fl;wilma ;ffrr citmn, j COENSOURC. PA., j FRIDAY, - - - - MAY 13, 1881. At last Monday night's session of the House at Ilarrisburg, the mutual crim inations ami recriminations of half a dozen members Yho assume the Repub lican leadership of that body was dis graceful enough to put to shame even a cariet-bag Legislature during the recon struction period. At the caucu3 of the Republican mem beisof the U. S. Senate on Monday last, Conklingmade a speech in which he en tered into the minutest details in regard to what he alleges as Garfield's broken promises to him concerning the New York nominations, and is reported to have undertaken to prove to the caucus that Garfield had 'iied wilfully and de liberately and had forfeited the respect due from one gentleman to another." The Judicial apportionment bill, which passed the Senate some time ago, was reported by the House committee toward the close of last week, and there does not exist any doubt of its final pas- j sage. The Legislative apportionment bill has not thus far received any con sideration in either House. Billingsley, chairman of the House committee, it is true, made amotion one day this week to suspend.the rules and take up the bill, but as Billingsley's motion was made with the secret understanding that it should be defeated, that result was promptly effected. Wk publish in another column a vig- j orous and manly letter, addressed by j Hon. Wm. A. Wallace to the editors of ! the New York Wurhl and Philadelphia j Tinas, in reply to the story of certain ; Washington correspondents that "mon- j ey to a large amount received from the ! star route ring was used in nominating Gen. Hancock at Cincinnati'' "that money from the same source was used in the Pennsylvania Pemociatic State con vention of 1S80,-" and that in his capa city as chairman of the sub-committee of the Senate appropriation committee on the postoffice bill, Mr. W, had aided and abetted the Star route plunderers. The letter is a clear and candid denial of the silly and shabby story, and is well worthy of the ability and fame of the tlistingHished statesman who penned it. The magnitude of the Star route plunder nitty be seen by taking the fol lowing named vve mail routes, the first being in Texas, the second in new Mex ico, the third in Dakota and Montana, the fourth in Wyoming, and the fifth in Arizona. On these five routes, as is shown below, the original contract pi ice was increased by General Brady, who had the control of that branch of busi ness iu the Postoffice Department, near ly six h'l'ulrcil thousnail (lolUirs. The yearly postal receipts of the different routes are also given : Original Increased Pav. Pay. Receipts. 31,4."4..i:n,ooo.OO S-JW.nnO.OO S:tS,l'.4.:34 a',i-'.. t,3so.oo i."hi,:;,.ij.o;i ."i,rjn.7t". 3ri,l"l.. J.a.-iO.OO 70,Ofio.(H C.,54.-..77 ."71, to.. io,Ho7f2i; K.s.Tiis.u 2,4u:i..vj 40,101. . M,.U4.0d 12."f,!7j.o0 H.K,l..-,S No. No. No. No. 'o. Total ?If!i,.('0.Jj ?744,l.V..l.-. ?o3,71s..-,7 The weight of opinion among the Catholic clergy it. Ireland is strongly op josed to making any factious opposition to Mr. Gladstone's Irish Land bill, but being well satificd that it will pass, their great inrtuenee is being exerted to get the bill in the best possible and least objectionable shape to the Irish ieople. Archbishop Cioke, of Cashel, whose counsels have great influence with the people of Ireland, published a letter re garding the Land bill on Saturday last, in which he says : "Let the Land bill have its second reading. If it cannot iu committee be brought into such a shape as will commend it to the good sense of the country, or into harmony with the Views of the leaders of sound public opinion in Ireland, both lay and ecclesi astical, let it be rejected as inadequate to do what it pretend.- and therefore uu vorthy of our approval and supiiort." It was entirely unnecessary for the Johnstown Tribune to "most lespeetful- Jy inform the Freeman- that the ques- i tion of repudiation of the State debt of Virginia is not a national question and does not enter into the contest in the United States in fact, it is a local is sue." Everybody will admit this, but the doctrine of repudiation, whether na tional or local whether it disowns the obligations of the general government or the debt of a Statp, county or town ship is alike disgraceful and dishonest; and wiien Republican Senators under take to strengthen Mahone and Riddle berger, whose avowed purpose, should they carry the election next fall, is tin repudiation of one-third of the debt of Virginia, they become the active part ners of Mahone in conducting his dis honest crusade against the integrity and plighted faith of that State, and must share equally with him the infamy of the act. This is so plain a conclusion that no right-minded man will dispute it. The Judiciary Committee of the I". S. Senate on Monday last reported against confirming the nomination of Stanley Matthews .is an Associate Justice of the .Supreme Court. It is understood that the vote in coinmittce was as follows : Infavor of confirmation, Mr. Lamar ; against it, Messrs. Kdmunds, Logan, Ingalls, McMillen, Davis, oflllinois, and Uayaid ; absent, Messrs. fonklincr and Garland. The friends of Matthews claim that they can control encngh votes in the fcenate to confirm him. We do not believe it, but as the white man, ac cording to the IndianVestimate of him, ij "mighty uncertain," and especially so if he happens to be a member of the U. S. Senate, we must wait hoping for a different result. Mr. Lamar's vote in fa vor of Matthews is paying Matthews for the part he took in getting Hayes to -agree to withdraw the troops from the South, proi islol the .Southern inembersof Congress would permit the count of the electoral voie to proceed to the end with out being interfered with or interrupted. This wasdone, Hayes was declared elec ted, and the troors were withdrawn itora South Carolina and Louisiaja. Adam Badkac, who was a member of (rnnt"' "taff dv.r'.T t.ro ,vnr. Ti,a wr.ttcn a u.iliM.-y b.-.tvry of i.r r il Giaat iu tl-.rte vo'.uuu-d. ai.,1. judging flOIi t.'i si.liOiC Oil Xihvit'tltt o pi 0'.iiCtiJil which appeared in the Johnstown Tri bune of last Monday, it will neither do Grant any good in the estimation of the country, if Badeau's statements are to be believed, nor will it establish the re putation of the latter as a historian of truth. According to the Johnstown Ti i?(ne article,Badeau represents Grant as saying of Frank Sigel, the German General : "He will do nothing but run. He never did anything else." Badeau must have made a mistake and substitu ted JSigel's name for that of Schurz, for after that General's sorry ierformances at the second Bull Run battle, and else where, it was said to be a common ex pression among German soldiers, "We ijiyht mit Sigel and we run mit Schurz.'' Sigel "s reputation for courage was never questioned. When the brave General Lyon was killed at the commencement j of the war near Springfield, in South- j western Missouri, Sigel conducted the retreat and for his ability and skill re- j ceived the highest piaise of the best army officers. After that he fought like I a hero at the bloody battle of Pea Ridge, ! in Arkansas, just over the Missouri line, ana iuiiy sust iineu his reputation as a ; man of undoubted courage. We don't exactly believe that Grant ever said of I Sigel what Badeau represents him as j having said, but when we remember how he deliberately lied about Gen. Hancock j last fall in an interview with a Chicago ! preacher, Badeau's statement becomes j highly probable. Grant may have been as willing to injure Sigel as he was to defame Hancock, but his malice will 1 fail in accomplishing its purpose.- j j The Republican leaders during the ' last eight years have resorted to a great ; many methods to break up the solid South, but Grant's plan of the bayonet j was the only one which met with any- ; thing but disastrous and absurd failure. ! Grant's summary mode of doing things ' : was abandoned by Hayes, who conceiv i ed the brilliant idea that the only sure way to divide political sentiment in the : Southern States was to put David M. J Key, who in a speech in the Senate had j declared that Tilden and not Hayes had . been elected, in his cabinet as Postmas-ter-General. Key was put in according ! ly, and the whole country knows the J alarming progress he made with the aid j and counsel of Hayes himself in split : ting the solid South. Xow we have the rlan of the Republican members of the Senate, which was to form a coalition with Mahone, who represents the odious and accursed doctrine of repudiation and represents nothing besides, and in ad dition to elect Riddlebcrger, Mahone s right bower in Virginia, to the office of Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate. This is what the thirty-seven Republican Sen ators, with the assistance of Mahone and Arthur, the Vice President, have been wanting to do for the last six weeks, and which they would have ac complished but for the simple reason that the Democratic Senators exercised the power they wielded, thereby prevent ing the consummation of the disgrace ful bargain. The man who supposes that the Democratic party in the South ern States can be split in two by such wedges as Mahone and Riddleberger, with all the power the senate can con fer upon them, has a most miserable conception of the South and her people. When Garfield reached Washington, ! a few a days prior to the 4th of March, j he had not decided on all the members of his cabinet, and Don Cameron, fear ing the appointment of Wayne Mac Veagh as Attorney-General, and being determined to prevent it if lie could, put his obedient tools to work to manufac ture a large amount of political capital in favor of Alfred C. Harmer, a mem ber of Congress from one of the Phila delphia distiicts, for Postmaster-General On Saturday last, Joseph R. Black, of Philadelphia. who is Harmer's partner in the coal business, was arrested with three others for complicity in the scheme to defraud the Government by putting in straw bids for mail contracts in Tex as, Harmer, it seems, had recommend ed Black to the department as a respon sible bidder, and although he may be clear of any connection with the cor ruptions of the Star route ring, it was a fortunate thing, from the facts develop ed in Black's case, that he was not put at the head of the Postoffice Depart- j ment. The ugly fact still remains that j Cameron was excessively anxious for li is i appointment, and he is credited with j generally knowing the precise kind of a i man he wants to seo in an important I public position at Washington, ! In as mild a manner as the case would ! lossibly bear, we asked the editor of the ; Altoona Tribune last week for the proof j of his statement, that the "Bourlions of j South Carolina" had illustrated their j idea of "a fair and free election" by I throwing "cayenne pepper in the eyes j of colored voters," but he has not seen j proper to respond, for the reason, we i supiose, that the charge is a bald, nak- J ed and shameless falsehood. We pre- i sume the editor did not invent it, but saw it somewhere in print and rashly en dorsed it by its reproduction in his edi torial columns. The editor may possi bly regard it as a trifling and nnimpor- liint matter, but it is no light thing to prefer such an accusation against the people of a State. It is just such malic ious inventions as this that beget ill feel ing and keep alive the accursed spirit of hate between the two sections of coun try, and that is the sole purpose of those who originate them. If the Tribune ! lnan had reflected a moment, it would j have occurred to him that such intimi dation at the different election polls in South Carolina would involve the waste of "cayenne" to such a frightful extent as to cause a sudden and alarming rise in the market price of that commercial exchange. Sinc e thejdeadlock was broken inthe .Senate, on Wednesday of last week, without Riddleberger being elected Ser-geaut-at-Arms, the Pittsburg Dispatch asks : "Where are now the elulogiesof Mahoce ? Where are the brilliant pictures about dis solving the solid South ? Where are the pan egyrics on the most glorious stand ever tak en by a band of fearless patriots ?' Is it possible that all the chatter about patriotism, and noble stands, aud fearless statesmen. j was but to iiuoibu aud diude the people." OIK PHILADELPHIA LETTER. f-l TV (J! V .: i- - -V A - OF 1MI T ON T ' .N' V L N OV- TH! S 1 BE CITT'i (MY VNTjE: Ml'Rr-FR trll.TKT OS-TEE KI.ECTRIC I.tOHT THE COMMITTEE OF ON'E HCNDKED FATHER MATTHEW'S BIRTH DAT SAFE INSUR ANCE COMPANIES, ETC. rSpecial Correspondence of the Freeman Philadelphia, May 9, 1S81. Dear McPikf. A suicidal mania is pre vailing not only in this city but almost every where to an alarming extent. It is sadden ing to contemplate death in any form, hut the saddest of all forms is suicide. There are thousands of wear-, heavy laden souls who have a sympathetic chord "touched upon reading the niany startling accounts of death by suicide, and to such persons a death by suicide is not incomprehensible or surprising. When one who has long leen strutrsling with adversity, who has kins leen jostled and pushed aside by the fortunate surging throng, and all hopes of bettering his or her condi tion is gone, it is not altogether surprising that in a moment of desp.tir life is thrown away. These are reflections which volun tarily suggest themselves to the minds of such as are themselves struggling with mis fortunes and adversities. They feel as if the grave would be a refuge, and in a moment of frenzied despair throw away the lives that were given them Some have sad experiences j in every-dav life. exatious delays and continual disappointments when in straiten- j ed circumstances are wearing upon a nervous , system and with many the mind gives way 1 and relief is sought in suicide. Numbers of sad cases of this kind have occurred within the last few days. There seems to be a ma nia of suicidal mania prevailing all over the country. PHILADELPHIA STAR ROUTERS. Philadelphia stands pre-eminent for the ! production of Star routers. Our city enjoys j me distinction ot possessing more citizens who figure conspicuously among those who have suddenly acquired fame by their con nection with the star service than any other city in the Union. Hostlers, shoemakers, jo?t masters, congressmen, etc., are mixed up in the dirty business. While our most honorable accused citizens are industriously making denials of any complicity in the frauds, people generally are too uncharitable to believe them. That they helped the frauds along is generally received as a fact. One singie individual in Philadelphian had his pay increased from $42,871 to $ll.VS- All the honorable gentlemen, such as Hartranft Harmer, Bingham, and others," regret thai 1 their names are connected with the Star route scandal, and Deputy Postmaster Bing hamand his principal, Postmaster Hartranf t, declare they will never again sign fraudulent certificates. THE CITY'S K1I.THT CONDITION. Whatever hidden causes of disease and death there may be in our cit-, the filthy condition of our streets is a manifest source of danger. It is difficult to correctly charac terize the official imleci!ity which "tolerates such a state of affairs. Street cleaning should be put in charge of a medical inspector and dictatorial power given to him. We are en tering upon the warm season of the year, when cleanliness becomes a sanitary consid eration of special consequence. During the last several weeks there has been a largely increased mortality over the corresponding weeks of lSsio, all of which is attributed to the filthy condition of our streets. THE CITY rXPKn ELECTRIC LIGHT. A proposition has been made to illuminate i Chestnut street lrom the Delaware river to the Schuylkill. At present there is an aver age of four gas lamps on Chestnut street to each square between the two points named, but the Brush Electric Eight Company pro pose to place an electric liirht of J.noo candle power, on an average of two to each square, which will light the street so that a newspa per can be easily read anywhere on the street and at any hour during the night. The company proposes to do this for the sum of ."i,nou for the first year, the company to bear the expense of placing tiie lumps and running the machinery. It is not improbable that a few years hence our whole city will be illuminated by the electric light. W A SH INC. W A S H 1 N : TON. The rain and the dust in the course of a year or two has had a very dirty effect on George Washington, and as a consequence the aforesaid George, who stands on the pedestal in front of Independence Hall, looks very dirty ami demoralized. A year or two ago the ""Father of his Country" was scraped, but now he is to be washed with a patent compound. For the second t-iine since George was mounted o:i Chestnut street the renova tion of his outward exterior has become a necessity. It is hoped that George, after be ing thoroughly washed and cleansed this time, will stay clean. THE MVRDEU OF THE INNOCENTS. The deep discredit which attaches to Phil adelphia from the terrible mortality prevail- ing among the almshouse infants, hasinduced I the Isoard of Guardians of the Poor to hold special meetings to consider the proposition of the Society tor the Protection of Children j from Cruelty to receive and care for the ; foundlings. "Although the Society has made I an offer to care for the children, it is not very i Incoming in a big city a great city like Philadelphia, which is"abundantly able to provide for its poor to saddle any portion ' of them upon a private charity. The Socie- I ty, though devoted to a noble wrrk, is not an . established institution with an endowment or otner fixed resources, but relies for its support fi 'nn year to year upon the contribu tions of the charitable. A frightful mortali ty has gone on for ten years without any ef fort being made to check it, ami is not only a grave imputation on the Board of Guar dian", but is a disgiace to the city to have al lowed such a horrible state of things to exist unchecked for so long a time. The testimony concerning the condition of the management or the children's department of the aims house presents a ghastiy picture Mutt must bring shame and indignation to every citizen. FATHER MATTHEW'S BIRTHDAY. The Catholic Societies are preparing to celebrate Father Matthew's birthday in grand style. The Catholic Total Abstinence Archdiocesan Union has a membership of seven thousand, and they are providing for a parade on the loth of October next, in cel ebration of the event referred to. There are on the roil sixty-two societies, some of which are composed of ladies. A magnificent dis play may therefore be expected on the 10th of October next, to be made bv the Catholic I I tal Abstinence Archdiocesan Union of ' this city . THE COMMITTEE OK ONE HUNDRED. The committee of one hundred citizens of Philadelphia, self-imposed as its duties may be, has accomplished much good, and there is much morefor it to accomplish. Although unofficial and voluntary, it is capable of great usefulness. It is "a rallying point lor all the opponents of misuovern'ment and cor rupt administration. Philadelphia should le thankful for her committee of one hun dred. It is a happy thing for Philadelphia to have a body of honest, earnest and patri otic citizens zealously watching its interests. As Mr. Field, one of the committee, truly said, "There is an outrageous state of affairs when night schools can be kept but once in the year, and one man can put 5100,000 in his pocket in one year." When one individual oflioer of the city can steal $100,000 in a sin gle year it is high time there should be re formers' movement started to overhaul city office-holders. LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES. From the bill before the Pennsylvania Legislature for tiie suppression of "life in surance companies, or rather speculative life plane of industrious enercv than anv other entei prise in this country. There is no oth er business in the United States which occu pies in Us entirety so high a plane of honest industrious energy. The deep interest which life insurance companies feel and take in collecting premiums are wonderful, and when death occurs the same wonderful in dustry and energy which has been previous ly displayed in obtaining membership, Is at once applied to resisting the payment of the claim under the policy. In this respect I can safely venture to say that no other business in the United States occupies so very high a plane of honest, industrious energy. G. S. y.x-SEN-ATort Wallace and the Star IfbvTK Appropriations. The monument al liar at Washington is at it again with the stale story slt Senator Wallace favored the Star route appropriation in return for the financial assistance of the contractors to de feat Randall and nominate General Hancock at Cincinnati. This garrulously-malignant liar says that $21,000 was spent to elect Han cock delegates in Pennsylvania, and that the meagre expenss of the Hancock canvas in Cincinnati were raised by subscriptions on the snot, and dirt not amount all told to tho twentieth part of this sum. If T. Pepper wa. alive he would blush with mortification and jealousy in presence of this exuberant liar. When Senator Wallace supported the Post Office appropriation, including that for the Star mail route, it received at the same time the support of every member of the Senate, Democrat and Republicans and they cannot even by dint of theliardest kind of ly ing shift any responsibility ou iunoceut shoul ders. Jarrubury Patriot. I ... ...,, , luiiMMimiiinij, mie wouid oe lea to ' osence oi ner parents on a trip to New Or- ' suppose mat me insurance conmanics worn : leans, f'olnnpl I iiw.,in i. i.:,.i i I . . .. ...... . , - - V. - . ,,,. ill IIII, 1-IM II. . i not just What they oueht to be. This is a re. was informed of the fact, nn r.i.. ti. ! 11 flection on a business that oceunies a hio-hor little pirl eonfecwd. vtnii,m ni v,ii'i, :.i 1 NEWS AM) OTHER. XOTINKS. A man J. i-trofce n Ch! .l0 01 ifunoav. T 't0. Pi- :rv r'OOll -it !.... cousin of President A Vf-Vl'l.T Dunkirk, N. is a Garfield. . . Three children were killed by lightning while playing um.er a tree, at V inona, Miss- j isstppi, on liuirsuay. .,,! Tort land woman has been arres cruelly beating a 3-year-old child because he I wouldn't say his prayers. 1 A North Carolina man, having the stom ! ach of an ostrich, swallows a handful of ; uravol after dinner everv dav. A sixty-five-vear-old tree on Belgrade Hill, Me., is credited with an aggregate yield of 0"0 bushels of Haldwin apples. Iowa advertises for a thousand working men. Idlers in search of employment had better make a bee Hue for the west. A mad dog in Halifax bit seven children, three men and one woman, on Saturday be fore he was shot. It is feared nil the victims will die. , ... , Mr. A. Johnson, Tulaski, Ky., killed R bronze turkey gobbler, eighteen months old, that, according to sworn statement, weighed hfty-tivc pounds. -V."-.'.r.;' n .v:w Wil. 1 . ;JrilV-,t , X'Xi 1 iam im fcliua ami I -i iicb. i ; 1 farmers, have been arrested at oienaaic 1111- wiIliam shannon, of Wcisport, Ihigh .-.. inuui n.n;l,t fnnr months t, ,)C ha's iived like a prince, . - lm mnnpv Fmir 111?n(0 at work on an Alabama and Great Southern const uction tram were I killed at Maxwell's station on Monday by ' the falling of some earth, j The a-vear-old child of Abraham Kline 1 got its head wedged between the pickets of a i fence and was strangled to death at Mt. rieasant, Columbia county. A party of treasure-hunters is reported digging by night for buried Spanish doub loons on the banks of the Allegheny river, near Indian liock, en the Allegheny side. The President on Monday sunt to the Senate a message w ithdrawing the nomina tion of W. A. M. Grer, of Pennsylvania, to be Third Assista.it Postmaster-General, Mr. Grier having declined the position. Edward Frill, a wealthy farmer and breeder of fine horses, residing a short dis- - r -!: IV. comn.ittea suicide head with a shotgun. i.nei ior me ucauiui his wife is suunosed to be the cause, A "irl recently took a bottle of chloro- form to school, at Middleport, N. Y., and ap- nlied the limiid to her own and herlcompan- ions' noses so effectually that it was with j great difficulty that their lives were saved. An odd-looking car was run over the i Erie Railroad recently. The topof the car was j covered with windmills and revolving cups, j the object bving to determine what shape j was best for front of cars in resisting atmos pheric pressure. Isaac .tones, a workman in a saw mill at ! Rahway, N. J., was caught in a shaft on j Saturday and whirled around at a terrible rate of speed lor about nan a niiniue. .nany ot his bones wore broken and he died the same evening. Eliza TrefTt, 1S years, committed suicide on Saturday at Adams. N. Y., by taking ar senic. She was to have been married to a young man named Allen, who was arrested a week previous and taken to Canton for be traying a young lady of that place. Minnesota has "a new law permitting teachers in nublic. schools to give daily in- struetion in social science, good morals, and patriotism. Tr.ii ty topics are specified, such I as health, honesty, industry, and cisasury, 1 but none of them are distinctly religious. I A great temperar.ee revival that has leen j in progress at Clayton, N. J., tor several . : months culminated on Friday evening in the ' ! purchase and destruction by tiie temperance j j people of all the liquor the proprietor of the j j only hotel had on hand when he was refused j ! a license by the recent court. ' S. M. Thomas, convicted of lnanslangh- ! ! tor atShreveport, La., for killing his brother i in-law for seducing his daughter, was sen- i ' tencr-d to one hour's imprisonment, and to pay one dollar fine and costs. Petitions for ' ( his immediate pardon, numerously signed, , j were forwarded to the Governor. l.i.zie Devene, with the liarnum-London j , circus, while preforming the catapult act at ! 1 Wilkesbarre, Pa., fell upon the netting and I ! struck her chin upon her knee, causing con j cussiou of the spine. She lost all power of I motion and sensation of the lower limbs. ' ' Her recovery was considered doubtful. ' Gyumber, the sleeping Hungarian of I.e- I high county, has recovered from the effects 1 j of his leap out of the window, and being led out into the yard on Ihursday followed his , attendant without difficulty.' He. seems to ' suffer no pain, and lias settled down into an- ! other long sleep, similar to his former con- ; dition. Mrs. Francis Briggs, of New York, was cured very suddenly on Friday last, of rheu matism by the exulosion of ;1oo pounds of gunpowder under her window. On hearing . the noise, forgetting her complaint, she : sprang out of bed and ran rapidly down j stairs. Next day her rtveumatism had not retnrncQ to her. " 1 An educated man, of good address, j named Gibson, 1ms len convicted at Wills j Poitit, Texas, of the theft of S7.", ami sen tenced to the i-enitenttary for eight vears. ' In defence of himself he made a speech which electrified the bench and bar. He claims that, he was at one time editor of the 1 St. Louis G!vf-lMm9crnt. j Reuben Pray, a wealthy and prominent : citizen of Gallipolis, Ohio, committed suicide, j He suffered a great trouble on account ot his ' laughter, who recently died in a house of bad repute in Iowa, whereupon his mind j seemed to give away. He succeeded in find- i ing a shot gun which had been hidden from ! him and blew out his brains. A ieorria man has lxon sued by his niece for breach f.f promise of marriage. He i Sst'thc plS'tCTeouhl'ou ' proposed union was at first repugnant to her. but, as lie was rich and persistent, she final- ' ly consented. :-he wants f ,r.,fi0 damages. P. C. Ransom had been Mayor of FA raso, ill for two terms, when a charge of 1 .1 I.:. ... . . i liiuamy f pventod liis re-Iptioii. The le feat made linn morose ami desjierate. -er-liearin an offensive remark on tiie subject by Walter Bullock, rliainnan of the opposing political eomroittee, lie demamled an instant retract w, and failing to get it, shot Rulloc-k through the heart. N-lmn Ditzell, a Cliicacr domestic ser vatit, Ix-inc threatened will; arrest on a ehaifje of stealinp;7 from her mistress, de clared herself fiuilty. Mie was thereuoon forgiven and retained in employment. That nilitslie took poison, anil just before death solemnly protested that she was innocent, havinc made a false confession to save her self from imprisonment. A wonderful monstrosity of the porcine species is reported from AVooster county,' Ohio. The animal in question is of lart;e size, with a trunk like an elephant, a mouth and chin like a monkey, has only one eye, and that in the centre "of its head, feet n sembliiiK those of a cow, and no hair on its ears. Hundreds of curiosity seeker.-i daily flock to see this menstrosity. There is a colored man on (i M. Ttay's plantation, on Kockfish, says the Fayetteville (N. (J. ) Ktamintr, who is a real wonder to his neighbors. He lias lived with his old master ever since the war and has never asked for any money, has never missed a day's work, has never left home, has never associated with his own race and 1ms never been known to do a culpable act. 1). M. Smith, of Corning, Arkansas, an attorney, violated the person of Jessie Mar tin, his cousin, twelve years old, durum the ne would kill her if she told. Smith fled to the woods, but was arrested and at latest ac counts a strong guard stood around the jail to prevent lynching. Professor Lewis Swift tho at Rochester, New York, discovered another southerly direction. It seems that Prof Proctor asserted that the discovery of anoth er comet this year "would give serious grounds for apprehending the end of the world," but Professor Swift is of a different opinion. The Rochester Democrat and Chronicle of May 6 says : "Dr. Swift has named the new comet, so far as he has authority, 'Comet 1881. If other comets are discovered during the year, then the designation will br 'Comet A of lSSl.' With reference to the desire of the ew ork World that it be called the 'Star-Route Comet,' on account of its irregu lar movements, Dr. Swift says he thinks it bad enough to have the Star-Route frauds below, but has no not ion of elevating them to the skies on the tail of a eomet" On Thursday morning a woman leared from the Girard avenue bridge into "the Schuylkill river at Philadelphia and was drowned. Her hat and veil has been identi fied as the property of Mrs. Mary Patterson, twenty-three years old, who was married on Wednesday, the day before she committed 6uicide. Her husband, John Patterson, is a hosiery manufacturer. Her friends believe that tho prospect of continued poor health and the excitement attending her marriage had effected her reason. Her body was re covered on Friday afternoon. iL'lll. anil niovmrr in a "... ... . " " - - 'J. -11-1 -iiiivii nam ar.,1 firtf ti,- V: ' "CV : '"? ' Roou neaitn. . nen l IIrW fM iTIIIT B IP JO mnt-ninmi a V. ai. I .. , '' r m 1,10 I always feel good natured." Read c ; C .," I" V. rKt as7- m another column. For sale at decrees : V ve i ' ." '6 -tore, in this place. 4-21. ' An odd contest took place at a West i Pittston mine a few days ago. llets for con- Mderab.'e vims wet c-ut-rr-d ai:d taken that Patrick Ho-ine could load a mine ear wore q iickiy than Patrick Ivirby Kuane is a man of middle nee: Kirby is twenty-two Years j old and thirty pounds less in weight than his competitor. 1 hejear to be loaded ws capa- rr;senpe f a aTe croW(1 ,oadpd the car in eiehteen minutes: Kirbv loaded it in eieven iiiiimi-s -rvimn is consuitrea in me mining district a wonderf al and unpreceden ted feit. The Dement family were traveling thro' Arkansas in a wagon. They camped one day on top of a hill, and the father went off to fish in a stream a miie away, leaving the wife and two children to mind the horses and baggage. When he returned he saw a prairie lire moving up the lull. He hallooed to awaken Mrs. Dement and the children, for night bad fallen and they were asleep. They found themselves approached on one side by ilames, while on the other was a pre cipitous rock. They endeavored to evapety climbing, but had reached only a little height when the fire scorched them, and they met a horrible death in sight of the powerless father. ine lmyiesiown . The Doylestown Democrat says that Tom Tomlinson, on the Shewell farm, has AW in,l..trv stnrted AUm.f r.n -lr .VA J one of his eats gave birth to a litter of four kittens. Soon after, an old hen assumed the i sole charge of them and furiously resisted nil I attempts of the mother to approach them. She manifested so much pride in her newly adopted little ones, that she constantly pro I tected them. Several times has she been re j moved, and placed in a coop over night, but ) when released next morning, would prompt- ly leturn to her charge. Tom thinks the ex j periment a doubtful one, as the kittens do not seem (to thrive well on hen's milk. At I all events the freak is a curious one. j The Montreal Orangeman recently erect j ed a monument in Mount Koyal cemetery to J the memory of young HacKett, who was kill- ed during the Orange and Green troubles in I 177, the inscription on which says he was i "barbarously murdered b an Irish Koman I Catholic mob," The cemetery authorities I objected to those words, la inline that per j sons other than Roman Catholics were en gaged in the disturbances, and ordered their ! removal, which the Orangemen refused to permit. Joseph Doutre, queen's counsel and ,. , ". "? " , - ' ; i j imw: uffii jrmuvi'u. x ue an air caused considerable excitement. Rev. Father Maloney, of miracle fame, was deposed from the Catholic priest hood at F.rie, Pa., twelve years ago. He went to F.u rope, and only lately returned to bis old home. Kllen MeQuifllan apparently died soon afterward at Summit. MaloneV com manded her to rise from the dead, and she immedintly opened her eyes. This was ac cepted by many in that region as a miracle, ,and the alleged cure of several cripples in creased the ex-priest's fame. The Hishopof Erie discountenanced these things, but with out effect. Maloney made arrangements to open a big 1 warding house for patients, in order to secure all the profit possible out of the bnsines ; but a detective, after paining his confidence, now exposes him as an im postor, and accuses him of forging certifi cates of cures. It is said that he was making f 2u0 a week. A Washington special, referring to the latest facts developed in the postal fraud in quiry, says -. There is now no reason to doubt that the Attorney-Gemnal and l'ostmaster Gencral are masters of the situation The evidence which the Government Is daily ac cumulating against, General Brady and the whole ring of contractors, bidders, bonds men, postmasters, and intermediaries, is both direct, documentary and circumstan tial. 1' he prosecutions will be conducted in a dozen Slates and in nearly, if not all, the Territories. Besides this evidence for crim inal prosecutions the Post master-General is empowered and in position to recover a very large amount of the money got from the Treasury in the name of expedited and in creased mail service. On one route aeon tractor has already been fined !-mit which will lead also to ci iminal proceedings against a number of Government officers whose con nection with the frauds is now clearly estab lished. The six weeks' deadlock in th 1". S Senate was broken on Wednesday of j last week, and on the next day iai fieid ; withdrew from that body tne New York : nominations for United States Marshals j and District Attorneys, and also for the j Buffalo Collectorship. The men nonii ; nated for these different iosit ions were 1 all regarded as friends of I onkling had ! held their ollices during Mr. Haves'' I ; term, and their ire-nomination l Gar-I j field was regarded as evidence of a wish I on his part to cultivate amicable rela- I tions with the Xew York "boss."' ()u i . the day following these re-nominations, , however, the President removed the ; ! scales from Conkling's eyes by sending i ! to the Senate the name of Wiiv.ll. 1:1- t ertson, the swoin jwiitieal foe of Conk- : ling, as Collector of Customs at New ; York. By that, one official act (iarlield j has widened the breach between himself j and Conkling to such an extent that there now exists in the Senate among j the Republican! a Garfield faction and ! a Conklinff faction. In this quarrel i over Robertson's con firm-it ion the j chances are all against Ccnikling and hi favor of the President, who has all the ! enormous patronage of the government I at his disposal, which is a far more t potent argument with Republican Sena tors than anything that Conkling can possibly bring to his aid in the desperate ll",ak,,,S aSiiiRSt ll0bert-'S A Losing Joke. A prominent vhj sieian of Tittsburg said jokingly to a lady patient who was couinlaiiiirur of her continued ill health, and of his inability to cure tier. "Try TT -.. ... mi . . Hop Hitters !" The ladv took it all in carn- ' est and used the liittcrs, from which -die ob- j I tained permanent health. She now laughs ; at the doctor for his joke, but lie is not so , well pleased with it, as it cost; him a good . patient. lhtrrixiircf 1'utriot. Sold by M. 1 i L. Oatman, authorized agent, Kbensburg. i . j The Rest American Railroad. Tn a i recent conversation, Mr. James, the Post-mnster-Cciicral, is reported by the Cincin i TWt Enquirer as having said that "the Penn ! sylvania Railroad has always shown more public spirit in its connection with the (inv ernmeut than any oilier of tiie great trunk ; linos." j We have no doubt this is so. There can j be no more competent witness than Mr. ' James: but it is equally true that in every i other respect, the Pennsylvania Railroad is the ;best railroad in America. It has great disadvantages to contend against. Its grades are heavy, and in many places there : are considerable engineering diinculties in ; its construction. Compared with the New I York Central, for instance, with its straight line and its level road led, the natural in 1 feriority of the Pennsylvania is very great : i but through anility, energy, ana liberality in ; its management, this inferiority is more than : made up: so that its immense passenger i trains are carried over the mountains with a : degree of speed, safety, nnd comfort that ' leaves nothing to he desired, j The Pennsylvania Railroad Company is I guilty of many sins. It has exercised a cor rupting influence in legislation and politics ; mi me railroad winch it owns and run is :e most satisfactory and admirable of all our public enterprises. yew York- fun. How It was Done. "How do you man age," said a lady to her friend, "to appear so happy and good natured all the time?" "I always have Parker's Ginger Tonic handv." was the reply, "and thus easily keep myself am well about it tho new lm. A Diamond Rinc, in a Horse's Hoof. The Richmond (Ky.) Ilerfisttr says : A wealthy phypician ol IMurfwphoro, TVnii., bousrht a $ X.bOi diamond rinic lor bin duuttter. About three yenrs since, while riding; out, the rinn; wa? lost. It was advertised and IiSeral rewards ofTere.1 for Its recovery, hut nothing was ever heard of it. A few weeks airo a ehild of a btaeksmlth was taken sick, and the physician referred to was called to see It. While at the bedside he had occa Mon to mention the daughter's name. At this the child's mother took from her tinner a rln-. handed It to the physician, and asked him if his dauhter had ieently lost a rini-r, tor the riiii eontalnnd the name he had just pronounced. The physician said she had not, but that some vears ago she lost a dia mond ring, and when his eyes fell opon the spark ling object he recos;niicd his daughter's lon lost treasnre. The lndy said her husband had found It In the bottom of a horse's foot only a few davs before that, while cleaninu out the hoof for the pnrpoFeoi shoeing hlui. One small diamond was missing. Ely's Ctceam Balm has cured me of Ca tarrh of severai years' standing. I have re covered my sense of taste and smell by its use, and can truthfully say that the Balm has no equal as a cure for this terrible disease Frank C. Oc.den, Elizabeth, N. J., Aug. 14.' 187!). See advertisement. IwXew York 4,r00 bakers or on n strike, aud ay they won't knead bread at the prioe. TIIL Capitol 0 OaK S. E. Cor. Sixth and Market Streets, Philadelphia the 1861 20th Spring i88i Twenty years of lessons in how to make nnd e!l the best clothing. We have begun the twenty-first. All that wc have found out about it, we hare put into practice in making up the 2 acres of clothing that you will look at for our trade ; it is the very largest retail clothing stock in the country : worth vrv rAnt H -cl- . . .1 - . - - t ' T vtik, aim ncguaranicc every arucie. More and Better Materials in More and Better Clothing in Lower and Fairer Trices in Than in any other retail icaui vi American money. The secret of our great business is only this : Doing our level best to make up the right kind of clothing, and having made it right, then counting the cost, and b SELLING AT THE RIGHT PRICES. This we have been doing for twenty years; and have clothed over hundred of thousands, old and young. This Spring wc Overtop ever' Fast Spring. The spring has been so backward that we have had ample gctting-ready time, and the extraordinary stock of clothing that every man and boy may choose from is without equal in America. The stock is something wonderful. SOUND AS HONEST WORK CAN MAKE IT. The best sewing on the best cloths, the best trimmings, the Vst Ftyles, and the best money's worth that can be put into clothing anywhere. It is a great thing to say. that not another house in- the land can do sc much in clothing you so well. The cloths come direct tons; we buv them largely ; we make up the clothing in our own well-ordered wavs, knowing all the things that belong to making clothing well, and they will go direct from us, the makers, to you, the wearers, not a profit between. That's why Oak. Hall has the lowest prices, as well as the best clothing. During the past ninety days wc have, in making up this new sprint; stork, so improved the patterns, our ways of making, and minor details th it this spring's exhibition of ready-made clothing might be fairly called READY CUSTOM-MADE Being far in advance of any hitherto applies alike to Men. s and Boys Clothing. Our Custom Clothing Department improves every year. Wc make to order from the finest fabrics, and believe wc do the bai-.t work that can be d-me. Orders by mail are filled with the same promptness and care that would be given to serving you in person. Extending the compliments of the house, and a cordial invitation Tr everybody to come and see, and make trial of the 1S81 Spring Clothing. Wanamaker & Brown, Oak Hall, S. E. Cor, Sixth and Market Streets, Philadelphia, The Largest Clothing House in America. The Aoitiin.it ion f Ilanco k. SENATOR WAT. I.AC E C'ONTI MH T? A fILLY ST A It KOI TK STOHV. The following appeared in tlif New York IVorhl and Philadelphia Times of Sunday: Certain Wasliinirtcm cm-pTontienti of the ri;il nJclphfa Vrjtjr, fs'cw York times. H -fetTi Herald and other newiiu or? iriva currency to i-vtatouient.- that money to u lanre amount. rt'CPlvnt from the Star route rinjr. was u?el to atl in noninatin fener:M H.incxk nt Cincinnati "that iii.ni y from the fame ponn-e wai nefl in the lnn 1 vania Ieinotr:itir cnnTeiUon ot is' htmI that in ruy capacity a chairman ot the ?nrcMm,rnittee o( the Senate appropriation committee on tue po-t otne appropriai in hi Us 1 a Med the Stir wmte rinir. It i lint my hatnt to contradict nw.-paper talse hooli Imt the truth touches the puntv ol Ocncral Hancock' nomination, ami therefore 1 w?ite. Mo money whatever came from any 5urce to ear rr the deieirntton from his own State for entral Hancock and none was ueil. Hi enraiM and mine trumicteti the result ot that conveution ns a victory over (.feneral Hancock and hia friend. Cieneral Wm. li. Franklin wa in etiarca vl Han cork' headquarter at Cincinnati and controlled the expenditure of nil money u--ed there. o Mieh Fum af $:i.ooo wa either raicd to expend or wa expended ther. The whole urn eipcnded did not exceed $l.?n-0, and thi- win fur retir. mor-ic. hanner, hadjre, etc. Those in chance ut his in tercts there did not believe in securing either hi? nomination or election ly the ne ot tnry. In the pnaire of the pftt office denrrney I'ill of 180, as chairman of the suh-coinmiitec 1 wa. avked for a hearintr hy the in tretM In route which would; he cut oil hy failure of the appropria tion. They complained that the llainr tfHiniitire rcfued to hear them. The ?uo-couunttce Sena tor. Heck. Htth and myelf pave them a heart mr. It wa public and t he statcint nt made t o wre printed. We reported the lull back t tbe full committee favorably. Our rejori wv adopted and 1 wa instructed" to c-11 it tip and put it upon itj paajf. It parsed the Senate Without a rail of the yea and nay. I iravc my views if the sub ject thn. which are in the record. 1;. unr action upon that bill the nilt or innocence of no pntdic official wa paed upon, but we acted iMdely upon the conviction that it would le unwj.e pwhlie poli cy to break down the mail service west ot the Mi--i5?ippi by reluini: to vote the money in carry it on. Very respectfully your. William A. Walla k. Clearfield, Pa., May ft, A Eove Comedy. The following intense ly romantic story of a tooth comes all tha way from Wyoming Territory : A youni; woman, who is described as "one of tbe tovefie.st and most nccotnpli.lied fiitnhtcrs ff t'heyenne, while rioinir Uir.uirh the ,-tn-ets ot that lively city a few months ai' was thrown vio lently inin her horse. A Snr.:t-h lad s'-ranij troin the lamp-post suaint which be had li-n leaning and en.leavored to prevent tin accident, but Mm only assistance that lie could render was to lift the lady from thefrnmnd and hear her iuto a neih iK.rinz house. Then, siuhinsr for further sibt of the lair one, the youth resumed bis duty at the lamp-post. As tor the youiiic wnm.ni, she sustain ed an annoyinir injury. It wa-1 nothing less tiian the lractnrc ol one ol her front tc-?li. The dcltrate pearl that Hashed through "iips wuliin wlic.se rT labyrinth when she siriicd the sonl was lost." was hopelessly crushed. Heauty in distress appealed to art : the younjr woman went to a dentist, who promised to search hih and K.'W tor a pearl of the proper sire and brilliancy. The search was made taitblully, but not until'the dentist saw a young Spaniard jcaning against a laniu-post did lie find the coveted prize. The youth gladly sold one of his teeth for f loo. nflcrinir all his slock in trade at the same terms. 'Jiic tooth was submitted to pro per treatment and the young horsewoman ap peared at a hnll on the lollowinx evening apparent ly none the worse for the accident. Hut. with a woman's curiosity, she would have have aiven her head to know whence came tb tooth. Time pass ed. The Spaniard made a fortunate putvhnseof stock with his hundre 1 dollars and not only bcican to patronize the tailor but indulged In a bank ac count. One evening last week chance threw him into a select little party, where the fair rider hap pened to be present, and he related bis dental ad venture. When he smiled and fomted to :he va cant place in his mouth the yonnit lady cave a lit tie shriek. Her secret was discovered, and now the Cheyenne and IV'nrer papers announce that the Spaniard will iret his tooth back at the altar on tbe 2M11 ot this month. An Alleged Mmvci f.-Wokkkk Comes to Chief. A speeial desnateh of the t'dh from Erie, V:., to the New York World says : For two years and more Vather Maloney. ol this city, has borne the reputation of a miracle-worker, and his fame has uono abroad through the Suitc and beyond it. On one occasion ho was said to have restored Elb n iUct riiillian, a young girt, to life after she had been dead for tweive hours, and at curing-the blind anil paralytic he won (treat re nown, llis list miracle was worked on April 14. when .Tames Hums, who had been a paralytic lor eighteen vears. appeared free lrom detortutty en the streets and maintained that Father Maioney had cured him by the laying on of hanVs and by prayer. It hasaiten teen alleged that the Kever end" a-entlenian was an imi-osior, but as he was a priest in good standing and as those whom he pro fessed to have cured told the story of their r-oov. cry and of the part he took in it very circumstan tially, his parllioners and many other devout Ko man Catholics In the diocese were persuaded that Father Maloney was what he prvndcd to be "one sent ol heaven in these latieTdays."' To-day he was discovered to be, a fraud. It has heeu shown to a demonstration that ho acted in collu sion with weak-minded memliers of his flock, and when be could not prevail upon them to testilv to works which he never wrought, forged letters and manufactured interviews. The Ilishop has d nounced him. and those who were his most earnest rtelenders a week or a two ago are now the readiest to deprecate his fraudulent practices." It is only fair to the Hishop to ay tha. he has not in anv way approved ol these alleged miracles, but waited until their real character wag made clear. Latmes, anil all who learl sedentary lives, Should use I)K. JIKTTAUK'S HEADACHE AND D YSPErsi A TI LlJS. Priee 2." eents. For sale at all Drug Stores. f4-2l.-lm.l Joel Tati or, with oneexeeption the old est letter-carrier in the United .states, died in Manchester, N. Y., on Sunday. He enter ed the service iu 1H4;. If von are ilonf onr run aiifl m-a al. ..l. t.ike'1'F.BrNA. I have tr'ied it.-C. D. Wi'- iiuujjuiw, i .i. vm hi utw iirug store. American uo nng Hall, Qak Hall clothing house anywhere CLOTHING. offered for immediate wear. This New Kim of Tn.EpnovE. A Tan ror rosjMitnli'tit tinder date of .Mav 7th, sends th following account ol the latest scientific se:i . sat ion : l A reinark:ddy inn re-tin experiment lia iur-t been made at Calai and Jver. between which place eonver-afmn ha lovn keit up rtrn ror, by menn el a new knul of telephone, which ha bee patented under the name d electrophone. Not only wee word whi-pered into the apparatus at Calai distinctly hard at Ifciver. and, of conre. ncc vrrsa. but the l'-teiiT at one end was perlectly t aide to dist.up-ui.-h ly ir.re tone of voice tbe per , on who wa. p.--kin at ike other end. It ttuld be observed that white the human v-iice wa honi; transmitted through one the wire, the other wire wore beinir employed lor the t ran mi '.-ion of ordinary telegraphic mus.ii:. Moreover. experiment were conducted between t he hour of j ten and four that is. in tbe buie-t part ol the day, when the wre are in nncca-Mtuc requisition. , The voice ol the .-pcaker wa d:tinc;ly heard a oon a the wires were Tnned to the "apparatus, ; and conversations we: e car Tied on without inter . ruption in the pre-'"nce ot competent specialist. ! Experiment with the same apparatus were ttien j continued, with the same re-wit. and in the mid-t of the confusion produced by the imultanec.n j working of cveral machine at the l't!)"n torrni I r.al station the voice of the speaker wa heard a t'lainly a though he had be-n in the same rcm. There can no longer be any douM that it i ter ; fectly practicable to converse aero, or rather nn , der. the sea. bv mean ot a sahmanne cabb?. Tha inventor maintain? that It is ust as easy to talk a.'ro-s the Atlantic a tnun one room to another. Siik went to the plav ot "V 'Virette,' And near an open T-inf,w .-be sat. A nd tv so dot m she thcr met Tiie fHte of all who rashly 55 tt So imprudent. She saw a notion in the wc- klv Vrr. "To i nre a t "old -T 'e Si jt- "si:i r of Tap." So she went to the druist, nnd then and there lnve-ted wall a simile u.uarta:r In the article. Now if yon only have ocra-i."! to see liow earnest and vehement she will be When tellinir htw tiiiek'y and entirely She wa cured of the cold caught on -aid 5-ettra. Tw:lI Fiirpri-e you. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. TARKAM'S SEI.TZKR APKRIOT May properly be called the ' Hcrniici." ol DMd icine. tor it cleanses Nature's auirean st. tides, and allows the reeuiM-rative Kwers ot the system to do the work of rcstor.it i 1 1 to beilib. No mediemc cures; Nature nh'iu- ' ores. I Aperient opens the pro p r acetifies, the tun-! ions arc permitted to resume their Work, a u.l the pn Pent t ' s we! I. SC1.1 HY AKI, l'lit ('CISTS. AXLE GREASE Hest In the world. Lasts longer than any other. Always in k.i-j ! condition. Cures ores. cuts, bruis rs and corns. ('..--( I.nt lit t le more than theiiol tati.ms. Kvery package bus t ie tra le mark, fall for the genuine, and ke no ther. HOUSEHOLD WORDS. "Tor ric stomach, bad tastw. ttnkln spells and Hi'"''-1""-!- rclr w'- --' ri Ji-L-J ICl Mon, and Ptct e.mplalnt.t.tV If"i v: ft lei -Vnr n-uit .l iT.ti.l 1 1.. liiouii... 1 Tboso In rtt-r:ir-, professional or com mercial pnrs-.iifi coostant'v need FT i'-v t or consiipatiou. il is.u.in." kTWSESf "For siek h'odarbes palT in t 10 be.id. dlrzlucss, and low tpiribi, take l'Ei:i sa." Read and stndy our bo"k on thSilUsef life, follow Its r-achinr'S nd von. will be happv. -fl"o3 will l-o p id for any case. Pi r.rs will not cure or greatly lmiuoTe." OBSBBS Ladles, tf yon wish tnrrnetri, hc-ilth and beauty, swop; PreTth. rherry Hm -.. tv -1 of ritti sA. Take It beforoeach mca!.- 'For nervons Vbi!rv. r.-rarrh of tbe blad der, or discaso of I lie kiducva, Uko 1-j.bi A, and be cured." Sold at the ?ew lruir Store, I'ostoiUcc. F.b ensbura, 1'a. l-l:,'fcl.-ly. AGENTS WANTED rvrRrrnrn?; t-. tlnat maerilne ever invente.i. Wm ku.tarairof T.X knus. with H EEL and TOE complete, in SO minute. H wm a.so knit a great vanetv of lancT work for whlrh there is alwars a rea ly tna;ket. sivl . - - - . . n .ill, w r n . MliuiV-l7 Walhn lurtonMU.," NEW RICH BLOOD! aranum9 f'ri rein 1 1 r-- r:tl A v- Ttl.io.1. and will completely chance tbe ldorl in tho entire syst m in thrce'months. Anv person who will lake 1 pill each niprbt from 1 t w.i-k niny In re.toivl to sound health, if such a tbinit bejiossibl,.. ,,t bv mail for 8 letter stamiw I. .s. .Forty so. X t- CO., JlostoM, Mas., formerly Hatigor, Jlfe. HFATTY'S OKIi Is useiu! stops, .'..-et-1 reeds, wnsi nli I'isnov flio up. -ll!u- C-ataioc. iiijk. Addres.- lleatty.W asu.ntlon. N..1. i ?.)t0 " 'Vi v al h no. Sair.ples worrit ," fC.-s SfI-'N -k '.. I'oi't-13-4.V..-JV.J G. "WOLF'S OLD RELIABLE PTCSPi LD RELIABLE hM Tin: imc)m:i:1 Clothing Housf t He In Central Vcnnsyl vnin. XEXT TO POST-OFFlrv ALTOONA, PA. STKGSG EASY S I ITS stko.sg r.Ar suits ALL TTOOL SI ITS Grtat rrrirty SA CK end I ITA n -f F Mil-'. Fancy fifrrriri '..' W'ltHSJ y.r SA K UlTs . Large atcrtmrr.t of STYLJSIl ( t T "f 7f . Ali n'ool ttemni Mark Vf't7'H.V SI ITS... Doullt Vrrmrcil fancy SA K SHjs Tine Inagonat f'l'TA 'A Y St ITS. Suprrjinr l-tuomiel FHVflC COAT Si ll s Good Frrry l'ay HOhhlSG TAMS Brtl PASTS in fe city for the money A U- Wool KERSTY FASTS FA ST A l.OOSS of m!l ttuc and qnalitirt vj, the finest In e- f abrics ct Special Bargains II "ST KK( I.IVi :i) FROM OUR LARGE W0RKR00.1' coxTia or a f.xrini lie cp BLUE, BLACK and BROWN ALL WOOL I t K RCATI'.R OVERCOATS ll&ih Hound. Pllk Velvet V1!t. c- j ierge I.inir.ir. r TETS3" DOLI.Al: mi 611 Mb m b,. OPEN EVERY DAY IMILlnOTif Q.Li Reversible Overcoat Tbe Kevf ril I'vcrront f.r-t idctV ": -. one year ago. but J not en a fair !"' 1 - r favor until the j.rent fon'in. It i' n-i'!' - -. lining, ol rourso, ti' ti e Faia ar firrrr1- : fiuli a way tlial tl -e I no r rjc ?'!.' -. f : Jc of the fl-'lh i- m:-I."'J inavnrifr -f'-. noh d;apoia!, ixej. Ptc. etc., arA V. i? U'lisily a quil'cj -lai 1 or check. T:"- t"o, arc fo iEf.'en!vU. "T contrived thst r tt wlii..h iij of U:e c at if out tlicy are a'.-r;; : rii:iit I'lace. rra y f jr !i1ne--?. We rr'U : -rroefe all the Ufversil'le"t-S e have : a'-- thir.z in our line that a k V r. It w ; yon to ark f- r nn; thin-; haven't z -1. Fimp 5 Iron, WE HAVE JCfcT I1IIH.IIT AT ASSIGNEE S SAL! A LAItfiE AND fK".T..T mi K r Overalls and Shirti niade of hcivv Jurk. and a? we have r. r --t iet them v rv bmir we w!J! c'.ve our j -'. : 1 l w I o-ni of the t'arvftin we pti in the j v.--li- -a ,nl feHins them at FI FTY CLNTS -f TT. -: t CO TTKNTY-V1VK I'ENTS tto rn.li r- . - , rn-lT. Thry are wr.rth at lr? 1 "t jii.h : paw 7.H.NKY. THIS AVEEK j W re fhowinp. a fully a en? .-r"w! 1 c i. ( will jiermit. everythir.s wc h. e SUITS AND OVERCOATS ........ ... nine ar.a cperiai.y i p r.ii i . i. we are i-to-?h-w ainio-t an unliuiltoil a.eavrtiner!t '-f Ling In 1'Iotliinir anj t'nilt-rrlt th:Ee. lat - le ' crrw-ral (lij iay o! the week if is Overcoat1 cry ort. It is a i'lea?.int to talk at-oni t!i reweft f" fir.ct thints a it i to wear them, hmt rnt a'i ;-a want to iay for them. AYc have c-qal c- ' damp and cold, even though tbey nwiy be a 1 ; rt'Osjh. Thnnsan Is who will read :!; t-il-i ""c clad to lear - that A OOOTt SATIS OVERCOAT. 'wavy mounTi to give a sene id warmth : - ' tial enough for tbe roughest wear, and : tJZ fti"u:li lor better use. can be bad !.ere I'Oll -r-.--.oo OK -.. oo. Other merchant will look w;th 'J'C n-c " " br K-quiniaux Hearer at fin ta r.r. ! " t'hincbilla overcoats at f'.c to W'e have no time to write ii-t l.ave y-.u : :- r--to read nnytbics like an account ol w) at w ttis week. Here i the jdace to Ufe your ey.- -yonr judument. Jlcrc we will .., tire ; : ' des,-rj.ti,,ns beforehand. ki-:mi-:mui-:k this: Whatever yoa buy that rtois rt -t suit y-.;i sold at all. Come back with it the fir-! ir''- you can You are as free as if vn had v.. ur in : gem in your pocket. You shall r-,Rv your n-nt-y ' ' n your pocket if you want A : -at take 2 "" ill. of the garments U-t us, so Iodk as our :.u'"' them contiuues. ;rvo GODFREY WOLF. V. II. LATER.XER. One f the Salc-m's TO CARD COLLECTORS! I$UIiuy sevrn bars I0'-,- rea KLIZCTK1C SOAV of your l;rf-y ccr. 2d. Ask to ffivc you a f'itho of it. .1,1. Mail s his hill d full address. itn. ft r ctt ji A - o. a j eei-cn beautiful ami tlegant Ti'Va' ' in si jc colors and gold. represenfi"i rw i , snl ' Shaksjeare''s Seven Ages of .V'" ins ! I. L. CRAGIN & CO., i HO otH IT'oxii lli StX, j 111 1 LA DEL I'll I A , VA. I ?IM IHB1NS tl.FtTKU SO KV is dl hT -L" S. Karkkr. Bito., Ktensbur. -l.-e c w t. not ST. XAYIERS ACADEMY vrmi.Y half a century old. from whicb 1 iN ol the most trominent and cultivated j & I'.nnlv.nu'ind clshere n.v..1' ,ri , ' Oner niOSl HinrouiCIi ciuoiii"uj - stan.lar.l ol renninc innuencr-. i- V 1 - lupil admitted at any time. ie"-J i pens about TJt 1 Address : I tie I SISTi-KS OF MKKCY, jrr, ! ivc. to, lsw.-tt -VVertmorelaid Oo., I " - - oti AGENTS WANTED pvvrv" " i. .'' lilts liwrritne er-er iTiveniei i " , : ,. riir i.. kn.s-. un IIITI. and lOh 1l'1'.'' ,- r" Wn--mitnl It wnl al-o knit -i: !,,!- - nr v .k tor "hi1 h there i ai av '"' :- lU; t r r.-ubir fid t- MM- to Hie 1 iul'h " . Mjm hinolo., it nifliii" 1 - - ,n .KTS iTID TID forth Pest an! W ,nt Books and Wit-le. IT-' fc t( Nat'onal 'tttltiil t'o- 1 1 ' ;e- M inz l icturi i-er cent. in to 1: bot fx; ine? the'u ruiir puii! erop rou dow said ship I.u it ev r.? Will Csi add! Tou bnrj evil- Iii t; pale nnd eith' ship, eroh niL'h Yc lv a iriJ flou" that font; so lo tiie t ine died aboi t ) dil i?ii; coin! nntl jrt' ( pom pot l' u If term "all put : tiav 1 the j; Fran Tin I rjanx SIX of li lluir 1 tvoul re t OOHIi saw cove v a few rnre ire r-: E'.HT apc Jie o lY f iilaT !"?!!! lew i iw I low V left ?fer riot ditu; , i ean P. w iv r f "tlx "bit urin robs Mh. K id r isi r , rif ours s hat i till r ou 1 irsa A iv a! T lis fsk I ' T ! i art Tice is t P B, m ren rmp K a W( n ; lea; r V