The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, July 21, 1882, Image 2

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rBEHSBURC, PA.,
FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1832.
DEM01RVT1C STATE TICKET.
FOR GOVERNOR.
ROrT E. PATTIsON". of Philad'a.
FOH MF-fTEKANT f.OVF.KNOTl.
CIIAUXCC V I'. BLACK, of York.
FOH jnmE OF prrrtF.'VfK COURT.
SILAS M. CLAPS', of Indiana.
FOR snCnFTATlY OF rNTFR"?AT. AFFAIW",
J. SIM PSOX AFRICA, of Huntingdon.
FOR COVr.RES?MA!T-AT-LAROE.
MORTIMER F. ELLIOTT, of Tioffa.
Mr.5. ITayks, wife of tlie man who
filial but never; was elected to the Pres
idency of tin United States, is to pre
side at the Chautauqua meeting of the
"Woman's Home Missionary Society, a
position nssicrnr-d her without the aid of
fraudulent returning boards.
The AUoona TrPm-ic draws consola
tion from the prediction thaf'it becomes
Liore nnd more, evident that there will
le substantial unity in the Republican
party of Pennsylvania when theXovem
Ih r bierzos begins to blow," Faith like
this is not only rich aud'rare, but capa
ble of moving mountains. Garfield, as
the TrP.'.me will recollect, spoke alout
the "nvlancholy days of November."
"U". V. IlFxsF.n, Esq., chairman of.
the Democratic State Committee, lias
railed a mrt.-tJn of that body at Bolton's
Hotel, Ilarrisburg, on Wednesday next,
th 2"th. He dors not intend to wait
and see whether the Cameron and anti
Cameron factions can compose their
quarrels before he commences the im
portant work set before him, but propos
ed to begin it at once and carry it to a
successful conclusion.
AErrriiLiCAN paper of the Camer
on stripes Mys that 1'atlison '-lias not a
a single qualification for the position of
Governor except that he is intelligent,
lias a hih school education and is hon
est." That a man who possesses' intelli
gence, is well educated and honest is not
precisely the kind of a man best quali
fied to till an otllce to the satisfaction of
the people, is certainly an alarming pro
position. It is because more men pos
sessing tl""-?! qualifications have not
been elected to oftico that bad gowrn
ioent in thu nation, State and county
lias been tho rule and good government
the exec t ion.
AxsF.TiN'itof the Democratic Com-
mPtuo of Al lechery county was held on
Satjt'fay lat to fix the time for holding
lbs primary elections and the county
aiai'milifij? conventions. Hon. James
H. Hopkins !s chairniau of the Commit
ter, and on calling- the meeting to order
In raid : "Though Allegheny county
failed to '-( t any recognition on the
ticket, there is no doubt that it is the
best that could be selected. There is
no rnnn on it v.-ho needs a defense, ami
none w!iot-e record we need feel ashamed
of. Tlioso of us who feel some disap
pointment that, other narr.es are not on
it will put aside our personal regrets,
and help in its triumphant election as
eariitst'.y as if those of our first choico
Lad l-n put upon it." The original
friends of Mr. Hopkins never doubted
vrt.ero he would bo found in the event
of Iih failure to secure the nomination
for Governor, and his remarks to the
Democratic C'Mumitteo of his own coun
ty, a given ab-ve. show that they were
not mistaken. He is .as true to his par
ty and its organization as the needle to
the p ! ?.
Tuf bombardment ot the city of Al
exandria, Egypt, was begun by the Bri"
tih fleet under Admiral Seymour, on
Tuesday morning of last week, and con
tinue 1 throughout that and tho follow
ing day, when Arabi Bey, the Egyptian
corjmarder, concealing h:s real purpose
under a flag of truce, withdrew his
forces from the city m the direction of j
Cairo. Many of the best built portions ;
of the city were destroyed by the contiu- j
uouj rain upon it of shot and hhell, and
in addition to this it was set on fire in '
mar.v places by the rabble, who indulged !
in wh"'esale and indiscriminate plunder, !
rapine nnd murder. The loss of life on ;
the Egyptian Side was large, while that
of the Englirdi was inconsiderable. The :
city is now in possession of the British
Admiral and order is being preserved
by the sailors of the tleet. It is idle
now to speculate upon what will be the
end of this the first net. in the drama of j
Lhod. What scrno the curtain may i
nest rise up-.n is very doubtful. In tlie
meantime- England is sending all her
available troop to Egypt.
John- C .Dflanfy, formerly of Lu
zerne, now Lackawanna county, is anil
has been for many years Libvaraian df
. ,. . ... ...
u:e -fiie .- jiiiie. vs ins name inui-:
catr, he is an Irishman, and a brawl- i
ing Republican at that. It has liecn hi3
regular custom in recent jolitical cam- ,
paign.s, to visit his old stamping-ground, :
tlie anthraeito coal regions, and with a j
vatic 1 a. utnrnt cf affidavits, attempt i
o control tho Iri-h vote against the i
D'jmecra'ic candidate for Governor, or I
tame other State o!Tae on the alleged :
f to and that he hud been connected with i
ti. Know-Nothing order. When Mr. !
1MH rt.n for Governor four years ago De-
lar..cj went into the business of defaming j
him in La.orne county on a trumped-up
cLcxs or Know-othinisni in the most
lively manner, although at the time De
lant.y i haiged Limuith having been a
rr.eiiib. r of the order, Mr. Dill was a
young student in a college in Maryland.
So far, liov evtr, as Robert E. Pattison
is concerned, lHlaney's occupation, like
Othello's, is gone, because when the
Know-Nothing party in this State was
buried out of siIit, at the October elec
tion ot 1 .-.", Pattison was only tire vears
old, and ludr.'t commenced wearing
pains. His want of aire is all that will
save lum from Dehu.ry's crusade against j ing good health. M,e was the mother
his alleged know-Nothingism. Were it j ,,f two children, both sons, oneof whom,
otherwise Liuerno and Lackawanna i Hon. Rob't T. Lincoln, is the present
would be alive with allUavits, furnish- j Secretary of War, the other, and voung
ed by this demagogue Del.uwy, for the , ger son, Thaddeus, having died at' Wash
pur pose of arouoing the foreign voU I ingtoii dining the first term of his fath
.agaiiiit hiui. ! er's administration.
TnE Cameron State Committee, which
met at Philadelphia on Wednesday of
last week for the purpose of uniting the
two factions of the Republican party,
submitted four propositions to the Inde
pendents for their consideration. With
out publishing them in detail it is suffi
cient to say that each one of them con
templated the renomination of Beaver
for Governor, whatever might become
of the other candidates on the ticket.
On the following day, Thursday, the
Independent Republican leaders, in
cluding all the candidates on their tic
ket, held a conference in the same city
to consider the proposition of the Cam
eron clan. This resulted in a letter ad
dressed to the five candidates on the
Cameron State ticket, which was signed
by Stewast, Duff, Merrick and Junkin,
four of the fivecandidates on the Inde
dependent State ticket, in which they
submit to the bosses' candidates two
counter propositions, as follows : 1st.
The withdrawal of both tickets. 2d.
The several candidates of both tickets
to pledge themselves not to accept any
subsequent nomination by the proposed
convention. Mr. Stewart and the oth
er three candidates named state in their
letter that if Beaver &. Co. will agree
I to tho above two propositions they will
! then consent to a new convention, to bo
! constituted in pursuance of the third
j proposition of the Cameron men, Col.
! McMichael, of Philadelphia, the Inde
! pendent candidate for Congressman-at-
Iarge, refused to unite with his collea
gues in signing the letter. The Camer
on Executive Committee met at Phila-
i adelphia on Tuesday to consider the
j two propositions of the Independent
j candidates, and make a reply to them,
j and we will know what was done lieforo
j going to press. The Independent State
! committee has been called bv McKep,
its chairman, to meet in Philadelphia,
on Thursday next, the 27th, to formally
consider the four propositions of the
Cameron State Committee to which we
have referred. There is a vast deal of
"now you see it!" and "now you dont,"
in all this business, and we must pa
tiently wait and see what the result
will be.
1', S. The Cameron Executive Com
mittee, at its meeting on Tuesday, re-
! jected the two propositions of the Inde
I pendents noted above. It is thought
j that this isjthe last attempt at compro-
I miso
J Tiik prospects of convicting Dorsey,
Brady, and the other Star Route thieves,
are "growing smaller by degrees and
beautifully less." During the progress
of the trials Judge Wylie on two or
three occasions has plainly intimated,
that while tho evidence shows that the
treasury has been swindled out of an
enormous sum of money, it fails to make
out the offence of coii.piraci to defraud
the government the crime with which
the defendants aie charged. It may be,
as the counsel for the government in
sist that they will yet be able to estab
lish a corrupt combination or conspiracy
to defraud ,but such does not seem to be
the impression at Washington of those
who have watched the testimony that
has thus far been developed. There has
never been a high and important crimi
nal trial in any Court in the country, in
which there hasleen so large an amount
of confident boasting by the counsel for
the prosecut ion of their undoubted abil
ity to convict as there has been in tiiese
much talkedjof and celebratedStar route
cases. Their investigation preparatory
to indicting the defendants was com
menced immediately after the inaugura
tion of President Garfield, by his At
torney General, Mr. MacVea&h, and
Postmaster General James; and now,
at the end of a year, and after the gov
ernment lias consumed week after week
in spreading before a jury evidence on
which it relies for a conviction, the
chances are ten to one that Dorsey and
his confederates will escape the penalty
of the law. If this should happen to be
tho result it will furnish a most notable
and instructive example of t lie difference
between high-sounding promises and a
conspicuous absence of anything like
j vigorous performance.
Old Simon Camfkon was in Read
ing, the capital of "Old Berks," a cou
ple weeks ago, and prophesied several
things regarding the present campaign
in this State. One of them was that
the Democrats who fought so zealously
for Mr. Hopkins' nomination would not
permit so young a man as Mr, Pattison
is to i!k3 elected Governor, and thus
become the central figure in Pennsyva
nia politics. There never was a time in
the political affairs of this State in
which the Democracy were so complete
ly and thoroughly united in support of
their State ticket, as they now are in
support of the ticket with Robert E.
Pattison at its head. In its favor they
are all of one mind and one heart, and
Simon knows it as well as he knows that
the present campaign will be the politi
cal grave of his son Don. He was also
convinced that if Pattison should be
i . , . . . .
: elected his friends intend to
make him
the Democratic candidate for President
in and on that account the old
Democratic leaders in the State would
yield him only a lukewarm support for
Governor. A man can't be elected
President until he is 33 vears of age,
and Pattison won't be that old until De
cenilvr 1R." more than a year after
the next Presidential election. It is
net pleasant for a man of Simon Camer
on's age to comtemplate the destruction
of the jiolitieal machine in this Stnte
of which he himself was the original in
ventor, but it is as true now as it ever
was that he who sows the whirlwind
must expect to reap tlie storm.
Mus. Mary Lincoln, widow of the
late President Lincoln, died at Spring
field, Illinois, aged about sixty-one
years. She was a daughter of Hon. Root.
S. Todd, of Lexington. Ky., and was
married tc Mr. Lincoln in 1S42. She
Was sitting by her husband's side in
Ford's theatre on the night of the 11th
of Apiil, 1-G.", when he was assassinated
by John Wilkes Booth, and since then
she has never poinv.i vthn.r, a,.,.r.,-,,.n
CO-M'ERMH "ALIENS."
Chairman Cooper is determined to
let his party know that he is doing some
thing. He has been engaged in distri
buting what he calls an 'argument show
ing that the contest for for Governor is
really bet ween, General Beaver and Con
troller Pattison." Without waiting for
his executive committee to meet and
make answer to the proposals of the In
dependents, Cooper assumes that they
are rejected : and as he appointed that
committee and knows his men he can
safely assume this. He berates the In
dependents very soundly for their failure
to nibble at the cheese in his trap, and
scornfully refers to four of the candi
dates posing "in the self-sacrificing at
titude of martyrdom" while McMichael
"through a stimulated or real difference
of opinion, proclaims in an incoherent
and inconsistent way that he remains a
candidate, and shall himself be the judge
whether he shall support any nomina
tion made even under harmoniona con
ditions. Exit McMichael." Whereupon
Cooper consigns them all to the demni
tion bowwows as "factious, insincere,
trifling and dishonorable men." with
whom he and his can have no affiliation
nor further negotiations.
Having thus taken the responsibility
of declaring the issue to be simply
whether Pattison or Beaver is to be
Governor, the Republican chairman
abandons the tariff question, which was
the leading question last week, and
boldly arraigns Mr. Pattison for having
been born on the South side of the Mary
land line, the son of a Methodist itiner
ant preacher. Besides this unpardon
able offense, Pattison committed the
heinous crime of coming into Pennsyl
vania at the mature age of six years,
with the deliberate purposes of a "mere
adventurer." That nativity elsewhere
entirely disqualifies one from serving
the people of Pennsylvania in a public
capacity, Cooper amply proves in this
able paragraph :
The office of Governor is one that special
ly calls for an Intimate knowledge on the
part of its occupant of the people of tlie State
their peculiarities and local idiosvnerisies,
their special wants and desires, aiid of the
measures neeessaiy ti promote their varied
interests. This is a knowledge which none
but a native can fully attain. A man roust
erow up amonx the people to understand
them fully ; and it is the unwritten know
ledge and experience thus acquired, and
which only a native Pcnnsylvanian can ac
quire, that Is essential to any one in the gu
bernatorial chair.
Seeing that Thaddeus Stevens came
into Pennsylvania when he was twenty
three, Benjamin Franklin 19, and Rob
ert Morris 13 ; that Blaine left this State
after he had grown to manhood; that
Daniel Webster was 22 when he entered
Massachusetts, that Henry Clay was 21
before be ever set foot on Kentucky
soil, and Andrew Jackson of full age be
fore he entered Tennessee ; that Abra
ham Lincoln was unknown to Illinois
before he had grown to the full stature
of manhood, and Sergeant S. Trentiss
had attained his majority before he land
ed iD Mississippi it is a little remark
able how the men whom their adopted
States learned to cherish, and whose
memories they adore, became acquain
ted with the 'special wants and desires'
of their people and the ''measures ne
cessary to promote their material inter
ests," although there were aliens to the
soil of these States at an age when Pat
tison was growing up with Pennsylva
nia and fitting himself for that brilliant
career in which he has already done tlie
State such 3ignal service. As Control
ler of Philadelphia he has already done
more than any other official whom that
city ever had to accomplish municipal
reform and open the way for the wider
held of state reform. It must be borne
in mind that Mr. Pattison was elected
times without the intervention of assis
tance of the Committee of One Hundred
No such organization then existed, and
many of its members, as individuals,
did not support Mr. Fattison. It grew
out of his labors ; it was organized to
support the work which he had almost
single-handed begun. It is r.o wonder
that this work does not suit Cooper and
his party. It has dislodged the corrupt
Philadephia ring from power and driven
the thieves from their stronghold. Penn
sylvania feels far more pride in him than
in degenerate native born sons who
have sold their birthright and shamed
their commonwealth by betrayal of trust
ana abuse of power. Lancaster Intelli
gencer. Doing tiik South .Tistice. In
Charleston I met a Michigander who
has served two terms in the Michigan
Legislature, held a Federal ollice of. some
prominence in the State, and been fa
mous as a politician in the Republican
party. After we bad walked around
for an hour, I asked :
"Now, then, what do you think of
these ieople ? You have seen thern
with their coats off, and can judge them
as they are."
