1 1 I i i f ' r " " "i U - i. - - mnlimrf iceman. EDENSBURC. PA., Fill DAY, - - - Al'GVST 10, 1 SSI. last. I.o. SdMnirv v.ith- !- ; v his ;.;,.-'.! ion to U,o I l i-h f.an.l V.jll :v it i. i-s.-.l th o;w of (Vtr.mons, :ri'l 'Ji-' tlirfff-Mf-'l .1, :i'l'o'!: hrtwecii 11:.- two hons.'s over tho bill was thus ;ivn;,l.-.. .Ik!' X "i i-oo:o: r in: v. l.'i r- ; i-f"Ti t oil the 1. ; :;: K I in i;i ir.si nor in i no t;ue S.-i ate. ilii-.l n S:n.(!av last, at Spring i;i!,i . N. .1.. in tho lis' yr-.ir of I: is a-o. IFo vas a man of ability, an unswervit'S I 'fin :;r:it . anil possessc-il a diameter without sain or I' proidi. Ui- term :ivp ff.in.il at t lie cml of IV- 1 1. onhl Mnl-. r. So ji x v I y : ii ir report's have loin put into eii ci' it ion in the interest of spee iihitors ahop.t the arecrat f of this year's wheat ep: as (mparel witli that of 1 .-. that it is isnposs'iM.-- ytt to nr.iVe a reliable i t ior.it'. Tlie, report of the A -Ti icii't nr.-il 1 )i 'pai t men! .to appear next week, is the not imtvntant oiif of the the year so fir as wheat is eonoerneil. ami it was staterl 5v fiP.ieials of the IV ,iai tiv.f nt on Friday last that the reports then l'-eeiveil iti'lii-atf ! a falling off as roTiipnred with last ear of about V2S K dim b-.ihfls. There is little doubt also that in the trreat rom-irrowintr S ates of tlieWest the yid.l will be far below that of hi-t rear. Til i: l'li si'lriit's eoinlit ion in the early part of Ttvs.hu- nivrlit clmnsM for the w.-rse, in eonst quenee of l.is bavins vomited -.'veral tilings, ami on "Wednes Oay the s'iavi st :pp! lier.sions wi re fell :it the AVIiite House that his end was near at hand. His rendition during Tue.-day l.iuht and all of Wednf'lay was more hopeful, however, and the la est dispateli from AVashiivt on at 7 nYl-vli this i'Thuisdav) mornincr. states that h.e pa-red a (iii fort able niaht :'nd was sotv.'-u hat letter: It Kerms that the reat troubl" with him is not mused by the wound, but frr.ni the refusal of bis stomach to retain any nourishment. Th' prospects of his invi i'v are by no means bright, but while there is life there is hope. I i islnul to bdi.'vethat Mrs. !;uth'i ford U. Ifaeshasb! en truthfully report ed as .iy i nr t hat the, issue in the Ohio election this Fail is: "Shall I endorse (oilfield or (initea-.i ". " And yet the Cincinnati (' n,,i,u ,;, il, a loadmc: and well-known Uepublican paper, proclaim ed to the world th.it she 1 i . I i:-e these very words. A Cleveland friend of Mi , Hat es i1 n;. :-. ho-.vi ver.that shec mploy e 1 ?;,. t-Npr. si on. and a .pi'-.-t ion of ver acity is thus raise, 1 between him and the C.,, ., i,,, 7. A"e trust or, h.rr own ar -rou:-.t that the denial is w ll-fornided. a'id that sh ilid not deiihr.ttelv iraVe Tin: .lol:r.stown T,-ilu.-,f is constant ly sr.fipp:r.r at tli' heels of Jeremiah S. Black, .-ml it niav ih.-vbly flatter itself that .Tud.ije lihu-k bears and herds its i persisient yelps in th.e quiet of his rural ' home away down in the county of York. , The Tril'i is unlir.pp.V because Jude ' lll.ick has recently vindieated the truth 1 of hi-'ory by making a very complete : and '.'svbseincr .tn'f ment to a reporter of th.e I'hikidelj.hia Vrf.s, who visited ; him f t th-it jiurpnse.of the position oc cupied bv yiv. ucbanan ar.il his cabin et. of which Judu"- r.lack was a ir ember, in reference to the 5-orps.sion movemerit between th.e meeting of Concrress in IV ren'.ber, lr,t and the inauguration of Mr. F.ineobi on the !h of March, 161. Tn support, of this statement of ".., by .Tndcrf I'laek, occurring durincf the thrfr months mentioned, he furnishes record ' evidence the truth and sufficiency of which no man outside of a lunatic asy lum will sainsav or call in question. His own letter as Secretary of State to , General Scott, dated .January lo. 11. on the vital necessity of instantly rein f orchid Maj. Anderson, then in Fort Sumter, is a part of this record evidence, now for the first time civen to the coun try. Another ra't and one which shows .Tudje r.la. k in those dark and threat ening days tohavel 'en a true and un (lincliinc? patriot, is the paper, or mem orandum, he wrote at the end of Decem ber, lof, for President Tjuchanan, in answer to th" impudent demand of th.; thiee South Carolina commissioners, then in Washington. This memoran dum, which Mr. Ibichanan adopted in his answer, was wiittenby .Tmhre T.lack ' in the office and in presence of Edwin M. Stanton, wl:owa then Mr. Buchan an's Attorney General, and was copied bv him sheet by sheet as .In due Uho k wrote it, the copy in Mr. Stanton's hand writ in beintr now in .Tudo P.. "s pos session. These revelations of .Tude F.. as wfil as others to which wo cannot re fer, sustained as they are by evidence of their truth "asstronir as proofs of holy ' writ," are exceedingly annoying to the editor of the 7V' ".c. and while lie dare not ven r.re a contradiction of the re cord proof adduced, h.e takes refuse in wanton calumny and ahus' of .Ir.d'jre P.lack upon the silly pretext, invented by himself, that Jndo V. is making a bid for the vacant scat on the Supreme Court I'.eneh. Judge P.. is in-ii. s old. which is .,( vera- over itm age .'. mi :cf of Coivjress permits a in his office Reminiscences hr Ma. (J. Nelson Smith. Laurel I Hill, a spur of ' the Aliecenies w eenery is exeea I ic. the Rir pure. TfTF. V1PCT CVVAI. 1ie.M-SM.T-MKlN(i ON THE CONt.M.U'eH KTiKIMINKT (IIVKII? THE f. F.NT.llT A I.ONT. THF.SE KIVEI1P VFo ETAHI.K r.EATTIES, ETC. fSpociol rrin-c'rimili'iioe nf the Snplmrg T'ro. Mo vst Joy, Arnistronff Co . Pa. ) Aucust S. 1S1. S I write fr.tn whot is neither a new, old, or far-famed waTeriecr-pl iee or summer resort, ye a few words nlx-nt te p'aec mav not he ur.interetlii!. Mo'sr t .Toy. fts the place is named, is the I o:netrad of one of i.iv earli est and ohle-t living friends, ('not. Henry Trc.bv. It is a !i-vi -i f : f n I spot, s'ttiio t I on the ri-jht h.Tik of the KNkiminetas Ttiver, soine two miles tihove T.eeehhurnr. nt rn ele vation of one hundred and fifty f the river l ed Here thr i;i'r!v I'-nii'ifut find r.'irir trer-!'. rim mv.coraiincr. ;::e prt im iione wwli to beaut if v t lie ptnee. nature hns rot been too nincli interfei ed with, soti at theas pert is sipr-'ilnrly plensins. Sixty vc.rsaco, when 1 1 io writer was n lov, lie visited this spot at st.ifed ir.terals, when the conn fry was coveted with timber and thick under lnush. Put durina the period of sixty years, bv th.e preservation of (lie fittest, and tlie sweeping off f tliat which wis unfit, the country is now covered with thrifty farms, and handsome, comfortable dxve'dir.cs. The era litre wlkieh more tl'.an half th.e century Ins wrou'jhl strikes the mind of th" visitor wifli trreat force. I am n'ensed to fied my r 11 time romranion and friend, with his estima ble lady and accomplished daiirhter. liviiiG in comfi it and afltuenco. He is now travel iio'ilown life's hill, near its foot, at the "lose of his ehiht y-tirst year, and like your eoire- ' spondetit. as the jocular eilifor of the C,ua hrit I'rfiivin puts it, sadly in want of "a pair of new leas." I.ee hbiu-.j. which took Us name from Ta- ' vid I.eecli. the hnildcr of dnm "o. 1, at tlie p(.int. at which th.e town is situated, was, at the time Mr. Leech commenced operat'ons, almost a barren waste. There was tint one rude, round locr cabin, the abode of a fisher man, named Hunter, and near by ir was a i noted sprit'.!! at which CHioenieu and koel- i boatmen always landed to partake of itsoool in:r wafers, of which the writer n;;d los friend, Truhy. often partook, beechbanr is i tevday a tiinffy, onterpi isincr town, with near two thou-nrd inhahitaiits, reir.avkah'e ' for beirci lie'i'ed day and nisht by a con sf.uit sticani f.f tmrnina eras. Th. re is al- ; ready le-re one larse rolling mill in f)iera tion. ai;d a mw steel and ulass works about to oe eon-t re.cted. Some years a.roa party dcsii inir to tet the teniforyfor oil. drilled n well oa the West morelaml side r f the river, directly opposite the town, in which no oil was found, hut from w hi. l. a lar re flaw of lms proceed-!, and which the propi i.'toi s of the I.eccl.hii:'!: Kohiier Mill