$amtow pitman. .EBEK8BURC, PA., f uIDAY, - - - AUGUST 5, 1881. The condition of the President has Inprovci so steadily with each day since Friday last, that his physicians now do nit entertain any serious doubts as to ultimate recovery. Chairman Dill has called for a meet rig of the State Democratic Committee Bolton's Hotel, Harrisbnrr , at 12 M. -,n Wednesday, August 10th, to deter minfl upon a time and place for holding .he next State convention. 'A full at tendance of the members of the Com mittee is requested. The Legislature adjourned on the 9th of June, and on last Friday, just fifty days afterward, we received fifteen cop ies of the Legislative Record, bringing up the procedingB.of the two houses to with in a few hours of their final adjourn ment. The Jiccord costs the State about twenty thousand dollars every session, and althoughjitis the most glaring of al! ths shameless frauds of legislative ori gin,the robbery is permitted to go on ses sion after session, without the slightest attempt to stop it. The Record hence forth should be a thing of the past. A great many people think that Dan "lice is dead, but he isn't by a large ma jority, as he was alive and well in the ity of Erie ouly a few days aeo, where he exhibited his show known .is Dan Rice's Aggregation of Animal Curiosi ties and Wonderful Colossal Combina tion of Circus Talent, ' together with a good deal more of the same sort. A newspaper reporter who interviewed the Id veteran found him to be the same o'd Dan that he was in the palmiest days of his prosperity, when he was a candi date for the Presidency, with a joke and a hearty laugh for everybody and every thing. Tas Irish Land Bill finally passed the House of Commons on last Friday night and i3 now in the House of Lord It is believed that no attempt will be made in that body to amend the bill in any Im portant particular, but that it will be pushed through as rapidly as possible. As to the bill Itself, the Irish landlords protest that they have teen sacrificed on the altar of English radicalism, and de clars that they will not take skies with their Epjlh brethern when a similar measure, or one that is even more rigor ous. i. introduced into Parliament to ap pease the pr pular cry against the iniqui ties of the present English land system. Governor Critten Drcx,of Missouri, in a recent conversation with a St. Louis spaper reporter, stated that when h '.vus in "Washington some time ago, nl when the late Judge Clifford was in trw- enjoyment of his usual health he Judp: C.) told him that he had prepar cl a complete a" J detailed hiatory of the ; toceedings of theEIectoralCommission, of which ho was a member, and that it "ould be published after hi3 death, un .?ssbis wife, who is the custodian of the uauuscript, should otherwise decide. 1 1 Mrs. Clifford wili give this document he country it will be "mighty inter- c :ing reading," so far as the "true in- j vardness" of Judge Bradley, of New "ersev, another member of the Commis ion, is concerned. Rev. Thomas Farrell, for many j years pastor of St. Joscph'sjchuich, iu New York, died July 2)th, and j the monument provided for in his will iitis been completed and erected over his grp.vtimid will soon be unveiled with ap propriate ceremonies. Under the dates of his birth and death is inscribed, as directed by Father Farrell's will, the following exhortation : "I beseech you to love libtTly, and, above all, intelli gence 'and try to extend their blessings to every member of the human family. Hate tyranny, oppression wrong and suf fering ; but, above all, hate ignorance, the fruitful parent of evil to the human family." This good priest could not have '-ft a richer legacy to his admiring and devoted congregation than is contained iu these few eloquent and patriotic words. ; a .. So rkstectable a paper as the Har risburg Patriot ventured iu its last Mon day's issue to say "Should the deci sion of the Dauphin county Court in the legislative salary matter be affirmed by the Supreme Court, the next Legislature will pass a bill fixing the salary of mem bers at f 1,600. Stick a pin here." Of ceurse the Legislature could do what the Patriot predicts it will do, provided it has the necessary amount of cheek, but we hardly think it will be inclined toat tarnpt the experiment. This salary question and fiv months' sessions of the Legislature, with a very poor harvest as the outcome, are dow pretty thoroughly liadsrstood by the people, and they are in no humor to tolerate any extra legis lative ray such as the Patriot endorses. At ail events a bill passed iu 1883 fixing the salary at the sum named could not 0 into effect until the Legislature would meet Iu 1SJS5, and a Legislature pledged to repeal the grab would be elected in l.?S4. At least that is the view we take -f the matter. The downfall of Roscoe Conkling, al. hough it iuay be, rrova to only fr a is a fatal blow to the third-ter m tensions of his political idol, U. S. r,rant. Conklinif was the brains, the ,.ad r.ud front of the movement, and to iro, more than any other man, or num r of men, that dangerous and anti- Aii.ericandoctrineowesitsorigin. There ever v:as so Lold and fraudulent an t t pt made in this country to misrepre- nt the will of a political party as was ;,..vle by Cameron in this Sta'.e in Feb- --.iry, 1?0, and by Conkllng in hew 'Vrka short time afterwards, to pack Chicago convention with solid third delegiticns from the two largest ?Uts in the Union. If the scheme had been wholly instead of only about half anccessful, Conkllng would have be)n :preme master of the Chicago conven Hon and Grant would have been nomi nated. With the fall of Conkllng, we repeat, the third-term heresy falls, and Tith it Graut disappears as a Presiden tial" candidate for a'.l tiiae to come. WunocT attempting to discuss th coustitutionality or unconstitutionality of the ten dollar per diem clause in the legislative salary act of 1874, there ia one fact connected with its passage that deserves special aotice. The session of 1874 was the first one held after the adop tion of the new constitution in 1873. James .S Rutan, of Beaver county, wa then a member of the State Senate, and last winter, when Attorney General Fal mer took ground in a written opinion against the constitutionality of the clause referred to. If r. Rutan stated to a representative of the Pittsbur Post that he himself framed the salary bill while serving in the Senate in 1874 that it was found to be impossible to complete the work of the session within the one hundred days, owing entirely to the fact thdt the constitution required the enactment of a great many impor tant laws at that session to enforce it3 provisions that it would have been im possible to keep the members at Har risburg if they were not paid for the ex tra lime, and that the bill was drawn up and passed expressly to meet that emer gency. Mr. Rutan further said that no one expected any subsequent session would exceed one hundred days, and that, therefoie, the bill was not limited to that session alone, himself aud the other members believing that public opinion would be so strong against long sessions that the Legislature would not exceed one hundred dajs, for which a salary of oue thousand dollars was pro vided. Here then we have the plain and emphatic statement of the author of the salary bill as to his meaning and in tention when he wrote it, and what the Legislature meant when it passed it. The only thing for which so experienced a member as Mr. Rutan can be censur ed is, that he didn't add a proviso to the section limiting its application to that particular session and even embracing the succeeding session, so as adequately to pay the members for the extra time consumed in enacting laws to carry out the provisions of the constitution. If he had done so it would have simplified the matter amazingly. The State treasury was wilfully im posed upon at the last session of the Legislature by the men who procured the passage of the bill appropriating J220. 000 for the annual maintenance of the National Guard, and the Guard hasbeea outrageously swindled siuce by reducing the number of its brigades from fie to three. When the bill was before the House several members stood up in their places and pledged their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honors that $220,000 would be sufficient to keep up and pay all the expenses of the organiza tion as It then existed, and that they had the authority of the Adjutant Gen eral for saying so. All this meant fii t brigades, and the bill passed, but no sooner did the Legislature adjourn than Hirtranft, who is Major General, Latta, the Adiutant General, and the other i rr.mt r,e .t; ,f at work to reduce, and actually have re duced, the five brigades down to three. It is as plain as the nose on a man's face that if 220,000 was sufficient to main tain five brigades, it is just $88,000, ac cording to the plain rules of arithmetic, more than enough to keep up and main tain three brigades. Latta will of course be entitled to draw out of the State treasury the whole of the appropriation for the three brigades, and any man who thinks he won't do it don't know Latta; and it will then be the business of the Legislature, at its next regular session in ltS3, to find out how the grab of f?8, 000 was expended, and into whose pock ets it found its way. John I. Mitchell, the noble col league ot that other noble representative of Pennsylvania in the U. S. Senate, i Don Cameron, has written a letter to J. Ambler Smith, of "Washington, in which he indorses Mahor.e and his repudiation brigands in the political contest now go ing on in Virginia. In thus aiding and abetting the vile and robber doctrine of repudiating the sacred obligations of a State, Mitchell conceals his purpose un der the thin veil of assumed devotion to free schools, fair elections and just laws." As to "free schools," Mitchell knows as well as any man that one of Mahone's publicly avowed purposes is the repeal of the poll-tax as a suffrage qualification, that tax being the chief revenue or fund set apart for the free schools for the equal enjoyment of both blacks and whites. And as regards "fair elections" and ' just laws," when have the colored people of Virginia ever com plained that their right to vote was not precisely the same as the right of white men, or that the laws of the State don't alike govern white men and black? It is a disgrace to Pennsylvania to have twodemagogues In the Senate like Cam eron and Mitchell, who, when honest men in Vl'giuia, Republicans as well as Democrats, ere engaged in a death strug gle, as it were, for the finaucial honor of the State, will stoop so low for politi cal purposes as te throw the weight of their official influence in favor of the suc cess of a political pirate like Mahone. John C. Bcrch, of Tennessee, Secre tarv of the U. S. Senate, who will be gratefully remembered for his courteous conduct ty those members of the Penn sylvania, Ohio and "West Virginia Press Association who visited Nasbvi'.le while on a pleasure trip nearly three years ago to the Mammoth Cave In Kentucky, and who cannot but regret his untimely de mise, died at "Washington on Thursday of last week. His death will, of course, render necessary the election of a new Secretary when the Senate meets in De cember. Mabone's candidate at the late special seeMon, George C. Gorbam, is said to be preparing to make another con test for the place.but bis bitter denuncia tion of the President, up to the day be was shot, through the columns of the pa per be edits in Washington, are not cal culated to enhance the prospects of bis success. The Kentucky election took place on Monday last. 2fo 6tate officers were to be chosen, but a Legislature was elected which will return James B. Beck to the TJ. 6. Senate. He is a very able man and enjoys a high reputation in the ten ate, second only to that of Thomas F. Bayard. THE EFFECT OF IT. The Chica-o Times, which has a ma nia for breaking up political parties, baa been Interviewing a grant number of representative men of all parties and shades of political opinion as to wheth er the attempted assassination of the President wrought any marked change in political feeling. Several other ques tions were also propounded, but they were of minor Importance. It is the al most unanimous verdict of the entire country that the shooting of the Presi dent has not produced any marked change in the attitude of parties, fur ther than to soften the sensibilities of partisan strife and in a measure harmon ize the conflicting elements of the Re publican party. The rpplv of ex-Governor Sevmour to the Times is the best tempered and more nearly reflects the general opinion of the country than any other. Governor Seymour says : 1 do not think that the attaolt on tbe Pres ident has made anv marked change In polit ical feeling, except, perhaps, tosoften them. It has without doubt mailn with Democrats a more kindly feeling; toward the President. What the future may be no one part foresee. If, in ease of his restoration to health. Pres ident Garfield should show a stronz parti san feeling It would make a reaction against him. Extreme vmrtisanship would lie felt to be an ungrateful return for the interest shown by all parties and aM section in his recovery. I do not think that the question of administrative arrangement has occupied much of the public mind, nor do I think that St has brought out any well-worked plan for guarding against this danger to the public from the attempts to murder officials. The perils which surround high positions mav tend to check ambition to hold them, and to sober the passion for nlace and power. It is hard to foresee the effects of the Albany con tent upon the action of parties. Them are so frequently modified bv carnal events that It is difficult to forecast the effort of anv par ticular action. It has encouraged the Dem ocratic party, because t has not been drawn Into the contest or made responsible for any of the acts of the legislature that hare of fended. I do not think that there are anv In dications of any great modification In politi cal parties. The Times itself gives this view of the situation in New York : When Conklingtost his crown and his head Ms Influence seems to have gone with It, and the power of fate personality Is little feared. Outside of New Tork the belief Is very gen erally expressed that his disappearance from the arna, if he has disappeared, has left no Impress that will be felt In national politics, and not enough te speak of in local New Tork polities. Democrats art sanguine that the dethroned chief will be the disturbing element in the Republican party which will result In a Democratic vlctorv in New Tork, and an eventual Bourbon triumph at the next general election. This is all Idle spec ulation, however, for the reason that o one yet knows or protends to know what the ex Senator proposes te do, and much depend on that. The Half Breed organs may sneer as they please at Roscoe, but beneath all their sneers is plainly seen evidence of fear for his political powers. He is a man who never deserts those who do his bidding; and he has avowed that n the "near future" his "Spartan band" will be rewarded. Conklinsr is down now, hut we doubt if the. Half Breeds can keep him down. Pittsburg Post. Fkhn's Boot. The proposal to bring the ahes of Wlillam Penn from England and deposit them within the limits of the great Commonwealth which he founded wn a very natural ;one, and it is a pity it cannot be done. There are those who consider Penn the greatest man who ever set foot on this continent. The work which Penn did in England doulitls appeared to him at. the time far more important than that which he did on this side. Even had he been ab'e to forsee the futnrn magnitude of the State whose foundations he was l.iv'ng in the wilderness of America. It would vet hare been In Ms eves but a small object compared ',th tht 'wee and perfect religions tolera- tended there. For this he wrote, snoVe, and suffered in body and estate ; and the most j Mimv 01 ins ure Bnn remains win show that be wrotf- rnd spoke with learning and ahilitv. and that he snfTVred with the pions fortitude of a true martyr. If he Mingled much in a corrupt Court, and took nn important, pnrt In various great affairs, he used bis Influence always to re lieve those in distress, to help forward the sacred cause of relieious liberty for the r.ro fessors of all opinions and to save the King from some foolish and from some brntal er rors, while his own character remained abso lutely stainless. But his noh'est work was that which be did In the Province of Penn sylvania, where as statesman and lawrvr he put Into the framework of the freest State then on the enrt!i the advanced doctrines which he preached toothers. The possession of power never for a moment blinded his clear judgment ad no temntntion over turned him aside from his original nurpos of granting tn all nien the snme liberty of consclencp which he claimed for himself. The State, f-onndnd in Christian peace, grew and flourished In that peace Its com pact with all its iieighbors. civilized and savaue. were sacredly kept, and the "blood of war." which flowed frcelv In everv other part of the -continent, was never slied within Its borders while the Penns controlled its councils. The history of Pennsylvania for about one hundred years is the noblest practical triumph of Christianity that we know anvthincr ahont. That great Com monwealth is Penn's monument, and his mortal remains should not oe separated from It. JV. T. Sun. Pf.ohta. Illinois, puts in a claim to the distinction of lelng tthe home of the man who manufactured the dynamite machines which have recently thrown ireat Britain Into a tremor of alarm. An alleged partner of O' Donovan-Ttossa residing In Peoria, named A. W. Crowe, who is vouched for by a press telegram as a temperate, honest, and industrious fellow. Is said to have recently declared that all the "Infernal machines" lately seized In Europe were tnanufactvred in that city. He describes those engines of destruction a follows : "Each machine weighs forty-five pounds. The outside ia made of Iron, and within Is a zinc receptacle containing a clock arrangement. After run ning six hours the clock liberates a hammer that strikes a nlpple"and explodes a percus sion cap, which fires the charge of an ounce and n half of fulminate mercury and a pound and a half .f dynamite, which is sufficient to blow np the largest block of buildings in the world." c;ood row Martlisd.-The State In surance Commissioner of Maryland, Jesse K. Hlnes, is determined to stop the specu lative insurance business in that State, and has sent formal notices to the speculative in surance companies doing business to the ef fect that hereafter all parties Issuing or cansing to be issued policies of Insurance on persons for speculative purposes will be in dicted. He says he Intends to devote all the energies of his department in stamping nut the abuse, and would pay special at tention to the agents of the various Pennsyl vania companies doing business In Mary land. It is evident that the Commissioner will make it decidedly warm for th parties concerned, as h Is by law granted nnnxual powers in connection with Insurance com panies. Pore L.o's Encyclical Letter, Issued on the 39th of Jane, two days befon the scoot ing: of President Garfield, treats of recent attempts on the lives of sovereigns and de clares any man peculiarly and atrociously guilty who will take the life ft the chief ruler of a nation. The Pope declares that the precepts of Christ are eminently fitted to comprise both those who obey and those who command and to produce between the two sections of the community that unity of purpose which engenders public tranquillity. And yet, says the. Lancaster Intelliptnmr, there are people who will take this eneveleal as anothet evidence why foreigners should be disfranchised and Catholics extermina ted. Dkttggtsts Prisr Thesc. "We always reccommend Malt Bitters." A perfevt food medicine," "Best nourishing agent we know of." "Women and children take Malt Bitters." "Overcome nervousness and sleeplessness. "Not a vile rum bitters." "A perfect renovaterof exhausted nature." "Most successful medlcise in the world." 6evxai prominent medical men have lately discovered that rocking the baby is al moot certain to make the child waak'hrain ed. All the medical clique making this as sertion were roeked to r leep In their bahy days, and the fact that it weakened tbelr brains is platnly apparent. At the faintest pain Pehttka should b thought of At new drug store, rpeasburf SETTS UfD OTHER 30TI36S. A Chester county man has thlrty-ooa acres of tomatoes, all doing well. There was no Catholic on the revision comailttM. Cardinal Newman declined. A heavy snow storm, lasting three mln ntes, oocurrelat X Manny, Centre county, on Thursday. Ilay U so abundant In Centre county that farmers are effering It as low as four dollars per ton. Uueas Grant has been fooling with a toy pistol and got the lock-jaw. Nothing wa ever made In vain. Ten persons in all have died up to latest accounts from Injuries received at the Peoria (I1L) distillery explosion. ....... Mrs. Van Vorst was klllad by lightning at Carbondale. Pa., on Friday, and four oth er persoBS were seriously Injured. Apples will be a drug In the northern counties, where the orchards are literally full to overloading the trees. Near Welrsville, N. T., in a quarry twenty-six feet below the surface were found two young hickory trees, petrified. Wm. llallock, of PltUburg, has sued his wife for assanlt and batteiy because the knocked him down and thrashed him sound ly. An Ohio woman owed her hired man $320. She married him to square the account and then for got a divorce, thus saving Alonzo Dock's house at Muir, Michigan, was burned on Monday morning. Three of his children and two other beys perished in the flame. Dan Rice's second wife is a suitor for a divorcs from him on the charge of desertion. This is the way, too, that he came to have his second wife. Eighty thousand acres of Arkansas land have been bought by the Catholic Coloniza tion Society. The aim Is to Induceriabmen to become farmers. A breach of promise snit was compro mised, in Indianapolis, by the defendant providing the girl with a husband of equal value with himself. A nan named Baker stabbed and dis embowelled a man named Bennett on Wed nesday at Avola, Mo. Bennett died almost instantly. Hi murderer escaped. The Chief of Fbllee of I to me has been dismissed for neglect of doty In connection with the disturbances on the occasion of the translation of the remain of Pius IX. Eighteen men were injured by the ex plosion of Woelner Bros." distillery in Peo ria. III., on Saturday, trine of whom nave since died and three more will not live. A flock of 116 sheep that had huddled under a tree for shelter from a storm at Orlggsvllle, III., were alt kilted by a single discharge f electricity froiw the elo-ida. A vicious little scomulret in Faribault, Minn., the other dny, exploded a fire-cracker In the ear of one of his playmates, burning him severely aod endangering; his hraring. A boy who1lcovered a ln1-slide on the Old Colony Railroad and ran awl warned the station-master, has been given by the com pany a life pass on its line and all its branch es. Before Mrs. Pktton died, aft Evansville, Ind., she induced- her hush and ber daughter by a previous union to-promise to marry, and the arrangement is te- be- carried out. Two small girls-, while stand-rag at the blackboard in a school house sear Canton, Pa., on Monday, were struck by lUrhtning. One was Instantly killed, the other badly hurt. Frank Gilbert and Merrick Bouenfrrant were hanged at Ceadville on Friday. U tli presence of about 7,000 people. Kosenexaa declared his itinoeence, while Wlbert pleaded self-defense, The doctor are of the opinion that they have located the ball whichsaaora'y wotf ed the President. Having huntud it down they propose to Icaye it severely alone for the present. A young man of 19 and a girl of 14, arm-in-arm, Jumped from the seventh, story of an. old palace in Naples to commit suicide. The; young man was killed and the young girl tit upon her feet They were lovers. Mrs. Priscilla Wunder, of Kiuaus, Vs.r sixty years of age, out of spibs against her tenant, Kershonau, took a scythe on Thurs day and mjwed two acres of his growing corn. He will sue her for damages. The wife of Philip Stires, of Flemincton-, Clinton count. trav hirth ton nir of twins a week or two atn. and had nneviouslv bean the mother or two pairs of twins,, one trio of i triplets and three oue-at-a-tlmers twelve in. all. I Guiteau has been denied opportunities- for conversation and has taken up writing,. 1 lie is at work on an autobiography, which he expects the newspaper will print. lie says lie is anxious now that the President shall live. The Chicago Timet puts in an. eloquent anneal for Kat Shellv. the brave eirl who J recently saved a passenger train on the ! Northwestern railway from destruction, at the peril 01 her life in giving notice to a tele graph office. Five children of William Lloyd., of Union county, ate apples which they picked up from among potato vines iu wliiuh Paris green hud been thrown. Two had died- up to Wednesday, but it was 'joped'the others wou'd recover. David Fitzgerald, a car. inspector on the, Pittsburg and Erie Railroad, with his res4 d'iice at New Castlo. is said to lve goie without eating since July 12. He had a row with his wife, and swore he would starve himself to death. Sarah Whitton, of AJfred, Me.,, was ar rested at Rochester. N. II., on Friday, charg ed with murdering her childt which; was found drowned in the Moneam river at Ken nebunk. Me., on July 19. The child's toogue had been cot off. The city editor of the "Wllliamsiort S and Banner arraigns the Lycoming com missioners with malfeasance and corruption in office, making thirteen specifications of official abuses and fraud in, which two of the'-noard had divies. A New Jemey drummer has plvad guilty to having five living aud undivorced wives, and he seeks to mitigate his crime bv assert ing that he married all of them outside of the State. But New Jersey dos not permit such conduct In foreign parts. The Commissioners of Lycoaiit county, against whom Harvey & Wells ha brought wholesale charges of corruption, are all can didates for renomi nation andtbere are sixty three other candidates in the fiold for the same thiee offices. There must be millions ' in it. Michael cauan, who has oeen connected with Georgetown College, District of Colum bia, since 1814, celebrated the centennial an niversary of his birth en Wednesday. He was born in Ireland In 17U and has a cer tificate of his birth from the church where he was christened. It is Blcomintou. III., this time which Is shaken with a tea, ma?. While C. R Livingston was busy making money be de lighted to have fila handsome wife give royal social entertainments Now in disgrace and a divorce suit he mourns that she found pleasure In other men. A negro boy who skin is turning white, pot after spot, has frequently been exhibit ed in New York. The change began several years ago und continues steadily. A little negro girl at Lafayette, Ala., has begun ia the same waj to turn white, aud in her case the hair also is bleaching. A Jefferson county (Pa.) man, named Godfrey Reitr, had a stroke of apoplexy soine days ago and to all appearance died. While preparations were being made for the obseqnies, however, he rose up and asked to have, the funeral deferred. His friends willingly complied with the request. The Mauch Chunk Democrat says that juiius ijuhcsd, an uncie or the assassin, started at Mauch Chunk, in 18.KS, the first furnace in this country where iron was smelted with Anthracit coal. A part of the ruins of the furnace tack may still be seen peiow tne lowpam, near tne weigh-lock. Notwithstanding the many conversions to the Catholic church which have been made in England within the last few years, the whole of Great Britain does not yet re turn a single Catholic member to Parliament, nor is there a single Catholic Irish or Scotch representative peer in tne Bouse of Lords. The other night Henry Firing, of North Coventry, Chester county, came home from work about 12 o'clock and called to have the door opened. Ills wife arose from bed, opened the door, and as he entered fell dead. She had been suffering for a long time of malarial fever, by which she had become much prostrated. Mrs. Charles Snyder, of Meadville, the second wife of a man who was sentenced to eight years In the penitentiary for smother ing the illigletimate child of his daughter, of whom the daughter swore he was the father, attempted suicide last Thursday night by taking laudanum, the alleged cause being Snyder's brutality. Thomas Marvin, passing himself off as a wealthy widower, married a young lady of Richmond, Vs., recently ; passed a forged letter of credit for 1800 on the bank and went on the honeymoon, and abandoned his wife at Albion, N . Y., deceiving her with a story that her mother had been killed and that she ahould return home. Jo Kist, a German team driver, of St. Louis, on Sunday week Jumped from the r adway of the "Big Bridge" into he Mis sissippi river, the height-being ninety-six feet, Over two thousand persons witnessed the leap free of charge. He had previously Jumped from the uppw floor of a St. Louis elevator and 1M feet from the mast of a ves sel at Few Orleans. ... Vt. Tbh a forme citizen of Jeffftf- on eourtv. West Virginia, and foreman of the Jury that convicted John Brown, In con sequence of which his family bad been great ly persecuted dnrlng the war, died at Har rUoobarg, Vs., on Saturday hrt. A bolt of lightning struck an editor nam ed Claude Slyter. In Ureentown, Indiana, the other day, while sending at his deak writing. It stripped him of hla clothe, knocked bim across the room, and paralyzed him, but he got up and afterwards wrote up a full report of the occurrenee. He w the AJax of tne editorial fraternity. The astronomers say there are now three comets visible. The latest arrival, Encke's comet, appears about two o'clock In the morning, and is visible by telescopes. It U Just a little north of the plealdes. Comet C Is getting brighter every morning, but U only visible by telescope. The old comet B is traveling rapidly southward. Bishop Seott, the senior bfahop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, la seventy-nine years of age and has been in theEpicopal office twenty-nine years Bishop Payne, senior bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, is eighty years old and has been In the Episcopal office thirty -five years. In the little village of Paret2, near Spaudau, a father and mother going to-work left their poor chllJrtn locked up i the house. On returning at night the little ones could not be found. A long eArch diccver c them dead in a large ttunfc into which they had crept in play. The lid fell, the lock sprung and they were-all suffocated. The Right Rev. Dr. McMullen, Cathnli Bishop of Davenport, la., arrived In tha? city on Saturday night. He was received by fully 8.000 of his flock and escorted to St. Margaret's church, where an address of welcome on behalf of the city was delivered by Mavor Henry, and another address on the part of the church bv Mr. M. V. Gannon. Mrs. Maria Walrath, living ten miles north of Janesvllle, Wis., died on Saturday from the effects of a blow on the head with a double-barel led shotgun in the hands of Fred. Blank, a German. Mrs. Wslrath was 42 years old, and leaves a husband and three children. Blank has a large family and bears a fair reputation. The trouble seems to ha re begun In a neighborhood quarrel. The daily spectacle of an old gentleman about eighty years old and as deaf as an ad der, dragglng'himself along the douole track between Yatesville and Mill Creek, has been explained to the satisfaction of the wonder ing Scranton He publican. He Is sent down the railroad track ostensibly to do errands by some rascals who have a ten thousand dollar policy on the ol0 man's life. Hon. John C. Burch, Secretary of the Senate, who died in Washington on Trw ra il ay, was the seventh Secretary of the Sermte, an office which has been held by fewer In cumbents than any other under the Govern ment, ne was elected to succee t Gorbam March 24, 177. He is the second Secretary of tha Senafe who has died while an Incatn bent of the office. Asbury Dickens waso-i the ther. James Murphy, an eight-year-old boy at Caledonia, Mlnp., while out hunting "the cows, came upon a deer lyinz in the bushes. He crept up and grasping the deer by the horns threw himself upon Its bar-k. Thus surprised, the deer sprang up and dashed away with the boy still ranging to him. He ran some eight miles, until he was complete ly fagged out. when the boy slid off, skipped home and related this remarkable adventure. A negro woman In Lynchburg was pre sented with goods for a 'drees for ber two year old Fannie, but the mother out of the goods made a dress for her two-weeks-old baby. A few days ago Fanny recognized her dress on her infant niter. and at on.e struck the little thing on the bead with all her might. The blow happened to fall on the baby's neck, and death resulted Instan taneously. The child was nursing at the time. Two ladies recently died in Favette eonn tv whose lives present singular coincidences. They were distant relatives, were born In the same month of the same year, and al ways lived within a mile of each other. They were taken sick a short time ago, and after a brief illness both died in the same hour of the same day. one funeral sermon beipg preached for both, and one large concourse of friends following both to their last resting-place in the same churchyard and at the same hour. The lower lift of slope No. 9, operated by the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Com panv, at Lanford. Pn.. was discovered to be on fire on Friday afternoon. The miners escaped by other means of exit fortunately provided at this mine. Next night the flames were burning fiercely, and It was thought the mine would have to be flooded, which will throw out of work more than W0 men and boys. Samuel Powell, the machinist wliose disoliedience of orders caused the fire, is almost insane. John Mct'omhe. of Fjist Greenwich, and Miss Isabella Wright, bis affianced, of Ap ponaug, R. T.. were walking together on the Stonington Railroad track on Saturday even ing when a "steamboat" train came up be hind them. To avoid the danger they step ped hastily to the other track. Just at that moment the Newport express came sweeping around the curve from the other direction. B'inded by the dust of the first train they did not see' their peril, and each was crushed into a shapeless mass. Two men named John and Thomas Car ney were shot and killed at the Exposition grounds, Indianapolis, on Mondav night, by , a street car driver named m. II. Collier. The Carnev brothers were from Cincinnati t hotlrs at John ' and were employed as Newark'eliverv stable. They were Intoxlcat ed and quarrelled with the driver. It is claimed bv bim tey were attempting to rob Mm when'he drew a pistol and shot both. Af ter the shooting Collier drove his car back to the end of the roac and cave himself np. A special from Fogelsville, Iehlgh county, received in Reading on Friday morning, gives briefly the details of the pro- haMe murder of Charles Mnger. an otn man, living alone near that place. He was found In adyingcondition, having been beaten with a club by a party of three men, sapposed to have been masked. The old man was just able to hold up three fingers In answer tv a question as to how many bad attacked him. He died without leing able to give any further information. Ills house was ran sacked and then roblied. No arrests. A farmer named Sclicnck. living er Memphis, Mo., found in his cornfield on Friday a bottle containing papers, which proved to have been dropped from til bal loon which left Milwaukee, Wis-, mi the evening of July 25th. The letter. w sign ed Robert D. Rice, directed to his father, G. S. Rice, No. 24S State street, Chicago, and dated 11:15 r. July 2ith. The letter sta ted that the balloon was in a pal uncon trollable, and going in a porthwawry direc tion ; that It was partially destroyed ; that he was in greafdlstress and did no expect to see them again. The bottle also contained a letter in short-hand and a lock of hair. The Binghamton (N. Y.V trader says that Thomas MeGlasson, of Drver Plains, was standing on a barrel a Rhinebeck, Dutchess county, the other day, with a pot of green paint in one Innd and a brush in the other, when the head gve way and he dropped into the barrel. K was at the top of a ery long, steep hill, a.nd when he fell Into the barrel It upet and rolled swiftly down the hill with McGJasson Inside. He tried to extricate himself, but protruding nailM bad fastened into his clothing and pre vented him so doing. MeGlasson Had to be carried, he was so dfzzy, while the green paint had besmeared him from head to foot. The Corydon (Ind.) fiemrrat says: David W. Crecelraa, ot Scott township, sends us a description ul a very remarkable snake which he killed on his farm a few days ago. Mr. C says the snake was 3 feet 4 inches in length and about 24 inches thick. Its belly was a golden yellow and its heads wera tha same color. Its body was a beautiful brown dappled with gold-colored pots or specks, with about sixteen yellow stripes acrotta its back. But what is tb most remarkable is the snake had two heads, and teeth abAt half an inch in length. There was one head on each end of the snaka, Mr. C say be was hoeing corn and there were three other men in tbe field who. saw the snake." A dispatch from Mazallan, Mexico gives am account of an explosion ia the govern ment magazine there caused by a guard, smoking. The building was situated la the centre or business portion of the town.. The explosion completely raised the magazine, and destroyed many houses In the iaimeo'iate vicinity, besides doing considerable dainaxe to numbers of others and killing a targe num ber of people. Immediately after the explo sion the soldiers and citizens went to work to recover the bodies of those known to have been buried in the ruins. Seventy bod lea were recovered, among themFrancisco Pena, District Judge. The number of killed and pounded is not yet known, as many bodies are still buried under the ruins. Mrs. Samuels, the mother of the James boj, whose exploits in the western country imvrj (ivtru uit-iti an iuisiuuu uutwi iviyt looks upon her villainous progeny as heroe. She lives about four miles from KearntVy, Clay county. Mo., and always appear (n Kansas City promptly after the comniitv ,i 0f some conspicuous crime. A few hourr, after the recent train robbery in which ytf sons are supposed to. bave participated, 8he ar rived there in accordance with VM predic tions of tho police, anxious to jear all tha pews and talk about her "be ys." She af firms that Jesse and Frank are dead, and therefore could not have be -noaoed in the robbery, but not the lr6t confidence Is plaetd ia aaybiEj. ie ruay sayl : A row la Chicago last Monday night was of considerable Importance. It origina ted In a quarrel between Tom CahiU. a sew er worker, W vears old, who fired a shot at a boy named Cnrtst. Dixon, who liad teased him. Dixon complained to Policeman Ray who was prevented by Tom's mother and brother from airesting CahlU- KT moned the pollee wagon and several officers tried to enter the bouse, which In the mean time had been barricaded. The door was Anally forced open, whee Tom Cahlll fired a ball Into the breast of officer O'Brien, Just above the heart, inflicting a wound that Is firobablv mortal. He also sbot Officer Rav, n the head, but not fatally. During the melee Tom received a wound In the body, the ball passing through the liver and inflict ing a wound that will prove fatal. The arrests were finally made and the bloody pis tol which had been reloaded was found hid den In a bed tick. George W. Nelsen, a land-broker ; D. L. South, a stock-broker, and a man named Miller, were arrested In Pittsbnrg on Friday for negotiating nearly tAOOO worth of stolen bonds, the property of Wm. Connors, of Cat fish, Clanen county, tkls State. Connrrs, an aged farmer, supposed to be wealthy, was found one morning in Marck last together with his wife bound and gagged. During the niglit half a dor.en masked men had en tered the house and after threatening death and torturing the old eople by burning, procured from them the keys and slalo from the safe $TSI0OO, of which "$.0O were rail road and bridge bonds. On Friday last Nel son negotiated the sale of the bonds, which were purchased for the Citizens' National Bank. Nelson Haims to have been acting for Miller. Sonrth has been released, it hav ing been shown that the only part he had In the transaction was in s-Uing the bonds. Miller says bis home is in Cleveland. On fils person was a money order payable to Thomas Roland, of Cleveland. It is believed that the robhery was committed by parties from some of the Take cities, and that Miller way sent to nttsbtrrgh to negotiate the bonds. As ExTlBit Fawtlt Drowsed.-Mr. n. W. Lawrence, wife, babe and a daughter aged about If! years, were all drowned near a place-palled Surrounded Hill, in Arkansas, on last Friday. It seems that the unfortu nate family was driving- tn a carriage to visit some friends at the above place, and reach ing a smaJl bavou the mother arid daughter, the former with the infant in ber arms, got out of the carriage while 3Tr. Lawrence led the horses on to the ferry boat a small flat boat. The ladies then stepped alioerd and the craft was pushed into the stream. When midway the horses became frightened and began rearing and backing. In their struggles they crowded the mother, baby and daughter into- the stream and finally ended in backing the carrlge and them selves overboard into the midst of the strug gling unfortunate in the water. Lawrence, made frantic by the accident, ywmped over board and attempted to rescue fits wife and children, bnt wittlout avail.. The horses, carriage and the -victims were mried In an inextricable mass and all went ikran togeth er. The bayou war subsequently dragged and the bodies of the unfortunate victims were recovered. Shot to Pieces. Bainbridge, G. ia exci ted over a horrible manler, to which re satis factory clue can be find. Mrs. Martha A. Brockett retired on Thursday night in her peacful home, which two hours later was alarmed by a terrific report of gunshots. Her sister rushed In from an adjoining room and heard the pKir woman say, "I am shot to pieces." Her bed was-near an opsat win dow; aod the asa4ns had put their gsns within a few feet of her bndy and fired, and she was riddled with bncfcatot, two of wtrich grazed the face of a little ohlld sleeping on the other side. Next morning the tracks two men in their stock Irnr- feet were traced out into the road and titer lost. No nwB dastardly murder ever blaoend the criminal annals of Georgia. Mrs. Brock ett was a peaceable woman, who rented a little form totenants on shares, and theely persons suspected of Ill-feeling toward h-r are some men in the OKtirrty against w hoes she appeared as a witness in a trial a year ao. No other evidence cottn-ets them with the murder, but they will probably be arrest ed. A Ftw days ago a bey aged about six. soa of Mr. Henry Barnes, living on ttie Brod Rlrtge, wa sent on an errand -to a neighbor's house. He stayed so lon tl t search fr hira was-Instituted, when, he was- fosoid hanging to the limb of a large pine tree-, about twenty feet from the-ground. W asked to - descend he declared that he ceoJd not, and the man wlm .eluubtd Uia tnee-tor hin found great difficulty in breaking bold. He could not account for being in the tree ; the only sol-itiou lie oould give was tha something cold : seewed . to seize- hiiu around thn waist, and tha next thing he knew was that he waj-up;. in the tree. Per sons who examined -th) place say that the boy's tracks could not tm- found nearwr Chat twenty feet ot the. tree, while the lat tracks, seemed to have beefl reude by skipyjfig or bounding. The loy has been to town. &ttt ha been examined, bu4 tlie above was all that could be decidco Was it an eaJe or a bear, or what was . il (A. iJBbtionian. The Height ok Foia.v. To wait; until J'fu nre down rm your bml with tHs-ase yu-.i niay n-t eet over for months, is the lit-ijriit of folly, when vou lnttrii; do easily curea nur rnft the early symptom by using Farbjer'a Ginirer Tonic. It coets only a tr.ifle, can. never do any hariiw aivd posesf es curativo properties ia the hMjlsrst .k-Rree. We have known the palest, sickliest locking nien,. women and children become th rosiest aiwi healthiest, from. the timely une thia pure family medicina. See advertisement lit an other column. Oiterver. For sale at tho nw drug store, Ebensburg. ; 57-22: -Im. J The TousTfiWH C'KNT-NjtiAi. The Torktown celebratlen bejjina under the ai picea of the, Cectennial A.ssoiatlon tn tlse 13th of Octooer and continue until fch lota, when the national oiremoniea begin. Ci-(rrt-asraan Goode., President of the Asser tion, will deliver. the openinaddress, ajui on alternate days. addresses, will: be de-llvejed bv Secrelarv nt the Treaauev.. Carl SMsrz, and Frederick R: Coudert and Prot. t-ar-ller, of New Yurk. Rcligipua service wil? be conducted on Sunday., vhe ltjth v ttve morning bv Rb Rev. J. Jt Keene. Clriol',c Bishop of Rlehmond, assisted by rue Rev. Jaa. Oibbo:in, Avchbishoo of BaitUnrMe. n nd primate of tike Catholic t-'hurch. tbe V ni ited States, and in the everdng by R-v. John Mall, of iew. York, 'fhe fflativiea wil? t-m-braee pyrstemic displays.. eoticetts.Txl a na tional regreita on Uie 13Ch. The Mw Fouse, the scenstof the capltuiaiior: wiUeosd for the reception of visitors. On reccn will be reserves for the exhibition of rerolf itionary relic. No 6ood PRR.Cui&. No i can do a good job of woik.. preach a goo d sermon, try a law suit wHk doctor a patient, or write a good artic wbea be fee is miserable and dull, with si -garish braiia a-, id unsteady nerves, and none slotld snake the attempt in such a conditio, whoa 1 eay ( he so easily and-cheaply rr-raowed by a Bttl e Hop Bitters. See-anothei coItmbh. Jt'- Time. M. L.. OaUnan is the- a-thoriaea a gent In Ebena birg for the sate of Hop RJU rn. TheIkevitablk Rssci .t. The Blooorns orc K'pubteoan says, that, in Snyder county, where the speculative er aze first took pos session of tha minds of O ie people In Central Pennsylvania, we b-gt n to hear the out rrnnmnifS Ot rilsetKf at-tfin a caaenianta j Tf. becoasAn; w tresis ent that many poitcy- nnblers ara wDabietur ay them. The officers and agents are reeet'.-lng the. curst-s of the insured for ineir fle eption, and the retrlbu cied themselves to be millionaires in tbe near future are, despised by the people of the community in which they reside, and la ment that thpy ever saerifioed their man hood to their f ;reed for wealth. DvsrEPSlJ, AND I.ITKR COVtrLAIVT. Ia H not worth tt ie small price of 75 cents to free yourself frjm every symptom of these dis tressing co mplaitits? If you think so, call at E. Jaroea Drug Store, Ebensburg, Pa., and procure . bottle .f tihiloh'a Vltalizer. Every bottle hf m a printed cnarautee on it. lT6e ac eordtajr'y and It it does you no good it will cost Jr ju aothing. 4-8. -e.o. w.ly. A't 4 o'clock Fridaj morning the work of cha ncing the gauge of theChleago, St. Louis d New Orleans railroad t Jackson rout-) i rom nve reet to tne standard gauge of four feet eight and a half Inches was commenced. The entire line from New Orleans to Cairo, a distance of five hundred and fifty miles, exclusive of sidings, together with Kosciusko branch of twenty-one miles was completed, and trains were running In all directions at 3 p. m. the same pay. To complete this her culean task a force of over three thousand men were employed, being distributed along the line. - This is the greatest feat yet ac complished in gauge changing. won, wuicb we preuf ctea as tne lotoi an wno . .J L. M T , maiuamH in b ,. i cleanse the Blood, clear th Complexion and Skis, are eneagen in ttm dishonest practice Is be- restore the Hair, and enre every ip-ci.r of ltchln ing VtSlted UPAH tf.e CUlltV. Many Who fan- Scale and Scrofulon Hnmer of tha Ski a Ka!,: A Twoator-ow arrd safe remedy Is Dr. MET TAUR'S HCA.DAO HE a?td DYSPEPSIA PILLS." Sold by aU druggUH. Frio 25 cents. !-:T.-lsi3 An Apparition t the Blessed Virgin. A FA'TTSn JSLHTD OIRL l?W A VlilO. PRE DICTS ITS RKAPPARACt ASD SX H I BITS IT TO MAH Y FMSOJTS. A special de-patcn to the New Tork World. dated Philadelphia. July 51, tells tbe follow ing remarkable story : For abrwt flr wki tt Mary Daan. l lb-to-Tr-"ld 4ii(btr of A. J. ln. of 5 .iltj Msrkst itPMrt, bai bo eooflavJ to ht 64. Xr. Xhion larf hit daughter bss bn blloj ferovar tlv years. br blind telor oaat4 bv soar Ut Urr. Sloe that tin mil nr weeks sfe var. aioem mai nm nrw ( it to all pprDe txso In perfect bU?. i tskso tlrk rhm lnKrail lir I.srsnlt that ss troll) to die aaxl that mrtfaly bksIIcid sbs When ha was irol wuiiM not do fteraay grna. tn nnw Darrnf ipuni. In eJr to "let hr tha Doctor arifDlD-Uterod both other al chloroform, tat nolthorhadtba lestt eBert pa her. and It wm only wb-B ber tatbor fwrltod prayers that tbo qnltol. Shortly aftor being token sick ibc told hor ptrtirN that iho wot ng to tUop snd woold not ! op for sorer) rtT. Sho lcp f-r a wbolo woo, only wskts- P ox to otk for drlpkol witr and spparowtly Blllir stleep afota almost ImmeillotelT. Sbo h' otn no food ot a fohotantisl knd slnro sho ha bB illk. '-Tte Riorod Mother,' oho emlki the Virgin, baa booo one of tho spool,! oh)oti ot the ehrVi'l so ar t ion. Abo ul are wookt Of' tBTpHted bar uorenti by tailing thex trmi tns dm virion of th Vlraln, and oiel trot upon tho won where it nn appearet to wmr. ne apparition wa su?rvon'led by a tk4 The parent enitea-aored to eonvrne the! tha? fhe wan iniPTfiscTO, itni pne iit-itwj io i?rt inK rie reality of wlnt rtie had e-an and added. -Sm-ethln tell me- thst It will eotn- acaln." Sho tten mentl-mod t mirtit whe it would ap pear ! the hour. SSo aleo reqaorfed- tnt an altar to erected axalrrt th- w-ll Old pTTldt-d with birred candle. was done.- Otatbeap- polntad rifht tnanr of tfc ne'rhhoro writ preaeat In tbe tx-Sroom. Alary requeued oi tbo bxr ao proarhed :t all kneel acd "recite tho Uraoy of tho Blotted? Viriflo." Toward tho end t awited that tbo eaiHlloe bo lit on tr-o altsr. the rort of tbe eharafH-T herns; to complete larioe. ITdoly at roidnlrht aud tha lot: "Pray tor o'r died away a faint balo tbone on tbe wall. Is a- mo ment It took nape, and befjre tho oyet vt tbo men. women sad children preerot came tbe fcm of a womrn clad in white and hotdlnc her beode too-etlier before er. While tbo other, on thr kneee with bent head aod pMrrttailnt; beano, hardly dared relee their ojo, she p-lrl with Hy breathed a ferrent prayer and. cpenint her e too wide. bo pointed to tbe pot on Itm wall where the apparition appeared. "ambe- ot Intellireot Catholic In Win Philadelphia aro reported to hare eeen tbe trare lt(ht. It ha occurred twloo flnce. Mill linn alwayp rccntlonlna; bo forebind the ntprht ea witch It -eid appefcr. Mr. Jane MrIauKhllo. t.lM Ludlow, tirect, and ton both taw th flxare and minutely decrlbo It. Tbe room wa filled and all. It If l. raw It ex cept one lady. Mr. MOMotkev. next door to tbo Dunn, and Mr. Buol ia-.-, ol 'Forttctb-etreel and Powolton areuue, alro w it. WORMS. WORKS. VT OR "ST ST: Tape Worm removed alive, head and all com plete, in from two to three bMin. No fee till cored; or if prepared medicine l dvrtred. ean be taken at borne. l-'or Tape Worm, tbe patient tnnet cejt th doctor penooally or by mail. ) Send three cent etamu for information by mall. 'r etoroach, 8at, Pin. Round or Thread Worm. K. K. Ken!1 Worm Syrup. Fifty per cent, of cate of IH-rpop. la and diftora-amzaUou of liver are eauitad be totaaeh and other worm In the alimentary ncot. -I 1 nave a veicetaDi remedy wmcn rettnally rw more them, and cleaoe theliveraod kWueys. 4 nmri ol prominent emaen ol rhiladelphi wbo bare been ttoated for rarlou ill"eaee k1t pepala. consumption, bronchltt. female wcaknest. etc. can certify that my treat u.ent bo cured thous and tbat they had been treated tar wrotnj ln imci. Common ene tear ho if late Worm can bo re moved, all atlier worm can be readily dcotroyed. Advice al once aud store iree. i he doctor can ten whether or not the patient bf worm. Thoa-rond are dytnir dally with worm and do not -know it. Fits, sparm. erampt. choking and suffocation, sal low complexion, circle around theecs. swellluc aod pals In tho stomach, restlessness at night, T!ndlD; of the teeth pk-ktoc at the note, euoirta, lever, itching at the (eat. headache, foul breath, the patient crow pale and thin, tickling aud irri tation la the anu all there (ymptoiii and more eoao from worm. K. F. Kunkei Worm t;rup sever fails to remove them. Price, l.oo tc Pottle, or ix nottle tor SS.00. (For Tapo Worm, wrto and consult the dootor.) For all other buy of your drua-irlrt th Worm Svrop. and it he ba U cot. NDd TO Z. r . &QDIV1. i . iiinm v., uiwuw phta. Pa. Advice by mall free ; (rod 3 cent (lamp. E. F. KUNKEL'j BITTER Wi.VE OF IRny. Tbo jrt-ot rncce and dellht of the people. In fart, nothinit ot tho kind bar ocer boon oCerod to tho American people which t as so quickly fotiasl it wav Into their ipod favor aud hearty approval s t f. Kunkei' Hitter Wine of Iron. It doer all It proposer, and thus KITea universal rallrfact'on. Jt t icoaranteed to cure tho worst cafes oi dyapop ta or lndicestion. kidney or iivor disease, weak ness, nervotirne. eonrtipatlon, acidity ol she stm sck. etc. Oct the a-enuine. hold onlv in (1 boc tiet. or six bottles lor . Ark lor E. F. Kunkei ' Bitter Winoof Iron, and take bo other. U vour irmxrirt har It not. send to proprietor, K. F. Kno kel. it IS". Nlnt St.. Philadelphia. Pa. Jdvlco free ; send three cent atarep. Aechenbaeh Jt Mil ker. Sole Agent. 3d and Cailowhill Sti., Plilla-i a St. ISlmo Ilotel, N'o. 317 and 319 Arch Street,. PHILAUKLPHIA. Rates Reduced to S2.00 ie- Usr.J The travelling publlo will still find at tb Is Hotel -.1 tbo aaoee liberal provision for their eomfo rt. It - located in the Immediate cea'.re of buaitieta aod. SDitwati1. and the different Hall Ro". depot, as well a all part of the city, are easily a ererrtVi by street carr constantly paro'tiic th doo . It 4 forsepeolal inducements lor those vtsltlnf the ett for Niner or pleasure. Tsor patronage Is resnecttullv rolicltes I. JOS. M. FttltK, Pre prlotor.-. Philadelphia. Nov. . Uto.-ti. STATEMENT UNDER OATH. A Startling R-veltiou of Su fieri ng. OH- MY GOD, HOW LD1D SUFFER V "I Earnestly Pray ed taDSe," 'T hare been afflicted for twenty year wita an I otioente skin disease, ca'.lej by some Itt.D.' Proriats,ad by otoorf Lerorosv. eoramonoiBg on my seafood. Id spit of f .11 I ceild 1f. wttk tbo help of tb roort skillful dccUrs. It slewly tot a re ly eTtsodex), until a year fo this wicult eevered my esttre pcreon In tor an of dry oca.'.. For tho last t-ree years 1 bava eea unable in do any la bor, and ru fieri n; Intensely all tbo-tinra. Erery Bontine there could be nearly a. dustpanfal of araVt taken from the sheet on ajr boa. mae of them half r laree at the envelof a cnntalnlrm tho letter. In tbe latter part of wlciar nvy kia com menced cracking open. I tried eeervtbina;, almost, that ronld e thought of. without any relief. Tbo 13th of June I started Wort, la kopec 1 eoald reach the Hot Springe. 1 reached !" It. and wa o lew I thought I should have So r o V the bnrpltal. hut finally srot as far a LBif, Mich., where 1 bad a rlrter livln. On lr. treated mo aeoot two weeks, hot did me no g-eod. All thoncht I had but a short time to lire. 1 earaestlv preved to die. (."rack ad through the rkln all over ny rmek. acros my rin. arms, hand, limbs, (ret badly swollen, toe-nail came off. nneer nils dead and bard as bone, hair dead, dry and lifeless a old straw. U, my fxi ! how 1 did rufter. "Xj Bister. Mr, r.. n. iwvir, naa a small part Mr. K. H. er i box of Coticnra In tbe bouse. She wouldn't jivo on; ai newin try t nticnr.' Some wa applied toon hand and arm. Kureka ! there wat relief: Mopped the terrible bamtnc sensation from th word so. They immediately a-ot tbe Resolv ent, t ullcura nfl v.p. I commenced by taklnc one tablespoonful of tho Resolvent three timet a day, after meal; had a bath once a day. water about Mood heat; need Coticnra Soap fre'elv ; ap plied Cutlcura mornlcf and evening. Henult. re turned to my home to Just six weeks frum time I left, with my skin as smooth as tbtr sheet of paper. HIRAM B. ("AKPKNTtA. "Hendorten. JfIeron Co., N. T.'- ?worn to before ma thie lotb dav of January, 1M0. A. M. LtFFlNOWEI-U. Justice of tb Peace. IV o Humnn Agency and Hlood as the Cutlcura Kcmedle. ceasiattny of Crncrsi RaeotTaT, the new Blood Purifier, and (tncrsi and Citicta Soar, tbe Oreat Skla ("uros Ark yonr o; ro pr a rt about them-. Right bora la thl town you may find evidence at their wonderful healinr power. "or Sunburn. Tan and ttreaty Skla or Crnec- Soar, a iqulsit toilet, bath and noveery san ative, fnurrant with delleiou lower odor and bealma; balsam. Coticnra Remedial are for tale bv all dren'sts. Price of CCTirrRA. a Medicinal Jel'tv. small boxes KK ; lartre boxe. fl. Orncraa KsovRaT. th nw Blood Pnr1Br. II per bottle, TTcra Ma Dicrsat. Tottrr So, 2c. rrniTM Mericit. Sbaviho Sor,l ; tn lar for barber and large eonrumors, toe. Prlnelparl dapot. Weeks A Petter, Bta, Mas. T"A11 mailed free on receipt of price. Oae of Uooin' Voltaio Vianrlu. Pi ttrau aatlfi T9UAIC tXKTBOit eantt. It far superior to fit M .-eA every other eleetrle apptl- AS I L.t"" aneeberorothernblle. They Instantly relieve Dyspepsia. 1.1 ear Complaint. ?H a laria. ver and A:ne. and Kidney and lrtaary Irlfflcnlties, and may be worn over tho pit at the rtatnach. over the kidnev. or anv aOected part Price. 3 es. Sold everywhara. eeks 4t ( tr, BmUb, Smi. (l--lm. YA88AR COt.lL.13GB: potdHBErrNC, h.-t. rom TH? LI RURAL tDlCiTlO OP WOIK. Kt- aroinatlons for eotranoe. s-t.t. 14th." Ctalo;aei tent ob pi-1leatton to W. h. DKAN. Btf Ittrar. Aug. 6, ll.-Sm. X i ! fUVl 'r to Huts. anAaTBta. ilWvilt fire. AaC':sf.--(rfnf.,Au.-sk ile. ESTABLISHED FOR IBlRIi'-fin - HAY BROTHER ManuH.turen r WHOLES ALE AND RtT. l towi -or- goat . sear favoi 1 rn!e ten. i knov a we 3 has onoe 1 houi -and t 1 Ship, patrl days Tayl ckoif 29 y." 1 Pror w tw, mm -AND- H.i: ! Sheet Tron War; elr cnlid AND tEALERS !X HATING, PABMRaiiCSi STOVES SHEET META1 -JtSvD- IOUSE-KRMSHIXG 3G0DS 1 D5 have Te rt ab!o i r l-bia, t ;.'( lasts V Jer r tfl fi Jobbing in TW, COPPER 4 SHEER PROMPT IT ATTrrOED TO. sizes M 4 time! JOHNSTOWN - PA. it ford. phy1 Chicago L Norlh-Wcs': Tt A 1 1. WAY LUVllTtl: and tea tar DCid. LEADING R AILW'J.Te1 WEST ANd'nORTHW: now It It tbotbortaad best route bwtsl tt all poiEte In Catnl Warebara tlltael. Iowa. Pkta. town' break. California. Oreeea. t olir. v Arla, Idaba, loatae. !. COUNCIL BLUFFS, OM fra,! Dr..WrR, LEADtlLIL in on SALT LAKE, S A ' FIl A AO r'" DMdtd. lai Hy. They Cedar aTapic. Ic oisct. ' "v-afcuj. s-i: -. A n re Temtc-riet end n fe Welt. ' " rnel i e. Grm Bay. Othkeik. ffhoyccn. y.a-: du Lmr. Hec-fc.v-n, Heuahtni. cr-iai. pure ' Pi. .MiacTolis. llvrnn. Voice. " "wlrHi K laoiu. ljt'rottr. Ovarenta ad c " nrtotm. Paxara. H Urounn rlf pessll At Council BIu"s the Tr:r.; ! f tts i Xortb-W ertcrn and the I . ' K -. . -.v arrive at and ue the raire ! i-!ot I X At t hlca;n. clore connection s -t : " . f Ijvkw Shore. M Ich-iran Ont'ni H'.' 'i-o: Ciate Pt. Wavne an.i Pennr-vtrarla. t ! ja,a 1 Trunk ll ji, and the Kankakee ar.J i ' ... Route. Wutlfl eT-CIoae reanertloa made at Jaaftlai name It la (be OX I.T I.I5F. rnnnlr. pullmaxiiotkldimm;;-! CHICAGO and COUNCIL BLl7arD rnllman Sleeptrs en all Mrnt Inrlrt ujon Ticket Aeutr vll'.na f ' via thlsrfwjd. F.xsnulne out 1 n-ketr! a. Igbtf ; to hue if they do nnt read over tt i- -p Worth-Wertern Kaflwav. ' If yon wih the Hest travellr; K":ti -H-tld you will buy yoer Tt.-kts by this r.av arTiKE Kt E otHkr. . iree 4rAll Ticket A rent sell T'-- " tn the M4RVI nt.hin D!strl 'Mv 1 :en trar-ts BmmmmaBataT0e3--B- Kc THE CHEAT be, : ItriiLIXGTOy JJOHdrtde rwN other line rvn Tbre ftor' tenrer TVatna Daily betrf lf -Jrctr Moines, Council Blr. t' aa t f" -Joaepb. Atehiaon. 1pek a" ' ,tnn llrect conBectioi! for all r"'r" W Nebraska, Colorado Wye-mlr "Hl'a r rada. Maw Mexico. Artaoca, ldno.l"e (. Califotjiia. Xa Tbo bortett. re4t !'!l'-v-ti-. Ma Route via Hannib' o Fort Went Dallat. Houston. Austin, Saa Anics-' 4 t,e ton and all point in Texat. ... Tba uneqnajea tnac-meett effr.Jed T) Line to Trawelert and Tour:t. 1 " W! Tb celebrated Pullman ''" Z Sl.anlrr l lr, v-n cn.v r tl r. OUTke Q. Palace IVswItr-Room Car, wj, Try It. and vou win ana ir- rrt ta4 of a diomfor. rtl. Tbroufb T1oea v.a HI . re as a, for earn at aJ eeas tn tbe la-" a-f-Canada, fi" . Ail inforraatioa about Tr--e. Ins Car Acmmmofliuoni. ' 1 " , j vt Ul bo cheerfuhy flvon by r" A. Oti'l rsi'era i?, f. I Wast-:i"";t" .f af iJtt. and UT Pioc,.T- - J. O. A. K 91 JAMK5 R WOOH. tiea ""Vx- 0 TTRR. r.ea. M i Desirable Property ft.X rpHf. dndrlnnd Uhe te'' r Tb 1 -PtHTY. loctd at Mtl!woJ ".sh. anuhtv. oa the line ef tre 1 . . : fa ft1 . . . ,1, 1.1. ...,rt 'III F . r K H : " . U near to a-nod market, ha , three ru f rel not in repair), a ecpioitf AtMlUnl Afrvln . Millwood. Jul 7 . vi.-:vy , ; ' I' 5htaw a m U- s w. iTX .-1' 1 dk a m a. a-kk fatiNiUf W lf C i fir pTt?lr . -i3t b ia-slSeUrTilw A a A r,TS three i I ftrrZ- JtLT4:1- A vse Ww. - c"'-" e 3(t&r - -iVi i'Tt ! I"" 3 grVaTa3tgriEi Flftb l THE encai Jollar 4-l WKSTWAUD. A "cr;: r- y. Jremi aafy -6jrdiai ks . i -e'P5a"y-, Ky Ilka ord"s : Ree'KiIra Cbatra. Nu extra cdt In netllr.lna baire. T fW'"'V' am r'ac D'nlaif Car. O otrc . disi fitted with tT.eeont H i-h-P-' 1 vclvlnr blrfer tbe exeli:!V wl-'tni rlar paaeerirera. -r --Vr P-c-l Track and Suae-!'"'- ' -n-,V- T bined with their G rent Tbmufix ,0, bo! xnent.makethla. above all j Rrmse to tba South, South-w !.- -weot. 1 Mt