EBENSDURC. PA., FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1882. Gex. Stoemajj was made the nom inee of the Democracy of California foi Governor on Friday last by the State convention, which met at San Francis co. He is the well known and gallant Gen. Stoneman who acquired distinction during the civil war as a cavahy officer in the Army of the Tennessee. Soon after the war was over he removed to southern California, near Los Angelos, and engaged in agricultural pursuits, If California can 1x5 wrested from Ite publican control, and we think It can, he is peculiarly the man to do it. A special rJEETixoof the Cabinet was held on Saturday last to consider a petition sent to the President, signed by a number of medical experts in New York and elsewhere, in which they state their conviction that Guiteau i3 insane, and urge the propriety of the appoint ment of a scientific commission to de- that question. The Cabinet not to interfere with the sen the assassin, and the Attorney instructed the Marshal of the and Warden of the jail to al low no person to see the prisoner except his spiritual advisers, his physicians and the officers of the prison. He will be hung to-day .between the hours of 12 and 2 o'clock. termine decided tence of General District An illiterate fool named George Riches, of Kansas, wrote a lecture for the widow of the late Jesse James, in which he glorified that king of bandits from the beginning to the end of his bloody career. Riches and the widow first appeared ou the platform in Kansas City, Mo., two or three weeks ago, Riches reading the lecture with Mis. James sitting on the stage and sobbing convulsively while Jesse's daring deeds were related in bad English, and the deep damnation of his sudden taking off held up to the motley audie nee. Such a spectacle would furnish a pic ture fur the highest talent of an accom plished artist. Missouri, we should think, has had enougli of Jesse' James, and his enterprising widow ought to go into permanent privacy. Tr is a historical fact that in 10S1 Charles tho Second, King of England, conveyed the then province of Pennsyl vania to "William Penn in satisfaction of a debt of eighty thousand dollars, which the spendthrift king owed the estate of Perm's fattier, who wpg an ad- "If Hancock is elected the tariff will be destroyed and this mill will be com pelled to stop' "Hancock's election means a reduction of wages and a sus pension of business. Garfield's will in sure high wages, .rood times and contin ued prosperity." Such in substance, if not in words, was the cry of Republican manufacturers and Republican stump orators throughout the North during the Presidential campaign or lsw. j Hancock was defeated, but the same j tariff is in existence now, as wa3 then i and had been, ever since l'3-2, and what has the harvest been ? Labor strikes j all over the Northern States exorbitant : ly high prices for all the necessaries of i life more than a hundred thousand la- j boring men out of employment, and a : Republican Congress by its legislation paving the way by refusing to modify , the tariff and internal revenue laws, for ! the accumulation In the treasury at the j end of the present fiscal year of a sur- j plus estimate! at the enormous sum of one hundred and forty millions of dol- i lars, after paying all the expenses of j the government. What other govern- i roent under the sun except our own wrings from the people by taxation any more money than is required to pay its legitimate expenses ? To do so is le galized robbery and shameless oppres sion. The present condition of affairs in this country is precisely what the Re publicans told the people would take place if Garfield was defeated. How long will the workingmen consent to be deluded by the shams and base charges of the Republican press against the purposes of the Democratic party? Time and again have their false pre dictions been scattered to the winds by accomplished facts, and if they now fail to realize the litter hollowness of Re publican promises made on the eve of an election and with intent to deceive, nothing short of a miracle would cause the scales to fall from their eyes. The grand old Republican party that conferred freedom on the slave, pre served the Union, pays off the national debt and brings about good crop3, is robbing the cradle and the grave to in sure a continuation in power. A Mich igan Congressman named Hubbel, who is Chairman of the Republican Congres sional Committee, has addressed a cir cular to each office-holder in the United States, from the little pages in Con gress to the oldest veteran in tlie pub lic service, asking for a ''voluntary contribution." as it is termed, of two j per cent, on the amount of their annual pay to raise a fund for bearing the ex penses of the fall elections. ., Ilnbbel says that such pontributions will not be objected to from any "official quarter." Mr. Arthur understands all about vol- mirnl in the Ibitiuli Vw matter of history' that because of Will- untary cofntiibotlons" ami .how a refus- lam Perm's attachment to and respect for the lukc of York, who succeeded Lis brother Charles on the throne, Penn wa3 suspected of disloyalty to the Church of England, and that this same province of Pennsylvania was seized by the crown and held for tilore than two years. In a rteii'Olident mood, Penn, in 1712 offered to re-convey the province to the crown for 10,000, for which 31 years before he had paid ?SO,000. The population of tho province at the date of Penn's charter (101) was 2,500, At the hour of putting our paper to press this (Thursday) motning, we are not in possession of any definite news from the Democratic S'ate Convention, which met at Ilarrisb urg on Wednesday. We learned last 'evening that on the lourlh ballot for Governor the vote stood: Hopkins, OS ; Pattisou, 81 ; Cox, 4-3, the balance leing scattered. The impres sion at Harrisburg yesterday was that Mr. t'o:ie;wGulJ ultimately b nomina ted. The friends of Mr. Hopkins, how ever, expressed great confidence in the final result. (uite a number of the leading Democrats in the State are at Harri.burg, but no attempt has been made to interfere with the free and un trameled action of the convention. Ran dall, who is there, says the people and not the leaders are now playing "boss." P. S. Pattison was nominated for Gov ernor this (Thursday) morning on the eighth ballot. The Johnstown Tribune on yesterday week, in an article endorsing the nomi nation of Congressman-at-Large by the Cameron State convention on the day pievious, said : "Beaver and the whole Republican State ticket will be elected by from 20,000 to 00,000.. majority, after one of the most rattling campaigns in the history of the State." Perhaps the editor believes in this rosy view of the result of the present triangular cam paign, and then again perhaps he don't. A man can believe almost anything he wishes about an election if he makes a vigorous effort to do so, But whether lie believts it or not, we will publish his prophecy in the first number of the FlKraAS issued after the election, in order that the editor may then see him self as other? see him. The campaign will likely be a "most rattling one," as the Tribune predicts, and will cause the most terrible rattling of the dry bones of the grand old Republican party in this State that the editor of that paper ever dreamed of. al to respond to such a circular 13 pun ished. Ho learned the business in New York and consequently will not inter fere withllubbt l's political assessments. Tom Cooper, Chairman of Cameron's State Committee, who also wants mon ey, and a good deal of it, to save his party in, this State, has issued the same kind of a. circular requesting a "prompt and favorable response by "bank check, or draft, or postal money orJ': an there be such a thing as free and honest elections controlled by the omnipotent power of money ? It is a most disgrace ful spectacle a plain violation of the law, and subversive of all political mor ality and will eventually, if it is not cut np by the roots, undermine the very foundations of the Republic. ' A concuhre.nt resolution was pass ed by the House of Representatives on Saturday last for the final adjournment of Congress on Monday the 10th of July, but the strong probability is that the A WORD TOJTHE STRIKERS. wi, xt is it that drives so many thous- : amis of industrious men to leave off ! work on which they depend for subsis- fnce? They do this because their I wages are insufficent to support them. and because tney nope oy eirntmg to compel their employers to pay them more. Why are their wages insufficient ? Because the enormous taxes which are imposed upon ail the people of this coun try, and which, at last, fall with the most crushing weight upon those who labor with their hands, so increase the cost of the necessaries of life that work ingmen are no longer able to procure them. Wliv are such enormous taxes impos ed? Originally they were imposed to meet the necessities of the civil war which was fought to maintain the unity of the country. In that war a million lives and many thousand millions of dol lars were sacrificed ; and the. sacrifice was cheerfully borne. In order to bear this enormous expense, taxes never be fore known in the history of the coun try were levied upon the people and, in addition to the money raised by taxes, an immense public debt was contracted, the interest of which and the payment of which also had to be provided for by taxation. But has not a large part of this debt been paid ? Yes, a very large part of it. The taxation has proved to be far more productive than was ever expected. So much money has been poured into the Treasury that in the short period of sev enteen years a greater proportion of that debt has been extinguished than any one supposed would be extinguished in fifty years, The Republican adminis trators of the Government have made a great account of this premature pay ment of the public debt.' They bave never had a thought about the terrible burdens they were laying upon the shoul ders of the people. But is all the money raised by these awful taxes applied to paying off the public debt ? No ; it is not. Notwith standing the enormous sums paid on that account, there is now, in the Treas ury a surplus of more than a hundred and forty millions of dollars; and thi3 vast surplus the Republicans are eagerly preverting to all kind of jobs, to every sort of useless and unjustifiable scheme, and to various dishonest purposes, such as a hundred millions to unnecessary pensions, mostly fraudulent. Moreover millions upon millions have been stolen ! outright and divided in various sums among thieves connected with the Whis key Ring, -iu the Washington City Ring, and thieves .high aud low, limited and unlimited. But now when the pressure comes,' and tliH people in their distress are cry ing out m agony, and even refusing" to work because their work does not bring them a liviihood, do tho Republicans who control all branches of the Gov ernment, legislative, executive aud judicial, propose to lessen these burdens and to leave the people a littlo of the people a little of the substance which they have saved, notwithstanding their terrible extortions ? No ; they do not propose to do any such thing. They look with indifference rn the suffering mass of laborers, those who are striking and those who yet continue to work in the hope that they may be allowed to earn a livelihood. From their burdens they will not remove a hair's weight ; from their taxes they will not take off a Penny, .' The only s'2'oty tor the people is in turning the Republican purty out of power. Ar York S'?oi. The nomination of Citizen Brosius continues to be the subject of poneral comment by the press of the State, tho Regular journals almost uniformly eo. mendirg it as a ft one . the Independ ents testifying to his personal merits and some of the pungent paragrapheis seizing upon the report of the speech made by him in this city on Wednesday night as a fine subject for. their witti cisms. The Evening Telegraph . repre sents some extracts from it, head-lined "Brosiusiana Brosius struck by light ning A French idiot yho fell, down stairs Providence compared to Camer on.'" The Tirhrn thinks Cuoper will have to have Biosius put undercover, and declares that a candidate who "says that a bolt of lighting from a clear sky has fallen on his devoted head, should at once take out an accident policy. A man who is so magnetic that the ma chine lightning on a clear day, is liable Ax Interesting Census Bclle-r"TT?r.- Very" slowly "tlrc-TTOrms returns are given to the people after two years of work by the census bureau. The re turns come in the shape of bulletins and the two hundred and eighty-seventh has just tieen iasued. It is entitled "Selec ted Nativities" and shows the native and foreign born population of Nebras ka, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio. Oregon, Pennsylvania andJTenuessee. The returns for Pennsyl vania give some points of interest. . The total population of the Keystone State is 4.282,101, and of this number 5S7, 829 persons are foreign born. The coun tries ix$m which these foreigners came are set down as Ireland, the German Empire, Englaud. Wales, Scotland, Canada. France, Sweden, Switzerland and Poland. Chinamen are so few in Pennsylvania that they are not enumer ated, and those who are among us are included in the 10.020 foreign born per-, sons -who ! appear la the.' list .with nj country assigned to them. The Irish head the list of foreign born persons with 221,505, The Germans come next with 108,420, and are followed by the English with 80,100. No other nation ality goes higher than 30.000. The Frenchmen number only 7,0 10. The total colored population number only 85,100, Allowing one vote to every family ,f four,--which is ratio on the whole vote for President in 1880, it is safe to say there are about 21,277 color ed voters in this State. Thisvote is yearly cast for the Republican ticket, and makes up the bulk of the majority by which that party carries the elections If the average colored voter in this State does any thinking for himself, he can not fail to see that he and his brethren hold the balance of-power. It is, to say the least, surprising that with such op portunties, he should permit himself to be used by a party, which depending mainly upon him for success, yet persis tently refuses to share w:ith him the fruits of victory. How many of these 21, 277 voters have ever obtained recog nition from their Republican masters in Pennsylvania, except on election day, when their aid is required to keep the bosses in power. Ilurrinburq I'atri"t. SEWS AD OTHFR VOTINGS. I.eadville miners still eomplaim of snow drifts. A quince tnie in Pottstown has already bloomed three times this year. That backing eongh. can be so quickly 1 cured byShiloh's Cure. We guarantee it. A herd of . buffalo, f ourtcen nii.es in length, was seen recently near Glendive, M. T.. As Joseph Hall stood admiring his cattle i near Tallahassee, Fla.,nineot thetn fell dead, strueK oy iicnrutng.-- - - The interviewers have been after the Tariff Commissioners, but tney don't improve on closer inspection. It 59 thought the yield -of wheat in Kan sas this year will be 30, ooo, 000 bushels. This is the best yield since 1S"S. sleepless nights made miserable by that terrible couch. Shiloh's Cure is the remedy for 3-ou. At James' drug store. At Watftrson, Chester county, a few eye nines ago, lightning struck a "guinea hen, splitting her open down the back. win you suner wiin dyspepsia ana liver complaint : to cafe vou William Peake, the father of the once ! t famous Peake family of Swiss bil rtnra, is 4 an inmate or the Goshen, . 1 ., Jail, where he was sent as a common vagrant. An ex change says: "It was not dissipation that has bronght-the old gentleman to his present distressed condition, lie had too big a heart for his age, and in a practical way felt too keenly for the woes of others." 'if this is the reason, which we doubt, he Is too good a man to be confined with criminate. Iowa, the chief sufferer in the cyclone that devastated several states a we'k ago last -Saturday, was visited by another hurri cane ou Thursday. Ther town of Malcolm was on the route of this second tempest, as well as of the first, and, after a three hours' attack, what had been left from t tie former visitation was in ruins. It would seem pos sible to make some general deductions about tornadoes from comparing the facts regard ing these two storms in the same region. The Home Telephone savs that the other day a certain young lady in Home, tia., start- ! ed out shopping While cutting on her hat "T " I cha tl...o ..t.fr : 1 i Who i ...... iw trail, iint- urVV, Mill, no- 810,000 7f Cbrontoo 'Wall SO ( HEAP JEW KKCOXO 1KAM Itl S I Hill 11 IO OT PRr.MIlM AMOXU AtiT.XTtt TOB j ivuiu win ikic nu.-. i wnicn lime i:Q T-l.'li- lnmbr-r lilYf FI.HT! VlF"' Uur Sunnv B araoiiB th lucenu uie foliowinif lit of rr"rr.iu:n- One 7"'l ri-m. 7r Vrovrnvnnd. ! Trv., f l,fv'' Pn Elraa-t Ui'trtc d Square l.rmnM lmno.9ni. ("O On' y.traant PaHor Tym. Tahird ( j , One fash fr mi n of .lt."j in Gold, Out far, n agon, valuf l el., y Onr rcir' G!d H ntrt, , Out Cash rrrm.wn n' One irtt-t int ; ;mtlrnnn'e i.nn, i One I aeh Irrm'vn of .5 ; . Tbe r-nnlnlriff I'rrmlum? on1t of licV. wt-l;r. Hon"!i-.M Art :-;. let Ari!elr. Jlu'iol lntrum-nt. Hn. Kvcrvthlng w raritr.l f:r.t 1 :u. ! .. We pnltive!y turret" m t to rr-nl out any chromo (wcilc l), or chHj jrwc r. . ; 1 ", flooded wlin tra--n oi i:ai coaraciT. HOW TO OBTAIN THE PRE1Y1I The" TTemitiirif arc eircn for (not toi nh.'erUieri". We arc n.i m . . ellinn ckop ewd t a dear r1re br throwicr In a j.upvr. Tl. !'.- n ,u oft:un put'prriherf (or our paper. AnvoneVnn at as A-rit. O-jr Su-.n ticine anything, put it on her head. On her 1 .r,.i i...,i. ,.,i,.t...f i...'i ,.a,,r it t,. 'StM. Ki.rirnr.,i V.i .a'- Sfnloh's Vitaliaor is guaranteed j return home she asked her sister to take off raiuat.ip informitioo in ronari to in. Tin feature i? wurtw ti.es.: t .Iamj' rlrntr alnrrt . . v 1 u.u-, s sue iiiousill soil H 11 11? was on 1' i - j.-'...- .-- .. i.uv.n u.i n u . 1.1. u.. r . . .1. u--. Gcitkat". A telegram from "Wash ington dated the 27th inst. savs : At the jail to-dny th preparations indica ted for the first time that an execution was soon to take place. As the condemned as sassin took his exercise iu the corridor he could hear, with death-like distinctness, the sound of saw and hammer of workmen at the scwllold. From his corridor he could not see, but every sound couldibe heard. The prisoners on the side which opens upon the area where the scaffold stands have had thir faces against the bars watching the proceed ings below, as if it possessed for them a fitrange fascination. The scaffold itself has been moved about four feet south in order to bring the new adjustment of the drop op posite the secou lcf U. 'I his new adjustment is simply the turning of the floor of the scaf fold in the frame'.' so that instead of dropping tween'the swinging body and the audience of officials it will swina behind the body, ex posing the latter to full view. . The turning Of the scaQold floor was the easiest way to chance the direction of the fall. The workingmen to-nay were adjusting the General Rosecrans has been compliment ed with an nnopposed renomfnatlbn for Con gress from the First California district. Nervousness, peevishness, and fretting, so often connected with overworked females' lives, is rapidly relieved by Brown's Iron Bitters. Thirteen men were killed by the railroad accideut near Wilmar, Minn., on Saturday. Fifteen wounded men are under the care' of physicians. The Fort Valley (.(ia. ) 3firror basks un der the shade of a boss cabbage eleven and a half feet in circumference and weighing six teen pounds. John Doyle, an Irishman, aged 45 years, tell over an tmbankment on Boundary ave nue, at Baltimore, on Saturday night, and broke his neck. Barney and John Kepler, twin brother, Her sister took off her hat. 1 ' o,l ...tin.. A,', 1 ltroolain' nomine mf,m or rn-niionni ; n n"i mu vi nr. t ufi-i "Oil Willie 1 1 0 1 71 : . . k. .. - i . i - , , n , . ., 1 ; ..... w cam -very near boiii bitten by a wnakw. f tna- tor the '!. theT. iM the Braotifnl." The -iiwri,.t!on Tr- -V i'r'.".; - ....... .iviu hit, .Tun He aiuuuil Willi I w cenis 'T rr. i UTr i nf r-l UHltio on U!i JTiec l Bim'iic. . e d r T , - . ner all the time, tirrconseions of irs presence, j into fto.owtiiw huiH wi:Mn the next m month, aad eotieoj-My n' t. i A dispatch from Las Veiras X M av4 i W1" 'n'1 " oluD of four nibacritxrsat fifty tnts each, will receive a w that on Satnrrlfiv nirrht .a . XJ. fc ! holder to One Share In mr - - - - . .... , 1 1 , 1 1 c 1 1 iinii it "i iv. t U Ori'oiKl JJistribiition of Prominms And ever?-crrtiDcJtc U jiuaranteej to receive a rremlum. KKMlMi;i.ii. ,1,, B, t. ., any lottery, or any oilier huiuliK. Tliere arc no blank, and eery eirt i tn i J... " a handsome lirpmium. 1 here w 1 11 he no nnTrtoiim"nt . hot th a rf;tr'f .n' t..n - . ol? art toa taiky t.:t.' "nt hv trail, whet thev will be ent ty fr-itBt fr ti- , .... pene. If toi fpn'ttisfmir tl.ent'er yott Will receive one cf-rt ..1 : f -.-i ! .... .". cates : twelve puni.rit'er. three rertifente ; fixtccn Fuln.rih-rf .f..ur rer: - :..; . duh ot twenty uhMTitr we will fend you fix ccrtih-ates ; an.t rt e-ry cen 1: i . , cire a rreniwh. The more ce.liflcate you hold, the better your chance I .r 0ra Premiums. OUlt flKI.IAl5U.ITY. ii. Jluner was walking on the street with ! his wife, an Indian desperado named Fran i Cisco Tajrja, better known as Navajo irranK. tnrew a lariat arnnml lintt-or-. nt,.h- and put spurs to his horse and rode riff at a rapid rate, dragging the man over the streets ' ror a nunnred yards and more. Citizens fired at the desperado, who drew a knife and cut the lariat Hutter was;torribly bruised. On Monday vigilantes taptured the Indian and Ivnched him. There Is a youne man In Cincinnati whom fate Is reserving for some very impor tant performance later in life. He had the reside together in I'Jum township, iiiicks j , ' ". , h ; . V l countv. Thev are old bachelors and in rea- ? he ws ,n Prepared for burial his foot sonahlv good health. Catarrh cored, health and sweet breath i '"'!;, "J ,K seemed by Sliiloh's Catarrh Kemedy. Price I rif ?f aJ'v 50 cents. iasal Injector free. At James drug store, Ebensburg. Four hundred and eighty persons were received by confirmation into the membership of St. Patrick's Catholic church at Xorris town on Sunday afternoon. A Texas gambler on Monday hot and killed three men and wounded two others, and was then seized by the enraged citizens and hanged to a lamp post. On July 4, 1812, Dr. West, of Chester, N". J., stuck into the ground in front of his door his walking stick. - To-day the circumference of the trunk is seventeen feet. A German in Philadelphia has discover ed that the expansion by heat of bisulphide of carbon is the great mechanical power of the future. . lie proposes to moye uxjuntains with it. A terrible storm visited Findley, 111., on Friday night. Three men named Charles G. Sensenoy, of Fort Wayue, Ind., John Wilson and Charles G. Holmes were instantly killed by lightning. An American citizen remained np a tree in the Carrt.liton, Georgia, jail yard for thir teen hours to see a man hanged, lie slept in the tree, ticing himself to a limb by means ot his coat tails. Several Florida negro children buried a baby alive, intending to dig it out immediate ly ; but they got tu playing at something else and forgot the infant for hours, leaving it to die of suffication. j i A celebrated lecturer, upon being com- ii l twlcned. He was taken hack in the w-srri i t. : ., . . . jircovriuiK irom me pest re was immediate ly seizea py erysipelas. On getting well of that he was promptlv taken with tvnhoid fe ver from which he is now slowly convalesc ing. Whether this youth is to be hanged or sent to Congress is the Interesting doubt he can debate hereafter with himself. A remarkable tidal ware swept the lake front at Cleveland, O., at fi o'clock Friday morning. From the best information then obtainable the wave was about two miles witie and eleven feet higher than thesnrface of the lake. It came in t!w wake of a dense, i Following To vfton it miy concern : Thf U to certify that we are personally no.giini of Our Sunny Sout h, and know them to he responsible bu?lne? iceu. h.. w:; promle. C'OUOIX BKOS. fc ().. FECAN V.AIXI Y HANK. J. ;.; Hunkers. :m1th iMcCen!", 1 rcj . 1 In WHO HAVE RECEIVED PREMIUMS i"' 1 : Incur Hecemher, lSI. tltrihotlon. the following prr- rc -eive 1 the 4 Oovan. New irleaa-, !' oc-bs ot land: 11. s. Ko-.n". Auil nrl 1. la.. . ie ."hsinnn. S-iviiie. S l" a Parh.r onrriTi : letr Klvfi ne. oi.n. ; r, every j.ers.n holdlOL' a e rt;h-at-Teive l a premium. Now 1 the 1 1 ttjc trt ttir kr ttp rlohs. STd mf-ney t-y 1. . ori. r. r. . ;et Tork. Write na-nrt lmni, and don't neglect to give your I'oft' T -e. vn:,i . n,' v Coniniunicatii.ns . , i e '. . umwiamab . . v a:a-wv -w a Delegates to the Mate CouTcntion. a full and correct list of the angry-looking black and gray cloud, whicU. delegates to the Democratir State conven- moved sullenly lrom northward fiver tl:p pitv There was no rafn nor wind at the lake shore, but a dash of rain fell in some parts of the city and the wind blew fiercely from the youth end of the town. Vessels and docks were submerged to a depth of four feet in some places. Hundivdsof fish were east a-hore. The fires in the Lake Krie KoUing Mill, on the river beach, were put out. Latest advices show that the storm last Friday night extended met Minnesota, Northern Iowa and Western Wisconsin. At all points the rain came down in torrents. Throughout Southern Minnesota the streams rose suddenly and overrun their barks, and swept awav considerable stock and did other damage. Growing grain in some places was leveled to the ground but pot seriously dam aged. On Sunday a terrific storm gathered in Iiutler county. Iowa, and swvnt southwest. 4k i. . .,.. . . ,.' . . : r,t uuouKii.-utuiiuer, Jancasier, cass, Aloeana I 22. H. K. pMker. eimma counties, aoingtlie gteatest damage 1 S3. .'. 1. t. s. V4. Jurat? Iieean. tion which met at Ilarrisburg on Wednesday iiiii : SHjITOFBIL PS LEO AT KS. Wnsrh Oll'm John Metormlclt. .las. 'ray fordon. Harry p.nHtn'6. Joliul. RftdlTITji, ' W m. Cam). bell. J..hn K. Kf ad. Hnich Shicl.l8. Kdw. W iipon. ir. Herman Yerkes. lr. V. . Hruner. 17. I'r. John Tod i. ' 18. W. V. Henel. i H. IT. B. Irwm. IIS. John W. Kow i!t. H. VVm. H. Si.jT.lt n. 17. I'hlllp F. AIet.'Uy, 11. nm. Kehl lemai. i 19. Joseph Hemphiil. I iu, I rank A. laamlyh. 21. K klr-v H. (ne. 1. J. 8. to! 11. ie belt. 2r, miles in width, between Wa- I, . J ... rvtt ..... alimented for the eleai ness of his voice, r "-'' estnn. 1 ne corn was natliy Peat , , ...... ... . . . ' . .. : en nown in tho cniithorn marked: "Why, nothing is easier! Ail yu'e got to do is to use Sines' Syrup of Tar, V iid Cherry and HojtTiiound. halt-inch rope which adjusts the spring of I Grace Hill, of JSorTistown, promised me trap wiu ne luuni.iual wno performs the duty of executioner. A fourteen inch square pine spout connects the cell window with the scaffold and conceals the rope from view. ; The rope passes uuder the scaffold where it turns around a cast iron pulley to the tiap spring, which is loosened by an or dinary vigorous pull wjthin the second cell. Jn shifting the lloor to-day several pieces were sawed from the flooring, and these were quickly gobbled up by the correspon dents and borne awav as relics. The scat- fold Is a plain square frame, constructed of i Georgia pine, painted a-4ght dfa'.i. It is 12 i ieet square, 21 fr-et from the ground to the cross bo? in to which the hauging tope is at tached, The floor is guarded by railingthree eet men, and is approached ty tifteen steps. William 11. Walker to marry him in Decern- her. V liiiani, feaiful that she might change ! her mind, had her sign an agreement before I a magistrate to keep her word, j '' A promiuent farmer named Clements, 1 living a few miles from Clinton Station, O., was struck by lightning in his own door-yard I during the prevalence of a heavy thunder storm ou Monday last and instantly killed. I James Watson, of York county, had a j terrible strupslrt with a tramp, and was only saved trotn death and'rohoeiy uy the appear- part of Saunders conuty, and small grain was utterly ruined. Many buildings jn the track of the tornado were demolished, h'nt so far as can be learned the loss of life has not been very severe. HAT FRTF.K. Mr. A. I., Averv, Plwmaclst, Newark, N. J. Having teen severely afflicted for eleven years with Rav Fever, after trying almost everything without avail, I pave up all hopes of bing cured, when I purchased 1 tu ou a pox .r tiys L-rt am lialni. lo luy I supr':sj, after a f.-w application-", I was en tirely lelieved. It. Watson TIap.k is 2. Huh P. .Bradley. it. Th"m. .t. Han. T. J. K. WnnderlT. Levi Ma1h. '.v. James Kllis. P. J. KirtnlBaham. II. H . l.ee. H. K. Pefler. I'eter TTlrh. T. H. W til;-ple. W. Fisk t'onrad. A. H. l-Lf'r-.th. Harney Jones. J. H. T'orhran. K. C.til'er. S. I,. M erf rerat. Ir. 1. I'. Marshall. '. M. Hatrjh!Ti.'ij, J. H. .MiH'n-nrr. fhrift- 1 her Mf;ee. J.-hn W. farl. John M. Buchanan. W. K. Wallace. K. V. (1 enn. tirunc Not-1. John I.. McKlsnev. o. ist. 1 U-' ' :. Ul. '4-J. '4-4. 45. 41. 47. 4S. 4J. Letter Carrier No 14, N-w P. )., Newark, N. J. I have been a Hay Fever snfforer for three did not k'il the scoundrel, who managed lo i years, and have ot ten heard Ely's Cream The construction is very strongly braced Ixyj His nio,,lef arili a nAn ,mert Tru? iapnal V'ws of timber. aso .vf.reiy butned in their uni iii.iii wimj was n-tiieu eu mis machine was Stone, whose head was snap ped cff. The scaffold then stood in a jail yardairanged to comply with tire statutes. Since being moved witlun the jail the two Heath murderers, Bedford and Qneenan, were hanged theteon and at the same time." country will not be able to welcome its t ator Cameron expresses himself as "em dispersion until a week or ten daya af inenly satisfied with a man who is one r that time. When Congress met of the ' people and un DnrxKESSF.ss is often set np in ex tenuation, or as an excuse for the com miskn of crimes of the highest magni tude, and particularly sr iu trials for murder. A case of this kind was lately before the highest Court iu the State of 2'ew York. It was claimed by the counsel for a convicted murderer that he was the victim of an appetite for li quor to an extent which amounted to a disease which completely took away all power over his will, and rendered him as legally irresponsible as if he was proven to be insane. The Court held that a discard mind, even to a state of frenzy, caused by strong drink, cannot excuse a person charged with murder from criminal responsibility, .Drunken ness is a voluntary act, and if a man - w hile Iu that condition commits a crime be must answer for the consequences of bis acts ; otherwise it would become the convenient cloak for every form of vio lence, There is nothing new in this decision of the -New York Court, and we only refer to it as a very late adjuca tion of the question by a tribunal of the fcighebt authority. ' ter Keifer, the miserable tool of a corrupt cabal, who was pitch-forked into the Shaker's chair, pledged the people in bis inaugural address that the session would be peculiarly a "business" one. The business, however, that it lias transacted ha3 been the very reverse of what the taxpayers of the country hada right to expect at its bands. Instead of adopting measures' to relieve the peo ple from exorbitant taxation through the tariff and internal revenue laws. its sole aim and purpose has been to squander the enormous surplus in the public treasury. It has passed a pension bill without debate amounting to one hundred millions of dollars ; a River and Harbor bill which will aggregate, by the time it ,is presented to Mr, Ar thur for his approval, not much less than twenty-five millions. This is the kind of "business"' the House has been doing through its committees arranged for Keifer by his masters aud organized for purposes of plunder. Xo former Congress has been bo criminally waste ful of the public money, none ever start ed out with louder professions of re trenchment and reform and did less in that direction, and the country will hail its final adjournment, whenever it j takes place, witU loud and universal ap plause. - - The people of this country never fail to respond in the most generous spirit to the cry of local distress caused by a sudden calamity. Eveiy. one will re member how during the long continued drouth of last summer, extensive sec tions of country in the State of Michi gan were swept by Ore, destroying hous es, barns and growing crops, besides en tailing a fearful loss of human life. Ffora the report of tho commission ap pointed to distribute the money contri buted for the relief of the. burned-out families, it appears that it has distribu ted in cash 3,226 families nearly 171.000. In addition to this money relief the Commission furnished each family with 3,000 feet of lumber, 4,000 shingles, a door and window sash and with these comfortable houses have been erected. The commission also supplied each fam ily with a new cooking stove, bedsteads, table furniture, tinware, crockery, etc., and the necessary clothing. The pooler class of settlers are now, as stated in the report, abundantly able to take care of themselvss. It is estimated that not less than 130 persons have been killed by the recent tornadoes In Iowa. Miesonrl, Kansas aud ' Minnesota. Vbuller ' to re- Independent nexceptionable' to them ; Senator Mitchell has said "the' nomination of Mr. Brosius would not strengthen the Regular ticket with the Independents ; it would rather weaken it With the Regulars ;?' the Huntingdon Journal refuses to support bilu because of the irregularity of the convention, and Wharton Barker's Ameriran extends condolences to him as 1m "uo doubt Teel3 himself misplaced," being put for- wara, now, sunpiy as a ceive the blows of . the movemeylti ahti bear on their force ; and he Svould not have "been thought of by the "bosses'' nor allowed by tlim a place on their ticket, except in the hour of their extreme need.- Lancaster In telh'gruer Never, to tie Forgottev or For given. Our esteemed contemporary in St. Louis, the Globt-Vtmwnt, is shock ed at a reference "to the fraud which whs perpelrated in lsTG-77 to the dis honor of the great republic." "Great heavens V exclaims our St. I.onis con temporary : "are we' never to hear the ! last or this fraud r It is undoubtedly true that there was' a little irregularity in the election of ls(V5 ; but if the Re publicans sin-ned in the matter, they af- " Guiteac's Deatii Warrant. (iui-, teau's death warrant ' was signed' by hC'lerk Meigs, of the Criminal Court in Washington City last Monday. The eeal of the Court was attached, and the document forwarded to Warden Crock er, of the Jiistrict Jail. The following is a 'Copy of the warrant : , Whereas, Charles 3. Outfeau has been In dicted of felony and murder, by hitu done nd committed, and has been thereupon ar raigned, and upon such arraignment has pleaded not guilty, and has beeu lawfully convicted thereof ; and, Whereas, Judgment- of said Court lwis been civen that the said Charles J. Guiteau shall be hanged by the neck until he is dead; Therefore, you are hereby commanded that upon Friday, the thirtieth day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-two (A. D. 1S82), be tween the hours of twelve (12) o'clock mer idnn.'aud two (2) o'clock post-meridan of same day, him, sain Charles J. Guiteau, now being in your custody iu commou jail of tbe Distiictof Columbia, and that you cause execution to be done Upon, the said uharles J. Guiteau in your custody, so being in !l thine according to said indement. and this you are by no means to oinil at your peril : and do you return this writ into the Clerk's office of said Court, so endorsed as to show how j'ou have bbeved. . 1 Witness: I). K. CiTTEBr . Chief Justice of said Court. t escape. A 5-year-old son of S. W. Paulliamns, : .of Willianisport, Pa., was burned to death t laaius were ly but next in their efforts to save the child., Andrew Torter, a gra-ve diccer, at Erie, Pa., was entombed in a crave of his own making on M.uday, by the caving in of the grave he was discing for another. After two hours he was dug out alive, badly but not fatally injured. Lightning descended the chimney of the; residence of llenrv Shaffer, near Deposit; N. Y., shattered the "stove, threw .Mrs. Shaffer down end set her clothing on fire, destrojed the eyesight of her husband, aud badly burn ed a baby and a boy of s years. A larefe hall of fire struck the ground bouse and the next car, and as they ail near tbe lmuse of Joseph Collins, at Roads- j down in the wreck and the water the s town,-A. J.,fin a recent thunder storm, men Halm spoken of in the highest terms, butdid not i take much stock iu it because of the 1 many qtia"k medicines. A friend persuaded ! me to try the lialni, and with the most won- j derful success. This recommendation you t can ne for the benefit of Hay Fever suffer- j ers. T. S. Gf.eh, Syracuse, . Y. Price CO i cents. Atit hi into ttoxtrilx r;VA Tittle finciir. took a turn at risrht ancles skinned up a but tonwood tree, and after netting half way up descended spirally, completely stripping the tree ot bark. ; A private defective named Gordon, who was etigatjed to ferret out the murderer of Mrs. Kachel Smith, who was killed near Greensburg, Westmoreland county, about a year ago, lias disappeared. It is supposed that the murderer or his friends paid him to leave the country. A peach tree in the garden of Mrs. John Arney, North Hanover street. Philadelphia, has double blossoms almost as large as the j common June rose, which they resemble in a j remarkable degree. The tree is ten or fif teen feet hijrh, of the white freestone variety, and though not prolific bears double fruit, j Over the grave of Mrs. Bolton Winpen- j ny, in .Laurel Hill cemetery, Philadelphia, tliere. lias, been erected a monument forty ; feet high. Surmounting it is a statue seTen j and a half feet hich, which is said to be a j correct likeness of the deceased, representing i her in tbe character of "ltuth, the Gleaner Allie Mills, aged 14 years, Mary Oglie, aced 17. and May Jones, aged 12, committed ' Eleven Men Killed. A construction train on the Manitoba Line jumped the j track near Atwater, Minn., on Saturday evenine, and tumbled down a twelve-feet embankment into eight feet of water, totally ! wrecking the eun'me and twenty-two cars. j Engineer George Flood and ten men were killed and many move wounded. There were ntty men crowded tofftner in the ca- I went scenes I baflle description. The train was running I about eighteen miles ah hour, and the-acci-; dent cannot be accounted for unless there ! was a defective : wheel. The engine and I cars are under water and the cause cannot : be determined. The killed and wounded, ' with the exception of the engineer, were I Norwegians ' and Swedes. The company I pent out Tullnian cars and physicians to care j for the wounded, and they were removed to limar ana other points for treatment. nr.i.it ATE rm.vi.r.s. The exactness of society, added to the cares of maternity and the household, have tested beyond endurance tho 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 nourish'1112 and sfrengthening pro perties of MA1T P.ITTEliS. Theycuiich the blood, perfect digestion, stimulate the liver and kidneys, arrest ulcerative weak nesses, and purify and vitalize every func tion of tbe female svstwm. suicide at Danville, III., on Thursday morn- I pers offer their subscribe ing by taking arsenic. Allie Mills gave as ciiroinos, aim Mie im PU trwauls surtere't, ana it ls-cruei.io re mind them o these things now." To remind the Republicans of this fraud is no more cruel than it Is to re mind a forger of his forgery, a burglar of his burglary, a murderer of his blood shed. ... The crime of the Republicans can never be forgotten, and it can never he forgiven. Even when- centuries have' cast over it the kindly veil of time, it wi!l stand forth conspicuous and revolt ing in the records -of history. The names of the managers will be infamous, and they who profited by it through of fices or honor will be covered with shame in the impartial annals of the world. No sinners can be forgiven but those who have repented ; and the republican party has never repented of the Elector al Fraud by 'which Hayes? was put into the office which rightfully belonged to Mr. Tilden. JVctc York $an. TrtERR were some important and close votps on Saturday in the House on the bill reducing internal revenue taxa tion. An amendment offered by Mr. Randall, removing the tobacco tax of all kinds, on and after July 1. 1SS2, was de feated by the close .vote of 105 to 100. Then the motion to repel the tax on uu fermented liquors after the same date was rejected by 63 to 91. The motion of Mr.--Randall would have reduced the revenues after the next fiscal year forty two millions of dollars, and would, says the Pittsburg Po?t, have materially abridged the surplus on which the Re publicans rely to make their jobbery and extravagance easy. There were more suicides in the three spring months of this year in Ohio than in any other State in the Union. Has the political back-set of the "Ohio man" anything to do with this? asks the Philadelphia Ji?rord. More Tornadoes and Floods. Butler county, Nebraska, was devastated by. a tor nado on Sunday, and a number of people were killed, much stock was lost, and the crops destroyed. The path of the storm was ten miles wide. The damage, is estimated at ?r), 000. In the vicinity of Verona, Iowa, the storm rose to a great heitht, the fields were completely inundated and bridges and sluices earried away. Many farmers have abandoned the. hope of growing enough corn for seed. Oats are materially injured, many fields being red with rust, and the outlook for the crop is 50 percent, worse than ten j days ago. Disastrous storing iu : Missouri j along the line of the Hannibal and St. Jo- 1 se-ph railroad blew down thirty-five miles of A PrFHFi of Chkomos Ls what snide pa rs, t ou buy a riuz- gave as i-eil cinoiiiu, iiiiw i nr. umn in in- j-ai'.-i. her reason that her father lived w less woman. Miss Oglie's reason she was nrtifl rwr4 nco mo ntlrora Win t MissJesseGreen.of New Orleans, daugh- ( scribe. The paper is published on itsmer ter of Trotestant Episcopal patents, em- its, and I they don't want c bo subscribers, braced the Jewish faith and was married to ' lhV offer .very valuable tndums to their tr tc Voitoi o f;h, j h.t cn ' aeeuts. Read ti e advertisement, send them r.mKESTitlVJ IjKLEGATES. Ailam Wm. .1. ?.Iar-ln. lf.n .1. Whl'f. Allegheny 1 --i Inst n-t. F-n-ieh. I). F. Pt- tron.V, I-'. Kicbnr1'ir : 2V Wtr E. R.aam"rr. L'has. F. AnilTfi.n: S I. ! jhrt EMclsil. Sam 1 11. Oilson ; 4th. W. H. p. -r. K. Fi lv. An !. itook-': Mh. It'ii. T. Miller. VTtliam lH-.-kson; eth, J. K. K. Duff, W. P.. K. Lewis. t . Artiistron It. H. Joiiotn. .T'a--st A. .1 ek. Biarcr Jaru:t tli "tiTi. 1 1 onus E. I'MTSrii. Bedford Walur I. Mm.rp Entile Klet.-lier. B-rk lM, A H. W. Smitn, Jib Milter: 2d, II. H, Sflnnru. i ic.r.-t- Sm;;;.. jr. : I j, J.i ! M Kiitim. .Ii-hn I". "Mr::!l. Bia.rs,. H. I-.tr. A. .1. H-,v. Hra ll T.l 11. II. M-.-Kvsn. L ii'J Porter. Vrlnh Terry. Bucks Lewi H..I.HKCS JoVn H...l!:nn. Arthur LTi'l.T. i . ; i i k von. Butlrr (Ie... Ii' i.:t!im. W. 11. HCmnti. t "am Nr. :i .1. h:i V. I.mt- n, Ia1ure Llitar.. t "nuier.iTl N s. H;n-k-tt. f fart, .n .1. ( 1. Z. rn, jll ael CU:v. : Centre J. .N . taam-v:. I. A Hw-w, Clieiiter J. tin H at.lani.'.il.cwls Baker, Henry K. tup, lle-jimln Vauilcvr, . t'l iri'in . W. ;roet,,ii,l, J. T. I.cU. t 'erfie! J 1 r. J. P. JiurthliclJ. t'llnton Tliiniias J. I'i.i. Cnlninhm I'cter A. Evan", (t. A. Herrlne. t'raw..7 i .las. . I..ili;lHf. Tlios. E. t-utt, C. BiJ-tone. Th?. J. Nmllev, Cumberland .l.lm tir'alinm. -Vnrtin Onfwller. I'aupMn lt fcfr.b S. Hai.lman : ' U Autrustua 311'ler. A C L:i.nf1is IMaware u.fcn anrill9. An lrew dsT-orne. Klk c.nrc K.tnxon.M. V. Blare. Fayette 11. I'. Snv.tcr, X. Ii. Sniiriitiit. F'.rpM .Io.'id l atteriiu. Kratiklinw. s. bietittr, B. F. Winder, IiavlJ J. Skinner. Fulton m. Ii. SkitjTier. Ureer.e K. U. Fraiii-r. Huntictsavn Thus. H. Adams, Oen. M. t'ris t!l. ; Indiana J is. 11. S.in?"m, J. M. Thtnpson. JeCeriun F. K. j"Iuilin. JnuUta SHtniel F. Ard. l,ane:!5ter l.-t, Henry Woir : 2.1. 3. Cba'. I'lanc 7.. M. stan!l.-r: SI, t. I.. nnit.nstit, V. Hanhm. . M. W,lier. Lawrence John ti. McCVnahv, ALclrew I'alter son. Lebanon .Tohn Keiter, John B. WUrnr. Lelnli lr. A. J. Martin. M. ii. Jlu'iner. Xr 11. A. !av lor. Lyci.miiiir Henry M. Wolf, jr.. In-. 11. H. Mar tin, stoiHrhU.D tJeorife. i.uzime and I.aokawana lt. S. W. Bovd 21 H. W. Search : 31. Amhonr F. ImiCj; 4tlT . S. b! friae ; Sjh, J.-lin K. Memmiil J ; eih. .K.hn B. t".. I:n. .lnuies Kerrumn ; 7th, A. J. Smith; sih, M. E. MeKorniM. H- Kean H. l.crt iinesr. Mereer B. Jiaje'ul'n, Peter J. Pierce, Jame! A. Stsnn.'than. Mifflin J. M. Selheiuier. - Monroe A. J. Shoemaker. Montgomery t'has. T. IMirham.Wm. M. Stneer ly. I'hilip S. tlarrett, l'aniel Kolev, Kiraiu P. Kelley. .. Muiitonr O-car fra'ic'. Northampton John Bruce, Oeo. W. SchnaMe, James V ounij. Nortliuint.eiland Hiram Haas.C. BcW illiam? Perry Wiili.m. W illfg. Philadelphia 1st. William Lee. Huirh Tlovte ; 2.1. Michael H uniiton, Patrick IWiiiMheitv :" fkl. Peter Monroe : 4th. John Forsyth .tii, Au'tb.iuf . 1'ilion : 6'h. Martin Killa ky :" Till. Jntu oki, John H. Lynch: ii. 1 .twin A. I ut: wti. Jotin Rim : l'.t h . William t'hatuiler ; 1 1 th. John Ham ilton: Uth.K.K Kiernan: loth.r.r. Haciterly 11 n, J. t . scoT-nai-tior; lain, .Jurm ri . .rn Uon. An; am one of the New t v-r ti r -. . fTk ntv 1 . tricts in C'ncress and i-V; iron nianufactuiers in tl it - . a vrr Ii '. rf i.ru nr. K.., 1,.-, 1 House resumed c.ni..eiat...!, reduce internal rcvt-i tie ta.; after referrit-e to th lai-.. ri men now refiwii-- tu the causes of Ftiikec t:"-, : said : Tlie t-eneral d.-r.-:D 1 i r v.- I lace 1 w t' -.t th" w,.rk"-ar t -I'le to fni p ! !n..-r,r ii r i t: - t - K' he w.t tllW rec-.!', it i; . ; fO!ii y c y-n tx-L- J.-r-. i a -. ; : pree, an-Jra t cici-- vr -i' TI e r'-"- in i r'-- . ' ti . year had t.e'-n ..- k"!-.-!: t: foiin-l ti.ey er l-e:t a r-. c m araute c.M'.f. rt t . What wis fo 13 1 n: n :! demapi! t-y the t: . .vr ers wrer umii le to e K'd t p:j 1 is; her w .- -r f-.if ed Imv. c -ni(- their rat-ital. T! c " It wa" !n:po-.il.'e to ? the emj i..ye or the e:-. i of fOTpr- B h. Fl e tr t-r. ' lr t"ni;ree r.ni: hand hke tin l.-nd i f n e-n; r and Inl--r p n I v i. tr.totion. if H cou'l hud 'V. t c on the t n-lit:1'" of ir.Vj-- v .- ' tinncccs.iTy. tl ti;. s f-.r l. i. proceed witt t ee l. It h.-u: ! tm.n of l-ai.!atti n in " -'-r t wh-rh w-re p-r.ir li.e v. ry : j ej. e 1 the ' -i; Ie. Conrrt-n wj t. IJ I v these-r-Dry that in ..re t:.. r'-y ip -e-od'!. w tor gentleman t ( K f "! t t ) :i ' 1 h e ; I i :lK v . . ' V.I-rj. On lju! lrt m l t dollar d -:nt u'- 1 "'..j '- -. relieve t l-em rt : ' e t " ' n t t: - ! 1 r thi tr. : ai ! :..- n t . I ll'fc lAflO'l. . I B ! . i B - K 1 Ti ff a red -ie; j had t een r ' -red I lia t rtetn. cde 1 a I tax-Utoi ar-.l hec t"ek of- ll,i0 0 word ot p-vmie to hope. hi- tn did not tou-h tha wo (ina-ie artieie. mau k.-. . the l.cpur.ii.-iii i-'irty. e!; h'.lity ol iett!-ia:n.T. ":.' now on a Ttr'vercril r-ke t.. ?;ifh-'ert for their ;-p;-. rt. to a whale. The ).'ioD i t. t;,-n had t-een iriade. 3r word ! te an t.fj In tl e l-tie he fi i.iiM out In ti.e t-. Iti.ted tltat th: pr- t-oM -o -a finir'e ote-ei.,,; ler. Ih.-r 1 ical em!?cflr! In the e -i.. i He app".;lc 1 to ?!.! tt. ! I red -ie-Yxp. tvI t ir' - : i: i on the r -ert.iirt'crte.l t-t:".-pie. I'tv re ! u: i c f and that was to keep H,e t--. j erty of th- trea..ir w - '.' -I ll would not perm.: w.-uid vot ,TDnt ri -: ! (. It would i,, t p ra .: j auins f.-r hni-l-inz wt'ortl.!e. ! of the navy yarjr. V HI'".' 'th - tk 1 ' i an orphan, and' Mary Jones took the umn, don't offer a dozen chromos or a peck 'eaue the others did. i of snide jewelry to ln.lueo people to sub file 14th iut. Shortly before her public dec laration of her cbaiipe of faith they were married by a civil magistrate ; after It they were united by the Jewish rabbi. ' The w Tork Sun repeats the story that 'when things looked blue for (iai field $100,000 were raised and sent to Ohio by Jay (ion'd, tluoimh Wbitelaw Reid, for the lie publicans : the candidate binding himself to p.ppoint Stanley Matthews to the Supreme teleeranh wires in the vicinity of Brookfield. Bench to reverse the at.proved constitution Almost a evnlnfm vtAitel llnleehartf nn Sun- j alitv of the Thiirmnn rallroail ae.t. day ninht, ahd ai;houh the daiuap; done The New York GMe, edited by colored as SO cents, at which price tbe grower scarce was not preat, the neighboring country snf- ! men, says : "When a party cannot maintain : ly Rets any return whatever." fered considerable injury. The Illinois river is oHt of its bank and bottom farminif this year Ls impossible. The telepraph wires are twistd, torn, and grounded in every direc tion in Nebraska. The storm travelled 400 miles in sir hours. 1 In its course it struck Kerwin, Kansas,' fend completely carried away churches, houses and barns. At Tal mage, Marysville, Avoca and other points in Kansas the storm dealt destruction. Three men were killed at Talmae. The crops were levelled in all direction. PEVASTATKn Iowa. An Alsrona special to the Des Moines KtyiMer of the 2"th says : Twenty houses were demolished, five per sons killed and twenty-fire injured in the south part of Clav county by a hurricane. yesterday. In Ennnettsbure, five houses were blown down and other damage done One man was thrown on a hot stove and burned, and three carried off and badly hurt. A child wascarrieu several rods, and will die. In Fenton township, Kossuih county, all of Win. Mt'ers family wore hurt and the. house blown down. X ear Wesley, (t. W. Adams and child were injured. A Cherokee, Iowa, special says : The wind and rain storm yesterday morning did con siderable damacre at and near the town of Peterson and south and north of here. At Peterson a store, fotvr or five dwellings and two stables were blown down. Four miles north of there four farm houses were leveled, killing a woman and child and woundins; several others. - A few miles this Side sever al more farm houses were leveled and others damaged. At Southerland three stores, a blacksmith shop and seven or eiijht dwell ings went down. Knmors of other damnee in the surrounding country, but no further particulars. Father is Getting Well. My dauch ters say, "How much better father is since he used Hop P.itters. He is getting well af ter his lon suffering from a disease declared incurable, and we are elad that he used your bitters." A lady of Rochester, N. Y. Shiloh's Cough and Consumption Cure j is sold by us on a guarantee. It cures eon ' sumption. At James' drug store. it? supremacy without corrupting the public service by bnrgain'.naaway offices and taxing, poor employees, and when a party is unable to correct these evils by forces within its or- ' ganization we cannot s'ee why it should long- ! er hold the confidence of honest, thougbtt ul citizens." v , I AboutO o'clock on Saturday night Smith, j a saioon keeper in Chico, Cal., shot his wife I dead in his saloon and attempted to escape. , He was soon captured and taken to jail, when it was discovered that he had taken j poison. A crowd assembled, and if the ef j feet of the poison could be counteracted it was thonght the murderer would be lynched j before morning. A barlie.r in Lawrence, Mass., thought it ! funny to cut the hairof a simnle-minded cus i tomer in an eecet.tric and ludicrous manner, but the police justice, on the matter being brought before him, looked at it from a dif ferent point of view, and, telling, the barber that hi had been guilty of a serious assault, fined him f.vi and costs, with the alternative of going to jail for six months. David Andy, slightly demented, a resi dent of West Newton, Westmoreland coun ty, and the father of nine children, commit ted suicide by hanging at Irwin Station at 4 o clock Sunday morning. Corouer doiman was summoned and found Andy suspended from a swing in close proximity to Hoofnan glc's brewery. The rope used was an inch thick. Among the recent immigrant arrivals at Castle Garden were three girls from Iceland, who are on their way tn Milwaukee. They are pretty and robust. On their heads are skull caps made of black cloth something af ter the fool's cap. The peaks hang to one side and are crowded into metal rings about three inches long From the. bottom ot tbe rings depend: heavy silk tassels a foot in length. At Paton, N M-, on Monday afternoon. Deputy Sheriff Dolmann was shot by a noted gambler named (ins. Mentzel, who at the same time shot Chas. Fox, Jacob Harris, S. II. Jackson, narry Moulton, and Hngh Ed elston. The three" latter were killed Instant ly, the deputy sheriff was dying at latest ac counts, and the murderer was summarily disposed of by the enraged citizens, who hung him to a sigu over tbe Baton bank. tnphelj. ithVsl The pubhshers 'of C Ar Sunny Soot. ; whose .1? in was that advertisement may be found in anot.ier col- w. tmerlck ; Wth, J:!.n Uorralcr jojtn Srf!H, K i John aie lUiumi : J tn, alter II IMnirtilt-e. .lai. ! Maher : Vllft, T. 11. iHdahahauty : km. l. .MinmnK; j 2.td. Kdwar.l Alien: a4t!i. J. ' (Jailmrher, -JS'.h, K. H. r loot! ; SMIi. t-.lwsrd FltTt.a'i-H-k. Stephen Ifcjueherty ; H7ih, Saniui l T. Jaqtierte; 2h Sara nel .loacptis. Potter L. Peek. Sehuvlkill lt, Patrick Pilton : 21 . "harle E Steele : Sd, STichaol Heard ; ftk, t. I Nice, U. J. Areuoo.1, John T-'ole. Snyder X. J. Smith. Somerset r'red tlroff. John Uhl. Su.ltvan-M. J. Lull. Susquehnna FimeDe O'Nell. J. W. Iu?enhnrT Tio'a A . M. Fitt. John WT. Bailey, t'nion Samuel Johntori. Venaniro William Haseoo. Gilliam Foster. S. Siinonx. Warren II. Tairirart. Washinvtnn Ja.. lKinaldon, W. II. McCarrie E. T. Townsend. ' Wayne P. P. Smith. Antuft Hartintr. We?tmoriland J. W. Kuii,v;. . ttrlffith, AV. C -tone?. Wyoraint samne .Tecklna. York K. I. Zeigljr, Jubn Hlackford, Foulk Juues, John IXean. a club, and in doiug so mention this paper. The New York Times, in an article on the peach crop in Maryland and Delaware, based on past seasons, comes to the conclu sion that not less than 3,.V,0,000 baskets of peaches will be grown on the peninsula this year for the market. It predicts that peach es will be very cheap in the market, as a "crop of 3.000.UOO of baskets will permit only very fine peaches to sell for more than Jt per basket, and cause fair quality to sell as low FunAKs OTHI j telegram of tl.e The ryel.ir: to-r.e v ; day traver--d a::-l ;- (""Mowed no pe.-t" e'ltre I sit I -or.t a- I Nehra-ka. Micl iw-.n. 1 ern lndi.-.na. W t 1 been the im t Fcri?.ue t irreirate l"-o iu i th 1 ver henvv. !A fewere ra'n an-J w i ! ye'etilay evrnmir. - t: der and litl-tnttu:. "!! many prank were j l;.yi-l live i re l. t. I He'.ween Mo !oii and I I 2,ROi tcet ol CI leu:-. r. ' wa warhed rii y. I I ' Q.utni-v roH-1 i.fTe..--1 .-v. n In N'ehrH-ka ye-l-" i.i. ir -gathered m Iviit'.-- ,-i! ' through rder. 1 .--1 . ' tra-ka e -nnt.e-. .1. l. .- ' lc!t twevly r.ve tD.'e- " V.'t -tf-n. 'i'w o hoi-c. - ti -c 1 and a iwii-et i'v I. rti i air. A l'e.. or li roirf. erirht miles Mihiwut-l. i--. the wire l.r.'ft;. IS'.-t a the winrtoww lacing t tf k wit e.n. t: '' e w w k il led and ft ve c : e 1:. r.i-e : rtit?.-uri I'n- :1. hai.v ay. m.dcra freiirhi vir. w ! i Corn wi;; he piit l-..ek t tcr of cattle were rnrrcj d ed nen r I.-- r;el ..r" . Iu Mil tierota the r--: d hndtres anil tuade i- n damrted eem-v 1 ' man w;i drowr'd 'n L ll!C s --k f-. rri !Ve lie- - At l-atur. lini.. tte 0.. 0o.i. Thr. e pr-r- h:ie : cent t.-nudoe. II' to ri-wi, .J. 0C. 1 he te w ire- were a.i Mown 0 w: . there wai a t--rri:!f Tn r S?-turj:ir T. w - the e"y"foT n e ir iie-h' roek ntid ImmeiiF trr-- a It" fury wa epent hef- re ItESTOiiEi to Sioht. Senator Alexan- ; der's son, who was oltliged to leave college ' six months atjo on account of aome affection ! of his eves, is hack aaain at t-tje State Col lege i with restored eyesight. Dr. McKenzie, the ' 'ew York oculist, attended the case and ' thanks to his skill Mr. Alexander informs us i his eyes aud sight are better than they have j ever "been. The disease was functional and known to oculist as Compound Myopic As tigmatism. ISoileJorUe Centre lJemocrui. At Santa Cruz, California, on Saturday, a coach In which a numtier of young people from San Francisco, who had been camping out in the vicinity, were taking a ride, went over the bank of the turnpike near Felton, killing Miss Iva Cowdery, Eva Sussay, Celia Scott and Master George Scott, and wound ing Masters Htirr, Penjdniin Burling and Wm. Mockles seriously. The accident was caused by the horses shying. Rl tKLtll'S ARXICA R.4I.VE, The Bfst Salve in tbe world for Cuts, Druiscs, llurr.o, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chil blains, Corns, and all Skin Ernntions, and positively cures Piles. It is guaranteed to rive perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price M ct9. per box. For sale bv T.. James, nuie aneni, roensourg, I a. o-S.-ly. The Philadelphia Record cives this vivid picture of the business of raising campaign furds iu the Republican party: "The poor page-boys In Congress, the scrub women in the Treasnry, the stitchers in the Govern ment Printing Office and the common labor ers in tho Navy-yards must all contribute from their pittance toward defraying the campaign expenses of the parly in power. If they refuse to pay they must go." WHY WOJIEX I KE IT. Because they have learned by experience that it overcomes despondency, indigestion, weakness In the back and other troubles of the sax Is why women everywhete use Par ker's GiDter Tonie. J7w. Jwrnml. The IIi.ack Maii.inci Circulail The New or It Herald of r ridav.prints a rVic timile of the cirx nlar of the Republican Congres sional Committee, addressed to thousands of odicials and employes m the United States, demanding money to "meet expenses inci dent to the political CP .ppaign"this tear. The Herald says : in me example we par- Mr--;ed 'or cleetrotTn- i ii iiiw uui iu'-i iiiq.i uoiiar?. ana the pern.in Irctn tun It hnt ht-ei extorta-1 t a dav lal.orer with ft wile and eliil.jreii ' ?u; p -rt. It fs a!iee.l oq an I:i:m ra'i'a-el at eren hun dred and fifty dollars a vear. Many other m h letters have Peon hroiurht to onr attention. 1 he funres vary In them, and appear irenerallY to ho computed. u In fT.t e?ie. I.y a pereentage nj.on the Tietim'p mm. wlarv or t.n-aume..! emolu ment. In w-ttiH iint;mii.. howtTer thev ar- In pefted arhttrarilv We iia . t.ln,..i. m t which they r-oh a hlrh a two hundred and an other In hieh they reach low as three dolUrs and Flity eent. In the latter the jeron acs-ed it an errand tK.y thirteen year old. hnt pretty full trrown for hi? ae. Women and a-irl In the em ployment ot the envernment are also held iiahle. I'he cradle is robbed, and the unit would be if It wr! aeeesfitde. We have feen it aerted that the arrrea-:i:e of the roeet pts whieh th Ketiurdican C'entirea-ioral t'ommittee aimi to obtain in this manner is at leat five hun.lrad thousand dultar". Tlie num ber of iatter? it h:i already sent out i estimated at thirty thoufaud. and l' tnereai-lnic dailv w.th ftrcat ratiidity, the Intention Ivitii riot nierelr to reach and aef the hundred thousand y called olhee holder, but alM Hie ."till mcater number ! employe" who are nut cuniinfiniirl. I'.r exam ple, the Ho!on newspapers savthut seven hun dred ol these letters were served last we-k npon the workimrmen in the fharietown Navv Yard perhai In compliment to the civil v ie'et rel -rm prolesions ol SenaUirs Dawes and 11. ar. l rom a plan exeeuteil on .uch a comi-rchensiTe scale the exjeetation id the extortion ol hair a million dol lars appears to be very moderate. PKRKOXAI.1 T Jtrx OM.T! TtttViK-THi- Hm t.. Marshall. Mich., will pend lilt. lirfi-CitniMTin KinTiw ivtio Helts ami Kl.EfTKti- Ai'i'i l a M K- ua trial for thir ty day t0 Ucr) fyoutiir or old) who are xft'.totej with Norvons Teb:hty. host Vitality and Vjn bood, and kindred troubles, iftiaranteeinir speedy and comi.lf.e restoration of health anil manly vi( or. Address a" above. N. R... No risk Is Incurred, as thirtj Uavs trial is allowed. IVM.-'iJ.m.J i KTK A' 1 - F BOM TH ': x 1 MASTER IH Loyn.-A V.':- of J une 20tb says : I Long's in-te ivt "f ' ' on tur.cr .tli tl i--.-'y half a cuii-l i f d ii u :c Cit: , flnokM-n d:e 1 : m ' ' banters tvuud U"li in ' ' meat left. October 7 llreak.'n-tt 1 t d 'if meat and iaf fa:u t- on a piumey of uiiifs, t. -j fett .eir.ctit ex'-'ed . ictMr e Hrt airaft. t 1 pint of hot wau-r lor a i , uiiie. struck a r.ver. o-.it er lo - I..is: hi.'.: -H" n-n to cat deer n s r. lore eaten tht-.r ilecr k-.:i and made drink Ir-rc lea ' i-to r It ak'a'-t. - and hot wau-r, dinner, a r- tic will w in a l o; . ! a: 1 ar-y with ftrci.Lt'i cn.'ii-' 7'errihie f now a u ies. ( ' -t .Vft lit W if. w ' rrokinif the river tn:s I ni d ne h..d h.iti ii -r .i ' and .a:d it " I. r : s pr . ' octoi-r n i;.-r.k . t "--t. Alexy. tc i-t.tr -C:itne 1-. -i I isi.-i.u ' lay, Ikp-i cr 1 l -Scrv i e. i. ; .'.or IT a ' Head prayer, t.-r f c - - Oc'ot.er 1- Sr'- tle-olerT 'u: u; Oetot er 'JO l ta ! o ' icuy-cr K'H -! ' .' tv n I c I t. n I'd T ' L' , pravers when i.- n ' - Oet nN r VI 1 ' " wesi. ' . lti-1 Ku-h out o-i t e ; draui; -d tk. in ar i tl c - Oct. h-rCi H-.ir i-- 1 rvboiiy weak ; c h . pv.ivi r ; no h . t -ed r .Practical Li- A.FNT WlUllt il..i- AGENTS Wan- .! k - ... rn C ' ' "7 , a v 1 fret. At3'.:
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers