r rtcmmt. EQENSBURC. PA., FRIDAY. - - - MARCH 11, 1881. Tiie members of Gen. Garfield's cab inet, Till o 'Whom were confirmed by the Senate on Saturday last, are as follows l Secretary of State, James G. Blaine, of Maine . Secretary of the Treasury, "WiS liara "Windoin, of Minnesota; Secretin y of tVie Interior, Samuel J. Kirkwocwl, of IoTva ; Secretary of War, Robt. T. Lin ed d, of Illinnis : Secretary of the Xavy, VilJiam II. Hunt, of Louisiana : Vost- master General, Thomas L. James, of! ' "Sv w York ; J H'-icVeagh, of New York; Attorney General, Wayne j " Pennsylvania. ' Thk rejort comes from Washington I til the afternoon of the day before final "that the irrepre-sible Harry White was j adjournment, when, with the aid of offered the appointment of Minister to , twelve Democratic votes, five of them ."Tain, and that he declined it. As i from this State, the bill fixing the num White has never been a declining man j beiat.119, wasiushedtluougl.thellouse when a good oTcc was at stake, it would I ly vote or 13'j yeas to 1J.1 nays. Of TPnnirP irnn-rUd affidavit to convince i course a bill passed at that late day had -us that he put asid.; either tho Spnnish -or any other mission, provided always any such ofTer ever was made to him. We have yet ta learn what foreign mis sion, or home department, has been ten dered and refused by that "brainy''' statesman, John Cessna, who, like the immortal Mieawbcr, is always waiting for something to turn up. "IfAiii," the well-known newspaper j correspondent, is a cynic, and usually j takes more pleasure in abusing a public j man than in praising him. Samuel J. KirkwcctI, of Iowa, the new Secretary cfthe Interior under GarOld, although ! a tn.n of passing respectable ability, is ' pictured by "Gatir" i:i one of his Wash- ' ing letters as follows : j KirV-wood well. Ood only kliows why : Xirkwood was selected, lie is a good natur- I old cranny, w!;o thinks slow ah. nets de j latrate v. is" never in a hurrv. and if left to . liirasel' will be apt to forget to wake up i wi;en Gabriel blows his trumpet. The In- j an pr iblem will worry him no ninre than a dose of c.sstcroi! yuld a craven intake : and : as fr the I'micas, he piobably has no idea ; w b:t!;er they are a tribe of Indians or a mill- ; Jtrel troui-e. i TitF.r.t: was nothing wrong or out of place, aj some Democratic papers piofess ). to tee, in General Hancock attending j Garfield's inauguration, even though j Garlie'.d was mean eno";li in Congress, j in 1 -'.', to attempt by legislation to de- 1 grale Hancock from his military rank in the army. Hancock is neither nar- j row-minded nor malevolent in hi3 na- I tuic. as no true soldier ever is, and Ik?- ! side this he was specially invited to go to Washington by tier.. Sherman, who fully r.pprecia'e? Lis military fame, as well as his noble qualities as a man. Gen. ' Hancock's lv-ecpt inn at Washington by ' all classes -f people was very enthnsias- i tic, ar.d particnlarlv so when he entered - , th Senate, every man pre.-ent, Setiators and Representatives. IJcmocratsand lie- ; publicans, all greeting him with long ; continued and deafening appplause. Th at prince of jMitical villains, J. Madison Wtli". of Louisiana lleturning IJoard infamy, attended Garfield's inau guration, and still f'gures tjuite promi nently among the tumultous crowd of office-??''!; ers at Washington. He sti'.i demands adequate recognition for his great services to Mr. Have:; in falsifying the Louisiana eh.-ct k-n returns of and puts his dem.in .1 upon Garfield on the plausible ground that without his aid and a-:: ttauce Mr. IIaye5 'vc;;'..l hav -spent the last four years at 'Freiuont, Ohio, and that Tildcii'.s adtititiistrati-ui, beginning on the -J'.Ii of Mar-.dt, 177, would have be.n f.'llowed by anot'itr lemocratic administration, bcciiining on the Hh of M!arch, ll, and not, by Garfiehl's advent to power. The- tlieory is a cunning one, and might possibly succeed in landing Wtl;s in a good pay ing oliice, with unlimited stealing, if the Senate was only cut of tiie way. Havki litly closed his oiticial career by vetoing the funding bill at the in- i stance of the Xath nal Hanks, and !y ' approving tiie scan'ialous Kiver and, .Harbor bill, which i'd t'eece the treas- i .ury of millions of t!ie people's money fur , the Irenerlt of a set of thieves and phin- : derers, who annually succeed by the pas- , sage of a kindred measure, through the IHtwat and corrupt means of log rolling, j -in swindling the government and put-, ting vast sums of money into their o.va ; pockeU. 15y bis veto Hayes enriched j the National Banks to the extent of j nearly fve millions of dollars a year, and ! compelled the government to pay more . than fifteen millions of dollars a year in- ; terest or. its five and six jier cent, bonds ; than it would have to pay if he had sign ed it. It is extremely probable that I Hayes. wIk) josse:-e3 all thethiift of his ; far-off Scotch ancestors, lias the one bun- j !red and f fty thousand dollars he has , salted down out of his four years salary j invested in these same five and six per : .cent, government bonds, and was there- i Xortt opposed, on the principle of self-pro- : tection, to the passage of a bill that ; woiild diminish the flow of gold into Ii is .own plethoric pockets. A man who usually displays so much ood common sense in his Fpeeches in il.e Senate as Mr. Deck, of Kentucky, m go very far by ofie thougM'fsg re juiaik in seriously damaging his wcll CuneJ reputation. When the s;.n:itp ca lat Saturday af-lernoon, had the cab , 't.T nominations before it. and when it f-uggesLed that t't-ir consideration 1 deferred until the appointment of the : .-,. , 01 uuiiuttfs, .r. i e t rs. is rciMirieti as .say - to hi ccolenrrttes on the Democratic PiJe of the chamber, that If they desired to eo out cf power and remain out for twent. T-nve Jcr.rs. tuy migUT uy i:ie tl- .... . . . . iu'-) ujiu. ii y i:ie ti- the confinna'ion of tho t- t s i . Lincoln. If Xfr. Heck led a verv foolish and a fect of delaying son of Vbrahaiu aid this" he uttered veiy extr uvagant remark. If Robert T. , Linculn is unfit, for any good reason, to fill the office of Secretary of War, is he I to lb3 conC.mieJ .simply because of the j intio fact that hu happens to be a son of j nn ex-Pre.sid ?nt ? -iul yet that is just J what tHr. B. siiid. If Lincoln i3 unfit it i would betlie duty of tho Senate to re-j jett himT no matter if Abraham Lincoln ' was his f.vther, and tfie country would j I T . . t tm Con -ita lit CA l-irtr fw Hock-'n noti on is indefensible on everv orinciplo of .-Vtsnd hgic rjjtl hard com- ' , , on se.j Tiie course pursued by tbo Republi can leaders in the lower branch of Con press in relation to the passage of the Apportionment bill, is one of thoseexcep tional and flagrant wttrages that will not soon be forgotten-. It will be remember ed that the bill reported by Mr. Cox from the Census Committee fixed the number of members at 301, which was i of a' ministry to which lie was opposed as a snbseqnently changed to 307, under the j '-fortuitous concourse of atoms" would be a , . ... ! flatterine description of the new Laluuet. belief that Viat number would meet wuh , lt j3 ,,,,1, evidently enoush, of politi the cordial approval of both parties, and cal atoms, but'ttieir concourse" would be r. ii-,ij-.. c.vq:., more respectable if it had been really lortui- especiaMy so as Gen. alker, Miperm- j toM ins.ul of lH.-inK t!)0 re,it of a series of te-nAnnt of fhn Census, had shown bv , eomumniises ami concessions throuuh which, . . . . ... .L. iv.: i t statistical tables mat it was me lauest j and most equitable to all sections of the J country of any number that could possi- b'.y w named The Ilepubiican leaders, . ... ... - .. . - c however, by me w:iinown process ol nlin-isting successiuuy 1es.1sr.eu eery ei- fort to reach a direct vote on the bill un- j no chance of getting through the Senate even if it was a fair one, and no action was had on it in that body. This inex cusable conduct by the Kepablicans in the House in fighting against tho bill, and preventing its passage in an accept able form, will require the Legislatures of neauly one-half of the States to hold extra sessions next winter, to district their respective States in pursuance of the bill that may then be passed by Con gress. All this expense to the States in which bi-ennial legislative session are held could have leen avoided if the lle publicans in Congress had desired to do so ; but as they saw proper deliberately to impose upon sixteen or eighteen States an norm'tus expanse, the taxpayers will i . . ! noi oe iih-eiy to rorgei ir, out will neas- ure up the wrong that has been needless- j lv don them when they ascertain the ; full cost resulting from its infliction. When" the Altoona Tribune on Fri day last, the day on which Gen. Garfield was inaugurated, said of him, "The new President is a good man in the best sense of the term and again, "The new Presrdent is a strong man politically and morally," it discounted the Con- cressional record of the 'new President' with entirely too liberal a hand. The Tiibnnf, now that Garfield has been transferred from his seat in Congress to the White House, can't by any amount of eulogy whistle down the wind the re- i ! lort of the Poland Committee in 1S73, 1 in which three members of the House (Poland, Banks and McCreery), yvell kno.vn members of Garfield's own polit ical household, charged him lie fore the country with having been guilty in the Credit Mobilicr business with both bri- lery and perjury. Xor can tiie Tribune now cover up or hide out of sight the. reiort of Ihe Ctlover Committee, before . which Garfield admitted on his solemn t oath that he Lad been paid So.OOO, while I he was chairman of the Committee on : j Appropriations, to consummate a con ; tract between the De Golyer pavement : ; company and the municipal authorities j of Washington, All this is fresh in the , ' recollection of the public and needs no , additional vent ilation. If all this proves, ! , as the Trii'itt'e from its language must 1 neccessa'iiy infer, that Garfield is "a : good man in the lest sense of the term," or that lie is "a strong man morallly," ', , then human testimony is a delusion and ! ' a snare, and instead of making doubtful things clear, only serves to rentier thrjni . more obscure making, in a word, the i i wors appear the better side. Leaving 1 out of view, however, for the present, ! th past public record of tiie "new Pres- is if i: t . T we are willing that he shall be ' ; jiulged by his acts in the future, an 1 that bv them he shall either stand or fall. Till-: nomination by Garfield of Don Cameron's brother-in-law, Wayne Mac Veagh, as Attorney General, fell upon tho son of Simon with the same sudden surprise that is produced by a sharp clap of thunder from a cloudless sky in June. It was not the entertainment to whi-.h he expected to be invited, nor was it the harvest he proposed to reap from the seed he had sown. Kver since we knew anything about his political careei, Mac Veagh has always ow ned himself ami lias scorned to be the subservient tool of others. He has always acted tip to his convections of what he believed to be politically honest and right, and could not, therefore, affiliate with the Camer on clan if he would and would not if he could. He was opposed to Grant's third term project, which proved to be the dev il's rock in the sea of politics to Don Cameron, and he attended tht Chicago convention, not as a delegate, but as a "hxikf r-on in Venice,' for the purpose of throttling Grantism ami promoting the nomination of Blaine, or of some other man in sympathy with him. lie was a member of the committee sent by Mr. Hayes shortly after his inauguration to visit Xew Orleans for the puriose ot composing the political difficulties in Louisiana, ami to him more than to any other member of the commission is due the credit of evoking political order out chaos in that State. His past record is a guarantee that he will discharge the duties of Attorney General with com- men.1 ible ability, and without fear, fa- oi, oi aueciioii. ti.VRUELU never displayed as much backbone during his seventeen years ser vice in Congress as he did when he re- fued to be driven from bia ln"e to i " " "wurj eral bv a protest against his dmn,r I siue'1 hy Cameron and the Repub- ViCSin meiMljers ot Congress from this State. Cameron has of late received i m i tr i smo.Ti-n unci. srT a in i.io t.n.iri a tv i , j , . , .... ... ' " " -" t --- i Rfpublican machine in Penn- ' svlvania but none of them was so crush . n,i.u, , uji noi.eot tiiein wassocrnsli- 1113 aS S' 11 :it first alleged that the new Senator. Mitchell, h nl acted in concert with Cameron against Mac- Veagh's nomination by Garfield, but that is denied, and it now twins that Mitchell aw what was coming and had prudence and foresight f nougb to get in out of the storm. The colored politicians who made so ! many pilgrimages to Mentor, Ohio, to j set Garfield to nut ft K l!r,.o .n et uailieiil IO put li. 1. llllce, file CO- o3-n"ta MiMSissippi Se nator, 111 bis cab- i met, cau now roost on a lower brand! of ,t, f,e,iu t ; the Republican tree. Th Xcw Cabinet. The rtfi!'ntial mountain in labor has brought forth a lUer of Cabinet mice. After all tiie mailing to and fro and the mysterious telephoning between Mentor and the head quarters of every "lloss" in the United Katis, and as- the apparent result of all thene perturbations, tieneral Garfield yes teirlay sent to the. Senate the weakest set of names ever made up into the lut of a C'abi nr i Pnimeminr'd famous description nni aftpr another, the leadinsr men of the 1;e ll)lioan party liave ,K.en strm.k ol,t of tj,e Goverim.eiit, and the new Aduiir.istra- . tion has been lett a t.un ot .siire.is aim 'T,V1) )TUn a;orie of positive strcneth anrt wciirht should be excepted from tin: verdic t. Mr.' Blaine is the first of Republican politi cians, and Mr. James has been by far the lest Postmaster that this city has ever had. .Mr. Jiiame lias win, energy aim auuuy enough to make his mark on a vigorous for ign policy : and under Mr. James the pos tal service of tho whole country will doubt less be brought to something like the same efficiency and the same economy which toe lias introduced into the postal service of its chief city, if he is to control the depaitment. Ilis nomination is the one nomination upon which the whole country might fairly be con gratulated if the general complexion of the Cabinet gave less color to the apprehension that he has been put into his office to preside over it in general while others bedevil it in detail. Why Mr. Windom should be Secre tary of the Treasury rattier than of the In terior ; why Mr. Kirk wood should be Secre tary of the Interior rather than of the Navy ; .. !,,- ;.,.!.... i oiii.r i f !.... .i.t .n.iunr r in the Interior rather than on the Exterior of the Cabinet itself these are questions to ' which nobody has offered and nobody is ' likely to offer any answer which will show ; that the public interest and the actual des- j patch of public business have hail anything 1 reany 10 uo w un ineir seieciin. 1 Politically the Cabinet is as weak, with the ; exception of Mr. Blaine, as it is administra j tively with the exception of Mr. James, and Mr ll!nin.,a r.i.lifif-jl t rf.ll rt h w liL'dV trt ; Blaine's tpialities of readiness and courage i ' fit him verv well to be the leader of a body ! , iiL-Ai.. 11. r.f ii..r......t , i l.nt if ii. huJ auv 4.011ii,ie,.c in tiie President's con- j trt.d of "his own Cabinet it is not iikelv that be vrould have exchanged his seat in the s,Mlat(1 ffr ni,.Ui,lu, "f .,, state Det.art- ment. The importance of the patronage of ; that department to Mr Blaine's position as a iioiitical leader certain v cannot i;ae t-niptcd him to such a step. He has doubt less gone into the Cabinet tu prevent the ' President from giving way altogether to the intluence .vhich hi ought the Kepublican purty , so near to a total shipwreck at Chicago and ! defeated the nomination oi Mr. Biaiue him . self. If we set aside Mr. Blaine as the rep- resentative of the most energetic and pro . giessive element in the Kepublican party, i and Mr. .fames as the representative of nd- ministrative expeiicnce, the einaiiiing offi ces are so filled as to nulily the value of the Cabinet either for the Kepublican party or Dflg ition. Y hen the ayes was named lionouv dreamt it could bang together for a year, and yet the individuals who composed it were much stronger than the majority of the present Ministers, and the Cabinet they wiV ,m,Vh nu'ro ''V"? V'a" this of Mr. Haves s successor. Carl Schnrz is mucli more'of a imbiic man and repre- ! sent a much more important element in the ' party than does Kirkwtiod : ''lick" Thonip- son was Ix-ttcr known and polit ically more i respectable than Kellogg's "pal," Judge i Hunt, of Louisiana; and General Desens : stands Vciv much higher, both as a lawyei and as a politician, tlinn Mr. Wayne Mae Vea.uh. W:io!ii t,r what any one of these persons represents is not at all clear, nor has ! any one of tlu-iii so much personal strength 1 as to make it possible even for a Republican . oiiianist to pretend that he has a personal . value id his own, its Mr. Ulaine, for example, j has a personal value of his own. What j possible claim can .luli;e Hunt have to the . place of Su Joseph in tiie American service, ' except the tact that some years auo he lived in Louisiana and w ithin reach of title-water ? Mr. Kirkwotxl, except th;it he lives in Iowa and has served a term in the Senate, in , iniet obscurity from which he has only cmerucd from time to time to b:-come ridi'-u- ! Ions? Or .vlr. MacV'ea;;h. except that his ; kinsfolk, the Cniiiciotis, i;siike him, that he is the representative of that feehlef.dk, the faction which in Pennsylvania correspond to the Vonn Seratchers in New Vork, and that his recent candidacy for the Senate de monstrated that he had no following in his own State ? The most amaius of ihe appointments, of course, is that of Windom. A Washington despatch in to tiay's H'vrU! revives lor our readers the financial record of the man who has been called upon to corfirm resumption and to complete refunding; in the Cabinet of a hard-money President! There is scarcely a more coiispictnusiy unlit man in tiie coun try than Mr. Wi.ni.nn f.rlhe place t.i which he has been nominated. Tim wild way of dealing with '.Treat public questions which he has habituaiiy fallowed in the Senate is precisely calculated to alarm investors, do mestic a 'id forei gn, as to the financial policy of the country at a time when every possible .security as to it ounht to be pis-en to them, in iew oi the certainty that some scheme of further refunding must he adopted by Con gress, no matter wtiat becomes ot the meas ure which .Mr. Hayes vetoed to oblige the banks. If it bij true that the appointment of Mr. Wind jm was surjestetl or accepted bv Senator (Joukling either as his first choice or as a compromise, what a revelation is ttiis to New Yorkers of the soundness on ques tions of currency and finance of their rep resentatives in the Senate! Senator Conk lino; has repeatedly failed to submit his views on these subjects to the test of a vote noon any measure w hen the facts were on one side of the case and a popular prejudice existed fr was imagined by him to exist on the nthr-r ! If Mr. Windom be Senator Conklinjr's Secretary there need be no furth er test applied ! The nomination of General Weaver wool.) not have been more ehxp-.ent of peri!. Possibly Ccnernl Garfield may have chosen Mr. Windom of hisown motion", and because tins Minnesota delegation, which had cluio; to Mr. Windom durnii; the battle auahist l!!aine at Chicago, was among the first to break, and resolutely ran away ; from "Mr. Windom to General Garfield when the convention could hold out no lontrer. ' If this be i lie case, it is a pity that a Presi 1 dent from whom the. country had hoped for ' a conservative front could find no cheaper , way of acquitting; his political debts than at the expense of the credit ami to the immi nent peril of the prosperity of the country, i Xan York Wurhl, Ot'i. i Mvny of the Keonbliean journals grow i doieful ovet Garfield's inauguration upon a . Friday. No wonder. No President inaur ! urated upon Friday has been elected to a I second term. .lohr. uincy Adams, in 1S2." ami Franklin Pierce, in ls.j.f, were iiiaasnia i ted on a Friday. Possibly these precedents may not distress Secretary Blaine, General j Grantor John Sherman. Every day of the ' week except Sunday has seen a President sworn into office. Washington, Jackson, I JetTerson. Tyler, Taylor, Lincoln and Hayes i were sworn "in on Monday. In four instan ces thix resulted from the accident of March 4tli falling on Sunday. Monroef Polk and Grant (in his second term) were lnaugura i ted on Tuesday. Washington, Jefferson, JY viTV f1l,,n,ora an' V"c,nan j KJm Jackson, tillmore and Buchanan entered Madison term was ; sworn in on Thursday. John Adams, Mad i ison in his first term, Van Buren, Lincoln in j his second term and Johnson were sworn in I on Saturday, lt may comfort politicians 1 past the middle age to" know that March 4th ; will not fall upon a Friday again until A. D. ; l!'2t. -J'itr-Ouryh Pout. Wk notice that a great many proprietory medicinemen are advertising iti such a man"- ;,.,V: "," "U YS'"V. ' lit -'V.'.- 1 l" r mi: r-uom , mm pai neinariy ; i!'!"'!;!'!. j are sent in e?riy they will be unable to I fi" them. "We, however, notice one excon- .urn in iius ri c in ine ease nr Ti.n . . . . . jith to, of rhilndeijibia ra, who are hon- i- . o , oi i nurKieijiiiia ra, who are hon- I enough to state, that no matter how fast ; t'"' nrders come in for Sinks' Sykvc ck Tak, , Wnn 'HERI(Yand Ilo.umttt :xu tbcv shali : all be filled. Thuir sales on tnis oreiiaration iasi year miti-iuvm oomes ; llieir lacilitieg for making at present are l,0oo,oi bottles per annum : but let no di ucuist or customer lie alarmed that there wilt ever be a corner hi Sinks' Taii, for should the trade demand 2,000, Oofi bottles they can be had, and from our experience w itrTit as a eou?h and cold remedy, yve have no doubt that its sales will soon reach the last named figures. Han Fran ciao Xtirs artd Dirpntfh. Mink News. Hop Hitters, which are ad vertised in oui columns, are a sure cnr for aifue, biliousness and kidney complaints. 1 i nose wnn use tnem say tliey cannot be too hicluv recnmmendcH tlmi.mi,.f.UI,n.,M ,' jiive them a fair trial, and will become there- b 7'llsiastic m th praise of their curative nualties. FortliAl Ar?.i .Sold by E. James, j iruggtrt, Ebensburg, I'a. Garfield's Inaugural Address. Commencine with a flatterine historical nvrti.rp. President Garfield drifted to the civil war and talked of the conflict and its ' Two Vermontera recently swapped wives results. The disfranchisement of the negroes i,y the aid of the courts. suggested universal education as a curative ( Pennsylvania lias the lnrpest number of of their unfitness a voters and officials. Sunday school libraries in the country. lie believes that all 'he constitutional power Nine vessels and l'" lives were lost off of the nation and States and all the volun- I the Aberbeenshire coast, England, in the re teer forces of the people should be summon- i cent storm. ed to meet this danger by the saving infiu- j Three persons fell Into the sea from a ; ence or universal education, lie says it is a i balloon which ascended irom i--e, xi.ii, im j high privKeee and the sacred duty of those j sUndav and were lost. ' now living to educate their successors and fit j Bradford's postmaster is named DeGol j them by intelligence and virtue for the in- Ver. The new President will doubtless keep . heritance which awaits them. In this bene- I ,ini in office ri;lit along. tinn nnd races should be for- ! Tin. (iicensbitre Aran tells . a man 111 ' cotten. and o.wtisanshin should Ite unknown. lie winds up this part of the inaugural as loiiows : j.ei our iieoinc hiki h nc iiinm- ing In the divine oracle which declare that "a little child shall lead them," for little children will soon control the destinies of the nation. Mv countiymen. we do not now differ in our judgment concerning the controversies of the past generations and fifty years hence our children will not be divided in their op inions concerning our controversies. They will only bless their fathers and their fathers' God that the union was preserved, that slav ery was overthrown and that both races were made equal before the law. We may hasten or we mav retard but we cannot pre vent the final reconciliation. It is not possi ble for us now to make a truce with time by anticipating anil accepting its inevitable ver dict ? J-.nt'erprises of thcMiighcst importance to our moral ami material weii-oe.ug mvnc us and offer ample scope. for the employment ; of our best powers, let our people, ie.n ns , behind them the bnttle-ficidsaiui ticau i more forward, and in the strength of liberty and a restored union, win the grandest vic tories of peace. , , The unparalleled prosperity oi iu.-1. ...... . j at the present time is referred to. i-or rui v . . . . . . .... ,t in irimn to tne fruitful seas but the preservation ol me puonc nt-.m .1.... the resninntion of specie payments so suc cessfully obtained bvformeraduiinistrations, has enabled the people to secure the bless ing which the reasons brought. Evidently ,-....,.;, ,,r in tl.e f undinir bill, he savs of the 1 debt at a" low rate of inteaest should be accomplished without compelling the withdrawal of the national bank notes, and thus disturb the business of 1... o.muUtv Time and experience have il the oninioiis he has so often expressed on the subject of finance, and says the tinan -cs of the government shall sutler .;..ti imi.Tit which it mav be possible for his aJiuini-tration to prevent. Iidcrests of agrieult '.rramicr.mmcne get a pood send oh. The settled policy of the country as to in- te.occanic canals is le-aflirined : that is we must boss the job. He says: "We will urge no narrow policy nor seek peculiar or exclusive pi ivneges in ,m ihhiiih , i,i i r in tlip Irinf iiMiri' of mv nredecesoi s. 1 be lieve it to be the i iubt ami duty of thol'nited ' States to assert and maintain such supervis ion and aullioritvjover any interocciitiic canal across tho GUmo'i that connects North ami : South America as will protect oar national iidcrests.' " Polyyamy in I'tah comes in ; for vigorous denunciation, and in the judg ! ment of our new President, it is the duty of i congress while respecting, to the uttermost, ; the conscientious convictions and the relig ious scruples of every citizen, to prohibit within its jurisdictions all criminal practices, i especially of that class which destroy family ; relations, and entlangersoeial order. Nor , can anv ecclesiastical organization be safely nermrtted to usurp, in the smallest degree, the functions and powers of the national : government. Befcrring to civil service re 1 form, he says the civil service can never be , bas,i on a satisfactory basis, untii it is regu ' la'ed by law for the good of the service itself; for the 'protecting of those who are entrust j ed with the appointing power against the waste of time and obstruction to Die public ! business, caused by the inordinate pressure for place, ami for the protection of the in cumbems against intiigue rMi.l wrong. He shall at a proper time asks congress to fix t he tenure of minor ollices of the several execu ' tive departments and prescribe grounds up ' onjwhicn removais shall be made during the ; terms for which the incumbents ;have .been I appointed. A TKRnim.K Kx rF.iti f.ni K ox a Ilr.voi.v ino Shaft. A terrible, and what in ninety nine cases in a hundred would be a fatal ac cident, occurred at Snook it Co. 's machine shop, near the Venango Mill-, last Friday in'. rtiing at about seven o'clock. At the height of some ten feet from the floor an iron shaft, to which band wheels are attach ed, runs the whole length of the building, ex tending into the blacksmith shop in the rear. While John Amy. eighteen years old, was in the act of placing the bund upon the shaft the loose bioiise he was wearing was caught '; by the pin that keys the wheel on the shaft. In a Hash he was drawn up till he lay across : the .shall, on his back. In this position he .s whirled around at the rale of fine him : tired revolutions a minute. He made noout- cry until his feet struck aboard ovcihead. J Then he veiled, ami th'i machinery was stop : ped by a feli.iw workmr.n. Amy'was tiken down from bis perilous position, w hich could only be done by cutting his clothes loose rvin the shaft. He is terribly bi u;st.,l from head to feet, the latter being swollen to an ; enormous size. While making the fearful revolutions around the shaf t he had presence of mind enough to keep his head from com ing in contact with the board a'.jove him. : Under the care of Pr. K. W. Moore he is , siowly r-covcr'mg, but it will take several ; weeks to restore him to his normal condition. : Franklin .S tutor. A SnutM Piir.tKiiEn hy a Column of Fiuk. A fearful storm of lightning, wind, 1 bail ami rain passed over and near this city : last Friday night. Jt came from the south- t west, and dividing, one cyclone passed over TaylorsviHe, four miles south, and the cither ten miles west of the city, both doing consid- i erable damage to fences, cabins and stock. ! The hail was heavy, ami the stones as large ', as hens' eggs, in and about Baleigii, in Pick ens county. We have seldom seen more in cessant lightning. It is said the storm was preceded by an apparent flame or column of lire, shooting our vivid Hashes of jets, and finally taking the shape of a round ball, dis appeared. Four miles north of here, the wind blew down a stable on John Moore's place, killing four mules, wo understand: and at 1 ayiorsville stock was kiiled and cabins were unroofed without injuring the people in them. The rain was very heavy. T vvqI'Hi (Ala.) Ovrette. A Family Pftenkd with Flf.as. The Boston fjl"hr describes the affliction of the family, of Mr. George T. Patch, of Hollis. N. 11., which lias .been isolated from the rest of the community by a peculiar species of flea. A physician says that they have now entirely recovered and that the public need have no f mther fear. The trouble and suf ferng of the members of the family have been very severe. It commenced hist Sep tember, and since October, until recently, not one of them has slept in a bed. Fvei'v imaginible remedy has been tried, and the afflicted family has bathed in salt mine and other decoctions until their fiesli was nearly raw. Several times members of the house: hold were driven almost to suicide. The in sect that has done the mischief is called a West India jigger. Mr. Patch is a well-known ami highly regarded citizen of the town, and feels very keenly the notoriety which he has received. IIaxchktt it Caictfu, poprietors of the great V-'th St. Livery, Chicago, III., in a letter dated Pee. rth, 1S7'.I, speak thus of Kendall's Spavin Cure : It is several years since we bought the first from yon, ami" we do not hes itate to say it is the vf.hy best article for spavins, ringbones, scratches, splints, etc., that we ever used. Ve would not be with out it in our large livery for thousands of dollars. We pronounce it one of the createst oiscoveries of the age. lt stands without a peer in ho-se linaments. See advertisement. ! Hezekiah Stikces was 62 years old ; when he married Miss Belknap, at Zanes I viile, Ohio, and she was 20. He had S 1. "", -; OtM), and she had no nionev at all. Itefore i the ceremony, he insinuatinpiy niked her to I sijrn a docunient allowing her, he said, ?,"V0 a year for pin money: but he did not ex ; plain that by so doing she relinquished all i claim on his estate ater his death. She has . just discovered that fact, after being his wife ten yeais and at last becoming his : widow. K. V. BttANT, DnrooisT, Ei.izareth, N. : J. I could scarcely speak above a w hisper, . and it was almost impossible to breathe thro' ' my nostrils. I'sing Kly's Cream Balm a ' short time I was entirely relieved. My head has not been so clear nor my voice so stiong in years. I have warded off several colds since. I reoomm'Mid this admirable remedy to nil w ho arc alllicted with catarrh or colds 1 in the hei.d .1. . Tn ni-.tin, Dealer in Boot and Shoes, June l.", IsTtt. Sec ndv't. A despatch from New Philadelphia to the Cleveland lntlr says that a verdict of murder In the f onrii-grw has been ren dered aitaitist Mrs. Knen Athey, who some months ago chopped to pieces a young wo man named Mary Seneff and hid the re mains in an ash pile. Mrs. A they confessed her cri'.ne. The verdict means imprison ment for life. JiETVS ASD OTHER XOTIXKS. Wood choppers are in demand in Cam nn ennntv. Wasiiintrton county who has the bead of a ho. He cannot speak, bat prutnt. rink Pratt, ciored, was hanged at Ma rietta, (Ja . on Friday for an outrage on Margaret WatUins.Ja little white girl. Timothv M;iher, the strongest man .n New Haven, is dead. lie could hold pounds suspended from his middle finger. A vessel supposed to have several w omen on board was wrecked oif Miuderland, Eng land, on Friday last. All hands were drown ed The Pennsylvania Railroad Company has established over l'.'hi agencies in F.urope for the. sale of emigrnnt tickets over their '''lMaTgie Conner, while in a fit of insani ty, jumped from a hospital window in Pitts burg on Saturday and received terriblo in- JU!l'Mr G. S. Langdon, who was expelled tim Vornial School at Millersburg for violating tne ruies, has apologized and been reinsiaico. line hundred ami twenty-six persons were killed and property to the value of g-jon,-(Mts destroyed by a recent earthquake in the island of Jschla. The report jxiven elsewhere of the wreck of a vessel o!f Sunderland, England, has been continued. F.ighteen persons lost their UVes t.y mr u.. .- In Kaston, on Sunday, while l.liam Smith, aged U" years, and .lacob l oung, aged is years, were playing, the former was struck bv the latter with a stone and killed. There is in Juniata county an orchard containing l.'i.ooo peach trees, 1S,oih iui:i e trees, and U.OoO Siberian crab apple trees. It was planted in 1S7." by Mr. H. Bradford, of Connecticut. In Chicago the snow is piled so high that passengers on one side, of tiie street cannot see those on the other side. The tiains an; still weather-bound in nearly every part of W iscoiism. iowa and Minnesota. It has been thought worth while to an nounce that Senator Jones, of Florida, is an Irishman, a devout Catholic, ami a carpenter by trade. He is tall and erect, has a fair complexion and an excellent bearing. In a Philadelphia pantomimic play a coach is drawn on the stage by live horses, two wheels come off, and the upset throws the passengers (wlio are skiiful acrobats) into grotesque attitudes in all directions. Among the curiosities at an exhibition in Washington two are furnished by iiti American soldier, who captured them from the sioux. one is a white holy's scalp ami the other is a necklace of human fingers. Governor llot, sis coirmaixlcr-iri-chiof. issued an order on Tuesday congratulating the National Guard of Pennsylvania on its fine display ami soldierly bearing at the re cent inaiigniittion eremonies in Wa.-hington. Tn the colored vote Garfield owed his majority in the three Staves of Peiui ..yl va- nia. Ohio ami Indiana. Yet the list of Gar- field'x cabinet has been vainly scanned to ' find any recognition of the nian'and brother. Joseph F. Fiu'hs, who shot and killed , Policeman John Wiggins in Allegheny City, was convicted of murder in the second de gree and sentenced on Sat unlay to an im pi isonmeut of four years in the penitentiary. On Wednesday of last week a woman best known bythchameof Kate O'Brien was discharged for the twenty-fifth time from the Poitsi!ie jail, iu which seventeen years of j her life have been .spent. Whiskey is what ails her. j The new Postmas'er General seems to be the right man in the right place. He is a printer, has been a newspaper publisher, : and postmaster for eight years of the biggest postol'nee on this continent and possibly on the globe. A colored man has her n elected a mem ber of the National Association of Mexican Veterans, who have just held a convention in Louisville. He is very black and was given his freedom bv Henry Clay for gallant conduct at Buena Yi-ta. . Jay Gould lives in a pl.vn, comfortable house on Fifth avenue. New Yolk, indulged in a little art and a few horses, keeps his family out of the newspapers, listens to any suggestion or re.tiest, and is merely a phe nomenal moiicy-iiiaker and promoter. The assertion is made by a citien of Maine that '-'" or l.ouu mechanics and small , tradesmen are now living in Massachusetts, i who left Maine to avoid iniM isonment tor debt. Maine is the Stare where leains of the Xeal Pow kind assume importance. The first arrest under the coercion act in Ireland was made on Tuesday, the arrested , party being a merchant of Casti.-bar. Ar rests in huge numbers aie expected to fol low all over Ireland, and a reign of intimida tion and terror may be said to have set in. , James Haydcn, from Lebanon, Ky., drew a revolver iu a nii.road car near Peiii si.n, Texas, Friday veiling, and fired among the p-js-st tigers. "William Lewis was shot ! dead and 1 hos. Shaw and James Hamilton . were set i ai.-ly wounded. Hayd-'ii is insane. Fifty years ago Pennsylvania's two Sen tors in C'ongiess were Geo. M. Pallas ami William Wilkins. They were brothers in law ami lived respectively in Philadelphia ami Pittsburg. Since the expiration of their terms neither of these cities have had a Sen ator. A mulatto barber has eloped with a pretty and tolerably wealthy white girl of Lancaster, Ohio. No trace "of the fugitives has been discovered, anil as his Afiiean blood is hardly diseernable in his face, it is surmised thai they intend to hide among strangers. An eagle made off with a three months old pig from the yard of Mr. Frank S. Mail ed, in Upper Menon township, Montgomery county, u few days ago. The glorious bird of freedom buried his talons to a better pur pose that time than the steward spoken of in the soriptiires. Paul Boyton, the swimmer, gave an ex hibition in the Bimae at Lima, in Pern, the other day. The torrent was lushing down at a great rate, cat rj ing bouhh rs, etc., w ith it. He floated down iu his peculiar dress without trouble or exertion, although no boat rould have made the trip. There is a da uglier of a prosperous far mer in Connecticut, still a young woman, who has Ix'cn divorced from three husbands, each of whom is livintr ami married to anoth er wife, while she has lately been married to a fourth husband. Nor is this the only c.iss of the kind repotted in that State. The MirtJmtown Tirmorrat tel'.s of an aged resident ol Fayette township, Juniata county, Mrs. Marg..ret Stewart, now 'aJ years of age, w ho has a very vivid recollec tion of h iving seen General Washington in 1701, during the whisky insurrection, and w hen she was only six years of age. A detachment of the Seventy-first New York regiment on Thursday visited the Con federate graves in N'ew Orleans ami decora ted the monument, with flowers. The band played a dirge, a funeral salute was fired, and Bev. Mr. Martyn, chaplain of the regi ment, conducted the religious services. A shooting affray eight miles east of Podge, Texas, on Saturday, lietween two brothers named Spratt and two brothers named Cleveland, resulted in the death of Frank Spratt and Edward Cleveland. Aus tin Pratt surrendered himself to the authori ties, and Booert Cleveland is still at large. Eariv in February two German women, Frau Schmidt and Frau Feestel, living at Zeitz, in Prussian Saxony, and in addition living in tho same house and on the same floor, were each, on the same day, delivered of three children, and they were all boys. Probably such a singular coincidence never before occurred. Samuel (iisil, charged with the murder of Samuel Hunter, aged 14 years, at Brad docks, two years ago, was acquitted in Pitts burg on Saturday. Samuel McCain, who was previously tried for complicity in the same crime, was ennvietod of murder in tho second decree, ami his case Is now before the Supreme Court on an appeal. -rThe Slate Hospital for the Insane at Danville, l'a., was almost totally destroyed by fire on Saturday. Nearly oou patients were in the institution, all of whom were rescued without loss of life. The building was in process of erection for some eleven years, and cost ?uon, 000. Insured for f oio. The origin of the lire is unknown. Thomas Smith, a veteran of the war of 1S12, died at his residence, Freeport, C I., on Friday, aged ninety-seven years. Sixty years ago Mr. Smith "was a noted jockey, being a light weight and an expert in run ning races. I'ntil within a year past he was remarkably active, and last 'summer worked at hoeing corn, mowing and other lanu work. A collision occurred on Saturday after noon at Severn station, on the, Baltimore A Potomac railroad, between a train of empty passenger cars and a passenger train contain ing the. Cleveland city troop and Mr. Hayes, family nnd friends. J. YVynian Young, of Slianiokin, la., and John Oliver, baggago master, were killed, and fifteen persons were injured. Tho wreck was caused by Henry F reel) urn, engineer of the empty train, dis obeying Qrders. The dead body of an infant, nenrly de- j composed and partially eaten bv the crows, was discovered in the road in the vicinity of . the Welsh mountains in Lancaster county on Saturday last. It is supposed that the !ii!. I was murdered by some of the disrepulaole . gang inhabiting the mountains, several mem oers of which now occupy cells in the Lan caster county jail for various crimes. Austin Moiiartv went home to his wife ' r.t Putnam, Conn. and told her that if he was not mistaken he had on the previous day been married to Il:o-!e Brown at Provi dence. He bad a dim recollection of going with some friends to a clergyman's house while drunk ami becoming the bridegr.Mitn in a marriage ceremony. His memory proved sound, for an officer soon arrived with a warrant to arrest him, but his wife by str.it egy enabled him to escnpe to Cr.nada. The Lancaster Iiit;'l;i' c r hears of a big six -footer v. ho is loafing tu . die! H inis burg, bor ic on the i; lolN of the Ibu.-e js a page at i- pir day, etnploj ing a l'.T'ie Loy al o cents per diem to do his w.-rk and pocketing the ? I "ji daily profits of the fraud upon the Stab. His case is not much woise, however, than the pastors and folders who get jv, a day for l'.O days and never go m ar Jlarrisb'ii-i except to tign the pay roll and settle with the fellow whom they employ Ij do their woik forjioo n ses-i. n. Mrs. Mary A. K. Kv r-tt Crawford, of U'.o St '.tyvesant avenue, Brooklyn, the wife of Henry C. Crawford, a compositor i:i the olli.-e of the New York H'oro. recently gave birth to nmalo child weighing L". ' 4 pounds, Mrs. Crawford, although only MM years old, has git :i hiith t twelve chiitireti". eigM of whom are now living. One weighed at birth It!1, pounds, another 10 pounds and a third I t pounds. The L'l-pouii.fer b ;s beeti tiaiued, out of consideration for his si7., ;t'orge Washington Thomas Fretlcri :k Crawford. The champion bee-keeper lives, vciv np propi iaiely, in Byt ton, Cal., and l i ar's the not uiifi'.mi'ar name ol" Jones. In the year 1S70. from ;'o:) colonies f,f bees he obtained T.'i.o.'o pounds of honey, ac.d in lso, f i m:i -ion co!o:,ii s he obtained'-'",!''-!' pounds, woi I h PiJ.onn, and the latter w;ts a lad yar for honey. Dii' ing the latter year he obtained unn new colonies from the -toi, and commenced tssj w it h 1 ,o"0 colonies of bees, va lued at t T.ooo, indejit-ndent of the cost of the hives. Mr. Jones says he will clear at least ?l".ooo this year, unless some unforseen ncetdetit occurs. Recently Mr. Nobl.'tt, of Uutiierford eoiMity, N. C., employed a negro to help him kill hogs. That night the negro stole one bog, and had gotten some dis'aiK-e on his way home, when coming to a f ::nce. he iaid the h"g upon tin? top rail, balancing it until he got over. Afterward, in attempting to shoulder the hog, it fell on the opposite si le of ,he feti'-e, and the gammon stick, which I )i,e negro had neglected to take out, caught him around the neck and held him l'a-t. ; The next nouning li- was found th a i, the ; hog on one side and the ne-ro on the other Side of 1 ho ten e. ' In Jackson county, G.., on Thursday hot, Jesse Cook, aecoinpr.ied by his 1 1- car old daughter, we:,f iutt the wool's to"si lit rails. Cook tol l his daughter that if she'd":-! in t s.;i as many rai's as he did in the day's work he would kill her. After a hard day's work the daughter, on counting hwr pie f rails, a-certauied that she had n-.t. -put quite i so io any as her father. Ft tiring the liinii". oi f til puni -hnient to w hjeli she had i requenrly bcen snbiectcd. she ilid not g I: hi". Ih r father followed her up and 'tailed h. r ; ; un- mercifully wdh a rail that she died soon afterward. Cook attempted to escape, bat was placed in jail. : A marriage service was in j.rogics-; at ; St. John's church, New Orleans. A closely veiled woman with an infant in her aims , walked u)i the centre aisie ji:-t as the cler gy man asked if anybody obje. led to the ' union. 'T do," .-aid the intruder, pu'.iing ' off her veil, and laying tin- baby at the feet . of the bridegroom, -'lb re is your child. You arc my husband. 1 am lawfully your . w ife, and you shall not marry this woman. " : She made a f urious attempt to attack iiim, : but was restrained by the Ushers, while the ! bride scree med and fainted. It transpired ; that the woman was not the man's wife. ' thou.gh he had for years made her believe so i by means of a forged ecrtifi-af.-. An explosion occurred Thursday night in a coai mine at Almv Station, near Kva'-s-ti'ii, Wyoming Territory, on the line of the I'nion Pacilic road, while the lti'ght shift. Con sisting of fifty ( hiiiamcii a:-.l live whit's, was :d work. Two of the whites were taken out in a crippled condition, ned f ttoen ( Iii- , liiitnen were rescued through the ventilating shaft, all of w hoic. w ere more or i ss injnieo. It was believed at the time, and the suspicion ' has since bei n c, .;if;i nicd, 1 1. at thirty-five 'ia hamen niid two w bite men had perished in ; the mine, which was then on tire. Tha mine is owned by the Central Paeitie Bail way, fud was be':. ag worked to its full capacity." The accident will cau -c a suspensioii . f woik for a year. The It '.'.'.an baik Aja.-e, from Aniwcip, with k'-roscne barrels, became w.atei i-.gg . off Bockiiw ay Be:i"h, on Tiiursday nigiii. The crew b.came demoralized when they f ctind the vessel was going ash r. f.nd ft.ir of th' iu cut their throats. Th captain, whose name is Moriee, was unable toconVrol 1 is nun. The bark fir-t struck on Rock nw:y Shoals and went to jiieces by 4 o'clock- ' Friday nenoTeg. The new ni mbi-iad 1:1 teeii men all told, and a'l brt one weie. drownt-ti. Tl:c Life S pig erew d 'nnar-ie went 011 board as soon as the w reck was dis covered and took off tiie one survhor, an Italian, named Pi ter Sallace. who tells the above story. Rnckuway and Coney Ismd beaches arc covered w'th wrecKage. The New York U'oW says that a man was discovered Friday evening ju-t before d usk on ;i eake of ice which was 11 .-a ting dow n the North river, opposite, tie Wechawken ferry. Some of the ferry employees rowed nut to the cake and rescued the man. who said he was William Gray, a sailor, and that he had been on the ice since the night pre vious. He had shipped on a schooner lying at Fort Lee, end on Thursday night ail hands got drunk. After a time they oecaroe un ir te'sorae and a tight ensued, during which he was ltn.x-ki'il overboard. He managed to climb up on the ice-cake, tint the niiiht being cold and his clothes drenched be was in great danger of freezing. By dancing and jump ing about on th" ice he managed, however, to keep up the circulation of his blood ami thus c;1Vcii h's life. I Fdward Young, son of a prominent at torney f Georgetow n, 1 hi. shot and killed George A-hmnre about l'i o'clock Saturday 1 night, and seriously, if not fatally, wounded dames Ashmore ami Clinton Campbell. Young and James Ashniore had previously had several quarrels. The two A-dunore-s and Campbell were in Laville t Inskep's , giocery on Saturday night, and as they were going teat they met Young entering. High words followed, and Young, drawing a re volver, said: "1 lon't crowd or I'll hurt you.'" , He then fired three shots, the first kiliing George Asbmore : the second striking Camp bell in the left side, and the third taking ef fect in James Asiimorc's head. Itisthought toe latter may recover, but there is no hope for Campbell. Young is p.ti tit eighteen years old. and James Askniore about the , same age. Young was arrested on Sunday, ' and wili plead seif-defen.-e. Man's Hand Cvt Off r.Y a BvmtF.i.. A singular accident occurred in I'iaenixville a week ago la--t Saturday. A farmer by the name of Yoos, residing in New Coventry township, Chester county, drove to that place for thu purpose of delivering a barrel of cider at the bakery of George Brownback, i on Bridge street. Christian Beieher, a young 1 unmarried man, yvho happened to ie nt Mr. , Brownbaek's, volunteered to assist in un- j loading the barrel, which lie and another ; man -attempted to do by sliding it down on a , short board. One corner of the latter broke . and tilted the barrel over to one side. In bis endeavors to prevent it from falling Mr. i j Reicher's feet slipped and be fell to the ment. the chine of the barrel fell on bis pave- 1 band ' ami cut tbp band off as clean as if H hail been , I a cleaver or an axe. Beieher was not aware : j of the sad los-j which befell him as he jump- '. ; ert up and began laughing about his fall, i . when a bystander remarked that he did not , I think he hail much to laugh about, and drew 1 his attention to his hand lying on the. pave- ; ment. The unfortunate man did then for . j the first time see hi bleeding limb and s'art- ' 1 ed at once for the services of a physician, ( hut considerable diflicuity was encountered j in securing one, and before one could be , ! found Beieher was so weak from loss of blood that fears are expressed for bis recov ery. j It is we'd known thst rats and mice, in addition to their proverbial slyness, fall into i astonishing disagreeable habits when their I surroundings are such as to tempt them to ! depart from the temperate course character- istic of rodent life. At the tobacco house of ' I.eggett A: Meyers, in St. Bonis, Is a bright, I grayish colored rat, fat anil plump, that I emerges from his hole during t lie dav-time, ; jumps upon a pile of leaf tobacco and eats and relishes the nicotine weed the same as it i would a dainty bit of cheese. This animal j is perfectly gentle, and its curious appetite I has vouchsafed for it the freedom of the en j tire factory. It ii looked upon in the estab- : li.:!irTWkt.t -. flirt ..IasI .f !i.-;n .. .. I . ... 1 ; . . ... v .. 1 ur, hn .... -1 . innmiuiiniins, and possessed, as it seems to be, with Intel- ; ligence, it is permitted to frolic about the the factory unmolested nnd nllowed to taste j sparingly of the choicest importations. IIeda( hf all IVilious Disorders, Uyspep- ! sta. and Constipation cured bv PK. .MKT- i TAUR'S HEADACHE AND DYSPEI'SIA i PILLS, riice 25 cents. 2-Sl.-lm.j j Penxsti.v v j V. ., tt.t'O m Bf ron. Tin antnini report of the Pennsylvania lfailroad iving its rieratl'iis lor k-mo. manes a gran- tying exhibit. iN oper.0 n-ns tlur ng la.-l year, covciing ai! its lines ca-t ii ml west of l'ittsb'irgb. sliowed enormous lignr s. th.e gross earnings being - 70.7. "5." VI, while fi' ly millions .f tons of freight and twenty-six millions of lassen g.;s were can led. In de tail the figuies are the f.lowing : Pennsyl vania raiiroad, main one ar.d ! tranches, Phil adelphia to i'iusburgii Gross receipts. !'ss,t,.-,r.t;j : wi ki:"g. pcnses, ?!4."'51,-Js.V7: net earnings S 1 1 .! .7. 1 7 . 1 -. to which a:e to be so!. led lnlcrc-t from ii.t est ment s, n-nt.il from cquipii.eios. o .ii r:ya!t!,-s ;i ,-,d. ili: I e Line earnings ?::.so.",7'l.i : iii-.l.!t;g a total of s 1 7-1 !,!JJ ;!. From this io de ducted ret. tills j ...id iu .',!, h re.f'.s, i::!.cic-t .u hieid-l Ccl't. St.ite t.i c. i:iti-ic- t on purc!iasi of the main line from I'cni i i a it ;a, and in terest on Car ' 1 !-'-- ia s. -1 amoui.tmg to f "., c.';". I '.7.7-', le:'. nig l i t irn-..:r.- t.u I'vR'i--, ). v.n.i.i B.dirtia.d i.-l-:o!t, s ...o.-1, ',-.-,. ,.. ,.. tiii- tii.g the in t loss in working the Nc-,v Jer sey lii-lo'i fi.-ui l'hiia.ic Iphia to New York ? l.o o.:--s.i-7 : tiie tayiip;i.t into tie tmt fund. Sol 1. 1 1. i.i : t he pa mnts to t l.e sinko g fund for the coii-olidatcd niol tgage. J-I'l ,"uo; and deficieiieles in meeting ii o-ri'-tof vaii ous g!:a;-,-,i,tced ' !ci a'.i.ies, s-s.;.o 7.-S : : i all amounting t .-.'.-i : i... : shown to ti c credit of i';c i,e ;v le.l.-.et ing p;. n.eiits lor w !;. sl'.ania 1 1 : i 1 1 .... ' i- rcpo!isii.;. o'i-'.o!. this -t.sjo.oii v.-ett b I ' .': nee is : t. :tft-r I'- 1.11- ot p.. s-7.i..:s.-il for 7 nod to per ;i4. oi , nicii is ii in ,..g t !),. veai the balance is added reah.'.-d from old accounts, UI t i ; t - amount to tv.ht ol ptolil and loss at the beginning ol tie year, making a total cied t balance of f7.7 J.i, (ix. 71 at the close of tsso. The railways west of Pittsburgh, after providing for all nihilities, made a net profit i f Both the lines cast and we.-t of Pittsburg are free of Pouting debt. A Stoxf. Ib.nv.-l". r. Benfro ,v. of P.us s II, Ark , and I apt. tin W. J. PaMou. .d 1 at tic Bock, arrived iu this city to-d.'.v, sa s the St. Louis '.'',,. I), , - rat, 'oil th.'ir v."a ". Washington, I), c. The object of tleir'v.'sit to Wis!-:iu;t.i! is to :!. i-.p .' i. rs of the Smithsonian lustiiu'o the "Fur-K.i Baby." a specimen of ;o e: . . --v fnii.d on the 1st of lest Mohi-r at .:mi i-a Soiit'-.-s. Alk. The baby was fouad abo'.d fori Pel below the Mirf a'ce :i the lot i f J ..'m B. II .! born, a resident of the town, and ' w n. dis. covered bv al;.!,o:,r. i.a:u.-l I . II C.imn- bell, while la1 wats i.ggiiig a v .-II. The l-ab nana coa'mg ol eo!iii.o-it u abort as ii.-l X vet i:vg. v.'.rv:l:g pumice-'.!"... put t''is in thickness fioui half ai he u to a v. Pvli and a half, has mii.-p been removed from the en tire head and shoulders am! the right sab1 of the body, showing one leg complete. The baby is tv.o f. a t and twai ineln s long, ami weighs, v. i'h t'ao e. no o-r.ii co.-.'.'n.:', eigb'v- five i!.Uiids. 'i l ,. aie said to he ri ehel l.'s Hie lollf.-.l vl fll'l o.o it.v pi .'pot tit t and the leg s .,..,! ad. The :.:! ti e li.l'.V l.ul.tlf s. a 1!, .1 . arc ti'iinni. 'I h.; eefer, is a b:;ii-l-.-bi..v.j., The bloV looks . ! 1 idol. Mr". Bee-";.-,- ,' t. t':e "aiiy, has ' ..'.: i a g belie e il to be ;i p.-! '., y i"'" . l Ol . nl. he It is h 'C. s- i 5 not heid by a s tb a:l '.X a ! k of ; tii'st:o-i to be . v ' Th I '. t Md fr-t i;i t h , '.Id w imp v. ith il is iii i". i'e I ft fie ,, we;l-i5:ge,.,-, ( t ;. the t v. as 1 by a pcofle placed i l.t a e t,y a 1. pi . s(o it .-. e of t h id tic Smithsonian upon to decide. J.ie:. :,!,.:, iac e 1 r-'se at race t lllstitiit.; will be a. 1 A Thki!.i.im Bat: i k St i:xft. The spe cial correspondent f th" Loh I hi st'iu l-r I. t. legraphiiig from Poit Aiai. l, gives the fol low ii. g account Boers on the ! (.t the ;;ge.e:it :h tin- '. uns vf ttn-t I t urrel j.ffir.ia--p t-l ia It " .. n il:- : i 1 ( rriv-'i j f; Si r t . l ' ' . hw Iv ili'l tfiu en -;n iicikc t:i rn'rui ri'l t 1 1 it w.i- iv!;': it '('!:: r y I ';a i n r t ii" t:-.' !'tftr 1 i-:v.l' fit f !t. . t ' ! i-fl !'o titrTit wn- ci'"!v ;i -r H ir- wee i,n the ln'-hr- :t:1 : 1 Hr i t ) li I'-r-- Lr: : 1 :: :i ti Ir i in .1. : a tn n.tn - ti I. 1 1 ll rs :.. I : Vit rt It' ,-i-s ("re v. o!; rl.e re I tVc 1! I! 1 .1 . gr.-'it 1 1 1 1 t 1 . o . i:ri:i-h v.-c-.-e Ih lire ei an! i v : . !. .ier-"Tir ;i-en-lies .a f came .lot-. . li. Pr. r tall.e. V i;.-.l!S' c.-.' - 't..- a; n ' licit ti -i. il oil li'l il; V:' 11.11." v.;.. v Tht. I Via ware I., gisla; ore is f.i! opinions, nci; 0:1 I-V.iae la-, n'-aii t ! fr. Hay i s w as getting a v. ;:y 1 roi.i the House, a lei . ii ti 1. sc r-.- o I'.,: i- a - : I;. .1. 'rt,;i r.-l f "I'lOT Tl !: C '-t r:r. wo !..-'.t'. e.e I.lie t,.:r t.i r:;"-l h ' I :i ''li. . 11. ss . (,.r .!i, 1 1 f.r r r; r ot' !'e. i:;:it : r:-u i l ." p.' rn' "-! ill II; - . ;"f:r Mu". :n 1 t i -1 : r.i t .; : m . Il .i . et o : r rc 1 11 i : c! Sine m t it tl:at fT". -i-: l-v hi.-l: lrni !ii!f:;t s.-' the n ti; '.iiiiTrv were .1. ''rO'c.l ! ilie.r je-.'-r m t : W i: tir'.iiLt t" ri-.-t rat.-.l ni en the raslit -a 1 one-' s j..-t rat.-.l iijen the raslit if nliih iil or: rciiialn a .n-roach 1- lie'j 11- snt atir-,. R. .o.'r'rf. T'uit o siiietT'ly T-zirct to i.'ir l'r' -ia.o.' y of n man t...r clri'-t" a. t-.rs in The p-rjet ra I i-in act': ct t til" arrer. t tva.el . ,x"'i'r.f, 1 hat the f- vrii r -a tie .pic-Tea t.i rrar.Mtiit n i' a y ! tl." ter ti-.r.-. till iv HH.TC'l hv 111" Soi-ak'-r-h.a II 1 tons - ..t the l ii'lli-ril I A--. :il!i tbc Irviit :' n l ins i.t t!:e u-uir. u-pa . - St::t i- , v.'tij r and "i. re i'. c. M e I! r - S:'.!lllll-i .1. I M.iCl, wiv J-nt o! the T nit-.-J Sta . a i-'ir lily ele c- in isT-.i. .-a Whv Snot i ! Tuiiv ? No 1:1.111 or worn. can tlo sa.t jsfiietorv to-rk w 'en the hrai.-t dull, the nerves arc un-ie.-i. the -v-ti-n r. laved and they f""l general. y wice"'.ed. Wl. should lawyers, luer -l.at:ts, t -l-rg icnt. d- tors, meehiii ies or mothars -1 1 n lei--! drag through their work in this comht when a ma!l a.n iu::t of Parker's G.i Tonic wid aiwavs, at a hunk rate cost , e y a. eg. r clear d the the brain, and gie them the strei: will to pet form th'-ir duties sat; .'i r.t .i.i'.'torilv W e have ft It Its strengthening mnl bracing, can recommend h most highly, ilutnii. y.d. g-'Jl.-l in. effects and See other c- The. students of the state Norma! School at Milicrsville. I'a., are excited ocr a recent occurrence. The rules of tin-sc1i.mi1 prohibit the ma'e and the femaie students fr.-oi trav eling toget her, andG. L. La ;igdtn. a iiviii'm r of the senior class, has been s'.i.. r. !.- ! 1 y tiie principal lor violating the r;.'.e. 'i "! ' students had been r.t an t nb riair a.ei t i" Lancaster, and Mr. I.aiigd.ei persist, ..1 in (.-:i-teringa street car in which some f the fe male students weie seated. NKW ADYKPJISKMKNTS. Host in the worl-l . I.n?t lonci tlmn any otlirr. Alwn s in itHuI on'Mlion. Cure ?ori. cur. Itu: nnd t'orn. IN'.-t? hut I i I! !; itkt.' t !i:i n The irri tations. Kvrry j:i''kr han t hv tnulc mark. C all lor t he if enn i no, ami ti. ko no ot tir. 1K. MM.I.IN4-10 S STRENGTH RENE WER -YlI.T, (TKK'is y"pnkn.si nn.l Ftthmistti.n. Itv-jices-n, Ntv-.i-s IV'bOitN'. Neurr.lTin. I': ti? i'l ti e l' i 'k ui -l Si.! . II. t i 1 i-le. Slo. .linoss. lrrit.'il.il.iv. l':ir:ilvi. Si.'k H.'K.ln. l.e. raipitnti .n. M.-nt il I r: ve- .ei, i:ia. I, !cr WcukJ. -., li-.- eoi.ij in .-In :.l . n, H v icrei, 'ear .if IM i-Iertuno. Aiut nil :nustoi u 1 r:ic. A.-t ly invi'.riito.a mul sirens. I.fion tin- 111TV1..18 fystctn. l'ric" Kl ; a . -lesf .lc-i"i-c.l ppe.-lnl I y lor I'tirenic rae-. s- tit jx.-t ;"i.( on receipt of lri-c. A.ilre-!. Ir. V . I . Mill. Inclon, 216 Tentli SI.. ISrool.lt . . v. tin- ltr. Miilmt:tn ctn he cmu'tc li.v p. r-.- 1-df-smror the mlv.rci.l un experu nee. I -t p!.x--ci ui. He i-new treat iin l-v . -tier tc.iai ".- .. Spi tell ivl I is,"e., l-...f v. :' 1 i"l- r:iljrl. HI" tun it Win. II part liar . (-. iir-.M :. Ii -'-pliarae. Ki.lncy, l.ivf-r im.i W..mh ' n:p.-.i:i:. licfr of N-fiiM mul Hen. to t rin-trv 1 f.oitis. Many l.atx-nts tltoimlii lv inexpi-r.et.c' -i i-r-..i.5 imiu iif.lc lie lias cured. A' J vice t.t-c. A-i noss as atmve. Wisconsin r, o o, o o o a ci: i:s 5 I X T!!K mm: cr T!'i: j Wisconsin CENTRAL R. R. i Kir full p?m.i'.tr. u .U ! tit , fi, , n.l.lri-,? IIAIil.l S I.. l.liV. , I.nml 'ommiixloiT, Milnankrr, , I'lUl' I llflC J-r'ieswi'arill:Ic.l j So and 1 Alll' -n'i -na! ii -oo.u ' !."..-,. mi- inti-r.-stt-.i in Mining mu -n -i-. -. nt .1 A'iiTt, plivise .ti 1 n l.irc f .r .- '' 1 ".HiSIAH H.!:i'('!it:i;. Hr..-.i.laiy. 1. 1 at . N. V. e A Y1IAK aiol H'!-ni"' ' ' 1 1. out I'r.-e. A 1 1 I I KKY, Amcusta. Mume. t.i ni-t t". . U.Vlt'K- C'finfl vrarto AL'-nt. htj.I ettp.-n-.s C J J frc. AiUr. ss . Svain lo., A frtl'ifHt i Jla,ll.. E Dattlo Crt,-'K, r.-.ich z-'n KjirrcTtT..rR z t:-e ..: - ' IN J -J V- s, ' THRE"!iU".?, Traction rnd Pl-Vn i - . It'-, ' ' tTrM!-riV.TTt -TP M? . ' C .".! 1. !t-'-t-t '-"' , -"'r-ic lien Kiisii.f. -ill .fj. . r t.. ' i . l. 7,500,000 i f s.t TRACTION Mr. - ,.... e.f. -. .!.- I ' f J. t A-. -v." ' ; 'V S.Cko: MILLION n c!' !.uik's i;a r! ) U it's : V il- -Itl'.r K. m".1 tii:i:i." s f - r p.H'. :-.:2-.: 1 1 y In: 11 t .' :-. e 7 i't y t.. 1,1 n I- 0- ijir.rtr-;.'-.. ' .,xv .1 ; t i i if.. t- i - M Wl C-i ' -f s - - . . A s t r l .-a .. : km e - "' ' '.a v 1 t-rs rr t. - -- L s FAT1ILY CilQCGLuTI l r . or 1 X U I , . t .,V..'. ui . va 1 i.ji'. o . . v. -k ri.. 1.1 a 1! l'-cr. -"1 !:.-. I o D s 1 t . 1. i. LOST MANKvVJ A T;.":ni of Vl"-'V ";1 :r.T. ' T tLir1 hvay, N-r. I- t , in- t'1' X i'i vav.i t:r V c nvr. l m E;r.-i-v- cTr-. m - ;.. i.'-i f.'I'nv'.r,'!:-, a ? 'r : HllMiKVV:'v -iii fur, -- II - ' ' !' - .. 1 . . ! T, 1 '.I . ! ' ' r, -.ie. i:.t'i:- '": " 1 11 ' ' - - '" I i . V. .! V-. j'. 1. A 1 ol- .1.1. 1 1 : ' a t J -t -::' -1 - :l P-.-i- .. - - 4 s.'; ;r r-,i , c . i 1.-. f r- r : tsi . ttLMi.- ' . ii:J! M-v T"- t)si:i':i V. ' 1.1. N I A 1 I ti- fur. ' In 'o .. . 1-s -.-If. A l.KM' Al I 1 :.t N ' . 1M.- 1 li ?lnr.-tt it V Uu-l. M.ii.t.. In !,r V.'nr-a r . ., -T, - C- i' ' I! .' - I I 'i Kc'i. 4. 11. r 1 ttrt. :it. .: s 1 licinn"! i-Jl. lathe 1 i S . - in
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers