EDENSBURC. PA., FRIDAY. - - - MARCH 3, 1SS2. The J .a-lies' I .ami league of Ross earrbe.ry, Ireland, have resolved "That the members of the Kossearberry In dies Land League, pledge ourselves nev 'tp marry a landlord, aent, bailiff, : Igrabber, or peeler who is not a id I.eagneij" The chairman of the Democratic State Committee, Mr. Hogcrt, of Lu zerne county, has issued a call for the meeting of the Committee at Ilarris burg on "Wednesday, the 22d of March, to fix the time and place for holding the next State Convention. John E. Scan Ian, Esj, of this place, is the member of the Committee from this Senatorial district. Jl"ix;k Tkcnket, who was absent from Philadelphia when the Supreme Court decided the legislative salary question on Monday of last week, read a dissenting opinion when he took his seat on the bench on Monday of the present week. lie holds that a salary means .a stipulated sum for each session and not wages, or daily Inre, and that tlie first section nf ;he act of 1S74 clear ly violates the constitution, Tun Congressional Apportionment bill passed the Senate last week in the precise form in which it came from the House. Under the bill Pennsylvania gets twenty-eight members, an increase of one over the present number, but as the Legislature will not be called to gether in extra session by the Governor to district the State, the additional mem ber will be elected by the voters of the whole State, and the other twenty-seven in the districts as thev are now consti tuted, I-' A i n one of three land owners resid ing respectively ill Xorth Carolina, Georgia and Texas, has offered one hun dred acres of land as a free gift to every head of ji family of the fifty Jewish fam ilies, numbering over :'.' persons, that arrived at Philadelphia last wef k-re-fu gees from persecution in Russia. In no other country except in the United States could such instances of benevo lence by private individuals be expec ted to take place, and the generous of fer reflects credit on the men who made it. The Commi'tee on Elections has de cided the Utah contest between Cannon and Campbell. The decision is against Cannon, because he has three wives more than any one man ought to have, four being the number to whom Le ad mits he is "sealed, '" as the Mormons call it, and it is against Campbell Hcause he received only about fifteen hundred votes out of the twenty thousand poll ed. The Committer for these reasons will declare the seat vacant and a new election will be held. The report of the Committee will likely give rise to a lengthy debate. Unii:i: the watchful vigilance of the. "Committee of One Hundred"' elections in Philadelphia now elect, whereas when the bosses had full swing the re turns were made to elect men regard less of the votes as they had been cast. At the election in that city la-t week, I ci'i'ii members of Councils were elected by majorities ranging from 22 to 2.12. The bosses would have laughed at these figures when they were h: the full tide of successful experiment, and by their Iecu!iar methods would have made the ballot-boxes pioelaim the defeat of every candidate who was obnoxious to them, That time, however, has passed away and will never return. Ik Sami ki. J. Tii.I'EN were to die the occupation of Republican newspaper editors, like Othello, would be gone. What Mr. Tilden 7n'f say, and what he don't do, aie the matters they con stantly discuss, one transparent lie treading close upon the heels of anoth er. The latest invention of these enter prising gentlemen has just been dis posed of by ex-Governor Palmer, of Il linois, who denies the story going the rounds of the Republican press, that Tilden had written to him proposing that he should run for Vice President on a ticket with Tilden in lJ. Gov. Palmer says he has not received a letter of any sort from Mr. Tilden, and that he would not for a moment entertain a proH)sition of the kind indicated. Mr. Tiideu is to old a iolitician to be caught writing Utters of that nature. It was two months and a half from the day President Garfield was shot un til ho died, and a committee of the House has agrced'.to report a lull paying the physicians who attended him as fol lows : Dr. Bliss, 2",kh) ; pr. Agnew, l.r.,000; Dr. Hamilton, l.V0o0 ; Dr. Boynton, f Ui,X) ; Dr. Heyburn. SH'.Wh) aud Mrs. Edson S",fXX. No pay will bo i ter to Germany. While in Congress, jriven to Surgeon Ceneral ;Barnes and Sarpeant was the friend of any legisla Surgeon Woodward, 'as they are army i live "job"' that would pay, and so of olhcers, but the first named will be pro- I fensivc did he become to the people of moted to the rank of Major General and California, that ho was burnt in effigy the other to that of Lieutenant Colonel, i which will carry w ith it a corresponding ! increase of their annual salary. As- : sinning that these amounts are not ex- j travagant. at least tw ice as large as j iney ought to tie, can any man form an intelligent opinion of their proportions jf tho President had recovered 'i Pp. EsmKNT ArtTiiri: last week ent io tlve Senate the nomination of ex-Lieutenant Governor and ex-United States Senator P. JJ. S. PInchback, of Louis iana, to Le Surveyor of the Tort of New Orleans. In playing statesman and in the wild pursuit of ofTice no other color ed man in the South has been able to hold a candle to rinchbaek. He was prominent in the villainies of Louisiana politics during tho glorious days of re- rllitril,f io.l On,! n ln-.taontn r,t,,,,l, .n niivinuiu jiiiiiiiici llll- i der Grant, and since then has been the most rineient leauer.of the Grant wing of the Republican party in that State. John Pherman bil high for the Louis iana delegation to the Chicago conven tion, but Pinchback controlled it, or the most of it, in the interest of Grant, and Grant's shadow, Mr, Arthur, has d3ov reognied his important services, add promptly discharged the debt. I Looan's bill authorizing Grant to be placed on the retired list of the army with the rank ami grade of General and with pay accordingly, passed the Senate last week. Five Democrats voted for it. viz : Brown, of Georgia ; Jones and Call, of Florida; Hansom, of North Carolina, and Davis, of West Virginia. David Davis, of Illinois, who prides himself upon being politically neither fish, flesh nor fowl, but a party, and a very heavy one, all unto himself, also voted for the bill. So much has been said about this Grant pension grab dur- n m,0 i-r nn,i niwnt. session of Con- ! in I gress that we will only now refer to the . part played by the Republican leader or the Senate, Edmunds, of Vermont, when a bill ret'rin" Gen, Shields with the rank of Brigadier General was be- fore that body three or four years ago. The bill passed the House with only six votes in the negative, and when it went to the Senate the Republican majority amended it by a dding the name of Grant and retiring him in precisely the same ; manner as provided for by Logan's bill. I Edmund's made a speech against the '; bill as amended and defeated it. After j quoting the statute regulating the re- J tirement of army officers, he said : j "Does cither of these distinguished sol ; diers fall within the principle of this statute? Every Senator who hears me must answer i no, because they do not answer anv one of 1 the conditions which the statute imposes. ' Neither of them has served for forty or for thirty years in the regular army of the ITni- ted States : neither of them has become phy , sically incapacitated to perform military dtitv as an officer. ! "Too much cannot be said of Gen. Shields. ! no has been, as I believe: a good citizen and i a brave soldier, and has served in two wars. ! So have snores of other officers ;'so have hun 1 dreds of subotdinate officers in lower ranks than he : so have thousands and tens of thousands private soldiers for whom the 1 law has made no provision and it can make ! no provision ; and therefore this speoies of ; legislation is partial, it is unequal, and it is. ' therefore, unjust." ' If the position Itaken by Edmunds i three years ago was sound, it is equally I valid now. but when the Logan bill was before the Senate last week Edmunds made it convenient to be absent. He i wasn't ashamed to raise his voice in op posit ion to a bill for the relief of poor ! old General Shields, an Irishman ami a I Democrat, whose bod v had been riddled with bullets in two wars, but when it is j proposed to pay a yearly bonus of some- thing like fifteen thoiisnnd dollars to a , rich man like Grant, who only a couple i i of weeks ago rented a iw for a year in j a church in New York at a thousand j dollars, he forgets all about the statute, j knows t hat Shields is dead ami can't be j damned with his feint praise, stays out j the Senate and permits the measure to j pass. The bill will probably receive the j sanction of the House, and then it will j be in order to ask. what the Pittsburgh 1 Clironirlf, a Republican organ, wants to i know, "Is there anything more we can do for General Grant V' President Arutvi: astonished the Senale, as well as the entire country, by nominating :n Friday last his best friend, Hoscoe Conkling, to be an Asso ciate Justice of the Supreme Court, in the place of Ward Hunt, of Xew York, resigned. Is Conkling qualified to fill the position? His peisonal integrity has never been questioned, and that is the very highest tribute that can be paid to a man who has spent fifteen or twen ty years of his life in Congress, while the fact that he is gifted with great intel lectual power, has been abundantly es- tablished by his career in the Senate. These are two of the requisites in a com- potent Judge of the Supiemeor anyoth- I j er Court, and Conkling possesses both ! of them. Xor does the fact that lie has : always been an active politician prove his unfitness. Roger B. Taney, next to I John Marshall the greatest Judge who 1 ever sat on the lench of the Supreme J i Court, was a bitter )o!itician ; and so : were McLean, Story. Xel son, Woodbury I I Grier, Clifford and Chase, and yet they j : were all able and conscientious Judges, j The stumbling-block in Conkling's nom- , ; nation is that he has never been regard- i i ed as a profound lawyer either in Xew i York or in the Senate. How could he j ; lie ? A poet is said to be born such, but ' that is not the case with a lawyer, who j j must acquire greatness by bard study) i and laborious application. Conkling ' ; might have become a great lawyer had j i he never gone to Congress. Twenty years service :n the two houses will nev ; er of itself fit a man for the pioper dis charge of high judicial functions. "Who ' would have ever thought of appointing i Henry Clay to a seat on the Supreme i bench ? Of course Henry Clay know a great deal about the law, but he was es ; sentially a party leader, and Conkling ' occupies the same position. This is our ! view of the nomination, and yet if Mr. i Conkling accepts possibly he may, as has j sometimes been done by otherssignally i disappoint those who now doubt the j propriety of his preferment. Aaron A. Sakgkant, whose term ' of ofTice as a Senator from California ex ' pired three years acjo, was nominated by Ir. Arllnir on Friday last to be Minis- in various parts of the State. He cov- j eted the office of Secretary of the Inte- j rior, and it was believed for a time that i he would lie appointed ; but the protest j against it was so universal that Mr. Ar- Ihur recoiled from his alleged purpose : of making him a member of his cabinet. ' Heing in such bad repute in his own , u'" U1:'". iirtp-j-m m unrt mun Woo(1 cnrPS rilUT)-PSf blotches, and erup countrv. unon what theory ran Mr. Ar- ! as. thtir K,nh. ,Yh'le,ln auihority "ei ?ions, and causes even great eating ulcer to .". . ' tnur jusiity ins selection or him as the representative of this government at Berlin ? The fact that he was in favor of Grant for a third term is the explan ation. George W. Curtis, the so-called civil service reformer, says of the nfini ination, 'It is pretty hard on Germany.' Urief, but comprehensive. Tf ever there was a young hero who deserved a public testimonial, and a bisr one, it "trerris to us that L-a Vern Mul i vey, aged In years, of Rochester, X. Y oustit to ue classed in that eatecroiy. Of young Mulvey it is related that while at work in a laundry on Tuesday of last week, his right arm was caught in some of tho machinery and literally torn from I his body. Racked with pain, almost his first exclamation was : "What will be- coim of mv mother? I am her onlv support and what can I do with this ?" i OUR rillli A. DELPHI A LETTER. REJOICING IN PIIILADA LTFI I A FAHI-CIDE-FII.IAI. LOVE AND Dl'TV-HON-ORr"NG OR ANT. Regular Correspondence of The Freeman. Philadelphia, Feb. 27, 1S2. Dear Hesry Since writing my last letter, there was an election held in this city, at which for the first time in many long years, the voters generally prepared l..n.VVO ... . inn for the polls, and paying no atten- tion to the ticket man at the window, ! voted pretty much as they liked. It was a very cold day tor the bosses While Philadelphia's Democratic roos- ter to-day is not exactly the old-fashion , , ,, , , .-,. ,,..; 1 between R I)emocrati shaTl hai and the Kpform hen, It is bv able and honest minorities that goon government is commanded from majorities, and "'ere is now in Philadelphia Councils such a minority as will protect the tax payers. The Democrats have now one third of the Select Council, and in the popular branch have a fraction less than a third, which will bo an able and repu table minority what the people of Phil adelphia have long needed, and over which there is "general rejoicing." The bosses and jobbers got an awful chill on Tuesday last. The honest Democrats gave some instructive lessons to some of , their leaders. PARRICIDE FILrAL LOVE AND DUTY. . In the last issue of the i reeman is i reKrted the hanging of a man in your i adjoining county, Indiana, for the mur der of his father, and quick follow- j ing the hanging of the Indiana coun- i ty parricide comes the startling intelli gence of a man killing his father at Worcester, Massachusetts. The horrid ciime of parricide is becoming common in this country. Scarcely a year passes that the crime of killing of a parent is not recorded in its history. Something more than ordinary punishment should be meted out to one who stains his hands with the blood of the author of his be ing. In nothing, perhaps, have the ways of heaven to man been more signally justi- ; fied than in the punishmentwhich sooner or later follows deviations fiom filial ; love and duty. The Persians held the i crime of domestic rebellion in the great- j est detestations. They looked upon the ' striking or slaying of a parent as being j an impossible offense, and when an oc- i currence of the kind happened, they ad- j judged the offender could not be a child i of the patty injured or slain, but must ', have been surreptitiously imposed upon them. In China, should a son be so in- Solent as to mock the father, or be j guilty of such an offense as to strike : him, all the people of the province where 1 the act is committed are aroused, and it ; even becomes the concern of the whole ! empire and of the Emperor himself. All ' the mandarins in the place where, such i a crime occurs are removed for negli- I genceof duty, and even the neighbors ! l - i r..i! e.,,i? o 1 are l epnmanded for allow ing such a lla- grant act. In China the lihal diuy is the same with the prince as with the i j peasant. They think there must be : ! some hopeless depravity of manners in a "raVltV 01 manners 111 a ' e such a monster be- ' irnv wretch is cut into ! ippy wretcn is cue into , ! community where : longs. The unh i pieces and burnt : the house in which he lived is destroyed, as well as houses that stand near by it, and the ground on ' which it stood is sown with salt. In j Rome the punishment ordained for one who stained his hands with the blood of i the author of his being was, that he ; should be tlayed, then sewed up in a ! sack together with a dog, acock, an ape j and a viper and then thrown into the ' sea. The Jews were not the only people 1 that looked on disobedience to parents ! as worthy of capital punishment. In China let a son become ever so rich, and a father ever so poor, there is no sub mission, no point of obedience that the father cannot command, or that the son can ret use. hen a rather accuses a son before a mandarin, there needs no proof of his guilt, for they cannot be lieve that any father can bo so unnatur al as to bring a false accusation against his own son. Thus was considered filial love and duty by many nations in for mer ages of the world, and it is a stain on the character of the more recent ages that the crime of paricide should be tol erated as that of an ordinary murder. HONORING GENET. At OR ANT. The bill passed by the United states Senate placing General Grant on the re tired list, with the rank and pay of a General, is sadly lacking in any essen tial to command the respect of the Am- i erican people. It is an unwarrantable and unjustifiable piece of American leg islation which should essentially damn every Senator who voted for it. The Democratic Senators who sustained and voted for the bill are fitter subjects for prison criminals than for United States Senators. If not fit subjects for a pri son, they are fit subjects for a lunatic asylum. The honest portion of the Re publicans of the United States viewed with alarm the dangerous length to which their party leaders went in their infamous efforts to advance their politi cal fortunes by a violation of what had become a part of the unwritten law of the nation, by forcing Grant upon the eoplefor a third time. Thousands. upon thousands of the honest Republicans of the country regarded it as an insult to their intelligence to present to them for uieir .support ror a inira term one wnose record showed that he was simply set as a trap to catch the unwary one whose past reputation would put them on the defensive whose inability to resist temptation was proverbial, and whose personal ambition lead him to regard the public service as a mere instrumen tality for furthering his own avaricious ends. Whither are the American people drifting ? Has the lessen of wisdom which should have been taught the Am erican people by the Grant dynasty been lost ? Grant was the principal actor in the great political crnne of the century, the robbery of the dearest rights of the people. Is the new era coming when a crown is to be placed on the head of an American V .Such was the prediction of the men whom the managers of the Grant boom had. chosen to speak their thoughts of the Republican State Con vention held at Harrisburg on the 14th of Febr.iary, lO. In that convention, W. C. Moreland, of Allegheny county, the mar. who had been slated to talk up Grant said, "c nrte era will come when tre pUtre the crown on the head of t. 8. r')anf." In this declaration we have the startling proof that the Republican leaders of l'ennsylvania would crown "Lien, n . I ill 1 L as Ult'll Ivinu:. iiiey wumu crown a man as their king who has no appreciatian of what is necessary to so- , , i ! asine local civil triounais ana eniorcea the penal code against citizensby means ' of military commissions. The Kepubh can leaders would crown a man who while President prostituted the oppor tunities of his office to ruin thousands of his countrymen for his own selfish in terests, who interested himself with the Fisk, Gould and others in the manipu lations of the stock market which resul ted in the disasters of 'Black Friday' of Septemlier, I860, when $.VhJ,CMX,0oO changed hands in one day, and by which thousands of jeople were ruined, and many driven crazy crown the man who proposed while President, "that the Governors of the .States of South Car olina, Florida, and Louisiana, Chain berhtin Stearns and Kellogg, should cer- tify the Hayes electors, for the President of the Senate to count the votes and l-m-rm Y imtti f 1 . i rrt ' fwl i rr r 1 1 f finf M,a Gordian j-not sll0ulli cut ith sabr63. It is impossible to measure the injury that Grant as a l'resident inflicted upon this country. When President he un seated and rejected from the Louisiana Legislature five regularly elected mem- , bersW that body and seated five un-elec- ted men in their places at the point of j the bayonet. Such a fraud was never ' before attempted by the most reckless j politicians in that. State or any other ' State In the Union. When Grant was ! President, he revolutionized the politics r.t T .11 Icio ii'l I,7 nr.lnT-ini. 1 ' . , ,1 rT - i briand at the point of the bayonet to nn- seat regular members, and it was Grant J who while President set the example of ! Ky.,.:. II 1.1 I tuc ICUI":1"' u wi i irsiuen- election. It was the villainy of , inspired the gamblers in politics in the ! States of Florida and South Carolina, j It was through Grant that a large ma- ! i jorit of the voters of the Union were j deprived of their rightful President, thus excluding thorn from the rightful control of the Executive power of the government since the 17th March, lSi t. Grant is not half as deserving of the honors heaped upon him as hundreds of j other Xorthern Generals and army offi- j cers. If all of Grant's failures were as ; fully and freely commented upon as has j been his successes, instead of being eulogized and extolled for his greatness i he would be derided and scoffed at for i his littleness. The fact that Gen. Grant ; with a very large army, well supplied and equipped, caused Gen. Lee with a very small army without either arms or ; supplies to surrender, is not at all sufli- I cient to inspire the American people with j an undue estimate of his great general- ship. Gen. Grant did not right it out on I the line he so vauntingly boasted he j I would do, "if it took him all summer," ! but he allowed General Lee with an : j army of 70,000 men to cause him with j I an army of 200, (mh) men, to take two l summers anil two winters to swing , ' around the circle, and in edging his way j j to Hatcher's Run, in a series of disas ters and to sacrifice the lives of more ! men than (Jen. Lee had in his whole army. It was not until .after Gen. Sher- man's successful march through the Southern States to the sea, and cutting ! off all of General Lee's supplies, that ! Gen. Grant with an army of 100,000 men better armed and equipped than any Union army ever was before forced Gen. Lee with a mere skeleton of an army without cither arms or supplies, naked and starving, to evacuate Itioh mond and surrender at Appomatix. When David killed Goliah, it was a genuine victory. David being a mere stripling of a boy, ami Goliah a huge giant, tmt when a giant whips a little boy, as in the case of Grant thrashing Lo, the victory cannot be regarded as either a genuine or a 'jriiliant one. The honoring of Grant by placing him on the retired list with the rank and pay of a General, is an injustice and an insult to hundreds of braver and more deserv ing Union soldiers. Are there any of the MOO brass collars worn in Cambria countv? G. X. S. v hii.f. nobody will be round to blame Mrs. Scovi le for feeimg a deep interest in the fate of hn hU)thPr th- wetollocl assassin Gui- teati, most people will agree tha'. her letter to Mrs. Uarfield, begging that lady to plead for the murderer's pardon, was an outrageous impertinence, nowise redeemed by the wri- liMplinen'-e, uuwi--: i:'(!ri'iiiru o me wn- tr"s evident belief that "the poor motherless '"'-v" of forty h2? 1f'e" mor sinnpd against Umn .innin That ,!fl ia now ..sliut away from the world for months" and that "not a ray of sunshine, not a blade of prass, not a tiower, not a bud, not a rriend to speak a kind word" are left him, are misfortunes which only a sentimentalist would hink of using as a plea to the lady whose husband was brutally murdered by the creature now languishing for those consolations. Mr. OJni tenu and his interesting family have occupied too much of the public attention for many long months, and it would appear that they take a gloomy delight in airing their disgrace before , the world. As a cold matter of fact. the miserable scoundrel does not pine for grass or flowers or kind words. He is su- j premely happy in receiving his numerous visitors and supplying the increased demand for his pictures and autographs. Instead of pini'ig in a "tomb-like cell,'' as he ought to be doing, he occupies a position full of de light to his morbid vanity, ar.d the only pity is that he will occupy it for some months i longer Boston rVot. ' llEN-nv Waters, of Youngstown, Ohio, I believed in ehosts, and had a peculiar dread I of them. His weakness was known to his acquaintances, some of whom planned a ! practical joke at his expense. They man- 1 aged to draw the bullets from the revolver i which he kept under his pillow, and then, in ' the night, he awoke to see a white rolled fig- i lire standing at the foot of bis bed. Although dreadfully frightened, he suspected that it i was a inker. Drawing his weapon, he took l aim and said : "I shall fire when I count ! three. One two three." The intruder I made no response, and Waters pulled the ' trigger. No impression was made, of course, ' and five more shots were fired. The mock , ghost laughed hoarsely, and threw six bullets ; on the lied, as though he had sunernaturally j caught them. Waters shrieked in terror. I Then the ghost threw off his disguise, and I the other merrymakers burst into the room to j laugh at their victim. But he still gazed fix- edly. The shock had made him insane, i Three weeks have elapsed without a restora- ! tion of his reason, and it is not expected that j he will ever recover. ; w I.lfe for runrllon Weakened ly IMer, Ie1ility and IMnalpntlon. The f -reat Gkhmas Invioorator is the : only specific for impotency, nervous debility, ! universal lassitude, forgetful ness, pain in ' the back or sides, no matter how shattered ! the system may be from excesses of any kind, the Creat German Keinedy will restore the lost functions and secure health iind happiness. $1.00 per box, six boxes for fo.uO. Sold by all druggists. Sent on re- ceipt of price, postage paid, by F. J. C he- , NEY Toledo )UOi ,,, RBent-for the Unl. ted states. Circulars aud testimonials sent free. j The St. Louis .V?ic says that Mrs. Mary i J. I'enn, a Missouri widow, from Trenton, , I has been astonishinc the new Pension Agent : at Topeka, Kansas. Her soldier husband i was disabled in the "late unpleasantness," 1 : and drew a pension until the time of his ! I death, in 1ST7, since which time his relict has ', been thawing $s per month for herself, and : $2 per month for her fourteen children. And ; here is the astonishing birth record t Mary i ; K., June 0, lSf4 ; William S., June 20. lSfS.- ; ! j Charles N., June 8, lst'ti ; Maybe!!, Julv 6, , 1.SH7 : John C, September 3, l(iS ; Alice and ; Albert, December 14. lsr.o : 0car and Oliver, i I July 20, 1S71 ; Grace and George, August 0, 1S72 ; Jessie, November IS, 1875 ; Lathio, j j January 7, 1S77 ; F.rnest. March 0, 1S7S. Jlere , , the lecord ends. The husband died in No- ; i vember, 1S77, and his last child was horr: the. 1 March following, making in all fourteen in . 1 fourteen years. Mrs. IV nn married a second , ; time a year ago and moved to Kansas, and her pension stopped, but the fourteen chil ! dren are entitled to f 2 a month until thev are i sixteen years of age. TITE AUT. OF MIRACLES is past, and Dr. Tierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" will not raise the dead, will not cure you if your lungs are almost wasted by consumption. It is, however, unsurpassed both as a pectoral and alternative, and will ci.ic iiusioiiite; ami wvrio uisenaes ol me , throat and lungs coughs and bronchial 1 af- " 1 i . a i i . r im on s ii j...., ..., ... , ...o....... :, .no : heal, A Febrcary thunder ntorm and a house struck by lit;htttin- don't happen more than once during the ordinary period of a man's life in this cold, northern latitude. On the afternoon of Wednesday of last week a j storm passed over West f ikeland township, I Chester county, during which the house of Abram Mosteller was struck by lightning ; ana consuieraoie damage none, rne event being so remarkable and so entirely "out of season, caused a great deal of comment m the neighborhood. " A World of Good. One of the most pop ular medicines now before the American public, is Hop Hitters. You see it every where. People take It with good effect. It builds them up. It is not as pleasant to the taste as some other bitters, as it is not a whiskey drink. It is more like tlie old-fashioned bone-set tea, that has done a world of pood. If you don't feel just right, try Hop Bitters. Kunda Xews. TnE house of John Wilhemy, of Xauvoo, III,, caught fire on Monday and his two little children, who were alone on the premises, were burned to death. NEWS AND OTHER NOTIXGS. Sylvester Hood, 10 years of ago, com mitted suicide at Lock Rock, Wis., on Tues day last. Two little girls named Collins were drowned at Plattville, Conn., on Sunday, while coastine on a pond. A dozen men, who, four years ago, were among the foremost ot New Jersey, are now prof. Jackoon, proprietor of the Chester ryrothchnic Works, where an explosion oc- curred a few days ago, and Charles van liorn, assistant, nave oeen arreste'i. i A veiled woman with a babe boarded a ! railroad train at Hastings, Mich., laid the in- faut in a strancer's Ian and disanneared. t A wire cabls measuring feet ana weighing 4 ?,0H0 pounds ha just been com- plated at the works of the Hazard Manufac turing company, at rvranwn. Charles Loeber, of New i orK, claims to have made a discovery by which air ships be come feasible, and proposes to construct one of 100 tons, furnished with ample steam power. Overworked men and women, persons of sedentary habits, and others whose system needs recuperation, nerves toned, and mus cles strengthened, should use Brown's Iron Bitters. Horace Gross was drawn into the ma chinery of the Pennsylvania Agricultural Works, at York, on Saturday, and crushed to death. George Hendricks, a printer, of 174 Eld- ridge street, Xew York, is under arrest in that city on suspicion of having defaced Ma jor Andre's monument. An angry woman in Newport. li. I,, threw a fork at her son. It lodged in his heel, making a slight wound, which resulted in gangrene, from which he died in great agony on Friday last. The delusion of an otherwise sane Chi- i cago man was to believe that his cane was possessed of a spirit. He talked to it, never ! left it be out of hisjsight in waking, and kept j it by him when asleep. I A freight car ran ofT the truck near Jol ' iett, III., on Monday last, and of ten tramps i secreted in the car two were killed outright j and the remainder so badly injured that j their lives are all despaired of. Some convivial spirits of Koscoe, Minn., conceived the idea of rousinfc one of their ' companions, more drunken than themselves, by pouring kerosene oyer liini and setting it 1 on fire. He was burned to death. liev. E. L. Magoon, of Philadelphia, has been robbed of aquantity of silverware which ; was brought from Lnglind oyer a century j ago. Lafayette had eaten from it, and it was otherwise valued from associations. Chailes Lee, aged eight, broke through ! the ice at Mechanicsville, near Troy, Mon- , day. While sinking the third titne-l "is hand j was caught by ills little comic., .esse IS.iker, ' j who held him unfit assistance arrived. In Haines' Mills, lUncelas. N". J., on Friday last, a mill hand named Scott was ; caught between two large wheels, revolving ' ! in opposite directions, and was literally torn ' apart, his arms and feet being torn otf. ; Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription," for : all those weaknesses peculiar to women, is : : an mieipiai ied remedy. Distressing back- , ; ache and "bearing -down" sensarions vield to ' its strength-giving properties. By druggists. ! A horse which was being shipped from , Boston to Cliicopee, Ma., slipped its halter, i : managed to open the car door, and jumped ; j off the train. The buyer has learned that the animal returned to Boston and its old j i master. j j Maiy (ilyi.n was arraigned in the Police 1 i Court at Bangor. Me., on Saturday morning for the miirderof the infantson ofiierdangh- , ter. Mary ilynn, lij years old. and was com- niittcd to jaii to await the ac tion of the grand i jury in August. I The woman who had the 1 12-pound tu- 1 i mor taken from her side at the University ; Hospital, Philadelphia, nearly three weeks . ago, lias so far recovered that ft was expected ! she would be able to return to her home, in . eiuif u(uru, mis weeK. Wert Aifkney, of Cook township, West- i moieland county, was thrown over a fence ' by a schoolmate, a few days ago, and in fail- ' ing the boy's head strnck on a snag, cutting hiH eye cpen. He suffered for a time in aw- : ful Runny, and at last died, j John Major Hicks, a colored murderer. I I was executed at Covington. Kv., on Friday I ; last. When the cap was adjusted the con- ' i demued wept profusely and cried for Divine ; i mercy. He was attended by two priests and j I made no public confession. It is useless to deny that the brightest I ! ami fairest fall easy victims to consunmtion. j and equally fruitless to ignore the fact that j decline has its origin in many cases in ne- glected catarrh. Sanford's Radical Cure is a IHU"e, sweet, balsamic specific. A dozen people were poisoned at the Central Hotel, in Clinton, la., on Friday night, by drinking milk containing arsenic. All wi'l recover, it is alleged that a colored cook, who the same day had been discharged, did the poisoning for revenge. Jacob J'.'.aiiiiek, a wealthy farmer living near Anaphee, Wis., was on "Tuesday arres ted on a charge of having murdered Ids fatii-er-in-la w, John Uettiner, three years ago. Gettinger at the time was supposed to have been burned to death in his house. Two naughty boys in Toronto, Canada, tied a kitten to tiie tail of their kite and sent it up, mewing pitcously. When it had as cended about 400 feet the string broke and the kitten was borne away toward the clouds. Neither kite nor kitten has since been seen. During an altercation on Monday last between a son of ex Sheriff Keels, and'a col ored man named James Hardware, both of Harrishurg, the latter struck the former on the head with a brick, indicting serious and perhaps fatal injury. Hard warewas arrested. Thomas Hoffman and Joseph Wattsou married men, were instantly killed satur-i day at the Eekert iron ore niihe, near Head ing, They weut into the mine soon after au explosion, and were crushed to death by ore and earth loosened by the blast falling upon tnem. The rope with which a convict descend ed from the window of his cell and escaped at Jackson, Mich., was made of small pieces of tailed twine, taken trom bundles of staves in the cooper shop. To gather the material and form the rope required months of sly, hard work. Wood Hite, a notorious train robber and a relative of Jesse James, has been sentenced j Hite was a resilient of Logan county" Ky i ami was arrested ki ink ;uissouri neniienriarv Tor i vpnrs ! plicity in the robbery of a Chicago and Hock j Island train. Samuel 11. Owens, nast grand master of the Masonic grand odgrof X ss ur the ! present H hii, Ji '? 'f. 'iiT.? ',.'.. Driest of the rrand e.haiv ter ot the Itoyal Arch Masons, and grand I treasurer of ttn A .... 1 .... t-..:...i I 7" - ..v eiiv-n ill ' 'II I' Ol Llllieil orkmen of Missouri, died at St. Louis on emiesnay mgnt. Two men residing in r.lanchard. Out., named Montravand Mossio bd a.l ismite ..ii x nun) ret ire. inn property, when the former I cession, which was honored in various ways drew a revolver and shot the latter in the ! on its route from St. Patrick's (Cathobc) breast and afterward shot himself in the head i church to the cemetery, even the brokers three times. Neither was killed but their I quitting the to.-k Fxr-hange to stand ti ncov deaths were certain. I ered on the sidewalk as it passed bv. Mrs. Ala tor r . . Walker, of the TJ. S. Army, Was nubile V COW lllle. 1 in Vinolun,! V I j on I" riday afternoon, by Mary O Nsil, a flaxen-haired. Irish girl, whose fighting weight i is nearly 2m pounds, The Maior's a'leged j ofTense was the offering of insults to Mary's j sister, a girl of seventeen years. , In the rolling mill at Salisbury, Lehigh : county, on Thursday, a barof red-hot iron in passing through the roils suddenly took an ! upward turn and striking Quint us Souerwine, , a I" year-old boy, under the chin, burned a hole several inches in diameter through his I tongue, and to the roof of his mouth. A party of masked men broke into the J office of the Wahoo (Neb.) Independent early i Saturday morning and destroyed the Press and outfit. Thev were sumrioed bv one of the publishers, and were subsequently ar- x nr riiiiiu kivs nip aitacK wa insii Rated by a member of' the Town Board. J ames Jovee, aged sr., was shot and killed Saturday nitrht by Geo. W. Blast, near New Aioany, inu., while attempting to enter the 1 hnmnnf ih 1,1 ti, ,.i j . i:i.. iv umier tlie influence of -j ' ana was on ! h,s ,h . inK lame and tired out, he souiznt, s 1C ter. lilt instem rwmviil n bn nt A Salt Lake City dispatch of the 24th Says : A house under the Keeler'S Peak, Big Cottonwood, inhabited by a wood chopper named Tacrcrnrt hU .If. anH four xl.il.tran named Taceart, his wife and four children. has been swept away by a snowslide. It was first missed this morning. Men hav gone to dig it out and rccover.the inmates, alive or dead. H Sin inmates of a house of ill-fame in Providence, 1!. I., were poisoned onsatnrday last by arsenic put into the coffee by the housekeeper, Dora Avery, or Ilitibee, who has'escaped, Mrs. Turner, the keeper of the house, and one of the cirls were In a dancer- ; ous; condition. The other cases were more ; hopeful. ! At a Webster. la., nicrht school Saturday. Wilhelm Marenthal, aged 12, stabbed another pupil, Severin Kuchs, in the side with a pock et knife. It Is believed the latter will die. The boys had beer, plaguing Marenthal be cause he spoke bail Knglish, Fuchs being piominent in the mischief. Marenthal was locked up. Tho bodies of the familyswept off in the Big Cottonwood snow slide, near Salt Lake City, have hesn recovered under forty tons of snow. They were not frozen, but Iving naturally in bed, the husband, wife and in fant in one bed, and two boys and two girls, the eldest II years old, in another. It is evi dent they were smothered instantly in their sleep. 'ti j. .r .f ill, lz..---'.-J. .":' hi t i V'-- .--.i "" " -. - " 1 n. n URAND -UEPOT Phil A DELPHi Samples ! The case of a four-year-old boy who be- came an invalid through inveterate smoking, j his parents having given him all the tobacco i he wanted, is interesting 'he faculty of t .le ! Surgical Institute, in Indianapolis, i .nv I have deprived him wholly of the weed, and hope to cure him of spinal trou'oie, whie.i his j habit has cnuted. He had mokcd an avcr i age of ten cigars a dav for a year. J A little daughter of Lehbein Newcomer, . j who lives near Searights, Fa yet'e count v. has ; I two grandmothers, three great-erandniot ti er, and a great-great-graudmother, all liv ! ing, the latter being !; years old. Of whom : else in Fayette county, or out of it, can it be j said that its mother, it mother's mother, its ! mother's mother's mother, and its mo'her's mother's mother's mother are all living. ! Rt. Rev. Patrick N. Lynch. Catholic , Bishop of Charleston, died on Sunday morr. : ing. aged 0.1 years. He was consecrated in ' isr.s. Bishop Lynch was much belovvd by all classes in the community, and was cr.-.i-nent for his scientific learning Po less than for his Mieolnrieal attainments. Th--1 funeral, ; which brought together many of the dlstrn ' guished Cal holie prelates of the country, took place on Wednesday. ' Stonewall Jackson has a brother frimn ; ing around in Missouri : Kxplorer Living , stone has a brother begging In the s'reets of Trov, N. Y., and alnvt every dead man f fame is thus afTe'ioe.-.ite'y disgraced bv pau per kinsmen, fitting the case of the liicg .d Jackson, however, it is found th.it, he is i fraud ; the cie of Livingston. t'!:i;i,("i! i is an imposf-r, and so the lance of tn.t!i i icres the mask of imposition. j A specja! gives an occour.t of the sho.-k- ' ir, g and brut il m n rde r on la-t Mon lav ie- ii ri- ' ing of Miss Emily Numii;, school teicher, ontv seventeen years old. in her seli:Mihon- at Salem, a sma'l village a few mi!. -s from Decatut, Adams eonntv. Tti-T. !ie had gone to iiie school hocse to build a f.ve, I:,mi she was ettacke.I by some person aud outrige 1, thenthorri ily mangled and left d-"d on the floor, where s! was found bv pupils. The Cincinnati Emnircr has a repot t from Lexington, Ky., to the effect that its reporter, having been confined a week in iail with C.eorge FMis, obtained frotn him a state ment that his former coofo-sion. charging the murder of the 'iibbou family on Wil'o.uii Neal ami F.ois Croft, was untrue, and that it was made under duress and under the belief that Croft had confessed, he being so inform ed by the person to whom his fiit confession was made. An inquest was held in Philadelphia, on Saturday morning, in the cae of the infant of Annie M. Cnrhnrt, wholived in the house of Dr. John II. RutVy, the doctor having thrown the haliv in the stove soon alter its birth. It was shown that Rut ley was a grad uate of the "Pliiiad. !phia College of Medicine and Surgery," commonly called Paine's col lege." The jury rendered a verdict that the child died from "the unlawful ust; of instru ments by Dr. Riitley, who is rrimlnallv re sponsible. The accused was then committed to await the action of the District Attorney. Several days ngo Mrs. David Suhaiiffer, of Sand Lake, N. V., was taken violently iil and whrn a physician was called she declar ed that there was a snake in her stonip.ah. She says that last September while drinking from a" brook she swallowed the lepU'e. The doctor upon the investigation became satis fied that the woman had swallowed a tadpole which has since turned into a frog. The iep tile's presence in the stomach of the patient is easily felt from the on'sids, and its move ments can be tra . .. The woman has been removed to theAihanyhospita! for treatment. A shocking boiler explosion occurred the other day at New CaXe. a few mih s nor'h of Newcouierstown, )., by which five men were killed instantly find fiWh.-r wsCf tal'v injuied. The water in the boiler at Stuts man and Trog. i's sawmill 1 ad got very low while the pumps were being repaired, and after the valves were opened the cold water rushed nit.-, the boiler, c.mv with fearful violence. T1 ;ng it to X! lode five lon-v w'lO stood near, were blown to afms : and their mangled remains were buried through the air with heavy titnbets and pieces of iron a dis. ta-ice of several hundred feet. The sixth man had an arm and leg torn off anil is dying. The Phi!ade:,diia .'.mr'ls.ivs that Ilobert Me()ii'.llan, a man of about r.o years,: 'living at Lawrence and Canal streets, died on Satur day from injuries received on Friday evening while at work at the r.aitic Mills 'on Law rence street, below Girard avenue. The de ceased was a laborer at the place, and was required to shut off the stop-cocks of a pipe which ran behind a row of large vats of boil ing dye, ami had to climb on top of the vessel and reach over. In doing this he fell in the boiling fluid and was severely burned before being rescued. He was taken to Si. Mary's Hospital, where he died after several hours Of intense suffering. The acids in the dve were so strong that the clothes were eatea off the man. A dispatch of the 2.1th ult. from Mineral Park, Arizona, says : At Haekberry, about . thirty miles from this town, J. O. WeMon, a desperate character, on te 20; li instant sh't and killed a peaceable citizen by the name of John Bullock, without provocation. The . citizens rushed to the scene and opened fire j on VVeldon, which he returned, slightly wounding Indian Agent Charles Speneer. 1 VVeldon was shot through the breast, and, after his pistol was emptied, surrendered. : He was held in custody till the night of the 21st, when a party of men took him out find hung him to a beam of a blacksmith shop. AVeldon declared publicly a short tim ago; that he was glad Guiteau had killed Garfield A Not A m.E Fr"F.r,.i A Governor, an ot.( iovernor. two i Generals an editor, a cler- ' cyman, a banker an i a m?rehant were tl.e rail-D''arers ar the funeral or Mai t-aret Iaughery, in New Orleans. Numerous so cieties were ofuia!!y represented in the pro- ' Iblughery was of humble origin, uneducated, i and had boasted of never wearing a si. k dress ' or a kid glove ; but she was famous an 1 be- loved as a friend of the poor children of Lou isiana. Many years ago she nursed a dying man. He had a little property which he left to ner for charity. She bought with this money a cheap ra'tinj house and bakery on the river front, and sold wholesome food to steamboat laborers nt a little more than cost. "She cave them a roll and a cup of coffee for five rents, to keep thnn from spending a quarter for whisky," says the account, "and they look the roll and coffee, and then spent twenty cents for whisky all the same." Tl.e business prospered, and she might have ac cumulated wealth ; but she established and partly maintained three orphan asylums with i the profits, and died rich only in reputation. A Deathbf.ii Confession of a TIorki-rtt-F. Crime. The Hartford (Ky.) Herald of Friday furnishes the following : An outrage, too horrible almost to call to mind tia ppened near C'aney ville. .lann try i:S, lssi.by lieh WUey Embry and -ox children were burned death. We have just learned that a deathbed n foa l Ah tiac Kr.unrht nn t f ha lirtinf f". t ofd lie wn to I .Ta. N. Jtrandon. ot t"anyville, on hl deathbed ! confessed that he and John Wlnttlnirhill nd Bill ! Taylor Whutinztiill. son or Keram Whtttlnehill, : did the deed. Brandon said that they took a (.yr- confession lias brought ont the perpetrators, fir. tnxe and threw chloroform through the kevh .'l into the ditterent rooms and waited till It eau?d a deep sleep. Then tliey went In ni robbed the house, getting Jl.ono in money. They then et the houe on fire in Fcveral places and ran otf. Mr. EmhTT and three children escaped from the tire, and Emhry and fix children, includinn three ?oni almost rown, perished in the flames. Th par ties have bo-n ucectd for some time. Bill T Whittinnliiirs wife took wo hill to -Moorman's store to Kt It changed, and a Whittinnhill was known to be jearce of monev it excited suspicion. Krandon married a ipter of "Wlilttlnithtll, and we understand that Brandon Is d.iad and the Whit tlnifhills have fled. This U the information as re ceived. It may not ue exactly correct in detail, but the fubstaii -e Is. A numlx-r of Ir. Brandon's friends deny that he made any u;h conlessiou. On THtnxT Pivs" Trial. We ill send Tr. Pve's Celebrated Kleetr i-Voltatc Htt and other Kleetric Appliances n trinl Tor thirtT duvs to vonne men and older person who are afflieted , . I ...1 . . .... , . miii iiernuis I'l'ouny. i.ost itnnty, etc., euar- . etc., Eiisr- torationo! d-mcViltie" illustrated Tijror and inanheod. Alo lor Kheumat ralnia, I'aralysis. I.iTr and Kidney d nu'irps, and many ouiit rnscases pamphlet sent tree. Address Voltaic Belt 'o, (lj-.-ly.J Marfhall, Mich. Ferl-na cures every time get some, be well keep it ou hand, a.nd sin no more. 0 f.ryf -3 l:A:iM:i M-J&.s --IS kJ U U 6 - -i . , mf and Catalogues by mail when requested. CHAIN. I) TO THE Fl O. -R. A Co! ! Cut .f theAltoona 7-'oee. und. r tin of "Huntingdon County J. t! iegs." te following rather remarkable io- : ' V r iiijuy years a Mr. !l.i .v, & 1 o,.o been krpt hufticl t.i tin- att.r Hour -i ! tieu-e. Tt-c I'U.khrjtf ntoT- o. Il.iwn i- -v twe ffTit!i tiiil !llual"d eM t'o- .!'. K j! ! . tow u tra:ii'li. in a nem li Sortie, , d w ,-rc ni ; ' :o:! ( "hi ij.'o , loty iii'enreJ. an-1 ly -u :i, , i !heo uri! cnpiTal. i I i- re,, in co',iai:is n-, tjle ptrec "f turn-.ture, ter t!o t.c :! : . lii-li in 1 i tie li in ii a ;n! i'i t .: I a:". '. '1 : the nt:r th man iiauit b.'.s ou tie' t! -or. ::,.in'l in a l eard ot -ilveru:;-l th? el e- if he wr,'ti -li''. nn l tu:;-' nt ll.- ctinoi tiiat ki' oure las i r.s'.,n show tli.-it hp . -e vr- u ,!iv-n'-tl jtuwer. Hf: is p.urfiy boiiu-l : t ! o fl r I y a Imkfst chain wjocil t-ll- irv i'- to- w-i-o ::t,-1 wto- li is liei-1 tu tt:r fl jor t-v a :i ir- : ,i ,ec. II;' !:: u i s n im l i!,cr! v to He i;, n. -mi u i. ana P. i , i. it- l'-nvrth rt'out t"o r -etn ol lo ronnieTTi'e t.itss ratlier eoie.i-'iill;. , altii u-ti :t is t i - -tic li h lunalK. r no .s.nsof t t l'-nt. ii hv.s in d o lines-. !!;, ,-.' Ie.!:u : .low i(i tin- rem. v i.ere tlici .ts "U.-' il, w i.n ni,w il:i:ke:el tiy loai n iii Ji w u sotn.t yr-:.r ixcj wn.lo cari nirr- w nt llir i:0,i.riic. It s! Tlity -ii'-ul-J ; ct ,t.'-; 1 : iq-.irtmcnt alel til ir r' l -e i X? tc I,,.:: : Ih'iii ol vi lcii''o. I fur :iii r ne w , atrr ii-: i .r.,t- ti'd n im.-l t'i r-,,t t-y a ?ve v.., ti.i.I nnv : ii i -i e li li lar-::',,:, ,, u.at i . i H I k i t k . ;i, it rn: n t: 1: . r-- -ei prf'V.oii t t,e I-.iiiH' ti :u i r:-. : '..- wo th'i tleor Of Ii 1 wri's I !M:i:,,Kti i s rte-ri i i .ro.;,' ' i1.". :i I ? !: 'I i l ; i iil re;-. -f -1 tu I'l1!. T.'iCt '':t v K;r. t.i:!.i-r aij im li, r ,irr ,:-,;..i, luia - u jir,'u ultl.j cl li ,.- ! i o' ;. -c-. ::i I , r i. ef K':,-pU t or oM ni', 'i .n ' ,iT i . . i . ; . u:i-w, ratl l :-..'.:-- :tl,,,! t V , ,1 I' 't ;'vniitiul ! C'' I . : ,n u 1 or ; lift . l'iie 'i'j 'i i. ei .oj t te i' w.i;:i,1 Le liai . i-j wii w.:.;t ::,, ;r !.:. k'-ct' nig l';,- : ... i ;i -i. t;,,', o, W ' o 111', y'l ':.M : c :i i !:' !L..r tic wa;d en i.'ini;..r :, :ir;(j y; I!, at inay l e tr'ie. I.i :,; i r .:i;o l . ciieiieno'at an,l lan 'j '.'k1- r.'-er ' , ieito aiel ;e y I, il ,i.i' ::o:'-o o, : , a .itn. 1 i eu KlK v !,t- w i3 i.r s. Mt.e- ; i ii, n liiC a...-'.i w.iy irea'm's ioia I III a l. t inn i3V all .ii ".,1 :-: a'-. Hi- ; lo :-i a lei u ir,- !i in -il t.i h t ;ie . a ,J 1 t:.e t.e lias a t'.ar ire;-.i r-il lor : ii em 1 v e-. a:' c i r,': ti; i.i iu-rt ti a.. i. -.a : ,y . i-.ni u-' cuIiTtiTi tl.eir '. -,r en .o . ; i-; : e l in tee (.iiiinui.iiy ni w'n,-:i t.li tn rr, t'Tv ot ttie I.ii' I,-.-! .iu loir-n h 'iil 1 be t-oiroir' i" t !u kf a ti.l i! wn too' i el.jiiicl t-. t:.- u t room, ffiiii'-iit j nrr sir lo r,;cutii-. fet ail t'irf-. aud : w.t', ..it ;ar.i Joti i- a::ti ." I, A NoMwr.itL Fi.iv.L.i "long. iank," to iiCo'te hi e.vo and exceedingly atui.mie fiieie', V City editor ot tht Corneal ij,ar -. i . r litti gi.age, T. . .i'i . - (1 iHil) g..t lo, ni'g tthi yenyarir! a geiilieiaati . h "in o i !iteu up" in t his pi ii e 1: is t priiuet r; ai malady li eu the Heiive as w it i.e.-s t tie t oiloN my I i.-ut l.i- 1 We do i ,t o'tn write I'raiisr b -s e- put: i.u. are ro'l-:ra,li",l to VCl.t.lle Ol. I iiv Tl i- " I r i aenat:i !i:,,nui:n. 'Wc j uu;e "le-au' i . ' :fT Unit tl.e joi.., i:iTf-i.;,a may ! e lo . r I'-l'l-r-'! cii,; ! lo lor N ik-.J pyp ) V. I n; 1 i r-l la T - on t'P onT ! ! y.,u l reier il w :1. t u 'il. 1. !' r l.e i -a':, a Gj.j-i : ,r fee', lo (lay. What i tl.at 1 r.n . la r-.k . ' l.lavrr n.- ! Kxicmt-I 1 mi ill, '. i nt - w . : : ,y u;. str-t i wo itej,-' to toe ? '1 lial. n,v ijar ei'.i'.i.l Tv.-eiit dty h-i . t-r Rv.o i :i;i.i tni:i veil t'mi. Wt at is i f g-.i -i t,.r- lit- i n cnt-ri'!.;iie. ! a et- at I.i,rau a irec 'I ,sj,.nvr : rti.-atr lia l t,-at ; a l,.,.o, I icr, "x-'Ki on .-tr . ,-.ir i .i, - : i.n n Nir. and an.l 1cvk rial. 1 i:ci.' a vie: im ot i ti e la s oi mi tlie ceiitriil tiiire in in.i.i o!-jeet el i -r.u -w. a i :i i r., ; ' el tio:.- ..: i n-i it t: em th. it rvar.H n lid al t lit y c ' 1 !. :, is A ?..... 4. H li,Hl It (-., ,-s at, i J . - i - i 'v u -lie' V.'le.-.i h. ,y ar; l item :-ou , T li l to - I f ""il:.' 1: li. ii ,d 1. ' y ti i iti, t r -j e i ' i v i h-? ..'-a-;, i ? 1 ter .-'i 1 1 in . ! - o1(. .... e ' r , r VT. vv.. , ? i S' lliPT !.i- t- i. .'-oioi i. r 1 I ; i .i :i i i ; v f.-h,...: W ,'iy ; tins 1 ,e o1..,.; ', p,. eiioraliy . I -. i e iy th'.a rin.ii.it-' ni'ii. Inn oo.' ; ; in.. i: v . ;,. i : ' pull-. 1 '- !,. :. . x'.-TtA s. t e ;1 ,-i:or a !,. Iff , re - '.--. , W loll does lie ,,. U llll ir t'e m to the l'f:'nRr and tlien r: i Jks tloet uii d r tl; iMi.Vi.i. i ,,. k f a plieant" tor tickets 7 Wcli.a f.-w e,o,.B . A' 'ix tor l-.a,'ii t okrt. Th ir must in i.a 1 , uj j , , V es. Very !ir:;,.y -I f eon i,jr, r? it l,n It .1 l 'ie iri 1" Ii g ! K r nnti,!Ti . w .-'l. v-. what? J-'-t a I? w 1:1, re enr! el !!.,, ti-rr' ' ptier. W Imt d T- In- li.', ti,en r l-t-.-.i:. .. 1 do.-J i e i '."II li o W en n i, 1. 1 Tel !. f-- ; th ai mtnt rc.trl ll. tiau-c a rc-M-l and a l; ... i - Thk Fioht Srtr.iT. The following from the Clinton Iirmc -rat we oonimend t i the se rious attention of our na.lr i s. It is so appli cable that every one may profit thereby : " Th ir.attr nf im roveno r.t f-'ovii 1 t ot of hours: ,rtd on the par ot rep-v r" ,en. 1"! -ro n c!n of pe 'pi wloi arc drt.i":i' -.f ili .,r..j. but tlievo are Itfkim in tl.e qndit .5 t!it'r t' in ilk ti 1 if.xij eiti7ti. Wlen a Kin i ... ..:t:li that he ear- s etilv t ,r !::" en .'..nal e, no -r" of It vtns. he is no onxr n wer't.v rn.-ni -rr 0! . .-i y . for Fet'Ietr eliiims ome ?ert'-e irom cvry in tivid aal meirif.er. It inny b in an- ,r lnn-e ni'li tu" f.-r- -i 11 1 ta.ie of pertain wr..n to l.v in a leu. t . idant to trees, to dlr.,Tir 'h ill! ."d -ri'iioe ii; f'i I'll! id ! n ii Ot til l:o..f. n rd to lo e ri i le.ut f h. rj'jl lorts and conven'en, of u-ir. Tr.iter and t -i- like : t'ut this man i a I'yd c,i.:.n to nue i.a is nirrrlv ronc,i It inir iridiv. di'aj a-el j'"'.?, ir t'ite "in.'i liol the interrat and !eindit et tls" nnrl i iioi"-. H m?iy bn au're -tdr to jh trrt i,j-s no pon to twU in ne'liiflon. !n:t'ira l"'n out trom tus 'Vic pathyol t"!lo vr a "el tikioe en i,-rt in tneir'eii teri.ne. wii-:',cr In. in-i-.l. ; ,,,,-r. .. ne',el"nt or rlneion : nch n one does ,t e. nsi 1 er t tin t he f on? ..f a e-.-n ,;; , li: t -, of h ;s fe!" men "illi whom lie is Koind i:. comiii-. so- i.l t-ou r fd.iiiration. The m"t i. we are linked to--"!ir in the tie" of conimiiiiitT that r.i-di one of ns is j itiv ex;.p-t.-.l to do li; p.irt lnir li irir.k.;, eur eoaiaiou !i..n:e b-'irl.Ter. core 1 r" tr u. ;.i j n in -.- n Ivatiia (jeons place in !i .-h t 1 l.-r. It is n.-t ro-e a litatTr 01 privileoe .,; dutr u aid bv ! , t.vij- ual and ceiii'dio'd eft .rr lu jir'.iii,.'li:ii t r, 3. pi ity of our'? own p!;i.-e ri.tei..-e. He who t. els no J" r that na .wn t.-.wa staed i rAT.lt we'l am..DK ot her towns 01 .i;:td:tr aean-i r' ,"i-;r cot m eontent that ether i-Uees .-Imi; oi::. nil ill :it makes a I've a-e. u .!eftei-::t ipeiiitie? of an Am-ririn ru-.zn. t' ll! TlIX COTTAOE llEA-HH M AO ATTN E. We ! , have received tlie March imii'icr of this vol- ' time, published in Boston. It is f nil af cood , tlifnrr, anrnii- whieh are a tory bv Oeo-e : Mac Donald : Life in the Kit. by IV. .f essor ' .lames Roxedale; The Treasures t.f s,,.,-; I Winter in the Northern Seas ; Xew Music : The Fashions: Mothers and Young Folks' I Department. &c. all fullv and beautitullr i illustrated by more than twenty fine encrav , incs. The Cottage Hf.akth is the bet i periodical at itprice($l.,via veai inadvance-) . and the cheapest of its qua.itv in the world! I V e have arrancred to club w ith tin niajarir.", ! and mae the fo:iowitii offer to o jr subrrit I erS CiKd until Aprillst : To all who sen j us a new subseriber with two doMars a advance , payment we wiil send The Cottacf. j 1 1 eatith for one year free. And to all who win send us one year s ravmertof their own subscription whet'.ier now due 01 partlv in . advance and One dollar we W'il send TKE i COTTAGE HEVKTHfor 1S" Vverv one of ' ... - 1 i " Our Rllbcillers nuuM to have this beautiful ! j illustrated monthly. We hope to hear from I many of them within the next two weeks. ! Address this ofiice. , A Boy's PresknceVif Mind. The Mt. Union Turns relates the following : As Hansel and Oracle Bowman, children of ?e.i. Bowman, asj-d respectively about seven and five I years, were rromii the railroad on la"t cdne , day on their wa? home from irnn.,1 i !. ,., j canght her loot between a rail and pie-e ot plank ATT HICK I and cool, I not K-t tt loch-e. A train was o'min., . rl"LL, UV- A I "nfl would K.ti strike ber. In the emergen -v tier ' I I'ttle brother showed presence of inind nncoin- i l mon in older p-ople. He sit down to nntsstcn ber j S"K'0- A Mntleman pussinir br jw her dn-icer I I na iuccaeded In reletisinn ber foot. He Knuid ' i the boy eniraire p Ir. nnbuttonirm the shoe. . rv-ni 1 j "tb "hile, and be -aeni.l pro,n.v b:.-. bad t lie ; loot out ol tl,- soe in tlIne tu Eave j, t;?trr frum a horrible death. i W!":, i t-, i. r -, , , . , ! f.,; ; I roinblv, of Tronih'y s Hay i J- 'nton eonnty, New ork, while crotsiip ,1 nl-. -I -1 . sonn iiiiuijiutin On "Minilav upon tlie lit j sdKH L lintnphnn on Sundav upon the ice i with a 13-year-old son and a iS-vear-old cirl. i ""V1" R severe snow squall, drove his horse i l"'1 Rit?iIl1 'nto an open space of water. Mr. Tronibly was knocked under the ice several times by the strnciinc horse, an.l when rescued was unconscious. Hi son was kicked by one of the horses and was dead when taken from the water. The cirl was saved. Of. CV! ei ih.' : it ,U,i those tw. re i: f ri. Vn 1 oi t o o 1 : y s I ; 1 ! t lilo;. in. I I'l- : I an;' -a t : i f..ri; it. ' le ty be f iiaui i' :n e ' the V.lil W e.ite- i r.'i a e! A s'na'i a'Hive th Wilt' 1 '. At. a 1 li iif.,. w r-, lor X v r.i Slt.V r. ii i sc. 1 1. It I! A. 1 o. .la ,-.i . V ui:. 1 1. i: y.i:.WA. H -o. V m. I l iirf'l a '. no : had ! :. f'V !!!"' . ' I, ted ) a a Mil. A nil sr. I.il. 1. ii j i ;. '' i: i j -i l i n on-Tpncin'. ' k- r r Sanford's RadidC.F I'teur t'Po! l rii 1. r. 1 : r i- o. - to irr'i to- . 1: ! II 17. -1 Id .and 1 . An l: 1 i ill l "B-e t 'll "-e, . lie I'l l I liaivr, :o et.e j 1, 1 .1 HLM'i: tO Mi s I iM roi l im.! : cuc!;n I'm reeau-e thev kw? V the EeM Extent il K-: ; eJ. Thev will chie couzlis, il;i-ur.r.'.i-:;i. any local jain. An'litJ :o ilu- ' thev are infaliib'e I" H NERVOl'S DEBILITY, sr.: troubles; to tl.e 1 ii "' thry are a urc t i : 1 and LIVER avn.AlNT"( ALLCOCK'S PLASTERS are I grant, and quuk t imitations that Mitt ar- S, t e tr - Piaster. HATCH & NO. 12 Wall St:f Itny nri'l "'ll ' f rnmi nl Seen rli"'- i i G '. UV:ri $777. a i Mi FC FAWELET ..:.'