3 mwnn. EBENSBURC. PA., FBIDAT, NOV. II, 1881. It is stated in Washington on the best authority that John C. New, of In diana, has been offered and lias accept ed the mission to Kuseia, as the succes sor of John W. Foster, resigned. The appointment of John C. New to a first class foreign mission would have been worthy of Grant in the woist days of his administration. BARKER BEATEN! OUK PHILADELPHIA LETTER.' The returns of last Tuesday contest Indicate Bailey's election as RtateTreas nrer by about five thousand majority. "Wolfe's vote in the State will not be far from 50.000, and of this number it is now conceded that not less than ten thousand were Democrats, who deliberately went to the polls and by voting for Wolfe de feated their own candidate, Noble, and elected Cameron's man, Bailey. It is the latest aDd most certain method dis covered, or invented, by Democrats in this ?tate of smashing the Camerom ma chine ia politics, and ought to be paten ted. The New York Timet says that the cry of a potato famine in this country has caused the importation of ions of the genuine Irish potato to that port that eight hundred bags of them were received there on last Monday week, and HAPPY TH189 WHAT AMERICA OWH TO Til CATHOLICS AFTT.R THB BLBCTIOH TBI SLAUGHTBR. PHILA DELPHI A, Oct. 31. 1881. (Special Correspondence of the Fmintii. Drar Hery 1 am thankful and happy that I was not a depositor in that New Jer sey bank of which Mr. Baldwin was the casnier. I feel joyful that I am not embar rassed on account of that bank's failure. The directors of the Mechanics' National Bank of New Jersey should also be happy at least should felicitate themselves with the pleasing reflection that their able, enter prihing and obliging cashier did not give Mr. Nugent the bank, building. They should be thankful that Mr. Baldwin did not allow Mr. Nugent to carry off that magnificent struc ture. Mahone is happy that every revenue district In the United States came down T7"CTT"I?TW T7"ATATTl?TCI I handsomely t0 ne,p nim in njg repudiation iVLjil IN LiU I l.Ui U U ilVO I propaganda. He U happy in obtaining the saying that with the money thus attained he bought every negro vote in Virginia. I am delighted to learn that we are to have "A Swallow-Tail and Chateau-Yqneui Admin istration." There is to be a different branch of nmrmpra in th White House. Arthur AMI THAT'S WHY THE DEMOCRATIC had a preacher for a paternal sire, and mov- KOOSTEK FLIPS HIS WISUS ASD CROVTS MOST LUSTILY 1 ALL OUR COUNTY CANDIDATES, SAVE ONE, ELECTED ! The election in this county on Tues day resulted in the buccpss of the entire Democratic ticket, with the exception ed all his life in good society. It is said that 1 to see Arthur in a drawing-room yon would ! think he was oorn there and grew up with the place. It would charm a Chesterfield to see Arthur turn easilv from one group of gentlemen and ladies to another with nothing i eVer, the husband, who was an elder in the in either tone or manner to indicate that he i CMirch, was summoned before session, and A VEBT SAI SCEKE. A MOTHER ADD DACOHTER PET TO JAIl, FOR FOROERY, PKRJDRT AKD COSSPIRACT. The U. S. District Court, this rooming, witnessed a scene of an unusually sad char acter. During the week the case of John Love, Mrs. Mary M. Iove, and Mrs. Sarah E. McDowell, was called up for trial. They were indicted on three charges, growing out of an attemnt to obtain a pension from the United States, and the charges involved con- 4 spiracy and bribery. It seemed that a son of Mr. and Mrs. Love had been in the array, and that after his return home he had been attacked with typhoid fever and died. Sub sequently the parents received blanks from a pension agent in Washington, accompanied by a letter informing them that they were entitled to a pension, and requesting them to fiil in the blanks so that the application could b made in due form. They returned j the blanks several times, but finally conclud- ' ed to attempt to obtain the pension which j the agent asserted was due to them. Flav- Ing gone thus far they indulged in the crime of forgery, and also perjury, the latter crime , having been committed in making affidavit that the son had oied from disease contract- . ed while in the service. The husband, wife, i and daughter live in Fairfield township, : Westmoreland countv, and np to the time of the charges being made in this case, were . highly respected by their neighbors and ac- i qn-V.ntances. A8 soon as tne cnargea were mane, now of James Myers, one of the nominees I was anybody in particular, but that he had ' after a somewhat protracted trial was ex- for Associate Judge, who is defeated by Jos. Masters, the Republican candidate. The campaign wis unusually exciting in regard to County Treasure-. Mr. Bar ker and his friends, having determined, as it seems to us, as 30on as he was nom inated, that he must be elected, even if they called to their aid all the question able appliances known to political war fare. We have been familiar with po litical campaigns in this county for the past thirty years, and we never saw a jnst that easy dignity and polish without the onerated. When the case came on for trial least ostentation, wmcn Denis nign ojnciai n the Djptrict Court this week. District At- life in a Republic. There is to be no bv- gnne provincialism at the White House, but things will be done on an educated New York basis. At the Executive Mansion there will be no gross vulgarity of plain whisky, but the choicest old vintages; no more of the garlic and Sa-is Cullottes barbar ities of our ancesters, but the ethics of a bill of fare fit for gentlemen, and clothes that fit. Yes, indeed, dear Jlenrv. times wi'l look up under Arthur. Is it any wonder, then, that I am delighted? Who should not be? It more determined effort made in anv i affords me infinite pleasure to be able to im that thirty tons .in addition were daily j man's behalf than was made in the in- i P8" the.ft.drs l tn" i KmKMA , J,T ' " ...... I i t. t -r, i , ful tidings that President Arthur has for the expected on one vessel and fifty tons on j terest of F. II. Barker. "We do not say, another. Dealers sell them at $2,25 and $2,50 per barrel. These imported pota toes come chiefly from the north of Ire land, and one dealer in the article, while in a humorous mood, remarked : "Even the potatoes in Ireland cannot live un der British rule, and must fly to a land of liberty' "We call the attention of our readers to the prospectus of the New York Sun for la2, which will be found published elsewhere. Mr. England, the'publisher, promises that by a liberal use of the means which an abundant prosperity af fords, he will make the Sun "better than ever before." This is saying a great deal, but we do not doubt thatthe because we do not know, that money was attempted to be used in corrupting voters, but almost every other expedient was made use of to wheedle Democrats into his support. Some of the perform ances of his active workers in the north of the county, as they were detailed to us, would make "mighty interesting" reading, but as they signally failed in ef fecting their pnrpose we will let them remain unpublished. No Republican candidate can win a contest in this county on the theory adopted by the Johnstown Tribune, and by Mr. Bar ker's leading supporters in this end of the county that the Democrats are all fools and only know enough to teach them when to come in out of the rain. Perhaps they w ill le wiser in the future. According to a Washington special. Republican members of Congress are pledge will be literally redeemed. The ) preparing a bill for the admission of Da .Sun Is a most remarkable paper, is ed ited with the highest ability and is fear lessly independent in all its discussions of public measures and of public men. The weekly edition of the Sun for the low price of $1 a year, postage paid, is a newspaper peeuliarly worthy of a place in every household in the land. Not the least gratifying result of the late election is the defeat of John Cess- ! na for Judge in the Somerset district. A special dispatch frnm Somerset to the Johnstown Tribune, published on the day after the election, says : "Cessna's majority in Somerset county is three hundred. Baer is elected by less than fifty." Assuming this to be true, we congratulate the people of Somerset and Bedford counties on the narrow escape they made from having their Courts presided over by as perfect a specimen of a political demagogue as this or any other State has ever produed. So far as fUne for a high judicial station is con cerned, Wm. J. Baer and John Cessna were cast in very different moulds. Osly one hundred millions are ask ed for by Dudley, the new Commission er of Pensions, to pay pensions next year, with the prospect of a large in crease thereafter. Bentley, the late Commissioner,made the statement while in office that fraud in pensions amount ed to at least twenty per cent, on the the whole amount paid out by the treas ury, tat members of Congress of both parties were afraid to meet the question as it ought to have been met, and cow ered before the soldier element, or rath- kota as a State. This leads the Buffalo Courier (Deru.) to say that if the condi tion of public opinion were entirely healthy such a scheme would not I thought of. The Republicans have cap tured the Senate by the aid of two Sena tors who were elected by Deren-cratic votes and supported the Democratic Presidential ticket last year. The bare and precarious majority thus obtained they expect to make permanent by se curing two Senators from the T'-rritory which last vear in the election of a Del- ! egate in Congress, showed a large Re I publican majority. It. will be reuiem j tiered that if Colorado had not. lieen ad j mitte J to the Union in ls74 the party in i power tw years later would only have retained its control of the Government , by exteiulingthe Ret urningBoard frauds committed in Lousiana and Florida to another Southern Slate, North Carolina, , where the counting machinerywas in Re publican hands. The question whether i Dakoti ought to be admitted as a State, ! considered on its merits, hardly requires ' discussion. Ttie Terrritory at its census ot last year had not more than 135.U00 inhabitants 20,000 less than Buffalo. But one half of this city, which con tains all the elements of the highest civ ililation, would make a more resectable State than the fluctuating population of a Territory which has only lieen settled within the last seven or eight years. There are certainly precedents for the adir.ission of a Territory in the present condition of Dakota. But likewise there are precedents for election frauds, and, indeed, the scheme in question is noth- i ing but ballot-box stuffing under the j forms of the law. Commenting on this movement, the ! Philadelphia Jiecord (Ind.) says that, the j proposition to eke out the Republican j strength in the Senate of the United j Vates by admitting Dakota into the I Union ought not to find favor in any j quarter. Although a usual party ex- pedient it is a desperate one. No new past week been in New York finishing up his awfully complicated private business, and that moat fortunately for him he lias Grant, Conkling and a host of other stal warts with him assisting to settle up his private affairs. WHAT AMERICA OWES TO THE CATHOLICS. Col. John W. Forney, editor of Progress, ' in an article on the religious commemoration ! in St. Joseph's Catholic church, this city, of j the one hundredth anniversary of the Mir- : render at Yorktown of the British army un- der Lord Cornwallis, says : "All the diplo- : matic history of the period proves the asser- 1 tion that, but for the aid rendered to the cause of America in the Jier-elution by the Catholic ' King of France, Louis the Sixteenth, thisconti- 1 nent would to day be as viuch a BritLth depend- j ency as the Dominion of Canada." All the Protest;! nt powers of the world, headed by ' tireat Britain, were either hostile to the Col- i onies or silent, it was Catholic France that ! lead the way, and saved the American con- i tinent to freedom. Washington, Adams, I Livingston, Moiris, and Franklin, all admit- j ted it and there is a special historic justice in j the gratitude the American people owe to j the two Catholic governments, France and Spain, The descendents of Lafayette, De ! Orasse, Iiochambeau, Steuben. De Kail). ! Luzerne, Kosciusko, and other brave Catho- torney Stone nrnfed for a nolle pros, so far i as the nusoann was concerned, ami airs. ' Love and her daughter. Mrs. McDowell, entered a plea of gnilty in manner and form i as indicted on the three charges. I This morning the mother and daughter I were present to receive the sentence of the ! Court." The mother, who has reached a ! venerable age, was bowed down with griet. i Tier face was wrinkled, her hair almost 1 white, and she was clad in deep black. The ! daughter sat close to her, and clasped the hand of the mother with such earnestness that it was observed by all spectators who were present. The father, who had been relieved from the toils of the law, sat near his wife, and when she gave way to tears wiped his eyes in a nervous way that indi cated deep feeling. ! W. C. Moreland, Esq., attorney for the defendants, made a brief but feeling address to the Court. He said the guilt of the charges hail been admitted, but he asked ! the Court to consider the ago of the mother, j anil the temptations whteh had been held out to the daughter. While the father bad ! been kept in ignorance of what was going ! on, the claim agent at Washington had been j insisting on the mother and daughter filling ' in the blanks he had sent them. They had : done wrong, but they did not seem to have ! had any conception of the wrong they were ; committing. He hoped the Court would be . as lenient as was consistent with justice. I Distilct Attorney Stone said the case was i one of the saddest with which he had ever ! been ccniiected. He alluded to the charges j which had been preferred against the de ; fendants, nnd said that as a plea of guilty I had been entered it was his duty to ak the Court to carry out the Uw. He alluded feelingly to the gray-haired mother, and said that while lit-; was the prosecutor for the Government he would ask that justice would be tempered with merry. Judge Acheson, after the attorneys nan lies who aided the American Colonies to I concluded their remarks, said the rase was conquer peace and libert", should ever be dear in the hearts of the American peopla. Columbus, who discovered America, was a devout Catholic ; Americus Vospueius wasa .a-nuiic ; v sc- ie irama was a auionc, and so was the heroic priest. Las Cassas. It was Catholics who move to the front of destiny and assisted American freedom with their blood and treasure. AFTER THE ELECTION THE SLAL'OHTER. Had Arthur's Cabinet ben made one month ago, Benjamin Harris Brewster would have been Attorney General. One brief month of the adulation of the courtiers of power have effaced all memory that Arthur had of Garfield's policy. It "was the im pulse of Arthur to show some respect for Garfield's policy, but Grant and the leading stalwarUof the party would not allow him to do so. Giant is closer to Arthur than any man except Conkling, and Grant demands a stalwart administration. He commands that the adminisi ration be made boldly stalwart, and that the party be given to understand that Garfield is dead and that his policy is dead with him. He commands an immedi ate and entire stalwart Cabinet which will at once dismiss all the Garfield Cabinet but certainly a most distressing one. That two women, lespectably connected, should en gage in such a crime and carry it out was ' almost bevonu belief. In view of the plea made by counsel and the statement made ; by the District Attorney the court naa con- eluded not to send the defendants to the i penitentiary. The Court might err in this j matter, but the error would be on the side of mercy. The age of one of the defendants . had influenced the Court in imposing the ' sentence, and instead of sending the ron- victed parties to the penitentiary they would . be committed to the Westmoreland county jail. ! The parties wero then each sentenced to the Westmoreland County jail on twoindict ; ments. and on the third were sentenced to I pay a fine of and 100 in addition to the j cost ot prosecution. On the third indict : nient they were each sentenced to pay a fine of $100 ami costs. After the sentence had been announced otli mother and daughter bur-it into tears, and some minutes elapsed before the proceedings were resunjed. i Pittsburg Chronicle of Saturday. The prisoners were taken to the jail at irreensourg on Saturday afternoon where an- Liiuoln, who was a G;ant delegate to the j other sad scene was enacted. It is the gen Chicago Convention, but not admitted. A I though Biewster is a stalwart, he i not stal wart enough for the stalwartism of the day. Arthur is as uncompromising, bitter and ag gressive a stalwart as Grant, but lie i a more adroit politician than Grant, ai:d al though the great gift-taker urges the imrae--diate nomination of Conkling, Beale, Bout weli and others, Arthur will wait until mer the election to begin the work of slaughter ing the Garfield men. Blaine must remain for a time. The reason for the postpone ment of the execution of Blaine to stalwart ize the administration until attei the election is that it would cost the Republicans of Pennsylvania the loss of thousand of votes tor Baily by throwing tnem to Wolfe. eral opinion that the old lady will not out live tier two years imprisonment. nnu s oesire is to get the stalwarts into complete possession of the administration without fatally shocking the Republican Four Men Killed at the Polls. Four white men were killed and two severe ly wounded by negroes on Tuesday last at Marion station. Miss. Tne negroes opened fire on the whites at the polls while the election wa going on. The whites had no arms to defend themselves with and conse quently none of the blacks suffered. One of the men killed was A. T. Harvey, Dem ocrat ic candidate for County Assessor. The Sheriff, with a posse from Meridian, found about a hundred negroes barricaded in the Ar- j dwelling house of their leader. Ed. Vance. 1 he posse were fired upon by negroes as they approached tne house. Another body of armed men from Meridian wnt to th State should lie admitted to the T'nion er the claim agent element, and reckless-j which has not a voting strength sufn ly passed pension laws and supplement I cient to entitle it to a representative in after supplement to them, which must ! the lowtT branch of Congress. be modified, or it will require more mon ey than can be raised under the present revenue laws to meet the expenses. The Demociats elected their State tic ket in New York on Tuesday, with the exception, perhaps, of Secretary of State, and secured a majori'y on joint ballot in the Legislature. The repudiation thievs assisted by President Arthur, appear to bave elected their Governor in Virginia, and will also control the Legislature. This is the worst day's work done against the constitution ami the Union since the tiring of Fort Sumter in the Spring of 18iJl, and covers Virginia and the Republican administration of the General Government, and especially the Republican members of the U. S. Sen. ate, with deep and undying infamy and lisgrace. The results in other States in which election wtre heid require no notice, as no mateiial change fn any of them wau effected. The number of Land Leaguers arres ted and thrown into prison in the tour provinces of Ireland is placed at 244. A novel, but of course ineffective, plan has been adopted in some parts ot the west of that country for the purpose of keep- der oiders from his superiors in office. PiBr'7" JAftier th5, ei,ct',,n t,ie slaughter of ' scene of the disturbance to assist the Sheriff. ; mc uaiuritirm vtm commence. I titseVs EXPOSITION. j There are reasons for believing that there ! will yet he a larg amount of rascality and corruption in the departments atWashingion I unearthed. There will be much truth in Pit j ney's contemplated exposition of complicity , on the part of some of his official superiors In the frauds perpetrated through him on I the Treasury, Pitney is of the small kind that usually get caught, while the bigger j kind break through the net which is spread ' for their entanglement. Pitney is onlv one i of the smaller try. but he will make revela i tions that will he very damaging tu larger rry. ne. asserts tnat all he did was done 1111- Thk representatives of the French government who came to this country about a month ago to attend the centen nial celebration ot the surrender of Gen. Cornwallis at Yorktown, Virginia, on the 19Mi of October, 171, sailed from New York for home on Wednesday last, and the seven descendants of G-n, Steu ben, who came over from Germany for the same purpose, sailed from the same port on yesterday. During their visit they have been the guests of the Repub lic and have been liberally and munifi cently entertained at Washington, Bal timore, Philadelphia, Boston and New Tork, the festivities in their honor clos ing with a grand ball in the last named -city on Monday night. After the cere monies at Yorktown had been conclud ed, Mr. Blaine, Secretary of State, placed the seven Steubens, all of whom are officers in the German army. In charge of bis son, Walter Blaine, who accompanied them on a trip to Cincin nati, St. Louis and Chicago, In each of which cities they were feasted and en tertained in a becoming and generous tyle. In discharging the duty assigned to him young Mr. Blaine most have en countered some severeand embarrassing trials, from the fact that neither of the 8ienbens can speak a word of English, while he himself is as blissfully ignor ant of the German lingo, even in its basest form, "low Dutch," as he is of JtN Inxujnajjt. ?C the Obovtav Indian. ing the "no rent" manifesto letore the I tenants. It takes the form of a prom is r soiy note containing a promise to pay j the ient due on the pay that Parnell ' Davitt and the other imprisoned mem j bers of the League are released, the note to bo signed by the tenants and sent to I landlords, who ot course would repnd i iate any such one-sided arrangement. The decisions of the Land Commission thus far have been wtdl received by the complain that Loid OTlagan, the head, j or Chief Justice of the Court, is harder on them than Mr. Parnell was, and so ; lit-itors in Dublin say that they might ; nearly as well appear for the landlords ' tiefore a branch of the League as tefore ; 0"Hagan and his two associate Commis sioners, it looks as if the Iand act, un der the broad and comprehensive inter pretation given of it by Justice O'Hagan and his colleagues, will be found to pos sess more virtue or relief for the wrongs of the tenants than they were at first taught to expect from it. At all events there seems to be a general disposition on the part of the tenants to give it a chance to work out whatever of good there is in it, which is a most wise nnd eminently prudent conclusion for them to reach, instead of repudiating it in advance. tllrnVt7IIVfI DtO niiAirf.m On taking the oath of office Mr. Arthur I made a soiemn promise that he would be guided by the example and policy of his la mented predecessor, and notwithstanding ; this it will not be two months before not one of the advisers of Garfield will be left in the Cabinet of Arthur. The work of dispersing Garfield's Cabinet and destroying his policy .a i-miiuy I iK-ing uone ov Annur with cir cumspection. Morgan whs intended a a warming pan for Conkling, whose imme diate appointment would have been too se vere a shock to the nervous system of the "Half Breeds." In a few months the pub lic mind will be better prepared for the re ception of Conkling. The "Half Breeds." although they are makinz desnerate effort j to conceal the unpalatable truth from them ; selves, see the purpose of Arthur to sur ; round himseif witu stalwarts who were dn- , feated at Chicago in lHKO. This Is the way , j Arthur is redeeming bis promise on taking ' the oath of office that he would be guided by tne example and policy of bis lamented pred- i j eressor. Before the year is out. there will ! not be one Garfield man left in the Cabinet. I I Thus is Arthur redeeming his promise i ; G. N. S. i I y ifi tins exception the election in that j county passed olT quietly and orderly. A Sheriff's posse, consisting of about one hundred men, surrounded Ed Vance's house , to capture the instigators and perpetrators of ilie murders, ami demanded their surren j der, which was refused. John Vance, aged 22, a son ot Ed. Vance, lidingup, pointed , a gun at the posse and was shot and killed. A. G. Warren, of the posse, was killed in stantly by k shot fired from inside of the house Ed. Vance and the negroes escaped. Several negroes in escaping were shot at i and wounded. Will Vance, aged about .10, a son of E l. Vance, was captured and lodged . in jail. The Sheriff received a slight wound I rr,"n spent bullet. Hardin Jones, of the posse, was slightly wounded. Vance and ; the negroes fought desperately all day. James Redpath ox English Misrule. A large and extremely respectable audience was gathered in Chickering Hall last even ing, wys the New Tortr World of Monday, to hear Mr. KedpatH dewrile the results of his last experiences in Ireland. Mr. Red rath was introduced by .Mr. D. Gallagher President of the Parnell branch of the Land League, undet whose auspices the meeting was held, and received a perfect ovation. He described most forcibly the inmression I produced by an extended tour through Don- egal and the west of Cork, and pictured the desolation and misery prod need bv landlord Ism in the former county, where families av eraging rour and a I.alf in num!er were ted following denial of the charge in the Harrist.urg Patriot of Tuesday last The charge so often made against ex Senator .Wallace that he owed his elec tion to the Senate, to Simon Cameron and his son. having been related by Chas. S. Wolfe in one or perhaps more of his public stieeches. Mr. Wallace dis- Ioses of the matter by publishing the ; and c'ad fr.r a total of a year, and yet miu.rii.-i. hi a rem inree times greater than Griffith's valuation. Herec'ted in feel- II IT furmj mo - 1 . m Cleahfield. Pa., November 7.--The state- Cminty Cork, in the jaSlKsS.,: r. I !h?y 1-culiar.y roc'k'y true. The reverse is the tact. The Demo cracy had a majority of eight in the legisla tnre. I was nominated in the Democratic caucus by one hundred and six votes out of one hundred and twenty-two. An effort was then made to unite the Republicans and a few Democrats on another candidate. Sen ator Rutan was the Cameron leader in this movement and negotiated with my enemies for two days to defeat me and e:ect a bolter ! Mr. Mrtin A. Connolly, a merchant in ! Oil City, Pa., wiites : "I Inherited ill bealtn . from my parents, who were both short-lived. My wife i a sickly little woman, and has suffered considerably. We have had five children, three of whom died in infancy ; the other two, a hoy 4 years of age and a girl . of 7 years, have always been quite puny, : weak and sickly. Some time ago I read a ! medical work that spoke of iron being es- sential to life, that a want of iron in the , blood was the principal cause of ill health. : Shortly afterwards I saw an advertisement j of Brown's Iron Bitters. I determined to try it for mj-self and family. The result has ' far exceeded m greatest anticipation. My ! self, wife and childr-n have all grown , healthy and strong. Sores, aches and pains headaches, indigestion and sleeplessness, ; formerly so common in my familv, trouble i us no more. Every bottle is worth its weight III gold. Ay old man at Hahnstown, a village In Lancaster connty.was murdered a few days ago to procure an insurance on his life. The parties interested in the policy made the man drunk, took him into a hay loft, arrang ed a trap, and then, after he had slept for a time, called him. He staggered upon the trap, fell throngh, and died soon after. The names of the parties are withheld for the present, for the reason that it might defeat the ends of justice in giving t hem to the pub lic now. The Lancaster A'eto Era says it is one of the most deliberate murders that ever took place in that countv, and it seems al most impossible to lelieve that men who en Rage in this business, which has the taint of fraud and murder written all over It want to be considered honest, righteous, and even Christians. or a Republican. This movement failed be cause Senator Strang and fifteen other anti Cameron Republicans preferred my election to that of a bolter and boldly sad ro, William A. Wallace. In the Criminal Court of the District of Columbia Judge Cox on yesterda, af ter full and lengthy argume.it, discharg ed the defendants in the Star route cases on the ground that the crime charged was infamous, and. that" hey could not be proceeded against by information, bit only by indictment;. and barren, during the wholesale evictions ' carried on there bv the authority and by the ' authority and with the help of the English GevernmenL He said he saw a woman who had received a bayonet wound in the breast, ' and quite lately aj old woman and a young girl were bayonetted and are now dead. And this under a woman's reign t Cromwell : massacred the Irish in the name of God ; Victoiia massacres them in the name of pro- : perty. But the men of Ireland were firmlv mited in determination to obtain their I Ashbcrnham, Mass., Jan. 14th, 18S0. I : have neen very sick over two years. They ! all gave me upas past cure. I tried the most I Skillful physicians, but theydid nwt reach the i worr-t part. The lungs and heart would fill ; up every wghthiid distress me, and mv throat I was very ban. I told mv children that I never should die in peace until I had tried Hop Bitters. I ha ve taken too bottles. They , have helped me very much indeed. I am now well. There whs a lot of sick folks here who have seen how they helped me, and they used them and are cured, and feel as thankful as I do that there is so valuable a medicine made. Mrs. Julia G. GcsHrsro. rights, and behind them were thn rrent ma.a of the clergy, who are among the most radi- ' cai n their views, and behind them a greater power still in the women of Ireland. Ire land was the only country in the world where it was an honor to be In jail, and he. thanked God that Parnell. Davitt and the rest had been imprisoned, as their utterances had far more power from the cells than they could have fmm the platform. The race that for centuries has found in every new I defeat but a reason for a new battle could never be crushed and wert bound to triumph fn end. i Thk Irish landlords are ereatly alarmed at the recent decisions of the I?and Court. It rents are to be reduced 30 per cent., the loss to landlords will not be less than 27.0OO -ooo a year. The English landlords are also panic-stricken, knowing that it Is their turn next It is rumored that Mr. Parnell and the other imprisoned members will be released before Parliament meets. A scrk, positive cure for cotireness MAif ai.iw. For sale at the new drug store. EbnsrTirc, Pe. KZWB AND OTHER HOT IX 6ft. Charles Albright was waylaid in LUrria burg early on Saturday morning and robbed of S1600. John Shaub. of Lower Chanceford, York t county, nas a horse 3 year old that la la daily service. David Eby of FI".milton township, Frank lin county, raised KK) bushel of white pota toes on 4Vi acres of ground. The Catholics of Trenton. N. J.,we!eom ed Bishop O'Farrell to his new see on Wed nesday with appropriate ceremonies. Massy Hill, colored, who attempted an outrage on a little girl near Manchester, Tenn., was taken from jail on Saturday ulght and lynched. The late President's fiftieth birthday an niversary falls upon the 19th instant It ia proposed In Cincinnati to hold a seml-oenten-nial observance. John Stackhouse, of Pittsburir, was pre vented by his parents from marrvl.ig Emma Oswald, whom he had ruined. The girl took poison and died. A man was made in an Instant bald headed forever, in Mobile, by the explosion or a firecracker in his hat It waa ih work of his playful son. Nine persons were killed and many oth ers were injured on Wednesday morning by the falling of two houses at the corner of Grand street and South Fifth avenue. New York. A fourteen-year old daughter of David narmon, of Upper Latimore, Adams county, ran a splinter in her foot. A week after lockjaw set in and she died from the effecta last week. Martin Goldwerthy, in Jail at Paris, 1a gan county, Ark., for murder, escaped on Sunday by leaving his mother In his cell and wearing a portion cf her clothing to disguise him as he passed out. "Ah, how weil do I remember it was in the bleak November," when I caught the cold that was wearing me surely and swiftly away ; but I heard of Dr. BuU'iCough Syr up took it, and am well. A few davs ago a three-year-old child was missed at Niles, Mich , and afterasearch was found in an upper room fast asleep in a trunk with the lid closed. It could not pos sibly have lived there much longer. The trial of W. II. Scott, ex-Governor of South Carolina, f r killing Warren O. Drury, at Napoleon, Ohio, last Christmas, resulted on Saturday of a verdict of not guilty. Scott claimed that the shooting was accidental. Charles Hebden, a wealthy farmer liv ing two miles south of Capac, St Clair coun ty, who had been for some time insane, kill ed his three year old son by cutting his throat with a razor, and thn fatally cut his own throat. Five thousand people paid twenty-five cents each admission fee on Sunday to Cale donia Park, Jersey City, to listen to O'Con nor, member of the British Parliament,speak ing in the interest or the Land League of Ireland. Beckie Frame, a white woman In Phila delphia, was so severely beaten bv John Frame, colored, Thursday, thatshe died next day at the Pennsylvania hospital. The pair had been living together as man and wife. Frame is in custody. A woman at Marietta, Ohio, on reading of somebody having committed suicide by means of a towel, remarked that she did not understand how it could be done ; but an hour afterwards she was found choked to death in exactly the same manner. Eddie Smith, &ged onlv eleven vears, stabbed himself with a penknife at Titus ville one night last week in the presence of his boyhood love, a little pirl of his own age, who had slighted him at a birthday party, The wound is serious, but not fatal. When William J. Handy, of Somerset county, Md.. lost his slaves by tne war, he declared that he would never employ hired labor. His farm became a wilderness, and It was a struggle to reach his boose. Last week he was sent to an lnsan asylum. The Boone (Iowa) Standard contradicts a current story that a fund of f.1,000 has been collected for Miss Kate Shelly, the brave young Irish girl who saved a passenger train from destruction on a stormy night. The en tire amount subscribed thus far is f.V0.35. A terrible accident occurred at KeoknV. Iowa, on Friday evening about 7 o'clock. .' The steamer War Eagle, going south, ran t against a span of the Keokuk and Hamilton : bridge, breaking it into fragments. Eight I persons are known to have been drowned. 1 The Portland (Me.) Aaus says that the j late Justice Clifford did leave an elaborate ; paper upon the electoral commission, but that his son, William II. Clifford, has not yet I had time to read it. It is thought it will he published in book form some time In the fu ture. Wm. Forwood and John Ouigly were struck by the limited express train at Clay mont, Delaware county, on Friday. The latter was instantly killed, and the" former mortally wounded. The wagon they were in was torn to atoms and the two horses were killed outright. At Forestville, Chautauqua county, N. Y., Nellie Record eloped Thursday nlg!it with a young man named Dell Dye. The young lady was to have been married next day to her father's partner. Warren Hook er, and cards had teen issued. Ail the par tier moved in the highest circles.; A 1 a year-old girl in Itushford, Alleghe ny county, N. Y., agreed to elope with a hostler. Hie hid in an old chest in the door yard, and when her lover drove up she was ready to go. rnt her ancient grand-mother, wro saw her bide, stepped in and the elope ment wa- indefinitely postponed. Archbishop Croke, of Cashel replying to the address of a branch of the Land League on Friday last, advised tenants to tender fair rent. If refused the fault would not be theirs. It would show that the Irish can, for their country 's sake, endure insults and injuries. He declared that the Government had estab lished a reign of terror. A preliminary report has been made by the Government bank examiner, showing tne actual deficiency in the accounts of the Newark Mechanics' National Bank to be f2,4U.fH)0, which must be made up by as sessments on stockholders and dejxsitors. . The bank examiner estimates that the de- positors will receive from fifty to sixty per cent of their dues, and that the stockhold , ers will lose an amount equal to their stock additional A shocking attempt, which will yet prove partially success) ui, to commit a inur- ; der and suicide, was made on Friday after noon on Sixteenth street, Pittsburg. Law- j rence Kennedy, a glassblower, who lias been ! dissipating for a long period, shot his wife in the back while laboring under the delusion, superinduced by mania a potu, that she was preparing to take his life. He then .shot himself three times, one of the balls passing through his lungs. His recovery is out of question, but his wife will get well. Financial circles around New Yorx were . badly shocked last week by the failure of the Mechanics' Bank of Newark, N. J. The cashier had squandered the funds till the deficiency was over two milliont of dollars, ; neaiiv double the capital of the bank. Sev eral othei failures have resulted from tbe bank failure and more may yet follow. It seems almost impossible that a board of di- j rectors could have allowed matters to reach i such a point, and such directors don't seem j to direct A lake in the rear of Manzanillo, Mexl ' co, hurst its confines last month and poured , its waters into the sea. The lake was full of j alligators and the harbor of sharks. When the monsters met a water battle immediately I bagan and it was waged for several days in : the presence of most of the people of Man ; zanilio. For a long time victory trembled in i the balance, but the sharks finally prevailed ! and took dinner on the last of the routed in ! truders. The inhabitants of Mauzanillo pro nounced it better than a bull-fight j It is learned tha S. S. Cluxton, now nn ' der arrest at Vandalia, Fayetto county. III., j has for some time been making spurious ap j plications to the Governor for requisitions on the Governor of other States for imaginary ' fugitives from justice. This he did by forg t ing the names of county officers, surrepti tiously atilxing their seals to the papers and i getting himself appointed messenger. His returns to the State officers were forged in j the same way. It is not known how much I money he has extracted from the State by I these transactions. A special despatch relates a heroic act of Antoine Freitag, a native of Poland, in sav ing a passenger train on the Lake Shore road near Otis, Ind. On Monday last Freitag and several other section hands were riding on a hand-car, when a special train came upon them suddenly. Thev could all save their lives by jumping, but the alternative might be the wrecking of the train with loss of life. They resolved to take the hand-car from the track, and Frettag volunteered to take the post of extreme danger. Every man's strength was essential to success. They removed the car, saved the train, but Freitag was killed. , Governor Bigelow, of Connecticut, says of a suit of clothes that was made tor i.im at the Atlanta (Ga.) Exposition : -That coat was made in a day. The cotton was grow ing In the morning and I was receiving it in the evening. It was brought to me at Gov. Colquitt's mansion, two miles outside the city of Atlanta. Y ju couldn't tell it from broadcloth in the evening, but of course in the daytime and under close inspection it look? rough and shows ita true character." It has a rourse but not unseemly appearance and is lined with itilk. The vest was made of a sort of Imsket-clotb pattern. It is color less and or the regular receptiou tyle It is backed and liued with au elegant pattern of white brocaded wile. . This One Foot Rut may chance to be of service in many home,! also serve ui if it rccalli the rulct of OAK which arc: ISt-We never offer for sale any Clothina believe will give thorough satisiactica who -vre&r it. rh We stoutly maintain our custom have the largest stock of men's c clothing, to show our custom. Rules 3d- e do not allo'rv our " mislead customers as t. quality or kind of gccc v ese are the VOX day, Ok Atft-xv. e& rf-b V Hat ft trr the TV tj J t; jue Lr' any every see. stick to r alike to e; rich and pc; Oak Hall is still the Largest Clothing House in America, ante salt Hoping to serve you this Fall and Winter Yours truly, Wanamaker &: Brown, OAK HALL, Sixth and Market Sts., Philadelph; t .1 In; th- A Little K-Klc dispatch to St. Louis Jit I publican says that a man named Thomas I Kultz, while getting out lumber in the nioun- I tains some miles from Beiryville, was struck bv a falling tree and fastened to the ground. Fu'tz was sleepine under the tree and was aroused only to find himself imprisoned a-id danerously wounded, with a prospect of a horrible death from starvation unless dissol ution ensued morespeedi! from the wound, The unfortunate man was, however, over taken by a more terribie fate. The tree un der which he was buried caualit fire from the remains of a camp fire started the previoos night and he was burned alive. The body, when discovered by his friends, whim his prolonged absence had alarmed into institu ting search for him, was almost entirely con sumed. While Mrs. Fanny Keefer was ai'tiiur !n her kitcbun Thursday night, at ln Hnrke st., Baltimore, talking with Win. II. ;.!irisk, with whom she hail been living for smiie time, a son of the latter, Wm. II. (Virris'i, Jr., pushed a large musket through the win dow and fired. The weapon was loaded to thmu7Zle with duck shot, two or three hun dred of which lodged in the woman's body and head. The affair was enveloped in mys tery until Monday, when the police arrested the boy on suspicion, and he admitted having done he nhooting. He gave as his reason that since his mother died several years ago his father had been leading a disreputable life. The boy refused to accompany his fath er to the house of the wouuded woman, and went to live with an aunt. Young Grrish says that, being convinced that Mrs. Keefer was living with his father, he determined to kill her. lie added that he was son hat he had not killed bis father also. The boy was held to await the result of Mrs. Keefer' in juries. She is not expected to live. 1 "A Word to ths Wisk is Sufficient." ' An effective and agreeable remedy for the treatment of Catarrh, Hay Fever and Catarr hal Deafness is Ely's Cream Balm. A sure cure. Cream Balm effectually cleanses the nasal passages of catarrhal virus, causing healthy secretions, allays inflammation and irritation protects the membranal linings of the head from additional colds, completely heals the sores and restore the sense of taste and smell Beneficial resnlt.s are realized by a few ap plications. A thorough ,rehtment as direct- ed will cure Catarrh. As a household reme dy for cold In the head it is unequalcd. The Balm is easy to use and agreeable. Sold by druggists at SO cents. On receipt of 50 cents will mail a package. Send for circular with ; full information. i Ely's Crkam Balm Co, Oswego N. Y. i For sale In Ebensburg by all druggists. THET JOINED A ClKCVS. A IltHe RiH'k ciirresjMUiiient of the Louisville CouHt Jour nal relates the following strii-'e stnry : LH Uotober a circus fxhiMled in thi city bc tT a lnre u.Iirne. the 1-e.ipie commit fr'nn ths nrr nnj:r.t co;iDtry lor inl RnJ T:ji c-. tL thr..nic .is un old larmir nir.fd TVa.l ;. who, with lii wife, ron mi l i '! r,t:r, tin. I enrjj.. tmin Searcy ciuntr. oiir KO m:!e wot of drt. t uneii the nhow. The Kirl IT ye.,i ,,n 1 the boy a. nnt they I'trnuit o 'r.i JcteH tjl':ine-i with mil tney wttner.. anJ leci Iei fjen tt.e rtrc.!. Th girl. triuK litr wo'i:d -tan 1 ia the witynf fcer UeplKim, ilonne l Miahhv nia be lonidnit to her brother, an ! n'-C'-i'?.! id ecur:nic a i tun turn with liira without t-eiravloK her idt-n-tity. The rhow weMt ront h trom this p. nnt, takiuir the tWHiu with them. Tbe father n.1 mother el the two were frantic wl'li irriel, cot knottiov whm hx,i become of tlietr children. They roiimined In town fvtral da.vn. neurcliii. lur them evi-rvwlere. bm, belnir unable to hnj them. rc!urn.! "to tl e:r mountain home utterly bewiMere.l i.t it.cir 1 e and the sirtrv In which it w. l;r'.i! 1 1 o- dity 's train from lex;ii;.r'UKht buck ib cImMc-c. who mn sway iut a year o. It ti e iunn month whicn iiave elapaed liicy hve Ira-rrj enoiikh exiorience to lat them Jurinic the remain der ol their live. They were h re.i by the man agement of the how at fi per week, wtl.'ii to llieiu seemed a Inrve nm.nnd took part In the e-.t.ert wnich loUowe 1 the rex'iKr per oriunco?. They traveled throDh the greater pnrt of Tex. the Klltter ar.d tnel ot th bu'n fading awny at avery ftep. Finally, when at ivet u, the raanauer grew weary of tham and et thein adrift. Tl.ey were thnj left without a fr:end and w:i h only $4 in monay. Tbi wai In Ib-cerrbcr latt. Th Rirl bad kept the secret of her ex o weil that no one excpt her brother rook her to be other than a comely youtu. Alone and in a urine cay, tuev were a I ad In lift t uliiriliiin at once, aud t he cni v thliiK which offered employment a britr pU Idk between a velon nnd New Orleans, aud ou it they both Mopped. Their expo-iwnce on roird the brig was antlitnir but t 'ii-.nt, the er-w be In buuterouj and their employer ultcrlv bmtal. When they readied w irlea"ni tbev avnin rn away, forfeiting ail their wage thereby. tbe had contracted tor the rDun.l trip. Here toe !-. was taken ill. and their situation wa hecctn-nlc critical, when the girl encountered aristerot char. Ity to whom fhe told her story. Convinced lual it was true, the sister had the sick boy removed to a charitable Institution, where he w"s nured back to health. She also provided tha iM with gar ments suitable to her sex. nnd succee ld in eiih-t-Ing the interest of a we.il.hr and ch inUbie lsdy of New Orleans in the eiii Vreu to -h au exrent thai the lady lurnished thfn with m .tic. t jesrry them home. an. I a com 'ortm.U- o-fit beside. T he children reo-hed this place w: t:out any troiiole. and will leave t ons tur the old home amid the uiouTit.ilns. where their nrent are no doubt grieving ver their diaieuraiice. and where thev wul be welcomed as harms rln irotn the dead. A mas ha 1 a curious race for life near 3Ietiden, Conn. lie swallowed a large dose of morphine, intending suicide, but quickly changed his mind, and started for tbe nearest physician, who was two miles, away. He felt I he dangerous drowsiness stealing ovel him, and ran with all his might. The exer cise kept him awake, but his mouth becanK r arched, his eyes tibity.and hisstienglh less, Ie stopped to pray, but an instant of delaj warned him that, unless he depended on miraculous help, there was no time to be loft on his knees. lie at length stumbled hit) the doctor's office, and fell senseless on tte floor, but was aaved by energetic treatmert. Experience the BFSTUcrnK. The ccn atant practice most women have in cring for the sick makes them often more skil'.lul than physicians in selecting medicines. The reason why women are everywhere using and recommending Parker's Ginger Tmic is, because they have learned by the best of guides experience that this excellent fim ily medicine speedily overcomes despond ency, periodical headache, indigestion, Iver complaints, pain or weakness in the tack and kidneys, and other troubles peculiar to the sex. Home Journal. See advertisement. At FToekham, in England, the f unertl of Joseph Ashton. who was n years old, took place a few days ago. The deceased wis for a great number of years a travelling tnker in the astern counties, nnd on the roftin plate was engraved a kettel etew pan. and bowl. Until the last few davs lie had never suffered from any illness which kepi him from work, and at the time of his deith be had possession of all his mental poweis. TbASRSOIVISO A5D A TER. Following is the full text of a proclamation issued from the State Department, Washington, on Tu.-s day last : Bytht Prrsidmf of thr Vmtrd Statei of inHrt. A raoct-av ATtO. It has long been the toons custom of our people with thecloung of the yer to I, -ok Lack upon the Mefsings brought to them in the changing coarse ol tbe seasons, and to return solemn thanksgiving to the ail giving Source Irotn whom they Bow' and although at this period, when the falling leaf admonishes tnat the time or our sacred duty Is at haod. onr Matioo still lies in tbe b-dow of the (Treat bereavement and mourning which has Blied onr hearts, still find ns sorrowful In expression toward the od before whom we but lstelv bowed In gnefand supplication, ret tbe conntles bene fits which hare l-een showered upon us during the past twelve months cill tor our f. rvent gratitude and make It hums tht we shou,d rejoice wi'h thankfulness that tne I,rd in His Innuite merer has most signally lavored our country aud our people. I'eace without and prosperity w;tbin have been vouchsafed to is. So nestifeiiee has visited onr shores. The abundant privileges ol freedom which our fore-fathers left ns In their wis dom are silli our Increasing heritage, and If it parts o( our mst domain, some sfflirtlor. ha visit ed our brethren In their torest hones yet even th s calamity has been temj-red and lo a mauuer sane;tned by the generous compassion for the sui rerers which has been called Uoih throughoot the land, for all these things it is meet ihsttne yolce ol the Nation should go np to .od in devout bomage. w I'.ererore. 1. Chester A. Arthur. President ol the I nitel States, do rebommcn 1 that a!! peoo'e observe Thursday, t'.e 14: !i day o N..vemS-. In stant, as a dy or N ultima I thanksgiving ac I frayer. by cea-ing so tar as nsv h iron their see alar labors and meeting In their resn site places ol worship, there to p.lu in ascribing honor and praise to Almighty tod, wto.se goodness t as been so lUHitlleM in onr history and in our lives, aud ot tering earnest prayers that his bounties may con tinue to us aid to our cluldreu. In witness wbereol. 1 hive brcr?M .-t try hand and caused the seal ol the Vuited Mrn to te at Sxed. IKiue at the City of Washington this fonr-h dsv ol November. A. I)., aim of the lude e 1 ence ol the Vultei Stites tte one hmott-d and sixth CBbTKit A . Aktuvk. By the President : ; J. ti. BLaia. Secretary of Stste. ThE SUfN for Nert erTHj s--k - r n-m: re vi-.-i . - n .- Sh'T-.g. as Si- , ... - r . ft.i I krr lev.-i. 1 cm m ti d I tp. - .t : - l'nt nd -;;-. iHi'''- and wonink'nl e-- ' wnr-n-h is r.r Mie tf-vV ' - lort on the bl. ?;.- i:k t-i-k- The St s e' :Sf '-" It . r 'ed rra- v i ' tt;s ca-'erfl'ions w .rd sr. : --" r.s ! -nil. It ti nd- r o k t. uneor.vekti.-nsl wsy h . cm 1 1 ; i ng lo ei e;it o' ! w -t eg or on a"H-.T : - -s- -It-dej enderjre 1 .' " was tt e suees ' Tt-t s: v ' ent c'ihUcc i:it--" e Kverv t-rpo-ta:.t ' ' t . : t-y in the riozt-D v- "' te - Tnr ri. l'i : r - pi't-nn ha been nv- ' r- " ' J'T' (iliHllvtyVt i T . e Tb St si ot jsi will i vf trotb-teil.ntt. and tc?re-t i '- ' Hj- a li'-erai ue oi t: e n. dant rospcrltT aft .") w than ever beVre. We f: V t-nttit.g It into rei, !!., t.: . ttr. porta nee. not bv t'ie fad 'i by Its renl tr.te-es'- to the e : I'rint'r.g V..-i sonar ,,. tleii Wlttllst srs. Vi:fn.o. Worth rvl"-T ' ! We g, t l'e v . h:ii bers in Br .ok'yn or n b i In po''ti-s w have ,.. are sccnUoued to est :. "n be understood. W i :ren and events. That I ' : r Sry' political c. r-"- The week'y M.ii-n e' " c pages t!ie best reattr : An AgrlciHttira' I '. ' foil tnsrket rp. r'. 1 et-ary . scientific nn. ! : Thk W iuiiT si a i ' t-.-l-er lor tbe lartuc s 1 crs ed Whrd-Ms nM ktifsi-' . DAT Srs. ea h TiMT'-r ' ' intcre-ti Mg I te- i-..ir- day. pr.se every i:r.e " inciter enoug'n t r..: a r " finite'v more ynrod h-s e' be., log or 1'fle It onr IJe.a v' wi-st 'f-y-' fs yotl. send Hr l! e t I nr terms s-s? s K ' wt For the daily sr s eight columns, t it'-!"' r cents a month, o- g.."vo s Snnday paper, an e j ' : sr- ntnns.'tlie p-ice ! ' ru-. : resr. pr.f iate j a1 i The Sun liv ' E r ' " ' sei-antf-lv at Sl.2 e l"he pr.ee ot si. s' x eo! omtis, t a a v.-.-lna tlO we ol - - : A '"t- ! ViiV-! ,:,!' Nov. 11. li -e: - V i ' ''. L t-e-wnf . - , ; tv. -r,,i. wea Iroc r:p wbei a fa te., , In C eew haj I Up lalct f tt ndl plfte 1 ip. div i tip: c aid ward - i the Cher Wts year. A exhat radio Blttei that equal 33 eer I: done ft fx aid's. E pec! It wa and d i- Hipl and a n. it T Is wh bOO IT! welco V. Prts, print 1ad!y list A ment i Msajsr we h ' week. M court; en, v . her rl . Arro-i T fore cm town, last to ; -n!p, f to fpat y. Ti truck and thi TI Cffplai eotiBtv nr em Taper 5ty be Fn on sns J J !juf T an yers, e rf Prirrj ) -Ni. Vt. TTnte. J-Tiror i l-'fce ma did tr an no Crrrr! Welch T- cd hea J-"ema Xterra A i Clesrf a rrl; Catholit ear for Te) pi riot rial re.st.cre. rmigia Grir!an Mr. fBterer- Dtstipsia ajd Liver Compi.aiwt Is It not worth the small price of 75 centsto free yourself from every symptom of tloae dis tressing complaints ? If you think call at E. James' Drug Store, Ebenshurg, IV, nnd procure ft buttle of ShilohSVitaiizer. Every bottle lias a printed guarantee on it. Use ac cordingly and if it d ties yon no goo it will coat you "nothing. ' 4-8.-e.o.t.iy.l Sick IIeadachb. Nervous Headier. and Heartache from sour st.mmch are id cured by DK. METTt: DYbPEPUA. PILL ln TatriTT Dts' Tatst.. ve w i; send lr. Ilve's 'eleirote1 Kieetro V.-Uaie H-lt- and oli-er r.bieir.o Appliances on tnil lor thirty .i i to yonng men and older persons who are adl eted with Nervoii!, lKibihtj. I.t V Its I ty . etc.. gnar an teeing speedy reliel and com oleic festorai i.vn of vigor and tnaaheod. ai "r rtt.enma"stn, Nen ralgla. Paralysis. Iirer a id K ln-v dilB-il'ies Ku tnres. and mast other tlis.-i-e-. li u;tin ..,,., -t .ni f,, Avddress V. .ale H.. i .. Marshall, Mtab. (I'M, ly. BrATTY'Ni:i;Aa.":sto,...nj.e' Keds ,.n'v fvv. flanoa$lur Bars Hellisay tnaarewisats Keaay. VWite or c.ill on HaITl. Warnitigton. I. J. IT KtoltiaCh are Id CUled jf wWSa suamlmll . ws Weresw R'S HF.DCFE AND V J ,k-'""" ,"l,k -""l iw""" rrr a ctw. j V i 1 's f st , let s-Ttr a ata- z aw Lrnn. V Ew ToMt;( -A. l? BK!jar73f rr-u iL H d I f, inet,thi W 3 2 M. trapema! One of inr '"" Rt!, a T tr !.-. s pr-i - " la makir l-rwei .! itf'.'.'' to a Courts -.I ri " - Osr! st Ion i" e :. r . . r..t (V, H t'ers The I , , ltn .r-ST-i of I "". " 1 sTa the a e... in f-- ' - 1 fr,i.(-i.( , si- e to ene,! - jv . 1-H t.r.r' ! K ; ,l W " For Se ' 1 i t.-'r- s -;.r---. -KT mil " " -"'r ,rtnr ...,.s. K !'-. i-k) ' L ' "tc s . - f Uenc-a! Tnel"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers