ECENSDURC. PA., FRIDAY, - - - - JUNE 3, 1S81. The tone and language now of Home of the best known Republican journals of the country in their references to Gar field, remind one of what was said by Democratic papers dining the Presiden tial campaign last year. The Chicago -Vcirs, for instance, a paper that stands for Conkling in his fight with Garfield, in an article a few days ago, said : "No Credit Mobilier Investigation Commit tee has recorded his (Coukling's) per jury : no DeGolyer paving jobs have b-en tracked to his door, and no salary grab measure has received his vote." And in contrasting Conklingw ith Blaine the JY-.s further remarked that Conk ling has "no Mulligan letters bearing hi3 signature, and no Little Rock bridge steals to explain, The county elections in Virginia, which are much like the Spring elections in this State, took place on yesterday week, and so far as they possess any sig nificance resulted in the defeat of the Mahone repudiationists in several of their strongholds. The only possible chance for Mahone to defeat the Dem ocratic State ticket ne.xt November is by a union of the Republican with the lie- j adjuster or Repudiation part-, and against any such union the leading He- j publicans of the State aie bitterly op- posed, and have prevailed upon the l'res- ! ident to refuse Mahone's persistent de- j mauds to give it his countenance, and support. No man ever before ir. this ' country became of so much importance j in so short a time, w ith a flist class pros- ' pect of being so suddenly relieved of it, as "William Mahone. His convention to nominate candidates or State otlicers, . including Governor, met at Richmond j yesterday. ! Any mnn at all familiar with the pol itics of New York knows precisely what manner of man Chester A. Arthur was up to the titr.e that lie was nominated at Chicago for Vice President, to ap pease the. imperial wrath of Roscoe Conkling for the defeat of his third-term project. Arthur as Conkling's trusted henchman managed the Republican ma- ' chine in the city of New York, dispens- j ed the patronage of the Custom House in Conkling's interest, and was a regu- lar lobby agent at Albany, just as P.i'.l ; Kembls was at Harrisburg, i:i procur- ; iug legislation "for the party.7' The ' high ofliee lie holds has not impressed ; him with any sens w hatever of the pro- priety which should actuate a man in . his position. He was r-U u ted on t he same ticket with Garfield, and courtesy should have compelled him to observe a , neutral course between G.irlield and : Conkling in their present quarrel. I:i- j stead of that he travels with Conkling : io Albany and actively engages in all the low aits of a professional lobbyist : to secure his masters re-election to the ( Senate. No other Vice President would , have stooped so low to gain a political j end. ; Racii bianch of the New York Legis lature took a ballot for two L. S. St -n;t- tors on Tuesday last. The Garlitdd men made no nominations and scattered their votes on Wheeler, lut Vice Presi- ; dent, Gov. Fento.'i, J)( pew.Lvarts, and about a diven others. Conkling's friends ; voted for the late "P.uss" and his shad ow, Tiriu Piatt. The Democrats voted ; for their caucus nominees, Prancis Ker- ; mm. who was succeeded by Piatt on the tth of March iast, and John C. Jacobs, a inemlter of the State Senate from , P.rooklyn. The ballot in the House stood as follows: Conkling. i'fj ; Piatt, '. '21 ; Wheeler, 1" ; Kernan, 47 ; Jacobs, . 47 ; scattering 37. In the Senate the ' vote stood: Conkling, !; Piatt, S; Depcw, ! 7 ; Kernan, 7 ; Jacobs, 7; scattering, 10. j The entire Democratic vote (.74) was ' cast, as w ill be seen, for Kernan and Jacobs. It requires SI votes to elect, j The Republicans have 27 members in ! the Senate an. 1 si in the House, making l a total of 10;. Of this number Conk ling received 3" and Piatt only 2'., show- ing that 71 of the 100 Republican mem bers are opposed to Conkling's re-elec- ! lion. It is useless to conjectuie what ( the result will be, but it is safe to pre dict that the dead-lock w ill only be bro ken by a final adjournment. P. S. Since writing the foregoing we received to-day (Thursday) the result of the ballot on "Wednesday, when both Houses met in joint convention. It was as follows : Conkling, ?, ; Piatt, 2 ; "Wheeler, JJ ; Depcw, Jo; Kernan, 3 ; Jacobs, 72; scattering, 41. IVe know of no public man in this country who has ever been able to bat tle successfully with official patronage wielded against him by a President of his own party. It is more powerful than an army with banners and possesses all the omnipotence of money, making and unmaking men according to the limits within which it is dispensed. Conk ling is the latest and most notable in stance of its crushing force. It stripped him of his personal power in the caucus of Republican Senators over Robertson's coi.firniation, when the issue on one side was " Garfied u iih patronage," and on the other "Conkling cioif patron age." A correct illustration of its un seen but mighty influence was given by a Senator when he said : l I can't af ford to have my shins outiii the cold for four long years. I like Conkling, and don't particularly love Garfield, hut my frirnds cannot iforv." Foiled and beaten at "Washington, Conkling threw up his Senatorship and sought a vindi cation, or, in other words, a re-election by the Republican Legislature in .ses sion at Albany. There be found him feelf confronted by this same jiower in a double shape, Garfield and Blaine at Washington holding it, like the sword of Damocles, over the Legislature, and Robcrtion, sitting in the State Senate and a. Collector of the Port of New York in the near future, using it with it morse less purpose. Even Conkling, who has never known successful resist ance to his personal aires in his owu State, went down in his encounter with this double-headed monster, and now I'cs prostrate at the feet of his enemies. Gieat U the power of official patronage. Governor Hoyt last week vetoed the bill passed by the Legislature grant ing an annua! pension of $77 to the Ptnnsylvania soldiers who served in the Mexican war. It will be remembered that a bill which passed both houses two years ago, having the same object in view, but which contained an especially objectionable feature, which was omit ted in the bill which lias been vetoed, met with a similar fate. The principal objection of the Governor to the meas ure is that the present and anticipated condition of the State treasury will not justify the expenditure the bill would entail upon it. We admit that the reckless extravagance of Republican Legislatures, including the present body, and their shameless expenditure of the public money for all sorts of purposes, has left the treasury in a sorry plight, but if Governor Hoyt and his liepubli- can predecessor in ofllce, had exercised ! their veto power on a large number of j bills w hich were nothing less than organ- j ized raids on the public funds, the Stale I i might be able, even ?t this late day, to j do justice to the old soldiers of the Mex- ; ican war. There is a bill now before j the House, which has passed the Senate, j r.nd w hich, if it passes the House and is ! signed by the Governor, as it will be. will cost the State every year not less j than ct i nndrcd thousand dollars, or more than iVe as much as would pay pen- j sions to all the Mexican soldiers in the j commonwealth. "We refer to the bill to : enable the National Guard to hold an- nual pic-nics lasting several days, fur- nishing the Guard with brass bands of j not les3than twenty pieces, supplying it ! . . . i witfi the same signal corps system as that of the Pnitect States, together with ether fancy arrangements which go to i make up all the pride and pomp of glori- ; ous war, all at the expense of the tax- j payers. Then there is that bare-faced i robbery, to furnish the members of the ( Uvo houses with tt n thousand extra copies ; of smulTs Hand Rock, from which the J Senate at first recoiled, butafterwards, as i we said it would, swallowed deliberate- I ly and without an effort. This job will also receive I Loyt's approval. There are others equally as indefensible, but we have not time to refer to them now. The Mexican veterans will be remembered when the State government passrs into hands of the Democratic party, but not until then. Both branches of the Legislature have passed a resolution to adjourn sine die on the 0th instant. next Thursday. The lo'l days, for each day of which, un der the act of Assembly of 171, the members are entitled to receive ten dol lars, expires to-day, and with it their pay of course ceases. Could any one of the two hundred and fifty-one members, whether lawyer of layman, explain satis factorily to a single man who voted for him, if nsked to do so, why they spent '-: hiiintli.-- and one week" in doing what t i i e 3" ought to have done in one hundred days ? ( ''early not, and the taxpayers of th:; Siate will never forgive and never ought to forgive, the Republican ma jority in the Legislature for the outrage of rendering an o.-(i-t session next win ter a matter of necessity, after consum ing 1"') days without disposing of cer tain legislation which must take place before the election in November, lS'2. The time criminally wasted dining the present session, and the time that will be spent at the extra session, will cost the people of the State not less than two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. The electors of the Stale, however, are so used to sessions of this kind that they will soon forget all about it, and in all human probability will elect a Leg islature in 1SS-2 most of whose members, i like the majority of the present body j when thev wanted votes, will proclaim ! themselves from the house-tops as the firm friendsof retrenchment and reform, keeping the word of promise to the ear of their constituents only to ,be broken to the hope. Of such stuff are two- thirds of the men made who file their' minds for the position of legislators at Harrisburg in the interests of the dear j people. ' i Spkakkk I If. wit, of I!air,and Wo! fe, , of Union, the Republican (.hang and I Kng of the House at the commencement of the present session, engaged in another personal discussion in the House on TT'i ! day last that was eminently disgraceful I and would have done no discredit to two Philadelphia market fish women. The cause of the unseemly wrangle "was i apparently as trifling as that out of j which similar former encounters be j tween the same "Jonocn'Je" gentlemen j have grown. Nebinger, of Iauphin, i who mildly insinuated that the whole i discussion was out of order, was prompt i ly and insolently .squelched by Hewit, ! who roared at him that they "did not j want to hear anything from the tin ! whistle from Dauphin.1' This sort of t cut antl thrust vulgarity consumed the ; j entire morning, to the exclusion of all ' other business. Upon the strength of i the respective records which these two ' I leading Republicans have made during j ; the session, one of them (Wolfe) expects j to be the candidate of his party for Gov- : i ernor next year, and the other (Ilewit) ! aims at an election to Congress, and w ill take care at the extra session next w in-. . ter that Blair county is "fixed" in a i solid Republican district. We make ' no prediction in regard to the political I future of either statesman, but they ' are both the kind of men that usually meet with a wonderful run of political ! luck in these glorious days of legislative ; honesty and reform. The Republican party survived C, rant's eight years of corrupt ring rule antl managed to preserve its organization from any material injury during Hayes'' term, but it only required three short months for Garfield, with tho powerful assistance of his Secretary of State, Blaine, to divide it into two bitter and warring factions in the great State of New York, the certain effect of which will be itscomplete demoralization thi o' out the entire country. But yesterday and the Republican, party might have stood against the world ; to-day it is torn and distracted by personal rivalries and heart burnings, its unity broken, its vitality gone, and its ultimate disso lution only a question of time, with the brief inscription upon its tombstone, "Diedof the New York Custom House." oi k nnL-inti-rniA lettp-r. Philadelphia, May 31, 1SS1. f Special Correpondcncc of the Fbeima Dear McPike The City Council's Com mittee passed an ordinance authorizing the Bell Telcphoue Company to run twothou&and miles of wires over throe hundred ami twen ty squares, and erect, fifteen hundred poles. Thus will distant part- of the city be put in mouth ami ear communication. The receipts of the city last week from the different departments were $24!,8irr, and the actual balance on hand in the City Treasuiy is ?;t,Se'.,3ls. This is a plethoric public purse. There was a Councilmanic row in the city during the week. The war of words and jestures of the Couneilmanie heroes (?) were lor a time frightful to contemplate, and it seemed as if the Council hall would be stain ed with Councilmanic pore, but most happily j the enraged beligerants cooled down, button- ' ed up their coats, adjusted their eye-glasses, j and left .for their peaceful homes. Nobody: was killed, thank goodness, but it was a I sorrowful termination of a Councilmanic i meeting for floral souvenirs, the chamber of ! the Council being sweet with the perfumes j of flowers, reviving recollections of the Uni- j ted Strifes Senate chamber and Garfield's , tribute to Mahone. The season of disaster is opening very en- ! couragingly. All persons desiring to drown or blow up" their wives, children, motliers-in- j law, and others, will have fine opportunities i I for doing so. All the old rickety steamers I j on the Delaware have been newly painted j ! and the old life pteservers that had holes in J I them have been stitched up. Canada has the ! i honor of opening the disaster season this ' j year, but Philadelphia will not be long after ,' i her in getting up a first-class smash. I ! Mayor King is taking time by the forelock, j and four weeks in advance of the usual time 1 is issuing the usual proclamation against fire ; crackers and other explosives on the glorious j Fourth. The small boy and big man both ' may take timely warning, as the present j head of the city is supposed to be in deep ' earnest in his official utterances, j Philadelphia has just lx-en informed that : one of its young men who proposed to a young lady in Erie, upon being refused, kill ed himself. I have great lespect for the j memory of the young man who commits sui : citle when crossed in love, because he puts j himself to the very best possible use. He j could not be utilized in a more profitable I way than by furnishing business for the cor j oner. THR EI.F.VATI-.1 RAILWAY PROJECT. The Keystone Elevated Pail road projec tors, the same gentlemen who a year ago, had a tussel with public opinion and were badly worsted, have renewed the battle, and seem to have returned to the attack in good heart and spirit. What seems to be an in separable objection to the Keystone Elevated Kaiiroad project in the minus ol a large ma- j or it v of the citizens of Philadelphia is the I disfigurement of the public buildings, occa sioned by the running ot the proposed road around them. The enterprising and irre- KliOnTni til thc elevated rapid overcome this ob jection, propose, ii. stead of going around the publio buildings, to go over them. They ai going to solve the problem of going over that stately pile at Broad and Market streets by means of an artistically built piece of archi tecture, having due regard to a-sthetie effects, which will be a "thing 'if beaaity and a joy forever" a structure that will be at once so novel and interesting, that it will attract j the attention and nKinu at ion of ail who visit ' the city. The mountaineers of Cambria may think that I am jesting, that a raiuoad i couldn't be built over that stately pile, but i their minds will at mice be disabused ot that mistaken notion when they are informed j that the great w:tr poet, George II. B iker, is ! President of the Philadelphia Rapid T ransit I Company. The alilatus that lead Boker to j make verse will lead him to solve the problem of engineering away over the buildings at , Broad and Market streets. A man who ; could write such poetry as the memorable j war refrain, "Hooker's Across," can do all j the engineering t lmt's involved in the work j of bunding a raiiioad over the public build ings. George II. I toker was bom to lio won- . derful things. A great poet and diplomat like Boker will not build his mail around the ; building!, but over them. If Mr. Iloker's I poetry was a little wishy-washy and his plomacy somewhat so so, his artii-.tieaily built j raiiway over the public buildings will be simply immense. This elevated railroad scheme is terribly antagonized, but Boker ' will educate the citizens into more liberal views by w riting an exquisite poetic gem on the crossing. IHK IIKAH 1! VII.IiOAn MAONATK. In token of resnect for tho memory of Col. Thomas A. Scott." all the offices of the Penn sylvania Bail roe. ii Company, as well as those of the Blading Kaiiroad Company, have been draped in mourning and the flags above their several buildings placed at half mast. The flags on all the public buildings and I many business houses were also at half mast i as a mark of veneration for the dead railroad '. magnate. His death was likewise made the ! occasion of numerous pulpit references to i bis useful life by way ot illustration. Few I men leave so good a record to those who re ! main behind. Long will Thomas A. Scott j be remembered, not only for his ur.eiiialied j business traits of character, but for his gen ! erous friendship and great benevolence. l Kvery honor w as paid to his memory, and it was only in accordance with his otvil wishes that lus itinera! was conducted in a simple manner. Your correspondent was one of the thous ands of people of high and low stations in life who mingled together, irrespective of worldly distinction, and in common paid their tribute to the memory of Thomas A. Scott when his body was committed to the earth in Woodland Cemetery. Mr. Scott and your correspondent were for many years intimate personal friends. I first became acquainted with Mr. Scott in isn, when he was a clerk in the omci Tolls in Columbia and of ttie Collector of I I was a canal boat- ' man. At that time our social and pecuniary situations weie on a par. After forty years' struggle in the battle of life, lie died the pos sessor of tens of millions of dollars, whi:e 1 am penniless and without a dollar to bury me if called to my last account. ,3 I stood by the grave of my departed friend a vault ed grave, walled around with evergreens and beautiful flowers, while the mound of earth, the diggings of the grave at its side, were covered with shrubbery and choice cut flow ers, so greatly contrasting w ith some humble graves 1 had seen prepared for the resting places of other cherished friends it caused a vivid realization of the great muta tions of fortune. It also reminded me what a transitory and unsatisfactory thing world ly greatness is how ereat men are great only for a little while, and that eternal happiness is not in the bubble of vanity, for it can be bioken not in worldly pleasures, for they j can depart not in great fame, for it will not siivb jou i nun tiea.ii uoi, in gieai wcaiui, for you cannot carry it with you to the giave, and not in rank, for in the grave there is no distinction. Riches, honor, and all other worldly desires may be obtained, and yet eternal happiness never be reached. Future happiness is the chief object lor which all should labor, yet how seldom we pause to consiiier in what true happiness consists ami how we should labor to attain it. It is mis- fortunes, sufferings and poverty that best prepare us for a world of undying glory- When the sun (if prosperity shines upon us we are apt to forget the fountain" from i whence all blessings flow. OCR CKOI' OF MII.I.IONAIIIF.S. ! The laie Col. Scott's estate is estimated at ! i over fifteen millions of tlollars. Unlike most ' ! millionaires, however, Mr. Scott did not give I j himself up entirely to money making ami j self aggrandizement. In the acquisition of ' wealth he did not neglect all other things ' I which make man happy while he lives and respected ami honored when he dies, as did j j Messrs. Stewait, Vanderuiit. ami many other : i millionaires. The careers of those and near- ' I ly all other wealthy men have been more of . failures than successes. As Col. Kornev ' truly says : "We are trained to sec fortune showered upon men who use it onlv to help 1 themselves" that "wealth is conferred upon those who employ it to make their natural vulgarity more coarse but that "Thomas A. Scott was a supreme except ion, as he lived to assist the poor." Col. Scott's career hesiiles heinp a brilliant one, was a useful one. He did not devote his energies antl thoughts to the accumulation of money for the mere sake of possessing It. and had he been spared a few years longer, besides his present beneficent donations, a much larger portion of his vast wealth would have been applied for the good of the country and the benefit of the people. He knew how to spend his money, and had he lived it would have been spent properly. To his list of public charities and countless private ones would have been added numerous other promptings of his generous heart. Many were his delicate private and opportune be stowals, and there are many persons living to-day who can recall his kindnesses, of which none ever knew hut they and himself. He had a higher ambition than to make a penny jug of himself, such as Stewart ami Vanderbilt made of themselves. Unlike millionaires generally, he did not love money for the meie possession of it. The steady pursuit, of wealth for a numlierof years, as in the cases of Stewart and Vanderbilt, de velops a monomania which furnishes illus trations to theologians in exemplifiation of theit teachings that the road to wealth is the road to perdition. When the penny jug Stewart ditd he was laid iu his grave, but thieves cairied him away, and his present place of sepulture is ns unknown as that of the remains of Moses. His survivors built a rich mausoleum, but there was no corpse to put in it. When the penny jug Yandcrblit died thieves stole the crape from the door bell while his body was lying in the house. Soon after he was buried his heirs began fighting in a most disgraceful mariner forthe money he had left, and in their bitter fiht exposed ?ome frightful domestic skeletons, of the existence of which t he public would never otherwise have known. Poor old Drew, for many years the possessor of many millions a hard," grasping man. who in his zeal for money would slaughter his best friend and see him suffer without shedding a tear was reduced in his old age to penury, and stepped out of the world with his im mense estate dried up, as was also his miser able, worn-out frame. The poorest crea tures ami most miserable wretches of this world's population are those who possess more money than they know what to do with. We should be thankful that so far ns millionaires are useful and profitable the crop of them is not very large. "helV' asd "damnation." Before the publication of the revised New Testament we were told that the word "hell" would be left out, and many sinners were extracting much comfort from the reported emendation : but it seems that the word is still found in the revised edition. The word "damnation," so familiar to the tongues of the prof ane and ears of the refined, is entire ly omitted in the new version, having been changed to "eternal sin." But even with this change it is not easy to peiceive how uurepentant sinners are" to extract much comfort out of it. I fear the emendations have not been sufficient to comfort anybody very much. G. N. S. The New York JleraVl is not a paper, so far as its treatment of political questions is concerned, in which Democrats find much to admire, but it has a clear comprehension of the past history and present condition of the Republican party, and we publish the follow ing extracts from a late article in its columns for the plain, vigorous truths they contain. It says : "The public Is tired nr the Republican party. Tlio old superstition that oinctbinjr quite too aw fnllv dreadful would hanpen to the country if the Republican party should ceac to nil?covcrn it ha no lonzcr Hourly a? much terror a it used to have. Inrey dinner Hrady star routes, Indiana two dollar bills ami liuhlivll letters have doue n (food denl in the lust lew month to disillusion honest men who really believed that their party was the ...,-....ii.i.r'nl litnlr,!nl nil t li. .if li tr -i rt ilt Tim Ri.iiiil.licitn trick?te'r ami muiier have cried i w.ilf while they were leathering their own nest. the refpeetable part ol the country begins to j see tl.rr.i.Kn u.em. , I "I'enple pee the Republican party pit now en jfHacd in a depernte fiul over the pnolic plunder iiml ncKlectln every public interest in thil dl Kmceful Fci-:iinh!e. Aud m they lo"k on with con- tennd at this exhibition, which ha about us much dignity itn a fir-t cla-n doe tight, they recall the fact th -.f under Uayen it did llltlo ele than care- lullv conceal toe s;eaiinif winen it iotcren. ana that with loud ami Interminable prolesinn of virtue In ti;e Inst dozen ynar it ha only produced scandal after candal. knti! the whole history of the party In thi period ia made up ot B- Iknap, Robeson", 1'ncihe. Slail. Ftar route, whl-lty fraud. esrpet-b?!!f. "alary (irab anil a multitude of other jobberies of the baseet and moat vulgar kind, mix ed in with the most abject uleotion to railroad and other corpm at inn Influences. And in all that tune no one can recall without an etlo-t a Military public service the narty haa rendered. It mii;ht as well Inscribe on Its banner 'millions for plun der, not one cent for the public l:iterets. it ha reited every retorm : it naa prev-enteii the repeal of every bit of the obsolete and b:re. tive war le" islati.-n : it has maintained every bad law on the stature book : it has ithown In every iumiina!.le way Its t'tal incapacity to deal with p u bl ic ipie.-t iuas. and whenever pub! ic opinion has pressed it to do at least Some trtflinir trooj it has adroitly ot np some new excitement about the Si.mh. or K-ime nen petty and uncalled tur quarrel with the I tempera? s. with the s.ile view to en'.('K) the atfenti'.n ol the people an-! ilr.iw their miuds away from public inten ' and rel questions. s "Why hould n'.'t the 1,'epuldican party o to pieces ? W ho sl.culd any one of tt honest voter nionrn over its disappearance? It may not be dead at this mntuerit. but it is rotten. It is the creature of ruilr.'ad and other corporation and monopoly influences' its nn t Intimate relations arc no loniri-r with the peoole. Vnt with the rail road and telegraph kn-;i. the .l.iy Joulds. Stc.n fords, HniitliiKloii and others i f that kind, who own an 1 conirol its managers and chleU. To ay that such a p-;rty, wh nh tlelihcratly chooses II..;--sy as one o:' its public m tciou'Htors and imbluh imclv gives him public iliiin;-:: which ha? pro tected and honored Kobecon. which openly courts the Iriendhip of public plunderers, which during lour years sheltered ISrady in !iis Star route job. beries. and took part ot his ir iins for its eampaisn fund after tUe exposures m uie of him in Congress : to say that such a party, which scarcely conceals its relations with a doi"n lobbies, and" many of whose public men liie by jobs lo say that this party, ouarrcilinir now over the spoil, ouht to live Is aosurd. It bus lost even the re-pect lor public opinion which leads jobbers usucily to di vide their spoils in private.-' As accident occurred on the Pennsyl vania Railroad, at the bear switches, about four miles from Trenton, X. J., at 4::to on Monday afternoon, caused by the train. which leaves New York at and is due in Trenton at 4::3. running; into an ooen 1 switch. The Pullman car did not leave the j track and no person in it was injured, but the three other cars left the track and one of them was completely turned over. About a ' dozen persons are said to be injured severe- j ly, and a numherof others slightly. Augus tus Bitter, of Philadelphia, was " killed 'out- ! right. lie was trying to g-t out of the win - I dow, when be was struck by some preject- j ing timber. Mrs. Bucrelia Pennington, aged ; eighty-one, of New York, was fatally injur ed and died about 6 o'clock. A little girl.ta niece of Mrs. Pennington, was injured in j the shoulder. Thomas Murphy, of Krank ford, was injured in t lie spine. The con ductor, Lew Silance, was injured in the hands and hips. Many of the wounded ' went on to Philadelphia. Three cars were j smashed to pieces. The track was cleared j in about half an hour. Three of the wound- : etl got off ami are now at the Trenton House, I namely, J- . Beilstein, Jr., and wife, of rittsburg, who keep a hotel there. Mr. Beil- stein has a bad seal p wound. His wife also has a scalp wound, and is otherwise injured. The other person at the Trenton House is the little girl who whs with the old lady who died at the depot. 1 V oman's Wisdom. She insists that it is j more importance that her family shall be ! kept in full health, that she should have all I the fashionable dresses of the times. She 1 therefore sees to it that each member of her j her family is supplied with enough Hop Bit , ters. at the first appearance of any mptoms of ill health, to prevent a fit of sickness, with I its attendant expense, care and anxiety. All j woman should exercise their wisdom "in tiiis way. Aw Iliren Pallfliitm. Yes, and all : women and men should buy Hop Bitters from M. L.Oatman, authorized agent, Kbens j Durg, Ta. Robert B. Shaw, formerly presiding Justice of the County Court of Buckingham , county, Virginia, has a cannon ball weigli i ing eight pounds which was thrown into the i American lines during the siege of York j town, in 17S1, and was taken home by Mr. 1 Shaw's grandfather, a soldier in the Bevolti j tion, who was present at the siege and siir ! rentier of Cornwailis. It has been a Vh"r isbed relic" in the Shaw family for nearly one iiuiitucd jcars, ana will ni exhibited at a 11.. V 1. t' a ... ' luc 1 Kl,,w" 'uenmai m ctoucr next, I m-. Extract from a letter written to T. J Mriffiths, editor of the Y Dryrh, n weeklv WVleh paper at Utiea, X. V. : "As an en couragement to you, since the advertisement of Kendall's Spavin Cure, first appeared in your paper many injured miners have been using it, nnd in all cases in and around here, it has achieved wonders. It is a perfect success among injured miners. "Yours truly, IJien.vnn Owen. "Ocean Mines, I'a., April 20, lssi." i An infant ehilrl of Mr. William Slike, of :, Union township, Hunterdon county, X. J., 1 was suffocated by a cat, which had laid itself j across the child's face during the mother's j absence. She was gone only a few minutes, our. niooti was oozinsr irom the child UOS- I trils when she reached the room. The baby. . ,1 ' i . . 1 . n. r, . . . - . . . . 1 I :....! ...... .. .. mediately after she took it in her arms, Answer This Cm f.stion. Why do so many people we see around tis seem to pre fer to suffer and be made miserable by indi gostion, constipation, dizziness, loss of appe tite, coming up of fond, yellow skin, etc., when for 7.s cts. K. James. Druggist, Ehens burg, Ta., will sell them Shiloh's Vitalizer, which is guaranteed to cure in every in stance? 4-l.-e.o.w.ly. lin 'haris was esteemed one of the most upripht men in 81. Louis, and took a promi- I nent pait in relipious affairs, while at the I same time he had two wives nnd two sets of children m different parts of the city ; but when lie discarded the unrecognized wife, and she threatened exposure, he committed suicide rather than face public opprobrium. The western farmers are beginning to complain of drouth. In some sections of Il linois there has been no rain for more than three weeks and the ground is said to he dry and baked. This litis a decidedly depress ing effect on the vegetation of tho market gardens. My daughter's defective vision was much improved by Pefcna. Jas. Cook, Bakers totvn, Fa. E. James, Ebensburg, sells it. SEWS AM) OTHER SOTINGS. i Seventeen and one-halfj pounds of wool was ttie recent yield of a C'otswold sheep in Juniata county. Two children of John Augustein, of Col umbia, were drowned in the reservoir at that place on Sunday. Inquiry into the disaster to the excur sion steamer at London, Ontario, reflects on the management of the line. General William Bolton, of Norristown, recently coughed up a bullet that was shot into his neck during the war. At Detroit, on Saturday, Mary Durner recovered ?"0o from Pat Buckley, a saloon ist, for selling liquor to her husband. Siv hundred neael) trees on the farm of i Mr. HibberdBartram, in Willistown, Chester county, will not boar a peacn u:is year. Miss Dean, of Orange, N. J.,fell off Eagle Koek, a distance of eighty feet, down a steep precipice, and was only slightly bruised. Two children have been drowned, on irnniil D mil rdere.d and one man probably fa- : tally wounded in Lancaster county since last j 1 rir"(,imHl0p pnrcPi j9 reported by Bishop i Elder as "reasonably vigorous," the state i ments of his extreme feebleness being nn- founded. An American horse won the Derby stakes at the English Epsom races on Wednesday of i this week. Parliament adjourned to witness I the races. . . ! Dr. Smith undertook to leave Prairie Bend, III., to establish himself further west, j but four women hindered him with suits for j breach of promise. I A colonial pattern cent of ITsr., of unique ; pattern, was started at auction in Baltimore 1 on Saturday at $::, and was sold to a Boston gentleman for loi. In Woodruff county, Arkansas, Bennie I Johnson, aged 7 years, was attacked on the road and killed by vicious dogs. His body i was almost devoured. j Henry Craft drank a quart of whiskey I without stopping in a Chicago saloon last j Friday on a bet, ami before he could turn j around he dropped dead. John Berne, ot wnawa. Lamina, ran a milo in 4 minutes and 2S seconds on last Wednesday. This is said to be the fastest time on record in America. The faniilv of Ocnoral B. F. Butler deny i any knowledge of one Salisbury, alias Canty, j under sentence of death in Colorado, said to i be a nephew of the General, i A fourteen-year old boy named Ran ! dolpb. of Hawlev, Pa., was instantly killed on Friday in the presence of lus mother by the accidental discharge of a gun Ajr p. Martin, of I.ewistOWU Miftlin 1 COUI,it ias the body of a lamb that WHS , h((rn -vU) ,...,, fully-developed heads. I he creature lived for twenty-lour hours. 1 A despatch 'to the Denver Timrs says that one man was killed and eight sei lously j hurt by a collision on the Denver and Uio (irande road, near Granite, Col., on Friday ; last- i The first religious hotly to formally j adopt the revised New Testament was the Congregational Association of Marlboro, ! Mass., hut the vote was afterward reconsid- ored. Mrs. John I.enner, of Heading, who had been in a comatose or trance state for ten ; days, was able to sit up and taik on Satur- , day. The cause of her strange condition is ; a mystery. j There is a husband and wife living in , Terry eounty who have been married a little i over three, years and have five children. In ; the number are two sets of twins. The chil- j dren are all liv'mc. 1 Mr. ;. W. Harrison, of Philadelphia, i has been directed by the Governer of l'ann syivatiia to po to England and assist in pre- paring to remove tue remains of William l'enr. to Philadelphia. -Mrs. Wallace Pool, of Towanda, had ' been washing all Wednesday moi ning of last , week, appatently in good health. At noon j she went into the bouse, took her baby in her ; arms and dropped tlead. ! A girl nt ined Pobir.son was found dead ' in a shaii! v at Kansas City. Mis-our, on Sat- ' unlay. Arthur Miller and HoPert Wiikens have been arretted on suspicion of having been cmcerned in the matter. An Anieiiean bridegroom who married . an I'r.g'i-h lady the other day gave her a set ' of diamonds mounted in iron pyrites and a . flask eontfuning a few drops of water and a ; few grains of earth from America. i Prank Mi Donald and his wife, of Shel byville, Ind., are. respectively Id and 1.1 ; years old. They were married a year ago, ; ami, already tiling of matrimony, have Hep- : aratetl and gone back to their parents. A large number of men have been thrown out of employment by the closing of ; the coal mine at Shatton, heretofore opera- i ed by the Wetniorelaiid Coal Company. There is no probability of its being reopened. The town of Hampden. Mass., has given i the land for a cemetery, dividing it equally between Protestants anil Catholics. This is ! said to be the lir-t time that any public pro- ! peity has ever been given to Catholics in :. New England. An Easton school teacher locked up one , of Per girl pupils on r rulay for refusing to recite her lessons. The girl jumped out of the window and rn away. The distance , she inmped was fully two stories, yet she ; ; sustained no in juries. : In New Yoik, on Sunday morning, two ( ' little children, Freddie Hoodie and his sister 1 Eva, aged respectively : years and 10 ; months, while playing a; a window on the ', third story of their residence, fell to the side- 1 walk and were instantly killed. , The latest accounts from tho steamboat disaster at Eontlon, Ontario, places the loss of ; j life at from '-"Jo to 24o. The streets of the 1 city 011 Thursday presented a cont inuous line ' of funeral processions. In some cases faru i ilies were almost entirely lost. I C P. I.'ogers. of Philadelphia, who went j j to Erie, with his father to take charge ot the ; ' Stearns Mannfactiirttig Company's foundry, I blew out his biains on Wednesday night of , last week. He proposed to a young lady at . six o'cltek, was rejected and went home and ( j kiiietl himself. j j John Enrich, an ex-policeman and ex- . I saloon keeper of Indianapolis, whose wife 1 i had applied for a divorce, shot her and her , j father on Monday morning and then shot : himself. Enrich "has since died. Mrs. En- , ! rich's condition is critical, but she will pr- ; bably recover.. Her father was but slightly ' wounded. A special to the Milwaukee It'jmhlicnn says that a danchter of James West over, of ; I Markeson, Wis., aged sixteen, committed ! suicide because her father would not let her ! marry llarrv Murray, aged eighteen. On , ; learning of t he girl's death lie also committed suicide. Hoth took baking powder and : ' strychnine. Near Cochran, (ia., on Eiiday last, Mrs. j Tiny Garrett ami her daughter quarreled, I ! whereupon the daughter seized a shot-gun ; : and shot off the top of her mother's head. : . She fired again, but without effect. When ! her father came home he whipped the girl f nearly to death. The niofhsr and daughter i were both reported dying, j Jim Haker shot "ami killed Alexander j Osborne and two Hyner brothers, and mor tally wounded another man, name unknown, I at Osborne's Ford. Scott county. Va., on I Thursday. Jim Stapleton killed" Sam Kill i gore at N iekellsvilic the same dy. The dif ; lion It ips are supposed to have grown out of j the municipal election then in progres'. I The Chicago T)nily AVici puts it in this j way : Hlaineand Hrady, Shadowy Mail Kotttc i Contractors, Washington, D. C. All com munications must be addressed to Mr. Hrady, Mr. Elaine being a silent partner. Our mot to is. Star of the Mail route, lSeautifnl Star. Ueware of all smaller concerns. We are the only firm authorized bj the N. G. (National Government.) A block of frame buildings in the west ern part of Alexandria, Va., was burned on Sunday morning. The fire originated in a house where two children were locked in while the parents were absent, and the flames spread so rapidly that one child, an infant, was burned to" death. The other child, aged three years, climbed out of a win dow and was sav.d. James and William Feehley, former resi- dents of llitl.lulnli fnt have l.eei. nr.AstA.l ill Vnt ST, :... xr;..l.' .; i 1111,11111", Jill 11., 111! ttllll 'I 1 lit III ine imiraorm live members of U( Donnelly family, in nwMulph, in January, 180. It is said that James Feehley confesses having ,,. .a . 1 . . 1.1. science would not let him rest. The confes sion involves thirty-five residents of Hid dulph, mostly farmer who formed tne vigu ance committee. While Mr. Lewis Motteen and other members of his .'family were engaged in planting corn on his fn'rm near Worthville, Jefferson eounty, on Friday evenine: last, a thunder storm came up, and Mr. Motteen anil his son-in-law, J. H. Evans, sought shel ter from the rain under a tree in the field. They had scarcely got under the tree when it was struck by ligntning, and both Mot teen and Evans were killed instantly. The oilier persons in the field did not go near the tree, and therefore escaped unhurt. A few days ago, says the Home ((ia.) Courier, we made mention of the fact that a bald eagle had swooped down from Laven der's Mountain and carried off a game cock from the farm of Mr. John Coleman, near Koine. After the eagle had soared some dis tance above with its prey the game bird was distinctly heard to crow. Well, strange to say, three days aftr the rooster had been carried off he returned to Ids home in pretty fair condition, being euly slightly disfigured. His back fea'.heR were as smoothly down as ifhe had never ben snatched baid-heatled by a bald eagle. He is now cock of the walk iu the I latwooda. I Capito o Oak S. E. Cor. Sixth and Market Streets, Philadelphia; THE 1861 20th Spring i88i Twenty years of lessons in how to make and sell the best clothing. We have begun the twenty-first. All that wc have found out about it. we have 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 every cent wc ask for it ; and we guarantee every article. More and Better Materials in More and Better Clothing in Lower and Fairer Trices in Than in any other retail clothing house anvwherc within reach of American money. The secret of our great business is only this: Doing our level best to malce up the right kind of clothing, and having made it right, then counting the cost, and SELLING AT THE RIGHT PRICES. I his wc have been tloing tor hundred of thousands, old and young. This Spring wc Overtop every Past Spring. The spring has been so backward that we have had ample getting-rendy time, and the extraordinary stock of clothing that every man and b'oy 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 best styles, 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 buy them largely; we make up the clothing in our own well-ordered ways, 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 we have, in making up this new spring stoik, so improved the patterns, our ways of making, and minor dctajJs that this spring's exhibition of ready-made clothing might be fairly called READY CUSTOM Being far in advance of any hitherto offered applies alike to Men's and Boys' Clothing. Our Custom Clothing Department improves every year. We make to order from the finest fabrics, and believe we do the best w ork that can be done. 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 to everybody to come and see, and make trial of the iSSl Spring Clothing. Wanamaker & Brown, Oak Hall, S. E. Cor. Sixth and Market Streets, Philadelphia. The Largest Clothing House in America. S. S Wa'ci iikiit. of Angles, Calaveras couuty, C'al., uses engraving tools ki bully ami s ts t p.- iili in.-. It t tn. 1 1 1- ;ti nn ami legs have hecn paraljed inre birth, lie was 000 t'f tlit loiimlfr tif the H"((,('i ,V..;i tnin Ei-lio and st-t tip lis c.wn editt.iitl ami otlier articlos. He lias rt'ri-iith tlrvnted l.ini self chiefly to jol print njj ami fiirTtv'uis. The i'.i.-ttiii apcrs say that .1 iy liotiltl has orqaiiictl h unat express eomj.ary to compete with the Admin and Ar.ifi ic:t c uii-jianit-s, a ot.!,n!iil!itit.ii liisviuE ln-cn ifl' t tcd between the 1'iiilcd Mat.s I'-xjn-ess 'oinpany, iitniiiiif; frtitn New York tt. tl f Wes', uinl the I'nitin Pncifi." O'liipany, whicli nuiiii.po 7cs all Imsiiifs on the several lint's of the I'nion Pacific liailrnad. It will 1"" a contin uous line friini Huston to S;n Ktain ri. The Columbus (la.) fciiq-iirrr-Stin utiles the arrival in that city of Kit-hard 1 a i Ison, a South Carolina rice plantation nfjro. anil the champion pedestrian of Florida. He lias certificates of his remarkable speed, and dis likes for any one to ilnu'.i his ability to 0e.1t a steamboat or the average passencer train of the South. The certificate says lie threw off the hawer of n learner at Savannah, hound for Jacksonville, and walked to the latter city ir. tune to receive t lie rope and make the" steamer f:tst. He claims he hns frequently started from a station the same time a a train and heat it to the next station. The barn Iwlmiginsr to Andrew Lewis, who lives five miles sontli of Plain City. ., on what is called the Tnyloi fat 111, was burn ed on Thursday while the family weie all away but four children. It seems that in the father and mother's absence the children had been playirp in the barn and set tire to some old straw. The Haines spread so rap'dly the childien could not e.-t out nnd weie ail bin li ed to death. The bodies were recovered two hours after the fire, bmncd to a ciisp. The children were aetl from three to twelve years. When fannd they were all in a eile. showing that they oliinii together in their suffering and last moments. A machinist at Kichtnond, Va., named Walker, fell fortv feet over the side of a ship Into a lot of scrap iron, and escaped with a scar on his scui! and a broken nose. He was afterward shot through the bodv and struck by lightning: he lost the ends of his fingers in a saw mid, was bitten by a mad i dtig. and cut with a bow ie knife : be narro.v ly escaped drowning twice, and was attack ed by a mah with an axe : he was once pois, , oned. once b-.nl his hands cantht in some '. shafting and jerked them out. leaving l!eh behind, and only the other tlav he ;ot his ; nose broken a second time and his head 1 woundad by th" breaking of some machinery. ; Isaiah McNeal, sixty years old, living in j Conynghaiii, I.uzeine county, in a fit of niel ; sinchoh took his life, a few -"days since, in a . most singular end jiers'e-tent manner, lie ! first sought to kill himself by pounding his bend with a stone, gashing bis scalp lull ot ' ghastly wounds. Abandoning that plan he ; found a pruning knife aud thrust it into his ; head in the recion (if the temple, prnetrat ; ing the brain ami causing a copious flow of I blood. After stabbing himself in that way several times without accomplishing bis ob , ject he went bleeding all ovr the barn on a ; hunt for a rope, which, when he had found, he fastened about his neck, tied the olher ; end to a projecting hay-rack and from that lie jumped, breaking bis neck. 1 A s'range story comes from Providence, J P. I., where it is said that by an cxtraordin ' ary combination of accidents and misui.der ! standings, Mrs. Frances A. Kermis, of l'bil ; adelphia. a lineal descendant of ltoger Wil liams, died recently, in the very bed, in the : Khode Island Hospital, in which her sister, ' Mrs. Mary McLaln, hat! died a few days he roic. It was a great grief to Mrs. I'ergus that her sister should havedied in the hospital 1 among strancers. and she expressed '.he hope 1 that she might be spared such a fate. While ' in Providence, whither she had gone to al ; tend her sister's funeral, she was stricken 1 with apoplexy on the street, and no one . knowing where her home w as, she was taken j to the hospital antl laid in the bed from w hich I her sistei's remains bail just been carried. That most accomplished and t hartninz 'f I rull"1 Orators, r all ler 1 nomas N . l.iliKP, IIHS, SHS 1 lie . C W York World recovcretl 1 1- i . n .....-.. M.i;i.i;i" ?: ! oltl in the service .f his C hut ch. 1 he l.n: .i. ii. . ,,. t lin PHpcrs Of Jlav fl Contain the report of remarKati'e sermon preaciietl by linn on th - P.. V' , (1:l-m Joseph s l tiurcn. - ' ',a.!:t.1,u1 .n. ,M.e nccasion of tne dedication by the Archbishop of Dublin of an altar erected to the memory of Onon Mcf'ahe. In the couise of his sermon Father Burke said : The prlc'thnoil means a life devoted nnto the very ten ol death, unto the ervii-ei nf Ood and unto the fervlee ol the j.eo.lo, beeauje they belong to nil thfrnr rclatlni to od. And thcre'tore the only ebt! of men on thl earth that are to lace death In every form, no tnnttcr how tt ireentj Itjclf. arc the .riest. Tho soldier hind himelf I to meet it ill the tumoral. lo warfare of the battle field, and if he die, to die amontr all the accom paniments of human it lory. The ittilor epoe liiinell to all the d initer of ttie mldniirht Ktorm : but the priest i hound to raee death, no matter In what form It present ite!f to him. it onlv appear to him in the pervlce of tied and ol Hf people., lie may have to dto tho slow, lingering; d.-ath drunk in by htm In the pe?t houe, in fever "trick on. rholcra-strleken ward of tho hopita! ; he may have to esioe hlmpelf to tho death that nweep over the Inst battle-field, as in the evening of tho elorion day that ! irone he noes out ami eeks the tlyinn that he may reeoneilo them to UiiiI ; he may have to meet them flnni; Into otne dar'4. damp dunsreon In ome barbaric land, death accompanied by the m.wt Inconceivable and nn-henrd-of torture. In order to b Ivc testimony to tho ; lalth which he ha? preached and tiTthcwod who j pent him. Hot In whatever form it oniue. no mat. j ter who may shrink from It. the priept. al the peril I ot ill eternal welfare orrum, must jro forth and j uitet llto t- jU'1'it.ror, and overcome hiui lor Ood. Tin-: American m Iff Hall. Qak Hl twenty years; r.nd have clothed over - MADE CLOTHING. for immediate wear. This A Honnini.i: Omni'.EXfK. The ritts burg .' v.d'-r t.f rriday evening fin iiNh.-s the following horrible details of a fire which oc curicd tin the South Side, that city, the day previous. : A! ut oVl.H-k Tliur- hty alVrtnn.Q ttie wife t.f i'cur l-i'ler. a ;.-!i..eui.i ker re-i.l . i.z i-u Tvvlftti ?t;p. 1. S.i-.th Si.!e. riturui-1 Itctii- f-um t Ii e t'ath-i.!.- ci ;:rrii , a:i-i (ipiiifr in a hurry t' kin.ile trie f:re, p'.ur-.'.i Lpi-. -iiic o;i i n the w-.-.tl. llt-r at'n. et turnt-J .it in ttie uriiMl w;;y, l-.rtt.e flin.l ti i.U-.i.l aii-l rlii1 .ii M.-iii em t-i.-j e-1 in Il tiiip. She Ic-n rus;.i-i 1 1; r 1 1 t!ip rhtie flv-i- where her hnl-an.l wa ut ..rk. and a::h.iiih he trir-d to rp-ira;n heran.; miii.i .'it-r 1 lie n ncrr- .y tlireninu hi' coit nr..nn! lirr.rr.ili.i-ri-:ili;;lii t.at to liie ftreet. t.iii'.wcj liy t I'.-iutic liu.-!.an.i. 'l'hri" men wim were s-t.-in-lin t.n ttie '.poitp linvrin-nt. imp i.f w h--:n wn. Mr. It.-n. wh.-.e j.Imu-in- mill i i.':ir l y . rn- tip.l over t..wTi rj Hip w.mian. wli" r:nt up tiip trcet like a f: ieijipne.1 j.-cr. till Ins llii-:i:rnlili j u-r.-ina .-liru-k?. llic turn l:u.il ly i. t-ncok l:pr. a:nl i-r.n-urintf & tiuckpt i..r water Irol.t-l it nvpr l:er. an.t iti a inea.-ure sut.Jnp-1 t!:e tliiii.f--. A l.inre r.. at was wrapped armin-l l.pr el. 'fly. hut tlirutiuli lia:e it was .o j.iacp.J timt an , pen l.:i'-e w ti li ;tat the tie k in !r int. anj the i pi.i.I.neJ fl;iin.- uul:t vt-nl through thT. or:h -r. winch w:t.- .Jircvtly un.ter the iinnuii i f the urm-r-tnca-c wiiii-tn. A- t-he had I't-pn t-1.111 .lftflv tir.-.I t.Tit I y her PTtprtionf Flie n-a cHcii:nkr l-.r hreatti. I an-! Inl.alp.l the Ratney. Shewn cnrrifl Into the tlry .tl- T-!.iri-t M. K-.it.hT. on Twtiftli ftree:, an.l Ir. l.mnan ami Theirs" f ntnuimied, who tii-i evprythnii i-ii'ite tj r.-iipre her intense 5uf-ii.;-. In the meantime the hnrnTti oil from t?ie ei I l...!o I cil .-Tin whii-h lia.i loi rst while In the wo man' is; nil in hpr ln.n. a wt-11 n- t I.i. j -ippe ..f li'irnil. t-l--i!i.n (ir.ij'i.p.l t.y Mrs. llclpr, hatj ?i"t Uri- In the tl-Apl 1 : i.ir. I.iclrr" who w:i half prazy, r ihptl into t;i" l-in'Minir. an-l hmna hi? hahy hoy i-u the fl-K.r am! parrn-.l ir t.ilt. Mr. lln'n-r w;t t..ken pharirc i.f l-y 5i-vernl neiith-t'nr-'. aii-l reiiioveil to a tirn? tinre tn I'ltr-.-n FT-ept, wher-T hi- wonn.ls wpre i!r-'s.-e..l. While this w::!! heinit ih.ne l.e l.p.-.nne Ti.-l.-ntly insur-.'. anil was with Kip-it il i l!i-nl ty res-trained. Hi hand- and ariTi?- t-p-e l.iirt'-rp.i to the hlllllerJ, :i:i l St he w.ilke-J .ih-ni: p;e--e. tit !leh iruppe-l tri.in hiai en the fidew.-nk. H in beard, hair. an', ti phrtiw nrrr siiinp.l pit. and lie Ftiflpred iner.e n;r.ny. Al! t'i:it pould he dune l"r him wa tlon-p. an.l h" was- then taken in a wai.n to the Wet IVm n..-.itTil. 1 he tii-.-t h.irr-.hle feature of the wh'de afl.iir. ln wvvrr. .i the hn '.ini; td tie- t'!.ii-ki-np-l re-.na n t! l.fr.-.ip l.'.er, a three year-old daughter t.f the n:-.Tt uirrk n an and lri.nmn in w ho-e lK.ne t'lc lire start p.l. '1 he tirpinpn were c.ittu. away urne w indwuik when one ot tiietn in rh" p.nir open the d r of an out l iul.li:iir. l ulltdert what he ii-p.ir-e.l was the h-'dr ol a iK-i:, tint uj on examination lip was In.rriiied at 1 i-.-i.vpr: nir the h"dy t.f ttie gTrl. who had pri't'TiI'l v ran Irom the lioue to thi pi. ipo li.r ati-ty itt ter the exi'lo-mii. Mrs. IrU Icr and her ! inhl-.-T have Fiucc died. i A 'T'OI NTAIN tK Vnl TH" IN Ml-sr IM. ; Fi-lhrr JO'no't Vi'i-nn' rul Spriuo C' n -m 'fd fur ovr a Vmtvry. A ctii resj.olidcnt of the I New Ytirk H'orM. hi itint; from Keno, Chris tian county, Mo., says : i Marly in July last a J'arty of explorers eame upon whnt npt.pTirp.l to tip the remains ot an old I niinitiir elaiin in the hape of an lT-rpul:ir r'de of ' earth and stone neariy hve leei hiith and eitend- ln for twpnty tt-et ali.pj? one ot the nurthem fours ! tit the I i.ark ranae of :ntnintntns. Af'er d.trinir . rway thp etrth and po-rii" for ri.nie dictanpe ihey i.t-rppivd tho enlntnpp to a small pavp whirh had ( been closed nji with earth. 1hi ther plrared away, r mi wpre SMrprl-ed to find wstr ifn-ion I forth In ti laiire s.r.'.ttn fr-itn a "pnnif silUTited I Hhniit rive f.-et tr.-in the ni.iuth oT the pave The ( temperature ol tne water was exeee-linitiy coid. 1 an 1 near the fjinnir was found a stone on whiph ! was put : I ' Vr.in....lj t:..n,i 1TW " "t : The dierTery was t'ioti trt.uM tn the notice nf ; lr. l'nltun. hii ti!1 reiident el HitflilandvUle. ia j Clirist'.aii e mniy, nh.i i known u t.e f-milliTtr ' with Hie ejiilv liiTitury nf tlii? rerrinn. Ir. l'Htt.'ii I relate tlml tiie eiiMnee ot n t.r:iir in the vielnl J ty, en.Iuwed with remnrKnlde oumtive f-rtii'eTtls. ; 1..I- hocn Iiititt a Tr.-iior of t-.i i:ti"n. nr.-t tlmt ' Kntlier l.'i-nn tin' o-.ie i.f tlie heroic Inn.! ! f'reni-h . .Ir.:ts tt ho t-.irr:e.i Ihu ti..--ei t.i t lie i-:i liiti-. ..1 thf "r Wes; in t!.e early ntrt tf tin- eiahtt-entli c rtnrv. H is Taid that Kather ln. re.-f.Ted in- fnriiiatinn t.f the exi.-tree td m "I'tmntTon t.f I Youth." l'H Tite.l in the lo.trk Mountain. Ir -m a ; friendly Indian, ami tnrole it diseoverv theo!"-t I of a j.eiil eT.-.ntion. Tli st-'tie l-miol m-..r j Keno Spring n!iet the euiwul hi fear.-h, hut i a the l-ra'-e ;.rie-l wn-s never hi; i n .Tn nlive. it ' 1- l-ritereil that h-a inu-.'en 1 lythe Indian. , The Mi..;;.' t:iere:iTer, with ehar;i.-teritie .tt-al-I t.tiy, -ii-:..ie loaviiii the rt-jcion onreiniiv eonecai.l l the entrance :o the eavv to- rtUInK i with t arih and Mnne nd eradn-atins; n 11 oikiui ot h.ith ?;.rmu ; and eave. The witer contain nianr of the eon ; st ittieiits ol the water of the thermal iirinir of j ArkansTiF. helni: highly ehari;ed with nl.hnr and Iron. The .princ ha heen much renrte.l to of lute f ir it enralive propert ic in cr ol eatrrh tl ' n!;e.-t.nn. rheuniatiin, irnut and d viieiiia. The i x"wn 01 neno wa founded at the prina, and , - neariv a tnonan(l liihnh.tan . l he '. 'tn.J Memphi. Kailroan w,li -,v,n he Mi.lt - , thi point. p that traveler win he aide to ret a tne prmit tli;eilT hv tail. The oenerv in I Immediatf iieiirhhoihood i h"!-l and itrand. ! there are twenty five intiTcsl.r.ir and hi-auti:ul i mountain cave within a radm ol three mile?. Wouth IIemkmukkixo.. Now that cootl ; tinies are am upon us. before indulging in extravagant show, it is worth remembering , that no one can enjoy the pleasant-st sur roundings if in bad health. There are hun dreds ot miserable people coins; about to-day with disordered stomach, liver and kidneys, or a dry. hacking couch, and on" foot in the grave, when a'ftv. bottle of Parker's (i inner Tonic would do them more gixitl than all the expensive quack medicines they have ever tried. It always makes the blood pure and rich and will build you up at little cost. Bead of it in another column, ami buy it from E. James, Uruggist, Ebensburg, I'. Mit. Fhanks, a druccist nt Marque-, Tex., tbrouch mistake administered morpliine on Saturday last to his three children a-jetl 4, 6 and 8 in lieu of quinine. The youngest is dead, and the others are in a precarious condition. 11k l.( he, I spepsia, Biliiousness, and tjeonetipation cured by Ph. MMTTAl'll'S HEADACHE AND DYM EFSIA l'lbi.S. Tuce " centi. --.'" -lui. J 44 Vf KENDALL'S Y IB i r.i.-M' Dr. U.J. Kkmi.m.i fc. 'n ;t! my ilu'y to ri:ilT 'iu my tfif.K-! profit' wli:-h 1 li t.'' tl I ; . Hti'l fur lurc'l S j i. i ii ' ii re . Mv (".-.;.. a vsliiitt'le f tallmii irtli 4. .-." i; . tiad cpavin. nn.l wa pr-'ti' uik '-.1 f f . Tfternary ur'in l-ty. n I tit.v ttip tiore a- il-tn. f .r." t. A a r1 l my rott'in to ty .1 ! ; "urp. It had a tn ii -al (:-:;,. .. . cnfi! It nri'l Hit- l.iT-c i n fi-ii Bc r , . ot l!ir.turi:li. t In emirii-vf po-- . . .' n UH'-I i.l nolr. nrvl 1 t lc- l"- ' Hti n l'.i yr ! " '.nr., ; . J .'. V E- A . V !:... N. t j Kendall's SPAVIN f r eel nfi Ho ton 1h the Cm Wtl.T :. & C N. MtNV . .1 . H. .1 Ki:nt.: :. , -llr,. j. Th. a rt les fen Ka for lot j lov t-Oli i i.' .11 lv .f r-ii:i.le I ti. a. I ft r tuf t trv K i.f : .'.! it.-, M winch !,:,1 w.n hn llv 1:11 1 cciil.J r.i 1 ' any othir' rt iik-I v l.ii.l.l .1 ' h. lriiu. CUfil inv l...re. tlirte :ir,. 1 r.At 1 t.i ! t - ! W a fi-a. it !; A l -mt t i i- t-'ir -wei-T.ic.l vi rv !:. re:n-,jy ni t'vi'Ti in ftn-1 1 inn -t V-'.i- tu y tirf iy t-nrt-ii. il.l Ii fcl'. t.ilt tiI.m. to mv !'! It f..r tl.r ?!-::!!, i not KCt nr. ,:):-r i k. d-j'.lTir- I'-r :t. V. ii y...ur t...k r ,it i:r cr.-.l:t tlia : 1" H Mi.' J-r .Tf. I:..; i.--ial.t...?. 1 ..-l MU:i i.l r-ont 1! ! . i.'M r. t tai. rS Truly . i ; j. I'M pl.t elm From a PROMINENT PEYSIf W .-li:-.;n.. II I.K. IH1... .T-Jr.t. I It. H .1. KtMisu. k. f.. t-,oT..; I vur a.KTtiM-m.-nt in Tun. r-U ' : j Krri'lnil '. SpTH'.n I'uti'. :u;.J .. .. . ' nnj y I...: lm !.; ! l-. n luf). I liv do: T.v: ! .. . . ir f-iu'litf n TTi'iTiUi. 1 f-i.t t "u t . ex 1 if---. Iiji-I. in ? 1 x t -(... rt-Tiw . an-1 enlnri 1111 i,t. l- j a l:i .'; ". otl:T l.t..r-. aid t-th !...' nr.) a e.,lt. The one !!:! w.i- . '. , ' dred di'Il.irs. ilr-i. i: -::v ' ' ' 11- A, -. Kendall's spavix in H M'.IU-'tt '. f, N -,- jt... lu. Ii. .1. Kn-1. i l i-,. t 1, " fine mar? tlutt 1. 1 ! a It.' 1- - .' l'n.l cvrr tr.ir.i' n:;ir; i: . ... . 11 in vain. ?n.l wa- nl.-- : r . . . r Irieti.l t.f ni:ni- in tl.i- i-;t i--.n i - . .. . mrn..l K n-l -UV Si ..i : . witli crr.n.l re-ul'. r ii t: ' le:iii. 1 th'-icnt 'j.7. i-i-i-t-v. x ... . IHii-trnO '1 11. .1-" !,, ; . . . Wtt-r Ivx k t-r.nti-.I .1: t ..-r-e :.; . 1 h.ic t.ir"-i ..'-.it 1 ii - -r - ;,: 1? r'.:.;c I'-r y.-ii t-. rt: i-.- t,. -. . . . an 1 di. wiiat if - 1 ! c;i .1 1 ir t : ' :.- ... V.. -its truly. ' n : Kendall's Spaviu C; 10:1. inc Bs V tl.VI dns I) vi Bai rait . 1 . . t last 1m i y tilto cob Voll at I Cat: V. -T Km - 1"!. H. .1 K UN in-.ii!ti !!. 1 1 ;r nr I t an ti :ari.fiiT'.r. t yr- -and cau-. 1 11;. .-r . f.'-.ir i.r v.: r wr- W c . w !. St-ti vi v. t 'n-- 1 it !t t ' It p .tit t !ti.;y rtrn: ri'-i i .- J tl p m:.--r 11. Vr.. I ' . ir- 1 :i:u TI 1 I." t fn I ;.e . kn-WTi :t t. l-ftf p-t 1 the loc; Hoi the i it t.. l-o :l;p 1 am B"-!'i.-t.i, i 11.. KHNDALL'S STAVIN i 1 r-ir It:! i an v st t u!; l Tt ny I. or I . rn t a; t pu::- -t.r'l-.-ft". tor Tiinn p' in t !!--i s.-nd c 1 tlilrk sr. ' edy h:- p onr k ii- w j. rr- I "r P Ilr:ur:-; he .-(:.: t pri'icit-'.-r h.l, t. SOLD Cl'l Sui Per hat It :s . r usp-1. r r , .-r ., I'to MIT' wai luf hei X thn; of o help Insi ffin is si srv a 1 ' -. I k. 15. .1 !.: BY ALL DRUCCii' MONDAY, MAY D. IS5 13. & B. l ,t t h l t i : 1 01 Ji.i ted XI01 1S& tc(i itifcapi 1 a t ii " v . c i!f...n K . . . hmt it tmikmkutiti m ttti- i All the choice ew Mj lis!: 1 1 1 1 1 r ir i ira in Prices, i:tra I!:itx.-:i!- n'--i and Hi inch Silk I nd '-' j C hoice Solid W ttl H.iT"ll j nn1 Pearl. Ioiy. .c!l and Sih er "o:iuti.-s. ! Several ciue? n?w SI"M.1KK SILK .ttv. . fny " reii - r 1. in tow lOU! rr.ot kei- ' -w Iit!iino S-;k-. r.w ' Si: k. "T t..Jl... .er'ard. 1'! :i in l'Tf! lii-i-f M'ik.. i $! -'. Mi -t ci.uudeti linei.'i 1 K! t wp.irht 1 r-n. !i S:. k n ed. l..w -pripp I silk-, i.f t hk h .lrp?-l'ii .' a-i-1 w l.T -h art ur the tir-t Tone rhe wrai 1 1. - e Hayi-J . : (7: .-I. .1,1. .- -! "t hi:-P. th1 f r:nc :-t. t:.--n-i -ry sti i and ess in eliar him l'Otl? Trot few thon ana l.ir.i ' ---t .--J New i:a.-k and 4'-.i-.re 1 SurTt1 up. inciudiiir hand-..me l.i;st .,r trtr-i-l Sh.l'lPr pw S;tt n M arvil'pul. Npw Satin d l.yr-r.s. TS'ow S it .11 t ?r. t'en. N i-w li'ipk ln--' t ;...-ls. w P.'Ti -k and ! : S-it:r. "pw H'a.-k ar ! t'. h rpl Sat n H pw K-irr.an S Ik Strij . s. N-w t n..re S; . k . New l'oi:lard SiiK-a. New Tsny '.'lip-.-k Satlutt. V4 it; ' 11 pi.in'.inai: -n o hh: p--'.o-t h--a trtnim'na I'.urhm-. Nuns' V- c A.P.. of wl.ii-h we liiir a p.-n. h-'e I l.arire sl.w-k ot l.a.-e llur '. 1.;.--. 1 an extra ij-ihlTTy 1.-1 I.np-.Ti'p .-.- t--i Ins. Mi.rk mt-.-I r.-h.rs. ih'i:'-ie w-.-Spt-'al V-ariTTiirts in txtra fill r.o I.-t- p H:ir.tir,i et "pp. tv-ipk t.v.. .-r 'tiTinnrr wer 11 ctioicpst Imp and jntrirjsipa'.ly t c liavp e er s--i.l. AU-wo.d Hlapk Hur.tir.k-. IV. v.; f It Fi-i.l line 11. ir 1.. .4. luni' mad son a BOGGS & BUHl nn 3 inn Ti-3 i ni 1 l,- tins Ho dlill lZUrtJlirJliilJiim N. rt I.aee t'urtalns. H lirpss Trlmminas. H !'ihtpit-w ""ks to fratPh. New h ': T la-tjp and ph.-o.-e as. rtmi-r.' Kiurel Sir fr l.n.1 K new des: p ns. Kitt -.a 1::: - 1-in tUe 1 tbe NOTICE TO TAXPATI foth rhi.ji fell i IN nivo-.-TTince ' l lv o? tt.i dav t.i April. 1T-J rith an A-t -sf the .rrm.nwe:t;'l-. :i. ' :. relating Xn th" " brofc tt'he , not i rest i IIB e in "Mint.r.a n.-jritv. n..;:c.- 1 e taxpayer rei-Hre in the tp-'r - th:tt t ;e -flinty lreiircr, u: c ti ' ec-.n-l sect i.-n of a-d a-t. V. : ' of holdiriiri the town!:'.p ar t t- r tie dy- hert.':i:afTer named. : '-' -CPivini; the STATE. COVNTY and Tvi Aeed for Hie Vi'' WHS 1"! an c ati "M-t.-Viy. .lime l:'-'h Mun- - 1 '1 'led ;y. .turi 14 h 1.- T C r 1-W,--.j r..-d-iv. J ut.e 1 Il ' '-i ' : Th:'-..ln sine ir;'. .!"-- i Vridit v, i; pc 1":K fici-t-.'-i Sutiird.tv. June lsth 'i.e-r si-Montl-iy'. Jnn- - -h-I 1-wr. 1V,at tstav; Kent - Mvc Elpi ' AltrJ pictn in li Old I: 1 in -la . J -llic L'' 'I h U..,It:i" i.i .". June --!- W I te T.'T! Th i:r--.l i v, .1 ane J - 1 ' ' -Vriftv. :ure '-r Samr'l.v, .III!" J -Mi a'Tti-lisr M-n.'-iv". -lime -j-th ":it ..i!!..;in 'In. lay. Jane Js-1, far""!! lVw Welne lav. .1 uil '- - a 1 I u r- Jav, J une ? '-t !) IU Wiict T It: t iv. Ju'y 1' .' .". -k'n Tue lav. Julv ah faliih! :a V e.lDtF lay. July ih Ll'eiihu-?: ' Thur-!av. Julv Tth Monday." July ITh Tnnm ',,; h - '1 iic-l:.y. Jti'.y ltli t "-a'.'-TriTi W edne'dav. Julv inh siirr n. " 1 ' ; Thur'dav. Julv i-lth a-l.:i.s- c ' If r.dav. .1 ulv l"f.'h IV,..i:e Salurdar. Julv l'-l-Wi'mni ! " M.-indav", July" 1- Sutpn:e-lo:i ' T.iedi'v. Ju'.v 19th-t Wednei.lav. ti!v a":b l-t V ' n ' Thui!iv,'.ln'v .! Ft "W'iO Jri.lav. .bi'v -.Cl-Wo-.'.va e Saturdm . J i!v ..d-St.Ti cre-V 1 , M.mu1". Julv -'''' h faudTia 1 ' ' .-ji; litr erirr: tu'v af4.;-.! ; iw'.ki ' Mur.". ere i irtj v The OOt:i- V wer-x ' tt-, - 5ad 1 ;he w -i . . coii - ton to -h the 1 lie. lav. J u-.v J-th A ednt- lay. July -""ih 1. -n Thursday. Juiv .th Mololav, AuK'l't 7-t 1 r n.ivi , .' u - -v" - -r- hc.1hv. AuiTH't 2d "oPe! tti a --. - ednedav. Aut. 3-1 l'W t. lesi: '1 1 .nc . Kun, ; anr o.i", bat i reic! A ' bo. - Ln w. ki!" ' lot- ' ' le Tlinm.lav. Atiaust 4:h K h'.a:-! t rid.iv. Autn-1 6th A dam . Mondav. Ausu-t vh I'rt-pe-! : Ine-da'v. Aut':t Ktti i pper -f , Wcdneilav. Auk. l 'th 1 . reitoiu-" Thursday. Ans 11th i ridav. AuEUT-t l-Jth John'. -. ;, ; Saturday, Aui lt 1 ''til j" 'I Monday. Aujiu't 1Mb lueda'v. Aunnrt l-b " tt Wednesday. Aus. i:h '" j . ThurJay, Aiij.l lfta And. in accordance with the - , a-t. ..n all taxe paid to the in tlieUt tlav td Sei'ein!ier. tl-e- c. 01 i er riml., while 5 'J''. "':,.'. uip-id tajr. and placed iu tn- r u' iin Tr -uri r's OHM::: L'.'tu-' MO a niiBaana 1 m-VT tlni-. 1... '
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