EBENSBURC. PA., F1IDAY, - - - - SEPT. 30, 1881. BESOniAtIC OrTT TICKET. FOR TREaSritX" : JOHN A. KENNEDY, Ebensburg. TOR AtSOClATal JCD6ES : JAMES MYERS, Ebensborg. JOHN FLAN1GAN. Stonycreek Twp. POR COfKTT COMMieSIOKMS : JOSEPH nOGUE, Allegheny Twp. JOHN CAMPBELL, Conenaugb Boro'. Ton POO HOTTSB DIHBCTOW : GEORGE W. EASLY, Johnstown. POB COriTT ACDITOKe : II. A. ENGLEHART, Ebenibnrg. JOHN L1T21NGER, Clearfield Twp. OK CO BOH kx : C. W. EASLY, Johnstown. The inaugaral address of President Arthur will be found in another rart of our paper to-day. It is brief, but it is rery comprehensive, and if he carries out to the letter the fair promises he has made, his administration will be some thing that the country, and especially that wing of tho Republican party that stood by the late President, did not an ticipate with any degree of confidence. But will he carry out the programme he has laid down ? we must wait and see. Promises are easily made and as easily broken. It was perhaps a prudent thing in President Arthur to have the oath of ofSce re-administered to him on yester day week in the Capitol at "Washington, but it was not at all necessary. He had a precedent, however, for the course he -adopted, for Hayea took the oath twice, the first time on Sunday and In private, the 4th of March in 1977 having fallen on that day, and his second at the in auguration on the day following. He would not perhaps have taken the Grst oath if he had been fairly elected, but as he knew he never was, he concluded that a little double swearing might cover up, or at least palliate, the wrong and the infamy he was about to perpetrate npcn the American people. Abovt a month ago we referred to the aadden taking off by her own hand of Mrs. Daisy Oaks Dudley, the young, handsome and fashionable wife of Fran cis H. Dudley, of Orange Mountain, N. J., who, because a covered buggy was brought out for her to go to the Orange aud New York rail road depot, instead of her favorite pbrrton, ran up the stairs of her husband's residence and in her room blew her brains out with a pistol ; and now in the New York World of ' Saturday last we read the beginning of what prefigures the sad fate of poor Dudley, as follows ; "Francis H. Dud ley, whose wife, Daisy Oaks Dudley, committed suicide a few weeks ago, was arrested on Main street. Orange, yesterday morning on a charge of intox ication, and was locked up at the police station. TnE funeral ceremonies at Cleveland on Monday afternoon over the remains of the late President were of the most solemn and imposing character. Never before in this country was there assem bled In one of its cities so many promi nent men, embracing Governors of States and State officials, members and ex-members of Congress, officers of the army and representatives of nearly every oth er class and profession. The city liter ally overflowed with thevasi crowd of visitors, most of them, of course, from Ohio, Gen. Garfield's native State. The body was deposited in a vault in Lake View cemetery, where it will remain for a brief period, when it will be removed to another part of the cemetery, where a spot has been selected for its last earth ly resting place scene of all. A tabular Statement of the re turns of the Democratic priuary elec tion held in this couutyon Saturday last, will be found on the local page of our paper. This is the first experiment Cam bria has made in nominating county of ficers under the Crawford county sys tem, and the result, so far as we have heard jjemocrats discuss it, ia infinitely more satisfactory, and is endorsed with more unanimity, than nominations un der the old delegate system for several years past have met with. And why should it not be so ? Every candidate for office from the highest to the lowest appealed to the same tribunal, the Dem ocratic voters of the county, for an en dorsement of their claims. All of them mingled freely among the people, not to set up two delegates in each election dis trict in their special interest, as was formerly done, but to secure their nom ination by an "honest vote and a fair count," They have all made their fight and the contest is oer ; there is no alle gation of fraud or corruption in a single district, and surely ao man who is a Democrat from principle will refuse to submit to the verdict of the ballot-boxes. The nominations are not the work of an "Ebensburg ring" or of a "Johns town ring' but they are emphatically the work of a "voter's ring," and from that there can be no appeal. In view, then, of the result brought about in this fair and straightforward manner, and in view of the admitted fact that the nominees are competent for the positions for which they have been named, and are ef unimpeachable character, they are entitled to, and we doubt not that they will receive the undivided and unfail ing support of the Democracy of the county. If so the election of each and all of them by good old-fashioned Dem ocratic majorities may be set down as a foregone conclusion. This will be the final Peace to his ashes. On Friday last the President issued his proclamation convening the Senate at noon on Monday, the 10th of October, "to receive and act upon sncb commun ication as may be made to it on part of the Executive." The overruling pur pose in calling the Senate together is, of course, to do what Mr. Arthur himself at the lst session, by refusing to vacate the chair, prevented the Senate from do ing that is to say, the election of a President pro tem of that body, who, in the event of Mr. Arthur's death, would discharge the duties of President. When the Senate meets the Democrats will be in the majority.owing to the resignations of Conkling and Piatt, of New York, and the death of General Burnside, of Rhode Island. It is true that the two New York vacancies have been filled by the election of Miller and Lapham, and the Rhode Island Legislature is to meet to-day (Tuesday) to elect .1 succes sor to Burnside. But all this will not change the situation, since the Revised Statutes of the United States provide that "the oath of office shall be adtnin isted by the President of the Senate to each Senator who shall be hereafter elected, previous to his taking his seat." So that it will be utterly impossible for three new Senators to participate in the election of a President pro tem. Until a President pre trm is elected they could not be sworn in, and, of course, could not vote. The Republican papers are whining terribly over this sad condition of affairs, but as Conkling aud Piatt brought ii about themselves, the Demo cratic Senators will play the political cards for all that is in them. Senator Bayard will be elected, and the country has nothing to fear from a pure and en lightened public man like him. The post-mortem examination of President Garfield's body established the fact beyond all controversy that the wound was necessarily fatal. Never theless. Dr. Boynton, the Ohio physi cian, who had the noisy and unseemly wrangle with Dr. B'.iss in the White House, a day or two after the President was shot, and who has not had any pro fessional connection with the case, has caused ii to be announced that he will soon publish a statement, not only in re gard to the povt-rnortem examination, but in regard to the treatment of the case generally by the attending surgeons, in which he will undertake to show that they mistook the case from the veiy start and were gtiilty of malpractice. If Dr. Bliss is drawn into the disputation, it will probably List during the balance of the century. The artist doesn't live who could thave done justice to the scene that was presented in the Vice President's ele gantly furnished room in the capilol at "Washington, on yesterdajr week, when Chester A. Arthur took the oath of of fice for a second time. Who could have portrayed the expression of the faces of Rutherford B. Hayes and John Sherman when they stepped forward to shake the hand of the man whom, only two short years ago, they unceremoniously kicked out of the office of collector of the Port of New York, in order, as Hayes said in his letter of dismissal, that its affairs might be "honestly ad ministered. " To have made the picture perfect, and to eloquently show the sharp revenges of time, it was only necessary that Koscoe Conkling, with his sardonic grin, should have been present occupying a conspicu ous position in the back-ground of the grand tableau as a quiet "looker on in Vienna." WniLE the dead body of the Presi dent was lying in state in the rotunda of the capltol at Washington, on yesteiday treek, a turbulent and disgraceful con test was going on the Tirst Asrembly District Convention of Oneida counts, N. Y., the home of Conkling, for the election of four delegates to New York Republican State Convention, which will meet next Wednesday. Nearly two hours were spent in a fruitless attempt to organize the party, during which sev eral local politicians, including both Conkling and anti-Conkling men, were severely pommeled, knocked down and dragged out. The outcome of the scrim mage was that two conventions were held at the same time and in the same room, and two sets of delegates were elected, Conkling at the head of one and State Senator Lowry at the head of the other. It is thought that Conkllng's friends will control the convention, but it is not -1 ' "' a:r.- n;r?.r.E ccrtr.'.t:. President Arthur's father, Wm. Arthur, was a native of Antrim coun ty, in the north of Ireland. After hav ing received a good education at a col lege in Belfast, he emigrated to Canada in 1S22, and soon after crossed over to Vermont, where he taught school for a number of years, becoming in the mean time a Baptist preacher. His son, now President, was born in Fairlieid, Frank lin county, Vermont, on the 5th of Octo ber, 1330, and is, therefore, almost fitty one j ears of age. In this connection'it is worthy of remark that President Ar thur, the Republican son of an Irish Protestant, took the Presidential oath (we refer, of course, to the first oaUi on the morning after General Garfield's death) before a Democratic Judge, Jas. R. Bradey, of the Supreme Court of New York, who is the son of an Irish Catholic. The New York World hopes that this incident prefigures au era of "good feeling." President Arthur is a widower, his wife having died in the early part of last year, and has two chil dren, one a boy abaut sixteen years ol d and the other a daughter about eleven. A singular and unprecedented event sj far as we ever heard, took place two weeks ago in the court room at Platts burg, N.Y. Henry King, a convict in one of the State prisons, killed a fellow-convict and was tried for n -irder. The jury were in doubt whether the prisoner's crime was murder in the first or only in the second degree, and came into Court for further instructions. When the fore man of th jury had made this statement. King, the prisoner, rose aud delivered the following address : "Your nonor, and gentlemen of the jury, this was not a murder In the second debtee. If was a deliberate and premeditated mur der. I know that I have done wrong, that I ought to confess the truth, and that I ought to be hanged. (Here the prisoner's counsel tried in vain to silence him.) No, I bmve done wrong. It Is my duty to confess it, and I cannot help doing so. I cannot keep still. 1 plead guilty to murder in the first degree. It wm fifteen minutes from the time I struck the first blow with the axe until I struck Dim the second time, and all this time I kept thinking 1 wilt Qnish this man. It this Is nut premeditated inunier, what is it? I have al ready killed two men. What Is ray life to me ? The life of either of those two men I have killed is worth a dozen ot mine." LETTER FBOM CRLSSOX. Caixan IIocpk, Cumsok, Sept. 21, 1881. Dear McPntE To-day the whole nation stands in silent, unshakable sorrow. The whole country is clothed in the habiliments of mourning expressive of the nation's woe. The President of fifty millions ot people, who was treated with homage by the civil ized masses of the entire workl, was stricken ia the highway of oar own capital by the as sassin hand of one of our own countrymen. Tbe death of President Garfield is another reminder to the people of the United States of the vanity of human greatness. His fate teaches us tbe frailty of human ambition. On tue threahold of the second ee ntury of American existence, a second Chief Magis trate is added to tbe Tnartvrology of the conn try. James A. Garfield.'wbile President of tbe United States of America, died the vic tim of an American assassin. For eighty long days the entire American nation earn estly and devoutly prayed that their stricken chief might recover from tbe assassin's cruel blow, but the Almighty God, tn bis inscruta ble and infinite wisdom, denied the nation's prayer. President Garfield"s taking off marks another great epoch in tbe history of America. Although the country has 'lost greater heroes and more renowned states men than James A. Garfield, yet there will ever cling to tbe people a sorrowful remem brance of hi traeic and cruel death. While this is not the time nor would it be fitting here to attempt an analysis of the dead Pres ident' career, it is both timely and fitting to Attempt an analysis of the living Preaident wbo has taken his place. Tbe report of the United States Senate Committee of Commerce of 1ST 9 puts on record tbe opinion of naves' administration on the performance of Mr Arthur's duties while ie was Collector of the Port of New York. The report of that committee showed that the receipts rrom customs at that port under Mr. Arthur's administration, from 1872 to 1877, had gradually diminished from $148,381,446 to ?si,056,96S that the employ ees of the Custom House were "bribe takers and guilty of gross and base Irregularities, and that there were persons borne on the pay rolls as laborers, as a reward for politi caf services, who performed no duty except to sign their names to the pay rolls and re ceive their pay. It was shown that although Mr. Arthur's compensation amounted to over $ l.Vt.noo, he did not attend to the duties of his office, and that tbe position was a sin ecure It was also shown clearly by leading Importers of New Tork, who pay seventy per centum of the enstora duties of tbe country, that the great office was merely a political machine, and its affairs under Mr. Arthur's administration were administered, not for the benefit of the treasury, hut for the bene fit and advancement ot the faction of which Mr. Arthur was one of the principal leaders. Mr. Arthur's appointment was made, as nil of Grant's appointments were made, in strict accordance with the rules of the "spoils sys tem." He was tbe roan whom Roseoe Conkling relied upon as the captain of the hosts that upheld him in power, and Conk ling being Grant's favotite Senator, he ap pointed to the chief political office ef the State of New York the man whom, as before stated, Conkling relied upon as the captain of the hosts that upheld him in power. It was during Mr. Arthur's term of office as Collector of the Port of New Tork that the infamous moiety laws reached their climax. An informer named Jaynes, who for his share in the proceedings" was forever made odious, succeeded by tampering with a con fidential clerk in securing what he consider ed grounds for a claim against the respecta ble firm of Phelps. Dodge & Co. for $1,750, 000. The expo-jure of the iniquity of this proceeding led to the repeal of the moiety law and to the investigation of the Xew York Custom House by the Jay commission. Although the actual undervaluation of goods Imported by the firm was only a lirtle over six thousand dollars and the loss to the gov ernment ouly $l.fi4, and although it was shown that so far irom there being an inten tion to defraud the treasury, the firm had in the course of its existence paid $."i0,ooo,000 in duties, and frequertly overvalued their goods, the firm was vigorously pursued by the Custom House officers under Mr. Arthur, and compelled to pay $271.nno. Arthur and Conkiing persistently urged the perpetra tion of the infamy, arid half of the sum was divided under the law between Arthur, the informer, the District Attorney and the Sur veyor. Tbe testimony showed that the mon ey was actually wrung by threats from the firm n&med. Mr. Arthur's appointment as Collector of New York was regarded as a grievous blow to the community. He was Tom Murphy's constant political associate while tbe Tweed ring was in its glow. The abuses in the New York Custom House under Tom Mur phy were so gross, and the outcrv ac,aint him so great, that that he was actually forced to resign, and when something purer and better was asked for President Grant and Conkling gave the merchants Mr. Arthur The New York custom tvils, however, con tinued all the same. Collector Arthur made no attempt to remedy them, and public in terest demanded his removal. Secretary of the Treasury, Sherman complained to the President that the cross ahttaps of the Cus tom House continued ami increased under Arthur's administration. President Hayes, in a letter addressed to the Ser.ate, said : "I reaard it as my plain duty to suspend the of ficers in question, Arthur and Cornell, and to make the nominations now before the Senate In order that the important office may be honestly and efficiently administered." This began a struggle between Mr. Conk ling and the administration which lias rarely been equalled for bitterness in the annals of political warfare. After Mr. Arthur's election to the Vice Presidency he still remained the friend and follower of Mr. Conkling and lent his aid aj Vice President in endeavoring to secure again the patronage that had been lost nnder the Hayes administration. When that effort was unsuccessful, and Mr. Conkling resign ed bis seat in the Senate, Mr. Arthur follow ed him to Albany, where he labored foT what Mr. Conkling called a "vindication" against the administration, in which Mr. Arthur himself held the second place. When the new administration came into power It was annojneed that its second officer, who had been put upon the ticket as a concession to the Grant element and in obedience to the wishes of Mr. Conkling, would not be the figure-head that his predecessor had been. He intended to have something to do in the management of affairs, and it turned out that this something was the machine idea of the functions Of government in the appoint ment of officers. Such Is the man who was thought worthy of the high office of Vice President, and who, with ail iU possibilities, has become President on the death of James A. Garfield. s. CniI.DRKKKlU.KD BT RaTTLKSNAKES. There resides near President, a widow who bad three children. A few days ago she was preparing dinner and had the youngest child with her in tbe house. The other two children were sent bv ber to bunt some eggs. They were both young, and going out of the bouse they saw a hollow log in the yard. One ot them put in her little hand to see if there were anv eRg9, but quickly pulled it out, saying a 'chicken had bitten her. The other inserted his hand and pulled it out with a scre?m. A rattlesnake bad bitten them Ujth. The scream of the second child brought out tbe mother, and lifting a kettle of boiling potatoes from tbe stove so they would not burn, she started out. She had Just got outside tbe door when she was re called to the house by the agonizing cries of th baby, who had crawled across the floor and npset tbe boiling water over himself. She was almost dishartened and did not know what to do. Help soon arrived and everything that could be done was done for tbe three little sufferers, but nothing did any good. They all rapidly grew worse, and within a day all three died and were buried in the same grave. The naa.e we did not learn, but we are assured that the above are the facts. Oil City Derrick. UUK PHILADELPHIA LETTER. HONORIa THE MAD FHILADKLPHIA IW ABLE SARB-KOURSFtL SERVICE IN THE CHURCHES THE TOOK SPKAK AS LOUDLV AS TICK RICH. (Special Correspondence of the FnfMiJ. Philadelphia, Sept. 36, 1881. DearMcPiek - As one of tbe butterflies on the wing one of the votaries of fashion I lingered in tbe mountains of Cambria as long as it was fashionable to remain, and re turned to this city on Saturday last, to find death's drapery flouting in the breeze from tens of thousands of Philadelphia buildings, testifying mutely to the vastness of tbe peo ple's respect for President Garfield's memo ory. On the business streets running north and south from Market street numberless insignia of grief are displayed, some of which are of an exceedingly elaborate character. Indeed sombre tokens are manifested every where In the extreme. A large number of tbe public and private buildings had mono grams of the deceasd President made of im mortelles of white satin ribbons. Almost ev- erv building in the city exhibited its token of j grief. In the regions of the city where the j working people have their abodes, it seemed j as if a personal bereavement had come into 1 were the tokens or every nouse, so general were tne loKens 01 the rol,s twisted itself around the leg sort ow in tbe poorer section of the city. In- Arnshrnch in riitaH.,r ti.., XEWS AD OTHER 50TIXBS. A fire at Collingwood, Ontaiio, on Sun day night, destroyed $200,000 of property. Hon. Jeremiah Black Made a misstep on Thursday and fractured bis right arm. Wolfe is 36 years old, and the young Re publicans are crowing enthusiastic over lilm. New York has had three Presidents, but of the number only Van Buren was elect ed to the office. The Younger brothers have gained a good deal of notoriety as train robfcers, but the last reported gang was younger still. Stephen Andrews, aged 84 years, died near Hughesvllle, Lycoming county, on Wednesday. He was insured