EDENSDURC. PA., FRIDAY, - - - MARCH 31, 1SS2. The Democratic State Committee at its trceting in Ilarrisburg on "Wednes day of last week, txed upon that city as the place, and Wednesday the 2th of June as the time, for holding the State convention. The place selected is the right one. and the time is satisfactory, as it is a compromise between the advo- rates of an i-arlv and those of a late convention. The London correspondent of the X Y. Wn. ll in his cable despatch on Sat- j elect a member of Congress, while it urday last, says it is now almost univer- ! will eighty-five thousand Demo- sally admitted that Mm Irish Land Bill, j ocrats, nearly four times over the num from which so much was hoped, is an j ler of Republicans, to do the same utter failure, so far s the promotion of j thing. Every "Republican member who peace and order in that country is con- ' votes for this bill will be guilty of moral cerued. lie also states that the belief is j perjury, and could b convicted in a general that Mr. Gladstone will not at- : court of justice of that crime, if it was tempt the expeiiment of continuing in force the Coercion bill, passed in March when it expires by its own limita tion in September next. Mis Piii-enrc Cocsivs, of St. Louis, one of the best known Advocates of the right of women to vote and hold office, thereby making things lively in Nation al, State and county politics, lias made application to President Arthur to be appointed one of the five commissioners to re-organize the territory of Utah, un der the recent act of Congress. Plioebo is good-looking and one of the smartest of her kind, hut she won't be one of the commissioners to settle the Mormon question. The sixe of her cheek, how ever, is made very apparent from her ambition to take a hand at the business. state Sexator, Yj ki.ky B. Cose, of Luzerne county, who lias been quite conspicuously mentioned in the north eastern portion of the State as the next Democratic candidate for Governor, states that in no possible event would he accept a nomination. Ilis present busi ness engagements, ho says, requires all his time, and he has no special ambition to hold ollice. That Mr. Coxe possesses iD an eminent degree all the require ment."; for a faithful and honest dis charge of the duties of the office, is not questioned anywhere in the State, but his positive declination takes him out of the list of candidates. A prominent cattle deakr from the j Indian Territory, estimates the cattle drive from Texas this season at about I .JOOmiO head. This rrormous army of ' cat tlii will be shipped by rail from points in Kansas to Kansas City, St. Louis an 1 Ghicago. Tho average price for yrarling is $13 and for two-year olds ?1'. Although the prospects for an im :n!!se rattle business during the com ing summer is unusually good, the ex ten1 of the trad? during the next few yeais is confidently expected to exceed the largest predict iocs of the most san guine of these engaged in it. The In dian Tetritory, Western and Southwest- ern Kansns, and Texas will soon become and for years remain tho great meat ; centre of the world. JiTiOE St. .Times" Cox, of Minneso ta, who was impeached for habitual drm. kenness, ,md whose trial before the Semite t that Stafe has ben in rrosrress f or several weeks, was convicted in i!.;i;m'T an 1 form as he stood impeached o.j Tuesday of last week. He was sen tenced to be removed from office, and to be disqualified from holding a judi cial position for a period of three years, We made men! ion of Cox's trial at the thus it began and of his peculiar defence that chronic drunkenness was not an im p i'chable offense under the constitution of Minnesota, the opinion of the Legis lature to the contnry notwithstanding. If the one-half that was said about Cox wis true, it will take him the three years of his disqualification from office to get sober, if he ever does, which is very improbable. It is well understood by every intelli gent man in the country that party con siderations have much to do in mould ing the legislation of Congress on the question of Chinese immigration. The popular vote f three States, California, Oregon and Nevada is regarded as being reasonably certain to be casr in favor of that political party in Congress, which will go the furthest in its opposition to cheap Chines? labor. This is a very low and luistatesmaiilike view to take of so mportant a question, but is never theless a fact, ami being so, the Demo crats seem to have scored a big advan tage over the Republicans, both in the Senate and House, as shown by the vote on the Chinese bill, now in Mr. Arthur's hands. We gave the vote in the Senate when the bill passed that body. In the House the vote was li7 yeas to C". nays. One hundred and nine Democrats and fifty-eight Republicans voted for the bill, and sixty-one Republicans and four Democrats voted against it. Tin: Ilarrisburg Tt lcniph, the Cam erii organ at the seat of the State goi nmient, has the effrontery to say I hit - those who have been watching ttieir movements are now convinced i that the Democratic parly in Pennsyl- taiiia Li's nrdl.iu but n:en to fight for, arid that the fighting for these men will nuke all lighting for them a very hope less struggle." Considering the fact that for more than a quarter of a cen- , partment. lie is Grant's man first, tury th Tfhrjrdj.h has been the personal last and nil the time. Grant would organ of Simon Cameron, and then of j compromise with "My Dear Arthur'1 his son when his father's political man- j on Chaffee, of Colorado, whose daugh tle Ml upon his shoulders that it has tor is married to Grant's son. for Secre lieeu t he apologist and defender of the , taiy of the Interior, but as the country sins and in; -j-.iitiesof Cameronisru under ; don't seem to want Chaffee, the defeat any and all circumstances that such a ' ed candidate for a third term returns to paper whose slavish devotion to the po- his first love, Ned Iale, The latest litical fortunes of these two men, the j dispatches represent" Heale's prospects father and son, is notorious from ohe enn ot me Mate to the other, should charge tho Democratic parly of Penn sylvania with having "nr.Mng but men to fiojit for," is peculiarly coo and re freshing, ruid its only parallel would be whn a c'ain gentleman with horns, hoofs and tail rr.dertakestn act the role c f a ' -" i ; , t . j In t tic matter of a:i Alport uiniient j lull for CoTi'iessioaal iurioses, the lle j publicans in the Ohio Legislature are I determined not to be outdone by Ma ! lione and hid robbers in Virginia in re- districting that Ptate, although they propose to do a little better than then party friends did in Michigan and Wis consin, to whose artistic performances in that line we referred last week, In Ohio it is proposed to oass a bill, and it will no doubt be done, which will give j the Republicans seventeen districts and . the Democrats four. In that State , at the last Presidential election Garfield j ! received .TT.-i.ftOO votes and Hancock ; j 340,riOO. and under this bill of Democrat -f ic disfranchisement it will only require i twenty-two thousand "Republicans to I an indictable offence. The mere state ' ment of what thn "God and morality" ! party is about to do in Ohio is enough. ; It admil s of no argument in its support. or no palliation or excuse, and is a clear ill ust rn Mon of the convenient doctrine that "might makes right." The time must and will come lieforo many years pass by when both politieal parties will be taught that in the framing and pass age of a Congressional apportionment bill, minorities have rights which ma jorities must be made to respect. WnEX the editor of a Republican iiewcpapers makes the deliberate asser tion that "during the Presidential can vass of lSO, the political opponents of Gen. Garfield did all in their power to injure him in the eyes of th people," he sins against knowledge and utters a wilful falsehood. "The political oppo nents of Gen. Garfield" mean the Demo cracy and that they did all in their pow er to "injure" him in the campaign of lSO, is the inference to be drawn. The only attempts that were made to 'injure Garfield were bis transactions with Oak "s Ames in the Stock of the Credit Mobilier company, and his reception of five thousand dollars from the De Golyer pavement company while he was chair man of the Committee on Appropria tions. The Ames business, as everybody knows was uncovered by a Republican committee of investigation appointed on the motion of Jas. G. Blaine, and the five thousand dollar fee was also bro't out in the testimony taken by another committee of a "Republican Congress. No Democrat in any part of the coun try attempted to "injure" Garfield in ls0 by making a false charge against him. but on the contrary the accusations arrairst his official ami personal inte grity came through his own Republican friends. Tf hi reputation was ohseur" 1 by a cloud during that campaign which 1ms never yet been removed from it, bis own political household, and not the Democratic party, or any member there of, must be held responsible. Lor; x. r,f Tllinrvs. who has a bill be fore the Senate apporf ionincr the tax on whisky, amounting to sixty millions of dollars, among the States for education al purposes, made a speech in its favor ten days or two weeks ago, in which he said : "Have vou ever known a minis ter of the Gospel to refuse a ten dollar bill toward building a church because a saloon keener gave it ? I never have." Thi? declaration made by Logan has caused considerable commotion in Illi nois, and has been the text for some very vigorous pulpit denunciation both of Lo gan and his mixed whiskey and educa tional bills. Some of the clergymen, in heir comments upon the speech, regard j it as an onn and direct insult, Logan's j bill devotes all the revenue derived j from the taxes on l:qnor to the educa- j Hon of "all the children living in the j United States," not only in grammar and the other elementary branches, but j also "in the mechanical ami industrial ! arts." If the men who framed the con- ' istituf ion of the L'nited States had ever ' dreamed that the time would come ' when an effort would be made to per- j vert this into a paternal government for ! the purpose, among other like things, of ! leaching grammar and the three R's, they would have left their great work ; unfinished. i The color of a man's ekin appears now to control the validity of the find ing and sentence of -a court martial with the aicliorites at Washington. Cadet Whittaker (colored) although twice found guilty of slitting his ears to ac complish certain purposes of his own, and sentenced to be dishonorably dis charged from the military service of the L'nited States, yet Mr. Arthur finds a way of nullifying all this and substi tutes in its place Whittaker's dismissal from West Point for deficiency in stud ies, which was precisely the result that Whittaker wanted' to bring about. If j Fitz John Porter had a black skin in- ' Etead of a white one he would not now j at the end of nineteen years be trying to j get the sentence of the court martial i that unjustly convicted him set aside. j The Arthur-Republican mountain at j "Washington, has been for some time, ; and still is, in severe labor over the '. birth of a Secretary of the Navy, and it ' is again believed that when the child is j ' born its name will be Edward Beale. ! We have referred to Edward hereto fore in connection with the Navv de- ' as in the ascendant. l TriM anti-Tammany Democracy of New York, are preparing to call a meet ing of the Democratic tate Committee to take such steps "as will forever as sure all loyal Democrats that hereafter there will L'e no cowardly recognition of, or compromise with John Kelly." OCR PHILADELPHIA LETTER. A BIO DIVORCE liUSIXEfH OIL OR CHINA-WASHINGTON MALARIA THE AVROX.O COLOR FRAXKLIS PIERCE AND LORENZO IOX DEMOCRATIC STATE CONVENTION rillLADELFlII A DEMOCRACY SPECIAL BREVITIES. Philadelphia, March 27, ISSi. Regular Corretponlenee of The Freeman. Dear IIexry Our domicile to-day is not draped with the sable babilments of death, is nevertheless a house of mourning. The inmates of our abode mourn the death of Catharine Mc Bride, a ciose and cherished friend of your or.ce kind friend, Mrs. Smith. In the death of Mrs. McBride our community nas lost one oi me Kindest benetactors. Especially in her death has our family lost a dear friend, one who ha3 been to them a second mother, and whose good ness of heart and many Christain vir tues will be ever fondly remembered by them. Mrs. McBride was seventy years old, and was truly a good old-fashioned mother. Not a mother of the period, enameled and painted, with her chignon, curls and bustle, whose white jeweled hands never feel the touch of a baby's ringers, 'out a dear old-fashioned mother, in whose eyes the clear depth of love shone, whose hands though used to toil, had long gently guided the tottering steps of childhood, smoothed many pii lows in sickness and were ever reaching out in tenderness to the distressed. Blessed is the memory of such a mother. It I'oats like the perfume of a fragrant flower. The music of other voices may be lost, but the entrancing memory of her voice will ever echo in the hearts of many. Other faces may fade away and be forgotten, but her face will shine on. and in the fitful pauses of busy lite, when those she has left behind her cross the threshold and stand in the rooms once so ! hallowed by her presence, will drop a tear to her memory, and bless God for giving them such a mother. A 1IIG DIVORCE RL'sIXESS. Over five hundred divorces were gran ted in Philadelphia during the last year. This is more than was granted in the whole State of Connecticut during the same period, and Connecticut is a lead ing divorce-granting State. In this city the divorce business flourishes like a green bay tree. WASHINGTON MALARIA. That nasty Washington malaria that knocked Mr. Blaine down after the Mil ligan letter episode, has also prostrated Mr. Shipherd before he could produce i me pertumed. notes ot the Peruvian guano or respond unto ; and it is reared the same malaria will make the guano committee absent-minded. OIL OR CHINA. I feel proud of the spirit manifested by the members of the Jackson Town ship Oil Company, who are determined to bore until they strike "oil or China." The Jackson township boys are worthy sons of worthy sires. I have a distinct remembrance of attending some anima ted and interesting political meetings in Jackson township. I have a vivid re membrance of a meeting held at the house Of Henry Rager in that township, when and where a beautiful hickory pole was raised from which floated a large Buchanan-Breckenridgo flag, the pole being adorned beneath the flag with a lovely wreath of flowers, prepared by the ladies of Jackson. I can remember Henry Rager organizing the meeting by calling to the chair John Singer and such Vice Presdents and Secretaries be ing selected as Anthon Lambough, Peter Kinney, Conrad Rager, W. W. I Harris, Joseph Funk, Charles Murray, I and others. I remember that meeting j was addressed in the most animating strains by Gen. Joseph McDonald, Dr. , Win. A. Smith. John S. It hey and other i distinguished Cambrians. Tue gallant sons of Jackson township in those days : gave a good account of themselves. I j hope my enterprising Jackson township oil hunting fiiends will find oil before ! reaching China. j THE WRONG COLOR. ' Gen. Fitz John Porter seems to be off ; color both as to his epidermis anil his ! politics. He was tried upon trumped- ' up charges, convicted upon insufficient j and false evidence, illegally sentenced, i and afterwards vindicated by a military j commission of his peers, and commend- i ed as a gallant, faithful, loyal and efll- ! cient officer by Generals Perry, Schofield, ! Grant and others, and is still allowed to ; suffer ; while the slit-eared Cadet Whit- : taker, found guilty of an aggravated of- : fense. including perjury, s .'enced to ; be cashiered and confined ;i Lard labor in State Prison, was par i on ac- ! count of the slightest tech. , ality error I in the Court Martial proe.,, lings. The , negro Lieutenant, convicted as a thief. has not yet been punished, but mitiga- tio;i of his sentence has be-n recommen- j ded. Lven Sergeant Mason will bo sub- I mitted to the 1'iesident for Executive clemency, the Judge Advocate General , having found technical irregularities in the Court maitial proceedings in his case. But General Hancock is off color both as to his epidermns and politics. Yet this is in a Republic that boastfully guarantee the right of every citizen ! A CURIOUS PROPHECY AV II EN DID LO REXZO DOW PIE. I have been told the following prophecy of Lorenzo Dow by a good old Cnristian man, who firmly believes it to bo true. The story my grave old friend tells is as follows: -'At the time when Franklin Pierce was a representative in Congress from New Hampshire, he was called up on while in Washington by the long boarded preacher. Lorenzo Dow. Mr. Pierce was in his room at his hotel en cratred in writincr when tho waiter wran- ped on the door and told him that a ! Ckeen's Larger IIisiort of the En-rough-and-tumble old fellow down i 7,,?'?,:? brilliant stairs wanted to ee him. tnhlhh,'i1aJ"lL h'?riCtt. rH! alia IIUU A am LIIHqCU. dlllU Pierce. 'I have done so, already, sir," said . the man, "but he won't budge. Indeed, lie's the queerest chap I have ever seen, I yer honor," "Go down and find out his I name," said Mr. Pierce, "and if the old fwllow wants to see me very much, tell him to come again ; I am very busy now." The man went down, and Mr. Tierce resumed his writing. "Devil a bit he'll go. yer honor," said i the waiter, again looking in ; ''lie says hi3 name is j)ow, and he nntst see you. because he s got a message for you." "With the good humor that was char acteristic of Mr. Tierce, he said "Well, show him up. "1 In a few minutes the gaunt and sun burned "Wandering Jew," as he Wis called, stood in the chamber, where he was cordially received by its occupant, Who invited tuni to be seated until he I should finish his writing. The strange man complied, and 'when the writing was completed, Mr. Pierce informed him that official duties called him to the Capitol and invited him to walk thither with him. They left the room, and when outside, the old man, who had left his staff behind, coolly ordered Mr. Pierce to go back and get it, which Mr. Pierce good-humoredly did. The two proceeded Jdown Pennsylvania Avenue together, attracting much attention by the contrast the one dressed In the el egance of fashion, the ofher in a garb not like any in this world. With the politenessof a true gentleman Mr. Pierce made no sign by which it would be in ferred tiiat he felt ashamed of his com panion ; so they walked on to the steps of the Capitol, when the prophet said : "Friend Pierce, I have something to tell you that effects your coming life. You are now a Representative in Con gress. You will be sent back to Con gress, but not to this Houso. After this you will be sent here again, but not as a Congressman, and then you will be sent here no more." They then separated, and the President-to-be walked up the steps and en tered the Capitol, laughicg at the proph ecy so strangely made, which he regarded as the mere figment of a diseased brain, but which prophecy proved true. L,orenzo Dow, we know, who claimed t, . , ' - 7 on ine lnntisrna resources ot Ireland inai to have power to nronhecv. and wcnti!t,i,.hM....i. , about the country with staff in hand and . natural wealth : "ax arna for theapp'.ica giraleu like John the Baptist,was a re- j tion of natural labor, in which an economl naaikable man, and won many proselytes j c' result of a highly remunerative nature bv his mvsferion nnvcr ti s,.ni can be attended bv aVeelamation of a wide men as trees are swirpd'lw tbo nr;"r.,i and hi n,S m. i V ' ' ana ins outdoor sermons broucrht msnv a Hardened sinner to repentance, which the production of fuel." Taking the total caused me to listen with attention to my j area of Ireland at 20 ooo.ooo acres, the total friend's story, with the reflection that i rea of bog is estimated at 2,8.i0.roo, or one some very unlikely things hapnen But PT'ritn of tbp entire surface of the island. for the credit of my storv-tellincr friend. I hope Lorenzo Dow didn't die some years before the time on which this story is based. Will some good friend extend his kindness so far as to inform me when Lorenzc Dow did die ? THE PHILADELPHIA DEMOCRACY. The factious quarrels of the Demo crats of Philadelphia are a stench in the nostrils of the honest Democrats of the State. The 1 )emocrats of this city have already chosen their delegates to the State Convention, but only disputes and discord are visible on the surface. Up to this time there seems to be no solu tion of the wrangles of petty factions in the construction of the new Democratic City Committee. Petty bosses are jost ling each other in the race to gain posi tion in the organization. As the thing i looks now it will be just if the State ticket is made without consulting Phil j adelphia's small beer politicians and traders who will rush to the Convention i to wash their soiled linen and splash the ! party of the State with their fbth. The j eighty thousand Democratic voters of j this city should not permit traders and mere pretenders to prevent a proper or ganization. A competent, upright City Committee is now the first necessity of the Philadelphia Democracv, and no man should be suffered to stand in the way of it. An able and honest City Committee could adjust all the differences before the Convention meets, and enable, the Democratic sentiment of the city to make itself heard and felt in the State. It is to be hoped that a tempest will clear the Democratic atmosphere of Philadel phia before the meeting of the Conven tion. The importance of the next elec tion should stop petty wrangling, and as above remaiked, the city's soiled linen should be washed here, and not splash the party of the State at ITarrisburg. Let the country delegates at Ilarrisburg incontinently kick the city dirty linen washers out, and make a good State ticket without consulting them. THE DEMOCRATIC STAT E CON V EXT fON. The time and place for holding the next Democratic State Convention, viz: June 2S, at Ilarrisburg, are well chosen. The time is appropriate and the place is central. A fortunate selection of can didates may bring about good results. If there is any organizing force in the partv, or any remaining leaven of leadership, in the three months which must elapso before the mt-elii.g of the Convention iijcic wm ne an opportunity tor the (lis piay or it The nxt election is a moie ' than usually important one in the num- I her of State officials to be chosen, and In j the bearing it will have on the future political Unit of the country. S1ECIAL WKEVITIES. Blaine stems to.be on the ragged efige of another Mulligan scrape, and Gar field's fame keeps withering under the disclosures of his war correspondence. In love, politics and war, letters are dan gerous tilings. Now as "Click' is out of a job, John Russei Young, whom "Click" ctnried round the world as a valet, should take "Click" with him to Ch .. .... ..it,, nil, nDui i:- I master and high clmmberlain of he iiic ' Brother Barnes II. p KentueLv r,.JV ! vJ iV, , 7" , r Kt ""'tk-Y r( V'- tlit, who snatched Gen. Buford from mc ia;jiu IUri, nas now collared a ' heavy-headed editor and converted bim ! from the sins of stealing paragraphs I f'-om bis exchange?. ' G. N. S. j The meeting of the Democratic State Committee at Ilarrisburg last week, is referred to in a letter to the New York Sun, as follows : The meeting of the Democratic Commit- i n c ncir uri envied a very saiisiactorv con dition of things. Chairman Bogert and the wide-awake Secretary of the committee have succeeded in making a very creditable be ginning toward an eflieien't organization They looked closely after the spring elec tions, and. as a consequence, the Democrats have, made, large gains in election officers an extremely important point. This was notably the case in Philadelphia, where it is said, they have secured more than half these officers, and where in times past it made little difference how many votes the jjemoerais nail, since to have tin in wns trtn JSXMqeSff'"11 mn'My The committee embraced in the call for the convention a notice that it would be called to act upon a report in favor of new lev providing for a permanent and better organ! ization. A committee, of whieh Ilenciv- was Chairman and Itandall and Wallace ! were members, recommended tin; change t the la.-1 State Convention, but it failed then I for want of time to consider. No sn.-h ex I cuse will avail this year. The members of the committee reported the feeling good throughout the State no factions, no dissensions, no dangerous rival I ry and a general Vipinion that with good ' nominations the Democrats can carrv the .-iaie in ovemier. For Governor, Mr Hopkins of Pittsburg appears to have the lead, with nobody else as yet in sight. Another conference of the King bosses since the return of Cameron and tuay from Florida has confirmed their previous nomi nation of Beaver. The Convention will have to swallow the dose prepared for it, but it will make no end of trouble before it is di gested. Green's "Larger History of the English Peo ple." Fairly ranking with Macaulay's fcreat work in the absorbing interests of its narra tive, it excels that in its adaptation to pop ular needs, in that it covers the entire period of English history, from the earliest to mod em times, instead of a brief portion as does Maeaulav. It richly deserves a nlace in the i low as 50 cents for one edition iust heina is- I Riled hv Tha defiil k'nnUl r,. i .1 I. : - Co.. 162 William street. VewVort Ti,.f- are publishing it in severai styles, as follows : , in nve volumes tizevir eaition, L tility bind ; ing, 15 cents, cloth 30 cents, half Piussia, 40 , cents per volume, (postage 5 to 7 cents per volume extra), and a Model Octavo edi j tion. in one volume, Utility binding, 00 ! cents, cloth, 05 cents, half Russia, 80 cents, thy mail 15 cents extra). Numerous other j standard works will rapidly follow the pub , lication of this, of which catalogues will be ! sent free on request. This house sells only wonderfully low prices being possible to liooksellers and Agents. The reading pub- ; he wish God-speed to the enterprise, which is under the energetic and skillful guidance of Mr. Alden, late head of The American Book Exchange. The new company sails under the good motto of "Owe no man any thing buy and sell for cash. Gold dollars ask no favors" and Mr. Alden thinks it is therefore free from the danger of wrecking by competing millionaire publishers and the lawyers. ' 5iew Life for Function Vrnhrnrd by llbraw, Ielility anil nialpatioo. ! The Great German Isvicorator is the i only specific for inipotency, nervous debility, i universal lassitude, forgetfulness, pain in I the back or sides, no matter how shattered ' the system may be from excesses of any i kind, the Great German Remedy will restore ! the lost functions and secure" health and happiness. Sl.Oo per box, hix boxes for f5.n0. Sold by all druggists. Sent on re- ceipt of price, postage paid, by F. J. Che : JiET, Toledo, Ohio, sole agent for the l'nited i States. Circulars and testimonials sent free. Joht? Lewis, a prominent politician of Seranton, Pa., was instantly killed on Satur day night while firing a blast in the Hampton mines. i homes of the masses, and wa are glad to ; P' n,a.' ,nlt, 18 not 'et clP!ir whether the re- , nrestnt Secretary of Legation, a son of Ed- ; ! note that it is now placed within their reach, nlt he a crystallization or an explosion. ; ' ..d Kve,ett wu( has had four years' expe bemg reduced in price from the $10.00 for Mr; Wilcox, a Keadjusting Senator, has come j rienf.e Mr Sargent will be accompanied to the four volume edition of the Hamer to no " at last in his true colorsas a Republican, ...,: i " r, i-oiCI.o.i,ai.i 9 i:m,n Cei,iar THE IRISH IJOS. Much has been heard of the irrecraimable wastes, wilds and botrs of Ireland, of which we have been told it takes an acre to subsist a woodcock. Instead of this heinc the case, howerer. it is shown bv an Fnclish writer rea of fertile and ready manured country, ; thp rnst nf w,lion reclamation will be almost i,.,o . u- t ,. . or wet boe. and the remaining 1.2M.000 acres are what is known as moor or mountain hoc. Experience has shown bevond a oues- tion that a small amount of labor, intelli- I gently directed, will drain the mountain bog j j of Ireland so as to allow of culture at small j i expense, but the draining of the flat bog is a j ; matter lequirincr more expense and engi- i I neering skill. However, as these bogs pos- i sess a source of heat which may be utilized j j with great advantage, thus affording an in- , dnstrial value, the extraction and consnmp- i tion of the peat mav go hand in hand with ; tne reclamation or the soil for agricultural purposes. This peat, of which we hear so I much, is a substance of vegetable origin. I consisting in part of the remains of plants and in part of living vegetation. The bulk of the peat in Ireland is formed principally of bog moss, with varlations'in depth tofortv Toei. feat land is everywhere valuable on ; account of its richness in nitrogen and other j matters necessary for the welfare of crops ; i and it has been remarked that "a soil cover- . ed with peat is a soil covered with manure." j The acid matter which it contains, deleteri- 1 ous to the growth of agricultural products, is ! readily rpmtrsMe by drainage. The heavy ' grain cror, raised from reclaimed hog in ' England and Scotland are matters of noto- , rietv, and it is the opinion of those qualified to judge that "wheat crops as heavy may be easily raised from the large acreage now . covered by the bog of Ireland." The peat may be made a source of wealth both as a ; fertilizer and as fuel. Experiments have ; proved that the calorific value of turf or . I peRt In its natural condition is about half i that of coal, while compressed turf, which I can b manufactured at from Si .V) to ?2 per : ton, has a calorific value little inferior to that j of coal. Allowing an average depth of not j j more than six feet to the Irish bogs, and the . , cot of bringing the peat to market for fuel . twenty-four cents a rii hie yard, which is equal ' , to about sixty-two cents per ton, the value of 1 this "irreclaimable waste of Ireland" would i be about ?2,."0o per acre. Thus it is seen what an illimitable source of agricultural and ,; : economic wealth lies dormant in these much berated bos of Erin. Phila. Record. Srx MuTiPF.iiF.rts Executed on Fkidav. i Frank and Ibuiry Rumberger, who were er- 1 ; roneonsly believed to be brothers, but were ! i not related to each other, and who were con- j I victed in the Dauphin County Court of niur- ! ' dering Daniel Troutman for his money in ; I November, lSii, their victim being a respec- ! table farmer, sixty-eight years old, arid the j father of fourteen children, were hung in the : yard of the county orison (Ilarrisburg) at ; . half past ten o'clock in the moining. They ! both confessed their guilt, one after his ar- ! rest, and the other after the death warrant was read to him. ' Jonathan Mover, convicted of being one ! j of th parties who murdered John Kintzler ; , and his wife, two old people living in Sn- j der county in 177, also for thHrnioney, was : executed in the jailyard at Mtddleburg, that count r. at 11 o clock, a. m He expressed a strong hope of getting to Heaven asserted that lie knew notning oi me niurner until the day after it took place, but admitted that he ami the two men that committed the mur der, divided the money after the deed was done. John A. Xevling was hung in tiie yard of the Clearfield jail in tlrt' afternoon. "lie was convicted of the murder of Samuel Penning ton on the 17th of February, isso, by delib erately shooting him with a pistol in the street at Iloutzdale. lie attributed his crime to his love for whiskey. Frank Small was ining in the Pittsburg jail vard, between twelve and one o'clock, for the murder of Nicholas Jacvhy, in Janu ary, 17'J. Small was jealous of Jacoby hard words passed bet wee u them in a saloon here thev met and a fijht ensued. In go- J , ina 1",me fl"nl t!,p sa,,)"' Jacoby was from tl,,! effects of which he died. was arrested, tried and convicted ol murder on purely circumstantial evi.l llJii liomt iioill Liu- Minim ului v rts u.'v, ; .small if the ! purely circumstantial evidence. but of the strongest character. His last words on the scaffold were: "I did not kill Nick Jacoby. I am an innocent man." John McCarthy was executed at Angelica, N, Y., on Friday, for the murder of 1. Mar key at Kieh'.iurc- The condemned man said Wednesday morning that he knew nothir.g about the murder of a young lady at Corry. Pa., eight years ago, McCarthy was taken from the jail about ll:.'io The death warrant was then read, and alter pr..er ny me ai- tending minister the rope was cut, the i weight drooped, and at ll:) .lonn t,. mc Caitliy paid the penality of his crime. Ex-Sex atok Wallace. The traveling correspondent of the Philadelphia iVe.w, in terviewed Ex-Senator Wallace on a railroad train the otner day and succeeded in discov ering that Mr. Wallace has no favorite for the gubernatorial nomination. The corre spondent also learned from the ex-Senator that the Democratic party is held together and sustained by its devotion to principles, while the Wepublicau party i kept from fall ing to pieces by the stickincepluster of the spoils. By further vigorous pumping the enterprising correspondent got from his vic tim an opinion that "the Democrats will nominate the next ( Jovernor." The intei view is prefixed oy the following compliment to Mr. Wallace, which is worthy of noteascom ing from a piominent Republican source: ''Mr. Wallace has rarely been in Washington since he left the Senate. How strangely different from the course of most men who have lived in the glare of official life at the National Capital. It is a melancholy fact.that men who have been in Congress "and gone out. like night flies hover about the old time light, dash into its flame for a moment, only to be turned away to come again. Kid of the cares of public life theycannot rid themselves Of the desire to pose statuesquely before the public eye. How often have I seen bright men reach tho level of the lobby from the height of a sent in Congress. They must be in Washington, and they take what offers. How often may they be seen trailing on the standing they gained as Congressmen and the privileges thev have as ex-members, nly- ing their vocation of corrupt manipulation as shamelessly as courtesans practice their arts I unoer me glare or gas. Only the strongmen ; resist. Only the rich and brave return to their homes content to enjoy ttieir fortunes in the respected dignity of private life, oi labor like other men to gain ar. honest living. Wallace left the Senate with great influence in the councils of hie party, but he has con tented himself with industriously practicing his profession and accumulating wealth iii the coal fields of the Clearfield region." The political caldron is bubbling in Vir- j and wants the partv to avow at once and openly its fusion with the Kepnblicans. The ingenious Mr. Mahone, who has been labor ing with desperate assiduity to stave on any premature declaration of this sort, must look upon Wilcox as upon a cat in a game of ten pins or a snow squall in harvest-time. The prospect ot seeing Mahone enter the next National Republican Convention at the bead of the Virginia delegation and of seeing Tam many knock at the doors of the next Repub lican State Convention in New York is not one to be contemplated with ecstasy by the grand old party. A for the Democrats, they have got Mahone and Kelly in the only place which medical scientists teach us that a Doil '3 tolerable to wit, on the other man ! It pf.ems impossible that a remedy made of such common, simple plants as Hops, Ilu chn. Mandrake, Dandelion. Ac, should make so many and Buch great cures as Hop Hitters do ; but when old and youna, rich and poor, pastor and doctor, lawyer and editor, all tes tify to having been cured by them, you must believe and try them yourself, and doubt no longer Emantkl, Bott, the Italian who stabbed I his brotlier in a quarrel at Ilazelson, I.n- ; zerr.e county, last week, has been am-stod. and lodged "in the County Prison. The : wounded man died on Monday, tb knife i having penetrated his lungs. The assassin ; has been held to await the action of the grand jury, which is now in session. Lonn Byron, in reference to a Iwautiful i lady, wrote toa friend "Lady has been i dangerously ill. but now she is dangerovxlff well again.7' American belles, wheii attack- j ed bv Hnv if the ill ibnt flesh ia beir tr mav I be kept killing and avoid being killed by or Jem Mace seen the late fight between Sul Uking Dr. H. V. Pierce's "Favorite Prescrin- , ''van and Ryan they would have covered tion," which banishes feminine weaknesses, ' their faces With shame and bowed their heads i and restores the bloora of baU!i. By all hi mortification that such bruisers should be druajjists. EWS ASD OTHER SOTIXiS. I The President approved the Anti-Tilyg-i amy bill. j General McDowell is to be placed on the retired list. I To sick, colicky, eryinir babies (rive Pe bus never any other medicine whatsoever, j The Rfpotitory of Chainbersburg tells of a man in that neighborhood who never heard i of Ciuiteau. Mason or Garfield. ! Paralytic strokes, heart disease, and kid- nev affections prevented by the use of Brown's Iron Ritters. -The printers employed on the ? - w -r..:i.. New York World struck on Tuesday night for an in crease of pay, which was refused them. Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy a positive cure for cttarih, diphtheria and canker mouth. At .lames' drug store. Why will yon cough when Shiloh's Cure will give immediate relief ? Trice 10 cts., ,Vi cts. and $1. At James' drug store. Emigration from England to this country promises to le verv large this year. Manv of the newcomers will establish themselves in the South. The Rev. ieo. II. Thayer, of Bourbon, Ind., says : "Both myself and wife owe our lives to Shiloh's Consumptive Cure." At James' drug store, Are you made miserable by indigestion, constipation, dizziness, loss of appetite, yel- low skin ? Shiloh's Vitalizer is a positive cure. At James drug store. Charles Athons was apprrently dead, at Decatur, 111., from a stroke of paralysis, and was laid out for burial, but he regained con sciousness, and will probably recover. The late Colonel Forney's son and two daughters have formed a corporation in Phil adelphia known as the Forney Publishing Company, with a capital stock of $loo,oo0. Hazael, the victorious pedestrian, left Philadelphia for Europe, on the steamer In, diana, a few days ago. with his flx.Ooo in money in a belt, tightly lashed around his person. Mrs. Mackay, the bonanza person, is preparing to entertain 200 puests at a coe turue assembly in Taris. A large tent will be erected for the occasion in the garden over looking the Arc de Triomphe. The bi-centennial celebration of the ex ploration of the Mississippi river by La Salle at New Orleans, has been abandoned, owing to the suffering and loss consequent on the inundation in the Southwest. Senator Hill, of Georgia, had another operation perfoimed in Philadelphia on Sit nrday. The physicians say there is no ap prehension of any serious result, and there will be no necessity for another operation. Guitean has received another offer, tl is time from a St. Louis man named Cook, for his old clothes. He is offered f -'oo for the suit he; wore when he shot the President and 150 for the clothes lie wore during the trial. An Ohio man has resigned. Captain E. U. Belden, of Fremont, who for the pat three years has been a clerk in the Register's office of the Treasury Department, has resigned to go into the hardware business at Adrian, Michigan. Lizzie Steigerwalt. a young lady of Lan caster, Pa., was fatally burned Saturday night. She was about retiring when her clothing took fire from a candle, and she re ceived fatal injuries before the flames could be extinguished. The announcement that there were seven kinds of wine at the last dinner given by the President will have a tendency to indefinite ly postpone any movement which may have been on foot to organize a Chester A. Arthur temperance society. The Senate of Minnesota, sitting as a court impeachment, has formally certified its judgment against Judge Cox, impeached for drunkenness. The sentence is removal from office and disqualification for judicial posi tion for five years. Colonel A. V. Fryer, whoduringthe war of the rebellion was in command of a New York regiment, was found dead in bed at Milwaukee Saturday morning. It is a cae of supposed suicide, poverty being the pre sumed iueentive to the act. The centennial'anniversary of the burn ing of Tom's River, N. J., was inappropri ately celebrated on March 24th by peecU rnaking and jubilation. Possibly the enthu siasm of such an occasion is due to the fact that the, parties to it were not parties to the massacre they commemorate. Mr. William Crump, ihe steward at the White House, is suffering from r.ervo-n pros tration, the result of overwork and loss of sleep during the illness of the late President. He will leave Washington shortly on a bi ief vacation for rest and recuperation. When Vermont was admitted into the T'nion it was given two representatives in Congress. This number was afterward in creased to six. Now, after a period of ninety years, the Stale returns to the original num bor. This isn't getting ahead very fast. A. dispatch, from Loudon says : In the Commons the Cnder Secretary of Foreign Affairs said the Government was considering the repreenta'ioiTs of the l'nited States re garding the trial and release of Americans imprisoned in Ireland under the coercion act. The State Superintendent ot Soldiers' Orphans' Schools has issued a circutar an nouncing that the custom of holding exami nations immediately before the close of the school term in July will be departed from this year and the examination be held in May, An engine on the Sixth Avenue Elevated road in New York ran into the rear coach of a passenger train at Cortland street station Saturday morning. Two coaches careened, and would have fallen to the street had it not been for the guard railing. No one was injured. A lively Congressional scandal promises to Vie developed through the expense bills for the junketing trip to Cleveland when Car field's remains were taken there. The total cost of the excursion is set down at .",42.-., of which 52,000 was for champaigne and cocktails. The tugboat Henry C. Pratt exploded a boiler at Philadelphia Thursday morning, killing four men. The bodies of Bernard McCann and Patrick Fianigan, firemen, and a man named Maloncy have leen recovered. John Lyons, the engineer, and two other men are missing. A Deadwood dispatch says: Crow Dog has been found guilty of the murder of Spot ted Tail. The death sentence will be pro nounced on Tuesday. The result of the trial creates indignation which is loudly voiced by the local press. It is claimed tlie conviction was secured bv perjured testimony. While Tat Hickev and two laborers were putting in a blast of "three kegs of powder, on the new road near Blairsville on Saturday, there wai a premature explosion. The boss was badlv hurt, an.l a co'ored laborer was thrown several feet and Injiued so that he will likely die. The third man will recover. Miss Pho'be cossins, the well known woman suffrage advocate, of St. Louis, has applied to President Arthur to be appointed one of the five Commissioners to reorganize Tjtah under the recent act of Congress. A numerously signed petition for her appomt- ment will be sent to the President in a few days. ; Some ten days ago a dog bit a cow of a . farmer in PlainiieUl, near Hethlehem, Pa. ; The cow subsequently showed symptoms of ! hydrophobia and was killed. A youth j years of age, who washed the cows leg after the animal was bitten, and who had a sore ; en one of his hands, now shows signs of hy- 1 drophobia. Minister argent, win leave -sew i oru ; for Germany May 6. He will retain the of San Diego, who will remain with the Min- ister for a short time. A Syracuse justice of the peace post- ' poned a trial upon the request of the defend ant, who said his mother was dead. After ' the adjournment of the court the justice , learned that the estimable lady had been . dead nine years, and the defenda'nt had gone j to Canada. The next orphan brought into that court will catch it. A Lebanon philosopher has discovered that "all years endiny in 9, 0 or 1 arejext'eme- : ly dry ; those ending in 2. K, 4. 3 and G are extiemely wet; those ending in 7 and 8 are ; ordinarily well balanced : those ending in 0 ;: hiive extremely cold winters : those ending in 2 have an early spring ; those ending in l have a late spring: those ending in 3 and I are subject to great floods." I A London dispatch of the 2tth says : i There have been continual disturbances In , Galway between the Eighty-eighth Regiment 1 (the Connaneht Rangers) and the Eighty. : fourth (an Erelih regiment). On Thars- ' day night the "Connaugats," assisted by a ! mob. attacked a picket of the English and cheered for Ireland. There were several ! bayonet wounds on both sides. The hell of a church at Eliteottviile, : Md., was cast at Moscow, Russia, In 170,s. ; ar.d was one of a chirae of bells bekngin2 to the cathedral in that city, which was burned by Napoleon in 1H. Sold for o'nl metal, it was brought to this country as ballast, and came into the hands of Andrew Mer.eeley, the bell founder of Troy. He kept it for a time as a curiosity, but finally sold it in ls.'(i to the church at Elhcottville. The New York .Sun sees In Sullivan, the present champion of the prize ring, only a brutally hard hitter, and It mourns over the beantif ul science of boxing. The .Sun thinks that "had consummate artists as Tom Savers ranivcd at the head of their profession." McCarthy, who was executed at Angeli I ca. New York, last Friday, drank a bottle of I champaigne in the forenoon and is said to j have been "light .pirited," and talked fully twelve ininntes on the scaffold, admitting the I killing and saying he would do the same ' thing again nnder the same circumstances. It may be some question, in view of all the i : facts, as to what spirit gave utterance to such ! sentiments. j i Every administration has a peace medal I strnck off for the Indians to be given them ' between wars. That which was ordered ' during Garfield's administration has juet beenreceived from the Philadelphia mint. It is of silver and bears the name ' Jan.es A. Garfield" on the face, with a raised medallion of the late President in the middle, with : the date be'ow. On the obverse side is a fle- ' sign of an Indian and white man and agri cultural implements. Rose Evtinge P.utler. better known to the theatrical world as Rove Evtinge, ome time since brouiht nit for divorce against her husband iconic H. Hutler. on the ground of adultery. The case was ser.t lo William j H. Raft city to take test imoiu, and he report- ! ed in favor of the plaintiff." Judge Larre- I more, of New York, on Saturday, signed a j decree in accordance with the report, grant ing a divorce in favor of Mr P.utler. The defendant is a nephew of Benjamin F. But- j ler. I A man giving the name of E. V. Clad was arrested last week at No. Cos Arch . street, Philadelphia, where he was found at work with a lathe on a number of pieces of gold coin. His plan was to take five dollar i gold pieces, saw off the top so that the mill ing was not diturled and take out about : fl,4fi woith of gold from it and then fill the . cavity with platinum and fit the pieces to- J gether again. Several pieces of mutilated Cein were found on his person, and in the I room. ! President Jones, of the Monogahela Ml- 1 ners Association, in announcing his admit- : siontothe Pittsbnig bar. makes use ef the following language : "A II a long I have been ; anxious to attain my admission totl char, so , that ih case the miners should desf rt me as they have their pat officer. I can drop on a ' more profitable business. I hope you all see i the point. This advantage to me having ; been gained, and thus much anxiety removd, 1 I can the more devote mpself to your inter- . ests.'? A rare sight was witnessed at Wrights- I vllle. Pa , on Sunday moring last, on the river in front of that town. A flock of swans j twenty-six in number, was seen at that time i about midway of the river, twentv-four of , them being all white with black "bills, the ; other two also white excepting that their : backs were of a du-kv color. Thev were a p- j parently resting their weary wings for a 1 time or the placid waters of the Snsqnehan- : na with all the grace and elegance pecnliar I to that aquatic fowl, and were driven off bv j a couple of rude boys. " ; The Philadelphia l:-r,rl f Monday last savs : Mrs. Hannah C. Hembotd. of No. ho North Broad street, died last Saturday in the ff'th year of her age. She was the sole sur- 1 vivor of a family of fifteen children, eight j daughters and seven sons, each of whom lived over the age of 7-1 years. She led a very ' active life, and hardly knew what sickness : was. Her mental faculties were perfectly j cl-ar to within a day or two of h"r death. Her recoih etion was' particularly dMmet of the yellow fever epidemic in 179.1 She wns born near .lenkintown. but her fam'p- re moved not long after to this city whi re she : has lived ever since. j Thk "Philadelphia corrc-p-. indent of the New York Sun, in a letter dated March 2.1, takes the following view of the Kepub'iean situation in this State : The rennsylral i 1 mfeperrie nt am making tloMr Sttp oruKnirntinn rfie'v fr.r the rnnrtiet wlilt-h now aj.pe.'ir unnvoclMo t'r!w--n Th h"Sfl e an.l the voter ot tt e IJep'iMlc.in ;irtv. A committee of P.I i v ha hocn appointed p, orintnlre tlie )n1errnlenr in e.-e-h district, and to procure the elc-tlon of the represent t:ve to tlie s?at Convention which wiil Pe held on the 'J4th or May. Tho to,-. who have already nominated 'Jen. Beaver for 'lovcrnor are o cneijuivoi'til! ,- com mitted to thin act. tint th'-ir failure to enforce ohe.iion-e.. or the refusal or the V.nrentl..n to yield it. won Id cm pier el wret the eonl ro r.f th e parly from Cumerpn nn.i 'the rinu cMeltjOn. who now a:ime to own it. Heaver mn t an t wi',1 l e nominated, nnd that neinic done, the Indapenl cnt hnv iinnoimepd the;- determination c? ;?e-f-ai Ina IPtn at the pn4. The Convent! m of Mst -M-h wi'!. there'.. re he one of the most itir-o-t nt and !i!'er-.f evetit In the recent fol t'al t 1. ptv . f the e. iintrv. It wUI he the nr--t formal represent ,.j.-e eonren'i n ol K'-pti'dicm I. ..per-, loot wln-t,er tne -'.lit ln!i i.e local or n.tti..nal' te.np .rarr ..r prrfiiant. will depend lnrir;v upon It? proceedings. " 1 Tlie Philadelphia ??cor;. referring to the trials and sentences bv court martial of Cadet Whittaker and Lieut. Flipper, both colored, and the subsequent artion by tlie President in relation thereto, savs: The Flit eared Cadet Whittaker. fmnd irnilty of an nirirravared otfence. in.-Iudiiir per-urv. .n tenton.'ed to ho cahi'Ted and Confine 1 at lur 1 la bor in the State prison, was par h.n d on ne.-..m.t ol the .-liiri.te-t tC'lini''al error in tlie "oort -martial pr y-,.,.,1 , ilt.- jj,e ne-r.. hfultivin'. enrj.-te.! a a thl-f. )in no' yet been Ptin'-he I. and mit.ira to.n of hi" "i..!!.'i ha I.e. n re ..mic-nde,) : and the J mice Advocate fer.era I hf. Peon aide t . fi r.d te-hn.i'nl frrcL'ii'arlticc in xhf Court martial pri- cee lottf of Serjeant M:l.i!i. which wi'l he ilh Illitted to tlie l'r ident a" l.e hi f .r Kxe.-ntire clemencv. It it Ms p.r Hener.il Kit 7. .1- hn porter, who wa t-i". upon tni in .l -tin charge, en vic'.ed upon in? nil 'lent an.! laUe evidences, illeallv sen tenced, and n''s.-ouentlv vindicated hv a tmiltarv commission of his peer and commended ad a fcai lant . faithl'il. 1 -iyil a nd i'ffi"!en t efieer t.v rener a U Jrant. Terry, Schotiel J an.l others. Is t:il al- I lowed to u!"er. And tlii 1- the lie... nf. it-that ; !onstrjy irnni antecs the rights ot everv c'MTen !Pi-ieierl 1'orter 's off-color, PoMi a to hi? epi dermis Hil.l his polit'es. America Must YictT. The greatest th inkers, the most profound "chrd ar.;the most expert, t h.iroturh a r..l esi.-ces-sfnl chem ist f.,r these America must turn to "Sermanv ln the wofnily -p. e, il.itive he-! of medicine lio k renter --top has yet Peon taken than in the dis.-ov-rv. aft.-r t he most or tended research and tli" most careinl and patient expc-imn' r. of Iir. I-'au-t's term an I "on uli Syrup, lor the on re of ,.ti-n y p, j,,n, c .n-ihs. colds. s,,re throat, hronehiii. or-mp. and' ail pulmonary doas.-s. l,"cine.nher thf- medicine i s .Id on a pos.tiv,. iruarantoe to cure. Price, a.v f.oe. and 1 .cr hottle. Ask liruirirists. Sol.latK. James' Iruj Store. KbciishinK. IM. 4 l.-c.ti.w.J j Siifoh's Consumption Cure. "Thi is heyond .jnesin.n the most successful e-oiirh medicine we li ive oTor sold." wri'e a prom inent dm:; Prm. A tow does invana'-ly cure the worst cases of Comrh. "r"iip. or Hrom-httis. wlr.ln its Wonderful suc-e-s in the cure of 'on-umptoin Is without a parallel in the history of Hie.pcir.e. Since Its rn-st disc. .very it has p-oen sol 1 on a iruar antoe a ft which no other medicine can -land. I ! you have a c .tilth we earn, st I y ask you to try it. Iriee. Pk-..s.c. and 1. II your lnnii's arc sure, or your chest or back lame, use Shi! h's Porous Plas ters. Sold at t. James' lruif Store. Pos;..fte Khonshurir. Pa. f 4-l."M.-c.i.w.lv. - Thiktt Hats' Trial. We will penj Ir. live"; Celet.rnreil Flecti-.-Yultai" !l-!t nirl other Klenrie Appliance on tri;il f..r thirtT .lav to ynnnii men ami Mcr pcr..n who htv artli'-te'l with Nrvin Hel.ility. I..t Vitality, etc., icuar anteelnif m.co.I v r"'.iel an.l 'm j.li-te feMrat i. n ot viy.tr an-1 mtmliO.Ml. At? f.-r KliPtimai 'urn , Na ralitin. I'ar:ilvsi. I.iver atxf Kitlner .1 i ffl-n j'tie. Knptre. an.l ninny othor li"V. Illustrated pmnnhli-t nt free. Ail.ln-s Voltale Holt Marshall. Mich. lO-'Ja -ly J VYIILME COMES Till'. IMJOIXDED POPULARITY OF j Allcock's Porous Planters? j recaasc they have proved Hem Ives ' the Best External Remedy ever invent-! ed. They will cure asthma, colds, j coudis, rheumatism, neuralgia, and i ny local pains. Applied to the small of the back, they are infallible in BACK-ACHE, NERVOUS DEBILITY, and all Kidney troubles; to- the pit of the stomach,! m" tw.i- nvrt n ...... ... . tn -t ruiuisne i liicj dit- a uir cure iut UlrtlMA. j and LIVER COMPLAINT. i ALLCOCK'S POROUS; PLASlERS are painless, fra-' grant, and quick U cure. Beware ot imitations that Midler and burr;. Gef ALLtutn, wii) uenuine roroas ' , : , A atuk - hi.. ..... - FRA AXLE GREASE. lleM In th norlil. .et Ihe rnnlnr. ' '-very rufkujf liaa on r trnile-inark aad ! warkad Irairr. SOLO Ml KIN". IIVKK, TW. DICK. Attorxk y-u-Law, i Khenstmrif. F. CKrlre In luilllng &t T. i .1. I-leyd. fiac'rt. i ftrt floor.) I'm I re firerU KH mmtertil leal anfineri attenet tn jatitlaato- . rlly collectlDi epacialrr. tl(M.-fl t ZER to v stxeni siren strer out pf lents heard had broken feel at Itore bv ti TTR5. medic for all a con Indie WeaV ing a tonic. to the if: : p -" .. 5 v - t i - s ' . i i If v J 3TT -f--m,-r-i A. 11 A THE toi.. in). the !u'.l ft c.' pl 50 lOO sow - TT-9. r 1 1 i v 'ii ' i t Hard hL'.s lni n f rt ui n -t . .-i-iri-'y