rowan. EBENSBURC. PA., FRIDAY, - - - SEPT. 16. 18S1. Tin: Fre.-kh r.t'.s condition took a de cided hnnge fur the worse early on .Sun day morning, and grave fears were en tertained of t lie result, but towards evenir . the danger rapidly disappeared and he pasel a comfortable night. Since Monday he has continued to im prove, and on both Tuesday and Wed nesday he was lifted out of be 1, at his own reriur?t, into a reclining chair, and remained in i'. the last named day for one hour and a half. The physicians regard his condition now as better than at any time during the last three weeks, and entertain very strong hopes of his recovery. They refuse, however, to say that the "danger line" has been passed. Titk rittsburg Dispatch, which, tho' opposed to Moss rule, was not carried away with enthusiasm over the candi dacy of Davies for State Treasurer, be cause he did not assert his independence when he ought to have done so, admits that it was slightly led astray la3t winter when Mitchell was elected U. S. Senator and the result was claimed as a triumph by the independent Republicans. It re gards his election as in a certain sense a defeat of the bosse', because they were forced to abandon their own candidate, hut it seriously doubts if Hairy Oliver himself would have been "so miserably, meanly, cringingly subservient to the superior Senator (Cameron) as this lazy, good-looking and apparently good-for-nothing Mitchell, who lias proved him self to be C micron's henchman, even in the very short time he has been allotted for furnishing such, proof."' William T. Davies, who was the candidate of the anti-Cameron men in the Republican State Convention for State Treasurer, is a Welshman by birth, having been born in "ancient Cambria'' in 1?31 and brought to Bradford county, in this State, when he was only eighteen months old. lie is a lawyer by profes sion a member of the State Senate, and up until within three weeks of the meet ing of the convention his nomination was regarded as a fixed fact. lie took that happy view of his nomination himself, but as the sequel proved lie was in the unfortunate josition of his over-sanguine countryman, Owen Olendower, on a memorable occasion, when he boasted that lie "couM call spirits from the vast deep.' They did not, however, come at his bidding, and so Dnvies could ca'l spirits in the shape of delegates from the Republican depths, but, as the outcome in the convention showed, they did not answer his summons to any a'.arming ex tent. Isn't it a little singular that whenever the machine undertakes to elect delegates to a State convention by county committees, as it did in must of the counties to the late convention, they invariably turn up with the Cameron collar around their necks. It was nota bly so in this county of Cambiia. where at a fair test of strength in the Repub lican ranks Canieronism wouldn't stand the ghost of a chance. IIox. fiEOK'JE JjAM'on, once a State Senator and now an old man. was a del egate from Bradford county to DonCatu ron"s late convention at Ilarrisburg, and judging from the speech he made when he had "the honor to name for the position of State Treasurer Hon. Wm. J. Davies,"' his sufferings under all the surroundings must have been intoler able. He said it was the first State con vention he had ever attended, an 1 in our opinion it will also be the hist. I.an drui in his speech exclaimed : "Why do I nominate him (Davies)? Because lie is qualified for the place For weeks and months he has been suggested as the biggest man for the place in the .State. The thing grew and grew until a few months ago, when things sudden ly took a turn. And here we are to-day, and instead of having upwards of 200 votes, we will have only about $:. What has become of the balance of them no man seems to know, but, for God's sake, gentlemen, don't place us in the posi tion of voting against James A. Gar field.' If old Mr. Landon, before he made his speech, had interviewed Mat thew S. Quay, the king of the Pardon Board, be nrght perhaps have learned why "the thing"' stopped growing sever al weeks ago, and also what had become of all the 2' JO Davies delegates except the paltry number 83. O.ve of the resolutions adopted by the late Republican State Convention de clares that "the administration of Gov. Iloyt meets with our warmest approv al." This is, of course, an endorsement by the Repub lican party in the State of the pardon of Kemb'e ami his confeder ates, which was peculiaily an "admin istration" measure, although it was de nounced by every decent Republican pa lr in the State. Quay was a delegate to the convention, and as Kemble had car ried on the greater part of his corrupt solicitation of memlers in Quay's own office, he (Quay) determined that the j "Grand Old Republican Party" of! Pennsylvania, in convention assembled, j should stand the approval of even that ' infamous exercise of power by a board of which he is a member. Another part of the same resolution refei3 to "the credit of the State raised o its highest point and its finances placed on a proper ba.sis without increasing the burdens of the pcop!e,'Tall as the work of lloyt's ad ministration. What ha3 Iloyt cr his Iarty don to raie the credit of the State, or to inn rove its financial condi tion ? No man can answer. Gov. Iloyt has been very literal iu tho use of his Teto power, and in nearly every instance properly so ; and if he had refused his srent to several bills passed by the Leg islature last winter and at the previous session requiring large disbursements by the treasury for questionable or entire ly unnecessary purposes, the "finances" of the State would be in a much more healthy condition than they are at pre sent, and a select committee of the Leg islature would not now be devising ways and mean3 by a revision of the tax laws. for the purpose of meeting reckless and improvident appropriation which he 1 y-7" The Crawford couuty system of mak ing nominations for county offices, will be tried for the first time in this county j at the Democratic primary election one j week from to-morrow. The experiment can be made a success or a disastrous j failure, just as the system is fairly or un- 1 fairly carried out by the election officers j in the different districts. Ihe rules i anvpininff the system are brief and eas- ; ilv understood, ana tne great ana onij ends to tie acomplished,are an tones vote and a fair count. An honest vote means that no man shall he permitted to cast a. ballot unless h voted the Democratic tick it vt the rn-f(h'ng ttrrerrt election, and a fair count means that thi vote shall be returned by the election board precisely as it was cast. These two requirements are very plain and rest for their faithful performance upon the election officers, who, in the discharge of their duties, can render it acceptable to the great mass of the Democracy of the county, or make it more objectionable than the old dele gate system We have heard it intimi dated that it is the intention of Demo crats in some of the northern districts to cast their votes for two candidates for County Commissioner from this end of the county, and that in some of the Southern districts two candidates from that section of the county will be voted for. We can hardly believe that such folly is seriously contemplated, and will only say that any two candidates nomi nated in that way will he thoroughly de feated, as they ought to be. Dong cus- i torn has made it the unwritten Demn j cratic law that each end of the county i3 I entitled to one of the nominees, and un- 1 der the new system that custom must be t maintained, i We will only add, in conclusion, that i this being the first test of the Crawford i county system, it behooves the Demo ! cracy to make no mistakes in naming : their candidates. Let every voter feel j as if upon his ballot the nomination for i inch office may depend, and then let him 1 vote for the very best and most deserv I ing candidate. 7'he Republicans, elated I with their partial success last November, j achieved through Democratic defection I in the northern portion of the county ' and a coalition with the Greenback paity j in the southern section, will nominate : their strongest and most available men, ! ami the Democrats must do likewise if they expect to come out of the contest ! victorious. It didn't require much political fore sight to predict, as we did in our paper two weeks ago. that Gen. Bailey, of Fayette county, would be the nominee of the Republican State Convention for State Treasurer. The vote on the first ballot stood 157 for Bailey and 84 for Davies. This result shows beyond all ca"il that although the great mass of the Republican voters in the State are undoubtedly opposed to the bossism of Cameron, 'no is still able, through the active but quiet operations of his adher ents, to be found in all portions of the State, to maintain his supremacy in the councils of the Republican party. His failure at HanisburK last winter to elect his candidate, Oliver, to the U. S. Sen ate, don't seem to have materially crip pled him, speaking in a political sense, ps it was supposed to have done ; but. on th contrary, his control of the polit ical machine appears to be as potent as it ever was. Quay is Cameron's light hand man, and has more ability in get ting up a State convention, and in run ning it to suit Cameron's as well as his own personal purposes, than all the men combined who undertake to lead the anti-Cameron wing of the party, which has the numbeis, but Siidly lacks in adroit and skilful management. The nomination of Bahey, who was one of Cameron's packed delegates to the Chi cago convention and voted every time for Grant, was as bitter a dose as could possibly have been administered to the friends of, Garfield, and was doubtless so intended by Cameron and his friends. It will be seen elsewhere in oui paper ' that Charles S. Wolfe, of Union coun ty, the head and front of the anti-Cameron faction, lias unfurled the flag of re- 1 hellion and proposes to do soma valiant lighting throughout the State against Cameron and his hated clan. M. S. Qi ay as temporary chairman of Cameron's State Convention at Ilar isburg on yesterday week, followed as it was by the nomination for State Treas nrer of Gen. Bailey, one of Cameron's third term delegates to the Chicago con vention, was the last straw that broke down the patience of Chailes S. Wolfe with the rugged rule of the Republican bosses, and turning his back on the con- : vent ion he hastened to his home in ! Lewisburg, Union county, where, on the ; following day he issued the following j card, which speaks for itself : i i 7o the Editor of the Pres.', Philadelphia : ! ! LFwisnvRO," Pa., Sa ptember 0 Ti e black j : flag has hren raised against the Independent Bepublican of Pennsylvania. rieae an nounce that on inv own responsibility 1 am ; an Independent Republican candidate for ' state treasurer, in full sympathy with the. ad ministration sind against the rule of the boss- '. es. I will stump the state and give my rea sons for this action. Charles S, Wolfe. ! Wolfe evidently means business, but : it is too soon yet even to guess at the ef i feet likely be produced on the Rppubli. j can party in the State by the boUi and ! aggressive stnnd hehas taken. He does ' not, of course, expect to be elected, and i his main object in tightiug the Cameron I machine is, as he himself says, to find I out how much "sincerity and practibil ; ity there is in the Independent Reform i movement in Pennsylvania." Wolfe I has a good deal of "sand" in his politi i cal composition, and his candidacy bodes : infinite trouble to Gen. Railey, the nom j inee of the bosses. i Gciteac had a remarkably narrow ' escape from a violent death on the after ' noon of Sunday la-t. Sergeant Mason, I of Battery R, second artillerv, when in ; ! the act of relieving tho guard at the jail in Washington, shot at Into through the window of his cell, the ball gra.ing his head and imbedding itself in the wall of his cell. Mason was promptly anest ed. Guiteau will suffer the penalty of the law when he is tried and convicted of murder, if the President dies, or of an attempt to commit murder if he should recover, and Mason in assuming to anticipate the judgment of the law by becoming a murderer himself, oucht to be punished to the full extent of the pen- alty prescribed for his offence. Xo sol- j dier or citizen in this country can te I permitted to take the law into his own :mjs ani v!o!ate it -.vith TERRIBLE FIRES IN MICHIGAN. immense thcts of i.AXD MfKNED over and hundreds of lives i.oT. t n ! Detkoit. Mich, Sept. 7. Kenortg from I the northern and northeastern part of the i State, show a terrible condition of affair The long-continued drought has rendered everything as dry as tinder, and numerous "slashings" or partly cleared tracts of land covered with brush, decayed timber, and other inflammable material, afford the best possible medium for the rapid spread of the flames, carried by the high winds which hvA ! been prevailing. Sanilac and Iliiron rmm. I ties, lying on the shore of Lake Huron, he- ! i ' tween Port Huron and Saginaw brty, are the 1 i mearre oi me iiiom, uesiruciion, which is I i growing positively appalling in character. j Hundreds of farms are already reduced to ! ! blackened deserts stock, crops, fences, and ; all farm huildinirs sweiit away absolutely nothing left. Noi is this a'l. Several lives ' are known to be lost. Men, women and ' ' children, overtaken by the flames, were suf- ! foeated by the stifling heat. It is feared, ; J hen full accounts are raceived, the loss of I , life mny prove terrible. The little hamlets i , of Anderson, Klchmondville, and Charleston, ' ; Sanilac county, were ail reported wiped out, 1 while Port Hope, Verona Mills, and Badax, ! Huron county, are reported wholly or partlv i ! bnrned up. People are flocking to the shore ; i of Lake Huron from the interior of these j ! counties as the only refuge from the devour- ! ing flames, and sometimes are overtaken by I : the spreading fire. Not le.-s than twenty : i deaths are now reported, but it is hoped that ! ! some of these statements may yet prove in- correct, while it is feared they d not begin ! ! to approximate with the facts, so unprece- j ; dented is the condition of things. In Tus- j : cola county, the next tier of counties back ; j from Lake Huron and south of Saginaw, j ' fires are also raging, but with not so great se- i ; verity. Still, the losses here are simply over- i l shadowed b the more terrible state ot things ! j in the adjoining counties. Tin same state of j j facts exists in Laper bounty, next south of j ; Tuscola. The whole country around Sagt- j i naw and Hay City is also ablaze, from marsh- i es taking lire, and reports of many losses to j j farmers are begiuning to raeh us. The ' ' weather continues excessively hot. with no ; ' signs of rain. Where the present fearful . i condition of things will end nobody can fore- j i tell. j H IITHF.R DETAILS OF THE PlSAtTF.K. 1 j Detroit, Mich., Sept 8. The horrors of j : the situation in Sanilac and Huron counties, j j on the shores of Lake Huron, are deepening ; every hour. An appeal was issued at Port ' Huron, signed by Senator Conger and Hon. W. L. Bancroft, calling for money, clothing, I ! and provisions to be sent forthwith to Hon. i : E. (,'. Carlton, mayor of Port Huron. The ; ' distress is unparalleled It is believed :U)0 j i people have perished, and fearer! many more ! have, while thousands are stripped of every thing tood, shelter, crops, stock, all swept clean from the face of the earth. Accounts ; continue to come in of a most harrowing des cription. George McDonald, of Mindem, : S:mil;ic county, tells a harrowing tale. Over : 20n families are homeless in that section, and