on the specu lative plan for $80,000. President Garfield is the third to die of the fifteen members of tbe Electoral Com mission. Senator O. P. Morton was the first and Justice Clifford the second. John Oyumlier, the famous sleeping Hungarian, is now living with f rank l.,ns- : koski, an upholsterer in A lien town, and Ire- i quently assists the latter with his work. j Thomas M. Bowen, one of Colorado's new millionaires, recently sent the Denver Mint two enormous chunks of gold. The heavier U worth ?l,0oo ; the other, $12,000. A oar ot white-hot steel coming through of V m. ay, and deed, if sign of grief were anywhere con spicuons bv their absence, it was in aristo- t cratic quarters. Everywhere in the poorer j portions of the city. If but a five cent flag 1 jealously knocked his wife down with Its bit of crape, a vard of ten cent al- 1 ., hpr tmw.h.i k; i., . pacha stretched across the window sill or over the portals of the door, or a few strings of black fluttering outside the bowed shut ters, emblems of mourning could he seen. These lowly tokens of the poor spoke as loudly as the rich trappings of magnificent establishments in the business quarters, and conveyed a mute reproach to the wealthy citizens who neglected to publicly evidence their share of public sorrow. Yesterday (Sunday) congregations hold ing widely diverged theological views sunk ! for a time their differences of creed, and ! united together in bowiug in reverend sub- j mission to the Divine will, and mingled in prayer for thedeliverenceof the nation from its prospective troubles and trials. A cloud : of sorrow rested upon all the churches of the city, and in every sacred edifice appropriate references wera made to the loss which the nation has sustained. In some temples the services were of a memorial nature, while In amputated the limb iu an instant by burn ing. John Daily, a Boston laborer, in a fit of lumped being In a delicate condition and then cut her throat with a razor. Charles Deter walked five miles for the puipose of killing his wif-, at Yorktown, I A locomotive, hauling a freight train be- I' tween Chetapa and Parsons, Kansas, on tbe Missouri Pacific road, cxoloded on Wednes day with great force, killing fonr men and . wrecking the enirlne and ten or a dozen cars. The men killed were tieorge D. Adams, the engineer; Simon Bailey, the fireman ; John Denny, of tbe St. Louis and San Francisco Road, and a stranger named O'Neill, all of whom were in the cab at the time and were blown from loo to 200 yards distant and ter ribly mangled. While John Werner was cutting corn, near Orwigsburg, Pa., he was horrified to see a large snake coiled around the body of his little child who was sitting on the grass. The child did not seem to be frightened, but patted the head of the snake as it lay in Its lap. As Mr. Werner came up the snake be came alarmed and crawled away. It was pursued and killed, when It was found to measure over three feet in length. It was of a dark brown color, and had a head as broad as a man s hand. ! A Pittsburg Chronicle special from Ilea- j ver Falls, Pa., says the tram containing the journalists goln? to the President's funeral 1 at. Cleveland, via the Pittsburgh & Lake ' t-rie J.ailroad, ran into a hand car on Cic Beaver Itun bridgw, about 8 o'clock on Sat urday morning, killing four men outright and injuring two others, one of whom has since died. One man jumped down sixty feet atid saved bis life. The men were car penters, working on the railroad bridge at Beaver Falls, on their way to work. j District Attorney Corkhill on Monday j informed Guttean that his case would be 1 laid before the grand jury next week, and I that the indictment would probably follow. Colonel Corkhili offered to telegraph to any PITTSBURGH EXPOSITION OWING to DEATH Of PRESIDENT, TIME cf CLCSINB EIIENDED to ivl 0 3PE3ST DY AND 12 K INT I f ii 1 Ind. Finding her with some' visitors, whom j hejng accepted, he telegraphed later in the : lie whs iw po:ue to aisiuro, ne committed ) ""J iorme prisoner to the latter's brotlier ; suisu'e instead. j in-law, Oeorge M. Scoville, of Chicago, re- 1 A man tm tnrnn.l n in Tpav V V Olie-tinfT tliA (mntlAm.n I. I I . . . ' -.,.., ah',, . -, ; ......... in an v., 1 ur IrtW. ; , viaiiu. it, inr iiif lamer ot i on v-rmir 'tuiicuu reauesLPii rcnvniA ti uwtura eci Ufa '.prl rc blc the for ter mi ed. He Mb ret -t'' n . ler fort v ! children and to have had eight wives. His name is Justin Pasco, and he avers that he is 09 years of age. Dr. Thomas M. Cream, a notorious i abortionist of Chicago, on trial at Belvidere, III., for the murder of Daniel Scott, was on Saturday convicted and sentenced to the ; penitentiary for life, i At Brockton, Mass., on Friday night, ; burglars robbed St. Patrick's Catholic church of the sacred vessels and funds in the i alms box, the total value amounting to sev eral nunureu aonars. other lawyer to assist him. Emory Storrs as the person. Intelligence received from the Warner Observatory, Rochester, N. Y., announces the discovery of a new comet located In the constellation of Virgo. It Is a striking coin cidence that 4tnis new and bright comet an- j pesred at the same hour President Garfield I was breathing his last. It was first seen by j E. E. Barnard In Nashville, Tenn., who has made claim through Prof. Swift for tho 1 W arner prize of $lni in gold. This makes me ntin comet seen since Ma v first and f bMuZlJntl ' mA ""'r?, having nineteen perfect this number four have appeared freS. almost For tTL, - utiles was killed by a miller near Raleigh the same .pot in the heavens. for to-day a more elabotate remembrance, To-day everywhere the outward sif.ns of Inward grief "are painfully apparent. Alt j the street car lines of the city are exhibiting insignias of mourning upon their cars. ' From the Delaware to Haddington and from League Island to Frank ford are seen the signs of a nation's sorrow. Even the newly arriving vessels from the moment that land is sighted and learn the story of the country's bereavement, show their mourning signals, and thousands of flags float at half mast on both sides of the Delaware river. The dis aster which culminated on the 19th instant, was not simply personal to the President and his family and relatives, but a Providen tial visitation upon the whole body of the American people. The dead President whom we mourn stood as the representative of the whole itepublle. Public opinion rec ognizes the call of the proclamation making this day a season of humiliation, tasting and prayer. At the first shock of the great af fliction the sons of men stood dumb, and many were disposed to murmer because the long and fervent petition of the nation fot the recovery of the President was not grant ed, but these murnuirers have given way to a wiser second thought of that serene and submissive faith which sees in everr event of recent v. n n . 1 s,n nin,annnn l ; v inn)..d across the back was killed by fir. T. G. Jen kins of Camden. Ala. I TUom.w Marsh, of Gloucester City, X. ; J., after bidding his little daughter good-by j on Saturday evening, waded into the river ; ana deliberately drowned himself. ! forty-five years of ace. James Williams, aged 21 years, an em ; ploye at the Stanton mines, Wilkcsbarre, i ; Pa., fell down the air shaft on Saturday af- j ! ternoon, a distance of five hundred "feet. ; II is botfy was horribly rnungted. Scarcely has tho warm breath of Sum mer died away, when Coughs and Colds, J those avant couriers of dangerous disease, : Show themselves. Dr. linll'n Cnnirli Stnm ! lien the extra session of the Senate convenes, if all the members are present, there will lie in attendance 37 Democrats, :u Republicans, 1 Independent and I Rpu diationist. It seems to be clear that the nvci -'--' j'l'. iiu. in iin; rtn;ite must oe He was : elected before the Senators from New York aim jsnode Island can 1m admitted, and the indications are that Senator Bayard, of Delaware win chosen. After the vacan cies are filled there will be an equal number of Republicans and Democrats, and Messrs. Davis and Maiione will bold the balance of power. A special of the 2M from Newport, Ark., says : The passet.ger train on the Iron Mountain road was roblied last niirht hv v a I ..-.. .1 , . . J f ...... I , . J mnaptuirauicui, snu niosi qui'-Kiy loo. j iimsKcii men lanotner account says tiire-), Mrs. Maxcy, of Pace Bend, Texas, is 111 who halted and hoarded the train, and years of ace, has been married four times, I forced the express messenger to tpen the had fourteen children, and survives all of safe and then proceeded to rob the passen them but two. She can see better than she gers. Eighteen thousand dollars was ob could twenty years ago. She waits upon ! tained from the safe. It is claimed that be herself, and is still iu health. ' tween Mo.oon and f lO.noo will not fill short overnor Gear, of Iowa Drenared his 1 of the total loss. A cotton 3. AlKlnson. ost ?2.5nO. Th rot.l.ra nr IUxliibitss or I'ennn.ylA-ttiiin. STATi: remain until tlio close of 15xjoiti0 (JKANI) DISPLAY OF MILLING MACHINE IN OI'KRATIOX. 31AGX1F1CEXT DISVTjA I" OT Cl'l' FLOlfLllS, TRIALS OF SPEED X) AJn CLASSES ALL FILLED-292 ENTRIES. MUSIC by the GREAT WESTERN I18lh Reg't; EttV MOUNING. AFTKHNOON on.l EVENING BUILDING AND GROUNDS ILLUMINATED BT 61 ELECTRIC LI ADMI88IOX, 2o flSXYH. hi ii a b wh tak E. P. TOLWO, Gpii'I Wooajrer. J. VU BATCH iXOK. I'rpst. 5 J0. I. DAll.T, Afct Manama J. I. PA T1 LICSO.V S.-, t!.! da! tec: ff - of nea it a den y he est Clothing Least proclamation announcing the President's death as long atro as Jnlv-5. He keDt the proclamation in his dck, and on Tuesday of last week sent ;it out with the July date anixen lite the band of One who doeth all th.ngs j T)r. i;iPiiard Alten, who claimed that he well. A mournful tolling is issuing from invented the telegraph, died at Freeport, in j every belfry as I write. The day is marked ; this State, a few days ago. He says that but j by a complete cessation of worldly affairs. for bis novertv hi would havn intr."ulnn.. n,n l I An impressive gloom permeates the whole city to-day, anJ it is presumed that far away ', to the west the solemn ritrs of the church i are being performed over the mortal remains I of the late President. It is now imperative on the part of the : Democrats, there being neither Vice Presi- I dent nor President pro tem, nor Secretary of : the Senate to sweat m new Senators, to or- i ganize the Senate and elect a President pro 1 tempore. Would to Heaven the Presidency j of the Senate may fall into no more unwor- : thy hands than tiiose of Senator l?ayard"s. : If Senator liayard is elected, the line of the ' Presidency will be secure enough to suit the ! American people. G. N. S. ; telegraph to the world before Morse. IIo leaves a sung fortune. The largest .steam hammer probably in the world lias been put into operation at th Black Diamond steel works, Pittsburg. It will oe used for the purpore of turning out all kinds of large steel shafting, particularly sucn as are usen on fcleamuoats. said to be mere lioys, and it is believed they will he raptnred shortly. I Pecentiy we published a statement, says I the LaCrosse (Wis.) Chronirl. altout corn i stalks eleven feet high or so, Tnis was not j done witliout misgiving, because we knew ' the honest grangers of La Crosse ?ounty 1 would hop on that ttory with a cornstalk j vastly larger. Yesterday our fears were re- j alized when a prominent legal gentleman of j La Crosse stalked into our counting room j with one trailing along behind him over thir teen feet in length. This stalk was accom- j panied by an ear of corn over a foot long, ! containing 9r0 grains, wltn a few little Ensur- ' iv grains 10 sjuire, i Ms cie-mTie corn was t TnAT-TtOBBf!fo beii.g fullv as romantic and adventurous as Indian-lighting, and ' considerably more profitable in a pecuniary ' point of view, it is not to he wondered at that the callow mind, stirred to enthusiasm ' by much reading of dime novels' and story j papers, should at length turn to this branch of industry as offering a fitting field for the ' satisfaction of its aspirations for enterprise ! out of the common run. So much has leen said about the James "boys" and the Young- j er "boys" in this connection, and the world has so rung w ith their successful exploits in boarding railway trains and "going through" ! the passengers, that it was to be expected i that a spirit of emulation might eventually ' be aroused among ths youth of the country, : or at leat a portion of tl-.em. The "boys" ! referred to are probably more than twenty- j five years old, but everybody in not aware of this. We are now told" that a trio of beard- ' less desperadoes waylaid a train of the Iron ; Mountains and Southern Kailrnad at an ! early hour of Thursday night, and mado a ! most successful plunder, letting between i $4Moo and t.Vl.oiHi. A notable circnmtance about all or nearlv A messenger was sent from Muskecron I plauted May l.'.th, and on June 1st was only I to a Michigan lumber camp to Inform a man ! four inches high and not very promising of the death of his child ; but he nsed tho I Al Hardinsr's coal mine, near West Bell- j money given him in getting drunk, and did j vil,e- Mo-' Friday afternoon, Maggie, an not perform the errand. He never got solier, j adopted daughter of John Holmes, ajred 1 for lumbermen hanged lnui before be had fourteen years, and Dickey Holmes, his son, time. ! aged five, went about to gather coal. The The boiler of a steam threshing-machine, I hoy went upon what is called a slac k pile, j at woik on George Caldwell's farm, in 1 which is generally slate smoldering. He I Tlmrlow, Ont., exploded on Friday evening, ) ,ltld reached about the middle of the heap I killing Mr. Malcoin, Mr. Anson, Miss Viola w hen tiie smoldering mass caused a flame, i Caldwell and Andrew Lloyd, and seriously 1 enveloping tne uoy in its nery mass. Mag Etfioney. Wanamaker & Brown, S. E. Cor. Sixth and Market Sts. 111 IIjADKI.,!'! 1 THE LARGEST- n,0THI'; HorE IN AMLKI A. ' lng 1 Lut one nor is tr rati' reai tern rrof and reali be 1 nei' ft. hi reg Kbe M. R. bert' a bl lute: on ' Cre stay we-: Irg, tlor Sanf liier ache cot Tetf Pn-t Gen 1 tram up 9: Ire t mbou hs b tbe s injuring jir. catuweii, 11. uarvin ana ctias. Gerkin. Ham White alias Ranter, wljohas perpe trated some of the boldest stage robteries on record in Arkansas, Texas, and Colorado, was on Saturday at Pueblo, Col., sentenced to life Imprisonment. His last exploit was a single-handed robbery of a stage coah and its twelve male occupants near Alamosa, Col. Frank Dodson and Ellen Bailey, a run away couple, while being pursued" through Erie, Pa., on Friday by the bride's fattier, married tnemselves on a street ty calling witnesses to hear their mutual agreement to take each other as husband and wife. A magistrate decided on the old man's appeal that the marriage was lawfnl. John Monroe packed his household ef fects in a wagon, ami started from Illinois for Missouri. His wife accompanied him, and there was scant room for two in tin ve hicle. Wlitn she fell ill 011 tbe way and re- ' Lxui, quired space to lie down in, John was pm- auciors, orakeman and passengers usually 'throw np their hands" with surnrisintr nm. all of these train rohtrries is that none of the ' 2 , , "- . 1,e f,na"y ,ai' ,,er l,y tiw marauders ever get shot. KngilJeers, cont j TO!i(i t on. She died there alone. 1 ne commmee 111 cnarge ot tne proposed monument to lie erected over the grave of President (iarfield have issued a call to the people of the United States, asking for pop lar subscriptions to the fund, and icq nest ing newspaper publishers, postmasters and banks to receive and forward to the Second National Bank at Cleveland contributions for that purpose. An accident happened to a construction train on one of the new Wabash narrow gitage connections tireen county, Iowa, on Monday. The train consisted of a locomotive, six flat cars and a eahoose, and was carrying a construction inmiry ana sunmit to what they apparently consider the Inevitable. In this last case there was a show of only three pistols, but they were in the hands of the three children wno stopped the trail and went for the cash and watches of its inmates-. There ought to be a new leaf turned over iu this matter The non-resistant policy ha been tried suffi ciently to show that it will not answer. If the raids of highwayman upon travellers by rail cannot b stopped in any other way a battery of artillery ought to accnmiunv every train, ready to open fire at a moment's nonce, ir a tew mis particular class or m snvmti n.i . gie, ins toster sister, jumped in after him with a view to save the Ikiv. She got him out, but not U'fore his little "body was burn- i ed almost to a crisp. But h-r own clothing ! caught fue and she was frightfully burned, j Her cries broughr the miners to her assist- j ance. The hoy died last night ami it is tn-- lieved the girl cannot live. j Mother Felicita Bonte, of the Sisters of 1 St. Joseph, Chicago, died on Friday night at '. the Nazareth llon-e, aired seventy-three J years. This lady has Iw-en identiied for nearly half a century with cverv charitable : enteprise in Chicacro looking to tin; care and maintenance of destitute children by the ! Catholic church. Born in Lynns, France, j she joined the Order of St. Joseph while I young: an". after spending a sliort time in the Convent of the Sisterhood at Bordeaux, she : was one of the original colony sent out in ' 15s5 to make a foundation of th? order in the 1 United Stnte3. That foimdatiou was made , just next to the old cathedral I church on Walnut, between Second and 1 hird stret-ts. She was stationed, in Carou delet for a year or two. and was then for twentv-four years Superioress of tlc asylum ; in M. iouis. ' It is not generally known, hut it cer- J I tainly should be, that the Pennsylvania nail- j j road "company, which rendered such signal ; 1 service to President (Jarfield, did so purely ) I as a labor ofthat same love weall felt toward the suffering President. No charge i to be made by the company for ttie can that was constructed especially for the removal of the President or for the engine, train and hands for the losses entailed by the BROWN'S Pf Wr;3 pr?t mm knm a 5J A TRUE TONIC A PERFECT 3TRCN5THEHER.A SURE REVIVE IKON lilTTH'JS r hUy rf-mmsfrW f.,r r.M !is.-s,- r-.v :': ; a cvnmii 1 iliiiii iu tO!ii; ; iallir In?igtvtn,. Z'tt-wth i. In-, f I'ci rr. M'nii t nfApj''". ';' Stmtrth, ly-h r.f Snrr,r,,r;r-S L'nrichcs t: c '. strong! lu-ns the m!it!t-.a:i'J gives nvw lilo to 1 lie nt-r-rcs. Tlit-r r.i-t hk' s 1 : -011 tho iligvs: i ve drnns -?.i.m-'" (..V.'t.o.f vs;. iwli 7 .';; - T H i-hhi i.IL r '.. Vot ,-.'i.7virrirj.-.v. The only Tmn Tr-"nrat'-'' that will of MncTjcn tio tciT: r tri'vi"li-ilnoii s. . S all .!rn, I injri th-.; '! I- .-. fiit AY c f r : .!- A V. ( ' V.h ' "2 r-r. -f I?;VV?C CI:i:..;it AI, C()..B;uri;;. rr.M I5KWAKE OF VM5TATLO omrtliifafl ri in Itieeilltnar lownsilip, t ,n.nnciln f business over t!i rnnrf trav. eled by the t resideut strain. 1 ne company regarded the President's removal as a mat ter of national importance. A ice President examples were made of ' Prtv to work on the line. All the cars left j (;B,s,tt. who had intire supervision of thu ss or miscreants Umir 1 ine rails and the caooose waslid:v mashed. 1 s : j -mber and audacity would bgin to dlmln- j Three men were kiHed out-right and thirty I particular ie. Philadelphia Record more or less injured. Several years ago Ah Item Fon the SrrERSTiTiors A great deal has been said of the latePresident's superstitious feeling in regard totbe number 42, and how he was always figuring out dates, ete., so as to sum up or make up that num ber. Here is a cut ions coincidence, which perhaps no one has noticed, discovered by an employe of the Frmi office. Jwmes A. Garfield was : Bom, November l' Elected, November 1 Shot, July 2 Died, September 1! person if I 1 . I ; f r.f .-. n.nmKor ... I,, a n .u n , mil.. J-red Kastorlt fled: aaa .,..1 i;nrr n;. frooi Byron, Wis., in consequence of having p,arod by the whole company, from Presi conm.itted a crime, and atter a time all dent down. . . search for him was abandoned. But lie ' could not Tresldcnt Arthur's Ihangnral. 10 It will also be noticed that there are two 10 s and t wo 2's in this series of daes. Pat irw (A. J.) Prtxt. j lested him. and he promptly killed himself wita 11 on oemg arrested. A fearful tornado passed over Qnincy, III., at 6 o'clock on Saturday afternoon. Many buildings were demolished, unroofed or otherwise damaged, and many persons were injured. Four persons were killed and thirteen wounded, so far as known. i The track of the hurricane was two miles wide. The financial loss will not be less than f 10(1,000. The wind was accompanied by terrific rain, thunder, lightning and hail. When the President was battling for The Proper Grape for MimciNtL ' ' says the Iw York Sun million of Atine. Physicians from the New York ' Pra'ers for nis recovery were daily sent up, Board of Health have visited the Vineyards antl now tn1 ne 3 dea(l' instead of distrust and Wine Cellars of Alfred Sneer of New I ,na t,,e efficcy of P'.ver. we find that, even Jersey, only twelve miles from New York ' more tlian D, foTe- Iait-h " nrayer, ia God. city, one of the most extensive growers of I is 8troT1K among the people. Nothing ean the Portugal grapeg, from which is made tbe i destroy the religious sentiment ia ?man. oe&t Jieoicinai wine tn the. T'nitei Nt be happy away from home and I relatives, and not long ago put some poison I Ki,amazoo. Mich.. Feb. 2. IR80. into his pocket and returned. The drug Hon Bitters will bear recominondatio.i hon- was to be used in case the law officers mo- t estly. All who use them confer upon them the highest encomiums, and give them cred- i it lor making cures all the proprietors claim for them. I have kept them, since they ! were first offered to the puWie. They 1 took high rank from the first, ami maintain- ed it, and are more called for than all others I combined. So long as they keep up their high reputation for purity and usefulness, I shall continue to recommend tbm some thing I have never before done with any oth er patent medicine. J. J. Babcook, M. D. Is front of Colonel in Greenwich, Conn. Thomas Mead's house stauds a sycamore, or ballwood tree, which Is 171 years old, having been p'anted in 110. it s about 150 feet The New York Sun hastens to aay to Preaident Arthur at the threshhold of his administration : "At the very be ginning, and in the most friendly spirit, we earnestly exhort Gen. Arthur not. to do anything or allow anything to be done that will seem (o favor the scheme of making Gen. Graot Preaident of the United States for a third term. There are many things the new President can do with the hearty applause and sympa thy of all the people ; there is one thing be cannot do without arousing deep, un versal, and abiding indignation. No th'rt tcrc ?" A LEAniKO Professor Speaeinoof Sen sible People. Dr. S , tbe prominent Eastern Medical lecturer, says : "Every day people come to me complaining of their health being broken down. Tbe answer to my inquiries always are what 1 surmise nature's laws hate been totally disregarded ; consequently the blood, the stream of life, becomes contaminated and as a result of thi blood poisoning I find dyspepsia and disordered functions of the heart fiver, lungs accompanied by headache, nervous debility, and other impaired organic portions, often verging on paralysis. In order to keep tbe digestive organs in proper health and atrength I and my friends in profession have ncom. mended Brown's Iron Bitters they act eo 1 unuiy iiu nouiuingiy, never leaving any un pleasant after-effects, strengthening tbe or gans of digestion, and permantly removing every symptom of ill health, languor, and de bility. No remedy in the East gives snch good satisfaction as Brown's Iron Bitters and all druggists can procure it for you! Don't be persuaded to use a substitute. This remedy contains ao alcohol and is the only preparation or Iron that does not black en the teeth. Sun. This wine is known as Speer's Port Grape W, which took the highest premium at the Centennial. It is extensively prescribed by physicians as the best and most realiable wine 10 oe naa ror medicinal nnrnoses No successful assault can ever be made on me fundamental principles of Cltristianity. Simon etts, probably the oldest man in Cumberland county, was buried at Mount j Holly Springs on Thursday. Ite was 9 1 years old and came of a family which for peetan oeneneial for females, weakly ner- longevity is very remarkable. lie has sur- na ine aged, For sale at K. James T,T1 high, and fifteen feet from the ground its Circumference is twenty-eiht feet, and its di ameter nine feet. A hole in the trunk, hich is now no bigger thn a man's hand, was not many years ago large enough for a man to crawl into, and was once used by children as a playhouse. As the tree has grown of lute years, the aperture has grad ually closed. President Arthur arrived in Washington on AVednesday evening of last week, having accompanied the remains of the late Presi dent from Long Branch to the national cani- 1 kr.ow 1 tal. On Thursday, soon after 12 o'clock, be repaired to the A'ice President's room in the Capitol building, w hen the oath of office was again administered to him, this time by Chief Justice Waite, in the presence of several of the Associate Justices, the General of the Army, the entire Cabinet, and quite a num ber of Senators and representatives. After he had taken the oath, ho read from manu script his inaugural address, as follows : For the fourth time in the histnrv cf the r puh 1 i Up chief insKirate bag tx-ea remove I !.t !enth. j All heart arc filled with errlof and horror mt the j hU!eru crime which l.a darkened our land, aod the memory ol the murdered President, l.n pro- traded mfTcrinS. hi unvK-ldin for'itude, the 1 example and achievement of hia life and the I pathoe of hi death will forever Illumine the pxre ! of onr h!?try. For the trxinh time the officer i elected by the people and onlalned ly the eonnti 1 tutlon tr. till a vacancy thus created If ca lied to a- soas a new drug store, Ebeusburg. -23.-2t. Mator nowARD, of Altoona. returned on thrice S--unday from a visit to the national capital, ! hi;u. ng him a brother who is cVV one sister n and another SI. One brother died at 80, an other at 75 and one at 71. A sister died at the age of 91 and another at at. lie married and his third wife survives 1 snme the executive cliair. 1 he wisdom cf onr 1 father foreseeing the most dire poihtlltie made I Hire that the foverproetil thnuld never be in per- ; tiled because ef the nn oermtntv of hnman life. j Men may die. but the rit-rtc of our free in'tita 1 lions remain ntithaken. No hither or more rrtur . in proof eonld exls-t of the tren-th and perm. , nence of popular Rovermment than the lact that. , thousrh the chosen on ot the people be Uruek , down, his constitutional fueeePor is peaceful' In. . Ftal'.ed without hoct or strain except the porrcw wincn mourns m oerefcremcnt. All the noie 1 i aspirations of roy lamented predecnr which DVSPKPSIA AND LlVER COMPLAINT. Is it ! '""J"1 re-Mon l li' the meircs"derlsed 1 cfntv tn fr I ' -'"i"-' uu...t in. iinn aummif Iratlon to wnere, among other curious thanir. as w 1 rvtnrinionnao n t n . . i ... - , i 1 v..t uuiu mi toe world IV? le AItoo,,a -Sun. he saw a man and from all manner of persons continue to iS'i Wi , "!ly PP?;?nt cau?. became pour in. The Archbishop of Canterbury bald in a ainele day. This was J.,hn Bligh, joins hands with Tope LeS, and the Sultan Z '9rf.t ' f :",uni,.of?: V"-s " mrpattielne.saRe with toe ...... ... ...r..., ...in u.i .110 iviii in uu v. inui. 1 iraiaicrar ann ivaror u ami,.. . , , - . 1 - ... V l cv iiij 1 1 III ' not worth the small price of 7 yourself from every symptom of these dis tressing compiamia 7 it you think so, call at E. James' Drug Store, Ebensburg, Ta., and procure a bottle of Shiloh's Vitalizer. Every bottle has a printed guarantee on it, Use ac cordingly and if it does you no good it will cost you nothing. 4-.-e.o. w.ly. at the age of 11 years, in a sincle dav he be came perfectly bald, with the exception of two tufts of jet-black hair resembling borns, on either side of bis head, vlving him a curi ous appearance. lie never had any sickness or scalp disease to produce this loss of his hirsute ornainentatiou. Choice Extracts from Druggists. "We know the value of malt, hops, calisays and iron comising "Malt Bitters.' " "Our lady customers hitfhly praise them." "Physicians preseribe them in this town " "The largest bottle and best medicine." "Best blood purifier on our shelves." "Our best people take Malt Bitters." "Sure cure for chills and liver diseases." The Easton Frtt Prtt aavs if Wolfe can convince the people that Quay so manipula- tu in cuuveuuoii n 10 mace 11 a virtual in- 1 doraetnent of the Pardon Board in openins the jail to Kemble and Petroff he will get a .following at ci.ee. Tat boiler of a sawmill near Traskwood, Arkansas, exploded last Saturday, killing three men and injuring several others. Masiuk Mgnlates the bowels and liver. For sale nt tLe new drug ttor, EbecbL.rj?. kindlv wishes of the President of the third French republic, Americans must feel that they never realized before bow many friends thev have. J Rev. Dr. John McCaffrey, one of the most noted divines in the Catholic Chnrch. died at Emmtttsbnrg, on Monday last, aged about 78 years. Dr. McCaffrey was bom in Emmittsburg and educated at St. Mary's College, of which he was afterward Presi dent for thirty years. n declinded the Bishopric of South Carolina many years I aeo, preferring to maintain his connection with the College, which always prospered under his charge. For the sixth time in the history of the nation, the President of the United States is without a wife to adorn the White House. Jefferson was a widower, Mrs. Andrew Jackson died just before her husband was inaugurated, Martin Van Buren was a wid ower, John Tyler was a widower 'for about two years during his term of office, and James Buchanan was a bachelor. Now comes Chester A. Arthur, whose wife has been dead eur a year. It is stated, on the authority of W. H. Shrubsole, F. G. S.. that a canary bird liv ing near Sheerness, England, is able to utter sentences so as to be readily understood. Sometimes the bird interpolates phrases in a song, but is heard to better advantage when it speaks, as it often does, without singing. Hundreds of men. women and children f rescued In every community fiom beds of ! sickness and almost death and made strontr by Parker's Ginger Tonic, are the best evi dences in the world ot its sterling worth. Pout. For sale at the new drng store, Ebens burg, Pa. 9-23.-1 n.. An old man whose life had been insured by speculators for f"0,ooo was found drowned at Willkesbarre, Tn., on Sunday, and it is believed he was murdered to obtain the insurance money. correct anupcn na emorce economy, to advance prosperity ana promote the general welfare to en sure domestic eecority aud maintain frieniPv and honorable relation with the nations or the earth will t Karner.tid in the heart of the people, and it will be my eame.'t endeavor to pron. and to pee that the nation shall profit by bis exampie and experience. Prosperity Messes our countrv. Our flcal policy ao hxed by law. is well rrownded ami jrenerallr approved. No threatening u mars our foreiirn interests and the widora, mterrity and Itarlft oi tmr people may be trotted to eomiune undisturbed the present assured career ot peace, tranquility aud welMre. The alooio and aaxiety which hkve enshrouded tho country muni make repose especially welcome now. No demand for speedy lmlation has teen heard; no adequate occasiv Is apparent for an nnnsual scsMtm of Om rre. The constitution defines the functions and fiowers of the executive as eleiirly as thoje of ei' ti er 01 the other two department of the provern meot, and he must anwcr lor the nut exercise 01 the discretion It permits and the performance ef the duties It imposes. Summoned to these hiith duties and responsibilities and prof.mndlv con scious of their magnitude and craritT, I r-ssun;e the trust imposed by the constitution," reiving for aid on IN vine icnldanee and the virtue, pairut'.-iu and Intelligence ol the American people. KVRTaKI AP llUpr.K" mini (N. T. despatch of '.r.f J A terrible bnmcare s'm-k ' noon at 4.'0 o'clock. acv.uip.'r ' 1 i storwi. The tslow only la-ie.f r vast amount of damage ws tf-!." Knttre roo! with henvv tii; -! "" deeds of feet. The Kavtihun '. " the eplre of the Heddina .Ye'" -i blown across the street ir.to ya- ol brick were deoooit.! m u e rrv IYeby teriaii I'hureh. hi-les '"" ' the walls of scleral hr'ra hi: .'. -" 1 were cpJTere.l in all d.re- uo: ? Is eevered with debrt-ro'!f ' r " chimneys., fcr. loien- o.k. -trees were snapped at t".i r " ItMrrtiy a trect i.- pasaM- t e " """' of t-x-ey Mown acn I e::. " "' with are and teaaas ri- a-r,. t: Tbe Ktre LK-par'Toeiit is ed buildinii. Mr. S. A from his hury and ser ol a eolcrej eorrvh was "!nitia; and crabbed It in. i Tbe root of the pahice-ci over tbe freight cOlre ad f youd. The nrwi were f" eneatet consternation r1 preceded bv an eTthuvste. Iwt calm. ' Kata fe!I o t were tnnfrieei!t to cirri' mense dntif.tge was done 1 uoeuce of tbe water bsri-.s c nice. It is tn-.;mtMe t done, but In this cltv alof :' thtufsad dollars. riai.v" I' ; :1 ; 1 Ilojvltli '4 V'" , r'"" Headache, all Billlous IMsorders. Drs. pepsia, and constipation cured by Dr. MKT- l.itjno J 1 i.a i' AV. II r. PILI'i. rtlce -o teuts. " 4VII TIVSPTPVI a ts sold on a posit 5. -Cl.-lm. j JatucV lT'.. i-H iTf"fa attest J'ieW. The greatest thinkers, the most profound schol ars, the most expert, thoroitich and successful chem ists for these America must turn to (Icrmaov. In the wofully speculative field of medicine no arrea ter step lias et heea taken than in the disoov ery, after the most extended research and the most carelul and patiaul experiment, of lr. Faust's German t'sHuh Sy rop. lor the cure of consumption, coufrhs, colds, sore turoat. bronchitis, rreup, and all pulmonary diseases. KememDer tnis medicine lve guarantee to cure. I'nce, sac. bottle. Ask lmiBitiits. 5oH at C re. ttu? uig. l'. ll-l.- o wJ ,1. . V OT " V"V IM a st'ecif1" lor H" vuL'ioti". Nervous Hea.lso' s Im;s of Memory, Spert": -'T- ". voluntary Emissions. Prcu- " by over-exertion. setf-ahue. t-r " which leads to ra;ery, !.( will (Mire recent Ase E-n '': 1 trvatment. tine dollar per b t- ' . J. dniar: sent by mail prcr We Kaarantee "six hot;'e t each order reeeivaJ Lv v n!ed by Ove dollars, wa :1 .'. our written guaraoiee f -e -"11 ' -. treatment does not ec.-t a "'',.. sued nlv when treatirert ns. AH dress tlll W I - etors. 11 lx 13 W. Mails. r V. -,. by rll drusriists. Switb. Ki-'" A (tents. Pniiadelphla. "W"E wiil pav the ah. -ve rr" ; .. 1 Uvet t'oronlalDt. V'.' ,,-r Indigestion, t ompati.vi eri , cure aith Wel' V.-uetahi' 1 directions are strn.: r a : pnrelv vetrelable. niid rev: Sucaf foatet. H xcs 2S ct. Korsaleb an lrak:u ' ti-rlritcr and 11' tured oii!v bv .V 'M 1" Mkrr.""lSl"a 13 W . - trial tiacaaste soul t y u cent stanp. . Meet Tues atton decea bid b cne-f t--n, : t)r. l who t ty th train tion, pert Sund: yearn and a terrei' Tuorr!' r: Pren ISatnr "f'tiri Not b sis, 11 To lea ardsh: A eRjrr in iiei; snltati cpine ti'-mat Eiprv tifids' V tlist h- kiii'f i thoriri hofa Tpon ' Tl Cnnrt Sate, i net o tiCTl. aware. rnopt i tbe em It v"ved mt a r-r U flriir-t i t'e Vi G.-eSa i Iln drrppt, '-r Un f perat i r)tll t ilay hb , Owl 1 er, E'e ; fttets ' ' the grot we hi ; rfestrovi i Ifonday . eiTTnhn 1 had tbe ' eomewh . Mlc A. J. h inn boni ? t-o see l - rein. ' wl'd r.n( : Cr.ntitv .' by the ti ' tb-y bin i extra to ; m i t of Dr ; evperat rt thr rtrx ever M ' T ' roil; VAKHAU C roiiiKrrr1- I'M It THE L1BI BAl FPI I 1 1 . .. uiiuations lor entrain" aeot on eppiieatiou t AU)l. a, .4" 0 ' 'EO.M.REAPE. -r . n's'ee ' ttUt UlOlS H a"ll'r lie tl,.n t-ied to trt,l ! f bad counts t t -Tl-,., c-iubt be ""n his "i'on f rat u " "n.lry ' at be ''t It , 'rn n, OOfo-iM.' . -the ripyi C06, rears . ,r"i bo Lord c
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers