EBENSBURC. PA., FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1832 George Lear, President of the late Republican convention of this State, Is out in another letter, this time to Tom Cooper, chairman of the State commit tee. Lear sa) s in his letter that Cooper had no right to reassemble the old con Tention on the 21st of this month ; that he won't attend it and that a brand new one must be called. He also severely criticises Cameron's dictatorial course and insists that the party can only be saved by the Regular and Independent gfate Committeeseallins a joint conven tion composed of new delegates. Gen Joh:ii Oakiuat.di died at his home on the Island of Caprera, Italy, on Friday in the seventy -fifth year of hi? rv. He was a born agitator and his h life was stormy and full of adventure. The fate of war drove him from Italy in IS 10. and having made his way to this country, he established a tallow candle factory in the vicinity of New York in lol'and conducted it un til 1953. He had a romantic love for liberty, as he understood liberty, and revolution had for him an irresUlable charm. GriTEAr'5 counsel, Charles S. Reed, presented a petition on Friday last to the Supreme Court of the District of Colum bia, asking for a rehearing oi the case on purely technical grounds, the princi ple one being that the indictment alleg es that the death of I'reeident Garfield took place in "Washington, whereas it really took place in Mew Jersey. Mr. Eeed supported the petition in a speech of considerable length. The Court ren dered its decidion on Monday last, re fusing to reopen the case, for the reason that they have exhausted their powers upon it ; that they have heard it patient ly and fairly, and that a reargument would praduce no other conclusion than that arrived at. We suppose that this la the last we shall hear of this case in the Courts during the three weeks yet to Which Guiteau'a life U limited. A J cry was obtained in the Star route cases on yesterday week, and the trial may be said to bo fairiy under way. Judge AVylie gave notice to the counsel engaged on both sides that he intended getting through with the cases by the 4th of July, even if he had to hold a ses sion every night. No sooner had the jury leen sworn than the report was eent all over the country that two, if not three, of their number will never agree to a verdict of guilty. We suppose that this is a purely sensational story, and that if the evidence adduced supports the charge tha verdict will be in accord ance with it. If the art of "fixing'' or "packing" juries was as well under stood in Washington as it was at one time in New York, and as it still is to a certalu extent in Philadelphia, the re sult nii-'ht be as rumor ftrcasts, but we see no reason f.ir doubting the integrity of the jury in t'Ui instance. Michael Da vrrr ash John IMllox left Ireland yesterday for the United States, and expect to reach Boston in time to attend the centennial celebration In that city of Irish Independence, which will be hold on Friday and Saturday of next week. Their stay in this country will ii.- t i'.'' :! beyond two weeks. "Irish Ii. i -t ji.Iciice." or, in other words, a:, i:. -' pen-L-nt Iris'; Legislature was brought iu!lj ty the efforts of lit i;ry rr.a.iu ai 'i lasted only eigh teen e.u fri'ui lf2 to Ii.hi when British gold, placed in the hands of re creant and corrupt Irish agents, pur chased enough of its members to abolish it by sanctioning the legislative union of England and Ireland. In a speech over the fall of the legislative indepen dence of Ireland, Grattan pathetically said : "I ttood by its cradle and follow ed it to its grave." Its resurrection is one of the great aims for which such men as Davitt and IHUonaro now strug gling. The tnreatened great iron strike of the iron workers in Pittsburg and through out the Western States was carried into effect on yesterday week. How lon it will continue it is impossible to tell, as the men arc making arrangements to hold out as loi.g as possible, and tho manufacturers declare their intention not to yield to the demand for an in crease of wages, A careful estimate of the number of strikers iu the it on mills at PKtsburg and all ioints west of that city, fixes it at between forty-five and fifty thousand, and the number of mills closed at one hundred and and twenty nine. Other classes of laborers and es pecially coal miners, have been forced to quit work by the Ft ike, so that the to tal number of all classes now idle will not fall much short of seventy-five thou sand, all of whom are daily losing in wagi.e at least twohundred thousand dol lars. A redeeming feature of the strike is that nowhere has any violence taken rlace, with the exception of some riot ous proceedings in the outskirts of Chi cago.? Tv.r. republican press have persistent ly charged against Gov. Tilderi for months past that he i3 engaged in all manner of political intrigue to make himself the Democratic candidate for Governor of New York at tho ensuing election, a. a stepping-stone, if elected, to his nomination for the Presidency in 1?-1. The men who attribute these am bitious purposes to Mr. Tilden know of course that they are entirely un warrant e, but it suits their nature to keep up a lying warfare against the man who in 1S7-5 wa3 endorsed for the Presidency y a conjority of the American people, tut who was cheated out of the "office ty the mpjt infamous conspiracy of the present century. Mr, Tilden has seen proper to dtthie his position, so far aa a desire for oXcv is concerned, by saying to Stillson HutcLins, the editor of the Washington Poi. m reported by that gentleman, that Ik- "would not accept the nomination for Governor for a fee simple to the .v..-.v of Ne vYoik, and that he ha? ro i . r- inler.tiou .f being ft candid it( ' r President in Ik2 I than he has of i , , an applicant for the (hr,ue of )iu),i.'' The Republicans in the Ohio Legis lature last winter passed what is known as the "Pond Liquor Law," a Republi can member named Fond being its au thor. The act required every person en gaging in the liquor traffic to pay annu ally J300, and to execute a heavy bond the terms of which were prescribed in the act, The law in its operation and effect was plainly a license for the sale of liquors, and the question of its con stitutionality was determined by the Supreme Court of the State on Tuesday of last week. The Court decided the law to be unconstitutional, because it is in the nature of a license, the granting of which is expressly prohibited by the State constitution. The difficulty with the Republicans of Ohio under the lead ership of that unrivalled political trim mer, Cov. Foster, is that in their legis lation they always attempt the difficult feat of carrying whiskey and lager beer on one shoulder and cold water on the other. It didn't take the Supreme Court ten minutes to discover that this Fond law was a plain violation of the consti tntion, and yet a Republican Legisla ture deliberately enacted it after a full discussion. "Why ? Because its mem bers were cowards, and instead of de feating it threw the responsibility of do ing so upon the Supreme Court. There is no public question now agitated upon which there is eo "much backing and filling" by members'of State Legisla tures as the liquor question. Their aim is to trim their sails so as to catch the popular breeze. They want to be on the safe side of public opinion, or what they think public opinion is, and, through a craven fear of its terrors, compromise their own honeet convictions on a ques tion of great pubiic policy. Any one who will watch the progress of the pre sent campaign in this State, in regard to the question of which we are ppeak ing, will most likely agree with the In dian who didn't know anything about the devious ways of politicians, but who came to the eonclusiou on general prin ciples that a "white man is very un certain." The New York Legislature, which, when it was elected, had a Democratic majority in each house, but, by a cor rupt bargain between the Tammany Hall members from New York city and the Republicans of the body soon became a hybrid, mongrel concern, with the vi ces of both parents and the virtues of neither, adjourned finally on Friday last One of its plain duties was the passage of a Congressional apportionment bill not an unfair and one-sided bill butone that would do justice to both parties but it adjourned without doing so, after having made a feeble and insincere ef fort in that direction at the heels of the session. A' Legislature organized by such disreputable means could not fail to be controlled by the influence of the lobby for partisan and; corrupt pur poses, and it is not therefore strange that when all other methods failed to prevent final action on a bill in the clos ing hours of the session, the practice was to steal it from the clerks desk and thus effectually dispose of it. The man who above all others is responsible for preventing the Democratic members of the legislature from doing what they were elected to do, and what they inten ded to do. is John Kelly, because with out his advice and counsel the disgrace ful coalition between the Tammany members of the Senate and House, whom he own3 as absolutely as he does his house or horses and the Republicans would never have been formed. The union between Kelly and tho Republi cans seems to ba complete, and we sup pose he will rejieat Lis treachery to the Democracy next November as he did two years ago when he defeated the re election of Governor.Robinson and made it possible for the State to cast its vote for the Republican candidate for Presi dent in 10, which it did and thus de feated Hancock. John Kelly owes all that he is to the Demociatic party, and yet, with ingratitude without a parallel, his sole purpose is to break down its or ganizatioe and hand it over to its ene mies. Bon IxGEtifor.i. delivered he Decor ation day oration at the Academy of Music, in the city of New York. Gen, Grant presided, and Mr. Arthur occu pied a seat on the stage. Beechpr don't seem to have been present, but Grant's friend. Rev. Dr. Newman, was on hand and opened the exercises with prayer. In referring to the civil war and the courage, enthusiasm and devotion of the Union soldiers. Ingersoll spoke of them as having fought, among other things, 'for the destruction of slavery.' That was not the object Abraham Lin coln declared the government had in view in suppressing the rebellion, for every intelligent man in tho country knows that he publicly avowed'that his sole purpose as President was to pre serve tho Union, "without slavery" if he could, but "with slavery" if only hy that meanHthe union of the States could be saved. The destruction of slavery was legitimate result of the war, but it was not one of the original purposes for which it was commenced or for which it was prosecuted. Ingersoll knows this bravely, but it always suits him to dis tort the plain facts of history. Besides this, every Northern man who enlisted in the army would tell him that when he did so it was not for the purpose of putting down slavery, but for the pur pose declared by Lincoln of preserving the Union as established by their fore fathers, Ingersoll may indoctrinate some people with his notions about the non-existence of a hell, but his bold as sertion that the soldiers of the civil war fought "for the destruction of sla very" is a total perversion of the truth of history and will mislead no one who is familiar with the events of the war, up to September, 1S62, immediately af ter the battle of Anteitam, when Mr. Lincoln undertook by his proclamation to declare the slaves free. A MOYFMKKTwas started in Wash ington a short time ago, by the trustees of Gienwood cemetery, to get tho con sent of th legal enstodiaus of the re mains of Thos. Jefferson to their remov al from Moiiticello, Va., to the cemetery aforesaid at tho national capital. The heir.s declare in a letter that under no circuiiis'ancps will thpy permit their re moval from the soot selected by Jeffer--un him st If as their lafct resting-place. BBAPT, DORSEY A5D "THE PARTY.' The prosecution in the Star-route ca ses behave as if it really meant business. Iadictmeuts have been drawn that will told water ; the preparation of the cas es seems to have teu industriously and thoroughly done ; and there is certainly no sign in the opening address of Mr. Bliss of a collusive prosecution. It has been rather more than whisper ed for sometime that President Arthur, having seen the hopelessness of attain ing a second term by the help of Dorsey and Brady, or loaded with their mis deads, has determined to purge himself and the Stalwart section of the party of them and their words, as part of his warning for 1854. He may succeed, by abandoning them to the law, in getting them taken out of politics and put into prisoa. But it is entirely impossible for him to disinfect the Republican party or any section of it from the odium that these men have brought upon it. That these men were public plunder ers was notorious two years ago. Legal proof has been adduced within the last j three months, but it has not strengthen ed tne moral case against them. That a man is generally believed to be a thief is not a legal reason for putting him in prison ; but it is a reason for not givine him any public trusts. Yet the Repub licans kept Brady in the postoffice de partment after everybody knew what he was, and the Republicans put Dorsey at the head of their campaign organization after everybody knew what he was. The party permitted itself to be repre sented by two notorious malefactors who were none the less notorious malefactors for being as yet unconvicted. The treatment of the Star-route ques tion by the half-breed faction is exem plified by General Garfield's letter to "Dear Hubbell," expressing the hope that .Brady would give to the Republi can cause of the money he had stolen from the taxpayers, Brady it is said, insisted upon this request before giving of his booty, and Brady not unnatural ly interpreted this request as a promise of immunity if Gariiold should be elec ted. The stalwart treatment of the Star route question is exempli tied by the ban quet to Dorsey, at which the then Vice President-elect, now President,"openly congratulated Dorsey with having bo't votes in Indiana with his share of the Star-route plunder and such other mon ey as was intrusted to him for that pur pose. Both Brady and Dorsey, it is to be.'no ted, saw that their hope of immunity, not to say of continued opportunities of plunder, was in the election of tho Re publican candidates, and worked vigor ously for those candidates, Poor Mr. James, who really tried to make a caso against Brady and Dorsey. and who was the only Republican politician of either faction who ever did so, fell thereby in to bad odor with both factions of his party and fouud it agreeable to leavo the Cabinet. President Arthur may have the pain of refusing to pardon Brady and Dorsey; but that act of self-sacrifice will enable him to "unload" Brady and Dorsey eitner from his party or from himself. JYeic York World. The latest version of the little interview between Don Cameron and the Philadelphia business men is that he did behave in a somewhat profane and piratical manner, making violent allu sions to planks and powder magazines, but that he had the toothache and so was not responsible for his words and actions. This version does not precisely coincide with either of the earlier ones to wit, (a) that no such interview took place ; (b) that it took place but was conducted in a manner altogether Clies terfieldian Pickwickian but it is likely to be very near the truth. Even his worst enemies are beginning to feel that some allowance is to be made for a 'boss' who simultaneously discovers that a crowbar has been inserted into the most delicate portion of his cherished "ma chine," and feels the torture of a raging tooth. And the great American people will hail with thankfulness this valuable and interesting addition to the too brief list of maladies and accident available to public men in difficulties, Malaria long since came to be regarded with the sus picion which attaches to intoxication. Mr, Blaine's endeavor to popularize the sunstroko some years ago was a compar ative failure, being received with the ut most irreveieuce though perpetrated on a Sunday and ou a church doorstep, if we mistake not. The use of the sun stroke, too, is so circumscribed that it can never command favor. It is not possible to apply it except during the noonday hours of midsummer, and its action is to render a man speechless not to excuse his hasty speech. There was also a creditable attempt made some years ago to convert the honorable scars received by an Ohioan doorkeeper in sin gle combat with a buzz-saw into profit able wounds of an alleged "Union sol dier," but it failed of its effect, as (out side of Mr. Logan, who might believe it if the evidence in the Fitz John Torter case proved that it was not true) nobody could be found to believe that the rebels, however short of ammunition they may have been, ever took to tiring sawmills at our troops. The toothache, however, is a convenient and comprehensive ail ment. It is in season all the year round, and can be partaken of at any hour of the twenty-four. "When it takes hold of a man it woos him to violent actions and vehement speech, and there are few persons who do not know how it is them selves. When, therefore, Don Cameron alleges that he had put a toothache into his mouth which stole away his brains, his statement will be received with a respect and sympathy which may even melt the mind to credulity. For our selves we are free to state that he seems to have been afflicted with toothache all through the course of his political life. N. Y. World. DvRiJio the last Presidential cam paign a number of our iron manufactur ers volunteered to assure their employes and the public that if Hancock was elec ted the mills would close, for want of business, the imu trade would be ruined and of course the workingmen would be without employment and reduced to beggary, Hancock was not elected, mills are closed for want of orders, the tariff has not been reduced or disturbed, one hundred thousand men are without work who have been engaged in this in dustry with no immediate prospects of the mills resuming or the trade reviv ing. It "was not honest or decent in manufacturers to predict ruin in case the Democratic party came into power, but they knew it was a potential party cry to help the Republicans and would succeed in confusing thousands of their men as to the real condition of affairs. Perhaps these people will now realize that panic and depression in trade are not dependent upon political parties, and will come no matter who is President, but it will not hush the demagogues who mount tho stump to gain office ; they will insist that it is the Republican par ty alone which cares for the working men and that the Protective tariff is solely for his benefit. Let the hundred thousand idle men answer. Pittsburg Post. A ex-Mayor of L'verpool Is of opinion that the outrages in Ireland are perpetrated hy a small band of hirelings employed lv the i Fenians in America. That ex-Mayor, says 1 the Pittsburau Telcorayh, should get a liver j pad and keep on his own side of tho pool. too itiucn gaii. IIEAHT1LT RKOatlfSliFD. Don'l condemn ft cood thini? heeatise von I have tieen deceived by worthless nostrums, t Parker's fiinsjT Tonic hits cured many in J this section of nervous disorders, and we re 1 ceniruend itheartily to biich sufferers. te.i THE PRESENT, SOT THE PAST. The Republican party as it Is, and for years has been, is a foul disgrace upon the country and a curse to the people. Rescued from its subserviency to Cam eronism, as projected by the Indepen dents, it would be less venal. But we look as vainly to that body as to the Stalwarts for anything even remotely approaching proof that the party has not outlived its usefulness that, wheth er ruled as at present, or "purified" by the overthrow of the bosses, it ean long er be safely entrusted with the reins of government. The platform of the In dependents and the utterances of their leaders are as barren of guarantee of re lief from the grave political ills which afflict the country, as the meaningless platitudes the Stalwarts resolve in their conventions, indite for their organs and declaim from their stumps. What, in brief, is the demand of the Independents ? Simply that the offices shall be hereafter awarded to Republi cans who now fill them and that the practice of utilizing the public patronage for the furtherance of personal or parti san ends shall cease. Why, it is as clear as the noonday sun, that but for the public plunder thus manipulated. theRe publican party would have been dead and buried years ago, and remembered now more vividly for the crimes of which it has been guilty, than for any virtues it ever developed. The folly of the South gave it victory in 'GO. Noth ing could have distured its supremacy during the war. Nothing could have maintained its ascendancy more than a year or two after peace was declared, save what is vulgarly but significantly called "official pap." Take away from it now the support it receives from the beneficiaries of the thousands of Govern ment sinecures it has defied the consti tution to create and robs the people to maintain the monies filched from Na tional, State and municipal treasuries and expended to uphold its venal press and its corrupt ring organizations, aud it will be swept away like chaff before the wind. The Cameron clique have no princi ples. This will scarcely be disputed, "ex cept perhaps by office-holders, or those who hope to become office-holders, thro' its influence, The beginning, the mid dle and the ending of their ambition and their creed is spoils. What principles, saving that they would displace personally dishonest Re publican officials with personally honest Republican officials, have the Indepen dents V This change would be a refor mation, it is true, but it is far from comprehending all tho country wants at this juncture. Wilkcs-Barre Union Lcadtr. The TTarrisburg Patriot, in an arti cle on "The Democratic Prospects" in this State at the November election, says : The lesion of the past should be sufficient to teach the Democracy that oraanhntion is ihe great essential to success. The ticket to bo nominnted on the 23th inst., therefore, should !e constituted not only with a view of presenting candidates of recognized fit npss for the respective offices which they are expected to fill, but with an eye to the abili ty of the candidates to organize the partv, alien its voters in solid phalanx, and, in short, to assure the casting and counting of , every possible Democratic vote In the State, i It is plain, therefore, that tho candidate for I Governor ought to he no mere fieure-head, j however respectable, but a practical, level -j headed, enercetic man, who will be able to superintend his canvass in person and at the I sumo time to cope with Messr9. Heaver and i Stewart on the stump. The other candi ! dates should be persons well qualified for I the places for which they are named and ! able and willing to perform their flue share j of an active and thorough canvass. The convention can have no difficulty in finding i material for sueli a ticket, indeed it can I hardly go wrong in making its selections j from the list of eminent names already sug i pasted for its consideration, j The platform to be adopted by the con : vention should have for its most prominent ; features the overthrow of the one-man pow j er in the political affairs of the .State, with Its j inherent cormptious ; tho abolishment of I sinecures and useless offices ; and the obser- vance of a strict economy in the expense of conductine the State government. As the Democratic party refuses to tolerate any "bosses" of its own, it can consistently j make the issue acrainst the "bos-,ism" which I ha suppressed the voice of tho majority of ' the Republican party and vet the agency of j that party controls the affai'rs of the State. . And, by the way, it will be able to present , this i-sue all the more consistently and for j cibly if it shali decline to lie dictated to by ; certain self-styled "independent" journals which are in the habit of denouncing "hoss : ism" without stint and yet seek to "boss" i the Democratic party by prescrilin who shall and who shall not be its candidates and even go so far as to threaten to support the j candidate of the "bo3s" In case the Demo , rrats make a certain nomination. The bat ! tie cry will be"Down with One-Man Power," j hut no party can take up a slogan like that ; which permits itself to be cajoled or frifiht- ened by a would-be "boss" w ho sits on the ! fence and swaggers and threatens that chaos I shall come again if his wishes are not re spected. Let the party be true to itself and to those who deserve Its honors and It will go to the people on the Issue against the person al rule of Cameron meriting and mutt pro bably commanding success. Goxf. to .Tor thh Cow Rots. A M. Paul I'ioneor-Prt4t special of the 4th says : "The bodies of youn Washington and Fred Fe brae It were found in Red Rye, seventeen miles north of Perham, Minn., on Saturday. Washington was shot back of the riht ear with a load of buck shot. Febrack's throat was cut, there was n bullet in his left cheek and a cut over his rieht eye, ruaite by a club, which was found near by, covered with blood. The bodies were found about twen ty rods apart. Wasliineton was a surveyor from Ray City, Mich., about 30 years old. Febrack was a German, about 20 years old, and lived in Perham. Tho suspected mur deaer Is John Frebbett, 14 years old, who was seen In Perham with plenty of money, a watch, and a revolver which was known to have been in Washington's possession. He was in Fargo on Friday niilit, aud said he was coing to join the cowboys In Montana. Despatches were sent to Morehend to arrest him, but he got away. The murder Is sup posed to have been committed at least a week apo Frebbett s mother, who Uvea in Perham, seems indifferent about the boy's crime. ITe was a reader of the Doy$ of Jfeuo Tork and similar literature, and had often Deen beard to say that he would juin the cowboys." A Frrak of Naturb. This morning a woman called at the Mayor's office and ap plied for a license to exhibit a monstrosity which was born on Buchar.an street, Troy Hill, yesterday evening. The woman lives near the Catholic Orphan Asylum, in the Thirteenth ward, and was the owner of a cow which she valued attTO. Last night tho cow was delivered of a Iusub naturce in the shape of a calf with two heads and eijjht legs, but only one body. Both the mother and her calf died and the woirun desired to exhibit the latter to make up for tiie loss she had sustained. The calf was well formed and the two heads and eight legs were well developed. There were four eyes and four ears, all perfectly formed. The heads were on one common neck, but were separated at a considerable angle. Taken altogether the calf Is a most curious beast, and will no doubt be a source of profit to the owner who was granted the desired license. Pitt$burgh Telegraph, June 5. "I A DECUSE." ! Dr. R. V. Pierce : Dear Sir Last fall ! my daughter was in a decline and everybody i thought she was Koina into the consumption. I I get her a bottle of your "Favorite Tre j scription," aud it eured her. Mrs. Mart Hrxsox, Of all druggists. Montrose, Kan. i Tho nl.t.icf ftoorl In A ,,!,!.. ta . vi, . u in miiwt r ir pani nt lie in the possession of Major Iceland, of New York. It was written eighteen yuars after the discovery of the Vpw Wsii livrAhim ! bus. Th's doeument is a conveyance of ! Fisher's Island, near the mouth of the Sound, from certain Indian chiefs to the celebrated , navisrator, John Cabot, whose signature it Health is Wealth. TTires' lmnH i Root Bper package makes five gallon of a j delicious, wholesome, sparkling temperance ! beveraee Ask your druggist for it, or sent i by mail for tiventv-five cents. Charles E. ' Hires, 48 North Delaware Avenue, I'hilaciel Pl'a Ta. 6-0.-l3t.l Dyspepsia, the bug-bear of apicureans, will be relieved by Brown's Iron Bitters. The Chicago Railway Age says 240 miles f railroad have been completed in tba Uni ted States since January 1, 1SS2. Mr. Vennor predicts that the Saturdays aad Sundays in June and July will be days of change to unfavorable weather. Ellis, one of the murderers of the Gib- i boos girl at Ashland, Ky., was lynched on , Saturday by a crowd of 200 citizens. j It is rumored in Washington that a Got- j ernment bond plate has been stolen, and that ; (32,000,000 of spurious bonds have been is- j sued. ! An Illinois woman of SO has brought suit I for divorce against tier husband of 2.V IShe thinks be married her fur inouey, and not for love. If any dependence !s to be placed on the news from Pennsylvania, blandly remarks the N. Y. ITorW, the darkest hour is Just be fore Don. The last smallpox patient in South Beth lehem was discharged on Tuesday. During the prevalence of the disease there 119 per sons died. Win. A. Gordon, a native of England, died in Frederiektown, O., a few days ago. Authentic records show that he was Eearly 110 years old. bhiloh's Catarrh Remedy a positive cure for catarrh, diphtheria and canker mouth. At James' drug store. A monument to Allen, Larkin and O' Brien, the Fenians who were executed at SalTord on November 2:1, 107, was unveiled ai Ennes, Canada, on Friday. The Rev. Geo. II. Thayer, of Bourbon, Ind., says : "Both myself and wife owe our lives to" Shiloh's Consumptive Cure." At James' drug store. The poorhouse in the town of Oesthan ner, Sweden, has been destroyed by fire. Twenty persons were burned to death. The fire was caused by lightning. Are you made miserable by indigestion, constipation, dizziness, loss of appetite, yel low skin ? Shiloh's Vitalizer Is a positive cure At James' drug store. Franklin J. Moses, ex-Governor of South Carolina pleaded guilty to petite larceny in a New York court on Friday, and was senten ced to the penitentiary for six months. Shiloh's Vitalizer Is what you need for constipation, loss of appetite, dizziness, and all symptoms of dyspepsia. Price 10 and 75 cents per bottle. At James' drug store. Joel Barry, aged CO. the fatten man In Maine, weight 400, was buried Saturday. ; The body had to be taken out through a win- i dow. There were ten pallbearers. Mrs. Eliza E. English, mother of Hon. William II. English, died at the residence of ; her son in Indianapolis on Wednesday after- i toon. She was in her 85th year. j Thomas Archer, colored, of Cardington, f O., on Monday fatally shot two men named Sherman and Payne. It was expected that I he would be lynched as soon ai his victims ' died. j Four children, V.. eldest 14 and the youngest two y -ars, of John Jackson, were burned to death on Tuesday last at Harris Station, Me., whi?o playing with fire during the absence of tht r-nreuts. The London Ta'jUt (Catholic) quotes from the Tuam (County Gal way) A'eics In testimony of Pnder Secretary Burke's kind ness as a landlord. Meetings were held in Gaiway to express rebpect and regard for him. Gold In paving quantities has been dis covered on the farm of Mr. Maxwell, In the town of Stookbridce, Wisconsin, and consid erable machinery bas been purchased to work the mines. Iron has also been disiovered there. A Reading girl, who was living at service at Charleston, near rtirenixvtile, robbed her I employer last Friday of $ ?4 in order to afford j her lover and herself funds to elope. The girl has been captured and tho lover shook her and escaped. Three negroes who had repeatedly out raged Annie Bridge!, aed 13 years, at But lerville, Lonoke countv. Ark., were caught on Saturday night, identified by the girl and hanged to a tree by a mob who rescued them from the officers. Two German children, Herman and Christine Plumer, aged respectively 11 and 8, were playing on abridge at Adams, Mass., on Thursday, when tho pirl fell into the wa- ter. The boy jumped in to rescue her end both were drowned In Oranee countv. Florida, on Monday Mr. Warhurton, an Englishman, drove into Lake Eustis with a wagon containing his wife and twin children. The horae plunged Into deep water, drawing the wboleafaruUy after him. All were drowned. Four masked men attempted to rob a j Missouri Pacific train near Lardo, Texas, but were rirert upon Dy tne guards in the mail car, and beat a hasty retreat, followed by a posse. One was killed, and another surren dered. Both were sons of respectable farm ers. The boiler of an engine at Norrie, Wis., exploded on .Saturday, killing the fireman, Henry Hopkins ; blowing the engineer (name unknown) to atoms; fatallj' hurting jrrea uito, ami injuring four others so e 1 verely that there aro doubts of tbeir reeov I cry. j F.ariy on Tuesday morning a fire broke j out in the shaft of the Mike and Starte mine j Leadville. The derrick was consumed be ! fore the fire was extinguished. Five men who were working in a drift failed to res : pond to the call-bell. It is feared they have been suffocated. On Sunday evening the schooner Indus i try, from St. Joseph, capsized just north of j South Haven, Mich. All ou board were i drowned. The wreck was near shore and i witnessed by hundreds, but owing to the ter j rihle sea. It was impossible to render any as sistance to the drowning crew, j According to Beaver, the Republican ! party has always been "fighting for purity and morality." When the General gets, I warmed up on that sabject, it is to be hoped 1 lie will not forget to elucidate the "purity j and morality" of the Returning Board steal I in ix7r and the Dorsey purchase of Indiana ill In Billings township. Gladwin county Mieh., Anna Stevenson shot and instantly killed her husband, Win. Stevenson, a man over 50 years of age. lie had been away from home and she refused him admission, lie was in the act of eutering when she fired the fatal shot. Tho parties had quarreled before. A Clacinnati woman was swinging In a hammack in the seclusion of her back yard, and her feet hung down. A neighbor looked tbrough the fence and cried, "Shoot them feet !" He was prosecuted, and. though he protested that he meard no adverse, criticism of the feet, nor disrespect of the owner, was fined ?2. Mr. J. C. Bayles, editor of the Iron Age is of the opinion that the strike of thej iron workers began on the 1st Inst., is likely to be a long one. He thinks both parties to the contest are in good condition for a desperate and prolonged struggle. In the interest lot national prosperity let us hope that Mr. Bayles is a false prophet. Two children of James McDonald found a railroad torpedo In the yard of their pa rents' residence in Troy on Friday afternoon. mm, striKinp it witn an axe, it exploded One side of the head of the youngest child w.is mown awav, ana tne other child suuered a rracture of the skull. One Is dving and the other may not recover. The contract for publisbine the Pennsyl vania Legislative Raeord the next four years was on Monday last awarded to M. P. Hast ings, of Jefferson county, at S5.C6 a page. This Is one dollar and four cents less than the contract price four years ago, and will make about three thousand dollars difference at a long session ot the Legislature. John Casey, about 20 years old, was shockingly cut with a saw on "Thursday while at work in Taylor s saw mill in Fairfield, Conn. His clothing became entangled in the machinery, which drew him over upon the saw. A deep gash was cut in his shoulder, and his chest was badly mutilated, exposing the left lung to view. He cannot recover. The boiler of Edward Dickerson's saw miirat Ruckersville, Va., exploded on Thurs day, instantly killing young Davis, the engi neer. James Carpenter, colored, was fatally injured, and died in a few hours. John Garvell, a one-armed man, had his remaining arm broken, and will probably lose it by amputation. Several other employes were injured. The Alta mine, at Virginia City, Neva da, was flooded on Wednesday of last week by the breaking of a pump column ant sub sequently giving way of a bulkhead. Six men were cut off by the flood, but they were found on Friday sittinj in the cooline off house. Two men who went In n skiff to their rescue on Ttursday were suffocaced by heat and tras. While working on a scsffold at the new Catholic Cathedral at Erie, Pa., on Tuesday last, Julius Burger slipped, and hung sus pended frrim the dome until his fintrers gave wav, and he fell 73 feet. He was picked up a bleeding mass, but life was not jet extinct. 1c his fall he struck and injured Daniel Con roy, the man who became a maniac over the r puzzle, and who was recentiy discharged from the asylum. Caleb Campbell, a nero who attempted to assault a white married lady in Fairfield county, S. C, on Wednesday, and abused her in such a manner that her life is despair ed of, was taken from jail on Friday night by a party of citizens and hanced to" a tree three miles from Winnboro, the county seat of Fairfield county. His body was found next morning hanging to the tree. I T.avin Will rf Rpctimi Ditch. Dor- chotr. Del., has reached the ags of 100 ver. lie has been living witn his presens I and third wife fifty-one year9. He has been i the father of twenty-two children. He was i verv active np to five years ago. At present be is feeble, awaiting the end of his long Journey, For sixty years he was a success ful muskrat hunter, having caught as many as 1,000 a single season. A short thne since the residenoe of Sam Fa go, of Mill Beat, Ala, came near being burned by a rat which got into a box where there were some matches and paper. Biting the matches caused them to ignite, setting the paper on fire. Mr. Page happened to be awake, and hearing the rat and seeing the flames from the matches jumped out of "bed and threw tho box, papers and rat all In the fireplace, thus saving his home from destruc tion. The present and prospective wealth of Arizona is enormous. Within the year the mines of the Territory, which are as yet in their Infancy, have paid dividends amount ing to nearly f l.ooo.ooo. Nor is this all. Aritona aspires to become an agricultural Territory, and it is asserted that by the aid of artesian wells the desert lands can be ' made the mokt productive wheat-growing i distrirts in the country. The grain fieids of tne valleys are now ready tor the reaper. A dispatch from Calcutta to the London 7n- says it is stated that the Khonds, the aboriginal tribes in the Central I'tovinces, who, it was said on Saturday last, were cre ating trouble, had taken Bhawnapatna, the chief ftown of a tribe called Kultas, whom the Khonds accuse of agrarian encroach ments. They looted the treasury and mur dered over 4"0 people. Portions of the hair and flesh of the victims were distributed among the II ill Khoiid to induce them to join the revolt. Rev. Alexius Lenarkieweiz laid the corner-stone of a new Polish Catholic church, to . ne Known as ftt. Kaseiraer, at Shenandoah, j Pa.,;on Sunday afternoon, the erection of ! which will be vigorously pushed. There was ! a representation of Irish and German Cath ! olic clergymen and their congregations from all parts of the county present. All the Po ! lish societies, including the Polish National Guard, of Warsaw, numbering three or four nunarea, paraded, lhe ceremonies were witnessed by 3,000 people. A ppecial to the Boston Herald from Lnmberton, N. C, contains an account of a terrible fight In St. Paul's township Friday between two women on account of a young man, which resulted in Frances McNair plunging a dirk knife Into Jane McKellar's heart. They fought each other like tigresses, and the McKellar girl had nearly succeeded in choking Miss McNair to death, when the latter with a final effort released herself aud stabbed her opponent In the heart aud then swooned across the body. A Berlin newspaper mentions the case fo a boy who fell sick and was found, after futile treatment for a long period, to have worms in one of his lungs that had unques tionably come from a pet dog which he had I Deen accustomed to fondle. Two dangerous i surgical operations were neeeesary for the ! removal of the parasite, and the lad barely survived tnein. i ne journal advises parents generally to take note of this case, and not to allow their children to kiss their pet ani mals or fondle them too freely. A destructive hail and wind storm oc curred on Sunday afternoon, extending from Halifax to Garysburg, N. C, a distance of : ten miles. Several houses were blown down, and huge trees uprooted. Matilda Gary j (colored) and her two daughters, 4 and 13 ; years old, living near Garysburg, were killed by the blowing down of her house. The 1 other members of the family narrowly es j caped alive. The hailstones were as large as I one's fist. It is feared much destruction to i crops was done. Trains from the South have ; been delayed by blockades of fallen trees. A lad at La Salle, III., named Johnnie : Carr, while crossing the Illinois Central Rail j road bridge a few evenings ago, and when i near the centre of the structure and directly j over the middle of the river, was met by a i drunken brute, who grabbed him and, In ; spite of his piteous appeals and pleadings, i raised him over his head and hurled him to I the stream below, a distance of sixty-five ! feet. The little fallow, who is np and going j about again. In his terrible descent turned rapidly over several times, and when near me water he managed to straighten himself 8nf Bt1Ck: Uie water feet foremost, which raved him his life. Two fishermen near by saw the fall and hastened to his rescue, and i saved hlui as he was disappearing the last j time. A boy of 17 and a girl of 19 statted awav j together from a picnic at Indianapolis", I bouglit some laudanum, made a fair division j of it, and swallowed It. The dose was not ! enough to cause death. They had a sound sleep, and thpn awoke to find themselves still ' in the iand of the living. Xot weakened in I their suicidal purpose, they went to a neigh ; boring villnge andhbought some more lauda I num. Then they betook themselves to woods near by. sat down among the bushes, made another fair division of the poison, aud ; again swallowed it. This time the dose was ; too large, that is, for the girl. Her stomach i would not retain it and she threw it un. It settled the boy, however. In the course of a few hours he died, the girl holding him lu her arms and kissing him. Then she left the body where it lay and went home to tell what had happened Rut what nobodv can an derstaud, and what the girl tef uses to tell, is the reason for the strange conduct of the youtlif ul coupie. The X. T. World says ; "It Is hard to un derstand why the workmen employed by our protectionist friends in Pennsylvania should be talking about strikes and Fueh tilings. Have not Mr. John Roach and his brother employers mainly based their defense of the protective system on the ground that they desireiprotection only that It mav enable them to pay liberal wages to the American artisan, menaced by the competing "pauper labor" of Europe? Yet the American arti san now arises with his pockets full of mon ey and declares that be is not paid what he considers good wages, and thatjthe pa'riotio and philanthropic Mr. John Koach is the nan of ail men who stands in the way of li beral wages. Can it be Oh, can it be that while our Pennsylvania friends have been demanding protection In the name of the down drodden artisan, they have '.een stead ily pocketing all the; profits which should have been divided wuh him. The Fpkak of a Yankee ITex.-S- ome time ago a nen was set upon oucks eggs, and In due time the ducklings were out and on their way to the nearest water. Biddy was much alarmed at the apparent folly of her brood ; but after a few days she lost all fear, and each morning she led them to the water and patiently waited until the ducks were done bathing. After a few weeks the ducks were able to tate care of themselves, and the hen was set upon eggs of her own kind. When tho chicks were hatched sha had not forgotten what appeared to be ma ternal duty. She led her tlock to the water, but to tier surprise not one entered. After some time spent in talking to them In hen langnahe, trying to convince them that ft was their duty to go into the water, she be came exasperated at what looked like diso- i bedience on the part of her children, seized them one by one and threw them in. drown ing tha whole flock. DELICATE riXlLIS. 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 tha world pos sesses the nourishing and strengthening pro perties of MALT BITTERS. Thev enrich the blood, perfect digestion, stimulate the liver and kidneys, arrest ulrerative weak nesses, and purify and vitUiRs every f unc tlou of the female system. A man who says he is not able to pay for a paper, remarks an exchange, ought to go at once to the county Court aud have his wife appointed his guardian. Remember that a newspaper is worth more to a family than a three months school. A family that takes a paper lives, as it were, in a house set upon a hill, from whose windows he can see all that is going on in the world. Friend, don't say you are not able to pay for your paper. Sav you don't like the paper, or say you would rat her live in ignorance ; or declare that you do not want your children to learn anything but don't say you can't pay because you can't pay is to say that you are no man, have no backbone, aud ought to be in the poor house. y 1 Grape Ccre Fon Dropsy and Rheum j Ttsat. Dropsical and Rheumatic persons find the use of peer's Port Grape Wine, of New ! Jersey, and the Wine Bitters, of incalculable ) benefit. Their purity and valuable proper j ties have given them a wi le reputation among : physicians throughout this country and Eu- ioc. i ins wine loon tne tugheat premium at the late Centennial. It is excellent for weary and debilitated females. For sale at James' drug store, Kuensbura. It acts like maoic," was the remark of a farmer who used Thenol Soaioue '1 drove my mowing machine into a bees' nest and waa stung severely, but by the prompt use of the Phenol, I was relieved of pain in stantly, lor sale bv druggists and ceceral storekeepers. Jee advertisement. LAIMEV I.AD LEAGt E. BISHOr CULMOIR PUTS H1MKLF OS H SXORD AGAISST FkUALE POLITICIANS. Clbteland, O., June S. Sreral weeks ago a Ladies' Land League was organized in this eity. Th movement wis criticised by Bishop Gilniour, of tv;is Diorea-.. At the next meeting of tha League speeches de nouncing the Bishop were ma le. Yef-terday he issued a card setting forth his position in the matter, and further denouncing the league. After saying that no woman can become a biawline politician, and atill re main a member of the Catholic Church in this diocese, he concludes as follows : "Now. threfor. I. K(chrJ Ol'rnonr. by thrt fcr- of Oo'l B1 tie piintaii'nt of ttis A potto! lo Bee. Hi-hoj of 'lTcIati.l. heri-Nr anl If thfe pre"nt Tt mmtin!eaTe rtvI JHar eT"onmnnl Mle4 irm fjfln. Mw:ihl ihn Mmiti o! ths ce ot Ulerelnn'1 rnt eff 'rom the crm3innln cf th fmibolic "hrch. kht womn bow a mmbr of tha Parnell Hrnnrb of the Ivtiltvi' I .and I.rarus of t'lvelml nki fhall attend nny mting; ol l1 I.adipp' I.naJ I,cne. In what it known a; the t'unipll Hail. ClrTelaml. or !n an other hall, whether t ach mot'tlnic t held oit Sut)! after ncoTi or tieresMer. m any r.t her time or j 'e "1 ftirtbcr tla'Mar exooinnnnjK'ite.l. ipxo frto. and wlthtn tha !:ralt of the I Hue ot CHi!ti1, mi off from the cii'nmnn.nn of the t'ath-lls Chur.'h any woman who Jhr.ll. after the publica tion of this, join :i tnentl'-ite'l I.aJie' lni Ieagse. Kea!e moirty mull be m!i.ta:naj. let therot he what it may. No l.Tatb'Ulc woman h:i!l re permitted to target her womanhon.1. or if f he iioe ihe shall, within tha lHei je of 'leve land. ceae to o- In otfnmun'on wi'.h the atho'I? Church. We nerehy direct that next Sun .lav. 4th lnt.. th!f letter shall he real at nil the me fn all the Kntcliih-speaklrn' churches ( the e!tT of CleTelaol, ami we alo direct pastor t warn the women ot the.r respective crtirettoB9 ar;tlnt join- the ahorc I-a-liei' Lan 1 I-cmt i. or In any mariner countenancing any movement that will tcml to taint or letxcu amung us I'&ibi.io Krnaie modesty. "Olven under my hand anj seal at tnv Kp'ae,,. pal resijer.ee, t'levelaad, this first :'( .lane, ls. t K. (JlLMOt B, HirO.op of Cinslno.!. ' DEFYING THE BISHOP. Cleveland, O., June 4 The breach be tween Bishop Gilmour and his flock is wi.ter to-night than ever. His letter threatening to excommunicate lady members of the Land Lague was read in Catholic churches to-day and commented on by priests, who favored the Bishop's position. A rousing meeting of the Land League waft held to night and general sentiment favored the la dies, who have the support of ai! Land leaguers In the city. Ladies are deter mined not to disband. Miss Marv Row land. President of the Ladles' Branch of the Land League, bas written a bitter open letter to Bishop Gilmour. in which she savs women of tfce Parnell Branch of the Land League will continue in the woik thev have under taken. She sets the Bishop's threats ot ex communication at defiance. As Esoikeer's Brave Effort to Save a Child. A Charlotte (N. C.) telegram cf Tuesday last says : "Si" Hryan. nn enif iner on the North far'.l! Tia Ka'Irnail. while irivina hIkh.I un!r a full hend of steam tins' unTir.iii;. an o'.iect n the trritk Forac distance ahead, winch I g mij ; . is to he a dfiii. Th or:iri tier l.'t-w i.n I rak. -, and at the P'jtmd ot the whi;le ti e oh-.ect moved, and Ryan saw that it w is a child. 1 tie little thing he Ran to crawl ofl the trm-k. hMt f.n r-. hinu the rail deUKerHtely ftopj.cd and fcau-d, itri: a-tri ie it It. liryan started to crawl ah.nic iht eiRine to ft." Iiont with the intention "f pi -kin U. the child before it was struck. Ha tnlif ht have s:n-cee led in this .eri!on undertaking, but a lunue el the en Kine caused him to lose Ins I hIhii.-c and he was thrown down an emhar.kTU'tit. Hadlv hrulfed and fhaken he scranOK-d to h feet, and as he did so he heard a jiHTi-rr. -crca'n, 'an. I he 'knew that the child had lcen run d..nn. The c-ir.j itojijied within its lei.K'h fciu-r a.ivir. Ftruck the Child. Snake-Fish About a wi tk ago Mr. Jas. Wilson caught a catfish nt three mile dam, when opened was found to contain a small sized snake, and on Tuesday, younc Frank Burk, not to be behind Wiison, wetit to the reservior and caught a ca'tish with a snake in its stomach, which (the snake, not the j stomach) was alout seven inches long. This j is a prettv fair fishy snake str-ry to open the i season with. Bedford and Cambria j et to ; hear from. IloUiday'jtirr; B'!;Hter. PERSOXAI.I TVHES OSI.T1 TfeYcstatc TnLT V., Mar'tMl, Mi-' ., w'll sond Irt-ITiie CtLiBunm Kr.r.. rani or ta vy kilLTi !D F.LKCTBU 1'LHVT.5 (in Irill fTth;- ty da to mn tyo-jnir r eld: wn. ar tr.:c"'.l with Nirous Pe'-iltty. Eot ViUl t an i Man ltonl, and klndre 1 Tru jhlt'. slraatftp1'!; ;'ce.;y and complete restnttl -n ' f health an 1 manly tIij rr. A1iires a abuvo. N. B . .No rnk Is Ineurrc i, aa thirty days trial M allow 1. i-i .-i'm. J SEP Mr. Albert Kinif-.:ry, Ko.-at, N.H., t-ooKi 1 wllU had humor i-n l.an.!s arj.l b-rfc, cau.J ;t lead joining, (lie is a ; ais!r ) Al t,rr.f i't wuuia break out, era-k niiou, au4 tin.- sk in separate from the Qi'Sb In )arif f iccoe. can s: r. j arm ci.u tSDtiai imtung an l Miuk lj. 1'urcl asi j vucrrsm "iles: usej Ci Ticru Kai.n nt lnlcrLai'y aud I'i'TicriiA and Citui k Sur externally, iz X a lets thsn three months e'Jeotei acntui leie cure, arid has nm rm troubled since, t 'err "Vorated by . . K-:a. I.... .. I ., : UUllSril OL r IBM CI, LlllKltlr', AW'US, Jl. ! MOTHER Dltn FROM IT. I J. W. Ad:im. rpn'k, Ohio, fy: '-fntlcn-a ' Hemertlas iwe tlic nr'rr n:d -iri'i r-n aarrh. I Had the worst cac :.ll rheum In tui ci-udtt. My : mother ha 1 it twenty er. and In fnot l:el fru'u J It. 1 bfliore t 'utlcura woalj hnre 'nvfj berliie. i My arms, breast and head were covero'l f-r ibree j year, which nothing reliered orcured until 1 used j the 'ntleura Kej'Mvent (bled porlher) internally I and t'utlenm and t'ntlcura Sear external It."" i - : j MORI.4H. I H. K. t'arienter, tq.. Hd lerin. T., c.ired i ' f 1'sorla or I.e;'rsy. of twenta years' ftan-iiim. f t'T the t'r TT-ri: a K kh'Itkxt Internally an 1 t'n i- ' j crsA and i'i'Tiir ap eternally. Tha uiot wonderful cnt" n record. In re centred to bevre j a justice ot rhe re.'ice aad rro'nlneijt c.tizi-Ls. All ; I attlictcd with U'liinu an.! f .tly ilicaie rhvalJ j ' cand to n for this testimonial In fall. I - ! KAI.T KM Kl .tl. I Tlmne who hare experienced tho torrren's of '. Suit hketim esn appreciate the agony 1 endured ! r ' i years, until cured by the 1'i-Turn Kksi.itkwt I internally and (Ythth m! "i'TIi : i Sowex 1 ternaliy." Mrs. Wat. I'lssaTOK, Shari n. Wis. I i cr?irrKA ! 1 nd t'CTIiTTi Scat ftt"rrirsnj (YTiTri Ki holvrsjt internally will positively cure every spe- I I eies, of Humor, from a Common l'lmple to Scrola- I 1. Trice of C'.TirfBA. small t-oxe-. SOe. : !arie j larve boxes, S1.0C. t'r-ncvr.t Kr'olvsst. Jl per ; bottle. ( 'rTHTR . Sor. .'?(:.: t'rTirtRA Shav- ; ; is Soir. I1. Sold by all driiirtst. Depot, WLIKS VOTTI.R. B .ston. Msf. Sanford's Radical Cure. A single dose ltistsntly relieve! the rrio't violent Pneer.ina- or Head Uolds. elears the head as ty roatle. stopi watery dlnel areea from the nF and and hearing when afleeted. frees the h.ad ihnxt and bronchial tubes of offensive matter twea'ena and purifies the breath, stoj.s tue aounhand ar rests the prosreaiof catarrh towards evitsumrd ion. One hottle Kadlcal Cure, one box Catarrhal Sol vent aod one Iir. Sanford's lnha?er, fn one Re. of all 1ru(fiti-t. for H. Ak f..r NAttr.'UD'a KaiiciLCcKB. WEKKSt I'l'TTt.H. H..?t-n. loo Tiwas Moi;c Errf i rat. thaa any oilier f.israr i or el.-, trie battery f..r i am tr ! and weeknesaol the l.ucs, j.iver. jv'nnevs and t nnarv o-vans. 1'ariial Fnrle:e, 1 heuniatlam. Nanralla, Hysteria. Female Weakness nervous I'aina and Weak nesses, Mn'nria nnd Kever and A roe. Krioe S3. Sold evcrvwhere. CRESCENT PLUG This brand of Tobacco, thc-jh bat a sbort time , i-nur-nov tne lavorue witn ClIO I eaewers. Made from selected i. r n.i .,, ,.. Kweetemnr. it is a capital art cle and sr-e-iallT suited to Mia Pennsylvania taste, for sale Lv ail '-rnlers. Send for sample to the ocauuraeturara. C. A.JaCKSOX A CO., Pttenttarf. . EVERY ONE JTTPs?? Wilt a;ot vnl aiabl j ai form at I ow FKII t y endiair, for circular to H. Tociueb, Boston, Mass. Q?n r Bde 1b anv lreal!tv. ) V r !Sin!htnr entir-e'v Mw for ajiacte uataiaree. C. W. IHIUil I Bv.ioa.Uua IDTKETIIIIISI sand for onr :t r i.i .fto M .ewrrefT. nn. r. J!-ew!l a 0.. IT; ruee I'vints rimtinir noiaes In the head, eurei Nervous Headache and sul.due. chills and Kevar. In Chronic Catarrb it cleanses the basal aoa; ' o. foul raoens. ritnra the r. r .rr-J.ii ' fS' fa it t x 1 f y c tm 'r - m lUil BENSON'S CAPGIHF fa PL! 5.0T I'.H MA IT arm.' mm i;ieir csPf,;. r! - Public aro caut.o cA-pciNEij.::,,.;5 Benson s Capcine Porcus F;e Aro the or.lv irr;nrrr.-. maao in I'lasterp. Ono is worth i-.orr-.. vi nuj tuna. Will positively euro rh- remedies v-iii t,- r x-f . Trice 25 ccr.'s. Ee-waro cf C.:0? p p' witn lean poisons. SEABURY A JOKN; V-r . , ... stuff i:.mi:iiv t i , ifcEAO-S MetUated CCH s-j Fanry Ilia' t.if t-3 27 Stops. (0 Se'.s ri??;s fr ion I" d-1v;.i.i in f r J t:.k 1 rift. 1 .M --e r I ttr. I a:. 1 . . Ie'.sv. CatVe-ive A'.: DA:-:;ap,fiiAm:w.:; 1 II i hi 11 II LAI! SEvGER : ' i- A V i- The above cut re; re-'- : t!.A i eei le. wf.irh t!.e i; avth" wotiJe-ful !- w - -t a iven i "r''- t - I'rrrcnVrf.irl'.r . ber that we are 1. r u I ; tl only have eve-y -j . r : ' eti trie and It in rv to erne to pret r: : d--in"t do exscMy to.'-j" fi re rori t owr c ad'Ipli:a i.ijer iiacL : e i but -a.-em.J Hack'! LYNCH & m. 111 sa f -t rr r t-i fo' HOME AND CITY FURNITU LOUNGES "BEPv TABLES, CHA m LLKVKNTil f Between ICt'a anj VITOO A- F" fiMrrr e? I's-'-i ' w:i;1r.g tn T-.zr- i.ae t ' horet i rcs r' ' 'J. ea I before buy'n ' ' that w ean rreei er-y lasia. rrxM Or "r i Aitorna. Aj ril 1. ' the gl: MXDMP rnici: oyy 1 : 5DPEHI -H TO AST ? - 1CK IT KA: j.. yi...:.j l.;V aTt.y awaxitll ('' 1 AM) KEIN vl. H : Pure TL-iC-Ei L:::-1 - FERFECT FITTING ; in Tin: v"';; V. S. HARK11 ,f mr-Ki se-e rs r't. Staves, Hcadiog ; am1 l V:,,; v' Also. New , i tl Wav. t.l-aea tf1'" barjh, l a. D rBT.:n .. sve r.'-."-','r. r' Fi.verth avsre.. t are te t. -JTT ' ' of t T7l I t'jerat;et? el "