suffering from want of food anil clothing. ' John Ballentine, of Verona Mills, says that j fifty-three lives were known to have been i lost in the neighborhood of Sand Beach. : The tire suddenly reached Verona Mills on j Monday, and the town was soon wiped out. i The wind was so strong that Balientine and ! wife were picked up anil blown fit teen or j twentv yards. A woman and her husband were found lying against a tree, dead, the woman being partly delivered of a child. The devastation caused by the fires of 1871 is nothing in comparison to the fires of the last few days. In the vicinity of Bichmondville, ' Western, Forester and Mercer townships re : liable information leads one to sav that up- i wards of :iM persons perished in the flames, There was no escape for the.m. The woods am! ground were so dry that no warning of danger was given. Faster than a race-horse came the fire. It would embrace a house or a barn with its contents anil away to thy next. Persons who have been through the terrible ordeal sav that in ten minutes from tne time the fire" struck there would bo 110 vestige of a house left. A 'correspondent says: "I have iust re turned from a trip through the burned dis trict, and a description of theasights would make the readers' blood turn cold. In many instances men, women and children were found lving on their fa.'es in the road, where they hiid fallen when th-y were overtaken by the fire Children were lying on logs, where they had clambered for safety. There was no finding each other when onee separ ated, Many took refuge in wells and root-hou-es, but in altno-t every instance were suffocated. Details of the disaster in Huron ;ue as had ns Here. 1 beiieve that when the returns are in l.oon person; will be found to have perished in the 11 inies. Forester town ship "will turn out Thursday to bury the dt'ad eat tie. sheep and horses, the stench of which is unbearable. Kev. W. T. Allington found sixtei 11 dead bodies near lleckerville. Only five buildings were b-tt between this place and Minden. John Flytewager's fam ily, seven children and wile, were ail burnt together in Paris township with fifteen oth ers. The Day family were burned, with Morris (JiiiToi 'I. wife and child. A man anil woman are lyingdead between D inner's mill ami Tyre. Fifteen families wre burned in Areyie and Moore. Five hundred families are reported alMinden as having been burned out. A woman and seven head of cattle were, burned at Smith's Mill, half a mile from Tyre. Wherever a house is left peo ple flock to it like sheep to a fold. In some places as many as six families oeing in a log shanty. They must have relief irom the blow or great sulTering will Vie the result I saw many families to-day who had not one meal sine Monday, and who do not know , when they will get one. Their teams are all gone, and their cows and other stock burned. Desolation stares them in the face. They talk about the;r misfortunes, and many of them say, bad as it is, it might have been a great ileal worse. They are glad to get away with their lives. Many of the men are Canadians, who have been over but a short time and have just begun to get things in comfortable shape. Many need medicine and medical attendance." Merchants and capitalists at noon to-dav pledged themselves for ?l"0,ooo for the suf ferers in the Michigan burned districts, and ' also put their hands in their pockets and pulled out fil.O'.Hi, to lie immediately exoend- 1 ed for flour and meat, w hich leave here be- :. fore dark to night on a fast steamer for aid I to the sufferers in Sanilac, Huron and other , 1 counties. This latter is for immediate use, and if neecssaij froO,ooo will be raised. A i report from one of the best men in Sanilac is ; receivei, saying that fiOO are known to be killed aud over $3,ooo burned out. ! ! STII.L LATER. j Detroit, Mich., Sept. t. Details contin- ; ne to come in relative to the destruction by the f.irest fires in Huron and Sanilac conn- j ties, the principal theatre of the greatest des- truction and suffering. An eye witness states that preceding the approach of the i fire there was darkness and copper colored ; i appearance in the skv. Later it changed to , ' a dark red and by the middle of the alter- ; noon on Monday it became so dark that lan- ' terns became a necessity, in order tnat peo ple might find their way out of doors. This condition of affairs continued until about eight o'clock Wednesday morning, when the ' wind shifted from west to north, which cooled the air and brought a slight, relief. ! In the woods were many dead of every age ; and presenting a revolting appearance of the bodies, which are scorched and charred by . the fire. The high winds which prevailed i cut off nearly every avenue of escape, and large burning masses would lie bodily lifted up and borne great distances away, and in ' many instances started fires in fresh places. ; The skill and courage of man seemed impo i tent to combat with such flames, and the : fleeing people were caught in fire traps i and roasted, as were their live stock. One farmer who was plowing with his team of j oxen a few miles from Sand Beash, perceiv ing the approaching darkness started for his ' home. Keaching there, he found that his wife had gone to neigfilors. He took two children, and gave three others in charge of his eldest daughter Hef ore traveling many rods they found themselves cut oft by the flames. He turned in another direction and I escaped with two children. The three ! children and the daughter were found next j day all in a heap, charted beyond recogni j tion. ' A dispatch from Port Austin, at the top of j the burned peninsula, sums up the general ; destruction as follows : The loss of lives by the forest fires on Monday and Tuesday is : estimated at from two hundred to three ! hundred. The following villages were : burned : Rad Axe. Verona, Forest Bay, I Ricbmondville, Charleston, Anderson, Deck : ersville, Harrisonville, Sandusky. The fol j lowing were partly burned : Linden, Port ' Hope. Elby. The great loss in the villages ; is nothing "to that in the country, where the . losses are to numeious too he named. Rains have fallen in probably sufficient quantities to quench the fires, but not ; enough to soak the ground and revive the , drooping vegetation. The lowest estimates ' indicate that two hundred and fifteen faroi ! lies have been burned out in Sanduskyicoun- tv and thirty-two persons are known to be ; dead. I WORSE AND WOKSF.. I Detroit, Mich.. Sept. 11. The very latest nws from the firf whicji swept Huron Pe ninsula aiifi adjacent regions, indicates that the work of destruction is done, but the , M'-ken'ng details arriving every hour 6how . t.k.a: ::. ucra;i;oj ".vi crea iore wlie- spread and awful than previous reports Dave shown. In the counties of IIcro'T, Sanilac and Tuscola, thirty-one rownMiii eleven vil laws were utterly aesrrn eu. mi the townships burned over as close, as sum- mer fallow. In many cases bridge", .fences, houses and ;arr.s, cattle, sheep and Initnnn beings went down before the flames iik grain before the reaper stroke, LOSS OF LIFE. The Cro'eao Time makes the following estimate of the loss of life up to last friday : Burned nt Saml He"h On the iirontvt near Sand Beach - At Richmnnfivtlle 14 .. 63 .. 16 .. 80 M ..20 20 In Custea, Township.. Isolated eae in rannne rounij Ilea.! niar Minden - Near Marictte Pari" - WcM of Tvre AtCiato In the mini at Watertown IVear Vlley .. 6 I .. 6 : .. 25 ! Total. 4,5 Late returns Indicate that, the loss of life has not been overstated. The n timber who ! have pprished is at least 600. and may run , up to l.WO as soon as te back country can be reached. The number of homeless per- I sons will not fall short of l.r.,000. j STIRRING APrEAL FOR AID. Tout HrnoN, Sept. 11. The following was Issued to-day : j To the Amrrirrn Projilr : We hare to-nijrht re j turned from the hurnt district or Huron and Sinl- , Inc counties. We tiare seen the luirned. di'fnrnr- j cd and writhlngr fiViire' ot men. women and chil dren : rough board .ioffln containing the dead lol- I lowed to the rave hv a few Minded anil depftir Inir relatives: n-nwitl of half-starved people at ! some of the stations ii'VImc tor hread tor their families or neighbor. We hear of more than two . hundred v'rtlms alreadv nurid and more charred ; and Moated hodies dnilv discovered. Already i more than fifteen thousand families are found to be utter! v destitute and homeless. Tiley hnddle in harns.' in school houses, in their nelifhhors' ! lionses. scorched. hlitered. homeler-s. Some still j wander half craned around the ruins of their hald- ; tations. vainly geeklnif their dead, some in speech- ; les airony wrine inn their hands nd refusing to j he c.o:n fofted . More Than ten thousand pc iple who on'v one weefc airo occupied happy, comfortatile t homes are to dav houseless, homeless sufferers. Thcv are hunirrv and almost naked when found. 1 and in such uvea t numbers and so widely scattered ( that our let efforts and irreatcgt resonrer tail to supply their Immediate wants. Without seedy i aid manv will perish, and many more will sutler ; and become exiles. Our poople will do their nt- i most for their relief, but all our resources would ' tail to meet their necessities. We appeal to the i charitv and irenerositv of tlio American people to i send relief without delav. Sinned v .. '. "arlton. Mavor of I'ort Huron, and 'tiairman of the Kelicf -ommittee: Peter Jlartsnll. t 'has. J, Peck. John V. Sanborn. I'eter B. SanlK.rn, Clias. A. Ward, Omar I. Conifer. i A Prizf. F.fsat. 7V the Public: In Janu- 1 i ary last 1 offered a prize of ?oo in gold for I each discovery, during the year, in the L'ni- , i ted States and Canada, of a telescopic, n- j ! expected comet. Dr. Lewis Swift, director : of the Warner Observatory, discovered 1 ! Comet A, Mav 1st, ami Prof. Schaoherle, of j ; Ann Arbor. Mich., Observatory, Comet C, ; , July 14, each thus winning the prize. Comet l H, or the Great Comet, burst suddenly on the j i sight in this country in June, though it was j first seen in South 'Africa May 21st, anil its appearance was predicted near Ma Aur't'jrr j I for .Tune 2".d last, this prediction being ex- j ! actiy fulfilled. Comet It wis neither tHe ; sconio nor unexpected, and yet I was anx- j ions, could the first discoverer be found, to ' ; make a special award or1 J'joo. Nearly .t,0"0 : ' letters claiming priority have been received j i and examined, but Director Swift reports ; that no conclusion can be reached that would be scientific and satisfactory. This was a ! disappointment to myself and the claimants, " oer to encm.rag , ,r as v popular astronomical study, I tcg t ?? P of f" to the person , I nited States or Canada who shall pr but in order to encourage, so far as possioie, to an- in the prepare the bet essay on "Comets : thir C'omposi tiou. Purpose, and Effect upon the Earth. " on the following conditions : 1. The essay inutbe written in plain lan guage, each technical term to be defined in brackets immediately following, and must not exceed 3,000 words. 2. Erich essay must be signed with a now de f.lvme and a sealed enve'ope must ac company the essay superscribed with the now o plume and containing the real name of the author. :t. All the essays must be filed with Dr. Lewis Swift, Director of the Warner Obser vatory, Rochester. N. Y., by November 1, lHSl.and he will submit theni to the judges. With the hopo that this prize will produce valuable additions to popular astronomical literature. II. II. Warnf.k. Rochester, X. Y., Sept. T, isxi. The Mich ic as Calamity. Saturday 1 night in the fire-swept district of Michigan was the most horrible since the flames broko otit. To the sufferings of the homeless pen- I pie were added the tortures of cold and rain. Until then the days bad been hot and the j nights wi.rm, and those of the homeless j thousands who could find no covering but I the sky were rot compelled to bear up i acainst the depressing influences of cold. ! Saturday night the sun went down envelop- 1 ed in clouds and a cold w ind began blowing. I Uefnre nine o'clock it began to rain, and for , several hours the water came down in tor- rents which would have checked the de- I srruction had the rain come five days sinuiei i and saved many lives, but which "now only wet the sufferers to the skin and left therii .shivering in the raw night air. i The scarcity of food may be imagined : when it is stated that the representatives of : the Ifrraid who have been sent to the burn- ! ed district have had tc. rely entirely on what they could take with them. Almost the only staple crop there is wheat, and now is I the seeding time. Fifty thousand bushels j of grain must be scattered over the burned district in ten days or next year no crop can ' be id lained. Every steamer which can be i obtained has been pressed into the service to ' carry supplies, and tvery train over the lit- ; tie narrow guage railroad through the conn- try has been loaded in the same way. In reviewing the losses the welcome word "insured" is found to be modified to an ex- ! tent which makes it worthless by the fact that such insurance is in mutual companies, ! the stock in which is owned to a large extent by the sufferers themselves. : A Fiert Otuvr..-The Westphalia papers give an account of a terrible catastrophe which occurred in the northwestern part of that province on the ISth ult. '1 here has been for some time, in operation in the neighborhood of Solingen, not far from liar men, a strange phenomenon. A part of the soil of a hilly heath became excessively hot, so much so that some people living close by availed themselves of 'the heat for domestic purposes. The explanation suggested was that some inflammable subterranean gas, or perhaps petroleum, had ben accidentally set on fire. Some water had been brought to the spot by an artificial channel: but its contact with the burning soil had only pro duced violent explosions, which seemed to i shatter nil the ground around. Yesterday ; week some persons drove out in a carriage ; from Remseheid to inspect the spot. When i arrived at a distance of a quarter of an Eng : rish mile, they heard a strange, rumbling noise, which so terrified the horses that they 1 had to alight, and send the carriage back 1 some distance. They walked on, discussing the likelihood of any danger, when suddenly a space of the hiflside, about 100 metres . square, opened, disclosing a gulf of liquid ! hre, and throwing up flames. The house ! where the family mentioned above lived was at once surrounded by the flames, and was, i before tjieir eyes, swallowed up in the liquid j fiery caldron at their feet, apparently feed j ing the flames. It is known that several I persons were in the house ; none were saved, j but it has not been ascertained how many I peiished. Andon Times. GooD Advick from a Leaping Medi cal Professor. The learned doctor says : "Keep some kind of a tonic medicine always In the ho.ise, and if anyone feels unwell, make free use of it. Rut first be sure that, it is both harmless as well as meritorious. us wilI ' VmpT neiti,e; i partial to any remedy that pro,I, ces a severe , .hartic (Ji ' i i,r..V rut no trust in alcoholic preparations ; their i cathartic effect, for prostration of the ner ! vous system and digestive orcrans is sure to follow, l he mildest and best medicine ever invented for strengthening every part of the body and restoring impaired or lost orcranie functions to their normal condition, and one which is havin.e an unparalleled and rapidly Increasing snle in the Eastern States, is Brown's Iron Hitters. Any draeeist will nwmnra if frr iwiii if rnn ruciiiofit him si so, especially when he finds that you cannot lwi Tr 11 fi 1 tsrl ti tu Ira onma en Ticfir nra If It does not. contain