeared be fore the Electoral Commission in 1S77, "not,'" as he said, "for Samuel J. Til den, but for ten thousand legal voters of the State of Louisiana, who, without accusation or proof, indictment or trial, notice or hearing, have been disfran chised by four villains incorporated Jin perpetual succession, whose official title is the Returning Board of Louisiana." Mr. Carpenler"s faults were many, but he never attempted to conceal them, as so many public men do, behind the mask of hyprocrisy. The vacancy caused by his death cannot be filled by the Wiscon sin Legislature, under the act of Con gress regu'ating the election of Senators, until the 0th of March, (next Wednes day) which, owing to the nearly equal strength of parties in the Senate, will give the Democrats the power of organ izing that body to-day by electing its of ficers as well as the standing committees. The effort made last week in the Sen ate by a few of the moral, high-toned Republican members of that body, to raise a committee for the purpose of in vestigating the constitutional right of Eckley B. Coxe. of Luzerne county, to his seat, proved a most miserable failure, only ffieen Republicans voting for the resolution of inquiry, and Mr. Coxe was sworn in by Judge Pearson. The two Republican Senators who took a con spicuous part in favor of the investiga tion were A. J. Herr, of the Dauphin district, and A. Wilson Norris, of the SixthPhiladelphiadistrict, both of whom are noble specimens of "sawdust" re formers. Herr took Cameronism and all that the name implies as naturally as an Indian takes the sma'l-pox was counsel for Kemble and his corrupt lob by agents in the Pittsburg riot cases, and was specially prominent in urging their release by the Pardon Board. Norris is a light weight statesman just budding into usefulness as a reformer, and would have voted for John Welsh for United States Senator, a man who deliberately headed a movement after the Maine election last September to rai3e au enormous fund for the express and avowed purpose of corrupting the voters of Indiana into the support of the Republican Stale ticket in October. Hrrr and Norris are a nice brace of "Christian statesmen,'' as they might be called, to assail the honor and repu tation of such a man as Eckley B, Coxe, the latchets of whose shoes they are un worthy to unloose. Two years apo Andrew G. Curtin ran for Congress in the Centre district, and was defeated by Seth II. Yocum, the Greenbrck-Republican candidate. Cur tin contested Yocum's right to the seat, but being unsuccessful, Yocnn held the fort. Each cf them filed his bill of campaign expenses with the Committee on Elections, the respective amounts of which we cannot state, but in the sun dry civil appropriation bill, which pass ed both houses a few days ago, the large sum of $3,000 was allowed to each by way of reimbursing hitn. Under this state of the case, where is the man who wouldn't like to be defeated for Con gress, and then pocket S,000 as a sol ace to his wounded feelings, or, what is still letter, to hold his seat, as Yocurn did, at a salary of J3.000 a year, ano have JS.OtH) thrown in to cover exjenses ? This is undoubtedlyatrreat country, and to run for Congress and be defeated is becoming nearly as big a thing as to run and be elected. j The legislature by a concurrent reso ! iutioti adjourned from Wednesday last j until next Tuesday, on account of dm ; field's inauguration, which occurs to d.iy. It will cost the tax-payers of the SUte not less than fifteen thousand dol lars, but the people have been accustom ed in the p&xt to 6ucli silly and expen sive performances by the Legislature, that they regard them with a sort of '. stolid indiQerence and without even j thiokiog of protesting against them. The lrith agitation. The branch of the Irish Land Leapue prom ises, savs the Pittsburgh Pott, to play an im portant and possibly a determining part in the atntation in England and Ireland, for a reform in the svstem of land tenure. It will supply the sine'ws of war, to continue peace able and constitutional agitation, by liberal contributions of money. It does not counsel or ask money for purposes of violence or arm ed hostility to the British government. So matter how righteous the cause of Ireland, the odds aeainst the Irish people are so ereat that an insurrection would only rivet their chains and entail fearful sufferine and op pression on a helpless population. The preat end in view must be accomplished by other means, and by arousing not only the English people but the sense of the civilized world anainst the brutaP.ties and oppression of English rule in Ireland. England bore an important part, by its money contribu tions, in the apitation that ripened" in our civil war and the freedom of the slave. We can now reciprocate this service to humanity by promoting the enfranchisement of the Irish people from the tyranny o law and custom as galling in its way as was Americas slav ery. The President of the American bianch of I the Land Leacue is Hon. P. A. Collins, a j distinpmished Irish-American of Boston, and the Treasurer Rev. Lawrence Walsh, of ; Waterbury, Connecticut, to whom all money j subscriptions should be remitted. Mr. Col- i lins in a recent interview pave facts and fig- i urea of the prorrress and work of the Ameri- ' can branch. There are now established j some tiro hundred thousand branch Leagues in ; this country, and the number is rapidly in- j creasing. Within two months, Mr. Collins ' savs, there will be from three to four hundred thousand members enrolled. Asserting that j at least one-quarter of the population of the ! United.States is Irish orof Irish lineage, and j that the people of that nationality here are ; substantial! of one mind in favor of the land movement, Mr. Collins denies that there is anv prospect of a collapse of the apitation, j either In this country or abroad, growing out ; of recent events on the other side. He says , there are plenty of leaders to take all the va- . cant places, and that assuredly the move- j ment will not die from a lack of that kind. ! The agitation viil go on. A noise must be ! made to secure the attention of the world ; and foroe in some form must be exercised to make England consider the Irish question. But the Land League is "pursuing its course i strictly within the limits of law, pres?rvinz the peace, counselling and enforcing oioder- i ation among the people, and under its ad- ; ministration crime has diminished rather ; than increased." 1 Some people who take a surface vie'v of ! events are disposed to deride thi policy of ' "obstruction" pursued by the Irish members , of the House of Commons. The truth is it has accomplished great results. It is a form i of agitation that reached, not only the Eng- i lish people, but the civilized world, and par- ! ticularlv the English-speaking portion of it j in the United States, Canada, and Australia. I The Boston Pilot, in reply to the sneer of a : leading paper at Parnell's ''stupid obstruc- j tion policy," explains the philosophy and re- tults of it in this way : I No mutter for Ireland ! ancer and acratsb while 1 he could do netlitnir but ask, arus. and be out- . V'ted. j The world did not care. No other eonntry nn- I derstood or Interfered Ireland was an KukiIsIi ; prorlrce, tho'njht the Nation, and why tli.mld tnland treat part ot herself injuriously ? There, i was a wide belief, however vaim. that the lrlh ' had really no aolid cause for coiDplah-.t. hut were unsettled and turtmlcnt by nature. Mr. Parnell iaw like tha clear-headed an. I able man he iis proved himself to he. that tomtthinif mut he dene : I to awiiten o.e atxeiui"n 01 inuer counirtr-3. ui cugc- i : land, and ere.i of lreiand hen"l. or another g.-n- ! eratiou would iea almoft the de-truction el an an- ! i clant race and a rud nationality. ! I What could he done with uch petty power at he i 1 commanded ? Wlmt could twnnty nicn do airainpt ; over 91 x hundred who had made up their minds to ; ' Ignore the minority? They could only do one ' ; tbtnff they could atop the wheel? cf the imperial i i machine. They could lay hold on all the rules acd I precedent! and ailowancemd Parliament, and cast I them like solid loi?s hefore the wheeU tf theerjri ne. t When the gTeaf machine stopped on the track i' and crearue.d its aner like a K,-coinoi!ve. the pur- I j po?e of the OhftruciionHt was wholly fratnel. i They had awnkened Ire'and to the conrro; they- ' 1 had aroused all Kn(land to Ireland's irrievancea I and demands, taking the judgment at one stroke . ' awav from the hereditary iairisiators and handing j It to the whi le t.ni'irii people ; ar.d they had suc ceeded in arretti.ff the attention of the civilized : world to the relation! of the two countries. i This is no exaggerated view of what the ' Irish cause has gained by "obstruction." It is a folia of agitation that has compelled ' I England to revise ts parliainentry luies of ' practice, musty with the aze of cpnturieo. ; Irish prievanct-s and wrongs, and tiie rneat- ! j lire of redress are better understood to-day ; I than they have ever been before. They have been forced on the attention of the ! j world. And England, and lea-t of all the i j Liberal party of England, cannot set itself ' against a demand for justice that lias hack ; I of it the enlighti-ned opinion cf mankind, i j Results may not he achieved at once, but ; ! the seed has been sown in a fruitful soil, j ! and the not distant future will witness the , ! fruition of great hopes. The one fact that what has hitherto been a local and provincial : matter, has assumed the mighty proportions of an imperial question, interesting every part of the British empire, is an all sufficient answer to those who cavil at agitation in Parli anient or elsewhere. A London correspondent of the Chieago I Tirm-s telegraphs that paper an interview with Mr. A. M. Sullivan, on of the ablest j of the Irish representatives, asking for the j ral reason for the long fight against the ! Coercion bill. Mr. Sullivan replied, gtvinp j reasons additional to those we have quoted ; from the Pilot, lie said : j The first w:is, had the bill passed soon afer b j inu intrtwlaced. !t wuold have hten ro't with re!st I aD'.-e and blr-d?hed. The people of Ireland were I not prepared for it. and time m.it he hsd to fret ; them accustomed t the situation. For that pur- pose emissaries have traversed Ireland, day and tiiKht. tor six weeks, ma kirn tlie people acquainted with the coming- enactment, and coiinielme sub mllon. It wis f.r hid influence with the Irin : peopW tbat Davttt was Drought ever. The second i reaon was that resistance irave time to remove X.u.ivo and the rttais ot the Land Iaifue to neu ; trul territory. The tremendous cheering by the I I ri mh m T, r. Ir tt llnni. .if ( j.m m . .r, T . . I -. - I . I ,u . ... . ... ... u.. .. ... II. ... VUU.. . Tiiffhf which n Hinl Mo much a ton 1 i men t w-t J because, obvnietion had delayed tha billB unt'l ail ' was accomplished irathad been souebt by delay. 1 The ( bt ructioclstJ won a treat viotory. The third reaj4n f-r obstruct on was that If tha bill was ' delayed ti.l Mr--h It wa bettered there would j be such tui sldTce i f illeiral acts that the llovern ; mant would net think coercion cecessarv. Dead at Five Score Tears and Five. Mrs. Mry Orern, a well-known and vener able resident of Hampden, Baltimore coun ty, Md., died on last Saturday morning, at the ag of 104 years. 10 months and 4 days. Mrs. Orem resided in the neigliiiorhood of Wood berry for over a half century. Her maiden name was Mary Peake. She was born at Ridgely's Forges, at the month of the Gunpowder, on the 2'J.I of April, 1776. Her father was an Englishman, named Robeit Peake, who came to this country with the British army, deserted and went as a drum mer in the American army at 'he age of six teen years. He married Miss Murray, by whom he had nine children, Mrs. Orem being i the oldest, and only surviving child. In li I she married Cooper Orem, a carpenter at the : Forges, by whom she had nine children. ' James, her oldest living child, is now 75 1 years of age and resides in this city. Mrs. I Hare, with whom she Ijvea. is the oldest , living daughter and is . years of age. Mrs. . Harriet Simmons and MaVv J. Houlk, with j her son James and Mrs. Hare, her on'y sur j viving children, reside her. Mrs. Orem has j had twenty-rive grandchi'dren and fifty-on great-grandchildren. She was married in j her father's house by Rev. Nathan Green 1 field and was familiar with many events of I the Revolution. Her husband, CooperOrem, j served in the war of 1812 and 114. Mrs. . Orem had been totally blind for four vears, bur. in p-nnr! health ami al.--n .-. .1 I ----- ... - 1 " . 1 1 ' ' 1 1 1 1 1 dj 1 10 a lew nays ago. fne ued to say that her ; gramiiiiiiicr on ner moiner S sine, whose j name was Cudlip and, died in Cornwall, ! Kngland, left an immense estate, of which hue was one of tne legitimate heirs. Mrs. TTaves on the SrTrATTOjj. "Xow, Rutherford," she remarked, with some feel ing, '-what am I to think of vour administra tion, with my sister's husband's brother in law, Mr. Matthews, not likeiy to be confirm ed, and poor Mr. Rogers wir.li nothing to depend upon except indeed bis lovly poetry ; and as for our poor dear son, Webb C, it makes me sick to think what sort of a father you are, when those (irant boys are all mar ried rich, and one of them is a Lieutensnt Colonel on the stuff, and Webb V. hasn't got even a posrmasfership, and has to go back to that nasty little Fremont no better'n when he came here ; and as for me, I've no patience to think about it, with those com mon old country folks out there all achirg to call us frauds the minute we can't give their ryrahoa'nf husbands collector ships ; and m even beginning ,o believe that old Til den himself is more of a man." Then she swung the broom around at a tremendous rate .and Rutherford and Carl Schurz step ped quietly away in a cloud of dust to the pri vate closet in the cellar, where a few small bottles were stored. Rev. Fathkr Feprts, one of the most widely known priests in the Pittsburgh div ces, died on Tuesday morning last at the residence of his mother in Pittsburgh, aged 33 years and 6 months, fiequie&cat in pace. riEADACHX, all Pilious Disorders, Dyspep sia, and Constipation cured bv DR. MET TAUR'S HEADACHE AXD DYSPEPSIA. PILLS. Price 25 cnts. "2-21.-1. An Orphan Asylum nnrned. FOURTEEN BOT8 AKD THREE GIRLS SCTTO CATED IH THEIH ROOMS. Scrato, V.K., Feb. 27, 1881. The wild est excitement prevails in this citv ovr the most heartrending disaster that ever occur red here. At a few minutes bciore 9 o'clock this evening, a fire broke out in St. Patrick's Orphanage, at Jackson street and Lincoln j avenue, Hyde J'arK. ana iourceen os mu three girls, ranging in age from 6 to 12 years, were suffocated. 1 ne orpnanage was charge of several Sisters of Charity, who had care of twenty -two girls and eighteen boys. The children slept on the th'rd floor, a partition separating the dormitories. At 8 o'clock this evening one of the Sisters saw the children put to bed and locked the doors. She had hanlly descended the stairs when she saw a dene cloud of smoke issu ing from the rooms on one of the upper floors. Hurrving back to the apartment oc cupied bv the" girls, she took one of the small est in her arms, and the rest quietly followed her to a place f safety. By this time the fire was raging fiercely on the third floor, and smoke poured into the hallway. The inmates of the house were now thor oughly alarmed, and the girls were hurried lldiiiff. The Sister who discover- A ti, flan.ea nirain leiran to ascend the stairs tosthboys Sscape. When she I had gone about half way up she was met by a man who informed her that the boys had all been safelv removed. Mie peri.iru m.ii thev had not been taken out, hut he insisted thai none were in the building, and refused to allow her to pass. Thousands of persons d7r hv this time attracted to the scene. It was rumored that many of the children were i in the building, txi tuose w no prnumni Vnow quieted the fears of the crowd by saying that all the inmates had been safely removed. Scores of persons entered the house to inves tigate, but the flames raged so fiercely that but little progress could be m?de in the at tempt to reach the sleeping apartments. Fonr fire companies cam; on the scene m quick succession, and the work of combat ting the flames was actively liegun. In a short time the fire raging in the hallway was extinguished, and the firemen were enabled to reach the dormitory occupied by the boys. The door was battered in, and the discovery was made that not a single occupant of the room had escaped. The little oi.es were huddled together Vneath their cots, manv of them being covered hv the bed clothing. N ot one showed a sign of life, and they must have ben suffocated soon after the fire broke out. On account of the distance of the orphan ?ertained tonight how the girls were found I age from the citv it cannot be definrtTe.y as in thp hnvs' dormitory. The bodies or ine children were removed to the residence of ; the priest, and hundreds of persons surged j into the building to view the remains. Many of the orphans had been placed in the insti- : tution bv their mothers, and the distressed : women "were almost heait-broken with grief i when thev singled out a child from the num- j her and claimed the little one. The major- ity of the children were without father or j mother, and were shown every attention by , the Si ders, and were supported by the peo- j pie of the parish. The disaster has sent a i thrill of sorrow throughout the city. There '. is no fixed theory as to how the fire originated. ! 6TI1.I. LATER. Sen ANTON, Pa., Feb. 28. The excitement i over the burning of St. Patrick's Orphan Asvlum is intense. Although the origin of tho fire is assigned ; to a defective flue on the second floor, the j matter has not been definitely settled. The asseition bv one of the Sisters of Charity that she was stopped on the stairs by a j stranger w'len she was about to return to the , rescue of the boys, at:er having taken tho girls to a place of safety, causes much in- i jiiirv as ti who ho was, but n:ne of thosa : who" were in the building have yet identified : him. I The three girls among the dead are sup- I posed to have broken from thuir a part me nt and entered that of trie boys, where they ! met their death with the rest. I At 11 o'clock this morning the coroner em- ' panneled a jury and viewed the bodies cf . the seventeen dead children. The children i were identified by two Sisters of the burned asvlum. Many of them lay on the floor, ' with blackened f .ces and "burned wrists, i The jury visited the burned asylum and in- spected the dormitories. The boys' room was greatly damaged by flames, large holes i having been burued in the fl-jor. The girls' ; rxm was not damaged so much, but the. cots were disarranged, showing that they must i have experienced t!:e mot intense fright. , The j'Jry adjourned until Friday next. j A Sovereign Remedy for Smallpox and Scarlet Fever. About two years ago The Record 'made kn.iv.ri through i its columns a saialincs spe cific which had been given to the public by a correspondent of tlie Stockton (Cal. ) lle.-a'd, who declared that it had been successful used to his knowledge in hundreds of cases, and would prevent smallpox, or cure it even though the pittings were filling. The recipe was originally published as a panacea for smallpox by some of the most scientist-schools of medicine in Paris. It is claimed to be of in fallible efneacy. It is a cure also for scarlet fever, a..d is harmless when administered to well persons. Following ii the prescription : Sulphate of zinc, one grain ; foxglove (dig italis), one grain ; half a teaspoonf til of sug ar ; mix with two tahlespoonfuls of water. When thoroughly mixed add four ounces of water. Take a spoonful every hour. The disease will disappear in twelve hours. For children smaller doses should be given ac cording to their age. A subscriber of The Record called at this office yesterday with a slip cut from the is sue or"this paper which contained the recipe ahove given, and stated that the preparation had cured his child of smallpox in one day. The remedy appaars to be precisely the same as that now being dispensed to scores of peo ple daily at St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum, at the corner of Seventh and Spruce streets, in this city, and which has been lound remark- j ahly emcacious. Mother Gonzaga, the ven , erable head of the instution, w ho is busily en- gaged in compounding tlie medicine, has been a member of the Order of Sisters of Charity j for fifty -four years, and is now the Mother J Superior of the order in this city. She states i that she received the specific" from Father Kenrich, of Germantown, some ten years I ago, who first had it from a Trench physician ; who discovered it during the prevalence f a ! smallpox epidemic in Paris, where it had been used with ereat success. When theSis ; ter first began to make it she voluntarily sent a bottle or two to families that the. "knew i were suffering from smallpox : the result I was so surprisingly beneficial that the report j rapidly spread, and in a short time the news I was known all over the neightwrhoixl. Sev j eral priests in the city have not only recom I mended it, but announced to their cor.grega 1 tions where it could be procured, and the ad ' ditional publicity thus given lias necessitated i the constant labor of all the Sisters in the j work of prepaiation. It is made in a large : copper vessel, which'liolds eight gallons, and 1 not infrequently twenty gallons a day are dis- tril.uted. Any person can procure it, nodis 1 tinction beir.g made on account of religion, i Ir is given free where persons are unable to I pav, nut those who desire can make a small ! offering in return for it. It is the custom of j the Sisters to send out a printed prayer and j a small scapular of tne Sacred llea'rt with j each lottle. Many cases of cure are reconnt ! ed by people in the vicinity, and the Sisters I say that in no cae where" it has been used has it failed to give the best results. Phila delphia, ll'cord. CruF.n by Faith. A special correspond ent of the Philadelphia Tims wiitinn frotn i Damascus, Ta.. Feb. 2i;tli. savs : Miss Lilhe Tyler, a relative of Mr. Wil.iam Tyler, the postmater at this place, hss len an invalid for upwards of six years. Doctors have termed her complaint heart disease. She has been treated by some of the most noted medical men in this country and has used all kinds of medicines sle could hear of, with no relief. About a month ago Miss Tyler heard of a lady living in Connecticut who cured long standing diseases by prsyer. A letter was sent to this lady and an answer received from the worker of miracles appoint ing the day and hour when Lillie and her friends should engage in prayer for her res toration to health. The day came nt last and the invalid's friends gathered at her bed side. This was about a week ago. Miss Tyler was. at the time, too weak to raise her head from the pillow, and the company pres ent included her uncle ar.d aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Tyler and her pastor, the Rev. Thomas Wescott. At the apiinted lime the young ladv and her assembled relatives encaged in prayer. As remarkable as it may seem, before the hour had elapsed the young ladv was sufficiently recovered to sit up in led and has been rapidly improving ever since, she is to-day in such an improved condition that she is able to ride out, and her relative are convinced that her complete cure will result. Considerable excitement prevails in this immediate neighborhood over the ftrange cure. Littno Witsessf.s The hundreds of strone, hearty, rugged and healthy Rooking men, woman and children that have been rescued from beds of pain, sicitness and well nigh death, bv Parker's Ginger Tonic, are the best evidences in the world of its sterling merit and worth. You wi'l find such in al most every comaiunity. Read of It in anoth er column. 2-21. -Im SEWS A5D OrillB K0TI5GS. (larfield has a brother chopping wood at $1 a day, and they say he is the happier man of the twain. In Schuylkill countv Corneliu9 O'Don ne!I, an old man, choked to death while eat ing a piece of meat. While shooting at Mike Murphy late Saturday nipht. at Cincinnati, Kichard Hur- jy killtd John Sullivan. An tnnn went insane with remorse at Laporte, Ind., ber-a.ise he blunderingly killed a neighbor while shooting at a rabbit. A family in West Chester awoke jnst in time to save themselves from being suffoca ted by coal gas which was escaping from a defective flue. John Vanderheidc. aged 24 years, was hanped on Friday, in Mielbyville, Kentucky, lor the murder of a little coiored girl, com mitted last jr.iy. Charles Men ill killed h.s mother nt Ch!- i chopped'the body" to piees and buried what he could not burn. The anxiety about Taul Boyton has been relieved by a letter received by his mother, dated the Oth of January, which sa"d be had pone to the interior of 1 em. Martin Koss and William Pickett, hvmg u....rir M.i . exchanged shots Thurs day on account of an alleged insult offered RoVto Pickett's wife. Pickett was kill . a iiui ennnot. recover. There is a farmer in the eastern end of Lancaster countv, eighty-one years of age, who has alwavs dealt at one store. His first visits were made when he was a small boy, aud accompanied by his father. Eour stiangers ana me proprietor m a snk,..n near Santa te. X. M., quarreiicn while plaving cards a few days ago. Pistols o.-..re drawn and the strangers weie shot dead. No arrests have been made. Mr. .Kdward Forrest, of Smithville, Rraiiford county, recently gave birth to girl twin's who were firmly united in a face-to-facc poMton from the breast bone to the ab domen. Thev died shortly after birth. At the Whipporwill colliery, in Wilte Parre, Pa., on Thursday. Richard Williams, aged sixteen yean. was cut to pieces by a runaway car, and James Davis, W'illiam 1 la vis, M. Webb and Edward McRue were seii ouslv injured. Can a legislative enactment make s-a-s spell "saw?" They think so down in Ar kansas, for the l egislature of that State has j.ascd a bill defiring the pronunciation of Arkansas to be Arkaiisaw. Kansaw is still to be heard from. ---Mrs. II. II. Ingham, of Monroeton, Rrad- Varlet "fVver. In Viping the patient's ford countv. waited upon a mere attacked month the saliva came in contact with a sore cn Mrs. Ingham's hand, causing her death. The niece recovered. Archbishop Laing, of Santa Fe, is in better luck as to worldly affairs than most of the clerical profession. He owns a gold mine which yields $1,00 from two bucket fuls of ore. ne nugget recently taken out proved to be worth f 2, 000. Agent Charles H. Day, of Forepangb's ahow, Philadelphia, lias received nearly .no photographs in answer to his offer of ?10,no0 for the services for the season of the hand somest lady in tbp land. Thus far a young lady of Bradford is the favorite. Thirteen of the victims of the orphanr.ge fire at Hyde Park, near Scranton were bur ied in one grave on Tuesday. A is i ner, who is much respected, is the man charged with stopping one of the Si-ters from going up ! stairs, lust he denies the charge, i Congress has passed a special act plac I inr Mrs. Elizabeth Upright of Rockland, Iowa, on the oension rolls because she had : I eleven sons in the Federal army. There is j I no other instance in thp country of a mother ; i having eleven sons, all in the army. ( Two protheis had a lawsuit in New j ' Castie a few dr.vsago iostt!e which nhouhl 1 i pay for an eight dollar tombstone over their i j mother's t-Hve. They will both receive lu- ' 1 cratire office ruder Garficld'a adininistra- I ! tion, or a record f.r meanness is of little me. i I Kllen Athev, a murderess in jail at 'w ! Philadelphia. Ouio, got out of her cell, and i , was met in the corridor by Mrs. Lyons, the j i Sheriffs wife. A desperate encounter be- ! tween the women resulted in the securing of ' ; the prisoner and the fatal injury of her cap- j 1 tor- I Michael Pavitt, the land leiguer, n the ' son of a tenant-farmer of County Main, ar.d i , worked in a Lancashire cotton mi!! until he , was 9 vears old. Then his arm was crushed 1 in the machinery and had to be amputated, j i Thereafter he turned his attenlion toedueat- j ine himself, and at 15 became a government 1 I letter-carrier. j A dower of ?s )0, which has been stand ' ir.g against a property in Northampton countv since 18:26 and on which f J,i3.3i in 1 terest had been paid, was distnbu'ed recent- I Iv among the heirs of an obi lady who died a j ; few weeks ago at the age of 104 years. Nine ; : children survive her, the oldest being over0 j year of ag. i ; Oscar Trigg, Superintendent of the Mad- ison. Indiana, Poor Asylum, nas a oiock 01 1 wood a piece of beech" limb ir. the heart of I which is a likeness of a woman, dressed n the stvle of the period, the skirts being I flounced, tucked, gathered and pi.ined back, ; the arms being carried a la kangaroo. It is j a freak of nature. j The Philadelphia Time says that a ni ' mor has been current for some days that Mr. L. P. Farmer, General Fafsenper Agent of ; the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, in ! tended to resign, owing to impaired health. ; Mr. Farmer's friends express the hope that hi will be ahle to continue in the position J that he has tiled with so much ability. ! Tlif Columbia Spy is responsible for the ! story that on Wednesday evening a large ' mnskrnt was attracted to the residence of Mrs. Rudnstein, on North Third street, in : that borough, by strains of music from a : piano : that he scratched at the door until i admitted, and that not appreciating his pres i ence the inmates of the house kil'ed him. ' A child's dress made of font tlass and ' trimmed with lace made of the same mate rial is now on exhibition in a fIiow window I on Fifth avenue, Pittsburg. The dress glia- tens like the finest atin, and is marvelously J beautiful. The fabric from which it is fash ' ioneil wp spun anrl woven at the glass fac tory of Messrs. Atrebairy t Co., that city. . The wife of Cyrus Hoffert, of Cumru township, Berks county, bad lot her voice two yers, five months and six days, all of which time she was able to speak only in a whisper. Recently, when she was trying to peak throuch a home-mad telephone con- strncted of esjpriee hoxes, she reeoven d her voice, and is now Abie to speak as well as ever. When Orin V. Crowell left Socorro, New Mexico, for Lake View, X. J., tlie other day, he kissed a pretty cirl nood-l.ye, at the same time noticing that her cheeks were plumper than usual. On his arrival at Lake View he went amonir the citizens with a swollen face and his month onen like that of a fish. The pretty eirl bad the mumps and by the kiss Orin caueht them. Henry O'Connor, aged 17 years, shot his sisfer Annie, a girl of 20, at St. Louis, on Friday nicht, while she was in bed in her room. He had previously been reproved by his uncle for striking a younger sister, and supposing Annie had reported him to the Jiiuir, lill-u wilrtltviiiuiiuiiurSjjuioc a lami shot. Annie tries to shield him by saying it was an accidental shot. An old German woman died In a miser able hovel near (uakertown, Bucks county, a few days ago. in the midst of poverty and filth, who was heiress to a fortune of $10,ooo. The money could have been obtained long ago, but for the obstinary of her husVtand, who refused to consent to the deduction of some interest that was n dispute at the time of the sett'ement of the estate. The Philadelphia Press sums up the character of the abortive movement against Eckley B. Coxe in one sen'ence : "To at tempt to" torture his voluntary seif-aecusa-tion of over-7ealous electioneering into evi dence of such a wi'fn! violation of law as to forever disqualify him from hoiding ar.y of fice of honor or trust in the trate is neither very ingenious nor very decent." At Syracuse, Y., on Friday last, Judge Riegle sentenced the Karl gang of tur glars, ttiieves. and highway robbers. Lean and Charles Earl each to sixty-five years in the fsfate Prison, and Emma Earl, sister, re ceiver of stolen propei ty, to fifteen years. Of the other memtiers of the gang Thomas Jatjues got forty years, Frank Richards twen ty years, and Anna Sterling five, years. Bartner and Baptiste Costa, two eccen tric, brothers, lived together in an isolated house at ( ollinsville. Mo. Baptiste went to the nearest neighbor and said that he bad killed Bartner. His story, though true, was not believpd. Next day he tried to convince another neighbor that he was a murderer, but with no better success. A week elapsed Iwfore he was able to get himself arrested. In the eastern part of Bartholomew county, Ind., a mob, masked and armed, seiz ed Samuel Ewing on Tuesday nicht of lat week and hung him till he was nearly dead, and then stood over him with a cocked pitol trying to extort from him a confession that he had poisoned Dr. Biddinger's horses, the doctor having lost seven by poisoning. The mob utterly failed and abandoned the pris oner. Mrs. Armstrong, a voting and charming widow with a fortnne of f:?0.(K0, was receiv ed into the best society in Columbus, Ohio. She married Hermann Corzillious, the Treasurer of the county. Two weeks after the wedding she was arrested for the mur der of her first husband, whose father had for two years kept detectives at work on the case, and had at lat discovered testimony clearly Implicating her. -A child named Shutter was burned to death on Thursday, by playirtT with fire in the absence of its parents from home, near Coevmans, New Tork. A little girl was kill ed in Coeymans the same day by falling on the water wheel of a paper mill. James Jordan, a miner, was killed by a blast in a coal mine at I'ittston, Fa.. Fi ;day . Sheridan C. Matthews, nged 10, was killed by the cars, at C'arbondale, Fa., on Thursday. The so-called "independr :it Republi cans," alias bolters, of the Pennsylvania Legislature are very much mortified now to discover that Senator 'ameron suggested Congressman Mitchell for Senator. They have been working nearl two months "to : beat Cameron." and refused to elect two i good men because Cameron wanted th'-m elected. After all this fuss and fury, to j . have stepped into the l ameron irap makes . these patriotic and broad-fc.uio statesmen very unhappy. ,j ,,ollse; KilUnning, who died on Ati' lorn nevri'iiiis, proprietor of the Thursday night last, was born into the hotel business, having first seen the licrht in the Kittanning Inn, the predectsor of the Rey nolds House. Mr. Reynol Is was born in 119. His father came to Kittanninc when K was an Indian village and built the fir?t hotel, which he conducted until 1S50. About ls.io Absolom was elected Treasurer of Arm strong county. He leaves SMO.noo to be di vided between his son arid daughter. The live question of hugging, whatever it may be, is before the Michigan Legislature in the shape of a bill to make hugging a cirl against her will a penitentiary offense. The Philadelphia Times thinks no measure of this sort is likely to pass. No girl unless the girls of Michigan are totally different from all other girls wants any such law as that : it would siniil about ninety-ninc-one-htindredth of all the fun there is in this world, and every enterprising young man in the. State would be in jail witttfn a month. K. C. Hayden, convicted of the murder of his wife, and sentenced, in September, 177, to two years' imprisonment in jail, two years' confinement in the State Prison, at fiaid labor, three months' solitary confine ment and then to be hanged, suffered the latter penalty, Friday afternoon, at Wind sor, Vermont. An application for a new trial, on the ground of insanity, was refused about a week ago by the Supreme Conit. Ilayden was intelligent and fairly well edu cated, but reckless and dissipated in his habits. An immense loss of stock by starvation has been one of the consequences of the un precedented snows of the present winter in the extensive cattie ranges of the Western Territories. Such is the fertilizing effect of ls"T'tt. ,r'"? -'f ZTZ V te exceptionally g-od this vear, but it was probably sufficiently good before an.1 did not j require improvement. Enough i3 said to be as good as a feast. It is in fact a great deal t better, and even shnrt commons rigid along ' is r referable to an alternation of famine and ' abundance. It hardly seems possible, says the Du j binjue (Iowa) Time, that our city has among ! its inhabitants a man who shook hands with . Sitting Bull, a man wlio has smoked with : him, a man who has hunted with him, a man ! who has courted his daughter, Big-woman-j Tiot-afraid-to-have-p.ipooses ; a man who has 1 dated to enter the lodges of the blood j thirsty Sioux. Rut it is solid truth and can j not be disputed. When the history is writ i ten of that great tribe one name will stand : boidiy out and read Tim O'Slica, night clerk J of the Lormier. More anon. 1 A shepherd dog on tne farm of Mr. Thomas Haiti, of Sceleyville, Wayne county, has been creating a furore in that neighbor hood during the entire past winter. He has been seen repeated lyTo drag a Urge piece of bark up a steep hill back of the farmhouse, where a thick crust had formed, then deliti erately seat himself op. it. and slide to tlie bottom of the bill. Many poo'e have wit nessed this strange freak of the dog's, and after coasting down tbs hiil several tiui'-s I the nog would enrry the. bark sled to a place j of Ktfetv until be needed it sgain. I Father Maloney, a Catholic priest of I Cherry Creek, White Pine county. New, j while crossing Ruby Vail- y on horseback, a j short time ago, g;t caught oHt at night ami i had a vers' narrow escape from leing de , vourcd by coyotes. A paott of the wolves I attacked him, but through violent shouting ! and secii'sr gesticulations am' grimaces and i the aid of a good horse, but elderly by the latter, he finally escaped. In relating his I adventures to a newspaper reporter, be j closed by saying : "I am now partially re 1 stored to my usual spirits arid elasticity of mind, and expect ere Ui:n to be able again '.o compete with the boys in any feat t' jumping, racing or stone throwing. Alto gether, however. 1 look upon my narrow es cape from deatn as a special protection of Divine Providence." A novel combiit was witnessed by a large crowd in Kerry Patch, St. Loui." A bantam game cock made a fiercealtack upon a small bull-terrier which c ooroscbed close i to a number of chickens that werj feeding. ! At first the dog snarled and showed his i teeth, but did not attempt to injure bis im i puderfl antagonist. Tl'.e bantam would riot ! be subdued by Mich a moderate, manifesta tion of spirit. He llew uion the terrier s back and sticking bissptirs in the hair to ob tain a foot-boid, apparently, tried to put out the dog's eyes. Terrier then attempted to snap off bantam's head, but tite hitter was too quick. After inflicting some slight wounds bantam flew a short distance and crew shrilly. Then he darted back again and met terrier haif way. The terrier was agile and fighting hard, "but was never able to get a bite of bis opponent. H- made a anap every five or six second., but tlie wilv rooster always escaped injury. The fight lasted mme five minutes, and only once did bantam's life nppet-r to be in imminent dan ger. Bantam lost some of bis feithers in the fight. Terrier lost one eye and consid erable blood. Wr noticetliHt erpsjt maiiT prupriptory mediein" men are advrrtisinjr in siu: h a roari- ner a- to load the puliiic, anil particu'arly i the retail (Iriiggist. to heltve that tlie s;t'e ff j their enods is so crent, tlint nniess their ir ! dors are sent in early tliey will be unable to j fill tht-ni. We, however, untie one excr-p-1 tion to tliia rule in the eas of the .inkV ; M'F'a Co., of l'hiladelpdiia Pa, iho are hon- ear, enough to tte, that no matter how fast 1 the orders come in for Si-r.a' Syr it of Tab. 11 D Chrrut mil HoAKHorND tbry liall a I r. ri I tmtl I o . , UB , tola . . .,t vear wereo.4: bottles : thHr fac'ilitir. ; fnT :.!-;., t msnt .e 1 ,,u1 ,, k.,,,,.. per annum ; but let no drucsist or customer be alarnvd t'nattliere will ever Vie a corner in SrwR' Tar, for should the trade de-niund S.OtHi.rV)') bottles they can be had, and from our experience w;tli it a a couph and cold remedy, we have no doubt that its sale will toon rea"h the lnt named figures. 6i Fran cise jVe-if and Dispatch. I j TTARRisnrno, Pa., Nov. 1, ln. I)r. I?. ' J. Kendall & Co., Gents : I have a very fne 1 mare that has had a bone spavin for a lone I time, I tried everything man could devise to 1 cure it, bnt all in Vain, and was about to give ! it up when a friend of mine in this city came f to me and recommended Kendall's Spavin vuitr, Allien l irieil Willi glfllln rt'SUilS, l't'- moving the twine clear and clean : then I sent 2.r cents to you for one of vour illustra ted Horse Book. "and I think there is no let ter book printed on the horse and his diseas es. I have taken preat interest in it and have since sold 18 copies for von to my neigh bors, and will try and do what good I can by getting them for others. Yours truly, . G. TY. Miller. Death of a Well-Ksowic RRLioiEreK. Alter forty years' service in the cause of her Master, as we learn from the Pittsburg biipntch. Sister Mary Veronica McDerlv died at Mercy Convent, in thitt city, on last. Sat urday morning. Sister Yeron ion was one of the seven Sisters of Mercy who, in l4 i. ac companied Kr-. Rev. Bishop O'Connor from Carlow, Ireland, to establish their order in this diocese. This was the firit convent of the order established in the United States. The memory of Sister Veronica will be long revered by the large number of persons to whom shn was indeed a Sister of Mercy. May she rest in peace. E. TV. R It ANT, IRrnOIT, F.I.17.ATIETH, X- J. I could scitrcely speak above a whimper, and it was almost impossible to breathe thro' mu no.trtla T'tttorr Vlu'u i ' .. ... II , 1 . m I short timf. j hj, entirely relieved. My head nas not oeeti so clear nor my voice so stion in yoars. I have warded off several colds since. I recommend this admirable remedy to all who are afflicted with catarrh or colds in the hend. J. O. Tichkntor, Dealer in Boots and Mioes, June 15, 179. See adver tisement. Kittanniso is excited over the presence of a man who calls himself Baron Linton and who claims to be the husband of the late James E. Brown's grand danchter. llesuvs that the young lady, who is the danchter f the late Mrs. Jane B. Finley. met bun while traveling in Kurope and oecame his wife. Mr. Brown left an estate valued at $2.0oo, 000. a considerable portion of which will po to Miss Finley. I HEi.tFVK Ei.t'8 Cream Batm to be the hest article for catarrh and bay fever ever of fered to the pnbhe. It has piven satisfaction in every case, and knowing its merits I re commend it. Samcel J. ViL60S, Druggist Wllkfsbarre, Pa. V Lni'gliinfT Family. TEE fTRAViiC VIAL-APT WHICH AFFLICTS A FAMII V AI.OC TRK DELAWARE FT1LIT LE6S ITfonis TO STAT PERIODIC LAUGHTER T ' I.KS TOLD BT THE MF.IUHBOns. A Frenchtown, N. .?., correspondent of tite Philadelphia Titmn. wii'ing under dHte of ; February iwth, t!lsa rather queer .story, as follows : ' Straight across the Delaware f-om here and r-. i i am nif the hills which run parallel with thu river for piany miii livsa himm coneernirjir whom 1 he j ptran:ret Monrs ate teld. Ti e fatherand simis are ' farmer!, and all live in a Lirjre. ntstantinl lu.ii-f, ! a few var Is froir the road to 1 l"-t'.wn. Thevare all chronic laiiRhrrs. having an aW:rtion of the muscles of the ru oith and throat who h compels them to irlve vent to nft;:rrnl tnerrmo ' at i-turnl , interrals. The malaov nrs appeared in t tie Sathrr i about ten jran en. lie : n.inl!v a very que t I mnn. eni'-vinirttm. hut tn.irifcSTiiiir his rv.: .vim-tit ; 1 without niui-h t.-.'-e. He whs I at the dinu-r I tahle ne ! in the i r;ri ' f the yi'sr, i-n'in; I i steatlily ant ii'.l ecrnirit.ii In at-y , f the cotut f- ! ! tion whicn the f.thrr member of theiamiiy wen- csrrylnif on. Siel.lrnly. without any c:oise. he I I irst into A ltid fit fl iai:: liter extretn' !y diier- i ent frutn Ins afji'.-ioi 1 laugh that all wire at- j I tracte-l by it at once. When a - k t-.l wlmt su the I reason fr Ids m.hlen oitNnvt he raaile no reply, ' i but continued I -is m'-rr mrr.t. sjottie of the fcoys j thouifht he h:ol hysterics aii.l on luted him on tlie j ' hack, hut itdni !; fl. Altera lew moments he i tnMle motions for j e;e:l ntul paper ami wr..- thst ! j he was umi'.le to . urn. 1 his nsiMe aud ascil them 1 to tend lor a !o tor. I i THE -.Tl BE OF TBI M ALA!V. The'ruritl ph :v-1:ui can.e, hut eoiji i tu-p no rf 111- : ely toat atof.po.l the laiikrho r. I'eal after real of ! what sounded like trie lieric.-t kind of lun came j 1 from him. td not hitiir would avail to j-rrveiit it. The doctor finally came to the conuiusion tl.st he 1 wai tho vimm oi a ro rvou attuck. atul. Ic-ivn r a I nervine, dejmrted. The lH'hercor.t:nue 1 luui:h:rir 't until ahout suroh-wn. wh-n he suddenly ;.j.-e 1 ', and fell 011 the (l.i-.r. c'm;detely protriTe.i. He i soon strew better, however, ate :i hearty tMi-jrt i.nd ', i sj ent the evening much as 11-tiM. No sumiso! a ! return of the tel. I tr :'ihle appcarine. he wer.t to j lied and was soon fast a.-ep. Alnnir ah ut two 1 j o'clock in tlie inoru.nir. howev. r. his wi:e w A. ' awakened by his lnuirhter. smi the same symptoms iuhuii'-.:.-'! i in 111 i'i e. a f on tne ntterms.n prcvi . ou?. He kept u tip u:it,l 7 G'ol .ek, laiiyhin loud ; and flrona. A t , ep-k the nojeudden!v o".-e4 and d'd not return a.'ain until dinner time, 'i'kais 11 i-oniinuea. ri"Urnn pa-t, ,'iV e) urtiv aOer no n a nd in the nislitnV uu oVtork'. and h:o- e-. er iiio. As the wo, kf passed hi- irrow a-.-o-!. tr.i I to tf:c ditease that l.e was caused verv ht'le it.t-t.nvent-enee by it. He did n .t (tet tired out. a at lrt. and toon wnsahle to iro about his work sowing seed and plutd.r.ir c-.rn. d.uifir.x vetretnM-s and watern.K the cnttlt while Inuk-Uicc itrimoderitciv. j lie could not talk, while under one ot the t-peiiV. I hut carried a suite rind pencil around with h.in, af I ter the far-hion o! a daf and dumb person, j THE LACKUtllR OPiiBAtM. I The tro'ir.le was very regular in lis corr.trsc and i goinif and only occasionally broke forth at ouiovard j li.r seasons. Hi"e the old ina n aas tuio n in chu'eh. just when the minister w.i exhorting his hearers j in the most solemn strains, and spoiled the effect j of the discourse, besides .iisturvinv the eo,ii:lihrtuTn ol the clergyman. An itb-r tunc he was found bv ; one wl his neighbor? along the road, lyin;; ten--ath I a I ajf of four, lanvhin:; at a ternnc rate. He I as ; been taken while driving home from the mill, and the fii liipnnv.o ot the sounds frightened the horse, i causing it to run nway and dump the man and i part ol hif load tut in the road. For eighteen j months the hitle r was the only one or the boue ! hold afflicted with the malady. Several 1 them had com plan ot ir mi tuue to lime of an inclination to join the father in the lauti. but none ct them did so until nearly two years alter he sm taken, when Su-ie, the youngest child, suddenly burst into a similar fit i urlng one ol her father's attacks. From that t ni" on she laughed Ht about tha same , hours h-r father does, i Mie by one the remaining i members fell victims to the strange t'otnplaiur. un- t 1 three ye:ir n.r,. thre was but one b-It free, and 1 tha.1 was t'harles, the o'der-t s-.n. llisiut.gfcieu.p- tion le 1 ti'.ni to believe he would escape the r-'iita- I i Kion. Hut he ai mistak-u. and it i a d he f iJ ; j his fir"t ntta' k wliiie pel i i..m ng f -.r the 1 an i o! a M;;rn-l'iirit dnnisi-i. S'. rncln.iifil wac ths la iy j : by the fjneer belia'. lor of her -Li.Ior that Ff e ran I ; tpiiii tin- room. a. id it n weeks buiore the proper ' i e.tpii: tiai i"iis coil :d 1 ni u-.-e h er to e -e Liin n iri. ' She is now one oi the ianniy here and, cs -aping I 1 the tnaiady. never initios the hideous cb.i'ras of 1 I Innghter w tic h twh e h day rebounds through the. ' 1 house or grounds. 11 lsn-garjv l as ratic-r strange ! that none ol the neighbor shoul.i have caught ti.e , lnfei iion. tuit u h i the case, ultnongh u,any o. ' them mingle consta ! v. ith the le raoy. I ; 1 rvino to 6T'-r it. j KrrrvthiiijC poss.ble h:'S I ecn dne to alleviate 1 , or rem", e tti- malady. I nt w thout per-eptii.le el- j leet. sCv,rti e'lOiiP'it physic -u s trom tl e lea i.i.g j cit . have v. -tied jhe h tn-; aiid tjrown ei -e !,ng j ly intcr-sf 10 th -?se "I hey ail c.iuies them- i ' selves battle i by l.a.a iy and isaiit oi; r 10 f ' cf the family to go to the '.f- x t where they ran re 1 ceive coiistatit t reatiijeii t. l'ios they sfeH-liiy re- i , fuse to do. Their peculiar trouble, s" E"-.l eabie ; ; at;d 1. lias -na.ii; li-.etn cry seiii lac. ati i tnoy '. r nut travel wfiere th. y be sut. f-cied to pub- I lie 'unny 131' . eiuark. I'Ley g f eh ur-: or th c ; nore in the vulave t'.u-e . and aTT'-nd s-.h:11 -;itherinys occiisioi(a.iy in the tieilil cih.-. 1 in : i the eveirngs. but only an ' z life-long ir.an.'s. J IVop'e within a radius M a ! w iri'.e1? are so ii'-r-ui j ' tome ; to the thing that the; i.po i n il! 1 it i t IikiI- tion it. IVlC'-'.ii'ni;;' vn; r-w I--- le ,.d . ' the Imincdiate " teini'ty. and ihe irysicans who , ; have ai'Ci'de.i ihi 111. i-re e iiizmt of ti e ctreun- slani-es. l'eeple ani.it li e 1- oise. esoec aily in : tire summer ;tr::e, have been h.'ei wiih eu-' -i-.y bv what t'ey saw and h-ari an h.tc carrli-1 ae ' , counts to ii"-ti.t.t pia.-es. I tne reports aie very ' vaitue. lor the pai-er-bv ha.e lit 1 no c h n t i-lei ; ol the tr.iutcr. 1 lo j only knew 11 at 1: I eked r--1 markably strange to see a Isiiier and hii- -et.s out , In a held. 1 lowing and sowing- mimy r- ds mrt, 1 ; vrt e ieh one l.njriitiiz as tt .cji;ii he ha 1 l.ciir 1 tne , best n k- in the world, t ui .'on so -:. s me t .id ol 1 the truvelers -alio wci.t that way. Several year? ag. tw--i -ung men e.,Tne fr- m i.t e-;.'ir. lo at j tend paitv at l.rwinua. a summer r-rt 11 li.e I'e: ide. . a lew Ul '. les I ' ,.w ! e tirt 1 d the ao k lo. . a warm tug . late, 'i ht-y j family seen 1 he wilui.oi: : tie clerlv '.. d.d Lot trove p :t ti c 1. a Iter ti e r' guiar h s were til' open aiei e .eard. A t .ie ein.g the most unearti.lv ne. no n ! they heard had ever re deiioniuu;. leieed. It Seemed i;ii a p , and tht-y leit sviro li.ey tiitrim-e t'i the lower r v' fr.irhl and ne:,riy rai: aw.,y ti.e eeiiClu-loU tll..t. at ti.e 1. am. te l. :i ev hu;i;e.i li tr. : fctrucii the llor-e took ; t'ouillitf to : l.iaee was leu;. , i;em uioniititt spread li.e n Pari .es w- re ; ed tit ItiVe.iiatc tlie mutter, but ' solvtd tl c sal-o 1 1 111' rt lnt-Tiiie.i 0. .liae near el hand as '. ti.e uati 1 he were u;.e l lo remaia re'..e:el 1. one t f ut ti mat- ; ter and tac doriv . IHEl li riitipv; . o UTIi . The yesris id m -es-Ki.t laughter hr.ve t'.-'.t sorre ; what on tl. la a s oi the lam.ly. but pot o as to be : very t.i.t leeaole. Tin re are M-ores ot itiic: ui.vler : the eyes atol al'evf the cheek" ca.i.-rd by t lie .irair- 1 nif up tt tiie sk:ii. Ti.en tiie.r in.-atiii bare t-e-! coino wolei" anil they keep i hii: ciesi. i with dirh ; eully. i he most marked result ol tbe d;aense. 1 how.-ver. is in tho voic. 'the cnUte tHimly ta:k , in the same tone, refeiuMin a r.tarl. a- nt: '.h'ra I the vniee -l an atio s.i.i:er. tb s an i tenoile ' have the eaiiiu lnlleetiou anil iiii"Hat.op. l; ?t if t heui have more, or lea trouole w n h their cyev several bavins liis-.tue r-ry ui ir i'k I to 1 . The pupil- have rontrarted arid the i l.t te ej. e' ail is tlii.nniMH'il in sre. '1 is a-eootne l for t v the ' contract :ei ol t he eyes wh : le lail'j h . -. and ; fort teq 'i i red i n ork i nif or rea-i i nt w r i le un 1 nir an atlae-k. ery l:IIle pl ye al Biino-si'9 is I 1 caused the laliirher". They re;td and write, s eep J i and work without any treih'e. 'the only thu,; : ; t:er s,-in t.nable foijo. wl:t:e n:taeked.lr- t " eat, J ' nn i tbat e:n be rea iily underto...d. Several uraii I- : chiidren ba e beeti tu-rn. a iid i n al 1 but one i iiaire ' ' thy were taaen. soon afier tdrth.with st..ted at- ! ! t ieis ;it the ?;i pie hou-s as their parens. O' cmirso j 'hey do not iaimh n the older nnes do. but they rs'-w and exj're-i til the siirnii ol baby i;bt. two'-e a j ' dav and never err wh. le in I hat state. , CovrtTiNC. (Ink and M aiiryivo the Oth Eli. A correspondent of tne N. Y. HV,r'f. writing from Co'un.b'.n, O., under duo of Ft'brumy - J. says : A pr. ir.lnent staie rilli--i-il b l-i.i t-r heauti tnl a t d hih lv-wont; dished da liih-er-; -M :-s Kate tind li-i Jennie hulh rd wl'.itn are well atd Mr. orahly knewn in s.ioietv. A earriae tniiiiiier whi lived hard hv was il-.u in tits sf"nt. m to Mi" Jennie, tho ynui.itcr. and niatt' r l ad ;ni gre?"d s far tr. it aa en -m.-inent .i cil'-ri' 1 in to w.th the cmisent .f her father, a id ail the ar ranueinents were made tn cele'inr the rejua'-S lat evciiitiK. far Is were out. we-er.'s were se ieeted and eoncratiilat'one had 'already hecun to irriv e. Slid ten ly and without evi'ianaii'H; the in vited K-I-slS w ure not . fl 1 tha 11;' we Li. 114 had hern in !efinite!y postnned. The ria.ns tin re fi r have j'i- tir-e'-i reide K rwn. I in 1 nesday M 13 .leiinia went tj her re-nni and loand iyine un her dre-i-iiu i-Hse a note a-i-lreed t ' her sirir in the hand ritmit of her alh.i need. Hiih a woman's Cllr: wily She etiened Hill Teld lie lute 31, d w.ifc rend ?red a Into; in-ane l hnd in it the tall del ths ot an nr-Miitf enenl fer her Si-ti-r Kate t tne.-: t.io carriakre -tritr. tner at tha resideiiee .-fa 11 1 1 n - ter a nd ha e t he marriaiti' cretn any ierlnri:.eil tsat ewn lnir. Hastening lo the parlur to cml'-ent her sis- ttr, she learned that .Ui-s Kale had iti.ne out a short time previously. Mi Z. ni te.' hv the arrival t.f h- very" new -vile, who diatelv to make prei.ar.it t.-r's. bnt thev were iitlerrut t'lecarriam tiimmerand gave no o' her explanation lor t- eir v-m-itu-t than j that "it had teen intended from molir-if.' They then reomred to ll,e residence 1,1 t'le ea.-r-.aa-?-triiri- 1 tiler's father, where they still remain. M:.s Jen- me was prostraied hy the unexpected Mow and l.ow lies at the. puint of death from an st'ark of ' hr..in lever. ; A rTi t W led . (UiIHitm's flLniosrl'l.A irvKH i KtllLT M AI.F. WeisnacptoSSlba. Il-t-iil rrie-. d.4tf. l-u,iejri-tie As-n-a. xwrKTic fscaijc Co., m. .anau, 41. h Peter Henderson's (J I 3 Wilt be Mailed IYre Pt all ysho api'lv " ? lAtT. i Our Fiperlmental rrrni In A which e teat n r errtsble and a F onrr Keef ai-omnkt roinririei nd one f 'remlniies for l iaius (roTrrlnar irrr In Rlaaa), re the largeat In America. PETER HENDERSON & CO. 35 CortJandt Street, New York, X will mail copy of tny ?iew Hook, "MEDICAL C0MK01 SENSr." El il . . . . I . , io 1 1 (-e 1" II wim "ii nMHWMiMM aacd hia tiame'and ti-'Lit-oLice auuicM, aa cciU in stamps to pay fi"' are. To. fiv one snVe-.nr Wth COs-frrTIOV, aitrMa. CATAimii, S4m: iiikoat, cr BRONCHITIS, the ln?orrr.ron In th P"-k i c-f pr-eat vain ; and It may In the provhletica ot 4od Save reanT nsernl 1Ivb. Andres. Vlk JL U. Wfin, 14 Paltk t, tixtmati. X WSW . 1. . , "-i w i '.i a week In your own town Tern's and J-toutht CVVJfri.-o. AdirB H. Hellf" $r Co., I crtland, Me. ( : - - --a f flTl ' fn M irmrr f Our Questions. Are you a buyer r,f Mf'; rr s Clo'ng at retail? Do you need clothing for tr.c farm, ti.o office, .-. 5 work-shop, the court-room, r,r the pulpit? Do you want IvnV rloth;n for the school-rci., tr lor dress ? D you prefer to buy clothing tc? ty-rna.de cr to order? Are i-u in need tf h;rts ? If yef, to any or all cf these que ries, state your needs to us, ti.it we may send you samples and prices. Your Question is. Will this pay for the trouble ? Yon must judge. We will make up the case, you must decide it. But re must tell you that we have created the Largest Retail Clothing Business in the L'nited States by the simple method of giving the t-cs rlothin f r the least money. We mean that :t shall pay you to buy of us. If yea buy and are not pleased, return the goods for exchange, or vieriud your money. - Wanamaker and Brown, S. E. Cor. Sixth & Market Sts. v$ rHILADLLFHIA. 1 B. J. LYXCH, SI anufat turr- tat-t lrltr In I HOME AND CITY MADE FURNITURE! ; L01IXGES, HELTEADS, j TABLES, CHAIRS, i Mattresses. zo. HVC KI.KVKMH XXYSVL ttvivsem ir.U. ti.d ITtJi Sf-., J A.lto( ,mn Icim'a. - fit wishing t h-.nc-st pr Of I --.0 rebate i: .. -1 rs rei; s ii'v sri n h'.lll I.h :iv -id tog. as 1 a:-i e. ' ; '", Jt. cri -il .r. j.i ; b II eull b. i re t th it 1 ra n in I'r:ee trie ve Alti'OIi.i. A o;g c e e r St Sl erc. -art i:r ril IS. IVicNEVIN l YEACrfi, -mN'Tntr. cr- Till, en? Sftot-Iit 110 F'eventi Avenue. . Allooiia, la. One Poor 1'tit uT i;n : s !3o-ie. iiooi-'iNo Ai si'or riy F.iriiKs ran A IISM.5. ' . -t. FAMILY 0HCC0LATE1 n at i'el t.':s. : ary rxperiep-: ( it or In suaVti er In t ; i i.'.r.'kvi N( w ul k h ' elo at-' i- pre ' Ids Mrerirtn t and 1 wer A pr-.tr ' e n e vfi ral ie to ie ' b..riv. r. op i' o n th;-.t elo -., at berant; it udds slrei utm-iol I ra n, harm- r. ;7.e the w. rk ar, i itives pn-iiy to i' Fi - a -lirerT;ee ei ' e to f-I tne dine tl:l oi'd. II. KSli TOD eor : i-c. . tor oi,.- Sw. Si 1 VaTi.l a ) .vol: lorh 4 M : i: r. J ! a-i-.'. 'a I Io-b 1! St' Foraa'e by V.S. Haiiksi. l r :-. and N .1 r .r. Serf. l-.isr.e;-i:rrf. Pa. -lv. 'kSLXAVlER-jS ACADEMY hi- J n - I Trt "V" :aki it : th, m l'enr- Mr- I'n; Y half a eer.iu: v .,1,1, f-r.-is w) o- some rr:.s-t l r m-'icrt an 1 riot-iated !s,o.. ivar.ia ai.d el-ewiieru ha.", e r.' u-..ic ' . t'e.r-nuii r-l -i -at '"nil aids aud h.;f)ie?-. f rehnini; inflaeiiees. ils r lit. tied ai any titce. Yen'.v T- it " pense ai Address : sisr: OF V.FKCY. Hunt s J. ' .. V.'e.- .it', re'anol t'c. Tjre. 10. l?'-t STARTLiHG DISCOVERY! LOST MANHOOD RE3TORLD. A T'etrm of yoiithfal tr j-ndvr cjvsh c Ire-r-1 - v t V"rro!i TVliijirr. Ixt-t .Vri!iiv1. jiTlEfftrid in vs.in errr kT; u rt:- ly, Lss .1'tt- i. k m f.-llow-euffn-rs, a lTaa j. II. Rf I , 4 haihtuii M.. T. li t. 4. Farms fcr Sale. ( 1 ..i. l ti i . I 1 1 . : 1J : . Tf. . ' " ' R l"t w hn. t-f he nt an-1 i-u. ..r ti y--. :i-t , . ( '.vi.'y r : fru ; t vf ii k . i;-- - ; j r 1 -:-A 1 t-o- A . I t VAiNi". H i r n; i , I so 'r.raii'; Vrlf e p-r Arrr. 1:0 ''iili: ; at-l : n . 4 ' ; ,n. . r : k -u :. 9 r ; o fri iiiv brt : r f- : . hrtilv lo u.-arkel. A i :r.- Wisconsin T A TyTiQ I I 14 11 I "i .lOO.OO" A C.'JJ.S XJXl.i.1 U hJ ON THE Ll.NL OF Tw Wisconsin CENTRAL B.R. --For fuM p .:ienlart -l.-. l- r '' r ' -I f tf addre.j I IMKI.I s I . I HI 1 Land t'ommitsionrr, Jlllaanaee. ! l'Al n:i; f .t o tt rt-ee-I 1 1 nnder-iune in '.iir II L toi L-Wtl. o; -tie 1- ne ; F' -; iv " Ol ei..- e -AM'l 1 l h , : ' foli.'it ld. I I." us i - v ,. :i.ns. is r . .-v.. the i i KFi u y.' . v w t'a rre wu. D iH. M. J. JH K, rHTSltlA.N ASllSrR(lro:., A I "'I : iW A , I A Offli-e and r-M-srp m, K'-at een'h s-e -HI event h avenue, w here r iht calls cuu 1 ? ni 1 n OtJi.-e hours Ir mi S to lo. a. m.. and fn ro '1 t -4 and 8 t-i 8, r. v. Sp aal attention paid t ' eases of tha Kye and 1 si, i well a t Seer-'s: 0ralljti; ot evtiv iitrr:lMti. I4-W.-H.1 SPKCn. ATIOX. s,7:,,y.dY;:-vVt!;. V,; l.rain is the only Knfe. lair and hanfii vet ottered Investors to in k'" '"'! " niint j-1 1-ivr-f-n:.'. Add--5 ! t i 1 t AN. 114 f.ssf'ie si ..4Tne.li: 1. 1 ;' I dtiD 4- Snmnn r rr'-wni'.Vif t- cut; a t eirjg in rr.-ej, w-:y tr?l y rj tiois. N.'I ! 8 Hr-.kt-rt r' lT -i,o. ,-.-1 '.-!, .. t. A DTf BT11 US It.-. Mn-irii ti. P. Unwell a t ! 1.1H t lo- ri; i i - i- - of sr.v proliose.l i can ew-j.aier eof A I'VI li 1 IM M : in A-neri--oo-paae l amjih l.t. li .". , FAR an 1 Mi"i" t.. n-e- Q i nim Free A.i-ire P. O. l' ' !(Y. ut in' a. Maine. t tf i. t :d e ni . i j.ii i o.. Ann 'Sto i-t Me. i.1.'.' free Ad.lr, ss f wees fl2a t.iv at hornt eas-.V Tilrtde , Aus-u j-..-;'; t.M OulCttree. Aa3re rneflr ! A F.E PS;t! -e'l 'rl L i . s li- itei '-erri-!' W ' It WSJ . .V,-- al .Ml ... it- i,,,.'.r.r-r. i k ct.ill , Ajif ! r e.e. I. l "1 I I. I . r :t . 1 ,.,,..( . ..j. J X flV y .,c v : lv-IT - -Uf Vf Ifl. V ;rva.l.-.i! ?! . . l.eir ears J? vi r not M 1 '. ;: : pat.- ' . '2 J ' 'r ; U-l l..tV f .f J-... . , i- : i .!-.-,. n. lb? f-r V! P.M. fetcenla & fe.. n their.. fjjl r-; : . - I . - .SI . rAe.i;-,. i- ,i:i..:.ii.t. d the' -! !.Tj e.. k . :. . . :crm- ' tS Iheni Feb. 4. ls:.-?.:n. in :. . a-e. l . ' . . . .. . '' . . i T S- . M.S C.r L.L .lKilKR, R X S - - I E ?