The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, January 27, 1882, Image 2

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    (tambru Jrcaihm
EBENSBURC. PA.,
FHIDAY, - - - - JAN. 27, 1882.
Tjik census of 1880 showed the entire
population of New York city to be 1,
20e,2t9. Of this number, 720,629 are
native born and 478,070, or a little over
one-third of the whole, are of foreign
birth. The Irish exceed all other na
tionalities, their number being "595,
while Germany coines next, with 153,
42. These figures disprove the asser
tion so often made that New York ia es
sentially a foreign city.
t'ONfiKKis has been in session eince
the first Monday in December. Keifer,
th speaker, kept it waiting two weeks
and more for the purpose of arranging
the standing committees, and in doing
so disgusted all the Democrats and over
two-thirds of the Republican members.
Then two more weeks were lost by ad
journing over the holidays, in order that
the members might visit their constitu
ents on fret passes and ascertain what
would be the popular thing for them to
do. Since their return most of the time
has ben consumed in trying to find out
who is the Republican leader in the
House, and in offering about four thou
sand bills embracing all imaginable pro
jects for consideration and final action.
"Go forth, my son, into foreign lands,"
said the Swedish chancellor, Oxenstern,
"and see with what little wisdom the
world is governed."
Jt'DOF. Porter lep;;in his address to
the jury on behalf of the proaecudion in
the Guiteau trial on Monday, and proba
bly got through on "Wednesday evening,
and certainly not later than yesterday,
so that a verdict may be expeeted before
the end of the weok. On Saturday Oui
teau delivered his speech to the jury, it
being substantially the same as the one
he published a week ago, and which
Judge Cox at first refused permission to
him to make. It is a most extraordina
nary spectacle to see a criminal deliber
ately arguing hid own infinity and mak
ing ajvery 3hrewd speech on the evidence
to prove it. 1. .S. Judge Porter con
cluded his sjH?ech at 3 r. sr. on "Wednes
day, after which J ridge Cox charged the
jury, and at ten minutes past 5 o'clock
they returned a verdict of guilty.
The Allegheny county Democratic
Committee, at its meeting on Saturday
last, adopted resolutions warmly en
dorsing Hon. James II. Hopkins, of
that county, as the next Democratic
candidate for Governor, and authoriz
ing him to select his own delegates to
the State convention. That portion of
the resolutions tmpnvering Mr. Hop
kins to appoint his own delegates not be
ing acceptable to several members of
the Committee, although nine-tenths of
the committee favored his candidacy, a
motion was made by one of his friends.
Dr. Wood, to reconsider the yote, which
was agreed to, and the duty of electing
the delegates entrusted to the district
conventions.which are called to meet on
Tuesday, the 14th of February. There
does not seem to be any doubt that Mr.
Hopkins will be supported by the entire
delegation from Allegheny county.
Rkbellion most foul has broken out
in tho Mahone camp in Virginia. Jno.
E. Massey, a man of acknowledged abil
ity and regarded as the father of the
Readjuster or Repudiation movement,
and who was elected Stale Auditor by
tho Legislature two years ago, wanted
to be re-elected by the present Assem
bly, but refused to permit Mahone's
caucus to dictate to him who his sub
ordinates should be. The caucus insist
ed upon its right to do so, whereupon
seven of Massey's supporters retired in
disgust, uttering loud threats of ven
geance, To-day (Tuesday) is the time
fixed by the Legislature for the election
of Ma-wy 's successor, but with what re
sult we cannot of course state. "When
the quarrel between these public plun
derers fairly begins, as it is certain to
do, the sequel will furnish another in
stance of the truth of the old adage,
that "when rogues fall out honest men
are likely to get their own."
It cannot but bo deeply gratifying to
ex-Gov. Horatio Seymour, of New York
in his declining years, to know that he
enjoys in a most eminent degree the un
qualified respect and esteem of all tho
people, irresrctive of party, in the
great Empire State. The undoubted
existence of this feeling of honest regard
and friendship, for a man whose whole
life has been pure and unsullied is abun
dantly illustrated by the warm admira
tion and regard for the distinguished
ex-Governor, as expressed by the public
press of his native State. He paid a
brief visit to Albany last week, and the
ning Journal, tho Republican organ
.at the State capital, referring to the
fact, says : "No man in the Democratic
party deserves or receives such honest
admiration as the sage of Dcerfield. A
Litter partisan himself while in author
ity, no man ever dared question the in
tegrity or intentions of Horatio Sey
mour. His declining years are sur
rounded by all tbat'inakes old age beau
tiful." '
That veteran Democrat, John Mc
Jveon, the newly elected District Attor
ney of New York city, don't believe in
traveling over a railroad on a free
pass, as he plainly indicated la3t week
by returning to the New York Central
and Hudson River Railroad Company a
pass which had been sent him, and
which was good on that road for one
year. In speaking of the matter to a
reporter Mr. McKeon said ; "If mem
bers of the Legislature would refuse
passes they would come liomo less fre
quently and stick more faithfully to the
duties that the peoplo entrust to them.
When I was in the Legislature I went
to Albany on the 1st of January and
tayed there until the 1st of May, when
I came home on the Crst boat that
ouM make its way through the thawed
Ice." It has been a long time since Mr.
McKeon was a member of tho Xew 1
York Legislature, and as the times
Lav changed somewhat since then, so
iiavt; men, especially members of State
Legislatures, changed with them.
ROBERT E. PATTISOS.
At the last Presidential election, Kob-
ert K. Pattison was re-elected Controller
of Philadelphia by a majority of 13,593,
and at the same election Garfield had a
majority of 20,560 in the same city. Mr.
Pattison is a Democrat, and owes his
re-election to the fact that he proved
himself to be an exceptionally able and
faithful officer, and also to the very im
portant fact that he was endorsed and
voted for by the independent Republi
cans fighting under the banner of re
form in the administration of the city
government. "With this flattering en
dorsement of him at the election refer
red to and the admitted integrity and
efficiency of his official record, a3 good
working political capital, Mr. Fatti
son's admirers in Philadelphia some
time ago conceived the idea that he
would make an irresistable candidate be
fore the people for Governor, and at
once put the necessary machinery in mo
tion to secure for him the forty-six del
egates from that city to the next Dem
ocratic State convention. The result
was that the Democracy of the eity di
vided into two hostile factions as they
habitually do, on advocating Pattison's
nomination and the other opposing it.
The contest over the delegates was a
warm and bitter one, and resulted last
week in the election of a majority of
the forty-six who are favorable to Tat-
tison's nomination. As usually hap
pens, a very large number of seats are
contested, and it is therefore impossible
to state Pattison 'a real strength in the
delegation though it is conceded that
he will have the larger portion of it.
"We legard it as very short sighted
and unfortunate for Mr. Pattison to al
low his name to be used under all the
circumstances ; nor can we regard the
men who have been conducting his pre
liminary contest as his wisest and best
friends. In his prescat attitude he is
not the candidate of the undivided Dem
ocracy of Philadelphia, a position which
any candidate from that city ought to
occupy, but he has permitted himself to
be made the candidate of a certain set
of men in Philadelphia who manage one
faction of the party. This is an inaus
picious commencement for him in the
race upon which he has entered, and is
not calculated to give him any special
strength in the remaining counties of
the State. Besides this. Mr. Pattison's
friends will hardly contend th.Uhewould
be supported by the independent Repub
licans for Governor, as he was for the
office of City Controller. And then, too,
he is a new man and comparatively un
known to the Democracy of the State,
his present candidacy being his first as
piration for nomination to a State office,
He is a young man yet, and tne accept
ed time for him to become the Demo-
cvatic candidate for Governor may pos
sibly be in the near future. He has
been twice highly honored by the tax
payers of Philadelphia in electing him
to a most responsible oflice, for the ex
press purpose of guarding and protect
ing their highest and best interests, and
a propf-r sense of gratitude outrht, in our
judgement, to suggest to him the pro
priety of fulfilling his part of the con
tract by serving out the remainder of
his oSlcial term.
No max in this country ever stooped
so low to bring about his nomination for
the Presidency as John Sherman did
prior to the meeting of tho Chicago con
vention in lsso. A colored man of ed
ucation and intelligence, Emerson by
name, and who was a clerk in the Treas-
ury Department under Sherman, appear-
ed before the Senate Contingent Fund
Investigating Committee one day last
week, and testified that in the summer
of 1JW0 he was sent to the South by
Sherman to work up delegations in his
(Sherman's) interest for the Presidency,
and that he was authorized to promise
Fede ral appointments wherever he eould
secure support for Sherman that he
went to Arkansas and consulted with
that fragrant statesman, ex-Senator
Clay ton. in whose control he was author
ized by Sherman to place certain govern
ment patronage-rori'fZcd Clayton would
agree to work for Sherman that he
found all the leading Republicans in
Arkansas, as well as wherever he went
in the South, favorable to Grant
that ho was swept away by the Grant
current that he went to Chicago and
electioneered for Grant, and that Sher
man bounced him out of office on the
very day he returned to Washington.
Ho further swore that in consideration
of being appointed naval officer at New
Oileans, that prince of gamblers and
colored statesman, Pinchback, agreed
to send a Sherman delegation from Lou
isianathat the man then holding the
office couldn't for some reason be remov
ed that Sherman then wanted Pinch
back to take another office that Pinch
back refused and organized a Grant del
egation from Louisiana. During the
decline and fall of the Roman Empire
tho Praetorian Guard was accustomed
to put up the imperial rurple at public
Rale, or auction, and knock it down to
th highest bidder ; and John Sherman !
sought a nomination for the Presidency,
by a liberal and corrupt use of govern
ment patronage. Wherein does the an
cient method differ in infamy from the
American or modern style ?
Samuel Bctlek, the present Repub
lican State Treasurer, has addressed a
letter to one of his political friends in
Chester county, in whieh he states that
lie lias concluded to become a candidate
for Governor before the apprroaching
Republican State convention, having
been assured, as he says, "by friends
from different parts of the State in whose
judgment I (he) have implicit confidence
that there is a public sentiment in my
(his) favor that would justify this ac
tion." The Pittbburg Ditpntch, which
is very independent in its attitude and
terribly in earnest in its hostility to Cam
eron ism, has a very strong impression
that Jiutler is simply a candidate for the
puriose of capturing a few delegates not
within the reach of Beaver and turning
them over to the candidate of the ma
chine when the proper time arrives.
The same paper, in referring to the fact
that on Saturday last the Lehigh coun
ty Republican Committee elected dele
gates to the State convention who are
"solid for Beaver," says that the Le
high Committee have contributed their
mite "toward forcing the nomination of
a complete Independent ticket."
The Supreme Court has fixed Febru
ary 2d (next Thursday) for hearing the
argument of the $"300 legislative salary
qutJtiou.
THE LMOS VETERA ' CORPS.
j A Union Veteran Corps, composed ex-
clusively of honorably discharged union
soldiers and sailors, of the Grand Army
of the Republic, will hold a military and
civic fair at Masonic Temple, in the city
of Washington, commencing February
27, 1882. The object of the fair is to
raise funds for the purpose of increasing
the numbers of the Corps. There is no
militia law and no provision for main
taining a military organization in the
District of Columbia, and the purpose
is to build up a first-class military com
pany in the capital of the nation. The
Corps embraces in its membership re
presentatives from nearly all the States
in the Union, as well aa from every
Corps in the army during the war. Con
tributions of money and articles of any
character are respectfully solicited, and
will be duly acknowledged through the
press and by mail. Contributions can
be sent to Hon. John W. Thompson,
Treasurer of the National Metropolitan
Bank, who is President of the Finance
Committee,which is composed of thirty
six of the best known citizens and busi
ness men of the District.
Season tickets for the fair, $1. Prizes
to the number of one-third the number
of season-tickets sold will be distributed
at the close of the fair among the ticket
holders. The prizes will range in value
from II to f300. All orders for tickets
from abroad will be promptly rilled, and
prizes drawu by ticket holders residing
outside the District will be promptly
sent to any address.
The Corps is under the patronage of
Hon. Robert S. Lincoln, Secretary of
War. and fifty other of the leading gen
erals and soldiers of the late rebellion.
The members of the Corps make a con
fident appeal to their comrades and
friends without reference to locaiity to
aid them in their efforts to build up and
maintain at the capital of the nation a
first-class military comrany. The ob
ject is one worthy of the attentiou of
every true friend and lover of the Union
ion who is able to contribute in any man
ner towards eatablishing a permanent
Union Veteran Corps at the seat of gov-
ernment.
WOISE AND WORSE.
The Irish news is mournful in what
ever aspect it may be viewed. Despite
the encouraging assurances of the min
istry as to the acceptance of the land
act, tho number of agrarian outrages in
creases. Fifty thousand British troops
are insufficient to stamp out the spirit
of destruction that public events have
bred on that "distressful" isle. There
are mutterings as to what will happen
whenParliament reconvenes. Gladstone
is to be harried more than ever, because
of the state of Irish affairs, by those
who would have ail dissent against Eng
lish measures crushed out by an iron
heel. Suppose for a moment that those
efforts should prove successful through
the aid of the Irish contingent of Par
liament, who would take the places of
the Liberal ministers ? By a logical
necessity, men who would go for eradi
cating from Ireland by fire and sword,
every symptom of enmity to British rule,
No other alternative remains. Glad
stone's ministry has filled the Irish jails
with political prisoners, yet seems to be
powerless to restore a reasonable degree
of peace and order in the infected dis
tricts. It lias now turned its guns up
on the Ladies' Land League. "What
more could a Tory minister do, except
to imitate the treachery and brutality
of Elizabeth's and Cromwell's time ?
Yet the English public daily evinces
more dissatisfaction at the turn of af
fairs in Ireland. This is not an omen
of good tor the latter country. Glad
stone, with a savage public opinion thus
far latent behind him, but gradually be
ing awakened into activity by Tory ap
peals for something effective to be done,
stands between two fires, the Tory bom
bardment and the Irish fusillade. Then
his merciful disposition and his desire
to deal justly lead him to concessions
which the Conservative critics term
weaknesses. The Irish policy is to
strengthen the hands of tho opposition
to the Liberal ministry, and so hasten
the inevitable conflict between the two
races. Earl Derby said some months
ago that no doubt could exist as to the
universality of the sentimeut for a sep
arate government, entirely free, enter
tained by Irishmen. This is the under
laying cause of the confusion and an
archy prevailing in parts of Ireland,
which some maliciously assert to be its
normal condition, the object being to
tire out England, and compel it by
sheer disgust, to give up its control over
tho Irish soil. This it will never do, and
when the conflict comes for English
supremacy it will probably prove as ter
rible and merciless as llaleigh's raids or
Cromwell's successes. Boston Tran
script. Some Divorce Facts. Divorce
statistics in England show one petition
in every 6w marriages, ana amiougii
the proportion has doubled in the last
few
r years, it is not to be comjiared with
divorce rate of Connecticut, where,
the
of Protestant marriages, one in every
eight is annulled by the Courts. But
although England has not yet reached
the rate of New England even in Mas
sachusetts the Protestant divorce rate
is one in fifteen it teems to be on tho
road. ThrJConnecticut omnibus law of
1S43
too
ed
permanently destroys the happiness of
the petitioner and defeats the purpose
of the marriage relation." As yet noth
ing of the kind is proposed in England,
but even under the existing law the
number of divorce cases has enormously
increased. In France, where the Re
publican party is pledged to legalize di
vorce, legal separations have gene up
from one in 371 marriages in 140-50 to
one in 1"0 in l.S.VJ-70. In Belgium the
ratio of divorces has risen from one in
576 in 1840 to one in 2W0 in 1x74. The
evidence as to the effects of the faculty
of divorce is singularly incomplete.
Strange to say, it seems to make little
or no difference in the average rate of
immorality. .South Carolina allows no
divorces. North Carolina has a divoice
law that is singularly lax, yet no one can
find the moral difference between the
two. Divorce is not legal in Franc e,
but Parisians are not more moral than
Bostonians, who annul one marriage'in
every fifteen. New York has the strict
est of divorce laws. Maine gives every
Judge liberty to divorce whom he pleas
es, yet is New York as pure as Maine ?
Whatever may be the result of social
morals, facility of divorce by seriously
threatens the family institution.
("lakkson N. Potter, an eminent
citizen of New York, whose reputation
was national, died in that city on the
23d inst., in the Goth year of his age.
Mr. Potter was an ardent and influential
Democrat, and first engaged the !atten
tion of the country by his constitutional
arguments during the dispute over the
election of Fraud Hayes, and later by
his work as chairman of the now cele
brated l'otter Committee of Inquiry ap
pointed by the House of Representatives.
After leaving Congress Le was not con
spicuous in'politics, but took an active
part in the affairs of the country in a
quiet way.
which, however, was found to be , ' "'ira"" urilTe
wide even for New England-grant- ; ,I,ZZZ,"-!
divorce for "any sucli misconduct as didate. No soldier in the T
I
OUK PHILADELPHIA LETTER.
TBK Ttt.F-SSrSOS OF A MILD WIXTER BNOB
DflM OH ITS KME18 MORE DEMOCRATIC
BLrDIBIN6 THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
PREDOMINANT.
Philadf.lphia, Jan. 23. 1882.
Kofrular Correspondence of the Fhkexas.
Dear McPike For a lonp time I had a
great anxiety to learn the cause of the Do
teral disaster last April, in the traitjhts of
Magellan, and at tins time, though somewhat
late, I am gratified to learn that the flisaster
was caused by zerciine siccntine. Tins ex
planation is entirely satisfactory.
Several snow storms have occurred in this
locality not such rude, blustering, boisterous
blizzards as were familiar here last winter,
b'.it aesthetic sort of snow torms quiet,
sweet, low-voired, restful affairs. Nature
has so far this winter been in one of her
amiable moods, and the season partakes
lareely of her genialty. The snow-flakes
drop gently and tenderly to the earth as
though they were freighted with heaven's
choicest blessings for us here below. Our
pleasant weather lasts well and so does tbe
winter stocks of our merchants, rendered
partly unsalable by its continuance, but It is
comforting to the merchants to think that
what they loose in business thev gain in fuel.
I wonder if they think of that. I bet thev
(ion t, and are nnhappv. Why don't they
think of that and be happy ? Judging from
is. . i ., ; r . , ...
S-P ? tSAnt-no7,r.!lweath.er th,is latl;
the Grand Trunk Railroad from Cresson to j
Ebensburg have, up to this time, been rust-
ing in'enforced idleness. I presume, bowev- '
er, that the railroad employees don't fret i
much over this enforced idleness of that
class of their machinery. There are, I ven
ture to sav, many more pleasant experiences j
In railroading than is to be found in bucking j
big snow drifts. The Ebensburg branch '
railroad men are doubtless all happy. j
BNOBDOM ON ITS KNEES. j
Notwithstanding the awful rumor that the j
apostle of aestheticism was christened by the -i
unpoetical name of Oscar O'Flaherty, the
snobdom of Philadelphia came to its knees i
at his feet. The Wilde sunflower anostle '
appears in a fur-lined green coat which ex
cites tbe merriment of the unaesthetic class
of ladies. Xot only the merriment of un
aesthetic maidens is excited, but also their
curiosity, causing the inquiry : "Does th
green extend all the way tnrough ?" and
the general belief is that it does, It may not
be uninteresting to slender ladies to know
that Mr. Wilde's ideal of perfect beauty is
Sarah Bernhardt, whom he regards as th
realization of all his aesthetic dreams. He
says he would ask no higher earthlv delight
than to sit the whole live long night on the
door stoop of the house in which Sarah slept.
By the way, it is said that Mrs. Sarah Bern
hardt is threatened with another "accident."
I came very rear negleting to teil what may
be interesting to tbe young men of Cambria,
viz : That Oscar Wilde, besides his green
dress, adorns himself in a vellow dressing
gown with red cuffs, brown trousers with
red cords down his long legs, red silk stock
ings and an olive green ulsterette with a
mik fur collar and patent leather boots. I
take pleasure in making it known that since
the big Dutchman, of the artillery band, un
jointed his ophcleide and silently stole away
to a lager beer saloon, the Atlanta aesthetics
have had no worship, and have sent for Os
car Wilde. It !s much to be regretted that
this wayward young Wilde took the poetic
license of skipping Baltimore and putting
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carroll, i.f Carrollton.
in a flutter. Every florist of Baltimore had
been deplicted of hi? stock of sunflowers to
decorate the Carroll mansion.
MOKE DEMOCRATIC BLUNnEHINCW
Reckless ambition and injudicious counsel
have eaused troubles and quarrels among
the Democrats in many wards in this cltv.
At a time when the Democratic pfirtv should
be a unit which good work is needed on the
part of every Democrat Mr. Uobert K. Tat
tlson, a professing Democrat, foists himself
upon the party as a candidate for Govern or,
when he knows that the result would raise
quarrels and division in the Democratic
ranks. Ah the late Democratic ward con
ventions in the city would hnve been harmo
nious and productive of good, had Mr. Patti
son not forced himself into the canvass
The purpose for which he divided and im
nottered the Democrats is Infamous, From
his on-ii confession, he did it to "gratify his
personal feeliiis" and obtain"a vindication"
against his personal enemies. It was arro
gance on Mr. Pattiann'a ?rf tn thTnV ,.r
i having such an honor conferred urou him
Neither by age, nor wisdom, nor service had
ho the right to ask the Democratic party to
derate him to the highest oflRce in the Com
monwealth. Mr. Tattlson, should he ever
again become a candidate for any po-ition
would bo repudiated by the Democrats of
this city. lie aided in defeating a portion of
the Democratic ticket in this city last N'o-
vruuicr, ana ne nas now been instrumental
in dividing and embittering the Democracy
of the city to satisfy "personal feeling," and
to vindicate himself against "personal ene
mies." The canvass of Mr. Pattison for se
curing the Philadelphia delegation to the
next Democratic convention in his interest
as a candidate fr Governor, has engendered
more ill feeling than ever before resulted
from Democratic blundering.
The Democrat will have no common ene
my to light in November next, and in no
county in the State arc the Democrats more
sensible of that fact than thos- ef Cambria
At the meeting of the Republican State
ComiBittce, a member of that body from
Cambria county, Hon. Henry A. Boggs,
made a declaration which was greeted by
long and loud applause, viz : "As for our
candidate, for Governor, it is only necessary
to have him photographed with his crippled
leg and crutches, and put a photograph in
each school house in the State, with his war
record pasted upon it, to get the unanimous
vote of the people." This speech, with the
endorsement it received, was a confession
that the whole committee regarded General
Beaver's nomination as a foregone conclu
sion. The action of the Republicans on tho
10th of May next will be a mere formality ss
far as the candidate for Governor is concern
ed. The Republican candidate for Gover
nor has already been nominated. Before
the meeting of the State Committee, a con
ference of Republican bosses was held at
Senator Cameron's house in Washington,
and General Beaver, one of the 306, who mis
represented the Republicans of his eountv
and vot?d 30 times for Grant at Chicago,
was then and there decided upon as the Re
publican candidate for Governor.
Now, since the Republicans nf Pemisvlva-
nia have chosen a soldier as their candidate '
ror wovernor, let the Democrats of Pennsvl
vanla, who have an abundance of soldier ma
terial, place a soldier candidate ou their
State ticket, either for (Governor or Lieuten
ant Governor. Major Moses Veale, of Phil
adelphia, has a war record unsurpassed by
any Union soldier in the State. Major
Veale, the hero of a dozen battles, with a
war record that eclipses that of General
Beaver, a citizen of unblemished reputation,
a cultivated gentleman, an able lawver and
an eloquent orator, would elevate the stan
dard and reflect character and credit on the
show a better record and more honorable ca
reer rnan Major Moses Veale.
THE EJf GLTSH LASCUAOR TREDOMllfANT.
ITubbard's "Newspaper and Rank Direc
tory f the World" gives the total number of
newspapers ruid periodicals now published
as 34,L'7t, with a circulation of about 11),
000,000 copies, the annual aggregate reach
ing in round numbers about H),ii0ii,non,ooo
copies. Europe leads with 10, and North
America follows with 12,400, the two togeth
er making over nine-tenths of all the publi
cations in existence. There are 4,020 dailj
newspapers, 18,274 tri weeklies and weeklies,
and H,oo8 issued less frequently. It appears
that while the annual aggregate circulation
of publications in the United States is 2.000,
000,000, that of Great Britain and Ireland is
2,2to,ooo.jon. Of all these n;,5o0 are printed
in the English language, 7,soo in German,
3,S."o in French, and upwards of l,6uo in
Spanish.
The flexibility and terseness of the English
language has made it the language of inter
national telegraphy, and from statistics just
collected it appears to be the great newspa
per language. In other words, it about
equally divides th newspapers of the world
with all other tongues combined. The suc
cess of the English speaking people as colo
nists and their superior prolificness are not
the only reasnus for thinking that the Eng
lish language is destined to predominate the
world. There is not a question of doubt
about the English being the speech of the
future. G. N. S.
A f 20 Biblical Reward. The publish
ers of Rutledoe's Monthly in the prize puzzle,
department of their monthly for February,
ofter the following easy wav for some one to
make?20: To the person'tellir.g us which
is the shortest verso in the Old Testament
scriptures by February 10, 1SS2, we will give
twenty dollars in gold as a prize. The monev
will be forwarded to the winner February
16, 1SS2. Those who try for the prize must
send 20 cents in silver (no postage stamps
taken) withtheii answer, for which they will
receive the March number of the Monthly, in
which will be publisned the name and address
of the winner of the nrize, with the correct
answer thereto. Cut "this out, it mav be
worth f 2o to you Address, Ratledge Pub-lii-Liii
Company, Easton, Ta.
I l aninrrrii tinlfnf II J
THE TRUNK LINE FIGHT.
SOME OF
THI ADVANTAGES OF
STLVANIA LINE.
THE TXNN-
The Pennsvlvunia T?rilrnrii1 seems to have
got at an early period somebody with taste j throughout the country, and it behooves ev
and elegance about them. Take the color of erybody to be vaccinated.
its cars a rich, royal magenta, with a gold
mrongn it to neein with
Then their
w engines,
experimenting on snler.did new
some of which make a mite a minute. They
offer prizes to Superintendents for the best
piece of road-bed. All the new air-brakes,
patent platforms. Internal fixings, the Penn
sylvania Railroad adopts before anybody else
thinks of them. Along the line of the road
there are men constantly inventing improve
ments. Its station-houses are almost all of
stone or brick, built to last in to the twenty
first century. Some of these station-houses
will probably be) seen five hundred r six
hundred years hence. A constant premium
is put on people living on the Pennsylvania
line. Trains between terminated points sel
dom or never stop at the suburban points,
which have their own svstem of trains, the
one never running into the other. The block
signal system is on their whole main system,
and they carried all the passengers to tho
Centennial Exhibition without the loss of a
life. .Wherever th Pennsylvania Railroad
enters it either sweeps away competition or
compels it to get up and dust itself. Polite-
rinun-ni muni; nil ti mir
! information is given to passengers.
Bess is enforced along all the line, and full
Mr. Vanderbilt knows that it will cost him
money to put his railway system on the Penn
sylvania basis, and heprohablv desicrned the
railroad war to affect the dividends of the
Pennsylvania Company, so that its stock
holders would make a fuss. He has not done
any of these things. The mild winter has
extended railroad building up to the present
time, and the two railroads through Middla
New York the Rackawana Extension and
Fludson River West Shore are making gal
lant time : while the Buffalo ami Chicago
Railroad at the other end, is hastening along
side by side with the Lake Shore. Mr. Van
derbilt has, however, invaded Pennsylvania,
if Mr. Gowen's triumph last week was due
to him. Yet the principal thing he can ac
complish there might be to reduce the Penn
sylvania's passenger traffic on the Jersey
lines which have to earn n big dividend, hav
ing been leased at a high figure. The Penn
sylvania svstem is so extensive, however,
that a deficiency at one point is made up bv
a surplus at another. Its termina' facilities
in the larger cities are magnificent. It is
building the last of its prominent depots in
Chicago. The Philadelphia station i. one of
the finest in the world, and is in tho very
centre of that citv, right under the Courts of
justice and the city offices. All trains from
New "i ork to the West and South run into
the middle of Philadelphia. Oath's Lc'i"r
I Watermelons in Januaiiv. The family
! of Teter Matson. living near Burlington, N.
; J., eat watermelons for dinner every day,
I and expect to do so all winter. Matson laid
away melons during the season, preser
1 ving them by a process which le professes to
; hnve Invented, He varnished each melon
. all over and then pealed up the stem. Not
1 long ago he invited a number of his friends
! to dinner ami brought ont three large wnter-
melons for desert. His guests all united in
i saying that they never tasted more delicious
' melons even in tho regular season. The
news of Matson's preserving powers reach
) ed a large fruit-dealer in Philadelphia, and
; a representative of the dealer went to Bur
: ling'on and requested the privilege of tasting
j some of the fruit, lie pronounced them de
licious, and at once negotiated for fifty of
I the melons. Matson hesitated some time
j but has at last concluded to part with a por
i tion of his stock, as the price offered was
i very large. They are to be placed on ale at
fabulous prices in Philadelphia in a few
days. The dealer wants Matson to preserve
several thousand next summer or else sell
j him his process. Rocal physicians declare
: that the varnish usM to preveut the melons
! from spoiling is sufficient to have poisoned
j all thoo who have partaken of them, yet
the members of the fimily never enioyed
' better health .V I. World.
Five Peusons Burnet to Dmtb.-a
special dispatch from Clinton, M, says the
house of George C. Smith, at Lewis", five
miles north of that place, was burned at 9
o'clock Thursday morning, an l five of the
inmates perished, namely : Elizabeth Smith,
aged seventeen : Ra-hel, aged thirteen ; Ella, !
aged six ; Theodore, aged sixteen, and the !
mother, aged forty-three. The fire is sup- i
posed to have been started from Hot!.; I
hanging by the kitchen stove, or from a coal
oil explosion. Mrs. Smith was first to awa
ken, when she aroused her husband, who
mnd his escape with the little daughter; of a
neighbor, who was staying there for" the
night, and one of his own daughters, need
about eight. Smith and his daughter were
seriously burned. The house was a story-and-a-half
structure, nnd the'fnmily were'all
sleeping in the second story. Mr.'White. a
suitor of Elizabeth, was at the house after a
o'clock, and thinks that the fire caught in the
kitchen. Miss Smith was to have been mar
ried' in aTfew weeks. An inquest was held
and a verdict returned in accordance with
the above fact.. Mr. Smith was employed by
the Osage Coal and .Mining Company."
In the suburbs of Scranton, at 1 o'clock
Friday morning, a miner named Cook was
dying of small-pox. Hi? wife and babe were
in the same room on the ground lloor. Mrs.
Cook, in accordance with her belief as a Cath
olic, placed a lighted candle in the hand of
the dying man, and then knelt beside him to
pray. Being overcome by the fatigue and
worry of several davs and nights of constant
j attendance on her husband, she fell asleep.
: The candle burned down between the rigid
fingers of the dying man and set the bed on
j fire. Mrs. Cook and the babe were (on
: overcome by suffocation. A crowd gathered
i n t;Z: II" ZTweo
At icr,. two 3 1 " rx
X V.".
. .i.i.i v n i i.j.i vui, hh. iiiomer ami cniM in a
j state of stupor. Cook was dead, and the
the beVr t i i W 'h
Si
now able to tell ofjthe circumstance leadin"
to the tragic affair, hut it i? thought that she
cannot recover, and the child will also die.
. . - ' -... -.!-.. o 1 1:- n.ir is,
Thtc Saddest Tat.e Yet Told. For some
days the children 0f lrs. Teresa Heddy, R0
VearS Old. have been Cnrrvlnr her fmm nno
01 tnp'r homes to another and""depositing her
"i miir in i ruin oi tne nnnse, each family
of children claiming that the others ought
iu liihe care oi nor. sjtie is very feeble and
paralyzed on one side, so that she could not
move from where she was left. Last week
one of the families applied to have her sent
to the poor house, but the request was re
fused, because the children were able to take
care of her. A lawyer told them that if thev
took her to the police station and left tier
there the city authorities would have to take
her in charge. They followed this advice and
left her in front of the building. In compas
sion the poormaster sent her to the almshouse
but he will proceed against the children. One
son only is willing to do something toward
his motlier's support, but he cannot take en
tire charge of her because his own wife is
sick and feeble. .V. Y.San.
K"rr.r.KT His Own Chtt.d rs Anger. Ar-
mistead Grav. a Colored man who oeenniea a
I house on the premises of Mr.;Chas. II. Jones,
j nearOsartown. Powhatan county, Virginia,
i had two children living with him,"a son aged
i thirteen and a daughter aged ten. Grey had
I been complaining ot being sick and sent .his
! son to get him five cents' worth ofmolases.
punishment filled up the bottle with water !
thinking thus to conceal his niilt. Armis- '
i He ooy uraiiK nair uie molasses ami rearing
I teatl discovered the triek and was" so angered
wmi ne set upon rum with a heavy stick ami
felled him to the fl OOr. finrf llrinfT tho ct-nll
and producing death in a few hours. The i
father then carefnHv remover the ciitt;nr
from the dead body and secreted them. Grev
was arrested, Ins little daughter testifying
against him. Lynch law is threatened. This
isUhe second murder of this kind that has
been committed in Powhatan county recently-
Tt Hoc yatot n ,i,-.. : . ...... i . . .
- .ioii.(iui.ll ItlllOll lilt IHI1I-
! ters of Tike county that to kill a white deer
would take away all good luck from any one
i so thoughtless as to fire the fata shot. White
fleer are among the rare animals that roam
the woods. They are so rare, in fact, that
many people believe thorn to he mvths. Old
hunters declare that they have, seen deer as
white as snow bounding over the Vike coun
ty ridges in years gone by, and relate in
stances of the fate which overtook men who
were so rash as to kill them. Hornbeck
Shriner killed the last one, despite the warn
ings of the old hunters : his health, rugged
as an ox's began to fail him ami his fso.ooo
fortune all melted, and he died in the midst
of domestic trouble. Two companions shared I
an almost similar fnfe So snenlrs lh 1
hunter" in the New York .Sin.
The Venango Spectator saysjthat General
Harry White, of the Kiskeminetas, lectured
in Kittanuing one evening last week about
"American Statesmen," but didn't once
name the man who beat him for Congress.
The omission was no doubt an oversight.
I had Chronic Rheumatism for one year ;
had been given up to die bv two physicians.
Pei una cured rue. Wm. Cukiz, ritUburg. i
NEHS AND OTHER NOTINGS.
Jamos Armstrong, of Carlisle, hfn a bu
reau that was built in 1777 from wood cut In
tf 1 ii rlrt-l n .1 frn?t
Tho small-nnx "l Tennrte.1 n anrea1inr
a pastoral letter from Archbishop Mc
j Cabe, of Dublin, enjoins the people not to
listen to abettors of violence.
Miir-i.!e was ncromri!ished nt. Andnver
j Mass., by gnawing the phosphorus from
matches and drinking a pint of ink.
Adolphus Inkman, of Vilkesbarre, aed
j twelve years, 1ms the reputation of being one
I or the most export telegraph operators in the
j State.
t The body o:' Mr. Delaney was found in
her bed, at I'iMburch. on Monday morning
! burned to a crisp. The origin of the fire is
unknown.
! Thousands of families have had occasion
to try fie never-failing qualities of Dr. Bull's
I Cough Syrup, and they all unite in the praise
' of this wonderful prescription,
j Hiram Bleim, of Ilirkorytown, Mont
gomery county, has twenty f wo daughters
j and two so-is. lie has married off all the
girls but tbe boys are still single.
) A colored preacher and three of Lis con
gregation are under arrest in Montgomery
county, Md., charged with tearing down arid
hauling away their meeting house.
W. M. Nnlson.of Da vies county, Ken
tucky, has killed during the past vear 1 144
squirrels, l.r,0 raccoons, and 20 wi'd turkVvs
in the small space of 1,000 acres in Panther
Creek Flats.
X. Ridley and Edward Wilson, employes
in the wood-working department of the Pull
I i
man Lr Vorks, J'ullraan. I I.. were cmicrht
in a belt and horribly mangled. Death was
lnsiarianeous. ;
Henry and Willie Cleer, two Des Moines, .
Ia children, were burned to death on Mon- '
day last, in the shantv in which thev i!yd
Their father was at work and their "mother
was at a neighbor's. ;
Dr. Sanrord Tennonf., of Edinboro, Erie i
county, who is SO years of age, was married
recently to Mrs. Susan Brock, of Meadville,
aged TO years. The groom deserted his brido
the day after marriage. !
The prizes in the "lottery of issasina
l?n',' are sti!1 the centre of attraction at '
Washington. Republicans of the Stalwart 1
order are very earnest in their efforts to in
vest early and profitably.
A portion of St. Paul's Catholie Orphan 1
Asylum, at Worcester, Mass., occupied by
fifty-two children, was burned on Monday
nnht. All the children but one, John Rob- '
erU, four years old, were saved.
Two Rockingham, (Va..) girls, belong- !
mg to respectable families, engaged in a duel
with shotguns a few davs ago. After an ex- :
ehamge of shots the bloodthirsty damsels
were prevented from continuing their fight.
Forty -one new cases of small pox In !
Pittsburgh and twenty-one in Allegheny city
were reported to the board of healtn on Sun- ;
day and Monday last. Nineteen deaths from '
the disease occurred in Allegheny city last
week. j
The English Romani Catholic Directory
shows SS peers, 47 baronets, 6 Privy Council
lors and r M.IP.'s, of .whom 11 represent '
English constituencies. Wit!
years the mi ruber of Boman Catholie elergy
and churches in England and Wales has
doubled.
One of the saddest cases of youthful
dsgredatiim and ruin that have recently been
brought to public notice, occurred in "Phila
delphia a few days ago in the death of Kate
Mnitin. only fourteen years of age from ira-nia-a
potu.
Charles Brown, a German, residing at
Corry, Pa., after having experimented since
1li2 on the subject of peipetual motion,
claims to be on the verge of a solution to the
problem. He says he has found a power to
overcome friction.
In an interview on Sunday ev ning Rev
Father Grace, of Pittsburgh, st' i that at
me iare conrerence or the atr ,, j-clergy of
this diocese, it was decided that absolution
hereafter should be refused to members of
the Knights of Labor.
John Sojourner, of Louisiana, has given
unmistakable evidence of his belief in matri
mony. Although i2 years of age he has just
married his fifth wife, the entire time of his
widowerhood put together being a little over
one year. The last wife is about 0 years of
age.
An old man named Maver and his daugh
ter, living near Cumming-viile, Ont., wrs
murdered in their house with an axe on Fri
day nig'it by a man named Michael Kouike
Mayer's son was also r.ss;:i!ed, but drove the
murderer off with a club. The murderer es
caped. The body of a .Vyear-old child was found
on Saturday in the South Fordham Wool's
near Jerome avenue and Wr-.veiiy street,'
New York. It was covered with sores, and'
is supposed to be that of a small-pox victim
thrown out to avoid the quarantine that
woul J follow.
The Washington Ji p'thlnon , edited by
President Arthur's chum, Gotham, is reviv
ing the Credit Mobilier charges against Gen
eral Garfield, by reprinting w-hat certain Re-
pubncan pape:
Ames was on tl
Stalwart way.
s said m
ie vif:ie-s
1 s7-i.
stair
when Oikes
1, This is the
A car containing ur.clarif.ed whisky was
wrecked on the Pennsylvania Railro.d'near
Coatesviiie, on Thursday. Several men em
ployed in a rolling mill near by drank freely
of the liquor, and one of them,;nani( d James
lute, has since died. Two others are not
expected to live.
Gov. Hoyt ha? issued theVleathhvarrants
of Frank and Henry Rumherger, Dauphin
county; James Nevling, Clearfield county ;
Frank Small, Allegheny county; James Al
lison, Indiana county, and Jonathan Mover,
Snyder county, and fixed the 24tli of March ,
for their execution. i
A Chicago lad discovered three men rob
bing a house. He procured a ristol, and
sent his younger brother to ring the door bell ,
while he posted himself at the rem. The !
i iwsranout when they heard the bell
i y ? ,.
I aim seiu two ouners
after the third.
-Joseph Ehrn and wife, of Lebanon, have
been arrested for cruelly beating their chil-
i dren, one of whom, Oeorgo, aged eight years,
i -!' An invrstigftiVby plans'
. nrc.ves Lin i. rie r r, rs ir. tii ao.i h..
njuries found on his head. The naients sav
that the boy was struck by a comrade.
While a gang of men were working on
the Chicago, Portaire and Superior Railway.
near Superior Citv, Wis., on Saturday, the
earth caved in, completely burying three of .
them. Their comrades worked hard to get ,
them out, hut one of the men was found to i
be dead, and the othertwo fatally injured. !
Mrs. Ant: Campbell, of Ireland, who died
at 3.1S Clifton place, last Tuesday evening,
says the New York World of Saturday, is i
said to have been 1 r2 years old. Her grand- i
father is said to have been 1 Jo years old when j
he died, her father 115 and Fier uncle 110. !
She has a nephew living who is 03 years old. i
On Wednesday of last week Jas. Archer, !
of New Baltimore, Simco county, O., went )
into the woods to fell timber and not return- j
ing, his friends made a search folium, and
on Saturday found his mangled remains un- '
der a tree which had fallen on hiin. Exactly !
two years ago i.is twin brother was killed by
xne cars.
Emma Jager, wife of Wilson Jagger, of
Delaware township. Pike county, haselojed
with a young man named Walker, after hav
ing turned part of the farm property into
cash during her husband's temporary ab
sence. She is aWuit 35 years of age and
Walker only 21. She took considerable cash
with her.
Cnrl Nehbi rson, of Bieinerlehe, Ger
many, aged twenty-four, a prosperous sa
loon keeper at 44 Stanton street. New York,
with a good bank account and no known
trouble, hung himself on Monday morning In
the same manner, at the same hour and day
9 tl,e ear fther did in the old country
live years ago.
It has been ascertained that the immedi
ate cause of the stopping of the Hudson
l'ver train, at Spuyteo Duyvil, was pulling
uie air orase cord by drunken passengers,
who were members of the Albany Legisla
ture. Whether tbe brakernan, w-bose busi
ness it was to go back, was drunk or not has
not been developed.
One of the "Malley boys," indicted for
the murder of Jennie Cramer, is said to pass
his time in reading novels, wl ile the other
sketches and plays the zither, and is about
to publish a waltz that he has composed in
jail. Blanche Douglais. their alleged accom-
l plice, is reported to have more piously taken
to studying the Bible.
Sarah Gorhara, for 35 years an inmate of
an Indianapolis alms house, an inveterate
opium eater, died on Fridav. For several
months past her dailv allowance of opium
ran from 90 to mo grains of opium, besides
one pint of whisky, and more or less mor
phine. She has been known to consume 200
grains of opium a day.
The Signal Corns Station at. Cnne Tint.
teras reported to the Chit-f Signal Officer od
Sunday, as follows : "The bark F. L. Car-
ney, from Navassa, West Indie's toBa'timore
f'o.t T w i ' , ,
Capt. J. L. S. Merry, loaded with guano,
sunk three miles south of llatteras Inlet.
Eight lives lost. C. J.Cartson, a Swede, and
Frank Blakely. colored, were saved."
John W. Fierstine, John N. Light and
Andrew H. Light, insurance agents, were
arretted at Lebanon, on Fridav morning, on
the charge of conspiracy to defraud Philip
Arnold, of North Lebanon township, through
the sale of speculative insurance policies. It
is said Arnold purclwsed from them policies
to the amount of Sir.'i.ooo. at a cost in ilifi'er.
ent ways of several thousand dollars.
t Young naincs was one of the wrst fel
! lows of Bedford, Ind., and when he went
: forward for prayers in a revival meeting,
! with an air of deep contrition, a daughter of
: the pastor knelt by his side to give him con
solation and advice. After the services were
; over the girl missed her gold watch and it
! was conletnre'l that Haines had stolen it.
' She would not believe this, but went with
: the partv who set out to follow him. They
j found him on his knees under a tree, and for
a moment thought he was praying; but a
closer inspection showed that he was burying
' the watch.
The Chicago Tribune says there has jut
' emerged frowi the prison wails of Anau.oo
: a man who for seven years has borne the in
famy and the punishment or a crime ho did T T)TT.X' All'vllv
1 not commit. His name is William Lunger, -ML. i.l.N
and he was sent from Benton county on con
viction for incest. This foul charge was sus
tained by perjured witnesses, who wished to
get his property. On their deathbeds they
confessed their perjury, and Lunger's friends
hastened to secure his pardon. Mr. Lunger
bore his cruel punishment wit', fortitude,
certain that at some time his character would
be vindicated.
A very s,1 snd singular result of one of
the recent hangings in St. Louis, has just
come to light. John Irwin Knier. a young
man twenty-one years of age. witne("-d the
execution of Kftlovsky and EiiM in the jail
vard, January 'th, and was strongly affected
by the scene. During the afternoon of that
day he was noticed by his friends to le wan
dering in his mind and talked rontinuously
about the execution. At night he became
violent, and it was found necessary to take
him from his hoarding house to an insane
asylum, where he died.
A special telegram to the Pittsburgh
Ditnatrh from Newcoraerstown, O., dated
,
2.d iiist., says : Maddan Mabls". living about
. 20 miles west of here, was aroused last night
to find his houe ablaze. Bv a heroic effort
he saved his wife and two of the children by
throwing them from a window, but his re-
maining two children, aged four and seven
; years, perished In the flames. The horrified
parents, unable to rescue the little ones from
their terrible fate, were compelled to witness
. the cremation of their children, whose pierc
! ing and heart-rending screams made their
tragic death doubly horrible to tbe frantic
'. father and mother.
John Wagoner, one of the murderers of
Dr. J. A. Biggs the Treasurer of the Alice '
; Furnace Company, of Ironton, O., who was :
: killed and robbed two menths ago, while on '
his way home at night was taken out of jail
between 12 and 1 o'clock Friday night and
1 hanged in the court-house yard by between '
forty and sixty masked men. They fii?t took ;
j Bill Zeck, the other accused murderer, and j
swung him up, whereupon he made a con
: fession implicating others not jet arrested.
The crowd then allowed him to live f'-r tho
present. There is not the slightest clue to 1
! the perpetrators, and public opinion seems to
approve tho lynching.
John Williams, a shoemaker, died in j
' Jersey City, week before last, of small-pox,
leaving a wife and five children. The neigh- 1
bors were afraid of the disease, and wnen j
Deputy Inspector Sullivan went to fumigate '
the house they insisted that the bed the only
; one in the rooms should be burned. Last ;
Friday morning the Deputy Health Inspector ,
visited the place and found the mother hing 1
i on a heap of rags and carpets and covered ;
i with small-pox. On her right was the dead ,
body of her little girl and on her left that of
a little boy. In a corner of a room was sit- j
; ting a little fellow on whose face was the
shadow of death, white huddling close to the
' cold stove were the two remaining children.
The survivors were taken to the pe-t huse
and the dead buried at the expense of the
county. I
"Vear Central Depot, Mor.tginv ry conn- '
ty, Va., a woman received a sum of "money i
and was known to have it in her possession. !
i She took it to bet house wjjere a gentleman j
: occupied a room in the uvper p.nt of the
' building. Hearing loud and threatening
; noises during the Dight, this man came down J
stairs and found the landlady Iving dead on
I the floor of tier apartment with her tliroat i
j cut. He also reports that he saw two rer-
sor.s precipitately leaving the premises. 1
j Seizing a double barreled shotgun the man .
gave chase to these fugitive figures and soon ;
came within range of thera. As thev refuse.
to stop he fired in rapid succession, first at
one mid then at tho other, and ki:! both. !
j To his intense surprise it was discovered on '
a closer examination of these parties that i
they were two wonen t f the neighborhood, i
who for the ake of the p!rnd"r had dis- i
g'lised themselves as men and cut the throat :
of their ui:(..irtnnate victim.
"i rnu: pi.AiT?;."
Dr R. V. Pn.T.cr.. Buffalo, X. Y. : JD-ar
cr'r I wiiteto tell you what your ' Favorite
Prescription" has done for me. I bad been
a great u;Trer fr m female complaints, cs
peeiaVy "dragg'ng down" for over six years.
du-i:ig much i f the time unable to woik. I
paid out hundreds of dollars without any
benefit ti'l I took three bottles of tile 'Fa
vorit P!v-r,ptin," and I never had any
th'ng do ni- so much good in iuy life. I nd-vi-e
cve:y sick ladv to take it.
Mr.-! F.Mir.T Rhodes. McRrides, Mich.
CcT'i.rvT K.
ol Ilnr. A newlv-in.irried
pair .n th
Bennett i
n Fridav, say the Bmghamton (X
Y.) J.ea'l'r, and, being given a room, were '
escort-'d to the elevator. After viewing the ;
interior of the little room in the elevator, the !
(5 room stepped out and asked the clerk if ho
took him for a greenhorn. The clerk replied
in the negative. "Then give me a room wi'.h
a bed in it," replied the unsophisticated I
young man. Matters were explained, and ;
the elevator shot upward to the third itorv. '
F. II. Drak' NaSrIn(s.
F. II. Drake, Esq . Detroit, Mich., u7er
ed beyond ail description from a skin disease,
which appeared on his hands, head and face,
and nearly destroyed his eves. The most
careful doctoring failed to help him, and af
ter all had failed he used the Cuticura Re
solvent (blood purifier) internally, Cuticura
and Cuticura Soap (the gTt skirl cures) ex
ternally, and was cured, and has remained
perfectly well to this day.
j Consiperaiu k excitement exists at Leba
1 non, Ohio, over the exhuming of several hu
I man skeletons found under the old Bilmyre
. bouse, now being torn down. The building
has probably stood f?0 year. Several theo
' ries are advanced as to how the skeletons .rot
' there, but no satisfactory conclusion can lie ' P.OOTS Sill IFS Ar l.'T'RF.Vl.
given at prrsent. 1 lie excavation for evi
dence to further unravel the mystery is In
progress, and some new light may In- let in
upon it in a few days.
Give I'p st Doctors. "Is It possible
that Mr. Godfrey is up and at work, and
cured by po simple a remedy?"
"I ass, ire yon it is true that he 1g entirely
cared, and wiii nothing but Hop Hitters:
and only ten days ago his doctors cave him
up and said he must die!"
"Well-a-day! That's remarkable! I will
go this day and get gome tcr my poor George
I know hops aie good."
L. de K. Dc Vere, writing to the Balti
more American, advises all who would escape
the small-pox scourge to use the following
preventive : Tut every week, even twice a
week, in a warmed glass vessel, half an ounce
of sulphuric acid. The fumes will ascend in
a reddish color and spread all over the house
and take off sickness or miasma from said
house and prevent those occupying the same
from taking the disease.
Answer This Question. Why do so
many people we see around us seem to pre
fer to suffer and be made miserable by indi
gestion, constipation, dizziness, loss of appe
tite, coming up of food, yellow skin, etc.,
when for 75 cts. E. James." Druggist, Ebens
burg, Pa., will sell them Shiloh s Vi'alizer,
which is guaranteed to cure in every in
estance? 4-l.-e.o. w.ly.
NKW AI)VERTISBIKm
V Bl ITTf'S riAOt OKriN. MiOTTTtmur
holiday present: pniiare iirati.l pianoforte).
! P.nr Try lian.Jf.inic round corner, rof-wwl .
j three un;on.Henr t v'. met. l 1 ir'n InmK teol,
j hook, cover, r..xid. 8212.7V to 827.oO; -loicue
i r:, gsoo to f I ; at'iiaction tcuar
J antced or mot;ey rf'irred ifcr one Trar'B ne ; -I
riitht pi an-' tort rs, (1123 to (12.15; ra'taiojiuepnoea,
j K.IOO lo OSOOj iand?r.t J lan.forl ot thaonk
j verso, at thousand testify; write for mammoth bit
of testimonial: Hat.'y' c.lt,et (.lytni emUia
Ural. ehurt:h.;liare. rarhr, RSO npwar.) : vSjiuwa
i welcome: fn-c carriaup meets train: l!lniral
cataWne (h'.H.li er:ti.r:) free. A d d mi or eJU
upon IiAMLL y. BEATIY, Washing Ion. If. J.
IMPORTANT TO
FRUIT GROAVEKSI
THli
EAGLE PRUXBRI
A'recontlTpatenled lnvantlon. I a urer1or 1bb1
ment for llnht prunlnr. It i verv fiaiple 1n m
t,mctor, 1 l:t, eaily workKl. rapid and &sat
in e-rjeeutiin. Large aaleare freilieMd for ft. ISav
faeuon turn!'d. Send lor eaaalar. AaM
wanted. Ad.-s
All.ltlCAJi I'RCMHw WO., riUkkair,, tWata.
$777
K TliKind tipaaiM t avaa(a
o't (V. Ad4r
I. O. lk)ar, M.
?rwlPr AdTarturtar Bwreta, 10 rap at.jf. t.
NAINSOOK acl CAH;;.
and IXERT;Ni.
l-.DT(r!T nrw Jr(..
t iajI B. ttn: f i' ' r:,- i ,
pet lire not nr.'v nmi-..
qnMW. an I if f.,a w ;;
oriicr i., f.,re buv'ir.i; t i.;
will t. ur.r!?i J at 't.,,'.'
line fr'u4.
THK (1TM! l; j,, j
K view to a 'fc t th- '..
ranr : nr !r ! i ,
. Uie 1 inc-i 1 r.v i,:.- :'( :..
' '. d'-r-ri I'lnlti i .."i.
' ilu;n l..i : -' i . r
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I V .tor n 1- ! . . j
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Tr'Tnar.'.!. :.?..
1 lic-e iro "d! n w ,
irooj . t'tit ?...-! w-(b-j
nrt M. : : !',: .t:r- .
; of I'Uy ir. tic veil v - t
in the ilia T t t-f . i. '
Twe crimes im w I r .j.
i (V-ltr.n 1 rm mh-'. r.
. f n. .w o:;.'re.i. 'U 1...;. s
; Hnnr:iin In ail our iJ-" ,
arc roritina"!. ith :..! :
ter dily. A 11 -nr It
, mat mi j w.il ii 1.
tne ..t i-ineh HI i k
K-iney l-lrifl.l
C'eiinter, at fw.
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. re-luced.
s f
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11
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i
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Honrs In lii Karrr r;-;
Hrfrnin In I';a-n II:. i k
. at 2.2.',. worth 3 "..
i 1"u j.iec . !( it.ir t .. ;r f
j r.xMlp. I'lriel nti.i s-ir if
! I.2S reiu.-e-l lro:n i- :,
Kiir of s .1 y
, lfv : w.irtli x'-c. t i!;
r-n I.uit-n
j special ltitrie;.
T3oi(;s fc 5i
IIS IT.DLItll. MRI.IT, All)
r. H. Vl-'t our !..:
tiTlr. crk-"i:r.B in I
br.irj of t'f-Jorc. Y in-
All B:ut If olJ. S T
d'.wn to 1 1" !. s..ni" r
e l down to J? an 1 r."
an riju.'J rt-lu' llon.
TO MY 01. D AM
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FRIEuDSJKQCiLi:
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AND THE
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on l.u'nj ..; i I
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P ' V i '
that
I fr'r ha 1 '..:rt
I
r'.oJ. I 'iTIMlilltelV 1
Irtl'.Ti arj nrl
owi:.(c t.j tl.nt fa.-t 1 ,:
oo'iM . M!Tif ! nro -1
t:'!'-: .i-.ir'r.M t!i .
an-1 lo't iT'e
tfooj are! a i-re-it d'-t'
Tiaturii'. a. 1 tl.'.t '!ir;
thftn ..T,-r t ht o -r
a: d I i.ur-1 a-J :i i,:;
cfnt. ! -1..W r. iulnr w!
roiM.e to tflr. iiiv on
th?fiirrt re iurtii ri
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h-iT !
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ill: 1 i
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totiifrp it.
1 n tr. v
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t i-
V - rll
- -of
hold and j.rrs-in :il u. aiuu,. Hl. t:. -tlone.J
a Isrzr lot ol
! WHITE AND GKAT WCCL HLf
a nut: lot oi mi-
And hng-e pile or LADIES V'.
all of which will ..H rer clik: A
and flue ic.-tk i: ,.:
Ladies' and Mines' WOOLEN S
all new and very rin.iee ; a e rr : '- sm
the latt :..- t '
Dunss goods. ni:r c,
Htlna. an airj' ni r '
Tarns of a. I clun ar.J y.i .
full, e'eirant and Tarlrd :'? t
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Teas. CoHecs, Snars; Ti"::::i?
t lour, Ifl. I'rnrlcleix. '
all of wl kb will pcxItlTFlr b tMd it ttf i
Ml aotra. uu are r;.p etv J '' '
and fee fur jonr?
Oalliti!, CRR:a Co.. J .. '
B. J. LYXC
nannfjelnrrr anil Heal''' ;
HOME AND CITY M
FURlMITURf
mx and Eiiss :r
-TV
'"id
" in 1
Tri
as
i
at
Jf-
LOUXGES, BEDSTEj
TABLES, CHAIRS
Mattresses. I
100; ELEVENTH AV1V
Ret ecu 1 Gth and '"'
TV. I . T O O Ay 1
f I!
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b'r,
f "1t!rer. or Catnt-r'a
wistiinK t- pur.-o.ase : ' -'
honest pro-OS are re-p.-.-t .
rail heh.ro 1-uyin ,-i-,-w
that 1 ran meet every w.iut
I'riees the very l-.we.-t.
Altot.na. April 16. I-....--:
1 I
... 1
.! 1
fSt. llni Ilotn.
rnii.Ai)i.i.i'i"A
ltRte- Keluoeil to rr J. "
The trnveliiti: t.o::e w .!! '
the Kim I.i.eral t T ' ' , :.
located in tlie tn:n ed !:.' ' '" 1 t
amusement, and the d. -" ' l' , '
a well a. ail pnrtsof tl;e r :y . .
hy etreet ear' eon-tant!y p..-" ' - T ,
fer epeevil Stidueemetit l-r iter
fi-r usine-s or pleasure. .. i.
Your paircnHge l rer'--f!' J
IMS Si 1 'k-1' '
rh!ladelrh!. Nev. 1. lM.-.-t'
Etensturii Fire tea3 1
t. -v. Die-1;
General Insurance A?
j:ni:ysni i;c
..... at sf.irt c:'. v
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OLD RELIABLE"?
And alher I lrat !
Ehenturr,ri't.
f '
v-
$99;;
M
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Atlirtw .
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