alcohol, and is the only preparation of Iron that cures headache nnd eeies not blacken the teoth. It is a sure re viver, a true strenirthener, nnd the very best medicine ever invented for permanently strenctheninR the pulmonary, urinary nnd dip;e;stiv orcans, and preventing consump tion, kidney diseases and chronic dyspepsia, often curing these diseases when all other remedies have failed ; for it is truly nature's best assistant." Gazette. Mrs. Mary Sanders and her son John were arrested at Waupun, on the Erie and Pittsburg Railroad, on Thnrsday night, charged with the murder of Thomas San ders, the husband and father, in a family quarrel. Thomas was struck on the head by either the wife or bod, the blow causlcij def.tu iu t'?u uiicutes. NEWS AND OTHER NOTING!. lamfnll Is the name of a Colorado town. Lightning completely stripped a hoj; of its skin in Richmond, Mich. To sick, colicky, crying babies give P ri sa; never any other medicine whatsoever. Two hundred soldiers lately took the pledge at Alder-shot after an eloquent ad dress from Cardinal Manning. The wreck of a vessel at Frankfort, on Lake Michigan, with a los of 150 lives, was reported at Cnicaco on Monday. George noover, aged 11, who shot and killed his sister Lottie, near Sunbnry. last May. has leen convicted of manslaughter. Three sisters were married in one wed ding in St. Louis. There were eighteen bridesmaids, and the guests fil.ee1 a large nail. Sergeant Mason, who fired at (iiiiteau on Sunday, will not be tried by court-martial and the ciyil authorities have taken no action ns ret. Kentucky is to have a mushroom farm in its Mammoth Cave. It is safd there is room enough to produce a million pounds of musrooms dnilv. A girl received a reward of $10 from her father for climbing a church steeple at Sara nac. Mich., standing on the knob, and cheer ing lor Cot. Ingersoll. A Connecticut maniac's belief is that he is divine, and therefore has a right to ride free on railroads. lie tries to kill conduc tors who deny his claim. Nothing so good for Headache and Dys pepsia ns Dr. M ETTA PIPS HEADACHE AM) DYSPEPSI A PILLS. Price 26 cents. All Progirists sell them Wm. It. Mann, the widely-known sta tioner, died at his country residence in nd donfield, X. J., on Wednesday evening of last week, aged sixty-seven years. Lightning killed Thomas M. Donctass, near Agate, Col., recently, tearing his clothes into narrow strips, " destroying his boots, and melting his watch and chRin. Frederick Schuman, aged 12 years, and another boy about the same age were in stantly killed by a train on the Pennsylvania , uaiironn, at jersey City, on Monday even ( ing. The owner of a large cranberry farm at 1 Berlin. Wis., employ a hundrd girls, and j he promises to marry the one who picks the ' most berTies;this season, providing she wants j him. The Ilarrisburg correspondent of the I Xew York .s'iiu having charged Orange Xo ble with being a stockholder in the Standard j Oil Company, the Erie Dispatch refutes the j charge. ; Matt Chapman, one of the men arrested on suspicion of being connected with the Chicago and Alton train robbery, has made a confession ami given the names of his ac complices. Iloyt Brothers, of Equinunk, Wayne county, have just completed a tannery at Morris with a capacity of a thousand sides of leather a day and employing three hun dred men. A traveller was lately killed on an English railroad bv his own portmanteau, which he had placed on the rack above and opposite, and which in the collision struck him with fatal force. The Xew York Titn fP.en.1 thinks "the committee which drafted the platform of the Republican State Convention .f I'enn- sy lvania seems to have been sorely puzzled ' to find anything to say." " ' Lightning struck a calf, at Newport, Me., that was covered with black and white i spots. Every white spot was singed, even I to the taking off of the skin, while not a Pair f of the black spots was injured. ! A ten mile riding race at Des Moines. I ; la., Thursday, between Miss Pinneo, of ! Colorado, and Miss Curtis, of Kansas, was ; J won by the latter in 2im. lis. Thirty thou- t sand people witnessed the race. j j A lamp exploded in Wm. Carley's house j j in West Middletown, Washington county, j , on last, Friday night, throwing the nil over : I Mrs. Carley, and burning her to death. Her ; husband was also burned severely. , Daniel Watson, colored, beat hi" wife's i i niece in a shocking manner at Tallahassee, ! : Fla., on Thursday, and then cut the girl's ' i mother's breast open. He was pursued by j ; a party, who shot him. killing him instantly. t j Mrs. Ren ton Hammond, r.f Evansbure. ! Crawford county, was crszed by the death of J , her husband and fired the house and attempt- i ed to kill herself and four children with an i , axe. She was discovered and her attempt j : frustrated. j Five women and three men, snhl to be 1 connected with a band of robbers who have j blown open over fifty sifes within the las': I I two years, have been arrested in Denver, 1 j Col. "Over f.l.ooo worth of plunder has been ! ' recovered. ! The parties who robbed the old man ' Connors of several thousand dollars in gov- t ; erment londs at Catfish, Clarion county, j f some months ago, were recently convicted I and sentenced to seven years each in the I : penitentiary. 1 A train on the She i:y vine branch of the j Louisville, Cincinnati and Lexington Short- ' Lin? Railroad was precipitated into Floyd's i Fork Creek, near Anchorage, Kv., on Pri- : ; day, and eight persons were killed and many ; others injured. j Senator Sawver ha presented his son j with two hundred ane fifty square miles of j land in the St. Croix Valley, north of Hnd- son, Wisconsin The price paid by Mr. Sawver was one dollar per Acre, or $iuo,ooo for the whole var tract. Helena Fargns. acred eight years, nt- tempted to rescue a younger child from the ' wheel of an ice cait at Providence, R. I., on ! Saturday morning. She succeeded in doing j so, but lost her own life, falling under the j wheels, which crushed her head. At a colored dance at Esperanza. Miss., on Thursday night, Hester .Femes became Jealous, mid. drawing a razor from her pock et, catved Martha Price and Susan Wilson to death anel seriously wounded Patrick Crow der. Threats to lynch Jones were rife. Ten thousand homeless persons in Mich igan in cemsequence of fires, appeal to the charitable wit b lrre.sista.ble force. Short, of the bettlefield Jin such sickening sight has ever met the eve as witnessed over the deso lateet thousand square miles in Michigan. Dr. C.eo. W. Book waiter, "f Ansonia, has been arrested by agents of the secret service at Union City, Ind., with about f 5, roo ;n counterfeit two and a-half and five elollar gold pieces in his possession. The coins hre a very good counterfeit, and well calculated to deceive. Malachi White, of Middletown, Bucks county, has recently sold a walnut tree standing in his garden which Is supposed to have bean planted bv John Woolston in 1728. Tlie tree was twenty feet in girth and nine teen feet, to the first limb, which was nearly three feet in diameter. Edward Cole, of Xew York, was shot by Emanuel (iundaker. of Lansaster, Pa. in the bar-room of the City Hotel, on Sunday evening. The ball tooic effect in the neck. Inflicting a probably fatal wound. Cole had caused trouble between (iundaker and his wife, (lundakor was arrested. 1 Dennis Shaw was shot and killed on I Saturday night bv Jeremiah Ilarrigan nt ! Hockessin, about nine miles from Wit ruin at- ton, Del. Harrigan, who keeps an unlicens- j ed'groggery, in the hitter place, is in custody ! and ac'mits the shooting. There was jeai- ousy between the men on account of Harri gan's wife. The Democratic State Committee of Massachusetts issued a call or, Mondiv for the State con"ontion at Worcester. October 5 th. A committee was appointed to nre- pare and forward to Mrs. Garfield resolutions j of sympathy from the Democratic! party of I Massachusetts with her wounded and suffer ing husband An Illinois farmer declared that his daughter didn't earn her salt. She retorted that; she would he glad to stand on the same footing as tier hired help. He consented, signed an agreement, and soon forgot nil about it. That happened five years ago. Xow the girl sues for wages, and gets a ver dict Of $rKK. Two more of thesnspeeted Missouri train robbers were taken into Independence on Friday night. They cave the names of Charles Fisk and William Stillwell. and loudly asserted that they were innocent. It is expected that all the rest of the robbers will be captured, as their names have been disclosed by Chapman one of the first arrest ed. Andrew Plagnor, of Iouisville, was 4. His practice for many years was to read hK Bible two hours every Sunoay morning, and work hard all the rest of the day making wooden spoons, which he peddled during the week. He lately became convinced that be was a Sabhath breaker. His offence see-m- ! ef1.' nim enormous, and iie drowned hirn 1 v It. is said that startllne facts have been discovered in settling np the. estate of the late A. A. Stewart, of Greensburg. It was ! supposed be left a fortune of fc.TO.ono to ! f 100,000. It is now reported the estate is in- ! solvent, and that the money of clients hns I not been accounted for. It is believed Mr j Stewait committed suicide to escape the dis- P. ' '- ' . ' . .i -ii . . Gen. Ambrose K. Bnrnslde died at his home in Bristol, R. I., on Tuesday Inst., after a very brief illness, in the fiftv-seventh year of his age. He is best remembered ns the successor of Gen. McCle-llan in command of the Army of the Potomac in the autumn of 1862, and by the defeat he suffered in Decem ber of that year nt tu hlewiy battle of Fied erickshurg. At the time of his death he was a member of the U. S. Senate from Rhode Island, of v.b'cu StaVs h? Jjd formerly beeu Goveruor. Fere mlah Mahany died at Lis home, em the road leading from Peittsville to Frack ville. on Saturday night, at the repafi age of 11 1 years. A lthough he had heen n resi dent of Ametiea lor an ordinary lifetime, Jerry never spoke r.r.v language hut Irish, nis wife, who claims "to be l'"3, also speaks Irish and not nlng else The old couple ha ve raised a large family. The oldest boy is 75. An incident of recent occurrence at El mlra, X. Y., furnishes a fine opportunity for moralizing. There is & ftirl in that city who competed in an exhibition of female loveliness, and won the first ptiz- by per good looks. The triumph hns proved more than she could bear. It has turned lirr Fiend, and now she Is a enndidnte for adiriiton torn insane nyylurn. All is vanity, saith the preacher. The Grand Jury ef Payette county on Friday last retnrned true bills against the sever Molly Magnlres charged with the mur der of Maurice nealy on the 20th ef Jnne last. The principals in the murder are al leged to have teon John Kune, who was committed withont bail. Pat Dolan, Mike Dolan and James McFarland, while three others were necessaries. It is net yet deter mined when the trial will take place. A report was received In Sedaha, Mo., on Sunday last, that two heavily armed and masked men entered the town of Rates City, on the Chicago and Alton Railroad, about seven miles east of the Blue Cut, the scene of the late train robbery, and drawing pis tols and firing, began an indiscriminate pil lage of the town. The people offered no re sistance anel the reibbers seen, to have taken what they wanted. The amonnt of booty eb tained is"not stated. A gang of tramps, numbering about seventy-five, boarded a freight trsin on the j Pennsyivnnla Railroad, below Middletown, I on Sunday morning, and threatened the crew with violence' if they did not allow them to i ride. A special train nnd posse of eflicers ! wers dispatched to tho scene from Harrii ! burg. Twentv-one r.f the tramps were ar ' rested and taken there the same evening. I They are suppesed to be a portion of the 1 gang who have noeii robbing nnd burning i houses and barns in Lancaster county. The steamer Cedumbia. of the North Eastern line, foundered off Franklin, Mich., j at TI o'clock Saturday night and fifteen per- j sons were drowned. 1 he nonies eT ine c.p- fain, first and second engineers. Miss Fitz- perald, and a voting man unknown have I come ashore. The steamer was heund from j Chicago to Ca!lmrwoed, Canada, grain-la-! den. She sliifteel her cargo aliout 10:45, and ! sank fifteen minutes after. The passengers j and crew got away from t'e vessel in small '. boars, but the one containing the captain, j engineers and others capsized. William Brown, George W. Padgett and Patrick McGowan. whites, nnd Abel and j Amos Manley, Creek Indians, were hanged ! at Fort Smith, Ark., on Friday morning for i murder. The execution, which was private, ' took place in the oM military fori. While i on the way to the scaffold Brown fainted, but was speedily revived. Eich prisoner ; acknowledged his cni.f. As the cap was ; placed over Padgett ' head he cried "We I five die e.n the scaffold this m.-iriing, but ! we'll meet again in henvon this evening. " ! The signal was then given and the trap was i sprung. The white men tlieet instant 'y, but ! the Indians writhed convulsively and a : stream etf blood pushed fiern Amos Mauley's ; mouth. j A passenger train on the Chicago nnd j Altem Railroad was steipped and re.l.hed by , masked highwaymen, f uir miles east of In I dependence, Mo., on Wednesday night ef j last week. The express safe was rifled and j the pas$cngers robbed of money and watch ; es to the amount of several thonsand dollars. 1 It is lelieved the express safe did not con , tain more than f.;no. Trie express messen ! ger. Fox, was hadlv beaten by the ruffians, t After securing their plnnder. the whole job i e-cupying about a quarter eif an hour, the ! roblw-rs rede e(T to the woexts. It is believed ! their leader was the leafier in the rf.hlwry of i the Chicago and itnek Island train at Wins. I tern, on July 17th. The train was stopped ! by eibstrnctions and a reef lartem on the j track. As soon as the alarm was given by i the train at Kansas City, posses of men went 1 In pursuit of the highwaymen, and it is re I ported that six of theni have been captured, j The Governor of Missouri has issued a pro j clamation calling on the people "to rise en masse and exterminate the robbers. j II Kevkti. Messrs. White A Burdi. k, i Pruccists, Ithaca. X. V : I can recommend ' Klv's Cream Balm to relieve all persons snf- ferine with Hose Cold and Hiv Kever. I : have been a creat sufferer front the same j coniT'laints: have had ereat relief by usinc : the Balm. I ha ve recomaiended it to man ) of my friends for Catarrh, nnd in nil cases ' where they have n--ed the T.altn freeiy have i been cored T. Kknnev, Drv irevs Mcr ; chant, Ithaca, N. V., Sept. t, l$t. j fit. A. I.. Atkrt. rharmacit. Vewnrk, ' S.J.: Ilavine been severely af!ifed for elev j en years with Ifay Fever, Jtfter trying al ' most every thine withont. avail, I cave nr ail ; hopes f beitm enreil. when I purchased of I yon n hex of F.'v'x Cream Halm. To mv ! surprise, after a few app'tciitions. I nn en- tirelv relioved II. W.usov MHP.IS. Letter ; Carrier. No. 14, New H. (., Newark, N. J. . Trice .r.n cents. For sale at the new druc, store, Ebensburii. I ItoRFTiT Wilt iam and his wife, who live ' near Whitmill, in this eonnty, says a Dan ' ville (Vs.) despatch of Friday, had a quar rel yesterday and the wife went to a masis- ; trate and obtained a warrant for her hns- j i hand's arrest. The maci-trate appointed j ; Williams's own son as n special eonstab'e to , 1 execute the warrant. On his arrival at Wil- i ' Harris's house with the warrant. Williams's dead body was found lyine in the yard. His j head had liecn nearly severed from the body i with an axe, which was tvinn beside it. i Williams had been killed bv his daughters, . who had fled after committing the murder, ; nnd have not yet been arrested. Williams j was an educated man, ef goenl family, but ', was aeidieted to drink-. A Hkntfickst Action The worn look and miserable feelines of those closely con fined in milis or at desks or work tables, are caused by weak stomach, kidneys or bowels, and show the necessity foi some mild tonic to build them up- N"o one need suffer thns who will use Parker's Gineer Tonic : for without intoxicatine it has such n beceficient action on these sluirtriih ortrani and so cleanses the poisonous matters from the system, that rosy cheeks and pood health and spirits are soon broucht back acsto. Erpress. See adver tisement, and bnv the n.edicine at the new drugstore, Eiensburs;. -22.-lm.J I A new pncT has arisen in Chicaso, whose ; members call themselves Overcomeis. They assume Ui have a peculiar inheritance in the i promises which were made to the seven j churches of Asia, claim to work miracles, ! nnd believe in the salvation of all, even the ', devil ; but many will first have to pass thro' ; purcatorv. Their leader and some of their most advaneeel saints nre said to be em tbir j wa to Jerusalem to inaugurate the new dis j pensatieui. Chotcb Kxtkacts rnoM Druggist?. "We know the value of malt, hops, calisays and iron composins "Malt Hitters." " "Our lady customers hiirhly praise them." "riiysiciaos prescribe them in this town." "The larcest bottle nnd best medicine." "Hest blood purifier on our shelves." "Our best people taUe Malt Hitters " "Sure cure for chills and liver diseases." A Tot-so man employed at the Palo Alto car shops, who was told to carry a piece of an iron enr bumper down stairs, rn Friday, thought to save himself some hard work bv throwine it out of a second-storv window, ratriok Casey, an ehi man restdine in the Orctiard, was passjne at the instant nnd was struck on the hip hy the falling irem and seriously, if not fatally, injured. Anhwfr This QrEsneN.-Why elo so many people we see around us seem to pre fer to suffer nnd be made miserable by indi pestton, constipation, diz2tnes. loss of appe tite, eominjr np of food, yellow skin. etc.. when for 75 ets. K. James." Tlrnegist. F.bejrs bure. Ta., will sell them Shiloh's Vi'aliter whieh is guaranteed to cure In every in, stance? 4-l.-e.o w.'lv. Tekhence Connki.i t, the sick faster nt Newton, N, J., has entered upon the. seven-ty-thir 1 day of his fast, th first 4? rtnvs of which not a spoonful of foed in unv form. liquid or solid, was taken. Since-then, for tlie last thirty day, hp hns taken from two to three teasooonruUof linniil fwwl nunomL j I ly heef tea daily, but nothingolsfl except w ter. Silver Creek, N. Y., Feh. 6, ism. Genu : I hv been very low, nd liavw tried everytMnj; to no ndvantae. I heard vour IIop Bitters recommenced bv ao many, I poncludtd to elve them a trial. I did. 'and now am around, and constantly 1 in pro vine, and am nearly as strong as ever. W. II. Weller. ' Tjftflten, fur thone flitreiij mm plalnfn tn trilrh joti are mttbfect, ii Dr. raust'8 German Aromatic Wiite l-T:'M.-:r.j u (Tinn.plnn. Th followitiff extract from J.:.lg t.v k reply to Rob lngerv.il 'ir' that h" Hi vigorous n .IcfcT.tier f the Christian ie:igi.ji i os he is of the DnoTiti' party : i ' lrt w,nt k :t..l r,: a irr-r'. t !!: . n '.t Hcip!cs cf e iirlt nrj'lert-.-- to r:'-ru It, r, 1 i c.tnp..ro It with :h ".nditK-n in whfh tl:tr ' tra'lif-ri Jure j ct !t. In lt n..'nhir ire-'--ro'! , ; the ccrtrc of V Intellect nsl tJ!l p MM? 1 iwr. the lrt ten wrrc i.-. Mel's! to i-f? po (Wi.-'.r;.; that 1 coil. I fK-t rim liutio tu thctft l!;iu.'.t ? :i- Inif tt- t'' J 'r 1 ;lc nj.'.n. All Tr.::cri'T ct principle;! !'!:'' tpc wa p:it .'-cii 1 1. 'l:r ;.ri . ji n file of lliff wij'ile iiuiiit )! itliout c T)-citnnt rr Pheine, nr.d tbo nmTl--trt-i wrr l.VTonjjl.lr nd nnlvcrn!.T ewrcpt. H'ref"i"Os In erf nLftpe wis K'jr'tr ur.knc.wn. I be cipi- ! nnu the vokIc v t r-iti cr j'i:co rcr f.fv i Tricre . nt' r:tl f . r tl r.'-ir, . urs-r P-r tho I t:ck, bo rtluK" fur trie uof.rt,!nnt;. Jn nil .i?in ! ilum Iheto wa n-.t io-ital. .'uir.. l'.u,s-h-niso. or criranlr.-J ch-irttT of r.y kin 1. 1 re la ' Iiflrnco t- hnran l.fe a per e'-ny fr.aliOil. : The urjor of a auc'.'sJol !eil..r to (aiojte t ; opK)t!mt5 i iilV) cbyeJ by Ml lul owtn ' with the ctrnon a".a:rUT t:l i.ieieure. It wn a fp(y:l amu-cment of "the pcuuincc to flltni?s the fl ow at which wcr. wr ct'OiprileJ 'o kl'l or; another, to he P rn to plef-s I x wild !.e:t. it otherwise "butchered to make a l:nino lif.Hnny." In every province j.acanijm er.nctcl the ame r.l1i.l"iiJc.i crucin..; rpiirei'O n.l robherr ruled supreme ; timr It wed rumpnfc-in ni. l r l over ell the earth. Ihe (Tmrrh cnm. at:d ht-r lifrtit penclrute I this moral dnrkne." likt-a rcw uu. .She ccvircd the Kion wirh iiiM:nit!.'nr. rvcrcy, fcnd tl.oTjutid upon thfl-aii'tf ot her ! ciple (levt.'i'il t!icni.elvc cxWueiv.-!- t workf i.f I charity at the nr: ( nl every esr'hly latrreft. ! Her earliest aliicretila wire k:ilf 1 without re ! mor?e beheaded, crucified, totn o--order. thr-jwn ; to wild hen.-ts. or covered with p'tcti. piled tip In s treat heap?, hi..! liowly hnrned .ienth. Jtut . her faith w node perh-ot thrn'itrh HT'!crina and j the laws of love roe in triumph Irom Th r.al.ei of her irartvrn. Thii" rtllirtun has come down to tin throu-irh the asret, amended all the woy t y ritfht- eotinr. instice. temperance, mercy, tr.npnrertt truthiiltie!n, exuPinir hope, nnd whirr winded charitv. Never itst It" lnf!unde 'or ir ! more plainly percept tile than ti. It In ret convert ed. puriTied, atiri reformed n!i men, for i. fir-t principle ! the frcrdotn of the human wl:I, ard there ice thoe who rl.oo-e te r-j-t it. K :t to the ruanfl of tcai.kind. dir-c:!y and lroiirctly.lt hai t.roui;ht nneonr.trd h'r:nir. Atu'.lh it fake ! away the r?trnius which It Itnpo'cg or.-r'lpa?-: lion silence the adnionit'onp of it preacher? ' let a 1 Christian ceac their la.or ot chary I I. lot out front hi.'t .ry the re vrJ of iti heroic t i nevolence repeal tl-e l,.w It I; a enn"ted an t trre I ititut.,r. u : lx"' JV"j' Ima runt up let it irv.rai prin.-i- rr. and all it nilraclei of lltht ! niEUi-hed what w.m::! we cy?ne to? 1 reed not answer thi. qyc.-'km : The experiment he.? been piirtniKy tnej. The I'r-'ti. h ration f .rmsl'iy renounced e " f in -t ia n ity, drnf 1 tr.e exitnre o the Supreti e iicinir. and o nti?fi"d the hunger f The iiito'.'i tifri lor a time. What (ol'owr.t . I'rilverpl !rprr.i-ity, u.irn.p'itl r- lied in bloc-'l. fantastic crlno nu: nmu !nc 1 t.efor". which Hart led the rath witb th-ir uh lrne tiiry -ity. TLe American pe jve have nnd 'ijlit to have no peo lal deire to foilow the terrible example o! i :i'.t and misers. A SiNcri.AK Cei KSTiAi. Phenomenon. The sky, viewed frm this place to-tiicht, i cays a !Iat;ove-r fS. II.) fli-patch e.f tin- 12U; ! prcs-'nt-ed a Jbiziilar appcarnnce. of hi h ttie foPeiwinn descripi'ron is furnished by C. : F. Ktneron. Professor of Asttonomy" at j Dartmouth Cctlei: : I "A hand of yellow Jurht from . tn lf decree in 1 width and j:iiT- uwr.rm tl.r iiihoit m-fi Im ! fr' iu a:.- at -'o d ;r-ee iirrh of wert To d-L-e"S ! fhicli ( I i:!sr. i!,vM.k.- ij- ,. -ven .no. o ir'.'ifra i and pou'hein t -d !.. it !':rt l.f l. and two-f.lths re-p.-ct i vly. I: !ret.on wt a'mott at riaht mi:!'" ::ii ti.e ?1 Iky Wit. A vy ! distinctive J. a t u r w:i t ' e r- a i :.i r un l d'd;n;e:V Biarkrd n..ritirn 'oin.'ary. 1 rai r. uc'il 15 t P. V. it i.'in.itm -1 eoT.-iprtr.jt ve'y I xed At 5 wi i ocl-ck if we t oT i ,trnr h oiith . jf i :o,uslly , di:ip;-e:,r'tiir. .!u-T r..i;:h -,d eni ot t o.. rr-.--. t. : ot T iie st re:i mer irtli TV Ml!;v Wjy W"r.' t.-Ti.-r i twelvo hr.e- of lieht . 1 nt r nl.t me.-i". w :t h ' he ' atreaioer. hit .-"i-srt. 1 thr-e or lour d-irr.-e 1 front it and ueariv pam hl i e:e-ii orb'-r. 1 i-ee j liateN wre live o;-. ix e"ree. i r, p-Oiii. loir.c ' thl? tin. e thc-r were la.i t ir-ohorn iiaht ftratn- fn up at rlalit snte te the lu.d "" The sunn wotidcrf.vl phenomenon, as will be jfcn by the fiitrw ;nt! destintehe?. wa w itnessed at Jrarat-iua rii.d I'ti' a X. V. Sapatmo, S'-t'tf'!,.,"-r ,r. -tier ?,L'i,ii,e at- ; mipph.-ri.- l ire-n-.n -a .is v.:r...-, 1 it t o'clo.-k to-ii :k h t . A ltiT!,i:i-o: cio i l !-vinr.ft'l the tent ih trein the p-aMrrn ' " wr-t-m I . ri.' u- It ffiii al.oiit it., d e-r. , .i w , . I ; 1 1 . s r. ! u' no : ine J ma fo d.-rf1 l.it t I; ; r tflr- could e s'-f-n I through IT. The : mil : .'il ffiea l.t'tcd ti. rtv ; or f. T' y tu : t uTeQ . .a r. .1 w .a w ; : 'o r s-d I y riiriin ii i of people fr-. in the icc.trc i-f t",e ttrc?: aud Irorn j the lioti'c to . Itica. N . V.. Setdenfee 1 1 A c-lc.tia! lie j notjieoon wes w:i..-rj u .-r to-n-.ht at- tracted tr-H attention. A tnlc-l i t'll tit-.... 1 in the no-th :iu l ot iv-l to Th.- Z'.n-tli. v.ien !t J (.panned t'-e bv fr"ri the tasfcTTo ih" r- .' -rn ; horiron. 1 he :-aterti n l thn u-v-l-d in" j or. j tionn l:kt ii t ci-oi.!. ni-iviiv rnpidly mwar lf : the hps! until the who!.. ,:.snpi-r.tred n I.-i.il ili- ret'on. Ti.c b-i:.d d rteit.l m : n aie-crnld-. phay in thjt the i tt, re i.:ir--ly -Itr: ned. a nd th.it when M e i, ind brike up 1 1. 1 'fi in 'tic form -f whiir loiniTi..u clou.it. Zt w .a toiiiiht Ly 1 porre fhnt n r .-i.u:o:i h-lt .Ka I !".ihcd 11. e ur'.'i s an io-p::e-o. iuAvi v vrD Lift: ; yv- r .ve r '' ' e lowing dNp.itch from cra"- ,.i tie lnt., 'ells i't o'.vii eixerac-tf n! ste.ry : A nu'MiuTol aivt.ipri Ineiiinrrp a.3'ii ter- f 1. a I: l detective- tr-ni d;t:int part of fie bftcn her,, for the p ist iw day, isn-s eral c.ace-i ifdcah v hieli have rece-i ceiitly r;'pyrte l from the MiMir1-? h.r : Staoj have ; a a : i r. if p c v -".v lj..-e:i rc- t'te p-.irro-e of rC'-cvt-ri u th" i.moonr . f the p:ilu-e I .1 l.y ?-.e-"ul it r-i. T hey have .-i.-rt-i !-i th-it a . ppiraev w.a f f-o:c.l in (liyi hunt, five rni'.-it m th : "ity. to cri the iri-Tr-m-e c4. .fi.. :fe.f a nt. leet wh i : ;1 i.rve. ci;d who-o- ,.-aih w:i- xtu larlv repor-rfi nt :e nouie ;: e : number : .. o. wer i:im e v-l! .C U I'.eaie i f ! o i:i tl o rift r 1 ne purti had fhc!. 1 ti o rn.f: h w.- -! n -j r. . r-iril held niid the ct: hv a phv. --an v. ; lator. " A f;aw ti pr- Mivpi.'ioi.s o! the "ui.-iil. an t likely to r-.'i:li in trie aTre-st : n v -n A a tr 1 1 ' I. en1, when ,-oin- .-j i -y :l:--.-l s ir concern t:.r :l-e uietl.t-i ef I1 hliris; in l-i.itnn 1 1 1 .. A r afcrent ci ti. ip: city di-T'-i-d .-! to $iK.Kj.tK.s in t'lil.-.Tu-. h'St wc nil reeil nt- .-.I t'hi'-oro, nnd daily expect' d. p. , y 1" r ;n-"t ed sp h" are ctm ... e .a ri ii: .-: "ir.. i ce i - a Hi-.': n 1 1 c I fie iito.-.-t nre th-.7 u-a-!;? ere Hi- lilmo Iloti'l, N and Hill Ai-oli Street, PlllhADl.I.HHIA. Hates 1 1lu'oil t JrvJ.oe -ppv 1 h v. The tra veil nir pi-.t-dse will f till hud at thl H'-tel the au e liberal provi-i-.n t-..r their cotn..rt. located in the i n. n'.e.i i.' t r. of bn-in-P! 1; is and fimuemrnt. an I the d'ftTft Kail Hosd rtepoif. m" wel! nil parts ..I the .-ity. are .-.! a. c-ti liv triet e:ir eonM :i lit 1 p.L.-,l:i: the .lo-T.. It o. fers special iti.laee:ncr.t t r tt-.-e virltin Tj.e city f r u.-ine-- or pleHurr. 1 our patronnire i re;e: t ol " V iJol i r it -l . Kt'.iEU, Proprietor, i.-ll. Tl IS. M l'hiladrlphia. Nov. Ll 1HL blllbl PUPULAK O F ALL- v 3 SEWING MAEHINESvt V if LIFET1 ME - SURPASSES OTHERS ofnsoitfapK&Bo. 33 UNION 6 3. NEW YORK 0 Chicago ill. aC) ORANGC MASS. 22 .Tndtzc Chick ns n ntrNtr 'KTi 111 lift'il ETI K. Id 1 I WiT -K a ORDER B L7ST It IY A It II TAYI OH, l'ot t and Iraiclier, Sniil? tnke sreat p'.ea''re in rci me i-i! tb o ireit tho A-a.ieru ol Mr. !ulnn C. Sl'ort . liV." - j I ion. rmino wn, m . ., Si1 ( l"lo) "I cl eertully cnnent tn t:- u r,f mv rutin a rcfrre-nce M v' hn s wi ! n tttm io ou (inr f.utrtli vein utter tt.e:r"vacnti u " Fcr new 1 lef 'ri:i irrnlnr a 1.1 rc "iWITII. IX MIOnn.llKil , .. M.. harTaril til veraity trrailnate. Media, I'a , 1- ltnlcf from I'M, a. IJ At I Idea In Oac Ml'ilunt in ufe eccrvNxi'.'a choice it Vise cHtl-mue of ci ripr ! -n : t ifiH". J.I.HrMKU ai'FMirtl.. Cinrtn'M.O. lUriitnl. HUNTER'S SIFTERS. $777 A 1 1 A K ami exeo- to ngrntn. Octtit free. Aililrcn I. O. Tlfkery, .4-i7i':, -V'. fifrfuftr lt.-rfcufij !' fue. 13 1pm:: i' AltVKi: 3 I J 9 Till Gil; A, . INFALLIELT r Itcft'vftamT Sea,, iy.r " n'lif: t ti'"l i - of .11, .--ci 'j, tl.e iLte-rca! I ' b:cj rur.'.t tL an.l t'rrtt 'p S.., For Siit t -irc, I f T-a. Sc at, mi "k -TiaTlvc, f a. llfUlIrg l'S:UT!l. i'.. e -: SALT RHC'JM. W.-M. M I.,u..l I. L i. jrratc'i::iv acki.-T- , s on PT.d, n?-k. .... . ... tttiri: 33t aljlt- r.-s.t ; , , f-.f UTie JT; r. . ,. . year: tr-l hm..!-', -. Il'ilincfi: s f rri e Ii. . the 1 utlfi ra h-rr:.i.. '' PSORIASIS. H. I.. Pari .,fr. I. f.f r.jrl3f ' ' - I., i r t-. . l ythcrr-r ui I, -r-n r.A an.l ("t t'i -t s- 'jn-t.'rlii! f-K-c -?r- . i t a : -i-1 . 1 - l i -. ; ... flll'-tcj w:lb J:. t x :. . fctct f. it? f .r t!..- -i - SKIN DISEASE. F. Ii. Iirfk-. I Tfin.l ftll !-S "r f-n-c-i in h l.tr llrTT' yr 1 Jr f fulled to l-'t. I m. ! ti.e I'rrt l:r, aii-l nn. t a mr.t un- rt. 11. ai ij. 1 ' SCROFULA. H,.n. Wm. 1 av ;..r. 1: 3-'ll.a C- I I t': 'r; yeari of .n C'.riiA:.t . fce. rjft-fe anJ nci't .- aaj- ttiat l.nr:i cu:"j t: n:c-t rcti,:ii k'-V :. Tl t-,V FUC'f.s T rtrc- wijo wrf. h I 'nt'-ir 5;n'f j.i SKIN HUMORS. .Mf.S. K. V In) J .c. Ii- u her fas-?. li.i.J r ! '.u;c ;i alt.:'"t r.iT. HcH.l ct.rcr.-j Sati".J !-itTfu:!r BiiJ tru-.l Tien ly rnr.l t.y e "u w-u1 CUTICURA lierff.l-j sr.' f - r f:--'? Crrr'.'--ii.i. a Me.ln.-ui. lfirc :.jce-. tl : i t llin.nt Hiirifter, fl j ir t Tt-t: tTdir.Vi : vixi sj,P. i:, : ,,J in- umrs I't.'t -. W r IKS ... A1: Ilia. If. 1 Trr" lie K '-I ncv h n i t r - : - 1 ' ' - - over t lie it '' ! . tit Klv.-t" 1 1 : - . Weeki Intcr. nnMim k i3 -KPTKMF.Kl. NFAV CrOi l-eii; t v;;! n ' '1" c 1 :'- -t.-l a: ) J : A 1 nl le. f- ;i i'r c. T.;.- 1 ! and it or wri r- i : n 3'k fr .'T i : "! 1 " .! r-.(- '. ;i v f : 1 r Han : a-.ric HI II K Hll' 1 r --c- H a, v 1 '. -i- i.- - -;,, , ,. ... ;...;. ! -. , - -- ) . r H -,.L; i i ) . 1 . J ip .-- H . ; V 1 ... . 1 !;' -:r ;'j in ir r:i. :. en 1: S.'.i ') : p ' 11.H--K 1 M-tlI!f r. i V? 1 Ci Sc. -rr v;.r1 n n.-k i .!-i IH-.--S. j - " an-! 1 ; ., tt.-r o : p(.. tr l.txth ni riisr V'ejJ Matter u mtt N:'k r.r-llT,e-l ' . r'iirHn. ftrcniMr" h a ' '1 ril tt e o:..t n.j.r. vf.. .t,-.. Siii a 1. 1: i.i mc n i-: . r . . We ill !. r . ci.-.-.i e;-r; i " S-ttne- at x-i.; c.r.-i f i; : -1iiiti. a:.-l a-l y A ; t cr 1 ao ) ir- tiic r., a s -n i S:i. j r.-i ly t l'-i-t -. ..a ni ire r.r--t i fl l S '"..n. A r-,u fnve - S-t J.r,.- . f.rx- tfHri". Vy 1 - New lin- 5 I-- T i l ' 1 fancy at.-l j l.ua Ft iiil c... r -ti.iMH're. N.ii an.! r?-i.i--c k-.t l- 1.- : -. ili ere 1- -Crtu. 1'lncli hi, j New nii-l ta- f-xtfi-.Tv- e5-..l, I lircrl sti't Hii.r. "We nre .rt i.a- i T -. B'."v-jB nr J tiic rry t.r--: niotity in otr BiHnT ,: - : 118 & 12-3 FEDERALS. i L N. B Mew R. a ' V ---r ' J. Iifiavnri, N.-H gea. Nst lut'.ri. 1 :. t y ,- hi En CELEBSTLD I honfh rhiair t f f ril til-er with fever f.3 Tint . t ti tm pin runs t.act virus wf-h M-.'te: lrt tbf .vtr:i ''"-' fi ..niclic. whirii w r. ' t.r It. r c.m i - in 'ni . . irv. il.fumsufm. k .i ,,v men i -Fir !e .y a. V-- ' " TiftR nr " ' 1 tha act.Ta c.nicf i.i hur t... It wcti't 1-uiiet S le: l-ut IT i a.''C Jee. It ' UT do S'.i. it; : ti- ciiia. S'LIliV Al 1 ' RIOKTlirRN H.',.,.. II In nt f l il-x-a. ' 1 - miM el'iOKte. a'lun.!: 'r r . i vri-ltv ol iiruju.-ii. f n fi cf-Ttienieiit 1 n it1 r L.i' tlTfaiA Prl'c . t en over e..i tom1' i'! ' h.1 nt !jw i-rif ' acre of ir... I a:v' rl ea:' lnri ImiI rocentlT o- . i cn'ara anJ ms: f v,-;s drej. W. H. ABKO:;- 1 5 -V Y. ') cm not .-rr- . reft tJ AlMru I