EBENSBURC. PA., FRIDAY, - - - - APRIL 7, 1862. Gkn. Stephen A. IIurlbut, of Ill inois. United States Minister to Tern, whose name has of late figured so con picnously in the newspapers in connec tion with the peace negotiations between that country and Chili, died suddenly of heart disease at Lima, the capital of Peru, on Monday.'of last week. He was a native of Charleston, S. C, was sixty five years- of age, and has resided in Ill inois sinoe 1845. Last week's Scientific Americanlcon taiDed an elaborate and interesting de scription, with illustrations, of the New York World's new fivo story building, into which that successful newspaper re cently moved its quarters. As the World Is a model journal in all its de partments, it is in accordance with the fitness of things that it should be issued from what is probably the best equipped and most thoroughly complete newspa per establishment in the country. lli?s Mart Potter O'Connor, sis ter of Thomas Power O'Connor, mem ber of Parliament for the city of Gal way, Ireland, wa3 indicted at the Ros common county sessions on Saturday last for advising the tenants of a land lord not to paj their rents, and was or dered to give bail or go to jail for six months. She elected to go to jail, and went. Miss Mary is supposed, like every other person, to know her ewn business best, and as she saw fit to open her own prison door any comments on her choice would be entirely superfluous. If the scalawag who edits the Bur lington (Iowa) ITnu 'keyt should ever vis it this place during one of his lec turing tours, we leave our large Welsh population to square accounts with him, in any way that may seem the most ef fectual and summary, for having in a recent number of hisscurrillous journal ' deliberately and maliciously published of and concerning the children of Wiles, I the following false, scandalous and de- j ramatory libel : "Statistics disclose the fact that to every ten children born in Wales, less than seven ever reach their twentieth year. The others are worn out trying to speak Welsh." There is great force in the annexed paragraph taken from the Philadelphia JF?fcorci on the subject of fish culture by farmers and we commend it to the care ful consideration of those of that class of our citizens through whose land small streams of water flow. The experiment is a cheap one and would undoubtedly richly compensate any one for the little trouble and trifling outlay attending it, The Record says :' Since It is said that an acre of fish pond will produce more food that five acres of ground, why should not farmers raise their own fish as systemmatieally as they do hogs or cattle? And whv should they not turn their attention to fih culture as a regular in dustry and sourer of profit, especially those who have the advantages of good markets; There are few farms that with a little labor and expense could not get water to supply a Csh-pond. TnE New York World expresses the opinion that If Sergeant Mason should "be pardoned for having tried to kill Guiteau and failed, he might consistent ly ask to be promoted if, encouraged by pardon, he should try it acain and sue- j ceed." What an immense amount of gush and sentiment have been indulged in over Mason's sentence ? Even old Thurlow Weed, who is over eighty years of age, sneaks of Mason's offense j as having been "prompted by right feel ings aod impulsively comrn:ttu.;'' Ma non. on iui contrary, expressed a desire to shoot Guiteau before he came to Washington, and in carrying out his in tention was guilty of betraying the trust reposed in him as one of the pris soner's guard, nis offense was not mit igated one iota because of the infamy of his intended victim. Mahone's negro allies inVirginia are becoming rebellious against his assump tions as their boss. Both Mahone and Cameron, the lately elected Readjuster Governor of the State, live in Peters burg, which, together with eleven coun ties, some of which adjoin it and some are more or less remote from it, consti tute the Fourth Congressional district, with an overwhelming black population, always good for 8,000 majority for the Republicans, There are several negro statesmen in the shell in that district and they have arrived at the conclusion that it is about time for them to assert their political rights and to send a man of their own color to represent them at Washington, instead of allowing Ma hone to select a white repudiationist for them. When the proper time ar rives they propose to hold a nominating convention and name their candidate, which'will of course rule out Mahone's man. There have been other indica tions of the same movement id other parts of the State, all going to show that Mahone's political death is a mere question of time. One of the most successful methods with members of Congress for squander ing the public money, and one which they all eageily embrace. :s by procur ing large appropriations for the erection by the government of postoflices thro' out the States. Bills for this purpose are passing through Congress in fright ful numbers under what is known as the "log-rolling" system of legislation, and the amount of money which is in this way filched from the treasury at each session is enoimous, reaching many millions of dollars. As one of a score cf instances of these reckless assaults on the treasury, there is now before Congress a bill appropriating S150,000 for the erection of a postofCce building at Montpelier, Vermont, a town con taining about the same population as Hollidaysburg. This sort of legislation will continue just as long as the short sighted policy of the government keeps up the present enormous surplus in the treasury vaults. One of the country's greatest statesmen said in a speech in the Senate thirty years ago, that a large treasury surplus inevitably leads to in considerate, extravagant and profligate appropriations. The State Committee- of the Green back party met at Ilarrisburg on Wed nesday of last week, and having first re moved E. 8. Watson, of Lycoming county, from the position of chairman of the committee for alleged unfaithful ness and elected Frank S. Heath, of Erie county, in his place, decided to hold the State convention at Ilarrisburg, on the 18'h of May. Our old and es teemed friend, John Dougherty, so long a resident of Hollidaysburg, but now of Mt. Union, Huntingdon county, was in attendance as a member of the Commit tee, and although he does not seem to have taken a very active part in the pro ceedings, he revealed to a reporter of the Patriot a big scheme he has in view of securing cheap transportation between New "i ork and San Francisco. He ad mitted to the reporter that the '-money question is about settled," and then sta ted his project in regard to the transpor tation business, thus : "I propose that the government of the United States shall solve the transportation question, by building a free railroad from New York to San Francisco, which will cost five hundred millions of dollars, and which, after the profits of the road shall have paid the government for its con struction, shall bo thrown open to the public." He forgot to give any figures showing how long a time it would take a 'free railroad' to pay back to the gov ernment the trifling sum of five hundred millions expended in its construction ; but that is a matter which he no doubt believes will bo easily solved. There is nothing small or contracted about Mr. D,'s free railroad scheme ; on the con trary, it is bold and comprehensive, and if he was permitted to run the govern ment for a few years, with power to is sue greenbacks at his own pleasure, his road might possibly become an accom plished fact, instead of, as now, a fan ciful delusion. TnAT there is such a thing as Intem perate legislation on the subject of a pro hibitory liquor law, has just been made conspicuously manifest by the self-stultifying action of the Iowa State Senate. Both branches of the Legislature of that State adopted a prohibitory amendment to the constitution, the vote of the peo pie on its ratification or rejection to be taken next June. After the proposed amendment had been signed by the Gov ernor and in the closing hours of the ses sion, the Senate adopted a resolution de claring it to te the meaning of the amendment that it did not prohibit the manufacture of liquor3 in Iowa for .sale outside rf the State, but only their man ufacture for sale as a beverage within the State. In other words, while Iowa makes it. a criminal offense to sell a thimbleful of whiskey to one of her own citizens, she permits it to be manufac tured by the barrel and sold to the citi zens of other States. This is what'the Senate says it meant when it adopted the amendment, but the Courts will enligh ten it by deciding that it cannot play fast and loose with the question in that easy way. The Iowa Senate has bro't prohibitory legislation intosupreme con tempt and ridicule, and has done what it could to confirm the general belief that members of a State Legislature who are too cowardly themselves to as sume the responsibility of voting for or against a prohibitory amendment, but who take refuge in a submission of the question to a vote of 'the people as an easy way out of the. dilemma, are as a geneial rule miserable time-servers and shuffling hypocrites. WnEN the counsel for Brady, Dorsey and other defendants in the Star route j cases, last week asked the Washington court to Tjlias'ii the indictments against their clients, on the ground that certain formalities in the action of the grand jury, as prescribed by an act of the Maryland Legislature and claimed to be in force m the district of Columbia, the said act having been passed in 1722, just one hundred and sixty years ago, It is a substantial admission of their guilt and will be so regarded by the country. If Brady, Dorsey& Co. were innocent they j wouldn't attempt through Bob Inger- j soil, one of their counsel, to escape con viction by taking refuge under a musty and presumably an obsolete law enact ed fifty-four years before the data of the Declaration of Independence when Maryland was a colny of Great Bri tain. Innocent men don't answer in dictments in a criminal court in that way, but demand a thorough investiga tion of ail the charges against them. The question whether thi ancient sta tute of Maryland is still in force in the District was argued at great length be fore Judge Wylie on Friday and Satur day by the lawyers concerned on both sides, and the Judge said he would give the matter a full and patient considera- tion before coming to a conclusion. At the city and town elections in Ohio, on Monday last, the Republicans were shaken up as if by a regular polit ical earthquake. In Cincinnati their ticket was defeated by more than eight thousand votes. Results equally disas trous overwhelmed the "grand old Re publican party" in Cleveland, Toledo, Columbus, and many other large cities and towns, All this was brought about in consequence of the passage by the present Republiican Legislature of a li cense law which is specially obnoxious to the German Republicans, hundreds of whom refused to vote the Republican ticket on Monday, and swear since in the roughest kind of Dutch, that they have joined the Democratic party to stay. The result of this Ohio election is very significant when we reflect on the cause that produced it, and fore shadows the utter defeat of the Repub lican party in that State next Novem ber. In Indiana, Illinois and Wiscon sin, in all of which similar elections were held on Tuesday last, the Repub licans in many of the cities oud large towns met with the same disastrous de feat that overtook their political breth ren in Ohio. Tiie President sent to the Senate on Tuesday last his veto of the Chinese bill. In our next issue we will state his reasons for doing so. It is conced ed at "Washington that the veto renders certain the success of the Democrats at the next State elections in California, Oregon and Nevada. OUB PHILADELPHIA LETTER. EASTER EfJOS ASD CARDS CAMBRIA COUNTY AS AX IRON CENTRE COR RUPT GOVERNMENT BUILDING PAM PERED INTERESTS PLATES SET FOR 306 ABOUT TO REAP HER REWARD. Philadelphia, April 4, 1882. Regular Correspondence of The FREEMAN. Dear Henry The fashion of Phil adelphia patiently awaits the advent of Easter, and its advent is being heralded by an unusual display of handsome offer ings. Certain branches of trade that have leen dull during tho season pre sented by the Church will be amply compensated by the eagerness and avid ity with which their customers will in dulge their fancies and their pleasures when Easter hymns shall have ushered in the commencement of festivities. Among the novelties in Easter eircra rei wonderful specimens in stylos, sizes and j material from the smallest humming bird to the lamest ostrich anil drnT. gists are offering the newest preparation for coloring the eggs. Easter cards and designs of various kinds and styles are lavishly displayed and greatly apprecia ted by the crowds that linger on the thoroughfares of the city. Easter is now nearly as well remembered as Christmas. Not only Church members, but those who take no interest in the religious part of the celebrations, have come to regard it as a special season for festivi ties. Milliners and modestes who have enjoyed a season of repose are actively engaged in the preparation of startling novelties for the Spring season. CAMBRIA COUNTY AS AN IRON CENTRE. In the local columns of the last Free man I see a paragraph announcing that ! the Cambria Iron Company, of Johns- : town, at its last pay-day, had disbursed to its operatives at that point the large sum of one hundred and seven thousand dollars. Wonderful has been the pro gress of the iron business in Cambria county within the last thirty years. Less than thirty years ago Cambria was un known as an iron county, while to-day it is noted as an iron centre. The first furnace in Cambria county, "Cambria Furnace," was built on Laurel Run, a few miles below Johnstown, bv George S. King, David Stewart, John K., and William S. Shrvoek. in 1S41. It was followed by Mill Cieek Furnace, built by John Bell & Co., and Ben's Creek Furnace, built by Geo. S. King & Co., in 184.", and Elizabeth Furnace, on Blacklick Creek, built bv Ritter fe Ro gers, in 1846, and by Mount Vernon Furnace, at Johnstown, built by Teter Levergood & Co.. in 1846. It was not, however, until 18.r3 that the iron busi ness began to flourish in Cambria county through the enterprise of Geo. S. King, the originator of the Cambria Iron Works. To George S. King is Cambria indebted for the development of the minerals within its borders and for the es tablishment of the Cambria Iron Works, the most extensive establishment of the kind in the United States, if not the most extensive in the world. But for the part taken by Mr. King, the iron business would not have had so healthy a growth in Cambria county. In January, 1851, in the first number of the second volume of the Mountain Echo appeared an editorial stating that ! some of the enterprising citizens of Johnstown contemplated the erection of glass works on an extensive scale. The editor, in a gushing article, bid the en- j terprise God speed, and concluded his j editorial in the following words : "We i I hope to live to see the day when the smoke of a hundred manufactories shall ; rise to Heaven from our peaceful valley." At that day Cambria county had no dis : tinction in enterprises of any kind, and ' not until through the enterprising efforts of Mr. King did Cambria county, which is now one of the leading iron producing counties of a State that is the leading iron producing State of the Union, begin I to advance in the iron business. In 1870 i Pennsylvania made a fraction over fifty , per cent, of all the iron and steel made j by all the States and Territories, and in ; 1880 made a fraction under fifty per cent. ! of all the iron and steel produced by all the States and Territories, anil Cambria county herself produced nearly thirty ; per cent, of the product of Pennsylvania, j Of the 7.205.140 tons of iron and steel. ! the total product of all the States and i Territories Jn 1880, Pennsylvania pro I dueed 3.616.608 tons, of which Cambria ' produced 200.140 tons. The E'-ho man has lived to witness what he in 1851 hoped to see. A table of statistics of the iron and steel productions of the TTnited States, prepared bv James M. Swank. Esq.. Secretary of -be American Iron and Steel Assooi-' :o. presents many features that are f 'ing and in teresting. PenTjtylvanin has long been the honored leader of her sister States in contributing to the vaiiety and quantify of American iron products, and little Cambria stands fourth in the das' of the iron-producing counties of the State. CORRUPT GOVERNMENT. The culpable mismanagement of the Republican party does not admit of con cealment, nor does it admit of defense or excuse. The corruption of the Republi can government of Philadelphia had reached to such a stage that the instinct of self-preservation drove honest Repub licans ino the establishment of a politi cal Vigilance Committee to hang up their own plunderers, and the corruption at TIarrisburg in the administration of State affairs was equally bad. When there is no question or doubt about the Republican party having given us a dis honest government will not the people of Pennsylvania change their public ser vants ? The Republicans of the State have, furnished the Democrats with a battle cry. The issue is now "nonest Government." Let the Democracy of Pennsylvania now put in the field for Governor an honest candidate and take up the cry for honest government. The neonle of Pennsylvania are ripe for a chHT)S and ony aWait the opportunity I to vote for a proper Democratic candi l date for Governor. The people of Penn sylvania want a better government than ! Republicanism gives them, and there is ! now a chance for Democratic success. I The Democracy of this grand old com- I J monwealth can put itself in the strong i est possible attitude if its leaders have i wisdom. If the delegates to the Demo ! cratic convent ion to meet at Ilarrisburg make the proper nominations the Demo- j crats will carry the State. ' BCTXDIXO CP TAMPERED INTERESTS. The recent vote in the Senate in favor i of the Tariff Commission bill is a notice served upon the country that for at least j two years to come there shall be no let- , up to tariff exactions. There should be no assent, implied or actual, to the rob bery which impoverishes the labor of the country by unnecessary burdens to build up Tampered interests. The working men and women in the mills and the mines, if they ever come to understand, as in good time they must, that not only the Treasury surplus of one hundred and twenty million dollars, but that sum twice told is every year directly and in directly filched from their hard earnings. When the laboring class of the country come to understand this the Republican party will never elect another President. There is not another government on the j face of the earth that would dare to go on from year to year with a scheme of taxation so exhaustive of the resources of a nation without making such salu tary reductions as would bring income and outlay within hailing distance of each other. Last year there were 1120, 000,000 taken from the pockets of the people of this country in excess of the wants of the Government. The public expenditures were on a very large scale; there was a generous provision for the sinking fund ; the interest on the public debt was paid at maturity, and there was $120,000,000 still in the Treasury. Yet it is the deliberate intention of Con- gress to make no change. No stop is to be put to the robbery which impoverish es the labor of the country by unneces sary burdens to build up pampered interests. HE SETS PLATES FOR 306. When Arthm gave his big Grant din ner he set plates for 306. True there would have been a vacant chair, but as a favor Chum Bliss was induced to take it, and Dave Mouatt's victuals were sent him to the penitentiary in a tin-pail. While the White House was ablaze on that memorable occasion, when music, wine and wit flowed freely, a man passed by who paused for a moment and gazed and then with a weary, white scared face, fled with a shriek. The flying, shrieking man, was the once famous j Kodgers ex-Secretary of Mrs. Hayes' i iced tea and Graham bread administra tion. ABOUT TO RBAP TIER REWARD. South Carolina seems to have got bad ly worsted in her trade with the' Fraud ulent Hayes and is about to reap her re ward. It will be remembered that Con gressman Small, and a lot more of higher and lower officials, were convicted and sentenced to the penitentiary for various crimes, involving theft, bribery, corrup tion, etc., most all of whom were par doned on certain conditions. Now, at the instigation of Smalls and other South Carolina politicians, Attorney General Brewster instructs his subordinates to prosecute all the election indictments in South Carolina with the utmost severity. Instructions are emphatic to the extent that the best and highest citizens shall be" convicted by negro juries in the Uni ted Mates court, bo bouth Carolina is about to reap her reward for the exhibi tion of an ill-timed clemency. G. N. S. A Catholic Pastoral Letter, WHAT THE PROVINCIAL COUNCIL SAYS ABOUT CHURCH AUTHORITY, LABOR AND IRELAND. The Catholic Provincial Council re cently met in Cincinnati and among other things prepared a lengthy pastoral letter to be read in all the churches. It received its first publication on Thurs day in the Catholic lelenraph. It liegins with a review of the progress of religion since the last council, twenty years ago, and congratulates the Church on its transition from a missiou epoch to a con dition of fixity. It then goes on to sneak of the necessity of obedience to author ity. It holds that all men are not equal and that men ordained to rule as kings, magistrates, bishops and priests have rights which their subjects do not. It laments the disposition to try God be fore a court of human reason, and says that no man has a right to teach false hood or to change a jot or tittle of the law of God. It is very outspoken on the subject of labor unions, and says that a man's labor is his own as much as the gold of the rich man ana that he has a right to sell it as he pleases at. a fair price, and as long as men accede to oth ers the same freedom as they claim for themselves, there is no sin hi labor band ing together for self-protection ; but la bor unions are liable to fail and cannot be sustitined when they attempt to force a man to join a union, or to work for a price fixed by a union. Catholics cannot ba partners in any attempt to coerce oth ers against their just rights or to do In jury to the person or property of others. The letter has a long paragraph on newspapers. In which it specifically de nounces what it calls the illegitimate means used by the Irish World in its ad vocacy of the cause of Ireland, but adds: "We are ready to co-operate with the Bishops of Ireland in any legitimate ef fort to ameliorate the present unhappy condition of the Irish people." The let ter condemns much of the modern church music and says that the Gregor ian chant is the recognized form. It di rects that all music that savors of the sensuous and the profane, the theatre or the opera, shall be excluded from choirs, as also all music that attracts the atten tion of people from the altar to the choir. Much is said condemnatory of secret so cieties, especially such as have a religi ous hierarchy or form of liturgv. Re verting to the subject of authority the letter says : "It is not Catholic doctrine that all power comes from the people and that rulers do not exercise author ity as their own. but as trusted to them by the people. The Catholic doctrine is that the grant of power is not given by the people, but they only designate who is to wield it. As to the priest, the peo ple are commanded to seek the law fiom his lips, and in all matters of civil life ! appertaining to faith and morals, the priest has a right to speak and the peo ple are required to listen." This doc trine, it is said, may be unpopular with modern liberalism, but that does not prove it untrue. Goor for David Davis. The fol lowing manly and outspoken letter was addressed by the President pro tern of the Senate, Mr. Davis, of Plinois, to the mass meeting held at the Cooper Insti tute, New Tork, on Monday night, to protest against the arbitrary and pro longed imprisonment of American citi zens in Ireiand under the coercion bill. Mr. Davis' letter is in marked contrast with the weak and indecisive course of Rlaine, as well as that of his successor, Frelinghuysen, and especially with the cowardly inaction of Lowell, the Amer ican Minister to England, and its vigor ous statement of the duty of the Gov ernment will command universal ap proval : Vice President's Chamber, ) Washington, March 38, 1882. Dear Sir : I regret extremely that the demands of public duty will deny me the personal satisfaction of being present at the Cooper Union meeting on April 3. My sympathies are earnestly enlisted for the object which has made that meeting ne cessary, not only for the protection of Amer ican citizenship abroad, but as an emphatic protest against the violent action of the Brit- j ish Government in treating Irish-American citizens as criminals, without a hearing, and without a trial, against their reiteratad dec- larations of innocence. If there was no treaty to protect them, In ternational comity, and the constantly-professed friendship between Great Britain and the United States, entitled these imprisoned citizens to at least the riabts under tho boast ed common law. England may suspend habta corpvt In time of profound peace, and, under that sus pension, she may assume to violate the letter and the spirit of existing treaties. But when she touches thepersftn, and restrains the lib erty of an innocent American citizen, she does it at her peril, and should be made to feel the consequences of that arbitrary and indefensible act. Congress explicitly directed fourteen years ago what should be done In cases Ilka those which have justly provoked deep resent ment. That duty has yet to be performed, and I hope the strong voice of your meeting will prevent any further postponement of the plain command of the law. The time has come when the fullest rights of American eitizenship must be asserted. Tho presentXexperience and other examples equally trying to public patience render this assertion now an Imperative obligation, without which the United States would de servedly lose position before the world. Very respectfully. David Davis. A. E. Ford, Esq., Sec'y of Oommittee, &c. Throw Pbysle to tba Do(i, I'll bob j We do not feel like blaming Macbeth for I this expression of disgust. Even nowadays ! most of tho cathartics are great repulsive pills, enough to "turn one's stomach." Had ! Macbeth ever taken Dr. Pierce's "Purgative Pellets" he would not have uttered those words of contempt. By druggists. After quarreling with her husband, in Lincoln county, Arkansas, on Monday of last week, Mrs. Ballard broke the neeks of two of her children, aped respectively seven and four years, and threw theii bodies into a Eond. She then jumped into the pond with er baby in her arms, and both were drowned. A OTHER SrEAURO.VT DISASTER. THE PACKET GOLDEN CITY BCRKF-D AT HER WHARF AT MEMPHIS OVER TWENTT OF THK PA8SKNOERB, FRmCIPAL LT WOMEN AND CHILDRE5, LOSE THEIR LIVES. Memphis. Tens., March so The Cin cinnati and New Orleans packet. Golden Citv, en rout from New Orleans to Clncin rati, was burned at her wharf at 4:30 o'clock this morning. The Golden City left New Orleans last Saturday with a ciew of about sixty and forty cabin passengers, including fifteen wo men and nine children. When she was ap proaching the wharf here at 4:30 this morn ing she was discovered to be on fire. She was Immediately header for shore, and In four minutes touched Benl street wharf. The line thrown nut parted, and the burning steamer then floated with the swift current down stream. Some of the passengers had already leaped off. but many of them were still confined in the burning mass, as it drifted away. ORISIV OF THE FIRE. The fire was started by a watchman, who accidentally set fire to a lot of jute which was stored amidships. The steamer had jnst whistled to land and the watchman went among the deck passengers to notify them that they were approaching Memphis and that those destined for the city mnst get ashore, when the bottom of his lamp dropped In some jute, and before the flames could he extinguished they had spread all over the deck of the vessel. Marion Pnrce'l. one of the pilots, was in the clerk' office when the alarm was first sounded, and he r ashed thro' the cabin, bursting open thestate-ro.im doors and awakening the passengers. Sc rapidly did the flames spread that within five min utes after the discovery of the fire, which broke ont amidships, thn aft rart of the steamer was all ahla7 and those that were j saved had to flee in their night clothes. Tat TTaley, one of The firemen, ran up stairs to notify the head engineer, but by the time he had reached the hurricane deck, the flarees had mounted almost to thn pilot house, and hewas driven back by the Are. He then rang the alarm bell, and, seelnjr the boat was ap proncning the shore, ran down the forward stairs and jumped o.i board the tug Oriole, just as the Golden City strnnk her. F SCAPING FROM DEATH. Seeing that they were sinking he sprang aboard the steamer aeain and made his way to the coal bardge lying alongside. Two r.egro deck hands and a white deck passen ger were killed when the tug was struck as they were caught between the bow of the boat and the side of the tug. There were about ten men on the fan tall of the boat who must have been drowned, as when Ha ley leaped into the river he saw three men go overboard and drown and the others, he thinks, must have shared the same fate. Brvc Purcell, the pilot, made his escape bv climbing over thefront part of the pilot house, the fire then being in the rear. Felix Leh man, who was a passenger, says there was a merry party aboard and nearly all the pas sengers remained up until midnight. They had one or two gentlemen aboard who played the riann, and they furnished the passengers with music ami singing. He was awakened by having his state-room burst in. and heard the crv of fire. Seizing his clothes he ran forward, and reaehpd the barge jnet In time, as the next minute the vessel floated down the stream. CIRCCS ANIMALS LOST. Stowe's Circus, which was taken onboard at Vidalia, La., and six cages of animals and birds, together with the tieketand band wagons, tents and horses, were lost. J. C. j Crone, owner of a side show to the circus, is supposed to have perished. His room mate, I H. N. Ackerman, says he dragged him out I of bed to the foot of the stnirs through the j smoke and is satisfied that he never arose from wheM he left him. j J. J. Glenroy, one of the saved, resides In ! Philadelphia, He has for two yars been j keeper of the animals in Stowe's menagerie. He states that he was asleep under one of I the animal cages on the forward part of the I lower deck when the cry of fire was given, i He leaped forth, looked about, but saw no i fire ; then he looked again, and saw that thn j entire centre of the boat was a mass of i flames. I As soon as the boat touched the coal fleet I be jumped ashore, ne saw the officers of I the steamer at work making the hawsers I fast, fien he saw the Hues eive way and the I steamer swing out and drift down. A cage j containing a lion sank down in the middle as the flames enveloped it. He heard no cry ! from any of the animals as they were beinc burned alive. The six cages contained a lion, a tiger, two leopard, an Albino deer, monkevs and birds. Of four horses belong ing to the circus, aboard the steamer, three were saved, but one, the celebrated trick horse "Selim," was lost. It is impossible to gather a complete list of the lost, as the books of the steamer were lrst. A3 far as can be ascertained there were twenty-three ladies on board the ill fated steamer. THE LIST OF THE LOST. The following Is a list of the lost, ns cor rected up to midnight : Dr. Monahan and wife, Jackson, (). ; Mrs. Creary, Winton riace, near Cincinnati ; Miss tueila Crearv, Winton Place: W. n. Stoweand wife, Hen derson, Ky. : Ollle Wood and wife, Ilender- son, Ky. ; Mrs. Anna Smith, Massachusetts Ky. Mis. Helen I'erciyal, Hawesville, Ky. : Mrs. L. E. Knunsand threechildren ; MissOamp- bell, a relative of Mrs. Kouns; Rob't Kelly, second engineer; Mary Boyd and Amanda Atchison, chambermaids ; J. C. Crone, owner of the sde show to Stowe s Circus ; three of the deck crew (colored ) and a negro boy ser I vnt ; : The owners of the Golden Citv are Cap tain .T. D. Heeler, Sterling C. Mcintvre and j W. F. Mcintvre, all of Cincinnati. The . vessel was valued at f 10,000 and insured for f .30.000. She was built, in IS76. I Wash Smith, the colored captain of the ! watch, was sent to jail on Thursday on a ; warrant charging him with murder through carelessness in causing tr.e fire on thesteam I er. thrilling story or A ladt whose mother pf-rtshed is the flames. Memphis. Tenn., March 31. Miss Ionia Malsin, of nawesville, Ky., one of the three lady passengers saved "from the burned steamer, tells the following story of her ex perience : She was going from New Or leans to her home in nawesville, in company with her mother, Mrs. IT. M. Percival, and I ner nepnew, tm. ncis.iniey, a lan oi ntteen years. I here had been a merry party in the cabin and she and her mother retired after 11 o'clock. Some time after they had fallen asleep they were awakened by McKinley, who rushed Into their state room, and said that the boat was on fire. She and her mother got up, and, without waiting to dress themsslves, went out into the cabin, which was full of smoke. They walked hurriedly forward, her mother being a little behind. On arriving at the front t?uard of the boat she saw that her mother was not with them, and she attempted to run back after her, but was prevented by McKinley, whe said that she was only going to her own destruction, as the cabin was then a mass of flame and smoke. "Oh, I thought she was with us," moaned Miss Malsin, tossing wiklly on her couch. "I wanted to go back to her, but he would not let me." She said her nephew Eulled her out on the guards and lowered er down to Charles Ross, jr., a passenger, who was standing on a coal barge. He caught her in his arms and took her ashore. The steamer Fulton, which conveyed Cap tain Mclntyreand party to the wreck of tho Golden City this morning, bas just returned. A diver went down, but could do nothing. The wreck lies in twenty-five feet of water with the bull up stream, and the current is so swift that all efforts to go through the cabin by the diver proved fruitless. No more dead bodies have been recovered since the one mentioned yesterday, whih has been identified as that of Mrs. Anna Smith, of Springfield, Mass., who had been visiting relatives, in New Orleans. COSCORn (JRAPF. VIJTFJ. Fine, vigorous Vines. Two, Three and Four Tears Old, for sale by the dozen or thousand at the lowest prices. These Vines are raised on the famous Mt. Prospect Vineyards, at Passaic, N. J., where the well-known Port Grape Wine is produced that is bo highly esteemed by Physicians. Enquire of Alfred Speer, 2-10. -2m. . Passaie, N. J. The New Tork police were notified Sun day night that Cornelius J. Vanderbilt, the brother of William II. Vanderbilt, who con tested the probate of the will of the late Commodore Vanderbilt, had committed sui cide by shooting himself through the head, at the Glenham notel. The coroner was no tified, and fcave a permit for the removal of the body. A CLEAR COMPLEXION can be had by every lady who will use Par ker's Ginger'Tonic. Regulating the inter nal organs and purifying the blood it quickly removes pimples and gives a healthy bloom totheekeek. Read about it in other column. The wife of Sergeant Mason is desc ribed as rather tall and slender, between 25 and 30 years of age, with dark hair, blue eyes and with a gentle and modest air. SEWS AD OTHER SOTISOS. A great snow storm raged on Monday at St. John, N F. That hacking cough can be so quickly cured by Shiloh's Cure. We guarantee It. The only physician we have had In the family for three years is Pxrcsa the bett. An old man in Allectown is reported as living on lager beer and rye bread for years, almost exclusively. The "Favorite Prescription" of Dr. riercecures "female weakness" and kindred affections. By druggists. Casper Dutzer, of Wilkesbarre, aged 101 years, died suddenly on Friday morning. lie was a soldier under Napoleon. Meepless night made miserable by that terrible cough. Shiloh's Cure is the remedy for you. At James' drug store. Daniel lEllis, ?a married man of Potts town, has eloped with a married woman of Reading, named Lizrie Wentzel. James Yaggard was killed and Samuel Davis fatally wounded It; a dance at Fike Vllle, Ky., on Svnday niht. Will you snffer with dyspepsia and liver complaint ? Shiloh's Vitalizer is guaranteed to cure yon. At James' drug store. John Sullivan, who murdered his wife at Dedham, Mass., a week ago Saturday, and attempted suicide afterward, died in jail on Saturday. Catarrh cured, health and sweet breath secured by Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy. Trice B0 cents. Nasal Injector free. At James' drug store. Thirty-two persons are missing from the steamship Donro and nineteen from the Tru rac Bat. which were sunk;off Capo Finisterre 1 ast Saturday. A lunatic who lumped from a swift rail road train, in Michigan, was almost killed by the shock, but has been perfectly sane since his recovery. Eleven new cases of-sroall-pox and five oeams were reported in south Bethlehem on Wednesday. All efforts to check the epidetn ic nave inus xar provea unsuccessful. President Arthur was presented on I Monday with a petition a mile long. It's ! three hundred and fifty thousand signers j want Mason pardoned.; : Charles Jamison, who was arrested at : Kokomo, Ind. , for theft and the outrage of a three -year old child, was taken from the jail : by a mob and hanged on Monday nicht. ! Thebodyof an infant partiailv devoured by rats was found in the well of Farmer Ap plebeer, at Greene, Erie countv, on Thurs ! day. The matter will be investigated, j In West Penn township, Schuylkill 1 county, is a church called "The St. Peter : Union High German Reformed and German ; Evangelical Lutheran church. West Penn." There were sixty-four deaths from small ; pox Rt Bethlehem Monday. Five new cases : were also reported up to that day in Bethle ! hem proper, and the disease U again spread , ing. I George Blymer, a resident of Lancastei, committed suicide on Monday by throwing himself in front of a freight train. Domes- tic trouble i supposed to be the cause for the act. j A party of ten men in Lehigh county had the life of an old man Insured for $10,000, i and were assessed heavily dr.riiig his life. ; Instead of receiving $l,noo each at the death ; of the old man they got f 1.6.5. ! Miss Nellie Barton, a young and attract- ive lady of Harbor Creek, Erie county, has ! eloped with Clark Dumars, who leaves be ; hind a wife and three children. Tbeyjhave been heard from In California, i A Coatesville lady found an egg. 'one side : of which was black and the other white. ; Curious to know the cause of the coloring she broke the shell and found in the black ; side a medium sized sowing needle. Henry Green, a German, was killed on j Friday near Beatty Station by the Limited Express east. His body was taken to La trohe and an inquest held, the verdict being accidental death, and no one to blame. ! Forty thousand acres of land in Arkan ; sas have been secured for an Italian colony. : The immigrants are to come from the Tyrol, principally, and will he agiicuiturists. About i a thousand Italians have already settled in 1 that region. A Democratic majority of 8.500 In Ciu i cinnatl, of 2,2io in Cleveland, with smaller ' majorities in Dayton, Columbus, Toledo, Youngstown and scores of other places, in ' dicates that something broke loose in Ohio ' on Monday. At Gayhead, Mas., last Sundav, Mrs. j Julia 1'ockiat locked her three children in ; the house and visited a neighbor. On her return she found the house on fire. It was burned to the ground the children perishing ; in the flames. j A 4 year-old boy went into a saloon at ; Dallas City, III., tossed a five-cent piece on j the bur and called for a g!a.s of beer, as he. i hail seen his father do. Being refused the i drink, he went out and smashed a window I pane with a stone. j Reirick Biothers' safe factory. Sixteenth j street Pittsburgh, and five brick dwellings in ; tne rear, were burned t riday morning. The I occupants of the dwellings saved nothing but their clothing. The lo is aUout SOOO, which is partially covered by Insurance. 1 A lady in Jackson county, Fla., who was long confined to her bed by sickness, was re cently almost restored to health by an electric : shock. The lightning struck her house, tear ing off weatherboardi ng in several places, killing a cow near by, and eurinjjthe lady. About midnight Saturday night John McDonald, aged 24, keeper o"f a saloon in ; Covington, Ky., cut his brother Thomas, aged 27, so seriously that he cannot live. They : quarreled and Thomas raised a chair to strike : John. Both were under the Influence of ; liquor. An exchange says the order of the Penn sylvania railroad company, excluding intox icated persons from passenger cars "will be a bad thing about the timn ot the adjourn ment of the Legislature. How will the poor fellows be able to get away from Ilarris burg ?" George Scoville, the Chicago lawyer who defended Guiteau, now speaks of that person as "an ungrateful brute and the champion liar," supplementing the observation with: "Also the meanest man I ever knew." Mrs. Scoville does not share her husband's opinion of her brother. The Captain and crew of the brijantine William, wrecked on Sable Island, have ar rived in New Tork. The vessel got Jammed in the ice, and the provisions giving out, the men subsisted for 22 days on oats which had been in the vessel's timbers for two years. Water was obtained from pools in the ice. An improvement has been made in the telephone, by which the full tones of the hu man voice may be transmitted by using a current foor times as strong as before. It is believed that the new discovery will dispense with the eall bell, as the voice from the tele phone can be heard by any one near enough to hear the bell. Patrick Dolan, convicted of the murder of Maurice Healy, at Dunbar, Fayette coun ty, has been sentenced to eleven years im prisonment in the western penitentiary. This is almost the limit of the law, Dolan having been In jail since July lat. The case will be taken to the Supreme Court on an application for a new trial, Henry Burroughs, Peter Foger and Isaac Sarean, of Hopewell township, N. J., while driving through the streets of Trenton at a late hour on Sunday night, missed the bridge over the canal feeoei and were precipitated into the water. Sarean and the horses suc ceeded in getting out, but Foger and Bur roughs were both drowned. Joseph Holt, a school-teacher, was killed Wednesday night of last week by Babe Hun ter, near "BloomfiMd, Nelson county, Ky. noit, who boarded at the residence of rfou ter, interfered while the latter was whipping his wife. Subsequently Hunter waylaid him while coming from his school-house and shot hira dead. Hunter has been captured. A special from Pueblo, Col.. April 1st, says : After lynching two cattle thieves here night before last, a mob of twenty-five men rode about ten miles to where the two Chas tine brothers and Frank Orsby were stop ping, captured them and hanged them, thus making five men lynched for cattle stealing yesterday, within a distance of ten miles. Probably there never was a quicker ad journment of a Court than that which took place in Des Moines, Iowa, one day last week when the Judge was informed that two pris oners in the jail adjoining the court room had the small-pox. The ancient "Oi yez, ol yez" even was omitted, as the crier led in the q'aick retreat from the proximity of the pestilence. A wagon load of misery excited pity at Ottawa, Kansas. It was a handcuffed thief, on his way to prison ; his insane wife, who wrs being taken to an asylum ; two children, going to the poor house, and a dead baby, bound for a graveyard. The object In taking them all in one vehicle was to manige the woman easily, as she refused to be parted from the rest. A. C. Patrick shot his wife through the heart at Seward, Netx, on Saturday ntcht, and then fired at each of his two sons, slight ly wonndlng one of them. Patrick had trou ble with his wife In the east, and she moved to Nebraska with the sons and engaged in farming. He followed, and for some time had been loafing about Seward and drinking wnisky. l hemarder whs evidently premed itated. Patrick escaped. On Ftiday evening three men named Martin, Sanders and Franks, were at work at Dur.bar, Fayette countv, when Martiu and Franks got into a dispute, which finally end ed in blows. Franks" was getting the better of Martin and Sanders attempted to part them. Failing in this be picked up a brick and struck Franks on the head. The woucd ed man died during the night. Next morn ing Sanders was arrested and lodged in jail. Judge Cook, of Foret county, will con test with General Harry White, of Indiana. . for the Republican Congressional nomina- tion in the Twenty-firth district. As the hero : of the Klsklminetas has twice lost the district to the Republicans the law of self-prrserva- j tion may inspire the nomination of Judpe ' Cook or some man other than General Wh ite. ; The Chicago Eiming Jovrnal't Omaiia, ' Neb., special of April 3d, says : A terrible 1 tragedy occurred here about 9 o'clock this , morning on Thirteenth street, near Bohemian Hall. A Bohemian ndmed Joseph Jones 6hot his wife dead on the street and then shot himself through the heart. They were about 56 or B7 years of age, and the two bodies are now lying side bv side at the undertaker's. Domestic infelicity of several years' stand ing was the cause. The Washington (Pa.) Efginttr gives an account of the extraordinary flow of gas from a well which has been drilled to a depth ot twenty-two hundred feet on the McGugin farm, near Middletun, in Washington coun ty. The pressure is so great as to throw the drilling tools out of th well and compel a suspension of work. When lighted, the es caping gas blazes up seventy feet hih, the light lelng visible for twenty miles around. It is thought that such an Immense supply of gas Indicates the presence of petroleum In paying quantities. On Monday morning, about 3 o'clock, seven miles east of Knoxville, Tenn., Wm. Vance murdered his three year-old step daughter bv crushing the child's skuil against the floor. "The child was in bed with : its mother and father and became fretful during the night. Vance got out of patience, lumped up, seized the child by the hair, and beat its brains out on the floor. The screams f the mother brought two neighbors to the house, and thev found Vance with the child In his arms, tie laid It down, and started off toward the barn, and made his escape ; : but officers are on his track who will catch , him, as he Is club-footed and travels slowly. I Robert Bluen, a blacksmith, 29 years of ' age, of Cleveland, Ohio, at 4:30 Friday morn- ; ing fired twice at his wife, who was lyinf i beside him in bed, inflicting In her forehead ! wounds which are dangerous, but uot neces- j sarily fatal. 8he Jumped from her bed and i rushed from the room. Bioen shot at her ! twice more, but without further fffect. He then placed the muzzle of the revolver against j his own forehead and fired a bullet into his I brain, dying instantly. He had been married j only six months and was devoted to his wife. ; For three months he had been disabled by : rheumatism, and it Is supposed he was de- , ranged by pain and perhaps th fear of pov erty. In Pittsburgh, on Thursday last. Miss Annie Haggeitv, daughter of a "well-known eititen of Lawreneeville, and Miss Eleanor Fwing, daughter of Gen. Hueh Ewing. of Lancaster, Ohio, and a niece cf GeneralTom Ewing and General Sherman, took the veil of the order of the Sisters of Mercy. Though bred in the lap of luxury, and possessed of rare beauty and mauy accomplishments. Miss Ewiug six months ago save tip the giyety of Washington life and entered the convent ns a postulant. Thursday her period of proba tion closed and she received the white veil. Miss Ewing wiil be known in religion as Sis- : ter Mary Veronicia. Her mother, two broth ers, and sister Edith wera present. Sickness in the family of the Shermans prevented their attendance. On Saturday afternoon, about 4 o'clock, ' five boys were playing iu a tanii tunnel near New Providence, a small station on the Peik lcmen Railroad, when the top eaved in. cov ering them ail up. A short time after several men were passing by, when they noticed a pair of feet protruding from the saud They ; went to work to remove the sand, and three t boys were taken out dead. Thev were John . Rowland, aged 12 years ; Josiah Rowland, ! aged 13 ; George Rowland, ag-'d 10. The other two are so badly injured that they are ' not expected to survive. Their name's are : Samuel Mentz, 14 years old, and Harry Mo zear, 9 years old. Great indignation exists aij.iii:st the owners of the sand for allowing it to remain at suoh a prominent p!a"0. The three Rowlands were the children of Lewi . Rowland, an engineer on the Perkioineo Railroad. : MierilT William Est, of Stokes county, ' North Carolina, was shot and killed on Thurs day ni;ht l.st while robbing his own ofiice. He left hniui'. saying he would be absent i som days, and directed his wife not to allow any one to stay all ni;ht, and at the same time gave her the safe key. About d irk one ' of the ntihbors came to his house, and. Mrs. i E-.tes having raised no objection, he wentoS ' to a room to sptnd the night. After he bad j letired two men came tothe bouse and asked leave to stay, and Mrs. F.-te l They. ' however, went in and demanded the safe kev, ) threatening to kill her if she refused it. She ; rati up itairsand informed her guest and was i told by him to go down, deliver the key, and say nothing of his presence. The men then I proceeded to rob th safe. While they were thus engaged Mrs. Estes' friend came down i and killed loth of the men. Upon examina- tion it was found that one of them was the Sheriff, who had disguised hlmseif, and the : other was one of his neighbors. j On last Tuesday morning a fi re broke i out in the Standard Oil Refinery No. 1 situ- ated on Butler 6treet. Eighteenth ward, ' Pittsburg, covering an area of four blocks, i The fire was caused by an explosion of chrj - soline in tank No. 12 in which there were ; five hundred nd thirty barrels of fluid. The I cover of the tank was blown o:T, and crash- ing through the roof of the settling house J set fire to the oil. The flames communica ted to a warehouse a three-story brick : building three hundred feet long and sev- j enty feet wide, containing three thousand j filled barrels of refined oil and nineteen thou- j sand empty barrels, beside over one hundred ' thousand pounds f glue. The warehouse, settling house, and tanks containing distill ate were destroyed, involving a loss to the ' Standard Oil Company of at least f :,02.",0o0. The fire will burn all night, but it is not spreading The entire department of the j city was called ont, and their efforts thus far have prevented the flames from spread- j ing to the buildings adjacent. A Beactifci. Girl Disfigured With Vitriol. Miss Modie Boyer, aged 17, with handsome eyes, fair complexion, and a wealth of dark tresses, was drenched with vitriol on Saturday evenine as she was en terine her father's residence, l.yio Mervine j street, Philadelphia. Miss Mollie was blind- ; ed by the shower, and fell with a cry of ; aeony Into the arms of her lster, who had , conae to the door to admit her. The sirl was taken Into the house, and the vitriol at quick- ; ly as possible wa wiped from her face. One ' of her eyes was dreadfully burned, and a portion of her hair was burned from her i head. Her cheeKs were Mistered, and her j shoulders were badly burned. Her sister J escaped injury, but a new silk dress which she wns wearing for the first time, was com- , pletcly ruined. The motive for the assault j Is a mystery. Mr. John E. Keyes and his wife and 4-year-old son occupy the bouse from which the vitriol wag thrown. Some ' of the victim's friends who saw the vitriol i thrown, say that thev saw an old lady, who, i It is supposed, was Mrs. Keys, lean out of ' the third story window, fioni which the vlt- ' riol came, as though wntchinj; the effaet of I the deadly shower. The two families are ; not acquainted, and no trou'.de of any kind j has occurred between them. A warrant for Mrs. Keys arrest was aworn out The j;en eral belief is that she is crazy. J Thb Misisstffi Floods. From Morgan I city, La., to Chucahoula, nineteen miles in the direction of New Orleans, the country is ' one vast stretch of water varying in depth from three to six feet. The water throuch- j out this section has risen five Inches and is ( rising at the rate of one inch everv four hours. At Favetteville. fourteen miles east, i the water Is eight inches below the flood of 1874. From Chucahoula there is no land visible save a small mound at Tigerville, and as you approach Morgan city some small sections of land barely showing above the surface of the water. In many places the water reaches half way to the ceiline of the houses. Five-sixths of Morgan city is under water, varying from six Inches to six feet in depth. Skiffs and pirogues are utilized on the streets for communication along the princi pal business blocks and sidewalks have been erected some four or five feet above the ban quets, and in most f the buildings false floors have been improvised. Jrsse Jamea Killed. A despatch from St. Joseph, Mo., of April 3d, says : "Cha. and Robert Ford, who at one time belonged to the Jesse James (Vang and were engaged r in the Winston and IJIne cut train robberies, have been in St. Joseph for a week for tbe purpose of arresting Jesse James ; tmt be- ing afraid, as it is alleged, to mke the at tempt, they shot him down at Thirteenth j and Lafayette streets to day and then sur- . rendered to the authorities and were lodged in jail, There Is great excitement over the ! affair, several thousand persons beiug in the 1 streets. The wife of the desperado was on ! th spot in a few minutes after tlie shooting and wept copiously over his remain. The i body was taken in charge by the police. A lot of ammunition and several weapons, including pistols and a rifle, were found In the bouse where, th outlaw had been stop Ping." Wbek I pnblicly testified that 1 bad been cuied of a terrible skin humor by the Cuti cura Remedies, I did so that others might be cured, and do rot regret the time given to answering Inquiries. lion. 'Wm. Taylor, Boston. Opratea with Inert, .. Psrri rih.i.. XtQlrKlltlnr, A(erblBr . SttOfQlon,.!,1 .,. Uik Hl-HOIt.L The cuf at niwt hutrun ;". ,. hv::a.ns hcT'Ua!. .o1 r'7 .... '"-,, rem.1!e fall, Scrofu! or K u t i " " AB-t!oc. F.rvt!j.:i Tnir .. t'ODCleft. BotU. HUw.i I'(ii...r.s' (.. W a1n cf tL Kilnem . t'ontrlpAtion. PUri. L't;:.'4 anj Scaly IRCPTIOt f iti tsk'n and Seali-. . . I"ori!, Ttter. Kicirw l- -Hd. Itehm rile. nr.i 0:r. . Torturing Humor from a i .nr!-' ulcr. wbea a'id t "u.:-t-1 Soap, the reat .Skin Ciirf. inirm r i T all flte'cal vl -Lf m H; ... Iad Sk'n ar.1 Klli. Ir.-tir.-Irritation. SJof-rn". S'Vlt. lti weight In gid for ail l;-r ! K i-. 1 CCTUTR1 0pl An xq.i!:tTci. Ha-h n -.. . Krai-ant w.th do! Irv.y, ' ., v ' balfatn. i'i dIhIc In a iik 1 . . tan of futtear,. th st't ,:,' ' M In tl: tratirTt k and for r8ter!ii(i. irte-r!i,i s. complexion and t-a'.n. 1 t ; ' , Soap. ' - Cutleura Trri ar , for J(en.' ol the Hfc.r. k .... . y - Price r '"nticom K". .,; j . t!oo. Me. Tr t ' X: -v .. T-. . Madtelnal To!lt S..t. tv : ... . ShaTlr.n Soap. 15-. SM r. ...." I rinriii arwpoi, rtfk4 ft, I Sanford's Radical Cr Tl flrfnt Ainfrtmn llrtUamit 1'. fi"- non 01 wmen naif I. Amri- V -, aiuin v i r. sari told. 4 Irticr Itto oin. rlr.. K"T thn 1 'n :" !'f e re . ' 1 every f rin -f ":-;.. r v -or lnflu? r,z t t he I. - . ; -. ' 7 tl-'n. Io I rrJ t-y ' Medlrfii .ToTirr-ftV th- t t-n!y comrlpt f-rcrntl ! !:.'-: . One hoitlo l-.a-l 'jt- i S"!rrnt and Sar.'-tr i' I: ' v - 5". of ail Jnirif f' r ?1 A: -ure. W erke & F u-.r. iw- ;-. cou-Ws- ELECTEK t i i i.: u.K 1 1.; ..is h t ' !- 1 a:n. -. 1 1. Over 500G5 Druggists I.K AMD D' rj Physiciam Have Sinned or Endorsed Following RemarkBb'e k Document: 1 4 i.SMbury St Jotmasa. Xaf- ln Cfccroiats, S 1 Flatt St., He T .att su, jei j ta jstfwT"f and cf Fjrra'f A TVV - rf 0&tlacnn : For tt bar asld vaj-icua femndj tara. Tliyaiclaa amd tht Tull: I--' ethars. W couider tiemcct cf : fw relitbl bcusehold remtw&" of cooJSdane. Thay araacperr'J otber Peroua Ilaytra cr Ii"tilr.ai , xtraal yr.y.i' CVpe'.r.a rr dip - ' Faj-eia,oe"aticctl product, tl tbi - J order ef tnerit, axd e- recoffti l p&TBtciaxia and druffg-irta. ' .r Waan othar retnadiaa Mi f -.. . on 'a Capsuit Plaitar. k Ton will fca Aiaarpotntad If T -obaL9 Flarterv, TJnijnenta, Pi' toiaaj Kacnatia Xoym, ' et'HK BESIEDT AT LAST, f" . MEAO'S H!ic!4 CORN vt Eii Cerate T. I' k ft (Ik: t0tTll. ,1r r"" " 1 ,',f.V."-:CC '" ' ,,"Soll,l'.vJlt Marrh IT. 12. - " "-,' " .xf" in -n. : - tr
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers