The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, March 17, 1882, Image 2

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    (Llamb'h Jrccmmt.
EBENSBUFJC. PA.,
FRIDAY, MARCH IT, 1882.
Tin-: I'lesidnt on Monday last sent, a
special mc.-s.s;ise to Congress recommend
ing the pa?sn2 of ;i compulsory vaccin
ation law.
The Philadelphia Ilo-o,d (Ind.) say3
that the way to Democratic success in
Fenn-vlvaiiia is practically clear of im
ped i mm ts. All the iKiitj needs do to j
win is to deserve to win. That, in our j
opinion. i- jusl about I lie .si.e of it. ;
Tm: treasurer of the Iii.-h Land j
League. Mr. Ein, in a letter from Tar- j
is, 1, is headipiarier?, to a gentleman in ;
New York, under date of February 17, !
says that up to that time he ha ! lvcciv- j
ed from all sources in America, includ- i
ing from Canada, the v;ul sum
of 5"::i),iNo for general Land League
purposes. Of this sum there yet re
mains as a reserve fund, f2ST,0H3, of
which cl-ST.OO'J is invested in United
States government four percent, bonds,
ami American railroad first mortgage
bonds.
Tiik general sympathy felt for Ser
geant Mason on account of the severity
of hi- sentence for shooting at Guiteau,
as i.oticed elsewhere, springs from the
fact that Guiteau is held in universal
execration by the American people.
Mason's duty was to assist in protecting
Guiteau, assassin though lie be, from
the blind fury of the populace, if neces
sary, instead of which he deliberately
fhot at him, just as lie, GuHeau, fatally
bliot at Gaiiie'd. If Mr. Arthur should
pardon him, however, we presume the
country could stand the shock.
Soie time ago we referred to astrin
gent bill, then before the Legislature of
Iowa, forbidding the issuing of free
passes on the railroads of that State.
As was to be expected, the bill has been
defeated, the members being the chief
deacldie.'ds on railroads m Iowa, asthev
are in owar States. litre in Ien;isyl-
... , . . ,
vama the railroad companies, although
. . . 1 p
expressly forbidden to issue such passes.
Bti'.l issue them to members of the Leg
islature, who accept them, and thus
place themselves under obligations to
the company, whether they think they
are doing so or not.
The New York World of Tuesday
last says that rumors were circulated,
not only in that city, but at the west,
on Saturday and Sunday, that Jay Gould
wai selling certain stocks, known as the
"Gould stocks"' that a crash was com- 1 1 lluu' '" t imnK
ir.g, that Gould called on Cyrus W. Field ! lfc a rouh Iliece of business if the Gov
to he1: him out of his alleged difficult- j er"r refused t0 i,lterfere ? Thi3 i3 sb"
ies, and that in order to settle the mat- ! stil,ltliiIJ- Fitz J)Iin Porter's case a re
fer. Gould invited a numoer of the Lug- ! rorto,i on b-v 0rals Schofield, Terry
est operatois in stocks to his ofli:e on I wl.o were as much prejudiced
Mon.l iv last, and there showed them I n"ai,lst P"ltei" wIien l,iey entered upon
i 4 1... V - I . ; i: - i .
fiO.i-thrfr m,li;.,n of the securities i.
question, not even prepared for negotia
tion, but massed as investments. Gould
is literally what Dennis Kearney called i
him anil so aften lipid nn to the cxeora
tion of his '-sand-Jof hearers, "a bloat- j Bul1 1un' in !v2' he ha1 reaily saved
ed bondholder." I Tope's army from a much worse defeat
J than il actually suffered. Their report
()s Monday last the President nomi- ! convinced Grant of Torters's innocence,
rated to the Senate Judge Samuel anJ he pai(l 80 in a letter to the rresi"
Blatchfoid, it New York city, as an j t,enL but t-'x's unbelief would not like
Aswlate Justice of the Supreme Court removed by anything short of a
of the United States. Tins is a nomi- j revelation from heaven,
nation in every way fit to have been j ' " "
made, i-nd is infinitely better than the! Tut: appeals of Irish tenants for relief
nomination of either Conklimr or Ed- j from the cruel exactions of landlordism,
mnnds. the former of whom is not a good i havo commenced to exert an influence
enough lawyer for the place, and the !
latter, although a good lawyer, is entire
ly too much given, in his speeches in the
.Senate, to what is known as "hair-splitting,"
ever to make a safe and reliable
Judge. On the same day Mr. Arthur
nominated John Russell Young as Min
ister to China. This is a favor shown
to Grant, whom Young accompanied in
his trip around the world. He is well ! ask vo"r landlord or his agents to re
known as a journalist of ability, ind we j (1uce 5"our rents. If a refusal is made,
should judge is well qualified for the po- I give notice to quit, and if others take
sit ion.
Tiif. indictment against Dorsey,
Brady and others, one of the Star route
conspiracy cases, is a most remarkable
document. It contains but one count
anil covers tiyhty-fonr closely-written
rages pi foolscap. It was written by
Edward Ker, Esq., who was lately an
Assistant to the Democratic District
Attorney of riiil'a and specially ap
pointed by Mr. Brewster, Attorney Gen
eral of the United States, to assist in
the preparation of the Star route cases.
Dorsey and Brady will be defended by
some of the ablest criminal lawyers in
the count r, among whom will be E. B.
Carpenter, who was the leading coun
sel for the prosecution several years ago
in th" celebrated trial of Matt. Ward,
a young rowdy belonging to an aristo
cratic Louisville family, who shot and
killed a school-teacher for having slight
ly punished his yoing brother for mis
conduct in the school-room.
Gf.nkrai. Rosf.ciians Is a pretty old man
but lie don't swm to be old enough to know
that he is Wine upd as the catspaw of the
enemies of the Garfield idea. Altoona Tri
bune. (Jen. Garfifldwho in 1.3 was chief
Of Gen. Rosecrans' staff in Tennessee,
wrote a letter to Mr. Chase, then Sec
retary of the Treasury, severely criticis
ing his superior oiHcer for delajinjr mil
itary opera ions in his department. Af
ter Chase. died, this letter was handed
byChase's private secretary to Mr. Dana,
cum l " x orK onn. who in eP-p r,anced Went home to bed and slept
Lis pappr late in 1ST ) made some refer- j a" night on the roof of the palace.
ence to it, though he did not publish it, ' " -
xvhich drew from Garfield a letter to! The anti-Chinese bill passed the Sen
Rosecrans, dated Jan. 19, 1830, in which j ate last week by a vote of 29 yeas to 45
he sai'l that any charge, "whether it j nays nine members favorable to the bill
comes from Dana or any otherliar,' that ' being paired wilh nine against it. The
lie had been unfaithful to him (Rose- ! measure provides that until the expira
crans) was destitute of truth. Mr. Dana ' tion of twenty years after its passage
published the letter a week or ten days 1 t'ie coming of Chinese laborers to the
ago for the first time, and then General ! United States shall be suspended, and
Bosecrans first learned of its existence j prescribes a penalty of imprisonment not
and of Garfield's peculiar method of i exceeding one year and a fine of not
prejudicing a member of Mr. Lincoln's ' more than ?"00 against the master of
cabiuet against him. And now the j any vessel who brings any Chinese la
Tribune which regards Garfield as a ! borers to this country during that per-demi-god,
modestly but falsely asserts 1 iod. It also prohibits the naturalization
that itosecrans without knowing it is of a Chinaman by any United States or
being used as "a catspawof the enemies j State Court. Nearly all the Democrat
of the Garfield idea." Is the "Garfield 1 ic members of the Senate, together with
idea" synonymous with or a convertible '' nine Republicans voted for the passage
term for duplicity and treachery ? ' the bill.
So fa it as we have observed the ex
pression of opinion by the Democratic
press, regarding the next State conven
tion, it is undoubtedly against holding
it at as early a day as has generally been
the case with perhaps two exceptions,
the convention at Erie in September '75
being one of them. Our own opinion
is that the convention ought to be held
not more than three months before the
election, which would be in the fore
part of August. The demand for an
early convention is always placed upon
the ground that sufficient time must be
given before the election for the pur
pose of effecting a thorongh party or
ganization in the different counties.
Conceding this to be true, we have only
to say that a chairman of a county
committee who canrt perform his duties
in that respect inside of three months,
so as to have the Democrats in his coun
ty eager and reedy for the fray, ought
to resign his position in favor of some
one who can. Two essential things are
required intelligent and honest dele
gates to the convention men who can
look abroad over the whole State for
candidates, and not confine their politi
cal vision to a circumscribed, or to use a
better word, a home circle ; then the
candidates must be such that no Demd
crat when he votes for them will do
so under a sort of protest. They must
be men whose characters are pure and
unassailable, and for whom a vote can
be cast with a cloar conscience. "We
are also of the decided opinion, as we
have always heretofore been, that the
convention should meet at Ilarrisburg.
"We never yet heard a good reason why
a State convention should be held else
where, It has frequently been done, we
know, but we could never see its pro
priety, or that any possible advantage
was gained by it.
Gen Jacob D. Cox, of Ohio, who
filled the office of Secretary of the Inte
rior during a portion of Grant's first
term, read a paper one day last weak be
fore the ex-army and navy society of
Cincinnati in opposition to any steps be
inz taken either by the President or
fYitifrrpss for tbnrulicf r,f Viti Tr.lm T.
I . . ,
iter. This is a very contemptible busi-
i . . . , . TT .
ness for Cox to be pucracpd in TT in a
lawyer of good repute. Suppose he was
counsel for a man indicted for larceny
that his client was convicted on cir
cumstantial evideuce and sentenced to
the ienitentlary for a term of years
that after having served out one-half of
his term. Cox, his attorney, would dis
cover evidence clear and undoubted of
hi3 innocence that with this evidence
he went before the Governor of Ohio
and asked that his client should be re-
lm5 ' " v CM-igauon mey mane
of his case as Cox is even now in the
face of their report. Tliaj said in that
report that iustead of Fortor acting the
part of a traitor at the second battle of
among the people of ales, who have
always been loval to the British Govern
ment. A reduction of rent is demanded
by the tenants in Cardiganshire, and
circulars printed in the Welsh language
are leing distributed throughout the
shire, or county, in which the following
advice is given to the tenants : ''You
tenants, groaning under heavy burdens
your farms we will proclaim it through
the country, and not give the new ten
ants quietness until they leave the
farms." This language is easily under
stood, and if the movement it represents
i once takes a foothold, a leader will be
come a necessity, aWelsh Davitt or Tar
nell will appearj'to fight the battle of
the oppressed tenants against the land
lords, to be followed in the end by the
passacre of a Welsh coercion act by Par
liament, which would be something
new under the sun. This, however, is
a wonderful age.
The San Francisco Xac Lrtter pub
lishes the following imaginary leaf from
the diary of the Emperor of "Russia, who
i3 a prisoner in his own palace, fearing
to appear in public on account of Nihi
list conspiracies against his life :
Got np at 7 A. M. and ordered my bath.
Found four gallons of vitriol in it and did not
take it. Went to breakfast. The Nihilists
had placed two torpedoes on the stairs, hut I
did not stpp on them. The coffee smelt so
sttoncly of Frussic. acid that I was Bfraid to
drink t. Found a scorpion in mv left stip-
?er, but, lucVilv shook it out bpfore putting
t on. Just before stepping into the carriage
to go for mv mornine drive it was blown into
the air, killing thp coachman and the horses
instantlv. I did not drive. Took a lisht
lunch off hermetically sealed American can
ned eoods. They can't fol me there. Found
poisonpd daespr In my favorite chair, with
j the point sticking out. Did not sit down on
j it. Had dinner at G p. M, and Baron Laise
hommwonski taste every disX lie died dp
forp thp soup was cleared ft way. Consumpd
i some Baltimore oysters and some London
stout that I have had locked up for five years.
was shot at three
ad the entire audi-
OCR PHILADELPHIA LETTER.
TFIE GAME OF "DRAW" INVESTIGA
TING THE DEVIL DECIDEDLY PROB
LEMATICAL. CAMERON, RANDALL A
CO. SHERMAN'S PETTT THIEVING
POOR JIMMIE BLAINE RATHER SUG
GESTIVE "CCLTCRED" MASSACHU
SETTS, ETC.
Regular Correspondence of THE Freeman.
Philadelphia, March 13, 1882.
Dear Henry Allow me to inter
view you, by putting to you a few in
terrogotaries. Did you ever indulge in
the mysterious game familiarly known
as "iofcer," but more affectionately
known by its devotees as, the game of
draw? Have you ever, like the "Mill
Boy of the Slashes," the inventor of the
game, sat behind a "bob-tail flush," or
felt the supreme confidence of a good
Christian man when fortified by a hand
that held "four aces ?" This great Am
erican game has become so popular iu
England that the whole realm of Vic
toria has fallen a prey to its blandish
ments. London journals inform us that
our English cousins have become infat
uated with the game, and that the
craze over is wild. All of which honor,
if it is an honor, is due to the great
"American Gift-Taker." While the
ex-Fresident himself is not the inventor
of the "game of draw," he sent a repre
sentative toEngland who knew more
about "poker than he did about diplo
macy ;" and although the ex-Minister
may have been the direct instrument,
yet the ex-President is responsible. The
American Minister taueht the English
Prince of Wales the modus ojjtrnndi'ot
the American game, and the Prince
proved to be an apt pupil under his com
petent instructor. The game of "draw
poker" became the shibboleth of the
Frince'a popularity, and the game is
now a popular amusement, counting its
victims among women as well as men,
and reaching every grade of society.
The retired chieftain can comtemplate
the consequences of his work, now that
the realm of the English Queen has fall
en a prey to the blandishments of the
desolating game of "draw." The half
breeds seem never to have considered
the breadth and depth of this Stalwart
assault upon the morals of an unoffend
ing nation. It was a hapless day vhen
the American Minister introduced the
game of "poker" in England, Many
were the sins of commission as well as
of omission laid at the door of ex-Preai-dent
Grant's administratioui yet few
people are aware of the grave conse
quences of the appointment of General
Schenck as Minister to the Court of St.
James.
THE DEVIL TO BE INVESTIGATED.
I am rejoiced to learn that "Old
Scratch" is going to catch it at last.
The old fellow has been having it pret
ty much his own way for a long time,
but he will soon be brought to bay. The
Rev. Moses Hull, of Erie, is going to in
vestigate the Devil. The Reverand
gentleman is determined to show when
and how the Devil was made and what
is finally to become of him, Good for
the Rev. Moses Hill ! I am rejoiced, as
will be the people of the whole world,
to gain a knowledge on these points.
The origin, habits and destiny of that
old fellow have long been in obscuritv.
Ho is a mischievous, troublesome oid
cuss, and it is full time that he should
be investigated.
DECIDEDLY PROBLEMATICAL.
It Is much to be feared that unless the
distinguished Keifer and his trusted
lieutenants Robeson and Randall, man
age things better, that Grant will con
tinue on the retired list without a pen
sion. It would seem that the passage
of the Grant retirement bill through the
House is decidedly problematical. In
all seriousness the status of the Grant
bill is not what it ought to be for the
man who whipped the Confederacy single-handed
and alone, and is left by his
ungrateful count to wrestle with pov
erty in his old age. If all indications
can be relied on, Keifer is enduring the
pangs of purchased greatness. He is
now called upon to render a substantial
return for the exertion of the Stalwart
influences, which made him Speaker, by
landing Grant high and dry on a pen
sion of $13,500 per year. But there are
some troublesome elements to be placa
ted before he can do so. So far as Mr.
Keifer himself is concerned, he has no
conscientious scruple! as to voting this
handsome pension to the man who saved
the country single-handed and alone,
but Gen. Sherman is not well disposed
toward Grant, being stricken, it is said,
with the aesthetic impulse of jealousy.
Th3 jealous General lias also a brother
John who, although he voted for the
bill in the Senate, is religiously opposed
to the retirement of the great gift-taker.
There are also other individuals not un
known to fame from Ohio, and who
have influence in politics and represent
in that State a formidable Stalwart in
fluence. Keifer did all the Stalwarts
had any right to demand when he pack
ed the military committee for Grant.
He is not able to deliver the House,
which exhibits a desire to kick over the
crmmittee and prance around its pros
trate remains. So the condition of the
retirement bill in the House is decided
ly problematical.
CAMERON, RANDALL A CO,
The indications are that the coming
Democratic campaign in Pennsylvania
is to he conducted by Cameron and Ran
dall as a partnership affair against the
Independent Republicans. The Demo
cratic candidates to be put up are not
to be offensive to Mr. Cameron. He, it j
appears, is to be the Democratic cam- j
paign manager for the State of Pennsyl- j
vania as well as the Republican cam- j
paign manager. A uemocratic caucus
for selecting a national committee, pro
posed Governor Cnrtin as a member of
that committee, but it was objected to
for the reason that it would make Mr.
Cameron mad. The placing of Mr.
Curtin on the Democratic national com
mittee would madden Mr. Cameron, but
the placing of Mr. Randall in his stead
on the committee would gladden Mr.
Cameron. The Cameron Democrats
prevailed and Mr. Randall was chosen.
So it appears that Senator Don Camer
on is the Democratic campaign mana
ger for thetate of Pennsylvania as well
as manager for his own party. The
Pennsylvania Democrats don't seem to
be afraid of making Senator Mitchell
mad, as they didn't consult him. When
it was said that the selection of Curtin
would surely make Cameron mad, two
Democrats had the unblushing effron
tery to say, "Then let us take Mr. Cur
tin," but the Cameron Democrats pre
vailed, Curtin was dropped and Randall
taken. Besides having Mr. Randall on
the national committee, that he may be
elected its chairman, and thus have the
directing of it through the gubernator
ial campaign. The contest in the form
ation of the new Democratic city com
mittees sharper and fiercer then any
thing of the kind known for years. The
fact that this committee will have the
control of the Philadelphia Democracy
during the gubernatorial campaign dis
tinguishes the interests and issues at
stake beyond those that are merely inci
dental in what are known as 'off years,'
SHERMAN'S PETTY TniEVERIEB EX
PLANATORY EPISTLES.
Ex-Secretary of tne Treasury, now U.
S. Senator. John Sherman, has been
busy writing epistles marked "confi
dential" to his personal friends, who
promptly give them to the press, in a
futile attempt to make the public be
lieve he was innocent of the irregulari
ties in the disjosal of the contingent
fund charged against him. There is al
so such an odium attaching to Senator
Windom when he was at the head of
the Treasury Department in carefully
suppressing testimony before the inves
tigating committee, that he will also be
issuing explanatory epistles. During
the prngTcsl of the Investigation the j
fact of Mr. Windom having suppressed
damaging evidence against Mr. Sher
man was developed. This development
that Mr. Windom bad suppressed cer
tain important portions of the statement
made by Mr. O. L. Pitney, the custo
dian of the contingent fund, caused the
committee to summon Mr. Pitney before
it as a witness, whose statement respec
ting the manner in which the ex-Secre-tarys
political bead-qnarter3 in Washing
ton for conducting his campaign for the
Presidential nomination at Chicago, is
such as wiil require a thicker coat of
whitewash than that recently so vigor
ously applied by one of his retained jour
nalistic news purvevora to cleanse his
reputation. Mr. Pitney's statement
leaves both ex-Secretaries Snerraan and
Windom in a most unenviable light.
Pitney's statement exposes the meanest
and most contemptible svstem of petty
thieving from the public treasury that
can be conceived or. Sherman's thiev
ing appears the more comtemptible and
picayunish when it is well known that
he is a millionaire, Mr. Pitnev's sworn
statement cannot be controverted. It
is a lengthy and comprehensive one,
and gives details of Sherman's petty pil
ferings from the contingent fund which
are very damaging to a millionaire hold
ing the high position of Secretarv of the
Treasury. The statement of Pitney,
late custodian of the Treasury contin
gent fund is a Jmost flagrant expose of
the method employed to keep the two
aesthetical gentlemen who last held the
Treasury portfolio supplied with bo
quets by buying them with the contin
gent fund and charging them as ice.
"Where will such official thieves as
Sherman and Windom die when they go
to." These two "economical" finan
ciers, who have recently been at the
head of the Treasury and entered pub
lic life without a bank account, now
count their gains by many millions.
THE DISTINCTION OF THE LETTER G.
"Quiz" says : No one has noticed
how much distinction has been accord
ed of late to the letter G. It seems to
go in couples. In England there is
Gladstone and Granville ; in France
there is Gambetta and Gievy, and in
America we have Grant and Garfield.
As Grant faded from sight the letter G.
grew lurid on the literary horizon with
the terrible name of Guiteau. "Quiz"
thinks that the latter name will not be
forgotten.
POOR JIMMIE BLAINE.
It is sad that Jimmie in his'eulogy on
Garfield should take such nn warrantable
liberties with ancient and modern his
tory. The soft cadences of his mellow
voice had scarcely died away in the fret
ted roof of the Capitol till he was sum
moned to the bar of criticism in various
quarters. Befoie many of the men and
women of America had read with vary
ing emotions the carefully pruned para
graphs of his essay, the St. Louis Daily
Post editor challenged his biblical lore.
He says : "No man who misquotes
scripture as badly as Blaine did shall
have my vote. " Gen. Rosecrans sharply
criticises him for charging that the dead
Garfield found the army of the Cumber
land torn by dissensions and by his magic
touch brought harmony out of wrangling
and confusion. Public iconoclasts have
dashed and tumbled Jimmie's master
niece to earth anil not oTlicflo.t o a
hacking off its rounded and polished or
naments. The editor of the Macon
Messenger says : "Mr. Blaine's attempt
to make Garfield a heroic soldier by rea
son of his unimportant collision "with
Humphrey Marshall, exhibits a want of
familiarity with facts, or a disregard of
them, which might have been considered
ridiculous on any other occasion." It
says further : "There were ierhtps no
two men in the United States less fitted
to make soldiers than Garfield and Mar
shall." At the end of that skirmish
at long range, reeulting in casualties
hardly exceeding twenty disabled on
both sides, "Humphrey Marshall ran
seven miles one way and landed in the
Confederate Congress, and James A.
Garfield ran fifteen miles the other wav,
and found rest and shelter in the United
States Congress." This is the truth of
history. If out of this military heroes
can be made, had we not best tro back
and raise the statues of Napoleon and
Wellington an inch or two higher in the
temple of fame? Neither Gai field nor
Marshall will live in history as great
warriors. Neither was the proper t imber
out of which to make a great soldier. If
Gen. Rosecrans was tardy in his military
operations, he was certainly verv prompt
in emphatically characterizing Mr. Gar
field's letter as untruthful. Gen. Rose
crans resented Mr. Blaine's assault with
a promptness singularly at variance with
his military sluggishness. Mr. Iilaine
has done more to discredit the memory
of his dead fiiend than to honor it.
When two such distinguished doctors
differ as granny Hoar and Jr red. Grant,
who shall decide ? Hoar says Conkling
is unfit to be judge, and Col. Grant says
he is eminently fitted for the position.
Conkling's reason for declining the
gown is a good one. If by some consti
tutional quibble Guiteau's case should
come before him, he could not in the
gown face the man that put the gown
upon him. The Stalwarts draw well in
the "lottery of assassination." Conk
ling a gown. Grant a pension, Sargeant
a ministership, and Jack Logan's son a
paymastership in the army.
The most solemn farce that has latelv
been enacted at Washington was a dozen
or so officers of various grades ringed
out in full uniform with swords, snshes,
epaulets, and all the paraphrenalia of
dress parade, to try Sergeant Mason for
shooting at Guiteau. Not one of them
probably could give a correct definition
of the crime with which the prisoner
was charged, or the weight of evidence
necessary for conviction ; but there they
sat, clearing the room now and then of
spectators for the purpose of consulta
tion. There was no excuse for trying
Mason by a court-martial. He was
guilty of nly a slight offense against
military law, but had committed a grave
offense against the laws of the District
of Columbia, and on a spot clearly within
the jurisdiction of its courts.
RATHER SUGGESTIVE.
John Sherman's former colleague, ex
Senator Thurman, retires to private life
poorer than when he went into public
life. Twenty years ago, Blaine, Sher
man, Allison, Windom and Wilson were
all Republican members of the House
together. They were all poor at that
time very poor. Blaine is now a mil
lionaire ; Allison is a millionaire ; Wil
son is a millionaire ; Windom is a mil
lionaire and Sherman is trebly a million
aire. There is much food for reflection
in the fact that these gentlemen man
aged to become wealthy on the same
salary that Mr. Thurman grew poor on.
"CULTURED" MASSACHUSETTS.
An industrious statistician has been
engaged in comparing sexual crimes in
"cultivated" Massachusetts for the last
four years, and the exhibit is anything
but complimentary to the morality of
the Bay State. Illegitimate births and
divorces increased much more rapidly
than did the population of the State.
The labors of the free lovers in Massa
chusetts have not been in vain in a State
which has always been ready to look into
the morals of the rest of the world. At
the meet ing of the New England Free
Love League the other day in Boston, it
resolved that polygamy as practiced by
the Mormonsshould be endorsed. Claim
ing to be a veritable vestal in chastity,
the home of the Pilgrim Fathers is de
veloping into a pariah. G. N. S.
A Clear CompIexlSn
can be had by every lady who will use Par
ker's Ginger Tonic. Regulating the inter
nal organs aDd purifying the blood it quickly
removes pimples and gives a healthy bloom
to the cheek. Read about it in other column.
TWO SUPPRESSED TELEGRAMS.
INTERESTING REMINISCENCES OF THE BEIOX
OF IDWIN M. STANTON.
Theexeitement over the recpntly published
Garfield-RospTar.s letters, which continue
to form a topic of conversation just now,
brines to the surface a hitherto forgotten
fact which will tend to further illustrate the
friendship and affection which existed be
tween Garfield and Rosecrans nearly a vear
after the date of the letter published fn" the
Sun was written. It will be remembered
that Gpn. Garfield was elected a delegate
from Ohio to the Baltimore convention in
1SR4, which nominated Prpsidpnt Lincoln.
After that hart bepn effeetpn Garfield, re
membpring his old gpnpral, telpgraphed to
Rosrcrans, who was thpn in St. Louis, as
follows : "Vicp Presidency going a begging,
will you accept ?" Genpral Rospcrans hand
ed the telegram to a well known major gen
eral who was in his office at the time, and
said: "What would yon advise?" Ilis
friend advised him to wire bis acceptance,
" which was done. This answer was never
received by General Garfield, and it was af
terward ascertained that it hart hppn up
: pressed by Stanton, then Secretarv of War,
who vised every telegram at that time. As
a consequence Andrew Johnson received
the nomination which General Rosecrans
I would undoubtedly have received had his
answer reached Garfield, and the following
i events r.f Lincoln's death would have placed
! him in the President's chair, which was sub
j seqnently filled by Johnson. The snppres
' sion of the telegram lost General Rosecrans
; the Presidency. With referpnee to the sup
pression of telpgrams the following authen
; tic statement is given bv a prominent par
; ticipator in the occurrence. Just prior to
tne Da:tie ot reiierfcksburg, while General
Burnside was in command. General Rufns
A. Ingalls, who was quartermaster of the
army of the Potomac, and another distin
guished General desired to telegraph to Sen
ator Nesmith, of Oregon, then in Washing
ton, a private matter. They were well
aware of the espionage of the'War Depart-
i merit, ami ,now to convey the desired infor
j motion to their frU-nd puzzled them for a
while. A brilliant idea seized them, howev
i er, to send it in the Chenook toneue, which
they, being oid Pacific coast officers, were
j conversant with. They were also aware
that Senator Xesmith understood it. The
! dispatch was accordingly sent in that tongue,
! directed totlin Senator and signed "Ingalls."
j It fell Into Stanton's hands. All the experts
and linguists in the country were handed
; the mysterious telegram ; none could read it.
I Stanton became suspicions, and worried and
j desperate, and finally sent to New York for
i experts. Noue could translate it. After
' four days had elapsed Stanton addressed a
( note to the Senator to call at the War De
i partment, and on his arrival handed him the
telegram and demanded to know its purport.
Nesmith, who, as well known, was a thor
; ough U ar Democrat and a friend of Lincoln,
looked at the date of the dispatch and after
reading its contents assumed his Senatorial
dignity, and went for Stanton in a severe
tonsue-lashlng, and refused to tell hira the
contents. Nesmith immediately went over
to the White House and protested against
Stanton. Old Abe asked what was the na
ture of the dispatch from "liufe." Nesmith,
, translating It, read as follows : "We are go
ing to have a bpttle in a few davs. Are all
out of whisky. Come flown and bring some,
and we wili have a ni"e little gameof poker."
Lincoln laughed heartily and said: "Go
down. I will give you a pass for yourself and
friends." Nesmith with a partv went down,
taking sufficient commissary alone, and for
several days enjoyed liiniself. While thev
were all sitting in the tent on night engaged
in the seductive American game of pnker
the orderly brought in a telegram for Gen.
Ingalls, which read as follows : "Gen. In
galls, if you ever send a dispatch in such
language again, you will he cashiered from
the service. E. M. Stahton." Ingalls tossed
the message to NesmiMi, who, on reading it
replied. "Stanton ain't President of the Uni
ted States yet by a d d sight." Wasging-
ton Post. y y
The woist service that could have been
done to the memory of General Garfield was
to revive the discussion of his relations with
, General Rosecrans, whose chief of staff he
was whpn that fine soldier commanded the
Army of the Cumberland. The statement
was made a long while ago that Rosecrans'
removal from his command was due to Gar
field's influence, but both of them denied
this and when the subject was recalled by
Blame's eulogium General Kosacrans was
ratl.er disposed to defend Garfield from the
assumption of meddle-someness and quoted
a letter in which Garfield wrote to him long
before : "I have never been untrue to you in
thought, word or deed, lana or any othpr
liar to the contrary notw ithstanding. " Tne
publication of this single sentence may have
been well meant, but it prodnepd the effpet
that might have bepn expected. The editor
of the New York 6'im in a dangerous man to
assail. He has a fatally accurate memory
and while rarely attacking without cause he
will defend himself relentlesstv. Ilis meth
od in this case was characteristically com
plete, lie wrote not one word of comment,
hut quietly produced from his pigeon-holes
and printed a letter written bv G-xrfield to
Secretary Chase in Jnlv, is:i, when Mr.
Dana was lu the War Department, which is
certainly one of the most extraordinarv doc
uments ever penned by a military man.
TWO El.OTEMENTS FROM O.NB HOUSE.
The inhabitants of the quitt little village of
Port Washington, on Manhasset Bav, L. I.,
have been startled by two elopements, and
the whole township of North Hempstead is
profoundly agitated. The principals are
people who move in the best society of the
township. Tho women are sisters-in-law
and lived in the same house. Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Schenck had not been married a !
year. He was a carriage-maker in good cir- j
enmstances. Mrs. Schenck, it is alleged, be
came enamored of a young marripd man in '
Brooklyn. On Monday she started ostensi
bly to visit some friends in New York. But
she met the young man in Brooklyn, and to
gether the departed for parts unknown I
Mr. and Mrs. George V. Fleet were older
married people, having three children one
twelve years old. John Mackey, an ovster
planter, was Mrs. Fleet's choice and on
I hursday it is said thev eloped to New York.
Mrs. b ieet has made her whereabouts known .
in a letter to her daughter, asking her to go
to her. The husbands have not pvineed any
desire to go after them. at. j- World i
Source or the Garfield-Chase Let- ;
TER. The Washington Star of Monday pub
lishes the following: '-It is stated in are- '
sponsible quarter that the letter written to
ex-Secretary Chase by General Garfie'd,
touching General Rosecrans, recently made
public, was given out by Mr. Jacob W.
Schuckes. Mr. Schuckes now lives in New
1 ork city. At the time Mr. Chase was Sec
retary of the Treasury. Mr. Sehneks lived in j
Ohio and was appointed from that State by
Secretary Chase to a $1,600 clerkship. Sub
sequently he. became Mr. Chase's private
secretary. It is also said he has other letters I
bearing on the removal of Gen. Rosecrans, '
written by ex President Garfield, which will
be made public at an early day. "
"FF.JIAI.F. COMPLAINTS."
Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. : Dear
Sir I was sick for six years, and could
scarcely walk about the house. My breath
was short and I suffered from pain In the
breast and stomach all the time ; also from
palpitation and an internal fever, or burning
sensation, and experienced frequent smoth
ering or choking sensations. I also suffered
from pain low down across my bowels and
in my hack, and was much reduced in flesh.
I have used your -'Golden Medical Discove
ry" and "Favorite Prescription." and feel
that I am well. Verv respectfully,
Delilah B. McMillan,
Arlington, Ga.
A Ltfe Savtko Kiss. A very pretty story
is told by the Eouisville Courier-Journal to
the effect that an infant child of Joseph
Meyer, of that city, had apparently died after
a brief illness, and the mourning family and
friends were around it, when the child's
brother, about ten years old, bent over the
little one's body and kissed the pallid lips.
The baby's mouth was slightly open and in
kissing her the boy's breath was blown down
her throat. The little lips suddenly moved,
there were several sudden gasps, and respi
ration was resumed. At last accounts the
child was alive and is still improving.
Oxe Experience from Mast. I had
been sick and miserable so long and had
caused my husband so much trouble and ex
pense, no one seemed to know what ailed
me. that 1 was completely disheartened and
discouraged. In this frame of mind I got a
bottle of Hop Bitters and used them unknown
to my family. 1 soon began to Improve and
gained so fast that my hushand and family
thought it strange and unnatural, but when
I told them what had helped me, they said,
"Hurrah for Hop Bitters ! long may they
prosper, for thev have made mother well and
us happy." The Mother.
The Perseverance of some women In ac
complishing whatever they undertake is il
lustrated in the case ol a Georjria woman
who has, after three years of labor, completed
a bed-quilt composed of nearly four thousand
pieces.
fcWS AMI OTHER 0T1S5.
Dr. Lewis, a Chicago opponent of vac-
cination, has died of small-pox.
it vou nave the chi is take rastrsi. ir
you expect or fear tb-m take Pkucna
Mrs. Mary McElrov, 106 vears of age,
was burned to death In GreeDsburg, Ind.,
Satrday night.
An ew belonging to James Cochran, of
Salem township, Westmoreland conntv. re
cently dropped four well-developed lambs.
A rarmer named Conneil and his wife
were shot in the legs at Teacle, County
Clare, Ireland. It is expected thev will die.
The ijock naven Erpress says that a
niece of Benedict Arnold, Mrs. Anna Rhone,
resides In that city. She is over 80 years old,
A medicine of real merit, prescribed by
many leading physicians and universally
recommended bv those who have used it, as
a true tonic is. Brown's Iron Bitters.
Frank Krass, a workman, jumped from
the fifth story of a building in Attorney street.
New York, on Sunday, in which a fire had
broken out and was killed.
Archbishop MeCate, of Dublin, has is
sued a pastoral letter denouncing the recent
outrages in Ireland and stigmatizing secret
associations as encouraging murders.
A three story building was dismantled
by the wind at Bolivar, N. Y., on Saturday.
The whole structure collapsed, burying four
men, two of whom were taken out dead.
Small-pox has become epidemic in South
Bethlehem, this State. Seventy cases of that
disease and also a number of cases of pneu
monia are reported. The schools have been
closed.
Mrs. James Foster, of Thomson, Susque
hanna county, who is m years old, during
the past year wove 906 yards of cloth, and
took care of the milk and butter produced by
ten cows.
Artie Armstrong, of Petrolia, Butler
county, committed suicide on Wednesday of
last week by shooting. He was only twelve
years of age, and no cause can be assigned
for the act.
Guiteau. it appears, has about resigned
himself to the inevitable. The money-making
faculty is still strong within him, as he
continues to sell autographs and photo
graphs to visitors.
The London Engineer pronounces the
block svsrem of railroad signals a failure. If
so the Pennsylvania railroad company, which
has the btst managed line in the country,
has not found it out.
A lad named Mills, son of a widow lady
residing in East Tyrone, Blair eountv, was
caught between two cars on Wednesday of
last week and had one of his legs so terribly
crushed that he died the name niht.
Miss Lizzie Burton, of Clinton, Hi., a
highly-ftceoinplisdied and beautiful vouug
belle of 18, has just returned home after a
short vmt to the Joliet Penitentiary. She
has stoien 16 horses in her shoit bute'yentful
career.
The torturesif neuralgic pains, sick and
nervous headache, are instantlv banished by
thefusc of Dr. Faust's German Cure for Neu
ralgia and Headache. Guaranteed to relieve.
Ask druggists. For sale by E. James, El
enshnrg. Pa. 4-l,'81.-e.o. w.lv
Fin ley McKenny, supposed to be very
poor, was dying at Morgantown, Ky. With
his last breath he told his wife to break an
old jug that had long stood in the grim of the
smokehouse. She did so. and fl,200 in gold
and silver rolled out.
Services were disturbed by a drunken
man in the Lu'heran chnrch at Black River,
Wis. The minister walked coolly down from
the platform, seized thp offender, threw him
outdoors, and resumed his sermon as though
nothing had happened.
Miller, the convict who escaped from the
Western penitentiary by concealing himself
in a shoe box and fled to Canada, arrived at
Pittsburgh in charge of officers at aiout mid
night on Saturday night, having been brought
back on extradition papers.
It is stated that a caucus of the Irih
Catholic members of the Dominion Parlia
ment will be held shortly to draft a memorial
to the Queen, praying that the susnects be
released, and that "Ireland be placed on the
same free footing as Canada.
A crowd surrounded a barn in Park
Place, near Scranton, on Sunday, with the
intention of lynching Daniel Wa'ier, aeed
fifty-five years, who had assaulted an eig'it-year-old
girl, and who was hiding there. He
was rescued by officers and sent to jail.
Mrs. Lydia N. Johnson, of Paradise
township. Lancastercounty, has sued Daniel
Espendale, of the same township, for $5,0"0.
Mr. Espendale charged that whie taking up
a collection in church recently '.he widow
abstracted twenty-five cents from the plate ;
hence the suit.
One child has died and three persons are
sick of a mysterious disease in one house, in
Winchester, Mass. A ?onsultation of phy
sicians. I, eld on Wednesday of last week,
resulted ir. the decision that those now sick
have the oeretiro spinal meningitis, but no
conclusion was reached regarding the child.
Alfred Itetts married Mary O'Connor, a
mere child of but 15, at Erie, Pa. He mal
treated her continually, ending in ejecting
ner rrom tne nouse nunng th" night. Over-
whelmed with despair and grief, the child-
wne returned in. a lew days and swallowed
a dose of arsenic in a desperate effort at sui
cide.
A dastardly attempt was made at New
Orleans, Saturday night, to cut the levee
within the city limits. Timely discovery
was made and the cut filled, the ov rflow of
a large portion of the city being thereby pre
vented. The perpetrator has rot yet been
discovered.
Mrs. W. C. Mills, who was badly scald
ed in the explosion of the steam piie on the
steamer Sidnev, near Ravenswood. W. Va..
last Friday, died of Iter injuries at Belaire,
Ohio, on Motday pvening. Mrs. Mills'
death swells the list of victims of this disas
ter to nine.
A cirl at Pekin, 111., was about to be
married to a young sweetheart. A man in
the neighborhood heard of it, and told her
mother that, as his wife was going to die
soon, he would marrv the girl himself, if she
would wait. As he was rich, the barcain
was made, and in three months the wedding
took place.
On Saturday, Isaac Kerdrick shot his
wife twice and killed her, at their home, two
miles east of Grant station, northeast of In
dianapolis, Ind. He iemained with the dead
woman all night. He was arrested on Sun
day morning. He is a brakeman of bad
reputation, and is said to have been jealous
of his wife.
Five laborers staited to cross the Ohio
river on Monday evening in a stiff at Mc
Kee's Rocks, just below Pittsburg. Th?
boat capsized when nearing the Allegheny
shore and the meD were thrown into the wa
ter. Two named Murphy and Shields were
drowned. The other three swam ashore
greatlv exhausted.
On Saturday William F. Robins, aged
twelve vears, and his sister, Jennie, aged 8
ran away from the home of their father, W.
S. Robins, of Wyoming. The boy ran off
once before, when he was nine years old,
and remained aw ay two years. Their moth
er ran away from home several years ago,
and has not retnrnpd
A Denverand Rio Grande engine became success than ever before. This gratifying
uncontrollable at Leadville on Saturday and : condition of affairs is mainly the result of the
ran down a heavy grade at about fifty miles ; untiring and energetic labors of its present
an hour. It jumped the track about fifty i able piesident, the Very Rev. Ir. Byrne,
feet from a train crowded w-ith passengers ! late of the diocese of Boston. The institu
nnd was dashed to pieces. No one was hurt, ! tion has at this time an attendance of more
the engineer and fireman of the runaway en- , than one hundred pupils,
gine having escaped by jumping. j , , m
A special aispaicn to tne oincinnaii
Commercial from Belleville, W. Ya., says the
Ohio river steam packet Sidney' burst her
steam pip? below the town of Ravens wood,
on Friday morning, killing three persons and
wounding fifteen. The steamer Graham
went up the river from the scene of the dis
aster to get physicians and coffins.
A dog sto'e a piece of meat from Stran
ahan's butcher shop at nolly, Michigan, and
the man thrpw a knife at the thief, which
killed him. The owner of the dog prosecu
ted Stranahan for cruelty, the town became
excitedly divided in sentiment, the trial em
ployed the best legal talent in the county,
and the butcher was finally fined f 10.
Oliver John Kenyon'shouse at Ashantee,
Wis., originally had only one story. When
his son married he added a story for the ac
commodation of the new family, nd a third
was put on when his grandson took a wife.
He i9 now eighty years old, and it is there
fore unlikely that the building will be further
heightened lor a great-grandson, though he
hopes so.
On Thursday night Wilson Rothenber
ger, ot Emaus. Berks county, got his foot
fastened between the rails on the East Penn
sylvania Railroad, near that place, and all
his efforts failed to extricate himself. A
train was approaching whieh would certainly
have run him down, hut his cries for help
attracted passers-by. The approaching train
was signalled and the roan released.
A daring attempt was made by unknown
parties one night last week to murder Geo.
E. Mattux and family, in Prince George
county. Va., by chloroforming tbein while
asleep and then setting fire to the house. It
was with difficulty that the occupants were
gotten out Mattux's store was nxt pil
laged and set on fire. Both residence and
store were entirely consumed with all their
contents.
The court-martial In the case of Sergeant
Mason, who shot at Guiteau, rendered the
following sentence from Governor's Island
on Thursday : "Sentence : To be dishonor.
ably discharged fiom theserviceot the United
States with the li.ea nf oil nav at.H n,..
-3'!i 1 i P vd al!o,?nw
SfnSiiTirf uSJIt?hlin,Ka,,d then
&$&&f&
?ipb"t enan lo" oireci lor
nKiii years.
wm Murley, aged 12, of Lenven-
worth, Kansa, is either a moral monster or
; a martyr to aemelly false accusation. He
! went t play on the Jce with a lad voar ger
mmi uuusru, mni tun companion was
drowned. A spectator at a consldei able dis-
tanee -ays that Murley pushed the other i 1881. I hey show that 3 v, i
crown burouiu ui'ir iu hip ice, xnruSTlTig mm ! viiihk
under water, ano pounding his hands to !
make him let go his bold. j
A couple composed apparently of a boy !
of 16 and a girl of 12 presented themselves to i
a Justice at GUnin, mo., and aked to be
married. The Jnstice replied that he was
Ttot in the habit of joining children in wed
lock, and advised tripm to go right back
'; their parents. They asserted that they wpre
i over twenty, and so they were, being d warfs;
! but they had to bring witnesses and the fam-
lly record bpfore the official would belipve it.
Intplligpnee reached Panama on Monday
j of an appalling earthquake in Costa Rica.
. Advices then received statp that four towns
; bave been lerroypd Alajuela. Ssn Ramon, '
; Greecia, and Hrida. In Alajnela alone ;
j several thousand lives were lot. Those left
! alive there are homeless. Later accounts
say the loss of life has been something fear- '
fill. Thousands of the inhabitants wer
! swallowed np, and the destruction of proper
' ty is widpopread.
Thp Washington police had In charge the
othpr dav a white lunatic calline himself
', XVinfipld Scott Hancock and claiming to be
i Prpsidpnt of the T'nitPd Statps. fie arrived
i a few das ago exhausted bv a long tramp
! from North Carolina. Upon his arrival be
! nppliPd for admission to thp Freedman's
! Hospital, where, hp said, he wished to recn
; perate from the effects of his journey. Room
was found for him at Police Headquarters.
. He was to bp shipped homeward.
Rev. Francis A. Boyl. pastor of St.
I Matthew's Catholic church. Washington. D.
C, died at the Proridpp cp Hospital on Mon
; day while under thp influence of ether ad
i ministered in a surgical operation. He was
1 operated upon for stone in the bladder and
: had been given ether by his own desire. His
; death was the result f apoplexy, superin-
ducpd by thp shock of the operation. Father
I Boyle was regarded as one of the brightest
j and most eloquent priests in the country.
! The Hanisburg ratriot is right when tt
says that it is impossible to travel on the
Pennsylvania railroad without feeling atonce
that the emp.oyes of that line are as much
j the servants of the public as if every passen
! gerwerean influential stockholder" At an
eastern station the other dav one of the uni
formed attendants gavea rudely curt answer
' t-ivu miesrion. i hp wolds were over.
heard by an official and in three seconds there ,0li .' rttee J
was a vacancy in that department.
The New York Awn says that a gentle- i
man in Ridgewood. N. J., witnessed an un- '
usual spectacle on Friday morning. The sun
was just rising in a Oat kv, while in the !
west heavy banks of black w ind clouds were j
floating, pierced by the brighter hues of a
spring rainbow. Thev were so interlocked i
that they presented a magnificent scene. On I
one side of the house a heavy shower of rain '
was falling, w hile ontheotherVide there was
not moisturp enough to wet the shoe. !
A ronr.antic story is told by the Tuolum- j
no (Cal.) Union-Democrat of a daughter of j
Jose Cordero, who was abducted from her '
parents while a little cild. She ftlwavs re- i
tained in her memory the appearance of tier :
mother, the name of "her father, and the fact
that her home was in Santa Barbara. Be
cently she married in Keuttif ky and induced
her huslmnd to vis!t that city, she arrived
a few days azo, ard a joyous meet ir.g occur- '
rpd netweeii the lot.g lost daughter and her
mother.
Lawyer ScoviKe In "on versa! ion in Chi
cago, Saturday, aid to a reporter that he
believed it was the best thing for thp country
that Oiiitej should hang, for then there
would bp a revulsion in public fe-:ing, and
Guiteau would do the country the great ser
vice of bringi'.g about a revision of the laws
to protect the insane. He ha-, bnwt-vpr,
asked President Arthur to have Guiteau sent
to prison for life, and then, if he become a
raving nmniac, it would be easy to have him
sent to an nsylu-n.
Charg.-s of terrible erueltv are n-aie
against John Bennett, a J.hn.towrj (. Y.)
farmer. It is ai.-ged tnat he has luereiies-lv
bpat-n Lis four-year-old daughter, after
stripping her, throwing her nuked into a
snow bank. p:ting:ng1ier it to a ci-tern and
confining her without food in a tuid room
Shortly r.fter bet condition became known
she was provided with fo..d, and ate so rav
enousivt hat a physician ordered that nothirg
more be jrivei tier. Bennett has tied. His
neighbors threaten lynching.
Farmer Johnson has livp.1 at Beriin. ( On
tario, about twenty years, and in that time
his reared a large ramily, aTim.u!. icu mu. i.
property, aid Itecorne a highly respected
dea-.-on. A f.-w day ago a Russian woman
and her son arrived in that town and claimed
John-on as hut.and and father. Thev said
that he was a llumn named Trein'ki, that
he em icT.it ed for the purpose rf finding a
new home for them, and that thev had t-acel
hira finally by means of a neighbor who re
turned from a viit to America. He con-
! of buying tip their c'.aim.
uim iney u-u tne rrutli. and is desirous
.In Surrey county, N. C. a few davs
since, a neuro woman name I Jane Malrrv,
deserted two cl.rdreri. aged two and five
; years, leaving them in the cabin unprovided
with f'trd. Neighbors, missing the woman,
wptit fothphnns? and discovered the clii!
t dren in a tertRde condit ion, starvinc to .ieath.
i They had been without food for five days.'
; Thev were extremely emaciated and ha 1 liivt
i the use of their iimhs. Kind p?op!e to U
i them away and provided them with fo.nl. but
igTiorantly cave them too much, to eat. Thev
i ate so much that they died the nest day".
: There i no trace of the inhuman mother and
; much indignation against her is manifested.
J The house was in lather a lor.ely piace and
J had been J.x-k-d bv the mother betore she
, left.
-A special telegram to the Pittsburg Dis- KCZKMA.
' rarcTi from Steubenvine, O., March 12, say:
East evening T-rank Mvers. of this ritv
, inn fiver and killed by a passenger train near
j the depot at Toronto? on the V. and R. road.
j At the time the accident took place he w as
walking along the track toward the station. '
I and when within a few rods of it was struck! '
His wife was at the depot nt the time and
witnessed the casualty which cost her hn;
; band his life. His head was almost severed ;
I from his body. At the time two trains were i
j running, and" it is supposed that his attention i
j was attracted by the on? approaching iiim !
j from the direction from which he was waik- i
ing. The scene which ensued when the wife !
reached the mangled remains of her husband
j was very affecting.
) The financial affairs of Mt, St. Marv's
i College, near EtiimittsSuirg, Md., having re- '
eently been satisfactorily adjusted, the Re- !
j ceiver, Captain James McSherry, into wboav
j hands its management was committed one '
: year ago, filed his petition to the court asking '
; a.discharge, and in accordance therew ith was
; released of his tiust. This action restores to
! the venerable school the alma muter of
j Cardinal McCloskey and many others emi- ,
1 nent in both Church and State all of its
I rights and franchises, and opens to it. it is
oenevea a greater career or
usefulness and
The most wonderful curative remedies of
the present day are thoe that come from j
Germany, or at least originate there. The 1
most recent preparation placed ttpon the 1
market in this country is the Great Germ as
Inviookator, which has never been known I
to fail in curing a single case of impotency. j
spermatorrhea, weakness, and all diseases
resulting from self a'mse, as nervous debility,
inability, mental anxiety, languot, lassitude, '
depresM.m of spirits and function aj derange- i
ments of the nervous system. ForsalebyE.
James, Ebensburg, and by all druggists or '
sent free by mail on receiotof r,ri,'e si on
j per box, or six boxes for f ."i 00. Address F
! J. Cheney. Toledo, O., Sole Agent for the
j L nited States. Send for circular. t
High Price for a Cow. Edwatd Worth.
real estate agent, wliosk farm and residence -is
loeated in Wawa, in Aston township, at I
the West Chester and Baltimore Central '
Railroad Junction, has sold his celebrated
Jersey cow. "Bertha Morgan," to Velancy j
V. Fuller, Esq., of Canada, for f2,SO0. Mr. ,
worm was oSered f 1.500 for tins cow a year
ago, but refused to sell for that sum. She is
one of the finest formed cows we have ever
seen, and is r.ine years old. She made in
January, 1SS2, 19 pounds 6 ounces of butter
in seven days. Mr. Worth also sold ta the
same gentleman, two heifers, one a vearling
and the other two years, for fTOtt. flis herd
of Jerseys are of the finest in the countrv, all
registered. Mr. Fuller, we are informed,
traveled seven thousand miles to find what
he deemed th? best cow in this countrv, and
and he was satisfied that "Bertha" filled the
measure of his ambition in that respect, as
near as possible. As long as fancy stock
brings such prices it will be in demand.
Media American.
Answer This Qpestios. Wby do so
many people we see around us seem to pre-
ier to suiier and be made miserable bv indi-
niiui., toumi miiiin, iiiiiiurr,, u-bs vi ape-
tite, coming up ot food, yellow skin, etc,
wt,en forTS cts. E. James. Druggist, E!es.
bV ' -ill sell them Shilohs Vitalizer.
which is guaranteed to cure in every intatice?
i 4-l.-e o.w.ly.J
A PARK PICTIRL
AS IEIIB LAN PLC j) ON TRi.g ,
LoDON, March 9 -Retarr,. v
published of the eviction, ir. i"
perser.K u-
these l,0HO persons were re a'dt, iVl
antsand 8 ?'T7 as rare-taktr :'i
as me total number turnfd r.'t
- : n- i. .. . i -
nut-. iirir bit nicy and 1r
lng, these 7,270 homeless t..,!
r-'iat nr.
swer mav be sought in a i.ri .
niTT -ti iiniii in
from a lirie i,f if,
Isn u Gradv,
, ju-v pur. .ixr.en, v.
his own striking met at .-. .
- - . - . " I 1. .
In which are embarked the' w ' ' '"
tunes of the Irish landlords nrV"4
'llr I "imii nil U'KT lil'l St-r.
! and ev er c oser to an ir,... i . '
i says : - . r tJ.
"A an illunritlon of t!. .
: ima by r-vi.iutlot.ar- and d.,t'.'u' ''
over a claps, vyti mhrn t la-'r. .,
OTerwbe'.mirn n;:l:tarT fvrr o ' 11 4N
J and crt.bahle dihiiltiM ..-
break ui th- Xu Kent enrr V ."'''-
law. While the temp-r e.f v ?. ."
I tli at Intfrm.rl!:, . .. r. 1 ! t.
, ...... ... . . . . . ...
-r t!ian rvP-T rrtc
! ion. tb ! ?
luiuir I nui pu. i.nse n I.i? r.
oM'iraor and d irit Ion at
't l i! r. -.. i . -
pennon at '
yield. Jnpjoe that the pe... -
np .o and atter evi;tl'.n and . '
tate If c! -are 1 out Ir c.qu..rW " '
m-a.nwli!ie enMii.i'inir on -i- . i :
farn!-Ir.-cea?arily exemj ted'r- tt. "
....iu iur it-.i. i'. i. m enu i-
crmee the tef.l tuir ard train 5
onprcaortive. occJi.-d hr e.r
eraie rf uim to emhianr
ecu of ten MiiKiciri. a dir. r
' v"
main? liatde frra!e ard" taxes '" '
teret n c!:rg-r, .r.,. t. -
winch a p-' pi wi,o birr srrewe i
and deTtrrcmaT'on tn a ct-rta-- .
many int-ati i evadir.it."
Mr. O'Oradv then take r. Px.
UtP of 20 tenants, chained to j-,"
and with a ieiitu.1 of ". 6 n .
tenants pay up, that their f.,"
as carr.t ing ground to the ,:
ejected. The expenses and I:v
landlord, law co-ts, rate, 'at '
gency men, will am. him tV'V
year's campaicu. Two i.r t;
would exha-.i-t ar:v fund the ia-i
form. The author cyi,ti:i::rs: '
"1 liensfore 1 fay 1el:l-er-:T
movtmen!. if tlie p-t-ie v.iliir
terrurifta e our rather tl-an't-V-dlrfieulty
which if. fo Iht a 1 -
aLie. iwre-iver. let it r. rot..,..,
eitreni :
g'-fn. tliej are. they inv.t ,,
tne. me pe'.j.ie. w.;i proceed t ex
other. Thui" land Lnuc J.u
men appestriOK and d:.-nM:.-, ,
blii'ier j-jarry than har.-f -. j ,
icenlry. compelled to !a.l l..,rk c.
tion .f the ai i taryar ! to a '
proi-rt:on In trim;-, rei 'p: j. .V
yroundj, and ib l.md trbi-i
'arm, to the tecuer mero.es o!
Here, indeed, is a prt-cnrnt
admission from or. cd ti e
land ! Such ! the record of a
Ireland. Eviction, jntiini l,i: .
tion. imprisonment, iirepre::
for the national cms?, ur r;.
to the rational leader-, ul u :
tior.al leaders, inid ing h. ; V
etnane'ration, 4o,oou S).;,i,. ,.
amies. .".io untried piiunr-i- i
Ireland in the fortv six'h ts:
cf her Most Gracious Ma e ". :
A r.AKF. Di d Man a I'.
i corre.-pot.dent w t iu s :
About tVree m.-::T. r
anc-of Kot ert A. Wr:l-t. sr. e
Point Vj.l Con); ar.y. . ;:t la
wi.ch time mri-g u;. u, .. , .. .
e nr-f nb I: in l.arp te-i! . T " .
to ir.-;-rf ir-nul-x- rr-: ; j - ..
vera :..u and -ti:t.le man
much talk-nic" : hree I ciref. .
he n. ie juevf-r-l'T. :;. v , :
true. T:i..re efi-e.-mDy a- he n: : v
. krr.w liVi:- ti.t v were i. r f
pD'-ii-a'..::.
' He ( Tl yn- (.f nre. I t ... j
and a-f t. 1 r ' i, :, " i . -.
' served r.:::'i I t. an i ' ii-
dK. m.-r- an 1 ter-r w.-k t' t-hi-
h e. He b- not 1. t a d-v ;
t"-n inont h'. He t! e r. t r.-r c '
wh'Tii I..- forif J-turre!:. A'!.'.- : - '
let, a!! n-w i'v.n: ;tr c.-
on ( John Wrlrl.t. t!:i. if tl-.w l:i
ard .? 1 j en t t u .-r t . -i
I'avtf E-P t. . wtu. need and d;ed 'i
; Vireir.iaat t! e dvI!-.,i nae. a- i
l ce-lPt cte.l, .t 1. Tea, a' 1 ml .
ni-n.'.er . I t! Ma
!
t;e c .river. -..until youT.ir- .1
.t nil t itv a'. 1 If ir . .i . t
ra? ar. i-jr.tT.tf er.rifnrrer
'wt i tor h :.. t .
Oe
1., cu
ant t
ruref
wl-.i.-!
. W . B: wn 4D
'ei l-y o'ipurn
n' ra at'd O::
tl a u ma vr . rn
llH-
I f..er?
f.-r f :x vent
re?
ifo a.
I . H n-f.'.e. i
tro:t. Mi.i., Eh
CSP 'e7fT!'1 r ' '
a C-: ;j : a ii n '
w hih spit ii't
.. liT-'t t f
an
I T .' Tf 1 Mi: '
cum S ;tj. ':h
SCALD 111: AH.
H. A. I;sv-r..:. !. At:
t 1 V
jarKn, ,! tn.. Tra c-ird
year;- ciur;.i'..n l v Uie "i ti
H-.n. Wm l . vl. r. lv -t. u. v . -corei
a hamr-rni tMe fnr.,. I : !;
hr.d t een i-et.i tirr:o ct .... .
ly man; tt ..'..- (...-t j, v. :
ted sperial'M?, as well as t up y :
MII.K V It 1ST.
Mr. B..wcr, -4 'l:r.t.ti St..Mti
Ot ljer 'Ter Ch'ld, :!,.. ;fcf ri . . '
wtocti Twisted ail r"n:e ! (? t..r ' ..
fine healthy Wy, m il h a hmi:': t at
FAT.Liyf 11 A in.
Frank A. Hu. Stf-ntr! 1' r- T . " '
was eared of 4.)..mt:. !;' ; t
the Cuti.-nra Kefolvent ';-i- i - -
and Cutl'ora and I'lttt.-un, t .
onref) et-rn;!iiy. wi;.-h r"ti '
hair whi n a:i a"id 1
run a tmi:t.
The t'ut'.ci:ra t-e;-Tii c:.:. , i
ne ol t he t "uilcur 1. v- -fier.
and the external -oe t -ra
Soap, the tlie Kreat n -r-
CUT1CI liA
Raw cm e ere 'or ! ' v v ' .. -
Cnin m. a M-.Jk o. iI .1 .
lirv-e P.x. -. 1. "i i !. i : - 1 - - .
111.. ! lvr!f'.-r. 1 rr 1 ' : "
al Toilet s.-ap. ;se : 't : '' '
visa Soat. I.v. I'ritit t
l.KKS ri
I 1 !
Radical t
hrv! an l ' .
S'? Miitil ye!" "
!:" r: ii T. 1 1 wjr.
fevrih, r ip.ktf S v ' ' '
Catarrh anl le curt.!.
Vifh HrI. Anie-i. . n I
r1ff"Ul un i 11- v--r 1::
Kjiesl i'orf iirr in
Cure, or.f hx "f.r.l " r
baler. In one pack-re. 1 '
WI I K- 4' '
cOVUws-ELFC
QUEITTSSS'S
1 Vr'
S-ff.t V,.T
u
XRKDZ.'& MARK.
Kirn"-'
TAKE NOTh'i:
deMed t-e
t'e hef.-re t! e-! .
and note remain. n:
left in the Land? ot
r. e i
..n.
ensurs
' rut ra -n1
t;y .mt. V nit. tr m !: w.- ...
'-.-1 t ..t!,ffi. I)IU -.-t r-it. .... . l:
remnttrit ie tanulv.
; s t Pin
V - V - I : : :
w r I -
Sanford s
)
I : n ' j .