"I tell you, I'm ashamed of myself,"
was bis reply, "When I think of how
we have lied about them and'their insti
tutions I am ashamed to look them in
the face."
"Have they treated you well V"
"Splendidly."
"And they knew you were from the
North ?"
"Yes."
"And you were a strong Republican?'
"Yes."
"And what do you think of the dar
key ?"
"D n him, sir, d n him I" he ex
claimed heartily. "We wouldn't stand
the half from him that the South does.
He is lazy, shriftless, thievish, and. a
general nuisance. I've talked with a
score of thein and they are as i).n rant
as our horses. They vote my ticket,
but they can't tell me why. I'hey
have no reason, no arguments, no prin
ciple, and so little sense that I wonder
how they get thiough the week."
Wheu you return home you'll do the
South justice ?"
"How "
"Why, you'll talk to your party mem
bers just as yo have talked to me."
"X-o, I can't do that."' he answered,
"If I should go back and tell them ex
actly how thingi are I'd I'd -"
"You'd lose your grip V"
"Exactly."
"And to keep your grip you must con
tinue to lie about, abuse and malign the
people who have taken yoxi to their din
ner tables and shown you every iwssible
kindness and courtesy I You must con
tinue to claim that they do not give the
black man a fair show when sou know
letter ! You must continue to call 'em
rebels, when you see every Federal law
obeyed, and everybody contented and
happy I Colonel, politics is a nasty bus
iness." ' Cuss politics," he growled, as he
left me at the corner. Detroit Eree
Press.
A Retort Courteous. "How I en
joy the return of Saturday night," said
Senator Vance in the horse-car riding
up f'om the Senate.
"Yes," rejoined Senator Hoar, "if
yon were a Republican you might join
with Dr. Watts in saying :
"How pleasant is Saturday nit'ht
When I've tried all the week to be good."
"Not being a Republican," returned
the North Carolinian, "I can't tell a lie
like that."
Senator Hoar offered Senator Vance
his hat, which Was declined quietly but
firmly. IVaahiHgton sjievial to JV. 1'.
Tribune.
A horrible catastrophe occurred in Bu
enos Ayres during tt.e celebration of the fu
neral services in honor of General (iaribnldi.
A curtain in one of the lodge cauuht fire.
The edifice wa crowded xt Ihe time, and the
wall fell burying' many of them. Twenty
bodies were subsequently iu out of the
ruins, and ten seriously wounded were re
covered. Ail were well known people.
TATTISOS AND BEAVER.
There is no need of indulging in any
gush over the nomination of Robert E.
Pattison for Governor ; that may be
left to the zeal and enthusiam of the
party journals. But there are some es
sential points involved in this contest
upon which the supporters of Pattison
can boldly challenge comparison with
his republican and Independent oppon
ents. Without seeking to defend all
the acts of his administration, it must
be conceded that in the office of Control
ler of Philadelphia he has given proofs
of firmness, integrity, and executive
ability of a high order qualities that
are eminently requisite for the proper
discbarge of the duties of the Chief
Magistracy of Pennsylvania. In the
management of the financial affairs of
the City he has brought order and sim
plicity out of chaos, and has introduced
an accountability in municipal trusts,
which have saved large sums of money
to the taxpayer. lie has permitted
neither party nor personal consideration
to swerve him from the courageous dis
charge of his official duties. There are
many abuses in the state-government,
many and deep-seated, which await a
strong hand of this kind for their eradi
cation. Partly by design and partly by
neglect, important provisions of the con
stitution have failed of enforcement ;
and the election of Pattison would af
ford a guarantee that the constitution
had at last been brought under the guar
dianship of its fiiends.
In his limited public and official ex
perience Gen. Beaver has betrayed a
want of executive capacity which is in
striking contrast with the high adminis
trative abilities of bis Democratic op
ponent. Without seeking for one mo
ment to cast the faintest shadow upon
the personal integrity and pure charac
ter of General Beaver, weare compelled
to say that in his only opportunity to
give proof of his executive capacity in
the management of the affairs of the
Agricultural College he has been a
dismal failure. There is no doubt of
his zealous and unselfish devotion to the
interests of the college, and yet under
his fatal control this liberally-endowed
institution has in a brief space of time
fallen into almost complete ruin and de
cay. Looking at the matter purely
from a business point of view, it would
bo somewhat strange if the people of
Pennsylvania, in choosing their chief
executive, should prefer the candidate
who could not manage the affairs of an
agricultural school to the successful ad
ministrator who has reduced to order
the confused and tangled affairs of a
great city. With the best intentions in
the world General Beaver would lie sub
jected to the same trammels which re
strained Governor Hartranft and Hoyt.
lie is the candidate of the men who for
ten years have obstructed the operations
of the new constitution, and if he were
elected the constitution would remain
under the guardianship of its enemies.
Philadelphia Record, (Ind.)
Evictions and Arrests in Ireland.
The sweeping evictions that are now
going on in Ireland are inflicting great
misery on the people. Their hardships
are intensified by the refusal of the
magistrates in some districts to allow
huts to be erected for their sheltar. At
Carraroe there was no refuge for about
1,000 people save the workhouses. Near
Ballentuber recently a man named;Dy
wer and his family lived alongside a
ditch without shelter of any kind until
admitted to the workhouse. In King's
county J. F. O'Brien and A. O'Shaugh
nessy were sent to jail by Capt. L.'Es
trange, a notorious magistrate, for hav
ing taken part in the erection of huts
for some evicted tenants. Patrick Ka
vanaugh, oue of those evicted, took re
fuge with his wife and nine children in
an old barn, which had neither window
or door. The children were suffering
from measles, and two of them soon
died from exposure. Kavanaugh ap
plied to tlie police to have an inquest
held, but they refused. He walked eight
miles to a magistrate, who directed the
Coroner of the district to hold the in
quest. The Coroner issued his precept
to the constabulary for the summoning
of jurors and w itnesses, but the precept
was ignored. The Coroner then gave
it up, remarking that such a cloaking
over the case was sufficient to cause
discontent in the county, and that he re
gretted to say that some supposed eace
makers were peace disturbers. It was
stated at the time that the erection of a
but sent up from Dublin had been for
bidden, aud that more of the children
were likely to die. It was with refer
ence to such occurrences as these that
Chief Secretary Trevelyn was moved to
declare that there were landlords "who
asserted their rights in a cruel and un
patriotic manner," The Dublin organs
of the landlords are denouncing this re
mark as "cowardly and crime-inciting.'
The total number of arrests under the
Coercion act up to June 15 was t'17.
Most of these prisoners have been re
leased, and the number in custody is
diminishing so rapidly that the Prison
ers' Sustentatiou Society finds itself
with more money than it needs. Miss
Parnell, in a letter of June lo says that
i.'lG,.V."5 have been expended by the so
ciety, and it has over X'S,000 remaining,
and that no further collection for this
fund need be made.
What Our IiEPURLicAx Congress
Laughs At. It is very amusing very.
It makes the politicians laugh, even if
the judicious grieve. When Butter
worth made some remark on the floor of
Congress so indecent that they would
not be permitted to appear in the CW
grestional Record, and ladies were warn
ed from the galleries, his colleagues
laughed heartily. Mr. Uutterworth was
so pert and pleasing and blackguardish
that they were compelled to hold their
sides, they laughed so much. When
I the Vice President elect of the United
States, now its President, described at
a Delmonico dinner, in honor of Star
Route Dorsey, by what persuasive arts
of corruptton that sweet gentlemen had
saved Indiana, the tables were set in a
roar, it was so highly diverting. And
when Senator Ingalls described the Riv
er and Harbor biil, by which it is pro
posed to take twenty millions of dollars
from the Treasury to aid in the re-election
of Congressman, as the "annual
shame, scandal and disgrace of Ameri
can legislation," the Senate burst into
a loud guffaw. Their part in the per
petration of the annnal shame, scandal,
and disgrace as this year, moved their
risibles. It is possible that the sober
sense of the country may be shocked at
this laughter. It is something too long
and too loud. It comes in at the wrong
time. There really isn't anything fun
ny in obscene jesting, in election fraud,
or in legislat ive stealing. The electors'
turn may come one of these days. Chi
cago Times.
GriTKAU Heard From. A Philadelphia
spiritualist claims to have heard from Gui
teau since his death, through the late. Presi
dent Garfield. A number of friends were
rently gathered in tlie office of Jonathan
M Roberts, the publisher of Mind and Matter
when one of them, Mrs. Lawrence, went into
a trance. She announced that Garfield was
present, and stated that Guiteau's spirit
was present with him, but was as yet too
weak to control anybody. He had found out
that his theory of inspiration was all wrong,
and that he had been the victim of evil influ
ences, lie had been thus enlightened by a
group of friends, aniorg'whuin was bis victim,
the president.. Mr. Koberts thoroughly be
lieves iti the revelation, and only smiles when
asked to account for the discrepancies of the
two spiritualistic accounts from Guiteau
the one from New York representing him
hapnv, and the other as being consumed by
the eternal lires
A bystander observed, however, that the
differences in statement might be reasonably
accounted for upon the hvpothesis that Gui
teau was up to his old tricks of lying.
PERSUING AXD THE PEDAGOGUES.
Following is the address of welcome
delivered by Hon. C. L. Pershing, of
Pottsville, Pa., on the occasion of the
recent annual meeting of the State
Teachers' Association at that place. It
is a production well worthy of its gift
ed author :
Ladies and Gentlemen :
This has been a year of conventions. Re
publicans, Prohibitionists, Greenbakers and
Democrats have In turn met tocether and
deliberated, as they each proclaim, for the
welfare of the people of the State. The as
semblaee before me to-day lias a better title
than either to the name of State convention.
You have not come from the four quarters of
this good old commonwealth to debate ques
tions of tariff or free trade, hard money or
soft, or any other of the issues which dii-ide
the people into political parties or factions.
You represent a cause which forms a bond
of union between all good citirens of what
ever party name the great educational in
terests'nf Pennsylvania. The constitution
of the State declares that "the General As
sembly shall provide for the maintenance and
support of a thnroueh and efficient svstem
of public schools, wherein all the children
of this commonwealth above the age of six
years may be educated and shall appropriate
at least one million dollars each year for
that purpose." You are therefore a consti
tutional body. You represent not onlv the
hills and the valleys, the towns and the oi
ties, the farms and the mines, which make
np the 46,000 square miles of territory of eur
home State, but with theop, and more direct
ly, you represent the 20.000 schools, the 21,
000 teachers and 1,000,000 scholars In schools
of the commonwealth, all maintained nt a
cost which last year actrroeated t s,000,0OO.
These are prand statistics. Thev speak
loudly of the advance that has been'mnde in
common school education within the limit of
the last few year9. I realize this the more
as 1 look back to a period in my own history
when I had the honor of presiding over a
common school, In a very common school
house, with 75 restless and hard-to-be-con-trolled
boys for my flock. The waees were
"f'20 per month and board myself." The
office of Superintendent of Public Instruc
tion had no existence, while an annual State
convention to consider the subject of educa
tion was unheard of. With the ad ranee
madd in the standard of qualifications for
teachers, I doubt whether I could now sus
tain myself in the same position.
The time of your meetincr is well chosen.
The nation yesterday celebrated the infith
anniversary of its independence. The Intel
licence of the people is the safeguard of our
Institutions. "Knowledge Is power," is an
aphorism which since the davs of Lord Ba
con has been repeated times without number
the world over. But we must not forget
that iernorance, too, is power, and no
where in a free Government can it make its
power more danperousiy felt than through
the ballot-box. I fear that as a nation we do
not yet understand the debt we owe to our
schools, nor properly value the labors of
those who have devoted their lives to the
business of teaching. Not that I believe
that mere Intellectual culture will preserve
our liberties. Ignorance of the masses may
be destruction, but intelligence of itself is
not safety. Our Tree institutions must have
intelligence and morality some of us would
advance a step higher and say religion and
Intelligence for their foundation if they are
to be perpetuated. In this work the church
and the schools must co-operate.
It is gratifying to believe that we have ad
vanced to a period when mental and moral
forces assert their equality with political
power in the government of the world.
Hence it is that the name of Florence Night
ingale is everywhere remembered and hon
ored for her work of mercy among the
wonnded and dying scldiers in the hospitals
of the Crimea, whilst the names of many of
the Generals who led the contending hosts
in that terrible conflect are forgotten. And
hence it is that tho whole nation honors an
educated mechanic, in whose brain th plan
of the Monitor was conceived just in time to
be constructed to meet perhaps the most
dangerous emergency in our great civil war.
Ladles nnd Gentlemen of the convention!
It is time that I proceed to the discharge of
the duty assigned me on this occasion. On
behalf of the citizens I bid you welcome to
this mountain-girt citv. It is the capital of
r county ceienraieu ror its mineral wealth.
Thousands of the people of this county daily
toil in the mines beneath the snrface of the
earth, facing death in'manvlforms in their per
ilous explorations. The product of their la
bor add? immensely to thejwealth of the State.
It is a county abounding in natural scenery
winch elicits the admiration of all who be
hold it scenery furnishing subjects worthy
of the song of the poet and the highest skill
of , the painter. And to crown all, it is a
county wbicb contributes over 600 intelligent
men and women to the Grand Army of
Teachers of the State. You meet in a town
famed for the excellence of its public schools,
the result of the unrequitted labors of those
who as directors or teachers have manifested
a devotion to the cause which amounts to
enthusiasm a town whose patriotic citizens
are always first to hurry to the front in the
hour of danger; the tread of whose citizen
soldicrs was heard marching up the avenue
of the National Capital almost as soon astne
sound of the guns which battered flown the
walls of Sumpter had ceased to reverberate
a town whose hospitality, as you will find
from your own experience, cues hand in
hand with its patriotism.
On behalf, then, of the citizens I hid you
welcome to our county ; welcome to our
town ; welcome to our homes; and. in honor
of the cause you represent, welcome to our
hearts I
A Coal Heaver's Good Forto-e
Connellsville, In the coke regions, has a gen
uine sensation. It consists in the discovery
that among the laborers in the railroad shops
is numbered a genuine nobleman. His name
Is V.dgerton Davis. Two vers ago he came
toOonnelsville ragged and wearv and applied
for aid at the hands of Kev. W. Stor.er,
reetorof the F.piscnpal church, ftenresenting
himself as adevotee of that faith and in want,
the rector freely aided him, not only in sup
plying his needs, but in procuring'employ
ment. As the result of the clergyman's influ
ence the tramp was aiven wofk as a coal
heaver in the cmplov of the Baltimore and
Ohio R. R. Subsequently he was promoted
to grease-wiper In the round house and ihen
to work in the carpenter shop. In every
place he worked assidu ously and faithfully
By good behavior he won the esteem of the
community. He kept up a correspondence
with his wife in England, who 1ms ju.-t in
formed him by letter that by the death of an
uncle he succeeds to the title of Earl of Else
mere, with an income of .vt,000 a year.-
His history is an interesting one. Brn at
Liverpool in 1837, he was educatedat Eaton.
Then reverses came and he learned the trade
of a cabinet maker: and subsequently en
gaged in business with an extensive coal and
iron firm, Then health failed l im and he
came to America, landing in New Yotk.
After repeated misfortunes there he went to
Philadelphia, where he was robbed of what
remained of his effects. Afteran unsuccess
ful effort to recover his stolen property, in
which all his resources were di-sipated, he
then became a tramp and visited all the cities
In the United States, terminating his nomadic
life with his appearance at Connellsville two
years ago. U is a man of good address and
prepossessing appearance, and though his
accession to wealth and station is sudden it
causes 1es- surprise than might be expected.
He loft on Thursday for his home iu England.
A Shockiko Talk of Crukltt. James
Orr was arrested in Philadelphia on Wed
nesday of last week charged with crueltv to
his children, a boy of eleven years and a'gul
of nine. When the children were brought be
fore the Magistrate, they both were begrimed
with dirt and almost naked. Theboy stated
that his father was a carter and spent his
earnings for liquor. lie was seldom home,
and when there he made his presence known
by brutally whipping the children with a
heavy strap or beating them with a club. On
leaving tlie house In the morning he would
lock the children in the cellar with two dogs,
and on his return give them a crust of bread,
sometimes nothing. Recently the children
burrowed their way out of the damp dun
geon, and the neighbors were horrified to see
them eating from a garbage barrel in the al
ley. Orr was held in f 5O0 bail lor court and
the children were placed in charge of the So
ciety for the Prevention ot Cruelty to Chil
dren. The will of the late Mary U. Kelly, for
merly of Pittsburgh, was admitted to pro
bate last Saturday in Philadelphia, where
she died. She made charitable bequests
amounting to f 13,500. She gave in memo
rial of he father and mother, John and
Elizabeth Kelly, $5,000 to the Roman Catho
lic Uishop of Pittsburgh, Pa., to be Invested
for the education of students to serve as
priests in that diocese, and $5,ooo to the same
liishop for the benefit of St. PauTs Roman
Catholic Orphan Asylum. The Bishop is
directed, in consideration of these two be
quests, to have 200 masses sung within the
year after her death for the repose of the
sonls of decedent and he! parents. - The sum
of $2,500 is also bequeathed to the Roman
Catholic Archbishop of Philadelphia for the
benefit of St. John's Roman Catholic Male
Orphan Asylum, and the sum of gi.oofttothe
same prelate for the Home for Destitute
Catholic Girls at 2o. 17l'0 Kace street.
SEWS ASD OTHER S0T1NGS.
That hacking cough can be so quickly
cured by Shiloh's Cure. We guarantee it.
A barjof iron has been rolled at the works
of the Catasainua Manufacturing Company
that is 225 feet in length.
sleepless nights made miserable by that
terrible cough. Shilob's Cure is the remedy
for you. At James" drug store.
St. Patrick's Catholic church, at Dan
ville, 111., was burned on Thursday night.
The lo-ss is fao.ono ; f u'ly insured.
Will you suffer with dyspepsia and liver
complaint? Shilob's Vitalizer is guaranteed
to cure you. At James' drug store.
Rose and Lillie Dunnegan, two little
girls aged nine and eleven years, were
drowned in a pond near Sedalia, Mo., Sun
day. Two brothers, Teter and James Tarris,
while fishing in the Bay of Funday on last
Monday, were drowned by the swamping of
their boat.
A negro in Brockiugham, N. C, told a
crowd that he would die very soon. He fell
dead from apparently natural causes in a
very few minutes.
Catarrh cured, health and sweet breath
seemed by Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy. Price
50 cents. Nasal Injector free. At James
drug store, Ebensburg.
Michael Davitt sailed from New York
Saturday evening tor Antwerp by the steam
er Pennland. He will go from Antwerp to
Paris, thence to London.
Care-worn persons, students, weak and i
overworked mothers will find in Brown's Iron
Bitters a complete tonic, wbicb gives strength i
and tone to the whole svstera.
A. P. King and wife, of London, Ohio, j
while boating on Chautauqua Lake on Mon
day last, were caught in a squall which cap
sized the boat and they were drowned.
During the twenty-four hours ending
Sunday evening one hundred and fifty-nine i
aeatns were reported In New York. eighty
Six being children from cholera infantum.
Mrs. Henry Hoffman and her little girl
were drowned in a cistern near Upper San-
aasky, Ohio, on Monday. The mothar at
tempted to save her child, who had fallen in.
William Watson and refer Stewart quar
reled on a high trestle at Mandon, I. T. , on
Saturday. They clinched and both fell to the
ground, a dbUnce of 65 feet, both being
killed.
William nart. acred 35 vears. of TTnner
rittston. Pa., fell into a well on Friday and
was drowned. He had been drinking, and j
attempted to stab his wife a short time pre
viously, j
An old man In Hampden, Me., Is said to !
have a trunk (size of trunk not stated) filled I
with silver dollars, which he saved up years j
ago, most of them being dated between 1803 i
and 1831. I
A youth of Grand Rapids married the j
girl who was betrothed to his father. The j
f'air returned to the bridegroom's parent for j
orgiyeness, and got It, but it was not partic
ularly hearty.
At Antrusta." Ga.. a colored
Phylis Wright, who did on Mondav night,
confessed lefire her death that she had poi
soned three men, one a preacher of the col
ored church.
A little girl at Galena fell Into amine
shaft 65 feet deep, and though unconscious
when taken out, was found to have sustained
no injuries save a few scalp wounds. A mi
raculous escape,
At South Haven, Mich., on Thursday
night, Mr. O. R. Foote. of the Firt National
Bank of that place, and Miss Kittie Under
wood, of Aurora, III., were drowned by the
upsetting of a sailboat.'
A negro named David Cook, who had
attempted a rape in the northern part ot
Kershaw county, N C, on Wednesday, was
forciblj taken from the custody of the Sheriff
on Saturday bv masked men and lynched.
He confessed his guilt.
At a swell wedding In Cincinnati the
other day the bridesmaid was aged 7, and
wore creme net and creme satin. Her at
tendant was aged 10 and appeared in an ts
car Wilde esthetic costume.
Miss Nash eloped at Monroe City, Mo ,
and was detected at the outset by her mother,
who pursued her along a railroad track. Mrs.
Nasi), in her blind excitement, did not see a
locomotive and was killed by it.
Wm. Wilson, aged about 45 years, of
Milton, this State, committed suicide by
drowning himself in a rain barrel, head
downward. Caue, partial Inanity. Ue
leaves a wife and seven children.
Two gentlemen of Macon, Ga., caught
some enrfnus fish in the streams near that
city. They varied in size, the largest being
three feet in length, but were all shaped like
a watermelon, translucent, bloo.'.loss, and
cold.
A Syracuse woman who possessed some
monev and a morbid fear that she wonld be
murdered for It crawled uud-r her own house
June 30, and died there. Her bodv, badly
decomposed, and disfigured by rodents, has
but lately been found.
Henry" Clark, of Camden. N. J., became
convinced that water was good food, and
during 41 days is believed to have swallowed
nothing else. He seems to have suffered no
physical injury, though emaciated, but was
mcde incurably insane.
Mrs. Abraham Lincoln died at Spring
field. HI., on Sunday. She had been in poor
health, mentally and physically, ever since
the murder of-her husband in April, 1805.
She came of a prominent Kentucky family.
Her maiden name was Tod.
Edward Hall, about 2S, son of the late
Mayor, Theron K. Hall, and the wife of h!s
cousin, Henry S. Hall, were drownel at
Worcester, Mass., on Friday morning. While
going over the bridge their horse became
frightened, carrying both into the pond with
the vehicle.
There died recently a printer Lewis II.
Red field who was born dining President
Washincton's first term, who was a tvpe-set- !
ter seventy-five years ago, and who gave em- i
ployment to Thurlow Weed and refused it to 1
Horace Greeley because be doubted Gree
ley's industry.
Nearly three weeks ago a deaf and dumb
10-yenr-old son of George Wolfe, residing
near Riegtowr, Sehuylkill county, wandered
from home and lost himself in the woods.
The child lived on tree baik for five days,
when he was found in an exhausted condi
tion. He cannot recover.
IThti. Lyman Barnes, a prominent lawyer
of Wisconsin, is believed to have been killed
by alligntors in Florida, where ho was stay- j
ing for his health. He. left his hotel a few
weeks ago to cross a swampv piece of land i
infested with alligators and wild animals,
and has not been seer, since.
Th mortality among the Bishops of the
Methodist Episcopal Church has been great
during the last few years. Kingsley. Thomp
son, Baker, Ames, Janes, Gilbert "Haven. E.
O. Haven, and Scott have all died within a
very short time. Of the survivors, Foss, and
Faster and Bowman have recently been near
death.
A German giantess called Marian has
been engaged to take the part of the Amazo
nian queen in "Babel and Bijou" at a I,on
don theatre. She is 15 years old, eight feet
and two inches in height,and is still growing.
It is to be presumed that she will represent
Babf 1, and that she is capable of making a
great hit.
On Thursday night an insane man named
Closs was discovered attempting to set fire
to a house in Toboyne township. Perry coun
tv. but was driven'from the premises. Later
on Hollenbaugh's barn, In the same neigh
borhood, was destroyed by fire, and the
charrei remains of the lunatic, Closs, we-e
found In the ruins.
A violent storm of wind and rain struck
Pittsburgh on Monday. Its centre seemed to
be along the Ohio river. The tow-boat Alex.
Foster was capsized near the north shore, hut
no one was drowned. The boat is almost a
intai wrecK. a numoer or other accidents
were reported, but no one had been killed or
injured so far as beard from.
As a train frem Boston was nearing
Ridge Hill crossing on Thursday evening
nan a mue norm or Maishfield Station,
Mass., it struck a wagon containing William
Weston, aeed r.n, and his son Frank, aged
14. throwing both In front of the train, killing
them instantly. The horses escaped without
injury, but the waeon was demolished.
Two sons of William Jones, one gel
thirteen years and the n'her aged firteen
years, of Wilton Springs, Texas, quarreled
on Monday morning while getting a jug of
water at a spring near their father's houe as
to who was the owner of the jng The
youngest boy disembowled his brother with
a pocket knife. The victim died instantlv
Rev. Emanuel B. Schneider, a Catholic
priest, who was educated at St. John's Col
lege, Minnesota, thirteen years ago. and or
dained a priest in 1S75, joined the Fifth Av
enue. M. E. Church, Pittsburgh, on Snnday
morning. He came from a church at Mor
fold, Va., and expresses an intention of be
coming a minister of the Methodist Church.
William Kitter murdered a girl at Hen
derson, Ky., and buried the body. Nobody
suspected him, and, indeed, it was not
thought that she had been killed, her disap
pearance not causing much stir. Actuated
by some singular motive, he produced her
hat, saving that he had found it In a field
near his house. Then a search revealed the
deed, and circumstantial evidence fixed it
upon him.
The labor agitation has reached Roches
ter, N. Y., and there are fears of a general
suspension of business there. The issue
seems to be in recard to the right of employ
ers to hire and discharge whom they please
Both sides are thoroughly orcanized and ap
parently in earnest. Should the worst be
realized, the lockout, locally considered will
be one of the moat extensivo ever known in
this country;
A Passing jord
JlXYTnrXG T1T.it CIX HK.lSOX.UlLy ;;
FOR IX SUMMER CLO T11IXG FOR . 1 ;. v ! '
.41K1ITS YOUal OAK HULL. The PR ( '; . ',. ' !
. TIT IX STUFFS and WO'JLEXS trn Y7.Y.7,,.,
JUSTKD OX TUF SCHRMi: of OCR U 1ST . 'jt'iy-r,''.
UPSET SALE.
Oak Hall, Sixth and Market, Philadelphia.
A young son of Hugh Evans, of Hawkes
burv, Canada, and a daughter of Mrs. Evans,
of Montreal, went bathing in the Little Ri
deau river on Tuesday last, and were can i.'-d
bes'ond their depth. "The mother of the boy,
seeing their danger, attempted to rescue
them, when all three were drowned.
The t'heyenue Sun Dance is in progress
In the Indian Territory, with gteat trials of
physical endurance. Young bucks cut slits
down their backs and run sticks through
ropes tied to a pony. The pony is driven olT
and tears scrips from the b:icks of the In
dians. These strips of flesh are thrown at
the foot of a pole in the centre of the camp
as an offering to the sun. The ceremonies
continue for three days.
Negroes at Musick's Ferrv, near St.
Louis, having been scandalized because
Henry Francis, a German latmrer, was living
unmarried with a negrcss, essayed to regu
late matters. Francis seeing the crowd anu'ry
and the colored men about his bouse at mid
night, shoved his musket through a window
and fired. A preacher was killed and George
Morrlsjbelieved to be fatally wounded. Fran
cis was afterward seized by the mob and
drowned.
Frankie Knicht, a nine-vear-ol.l son of
Train Master Knight of the Troy and Green
field Railroad, was killer! in a hurrPde man
ner at North Adams, M:iss, on Saturday.
While driving cows to pasture he tied a rope
attached to one of the animals around his
waist. The cow threw him d.iwn, became
Jtij-'litened, and ran on", dragchig the lad half
a mile over rocks, railroad t:es. and traces.
All his clothes and his whole scalp were ti rn
olf, and his skull was fractuied. He lived a
short time only.
Edward McKInley, Thomas King and
another man, employes of a circus company,
were riding from Miilersbmg to Likens,
Dauphin county, on Sun lav, seated "in the
door of a box car, w ith their leps hanging
out. In pacing the siding near Lykens the
legs of McKiriU-y came in contact with a car,
and he was thrown with great force against
his two companions, and all thr-e were
knocked from the train. King fell under
tlie cars and was instantly killed. Mi Kinley
bad a heel crushed, and the third man, whose
name could not be learned, washadly bruised.
A young man named Patrick McDon
ough was drowned while bathing in the
Allegheny, near the Point, Pittsburgh, on
Sunday. His body was recovered shot t!v af
terwards and taken to Ward's livery stable.
An inquest was held and a verdict of ac
cidental drowning rendered. The deceased
is oneof the evicted Irish tenants who n?
rived In Pitt, burgh a few weeks ago. He
has no relatives there, but tw o of hN broth
ers stopped en route in Canada. Hisbody
was tiken in charge bv a committee of the
Land League, who defrayed the expenses of
his burial.
The Steelton ?-;rier of Thursday rec
ords atenihle accident which occurred on
the Monday previous in a harvest fi-. at
Hummelsiown, Dauphin county. Edward
IIofTer was engaged in operating' a self-binding
harvester, when some disanangement rf
the machinery occurred whi--.li he attempted
to remedy, and in the act was struck on the
arm by an iron hook which ga'':-rs the sheaf
with such violent torcea to !n -ik it entirely
off, leavMig the broken hmc with the hnnil
attached hanng to stireds of the skiu. Mr.
jioncr is nie agent of the machine, and a
large dealer In ngr'cnltcial implements.
John Vaa Horn, a mid. lie-aged, well to
do rarmer, living ym Coirt 01 t's Pond, four
miles from Siisqo,-',,,,,), Ra., committed -u-icide
on Friday by shooting bin.-'f v.:"' a
gun loaded with eighteen buckshot. He
borrowed the gun of a neighbor tu kill cats,
and, fastening it in a stone wall near bis res
idence, pushed the trigger itb a stick. The
charge entered his head, and caused instant
death. Some time ago be sold the old home
stead farm, and rctrret is supposed to have
caused temporary insanity, lie leaves a w ife
and two grown-up children. Mrs. Grecn, a
farmer's wife, living two miles from Mont
rose, Susquehanna countv, committed s-.ii,-;d
on the same day by shooting heiself twice
near the breast with a pistol while tempora
rily insane.
At :? o'clock Friday morning a frame
store and dwelling In Vicl:s!nr-'r MNs oc
cupied by a German i.amed 1'. Farc.is, 'was
found to be in flames in every portion. ' 1- ar
eas himself was discovered tied fa-t and en
veloped in a sack on the rear ealierv of t'ie
house His wife was found d. ad with her
sku.l fractured an 1 her braim oozing from
the wound. Her lower limbs, up to tt.e ab
domen, were burnt to a crip. a w : also her
left hand. 11. -r husband states that ix
masked men entered the bouse, accompanied
hyn negro woman, who demanded of h ',n
the keys of the iron safe. He opened the
sate himself, and counted out to the robbers
a sum of f7oo in g-.ld. silver and greenbacks
They then bound him hand and foot covered
him over with a sack, and left him where be
was found when rescued from the burning
house, llr says they bound his w ife to the
bed, administered chloroform to her as in
his case, and proceeded to set the bouse on
fire.
What It Ill for an Old I.alT.
fYsHoc ton Station. X. Y., Dec. 2s
GtuM : A number. if people had been' nin
your I'.uteis here, and with marked effect?
In one case a lady of over seventy vears had
been sick for years, and for the paVt ten years
has net been aMe to be around half the time.
About six months a;o she Rot so feeb'c she
was fte';,?... Her old remedies, or pbysi
cian, Im itn: of no avail, 1 sent to Deposit
forty-five mile;, and ct a bottle of Hop Ujtl
ters. It improved her so she was able to
dress herself and walk about the house.
Wlien she had taken the second bott'e she
was able to take care of her ow n room and
walk out to her neighbor's, and has improved
ail the time since. Mv w ife and children also
have derived creat benefit from their use
V. li. Hathaway, Act. U. S. Ex. Co.
At NashpoTt, Ohio, the other dav, Hon.
Daniel Van Verbis and son John went to :i i
villatre cemetery to straighten the monumei.t
over the prave of Hon. John Van Vorhis
father of Daniel. While workir.e near the
base a heavy block of Jin-anite fell from ti-e
top, a distance of about ten feet, striking
John on the;head, crushing bis skull and kiiH
Ing lum almost instantly; also striking Dtin
lel on the breast, Inflicting l-robably fatal injury-
Bri Ki rS R ARMt A (iii.vr.
The Pfst Salve in the world for Cuts,
Rrui.-es, H.irr.s, Sores, Ulcers, Salt liheum.
fever Sores. Tetter, Chapped Hands, dull
Wains, Corns, and all Skin Kruntions, and
positively enres Piles. It is guaranteed to
Kiye perfect satisfaction or money refunded
Price 25 cts. per box. For sale bv E. James,
sole agent, Etrensbnrg, Pa. 5-s) iv j
j, "i" ""'"'"J James II. Madden has lust !
died in Iadvilie, Col., with a phenomenally !
large brain. His death having teen sudden
a iKtst-mortem examination .. .1 i
the weight of bis brain was found to be ( 'i,'
outlets. During his life-time he had never
shown any exceptional mental powers, but
his head was noticeably large.
Time nnct I xpenae KaTfd,
Hard workers aresnbjeet to bilious attacks
which may cm! in dangerous illness, l'aik
er'stiinger Tonic keeps the kidneys and liver
active, and by preventing the attack saves
sickness, time and expense. Detroit Vt.
The seven thousand acre eonl tract on the
tiroae" Top mountain, estimated to contain
1,000.000 tons of coal, w ill be worked at once
by the reunsyl vania and New York capital
ists who have leased It for twenty-five vears
Six large collieries are to be erected. "
iviit iroiti rsr. it.
Pecans they have learned by experience
hat it overcomes despondency , ind igetion
weakness in the back and other troubles of
th. sex is why women eve.ywheie Use Pr
ker s linger Tonic Horn Journal.
An army nf froes invaded the streets r.f
Marysvi.le, Cal., recently, but disappeared
as suddenly as they came. They were all
Roing in the same direction, at.d were in stu b
numbers that every team passing through
the stieets killed dozens of them.
A ItOXtHZA IIXE
of health is to be found in Dr. U. V. Tierce's
Favonte Tresci iption," to Hie merits of
which as a remedy for female weakness r.nd
kindred atT -ctions thousands tesfiy
Wanamaker & Br
Hack from
FOUND I:,- AS
A -VI
A rhUadell 1:1a t-1. j
says :
On (!'.!. r S. l;Ts. s
e.i, cl Muck? . tm:.', ...
I o :-(. ij. vvti.t:"t.
.!:. w:i r." 1 : ! 1
that the i tH . !
Mi family an.l (r-n l
ton w! ami cl.ii.n-r, I..-,,
t'-rt. N. .1. A 1. t li. v..
liiiam. l:o 1 v,-.it i,
A'Tltira at lwist,,w f.a.
br.thtr w .Jiirji,-t r'.ii-!i i
H: brother had re. .j
He wa taken t"
fumior.fl. an ! ' t t j-- .
cniparat'Tc 1:pjI:i". 1 r.- -i
thai Mr. "o;.k r. :rr'
vi i to I.y-v: .in : ,.,
le-'t ictus cl" !: :fv Jir'.:i,
M.tUcI fr .in 1 1 n:c:r r,
wiilte af en. w. .i t; l it s t -he
tid tli npi'Psc re tc e i 8
Hilllr."-? Ht lm .,
Ms rta.tn. and 1 C:-.
Ititlcn ( I tl tvj "tv :
m'TnirtiT of the. T-h. ,.f i .
bc- II. .(I, II uiC, - u,
Hl'icimfivl 1 . bt: 1 r.ri ..n .
a Mar.k. He r..iM
w! c. Ik w , r ,(jat .. , a ,
The pen; !c a :n itl4t w .
hi in work, an 1 J. r . .-i: .
dor at a h-.tel in :
to N w(. .rl. h.-re t r , . .
rui.ner l-.r tl.. ;-. i;
tar an.I wi lt t ! !
the iiatnc i; U.1 --.r; j.
own. A'" ut a in. .t,
w in In. hut i- .tr j.,. ., , .
P'Tt l: c-anii. t le 1. y: ;
A I'-l'-ritly ill anMj !.;,. ! T
ft tlelirif.,1- c-'.i.--t t - r. t :
In his del rium j,,. i
l'.iviil. at E.lcw..1. aV'i ,
pt rill'cmicit ,.1 the).. ... , ,
wi'li the reMilt ai. . r '
I're l ,us tu I .. ,:.., , .
hold .rnmlni nt i r.i: - i .
the -t.i!e. He t . 1 u tv
IT. thttn-.Ttry ..f r .
vi.iup to I,; "j-'aj-i-ear-Iti .
lem.Nr:T;'- i'i- r:.-. '
nrnt part to the c m-i.
Supreme t' .urt. In ;-t:
hia ith In f:m-!V 1. 1 i
Oif trl '!rc-e:. Ih-'u- ...
dui inif his c.tjVia; ;! -. ,'..--,
"", a i.d t.-r : t : e ,
IrlPLid;IhH,hi"l;::t. ' v
ly and i,i,-tj!--. . .
j He cl.ars.-ter. T he
b ne.t e l t IU' ' - ...
tarai tear 1 yj. -l aru.
A r.RiiE or p.i
PiitsburL'h teleprum
of
following st rat st.;:y :
A fine !y drt d. r- .
J":ir i f tiic. tr :n v : .;.
the l:a..-,.t ll.-P'.e A :,
nne is vr;. .1 -
j t 'h.rikey. hv I i e jcm- a !
Sne :ii ti.arr- 1 . it V i :
OV'M k. fct t.. l!-C'l- ..!
. r .l,.rr1 i.-r ir n. n d. .1 j i
. th !-'n -iiost hue. ai ! ; .
MiM " a.-ey. ft.
! ha5 ri.n-i ler.'ii ;.-pr.- rty
! b'Khly e..n: V. ,
; lcT I't-t'Rn 1? T ; . ! lit t. ... ',
' infer i , x t i:.-. r-.-n . 'v
'he fact ,,f he-- t. a- - ...
, Btjrei. 1 .-rj.. v :.".-:,!; . j
I the r .iiuty t ii;. -'-....
) was I 'eer -.-I In 'ju-: .v
J hr.tther u.e t.ri.!c. tu ht.
f i-ter w ui-:ine. t l 1 a .
o.l her li'.erty. jn !a 11..:
, the t,.etu,,ii, "B,...i ; ,. ..
; Ifxj.liren.tit.e.it',.... ...f It.
; M. 1- well. . fi;,r . y.
I M"ri ru'ld a uteti:,tf y.--,-'.
ani,:i"d a nil ri: her t.i . t .
j vc l-.f.ij !hm a .e hud ! t
fMuty 1-r a l.uu.lft . ! v. .t-
che wc e-.rin.i f,,r thif-e
j ftf I'.Itll .I.e. s-l e ir:i i L, to .
1 j.r..l-. cf )r. ti ---l i-i, i -
j whs a v.. fl,..n-r: 1 1 : -.r -
i lo et w,t i, in. .ir..- i i - .
I 1' .i! when hit-.-i-.i- ii- :
j frieTid, claim. tf:nT e
i Mitler t j :t.t.ar.- 1 t
; Mr. il- .. ai 1 k ....... i
; crtv. wh . i- a f r . e '
:e
- ny that
me week
e t it:
Ttri:.
l.-r s-
n
k.-II to Hll
-lhn.:
: 1 -
1
He i
1 or:-
PI KM' A I.
THB V..-TM ' 1 f I
fend 1 r.. 1 .-. 2 s i i
Hklts Avn iz
t ,!hvs f . tl-f il :
Wilt. 'N-.rv" I '
he--!. k !-'- '. f
and e tt i "c-r.. re-- -v
or. A ! !t-e- - a :i: -.v-a?
;l!irty it. 1 t-
a
tlpetatft, wltTi l i.erji nt-
iiein. I. Iter. -..iisii
I'ari f lite .l In.
' !it rl i z i ii k . M.M.rl ;n at
Iuc N-rufulou. c.
tiuil t ttt - r
KUMC'S-
The fa(t i f i,
1 l-v fur . ....
relr.e-1 .e la 1. '. r.
S. din t'-. t '1 tt-.
A !i"e ! n s. I- rv - .4 .
clef. I; .,;. 1-. ;
inc ct K -due- a,,
t.ttu, l'i lr, l iJM-
-ERUPTICNS-
or
the klll
t'-r. n 1 i,
- l ;i- .
Huli'l.rc. '
Hei',1. If
Torturtnir
U'-eer. w h 71
Soil-, ti e k
1
e cl
CUTlCJnA-
A weet. nr.-!.H.;t-ii-
M ' 1 c-T T e r 1 :-. I e I. 1 1 -c . ' I
lien.) jyie.fc 1 (. .. ... - ..
lrr t i:itt.
we.j. ! t :ti e.t'r! ! r !! !' - ' -
CUTSCU- A
An x.p.1? v T 1.
Km t h . ; h d : - ' - r
I .-- .in. -
t-f t'l mi:; 1:4. th-- k-r-.t
J" n:i' ie . ;, t he I-. ..
e:iii-. and 1 .r r ?' r
iriir the rteiiiici--n : - '-
l!a:.v S : it.
t'l ti. i 1 & It'rvr "'
ft.r ill-.-.i-t.. i t , . s : .
!':- : -v- ., 1 1; 4 1 . - : -
I'l l li t I A. f. r. j..-- ' X : -
Cl K "I ti -,!Vtl 1 IT.
Me; ii-itAL ' t -
rrinrips! I.ei.tt. V " '
t r'
Sanford's
Tli ;teat
latlctn of
, u itch ''
"mi wi - i 1 r. '
I'ine. ifUtl'" '
lot T I " '
t -'c
Fi.r t' e 1 p. mi
every f-.rni t '
1 r. i 1 i 1 '
; t-.u.t h. 1-. i
Ind. r-ed t.v
1 Ji.tl'tKiit ! '
j dete c-T-e--
e.e v.. f.
. i
1 I
II
1 - -1 : ..-