utilize.' The cas of this well let only furnishes heat and hirht for the iron works, but a pipe, projectile far ahove the roof of ihe null, illuminates the whole town. P.vthe use of t!ii -jasthe com pany not only lilit their works but save , larrrelv m fuel, hieh , r,-m lha ol.iindnncp ot mis i perennial shrub, and wdiich lines its S"1' and crowns its towerirs peaks. '1 lie I,urei , Hill is now in its fullest and richest costume, ; showinirthe tinesl delineation of nature ana nortrnvina lier choice-t nencilniir. Notion ! more beautiful than the Pennsylvania moun tain laurel can be seen in nature, save and except her beautiful f.ncrer-work in thelarce snow-like blossoms of the maernoha in I exas Pi the country surroiiudins t he Trinity and San Jacinto "rivers, the mairu-'lia trees are seen in their native loveliness nml natural proportions. On the afore named river, forests of t'"s lmffi'ificent tiee rear their tn.rfcs from wo to pi f.ct. with larire leaves wearing the richness of deepest perennial verdure. Purine the flowcritu: season, which lasts from Mavto ,U!m-t, the magno lia t'ce. viewed fivm it - smi iii'r etevotion on a loll-ide. presents one of the most er.chant-i,-.,r tj,.iOs ini ature. A sine'e magnolia tree brines to the mind of the beliohh-r thonhts of a snow-white robed, beautiful woman his a i'pi ot'eh. ' - - NEWS AM) OTIIKR NOTIXJN. trecti LETTKR FR01 M1M0T.. ctiArmo ifs ription f a westeisv i.onk naiutow escape of a fish ino i'ahty on post pake. Y- It was at I.eechbiu'!! the put: ;:r ited vear: at which an act of Conuiv. .TinP'O of that Court to lc-ii on fuM pay for the balance of his life. .Tndsro Ioack would never take a coin-mi-.Mon as one of the .lust iocs of lh Supreme Court from a Republican ad ministration, and it he would lieconl lu't crot it. Pmt eV n if the office w is tcn- would si i!i bell- of its wrath and the know- .is:!nt fact alone Pi .ck. bra.y( tunl tted to be. to c;-.st and eiitei ni isina: Daviil I.ei'ch. the proprietor of the first transportation line. Uui't his first four boats, named Pioneer, !)eVi!t Clinton, Pennsylvania, and General I. acock. The first rana b :it. b.owe,-er, that ever moved on the Western division of the Pennsylvania canal, was built at Warren, now Apollo, coueerniiie which the following ONtr-iet is taken from an art:c!e many years a 1:0 pub lished in a PiM-'iii'rh ma.r.e'ine. wi'eii on the subie-- of the first conception ot iniiliti:? t ne er as toPoW- The icl the we-t by a canal, which lead ' r-1 c : : va- l-sii.T ;tt ,- o; '. ; r.iT.-k 1. it 'i. ' ; c.r I. ' il ' .1' t h 'V I - 1!! '!- n S: 1. l.l r r f-ror Pi! i ! r r r n w- -t i.f T 1: o il. .i.fi A'iivt I.-i'',-', S:i- :--'a. ll.e.v : Aruior.ll 1 i :-. na ! r t. .c: ;.i,--, ,. t P 1 1 1 -' i .' ! : . 1.!'.. r : a -ins. i:. i"!t'l.- nr. 1 rr.iTOns iil'r I, -o- i t' -biv-. II. r !rnit V:or. a l.t I."" 1 1 o rr , .n v,;o" -tia-r.'-r' Sv tlie H .ii. i n' i Pii Tie d( red to him. 1 Ic 7W" here to pour out the v ppo-l his devoted head b'.lue (.f that blip would cause Jil lo fearless as ho is adi aside the protV. rcd honor in i.r k a' ir -i.t : ' ,1 t-,.:.t wio- ' ;.) rt Oil I !i '! oa ite.: et . 1 , irt' nr moai i f tlie cur ;:t I.-? ill it .-. ivn-- i.tOv n i :-jiay ' :u'..., eiont T r . . - 1 Oil' 1 . lV::i"it''i,wi'i"T:i.!ct .'e:rj. I f ri'-r .1 1. 1. .. '. . f t'nj.f. lr-n. us n i:. I'.et-. - K ll' e" 'a . If. Ni'isin Smitll hca.L' i. aii i1 . :pii.". kn.-l- ' TP t'''-'a th" ai.lrli ".' ' f t';f ll.ae l a irnla .lav et. wlii.-li sb e arrivr-.l nt i.-jj-r. !i-T ::.lvf it l:n 1 l . M In r;.l ! 1 l .r rind :i n 1 11 ir..i ! t ma r. n :i a. I ir-v li-.-V-p-i t.o'. u Ta -o.i : -Inii t'i. lik'1 .it wiii.-ti Oiov y . I to !: '.!'. 1 1 v i ral-v lr a fool of lo ix If in the wa I -or. It was a wise n mar! Xapo'eot! tha wonien ste l mi in! of the :! 1 let ed t. at Tin: lh publican Stat' Virginia bo-t at E;.i:'d.l nesday week ai, i spl i: ii tic a i ,i 1! t. t.l i. M. Ai:n- rra' r.T. a ,;, p. ill !! t d 'l'l;:l CO !!Y. v .;: in V O'l ; .-p. i ' !i a M-.h-'b.o. H was 'rippt d fan:..! to bo , 1 :-l:. P- id' is'- r . th" firs fo ppinc'ir '' -uffiMir b :!.,M,-.ves an j.ecrr-.es out of their vote so a -rain if thf v had tl i:l :t. ins! s- th IP -1,1 to a e : any c; el tha powf r mbin: it ti 11 : ! a :e, n Con very vijor 'i: i a wit! if Maho;,; ' Would b, "Ml of stuff lOei'S ot t "'- ti Ml a- t;..n paris, lit e n. favc-ai f-lci- M - ea.o The fa. le to M; ! Cel. ( sh'.-rt ' i; tr. COIiVe hi ibto tw holding i! s n in the con i:l ion of mi,-' 3t i i ! r r t 1. a la. M i tt.f a ri i - .i 1 . .f tic :!..- t .-vn vr-i- (. mi 1 Oi h-.O-liv i : 1 -o . . ll i - wa ; a 2 . el (. Se" a I - -i iv U - -f ar- i We have been kindly permitted to publish the following letter from a son of Dr. 1 lost ot ter. if "Bitters fame, whose family i spend ; imr the heated term in this place. The letter j is addresed to a yonnirer brother if the wri- : ter, and famishes a very readable descrip tion or an adventure which came near cost- : in!! tlie lives of the young man and his fel- low voyagers : Kuna, Minn., An?. 10, 1881. i I PKU' Fiiki). Your letter received a few ! days ,-il'o. I told vou in my postal that I would have a bi-r fish storv to tell yon the next time I wrote, ! pinl I think I have one now. thouch it is not about a very laice li-li. The day I wrote vou from Forest bake we left for some other lakes much farther north, eal'ed Fish Pake. , I.r.st Pake and Battle Pake. We had pretty : rood fishimr the first- day we were there, eateliin; some black bass that would weitrh four pounds at least : hut at t!;e niosf inti r- ; ! osiitoTtime, when the fisli were bitincr spleu- J didly. we run out of bait, and had to come . home with a strinr of from fifteen to twenty ' bas. We determined tlie next, day to be I ' well supplied, and . spent t!ie net morninct ; er.ti'hinrr froirs. which, by the way, were ; about a,s hard to catch as the fish and that aflernoon pulled four miles through Fish Pake into Post Pake, ami there, at the out let, h"!ran to fish. We were so bnspy en- '. aaced in lishinrr that we did not notice for some time that there was a terrible storm brewing, and before we realized the fact, it ' broke upon us in a pertW hnrricane. We were fortunate enough at tlie time to be very near shore, and by hard juillin!! landed and beached our boat. We were now ritrht in the heavy timber, and thou :h not feeP.ni: at all ; comfortable at the time, it certainly was a srrand siuht to w.i teh tlie storm plavin-r iiavne. ; all around us. ( sUowtd have told you be fore that on landini! we had di-eoyertd an old deserted wood-chopper." hilt). T stood at the door of our hut and saw tree after tree lipped and torn to pieces, while every now and then the li'jlil nimr, which was terrible, would strike a tall old pine and fairly make kiadlinir wood out of it. This th imr kept up for about two hour, and when it calmed soirie we ventured out airain : and as it was then only about ." o'clock we started fo fish ' in;; once mote. We t ad spvudid luck. . catehiua a nice strinir of fi-h. and about, 7 o'clock, tliouirh it was still rabiini! s..me, we started to pull for home, as the wind was then b'owum vcrv strontj riirht up the lake. I and f hoiiah we had wo p a;r of mis we found it pii-jhty hard work to make anv yrorrress arraiiist it. We h id about reached the mi.I d'o fif ti-.e fake, altera half hour's hard tua; cinir. when 1 tnt'ied nrotiml to see that we were headiii'r in the ri'rlit direction and what I saw bearinu down iiou us. Fred., fnirlv made tnv hair stand upon end. and for the moment took ail tlie breath out of me. Iiu stinetivcly yelled o-;t to. Tared and he tnrneil and this is v. hat both saw : A back evund of clouds as black as ink, in the centre of which, and leadimr ri'rht down ujion ns wis a circular mass of dusty yellow clouds, which were whirlinT and teariii" t a furions late, while entirelv atart by themselves. The air. though file wind was hlowin like th'ia ch'r. suddenly h"orime hot and optoessi vp. end Ihoii'h 'vet t!,roc2h and soaked as I was. i iie-'tn to ;(! 'He r.'Tsm rat ion on ray fer-'head. It is pi.-t'v lard to sav now whether I was scared or not. as I really I Hi: 1 1". ; 11. wl. bv Ma: ie i or. aim S: d tor. ij; the fb i r" v ere pr i tiee of cheating the and would do ohar.ee and. that it w;is for dishonest practices of that h:rd that Mnh-.no had been kicked out of the Iomoera!:o par!. He eon eluded hi- spni-eliby s:iyir:L' amidst irroaf a;.p!:iur;e that raM-er than vote fm Ma hope and his Captain Kidds. It- would vote f.u the pttle fin 'er on the h-ft band of .b dm W. Panic!, who. although he w as the I ). mot rat ic ncmieee. was in fa vor of hene--f lv pn inir the State debt. The I. -mocrat ic State Committte met at II ri isbniuron "Wednesday, Aucr. loth, and as briefly noted in our creneral news item-" hist week, fixed on Wednes day. Sept om'oet j-ith. as the time .and Williamsport ns he place for luddinir tlie next State convention. Mr. Dill, the chairman, was authorized to ap point a committee, to consist of seven members, to draft rules for the better jr-v. erniiH nt of the parly in Pennsylva nia, the committee to report to the State 'on unit t at Will iamspot t on t h even ing of S 'pfember !2T!h. the day before the meet incr of the convent ion. The cit izens of Williams-port are hiirhiy pleased at their city be inn selected as the place for bol ting the convention, but if tho con"entioii was likelv to be an exciting one. which it certainly will not be. and if 'S,rrre Poll McMullen should take with him a car-load of his Fourth ward ( Philadelphia) row dies and blackcruarrls, ns he has boon in the habit of doine on similar oooasfnos. tho Williamsport peo ple will wish that the convention had en held somewhere else. an it il Mi. -II i in ' ! . laiioro s .'iv. !ii io:: a.-t his earn! Ma' e for !.!:.' other taeiu.::. v.'Pici: lint ion nti'i m Savor bt of tlie State, nom- ii'ated ( Ji-iif-ral WicKhain for o.vernor. ('v.. W; kham refus.-d. powevi r, to .".r--ct-i-t , iii el l o i 'h r b op i in at ion was made. The ooid' -t will therefore most likely be cobfnnd to Cameron, IP'pud iat i"ii ist . and I'.miel. the I mot r.tt i ' and debt pay im: candidate. This split virtually uit.s an end to the straight-out Popub lican party in Virginia, and renders pretty certain t no defeat of the Malcno State ticket, because his candidate, Cameron, could only hope to lie elected bv the Pepnblican convention declaring in his favor, which about one-half of its members firmly and indignantly refused to do. At least three-fourths of the . Pepnblican vote in that State is cast In colored mon. and in the state convention of which we are speaking, composed of over two hundred delegates, only hr ii.'. rirr were whites. Most of the speakinpr was done by colored men, and in the convention held by WJckliam, or the debt -paying party, the colored speakers who addressed it denounced Mahone in the most bitter terms, and didn't hes itate in saying that they preferred Dan iel, the Democratic nominee, a thousand times. Mahono'.s candidate will no doubt cc t tho larger part of the colored vote, but that, won't elect him, and es pecially so as the other portion of the negro vote, or at least the bulk of it, having no candidate of its ow n, w ill un doubtedly support Daniel. This is tlie aspect of the contest at the beginning, and as the campaign progresses we do not think- its present features will he ma terially changed. I 1 ,-!. .'- !' t' n .niii l r. an 1 at Ci' !l c ti.a 1 . 0 l.K . 1 -.1 II-' 1 - II' the I i" eel re Ml Wa- t'O, than t! ee was coo t-f 1 tl ' 1'VC-e a!' r 1 wis rea im T!". e-e has' v 2! , and wi;b(cit a w whirled far beat toward the n-ar... and pu'led as T t-,.-ver j.iP'e-! l.ef.ir. tb.ea a- v.-e b-ol o-'-.- n hn'f mi e t. sc. .!' as if the b-cO .ra l.-iior cro . y 'l,.' .1.1V a;ir u; an i l l.-' ::!:4 .1 a I'l.'ff tll"lll Bet". .r the buil.tinir (if the canal, the man uf irtiiie of salt was a protniiient imliis'i y in the valleys (if the ( i ie ma nu 11 and Kiskt u.p.ebis i ivcrs. t was th,. Tre:tt pioneer in-'i-iry( f the i.-op'e, foul in its p.a'my days was a meat sotuce of profit to the inhabi tants of I h-' r.bo' e-nansed valleys. Salt was first in ote on the Coneinaa-jh river in laJ0, or It ad of it we 1:: iv. i-. - s l-.-s o ., se: ne d c v "1 ferw ir.!. ! 'ir-a s,.t.p. t nls -i-.-t: the lake a! r ia-d:f. 1 vli'i o fiir'v make a ife l.-e we ed we t shore : an 1 co. it ml in ti no nut es . for such oil' a ha'f mile a -"nV if w is. ('ran pathway man ib, and in 1SPJ it- en-ive hiis'i'iess aione there b"in numerous ef. wl;ie!i a l.iiL'C cap'.t.ii was Pr-ptnt.ft av papers in this Sf;?e like tlie Hunt iundon .l-n"rf and pedf srd Iii p.'n-r ), w hile thevare too cowardly to litter a wand anainst Mahone and his freebooters in Virgini-i. don't hesitate wilfully to misrepresent the lancruaire used t.y Major Daniel, the Democratic candidate fur (r.ivernor. when he was a member of he Vop.afo nf that S'ate. in jeference to the public schools. These silent advocates of tho doctrine of rejut- Indian' Aoent Cook, at Pose Pud Agency, where Spotted Tail was mur dered by Crow Dog, reports to t'te In dian P'.ireau that Black Crow aspired to be chief instead of Spotted Tail that Crow Dog was his chief assistant in or ganizing a gang of adherents, and that the shooting of Spotted Tail was the re sult of a regular conspiracy to get him cut of the way and put P.lack Crow in his place. Another and a very different statement coming from Pose Pud people surprisinir in its divcisity ami beauty. The re became an ex tlie ( 'o'lemauuh. I'sivc saltworks in invested, and the busi .e-s was er-i-ricllcally proseent et',. All ahmtr tlie river, fmm a point a few miles be low Biairsville on to Saltsburt, the hills on both sides of tiie r'o er were like bee-hives. The locality was calV.1 tiie "Ureat, Cone nian''!i Salt Works." Th" first, discovery of salt was p ado in Indiana county bv an old lady named Deem, r, whom your correspond ent knew W"il, she beimra particular and in timate friend of h;s iiu. flier. frs. D.-e'.ner discovered, when the water was at a verv low stace, the oozinc of saltwater at tiie riv erside at a point on the Conema uirh a few nii'cs above i's can junction with the Poyal hanna, at which noint tiiese waters take the name of K iskiminetas. Prompted by curi osity. Mrs. reenter cathcrod some of the wa ter for using in cooking purpose, and with a portion of it first madenuish. which proved to he (iiite palatable. Ir was this discovery which led to the manufacture nf silt on th- Coi:cniaii'j.!i river. In a few years the busi ness eradaallv increased down the Kiskimin etas river's entire lenn'h. and down the A lle gheny river to Tioent urn. Pp to the time of the discovery of salt on tlie Conomat12.l1 in isin. in which year there was but one salt works on the river. New York had supplied Pennsylvania with salt. After this, wells were bored at the hase'Vf the hills alor.tr both rivers, and al' were once in active operation. The manufacture o"f salt was the only inibistr reported for the county of Indiana in the census of lsjri. Now I find nearly all those active salt manu factories in wreck and ruin. The produc tion of salt as a business must have reached its fulminating point some years since, as its production is now confined to very few es tablishments. Tiie traveler who passes westward from the summit of the A lleirheny Mountain on the Pennsylvania i; ailroail to" the mouth of the Kiskiaiinetas, will not forget, the contin ually ipeurrintr delight with which there arises tie fore him a perfectly new combina tion of hill and valley, tiivino rise to an end less suceeesion of the most ex'piisite and di versified pictures of nature. F.specially is t he sccnci v magnificent in passing through the collateral ranges of the Laurel Hill and Chestnut Pidge. stretching westward from Johnstown to the Allenhonv river, by the Pennsylvania and tiie West Penn roads. From Johii.stow n to Freeport, the mountains with their parallel ridges present a scene of undulating surfaces, or a labyrinth of hills, won a roreverrenewetl variety ot landscane, r t ir 1 1 1 through trie water, tarowmg it nn on every side to an humous--, height, and though, the full force .tni.'-li at this point, the whole lake ir-.t it, and for a time I don't think a storm on the Ocean could have been much wor-e. Our little baat was knocked and battered like a shiotle-cock, tiking in buck ets of water at every inmo. and It was only bv the united efotts at bailing that we kont afloat at all. The clouds came right down to the lake until we were completely enve.-op-'d in them, not being able to see seareely the length of the boat. Aral then it began to rain. Great Scott ! how it did pom down in a perfect shoot, and as we cniil l not see any distaneo we could only trust, in Providence and pull for dear iife. 'l pulled til! my arms seemed to grow inches longer at each stroke, while the boat seemingly remained right where it was. This, however, was a mis take, for we suddenly heard a rush and wash of water, and before we knew it. were landed "liigh and wet" on shore, and after several hours' walk were telling our story in dry clothes beside a biaing lire to our land lady, who had given us up, as I now tell the story to you. Very lovingly, your brother, JJkkt. Tin. PnoTt.it Pr(K ton Potaok Stamps An indignant head clerk in the Baltimore posfoftiice wants the newspapers to convey to tho public, his emphatic protest against the latest jionular mania confined as yet to scnitmental writers of billet donx namely, the sticking of postage stamps upon timistial and out tif-the-way parts of envelopes. There is, it seems, a "postagu code" of flirtation, and each position ofa stamp expresses some particular sentiment. Now, the law allows the stamp to he placed on the envelope anywhere the sender may please. But its position is a matter of im portance to the cancelling clerks. "As long," says the Baltimore official, "as the stamps are in the orthodox placethe upper right hand corner they can work away like bees, and get through quickly, because the motion from the stamp to the ink-pad is a continuous one: but just as soon as they have to hunt around over the letter to find where the stamp is wafered, why, they can't get along near so fast. Please hint through your paper that every letter that comes here not stamped with a single stamp in the rmht hand upper corner we use to make paper chickens of." 1 1 is, that Spotted Tail was killed for se ducing another Indian's squaw and that as a smasher of Indian women's hearts d iat ion represent Mr. Daniel as saving he was the Aaron Purr of the Sioux that lie "would be willing to applv the tribe. Spotted Tail had a singular pre- ti reh to every public school house in the judice against bald-headed men. At a state, rather than see a tax collected to ccuncil at ('amp Pobinson two years ago, he said to the agent who came to talk to him and whose head was as smooth as a billiard ball: ''Go back to the Great F.-.thfi and tell him to send no more bald-headed men to treat with us. 1 n"ver saw a bald-headed man who was not a big liar." (int. "C. M. Meredith"' writes from Wilkiiisburg to the Pittsburg O-m )-riil-f'-izf'tr that a recently born baby in Plam township, Allegheny county, has wings like those of a dove, and is u sound, healthy and lively infant. The writer says the wings are covered with fine down, and it follows, of course, as he .atc-'. that, the baby is. a girl. pay th interest on the State bonds is sued to rai-o a school fup.d."? They call this opposition to the public, school sys tem, nrd so it would be if Major Daniel Jiad ever said so; but lie never did. What if did say in a debate in the Slate Senate was that, ho "would burn down the public School houses In fare hf ri.iiil nil, thf- rn .'o'.'t thr Sf,il t hm ! nf.i i o th'.ii."1 Inferring to this sent iment of Major Daniel, tho New York TPo'7.7 well s.ivs : "Tt is no doubt of great im por'ap.ep to Virginia that its children hliould bo taught, but the value of an education which liegins hvfeachir.g thorn that they are to ! taught with oilier -; ipic on be doubted. ney stolen for that purpose scenery along the Conemaugli and Kiskimin- etas rivers present an endless succession of the most diversified and chinning pictures of nature. It is a region of never failing at traction, holding spell- bound with visions of beauty the lovers of landscape scenery. There is on this line presented every variety of configuration of surface, which gives va riety uneotialed ami an element of enchant ment to the landscapes. The highlands of the Hudson, which are said to he incompar able for the combined beauty and magnifi cence of its scenery, which foreigners admit doeseipia! honor to tlie Uhine. presents no .grander view of nanoratnie loveliness, or makes inoie delightful and lasting impres sions than the panoramic view ffom the cars of the Pennsylvania and the West Penn rail roads from th.e headwatersof the Canenmigh to tht mouth of the Kiskiminetas. Pery land may boast of something maies tie and .snoliiue in the veget ible kingdom, hut Pennsylvania, with her mountains of laurel, and Texas with her forests of mag nolia, are objects ehaileiiginT comparison and filling the mia.l with retDctiocs upon which it delights to dweil. leaving a green spot in the waste of time. In traversing the country of Pennsylvania, the traveler, at this time of the year, can see nature in her loveliet form in the delicate tints and bril liant lines displayed in the variegated flowers of the mountain laurel. On the sides ot the ib'.'uubiiiis, partieuluiiy ya the sMos. of the A r.AHY's grave at Glasgow. M l., receiv ed for nine vears the most careful attention, flowers being freipomfv planted on it, ami the sod always ke:l. ia perfect order. Mr. Brown and Mrs. KMison. ,.:l. i unknown to the other were doing this work nf love. Each had lost an infant, and supposed this was its grave. Brown erected a tombstone latey, and then a controversy arose, Mrs. Ellison insisting that it must he taken down. The church authorities held several meet ings of investigation without reaching any conclusion, and then somebody suggested that n neglected grave near the disputed one be opened. This was done, and Brown con ceded that the "nfiin therci.i was the one that had enclosed his child. The stone has been removed. Ct iiF.noF Disinkivo. S vs a leading rail road oflieialof Chicago, III : "A young friend of mine vs cured of an ins.uia'ii'e thirst for liquor, which has so prosrtated him tint ho was unable to do any business, lie was en tirely cured by the use of Hop Bitters, it allayed all the burning thirst ; took away the appe'ite. for liquor: mile his nerves steady, ami he his remained a sober and steady man for more than two years, and has no desire to retain to his cups : 1 know of a number of others that, h ive been cured of drinking by it Time. For sale at the new drug store, Ivionsburg. Zach. IIsKtNs. a carriage and sign point er, of Chariot to, Michigan, during a tit "3 drunken vomiting one day last week, threw up a live sun fish, measuring five and three quarter inches in length. The fish lived .several hours, and is now preserve ! in alco-lioi. A THORoruH and safe remedy is Or. MET TM'll'S HEADACHE and I)YsPEPSl FILLS Sold by all druggists. Price 25 cents. A birth insurance company has beer, tr jranicd at I.nurelton, Berks county. Fonr hundred horses in La Salle, III., : have been pros rra ted by a strange disease. I A woman of Lebanon, aged M years, is insured for $1fU, ooo on ti e speculative plan. : Joseph Fahey, of Union. F.rie county, . died of lockjaw " Friday from a toy pistol ; wound. Cardinals Manning and Newman were among the specialy invited mourners to Dean Stanley's funeral. A volcanic eruption :s taking piece near the South Fork of the Cleat water, twenty miles from Mount Idaho. The people drove Clemens out of Terry, Ala., because Jie took a second wife three days after the death of his first. The widow of ex-President Millard FiP ini.re died in Buffalo, New York, lastTlinrs dyy night, at the age of 71 years. "-l,John Evans cut Thomas Johnson in the l ead with an ax and ki iod him. at Omaha, Neb., for living with FaMis's wife. q'he Lebanon Shakers number ""i", two thirds of whom are women and carls, and their property is valued at tl.'.ou.i.oo. Maud S. the famous trotter, made a mile in a. 10. , nt Poehestcr, Thursday, beat ing her own record by '4 of a .second. A spring has been discovered in Law rence county, near Carbon, that emits a bluish llarne wli-n a light is applied to it. A brand new baby in Noi th Carolina re ju'ces in the devoted supervision of three greatgrandfathers and two great-grandmothers. A flash of lightning caused an explosion of Hour dust and the utter destruction of the Atlantic Flouring Mills in St. Louis on Fri day night. A three line advertisement in a Washing ton evening paper for a lady to do copying p.t 83 a week, is said to have brought LM3 ap plications. A single grape vine at Cajon, Cab, hears five tons of fruit, the weight of which has broken down the sturdy oak tree on which the vine climbs. David II. TreMer, a former wealthy business man of Williamsport, committed suicide on Saturday h hanging. Attributed to reBnt financial losses. 'fit first arrest made by a colored police man created as much excitement in the streets of Philadelphia as Barnaul's circus. It was of a white inebriate. Sylvester Le Voice is a fair-haired, blue eyed, miid-mannered hoy of 11 at .James town. N. V., yet he deliberately shot a baby because it annoyed him with its crying. Pohert Land, a young man, committed suicide not far from Harrisonburg, Va., by shooting himself in the breast with a musket loaded with buckshot, which tore his heart out. Mr. Nicholas Smith, the husband of one of Horace Greeley's d ingh'ers. is acknowl edged to be tiie prettiest man in America. It is said he is a love of a fellow ".nd no mis take. The marauding Apaches in New Mexico have killed t wenry persons since they taoKto the war path. A rumor that they had cap tured a viiiace and massacred the inhabi tants in denied. Dr. ieorge Nickel, of Brownsville, Washington county, has left for parts un known to escape the wrath of his neighbors, who tnreatened to lynch him for cruelty to his young wife. n Monday last, John Allguire shot and kii'ed a coh.ied man named Fred. Green, who, for spvera! yens had lived at Grand Haven. Mich., with A llgn ire's mother. She is a white woman. Two Iowa farmers have been at taw for a long while over the ownership of some calves that long since becam beef. The costs already incurred amount to fgao i, and the end is not yet. John Savage, a railroad contractor up about New! urgli, N. Y., found a rich vein of irmi ore on his mountain lands, and has be come so crazy over it that he had to be taken lo the asylum in irons. The Parnell branch of the Irish Land Lcagne of oncinm-.t i passed resolutions se verely condemning Irishmen who favor the use of dynamite or other Nihilist method., to promote the car.se of Ireland. Jay Cooke has j .jst found out and sent to a pi i vate asylum, with orders that she be made comfortable, one Sarah M ushall. who lost her money and reason in tlie panic to which his f;,i:uie gave th.e -tart. Charles B .yntoti, of Portland, Me , shot his wife, his si-ter-in-la w and himself on Sat us day. P.oyntoii died instantly and his sister-in-law cannot recover. Mrs. Boyn toii esci.cd by jumping from a window. The Pope is sai.l to consi.i.M-the speec'ies ma le at :h r.'cent ne efing in Koine urging the alio'.i' '.on of the Papal guarantees as a cTc.it. r often -e to the Chun-h than 0 (hs- tr'.an-'es at i'' ft-m-wi! of t'.c remains ,,r thus IN. A wife at M--i!lo!:, Ohio, eh.v.ed with her hii-ha:'et's brother. Ttie he.sband fol lowed ther.i to P.'ack river, whipped the brother, got a bnih't in return, cursed the pair in the pr since of a street crowd, and went homo alone. Stella Cane, a-ed 1 -' yens, was .'.(.; dead or. Friday nigi.t, in Newaik. N, .1 , by a toy pistol eiyen her as a "forfeit" bv a li.iv, who did not know that it was loaded w":Us ball trtrioge. The huilet pas-ej s.i:;o-c th.. -i:h the gi.l's bralo. Hugh Bund:, t ed a ri:ty pound roek abont his neck and filled his pockets with stones and drowned himself in ' a omit three and a half feet of water in the Mohawk, at ('iihoes. lie had been unable to obtain work and was very despondent. Twenty years ago W. J. Palmer was a cleil; under Thorn. is A. Scott, in th- Penn . sylvani.i railroad office at Philadelphia, lbj is now the executive head of the Pio Grando : and the Mexican national system, owned by ' two separate companies, lmt ua 'cr mi') head. lf) 1 ! , Ferdinand Pitcher. 10 years of age, son of George Piliher, committed suicide by hanging himself in his father's barn, in the township of Newport, Quebec. Having , been asked by his mother to lay the taole for supper, he ran cut of the house and hanged himself. James Wetherell, a widower, aged ' seventy, ana .Margaret Doherty, a widow, aged fifty, were married at Ottawa on Wed nesday night. A party of roughs started a . charivari and were driven away by Wether ell, who followed thorn and was killed by one of the gang. In President township, Venango county, on Thursday, two children were bitten bv a rattlesnake and died soon afterward. The niotliei Jian to their assistance as soon as they were bitten, and whiie absent from the house another child upset, a pot of boiling water and was scalded to death. Pel haps the large it pasture in the world is the property of Mr. Taylor Maudlin, on the border of Texas, having forty miles of rock fence on one. side, and yet requiring two hundred more to inclose it ; the owner expects to raise one thousand tons of oats upon it, and to feed one hundred thousand head of cattle. James and Walter Malley, nephew and son of Edward Malley, of New Haven, Conn., were arrested on Monday morning charged with the murder of Jennie E, Cra mer. They were committed without bail for one week, and taken to the. county jail. The authorities wid not divulge any new ev idence they may have. Christiana Taylor, an old colored wo man, arrested for the murder of a little hoy and girl, aged respectively .1 and t years, on i the Fisher farm, in the District of Columbia, . last Satnrditv, has confessed the crime. She 1 assigned no motive for the deed, saying: , "What I killed them for I don't know. The devil got into me, so that I could not help ; doing it." At Northampton. Mass., on Sunday 10, nno people gathered to witness the laying of the corner-stone of a Catholic church, oppo site Smith college, by Bishop O'lieilly. Ir. the afternoon there was a procession of all the local societies headed by a band, and special trains were run on the railroads, i The Bishop preached in the morning and confirmed :i7o children, i The Philadelphia .vcon? states that the freight traffic over the Pennsylvania Bail road is so great that a blockade is feared. , Miles of cars line the tracks, tint up to this : time tlie trains have been moved with re markable dispatch, and beyond a delay of : ."o minutes on Thursday, owing to the crowded condition of the tracks, there have been no serious detentions. 1 A tire on Tuesday last destroyed the machine shops of the Beading iron works at j Beading, Pa. Loss, $go,itnu. The entire i works have suspenned operation in conse ; quence, throwing poj men out of employ ; ment. Charles Steffe, Newton Bryron and i John Btyson, members of th.e Junior Fire Company, were hurled to the gronnd by the breaking of a ladder and seriously injured. ! The Pottsville Chronirle says that last Ootoher Isaac Bneehler, of Pinegrove town ship, sold nine sheep to a man near Myers- town, Lebanon county. A few (bus ago ! two of the old ones returned to their former ; hoineaccornpinied by two lambs. Mr. Bneeh ler found his old brand on them. These ; sheep had to cross the Bluet Mountains and i travel a distance of twenty miles, 1 Major Daniel, the Democratic candidate for Governor of Virginia, has a pale, and beardless face and a boyisli expression, re j min ting one of Byron. Ho is said to bo a very chivalric person, and it is related that i he left school with a room-mitt who was i expelled for some violation of rule, because. though not guilty of the same offense, he The body of a man named Hugh McVay was found on Sunday morning in the Alio c'.env river, r.car the foot of Fi"th street Pitfsi'urg, with several ugly gashes on the head. McVay was last seen alive alxmt nine o'clock Saturday night. It Is supposed ttiat lie was robbed and. murdered, as he w:;s known to have had a considerable nmoont of money on his person, and when f Kind the money wa h11 gone. A pin-making ghost is the latest sensa tion in Baltimore. 1 he sprinkling begins early in the night, so the rumor goes and continues for sererai hours, q'he sincuiar part of the affair is that the pin com" from only one part of the ceiling of the front room on the first fn-or. and that is directly over the door. Wednesday right hi 'tween two hundred and three hundred j arsons were congregated in the vicinity. --Alphonsc Choose, formerly of Quebec, but latterly residing in the United States, I II'I'I.I AT KX?OM. ,'!.,ii:i ( i.om bet a rVuk lr f'""" ' ate! a i. ).' :ot. l!rtwi iryir.a t-vrr fp.l'cd mi'k and Ir't1'- it,'.' at a tuf.'r.x; tiicic otiM to !" :i ltai-p? rrr.ii um. The quality nf nio--y ! n t !ra;ic. "V I'll put n.y wit- t tri.rk." a Yar.lo-e Inventor, "and invent .1 ?t irtcr that'll fix ttiat nil ratit. " ?.o poor wHiTrr tr' m rroil? rern 1 i:n5 fake e'tir 'ir iiti f rc".i"'. I.y.liA K. lanHinni " Vcse'nMo '.mipoarl wilt rt"n' yo. Yf-kcc ccact.-unn was ilrivinsr par:? .f F.n-J: !-!."!! abetit Jx -t-.n r"'cnrly. t; 1 at ! .! v.'r.'nsM t'im t'. th n. .t.-atn' tit "n H.o;Vfr tl.ti. '" lr., ,.,.,) ef 1 1." r-r i.b 'fr. "I l.-l a !iut if f. "I'mikc-": took a train' on Saturday to n turn to his oid home via Kich.mord. Jlis wife. w" was in a preeaiioiis cordition, i' ed on the cars. Six rr.i'es further on his little child, who ne. companie.l him. expired in his arms. ITc convi yed the remains of both mother and child to River da Lonp on Monday, where the family re-He. for interment. George J. West, a Providence lawyer, who was one of the Rhode Island (h-h gates to the Irish convention in Cti'n.'.'1'.'o and is in dorsed by the Providence Jovrii'tl n a trnst worlliyniar, siys that the eon ventiotn was very harmonious and contained a large num ber" nf prominent Ii ish-A meri"an citizens, lie denies that the convention had any sym pathy with O'ponovnt. Rossa, or any incli nation to try dynamite methods, although they do not believe that Ireland can be freed by peaceful! agitation. ' A twelve year did daughter of Pen iamin ritterling was" roasted to death on Mondav morning, in Brecknock township, Berks county. She used coal oil in starting a slow fire. The can bnrsted. and explosion follow ed, and the eirl was instantly enveloped In flames. She died in great, torture and acony in her mother's presence, the mother having also been severely burned in'tiying to smoth er the flames. 'The child had frequently seen her parents using the oil in the same manner. The house was destroyed. A Washington dispatch, savs that Cui tcan's a-.!tohiojranhv, now complete, con tains about loo. eno 'words. It will not be published nor Used in J'oiut in i's p resent shape. Some parts of it wid never see the liLfit. One portion of it relates to the ruin of his wife in Philadelphia before their mar riage, and another to various scandals about public men of both oai ties. Giii'cau thinks it is to be published in full, with pictures and autographs of himself and Colonel Cork hill, and a photograph of the rail. Half a dozen publishers have applied for it. One offers a handsome sum of money and per cent, royalty. He estimates the probable sales of the. first edition at g.Vl.ooo. Of course no publisher will get it. A coal oil liiinii exploded in Oppenl.ci mer's store in Bedford, about t:4' on Friday night last, and in a few minutes the store room was on fire, and nearly all the goods were destroyed. The ilames'sjuead ranidly, and .'onsumed Oppet heimer's building, the Fisher house admitiing, and a dwelling ho. longing to a Mr." Hartley. The hind engine belonging to the Pc-df'ord fire department was inadequate in extinguishing the flames, and the Si'.sbv engine nt Everett was tele eraphed for and an engine and ear ent from Bedford. It arrived about l-':.'.o. and got the flames under control in a short time. The loss on hotel and stoic, belonging to Mr. Oppenheimer, is estimated at 5o."i,eo i : no in surance. Mr. Hartley's ;d welling was insur ed for ?il,00o, which covers the loss. A most deliberate suicide was commit ted in Philadelphia on Saturd.nj. About ' o'clock in the afternoon a n an was seen walking leisurely along the south walk of the Market street bridge spanning the Schuyl kill. He gazed at the sparkling flood nea'h him and then removed his hat. wiped the perspiiation from his brow, dropped the hat find vaulted over the railing ino the riv er, just under the centre span. The bridge watchman and several others who witnessed thea.-t ran to the -potlwhcnco tlie suicidal leap had. been taken in the expectation that th man would come to tlie -an face of tiie river iigain. hut only a few bubbles ro-e t t-il of the tragedy. "The Schuylkill harbor police grappled fioni two small boats over the river bed nt til To'elm-k in tlie evening, and then succeeded in recovering the mi pse icar Sansotn stiei-t wharf, nidi. ., Pug that t la tide had been moving with great rapidity. A horrible accident occurred in Lancas ter on Monday evening, from tiie effects of which th victim. Mr. Daniel stant riVii' tnr t -1 . ( ' I. wie rc la -' tt.ra-ii.cir .i-a't ..j. a- I ii -t:y n cio a !;! tt:c w ' j ..- : par :..r j- I.e. !,i f.. pink'HM"? Yc-r t'i WT"t n o l '-i: iiiuii.. i- Oil t'CT'-a- h, r ' -. Kiln u a ti- man :i w fi ' ir- ti! r- :-j Ic -Pa K. I' It i- r.v what , i l . . r-.t. ( t . that r !' !';!:; sir , t r ! . i ' On. ..atTr?;.' !(."V -HO1. ll::l! till'.'"1 t ft i j l.-.t v !.;.t tt ey i cio!. t ';: want t : : y i that rr -O. t .in i- ftrr; - f . It i- cc v. ! : .;lt wl.ii r t hey '.r.'.'-i .ce. t 'iat a V. : - It H iM'i'i. "o'ei-- f'-r :i t- rc.ia. ite-c-i'i r'l-nf tr'.i ' to w.th I.-. .1 a K I ':..'. i etabhj 'i.." a"'J. '." s :!I r lr en w. ii.i. (r .io 5 ;i y . A b'tfi- f!l- w f tlvp. car u 'O' -; w r -t ft!' '. likhi ..1,. r ,.! t;,s , 1 -en '. : or e .ru-i : .r . ."las?. tt'l r 't ill n :t !' '1 . h U 1 .'!.-' 1 by r .1 - A ivi TO OI - v 1 w;:t f r ' ' Tti.li-iMi ha v ' t- 'I Wl. W Til ! it;l.!ir-t !' . - ' P"'l " n K-' 1- r.t -.-Ic ..1 " lo ; wr.t?" V"ll 'l'l. 'lii'tl '." r.iif -.iu f . - -T..nat..! ( l.f the 111 'S t f- C ' '' I Tl f a s.-s .t Ti: ' We t i, ' . "-' - V tlie ii se ot l.vili K. l'i!ik!ii!n' Vf-o-tn' ! ' ' "'n 'Uti l. Scr: l to Mr. I. ba Y. PO.KIi.on. g.- P. 't frn A oiiii.', Io'nn. Mno . t ;r . inihc-t. S...r:(. at mi i.o'ri'iTi'' r.!! .ae. leirii' l . pbty en inn j ...Ml iristr-niiMiits. 'at'i. nt ys ;t j c a-. b'Hrte-il tlio Ireck l.iiiiia;?c I'lutai ri.wti-'Ti I'ttuPcil "i "ty ati.J 'Oi n : . I.- it !. i tl," at it'J v .'t r.ro in. I r. .b l,ri.t, at .bi"t IC. tni.-ll ti the Ini" li 1 . n rnakre I. at u tew yearn ln-r..rc l.i.a iltrntti. Mrs. I,r dia H. i'ltikroon w.is nenrly foty 3--irs- ol-l nt.i-n -Iip ili.'i.'. cred tier Vi-io-ia t'lt- 'orio"".it,d. ily there facts we rioo '.hat It i never Ino late to learn. HT'T.Jllriir tbe pr"- i-i rr.t a siieo --. T'-ti may f.nt :: !..t in it.- tia.atli a:: I ; ail liar I. but tt-e lir; finnu run 'kic w 'he tre-vi..!: i- i... wen'iJ there ; a "Ki -feo.K '" M.o.a r--civcl I .r Pi raps,, l.-.-t.' P.a -'."" I i i i" tran ia' f 51 .in. r b;-:c Mi fl.e f .r'.: la-:: - i- . TP. ! To- ; , . . ,..' Y , ;,. r Hy iS mil I kz jl i ( 5 -Sr x:JJ.;i Jlere. a- . 4,X"?'' ' ' '' E . ".-.--'. ber. . :.. .i ' '--' 'V',A' ',y : - ' . h :' ' c - - - ' x (, ?, . Of Jy , . fC- ,. fo::nt.r -f ' S . - ' F ' 1 r ?f LYDIA p;::k: rT"-r"TAoI. --... -Oi "" md d iv 1 t nnri'ili:'! j v or . :-..;. . A C.eei I '". " mtikrui ' ?t-.-- , AM ir: T . , i , r r t i - - s t i.rilrv r',f s's '-.Ml V-s formtl ' fttftti slBHHnui In: ltw:;i. jr- i-.-tr..'v flatntf, !1 ' rr r. tton, Fnl- nr nr I ! ' Fr'ixikl '.'i' dUil It w.H ! i'.1o' "' - JI early f.-c ct : rl :..'t r. CPr(" tlUn.'-- 1 1 ' O l-rl't' I v. --. It rro'iT-?j fira -.. f.-.r .' - , . f or ftimcfcr'i. u l ":: i..ie It mn Pi-.! sr. It - -... i Coetml Iv :!ity, M-It. r . That tr-V.: : of t--' ?''. :t-ti ':.-; and ckeh.. . !.;.: -n:.aei- i.'a ' - It will at 1 1 tlru" -.' OTliri-:l"i- - Urmory with ti n-1 t.t r":' ''' For tLe car-cf Klcn. j ( rnj !k.rTi o: Comisj'in'r tn niiparr.'--. 1- O A'eil r.tv n; h c-tf A Ca ll" t'H" 1 c-,d ' jreen t! Ten ine f'or ir.-.i v.i t .erv h. - T' c v t. a II r '1 sail .. (.nlv C; r.-'."1'.e- y ,.Kefll !l-"r. A wn a r.rji r. (-I Pti HI It 11 l'l I..- wiii-Ti i i : i.f 1 1 : -:-. n.'h.: bly l-a I . ii r . The i'!.yi";il ill are s- ehac. tii.-i.tec Hi- -e-'i the IT"-, t t tie--e I" ' til. J.i.er 1 Oiaks.-e-e lo.b.t i: in the s-i i i- aiiJ J '.' lo.i.'f e ri-'-e: I'ii.k' Il V .. roi LVMt E. I'IMilltM'S Ul.lflS'j T'lC' ! por I i rerml at M iii'l i V 1 I.ynn. YtM. ln-f 8h Sii bnrtl-af .r i. SrrTsJS.' In the f'-.rrri of .i'!. a If '. ir. t! o f rrn t f t '.. ' rec.lr-t cf rrl'-e, i prl m f rr ::..- :- -a, t ', freely anewprs a:i l"t-.ra 'if in jv.t-t-. s..:.; .. r ,. let. A'ldrvas a alvit-e. .V--tii t.'.. ."-;- Ko faafly fkwill wi'b-'Ui I.'i K E ? t LITER rriJ-S. Tt.ee cut- e--ntira'. -.. an4 tvn -i-lity of the nr. r. ss e.:. i-r i g B old hr all Iriift:i. -i t. "'I i- l: :-re ; t-it:i'.r r I. c i . r-r in .-.a: . , r-r I" 'ete r.! 1 h.;-..iia-' el ir--'in-li t. iner r.o: f r.r.-t'sre.i l y Mr-. I.y- W e learn thTlt lO'l'd' ' 1' ii " - T Tl 'tie l-'l f i : ': i. iin. ': ne 1 thi- e.ty than is rii! I i.l hio -:. er re- '..' ce: ai. 1 all the wo-1 1 -l oiC'l lr,.i'i '; its e,.r:...Vi ,:- t-. Sec n-lvt-i ; i -enieiit iu ai.ij'.her M-.tna. ; . y-a :-.lrt. -Ihe w.iil l ! i firle.l .ir--t .ri tl " t. ash t wind." -ays a t. t. r ,hO tint .?ri t! e j. t t- !iae .lej.a't. fj tl e ti: a n ii . 1..:.". r w n:s. out itart tiT !n. lie- V. .' h 1:1- halel ell the 1 'r lii-y. ('-aiiit in. moi's cii'si:! ;i..' ir.l xviicre w..-:i J y..u t-.r.d tone to lak-- tut.- r--t "! Ic- luveTiT-.ry - "I'.T In c ct:s 1 iv.i. .i urstc:'! r- - 'r a. kcl Iipy c. an r.ai . ii i . 1 was i::i-c'. j r.i -or ill t - rr ' In : n.-ss. ;.,t w i cc:. fc- .':. ..i lv :..a; ..s li'.wn. at t'.tT.'-a t.e'i.M; ;( p.. er. ,. . I . . r -'. -.;.. t Coid. I rest it. liter liizt.t tea . I hit -".' .! eo.rs. ..jt fei- v'-t n.. re,i -..!. a. v. 1 tt '. "r 1 LiX;v!l tJJj T.l NT t-1 t e i -f.i . j - !! t'i.TI ! iMFoniED enrss U t.i.tl , lair ef th l ie in-j; t ( '..n: t! I!:.- ' was r- :- I : r! ' f 1 Trs. p.r.k' tir -. .: . i .,a:-- V'-i s. -. .. ! k : lv I ,r !- .: i.i " - -t I.'r .r-.t 1 .a 1 K :i .1 ' t r., -; '"e . Mr. St; ,a vc:;u. in : he jeer :, : 1io,.;c,1 oTer resided ni.d his st. ib . - -t:v. t. !i nt t N .b'.e fi I l'a.il . th.- I.'tt . 11 1" .1 of ,t a . en t:;. u. f. i ri! cuts a' o'.' s t a 1 1 1 : . . j crea 'I "'i ed. the a crviie v.i! thirtv-!': v l. r I ' v iff." -. '.Ull h I ! i::v f.c lima I ! i iiu re. ic I -ill's i Ilarris'nirE; is nrooertv 1 ii ..'. :, v- f f. ...l. ' - table is While Mr. act on Ihe I : i ii-ivii '.at the !.' l he was -raiiiVer's u !!.' :e-r of .. i -:-! '.mh t vas i-h all t he in. a ri... I "It r o.,.r.,.n -, W"':a-'-'al (::, .. c:i..ii!i:.t iri f. i:: '.'" C:-:ii.: It It a.' "r: ' s.'d '. s a re i.Oiits. 1 tri 1 it .-n. I N-.-iii s t...'t'e wn tal.e-i. I : 'T.-l cot.J. a r:-l in 1 --- t ti-i : e; t ly -.!. h'. 1 1: : v le I i'l'T It It.f u real m vC a". :' i . i: : - er !:--.. .-re . '.1. I'. 11c- a-o., y-j. -. f..rk I.; i All w il.lv w.ir."li :. r .' - rciiit ' h'-tiiel ef 1, .1 la K. I'm k haul's ' ire';.! j,- t " :::; '.ai - elor.it f it ie a ; "Wei h It- al. tn v " .-I : ;! c a1-.' - . lt'iu : l ie. '!-.'. i a.l i... ii - i Tl.C la-he- t h 1 i; 1 !. a . " y , ,.-.;,.': r. : ! t' : '. I::..? 'i-i:r" :i. i , o- p ..'I' ; t ' :1 r.'.n.ir . ih.e '.::i i.c 1.-1 a ti. 1',: 1,1 a ;:'- ;.. T a 'e . ( .11 i. ..i -1 j ; ji n . I I h : T n. i i c . - a-'-s . : :u whi. il v -iat a .-lii'tr icaeh. ' .. . :ei . ;...r, . s ,t 1, -1 art ." -a 1 a f- a. l in .ic-r l.r .-lu' . ;'. a vi . ini --.t i- r a in. lie c.r a:: , -b-e a - re! hi l in h'T.i :ai han-iinii I- i". j ) i,.' i ly the e.it i ." tii 'r.a-cr-. Iiu- irfini'iit rcius.-l ' tear at .1 y ..a;- :1 the -its; :. it- l j r.-.i: h. A r-ti)e.!y ',. -it w.'.l a.-e.---t a a r here f.-rnal-e.T .kn'-s e:, I,:..-: l.i;i ta he I- .i-ehir W:i:i w..i. en. aiL's ;.ra"iii l- : c-e.l i.ii tii' h a r-.'t.lv mi e. AT'.-a.". . i- in s. re'.i.o ;. ..: ti.:s . a- is fl. 1 a a k a.i-n's V-u !!! 1 ' :::; c id. ! "!. '.- itu i- .r.' ! t" a e : ii -. a-. .- : i-ain: - v -i k a. i .:- ; ei . -a I HO K t r.: I I. A u s .!. t; r.M.i: Alt. - aSTK till- . . OI I-.T . I . I . -T .Uiil.l ' Si'l I XI. tl I f I FANCY SUIIIIER ie "' The enee : rt' i i-o -l:t,'l f The CTl'ToT) ti ts n t. Ati'M A vr. - irfe ! i' e don'' tested T-ief jsc rtnd Ite ; r! .:ie a'v, -YV.ac nd iodu ct ien ee len.bd 'a. . T!:e 'lih'S Hi' ret-'isb g'e y.-, 3: s the Tiie t C'lll' olsoot'1 -her th- tr nml t Pani e strn ' y hi'e rrc art r. m I s:i-t'ic 2 itir.ls is plrtr' ;ip f r.i . itflble r Out' fief if th t is ( the 1. Sol in. tan le .trie -V. S. is that ' ua 1 w i.-'.a a ii - -I market it tne.-rs 113 & 0 Filer, m. I t .-t t . i . a '. . 1 ' s ai r-. '. ce cn-h-r-e.i Ti iu- r. s -iiec:r ia ti--i ::: ! 1 l.'i '11: ice. t j si t no -lb-rot me I i b re in r fC-es. nstntl' t.od s j js.-rr.. a.-a-T. and i;r. i. ia.t '. as remov k :t.e at I'v.ivi'.ilv w . i . 1 )ccca-ed '.vas 'ii'ioi.t nje nnd leaver a v. ite t C- n-s''-,:l. nnd four f-1 : i I i r t CiiM iN '. ren I.IT'K. The Iv 'ni'f'j -ays that iil.out t-n o mot ni-i'j Ir. 'l iii-nvin. the sta Shite Il.il. on the Krie Uaiiwuv, old ost ccrt.iiiilv have ilia ( N. V. ) .o. I; Siiiidav ;..n iic. i.t ;i-..li-ervr l nil enyiiie iiiis-uie; by at- a ln-j.li late oi sfecn. I'linsinsi to the foiii!i:tL;-.in in the r ar of tlie temlcr was a little hoy about eijht or t-n vears of nue. The M.ddletowi: 7 ' s.ivs that the little feilo-.v Was Hi ail evcecmncly verilous l-.oition. nn.'. sh:,uh'. h' or be sh.il..'U. Woll'd il! been ki.'u il. Mr. Tihsiiian sa v the child' lieiil. The enuiine was then iia-t linn anl could not he stoned, hut with rare presence of mind, he hastened to the teleirniph office and sent messages to Johnson's, the next station, an I to VVestown, further on, order iimtheni to flafi the engine nnd icinove the child. He aiso sent n nicssaire to the ;ciht al office at Jersey 'it v, which repented the messnue alone; the line. It was received it Johnson's insf in lime arid the engine was stonni-d. With anxious hearts they st.'i.j-ed to the rear of the tender and found the ad venturous little traveler still in hisjilac-', liii harmed. He was sent back to his heme, at Middletown, on the m'nk train. 1 : a.s. :,.,- , at:: i: cr .-: 1 was - or i 'ee-..; .,,;. ller t':::e ..a Tire ,'r-i '; -( i.v ii i "It. is t he t c rnaie we , ,n . till. Me. "i-.v M. It. we. .Irui; a t'-v ' .a ; : -y a : '. -; ': k hv"'i iinlcni.'s . s- '.: .;. l'--:::;'.'iit-a. hat a f- -.v ..-i i eciii s i , ; r-'j -rrao ci i ever heard i f f-.r !- ti. V. iittfiti. .baini-t, l.nta pit'.n"-r hr as a an ie r." K. t. Ilitii r. ?ae. "'Ihe fa es rrp a.:Y '--e-.s -',... , .. r .-, ' ;.- -':: if ' r'bi by ia. Te.isiri" as it ii :e h.-c-Miies kit -wn." Ibxiiy'.v Ilj.-k. llrilllulstl. S ii O ll f ii a ri . Jlp -'It hca Itithp list ot ad uiy t.rci rietary med n !i-.e." .1. U . C'l.-ir l. Urui-'i;:r, Lynn. Mass. ( inr cu tunier?. w itli.iut ri fi n-ile csee,'! ion. spe ik f it in the liii-tie-t terms el j. raise."' K. H. Sterns ,V Co.. druL'tfitn. IturiiriKt'in. Vt. '-My cnrt"raor fav it will iiu nil il claims." tVnrren Tii.;an, (Iruiri ist. l-ynn, Mass. "I stiall cmtintic tn .re rnhc your A'cirrta!'.! t'oint'eiind.''" 1 r. .7 no. S. 'arter." Uric. I'n. "Vour A eirctnhle Ccini.etin.l Kives universal satisfaction without ati rii'T'i-iiuri. It is the hc t i-rei'arti.n I ever knew . r tetnalo il i-e.ises.--l'h:h. Jvki..m. ilruiiiil-t. "1. is an.) Ml Kiiltv.n tre-t. Brooklyn. ?t. V. W e reu.ir.l it ai an turn 1 n ii le rcine.l y t..r ternaic tt.a k --s." t a derl'iiil .s. ia... .Iriiaii'.s!-. t'.-.ic, r 1. N. 11. "I r-.,i-iiratnhite yiai in ..n !i.t 115.1 ears 1 ' ;l Vt riiai-le me. Heal an.! c.iiaia'Vir.! "iii'-or." I'r. J. M. ( iixi.-ven'.r, "J-J l'ark i iu:e. ew York. . . j;.. -W s - - i R-;s - STOMACH 64 S Jj lSS r. : Malaria 1 nn Vnrni ao? jllHliHit' ! .Kiltie, fur r:h i m! 1-r t!i ollrts I w hi ft'.'o J- Vt l!l e. i c r . li - i -. -V. S. CV CIS . -fi-o r .- atlvjc - :ie low '. he be ' ,r- s -"I )i V I.fe I n ib ti N ire ti nnd . i led it s no v.. e. r 'c i l:' ' i.v. XT C . ItL's!. -man f -Salt si ' tov '. ted fo h.-r Co ;nid to It.s'ow -Time' -a cat 1 ides ai. e hrr.T'f 't.t t r. -The v tlTi'.'.W The Hk.ioiit ok Foi i.v. To wait until you are down oil your hcl with di-ease you may not iret over for months, is the height of foll'v, when vou mir-tht he ea-ily cured dur iim the early svin;toms hy iisiiej; Parker's Gin tier Tonfe. "it costs only a triile, can never do any harm, and possesses curative properties in" the highest d-nree. We lnve known the palest, sickliest looking men, women and children become the rosiest and healthiest, from the timely use of this pure family medicine. See advertisement in an other column. (ihtrrver. For sale at the new dniR store, Khenshursi. ;7-2J.-lm. A Washington special to th.e New York Graphir says the universal sympathy felt for Mrs. Garfield in her presert afllictioii will he greatly hekdit died by the knowledge of the fact that she nsiaiii expects to become a mother ahout the end of November next. The health of Mrs. Garfield has been excel lent since her recovery from her illness two months ano, of which, hy tlie way, the cause was at the time misunderstood. Mrs. Garfield was married in HeS, and is now ahout fortv-six veais old. Drtogists PttAisF Thkm. "We always receoiiimend Malt Hitter." ' A perfect food medicine," "Best nourishinc nuent nw know of." "Women and children take Malt Hitters." "Overcome nervousness and sleeplessness.' "Not a vile rum bitters." "A perfect renovaterof extiausted'nature." "Most successful medicine in the world." Mn. Connors, a highly-educated woman, whose history has been" a mystery to the people of Krie for seventeen years was res euded Sunday from a hand of tramps, who had plied her with drink and ill-used her. Helievlnn herse'f to he dying she states she is of noble birth, beinu one of the English Pereevals and reared ir. the family ef the Earl of Kraont, who was a relative. Dvsrr.rsiA ani Livkk Complaint. Is it not worth the small price of 7." cents to free yourself from every symptom of these dis tresint; compiiiints If you think so. call at E. James' Iiruu More, Fbenstmrcr, l'a., and procure a bottle of Shiloh's Vitalizer. Every bottle has a printed cnaratitce on it. Use nr. eorditnily and if it does yon no yood it w ill cost you iiothiiiK. " -S.-e.. w.ly. 1 5 'A hole was bored in the door of the ves try room nf 'the Church of St. Charles Bor ! roineo, Philadelphia, the door was opened '; and ? 12, iin stolen from a box. The thief I left behind a note reading : "This w ill never happen again. I got enutT to take ine to Virginia. That was all I wanted. I hope j before long to pay damages." WflRMI. WORMS. WORM. Trtpe IViTin reniave.l alive, hea l and nd ra t-b'te, in toini tw.j ta three hours. No le.- lib cartel: or il ire).are I lue.i ic, ne i. .! c?!re.1. pun he taken at ll-.Ine. I l-'or I'a.e W orill, the r.atif to noi't e..nu:t Ike doctor i.trf.ninily or by mail. Soml i hre- cent stanii. far i nt.-rmnt k-n ty mail. I- r St: iiii 'ti. S. t. I'in. Ibminl nrl lireaf VVi.rnm, use K. F. Ki'iikel f i Worm Tsyrui. Kift y ier cent, "f cae ef 1 'vperi- 1 pia and disorganization." of liver ore rmiiVj lv r't.-.nineri nnd (.titer worm in the aliinentitr.x canal" 1 liBVe a Tecetsi'lc retaedy which c;ietnai'.y re moves tbeni, and cleanse" the liver nd ki.IiicTs. "Nniiit'crK of protnincrt c'tireiis of I'hi It .felt I. :a. who have been tieat".l for various d ie.MeiT. iepta, ci.nf umjiiion. t.ri.nehiti. k-mnle w.-aiiiies". etc. can certify that my treatment lias cured theui anil that they ia,l t.cen treateil f..r wronz d.seiej. t'oiinnun sense tea-lien If lai-e Worin can be re mi'Te.l, nil ..'hrr wonr.J cr.n Le reaitiiy ieiinyo.t. A.tviee ai cttie.an.l :r re free. The doctor can'teli wtietticr or net the patient has worms. Thousands are dyinir ilaily null w. rtns and do not know it. Fits. S.ns;ns. era inn, clink me and Miff.. en Hon. s al low coini.'icii.'ii. circh-s around the eyes, swelling and i ain tn the stomach, restlessness at hiirht, ' grinding if the teeth i iekina at the m.se. mukIi, lever, it. Mm: at tlie seat. Icadaehe. foul tirrath, the iai;ent i;ro pale and ttitn..t!cklinic and irri tation la the anus ali these symntotns and mere I come from worms. K. F. Knnkei orm Syrui' ; never fails to remove (hem. I"ru-e, $l.si .r l.ettle, or fix liot'les tor $.'..0i. (For Tape Worm, write ( an I consult the , P eter. ) or all oiheri tuy of your drujiirist ttie Worm Syrup, and if he lias tt'nol, senlt to F-. F. KunKel. '.''rf N. "Ninih St.. I biiaiel pttia. Fit. Advice by mail free ; sBd 3 cent stamp. K. r. KV.NKIIIS HITTF-K W.M: OF IKON. ! Tlie ere.it success and dehicht of the people. In ; fact, nothing ol the kind has ever been ottered to ' the American people w hih ha s- qnu-kly found its way into their ir od fpvr rnnd henrty ai.pr- vaf I as t.. i . Kuiikel s Uitter Wiae of Iron, "it dees ail ' il proposes, and t lias t ivcs uir.v crsal sa . isfa. 'tinn. . It l.s guaranteed to cure the worst eaes ' (ivspep- . : sia or Iti.lHrestioii. keincy or liter il:rc,i. weak- , ncss. nervou n cs. constipation, acidity n! viii'ii.im- I a ch, etc. (et the irenuine. Soi l eniy tn 1 t tles. or "ix bottles tor f.V A'k !,.r K. F. Kunkai's Hitter Wine of lri.n. ant take norther If your . druus-lst tias it net. send to pr .prie'or. F. t. Kuu- j kel. av.i N. Ninth St.. I'hiisdelphta. I'a. Advice free: send three cut "tamp. Asehenach .V Mil ler. Sole Agents. i;.l and fa.lowlnil Sis., Fbilal a. S41 . lilnio Hotel, : No. :U7 mul :?ltt Arch Street, PHILADKLPHIA. Ilnt. rs lteduced toS'J.OO per Day. Tlie trsrellinir pu' lie will -till find nt this Hotel tlie :i:ne l'.'-'-ral pr. visi. n ti-r ttieir comfort It s located in the immediate cer.'rcs of I iis;n"s end amus, iien;. a;.d i:.e .loierent r.':nl lo i 1 ee:-..s. a- well n all tetrs .,r n;e city, are t:!5'. :: --O 'c by str.'.'i cars e..nt mtly pa.-sinic the dcrs. It ot. f. rs speei.i I i ndueeii.i'iits W tlewe isrtitv the city t..r Sussuess or pleasure. Vour I'jtrcriatie l re-p-c: oil' v .1 ic te-1. I OS. M. I-T ' rlili, I'rcpnctor. rtul.idelplii.i. Nov. . lss...-tt. B. -J. BYNUK MannfArtnrcr ami Ili a1 foiiOVV HOME AND CITY r.V1 '.'M !,!," tl, !.(.,. vir'i; a t:!i:e (Ml I Ulii ?i!T n IVi ri'';" "A rail itIIIHkH UVM tllll'tMII III M1S 1 TABLES, CHAIR Vests R h;ni 1Y1 d L.LIC-:bi. oours.. li - i : 0lWftll lOtll tunl 1T'h'"Vest.- 8 5. -t- Altnonn 1 3 e 1 1" -Af r V:t7CT of t r " tht 1 ran nirft r ry want -'. lr;'fa the crv l-'w"t. rcr. otir ' Itil reg ie (t -ay 1 prirtie ( TV sst-i- r p was -It is IS oti-ei lrt-t T r, whoi Jilt this roe of o one latio la therein. the boat s I- tialt as Pi :e .1 tncculr.r. Il. i-c.v '-ra:t.-i.'' earl s, a nd rtiny ' '. e : rr- k n lv as ut'PCt t" on--, ie :i.:'::i 1 ' Oh. lffi a" a !-.' W ill vim Ik e l the w i-Munir. the 's'nl pc-tcips, of t' e tiear a pro .c'i of that f...?t t. ir b'e ('iii.i:iiii! nn.' Ask vi-urseif If " 'rn aft -rU lor the sake of eavinj ' 1 cents l run the rok and ili rotliiim P r It. We Unnw from experience t-liat Shlloll's t'ure will cure y oir CHlsh. This wilt . olHin whv core ."t.TTi e eo.'o.n ()..,'.' were a l l tl:e past ve.ir. It relieves ("roup and W h.' nton.-e. .Mothers, dj n"t 1 ith out it. v.-j t'oiii: !i 1 cr l.ame TLir.VNK curost everv tinip. Get ioiiie hn ts. Price 25 was prsent and ia full sveupnthv with the I well; keep It on hand, and sin no more. At idck si ie. or fhert. n:t. sinlMti'f ror.uts liar Ll-.'T.-l'ji ' ufiemkr. " 1 the lv dru stort', Eltensburi;. i sia i-y t. Juajet. LH-uthurir. v-a. -.-e.i.-,w.iy V .'s- -.? h, v, X 's4,-S- V- R t 1 1 p , J,tf r- iniil:T - 5 f nislr ' . lle. . The Tarrant's Seltzer A?'-;-v sc -cres rccularitv, at. t c T.se ,u ' Vl) . S Wk"iS s,il.l.EY tl.1.11"' r K l.lKr.i ' 1 . f TK1 Y I h':I a c :-!'--. '.. t x .: the ic.-; pr-n- ' '" . . n K-a IT: IV.C-ih.ei'i , i e - r- Vict.,r , ', -s (I . ....... lip J.-;, st o la: 1 . 1 r. '::. : o . .. e . '" mf r.'.p:s s in- "' l -' ' peu-c.l'oi.lfy v Cen:!; A l'l res. : . -Mr IV-.l'i.lr,.-'f. V.-' - i? ov j! - - ,. t o V. I VnsViirc. i s- - i,. , t . yvu u tacr rir t t. - " ' . j I1-. . M. RKAIi:. . ihree door Irani H.ffn-- lanJ, M per dav f : i.e. A " '. y . jijmi ii ir , ,7" III! ' 1U IU'i',' I t