:aml)m Jwcmaiu EBENSBURC. PA., FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1881. Dean Stanley, a famous divine, died in Loudon, on Monday last, aged about CO years. if will be three weeks to-morrow since the attempt was made on the life of the President, and the latest bulletins from the White House justify a reason able assurance of his recovery. The at tend inc physicians still refuse to say that he is out of danger, or that he is convalescent, but. their language is "that he progresses steadily toward con valescence," and if they can repeat that announcement at intervals during the next ten days his recovery may be re garded as f ally assured. The JohnstowD Tribune of Friday Kst, in mentioning the fact that Judge Mack had published iu the Xorth Amer-i-an Btvkv; for the present month a re ply to au article by Bob Ingersoll in last mon"i"s Jlevietc, takes occasion to anui ii.late the Judge by speaking of hiui in following chaste and elegant style: "The Christian religion will not be benefited by a defense from such an old beast as FJ'ack." There is no wii and certainly no wiaJom in this,, and it can only be compared to a "mousing owl" hawking at an imperial eagle. Conklino visited Washington at the close of last week and caused it to be au- j nounced in one of the daily papers that j Le didn't care anything now for politics, an 1 that his business there was to look af:er the interests of Senator Joues, of Nevada, iu the Hudson River Tunnel Company, over which litigation is anti cipated. From what was transpiring in thf ioiut convention of the Xew York Legislature, just about that time in re ference to the elections of successors in tire Senate to Conkling and Piatt, how very natural it was for the imperious C .'nkliug t care nothing then, or at Last to seem to care nothing, "for poli- The joint convention of the New York Legislature on Saturday last elect ed Varner Miller as Piatt's successor in the U. S. Senate. This result was brought about by seven or eight Conk ling men voting for him. At the bal loting on Monday and Tuesday for Coukling's successor, Lapliam, the cau cus nominee, failed of an election, Conk ling's adherents persistently refusing to dsert him. "WbaJ. the end will be as to ' a successor to Conkling no man can tell. The only tiling about it that is certain i that Conkling can never be re-elected. Brains seem to be at as heavy a dis count in the Empire State as they are iu the Keystone, but even the election of John I. Mitchell from this State is re sectable when compared to that of Warner Miller. We regret that owing to its length v.e must forego the publication of Judge Black's defence of the Christian reli gion in the current number of the Xorth American l'im-, in reply to the assaults made upon it by Robert G. Ingtrsoll, the j notorious intidel. It i a rich intellec tual treat, marked by all the force and power,as well as pecul iarities of style, of every production of Judge Black's vig orous j-en ; and when he gets through villi ''Royal Bob" there is nothing of aim left worth mentioning. Ingersoll'a i 'tacks on revealed religion wonderfully ibo ind in ribald jests and outlandish I !.;!!ieruy, so peculiarly original, that they amuse and entertain a certain class cf people, but never convince a man of orliuary common sense. When men Jike Bolingbroke, Hume, Gibbon, and other well known able writers of the in fidel sc'ioo!, utterly failed in accomplish-ij,- jist what Bob Injrersoll is now at- ten pting to accomplish, it is not at all !.".e!y that ha will succeed in the work he has undertaken. ActoiiMNO to the Washington cor respondent of the Xew York Hun, there lias been another unpleasantness among he doctors of the White House. Thi3 time the quarrel, if it may be ho called, is littweer. the two hostile schools of medicine, the allopathic and the hoimr pathic. The four physicians who are iu charge of the I'resideut's case are allo fwth3 of tlie strictest sect. (Jen. Gar ilcld is a believer iu that system, while ins wife is a pronounced homapathist. Mis, IMoon, her physician, as well as t r. it of her children, is a homoepathist, and so is Dr. Boyuton, Mrs. Gaifield's cousin, who is one of the consulting phy sicians in the case. Mrs. Edison and Ir. Hoynton, as is alleged, have all aloug had some very distinct theories of their own in reference to the treatnientof tlie case, while J)r. Bliss and his three col leagues hold entire!' antagonistic views. Thus far Mrs. Edson and Dr. Boyntou .s physicians of the President, appear to l-e : tirely ornamental, as their names are not signed to the daily bulletins is-.-ued frori the White House by Dr. Bliss and his colleagues, The dispute, how ever, will hardly amount to anything .serious. 'Wing's Brewers Hand Book" for au official authority with brewers, as we learn from the New York World, fully sets forth the magnitude aud rapid increase of lager beer manufacture iu this country for tlie year endiug May 1, 1S81, as compared with the four previous years. Trom the "Hand Book" it ap pears that the total sales in the United States for the year ending May 1, 1831, amounted to 14,12o,45 Barrels, showing an increase as compared to 1-S80, when the total sales amounted to 12.800,900 barrels, of 1,324,WJ barrels. The larg est sales by states during the year end ing May 1, lSl, were as follows : New York, 4, -12 barrels; Tenusylvania, l,3CiU.-,l barrels; Ohio, 1,291,203 bar rels ; Wisconsin, 927,297 barrels : Illi nois, 870,275 banels ; Missoi i, 803,427 barrels, and Massachusetts, the home of tliat whining statesman, GeorgeF.lIoar, over the imaginary wrongs of Southern i.-qrjrt, 739,533 barrels. No beer at all vas brewed in Maine, Vermont, Florida, Mississippi or Arkansas, and the only brewery in tho United -States which brewed as much as 3.V),g90 barrels was one in Milwaukee. If Vice President Chester A. Arthur read the leading journals of the country, Republican, Democratic and Indepen dent, during the week immediately suc ceeding the second da ot the present month, when Guiteau shot President Garfield, as we assume that he did read them, Le learned without much difficulty the tone and temper of public opinion in view of the probable, if not certain, contingency that under the provision in the constitution he would be required to take the oath and discharge the duties of Chief Magistrate of the Republic. This public opinion has been greatly modified owing to the condition of Tre dent Garfield having daily improved, rendering the prospect of his ultimate recovery more and more hopeful, but the fact nevertheless remains that dur- iug the few days of doubt and hope re ferred to, the country regarded a fatal j termination of the President's wound j with a feeling of tremor not unmixed j withdespair. This feeling did not spring ; from any fear on the part of the people j that any imminent danger to the coun- try mu3C necessarily result from a peace ful assumption by the Vice President of ihe Presidential office an ordeal thro' which the country has safely passed on three different occasions but it origi nated in and found distinct utterance because of a want of personal confidence in Mr. Arthur himself. And this, too, not because he is au exceptionally bad op dangerous man as public men are now estimated, but simply because he has been conspicuously identified with a large and influential wing of the Repub lican party whose methods of adminis tering the government are odious to the American people. In other words, he represents Grantistn and all that the term implies, and the country, after eight years experience of that kind of administrative rule, has not the most re mote idea of ever trying it a second time, It is true that Grant himself, as was to have been expected, vouched for the safety ot the country in the event of j Mr. Arthur becoming President, but Grant's opinion of the public men of the country never commanded much respect, and his endorsement of Arthur failed to remove the doubts and misgivings of the people, who well remembered how swift Grant had been in indorsing Belknap, Babcock and (Teorce IL Williams, as I well as other public plunderers who dwelt almost within the shadow of the White House. Xo man can tell what weighty and startling events, big with the destinies of the country, a day or an hour may bring forth; and it may be that in the inscrutable ways of Provi dence the office of President may yet devolve upon Mr. Arthur. If that con tingency should happen, it is to be hoped tlr.it the lesson he lias learned during the last few weeks will not be soon or lightly forzotten. Willjam I). Spahks, a contractor of Wilmington, Delaware, a leading Re publican of that city, and dur:ng the re bellion a deputy Provost Marshall, and entice 1 ! eiuiceil i another man named Chandler, an old negro named Tqwnsend into ; Chandler's coal-yard on Friday last, j made him drunk, stripped him naked, and whitewashed him with lime while j ho was tied to a post, a portion of the j mixture severely injuring ins eves , . , iii,. I Sparks was arrested and held in o-aK) bail. Chandler escaped arrest by leav ing the city. The only motive assigned for this brutal and cowardly act is that the old darkey is an active Democrat. Suppose this outrage had been commit ted in a Southern State that the negro was a Republican and his assailants Democrats the entire Republican press in the Xorth would have sent up one long continued howl of horror and indig nation the people of the whole State would have been held responsible and j less township, Aiieeheny county, near Pitts denounced as worse than the savacres of ,,,,(,anie unruly. Her father. William the South Facitic islands. A doubtful State election at the Xorth lias more than once been carried by the Republi can party by inventing just such an out rage as this one at Wilmington as hav ing taken place in a Southern State. An unscrupulous demagogue like John Sheiman with this Wilmington affair lo cated in Mississippi for his text on the stump, could possibly save Foster, the Republican candidate for Governor in Ohio, from defeat at the Xovemher elec tion. In the Delaware ca?e, however, Townsend, the old negro, was a Demo crat, aud in the estimation of Republi can editors didn't receive any rougher treatment than a "Democratic nigger" deserves. The Democratic State convention of Ohio met at Columbus last week and on the second ballot nominated John W. Bookwalter, of Snriugfield, for Govern or. The nominee conducts a large man- ufacturing business which gives employ, ment to many hundreds of hands, and it is claimed by tlie Democrats that he will be a tower of strength with the workingmen of the State. It is said that during the panic and depression of business in 1873, while other employers were cutting dowu tlie wages of their men, Mr. Bookwalter took the ground that at such a time the man who work ed should lie better paid for his labor, arid that instead of reducing wages he increased them. This incident in his mode of doing business isknowc in every manufacturing establishment ia the State, and cannot fail to make him a very strong candidate with the labor ing class. Some of the Republican pa pers in this State, the Johnstown Tri bune among them, knowing his strength and fearing the result, are already charge fng him with having "bought his nom ination". This charge conies from the papers of a party that notoriously carried the Presidential election last year by the corrupt use of money and has for years compelled its horde of office-holders to coutribute to a fund for the avowed pur pose of buying the election of its candi dates with cash. The Democracy of Ohio, although as a general rule accus tomed to defeat, never surrender, and they promise to'make the campaign this year especially active and agressive In au interview in New York, on Sat urday last. Congressman Joseph J- rgen- sen, Republican, wno represents the Petersburg (Virginia) district and re - sides in the same town with Mahone, re- t . 1 1 rr-i a. i i m ruarKeu : 1 ueie is net an uoncBt nair t in Mahone s head." NEWS AND OTHER XOTIXGS. A dead alligator, seven feet lone wa found in the AlleRhenj river, cearFittsburg, on Friday. Father Buhlman, of Lebanon, has se verely denounced speculative insurance from his pulpit. The people of Arkansas fasted and prayed on Thursday last for the better health of the President The majority of tlie eirls married ia Wairen county, Kv., last year were mere children, their ages "ranging from 13 to 18. A chip which flew from an iron casting In anaflinjr car shop struck Amos Seitzing er on Saturday and severed one of his ears. The wifeand daughterof George Thomas were drowned while out sailing tn the har oor of Plymouth, Mass., on Sunday evening. John Thomas, of Huirunelstnwn, Dau phin county, died on Saturday of lock-jaw, caused by injuries self inflicted with a toy pistol. A colored man named Andrews is in jail at Harrishurg, charged with murdering his wife and burning his residence, to conceal the crime. Two daughters of George Fielding, the oldest 15 years of ag, were drowned on the north shore of Hants county, Nova Scotia on Saturday, If President Garfield rfcorers the Han cork and English and Garfield and Arthur battalions of Xewbnryport, Mass., will unite in a torchlight parade. Four more little Baltimore boys who owned and manipulated tov pistols have i climbed the golden stair, making 17 as far as heard from in that single city, j James Atkinson has been arrested in I Penobscot county, Wis., for murdering his i wife and children and throwing their bodies ; into the Mississippi on the 4th. Kichard Weddis, a farmer, of Walpole county, Ont,, while riding on a reaper cut ting grain on Saturday morning,-was struek by lightning and instantly killed. Congressman Speer and Eleanor IV Mor gan, daughter of Dr. Morgan, were married Thursday evening bv Father Gull, at St. Dominic's church, Washington, D C. "Speculative life insurance" is dubbed by critical paragraphers in neighboring States as "a Pennsylvania industry." This is no compliment, but we can't resent it as a slur. A life and deith struggle took place be tween L. Palmiter, of McKoan county, and a huge catamount, rerentlv, wliifh proved fatal to both. Palmiter was watching a deer lick. A man in Hyde Park has three wives living in the town. lie is estranged from one of them, but lives amicably with the oth er two and nobody seems to think anything I oi u. A Philadelphia man, being slapped in j the face by his wife, turned white with rage, stood still for a moment nsthougl) irresolute, J and then, procuring a gun fronvan adjoiuing t room, committed suicide. There are now two hundred persons im prisoned in Ireland under the coercion act, including one member of parliament, one priest, one magistrate, several town council lors and many poor law guardians. The Jlev. John lironk and Miss Janie K. Anderson, whije walk on the railroad near Fishkill, X. Y., Saturday evening, were struek by a train.' The young woman was killed and Mr. Brook nadiy injured. A Philadelphia guardian charged $"0 for adrmnisteting an estate of $4i:. The ward was a girl and he wanted her to pay jinn me niiterence out of Iwr own earnings. The court cut down his bill to $sr,. After two years of hard labor the fire in the Stanton shaft at Wilkesbarre has been subdued. The work of repairing the im mense destruction caused bv water and flames is now being vigorously pushed for ward. ' The Papal bulls for the consecration of Dr. MeMullen, of Chicle, as liishop of the new diocese of Divenport, Iowa, have arriv ed, and the ceremony will take place in the cathedral at Chicago, on Monday, the 25th instant The Catholic paronase at Paxton Falls, Quebec, was burned bn Saturday night, and the resident priest, Father Lame, was burn ed to death. His nephew, who was in the house with him, escaped by jumping out of the window of his roam. Mrs. Stewart C. Gardner, who was James A. Garfield's nursp at the time of his birth, died near Dowagiac, Mich., on the day and at about the hour of the attempted assassination of the President. She was eightv-seven years old. The rare phenomena of an inverted rainbow has been observed in a Prussian town. The ends of a semi-circle, the centre of which was the sun, rose and moved west ward with the latter for some thirty minutes ; when the appearance vanished. John W. Hook waiter. Democratic nomi nee forGovernor of Ohio, is a millionaire who has been for manviears a contributor to mechanical journals "and a collector of works of art. JHt. js a childless widower and is about fnrtv -five years old The Philadelphia Democrats have nomi nated J. H. Mitchell (the present Tiepubll can incumbent) for Judge of the Court of Common Pleas : Mns Veale for Kccorder of Deeds, and .1. C. McManemin and David Haggeity for City Commissioner. The Harrishurg Patriot is inclined to think that the harm inflicted upon the coun try by Guiteau's bullet docs not stop with the President'swinind. It shows itr'f in the election of a wooden-headed wood-nl I monopolist to the I'nited States Senate from i c-...- . ' i the creat State of New Yoik. On Mondav afternoon Ella Stevpnson, nn ins;ne trirl. living at her home in Mcfnnd. tevenson, need i.". and a sister attemnted to pacify her, when she kicked her father in the stomach, killing him instantly. After four niarriaces of a conventional sort, and after arriving at the are of 80, a Kentuekian eloped at niuht on hor-sebaek with tlie youthful belle of Hnckner, hastened romantically to a clergyman twenty miles away, was chafed by tlie angry father, and is now enjoying a honeymoon tour. A hint to Mr. Cyrus W. Field from th TlarrisbiirglfVrrriot : There is a widow of an assassinated President who liveson a pension barely sufficient to provide her a home and the necessities ot life. She has no political influence, but still she is the widow of an ex President. Her name is Mrs. Abraham Lin coln. Mrs. Eliza Garfield, mother of President Garfield, bad a severe attack of cholera morbus on Friday, from which she partially recovered, but next dav was prostrated by irwr. m account oi extreme acre eightv-one. her condition is rer, MIM itflllir critical and fears are entertained for her re covery. In the old Rodgers burying-ground. In this county, says the Chatham (X. C) Record, an oak tree has grown on a grave in which a person was buried seventy -five years ago and the tree is now five feet in di ameter. This growth seems inctedible and yet is vouched for by old persons who know whereof they speak. A shower of toads is renorted to have i fallen a few days ago near Delaware City, rdou iweive nines rrom v umington. The -eptiles appeared after a violent storm. They varied from half an inch to an inch in length and were very numerous. The farm ers of the vicinity are both puzzled and an noyed over the phenomenon. Of every five men in this country, one cannot read the ballot which he deposits in the box on election day. Whereupon the Philadelphia Record is moved to suggest the abolition of the ballot and the substitution of me. ntaroc system, oy which each man l calls out distinctly the name of the candi date, for whom he wishes to vote. The Council of Catholic Knights of America closed its session at Cincinnati on Saturday after electing the following offi cers : President. W. J. O'Xeil, Cincinnnati ; Spiritual Director, Bishop Spalding, Peoria ; V ice-President, W. S. Russell, Louisville ; Treasurer, J L. Heckma, Grafton, W.Va. ; Secretary, Newton D. Rodgers. Louisville. Miss Libbie Dimruick, of Roxbury, X. Y., a 16-year-old lass, who disappeared on the Fourth, has o1me walking home with a young man whom she found on the street, fancied and married. Meantime Miss Mau rice Brennan. aged 24,'of Port Jervis, N. Y., is ms'steriously missing, and anxious rela tives would be glad to get her back with or without a husband. A singular accident happened to a girl in Venango county a few days ago. She was gathering cherries, anl the limb on which she as standing broke. She fell about five feet, when her head caught in the forks of a limb, leaving her body dangling in the air thirty feet from the ground. She retained consciousness, and supported herself by the hand until she was rescued. The anti-clerical disturbances continue at Rome. The men imprisoned for having taken part in the attack upon the procession at the removal of the remains of Pius IX. will be presented with gold medals. One paper expresses regret that "the carcass was not flung into the Tiber," and says that clubs are being'formed to promote the per petual expulsion of the Papacy from Rome. Mississippi county, Mo., is the great wa termelon region of th world. Over 4.0o0 acres are this year devoted to watermelons a ne, and .the yield is alKiut a car load an . sL ".Z 'rT aM.W dianapolls. Contracts have been made with many rarms at 110 a car. The general prices run from SbO to ?100 a car during the season. It is reported in Washington that the wife of an ex-army officer, said to be the well known Captain II. W. Howgate, of Arctic exploration fame, will institute suit for di vorce this week, having discovered a seper ate establishment belonging to his mistress . and maintained bv him. The wife had been kept on short 'allowance. Her behavior in the home of the mistwss is described as half insane. She wrought havoc everywhere. Tli f'liii-airo Intrr-Ocean tdls a singular story of a man who became a beggar by fall ing asleep in the street with his hat in his hand. On awakening he found that it con tained $l in small coins. As he was sick and destitute lie concluded that begging was a good business-, and went into itsystematical Ur in ai ver be received 8:10.000, and with that he dropped the business, specula- ; ted in Western lands, and is now a million- ; aire -Two Italians closed their candy store at j irannah. Ga.. paid the rent three months i Savannah. in advance, tola ine owner mm. ui-y wnr going to Italy to get a stock of goods, and cautioned him to let nobodv enter the prem ises until thev returned. They had murder ed a peddler, taken his ?2,ooo, and hidden his body In the store ; but their ingenious way of "covering their flight prevented the discovery until the three months had passed and gone. . During the progress of John Pobmsow s show atUniontown, Favettejeonntv, Michael Crow, an old farmer, of Springfield town ship, was swindled out of 51. ISO on the show ground, by a well-dressed, affable man, who induced him to procure that amount of mon ey to go into a big speculation with him, and when he came with it the confederates natehed it out of his hands and covered l their retreat with a pistol Michael is a hicK old Crow. An unruly elephant connected with John Pobinson's circus, which has already killed five keepers, created a sensation in Butler a few davs ago bv leaving the street parade and making -an independent proces sion of his own up a back street. He was thrown down and beaten until subdued, but the impression crtated on the minds of the citizens by his acts of insubordination was sufficient to secure him plenty of room dur ing his stav in fown. A Winona (Minn.) special says: Paul Yeld. a Swiss emigrant, who lately bought a farm in Eagle CreekYalley, lecame insane through the failure of his crops and home sickness. On Sunday morning he was found dead in the front room of the house, his wife ami two children dead in the next room. three children dead in bed up stairs, and the two oldest boys in the nay lott, won nded. all shot in 'the head. lllOl'tally One boy ' may recover. A revolver was round in tne house. About twenty years ago little Jimmy McGiiinis lived "with his brother-in-law, Henry -Gordon, of the Hoard of works, De troit, and ran awav with James A. Bailey, a famous circus man, who adopted him. ne took Bailev's name, and. at bis death, suc ceeded to itis business. On Monday last he sought out his relatives, appeared at the show with them, and entertained them royally in the evening. But small hoys need not imagine that adopting managers grow on every circus. A St. Petersburg dispatch of the l.'th says that the Kieff newspaper, the Ixibonr, publishes a telegram from Poutivl, in the Province of Koorak, which states that nine teen men anil girls were shut in a barn by the steward of the property called the "Bol gin" fur refusing to work and that all were burned to death by a village mob settir.g fire to the building. One person, who was ar rested, confessed to his share of the crime. The 'solos, reproducing the news of the out rage, characterizes it as incredible The elopement of the prettvdmgMerof ex-Governor Hubbard, of Connecticut, with her father's coachman, is now followed by the elopement of the prettv daughter of Ferdinand Berthond, a wealthy manufac turer of Milt'ord. with an employee of her father. In this case the young people of the runaway match are very young, she but 1" and he four years older ; hut it is to be hoped they know their own minds jnd are able to look far into the future. Elopements, as a rule, are not followed by lives of conjugal happiness. The MePijerson (Kansas') Frwnnu savs that a father-in-law of N". T. Olson, (wonder how many he has,) aged seventy years, bad his left ear cut entirely off by a plow-shear on Tuesday evening. He was unhitching a mule team from a plow and had them near ly lixise when the mules started, and in his endeavor to check them be was thrown to the ground and the plow ran over him, cut ting off his ear and making an ugly scalp wound on the back ot his head. He was at tended by Dr. TT-rvey, who has the ear pre served in alcohol. The trombone choir of the Moravian church at Bethlehem received a new set of instruments a few days ago to replace the old horns, which were made in Germany over sixty years ago. A singular fact in connection withthecxchar.ee of instruments, is that the last time the old ones were ued was in the announcement of the death of a child of Mr. Bnrhek, whilejthe first time that the new ones were blown in public was in announcing the death of another child of the same family, no other death in the congrega tion having intervened. The proposed gift to Mrs. Garfield has called out the creditable fact. that, there is now living in the city of Ne- York a former Tnited States Senator who durincr his term " V""-""'-" rennerert important, and cnHrely it-s;iiiiiini "ervices to some of his constitu ents, who thereupon, as a mark of their an preciation. ottered a valuable gift, tn bis wife. Hut the offer was declined with the remark that a Senator's wife ought not to wear diamonds which her husliand con hi not afford to buy her. Th same, we may add, is equally true of nn other man's wife. There is a Mormon church in Scranton. It is not large, but makes np in firmness what it lacks in magnitude. The church was planted twenty vears ago by a mission ary from Wales. It has as complete an or ganization as the church at Salt. Lake city, Esdras Howell having from its beginning been president. There are but twelve resi dent members, and for fear of awakening opposition no public meetings are held. The meetings are all private and are held at thn houses of the members. The Mormons of Scranton do not practice polygamy, hut send their converts as speedily as" possible to Utah. It has been learned that Willie Cain, of Rockport, Maine, aged ten years, who was reported missing a few tfavs ago, was taken out in a punt on the lily pond bv Ralph H. Richards, aged fourteen, and Edward T Gross, aged eleven, and drowned because he i . ... . """J "ol ?ive tnem twenty-live cents which they knew he possessed. The boys say that ne nan given up in cents and wanted to be put on shore, when one of them it is im possible to tell which pushed him over board. They say that he came up twie and then sank. The body has not been recover ed. The boys are bard characters and have both been previously arrested for theft. The are in custody. The editor of the Philadelphia Bulletin is in good position to know the truth of his charge that the building which has fust been let out- by the trustees of the Norristown hospital, at a cost of ?72,57:', exclusive of heating, plumbing and drainagc,""was an es sential part of the original specifications and contract of this hospital which was turned over to the State with the ostentatious de claration that the building was completed and with the return of a small balance to the treasury in a way that appeared to be de- r.imed to trive the imnres.ior, tv, J V, - " signed to give the impression that the com. mission had actually done its work inside of the State appropriation." This is a scandal which wants legislative investigation. Miss Nannie Siffard, of this city, says a Frederick (Md. ) correspondent of the Balti more fivn, was married at her residence here this morning to Mr. Aubiay Pearre, of the firm of Pearre Bros. & Co., Hanover street, Baltimore. By her marriage Miss Siffard, now Mrs. Pearre, is obliged to surrender, in accordance with the provisions of the will of the Hate John Loats, her brother-in-law, an estate estimated to be worth lietween f jO.ooo and 75,000. The property, in whieh she was given a life estate, or until the marritd, con sists in part of one of the most elegant pri vate residences in the city and a fine farm located on the immediate southern suburbs of the town. It will now pass into the hands of a board of trustees, for the es tablishment of an "Orphan Home" for girls. It is generally understood that the institu tion will be controlled in the interest of the Lutheran Church. Stilt. Another Com et. Prof. Swift, Di-reet-orof the Warner Olervatory, Rochester, N. Y., has just verified the discovery of an other comet, in the Constellation of Auriga, made July I4tli, by Prof. J. M. Schaeberle, of Ann Arber, Mich. This new comet is ap parently coming directly toward the earth, and, for a telescopic comet, is very bright ; indeed, it can readily be seen with a good opera glass. It is quite remarkable that it should ite in just the spot whete the present large comet was first seen by the naked eye in this latitude, and it shows that the two bodies must have crossed each other's paths. This makes the fourth comet discovered within ten weeks, a circumstance heretofore unknown in history. Prof. Schaeberle has duly filed his application for the Warner prize of $200, and as yet he is the only claim ant. Petiitna cured my daughter's sore eyes after occulists bad failed. C. F. SCHREAD R, Allegheny City, Fa. A FriuTul Western Cyclone. DEVASTATION OF rnorEHTT AND LOSS OF LIFE MARK ITS PATH. New f i.m, Minn., Jnlv 17. Shortly be fore 5 o'clock on Friday afternoon, a cyclone of the most terrific violence stni-k t his town, df-"'olishing over one hnndred buildings, and killing or wounding upwards of thirty per sons. Though other towns In the vicinity were visited bv the storm to a greater or less degree of violence, the full force of the cy clone vented itself here. Aceordine to the evidence of eye-witnesses, two tornadoes met right over this place and the work of destruc tion was accomplished in less than fifteen minntps. The course of the cvclone could M distinctly discerned and it seemed to le ninvi, senarate volnmes from the north .nnih At a .in o'clock black clouds hered with great, rapidity. The thunder ai)(1 ijet,tning wete terrific. The wind blew a hnrrieane, wniie tne rain oescenoea in blinding sheets. There was a moment's lull, and then a cyclone struck the town, almost destroyincr it, and then disappeared ns sud denly as it came. Its effects was almost in describable. Some houses were struck by lightning, others were lifted np bodily by the violence of the wind, and others were demol ished by flvine debris from other buildings. Scores of dwellings and stores were nearly oVstroved. Verv few escaped uninjured. Manv had the roofs blown off, or were so bad ly unjointed bv the wind that they will have to be pulled down and rebuilt. The storm was most, destructive in the north end of the citv : whole blocks of frame buildings were swent away. Hardly a barn or stable es Par,crt'and it is estimated that over one bun- dred horses and cattle have been destroyed. J. (I. Randolph, mnvnr of the Citv, estimates the total loss at ?,V,(Kio, and the lowest esti mate is $.'."..000. Aside from the loss of life the worst feature of the calamity is that none of the property destroyed is insured against I accidents of this kind. Many have lost their j all. The citizens have, however, without ex j ception met the disaster bravely, and even cheerfully, and are taking prompt, and de j cisive steps to repair the damage, though all argue that next to the Indian massacre it was j the most diastrous blow New Clm has ever j received. The streets are filled with the de ; bn's of shattered buildings. The heaviest in 1 dividual loss falls on .1. Hoenstein, who had nt completed a brick brewery at a cost of $:so,onn. The building was entirely destroy ed No insurance. The eve-witnesses sny that the scene during and Immediately after lie ctnrni wnc fonrfnl tnnntpmnlntp and Ue- vftn.l ilfcerivtHen Peonle who were out. on ctreef? were litemllv lilnwn nwav Anil ! numbers were wounded by flving debris. As the victims of this sad catastrophe are j scattered over a comparatively large area it 1 is impossible to get an exact list, of the killed and wounded. esnee'niHv as the crcWme vis- I :....i ii- . . ,' . . , j ,1,., i The killed so far as known nnmher fourteen and wounded twen'y-fonr, some of whom are probably fatally injured. There are doubt less manv others who have been overlooked in the general confusion. The cyclone de- j vastated a stretch of country one "mile wide j and forty miles long and passed through the j town ot West Newton. Severance, Palmyra, j Wilmington and Curio. Gentb-men from Cario say tlie storm was one of the most dis astrous ever known m Kenville county ann that a large number of people have been kill ed and many injured. Gt'lTEAu's Case. Hon. Joseph E. Brown, of Georgia, in conversation with Postmaster General James Monday afternoon, related an incident which may have an important : bearing in determining the rpiestinn of mo- tive in Guiteau's crime Me said that bav- ing occasion to visit the State Department May 17, in eonipanr with a friend, they met : two men coining out, one of whom be subse- qnentlv identified from his photograph to be Guiteau. lie seemed to be passionately excited, and a- they passed exclaimed to his companion, "They have excluded me from the White House, but you will see that I'll get even with tboe fellows yet." The Speaker's man ner and language a'fracted Mr. TJrown's at tention, and be thought at the time that ven geance of some sort was meant agamst the Secretary of State. When be learned subse quently from reai'ing District Attorney Cork hill's narrative that the prisoner resolved to kill President Garfield on the lth of May, the day following the speech, he went to the District Attorney, satisfied himself ns to the identity of the speaker, and gave the above testimony, which will probably be used In the Government's case. The Albany CGa. .Vetrs and A'lrertifr of recent date savs : Parties who came in on the train from Arlington yesterday morn ing reported the following very remarkable incident : Soon after the train passed Walk er Station a deer lunined up near the rail road track and in its fright, ran right through the train, jumping from one side of the track to the other through the baga ge car, both doors of which were wide open. Tn its flight through the car thu deer was struck about the root of the tail by the sharp erlge of the floor on the opposite side from which ; he sprang, leaving his tail and a handful of I hair behind him. The IIeic.ht of Fot.i.y. To wait until you are down on your led with disi-ase von may not gi t over for months, is the heigh of folly, when you might be easily cored dur ing the early symptoms by using Parker's G:nger Tonic, "it costs only a trifle, can never do any barm, and possesses curative propertie in' the highest degree. We have known the palest, sickliest looking men, women and children become the rosiest and healthiest, from the timely use of this pure 1 family medicine. See advertisement in an . other column. fftnervr. For sale at the ' new drug store, Ebenshurg. 7-2'2.-lm. MAimur.K insurance companies are not tiriformly regarded with favor by the.Tudges of this State, in whiclthey have" of late sud denly become numerous. The methods of these concerns are various, but the common practice is to pay certain sums of money to members i.t their wedding. Judge Mender son of Lebanon county ref used to charter on the ground Mint marriage is not a legitimate subject for insurance, as it does not not de pend on contingencies beyond the control of the individual. Judge Mitchell of Rhiladel- ( phia, on the other hand, grants charters j without hesitation. i IIonohed attd Blfst. When a board of eminent physicians and chemists announced the discovery that by comhining some well known valuable remedies, the most wonder ful medicine was produced, which would cure such a wide range of diseases that most all other remedies could be dispensed with, many were skeptical : but proof of its merits by actual trial bis dispelled all doubt, and to-dav the discoverers of that qrmt mrdicine. Hop Bitters, are honored and blessed by all as benefactors. Democrat. M. L. Oatman, authorized agent, Ebensburg, sells the pure Hop Bitters. Miss rnornrn isrone of the loveliest girls in Southern Kansas, and a year ago was the recipient of much admiring attention from the pposite sex ; but now there is a disposi tion on the part of the young men to .stay f.Wy TJ," iU.T" 1 cl,anJ ,s, ca,,s',, llle fact tbat three of her suitors ha ve receiv- ! el gunsliot wounds while in her company, i It is not known who the assassin is. but he . is supposed to be so.nebody who, being una J ble to secure the prize himself, is determined j that nobody else shall do so. i Good Wokds fhom Druggists. "Malt j Bitters are the best ' bitters.' " i " They promote sleep aud allay nervous , ness." "Best Liver and Kidney medicine we sell." "They knock the 'Chills' every time." "Consumptive people gain flesh on them." "Malt Bitters have no rivals in this town." "Best thing for nursing mothers we have," "We like to recommend Malt Bitters." 7-1.-1 m. It has been the practice of the Interior Department to hand each Indian reservation over to the religious teachings of one partic ular denomination, so that the converts be came Methodists, Baptists, or something else, purely according 'to chance and never from choice. This is now to be changed. Under the new arrangement the Catholic Church will go iuto the field with a large force of priests. . Dyspepsia and Li y Kit Compeaixt. Is it not worth the small price of 75 cent to free I yourself from every symptom of these dis i treeing complaints ? If you think so, call at ! E. James" Drue More. Ebensburir. Pa., and procure a bottle of Shiloh's Vitaluer. Every bottle has a printed guarantee on it. Use ac cordingly and if it does you no pood it will cost you nothing. 4-8.-e.o. w.ly.l A hang of outlaws on Friday night cap tured a train on the Chicago, Kock Island and Pacific road between Cameron and Winston, Mo., killed the conductoOnd a passenger, robbed the United States Express Company's safe of several thousand dollars and then escaped. The passengers were saved from robbery by tbe sudden stopping of the train. The Story of Ihe Crime. THE OFFICIAL ACCOVNT OF THF. SHOOTI-N" of the rnrfinrsT. District Attorney Corkhill. of Washington, who has made a thorough investigation into the movements of Chafes Guitean from the time he first came to that city up to the day be attempted to assassinate the President, has furnished the following statrment for publication with the assurance that the facts detailed bv him may be relied upon as ac curate. He says : The lnterpt felt v the pnMIe in tlie !M!M r.f ; th ii!9intloB ami the mai tnr!r pnhl!hil 1 jntirv me in ptstinjr flint the reltnwliie if nr-orret i and accurate statement roneerninir the point" to j whifh reference 1 mmle : Tlie napln. 'hiirle j Guiteau, cxme to Washington City on Snmlay eveninir. March 6. 1S1. and toj.peil nt the Khhitt House, remalnlmronlv one ila v. He tl-en "eenre.l ; a room in another nnrt of the citv an.l hi? tv.nr.le.l and roomed nt vr!oi? pla-as. (nil letails of which I I have, lin Wlneitav.Mav IS. 11 thn'nln j iletermined to ninr1er the lfeHcnt. He hid ; neither moncv nor pistol at the time. Alipnt the 1 nut of May he went into (i'.Mt store, corner I Fifteenth and F streets, this city, and eratoired some pl'tols. a?tlne for the larircn enli' re He j was shown two similar in callhre an.l only d;fTer- : nt in Tiriee. tin Wednesday. .Tone S. he tnr- ! ohaed the pistol which he ued.tor which he paid ten dollars, he havinic in the meantime lwrrowe f1!ten dollar" from a ifcntlemnn In thicity on the plea that he wanted to pay hi board Mil. tin the same eveninir ahont seven o'clock lie took the ni tol and went to the foot of Srententh treet and practiced firinif at a hoard, firing ten shots. He then returned to his Imardinir tda"e and wiped the pistol dry and wrapped It in his coat and waited hla opportunity. On Sunday morning, .Tune T-'th, he wa sittinir In I.afavette I'ark and saw th. I'reident leave for the t'hristlan "hurch on Vermont avenue, and he at once returned to his room obtained tils picfot. put it In his hip pocket and followed the I're'ldent to the church. He entered the chnrch. hut found he could hot kiil him there without dnmrcr of killlnz some one else. He noticed the I"re?iient sat near a window. After church he made an ex amination ol the window and found he could, reach it without any trouhle. and that from that point he could "hoot the President throuth the head without klllinir any one else. The followln W ed ljesdav he went to church, examined the location and window, and became satistlvd he could ac complish hl purpose, and he determined there fore to make the attempt at the church the follow ing Sunday. He learned from the papers that the I"re?ldent would leave the citv on Saturdav. the 11th of . I line, with Atr9. Garfield for I.onif Branch, He there, fore determined to me.t him at the depot. He Ion his boardinir place alint fiveo'clock on Satur day morninir. .Tune 18. and went down to the river at the foot ot Seventeenth s'reet and fired five shots to practice hie aim and he certain his pl?tol was In eood order. He then went to the depot, end was In the ladies' w;itinir room of the depot with bis pistol rea.lv when the presidential party enfered. He saw Mrs. (Sarficld Im-k so weak and frail that he had not the heart to h.ot the F're-i-dent in her preaenco. and as he knew he would have another opportunity he left the deKt. Hj hail previously enlaced a carriage to take him to the pi'l. (In Wednesday eveninir the President and his son. and 1 think' T'nlted Stat. s Marshal Henrv. went out for a ride. The assasin took his pist I nd followel them an.l watched them for some time, in hopes the carriage would stop, hut no op- ; portunity was iriven. n Friday eveninir. .tuly 1. ; lie was sittinif on a seat in the park, opposite the White House, when he saw '.he President come out alone. He followed 1 im down the avenue to Fifteenth street, and then kept on the opposite 1 side of the street nn Fifteenth until the President j entered the residence of Secretary Hlalne. He waited at the corner of Mr. "Morton's late resi dence, corner Fifteenth ami H streets, for some time, ami then, as he was afraid he would attract attention, he went Into an allev in the rear ol Morton's residence, examined his pistol and wait- ed. The President and Secretary Hlainc cam" ont i together and he followed them over to the irate of j the White House, hut could Ket no opportunity to I use hi weapon. j On the inorninsr of Saturdav. Jnlv 2d, he break fasted at the Kiifirs House abo'ut 7. He then walk ed np Into the park and sat there for an hour. Ho then took a one-horse avenue car and rode to Sixth street, cot out and went into the depot and : loitered around there. He had hi shoe blacked. I and enuaited a baekman for two dollars to take ' him to the tall. He went into a water clu'ft and took his pistol out of In.-, pocket ;i!Hl iinwrni pod ' the paper from around it which he had put there : for the purpese of prevent the jic-n-irati-in from his bodv dampening the powder. He exam- ined his pistol carefully, tried tli? friir-rer and ! then returned and took a seat in the ladies' wait ing ri".m mid as soon as the President entered ad ! Y'inced behind him and flreii two shots-. These Tacts. I think, can tie relied npon as aeen ; rate, an.l I ptre them to the public to contra Pet I certain false rumors tn connection with this most ! atroslous of atrocious crimes. Italian I.iberlr (!) Krutallj r.xcinn'.ificrl. TH K 1IKMOVAI, OK THF. IKMAINS OF I'OrF. PU S THK NINTH IMrV.I'KH AM) OCT TtflF.P HY A HOWLING MOIi. A special cablegram to the X. Y. irrM, j dated l.".th int., furnishes the following in , relation to the recent removal for final inter ment of the remains of the late Pope, and : of the indignities, hiMilts and ini-iities ner- j pet rated by some of the infamous infidel rabble of the Eternal City on that solemn occasion : ; The translation of tlie remains of 1'upo 1'i"' 1. fpm Its r'stinir-i in th.- H.t-I'fa ! St. IVter s tn the toinl (irf.viilo.1 f ir it in the cluirrli i t San ; l.renzo was iiee'.mj'l'she.l lat ni-rlit anl this tnorninif. the removal neetnninir at nii.lnfir'it nn-l , the whiiie ceremony neinir enile.i l-elure il-iy I iirht. . The eeremonv rrss ttendef ml ili-uriee.l to- sninc t.f the must shameful scenes ever seen in Koine. -Immediately after his ,1, .,th an.l i.ti-e.iiie. it wll y.f. re in e The re. 1 that the bo 1 v ef t he 1 ite P- pe . en case.! fn sevcrxl ei.tllns. i.nf witl in Ihe other. "15 e'evativ! to a niehe t eiare.l Kii lnuli iii in the walls ..f one of the i-haue's ,,f Si. l'eier s .-hnn ti. ' where it remained until yesterday. Meanwhile. In sceordan-" with the onicr Kivcn in hN w ll. a : simple and inexpensive ton;h had heen i.rej.nred as its last testlnir ) 1 ice. under the ail.ir ! Ill" chnreh ot San I.nren . wl i'-h is s..me dr-inea from the Vatican. The lute I'nj.e h:ld some tender ' rem in ieenee cenneeted wit h t h is ehnn-h. aT-d ir this ras.n wished h's he.lv toTi-pp llirre. More over, It Is said that the jirot-nn 1 hnnulitv of sj.ir't of whli h he was e.iinh'e at times had induced him to wish to morttfv hi pride in life by il rMin; that his bo.lv should not have the honor of fetma nent sepulture in the -np.lest ehureh in the woil.l ; : and near the remains of the Apostles I'eter an.l j Paul. ; The tonh In the ehnrch of San I.renzo has been : complete. 1 tor some 1 1 me. bnt f..r reason $.Vif.c- ' : torv to his executors the translation ot the body ! did' n d take place until la-t niirht. A careful . watch was preserved over it until all tlie arrange ments were complete. At miduiiriit the ei.rhn was ! carried from the chai.el ar.d. snrronndcj by a l-intc i bo.lv of priests and t'atholic laymen, the mortuary pr.K;c.sion set forth. The coftin was place 1 ujM.n a Menjilrawn iiy horses and the priests and laymen carryiniE lighted cund'es. The s.-cne was solemn and sombre in the extreme, hut scar-ely had the procession left the steps ol St. IVtcr'i than an un ruly inoti of roniths of the city swarmed around it. ; hustllnir and intercepting the priests, endeavoring I to extinguish the candles and ovor'urr the bier. I an.l shoutinz. '-I.onif live Italy !" 'in with the i l'ojie f "Away with the bla.-U eowns V an 1 so on. I The disturbance became so jcreat and the fearot a -. terrible scandal was so imminent that the city nu l thorities were compelled to intervene. The police j lorce proving Inadequate, some companies ol soj. diets were nurrteiiy sent to-. tin arrivinic iney disjiersed the mob. 'order was restored, the pr-oes-sion moved on to the ehur'-h an.l the ceremonies of placing the ;ody tn '.ho toinh were completed . The same correspondent, in a cablegram dated the lith. furnishes the following in're gard to the feeling created in Chureb circles by the dastardly outrage : Cardinal .lacobini. Papal Secretary of St.ite. In receiving the Ambassadors and Ministers accred ited to the Vatican, told them that tlie Pope had Instructed him to 'ay that It was the rope's per sona! desire that they should Inlorm their vcrn ments how deeply pained he was at the insult of fered the body of Pope l'ius'l.: that henceforth he must consider himself more than ever a prison er in the Vatican, and as prevented from attend ing r.y religions service in any of the basilicas of Home. At the same time Cardinal .lacobini Tend the draft of a circular to the I'apal N uuei.is abroad, wiih Instruct Ions to leave a copy in the hands of the respective Ministers or Foreign Aflairs. A corres pondent says that the part ol the Pope's message relating to religions services in haailtcat confirms what has been confidently asserted in high clerical circles, that, had the removal of the Inxly of Pius IX. been effected peaceably, the Pope would hare found an early occasion to pass the dour of the Vat ican. ARIIK3T OF ROM R OF THE IIASTARU. Six men have been fined and Imprisoned for dis turbing the luneral procession ol Pope Pius. IX. on Thursday last. There was great disorder at the trial of ihe prisoners and the court was -cleared twice. The sentences were received with a storm I of shouts nn.l hisses. A crowd of people nuniber ! ing between two and three thousand cheered the prisoners on coming out of the court, and followed f them, ehounv, Imvvn with the clericals !"' The Soldiers dispersed the mob, which reassembled at the office of one of the clerical newspapers, tore down the bulletin, and then started for the rail road station to protest to the King and tueen. who were arriTing from Naples, but a cordon of police prevented a demonstration. The Missing Rri.i.KT Forsn. On Mon day last District Attorney Corkhill found the missing bullet which was fired at the Presi dent and for which there has been so much search. It appears that a German glazier, who tramps around the streets repairing windows, went into the depot to get a ten dollar bill changed on the morning ho Presi dent was shot. lie, was standing in the main room about 40 feet from where the as sassin stood and in a south-east direction. He had begun to unstrap his box in which lie carried glass, and had got one strap off i bis shoulders when lie heard the noise of the ; pistol, and immediately three panes of glass j in his box were shattered. He at once rush ed from the depot, thinking it was no place ior saiciy. on aturnay ne was Cleaning out his box and found the ball in his putty and was narrating the fact to his friends, when one of them told him that it was fired at the time the President was ahot. and took him to the District Attorney's office, where be gave his statement, and gave up the ball. He thinks it was the first shot that broke Hie glass, but says they were so close together that he had not time to get awav. His posi tion confirms the statement of Sonor Ca niacbe, the Venezulean minister, as to the exact position of the assassin at the time of the firing of the shots. Merchants who suffer from Dyspepsia, Headache, Constipation, or Kllliousness can becured by using DR. M ETTAUR S H EAO ACUD AD DYfePEFMA PILLS. Prlc 25 , cents, L'-Cl.-lm.l On the 1 st of this month c-;r M-wk of M-r, Boys' Clothing anl Gents' l;urnil;in ioods at O .V was seven hundred and forty-three thousand on; ;; and seventy-five dollars and eighty-one c-nts. Where is there another The old house lias been Tlie old hands (most of The old principles of goous, iasnionauie adhered to. l r 1 11 stvl vies, Who founded the business, is ing after things, and in all the to push up its hiidi prices. XjETr-' old-time greeting A' cur friends ez eryzf.ir and another cardial invitaticvi extended to eon:c to Oak Ju.'!, Wanamaker & Brown, OAK Cor. Sixth and Market - The Largest Clothing Postscript. The last new thing we have done is to open a TI. DOLLAR ROOM, where we have gathered a great of full Suits, suitable for dress or business, which. v.-- ;;-J sell at $io. You can judge of the cheapness ol" our stock !v -:':: i what wc can do for ,io. YV. vX P. I j j g& Xr. - - , - 'A WiXr.j?' you will f. r. d, I v'-x-p. vi Ii among other r-Jices I '?:b)ltr of intcrcst the UffMVi! V'!1 wcl1 worthy cf a mMMmmm its flo0r ana acres, Carpets, lroucn tne air, ana .orth seeing. i u There is a launch-Room in the building. V-ilie?, baskets and packages can be left in charge of attenJar.t i:: Ladies' Waiting Room. Mr. Wanamaker is desirous that visitors should feel at home when they come, and be free to purchase or not, as they please. Note. Our large Catalogue, with prices and fall directions for shopping by mail from any part of the United States, will be mailed gratuitously upon request, fcddrC-5 John Wanamaker, Grand Depot, riiiLArEirm.. t;. r. fit a ' ' 1 it i vt.v r"'ii t ;U ;i 1 : . ium i..- ibc ynij t 'Tns i I Tir. -. m - :-c it an lift!. ii- r::i t.'.-tr-r, a tp 1 TT h- tit- ! ' ino 1 1 I n.cii i! Ctr t- -rut -Imv. I invltTi tup ino p!iriin t r.: :i - t-rm i remain m -;iTh. -im. 1 vi vc.ir m n,. tlipv nxr l 'ill y .1.'v-1mo.! . 1 l:c v i.nl; part ,! tlie .'v w !ii li mi in t ii I . i ' v t p 1 iri til Trmal :nr. .i t'ut ireiM-m 1' Svnii nr t !l f !tt 1 V Ml' - in th in tji" 1 i ; 1 f . p nl'irc! t.':v i-an t1, r oir tt"Mn. 'IT. h:tn.- T 111 vliv-H i.in who nin"i ji T:if AV.iriil in tt li"r. iHvp wt!i liful. :i;m ia 1-c nniil r.'iii'u el i. i '.'iini i ! sn trarln- if Tape Vorin ran !p rt ntnvel. h!I ot'wr worm ran tc rfa!iH Ir-l nycl. Atr. at m - nivl Tri The !m-t.r r h tell r lirt !i r or nt ? h r p'i ' i -W l:a wnrm-. Timr-aii'I"! anp Iinir Ni!v wMi .n:t-; , ami d-i not know it. l it-. in. ramp-. .-Ii'-k ini; nn-I suit' mm t !!). .ilmw c'!iipK'ion. .-itv- :ir..ai,.l Thp oys. woi Iniir ami pain in the Tinia''!i. rtvt lcfSMie. nt hi!it. arimiin ot tltn tpt!i p i k Ti u; at the v-e. u?i. iwrr, ttehlnw at the hiwl - ' a'hp. foul hreath. thp pat'pnt tr-'W pal" xt.xX thin. I ticklins and irritation iu tli' ami a'.l r rw- fviup- torn? An I inup' n-nip from Trorin. V.. F. Kiinkrl"? . Worm Syrup novrr f i'ls to rvmovp thPtn. I'ru-o. , 1 pt iMrtit. or f rott!pj tor F'r Ttp Worm write an 1 crt-u't tlie , li.pt. ir. For all oihpr- toiv ol your tlnimr i-t the Worm ivrnp. and if he ha- it n--t. fend to K. F. Kuiikel. V N. Ninth St.. I'hii.v (Jelphia. Fa. Advirc hv mail free; -ml -Iani. E. F. KT'MvEE'S H1TTEK WiNKHFlKON. It ha r.prT horn known to T:i: in the rure j weakne--. nttt ruled with s mpt nm. 1n-!i pit in to exertion , lo- of memory . t! . f?i - nlty ot hr-a T h 1 1: weakm?. Imtpi l drrM-. weak, nervim fpinh. : In. ir. OrvaV.'ul Ivrror ot death . TitirM ?wp.i(.poM Icet. weakne. dinine. oi viion. l.inmi'tr. timvr , snl li !it mie of the iiiueular y trn. eiiormon np t Vi-titp witli dyspeptic. ?yiri toms, to.t h in-N. i'nh . inn d the hody. dryness ot the kin. pallid cuint". naneo and rnpiionc n tlie lace. titi!;.:nu the ;lood. p.ani m the Imck. heaviness i the eye!:iS, ! lrptuent black 5xts tlinie helore the eye uit'i ' piiII ni'iTi and h of stuht, wm-t of ntrput'or!, .Vc. Sold only i l.Oi tmitiv!. or'c li.ttlv lor Jet it ol your dniirwl . il h ha it not. sctm! proprietor.!-. !. Kunkel.2V. N. Ninth St.. Fhila Uclphl:. I'.i. Advice free, send :i Pent slnmp. Aehent:irh M illn, Sulc ici-nt-. .td and L'ailow hill .stroets, Fhila leiplna. i'.i. Hotel. Ai--U Sun t, 1M 11 A. I.O i r 1 Now. :UT mii.i :?l'.t PlIlIADi:! Tlie trnrllinit jmLlir will ftill Pt,.! at th' H.tct the sumo lioml privtion for tluir roin'ort. It ir li.onte.1 in tho i m inprl i : t o ceir. or j,ii.t1..c nn.l amiKeinent. nn.l th (HflorTnt Kul l.'i:i.l .IciM't'. well all ii.irtof th.' city. immIv n--r -i.r by ?trprt i-ar i"iitniit Iv pninn th- ioi-i. It ! for? cil iniln. rincnts f.ir tln? vi?mra the city (ir 'ninrs or iilpanr. Your I'litronap i rfxpctmlly i"ilu'itc.l mis. M yy; Kit. Tri'iTiHor. r)ila.!elihia. Nov. 1. lSK.'.-tt. Smith's Pat. Blind nnd Shittler I'.owcr. Shn'ters can he ilnve.l a. 4. 6 or ini'he npnrt anil lii'l l -nre!y tn either !itini. Aitents want ed in every county. Can make hijj ! in Suin tner nml Fall, the beet an.l hodiuet thin out. Sells nt every hone. AVrite tor partiruiam. Samvlc hv mail fur fl cent r'txee. Addre SMI1II O.. 301 Master Nt., Iltilaflrlpltlak. VENNOR'S PREDICTIONS! For this ?lmh' Weather, j.reriired eT.rc.lv f'T MOI.ItARIt'K KIAIKH. SAIi'Lt t'orr MitLitn run Sc. Stamp. J. M. Stohi.akt, Tub., N.York, rhll., or t'liicao. July ii, lSsl.-3t. I want 0?E aitent In every town toell avulua hie article. No mnnev required until -xd ir aold. Addrce P. t. Uox Sat8. New York City. I PAMPHLET o.'r. erir. lc vaee. Sl rente . ROWtLL A. CO., . rnii Here ,rM of oath "o don't y A i on Tii' a:: t een v Th Wilmo: inor. Th Altoon June. A rorsiT XCC't V. sort me at low? Ilo finite liVewis A toosa with hi Tin county might b Th. son's V was a n At 'alien bargain such stock to select from ? remodeled. them) are still there. just and riiiht prices substantial finish, are -r.::.v at Oak I lall even- day ; history (A Oak 1 lall it v.as Tin ye-' Uobabl s now. Per standards and drop down to 1 act; as ; at the Ger le put lace, o Duj id or ere am HALL, Streets, Philadelphia, irges inds 1 House in America. lids. Wa ow rep ow at guin The i town an buy ollar. Wl aviti 1 icrt. One e seric e tiny; p slov Ken mcled r."-e tj) re, E' -V. S sale id t.f I chop -A re mty, i ttlay c ke rc -The crikc Ir foil spaces now cover over tr.re; and are filled with Dry Go China, Furniture, etc. The iiful j -Jaux ides n h in 1 lay w fher sine r.y, 1 ie ne r.cf. . the i are tafTy Tiie'r t.j..: ani Tuhi; on )n t -!d tot ed f last addition is a larce and beautiful P-i torc ilallery, to which admittance is free. The PiLj.nta!-'e Talcs carrying the money uic JLU:irf.tqr.i -'i '.--tr;. NBV .UVKliTlM.:!i-.M JULY II, !B3i. 33. 23 23. v. I mm: s-i i.i.iN' ; Bixien Lines Dit THAT ARE YEnY EECI Noll' ! I'-w a !" LINEX 4-1 ' 1 1 I. linniii's :t l ' :-. . ' ian IMPORTED DRESS COCn At ! r.-lit -. so r:i"T.i i li.u v lf::i::.- 1 1 t ' - " ' ; h. MI'S' THAVKl.lN'i 11 - IH 75 -., Ml.no. 1.2. tl..in ii ' i:- ' -I n.lirH-. 1ls nml Ii i ! .1 r.n la irx am f.'.vf. y i m ' 11 X t. . l-.-r i i .,, i . .. pw I' ;;l k Sj-'i Ti ; -t; T ,T'T-. t w 1 ' -Nc N :l l TI- k I tit'r.' '.':.-. N . I. ' .riv Kit:rr I S t."'-. C'i . ti''. 11 lirfc.e i;iv, pi Im.k-W :tsd ''' ' I 1-cived c;:"h cck : fci-n S:M : I ' kpep'-T'u o-tr cT.-k r t: wt; n;:'. . 1 V i tt iT i, i iv ! 'i i ! j !;; rr t i a-' - ' l!;ht iii', nd .'Mr-. FANCY SUMMER SILKS 1 ' roc;(;s r.rui is 118 & 120 FeSeralSHTfUL, I'. s.-N.-w Skelet-n Ib-i. '-. i lK'-lcry.Ot-.vT. Itatt-.u. New H tnie "and Krina. I..ves' T.-nts inc irrir an-l M.-r;.. V I'rawcrs. Collars "ii H an.! Ne i'.'ls--''X I o one hn Is I horoiic h 1 ' r . the tHwe', I? half a h..t '- to .1 '' irroiu'.ar. lie l l-e atta'K-l " ' " eKeK. a u.l e iiimv t he irri.- ;f '. 1 1,1 - I.- ..K,t t., rtiifide 111 rl UCD.'C? Tarrant's Seltzer Aperies vnre reimlariiy, and eMiiso.iU 't ickuei(i. . , SOI. I) BY ALL. I K t KlairsilllP (Pa.) I.adir-' S."' Bcnntiful (jrouuds. einTt li n b J-1; Healthful l.vati.-n. t hi-'t ... Thirty riit ulr tninf Svi-tem.r . i v Iav rut ..uurl 1Q xi-. r July 15. un . . JrTrji lit .-'lI-Wsir'TCIWF FOR TH . c eL.lv i.bi' I'inw, ia adac.'v. The c In c rca.i Xiw , o: lime nee rapt big ' 'get iir o -"If n ClK o vt .elay re y he b us h Mtjf Jrct; rP, . be I na : rer t re I 'e r or o . Vri ni ai t"rt: tith, abit, nc : iudi: Fur ' j.i DdV Cb r fi ie 'n hi J':a di 1 a u, n Of Pb rj't e: r trs a
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers