(Emnlirh rcannn. BENSBURC. PA., FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1SS2. Postmaster O ex eh At. Howe pro poses to take the postasre oft of newspa pers and magazines, anrt to carry them all free in the mails. Under the present law newspapers are carried free in the counties in which theyare printed ; and Mr. Howe's idea is to extend this sys tem to the entire periodical press. How our heart poes out in approval to Timo thy Howe in this his latest and best sug gestion. George A. Cnxtr, brother of Frank A. Conly, the vocalist and mimic, who is well known to many of our readers, and a young man named TTerman Tteit zd were drowned in Lake SpofTord, at Chesterfield, X. TT., on Friday last, while fishing. Mr. Conly was a world renowned basso, and he and Reitzel, who was a pianist, were members of the Clara Louise Kellogg Concert Company. The ladies had not been recovered at la test accounts. It seems next to impossible to make a ln-ginning in the trial of the Star I'oute cases. They were called up a?ain in Judge Vylie's criminal court on Mon day last, and as on every former occa sion wore met by the defendants' coun sel with several motions intended pure ly for delay. Innocent men don't usual ly resort to this kind of legal strategy, and Judge TVy'ie, who has grown tired of it, tnade'a peremptory order that the trial of the cases should commence on esterdav. The Chairman of the Republican State Committee has issued a call reas sembling the State convention at TTar risburg, on "Wednesday, June 21st, for the purpose of nominating a candidate for Congressman-at-large in place of Thomas M. Marshall, who declined to accept. We will now see whether Geo. Lear, who was President of the Conven tion, will carry out his threat that he would oppose theelection of any candi date who is nominated in any other way than by the members of a new conven tion. The proprietor of the Xew York JTrr Jd, James Gordon Dennett, who fitted out the Jeannette and sent her on her Jll-fatetl voyage to the polar seas, an nounces that, with or without the action of Congress, or of the public, care will be taken of the widow and orphan child of Lieutenant PeLong, and not of them alone, but of every widow and every or phan of the men who sailed with the Jeannette and have perished." As Mr. Bennett is abundantly able to carry out so praiseworthy a purpose, the avowal of his intent ion to do so will meet with the warm and sincere plaudits of the American people. TrfE Xw York Wrrl7 of Monday last contained a full and exhaustive re port of the present condition of the crops from all sections of the country. The conclusion arrived at is that the outlook is magnificent that wheat, corn, oats and tobacco are in good and promising condition, and that a large cotton crop larger than the yield of last yeai is confidently anticipated. This i3 a most gratifying statement, and will continue to swell the tide of European immigra tion to this country beyond all former experience, the number of arrivals at Xew "York since the first of January up to the close of last week having reached the enormous aggregate of 210100. Mitcttelt., the colleague of Cameron from this State in the Senate, says the best way to settle the difficulty in the grnnd old party in this State is to with draw Cameron's ticket, nominated at ITarrisburcr, and that the Independent ticket nominated at Philadelphia is the true Republican ticket, nominated in the Republican way. Or. the other hand, Cameron swears that the battle must be fought out on the ticket set up by him self at Harrisburg. and that if the Inde pendents want to kill the party they may as well all go to destruction to gether. Mitchell's advice will most as suredly not be taken, but Cameron's prediction of the end will pretty certain ly come to pass. TnE General Assembly of the Presby terian Church (North) and the General Assembly of the Tresbyterian Church (South) were both in session last week, the former body at Monmouth, Illinois, and the latter at Atlanta, Georgia. Mutual despatches were exchanged be tween the two Assemblies, the initiative having been taken by the representatives Of the Southern Church, looking to the removal of all difficulties to a formal and fraternal union by withdrawing all former expressions of the Assembly (South) reflecting upon or offensive to the General Assembly of the United States. This was concurred in by the Monmouth Assembly, and the breach in the Church, which was caused by ques tions growing out of the civil war, may now be regarded as finally and happily closed, Governor IIoyt in speaking of the present condition of the Republican party in this State, says he saw the storm coming last fall and gave timely warning of it, but that he was ridiculed and laughed at. He believes that the real force of the Independent rebellion tigainst Cameronism has not yet began to manifest itself, and that there is a large body of Republicans, who do not make public and loud professions of their intentions, who will quietly vote against what they call the machine, and that it is a waste of time to attempt to argue with such men. The'eonclusion at which he arrives is that if the Republi can party in this State sustains "a good licking this fall, it will be all the better for it in 1834." What the outcome of political affairs may be in 1BR4 no one can now tell, but that the Republican party, if the present situation in this .State remains unchanged, is bound to get a "good licking this fall" is so plain and unmistakable that no intelli-jn-t man can dispute it. The decided action of the Independ ent Republican convention at Philadel phia last week thoroughly unnerved boss Cameron. lie spent Saturday last in that city, where he made a '-Help me, Cassius, or I sink" appeal to several leading business men, whom he invited to meet him for consultation over the present hopeless condition of the grand old party in this State, brought about j by his cwn selfish policy. He told them that he had ever stood by their interests in upholding the tariff, and that they must not now stand idly by and let him be defeated. He also made the threat, so it is said, that if they didn't come to his rescue the tariff might go to perdi tion so far as he was concerned. This man, who is nothing but a broker in of- j ficial patronage at Washington, assumes for his own purposes that he can make or unmake the present tariff system just as his whim or his pleasure may suggest. It is a most impudent assumption, and he might with equal propriety claim that he can control the movements of the present comet. His talk about the tariff is simply a cheap appeal to the i manufactures to forget his offensive po litical methods and rally around him as the friend of a protective tariff. Wheth er or not there shall be any change in the tariff don't now and never did de pend on the two Camerons, for, as Gen. Moorehead, of Pittsburgh, a tariff man, said last Monday, when he read Camer on's appeal to the Philadelphia manufac turers : "The Camerons, Simon and Don, have never done anything at Wash ington except to peddle out Pennsylva nia offices. Simon Camehox admits that the In dependent State ticket is composed of honest, conscientious men, but says he would not have favored such a ticket in any regular convention. Of course he ) wouldn't, for the very reason given by j himself, that every roan on the ticket is I "honest and conscientious." During I his long and corrupt political career in this State, Simon Cameron never mani j fested any special love for a man who had a conscience and who refused to surrender it into his keeping. His in struments in the game of politics have always been men who were prepared, at big command, to do what Thaddeus Stevens wanted old John Montelius, a Whig member of the Legislature from Union county during the Buckshot war, to do, when he told him his conscience disapproved of his (Stevens') course, and Stevens suggested to him that be ought to throw his conscience "to the d 1." Any Republican in this State who has had independence and neive enough to refuse implicit obedience to the arrogant demands of the elder Cam eron, while be had'charge of the Repub lican machine, or who has ventured to do so since his son succeeded him, be came a mnrked man a monument to the tyranny of boss rule and was as completely excluded from the councils of the party as though he was a Demo crat. The Cameron power is now about I to be swept away by the Independent movement, and that is a consummation devoutly to be wished, whatever maybe the political future of parties in the State. Font of the thirteen survivors of the crew of thirty-three men of the United States Arctic exploring steamer Jean rtettee, which was crushed by the ice and sank on June 12, arrived at Xew York on the steamer Celtic from Liverpool on Sunday last. Their names are Lieutenant J. W. Danenhower, Dr. Xewcomb, naturalist, Jack Cole, boats wain, and Long Sing, a Chinaman, one of the'stewards. These men formed a part of the crew under Engineer Mel ville, who succeeded in landing near the mouth of the Lena, in Siberia, in one of the three boats of the Jeannette last September. The nine other survi vors, with Melville at their head, are still braving the hardships of Arctic travel in the hope of discovering some trace of the third boat's crew, whose fate is as yet unknown. Lieutenant Danenhower has lost the sight of his left eve from hardship arid exposure, and the mind of Jack Cole is a blank his reason unthroned. He recognized his brother and son, but in a moment he was talking incoherently about the lost Jeannette and the exciting scenes thro' which he and his companions nad passed. A Washtxoton Citt dispatch was sent to the Tittsburg Post on last Mon day, stating that the editor of a daily newspaper at Harrisburg, who had ar rived in Washington that day, had said it was generally believed in Harrisburg when he left there that the name of General Hancock will be brought before the Democratic State Convention on the 2sth instant as a candidate for Gov ernor; that during Hancock's visit to Judge Black at York, last week, sev eral prominent Democrats went to see him there and had a conference with him on the subject ; and, further, that the plan mapped out is to nominate and elect Hancock to the office of Governor, and then make him President in 15S4. Washington is the inexhaustible foun tain of all manner of political lying, and we simply publish the substance of this despatch as an item of current news, at the sametime expressing our conviction that Gen. Hancock is not in pursuit either of the Governorship or the Presi dency in the manner indicated. We had a good deal of faith in Tom Marshall's judgment of politicians in this State, but we have lost it all since he has expressed the opinion that the vacancy on the Republican ticket, occa sioned by his own resignation, will pro bably be filled by either General Lilly, of Carbon county, or Josiab. Cohen, of Pittsburg, both of whom are 'first-class men." We know little, if anything, aboiqt Cohen, but as to Lilly there does not live within the limits of the State a man with so shallow a brain and at the same time with such extravagant pre tensions. Tom Marshall stands alone among all the men in this State who know William Lilly in regarding him as a "first-class" man. He isn't even a third rate man. Quay is of the opinion that the defeat of the Republican party in this State this year will make Samuel J. Randall the next Democratic candidate for President. MR. CAMEROX'8 TIME AT. Senator Cameron attempts to treat lightly the story of his threat that if the manufacturers "of this State do not come to his support he will fight the tariff in the future" as vigorously as he hits su,--ported it in the past. Taking his words literally it will be thought that they are harmless, because Cameron's support of the tariff has amounted to nothing. But the sting in them is in their inso lence, assuming as they do that the business men in this great State will mend the fortunes of his corrupt and shattered Machine, thus perpetuating a system which strikes at the root of Re publican government, because the head and front of that system threatens to at tack their business interests if they re fuse. Such insolence was never before heard even in the insolent Hoss poli tics which has cursed Pennsylvania, though it is exactly in keeping with the methods of forcing and bulldozing which have characterized the Cameron dynas ty all through its too extended exist ence. Though Senator Cameron is now try ing to throw doubt on the story.of his threat, his word in such a case will not be accepted. The Stalwart papers are also coming to his assistance after hav ing published the threat as a fact, and declare that it is a lie out of the whole cloth. Now, the entire truth of this matter is that business men of Philadel phia who were in conference with Sena tor Cameron gave this information to representatives of the Philadelphia pa pers, to correspondents of papers in oth er cities and the agents of the Associa ted Press. These representates finger ed in the office of the Continental hotel desiring to get news of the conference which was in progress up stairs in room 4. It was stated to them by Mr. Cramp, the well-known ship-builder, and other gentlemen that Cameron was very much excited, that he swore a good deal, and that he made the threat in question. Nearly a score of newspaper men, repre sentatives of Stalwart, Independent and Democratic newspapers, were recipients of the information. Their accounts, written without the possibility of a mu tual understanding, tallied precisely. These accounts were published Sunday and Monday morning in all the newspa pers, regardless of political complexion, and not a doubt was thrown upon the veracity of the statement. When, however, it was realized what a fearfn, mistake the Senator had made in his latest attempt at Bossism, the friends of the madman, and the news papers which fed at the Machine rack, hastened to deny or modify the threat to molify an indignant public. But it is too late. Though the original inform ants, seeing the storm they unwitting ly raised, have closed their mouths and will talk no further on the subject, there is a cloud of witnesses in Philadelphia who testify to what they did say, and whose words have more weight than all the gratuitous assertions of politically interested friends and newspapers. All of the leading newspapers of Philadel phia have reiterated the statement each day, and among their editorial of yester day morning were scathing denuncia tions of the grosi insult to the people of the State contained in Cameron's inso lent threat. However it may be smooth ed over or denied, there can be no ques tion in the mind of any not determined not to believe, that it was uttered as published broadcast. Business men can study its meaning and swallow it if they can. Pittshvrg Dhnatrh ( Tvl. Jtep.), 3 1. TnE Lancaster Intr.lUgrnc.cr cannot understand how some people, who pro fess to be able to interpret public senti ment and measure the average common sense of the people, reach the conclusion that the mismanagement of the State Agricultural College will not militate against Beaver's election. We do not assume that he has stolen any of the ap propriation or endowment of this con cern. He has been President of its Board of Trustees since 1874. In that period it has had feO.OOO per annum to maintain it. besides the commodious and expensive building, apparatus and farm with which it is equipped for its special work. After these eight years of his direction its last state seems to be worse than the first. We are told it now has one student pursuing an agricultural course. With an endowment superior to that of any other institution in the State, except the University of Pennsyl vania and perhaps Lafayette College, this Centre county school is absolutely a cipher, though every year the $30,000 is spent and there are calls for "more." Surely the President of its Board of Trustees, if he has any capacity for pub lic affairs, ought to have discovered be fore this what is the matter, and either have remedied the failure or broueht this wasteful expenditure to a conclu sion. That he has not'.done so proves his utter lack of administrative ability and this is good reason why the people should not vote for him for their chief executive. The Philadelphia North American thinks that if the Senate committee which has the case of Fitz John Porter in hand has so far yielded to Mr. Lo gan's prejudiced antagonism of the pending biil as to strike ODt the clause which authorizes the payment of Por ter's tack pay, it is a strange illogigal and inconsistent proceeding. Either Fitz John Porter is an innocent man or ! he was riehtlv and iustlv sentenced. If the latter, then there is no excuse for the adoption of a bill restoring him to his former rank in the army, but if on the other hand he is innocent, if he has been suffering all these years a punish ment which he did not deserve, if the Schofield commission was right in exon erating him and the president was jus tified in giving him the so-called pardon what excuse can the committee find for refusing to recommend the payment of the money which Porter has hitherto by act of monumental injustice been pre vented from receiving ?" The trial and conviction in the Uni ted States Court at Xew York, before Judge Benedict, of General Curtis, the Treasurer of the Republican State Com mittee of New York, with the circum stances attending the trial, afford ma terial tor the consideration of politicians and those interested in the study of pol itics. It is the first case of the kind ever taken into court. The law which is found to have been violated is an en actment of Congress of 176, and forbids any executive officer or employees of the United States not appointed by the President, witb the advice and consent of the Senate, to receive from or give to any other officer or employes of the Uni ted States any money or any other thing of value for political purposes. Curtis was the selected agent to apply the screws to Government employes in the Custom House. He did a good stroke of business for his party, but the Civil Service Reformers got on his trail with the result stated. SrMMiK Excursion Guide. The Penn sylvania Railroad Company has Issued an elaborate pamphlet showing the vaiious ex cursion routes which will be open to travel lers during the summer season commencing yesterday. The work is a model of typo graphical beauty. It contains an elegant map of the great network of rails which the Pennsylvania Road operates and coutrols, and points out valuable routes to resorts by the seaside, mountains and lakes. !The book aims to describe each and every place of im portance on the line of the road, giving pop ulation, peculiar advantages, character of hotels and such other information as is use ful jo tourists. HEABTILT RECOJtJf ENDED. Don't condemn a good thing because you have been deceived by worthless nostrums, Parker's Ginger Tonic has cured many in this section of nervens disorders, and w re commend it heartily to such sufferer. yi. TnE Independent Rett-bttcan Platform. The Republicans of Penn sylvania who will not surrender their political rights and who maintain the exercise of their own conscience and judgment concerning public affairs, as sembled in State convention at Harris burg on Wednesday of last week and made the following declaration of their principles and purposes : First. We declare our attachment to the principles of the Republican party freedom, union, nationality, equal rights before the law, ma'mtainance of the public faith, pro tection to home industry and we demand that the record which has been so nobly made shall be wisely and fearlessly perpetua ted. Second. We declare that the nomination and election of James A. Garfield to the Presidency signiried to us the triumph of a true reform Id the Civil Service and of an en larged liberty of action for the masses of the Republican party in the nomination of their candidates and the conduct of their party affairs, and we deplore the overwhelming evidence presented to us in Pennsylvania that the calamity of his assassination has been followed by the overthrow of these re forms in the hands of his successor. Third. We denounce the praetice of levy ing assessments and demanding contribu tions for party uses from public officials. We denounce severally and collectively the evils and corruptions which accompany the con duct of the government as a 'spoils system,' and which are inseparable from such a meth od of administration ; and we denounce the system of "boss rule" and machine control, which, when tamely endured, makes leaders into autocrats and reduces the mass of the citizens into political bondage. Fourth. We declare our purpose to take np the work which fell when Garfield fell ; we demand in place of the '-spoils system" the reformation of the civil service hy law, so the appointive places therin may be free ly open to all fit and meritorious citizens, and removals shall be only for good and sufficient public cause ; we demand, instead of the prostitution of the public service to private uses, its recognition as a high and honorable trust, to be administered for the people's benefit, with efficiency, economy and inte grity ; we demand, instead of the insolence, the proscription and the tyranny of 'bossisin' and "machine" rule, the free and conscien tious exercise of private judgement in polit ical affairs, and the faithful discharge, by those who assume representative trusts, of the expressed will of the people. Fifth. We declare in favor of the following party reforms : First, that delegates to State Conventions shall be chosen by the people in the'mannerin which candidates for the) Gen eral Assembly are nominated ; second, that repiesentation in the State Convention shall be by counties and shall be apportioned ac cording to their Republican vote ; third, that State Conventions shall not be held without at least sixty days notice nor earlier than the second Wednesday of July, except in Presi dential years; fourth, that those Republi cans who voted for the Republican candidate for President at the Presidential election next preceding shall be entitled to join In the choice of delegates to the State and Na tional Conventions. Business and Politics. The pro posed nomination of John War.amaker, for Congressman-at-large on tht Repub lican State ticket, has led to the saying of some very foolish things by the Re publican politicians with regard to such a nomination. One of these is that the newspapers which he patronizes so liber ally with his advertisements would not dare to oppose him lest he withdraw his patronage. While we have no sort of doubt that, as as a candidate, Mr. Wan amaker's high enterprise as a business man, and his good personal character would exempt him from the scurrilous warfare which is too often waged in the heat of a campaign, he would very soon discover that the honest newspapers of Pennsylvania do not sell their principles with their advertising columns, and that as a representative of the Cameron pow er in State politics he would encounter just as vigorous opposition as that pow er merits. Another suggestion is that Mr, Wanamaker's nomination would force all the small store keepers in the city and in the State to vote against him, and maybe against the whole tic ket. To which the answer is made, "and if it does, all the ministers will be with him in their congregations and in preaching from their pulpits." Equ ally narrow-minded and senseless is each of these suggestions. The "small storekeepers" will do well to stick to their business and the preachers to their text. The kind of men who would be influenced by such consideration for or against Mr. Wanamaker are not poten tial. The day for that sort of thing is past. Mr, Cameron may play the fool with the "business interests" of the State, but it is the privilege of a United States Senator to be the biggest fool in the commonwealth. Lancasttr Intelli gencer. The order to stand and deliver has al ready gone out to the Federal office- j holders from the Republican Congress- j lonai committee. A lithographed cir cular has been sent the Philadelphia Timrs by a Postmaster whose salary doesn't half pay the cost of his boarding, and it calls upon him to mane a prompt and favorable response to this letter by bank check, draft, or postal money or der, payable to the order of Jay A. Hub be'.!, P. O. Lock-box 589,' Washington, D. C. One important paragraph of the circular contains the assurance that "such voluntary contributions from per sons employed in the service of the Uni ted States, will not be objected to in any official quarter." As Field Mar shall Cooper is forbidden Jby his State platform to levy or collect assessments from office-holders, the Congressional Committee will have a clear field for the old game of political robbery. Pro bably Cooper will stand aside, let the Congressional Committee collect the party tithes and then draw on Washing ton for his share of the plunder. Gov. Hott speaks rather plainly of the prospects of the Republican party unless something is done and done vig orously and quickly. Said the Govern or : "I saw this coming last ;fall, and gave a timely warning, but I was pooh-poohed and the idea ridiculed. There is more behind this than a casual observer would think. Those who could always be relied upon here tofore have stopped short. The real force is not manifest. There are many who do not make public and loud professions of their intentions who willquietly voteagainst what they call the machine, and it is a hard mat ter to argue with such men. Their minds are made np." The Governor would not express a suggestion as to the best course to pur sue for a reuniting of the factions, but seemed to be of the opinion that if the Republican party sustained a good lick ing this fall it would be all the better for it in 184. Camerox declares for war to the bit ter end against the Independents, and pooh-oohs the idea of compromise. The Independents talk as boldly, and their leading newspaper, the Philadelphia Telegraph, gays of the bosses : See that their defeat is accomplished un less they can beguile the Independents into another treaty of peace. Possibly that is what they are now scheming and planing, and that is what the independents must be wary against They ventured once into the snare of the wily bosses. They should pro fit by their experience, and not repeat their blunder. By the voice of the Republican press of the country their position is declar ed just and impregnable. Let them keep it so. They are now the Republican party; the bosses are outside of it on the defense. There let them remain until their absolute submission is made their submission to the supremacy of the will of the majority. DELICATE rESIALES. The exactness of society, added to the cares of maternity and the household, have tested beyond endurance the frail constitu tions which have been granted the majority of women. To combat this tendency to pre mature decline, no remedy in the world pos sesses the nourishing and strengthening pro perties of MALT BITTERS. Thev enrich the blood, perfect digestion, stimulate the liver and kidneys, arrest ulcerative weak nesses, and purify and vitalize every funo tiou of the female systtm. SEWS A5D OTHER 0T1NGS. For lame back, side, or chest, ue Shi loh's Porous Plaster. Pries 25 cents. At James' drug store. Croup, Whooping Cough and Bronchitis immediately relieved by Shiloh's Cure. At James' drug store. Mr. Joseph Smith, of Chester, by one haul of his seine In the Jersey channel on Saturday secured 15,000 herring. Shiloh's Cough and Consumption Cure is sold by us oa a guarantee. It cures con sumption. At James' drug store. Mrs. Mary Ann Hamilton, aged 62 years, committed suicide in Pittsburgh on Saturday by cutting her throat. She had been made insane by the prospect of losing some prop erty. Physicians say it combines all the desid erata of every ferruginous tonic prescribed by every school of medicine. Brown's Iron Bitters. The people of Sharonville, Ohio, were surprised when Mc Bride, aged 40, married Mrs. Rosser, aged 78, but not when he dis appeared with her $'2,.'00. During a fit of temporary insanity Thos . Rector, a prominent citizen of New Tacama, W. T., on Monday last fatally shot his wife and then blew out his own brains. Shiloh's Vitalizer is what you need for constipation, loss of appetite, dizziness, and all symptoms of dyspepsia. Price 10 and 75 cent per bottle. At James' drug store. At Wetumpka, Ala., two colored girls aged 13 and 15 years, were sentenced on Monday last to imprisonment for life for fa tally poisoning a little girl Darned Maria Ware. Willie Haley, 11 years old. of Pownal, Vt., died on Saturday from the effect of three spoonfuls of Paris green taken to kill himself. His father committed suicide about a year ago. The Philadelphia Pret Is the only Re publican journal in the State with soul big enough to support the Regular and Inde pendent tickets, not day about, but every day as it were. A wood dealer advises'farmers to pile the split article with the bark up By so doing the bark adheres to the wood, and becomes an item of some importance when the farmer cords it up for the market. Decoration day was generally observed as a holiday throughout the country. At Gettysburg General Hawlpy, of Connecticut, delivered the oration and ex-Secretary Blaine also delivered a short speech. Sandy Matthews, a nsgro who Is to be hanged at Memphis to-day, has developed a strange condition, being now nearly para lyzed from nervous excitement, and is only kept alive by the constant administration of stimulants. Cardinal McCabe, of Dublin, referring to the addresses after his enthronement as car dinal on Sunday last, expressed his belief , that in spite of the ominous shadow now cast on Ireland there was yet a bright future in : store for her. j On Sunday of last week Mrs. Eva Slay- i ton, of Brandford, quarrelled with her moth- j er, a Mrs. Case. The mother knocked the j daughter down and tramped upon her. On Friday Mrs. Slayton died ot peritonitis, caus- j ed by blows on her stomach. Mrs. Case has j been ordered under arrest. ; Woodsmen at Bannerville, Mifflin coun- j ty, recently felled a tree from which scamp- j ered three young bears weighing about one j hundred pounds each. The unfortunate ! cubs were all killed after the men recovered i from the demoralization caused by their sud- den and unlooked-for appearance. ! Nellie Herd was brutally murdered by j her husband. Major Reed, near Greensboro, j N C, on Saturday. The two daughters ! heaid their niother'sereaming down at the j spring and found her on the ground and their : father beatingher. They pulled him off, but the woman died in a few minutes, Major ! Keed is in jail. I In Mt. Sterling, Ky., Buck Hampton and ' jonn Henry Tongnt a duel on horsebacK. each firing and hitting the other uatil all the chambers of the pistols were discharged. They then clinched and clubbed each other with their weapons until they fell to the ground. Hampton is dead and Henry is mortally wounded. A Cincinnati Times-Star special from Springfield, Ohio, says : A man named Kitz miiler, becoming enraged at his daughter for keeping company with a man whom he dis approved, drew a revolver and shot her dead on Mondav morning. He narrowly escaped lynching at the hands of his neighbors before he was taken to Jail. Bishop Wigeer. of Newark, X. J., has pronounced the play of the "Two Orphans" immoral, because a Sister of Charity tells a lie and justifies the act on the ground that it is resorted to for a good purpose. He for bids its representation by any Catholic so ciety in the Diocese of Newark. A special report comes from Lancaster Landing, 111., that Miltod Clifford, whose wife recently bore twins, strangled them in their cradle, find then burled them in it. He left his wife alone inja very critical con - j dition for several houis and reported what he had done, adding that he hoped she was I dead. He then fled. A large force is scour- j ing the country. I The difference between the United j States government and the relatives of John ! J. Lewis, who died some years ago after making the government his heir, have been i amicably adjusted and the United States I come into a snug little fortune of ?!00,000. J In accordance with the provisions of the will . the amount will be applied to the reduction ! ot the public debt. I The colony of thrifty Swiss recently es tablished near Mount Airy, Ga., is as pros perous and happy as there" was every reason i to suppose it would be. It now comprises ' twenty families, and several more are ex- j pected soon. Each family brought from ?2,- i 000 to ?.".000, and now owns a farm which, in I comparison ;with the scanty measures of I Switzerland, seems like a kingdom. ! Jacob Testerman has been arrested at j Tiney Creek, N. C, for the murder of his j daughter, aged j years. Testerman and sev- , eral friends had been drinking at his Vesi- j dence on Sunday night and were standing at the doorway, when one of the party told Testerman that his daughter had taken some I of his whiskey. He rushed Into the house. 1 pulled her out of bed and kick ed her to ! death. ! On last Saturday afternoon Anthony Campbell was enaaged in repairing one of me iracKs or me rennsyivania Kaiiroad, in West Philadelphia, when an express train came up. Campbell carelessly rested one end of his crow bar on the track. The wheels struck the crowbar and it whirled out of Campbell's hands and striking him on the head brained him. He lived but a few min utes after the accident. The Paris Voltaire publishes a commu nication from a Nihilist correspondent who. it says, has always foretold with accuracy Nihilistic performances, explaining the Thov nix Park assassinations as the work of a new Irish political secret society, which has no relation to the Land League, Home Rulers or Fenians, and is devoted to the task of freeing Ireland from English rule by a sys tem of murders that will terrorize it out of the country. The death of a woman from starvation at Sandwich, 111., has drawn attention to the singular case of a father, mother, and son, all insane with the same delusion. Their name was Lay. The mother believed that her son was born to be a savior of mankind, and he grew up in that fait!;, becoming a preacher of a kind of Adyentism. The father became as wild as the rest, and lately, when Mrs. Lay began a fast of forty days both men en. couraRed her to persevere. The N. T. World of Monday publishes full and extensive reports of the crop pros pects from all sections of the country. The cereals are doing well, and the acreage plant ed is far greater than that of last year. All other crops are most promising, and espec ially is there reason to expect an increased production of cotton. In the Southwest the outlook for the cattle trade is most cheerful, and it is expected that beef will be much cheaper two weeks hence. News has been received of a terrible tragedv near Miltord, two hundred miles southwest of Salt i.ake City. John A. Smyth, an old ranchman from California, quarreled with his wife, and seizing a double barreled shot gun fired at her twice, both shots Uking effect He then coolly reloaded the weapon, went out doors, fastened a string to the trigger, placed t'.ie muzzle against his breast, and fired six navy bullets into his liver, He died two hours afterward. The Burlington (Vt.) Free Pre. says that a furious wind passed over Evansville recently. There was a roaring sound high in the air, while near the surface of tte earth, everything was quiet. At one place near the river tha edd v descended, picked some planks off a long bridge, and carried them several rods away. The next day, near Barton Mountain, there was a continuous shower of dry leaves, which fell out of aclear sky from a great height. It is supposed that they had been caught up by the whirlwind. Two sisters were engaged to be simulta neously married at Lafayette, Ind. Their affianced husbands came to town on the morning of the day set for the double wed ding, and called at the house. The mother went to awaken thegiils, and found the room empty, their wardrobe gone, and a letter 6aylug that they had run away to avoid mat rimony. Two "weeks later they were found in St. Louts, sick from continual drunken ness, and one bruised by a fight with a boon companion. Their exploit is singular, as they had been gently reared, and the bride grooms from whom they fled were of their own choosing. The Greensbnrg Democrat says it is ru mored that a charge will be preferred at the August term of conrt against Jas. S. Ward, and, if possible, have him tried for the mur der of Ellen Means, sister of Mar? Means, on which case he was convicted of murder in the second degree at the present term of court. It is claimed the Commonwealth will be able to produce stronger evidence in the latter than they did in the former case. The time for a motion for a new trial in the case on which he was convicted has expired, and he will now have to accept the situation. A divorce suit was on trial at Mount Vernon. 111. The parties were Mr. and Mrs. Moore, aged ft3 and S4. The evidence had all been put in, showing that the "incompat ibility of temper" for which the wife demand ed a separation arose from an old and origi nally trivial quarrel. A recess was taken, after which the lawyers were to sum up : but in the mean time a committee of neighbors brought about a reconciliation, the case was dropped, the Judge congratulated the hus band and wife, who had not previously spo ken to each other in four years, and thry went home to a merry making which their nine children had prepared. An amusing instance of English ignor ance of America, says the Pittsburgh Post, was displayed in Wednesday's debate when Sir Stafford Northcote wssured the House that no one in America had any sympathy with the Irish "except the Stalwart politf cians who had lost their hold on the country." The leader of the conservatives in the Lower House went on to describe General Grant as "an extinct volcano now engaged in raising compauies. It is probably true the "Stal wart politicianns have lost their hold," but they happen to be the class who have the least sympathy for Ireland. Grantcan't rate very high in England now, when he is set down as "an extinct volcano." Try him with a gift The iuvention of an electrical apparatus by a priest of Ravenna, named Raraglia, is a most important one, and should receive at tention from builders as well as all who have the management of theatres, churches, halls, or other public places. The invention can be set in operation by simply pressing a but ton, and by which the doors of a large build ing can be instantaneously opened. The apparatus was tried at the Alighieri Theatre, in Ravenna, with the most satisfactory re sult All the nine doors opened simultane ously, as if through some spiritual agency. The inventor hopes to improve his apparatus, so that should a fire break out on the stage of a theatre the rise in temperature would itself set the machinery in motion. A horribleTruurder, committed at Beton plantation, eighteen miles below Wilming ton, N. C, is reported. Mrs. Bi-lla Jones, a young and pretty widow, and DaviP Sikes have been living together as man and wife for some months. A few days ago another suitor appeared and endeavored to ingratiate himself in the good graces of the young wid ow. Sikes fearing that he would be displaced by the more comely lover, for several days has been untiring in his demands for the wo man to marry him. For some reason the woman persistently refused. Sikes became jealous and angry, and white she was ir. her house with no one with her but a littli child caught her and cut her throat from ear to ear. The woman fell to the floor and Sikes then placed the child on its mother's breast and left. When the murdered worn an was found the child was asleep on her bod v. A terrible accident, resulting in the" death of three men and the maiming of several others, occurred about 9 o'clock Saturday morning at Stern's meeting house, situated in Rapho township, about four miles north of the borough of Mount Joy, Lancaster county. The religious sect known as Dunkards were about raising the framework of a new meet ing house, and the "raising," as is usual on such occasions, attracted a large crowd, some of whom were there to assist and others as lookers-on. The framework of the first story was got into position without accident, but in putting up the timbers of the second story some ot the lower timbers gave way and the whole structure fell with a crash, burying beneath the ruins not less than fifty men, a dozen of whom were more or less" iniured, ome of them fatally. The following named have died of their injuries : John Slienk, widower, aged about oT years ; Samuel Wit moyer, aged r0 years. Rrs Cvkr and Killed On last Friday evening, while Engineer Vestfall was on his return trip down the mountain, he observed a man on the south track at or near Scotch run, a short distance from Mc;arvey's sta tion, anrl on going ahead n look at the pros trate form he discovered that the man whs dead. The victim looked to be about 3" or 40 years of ape aud was dressed like a labor ing man, wearingoveralls and large brogans. lis entrails were protruding troro a large hole in his side and his abdomen was squeezed out so flatly that it is thought that the wheels passed over him about the mid dle. His left arm was unmistakably rnn over and cut off. There was nothing about the man's clothes to indicate who he was. A brakemaa by the name of Troy identified the remains as those of a man wiioni he had put off a freight train at (iallitzin about six o'clock, lie said he found three men on the train, all more or less drnnk. He put two of them off, but the other was too drunk to be put off at that point and he allowed him to ride as far as Gallitzin. Troy's train was followed by a stock train, and Engineer Westfall's engine was the next thing that came down the mountain. It is probable that after the stranger had been put off the train he got on the one following and being stupid from drink fell off and was run over. Altoona Sunday Morning. ROSE fOI.l ATVI HAT FEVF.K. Messrs. White it BrrtniCK. Druggists, Ithaca, N. T. I can recommend Ely's Cream Balm to relieve all persons suffering from Rose Cold and Hay Fever. I have leen a great sufferer from these complaints; by us ing thj Balm have had great relief. I have recommended it to many of my friends for Catarrh, and in all cases where they have used the Balm freely have been cured. T. Kenset, Dry Joods'Merchant, Ithaca, N". Y. Messrs. Vm I!n fc Sons, Druggists, Xew Brunswick, X. J. Since boyhood I have been troubled with Catarrh and Hay rever, and have been unable to obtain per manent relief until I used Ely's Cream Balm, which has cured me. After a few days' use I could sleep all night. E. L. Clickeser, New Brunswick, N'. J. Frice 50 cents. App'l nostril with tittlefinyer. now to Cook Bice. Rice is Vv-oming a much more popular article of food than here- j tofore. It is frequently substituted for po- I tatoes at the chief meal of the day, loing J more nutritious and mncn more readily di gested. At its present cost, it is relatively cheaper than potatoes, oatmeal or grain-grits of any kind. In preparing it only just enough cold water should be poured on to prevent the rice from burning at the bottom of the pot, which shouid have a close-fitting cover, and witn a moderate fne the rice is steamed rather than boiled until it is nearly done ; then the cover is taken off, the sur plus steam and moisture allowed to escape, and the rice turns out a mass of snow white kernals, each separate from the other, and much t uperior to the water-soaked article. ADVKE TO COSSIMPTITES. On the appearance of the first symptoms as general debility, loss of appetite, pa. lor, chilly sensations, followed by nieht sweats and congh prompt measure for relief should be taken. Consumption is scrofulous dis ease of the lunfcs : theiefore use the great anti-scrofula, or blood-purifier and strength restorer Dr. Pierce's "tiolden Medical Dis covery." Superior to cod liver oil as a nu tritive, and unsurpassed as a pectoral. For weak lungs, spitting of blood, and kindred affections, it has no equal. Sold by drug gists the world over. For Dr. Pierce's pamphlet on Consumption, send two stamps to World's Dispensary Medical Associ ation, Buffalo, N. Y. It is a very remarkable coincidence that Major Duff and Major Merrick, who are as sociated on the Independent Republican tic ket, each lost a leg while in command ;of a regiment In the assault upon Petersburg, on June IS, 14. They were In different com mands and have sine lived in different parts of the State, each making his way into prom inence by his own ability, so that it was an entirely unpremeditated coincidence that broueht them together recently on the plat form at Horticultural Hail, Philadelphia. Grape Cure for Dropsy and Rheum.. TTSM. Dropsical and Rheumatic persons tvnd the nee of Sneer's Port (Jrape Wine, of New Jersey, and the Wine Bitters, of incalculable benefit. Their purity and valuable proper ties have given them a wide reputation among physicians throughout this country and Eu rope. This wine took the highest piemium at the late Centennial. It is excellent for weary and debilitated females. For sale at James' drug store, Ebensbur. "It acts like magic," was tle remark of a farmer who used Phenol Son-iq tie. '-i drove my mowing machine into a bees' nest, and was stung severely, bu by the prompt use of the Phenol, I was relieved of pain in stantly." For sale bv druggists and general storekeepers. See advertisement. The Cassel farm, in Upper Salfnrd Montgomery county, has been in the family from which it Uk.es its name for ISO years. A Surgical MarTel. SCRYTTAL, OF A MAS TSTO WHOcK riHAJS A BRF.ECH-riX HID PASSED. There appeared In the rotunda of the Windsor Hotel last night, s.irs the Denver Tri'jum of recent date, a gentleman who at tracted no little attention and comment. Not hat he was rxld in make-up or eccentric in demeanor, but because he brre on his forehead the ghastly mark of a miraculous escape from death. Everybody who noticed the long red line looked a second and third time, and looking, suggested that the man had something interesting In his history. An inquiry at the desk revealed the fa"t that he was a New York journalist, the editor of the (raxtronomi.it, and that his name whs John J. Kenipster. Upon solicitation Mr. Kempster told a reporter the story of the wound. It occurred while he was duck-shooting in New Jersey on the 2?d of SpUtuter. is). Said Mr. Kempster : "I wan.lrrM Into th mrlic Nnt a mll Tid a lialt fr.im the hltlo vUlmrf n.1 firmllv obtalnrd a irofvi ght at flwfc or i1tiok wM-h wpr .wirn mine in a fhfiimw Ir.neh. 1 rr-1, rnvl ht was the In" 1 remcnil'erad .r nmr time. Khm I re roTPH'd eonclmines 1 w lymij flat upon tnr back, tlie mn bmtniir ilown on me. 1 k tic that 1 wa? wniii?it, but lr mnny m'ntiia e.m!ii not Im agine where the Inmry w. Hettf r '-ne rme to me flowly and with It ftrenirth. I 1e!t .niet!i!n tri.-klinic 1owq is? ffirrheail, and I'littinir up ir.y han.l tourhe.l a thin ct.atiiie that proved to be nil Hitler blood And brains. Then I appreciated that the run had exploded or dlrhared it'eli ttirouif h the breecb. and that aomethina had pen etrated my forehead. I ratted my band a peeond time, and felt the tnaller end of a br-eohpin pro. trudinic from my head. 1 Immediately thouirht all mnn up. and rommenred to make mv pea with fod in prayer. I icrcw ptronicer and mora concioii of my condition, however, and In the hope of aeourlnij tarsioal aid that nlthl nremt lifa. I ttrnifvted to my feet. A h-atne?. as if mir brain raity wa loaded with lead, wan a'l that 1 suffered. Kvary'hfntr ai'feared ntnril to me: the trees, the ahruohary and the marshe. and en the path I had taken wa distinct to my mind. 1 who even thonifhtiul enouirh to pick up the broken Bun and ermnine It. The fto k wag !'parted from the barrels imbed led In in brain ws the absent hreedipln. 'I walked back to the Tillafe. Tt eecmed an ate before. I jrot there, the Invisible weight on my head bendmif my knees and berin me to the ground. I rarer reie 1 . tf emif h . but kept on. with only a raicue hope for life ene.mrairinit me. W hen I arrived at tha hot -i wbre 1 w.i tppintho people, 'earn me. fled n if a ithoat were up proachlnn turomrh the ri.iyl.-K lit. When 1 told tiie ?ierk to go for a surgeon lie Mood palsied. I errew mad and fhouteCat him to find a rnrarnon or 1 would dre, and then I fell t the rioi.r pe"hlei. I wa attain uncunctoni until the operation bad been performed and the iron pin wa taknfr"tn off my brain. It wn a bunirilnir piece of work, two country pbyiei m. who knew an nmrh a'cut urrery aa I do of Choctaw, baeklnif and hrwina; and fawlna: my bead until they had opened it, as von ran see. mote than two arid a hall inches Then I was put on the train and sent to New Y.rk. t'ntil rjnconciousne-- eame ta my relief aain 1 was in the mot terrible aaony. my brain achlhr as thouiih a thousand ri:nrirrs were po-rcui It. 1 remember betnir plared In the hospital amiti!an"e : the remarks of bystander that 1 cou d not live: the jo'tine ride 'hrouh the tTt-eets, the rlnninic of the ambulance bell, wbieh ?ound"d like a aeath knell to me. and af'er that all w- blank. It was several days bef,.re 1 airain came to. and to well I recollect the first ijnery 1 made to the .--t.r. 'Waa there anr probability that mv life would be safe?' Kur months afterward I was onre more at the desk grinding awav as it mv brains were in tact." Where the breechpin entered Mr. Kemp ster's head, there is a ptce of about a half inch in diameter where the etiticle touches the brain and moves with each pulsation of the organ. A cutting t;f the skin would ex pose the brain. ; Wl MIT LEtl IIAIK Kf STOKER. It Is entirely different from all c tl.er. it Is as clear as water, and. lt name indicates. Is a per , feet Veicettblc llir Kestoter. 1 1 w 1 11 itn med i.ite 1 It free the h:d from all dandruff. retore urnv j lialr to Its natural color, and produce a new irrnwth where it has fallen oil. It docs nut in tnr manner j alteet the health, which Sulphur. Nnirar'ot I,ead, and Nitrate of Silver pr-'par-.t ion' liavnjdmie.. It : will change liirht or faded hair in a few davs to a i beautiful iclossv brown. Ask yuurdrnusrist lor It. I Kieh bo'tle warranted. Smith. Ki.ink & "n.. Wholesale Airents. I'hiladelhia. and t". . fniT : tkxtos. New York. j6--.:.-!y. PERSONAL! TO JIW OSI.T1 ThkVostic Hii.t Co., Marshall. Mich., will send I'n. " T'vt's Cki.f.khtiii KLtcrrn Vi.iTAir Belts jsh Hkitp.ii- A rn.i inns on trial fOrthir ty day to men (ye'intj or oldl wtio are aftl'cted with Norvoiu Debility. Kot Vitality and Mm hood, and kindred trouMes. K-uarantocinic spee.lv and complete rst. .ration "f he i'th and manly vi or. A1 dress a above. N. B. . . No r-It i I ncur-ed, as thirty d.ivi trial is allowed. 5-2 ,-6 i n. j sag Mr. Albert Klnz-burv. Kerne. N. II.. troubled with bad humor on han-l and luck, eiued by -lead poisininif. file is a painKr) At times it ! would trik out. rra'-k open, and the skin separate j from the fleh in lari:e pic es. causing i:re.it eon- j tinual itehinif and stini:iii. Uti-.-ha.-r I yciir rem- ' e lies ; ued t't'Tict it.s Kk-hlvknt internally and ! I'lTUTK and riTliTRA S.jap e it i-rnn 1 1 v. and in i less than three months effected a complete rnre. and haa not been troubled ?me. t 'orr-.t-orated by Billiard X Fisher, ltrupeists, Kecne, N. H. MOTHER PICII FROM IT. J. W. Adams. Newark. Ohio. ays: t'ntlrura. Kemedies are the frraatest medicines on earth. Had the worst ease salt rheum in this county. M v mother had it twenty years, and In fact died froia it. I believe t'uticura would have aved herl.fe. My arms, breast and head were covered for three years, which nothing relieved or cured until I n ed the t'uticnra He-solvent (blood purifier) internally and Cutirura and futicura Soap externally.' rsoniAs. II. K. farpenter. K.s.i.. H"ndrson. N. T.. enred of Isf,rins or I..eprosy, .f twenty year-. s'andmir. I by the Citiitpa Kr.s"LVKNT internally nn 1 C"rn- j ri r.K and i'ithth soap externallv. n,e most wonderful case on record, t ure oen ibe l to rei. re a loslice ot the pence and prominent eitirens. Ail . afflieted with It'-hinir and s.-:i!y diseases Miould ! send to ns f..r this testimonial ia fjil. I RAI.T RUEEM. ' Those who loive experienced the torments of ; Salt Kheum can appreciate thenjrony 1 endured lor j years, tintil cored by the Ci ti.tri Kf:-i.yftt ' internally and t'r-rirt.a and CrticrRA So.spes- j ternally." Mrs. W m. I'ksmwitos, Sharon. V. is. cmrrRA j and "t Tti tTtA Snip externally and CrTliTRA IJr soltet 'iiternally wiil positively cure every site- ! cies of Humor, fn.in a Common I'imple to S roiu- la. I'rice of "frier"" a. smnll bote-. ."c larire ! lirire boxes. $1.09. t "t'Ticr r a K koi.vkt. fl per bottle. "i"Tici it A Sor. 'J-"c. : "t"Tt i iia Sbav Io Soap. I.7-. Sold bv all drotriisTs. Iepot. WEEKS k I'liIlKK. H iston, Mass. ray Bin Sanford's Radical Cure. A sinic'e doe Insfintlv relieves the mot rbdent Sneeiinit or Head "olds. clears the bead as by raairic. stops watery discharges from the nose and eyes, prevents rinicinit noises in the head, cures Nervous Heidaehe ami subdues Chills and Kever. In t'hronls i 'atarrli it cleanses the nasal passaire ol foul mnens, restorei the senses of sineil. tate and hearinit when effected, frees the head, thront and bronchial tubes ot offensive matter sweeu-na and purifies the breath. Mops the enutth and ar rests the pnigresi of catarrh towards consumption. One bottle Kadical Cure, one box Catarrhal Sol vent bp.! one lr. Sanford's Inbater. tn one pack . of all druiritlsts. tor 1. A"k f..r SAHp'.Rn e Kaoical, Ci-kk. WF.KKSaPiri fKK Ho-ton lOO Tixt-ss wopk epTFr-r-T"AL than anv other plaster or electric hatterv for pain or and weHkaessol the t.init J-iver. Kolnevsand frinarv o-ijans. Partial ps.a:v,s Ivheunjatt-m. Nenralia Hysteria, Female Weakness' Nervous fains and Weak Besse. Malaria m..1 Kever end Aene. f "rice SSSc. Sold everywhere. Swr-dNh Inyt rovvdtr Kills Potato Iugs Ami all TrouMtome Vermin. It will ihorouuhly exterminate Koashes Ant Red Rati, Flo!, lAcn. Moths, Tobacco atid Cot ton " orms. fce. It is safe. snre. eleanlv and cbear.. It will not poison animals orwowls. Sami.le pack age bv mail 30 cents, post-paid. Stamps t'.fcer, '...11 rrea. treats Wanted. ddreJ.4s l?;.?l',yHTny' kmllhnrbl Ktreet, E-lttalxtl-Kh, , M-.M.-3U1 cresceWTujg This brand of Tobacco, thonah bot a srort time on the market, is already the f tvorite with many rhewers. Made from selected leaf and wi'h best sweetening. It Is a capital art ele and specially nited to the Pennsylvania taste Eur s'e bv all dealers. Send for sample to the manufacturers. C. A. JACK MO xc A CO., rtenbnrt, Ta. QQft 1,r w"k n made tn any l.trwlitv. OOl " SoajMbiriK entiyetv rew for aaenta R.x oatflt tree., ft. W. 1R ktHia CO., Bo.vjo, Ms. LIS, Bewan 77-1 r t raui CAPCiNE PLASTEF: HAVE DEEN And their excel Vtred by worthless nv-v Public are caution. i ing masters havu..; s: ing tinmes. See t' . C-A-P-C I-JT-E is corn--; Benson's Cape! Porous I ; Z " ! Aro tho only in.j revr made m Plas One is worth i: of any other kir. J. Will positively err- s remedies will i.r t t -Prire p.- Beware of eher.T) I : . witti lead poisons. SEABURY 4 ,ii :at.::fa A"t irr iti m?-:v T IrEAD'S Med rat(.j fov, a-.v- t- tnnii.!.rw;.r.wa;. , Ftri. Including- fuh- l;amm. rint , , " ikK.. and Music, in 6- J l . i v, " This Oro th ?"ht i The I'atmtt, m !.- t , r- i-'m 27 Stops, 10 Bets Res:: . i Focn to advance to J VI' . ' -J-t w : Bank I'mft. pt-WTce. fr'.-. . ?: letter, r-.ae-l and ; : : ... I'elay. CarMeeue F-ee. - c 13 s tl i-3 la E 1 r1! C' f i - - , if. 4 !M vy.; -i: jf 'Mvi- m l Ti x. ; TV rM.Ma ft dyspepsia or mdi :;.: ajviiied. l.r ti.ts s.:ke and n enial cmf St. ms"h H.'t r-. 1. lcate r.-n-uti.t n X--and its ret..rs;:e every where. di-K-.--fed 1 1 . . u. -rs .-r C' -O. 7 s:i'et and inyrl r; ; . E. r sb ;c by all I T'u HHFMF COM KM Till: I ' POri L1KI1V '! AllcocVs Porous FLk Because they have j rovt : -the Best External Krm-'u ed. They will nue n. conzbs, rheumatism, !:;;:--any local pains. Applied to the srn'i r" they are infallitbV in TVl NERVOUS DEinLlTV. ; : : ' troubles; to the pit f they are a sure cure f-r 1 Vv and LIVER CoMFLAINT. ALLCOCK'S P OS PL ASTERS are j prant, and quick t cure, f imitations that Wi?T zri ALLCOCK'S, the tn!y (;' - ' riaster. C atarrHE a. 7 rn . r wx . jt l- .f -Jit ft- Writ: .. . -1 - . . HAY-FEVER I.o-triN. On tc-e-M ' ' " v f I.V S l.r A , , i M wch IT. 1--e c a V- 5ui7 Heading as- HiSRrvr rmu rn ,,g "J ani i.rMi,' Also. Nw at 1 See- a-i . , reierenres r-' 1 ' t ; r" it, bctwesa 1 .':'' " ' burh. l'a. MA. 1U Kl J-V. T.,t r B-ttP-seevr tv ' A , .7 ttuwnnirlii'""', At1tua. ei e OrMUMg N.s.r.rr """ ' St . N . ' ( t xT -sy f- - , VasMS UlriH Tori ... v x - : - r KVV-H ...... v " J 1 i