iiiMikh frec timn. EOENSOURC. PA., FRIDAY, .... JAN. 20, 1882. The New York Worll expresses its belief, b.ised upon the comments of pa pers of all political denominations on the career and character of It. B. llayen that (Juiteau's ffreat mistake was in not shooting uPresident four months or four years before he did. "Golden- Days" is the name of a j lue J,mf an(1 a'r, or mat city, jjon weekly publication for voting people con- j Cameron has no more devoted liench dueted by James Elverson, of Philadel- ! mac in the state tuan the Senator from phia. the veatlv subscription price of ! Cambria ; Beaver will be nominated which is 53.00. As it is specially de- j niul his majority will be well, anything atoned for vountr persons the reading i that yur fncy may suggest, and no matter it contains is of the purest and most unobjectionable character. It will be furnished to subscribers weekly. or in monthly parts, each part consisting of five weekly numliers, with the leaves cut and enclosed in a strong and hand aomely designed cover. Mr. JirxNixof, the intelligent Lon don correspondent of the New York 1'rld. gives the following as his view of th present condition of Ireland : "It is certain, however, that even if the Land art were perfect there would be no T'Puce, The people are, to put it mildly, op posed to all English law simply because it i English. The disease, in short, can only be cured by repeal, and repeal is out of the question. Mr. Gladstone may tinker and amend atxl Lore? Salisbury may do likewise, but the only measure that can allav Irish discontent is the dismemberment of the em pire, and that being impossible, we must make up our minds to have the Irish prob lem always with us." "We were entirely prematiueinour statement that ' Guiteau's trial was about at an nd, and that' Judge Cox would probably charge the jury on Sat urday last. It looks now as if the charge to the jury will not be delivered before next Monday. The prisoner's brother-ir.-law, Mr. Scoviile, occupied the first three days of thisweek in his address to the jury, and Mr. Porter, of New York, who will follow him and make the con cluding .speech for the prosecution, will not likely get through before the ad journment of Court to-morrow, and pos sibly not then. TnE conference of the Independent, or Wolfe Republicans, in Philadelphia, on yesterday week, resulted in the adop tion of a resolution for calling a State convention, to meet in that city on "Wed nesday, the 2 1th of May just two weeks after the meeting of Cameron's machine convention oc thelOth of the same month. Over two hundred delegates were present from about one-half the counties of the State, and. judging from the tone and temper of the proceedings, the coding campaign promises to be un usually interesting aud exciting, and particularly so in the event of the Re publican bosses nominating Beaver as their candidate for Governor, as they undoubtedly will, and as Beaver himself epeins fully to understand. TnE American llcyixter is the title of a new weekly Democratic paper estab lished at Washington, the first number cf whi'-h was issued about three months ago, and is under the editorial control of Hon. Thomas W. Hartley, late Chief Justice of the .Supreme Court of Ohin and two other gentlemen, both of whom ' areoM and experienced journalist". The Iit'j'mt'r has the unanimous endorse- ! ment of all the Democratic members of the United States Senate "as a vehicle of elevated thoughts, and tho exponent of the views and principles of the Na tional Democracy, and having seen some of the late numbers we have no hesita tion in saying that the recommendation is well deserved. A journal at the seat of the general government, conducted with such marked ability and in such an elevated tone a3the iyt'.s?T,deserves a most generous and liberal support at the haudsof the national Democracy. The Lancaster Intelligencer meets the denUl of certain Itepublican politicians that Beaver was nominated for Govern or at conference of some of the 'Penn sylvania bosses at Washington, by say. ing : "Tho" truth is Beaver was nomi nated for Governor of Pennsylvania at the RepubUican National convention of C hit ago in li?80, w hen he led the l'enn syivania delegation for Grant. There was no special conference about it. Don Cameron did it. And it stands yet.'' This is the. secret of Beaver's selection. As a delegate to Chicago he betrayed the well-known Presidential preferences of the Republicans in his district in fa vor of Blaine, and was one of the 300 who stood solidly for Cameron's candi- ; date. Grant, and Cameron now intends to fulfill his part of the bargain then made by nominating the 'Christian gen tleman and able lawyer," of Centre county as his candidate for Governor. He will do it, too, and don't you forget it. A few Sundays ago, in the pulpit of riymouth church, Henry "Ward JJeech er made the charge that the loss of vir tue was made the condition of giving places to female teachers in the Depart ment of Education in Brooklyn. The Board of Education, viewing thecharge a-3 an imputation upon every fe male teacher and upon every member of the Board, appointed a committee to call upon Beecher and demand of him either to deuy that he had said what he was reported to have said, or to make the assertion good. On Sunday last Beecher, before announcing the text for his sermou, said that a sentence in a dis course recently delivered by him was fairiy liable to the construction that had been placed upon it, but emphatically disavowed any such intent, withdraw ing the sentence as publicly as he had Utered it, and in the same place. Mr. J5eecher's great weakness in the pulpit is a habit of saying something that will produce a sensation, and in order to ef fect his purpose he wags a very loose tongue, IInnvliating as it must have been, will iterhaps be of service to him in the future. His recantation was a square backing down, and one cannot but H'lmlre the courage be displayed In facing the music, and boldly escaping from, a very embariafrsicg position. If State Senator Harry Boggs, of this district knowa anything about who will be the Republican candidate for Gover nor, and what his majority will be, and we admit that he is correct as to the first proposition, but is away off on the Bide of the tow-path with respect, to the second, the Democrats and indepen dent Republicans may as well confess defeat in advance. Boggs attended the meeting of the Republican State Com mittee, held in Philadelphia on Wed nesday of last week, and if the substance of the four speeches which he then and j there delivered is correctly reported in questions asked. In his first speech Boggs predicted a majority of 30,000 ; in his second he went twenty thousand i tetter and made it 50,000 ; in his third j the speaker increasing in strength of j language and power of -"gesticulation, ( raised Beaver's majority to 75,000, and in his fourth effort, rising to the full i height of the occasion, he ran it away up to 100,000. Has our Senator ever . heard of the prophetess Cassandra and , how her vaticinations were received ? ' During the last Presidential campaign, John Cessna, chairman of the Republi ! can State Committee, advanced the the- oiy that the people vote through their eyes, and recommended that in proces sions Garfield should be represented on a large transparency a3 a bare-footed boy, with his pants rolled up to his knees, driving a mule hitched to the tow-line of a canal-boat. Bogga' idea of the intelligence of the people is akin to that of Cessna, with a slight varia- j tion, his plan of electing Beaver being. ' as he informed the committee, to place I a photograph of the wooden-legged sol j dier at the opening of the campaign in , every school-house in the State. As the j children who attend the common schools ! are not voters to any considerable ex j tent, Boggs' pictorial method of carry i ing Beaver through on a tidal wave of enthusiasm is considerably mixed. The ! Senator has laid down his programme, i .-r plan of battle, and we hope it will be adopted and made the grand feature of the campaign. Whether the people vote through their eyes, as he and Cess na imagine they do, or whether they ar rive at conclusions through a very dif ferent and more intelligent process, will then le fully and we hope finally demon strated. Twenty-two years ago the Republi can party, at its National convention, in Chicago, arrayed itself against poly gamy, declaring it to be a -'relic of bar barism," and that it ought to be sup pressed. The same declaration has been substantially repeated at every Republi can National convention since that time, and every Republican President, in his inaugural address, has avowed his set- uni uici iiiuiaiiun 10 imi au end to .Mnr- ' monism. Hut polygamy still flourishes j in Utah and in some of the other terri 1 tories, and that too in the face of the j fact that the Republican's have been iu continuous power since Lincoln's first j election in 1S0O. They now propose to commence the uprooting of polygamy by ref using to admit Cannon, the delegate from Utah, who is a Mormon and who received 13,000 votes to 1,300 against Ilim' Til democratic members of Congress are not willing to stnltifv themselves by assisting the Republicans to bring about this result, preferring tho leg.U and common sense ground as sumed by Mr, Cox, of New York, that a man's right to his seat in Congress is to be determined from the number of votes he received, rather than by the I , j v..v. number of his wives. For assuming this plain position the Democratic party is denounced as aiding and abetting the sin of Mormonism, wherea-s the ques tion of Mormonism has nothing to do with it ; but the simple question to be inquired into is, who waselected ? Can non has been in Congress eight years and the republicans could have refused to admit him when he first presented himself, but they did nothing of the kind. So far as any practical legisla tion looking to the suppression of poly gamy is concerned, the present Repub lican Congress will not advance further in that direction than to reach some half way stopping place, ;out of which they will expect to make a little cheap political capital at the next Presidential election. TnE Johnstown Tribune thinks that ; "Tennessee i3 another Southern State i which is practically uusolidified," mean-; inrr tbprebv that Tennpstoa m.lilu O . - - - --'--'"', " " ' 1 . T 11- giuia, has not yet espoused the infamous j doctrine of repudiation, and endorses by i quoting certain predictions in regard to i Southern politics made by Mr. Moore, ! who represents the Memphis district in j Congress, and whose bright and promis- ing career in that body we gave our j readers a foretaste two weeks ago. Mr. i Moore eays : "the Liberal movement thv ' j which he means repudiation) is growing in Tennessee," that "we (the Republi cans) have received propositions recent ly from the State credit Democrats (Ke pudiationists) which we will probably accept,'' and that "with the recognition and support which I (Moore) feel sure this administration will give, the Re publican party will win every time." There is more of the same sort, but this is enough, and it all means that Moore proposes to become the Mahone of Ten nessee and that he feels certain of re ceiving the same aid and assistance from Mr. Arthur that the President extend, ed to the Virginia freebooter. Moore ha3 the undoubted privilege of acting the scoundrel by cheating the honest creditors of Tennessee in the same way that Mahone is now trying to do tbe same thing in Virginia, but that a Re publican paper in this State like the Tri bune should endorse the dishonest pur poses of this Tennessee bushwhacker of State credit, Is an evil omen and is an indication that in some portions of even old Pennsylvania honesty is not regard ed as the best policy. But then Grant endorsed Mahone in a letter, and the Tribunn always swears by Grant, except in the case of Fitz-John Tortej. Thk lower branch of the New York Legislature had not, up to Wednesday, elected a Speaker. A TIMELY THOIUHT. There is not an intelligent Democrat ic voter in the Commonwealth who does not fully comprehend the importance of this year's elections. So full of weight are the issues before us that the leaders are already looking over the field with an eye to the grent battle that is to be fought in November. With so many weeks before us It will surely greatly to the discredit of the Pennsylvania Dem ocracy if they fail in perfecting a strong active and aggressive organization for the Gerce conflict of 1S82. In order to do this the one thing necessary is to see that the districts are thoroughly recruit - ed and officered. This lies with the vo- ters themselves, who must take interest enough in the primaries to see that only goodSand faithful Democrats aread- vanced to positions of confidence in the preliminary labors of the conventions. One of the most important accessories of the November right is the selection of strong, local tickets. Ilereiu will lie a great part of that force which will con tribute very largely to a general victory. Let the voters of the several counties in the State, therefore, see to it that the very best men are nominated for place by local conventions. The stronger we make these tickets the safer it will be for the higher candidates, and it should be the steadfast determination of Dem ocratic voters eveiy where this year to ignore the claims of those mouthing po litical place-hunters who turn up regu larly at the local conventions begging something at the hands of the party. This should be a year for men and not mountebanks ; for the loyal and not for the longing : for the true and nr.t. for the troublesome. A new inspiration ShmiWl tiA frivt.r rn mm ti.ia i-o- hv 7o f Y f would awaken surprise at their strength . ...v. .Kwu.un wl iii.fl.r-Ls niai and enthusiasm by their popularity. And if this is not done the fault will properly lie at the door of the common voter. Certainly there have been warn ings enough to suggest the true policy of party men in Pennsylvania. Else- wnere tlian in Luzerne the Democrats have paid dcarlv for their faction quar- rels, and it is high time that the rank and hie should begin to throw aside the petty jealousies that alwavs lead to dis- aster and the cheap bickerings that end only in defeat. Let us for once come out into the open field with our best nieu in command and the district guidons fluttering over united and enthusiastic columns. "With the district battalions so recruit ed and organized, it will be left then for the party to choose a bold, aggressive leader a man whose very name would raise a shout all along the lines, and whose headquarters would be in the sad die from the moment he took command till the eventful day of battle. Such a leader may le chosen. That he shall be chosen rests entirely with the Demo cratic voters. The humblest man in the ranks has a duty to perform in this re spect. There are no bosses to conciliate, no machine to dictate. It is for the people to decide who shall lead them, and as this thought becomes generally diffused and finds lodgment in the pa triotic hearts of the rank and file of the Democratic army of Pennsylvania, vic tory will shape itself tor lS$2. Wilkf Harre Union-Leader. Some Ixtrkestixo Statistics. Henry Gannett, the Geographer of the Census, gives some very interesting facts showing the approximate areas of ! the several states and Territories. It is probably well known that Texas, with its area of 2112,2'. square miles, is the b.rtrpst nf llm Stntcia onrl th.,t TM. T-, land, with its l,0So square miles, is the smallest, hough it has two United j States Senators the same as Texas. It is not perhaps so well known that ! Nye county Nevada, is the largest conn- i ty in the United States, covering 24.U(tu square miles ; or that San Bernardino, -iiiiuLinii v iin io,uuii uines, is ine next motive ciose ncnimt us, a sudden crash like largest, or that California has four other ; nl! "xpi"ion and the car became almost dark counties, each of them as large as Mass- j H?jd tlas9 ,a,n.'1 splinters and dut filled the achusetts. three that are .ach larger hf" tnM'n V",?''' " V' an:1 1 than Connecticut, and fifteen others j ?eXSn that are each larger than Delaware ; or. j tact with a roof ventilator, I thought for an thatSioux county, Nebraska, contains j instant .that the car had been overturned and si,uu square ranes. uregon also lias i several large counties, Grant. Umatilla and Lake, containing 17,o00, 14,2tiO and 12,000 square miles, l'resido, with 12, .rU(J miles is the largest county in Tex as. The smallest countv in the United si " ... A' .... l . r x- ... i. ! a inn, aiaicui ie luiK, nun u nas ine largest population. It -j has only an area of twenty square miles, iV't' tl'l Cf"n1iy an ... i t nlii! isi t if) s.m:!lner. prtnnln to l'ennsyivania. In order of size the several States rank as follows, the figures showing the square miles : Texas California Nevada ... Colorado. . ..202 292 . 15.r)uso .,lo!,7t0 ... 94, XO .. 81.7110 ... 7:,20.- ... 7H,lS.- ... 68,7-5 .. 6S,i)S0 ... fi7,430 ... .r.i;,ooi) ... G.1,475 ... 54,4.50 ... 54,2-14 ... M,04.r Mississippi Louisiana Pennsylvania. Tennessee Ohio Virginia , Kentucky Indiana S. Carolina..., Maine ..4t,S40 ..54,420 ..44.PS5 ..41,ft-0 .40.7f0 ..40,12.-) ..40,000 ..3.-..M0 ...'5O.170 ..2'., (;. Oregon Kansas Minnesota Nebraska Missouri Georgia Michigan Illinois Iowa Wisconsin Flunda Arkansas. Alabama.. N. Carolina.... New York West Virginia.. 24,f.4. Maryland.. f),8b0 !,l.f4 0,001 8,040 7,455 4.S43 l,ifi5 1.0S0 Vermont N. Hampshire... Massachusetts.. New Jersey Connecticut, Delaware Rhode Island... 51,240 48,.-.S0 47,620 The largest of the Territories is Da kota, with 147,700 square miles, and the largest county in any of the Territories is Custer county, Montana, with 30,300 square miles. I he statistics of water surface lakes ponds, bays and rivers in the several j States and Territories present in start- 1 ling figures the extreme aridity of New Mm mum Ar 7iinj with (in rlOllm.i 100 square miles respectively, and the i marked contrary characteristics of Flor- i ida, with 4.440; Minnesota. 4,100; North ! Carolina, 3,570, and Maine, 3,14-5 miles of river lake nnd inlet area. The total water surface of this re markable country States, Territories, and last, but not least, the District of Columbia is given at oo,G(X) square miles, and the gross area, land and wa ter, 3,G45,GuO square miles, inhabited by sixteen persons and a fraction to each mile. Wilkrs-liorrt Union-Leader. The Battle of 1982. Perhaps the most important political battle of the century is to be fought in Pennsylvania in 1682. A Democratic victory then will assure the next Presidency to that party, while a defeat by a decisive ma jority will give to the Republicans an assurance that if they can raise money enough to buy two or three States in 1S82 as they did in 1S80 they may still perpetuate their power by the same cor rupt means that have secured the party existence in the past, But, Democrat ic success in Pennsylvania in 1882 will depend upon the Democratic leadership in fact, upon the nominee of that party ror Lrovernor. ui course, organi- cessaty, but even that will be no good if we do not have a leader equal to and worthy of the occasion. .None but a bold, brave, fi,jhtinp, aggressive leader, of great power, energy and courage will i do; in short, one to whom every Demo crat may point as a proper man. If it be one sought by the party it will be much better than cue who seeks partv j tefernierit, or the mere party honors, j If the Democratic masses will attend to j this business, and elect none but intell j igent and experienced men of abilily to their convention, there will be no trou ble in securing such a nominee, but torn tit delegates are sure to nominate can didates of ths same order. Clinton Ihmocrai. I had Chronic Catarrh for years. Teru na cured it. K. I. tTRASBrF.erR. Pittib'j;. human bi;im;s,bueed roACRisr. TEKKIBLE OOA.LIPION AKD LOSS OF LIFE CO THE HEW YORK CBXTRAL HAILRO.VD. A New York dispatch to the Philadelphia Timet, dated Friday last, Fays : There was a terrible accident on the New York Central railroad tJ-night. The Atlantic Express, which was dua in this city at 7 c!ock this evening, was thirty-five minutes late in leav ing Albany. It ran at a high rate of speed and had nearly made up its lost time before reaching Spuyten Duyvil. There were thir teen cars on the train. Six were parlor cars These were the Red Jacket, Vanderbilr' j There were four passenger coaenes, two maii ! cars R"d ne express car. The train bad ' PRSS,"d Spuyten Duyvil and had cone about i a tl"nl 'll a n,ile wl,on one of t!ie air brakes 5"ron, Jimnenaha, Empire and Idlewild i ,,t . ' J ,c Tm ? bRt to a stop v nrv7 ll on the road and an approaching train could not be seen beyond the curve. The train was delayed five or six minutes while woikmon were engaged examining and repairing the brake. A local train for passengers left Tar rytown about 6:35, shortiv after the train had passed and leftSpuyten Duyvil at 7:07, being due at the Grand Central depot at 7:30. The only men that can tell what safef uardi had been employed on the Atlantic express to warn approaching trains from the rear, so far as can be learned, are Park Valentine, of Bennington, Vt.. a passenger, and the rear brakeman, whose name is said to be George Mealius. Mr. Valentine savs that be was standing on the rear platform of the palace car Idlewild, which was the last car on the express train when suddenlv a light was visi ble around ."spuyten Duvvil "curve, about two hundred yards back. The brakeman stood on the traek five or six feet from the rear car. with a red lantern and a white lantern. As soon as the light of the approaching train flashed around the curve, Mr. Valentine says the brakeman sprang forward and ran ouiek- 1,- Iimim. lw. ..1. : : . - . ! Vt "mv" Mit ick, swinging lantern. -vi r. i eni,iue nam mat everyone expeet"d to see : ti " approaching train stop; but if came on apparent vuiideifu neailwav. Seeinsr that a collision was inevitable, as the train drew near he jumped from the platform and es caped without injury. In thu doorway Mr. Valeutine remembers to have seen a small Migut man, wuoru ne roulil not identify. A me approaening train Ptrnck- the express the small man jumped back into the palace car -"i. .lii iiLim- iijhl as near as lie ' sons tne Mlewild. He believes that not I x"e SmM ,havo esrilP,(1- Tllc locomotive ; V can renieniber triere were ten or twelve tier of Engineer Frank Burr and Fireman Oua- ney Burr. The former was sliuhtly injured about the bead and (,)uanej eseped unin jured. Both declined to-night to give their version of the cause of the collision. The locomotive crushed into the rear com partments of the rear parlor ear. and the car was telescoped with the rear of the parlor car Empire in front of it o fnrs could he learned, nohodv escaped from the rear car to tell the story of the disaster. The wreck ed ears were almost immediately wrapped in flames. The stove had overturned, and the live coals finished the work of destruction. Before the police and firemen, with ladder and apparatus for extinguishing fires, had arrived, a dozen of persons had been suffo- cated. It is not probable that mora than one I or two were killed outright by the collision i a omit the mi. Idle of the rear car sat Park j Valentine, 2-J years of age, son of the gentle- ,' j mau who stood at the rear of the car and!es- , caped. Valentine was on his wedding trip, having been married to Miss Louise Gavlord! I : of North Adams, Massachusetts, on Thnrs- ' j day night. Both bride and groom perished in the flames. Lieutenant Governor Bar- ! : stow, of Vermont, who was with the bridal j party, had gone to a forward car and he es- ' caped uninjured. Near lhem in the car sat ; a large, handsomely dressed woman, appa- i rently about fortv vears of aze. Her body ', j was first recovered from the Jehils. Amor.f i the passenger iu the drawing-room cars were ' ( man members of the Legislature, including : i Senator Webster Wagner ana olher well : known politicians. It is believed that all of j ine ten or twelve persons in the rear earner- bd'ed. senator e'ister Wagner was Inst ' seen a moment before the aeeWl from the second car from the rear to the rear ' car, and there is no doubt that he is among the victims. The number of those who per ished in the second car from the rear is not ! known, but there seems to be r-ason for be- 1 heving that ail of the passengers wi re not rescued. A passenger who was in the rear of the ' rrlor im ITm.:..,. . . ' i . . n imi.iii- ram -i was stain'ino- m ! the aisle chatting with Major Charles DHch i ; commissioner of emigration, when the crash : cams. There was a shriil sh.-w-k r.f i,,,.,. I ra oh us sue, nut t soon found it was upright on the tvnet .,,! tit n-. m. it- of the rear car had crushed through the roof of our car. There were shrieks and groans, and above- ail the piercing cries of women I found myself close against a car window and drove my elbow through it. I was on the west ciild i.f 1, j .- . ; - -- ine ;inu iookcii out unon a - , " 4 ';,pi tj emti.inkment. Just then T'""J snoineu - l ins way ' from the other side of the car. I started across the ais.e, oyer broken seats and debris, to a win now, through which other pas-jenr-rs had escaped. The groans or the cries -o"f aeman entangled among the seats attracted mv at tention. I tugged at bis coat tails aixl ed him to his feet. He speedily scrambled i i.oii i ma ireL. no speedily scrambled it of the window to a place of safety and I followed him. Mr. (4. F. Spiiniev of the ' ew i ork Times, was I believe, the "last n tan I fi ' vi u ri Clin New out of the car. 'Within five minutes after the crash the two rear cars were in flames. The passen gers stood in the snow aud mud on the slip, pery embankment, and saw the fire darting through the wreck of the two cars, powerl-ss to assist those within, who were groaning and screaming tor succor. The villagers quickly gathered at the scene of the disaster and rendered such aid as they eoM but it was several minutes before "kei, earned in pails, could be thrown upon the flames Men and boys rolled huge balls of damp now ar,d hurled it through the car windows which other men had broken with fragments of the wreck. No faces appeared at the ear win dows, but cries in a dozen of voices were heard from within. It was evident that thev came from persons pinned fast beneath the debris and unable to escape. " In the pocket of the woman whose bodv was first taken from the wreck was found a visiting card bearing the name: "Mrs Maude uiov.il, .d esi roriy-inira stieet. A let- ln her pocket was dated from the office of "' muey, liroauway, and was Wk '' L 1- S11' .t-. ten "Dr. Watts, 40 West Thirty sixth street ' was in her poeket. book. Miss Mary Daniels who was on her ay from Troy to visit friends in New ork, was rescued alive. Mie suttered contusions and burns but will recover Oliver Keely, a stove manufae. tiirer. of Spring City, Pa., was taken out through a window in a dving condition His right arm was burned off nearly to the shoul der and he was internally iniured. The doc- : tor .-am ne coma not iiVe until morning Up, was 38 years old. Kis dying words were di , rections to fend to his wife. The body of a 1 man of large stature, with its face burned - past recognition, was then takn fn.m the wreck. Then came a body, apparently that ot a negro, supposed fo be one of the palace i car employes. Then two more charred and blackened trunks of human forms were lift : ed out upon planks by the firemen. One of them was the bodv of a man, the other, it i was thoi.ght, that of a woman. The number of dead bodies taken from the i wreck at midnight was eight. Several per J sons ate injured, one, at least, fataiiy. Kt , five minutes to twelve attain which had men j run up to the wreck reached the Wrand Cen I tral depot. Upon it was Senator Waener's I eldest son. The moment he stepped from ) the train he was surrounded and silently the j little group listened to what he said. lie had been unable to find any trace of his father i snd believed that he had perished in the ! burning car. From what he could learn fiom others, Mr. Wagner was of tho opinion that ; ids father must have been at the rear of the : Idlewild or at the tore end of the Empire urn mc 01H-.10I1 uci-uiTfii. anil rnar wo JtZ! up hope as the story was told and slowly straggled out of the dennf , Tliy halted to debate upon the manner of announcing to the family that their worst fears were realized and who should perforin that sad office. "WHAT IMIYKMIANS SAT. San Leisdro, Cab, Jaanary G, 1877. Dr. R. V. PrF.ncE, Buffalo, NT,Y.': T)enr Sir1 hnve employed your "Pleasant, Purga tive Pellets" in my practice for the last four years. I now use no other alterative er ca thartic medicines in all chronic derangements of the stomach, liver, and bowels. I know of nothing that equals them. J. A. Miller, M. D. A stonk church, built two hundred years ago by Puiitans, is used by Unitarians st Lnnghim, Mass. XKW8 AND OTHER VOTINGS. Domestic troubles caused Mrs. Sebastian j Redling, of Pittsburg, to commit suicide last , week by swallowing rat poison. Mrs. Caroline Carey, the oldest inhabl j tant of Buffalo, and the oldest woman in the United States, died on Saturday, aged 104 ' years. ! Three boys were instantly killed in Brooklyn Saturday afternoon by the fall of : an unoccupied house in which they werr? ; playing. Mr. Scoviile, Guiteau's counsel, has be ' gun a libel suit against a Chicago newspaper ! which charged him with fraud in going into I bankruptcy. ' Mrs. Augusta nolt, of Swedon, Totter couuty, a middle-aged woman, with two husbands livir.g, recently eloned with a boy fourteen years old. ; The evidence in the trial at Cettellsburg : Ky., of the murder of the Gibbons family thus far confirms the statements in the con- ; fession made by Ellis. , A horse owned by William P, Riley, ; Williamsnort. is so fond of tobacco that he ' seems willing at any time to trade a half peck s of oats for one good chew of the wead. Snow has fallen in the southern counties 1 of California an almost unprecedented oc ' currence. The prospects in that section of . the State are bad unless rain follows. Convicted murderers were banged on ! Friday as follows: At St. Louis, Thaddeus ' Baberand William Ward, colored; at Rimon ; ski, Ontatio, a wife-murderer named Moreau, David Smith, a farmer living near Ua- gerstown. Ind., was on Saturday found in a ; well with five wounds in his head. Smith's son's had threatened his life and they are i pusbeeted. Henry C. Spaulding, whose name was made familiar in connection with glue, but ; who got none of the millions made out of it, was lately arrested at New Albany, Ind., for : drunkenness. J A divorce suit is pending in Madison, Indiana, between Henjamiu Kinbale, 82 years of age, and his 23-year-old wife. The suit is brought by the husband on the ground ' of desertion. Three children of Mr. Selialzmar, of East 1 Liberty, died wit'un a few hours of each oth ; er on Sunday last of small-pox. The mother ; and anothei child are or were then very sick ' with t he same disease. Harvey Hughes, charged with killing : "Doc" Devail, in Greene countv, has been , convicted of murder in the secoud degree, and sentenced to the penitentiary for two i years. W by such leniency ? ' At Washington, Washington county, on S:lflirdriv tliA trial rf Ti-r,?i ll.rm, .1 . the murder of Thomas Korsvthe last, Ar.ril wasuiraciucii'n yy rue jury returning a ver- .. ... r..., niei or munit'i in me lirst detrree. A Kittanning undertaker renorts that. the last corpse buried by him last year was of a person only cue hour old and the first one this year whs 107 years of age. Tnat is turning over a new leaf Pi a curious way. The neramento H-e a9 there is in that city a tame deer which not 01113- chews to bacco "like .1 man," but goes the human beast several points better lie cats all the weed that is given him, and begs for more. A dispatch from Kichmond, Indiana, says that Mrs. -Smith, widow of the man whose murdered body was found in a well there, has confessed that she and her sons planned the deed, and that her son Daniel put it into execution, Fiftv-eicht million dollars is the estima ted value of finger rings of this country actu ally worn, and still there are people mean enough to go hacking and coughing because they do not want to invest i.'.' cents for a bot tle of Dr. Bull's Couch Srup. An insane nip.n named Walsh shot hini pelf in the "head on Frid.iv in thu Vtt Dame eathtoial, Ottawa, Canada, whiie ser- vices were in progress. The eon LT.-ira Lion composed principally of ladies, was panic stricken, and several peicons tainted. Sister Mary Joseph, the head of the Sis ters of 'io iden.'f., an Indiana Catholic or der, who died lately was a sister by birth of Inna de la Motte. who renounced rank and fortune in IJrittany to . mbrace a life of pri vation in the southern swamps of Indiana. The bouse of a negro named (ieo. White wn discovered to be in Cames on Thursday at Alton, Hi., r.nd lying on a beo in the house with her throat cut from ear to ear, was found the bodv of Mrs, Garrett, a white wo man, who kept house for white. It is thought thi woman had been murdered. The postmaster at Wilmington, Ohio, writes to the Tost Office Department that a child died at tiint place a few davs ago from what was supposed at the time to be chicken-pox. Ti e funeral was largely ai tended, and, as a consequence, there are over fiftv cases ot virulent small-pox in the town. Madison county. Ind., lias a citizen who has attained the remarkable age of i2 years. His name is Solomon Sheets, resid ing in Monroe township, three miles south east of Alexandria. He is in possession of an ins mental facilities, while physicallv lie is as spry ana vigorous as a man is ordinari ly at 50. j Mrs. Smith and her two sons, the wife i and children respectively of David Smith, , whose dead body was fou'ul in a well near f II -igerstown, Ind., the other dav, were ar- ' rested on Monday. On ti e way to the jail Daniel Smith confessed that he committed : the murder alone during a q.iarrel about the , saie of a horse. Martin Hughos died at Htwlev, Pa.: January Nth, aged 9i year. He had been an ! invalid for more than' a veai. It ts reported ; that over 100,000 in insurance was held on i his life in Pennsylvania graveyard insurance ! companies by residence of Wayne county , Pennsylvania. M.ist of the policies were is- : sued subsequent to last August. Dan Ldson, of Warrenslni'g. Fa., war a ' terrible blasphemer. A borne kicked i.tm m a uar.n the o wer uncomr Then tlanu s 1 t,,e building a uacn the other day, and his ejaculations ; comnioiny prolonged and vioient. ' s nroiie out among the hav, and i ig was destroyed. There" is no 1 convincing the neighbors that Dan's sulphur- 1 ous language d;,i net kindle the fin-. j Onthep.ithof December, at Middletown, Conn., two orphan bovs, Albeit S. and Os borne M. Atkins, aged respectively 1! and 10 years, were accidentally drowned. On the ; very day of their death a suit in their favor was decided in New York, by which t.hev ' were to receive 830,000, which now reverts ' n-u mi hit s oroir.er, i nomas J. Atkins A remarkable use is being made of pota toes. The clean peeled tuber is macerated 111 a Solution of si; rdiiiric nciil Tim ih,ii is dried between sheets of blotting paper and then pressed. Of this all nian-ier of small articles are made, from combs to col lars, and even billiard balls, for which the hard, brilliantly whife materia! is well fined. By the disaster on the Hudson Kiver railroad at i-puyten Duvvi I right persons were killed and nineteen injured. The kill ed were Mrs. M iry L, Brown, aged 2.", years : Kev Francis X. Mareehal, aged rG ; Oliver L.. Keetey, aged 40 : Darwin L. Ransom, aged HO : J. Albert Richards, aced 22 Val entino Park, aged 21, and his bride, Mary lionise, aged and Webster Wagner, State Senator, ng.-d r.5. The greatest alarm is manifested bv the people in and about Urownsyiile, Texas oyer the appearance of a horrible disease, hitherto unknown by physicians, among the dwellers on ranches. The malady first shows itself in the form of eruptions on the face. The bead soon swells and death en sues in a short time. All remedies applied so far have failed. The people are becom ing terror-sti icken. 'n'e scottdaie lierord says a Hungarian Child 8t the Mi'Clure works diml a few rlni-a Hgo , ami its father unfeeling dug a'hole close - u. nouse, flumped til coins therein an.l IIIPlI tb "fit nt lhori.in or. went oiT to work, leaving a little girl about seven years old to fill trie rude grave. Some ot the miners and drawers complained about this mode of burial when the superintendent marie th luhuman father exhume the child and bury it near Morewood. Ceorge and Edmund Uravely, who reside in Henry county, Va., are probably theold est twins living in the country. TTiev cele brated their W1 binhoay on the 1st of De cember last. They are still enjoying good heaith and live within five miles of each other, and within three miles of where they were born. They belong to a lon lived family, their mother living to be over 100 and the'ir father dying at the age of t0. A special to the Chicago 7,ifr-O'-'an of the lttth says : "The St. Eouis express on the Dubuqu division of the Chicago, Mil waukee and St. Paul Kailroad, from St. Paul while near Lansing, la broke a wheel of the smoking-car. The smoking car and the ladies' car directly behind were thrown on" the track. A child of Mrs. John Cnvnugb, of Warren Mills, Wis., was kiHed. Twenty persons were injured, two fatally. Fiv penitentiary convict were drowned in Fonxche creek, five miles from Little Kock.Ark., on Saturday afternoon. They bud hern at work cutting wood and on be ing taken to the stockade, nine prisoners who were working in a pang were placed in a flat-bottom boat, to be taken across the bayou. When near the middle or the stream some r.f the occupants rocked the boat until it took water and suddenly sank, carrying five men to the bottom. --It having been decided to give Neal, Craft and Ellis, the alleged murderers of Fannie and Mob Gibbons and Ininw Thom as at Ashland, Ky., a separate trial, 'Neal was brought into court at Catteilsburg'on Mon day afternoon, and his attorney, Mrown, an nounced Ids readiness for trial. About ths entir day was taken up in the work of em panelling a jury. The crowd was growing iarge and expressed considerable indigna tion at the lagging of the proceedings caus ed by the unnecessary absence of witness. DANES 2 STOP3,i S 63 H6 ft its: r-,J day-- i-nutm, 4b in George W. Bristd has a wife in Meri'ien. a wife in WoreeMr, and a wile in I'lovi denae. to al! of whom he has been reguUriv married wilhin a tew veais. As his liu-ines was that of a traveling agent, lie wag for a time able to conceal his biam) by visiting eaeh of his hemes in turn. Ihe wives are j-onnc. uniform! v prettv. and 1'elong to re spect?:l!e families. Tl.er nr.' united in their desire t i punish him, ir.w that they inve found him out, and l. Jms been arrested, jat in time to jnevmit hi; union with a n'iri at Middletown ! Vienna T!le:it--e fr i,-.- or.,a i...v. .' I . .... . .... , puir u ii!,, Ifi i. rescue or A Volinc aittllerv nriv;!t si-rii... lie en-ieavorea to rscaoe lroui the burning bunding by a stage door, but, owing to some mishap, fell through a broken trap into h deep cellar. Here tin; poor i!!ow retrained for seventy-two hours without sleep or lood, and troui the constant pouring of water into the cellar fro-ii the engines came near bi ing drowned. His cries were at last beard bv an inspecting f,tenirn, w ho took .r. out of" the water, which was up around bis chest. A diabolical attempt topr-ad sma"il-'ox j through the mails was reported to the postal , authorities at Kichmond. Ind., on Saturday, j Au undated and unsigned letter, postmarked ! Cincinnati, was received bv a farmer nt j Lynn, an oHce fifty miles iort!i (if Ki -h-j monil, in which two small. pox --cabs were enclosed. The letter simply contained the words. ! have sent you the sriall-poy. po home and die." The letter w as inimediai. ly burned and the oniy cine to the t'erjietrator j was thus destroyed, Put the best d -teetives at I the command of the department will be .. t I to work on the case. The blame for the dreadful accident on i the N,-w Yoik Centr.d lies b tween the brakeman ot ti:e disabled train, w loch had .stopped, and the engineer of !!-. e 'cuing ! train, whii h ran into it. The hr?keman ts- titied berore the eoroner's jury that he went i back to sigi al tin; couing tiain, and did slg , nul it correctly in fed time f,;r it to -top be ! fore it came around the curve. Tie ir.sjstM ! th nt no heed was p,i";d to his sigp.-tl. Natur- nl! enough, in such a cast, as this, each per- son will tiy to lay the responsibility on the ; other, and nothing but rigid irvestigatbm ; w ill revenl the truth. A great blast, which has beei. preparing 1 for nearly a year at the limestoiu qu.trry of ! the (i!c!i.l-iii Iron Con. t, any. ii"ir La-t- n, Fa., was fir--d recently, and" forty thousand tons of rock were dislodged. Four tcr.r.els, each titty leet long, were run ir; the hill side, and at tuc.r end two ch.'m'h-is n.-re bniit at iig'.:t angles, cacti ei:i.! .i t long. Ten tons of. powder were used, arej when ' the elec ic current was sent a'ovg the wire the face of the rm-k, for a distance c-f l."0 feet pud a height of 20 feet, was Ph-wn out like a hlj.h ave. r.nd tbe reck above th; ex cavation sank into the s; ace vih 'i roar. The Toronto GIo'm says that a veu'-g roan, a fartiiei, living a sh'.rt di-tarn e eii o I Omen.ot-. whs lti search of a life i.ti iiH-r. He went to church on Sunday. a'.nt six wr ks ago, and saw a v ung iaily f!:t wi,-,;,d appa rently comply wilt his wlsli. s, Afterchnivii he introduced himself, companied her home, got the license on Monday, and v a married on Tuesday. His tuatrlnion ial career was of short duration, for on Wednesday i.ist lie it-turned after being absent foi aony, ai d found she had eloped with the I. ind Lov, figed ai out the la'ter Inking a pair i,f . boots with him hHor.g'ng to Lis employer. T he New Albany, "(Ind.,) Tin(-Stir mys that otllcei's are on the lookout ior hdis Thurninn and. his young tram Iniot'ner, who eloped from nesr Grand View, Spencer coun ty, John '. Tliui man. at'Cd mar TO, mar ried a young vi man of 20 His grands-yi. Ellis TbuTn,;in, lived in the house with hici. and before the vercrable rrandUtther's honeymoon was half over, the vrac-elefs young grandson was making love to her wi;h all his might. He seems to have beat n the old man from the start, and a few d.iys cro took his youthful grandmother and eloped with her. " T!, venerable grandfather is very disconso.'ate. i Among the horrors of lat week's acc i- j dent on the New York Centra! railroad wis , th dentil of Mr. and Mrs. Valentin Talk who were m irried in North Adam-, Mass., on Thursday evening, and in lessthar, twen- 1 ty four hours thereafter were mar.cled corpses. While death by aecnlnt is horri ble cno ijli i!P'i"i' anv circumstances, there j is au ftdded elfineut of gl-astiiness in such a : sudden transition from th joy and eladness of the marriag service to the gloom of , death. All such trar.edies nrr but sharp re- j minders of the uncertain tenure t y which : we hold our li.-es, a!id of the inevitable fate : which awaits us all, ; The brutal murder of an unfoitunat ! girl liiined F.mms Hamilt-m Rbout two years ago in Montreml. Canada, bv four men has , just come to light, companion of the victim named Catharine Milliard having giveu in formation to the police. Th- men in rjiies- 1 tion. whop names are Bernard and William Mi Kverne (brothers ). W illUm Livernois and another man now deal, ".vent to the house where Hamilton and Milliard lived and want- ; ed the former to go f.r whi-kv, which sh i refusedtodo. They tiien knocked her down , : kicked b"r terribly'a ui cut her. S!i died. The McEverne broth-rs are confined at pres. ent. in the Provincia. en itentiary for high- way, robber j ant i.ivernois I. as beti ar- j rested. j A special telegram tr tie Pittsburg Dis- 1 patrk from New Paris, O., Jan. nth, ays : ! A most singular an-l remarkable case of "the recovery of eyesight after many years of 1 blindness, has just occurred st the little vil- ; laee of Melle Centre. Mr. John My e was su.blenlv stiicketi blind a'tout eicht vears mi ami on tn T sgo, and up to Thuisday In for manv years has groped bis way in Egyptian darkness. No reason was assigned tin his sud-.'.en af fliction, and it seems the d-vtor could give no relief. On Thursday Mr. My! had n pe culiar serration in hi eyes, and his sjht was suddenly restored. His eyts now seem as sound as ever, and his vision seems wholly unimpaired. This sudden -eceiving of his sight is considered almost a miracle. noted throughout several Pr i's Ivania conn- John Met ai land, a ho pcotl.er. was ties for the cheapness anr variety of his wares. On one trip he woulr1 have dry goods, on the next fancy wares, unl so on," his ex planation being that he boigbt Job lots at Ruction sales of bankrupt stick. The truth has now come out. Whri Ids wagon was Miip'ied, lie would go to tl freight depot of the Eeadir.tr Hail road in P dladelphia, and watch the loading of the Ciis until hi" saw what would suit h.s purpose. Then he would covertly mark that partienhr car for identi fication, ami hurry to a cer ain lonely point on the bnp where the train tvnuld stop initio night for ttie locomotive t take iu wnter. Provided with the requisite tools, he could enter the enr, remove the lux of goods with out detection, and thus fill is wagon anew, In Baltimore on Mondiy last between three and four o'clock Fatb-r Dancnhauer, rector of Si- James' Ca'hc'k? cl.urch, and JJrotliers Ibrnar-iine and Ioerhardt. while sitting in a room in the p.utoral residence, were startled by hearing V,e burglar alarm attached to th poor box ii the ve.-tih'.ile .f the church nnr-. P.ro'het Bcrnardine ran out and entering the clnrrt from the htreet, found a young man tampering with the box. He seized him hut the uiaa resisted. W hen Father Daner.haur atul li-other Eberhardt came in througti thechurdi he lr'.l;e away from r.rother Bernardiue, and, running up the gallery steps drew a ktife and threaten- : ed anyone who molested lim. Brother El- i erbbardt. who had provbUd Mmself with a i pistol, drpw the weapon frrnu the folds of his : cassock and compelled th, man to drop his i of iicrolice ' BrnVn! 1 r r Jaii. Address or call upon DATilEL RE ATT V 6 B hiit i The most Sw-rafut Ilovt in the World. WRITE FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE This Magnificent CABINET Organ; WUfc an Wnt fool. !W nd WujU-, brxei ndj Mlivarc4 on Bur4 Mil u Vi wiutiioa ji ' Jcry7 Only JjJUS.OO uuittwa titer ooc 9 am. 24 STOPS. Specific! Ion ns Follows i ltVllo. ft. fna 8 ft. ton. 8 C1rV!lA. R ft. lnn i Wftrtn! RnMu 75lCifi. 5 Hnanl.m.l Aft vn. e mplimw r 1 ' Viol l: 1tT!:Ma. ft. tOT). V t, " loii. 19 Harp .otivntw. Vox BlimiM A Knn. ft torn" VS'S1"!8 t- to". 16 CI'-1oti1 8 . " ik. Knur, jo 0 Ji 19Vox Jahi:iu, . sft. f llor!or! ft Coupler rfcrmoTilqu. sa Orchitri 2 3 Grind lirtru Km gtop. S4 vei-pte.B rt. tone. IK violin T dLVYAKEI o; r" Win mm Oetavr V 'o Dot thfrYcffcti1i Orrmn tht d cot v:b- rppr. tron wliib OouMm tb fevir f u,-ii i w. ,c vrri nn!nr i -t. it i reryl km tMr aVvvc oak 1 b mm ef toli4 ti- pnt. j'rofTifelr ornrrirTi d with hand er- r mat. i u ui bt rnl-brr trirnt Htl t i wfth trl wrlnrs, rUr for min. . AAA i XK )fd i a-rTin r a to trie BiiiUon- r!or ftn4 wouia ruoD(u kKia-i pnoccN. tin IV-rm'i within Wftlia of tni.d. d .ie-t in . on muj l'Tn. fcJcnt amc lr rmivn u trmmc. F. BEATTY, Washington, New Jersey. The Best Place TO Sixth and n "n?3 M P PHILADELPHIA. THE 1. A I Hi EST CLOTHING HOUSE IN The I.itkhai'.t "Ueuki mon." Tr. J ,h:i B. Alden, who organizt-d the "I.iterarv inv olution," which has given tho people the be-t of books atsueh wondi-rf ullv low prices, does not give up the fight with the f aiiu:e ot '1 he American Hook Kx ImTitre. " w hi.-h failure, he claims, was in no respec t the result of '.! ins books too cheaply, but was oau-ed bv the combination of pabhshr and honkseih-rs against the enterprise; i: famous and b-ts.-.ss slander being scattered broadcast culminated in a "panic" among the creditors of the in stitiion. cau-ing a "lun" which resu'ied in the failure of the compi.tiv, lust flj n ;,s often caused the failure f 'banks or other in stitutions pei feet ly solvent under orilmmy condition, lie mid ot!i-r f: lends of Tl.t eu- ter; rise have oanied "The I'se, id K ede P;il.;;s!;ir.g Coinnanv," and a i;t .Vt'in which prop. to carry on t! e !, V :!'! J' ll.e fir-t work putdi-hed bv the new coal pit v is a b.-asdifr.i td.tioii of M:-.nil:iv's "I.ife of Ficde-ick the I. ;ent." which they cell forth" 11 ::i ve! oysly j,-,w j ii.e .f ! -i-t. r i ' o 5 V bound in ! .th. The company pro pos. s to !.-e;n ii:!T.ed:ate'y the pid'.i"cat;on c-f a series o eye iop-i-dias on : 1 '. ; -,, one of bioL'ra j 1 y . (-:,e of .-,-lt-ncc, 1: e ; choice pro-e i;tiatur. one 1 f poetrv. and one of religious literature op--; ,.f "whl- h cvcloj rdi.is will he in sevcta; lare octavo volume of over P-.1O page i-ui h. ;it the pr; -c of per vo'ume, in cloth hlnd.'.g. and wi.i also be published in nut.:ers, at only two ceu's r-r nundT-r, !'"i!,j- or.sj b-rntov t.elow even the 'revolution" i.'ice-l Ti.ey wlll send spe.-imen i-:),"-s and entaiogttt f r -e, f.nd fiit lids of clioice or--i.i'. nre at !w pi i'"cs -.vi l ;, sure to !:ow.t t -in v -,: ,, ) ,,-;. ni-c.rds, nf Addr--s Iht; I'-t -t i. K-.-nwi i'.-v J'r i-,:.lvv,, CoMfANV, ' V illi tui ..tie. t, New Yerk. Ihumn Wp.f. ri h. An extraoi -dins-ry instance of humnn ingiatitu-i and de pravity is re ottfd fn-n.;ihe little village i f Ironda'c, a i iuub of C'hU'.ign. A fw'dav ago Edward. MuelU-r was stricken down with Hie str.a'dpox, .'aid Iiavlt:g no or.e;to adminis ter to his wtu '.s was placed in a ino-t j Itla't.le coTuiitoin. Kalt'h John-in atid bis wife, a middle Rued lady, assumed the r !e of tfte doi-d S:ii.aritan. and nursed Mueller v.uli he was j-. pror.chir,g 'onvalt seeuce. Al'out lo o'clock Friday night Johnson iell asleep, whereupon M uclier searched hi benefactor's p:T.t po -ets. and "sf cured liis little niite. f'.T.ry.. i oc n retcii men vi'7ii a room in which Mrs. Job son was sleeping, and. after uttering threats of ath i? iu:o!e u i-ut- cry violnteii;i:cr person. Heathen nade his escape, and lias sir.ee evaded capture, lm med.iateltly after he bad quitted t!ie j-!ace. Mrs. Johnston, who bal co!i,-eted her vt tered senses, I urried to her l!M.bfii.d"s 1-ed-sidr and informed him of w hat bad occurred. The poor man was almost frantic. A few of the neighbors were g.tteered together and in stituted search;for the villain, but no clew was obtained. MrnriEREr. Rpshf.h n-d Hrr.trEO. I.ast week iheawlul news reached this communi ty, says the Newpoit l.ei(jrr of the lltti, that l'hilip Acley, a shceni.iker, once a reii'n-nt of this vicinity, and who emigrated to Ven ango, Ellsworth county, Kansas, about four years ago, was munieie.l, robbed, and his cabin and body burned, on the niid of the 2th of December. What makes the news doubly awful, is that the deed was commit ted by a 3'ouug m:m who was a!s a resident of Newport, but went West since about two years since William F.rwin Crahani. sou of Mr. IsaacGrahaiii, of Millcrstown. 1 he per p tratorwas arrested andtaken to Ellsworth the county seat, and confined in jail : but on the 2d of January a mob surrounded the jail and took Graham out, hanging hiin to a tree iu front of the Court House. F. II. Irkf' Nnflerlng-H. F. II. Drake, Esq., Detroit, Mich.. suiTer ed beyond all description from a skin disease, which appeared on bis hands, head and face, and nearly destroyed his eyes. The most careful doctoring failed to help him, and af ter all had failed he ued the Cuticura He nolvenr. (blood purifier) interi ally, Cuticura and Cuticura Soap (thegrvat Fkincures) ex ternally, and was cured, and has remained peilectly well to this day. Givr Ur by Doctors. "I it possible that Mr. Godfrey is up and st work, mid cured by so iinpie a remedy?" "I assure you it is true that he is entirely emeu, nun with Homing out Hop Hitters: ! "',d. '".'L-' n, dh' s lwcil, Pave ''" up and said he mu-t die: "Well R-day! Thnt s remnrkable! I will go this day and get some fur my poortieorge I know hops aie giod." A Maine Judge lias unstained the wilt of Horatio N. Foster, n deaf niut, seventy six years old, who could neither read, writ.- nor use the manual alphabet Tim will, which was made by pantomime, devbs 7.loo. Only one dm ilar case was ever tried in the United States, nnd that wa- in North Caro liua. Certainly if a mute cmi acquire an es tat? lie ought to be allowed to w iii it iu his own wav. DTsrri v xd Liveh Complaint. Is it ' not wrirth the small price cf 75 cents to free ; yourself from every symptom of thee dis ' tressing complaints? If y ou think so. call at I E. Jamts' Drugstore, F.ben-tuire, Pa., and ; procure a bottle f Shiloh's Vitalizer. Every bottle bn a prirtM guarantee on it. I'se ac cordingly and If It dowa you rogmvl It will ost you nothing. " 4-a.-.o. w.ly. How Womkx wotld Votk. "Were wo men ullowe-.l to vote, every one in tbe land who has used Dr. Pierce's ' Favorite Pr siptiou" would vote it to be an unfailing remedy , or the diseases peculiar to her &x.' iy druggists. 1 MfOIlTiVT TO Tn.Utl.fll. Krnril in ducemer.ts are offered vou It the iirai.iva TO-n liorn. It will pav vou to rcsd thrir I rrisemerd,tb9foui".del.-w-b(.rrintbi. r- t f St n,'"w'w rwia mmt, Timt m l I I-Ji . V ...... rTi.-t t.. ' Ba!rtioti giui-nin or r. tct -'- V f ' awj orW' t ivrfvL tix t.. rv-.fi i. : MH iolsfvA, t.-.rt ViM- f r. , Z J?-- " i rirwirtr oaJloi Mill. kcrjtT(,t CSriMPORTAHTIIl. . . . . . , . . 1 r. ruLiviiUuiu fin t.ju.4i rrj.zt.5. L i v ny PtrrirDa.frri.ati!3Ur n' I :v 1 mjuinffttirrtfuch rr-.u-moucri-c: V . deel Je to prcha nno ilwt er ' t onc for TaliiAhlflrifnrma'ion 7 i-.',J.i ' " Whrr thc.t comee In ; botl-v $KTO tfirtv-ifh anrt-rotlt rf -.tt, ., T ;' L"' madBOnBsinsriefiaK. A TioDotv-la w o- it A on irtc. no f-pr.r, m'miin- m - 2 - - Jotr;o baa noiicLitiouprlt? i;-s - 15 1 Z "V A." - i IB MALL, i '"' " fc; f 1" .: .An t Market Street K V V : .1 J . Ai.dn w Jai ksf.ri'a p); Th" fo".-wi!ig -ef. '.Ji t.t i;-il,"d. V a- Vllttet! l.V Judge ot 'J ei;;i. a ,!;;-.: e ot C'U't i f t'-e Unit'-d s-t-i'es, t Hue! k'md. t::r.-e dav fitter t! 1 Ja-.k-. ri. 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" t- l - I-.- , t ();:' ' m , fir H t- v ' - " . r. ., . ? -". ? r.s a , , I r 4 f ' '-- 3 r -1- , . J If -j . "?":.' J--. . I K.' . V- ' . t 1. : . ii.if I-.,. i m -n I, -ur pn, o-r t-. t.-f. tie- !. in;-c,l t r I !, ui Iot n i-i-'IM .,1 I t to i.l i,:- ifr.i :, ni r.u;-f- '!:? tlm.K ii-J t i lii uev.-r u: ki-.j l-i v. to cry. w, n J h.ne a-t.-.l Ki th.- mat --ft. liou-,. i i-!-i-l-:e t . ;i, en inve r-l-i-,1 i he l i v : he ' 'inm i :. ,1 . n rot-i- t-T !.. t r-i tin -'. H,-i" -ir 1 e l,a t ui-:i n b. tt.-,; Th ili;j knew li.ra in. l lall-l. l. n u.'l ttat!. a- i f-,1 i.i h err ver iic 1-. .1. i t , r,...,) nd L i.' l j . f !-r -a t. i,r ..t li -rr. t ?rs leavlmr Imr ih a m: .-kf N ' Kin Con; I," r..,u i,l I'lc.eta: r.-tcTd.v a trvi l-1, i-!'i!J-u, ii ph. .::u-k. t-rery tr.nli-. tiiif- 1 ii, 1 v liiui-t' cri.iiiiiip i i n. I ;.i er a m !o .i ;.,r a 1 i f .-r : TT'jiilJ toi.t Ci i. Nav. cu.'-.i hi ir.. it t tt!T I !,e !,(,-4 t,..- . :, Ii r'l(l.t li .- I:,,- ' t. k ll'.wi-il !-:iu t 1 t I-l I If. Ot l"8. Jm.-1. - U f n r(.,1--,-r-r....' i c:- e i : on M..r. pii.ar. !i- s t- '"Kfeii i b ft ic: i; hi n i t -. ii a et,e t..r a 1. 1--r I - lit II,'- J-nrtHT.iaa .;,,.t. u,e l cn'.'uv i i ar:ci l.t- i::i; i',;. . i . .. au,1 Puck ot t!,f "in :y Irion 1- . : U ii !:-, i.if- ci nil n v. H"e elicit a F-.nic rrn,..rii I'emh it! t ui-t ma ii ,1 t jii.. I n tlui I! f tum-ril. H--tin ii ,-r- t , lit f-e tin my frln,.i r:i"n u enr'1 ly Ml-. .rip. JI Il k.:-.. JI the pur'oruilir c;:-c. rilul I..,- rnifj linn iu n.,1 1:1 cu:i tbfrrai.t Iruin ni-.-e-it. 1 i, 1-artfl. fxcfpt x !'-w iniiin.i'i t hi ?,i i4iii,-i-5iiiy llii-.t i.ii.v n. liave L 1-Hr-i IT. -it e funeral Frn.--n an-! alt li'Hir?. 1 nl down tn writf t u n t ruu into a loin i;:p:i. A""- i j' HoS. .1 as. Hubat ts. I u NEW ADYKin'Ih.Wk V Ktr iiri's ri4or-t:n.-Y;V a tmilaj prt'i-ij . : i--, . ' - ' : ' " f ur vrv I ii...,u.H(i.i:.; ' ' Uirtj?uii, i:,. r ! .o 1 ' b.-k. cuvm, i- ii-i, iiija-ra t 1 iw i :i-it. so l '' : Miicril or n-iii.i-i n-;'- 1 -..l r hi piHi. -i ri.ls. --'" ; -S'-.'i ' ; l.",00 f.. "-l; . :(: : " ' " - snp. jf I I ou o.-'i t--! : " ' ' ' ' , ct lot in.- e; H- !'; c ,". C.r.l. .-liHIcIi. vl.ai-el. I-" l . : . s -' TTiTiTtc : fw: :?- ti ' ' l- - T? , 1 ' . I- . 4 ( ., U(n i I1MII.1. HKAUl. m i'oki t 1,1 nil. A 'r-n t.J steti'cd I in "i '''. mt-nt t'-r i .1:1 fro i " ' ' ' T f '.nict-.r, ! t.t,"f . t v v -In wjK-'j'i,..:. 1 : -sr' ? IP'M". n tU.Hiii.l-. l. -11. ii )ant(s1. - t :t-- , t. . - - $777 It . f r. o. Tif HeTiTtfinpf r A trtl!rg t r " r-6 f 1 1 r 1 1. ; ir v - - r 1 ii-t-' i - i -T-- Jr-f r t t - - d -i- :( I F to ; --r-ih f i r l ird R- - t'-f-ktr 1- -s r t" T i , - t' rt t i . .1 rst a i 1 W; s . ' t w 1 M ' T ri -r . 1 Jl ! H- r- i i t i i h 1 1 t'i u i '"t i Set i a t I V r M r--a - l.u ,'tf "9 o - h v r '3 il e in ' b:s '-' y r, e net t a-'o, Tlo- ''et f r si, a 'it ' v ' da-'- , o.)r t 'I i: :-h. "u-rs ' v lov ' on; -rd -is I 1 w t ' "'n 3 is tia, '"n t J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers