CDENSBURG. PA., FRIDAY, --- - DIC. 23, 1S81. IIokack Grey, now Chief Justice of Massachusetts, was nominated by the Presi'Ient on Monday last to succeed the lato Nathan CUfr.jrd as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the L'nited States. Judge Clifford was a Maine man and a Democrat of the first water. The New England States were fairly entitled to his successor, and if Judge Gray is the man the Boston pa pers say he is, his appointment is a good one. Whoever it was who first suggested Andrew G. Curtin as a fit person to be nominated by the next Democratic State Convention for Judge of the Supreme Court, is a dangerous man, and ought not to be permitted to run at large. Curtin is a man of ability and made a good Governor, but his ability is not of the kind that qualifies a man for high judicial functions. He knows himself better tnan any otner man can possibly know him, and we are glad to learn that he has distinctly forbidden his name to L used in connection with the proposed nomination. If Judge Sharswood de sires a re-nomination no Democrat in the j tion was the most corrupt in the history President Arthur on Friday last nominated to the Sanate Benjamin II. Brewster, of Philadelphia, as Mac Veagh's successor in the office of At torney General. Although not a great lawyer in the full meaning of the word, Brewster will fill the office creditably, and certainly much more so than most of his predecessors since the incumbency of Mr. Evarts during the last eight months of Andrew Johnson's adminis tration. The first time the writer ever saw Brewstar was in 1944, in Reading, at the house of Henry A. Muhlenberg, who was then the Democratic candidate for Governor, and whose sudden death took place only a week after. Brew ster was then a Democrat, or he would tot have been visiting the favorite son of "Old Berks. lie was always a close friend of Simon Cameron Democratic party about the Cameron did: but whether, like him. he disgraced himself by takintj the oath of a Know-Nothing, we are not prepar ed to say. Like Cameron, he was a Grant man and in favor of a third term. j which, probably more than anything else induced Mr. Arthur to select him ior the place he has assigned him. One by one, slowly, but none the less certain ly, the members of the Garfield Cabinet are disappearing and their places filled by friends of the man whose administra- UUU PHILADELPHIA LETTER. THE LATE COLOFEL FORJtKT JOTTINGS CFCVN DIFFERENT TOPICS NO EXTRA 6RSSIOS HE HA A WEAKNESS OF THAT KIND A LIVELY TIME EXPECTED THE GRANT CROWD TO THE FRONT THE ERA OF IN VESTIGATION THB ELECTRIC LIGHT DEATHS OF CENTENARIANS FROZEN FISH. Philadelphia, Dec. 18, 1881. f Special Correspondence of the Fbeexan. Dear Henry The death of John Wein Forney was attended with more general manifestations of sorrow than the death ot any man that has taken place in this city for many years, if indeed there ever was a death in Philadelphia so universally regretted. Upwards of eix thousand people passed thro' the parlor to take a last look at the face of the roan who for nearly half a centurv had occupied a preminent Dosition in th of the country, and when the doors were nnauy closed, in order that the mmn.. be prepared for the grave, there were stiil .i.yU9u,.a uu m e :h ree c see if in g ro obtain ad NEWS AKD OTSBit KOYtPVS. The widow of Abraham Lincoln has lost the use of her eyes. In a street quarrel in New York Sunday morning, Patrick Lvneh killed J-xs. Malier. Two sons of Robert Berth, in Holden, Mass., were drowned on Sundav while skat ing. Fifty-four persons were drowned by the bursting of the dams on the Oran railwav in Algiers. Twelve Catholic priests were ordained on Saturday at Baltimore and as many more at Troy, N. Y. - Gen. Sickles' father, a resident a New Kochelle, N. Y., and over eighty years old, was manied last week. A dog which had been accidentally con fined at Metz fasted thirty-nine davs before he was released, and recovered. Peter Zerbes, of Chicago, aged 55, who was bitten by a Spitz dog seven weeks ago, died of hydrophobia on Sunday. a.i xv-usseiviiie, 310., three prominent mission and take a last lontr nf th , citizens nf Jofforann ,..... mi. j xr American Journalist Nearly every" trade day by a ) trim jumpingihe "track "lu"" proiession and walk in lif iocto VrTl!nfv,,"e whlc,n passed around the seat in an Albany theatre gallerv, fell over casket. The features of the dead journalist the rail, and was killed by the fall. ie same time ! wo a singular life aspect so much so that Thomas Major, of Chicago, whose wife ... . 1 mere was evon a t m nn ftr t,- : i .. n n .1 i. ; i . .1 : .. i i.. j . , ' ... ! witi, iBhiM, til -"c Kcmiti smne : cNiiuunurray, iook poison ana IOI- State ought to interpose an objection to it. ins eminent fitness is not question ed, while his location is a strong argu ment in hie favor. The scramble for office at Washing ton during the last two weeks is repre sented to have been without a parallel. The frightful array of thirsty patriots is made up of Arthur Republicans, Blaine Republicans, Readjuster, or Repudia tion Republicans, from "Ole Virginny," Greenback Republicans, and even some Republicans of the D.ivid Davis inde pendent school. The impression 1ms gone abroad that Arthur represents a new party, that this is a brand new ad ministration, and every hungry office seeking Republican has turned his,, face townrd Washington and swarm through its thoroughfares like pilgrims on the roads to the holy well at Mecca. They re there from the pineries of Maine and the grape-growing valleys of California, a moving mass of begging office-seekers, most of them too lazy to work and all of them intent upon living at the public t xpense. of the country. Folger is Socretarv of ! the Treasury, Frelinghuysen has suc j ceeded Blaine, Brewster takes Mac j Veagh's place, and in a few days some other Grant man will step into the shoes : of James, the Tost master General. The death in this city more sincerely deplored. JOTTINGS UPON DIFFERENT TOPICS. A silk fair is to be held at George's Hall i?uth!r9 from tlle 25th ot January to the 6th of February, which, it is claimed, will be the grandest and most interesting exhibition ever held in this country. A careful examination of the physiogno mies of the Philadelphians who persist in vi olating the law of decency by smoking on the platforms of street cars reveals the fact that they cannot read, or at least do not read the newspapers. Those who have t-arefully and intelligent y read the published reports of the proved ingSOf the Glllteau trial rnr-,f ! Z .Ml" Gateau is a I If Lieutenant Flinner h rooii I graced himself, he discredited his race, and Ins career has not made it easier for ambi tious colored men to get commissions in the Nf VPr wan t liorn Kr.i-.U4. . . . " 7" 7" ' , uAifcuttr prospect ror a time for each of the remaining members ' ulrLl2L!tmMP of of the Cabinet, with the exception per- I up for Mr. llVcock last spring "b Where baps of Lincoln, to fold his tent and tiS bVhiVi1'6 cup the ,!P-"-like the Arab silently steal awav. will of gS Tn IIP8 come around when it suits Mr. Arthur's j methods or purposes to say so. Till tJv11", f Speaker Keifer, the saroas- The tic New oi k San savs ii '. ...... ! Acu.jLintj .wr iiol rti an mierestea in ,, ' ,' , lo so '""avr a place ! o,, mv. .u. , . I Al'e I luladelphia Record remark "Mo, i v.... tuun ,,,, ,u lUK raoinec, nut can i view with calm indifference whatever Mr. Arthur, with the advice of Grant, Conkling fe Co., may see proper to do. By the time, however, thflt he is thro' with the work thpre will go up from the camp of the men who nominated Gar field at Chicago such a bowl of indigna tion and protest as w.is nevpr rfYira heard in the lrnd. j ! s- Since the above was written , the President has nominated Timothy O. Howe, ex-United States Senator from Wisconsin, to be Postmaster Gen- eral. Howe wrote and published a long and strong magazine article in'favor of Grant s re-nommation a short time be- i. week or two after the Xew York j fore the meeting of the Chicaeo Con election, in" November, wo published a statement niade by Joh'i Kelly at a meet ing of the Tammany Hail Association, in which lie challenged any man in Xew York, or elsewlieie, to make good the oft-repeated charge against him, that he bad ever made a coalition with the Re publican leaders of that city to defeat vent ion, and that accounts for the milk in his cocoanut. TnR next Republican State Conven tion, to nominate . candidate for Gov ernor and three other State officers, will be purely a matter of form and not of substance. Boss Cameron and two or certain portions of the Democratic tic- ! t,lreR cf h'9 Principal henchmen in this ket. On last Saturday night a large number of the members of Tammany who have recently rebelled against the "bossism" of Mr. Kelly, held a meeting to perfect a new organization. An ad dress to the Democracy of the city was adopted reviewing his political career "7ng the nine years he lias had con- State, held a conference in Washington week before last and decided that the nomination for Governor should be giv en to Gen. James A. Beaver, of Centre county. As sorn as the news of the re sult of this conference was flashed over the wires, both Beaver and Tom Cooper, of Deleware county, who thinks he ought .:.!. i , "in i n, " t i iistv irvi.uu twin lui Wltll Which lie was wont, tn crroot Ino t: i- nvaH th.m intn , i ' , , . j ana acquaintances. Npvr o J a lamuy or seven persons at Blooming ton, III,, named Lacy, "were badly poisoned by eating canned fruit. They will probably recover. David Barrett, an Allentown grava-dig-ger, is down with a severe attack of small pox, being the second attack of the malady for him. Iienry Lamar, of Muscatine, Iowa, will b 105 years old if he lives until the 20th of Marih. His health is excellent and his spirits good. In Pittsbure, on Friday, Mar Durkin beat Ella Fanning with a potato masher un til she nearly killed her. Too much whisky was the cause of it. Benjamin Lynch drove to the homestead of his divorced wife at Greencastle, Ind., on Monday and was shot and beaten to death by his two stepsons. . A physician at Douds, Iowa, trusted to I his sense of taste in compounding a medicine, i and swallowed a fatal close of gelsemiuin, mistaking it for cocoa. i A son of L. A. Derrick and a son of ' Norman Snell, aged respectively 9 and 13 j years, were drowned on Saturday, in Thomp son's Point, at Toland, Me. I Patrick Feeney, Patrick Carroll and a ; man named Mellway were seriously injured on Saturday at Poughkeepsie by the prema ture explosion ft a rock blast. 1 James 11. Kumbaueb, of Harrisburg, who a year ago was convicted of tampering with the mails while servlne as postal clei k, has : been pardoned by President Arthur. Mr. Charles Sconten, of Burlinctton, Bradford county, was mi.staken for a der ' by a companion a few days ago while hunt- I ine in 6ullivan county and shot through the body, it is thought he will not recover. David Fernal and his son In-law, Frank . Kerby, of Meredith, N. H., are supnosed to have been drowned Ky breaking through the ; ice while fishing on Squaam Lake on Wed nesday week J udge Boss, of Bueks county, has clearly j laid down the law that a tf-;tcher who whips a pupil in violation of the rules adopted ren- , ders himself liable to prosecution for assault ami lottery. , James Ennisand ffm. Williamson were struck by a train on the Beading Baiiroad, , near Pottsville.Saturday.aud instantly killed. Benjamin Gust was also struck, but was not i seriously hurt. The Boston millionaire who recently j died in Philadelphia leaving an estate val- I ued at f 21, 000,000, left $7,000 for charities, j Ho has at least that much before him in the i next world. The danger of the Guiteau jury going to 1 pieres, increases, or if it holds together that , it will disagree, and thus lengthen out th hideous case which has already tried the ja- : tience of the country. ( A correct list of the victims of the Bine ' Theatre tire, at Vienna, Austria, has been j issued bv the police. It five (hp t..t .1 mini- ber of victims as 704. of whom the bodies of 144 have been legally identified. Wiliiam Sindram, recently convicted at New Yoik of tiie murder of Mrs. Catharine Creve, his landlady, by shooting her through IJAVIS Orf.at ttatna i. . .... . . " , imor. inicn ever way he goes he tilts the other party " Mrs. Laugtry has stood a trying ordeal, ! and has now nothing to fear. She has suc- ceeded w giving asuccessful dramatic re pre -I sentatiofa before an audience made up of her j own associate and friends. 1 I KO i;iTRA SESSION. The refusal of Governor llovt tr.au extra session of the Legislature together dur ing the present winter renders it certain that the Senatorial, Representative and Judicial districts of the State will remain as they now are until the meeting of the Legislature in January, 18S3. The refusal ot the Governor to call the extra session will save the people some two hundred thousand dollars. Bv not redistncting the Mate in l82 no real harm will be done, for if the present Congress Should pass an appoitionment bill giviii" I ennsylvania one or two members, they cau be ?lectd as candidates at large, as was done on a fornipr occasion. Therefore no real or substantial harm can be done hv not canity an extra session of the Legislature and by electing Senatois And Bepiesentatives in the present districts next November, but the good win be done of saving the State nearly ! two hundred thousand dollars. j HE HAS A WEAKNESS OF THAT KIND. ; It has long been known that Gen. Logan has been troubled with the weakness of de ' siring to become President, ami it is believed ' by shrewd judges that Logan's real purpose is to retire Grant as a third term candidate j in order to make room for himself for a first i term in 1884. Although Logan failed in the ihbi congress to get the tenate to pass a bill ii. mj; uiioiigu una session, ou the V.rv first oay oi wiucn ne roue, the sa. nol)by !nto -".fil -i aS D inlnm or he would not be cp- . i to be the r-ndidate, although no other ! ful ;ormancy; placing Grant on the retired list of the armv l V'V1 s sentenced on Monday la?t to with full pay, he is determined to put "ft be Imngttl mi 1-el.ruary 10, 182. Il:in.i thn.nnli tliic .1. Mabel MorleV VtlH S Cum t.ci lerl tn a f torn nf her usual daily leaf of walkini a tik?ht roi.e The handsome new station of the New Yoik, Susquehanna and Western Bailroad at Washingtonville, Sussex countv, N. J., was totally destroyed by an exilokioii of giant powder Thursday night. The explo sion is supposed to have been the work of parties antagonistic to the new romriany. Seveial residences in the vicinity of the des troyed building were damaged' bv the ex plosion. A few days ago a very mysterious box was placed in the back yard of the house oc cupied by Scoville, the counsel for Guiteau. It was supposed to contain some explosive, and was not handled for several days, but on Saturday was cautiously opened and found to contain a coil of rope with a noose on its end. It also contained a note saying, "With the compliments of the Garfield and Arthur Club, of Meyersdale, Pa." Aurora, III, is beautifully lighted by a system of six electrical towers made of iron rods and network, each l.V) feet high. These are crowned with electric lamps of 2000-can-dle power each, or equal to 125 gas jets. The cost complete for each tower and apparatus is about $1,000. One electric tower lamn. I fed by soft coal at ?3 per ton, gives a 2000 I candle light at 2 cents per hour a ratio of z'i to .)0 compared to a corresponding use of gaslight. The city of Caldwell, Kansas, was the scene of a terrible shooting affray on Satur day between cowboys and the authorities, in which Michael Meagher, formerly mayor, and George Speer, a gambler, were killed. At last accounts Sheriff Wellington and a posse had gone to the scene, and the cow boys were understood to be surrounded in the timber twelve miles south of Caldwell. There were vague rumors of an engagement in which four citizens and two cowboys had been killed. The story told of Miss Bates, of Scituate, Mass., who died on Wednesday of last week at the age of 88, is interesting. She and her cousin Abbie, still living at the age of 80, hid behind a rock on the beach in the year 1812. i and, with fife and drum, sounded the roll ! call, thus frightening away and putting to : flight several boat-loads of troops vtlui were about Ian. ling from a British man-of-war. The probability of this incident is not its . least charm, and well may it have been told over and over again for nearly seventy years. ! The New Bloomfield Times savs that on ; Thursday last a little child of Mr. Samuel Bentzel, ot that place, seemed fretful and ! had been so the night previous. Towards ; evening Mr. B. took up the child and acci- dentally discovered the blunt end of a sew I ing machine needle sticking out just telow ; the pit of the baby's stomach. lie held the child and his wife pulled out a Grover fc Ba ker sowing machine needle that had gone in j fully two inches. Where the child got the needle is a mystery as they have a Singer ' machine. ! lit. Bev. Bishop McQuaid, of Rochester, N. Y., addressed the people of his diocese on : Sunday last in strong opposition to the Irish , National Land League. He aid the follow I ing of afewpnests with loose consciences did not sanelity the "no-rent" cauie, pointed his people to the position of the Pope as op i posed to secret oi ganizetions, and concluded his address with the sermon of the dav, tell- ; ing his hearers that between the revolution- ' ; ists of the League and all good Cathoiics the lines were to be sharply and determinedly i drawn. ! Mr. J. S. Weidler, of Salunara, recently exhibited in the Lancaster Xiw Era office a i young cockerel which, instead of walking and standing like f lie other niembeis ot . chickendom, stands bolt upright and walks in the seme improper manner. While stand ing he props himself with his tail, the latter i answering the purpose of a third foot. Mr. Weidler has a pullet that stands and walks 1 in the same manner. The cause is of course a deformity, but to see ons of these feather- i ed bipeds strutting hi-oi.md in so singular a fashion is a novel i't. They are of the ' common harnyard variety. i The Denver Tim's says that from twenty to thirty-live mile from Denver, between Cherry creek and Running creek, the Den- ' ver and New Orleans railroad fmces struck i an unusual obstruction, it being nothing less than a buried forest. The trees are all petri fied, ngatized, are of all sizes and lie ; buried at various ilepths, from ten to twenty five feet, which is as deep as any excava- tions were made by tiie workmen. Tliey j came upon thes" iclics of a bv-goTie age in tit lenst half a rloen loi-a'ilies," and have met -wi'.h not a little difltculty on their account. , The trees are very perfect and conld be takn ! out nearly whole if suitable machinery was ! employed. John Wanamaker Will inaugurate on Monday, December 5th, tie Greats- Holiday of Philadelphia, Sale At the Grand Depot. In both the Main Building and the two new annexes, vhen five acres of floor space and galleries will be thrown open to the pui-. the marvelously beautiful exhibition of dry goods, fancy goods, ladies' dresses a-j'C ' furnishings of every' description. ' Vienna, Paris, Berlin and Switzerland have poured in beautiful things for O mas, and the new toy department covering a half-acre lot is Like Fairy Land. iv AJItold' the present stock offers our customers a selection from almost million dollars' worth of goods. The ladies' suits and coats and the Fur Department occupy the new b directly on the corner of Thirteenth and Chestnut. ' The ladies', gents' and children's hosiery-, gloves and gents' furnishin - L- r occupy the three stores (thrown into one) on the west side of Chestnut Street entree"" The Immense Windows on Chestnut Street, and the arcade entrance (with its splendid displays of Christmas things Will be illuminated with Electric Light until ic o'clock every night. Mail orders have our careful attention. We are organized to attend t j tw. hundred letters daily. c 1 rt z , z : 1 . : . t. 1 t,ul U1 l"c m tLii uie , , tl ' Sense of shame n him b wVm . Ia.H9:tKe occurs in relation to i '"" Tr " i .ww 8RU,e utlU!UUU i such doin,. Grant is richer to-d.yF t.ian r. KtllyM public denial, above refer-; StilrtP(1 to a?hinPton a voyage of , Washington, Jackson and Li . . discovery. Cooper says he met Beaver . cjmbim'd. Rud l"s love of to. . i o laruBlv ftvnalunM his follow Ul Mr, rti "Within the past three months, with brag- : l"c "-".oer, ana asKea Lim part trnruienre. when , .f he wa9 ft candklate, and Beaver re- , rrominent Uepuoltean leader of having ! plied that he was about to ask him the deliberately traded oil ten thousand Demo- ,. ,,ciaf,r.r Tf wat finnllv nfreert pratir vot.. arinst the stte eandidates of same question, it was nnauy apreea liiii party, lie (Kelly) vehemently denies the eharee and defies fcny one to prove it ; and vet he knew that at that moment lie w as gaz Lincoln's fortunes i money did not j 1 so :?.T."'y overoaiance his selt-respect, lie would promptly ami peremptorily torbid the I ! further consideration ot Logan's bill. Grant ' j has now no more connection with the army ! j of the United States than a man who never I was in the army ; and, more than that, a ! between these two representative of thfl I T "V '-Ke rnt, who Is worth a million of ; aoiiars, is not a proper peron to be placed ing upon mora than a dozen of his lieuten ants into whose hands he himself had per sonally delivered packages of "republican State "tickets with instructions to secretly work them out of the Tammany boxes on the ihen approaching election day instruc tions so disloyal that in many instances they were disregarded." This charge is specific enough, and all that is now wanted to fasten it on Kelly, or to relieve him from it, is the sworn statements of "more than a dozen of his lieutenants,'- into whose hands lie is charged with having "personally deliv ered packages of Republican frtate tic kets, with instructions to secretly work them out of the Tammany boxes" on election day. These "lieutenants'" are of cour.ce known to the men who issued the address, and it would be mighty in teresting reading to the Democracy of the country to know what they have to Bay about John Kelly's "insti actions" to them. machine," so Cooper says, that Beaver was to be regarded as the candidate. Cooper then called on Cameron and the other Senator from this State, Mitchell, and also on old Simon Cameron, who was in the city, and informed them of what had taken place between him and Beaver, to which they all cordially as- sented. This Is the way, the simple 1 plan, by which the next Republican candidate for Governor has been ground out by the Cameron machine, and the edict has gone fourth that Beaver, one of its most, abject slaves, is the man, and it will be obeyed by every Re publi can in the State who hasn't the courage to think and act for himself. How handy a thing it is for a party to have a "boss," and what an immense amount of preliminary work it saves candidates liquor law of Kansas went into opera tion. Governor St. John, of that State, In various public addresses, as well as in interviews with newspaper reporters, has declared that the law was satisfac tory to the ptople of the State that it was fully realizing the most sanguine expectations of its friends, and special ly of himseif. And jet this same Gov. ernor has issued a proclamation which not only declares that thfro exists in the cities of Atcli inson,Topeka, Leaven worth, 'Wyandotte and Dodge City a combination engaged in vioiating the law, but also offering high rewards for the arrest and conviction of the offend ers. In addition to this, it is announced that St. John is about to visit the East ern States for the purpose of raising a fund of fifty thousand dollars, to be ex pended in enforcing the provision of the jaw, which amounts to an open confes sion that instead of being the grand suc cess he has been in the habit of claim upon the retired list. The cenerous irifts of the peonle have made Grant pecuniarly inde pendent for all time to come, and no Demo crat worthy of the name would aid Logan in his scheme to make himself President. A LIVELY TIME EXPECTED. A lively time is expected in the Democratic ranks over the choice of delegates to the State Convention. Some of the friends of City Controller Pattison are working hard to get him the delegates from this city for Gov ernor. Numerous Philadelphians, however, think that lie had better remain where he Is. Llence his candidacy will b opposed by many of the most prominent Democrats in the city. lie is not ths choice of the Demo cratic ranks of this city by any means. THE ORAST CROWD TO THE FRONT. Grant, Babcock. Belknap & Co. are in spired with the effort being made to launch a carpet-bag government in Mississippi. Mosen, Patterson, and the rest of the fugi tive carpet-hag plunderers, are plucking up courage with tha conviction that there are years of good stealing in the Southern States yet. All the old Grant regime thieves have a lively hope of spoiis in the future under the sdministration of the martyred Garfield's successor. The attempt to 6et up a rump government in Mississippi, to be sustained J . 1 1 1 T ' 1 1 1 k an offset to this Cameron programme, , ' " ".TIEV ' ei!L" "L" i rr.in rT t ho I nm rv if. . j, ,, , , ...... , and their friends in advance of the Evkr since the iron-clad prohibitory 1 . . , ... i meetinrr of the State Convention ? As ! T, D. McKee, chairman of the Commit- 1 tee which conducted the olfe cam . paic;n, has issued a call requesting the : Independent Republicans to send dele j gates from each county to a State con . ference to be held in Philadelphia, Jan ' uary 12th, to consider the propriety of ; nominating a full State ticket, and also ; to consider other matters looking to the ! overthrow of "Boss rule." Beaver, as j well as Cameron, who has invented him, ; will have a hard road to travel, unless j nough Democrats come to Beaver's aid ! r rid elect him, as they elected Bailey in i November over Xobie, and it is by no ' means a too violent piesumption that : they won't do so. again with music by the lull band THE ERA OF IK VESTIOATIOX. The revelations in the Tax Office investi gation confirm what was first stated. The investigation of the Alms House has begun, and the only apprehension felt is on account of the Guardians of the Poor having employ ed able and astute lawyers, who act as if they intend to take charge of the case. In the inquiry into the management of the Gas Trust, the Judges have set it aside bv a mere to the pole of a circHs tent at Athens, Texas, thou-h she declared she wa; dizzy from illne. Sl!!anii was killed. The jury in the case of Edward Sanders, on trial for the murder of Mary Seymour in Lancaster last Oetolter, hav rendered a ver dict of guilty of murder in the second degree. Thev had been out fourteen hours. Wrn. F. Weld, the Boston twenty-one millionaire who died in Philadelphia the other day, left his four grandchildren one of them nine years old three millions apiece, his wife $20,000 a year and t." each of his sons naif a million. The Pennsylvania Hai.road Companv i will, as usual, sell reduced rate round-trip tickets, for the benefit of those desiring to : make excursions during the Christmas holi- ! days. The full particulars mav be had at i the ticket offices of the Company. j The components of Dr. liull's Cough i Syrup are daily prescribed bv the ablest phy- sicians, whose success is due to the specific j influence of these components. Dr. Bull's ' Cough Syrup, skillfully prepared for imine- i diate use, is for sale by all drujieists. j In Chesterfield, S.C., on Saturday niglit ' Adam I). Wilson was shot and instnnt.lv kill- ! i ed while at supper, surrounded bv bis fam- i ; ily. Wilson had recently been prosecuted , for violating the internal" revenue Uws and : j had been a witness for the Government in a '. similar case. i ' II. H. Bruns, a lumber dealer, was shot i j and instantly killed on Monday by August j 1 Koors. hig biother-in-law, both of Coving- i ton, Ky. Bruns' wife brought suit for di- j ! vorce some lime ago, and the matter set up ' j in Bruns' answer was by Koors considered 1 ; offensive. Koors is in custody. There is a superstition among rennsyl- ' yania coal miners that if an person whistles 1 I in a mine some disaster is sure to follow, i The theory is that whistling drives away the j good luck spirit, leaving the miners to the j I mercy of spirits of evil. A whistler was i 1 f I 1, 1. , I : T - 1 : I imciv iin'iiuru in n jjncKHwauiiti iiime. i At Harbor Springs, near Tetoskey, I Mich., August Alberts had been making ; shingles, and left a pile of shavings in the house which he occupied, and where he did i bis work. While he and his wife were absent from the house, two children in some way j set fire to the shavings, and were burned up, j together with the house. The United Ireland, the organ of the i Land League, just suppressed hi Ireland, will hereafter be issued in England, and the : types and machinery of the paper have been sent from Dublin to London. Bv the time P.lkikd Ai.ive. While James Cotter was ciigait'cr a ditch trom Kistler s tannery to the river through Fifth street, in Lock ILtven last Friday afternoon, and while at work alone in the tteii' h, a fall of earth came in upon him. lie was in a standing position, and the earth covered him half wav unto his shoulders. The poor man begged for'help for some one to come down and rescue him from a living grave. A htrap was put nnd?r bis arms, ami efforts were made to pull him out. It was of no use the earth had settled tightiv around hiiu an.l his body could not be removed. A young man named El mer O'Neill was the only person who was willing to venture to his relief. After digg ing a short time, a second fall of eaith came in complefeij covei ing poor Cotter, and par tially burying O'Neill. The attention of the workmen was now directed to the relief of O'Neill, who had so heroically descended in the dangerous place t save a fellow-being at a great risk to his own life. Luckily he was seon gotten out and driven home, where it was discovered that he was onlv slightly injured. The work of hunting for Cotter now commenced in earnest, although no hopes of finding him alive were entertained. His remains were found a'oout 9 o'clock at night, badly bruised .with a c.ieh in the body under the ihouUl:v. Cotter was about 50 years ot age. Grand Depot, John Wanamaker, Thirteenth, Market and Chestnut Sts. Philadelphia, rrj, TFKK1AKE EXPLOSION. FOT.lt CHILDREN INSTANTLY DYNAMITE. KILLED BY A Won dk it Fir i. Tiili.. V en- l.f tiie Phi!;o lei pl.M Tim if. 1 ;", !!.' ton. N .L, under date ol the 1VI'. sti a:i;e s!'i y ef a n ;i;t.: 1 r. c wi i-h has ('. r !'. ; klnu !i to - ,-.! tlier uniTii A r u ii-t'. r. Th W ! rtti--! w t ' . v. ; Won :er!;i! ' lie - .1. - t tr ill c I a. I l;i- iu-;ul r- :. .. ;e- ..i;i;l .! c !,') t:e -I - v,-'t- -I -vi-Ml y.-.r- I:: I" n n.l-i.ll.i; r ;t-,i-r wiiem l.na a I.-1 :. It i - a n;.i; '.i.- tr m l H - n; i Kc- n e y - 1 ii.t. j l.- -iiiir. Tii l.i-miT in-T'.-.-i ii i:r-; wL,:..- . : - I'io tr:ii; (! i-x i.vr tie in t;nTa ; i-jr.v 'n lei-t-!iit-er l-7v A.I tt:: ..U.cr tr-e. . . . -t i,f'-l v :iire f iH-c.i.-. w--r-- rntr- !y t-a:e. wi.ilt- td.y rrve l-:il net. t-i a i ;'n r:i i. ( e -. l---t u '-iiu!-- !i--ir. Tl.er i r- mi .lri.1 ui;-'tTi.-:li ti n-l tm- U-a o;- t !i e I r-i Pihra w.-r.- a i ! ti.-'-n . It w -i with rr.-tit (Lrliuity th-it l-nl e.nml I t ;.-i.!iii ir..in the twtir to v!iii-h it ta.-TC! -i. Hii.l :i stri-t-r-. 7r. whi- ti wa- I-1 'Wir.L' :-t T Is . 1 1 itrC . ha t n-. t-fl e. t n jtuli the Si- at.ai'-!e! " ti: -1 . v ri-i at tlif tl.-':iotPOi!'in fiat hi- f ? a!! '"-nt 11. e 't, hi- "Yield Not to Misfop.tune. (iire Ely's Cream U:iliii a thorough trial if you would be cute-1 of Catarrh, Hay Fever, Catarrhal Deafness, or quickly relieved of eolds in the head. Cieam Palm effectually cleanses the nasal passages of catarrhal virus, causing healthy secretions, allays inflammation and iiritation protects the menibraiial linings of tiie head troin additional colds, completely heals the sores and restores the seiir-e of ta.-t-; and smell. Beneficial results are realized by a few applications. A thorough treatment as directed will cure Catarrh, Hay Fever, etc. The Balm is easy to use and agreeable. Sold by druggists at 00 cents. On receipt of 50 cents will mall a package. Send for circu lar with full information. Ely's Cream Halm Co., Owego, N. Y. For sale in Ebensburg, by all druggists. on iinaiuc uv aiiine i ... i . . . ... . , . - . , technicality, the power of the City Solicitor "'" ""V r. l"rouK" wun ine insn nusi ml t he Prim r,3 r .i..u.Kii j m ihiuks lie mil in has been taken awav, and the criminals are screened by the statute of limitation. Judges are merely men subject to passions, and their decisions are such at times as to sug gest that their election miclit with nronrietv be withd.awn from partisan influence. Per- j 'y doomed to a lingering death by consump- be qualified for a job under the Czar in Poland. Samuel P. Libby, a wealthy young man of Boston, lately committed suicide, after being told oy the doctors that he was certain- TnoMAs.T. IiAiifJF.Tt. Esq., a leading and well-known Philadelphia Democrat, and a prominent member of the liar or that city, died on yesterday week, in the forty-ninth year of his age. He occas ionally visited this place on business, beinz the owner of some lands in Reade township, imd as he was a prompt-pay-in? subscriber, and always called at our oflice when be visited this section, we ing for it, it is a complete and dismal became quite well acquainted with him failure. If there was any doutt on this subject from the action of Gov. St. John himself it lias been removed b Charles TJobinson, who went to Kansas from Massachusetts, became its first Gover nor after its admission as a State, and who has always been a htrong advocate of the cause of temperance. His views as to the practical effect t,f the law are entirely at variance with the public ut terances of Gov. St. John previous to the issuing of his proclamation. In a letter to some of hi old friends in Mas sachusetts ex-Governor Robinson asserts that there is more liquor drank in Kan Fas now than at any time previous to the passing of the prohibitory amend ment, and he even goes so far as to warn the friends of temperance against con tributing to the anti-liquor fund pro- ' iiosed to be raised by St. John, heliev- ! Guiteal's trial is still in progress and ing as he says that the money would be ; nnt come to an end in much less than souandered for if A if i r?i I Tin rrviCfta nrwl i n i ten davs or two weeks. His insolence to Keeping up a ieei;ng of excitement thro'- lli" tate that ouht not. tn hp snf- and formed a high appreciation of his character as a genialhigh toned gentle- ,; man. May he rest in pace. The Phil adelphia liecord of Friday last pays the 1 following just and eloquent tribute tohis memory : ; The sad duty i required of The Record this morning to announce the death of Thos. j J. Brirger. Our relations with him were of t the closest. In many ways we knew him, ' and in all he proved himself a eood and a true ; man one wi'.h the kindest of hearts and : overflowing with tha instincts and attributes , of a gentleman. He wat not without faults, ! as he was not without enemies; his human!- j ty made both. Those who knew him knew i how much he deserved and how little here- ceived. In the small circle of which he was the centre there Is no one to fill his place. , In this hour of bereavement the recollection j of his many good qualities will be to his fam- j ily and hi friends a consolation greater than earthly possessions can give an earnest of the better life. haps it is good for the order of society that the decisions of the Court are received as , law. . I THE ELECTRIC LIGHT. ! Chestnut street at night is not as light as I day, but is lighter than it ever was before. The electric light on Chestnut street is fairly ! satisfactory now, but after awhile the ill u- j mi nation will be eveu more brilliant. As it ! is, everybody prefers the new light to the gas light, and there is no doubt about the I new system being extended throughout the , city. DEATHS OF CENTENARIANS. Last week three citizens of Philadelphia ! died in the one hundredth year of their age, I and this week the death of Mrs. Rachel Ma- j horn is announced at the age of 100 years, 8 ! months and 20 days. Prior to her death there were four generations residing in the same house in which she died. Three chil dren, twenty grandchildren and twenty three great-grandchildren survive the old lady. FROZEN FISH. Frozen shad, salmon, and othe varieties of fish, are now being freely offered in the Phil adelphia markets. A large sized shad can be had for sixty cents and a roe shad for a dollar. The "frozen" fish are almost as good as when "fresh." By this recently ap plied process of freezing fish there need be no longer any stated fish season. G. N. S. . . - . POVERTT AND I I STRIPS. That poverty which produces the greatest distress is not of the purse, but of the blood. Deprived of its richness it becomes scant and watery, a condition termed anemia in medi cal writings. Given this condition, and scro- tlon. He put his affairs in admirable order, and left a ietter in which he calmly justified the act on the ground that it would save him a great deal of suffering and his family a great deal of care and scrrow. On Suuday evening two women, mother and daughter, nan.e Jackson, attempted to cross a railroad bridge near Hanlin's Station, Washington county. The daughter fell, and the mother was in the act of help ing her np when a train struck them, in stantly killing both. Their bodies were hor ribly mangled, pieces of flesh and clothing being strewn over the track for neariy half a mile. Dr. Isaac I. nayes, the Arctic explorer, who died suddenly in New York on Saturday morning, was aged 50 and was born in Ches ter county. He accompanied Dr. Kane to the polar regions in lS53-5."i and himself set out to find the open sea in 18t0; he was a sur geon in the army, went to Greenland in lStfO, and besides writing a number of books on his travels served in the New York Legisla ture 1876-1880. The jury in the case of L'riah Moyer, who was tried at Middleburg, Snvder coun ty, last week for complicity in the murder of the old Kintzler couple on December 8th, 1877, came into court late on Friday nicht, after being out six hours and a half, with n verdict of murder in the first degree. Rea sons for a new trial were filed. The verdict gives general satisfaction, as there was no room for doubt as to Mover's guilt. In a family quarrel" at Eastbrook, five miles from New Castle, Pa., on Monday evening, Wm. Alexander shot his son in the head and his wife in the arm. Neither were fatally wounded, but the son in return struck his father a fearful blow on the head with a gun stock, crushing his skull and TERRIKLE EXPLOSION IN AN ENGLISH Coal Mink. An explosion occurred about noon on Monday lar-t in a colliery at Boilon, Eng., and the first supposition was that 180 persons had perished, as 2u0 descended into the pit that morning, but the latest news is that only ;S4 were killed and at; injured. The explosion occurred in the Orrell pit, which was considered one of the safest in Lanca shire, as neither gunpowder was used for blasting nor furnaces for ventilation. The Arley pit, which is 150 feet below the Orrell, was affected by the explosion in the latter, and for a time it was feared that many of the miners in the Arley pit had been suffocated. This apprehension" was subsequently reliev ed, however, by the rescue ot the entire par ty, 150 in number, some of whom, employed in the upper seam, were seriously burned. f n Ions swellings and sores, general and ner- j making a hole out of which the brains oozed. Oltl III fered t exist. Here is a direct arraicn ment of the efficiency of the Kansas e.x perniHiil in prohibitory legislation, tn ad- by a coMMtent judge and war rants the conclusion that like similar ex periments in other States it has resulted in ')tii!cuous failure. the court, counsel and witnesses continues to be same as from the first day of the trial. It is an old saying that a man who acts as his own lawyer, has a fool for his client, and as fJnlteau has been playing that role we re gard his convictior. as a foregone conclusion. Some of the London papers think that his outrageous conduct is attributable to the fact that our judges and lawyers do not wear wigs and gowns in conrt. This, however, is m-elv one of John Bull's fancies. tniia alii ! i t v Istau rf floel ami arinutitA weak lungs, throat disease, spitting of blood and consumption are among the common re sults. It you are a sufferer from thin, poor blood employ Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery," which enriches the blood and cures these grave affections. Is more nu tritive than cod liver oil, and is harmless to any condition of the system, yet powerful to cure. By druggists. MA.r. niCKs, convicted of murder, will be hung at Covington, Ky., Jan. 27. His death was expected every moment. Both mother and son were arrested. Next to being a stalwart, the narris burg Patriot thinks that the best qualifica tion for office under Arthur is that of a good fisherman. Thomas C. Acton, who has been appointed Assistant Treasurer in New Vork, in place of Hiilhouse, "is a stalwart of the stalwarts, and an indefatigable deep sea fisherman, as well as a skillful angler lor trout." These are the accomplishments that brought him into intimate relations with the new President. New Bloomfield, Miss., Jan. 2, 1830. I : wish to say to you that 1 have been suffer- ing for the la.-t rive years with a severe itch j ing all over. 1 have heard of Hop Bttters and have tried it. 1 have used up four bot , ties, and it has done me more good than all i the doctors and medicines that they could use on or with me. 1 am old aud poor but wish i to bless you tor such a relief by vou ,medi . cine and from the torment:of the doctors. I ! have had fifteen doctors !. me. One gave I me. seven ounces of solut .uu of arsenic : an- : other took tour quarts ot blood from me. i All thev could tell was that it was skin sick ness. Now, after these four bottles of your ; medicine, my skin is well, clean and smooth a ever. Henry Kkoche. I Kenzei. Felix, a German carpenter, of . New York ciy, aad for months a confirmed I invalid, hardly able to stir from bis bed, beat bis wife's brains out with a mallet on i Monday morning, and then took his own life by cutting his throat and afterward hanging. ! Both were dead when found by the police. The couple had not been married a year, and j in a lew weeks Mrs. Felix would have be come a mother. Monday morning Mrs. i Felix visited the police station, stating that her husband was sick, and asked that lie be taken to the hospital. A sick wagon was . sent for him, but before it arrived Kenzel had killed his wife and taken his own life. ' Jealousy. The RaMinrnn nan Remt friend. Mr. C. L. Oudesluys, a leading Importer of Baltimore, has stated that nothing has done his dyspepsia, indigestion, etc., so much good as that most wonderful of all tonic and reviving medicines Brown's Iron Bitters. Just think of it : at a super the oth er night, although a dyspeptic, he says he ate at 12 o'clock, fried oysters, c'ticken salad and ice cream, after which, taking a dose of Iron Bitters, he rever spent a more pleasant night, with no dyspeptic symptoms in the merning. About half-past five o'clock this morning, says the Huntingdon Semi- ll'vAty AV of Monday, an explosion of ciuut powder (dyna mite) oecurred at the house of a miner named Joseph Ingram, who resided in the suburbs of Mount Union, this county, by which he and his wife weie seriously Injured and four of his five children were lnstui.tly killed. A few days since Ingram puichased a box containing twenty sticks of dynamite, and placed the box in the second story of his residence. Tiie powder froze, and before going to work this morning he foolishly t-wk ten of the explosives and placed them in the oven of the cooking stove to thaw them. His wife was busily preparing the breakfast, and it is thoughtlhis children were standing near the stove warming themselves when the dynamite exploded with a terrible result. The two-story house was completely demol ished, two of the youngest rhildien were blown to the rear of the building a consider able distance and instantly killed ; his wife and oldest dauchter were blown to the front of the building, and Ingram was found in the cellar, together with two of his children, both of whom were kiiled. The bodies of the four children, two boys and two giris, one a babe of clever, months, were featfullv mutilated, and was a sicken ing sight to behold the little forms lying be side the ruins of their former home, their heads battered beyond recognition. Ingram was extricated trom the ruins and conveyed to a neighbor's house. His rijtit arm was shattered, and his face and body badly cut. He was conscious and related how the acci dent happened. The real extent of his in juries is not known, but it is thought he may recover. His wife was struck in the breast by a fragment of the stove uml bled proluse'.y, it is nenevea sue m suivne. The oldest daughter, ai:-' I about twelve! years, was the only one of the inmates that j escaped serious injury. Her riht leg was j bmised. but as soon as fhe recovered from the shock of the exnlo-ion she ran to her i cn-t in tiie imie i-y tins .cri-ctu:i grandmother's house, a short distance away, ! ,e ,r and told the sad story of w hat had occurred. Ingram's age is abont 4." jears, and he has been employed in digging ore tor Mr. John : Whitehead." It seems to have been his habit, 1 is it is said to be of other miners, to thaw the powder by placing it in the oven of a stove, notwithstanding instructions snd 1 warnings to the contrary, and the fearful catastrophe bv which four of the children were sacrificed, was the result ot careless ness. An inquest upon the bodies of the four children was held by 'Squire Mcintosh, nut ' a verdict has not been rendered at this writing- The bodies were placed in the charge i of Mr. Harmon, Steward of the AItjs House, 1 and will be buried to-moirow. I u.il'-nt i'u '! :i t T- t! is r.ir eai i i ii :i t t i IT "I til- !; v UiiU t ii ml H.;' c""U rh.ir. Hf v-fi f:"ine irrcitly j.n7lei art ! ret nrnI frt-r:.l I iy- i:if-r v .Tti u rV--ry tp!n livlii in Tt'o vicinity, j h y r-in t- tnprk several ot the loaves . n cf ' w I- ti T hey reimi i d "r. i h. y were. '1 lifv iii'o re-"!1'-,',! to k"-j H..- !'pn" eret ntvl w r- ri it- .r n!i';i - rmj. rtf! t hy t . W i-f ii A i Ti i p. i :i f I the ) which tn-v li;t I !n:;k''. w. re i:-t krr-n uix-i i n i ii i Vi-nihT. rin-1 th1 Irt" 't-t: wit- t a ?!' i ill the len-t I y The s.-vtTiiJ i.I tiie v. i . t!u j rtli 1 the many t rMy 1 !n-t. The h:i"k va-tiij'i e.l every wp( k nn ! h ! Um a f.l.'Tt:f-il M'l ; !y M .n; fp-'m:;) h tt tTnier ntnl ih nuii -rer - 'am;! e- :n fyr:i all winter Ionic. The ;i'in hh- n trie-1 i-vi-r Mtice, not n lif hn hi Men rn the hcT t.t thir .) iei inv the ilny th1 tree wi ntw"i . ani The lias Il'iw-:! ;T.th The .;!:, o r'yar'.'v nril iT"Tu-hn. A fnr ;i ertti he n i-ert ;u r - i there i tn e:i:i-c f-r the ii)yl"n,!i vitaiitv f that l.nr: icn I t iiia('le There ;s liMhinif ;n the i r si!'-?i; f TftitlT cn-wth Ttmre avaihiMe or ni'ik' th-- tror.k nnl tT.meho hotter hie to rtri'l the !-tor!ii nr..1 c 'hi wenrhr. A numher r-T ieoj!e Imve httely vi-n'-! the ciir'nity. hut em ti one ct inc jiwuy j erctlv tnysT itie.I. At the i rirut ture nt ftiittier tre in "m i n. w t Mi ! hi ev-i it ioti of stin-i out hie-tk I! the w)' evertl verren-J roar the ic it n n ! the t'-'ink- nnl brunch frit utul Itihivg Haw J bs s.cs it rut 1'?miJ LEAD POISONIfiC. rt IC: i - h. i a ! i hf..,..i r . H'-aU! t-re. k fr-.111 the luiiil 1 1 t tit. e i . : 1 1 - - i i : - ; i ir !-:-. an I Ie i!.:.:i ti.- nri !,( t t (. u I ii.:ir.i K f-.-t- r uii.n l l J 14 i -i r I i ' H . A.t-iu.v. V, n )., t I-nvi:-!K ro the irii.T-! m. -I H-' lj.' W..-.T .f--:'r rlA!l-i; .. CI7CATEST ON CAR" -h n 1 !tA 'T 1 r- 'i-.--! I ' -eH K NT t: psoniAsis. 11 r. r.,-,o;,. I -q . H. i f .r,?-,. i-r I.itrMi-. ..t r.ii l.y the 'n l- fit a "t : I. in a an I "t rii m,,ct Ti.n !t r'til ci -r I'fi'-re a 'i--i" i-f t! Tri!t. !' :i ;nr!..J m : pi S r 1 r.ti'l l-ni -. This niai-h- i-i t-ri. e--ti-il from th .lust wl.v it i hi it Is 1m tn-V-Mi-r? :ri-n the r- in :tu r;- u.'-l s;...t . Hn-nii-t nrr-.UTti1t'tl hy r---k. fi-i ttie ini;i-natt.v i,t aU T I i.-onit-f-r t- x hunt y irn t-n ma- A N't.w rnsTM, Kf.i;i i ation l'.ti ativ TO N'FWSPArKR MTnXMK.NTS. A' titlC I. M. 'lineral Hatton has authorized tiie fol lowing rulitis! : Nu FU.ploiiiPiit rr-n'ninlne iinv a.Jvertisomi-Tit intfvtT can l-e alloncil in tue mails :it the i-ti 1 rata unicr- me iut-iiftier nmkes ai-1-ivii -ls.- that thi uma rat-B nre -ai.l tii him f ir the ,!v.-r tisin-iit -oritiine l in tin- siit-i-lemei t as for thru in t he body o! the paj.er itnelf. l'ub isl.er delr nif to fnj out sui.jilen:tnt ... u, tile with thtj t.ni oiHy'er the h li-iwiti arh-l .T.t: '.The unli-rsiirne-1. i-ubli-hf r ot the hereby make? imih mat nit!nr he nor anv other '-r. clt-rk. aui-iit t.r einitlr.v witiiir. miwie.lae, mil Fi-n.1 -r rnu? nr pi'rnilt to l-e tent i.r-i,- mrnucn ine man? at the ?r.md c'.at (pound) rate ...... -i.-r.,.,. ui c miainmif niiv advertiFi-ment' Thatevi r. esi-ent fuch aih-i-nu,-:iiini. .. n.i.i ANSWBR THIS QrEeTlON. WllV do SO ' '"I" at the iuie rte hi tliose in tin- tipdr ol the many people we fee around ns seem to pre- i'Hi'-r SALT RHEUM. lli' fo l ave p-.- - ir -Sa't Ki'tvain run b--!'!.-- i'- ' f - yt-iir-. u L'i -t:re i t : ' . "' ltr rii ii y i;d en x-'f.A a- ! tertia. 1 v. Mr Wsi. I'm lis CUTICURA nl t-iTh vi! Smr f-f: h S"L"KNT ir.!lTra:.v W ,j ;.. ci" of H-m-i-. :-. m a t i: t- , l'ru-o i nM k.. tin ; ' ec. -1 . TTl. VPS I. !.-.- HMM TlOt'Ki SnAT, l iT' r. Itej.f.t. w U KS a. !' t i 7 : .v.. f ' fer to suffer and be made miserable by indi pestion, eonftipation, dizziness, loss of appe tite, coming up of food, yellow skin, ete., ! when for 75 els. K. Janies. I ruirijit, Ebetn- i burg, l'a., will sell them Shiloh's Vi'-alizer, which is guaranteed to cure in every in- ; eatance? 4-l.-e.o.w.ly. Folk students at Waeousta, Wis., stole a farmer's tate. The college facui'y con demned them to expulsion, or the alternative of whatever punishment the farmer might inflict, lie sentenced them to chop four cords of his wood and deliver it to a poor widow. They did it to the music of a band and the plaudits of a crowd that watched the operation. Trkke is Nothing Like It. Tiie failing powers of digestion, assimilation, secretion and excretion, are restored to permanent neaitn. strength and activity, ty tafeing uiomis jinn outers a irue tonic I a per feet strenthener ! a sure reviver I (Name r1 i 1 i. ei "Sworn and fubscrihed hef.ire iue thin dar or , 18i . (SiKnnture and title) When Fueh an arti.lavit but been filed it i!l not be neec.ary to repeat It except when the i-ubh-a-ion ohiiM-i . lunils. Hut the uiakmir ot t h . ' c nav-ltwiil not il-.-penre with theother ren usren in retard to r ui.plemntP: it wili so,i.i,- .,t. uiittani-e of hand hi, l or potter, or advert t-e 'iient In a ti.rin Intended lor clrcuiatin Independent the paper iteli, or with-iut the date , ' ,. will it authorize the u.-e ol c-its nr 111 !itr io.n which would iKit bo adti.itte.1 in the bo.iv id tlia paper. The snpplcmsnt must coi.taln inatN r which is printed in the rupplemenl lor tm o; li.-r reai-n thun l-ir want ot room in the bodv el th paper, and which would have been fo published but l..'r thin reanin. and. therefore, the a-1 veniremen t contain ed therein must be ol the clas of matter, s ivle of ill-ltrati.n and display common to the paper. I'onttnater wiil be held re-i-onsil-le tor the mail" init of any matter in violation of thip rulina and are required to report all uch violation" couiirju under their notu-e. CATARRf SANFORD'8 BA.DICA1 Complete Trestf' For SI.OO. Israel (Irazier, a farmer nf Logan town ship, Blair county, last week shot and kiiled five deer, near Petersburg, Huntingdon coun ty, three of which were killed on the after noon of one day and the other two on the forenoon of the next. A boat containing fourteen persoti9 left (ialway, Ireland, Thursday evening, for the Arran Islands. Midway "of the passape a btorm was encountered, in which the boat was suuk, and all hands perished. I "was given up to die from a disease of my limbs, I took PF.Rrs and ii cured mc J. Ikwiji, Hope, Fa. At new drug stois. i Thirty Pats' Ti al. T win tend Ir lTe--.!ebmted F.le.Mro Voltaic n.t, and oLhar F.leeirte Appliances on trial f,.r thirty dan t ynnnt men and older pert mn who are afllit l wtth rvou Kebthty. Ix.it Vitality. tc raaf- nteetnit apee-ty r.iiel an1 complete r.'tordtion of yirorand manh-)d. Amo ..r Khuma'm, a ralnta. Taralysn. i,T,r knd Kideay dl Ticulti... Kuptare. and many ot,-er diiMteV. liiu-trat4 rmP 'Jt taat fr. Addr.n TolU'i Beit -., "'er fca id and y breath, per.'.-i-t n c-niji h. no ui: k i-.fc . i nd it i..i. are I t k ..t i r-b i.v 1 . i -e-d e K A I ' l ! tr-Hli-i- : . i I t Ie it AIT. All' "lU-T a -id "tapped lu ot;e pi ren ..in, and flTSAM'iR;iA F. A JB itf.i-l Moth er SHtr-To's trand terrestrial utiash-np predicted for 1H will hare to take place pretty soon, or ahe will have to bear the odium of ail falne prnphi t. The planeuarv pheiina.ena tor this month are not potentious of disafter. and the year will likely aro out as other years amid loyouK rea and the customary festivities, and with roanv new resolves for the new vcar, to ba broken a cir cumstance; create the netx? ;ty. I Oaneral itu. lkk"t,. " rj'"v,PTy-.-X '.' -' tiouseti.'ldl o'tcn ci-: and chetti-i f.-r--i-i 4 n-fi in i-i yinra. I v 't a-i-ieeri avd .'ri.n.u tafl.i l,.r '.s- r ,v-i f l -- -- - ,!.); TVM. H. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers