Jin -w? I I t EBEHSBURC. PA., FRIDAY, OCT. 14, 1881. m-:mo at a ti c ti ck j-j t. STATE. rm 5tatd treasurer: ORANGE NOBLE, of Erie. ' ji nn lAitr. to:; associate jcwies : JAMES MYERS, Ebensburg. JOHN FLANKJAN. tonycreek Twp. lorsiT. for trea?cper: JOHN A. KENNEDY, Ebensburg. KOR COl'NTY commissioners: JOSETII IXXJUE. Allegheny Twp. JOHN CAMI'ttELL, Conemaugh Roio'. for rrrort. house director: GEORGE W. EASLY, Johnstown. FOR COUNTY AUDITORS: H . ENdI.EIIAKT, Ebensbnrtr. JOHN LITZ1NGER. Clearfield Twp. FOR CORONER : C. W. EASLY, Johnstown. "C'rnvi wi'Idocb y forM y inai eieh hunun," whatever thnt mans, was what Morgan H;v:in, ;i xWslini.ui, said last week to the rin Republicans of Luzerne county, when lit- aunouiiotnl himself as an indeiKjiideiit candidate for County Treasurer. Tin: rern.irkn.ble exploit of the Dnch taking Holland was duplicated in Ohio on Tuesday last by the Republicans re flecting Foster, their candidate for Governor, though by a greatly reduced majority. It will probably be between 7. OKI and 10.0OI. We cannot to-day, (Wednesday) speak with any certainty jis regard-; the Ley i.-Iuturo. Jioth par ties claim it. The Democratic Statu convention of New York met at A'ba.iy oa Tiiesd.iy last. .John Kelly was on hand as usual with a full set of Tammany Hall dele elates claimiin; admission, and Irving Hall was ditto. IJ'tli sets were reject ed and the rejinlaily elected delegates admitted. Kelly says he will support the State ticket but will make a tijjht for aiie city ofiices. Ox Friday last the United States Trust Company of New York had registered at the Treasury Department in Washing ton ?J7o.'.H) in four ier cent, bonds in the name- of the Company "as trustees for Mrs. LtR-retia it. Garfield and the surviving children of James A. Garfield, deceased," being the amount purchased with the proceeds of subscriptions to the Gatfit Id ti'ud. These bonds will yield an annual income of 511,000, and can not 1? paid off by the government until the year l!X7. "When Mr. Scoville, the Chicago law yer, who is Giiiteau's brotlier-in-l.i.v and will act as his counsel, suggested to him on Monday last that he thought of em ploying Uob Ingerso!! to assist hiui in managing his defence, C, r.Uoati prompt ly and iurMgr.antiy protested against it upon the ground ("hit '"the whole Chris tian world wou'.d be pr-judievd." This is not only -rich, rare and racy on the Tart of Cuitean. but is also very rough on the silver tongjed Robert. From the time that Henry Ward Jleecher undertook to write the lire of Christ, there has been no such display of cheek in this country as when Mahone visited the bankers and brokers in Wall street. New York, last week, to raise money to enable him to prosecute his in famous campaign in favor :' repudiat ing one-third of the public debt of Vir ginia, If Ma!:ones robber doctrine once gets a permanent foothold in this coun try, there will be no reason for the fur ther existence of Wall street or of any of the other great money centres of the country. KiMihs in a pre.it variety of shapes come from Washington regarding chang es in the Cabinet, but none of them are trustworthy. It has been supposed by soix'c that Mr. Arthur wou'.d send to the Senate during this week, or at least be fore its adjournment. tn- names of an entire new set of Cabinet ministers, while it is as Co;, tidently asserted b nth era that he will net do so until the regu lar meeting of Congress in Docemhet. It is admitted that the resignations of MacVeagh, the Attorney General, and Wmdom. S 'cif tary cd the Treasury, are final, and that their successors w ill be named without any delay. MacVeagh wouldn't remain even if he could, and "Windom wouldn't be permitted fodo so if he wanted. Nor can Mr. Rlaine very long ': e connect d with an administra tion in which Conkling w ill !e tic pow er behind the throne. Oil ami water will not mix. President Arthur is a man of very decided opinions, and will pebct his own Cabinet advisers at his own time and his own wav. Tin: c:i;i'i obedience to President, re sessjoi; on Mo of the I'nited Mates, in the proclamation of the iivcm d in extraordinary id '.y last. Senator Tims. I . B.iyard, of Delaware, was elected President thi over Mr. Anthony. Kepublican, of Rhode Ishind, tl vote standing for Bayard, :U ; for Anthony, David Davis, of Illinois, did not vote. The action e.f the D( mocratic Senators in ehcting Mr. ISayard is in ac cordance with the law and precedents. It is ti ne that he can be removed at any lime by a majority of the Senate, but even with the admission of the two New York Senators and the new Senator from Rhode Island, the Senate will be equal ly divided, standing .'!S to ,'s. To re move Mr. Bayard will require Davis to vote with the Republicans, and the opinion preva'ls at Washington tV. p1.1 Davis will not consent to aid publicans by his vote in disturbing Mr. Bayard, who has the entire confidence of the Illinois Senator, who knows also that the election or no othei man would be more acceptable to the whole country than that of Mr. Bayaid. It is not be lieved that the session will last over a week, and that its lime will be occupied entirely in acting on Presidential nomi nation'! to office. C'h.vkles S. Wolfe, the Independent Itepnblican anti-boss candidate for State Treasurer, opened up bis campaign in Philadelphia on Tuesday night of last week, where lie addressed a large and uithuiastie meeting in rhe Assembly JUiilding. Wolfe has long been the sworn foe of Cameronism in the politics cf Pennsylvania and understands as well m any other man in the State the secret workings of the "-machine'' in forcing not only State Conventions, but the I.egisla'iue itself, to comply with its Mdtisli and arrogant demands, and Lis siH-eeh, which was very lengthy, was an exhaustive exposure of the crooked was by which the C'ameior.s and their willing tiH.ls have been so long enabled to maintain their supremacy over the Republican party in .Pennsylvania. Mr. "Wolfe's Mcon.l s;eech was at West Chester, where lie had a large audience. Prom there he went to New Crst le. Law rence county, and then to Titusville, at boUi of which places his meetings were participated in by scores of the leading Republicans. On Tuesday night of this week h? spoke in Wilkesbarre and was booked to speak in Pittsburgh on Wednesday night. We make no pre dictions aa to the vote he will receive, but it looks now as if Simon Cameron na' never so badly deceived 'n bis life a3 he was when he said in Philadelphia jast uft-tk that Wolfe's entire vote in fh State would not xceed for thous- THE DEMOCRATIC COl'NTY TICKET. We wer not of those who favored the Crawford oar.ty 5vstui, but certainly ' the ticket recently nominated by the ' Democrats goes far to commend it to ; the approval of the people. In the mat- j terof titness and capacity no better tick- et was ever placed before the voters of. : Cambria county. Every candidate comes tip to the Jefferson ian rule. They are all honest and capable. For the important office of Treasurer, John A. Kennedy is the nominee. No man of more sterling integrity lives in Cambria county or out of it. Barn in that portion of Carroll township now embraced in Burr township, his boy hood was spent on a farm, and his edu- i cation was obtained in a few months at I school in winter in the log-cabin school j house of that day. When IS years old j his foot was crushed in a cider press, re- quiring amputation, which was so bad i ly performed as to require a second am putation two years afterwards. Not l withstanding his crippled condition, he j continued to labor in the woods, clear ing, cutting saw-logs, making shingle?, i and teaching school in the winter, lie ' thus struggled until 1S07, when his mer its procured him a nomination and elec- tion as Commissioner. At the end of j his term he was appointed Clerk to the ! Bo.ird. which position he held until the j election of Treasurer Yeagley, in 1878, ! when he was selected as his deputy. As i Commissioner he was a safe guardian of i the interests of the county and the peo pie, as Clerk his record was always hon ! est and correct, and as Deputy Treasur er he has given the fullest satisfaction to his employer and to the taxpayers. ' For Associate Judges we have James Myers and John Flanigan. Mr. Myers was born in Minister township, a few ; miles from where he now resides. He . is a carpenter and has almost continual- : ly toiled at his trade until past the mer idian of lif", except the three years that he was called upon to fill the olllce of Sheriff, i: which he combined prompt ness in the discharge of his duty with humanity to the unfortunate. He is poor without any fault of his own. and has the ability and integrity to make an excellent Associate Judge. Of his col league, Judge Flanigan, it is not neces sary to say more than that his record as Judge during t he past five years has been without sta'n and without reproach. John Campbell and Joseph Hogue. onr candidates for Commissioners, are emi nently qualified for tin.' position. Mr. Campbell has h;;d more ofiicial experi ence than any man in the county, and has always been true to his trust. Mr. Hogue, as is well known to most of onr citizens is a man of correct and ma ture judgment, as honest as steel and a good clerk. He served very satisfac torily for three jeais as Auditor. For Poor House Director G-orge W. Easly male the nomination withrut op position. His merits and capneity d ' serve a more lucrative position, but lie I performs his duty no matter what thr trust committed to him. A rr.oie hon est, conscientious man does not exist. , The candidates tor Auditor, John Lit zinger and Harry A. Faiglehart, are hot h excellent accountants and honest mm. More than that cannot be said of anv ! one. i For the office of Coroner, that able journalist ami clever gentleman. C. W. ; Easly, I"-q. has b -en r.oiniriiitej. and i though we are sure it was not of his I own seeking, wc have no more doubt of ! his election than we have of his ti!ut-ss for almost any ofllce in the gift of the people. nch is the ticket, and where is the Democrat that annol support it with all his heart ? Tiik Washington city correspondent of the Pittsburg Jismtrfi. in his letter da'ed Octob'-r Sth. alleges most emphat ically that Mrs. Sht-rman, w ife of Gen. ; Wm. Tecumsch Sherman, General of the Armv of the United Statis, is the "Vicegerent of the Pope in Ann -rica" ! that she is now at the head of the i:,side I organization of the Catholic Church in : America that through this organia- tion she is commanding general of the 1 United States army that through it she is Secretary of War and A dj utaiit-Gen-' oral of the army, and that she makes , alike the priest and tie1 soldier; p;o , motes, reduces, changes, in accord mce wiih her own sweet will, the Church 1 militant and the Church triumphant, , and that, take her all in all, Mrs, Gen. Hierrnan is to-day nr.."1 of the tno-t won derful woman this country has ever pro duced That this is just the conclusion that we arrived at after perusing this correspondent's remarkable letter. We never knew before that this country was so completely, so absolutely, under petticoat rule. It most be a source of infinite lelief to ihe Pope. :.midst all his vexatious troubles with Bismarck and the German Empire, to say nothing of the ceaseless efforts of Italian com munists and infidels to harass, insult and degrade him. to be assured, as he row is assured, that his interests in the army of the United States, composed of twenty-five thousand men, are so lu cicntly and t l.oroughly cared f:r by that ' -'most wonileifuP' woman. Mrs. G ner , a! Sherman, bis chos-n and trusted vice gerent, or deputy, in America. This is a wonderful world, and this a wonder ful country, but no period in its history has been si) startlingly wonderful as the one through which we are mw passing. Ni.rnirrt Gov. Hoyt nor any other man who may happen tooooupy that po sition is exptyted to notice every charge that may be made against him, but in liis speech at Titusville, on last Satur day nignt, Mr. Wolfe connected Gov. Hoyt with a certain crooked transac tion which requires from him an imme diate exphm.it ion. Mr. Wolfe's state ment is that during the term of office of Oiu ran I Vil Vrivea St : t c Treasi i n r h i s : r,lif'f clerk.' Hlake Walters, a Democrat n liwrr m'li' " !.! i.'-i , j , speculated largely with the money of the State that this specula ior: consisted in 1 the purchase of lar ge quant it ies of crude i petroleum cert ilicates, which wire ex pected to increase in value, but didn't i that Hoyt and Quay were partners in ! this business with Walters that an enormous deficit in the treasury was the result, and that when Butler, the suc cessor of "Xcyes, hesiiated to take the J ofliee in such a condition. Pop Cameron : and Henry W.Oliver came forward and ! guaranteed the amount of the deficit. . This is : vpry serious charge, not made in a corner and in obscure and mster ! ions language, but utreied in public and 1 in terms so plain and direct that he who I runs may read. If Gov. Hot has any thing to say in reply, he cannot say ir. a j momept too soon. We leave Matthew ! S. Quay out of the question, because such things are ex-ected of him, and I therefore create no special surprise. It is a famiTar saying that "Justice travels with a leaden heel," hut an in stance has just occurred at Little Uock, Arkansas, which shows that she some times goes with lightning speed. On the 22d of SeptemU-r three young men named Cox, Stevens and Peianey rob lcd the passengers and took several thousand dollars from the safe of the express messenger, on a train on the Iron Mountain Kail Road, in the south ern part of Arkansas. On the 2sth they were captured, and being put on their trial on hist Saturday each of them plead guilty to fnurtffn indictments, and was sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of five years on each indictment, making in all safnty years. Three score years and ten in prison and no Pardon Hoard, such as we are blessed with in Pennsyl vania. In come to their n lief and turn t hem loose ujin t he world. It is a most dismal state of affa'rj. UIU THIUDKLPJUA LETTER. a;-: rirT.Tic rsKurrsT-A folttekfoive CANONIZINO OAUFIF.I.P MAK!Ni SAINTS ( of m wrvE ash mothkr the danc.hr j OF THE SCOT I.S STSTF.M "THE WAY OF TH E ' THANSOriF.SSOR IS HARD," ETC. Srwfial Oerres!nndnTe of the Frekvam. Phii.adei.fht A, Oct. lb 11. Dear McTike The longed for, the de voutly wished for, time by WasUington so ciety, has arrived. A social gentleman, an aristocratic single centlemnn, a super avsthet ical gentleman, has succeeded to the throne of Washington society. A correspondent of the Time, of this city, informs u that Wash ington society, the most frivolous tawdry and mixed of any city in the world, is con gratulating itself upon the dawning of what It is pleased to call "a oolite regime." Cold, calculating and mr-rcurial Washington socie tv has torn rt'urn its ostentatious mourning for President" larfield and prostrated itself ht the feet of his successor. President Ar thur, with open and genuine inward rejoic ing. The society of the White House, it seems, lias fell far below its former standard. Witt) the advent of Grantism came the man ners of the mess room and the tawdry evi dences of shoddyism. Hi? second regime was even worse than his first in a social i point of view as well as in a political. . When Haves came in through fraud he intro duced the practices of fraud, and made a ! false v.arado of his a theticis'ii through pen urious economy, although the Government had increased the Presidential salary to S.-m),-, ooo a year to enable the Chief Executive of , the American people to entertain in a way suited to 1 is exalted station. Now a great social change is looked for with the advent 1 of the great atlietic President. Chester A. ; Arthur. Washington society is now prom I ied a brilliant era. Wine will now be im ; hi bed at the White House, from whence i Haves banished it and put its value in his j pockeu ith th advent of Arthur we are tolil to prepare for "a polite regime." There ' will ne something more under the reign of Arthur than mere political lunches, cold and drv State dinners, cold tea and prayers. A ' t)iii:iant cm in 'the White House is now ' promised. - j After canonizing Garfield, saintare beinj : i made of his wife and mother. Human na tare is very queer, and the more you study ' its peculiarities the less vou seem to know . about it. The fund for 'Mis. Garfield has 1 grown beyond nil calculation and will pro- i biiblv reach half a mitlim of dollars. Still : . this does not appear sufficient to the senti- . ruentalists. and they pre now slopping over ' ! nbout his mother. They are now rai-iag her a pecuniary recompense for the l,is of ; her son. Inasmuch as the mother of the late President is c vnfortabiy situated, to ra:se a large sum of money for her looks very much ; tike a pecuniary recompense for t!w loss of i Jrer Vwv .fames. This is certaoi'y ridiculous. While hundreds nf thousands more than was first asked for Garfield's widow are being given her. words of pleading aud cries of di-tress which arc Hooding the country from . thousand-" of God's unfortunates in Michi- 1 gap, who have lost, husbands, wives, chil dren, parents, hon.es and everything, and who are starving, are unheeded. Why is this deterntiteitinn. after canonizing Garth-Id. ; to make saints of liis widow ami mother? From Ihe in.Mst eligible point of view this is all slubber and cu-h. It is all right that ; Mrs. G.irli.-ld should be placed in a pe.-unii-1 ry condition beyond future care, and the e.l- ' i licntion of her children he provided for. but more than this i; unnecessary and improper. ! Why d'-li't thc-e pc.'u'iarly gushing philan thropists five snie of the money to each ore of G:n field's children ? Tf the widow of Mr. Garfield, with a gift of half a million from the people .,f the United Slab's, would ne-gV-ct her husband's mother, she might read- -hv he su-et cled of neg'ecting her own chil dren. The rai-.ing of the funds for Garfield's ' mother shows on the part of tl:e crushing piiila'ii lip-pi-' s a ills' i ust f his w idow. The mother of president Garfield is in c unf. rti- . h!e circumstance-, and will "ever 1" in want, ; and the fund for the President's widow hav ing grown, beyond all calculation, it is to le i hopei! That these curiously gushing philan thropists who are raising the mother a pecu li'nry recompense for the loss (,f 1 1 1 . j- bo, will torn their a'teniion to pecuniarily re compensing the distresses of the penniless, pitiful women of Michigan who have lost both hn-bands and sops and who are on t he verge of starvation. While the aristoerati-: shciidvit-s are rushing eagerly forward to eor.M ibute hv thousands tothe Mrs. Garfield-, who peed nothing, let I heei also respond to the piteous plea of hundreds of poor willows, 1inr.seles nnd food less, shivering in the wasted fie'ds that were once their hearth stones. There ts where there is occasion for the exercise of humane impulses, instead of in ti e palace halls of Mentor. If is simply because of .fames A. Garfield's peculiar sufferings aud death that, he is eaa onied and Ids wife and mother made s.'.iuts, for Mr Garfie'd was not a great n an. nor hail he been the f ather of any great thing as had many other American Presidents. His administration ivrs too short to accomplish anything too short, indeed, to even indi cate what it might have been. Mr Gitfield was not great for political renown or states manship. He was pot great for laurels won either o'i the ha tie- field oi in th litio.i! arena, nor was he great for a pure pirate life. lie was only great because as Presi dent of the United Stares be. was cruelly a--- sassinated by one of his own part-; friends , and died a martyr to public dutv. The sym pathy felt for !re!deiit Garfield, was that which finds a place in the great heart of hu manity from one end of the world to the uth- er. It was the sympathy for government aeil law. and the condemnation of violence. It was been ife he was cowardly and brutally ' murdered by one of his own partisan fsiends that newspapers which had honestly con demned l;:'.i for his many untoward a'-ts in public and private lire turned up th. -ir col umn rules al his demb c. t The assassination of President Garfield is a calamity which it is hoped will resu t. in some good. 1 f there he any mitigation of the woeful hurt it has done tie- eniiutrv. if is to be found in 'he awakening of the American people to the danger of the '".spoils system." The President rf a free people was struck down by wicked hands because he refused an unworthy citizen the honor of p-rbii- p's. t-ition. Piesiuent Gn field was shot to death in theeappal of ' he nation by the hand of a cowardly of!ice---eker, whose disappoint ment in the pursuit of plunder niaddcne I him and made him i supporter of that mis erable parti-an faction that, had contended for months with unexampled bittcoess to compel the President to recognize I h. ir rule, "Senatorial courtesy." Either our free in- : stiti.tioiis of government, or the things of which tin- dire resiiitsof President Garfield's death is the seqni-r.ee, must have an ending. Tin- highest i.piees in the nation ar- filled not solely according to law but according to personal obligations. Public, truthas come to be aduiini-twr.'d for private ends. P-uiti-cal leaders maintain their leadership by cor ruption, and their followers keep their gifts by submission. 'God alone knows wl at our country is coming to. In the age of supersf ition it "was a common thing for the devil to appear to some morhidlv ambitions and avaricious in dividual and offer him untold boundless wealth for his soul, to be delivered al sight at the expira'loii of a given time : and the contract was attested by the signature of the soul seller traced in blood. Although the eduction and iilightenment of the present age should teach us that those- superstitions ware mie p!u.-i"Us, still a familiarity with he workings of the "spoils sysiem" of America n politics. us mini pulated not only at. our National capital but at our Slate capi ta!, impresses upon our minds a firm belief of the personality of the devil in the I'nited States. Since Ned P.eeelier ami Bob Inger so! knocked the bottom out of the bottomless pit, and abolished that place of future pun ishment, American statesmen and ofliee liolders think there is no hereafter, nor a day of retribution. In this every-day life we see cverywheie around us the fiends of ambi tion offering wealth and power in barter for politicians' souls. The principal business of National and State legislators now-a-days seems to be to act as go- bet weens in intrigue. Of late years a man serving a term or two as Congressman or Assemblyman learns to play angel, devil, preacher, out-throat, or any character occasion may demand. Spoils systematize! s may think there is no God nor : r, hereafter, but there is indeed a just God ; and a great day of retribution, i Possibly we are on the verge of a belter day, w hen a derelict Second Assisant Post master Genera! can be brought irdo court to make his plea. There has been many great rogues in office of late years, but with great friends to help them and their head quarters' influence, they have thus far been able to . defy justice. j The brilliant South Carolinian, the rtirlv haired darling of fair women and the suc cessful adventurer, Moses, has come down from a Governor's chair to skirmish with vulgar thieves and imposfers. I'nderan as sumed name, the ex-Governor of South Car olina, now flits in and of Poliee Courts. What a moral there is in his sorrowful tale. He once scattered money like chaff, but the monej he tossed about with prodigal hands was not his own His career of corruption, jobbery and robbery has no parallel even in this county, whichsjs, unparallelled for job bery and robbery. There U no limit to .Mo ses' recklessness. He levied toll on every public and private, legislative measure with money in it which required his signature. He gave away pardons like holiday baubles. lamps, piacKiegs ana criminals or evpry gi.tde, were roidoued by telegraph, by letter ir. 1 hv verbal ord-rs to jVt'.ert. a-v wi' o a friedi which Tirondsedi.nnr rmtyto.-ne r- 't rItn;'reoT:aVuc,rye, friend, l is li.e was plans tngue nun muu - . o. yteutialities i n tor gaining i"'v. . " i,rfnl means were possess o,. ... wer0 of great weaitn, i" , the oUlen wonderful, and m',h ,lH hands was j stream that tfow-ea ' "' came Ut. loyally spent. Mir i'"- trvoapi- The man n""V1enclent with cost- ! tal or s-ouui v i ....... at Uflt lv equipages, jewels an.. n..v .-o-, -- came so low as to steal an overcoat. Trn.J ; "the wav of the transgressor is hard. i THE CI. EAR LETTER OF A STATVTE. It was right aixl just tor rue i'n iai,L ' Senators to use the advantage given them in accordance with the constitution and laws hv proceeding to the election on Monday last of Mr. Payard as President pro tempore of ' the Senate before the new Senator were sworn in. Since the organization of the gov i ernment the custom of the retirement of the ' Vice President nt. the close of a session, so as i to enable the Senate to elect a President pro ; fix had been uniformly observed, but A ice i President Arthur at the close of the last ses i sien of the Senate would Pot and did not re ' tire and permit, that, hodv to comply with the , long established custom, simply because a Democrat would have !een chosen. Such : was the act of the machine politician. ice i President Arthur, apd such his regard for i the duties of a statesmap. That gros dis , regard of dutv compelled him to convene an ; extra session" of the Senate to repair Ids ' wrone to the country when he refused toex- tend to the Senate the corrlesv of retiring i when the regular extra sessior, of that body was called to confirm cabinet and other ap 1 pointments. In that act. Mr Arthur placed the machine politician and forgot the duties of a statesman. In that act Mr. Arthur prov- : ed himself incapable of Tisinf to the true standard of statesmanship. The law cave 1 the Democrats the advantnee of demanding 1 the election of a President pro tem before the new Senators were qualified, and in elect ing Mr. P.ayard they have done nothing ex 1 cent exercise their legal rights. There is now ' a President pro vm. of the Senate who will i make the supremacy of politics respectable. 1 TTappilv the' choice for President pro tm. falls upon one of the most liberal, enlight ened and patriotic of Democratic statesman. Thus. F. Havard in any position from Presi- dent down would command thn highest re i spect md trust of the republic. It is to he hoped that President Arthur wi'l outlive nis term, but as long as Mr. Bavard stands next in line to him the nation will draw an eav breath. There wn-' no pertnibation in stocks nor in the minds of honest men when it be came known that a Democratic mirorpv in the Senate had resolved to elect Thomas K. Iiivard President p-o trmporf. G. N. S. Mi:. oi?u:'s .tci irrwcu. Tlic Oflirlal nlifiriilin of Hlt ioi;l- . nreli'Mi for Stale Tprn-airrr. PlTTSr.lROH, Oct. 1S1. To th Hon (trmt'ie X' J.'r : Dr:R Sip : We hrye h' en authorized by the Democratic State convention, which met at Wilb.imsrort on the gstti day of Septem- ; her last, to formally announce to you the action of thi-t bodv in rominating you to the important office of state Treasurer of Perm- . sytv.Uila. ' "Tf must be a source of gratification for you to know that your selection by the cenveu Vi Pt'on as a standard bearer of the party and the repiesentative of its principles in the present campaign was made from a large number of the most reputable gentlemen in the State, ttie nominatir.n of any one of whom would have reflected credit upon the party. It is also a fact wo'thv of note that in these I hues (,f po'ttical jugglery your nomi nation w?.j nnir.tbi.--i!ccd by faction, corrupt ' c )inbinatifns fir boss dictation, which are ever abhorrent to Democratic bb-as. hut was accomplished by the representatives of the party, acting freely iri the exercise of their judgment as f, jts best interests, and the will of the majority thus expressed, finally ratified by the unanimous v ice of the con vention. With, every reasonah'e prospect of success, and sustained as you will be by a united . party, yon come before the poop'e under the most auspicious eireiiTii-t a pees and enter upon the race without any weight or hind rance to beset your way to ultimate sue CI s. And in the evert of election we are assur ed that the solemn p'edges made by ihe con vention to the veople, it) the resolutions adopted, will I " by yon redeemed : that vou will hold the of iee as a sacred trust, from the people : and that the rigid administration of the finances ,,f the State inaugurated hv vou will mark the end of the power and infill - ence fit vania. Very the truly Treasury Ping" in IVnnsvl vo-ir ooede nf servants. Gem W. Vii.t.kr. Geo. McGow vv, W. .1 P.UENNAN, P. F OoNNEt.r.V, P. P.. James. Mr. hlc- Kepl.v. Kkif., Oct. io. ISsl. .Vor. .rVo. H f'omnittcr : . .!;'" r. Geo. .V Gtnrnn. If. ,. O'i'inWb, aii'l . Jam, G'KNTl.F.MF.K : Your letter formally poti- I fying me of aiv nomination for State Treas- : urer by the recent D 'tnocraMe Sf;tt,o coin en- , tion at Williainspott would have been an- ' swered sooner but for unavoidable absence from home. ' You say truly that it is a high compliment i to have been made the nominee when so many woithv gentlemen were competitors for the position. I am gratified to know that the rivalry for the nomination was of the most friendly character, both before and , during the sessions of the convention, and assure yon that, if the choice fad fallen upon ' any one of the candidates, my friends and myself would have given him' a ready and active support. The reflection to which yon so uppropri tlclv refer that, the nomina tion "was uninfluenced by faction, corrupt combinations or boss dictations" adds very ' much to my appreciation of the honor. I accept the nomination with a full un- : ilersta ruling of the responsibility j( imposes, and pledge myself that if the confidence re posed in me by th.? convention is ratified by the people they shall not In- disappointed in their just expectations. The Treasury shall be administered as "a -acred trust fr m the people :" care will he taken to employ none but pure, competent and trustwoithv men : the records of the office will always be open for the most rigid scrutiny : the corrupt "lings" will be discountenanced: nnd the constant effort will he to reduce expeives, collect the revenues impartially, ami in every way possible to promote the intere-ts of th- State. Not a dollar that .bxs Pot le gitimately belong to me shall be taken a-., a part of the compensation of the office. The platform is or.e of the boldest and soundest that has been adopted by a con vention of any party in Pennsylvania for many years. Those portions especially which rela'e to the rights, duties and con trol of the great corporations are in accord with my life loner convictions, and 1 cannot doubt that they wj t,e approved by the people. While I would not take from any corporation a single right that properly be. longs to it, I insist, jn coaunon with most of the business men, farmers ami mechanics of the State, that pone shall be above Ihe law. that monopolies miPt not be tolerated, and that the "greatest good of the greatest num ber" must be the supreme object of the gov ernment. Having made no pledges of patronage during the canvass for the nomination, and being determined to continue the same pol icy until the close of the campaign, I will be free, in the event of tuv election, to make such appointments a will best advance the principles above stated. I have no enemies to punisti and will know no factions in the selection of my subordinates. With thanks to the convention and kinds regards for each of the committee, i 1 am yours, truly, OriANoK NoniE. Nkar, Abilene, K msis, not iong since, a mother left Ik r infant strapped in a chair in the summer kitchen. A wind storm came rip suddenly. From a dead calm a gale arose in twenty seconds. At the first warning the mother hurried to look after her child, ex pecting to find the cherub quietly drinking the contents of its thumb. To her amaze ment and extreme horror she saw baby and basket, pots, pans and buckets flying pro miscuously along with the tornado. The wind subsided almost as quickly ns it had risen and the mother had the satisfaction of i seeing the basket drop right-side up in a pile of hay, about one hundred and thirty feet beyond the yard fence. She was much more gratified to see that the baby had sus tained no serious injury. Its appetite was good immediately after the rescue. ' A n ( )lp Woma n's A iv ice. A nnt Kaebel, writmrj to the Cincinnati Enquirer, says : "When yon feel unwell and think yon must take medicine, for coolness' sake 'pt the best.' If you need a remedy that will make you regular in your habits, j;ive you a Rood natural appetite, make your skin clear and smooth, and remove all spots and b!o;nishes that indicate ill health ; if you wish to be free from menial depression, fretfulness, peevishness, wakefulness and other disor- i dors, "c Drw..n's Iron Bitters. ' EU 15 OTHER OTI7.t'.S. lathe Illinois State prison are sixteen men al relat -o to one another. A lady of P.-Uin, 111., has given birtti to hov on even. 4th of Ju'.v for the last four ,P1.r, , Aflvico to travelers : ruv a oonie ui . . - . . . - rr. Hull's Cough Syrup the onlv thing to 6U,p a hack. " A striKe nt coal miners at Sandy Run, Carbon county, has ended, the operators ac- ceding to the demands of their men. William Xero, a driver on the Lehigh canal, was kicked by a mule at Mau?li ; Chunk and instantly killed, last week. Macon, Georgia, lady has been par alyzed and is lusing the power of speech from the free use of canned fruit and vege- ; tables. Lady Frarces Kvelyn Rertie, daughter j of Lord Abingdon, has' joined the Catholic Church and entered ou her novitiate at a I convent. Mrs. Hannah Cox, of Holderr.es, N. IT., married when she was eighty-two years old. and died a few days ago aged 105 years and two months. ! Thirty murderers are in jail in Philadel phia awaiting trial, and it is thought that not less than half of them will be convicted i of murder in the first degree, j Miss Kale shelly, the Iowa railroad i heroine, celebrated her sixteenth birthday I last week. Sue had many callers and was 1 the recipient of a number "of presents. ' Fifteen years ago Jarrrea H. Orrn.an. of ! Fucblo. went, to Colorado a poor boy. To . day he employs :f,ooo men and owns and works g.ooo head of mules and horses. 1 The Tit us villc Petroleum World, origin i ally for Wolfe for State Treasurer, appears i to havt jumped the fence intothe Democrat ic pastor. It now hurrahs for Xoble. Secretary Quay has sent Hiram Young, ; of the York' Dpiwh, a drum-fish which he j caught with a hook and line and which was i forty inches long and weighed forty pounds. .lames Campbell, an old man, died at the : Northampton county almshouse on Saturday of smallpox, speculative insurance risks to : the amount of ?'io,ooo had been placed on ; his life. It (urns out that the opposition of the Frie H'raM to ( (range Noble is a sort of blackmail. The candidate refused to pur chase a share in the concern at a fabulous price, and le-nce the bolt, i Mrs. Overholdt. widow ol the late Jacob Overholdt, of Fayette county, fell down stairs at her home in Dawson Saturday, and was instantly killed. She is the third one o; h,-r family who lias met death by falling. ' F.l'en O'Connor, Us ing at No 40 East Fifty-ninth street, New York, was shot and ; killed by her husband on Sunday morning, and Mai y McKevei , of No. o2o F.iglit avenue, same city, was stabbed by her husband and won Id probably die. Jacob Hoehherg. employed at the Ha zard Wire-Pope Works. Wi'ikesimrre. Ph.. while washing wire in an immense tub of i water arm varmi on sarui'iay night, made a PH step and plunged headlong into the tub. IL w as lion Ibi y burned TP" surviving relatives of Mrs. Holtz m.ui. who recently died at l.kens, Dauphin county, assert that she never signed an ap plication for an insurance puHcy, notwith standing which the Pennsylvania Mutual Aid Society, of Harrisburg. are lewir. an assessment to pay a poiicy upon her life. In Louisville. Kv., m aouarrel between two brothers, Itudd and Henry Rirrett, over a loan of twenty-five cents, tin latter shot the former, kiliing him instan; !v The two had fought, diiriua which ll.-i.i was so , badly cut that l,e will die. Cox. Stephens and Dohuioy, tre Iron Mountain train-robbers, pleaded guilty in the llemstea l Circuit Court, Little K,ek, A:k., on Friday, ami were sentenced to the . penitentiary for a term of seventy oars each. The robbery occurred on September -2. Mason Tvins, who was a few years ago regarded as a vc.utig man of r;o.v promise, is now roaming the woods in Monroe count v, Tenn., arid is ca'l-d "the wildn.au." His head was turned some years ago, when he fell in love with a girl wiio didn't lecipro cate. Appleton Atkinson, os years old, and his son. James ('. Atkinson, aged JS years, ho were b'-lh sentenceo to be hanged Oct. s for the murder of the wife and child of the latter, escaped from the jail at Gayo-a, Mo., on Friday night by tunneling beneath the building. Friday momirg while Charles Me Jragm was (b-ceiidi'ig the llioderm shaft, near New Haven. F.ryette county, the wire rope broke and he fell to the bottom, a distance of about three hundred feet, lie died in a few minutes, lie was thirty f uir years old and leaves a wife and M-ven children. Wil iani Turk, aged fiPeen. and .Tames Gephardt, aged fen, were scalded to dt-a'.h nt Pctrolia, Pa", by hot water and steam es. capeing from a decayed boiler in use at driii tng a w d. The childien wcr- playing p-ar , the boiler and were fairly boiled alive. The . bniler, strange to say, did not explode. The Erie f 'i..')''. says: "We risk our reputation for vcr.i.-.ty in making this state ment : After diligent impeiy. we have not found one I reinoci at. nor beard of one, in tie city of F.I ic. who approves of the course of the . rohi ( : bolting Noble's lioiii-oatioi. i . Democrats, to a man. are solid for Xoble." Mrs. Staples w is boist i ul of h-rcrlme when put inta jail tor the murder of her huspaad at Colwell, New Mexico: but dur in : 1 .er first night m a ceil, as she believed, the dead man came to her. cursed tier for what she had done, and commanded her to ' hang herself, which she did on the following . day. A cit'.z-n rf Wilke.-harre who had in vested in a policy in a graveyard insurance company found the assessments to be un comfortably numerous and demanded the : nam -s atid address of all the policy holders . said to have died. The amount of Lis as sessments was returned to him without an explanai ion. A ninn named Church, confined in jail at ; Newto-i, Catawba county, N. C, charged with the murder of a Miss Thompson, in Al- ' exander county, hot August, was taken out i ami hanged by n mob on Thuisday night. It is feared that a man named ITockery, im- , plicated in the same murder and now in jail at Slatesville. wiil aSo be lynched. j The inquest on the body of Dr. Louis . Christie, kllied b a shifting engine at San- , dusky street, Allegheny, was concluded on . Saturday. A brother of Dr. Christie ter-titi- : ed that he was subject to fainting spells 1 and the verdict of the jury was that tie- do. ceased, while in a fit, fell under the wheels of engine No. (it and was accidentally kilVd. A terrible plague has broken out near ' AVaidron, Platte county, Kansas Eleven persons have died in five, days and none (.f the victims who are sick give signs of ree((v. : erv. The b aides of the sufferers are covered with black eruptions. After death the flesh falls from the bones, so that the bodies ca.l not be lifted into coflii.s ithout failing to pieces, It is said lhat the private fortune of Queen Victoria amounts to ?Si) una. ooo an, she possesses an annual income of ? !."J."VO,ooo. 15-1 ore her Girth her parents were so poor that they had t borrow money to pay their passage to England that the expected prin cess might be born on British soil, and she. . remained in comparative poverty until she ascended the tluone. A roll of an invisible drum is heard at . Ahlie Castle, in Scotland, as a warning of ; the. death of the head of the house. So runs 1 the tradition, and in l.i:, when the Lord Airlic of that day di-d, several persons de clared that they heard the mysterious drum ; beat. Of course it is now said that a simi lar occurrence preceded the news of Lord . Airlie's death in Colorado, i A sentimental fellow at Wrightstown, ' Minnesota., wrote to a eh ! that he would hang himself if she did Pot marry hin. As : lie was a stranger, shctook his queer missive as an inspiring jokp, aim replied angtily that lie would please her greatly by choos ing tire tree which grew near the window of her room. When site looked out next morn ing th'-re hung his lifeless body. Charles Jones and his wife were walk ing along a road near their home, six miies from Wytheville, Va., on Monday, when Henry Crockett met them and presuming upon bis longacquaintanceaddressed Jones' wife in a jocular manner, which, however, gave offense, and she complained to her husband, who went into the house, gota gun and shot Crockett dead. According to Guitean's own story, if there had been anything like civil service re form in the matter of appointments lie would not have thought of politics as an easy means of getting a living without work, but might have continued to the end of his days as a respectably dressed "tramp," swindling boarding-house keepers and oc casional clients, and now and again going to jail for his offences. The parents of any child born this year may secure ?2.", to buy" a .silver cup, by nam ing him Jesse Meharry, after a childless old man who died lecpnily in Lafayette, Ind., and put this provision in his will : "To namesakes, open to ail comers for one year. tht only limitation being that the. parents shall be of jiooil character, f 25 each." Won- , der who would call his child Jesse Meharry for the sake of f 25? Fred. VVollIe, who recently registered his name among the railroad magnates of , the county, was a clerk in a Montgomery ; Alabama dry goods store, seven year ago. He is now president of two banks, manager , of tour railroads and superintendent of the I Erlanner Syndicate. He is not yet thirty I years of age younger than Victor New J comtre or Henry Villard, Dot to speak of ! Gould and Vandeibllt. 1i-v:ts J iW-de.'A w i Ft.iur Rvrcrs, two j noet ic is characters ot i..ari'-v"v-r, t v .torcea their v.nv ;nt. the room of Mrs Mary Sey monr onAVednesdav night of last week, and in the presence of her three children Sander criminally assanited tier. The woman strug gled desperately to escape nnd at last suc ceeded. ' Sanders followed her into the street and knocked her down several time; Mrs. Seymour escaped to n neighbor's house, where she died from her injuries. Doth men were arrested. Gov. Hovt will leave Philadelphia on the IStli for Yorktown onttie steam propel ler GaPatea. He will be accompanied by his tatT, the Judges of the Supreme and lower State Courts, and mayors of various cities in Pennsylvania. There will be a military escort of TOO men of th- Pensylvan ia National Guard, who w ill go into carnp at Yorktown. the Governor and ether State of ficers remaining on hoard the Gallatea dar ing the sojourn at loiktown. North of Millershurc, Mrs H iwk. w ife j nf John Hawk, was about, kindling a fire in the bake oven, hsving filled it with wood j and applied a shovelful o! hot coals from the cook stove. Ielng in somewhat of a hurry, , and the fire pot coming up n oon as she de- I sired. Mrs. Hawk procured the coal oil can j and was about emptying its contents in the ' oven, when the oil took fire and a frightful explosion ensued. The unfortunate woman j was burned to death. i A double tragedy was enacted at Quiacy, i 111., on Saturday afternoon which wiil prob- j ably result tn the deaths of John McDade, I ex-Chh f of Police, and a gambler named ' Jackson. McDade was standing in a door- j way opt-. site Jackson's rooms, when Jack son, accompanied by two others, crossed the street and passed the doorway, whereupon McDade stepped out and filed both barrels , of his gun into Jacksnn's neck and shou!- i ders. fa'-illy wounding him. Jackson then j shot McDade through the breast with a re- J vol ye;- , A mysterious death occurred at I.iv-k Ha- , ven at 10:'.u o'clock la -t Sitnnlay night. ' Jonas .indie is the proprietor of the Far- i nieis' hotel on Church street. Samuel Hiair. ' who was under the Influence of liquor, had been ipiarrciling in the par room, and Zindle walked him outside. Instant 1 a heavy thud j was heard on the pavement, indie's wife ! run e.it and found her husband lying op the ; street, P.lair was on his hands end, knees, j but gol up and ran o!T. Mrs. Zindle called : tor help, nnd it was then found that Zindle was l-ad, and the rigid side o? hi face ter- . ribly bruised. Rlair was arrc-te.; at his ' hone- n" midnight. ! If it were fair to hold one event in th.e ! course of current Irappcnii gs te-.-p.insitde for indirect rebel's, it would be easy to si, o.v that . ; tiunp-rerts fata!i"ies have ensoe-t from Gui- . te:.'.r dastardly shot. The f..-c. -s th" death of President Gai fici I. the next a peptic-nan nt Camden, N. J.. who dropped deau on hearing that the 1'residcnt had finally suc cumbed p) the wound. Several men were killed by the funeral press train, and a Knigh Templar was killed at Cleveland. Several fatal injuries was receive.! whil fir- . ing salutes on tire day of the ohs-. lies and the wife of one of ti.e men killed by th" pres train fell dead on hearing of her bus- ban.'- fpte. ; Dr. Louis Christie, of rrar.kiin. Pi., met wilh a tragic death at the S.nidu-ky street i 1 rail-vay crossing. Allegheny City, about 11 :3o S.oid.iv miming. As a shifting engiie was ' ; epos r'-.r : he strc-l he eiihtrf.-M so thut his , , head was on the track or committed suicide. ' The wi.pels pf the engine pas., ,1 ovr his head, marigl-pg it in a lorrli-'e n-.anner and : cans u a imtn.t death. The d sct..r was ail- ' ing for a long time past, and w:is su-'ect to faintingfits M anv of his friepds believe it w as .1 in ing .me of these fits that lie fell and . met his fate. Others ki, stiff, r. d from aberration that, while in this e.-mdi: placed his heiid on the .v.ii:i licit iie also if the mind, believe i'-n. he d--l ib"i ately tva"k. lie was r years of ,-,j,-. A welding nn top of Pit repoitcd a few davs ago. A K pi" ii" vi- taken an opposite cm irtc-Tgt-ou ni fop th,- ceroiaeiv. s peak was nf uck V cou rse by g .;ng TI-:".- M - Callis'ei rived at procure. acc. enoip ; Ca.-e Oily, at once, at i d by a s:n ill party, ar f'oiiniry wagon-, were 1 a gay corepr.ny, which e el.-'rvman. drove over iticlu d a Loaisyj the hills to th" Mem-pola Gave, hole pi the ground vas br.rv. "Fat Man's Mi--ry" pas pas,, crawling on hands an I knees ah Toe gn at V entered. 1. the bride tig 'he riar s blind fish. row t -pel. r'e p. !. w I ith was sal ground 'civ f Uai: ied over, ami after an pnd-r- ip of pipe miles the spot selected ilit'pg was p-ached "There." .ving ac-napf, '-lpider nature's for the w avs a gl gbfer'pic gems, wi'h depth beyond, th.- to darkness filling the i'ch--s weirdly lighting the c'ergvtu ui did his the imme-Patc spa A Sr'i y..K Stop v. The '-.i-e of the men who ro-i'ied tl e p-s.-ng-r tra'n op the Iron Mountain rini-vi i op the :'l'd of Sept ember, assumed a new and sensational phase in the special term of c a-t a'. Life K ick, Ark , on End iv. wh-n ci'i.-i" ti:-' r-hber; plead guilty to fopyteeu indictment-, making the termor" punishment s, verity eirs for each man. The pursuing p.ufv ttiat pursue.) and captured f ;) eon-ist.-d of f a i tii'-n. named Tluddetoll. He'viie,, MoolC a". I Dolli Vide. When arrested the robbers hid about 5P"o,i. Hialdlcton proposed to divide the money among themselves. IJ-'lvires object.'.!, but finally agreed to its equal division among the four oftjeers in the re--vnee o! Stevens and Dclanv, the prisoners. I :r consideration of the latt-r t wo keeping the matter secret . each of the f ear officers took an oath that he would annually pay to the fanii'y of the robbers 5 I'M and leave no means nettled to secure their release fi om pi ison. Tht party reached Hope and turned over the prisoners t the authorities and then we-;t to Little Lock, w here they receive, 1 ?!,0i") I reward offered by the State." Al! the captors appeared ut the trial, when Iielvires divulged the whole mat ter. Catahiih. belief in five minutes In every i-ase : gratifying, wholesome renet oejonda money value. Cure begins from first appil cation, and is rj id, radical and permanent. Choking, putrid mucous dislodged, mem brane cleansed and healed, bre.it ii sweeten ed, smell, taste and heaping restored. Com plete treatment for f. Ask for S.uiford's Kadical Cure. jlo-T.-lm. A PKHl.IS pi statement that biiut man i tge 1 blood rent i v.-.s. otcssoj- is authority for the among Cathodes, who pio- tween persons who are lu-m I he pi I'poi tion of itc-.il mines is 1 in a. no", auiong l iviesi.ip.s, w :i arc less strict, the r (portion is one in 2, ooo : wlnie among Jews, w ho encourHge mter maiiiage wph b.an.l icl.itives, tile dc.it' mutes are us 1 in 4 Jo. D vsrF.rsr a and Livkk Compi.mnt. Is it not worth the suntii pin e ot Ta cents Ut tree youiel! from every symptom oi these dis tressing complaints '.' It xoii ihir.k so, call at E. Jitiues' Di tig store, l.fieiishutg. Pa., and procure a bottle ul Sh;l ill's V iiH.i.ci. Lieiy bottle has a printed guarantee on it. Use ac cordingly and it it does you no good it will cost juu untiling. 4-S.-e.o. w . 1 v. j A Tki-AnoI.f.. n Wednesday f last week IP.c wife o! Mr. II. B. Angle, of WeNfi I v u it. Franklin (ouury, gave birth to three ciiiiiiren, two hoys anH a girl, averaging sev en and tineo qu.itier pounds in weignt. or t wei.ty-lhrce and one qu.ii Lcr poundsof pahy altogether. None ot tiiem got a a ay and ad are doing weil, Jlitrns'turg Putriot. Lapt VtKKi TiKiKns. Ladif, you cannot make fair skin, rosy cliwks, ftinl sjai k lii; -yt'S Willi all the cosmetics it Fraiirf, r l)uutititirs oi the world, while iti poor health ariil tiiih:ii&; wiil cive you rueh rich 1WhhI. liitter. A trial is certain proof. Mrs Jknnie Mriir.A-rr KrsKE, wl;o lati-ly tlie I at ltii;u n, N. Y-, U-lt a loriuue t'f 12." OiiO.Oimi. was bml.linj; a rt'siitenct t.r cot 52,onn,oii:i, uitt'irdrnc; to ninke it the lint'.st in the Uuitrd States. Wliiv in Etr rope last year mh' wns married to Professor Fiske, of Cornell University. Iluxniir.ns of men, wonierr Rnd rhiidrcit ieseued in every community frora t.eUs of sickness and a'unost deutli and made, strong hy Tarker's iiuer Tooie, are t lie best eT denee in tlie world tit iis sterling worth. Post. For sale at the new drug M-nre, Eoens butft, Pa. 9-22. -lir,. A neot.ecteu but wealthj uncle of two firls who had lived as.servants in the Rush louse, Pittsbure, has unexpectedly made them hnppy. 'I lie 5Surr at of San Fran- ciseo has f;n.o'Mi of this dead lrran's money. , end Is looking for Caroline and Mary Clark. Headache, all Hillious Disorders, "Pys pepsia and constipation cured bv Pr. M ET TA UK'S HEADACHE AND DVSFEl'SIA PILLS. Tilce 25 cents. -2l.-lm.j A child born In Anamoss, Iowa, only weighed cue pound and seven ounces. No on can be healthy with a torpid liver and fffiftijjWtiou. Take Mi5 alin. n:r4HMXr traces now cover c r.crc3,andaref.l!cd with D-vV.."' &mm& Chin,.. Furniture, c,. '4 f'X$W& bt adsiiticn is a large trM l.- .' ImlV-MJ 7Worc Gallery to which admittar... Zy' ihtout'h th- c.ir, and the Electric-Lid. : JJ: If- .... , -V- . ,v.-r'., .;,..s;rr There is a Lvt- l-Ryjn in the building, y. khtts :ind p-cka-cs c;-.r. be !cft in charg-e cfctun." l.n iles' Vn:tip-T iio'.-r.!. Mr. War hetne wli.-n thi'V come, and be free to purchase tr r: tluy pi-j.-u-e. Note. Ch.r I'.rge Ci.'.rdcz.v-?, w:':h j.:::.a tiirec: .Ct.!tii , will Is. mai'.vd frratuitc.u.-'.y ti: ' h.llS W AN A. MAKE F. , Gll.-'.ND PfP.-T. I'iiri - i.UK The Best Clothini Lea Wanamaker & Brown, S. E. Cor. Sixth and Market St THE LAMEST a.UlIIING H.lE IX AMU i. ,'-':.VA'! s ' ' iji::"i'-n for Pi.:e--r ' Inr " V: - .1 V :si-. -it. : divil.i:.) ii.stru .U.r'. I-i-c m,, i.i ' i-. :. . . v . I : .. . . . ,: . cotirs.. ,f "::! lt-T"!'.tr tr-.-i n; .. 1 .-: ;- 7 - , . Sruimni. 1 or Circulars a.'.jri 1". 1 ...I .v I : , ; . LIFE and DEATH of JAMES A. CARFii or.-r t li . t--rr c f h. rrmtrknhlf crnirt1. . m P mm m A m.m mam mmm mm. r.l f nohlf Tnan.MUC 1 I O TVM 1 LU of Hi- M 50 per cent, discount to Agents' fii.N. IIano "k am His oi;fp W t: Skkvant. The f-rio-in ii'rst i'2 li.'-i- fh'Tlt Of HiTl'tf i (it'TK ll.UHT.rk's !iite viit to Cleveland, to attein! the f.n:erl -er- , enionie of rresijei t CJariifM. i re'i:.'l hy j tbe Ihriil 'f that tity, nu i v;ii !e aprrfia- j ted by a'.I who have vv;it iie-1 h: ifariup J dnrini the seen s f t!u late nation:! eai . ainitv: ; Mr. 'h-ir: I w n. a r- .it tN r'.ty. at 'J-VJ ir-y tro-t. p' th c xr.iv. r. 'ttpt t vl ?h w tr a -I tvo in ini..iipr C "ii.r . V. He v: ,rorJ in? th- rft '-i - tv ;'. t-nt ! i in v- CHi;na- t-) t'i T ni-r) l.ne- oi i I'--, r-t-r. l-r'J. fti. i f ITlto T lio h n Hi f. TfTl'T il lian'M-K Jit CiMi ' ? Til - I tin. V. The Ofnerrtl v.nt r. wtii i-ies-fil ' : h on ' ,Ht .it(I Mr. Hr-'wn t- rTmn with i::n in i th ca'acy i 1 f'n.'y -rT.trit. H tli.l p mti-I s wj;h it.r (irrsf-al f -r irnny trot yIl". v:1 S!i 1:1 -t r ! . : i t '. "-! !'P''!t'g m hi-h t!. tierral wt r,if nf.l. Wl.'-n t';f --tr f-. ti--:-, H c-'fk wr.-lp : ; il fet;T t" n l'T:i . m V. h!v irjiton r i.:i. n. : '. n z ti- ' '1 !-'"v tv t . i' r-; nr.k i it In m ('r.ttn . -1- :iil r ; - i v r I - is - .t t iif a ..Mt,.!ii li a: hr w - ut 1 .1 lrt him kn'-w .f it cn.e. Mr. Hr'W u wrn! to N :i -h i ni: t n . w . r X .c-re t-r -.Tiip 1 1 tn . ari'l S'-iniitz r-t ":tmf V t-ft. n-l h:ot k Hii f r f! Tf-Vit Vr"' ff 1 ca ' "'t'-'i in i ..Uril itj l. ;;iii l It-i.c-W In tr.t 1-. H"ir'r j Imh: ii"i,iT'! I? i ;.(. i ' t" w. th r ir v. t li - anc-r ! .!. :o-l W. ii. Ti irT. Mr i','v, 1 ii : - (.ti h i :ti u rit! : it! 'uoi il" : n-l-rrnt-.l ( arj That thf (Jcueral .i:fe to cI.utv'i. Mr. liu'wn Ktnt-1 that he w.? hi- i-rvint -ir. rtn :h r:ir an.i pxp!f'v! na fini'; i--Tt t er, liim. Me w Ak1-! t" tnk- n i'.ii jiti.1 uw.iii thf r ; irn tr -t. cii'ir. S"M"i h cr'i dr. vp an.i th- 0-:.t.i iifcr:.tci. 1! f il ; n. ;rv J Mfly i!irM-'(1 hon thrit hif ni rvn t h-t hn.i tn-t-zi with htm th rou'i thr wa? i f.t-fnx on the lawn a (i tl-i-e'i tr eo li!m. (in cM', Hun 'rtk immt f)'f t-1 y j.r.r-f le-1 wl err Mr. Ji' - tt.i- un l rt' r ti 1 7 1 1 1 ic h'tji I 't it l'e?"T hi t.-. ). e-1 h'n. fxt-n-lp-t hit l.-Aiiil hrM rusi.in ej irrn i..i the !i:tn1f'f hi i lil rviint wo h .l ttpn with h;:u nn nit ti: iy trying ppnep. wr-iiiit it t evp ry mH:iifi"!Ht n nf ilr.nrtit. while tea- fl;i A the ry o! hot'iHii'l rifitv o thrrn f'.ke 'r ..ine r-.Tn. At la-t thf ' tP!ith1 i; n .1 lr. Irwn it il"n j n -1 inn.le h:n rplntc pv-r'tvi:"'z th.ut tie :i.trr find thine Hir th. wnr. Mi 1 fii:ft:'i tns:i' h.'.n rc the iM j finf thT :f nnvTfo:iz ih- uhl h;i'"n t him t:,;:t he w..i:M inform tn it- ti-nl ni.a that nn:p rvii.m houM he m-i'le U r hiai. A Vi'R ia 1 rr.Ui;n county. M... Vavt'-.i c - t'T l i:.r. ii t.n :n l'Aum K"''TT ."n !-!t M -iKiv nutit, h r r-nnr i:a:!y nul'.ui Mr. nn Johh-"-ton, an j wtote tinman. NEW ADVERTISKMENTS. ?&' -i mA ir- PIANOPOHTES. i UNt.Ui:A.I.I.ED IN Tone. TcnGli.Woriiip & Bnrctility. i t.AIK i. CO. M iin .T Wwt TtHHirtvrro SlrfM, Ilaltlmom. yv. 1.2 Klfih A-rnU". New York. S.flll A;Ti I TH S! 1.1. lilt j LIFE OF GARFIELD! i t s psnv iff nn;l r.irer r-hi i-r h:i-1 -i VrM:nn; In p1t' ion nil 'ni'" 1 1 Ii!si",vit'.in; li tJ ticrou t m ! f. r i ' r ; w nnil.'rii I n-'.' trO;i!mpTiT ; r - - i . miii inj ; r-movnl to 1-"; . ihfath. rtc. ' o'r' i . . u ". .' 'f tcii S: 'fiiil ,1 r-ir-trait of iarin hi. In- it" nn.t n thrr ; no ft tho hoot in r ; lr' k-H-.-nr '! : r i. ; u in i ct-1 i : thr ur-o?.-i. ii n l t ti " j 'o iif;. cnl . co"u'-'fr and auri?r.ric w ork. 7ir i a fa tvi J r r.t nt tist in thr fsrl't vx'h t "in bonk. ittli 5r. Sin-at ; quick. Alblrr-' M LtHA K i HKiS T.M t he-t- i uut M I'hiiii'ipiitA. G&RFIELI);1 A iter t K-l f-.r I.i ir of I r.-i LI. A n-!l'pl.l.l.i!li- lr. ni cuilU- Io sn.f. by l h t nn i rrii I l.i..; ra li r, 1 '..1 t'it;iivt'!l. lnlro du.-rn.n hy : ! ;so- liry, John I. I.-.nx. i.n r nor ol MaKi.-liiii.'i :. 1 ...Us rr:i.lv ' t rtlir ery. An rl.vntly iiliiir.t"1 T..ii'ii. t -i t rf -1 ,! r.mi. lyil'vml terms. Air.'nl rkr i.r!ir for Innii " i r. :ii .-..j ip' .Mil; . on nn .! ln-r ho.ik ronrooiir. At:'!!t nr.T toa le nion. mi t.-i-:. Th. IK...W f.-ll i' If. fjirpncn-i- im hpt"i-;-. T'tl-iir.- iniki'.'Wi.. ;i uk - ':n" er-i" p'-.l-f. l'-iv..re r.ru-.s fro... Veo. Mirton k Co., fortlanA. Sainp. E M?L0Y M EfiT s.oA.LhPhR l?2.i JHSALAiyr""""' ill tu-tmbts w!.aH. HlCr.4 (.nmftlT HU4. SLOAN o. aor, iirone "t. lurtMatl. o. $777 A V Y A K nr.! xT."f 1" it-fiitf. (lutlil trie. A1"iTs I. O. Virkfry, Auyu.-.a, U'. TO nTFItTs:U L..-ft rait I. rc;v,r"..-lnz V K TTV ,":'' 1' V .... " In l.Olid rnil ni.--l'trs r: t !rt". AJt?rra ma r L. ". - ' ' I 1 1. I". J.' ''A ! I.T. V ' .. sJp-ii.v- r . N. V. 1 ("i ' ' The PiA -r.ctlc Tt:bc3 car r":r.r t. - is de-ircus that visiters :ti'i:is f:.r i:o-jr:v. bv mail 1:otti any part c; th. !'. .. . KK THt st RHoney, OAlv HALL. 11111 viiz:i.i'niv. : i s ir of tr Assise Thf P II : Arr Car 0 r-o r.) r mo- Or r.lood Foisoi.ii.c. vi i i Alrresrir , I lc, vr, ...-( tics, ltils ami lut-: II unror. 1 n.-. FEVER SORE. w i s; 1 tl; v j - : 1. KM :! ;. 1'' 1 : ' ha 1to!i trout it- 1 t-- y r -r.c ..t t i- Iwr. I.rt.-t " I irj ,y wtiiK a 1 ' '- liKYKl'lKS. hb ;k.: - TI'TKA KrKn; VLT. U' '- i n ' ' t ii. - I" t't'im .1 t la -K . h : you tfiiUi c-t' hi- " tr.:.'-h y- a ii ' ' SALT RHEUM. v rn"ir. i v :i -k i -- .. 's- - i s I f. J. li.-', k. ! "(. Ti-'t w.t k . x . ; t i. "Uf : ' r : ti : ,tl : fr ! 1 ; trie I hur..lr-i " - -1-: s o-i ' j .' ; j r -.: a r : ; cura lrr:er.::cs. Creat Blood Medicir Tl hif ! H- - : : . t:ve t - ..r : ; . - - I ;i li'1-l.i'...i. r . - "I t'l( I I -' '.J,"1-. ti.iim v, t ;., , ,r.i; t - - TREATMENT. Th- ("rf .-r:i f : S.. all. r H : 1 ;".: ft ti. i i: r. r -. . - - firr iin.r ! t ! . r " A V. 4 p. t .... . - - :i . J'ri-e . r I'i-ti. i- --. f. JI. "-. Tl. fK I. .... - ' " 1 ; ti. riSijr "..:, "" " S....1 '.V H' !, t. V. l.l K- k 1 ! CATARR- NFOEFS EA'.: ' Complete Trent For iTi.CO. " ir V - ! k 1 i . (''.Ii: h, IV f! k t: C-T-1'.T - , r T 1 1 - : CiS" .'1 'i " h 1 ' ,' Ti'inib'sl.pf.iv.ji nr. ' afoi;ih K:'i : 1 ;r i!'h tr-: :;'. ' ' of t t li A !:. A I. 't ' f N'LVfT H i ' 1' ',. wrti'i'p'l in in' .. Mr rrrti 'p-i, n i m ' 1 t ' - ttT 4M'im:;'5 tAT:.' ' ' iirncril ff.:. - ' be. tsa elc, Ui .oi:. ..'.' ..'fr, ; un l r! . - im r T ' . ' , lire In TiTir-. 1 ' " ; all :ir , r-p.l in - -' '' M.-tU-! f.-r . "' l h' K? v 1 1 -' I! t1" r : li;f. :'.'' -. i t,e