reman. tBENSDUnC. PA.. FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1SS2. 1 1.1 .'. i i - - - -- - i Memoi r itic state ticket. FOR GOVERNOR, "j ROU'T.E. TATTISON", of ThilaJ'a. FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR. 'CIIAUNCFA' t'. BLACK, of York. FOR JUDGE OF SITREME COURT. SILAS M. C LAKK, of Indiana. ton SHCRETART OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS, J. SIMPSON' AFRICA, of Huntingdon. FOH cONGnFMAN-AT-L.YRGE. MOHTIMLIi F. ELLIOTT, of Tioga. ThK cori-esponilent of the London JVeica at Alexandria, F-irypt, telcgraph ed the following to that paper on July 10, two days after the bombardment of that city l"y the JSritish fleet : "I have visited all the hospitals, and cannot peak too highly of the devotion display ed by tho Sisters of Charity." This short dispatch contains a whole volume. The so-called ex-President, Tl. B. Hayes, has this year, it is said, 2(50 acres of wheet, 275 acres of oats, and ten acres cf misccllaneons crops, on his big farm in Dakota, and it'is thought he will re alize not less than 20.m"m") bushels of grain. If his luck continues for a few years longer, it has been suggested that Sir. Hayes will be in a condition to re turn the bulk of Mr. TilderTs salary .to the U. treasury. Tub Committee appointed by the Democratic State convention to notify the respective candidates of their nomi nation having performed that duty, Mr. Pattison, the nominee for Governor, ad dressed said Committee the following trief and modest reply, accepting the nomination : Department Citt roNTROT.i.F.R, Phii.a X' a. July, -' lai-'. 'enf'"ncu : I have, re c. ived vonr letter of July L'l, advising m e of the fiction of the Democratic state conven tion. 1 accept the nomination for Govet nor and if chosen for the office by the people, I will strive to perform the duties to their sat isfaction. Kespectfullv yours Kor.Eitr K. Pattibon. Hon. Ai.r:xAXUKii IT. Stephens, who was nominated last week by the Democrats of Georgia as their candidate for Governor, is seventy years old, and has seen forty-six years of public life. lie has been thirteen times a Represen tative in Congress and was once elected to the Set. ate of the "Tinted States, but was not allowed to take his seat ; was a member of the Secession Convention of Georgia, a member of the Confederate Conpre vH, an 1 was elected Vice Presi dent of the Confederate States for a term cf fix years. The Republicans under th i retenro of breaking the solid south, wanted Mr. Stephens to refuse tha Doni'cmtic noniinatian and an nounoa himself as an independent can didate, but ho replied to all their over tures. "The regular Democratic nomina tion or no nomination at all." Tin. Republican Committee of Alle gheny county has established its head quarters on Fourth avenue, Pittsburg, and the rooms will bo under the charge of Major (:) .Tames Onslow, a clerk in the office of the Secretary of Internal Affairs, at, Tlirrisburg, Upon this statement of facts the question arises, will Onslow draw his salarv as clerk of one of the state departments, while he 13 superintending the rooms of the Cam-eron-Pcaver 1. end-quarters in Pittsburg, AVe know the '"Major"' thoroughly and are strongly impressed with the belief that what ho don't know about running a clerkship so as to miike it pay, is not worth tho effort to find out. It will be in order for some Democratic member of the next Legislature to ask the Secre tary of Internal affairs why the 'Major' was permitted to abandon his post of duty, if lie has any duty to perform, of which we have serious doubts, and whether he pocketed the salary for the time ho was in PPtsbr.rg. At Fredonia, Kansas, on Saturday last, Cl.as. Kultuke was tried, for the fifth time, for a violation or the prohib itory liquor law, and as usual, the jury disagreed. !N'ews of this kind is fre quently telegraphed from other towns in Kansas, and yet Gov. St. John, of that State, never fails in his speeches outside of Kansas to tell his hearers that the Kansas constitutional amendment against tLe sale of liquor is being suc cessfully enforced by the courts and ju ries. It should ie remembered, 'how ever, that ex-Governor Robinson, of that relate, who is a R. -publican and a strict touiperatiee ma:i,savd in a published let ter j"n.'1 months ago that St. John was riding tLe temperance hobby in Kansas to promote 1. is ow n political interests, and that lie wouldn't talk at a lie if it suited. bis purpose. The workings of the prohibitory liquor law in Kansas do not, from all we m learn about it, differ materially frctii"it3 operation in any lo cality in w hidi it was ever put to tho teat, Mis Fasst Pahnf.lt., sister of Charles Stewart Parnell, died suddenly rear Berdentown, X. J., on yesterday week, fxcm paralyses of the heart. She was ttntv-eight ars of age, and was born in Ireland. iie had earned for licrself a p'a-ce in the tearts of her coun trymen Rod country wemen by her active .r,riectiofj mith the Ladies' Rand Jxaco. rfistlBct from that which she a'nirwd through her distinguished Lrs ther, thg Irbh leader, iiiie made, Irish ftfairs, and especially the Irish land creation, her constant study ; and wrote about them toth 1n prose and verse with a ridy, intelligent and forcible pen. It was dontt!rs her tireless activity in tndiaif of t.'ie cause of her dear bat cp-pres-l Ire.n J that hastened her to a prem.iture f;rave. Our readers are .al ready aware that her mother is a daughter of the late Commodore Chas. wart, "Old Ironsides," as he was fa miliarly called, of the American Xavy. Miss Fanny resided with Jher mother in the old Stewart mansion in the vicinity of Hordentown. Her funeral took place on Monday and was largely attended by deputations representing the different brato-beti of the League in nnd around the city of .New York, in New Jersey end in J'hiladrlphia. The Craw ford county system of mak ing Democratic nominations for county oflicea will be put to its second test in this county thiee weeks from to-morrow The primary elections held under it last year for tho first time, resulted in the nomination f a ticket which gave more than usual -satisfaction, and wassuppor ted with the utmost cordiality. We are not now and never were specially wedded to the system, but we have al ways been in favor of giving it a fair and full chance in order-to see what vir tue there is in it before any hasty effort is made to supplant it. There was no allegation of fraud at last year's primar ies on the pait of any of the officers who conducted the elections, nor was there any illegal voting, and everv man's bal lot was counted just as he had cast it. It is true that after the return judges declared the result, one of the candi dates for County Commissioner insisted. a3 he had a right to do, that the return from Wilmore, so far as he was concern ed, was incorrect, and that the final footing up of the vote was erroneous: j but a thorough inspection ot every one j of the returns, made bv persons compe j tent to do so, showed that none of the I returns had been tampered with and ; that everything had been done on the j square. I The Democratic voters can make the preliminary elections a success this year I if they resolutely determine to do so. j The first thing for them to do is to re- fret well lii fcrc they vote, and not be car j ried away by wild enthusiasm for the i men of their choice, nor to permit their ( votes to be controlled by feelings of lo- cal pride, but to vote for men who are ; admittedly qualified men who have strong claims upon the suffrages of the J Democracy and whose nomination, tak , ing every possible view of the question. 1 would result in crivinj general satisfac I tion. The Fiieemax of course espous ; es no man's candidacy, that being a mat ' ter exclusively for each voter to deter I mine for himself. We are justified, ! however, in saying that it will be a j grave mistake to nominate both candi J dates for the Legislature from the same j part of the county, and some fears are i entertained that such a result is pospi i ble. The dividing line of the county is ' usually referred to as "Xorth." and "South," and evet since the county has been entitled to two members the rule ; has been to give one to each section, i and any other decision now would be ; attended with serious and it maybe dis- astrons consequences, W'e rleem it our I duty to liring this matter to the careful , consideration of the Domocraov of the ! county now. so that they may reflect up , on the possibility of such a contingency j Tf such should 1u the result a desire for the Swires of the ticket, ought and we j think would induce (he lon-rt in vote of ' the two nominated candidates to with-" i draw from tho contest, his place on the ! ticket to bo filled bv the candidate from the other section of the county who rel : ceived the highest vofp. We trust, hnw ; ever, thnt no mistake of the kind will be . committed that every Democrat, wil ! interest himself in going; to the elect jon, and that a ticket will be put in nomina' ; tion that will receive the willing and earnest support of every Democrat in ! the county. General. Reaver made a speech at ; Rristol. Rucks county, in the early part ; of last we'-k. in tho course of which ho . said li would 'be glad to answer any ; questions. Whereupon Mr. Harold ; Pierce, tho son of u wealthy merchant of ; that place, remarked : "General, I shall ! not vote the Republican ticket, but will vote for the independent candidates, un ' less T am satisfied that your administra tion will not be organized in the interest of Cameron." Reaver replied that the question was a very fair one and assert , ed that he had made no pledges to any man, and after some other remarks said: "Don Cameron, my friends, is not a big i man, but a very little man." It is very j strongly suspected that Reaver has ati i thority from Cameron to talk in this j way about him, in order to neutralize any bad effect Cameron's ownership of him might have on his chances for elec j tion. Re that as it may, no more accur ate estimate of Don Cameron was ever I made than this one by General Reaver. ! He is a small man in every aspect in f which he can be viewed. All that he i now is, is simply due to his enormous wealth. Money and not brains, is the j power with which he works, aided by j that other powerful lever, the official I patronage accorded to him in this State j as a member of the Senate. How did it i hapien, however, that Reaver.who looks upon himself as a big man, allowed that i "very little man," Cameron, so eom jpletelyto control him at tho Chicago , convention as to coerce him into a vio i lation of his instructions to vote for Rlaine bv snpjioitin Grant ? Reaver's i denial of his subserviency to Cameron ; comes too late. It was patent to everv body at the Chicago convention; it was , equally so when at, Cameron's dictation, . a rear ago last winter, he became a can didate for TT. S. Senator, in place of Har ; ry Oliver, who couldn't get votes enough : to elect him ; and it was again manifes ted when, accoiding to Reaver's own admission he went to Washington after Congress met to learn from Cameron whe'her he would oppose his nomination for Governor. Tf a very small man 1 could thus play the boss over Reaver, i can any one make a mis'ake In estima- ting J unes A. Reaver at his true worth? A man can't 8-jlect the place of his birth, and because Robert F. Pattison, the Democratic candidate for Governor, happened to be born in Snow Hill, Maryland, Tom (Toujhm-, chairman of Reayer's State Committee, with a mind capacious of such expedients, is endea oring. on account of the accident of his birth, to excite against Mr. Pattison a feeling of hostility, such as the dema gogues of the Cooper strips twenty-eight years ago succeeded in stirring up against foreigners and especially against Catholics, Cooper says the people of the State never ought to ana never have elected a man to the office of Governor who was not born on its soil, teing ig norant of i he fact that Benjamin Frank lin, who liih-,i the place, though under a different tit h, was born in Boston. It is gratify iui t know tnat the resect able j.riion of the Republican pres. re fient Cooper's effort to revive the accur sed spirit of KnowO;Uiingism and con demn it iu most vigorous terms. How fortunate for Mr. Pattison it is that his father was a wrll-knon Methodist clergyman of Philadelphia, because if that was not the fact Cooper would now te making an effort to prove tbst he was b.-r.o. ox Cattle oarents. J TLAIS FACTS. i FIGURES Til AT T0 NOT LIE TAXPAT- ERS CAN UNDERSTAND TIIIS j ARGUMENT. 1 The Republican party came into pow I er in this State in 1361, and the cost of j the State government then was SO-trt.- 911,83. exclusive ot interest ana reduc tion of debt. The Republican administration of Gov. Curtin, with all the enormously increased expenditures of war and the highest inflation of values known in i this age.increased the state expenditures j to only ?l,531,4',.r,7 in 18Go, In 1SG' the Cameron machine en trenched itself in the republican citadel and for fifteen years it has been supreme in every channel of Republican power in the State. With it came reckless profli gacy ; the creation of offices for favor ites ; the lavish waste of public money to reward partisan henchmen, and the absolute subordination of integrity and manhood to the cohesive power of pub lic plunder. In 1.70. after three vear3 of machine rule in the State, the annual expendi ture in the time of peace, had grown to ?2 22S,S70.'27.being an increase ot 1,31 0")S.4i over the expenses when the party assumed power, and an increase of 797, 430.50 over the expenditures under Gov. Curtin. with the extraordinary demands of war to meet. But the profligacy of boss government was not content with the expenditure of 170, The Auditor General's report sh ows that, the cost of the State govern ment for 13S0. including its share for the Legislature, foots up the enormous amount of 24.SG'2.105.."O, bein? more than the entire, cost of the government in isnn. when the Republican party first attained power This expenditure does not embrace either interest or principal of the public deot. It is simply the regular annual expenditure of the State government. There is a legitimate increase in the schools and judiciary, made by the con stitution, but that is little more than half a million, and the other expendi tures are mainly or wholly the creation of machine legislation. The people of Pennsylvania have late ly been carefully leading and consider ing the record made by Controller Pat tison in Philadelphia, and they have learned that his entry into the Control ler's office dated the beginning1 of the practical reform that has chaneed the city from a ?2.3." tax rate and three millions annual increase of debt, with little or no improvements, to a 51.05 tax rate, an annual surplus of a million, and substantial improvements in every department, and that is just the sort of an administration they want in Penn sylvania. Mr. Jacob R. Shipiierd. whose name some of our readers may remember of having beard mentioned in connection with Mr. Rlaine's remarkable diplomacv in South America, obliges the Associated Press with a pamphlet of nearly a hun dred paees in length containing what he desctibes as his 'rejected testimony, ' This testimony the long-suffering House Committee of Foreign Affairs positively refused to listen to about the middle of May last, and Mr. Shipherd thereupon offered it "for a consideration" to the Associated Press, intimating that it would be found to contain certain lost "documents" affecting President Gar field, and other matters of interest. The press wisely declined to purchase a pig in a poke, but if Mr. Shipherd's object was to get his "rejected testimonv" rend he made a great mistake in not present ing it theh as he now presents it to the Associated Press. In this case the old proverb "better late than never." must be reversed. Mr. Shipherd's "rejected testimony," adds absolutely nothing to the record either of our relat ions with Chili and Peru or of the preposterous claim out of which Shipherd and his as sociates extracted and developed the huge imposture of their-Pernvian Com- , pany. In fact it is not "testimony" at I all. It is a farrago of Shipherd's opin j ions and sentimentsabo-.it other peonle I and especially alwut ex-Secretary Rlain. As the committee has closed its proceed -t ings bv declining to liear a snoplemen ; tary statement from Mr. Blaine, the re j jectcd testimony of to-day would pro i ha bl v entail upon the press an awful ob j ligation to publish Blaine's "rejected , testimony" to-morrow. The line must i be drawn somewhere with witnesses ap ' parent ly so inexhaustible. We draw it j where the tribunal does, at "rejected j testimony." Blaine is not neeifci to j prove Shipherd a wind bag norshipherd happily to prove Blaine a wind bag. Ret us have surcese of both, and let i them pass into American historv arm in j arm like Winston and Ditfon iri the im- mortal but unfortunately unquotable ! lyric of Dean Swift. AVr York Worhl. I j "A Lie Xaileh." Some consterna ; tion was created at the Stalwart head j quarters yesterday by a casual remark i of General Reaver to the effect that the ; "moon was made of green cheese." The ; three or four strangers from the country i who dropped in during the day to report i that there were hut eleven Independents ; in the whole State outside of Philadel i phia and Allegheny, were dumbfounded i when Beaver's last utterances was re I eated to them by Cooper. The chair : man was convinced lefore the lay was . over, that the great No Man's Man had j made another mistake, which must le j rectified without unnecessary delay. So J a despatch was sent to Reaver, who had j meanwhile left the city, and la'e in the ! evening came the following : "I did not I mean, of course, that the moon is aeMi j ally made if green cheese. What I i meant to say was that 'if the moo.i vas i made of green cheese, it would be made , of green cheese.'" Coojier was busily I engaged this morning supervising the ; sending out of thousands of circu'ars ' containing General Beaver's explanation I and confidently believes'ttiat this partic- ular "campaign lie' will not damage the I candidate in the rural districts. 77t"?a i t?t'?jii Trh orajii) . i A "True" "Kntoht." Some of the socj ! ety people in Chicago are tossing it from lip j to lip that Miss Cortnne Kniuht, an heiress, ; has l een so far fascinated hy the hrass I buttons of Lieutenant Trie as 'to run aniv from the paternal nest to mnrrv him The j heiress is the ilans-hter of Key Mows Knisht, J a retired capitalist, and her lover is a militia- man, without money. A week orso fvjn ?r. ! Knight di-coverd a'Tiirof th heart and in anger banished his daughter to a Kentucky I farmhouse, where lived a spinster aunt. The ; trirl eluded the watchful eves of tfr father when they were on their way to KentiK-Vy ! and seid a telegram to the' lieutenant, iu i forming him of the whereahoats of (Ter pris on. That ninrtia I person t once start'-d on ' his rmnpnign and hy his clever, strategic I movements and tactical boldness succeeded ! iti hearing his bride nwav. The onng con pie were married in Kvahvi:ie. Ind.. and.re- turning to Chicago, implored forcivenes, which was refused. The boarding hou-; I accommodations provided for the bride are : not to he compared with the home comforts ' deserted, yet t-he tells such of her friends ns ; cling to her that she is glad she Joined the ! army. ' Oroamze at Once. Let organization be ; commenced nt once in every school district ; let thefiist work be the preparation of lists : of Democratic voters, so tlmt the assessments j may ! properly and completely made. Let : aim now he to renter every voter. There , is nothing more annoying than to find, when ; it is too lat-. that this one and that one is ; net ns-essed, and tlmt their votp is lost j thereby. Prepare y.mr lifts now. and have ( them constantly on hand and in mind, fr-r additions and correct ions, :o that hy the i time the register.-, close, the work may' have I been done peifectly. The Ultor reiiiued will not he a nearly as great as people im . acme it ru'y requires a lirtle intelligent at I tention. Do not wait to be appointed for j the ork, hut let one or rnoie in each school j district do it voluntary, and when compUded j hand the anie over to the township coaiiiut : tee for final exfiinijjaljoa and assest-aeut, A DEPLORABLE POSITION. General Beaver's chance of election is so exceedingly slim that one cannot help feeling a great deal of sympathy for him in the many trials and troubles through which he is marching to his coming death and burial. It is. at best, not a very comfortable thing to run for Gov ernor. It involves the expenditure of a great deal of cash and energy in a verv hot time in the year. When a candi date is bouyed wpwith a decent hope he may go into the fight quite cheerfully if he is of the kind that loves office, as he probably is, or he would not have been nominated. But when he lias no hope at all his position must be unenviable. Beaver, it is true, pretends to be hope ful, and even hazards the prediction that he w ill have fifty thousand plurality. It is not possible to think that he believes what ho says ; he can't be such a fool. He must know that his position is des perate and be miserable accordingly. Of course his friends in the regular ranks try to keep his spirits up by assur ance that they will put him through ; and of course thev mean to if they can. There is no doubt that Senator Camer on and his supporters will do all they can to sustain what is a fight for their political existence. So far as money and management may avail to success they will be freely and assiduously used. But in this exigency they won't go far enough, even if there were no mistakes made ; and even this early in the cam paign General Beaver has shown a wo ful lack of sagacity to say nothing of his venturing so near the truth as to say that his boss was a small man, meaning he says, physically, while every one thinks its true every way he has just succeeded in arraying himself against the orderly element in the Clearfield coal region by sending his lieutenant over there to bail some of the law break ing Knights of Labor, thinking to se cure the votes of that organization. Un luckily for him, but a small part of them have votes, while the people who are in terested in the prosperity of the region and an uninterrupted business, have votes and influence. In holding on rto the one side Beaver let slip the other, and failed to show any alarming sagacity as a manager. It is a pity a wounded soldier should get so knocked about, as the General is, in the home of his friends as well as his foes. We do really think that the Inde pendents who go up to him and tell him to his face that, they won't, vote for him because he is Cameron's dog, ought to have more consideration. To vote against him and defeat him is bad enough ; to defeat him and vote him a cur is too hard. A wounded soldier should not be treated like a dog. Lan caster Intelligencer. Star TIot te Secpets The admission hy Judge Wylie, of the testimony of Walsh, who was the hanker and go-between of the Star route swindlers of high and low degree, resulted in some refreshing disclosures. Walsh told on the witnessstand prettymueh. the same st"ry that came out in the New York Il-rnhi interview, heretofore referred to in the i'ovf. (J-eneral Brady, who aided in stealing Florida from Tilden in 1S76. and came to Garfield's relief in 1SS0, in resnonse to he "dear Iluhhell" letter of the "Martyied Pres ident," looms up quite conspicuously in Walsh's testimony. At the time Brady" was manatrine the IVistoffiVe Department under T-.raudulent Hayes, with "errinf brother Keyes" as a (ienre-head. Walsh testified on Friday last that he bad an interview with Rradv at the 7tofne de partment in 1SS0. in which Brady claimed thirty-six thousand dollars for having "ex pected" Walsh's route, informed Walsh that he had been assessed eight thousand dol'ars for the "Congressional corruption fund" and that fines to the extent of five or six thousand dollars had been remitted in his favor : reminded Walsh, when tha latter demurred to these demands, that lie "must he dull of apprehension if he imagined such thinns were done for fun." and flnady told him that he did "not understand the' busi ness" and hud better ect out of the mail ser vice. The XeW Voik Herald commenting on the testimony says : Hy .lornriK-ntR w(. have hnrtonirn published It fi'"M! thru K'.i'.!-('!N ;...!! v?f"raent levies tn I be "nmnniirn of issij rc Hirce corn. rn tlio yonrly F:ilHry. wutf.. (,r emoluments ol the j-rtin .-.!. If tin MVmirr.-yfMnnjtl rrrtit.t!n fit-v!" rnt.--e.1 r,n Mie -:inie r'l. an asi.-mont .fs -on.) nn either Wlsh or I'ru lv. t lien-fore, inciieatell ."-nr route .--pecni-itons to the inrirreuiu? r.f -f''1n the year 1sv f. rn inz,. ;n.ivl,liitil. Hv lv f --ilurv i. Sh.i.ii.1 As?.:,tI,. IVstma.-ter i!n er;il f.i.-.'.o a yenr. or o.,1t , Ilt'i more than two-flftlis of the uruonnt i 1 the nfp eminent. It would be an interesting question, the extent to which Huhbel! and his understrap pers. Tom Cooper and the like, are now as sessing defauUeis and robbers of the Treas ury, as the price of immunity and to make up their mammoth corruption fund, lluh 1 oil did it in lsso, with Garfield's sanction good man as he was. and it is not likely the present canvass, involving the fall of so many bosses, js conducted with greater hon esty. PUtsburtih roH. rEKXSXLVAXIA CANDIDATES FOR GOTKIt- ort. Pennsylvania never had more candi dates in the field than it has now for Gover nor. From 17!o to 181 1 there were only two candidates at each election. I u 1K14 there wore three Simon Snyder, Demorrat; Isaac Wayne, Federal, and 'Geo. I villi more. Tn dependent. From 1817 until 1S12 there were only two candidates. In lsa.S there were threp candidates Jos. Bitner, Anti-Ma-on: Gen. Wolf, independent Democrat, and Henry Muhlenberg, I)em. In 1S:sh there were two candidates, and in 1S41 three David H.iPorter. Democrat: Jno. Banks. Whig, and F. J. Ummnc, Abolition. In 1814 there were three Francis K Shank Democrat; Joseph Mark!?, Whig, and J. Y I.amoyne, Abolition. In 1M7 there were four candidates Fran cis K. Shunk, Democrat; Jas. Irwin. Whig ; K. C. h'eigart, Native American, and F. J.' Lamoyne, Abolition. In is4S, at the election to (ill a vacancy cam-ed by the death of Govern. r Shunk, there were three candidates W illiam F. Johnson, Whig; F. B. Gazzatn, Free Soil; Morris J,ong streneth. Democrat. In is.M there were three candidates Wm Bigler, Democrat: Wm. F. Johnson, Whi" Kimber Cleaver. Native American. " ' In 18o4 there were three James Tollock, "Whig: William Hitler, Democrat ; B. Bush Bradford, Free Soil. In lSfu there were three Wm. 'F. Pack er. Democrat: David Wiimot, Free Soi! Iaac. Ilazelhnrst, American. ' From Hin to !.;( there were only two can didates af eaeli election. In 172 there were three John F. Ilart ranft. Kepuhlican : Charles K. Buckalew Democrat ; F. B. C hase, Prohibitory. In l.s7.-. there were three John F. Hart ranft, Bepubijcan: Cyrus I, Pershing, Dem ocrat : K. Andley Brown, Prohibitory. In 1878 there were four capoidates Henry M. Iloyt. Renuhlienn ; Andrew H. Dili. D-'nioerat ; Samuel B. Ms,,n, Greenback ; Frank'in H. I.ane, Prohibitory. The can didates already in the field are' Republican. Independent, Democrat and Greenback. In 147 there were four candidates for the first time. A Woman's TIecoism. How two voung children were rescued frtim watery graves by the heroic effoits of a voting married 1 -idv is thus related by the O-ceola (low,.) Sentinel of recent dare : In eonoc,-ti..n with the White Hr;t Hotrom, Tewiv. Ft .Tin, ne wh to "peHk of the heroic eon c! i"t of "lr. 'nry. a yonnar married In, It, who to.).inir wirli .Mrs. Wile!" for the ntuhf. At l:::eor 1 i v. m. the I.kiiKs of the creek brtrtn to O' ciflownn l soon the water heion .-oniiiiar Into the 1 'Use . the wl.olo bottom wn n I luck unci roritig bo.lv ot it: : the nt'n w.i f'urinic 1wn In tor rent f : the clou, t overhinu (lie sky like velvet em-tain, mi l the L'unler af terrihe. Mrs. Carev took cie little Ir.v. RireM iboot nine, and Mrs. W ibs' bitby. tint sit weeks old. left the house and Ftne.1 h rthe hiir'i iroumi. lieaehine the ir:irlrn tei-ee. jer-f? 10 feet (rent the house, she loi:nil tli r'irrrn! sosiroiiKth-.it she could not keep hr footiriw-. Her dollies he.-iuiie entangli-il in n burn 1-orou atcly she Mf the fo..t of trep In the ! y to r::rr h the tree she I in.l, him ihe baby to hoi,! n moment. The w-ter we-e ravMnf 1 nr.i: her itn i were ruTn ily nsitiir. She miiFt n-t nui.-klv. W uli if rent p'c-td.c of niin.l she di-r.--i.tt-il lireir by terf!iK her rl-ess trojn her ;."r on. and swung h?relf iut ti.e tree. Ait;,it toe liov to el i Hi 0 f'lntie- UH rl:e to-k the b:i'n flli.i he!. I ii ti.l liersp; by one foot nnci one bnoil to tlmt s-v.iriiii! iree f.,r three loi it ho irs hihI ml rescifil bv men, w ho wmi in to her :m l bronchi I . r ami the rhiltirefi Hvay by theaM ot ropes. When the r-erl re:i, hefi her she s.Oit. oure f(1H paby nrst." 1 h heroism ol this noble little women who thus .saved the-c i hihlren the ehiidreu ui another deserves ;o t e mentioned in sons. ! why woiEji i sf. ir. i Hi-en!-- they have learned by experience ; that it over'-fitnes tlecponderc y, jnd iv'estion, I weakness in tbe b-,u k and other troubles: of I the sex is whv women everywhere uiS Par ser's ?:n j;er '1'onic-. Jlomt Journal. EYS AND OTHFR NOTINGS. j A Chester married woman created a sen- 1 sation by elopinj with a small bnv. Nervousness, debility, and exhausted vi- i tality cured by using Brown's Iron Bitters. ! In Floyd county, Tenn., last week, four j brothers named Burnett married four sisters named Berry. ) A Berks county man has in his posses- , sion a clock one hundred and seven years old, and still in rnnnine order. j A calf from the Jersey cow "Beauty," owned by John Patterson, of Chester coun ty, wns recently sold for $2,500. Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy a positive cure for etdarrh, diphtheria nnd canker mouth. At James' drusi store. llham Bean, of Montgomery county, j had an arm torn from its socket by' the tooth j cylinder of a threshing machine. I John Gardner, aged fonrteen years, liv- ! ing at Mount Pleasant, Wayne county, was j run over hv a wagon on Monday last and in stantly killed. I The Bev. Geo. H. Thayer, of Bourbon. Ind., says : "Both mvself and wife owe our j lives to Shiloh's Consumptive Cure." At James' drug store. ! --Kev. E. M. T. S. Carnfel. cure of Notre ! Dame de Mont Carmel, encountered and shot a she hear an.1 her two cubs, near Shawegau Falls, on Thursday. Fu'.ly one-half" the negroes of Montgom- ' cry county, Ala., in a formal convention held recently, declared for the Democratic State and county ticket. ' Mrs. Hiram J. riouch, of Chambersbnrg, ' lias recently moulded, in clay, a life lifce bust I of her distinguished uncle, Judge Jeremiah ! S. Black, of York. Are you made miserable hy indigestion, constipation, dizziness, loss of appetite, yel low skin? Shiloh's Vitalizer is a positive cure At James' drug store. . A crow alighted in a swamp near Xor ristown a few days since, when a snapping turtle seized upon his leg and held him until a man captured both of them. Hannah Brown, of Fulton township, Lancaster conntv, completed her one hun dred and third year on the fifteenth inst. This aged woman is still quite active. A bet of $1,000 was made on Friday night at the St. Nicholas hotel. New Tork, that Itohert E. Pattison will be elected Governor of Pennsylvania at the next election. Shiloh's Vitalizer is what von need for constipation, loss of appetite, dizziness, and all symptoms of dvpensia. Price 10 and 73 cents per bottle. At James' drug store. James J. Donovan, 30 years old and un married, fell twenty-five feet into the Holy oke canal on Saturday night, receiving inter nal injuries from which he died next day. A whit physician was called bv a Spo- j kane Indian to treat his sick son on tbe KU math reservation, Oregon. Tha boy died. . and the father shot the physician dead and ! fled. John Miller, the colored man who mar- j ried Miss Verde Cloakv. a wealthy Indir of I Washington, has taken steps to test the. le gality of her confinement in an insane asy lum. There is an apricot tree in Fresno coun ty, Cal., that measures sixty inches around the trunk three fe.-t from the ground. It is estimated thst there is not less than a ton of fruit on the tree. Sebastian Wimmer. of F.Ik counts, an ex memberofthe Legislature and a civil engi ner of conspicuous ability, has gone to Mex ico, under an engagement to serve the Mex ican Central Bailrnad. At New Windsor, N. V., on the New burg branch of the Erie railroad, on Friday last, a wagon containing two womn and five children, was struck by a locomotive, and all were more or less injured. A farmer writes to the Virginia Grander that lie obviates the necessity of setting tires by simple preventive. He fills the felloes with linseed oil, and savs the tires will wear out before they will get loose. Miss Addie Whit wood, of Nile, on the Allegheny Valley Railroad, while wining her I race recently on a roller towel, accidentally fell forward. an:l her neck catching iu the loop cbe was strangled to death. Lev. Dolman, a highly popular Mdho- I dist clergyman, Is under arrest at Erie for an j at ten: nt to murder his wife and her mother. It is alleged that on former occasions he made i att -nt.ts t" poison the whoie family. Patrick Meanv. aged forty, while asleep i on the window-sin of his rooms on the fifth j floor of a New York tenement overbalanced himself and fell to the ground. He received ! su"h injuries (hot he died shortly a, "ter. I Mrs. Mollie Zortman. near Palmyra, Pa., the other afternoon rnked and bound seven i sheaves of wheat for pleasure, just to show the yo-.ing folks that she could do Mien work. She is in the eighth-third year of her age. Fifteen fatal caes of lockiaw caused bv wounds from toy pistols on July 4th have j been reported in Chicago, and three in the i county. Six bovs baye died in Bui lington. ! Iowa, and three in Peoria, 111., from the same i cause. John Roach, the Somerset self-confessed murderet, attempted to commit suicide bv jumping from a pree-piro thirty feet hi"li into the river near Cotoiei'syiiie t didn't succeed. "Men horn to be hanged will never drown." The upner jaw of a fish, found about 23 feet below the surface of the earth in Wil liamson county. Tenn.. has or, teeth, and soekets where fifteen others have been. ' It Is believed to have belonged to a now extinct Specms. On December lfi, the snip Theobald. Cnpt. X. Jj. Waterhonse, sailed from Phila tlelt hia tor San Francisco. Sircethen noth ing has he.-n beard of her, and she and her crew of nineteen men are supposed to have been lost. There Is a rose bush in a carden ;n Charleston. Mass.. which bears over one thousand I. it Is. It is 35 years old, anl covers a space of oyer ooe hundred square feet V smg'e stem has ir, buds, and stems having 12 10, or less are quite numerous. "' AJL fii-p at No. io.I Washington stteef -ew lork, on rrnlav, Policeman Reynolds ' saved the lives of eight children, havin-r 1 forced his way into the burningbuilding and"! ! standing on a window sill, canidit the little ' ones as they were dropped from above. I A monster mushroom has forced its way j through the solid 1 inch flooring of concrete anrt asphalt jn a Boffulo grain elevator. The ' bulge ,n the floor was first noticed the latter ' part of the week before last. Wilt the break ' .id not orvnr until Wednesday morning. j "Golden Medical Discovery" is not only I a sovereign remedy for consumption, but also for consumptive nio;ht sweats, bronchitis, ; courrbs. p flnenza. spitting of blood weak ! lungs, shortness of breath, and kindred affee- tions of tho throat and chest. By druggists. ; A young lady of Chester township. Ohio, i on her way home from church declined the : escort of Willie Wells. ncred l vears and accepted that of Everett Decker, 20 years of ; nee Wells waylaid the couple, and struck ! Decker on the back of the head with an axe, ! inflicting a fata! wound. ! .. Trov Tehrrrim is a staunch PcpuTt- ! Mean naper. but Hubheli is too much for it. j n"!'"" "T'"' Republicans will do well to . Pull down that Western javhawker (or Jay ll'ib..e,i, which is the same thing) and hide ..,, ,, out or -lent until aft-r election. He is an ofTepse to the senses of decent vo ters." A me, Heal society in Chicago has expell ed a member for the gross offence of publish ing his card in a newspaper and paving for it. If lie had induced a good natnrect repor ter to eive him a free advertisement hv say ing that "Dr. So and so was called, atid drssed the wound," it would hava been all right. The special correspondents of th New ork D'orW in Arkansas, Wisconsin, Illinois, Louisiana. Kansas. Texas. Michigan, Minne sota and Dakota report that the whea"; crop row being gathered is unexpectedly large, ami that cotton, corn and other crops have been greatly advanced by recent favorable v i m i eer. i Two brominent New York Catholic eler- g men, Rt. Rev. Wm. Quinn and Rev. M. j O'Farreli. have pone to the Adirondack wil- j d-rness on a fishing excursion. They took ; wi'h thein the necessary altar furniture in ' order to e.-lobrate mass, which they will offer j nn in their tent or under the trees in the wild Wilderness. ! While a Mexican wagon train carrying 10 kces of powder was going down a hill j near Helena, Texas, on Friday mornintr, i some of the powder exploded. Two Mexi- j cans nnd four mules were blown to pieces. ! another man was tbrown to a heicht of 100 feet and killed. The cause of the explosion i unknown. Tho pastor of a Congregational church at Maneelona, Mich., cau'ioned his people aua'nst be excitement likely to be caused hy Revivalist Burns, who was about to begin w-ork in that place. But it was not long be fore he was himself wrought nn to a high piteh of feeling, nnd now he has become a hope'eas maniac." The sneress r,f prohibition in Kansas and the recent tereperaiice victory in low has emboldened th- workers in Illinois, Ohio, Wisconsin and Michigan. The chances now are that they wil I propose prohibition amend ments to their State constitutions at the ear hes moment. It is upsetting party politics in a'! tho-e States. No Arm Jack is a Texas horse thief who has just been hxked un in a Sr-ephensville-iai!. His arms are ofT above the elbows, but the hours protrude from the flesh several inches and are rough like corncobs. With these uncouth members Jack performs some astonishing fats. When 'taking a pen to wrde. he holds it betweea tha Bide of hiachia a-id one of the sturrrs. Joseph Morris shot and instantly killed Mrs. Turner, wife of a storekeeper, near Morris station, Md., on Thursday night, dur ing the absence of her husband. It is sup posed Morris attempted an assault, which was resisted, with the above result. Morris has not been arrested. He is twenty-three years old. Mrs. Turner was thirty year old. The Erie county almshouse, containing 300 paupers and insane, narrowly escaped being blown up on Friday last. The build ing is heated and lighted by natural gas. An idiot named Alfred Brand got into the boiler room and turned on the supply valves. An explosion ensued soon after, in wddch Brand was almost dismembered and the lower part of the building badly wrecked. The Bristol Osen-er publishes what pur ports to be a fac simile of General Beaver's bronze medal. In the centre is the picture of (irant and over and underneath the figures 306. On each snip are the fi Jtures 3t, symbo lizing the number of ballots. In a circle is printed "Awarded to the Spartan Band of ;ioi, who at Chicago defied the will of the people and voted for Grant :'.i times by order of the bosses. Mrs. Wilson, with her two children, aged 7 and 0 years, left her home at Newburg, Mich., on the Mackinac Railroad, to visit a neighbor, and while going through the woods , lost'her way. It was supposed that wild beasts had devotired the whole party. Mon day of last week, however, they were found bv a hunter. The mother and one child were dead, and the other child alive, sitting beside the dead bodies. They had lived some days on cranlterries. Mark Lary, who lives some eight or nina miles west of Morris, Minnesota, was In town one day last week, says the Morris Tribune, and reported ttiat nineteen salmon were found in E. V. Drodel's wheat field after the rain the night before. The fish were good size and flopping around looking tor the lake, which was eighty rods from wheie they were found. They could not have got there from the lake, as it is quite shallow and last winter what fish were in it froze to death. Two boilers exploded in 1). J. McCIoud's ahingle mill at Saginaw. Mich., on Saturday evening last, killing William Crawford, aged nineteen, and Ferdinand Schemm, nine years old. Both were about 2."0 feet away from the mill when tney were struck Jas. White, night watchman ; Peter White and James Ilearns were also badly hurt. Chief Eugi geer Wily, of the Fire Department ; Charles Grasson," Harry Barnes and Oscar Ilaeardy were all cut and severely bruised. The loss by the fiie and explosion is about f3,ou0 ; in surance, fl.noo. The village of Freeport, Wayne county, was greatly convulsed on Tuesday last by the discovery that two girls named Stearns had murdered their stepmother last week. They pecreted the body, but the secret bore heavily on one of them, and she told a friend,' who informed the authorities. One (if the girls has been arrested and is in jail in Waynesboro, but the other has fled. There are two stories of the tragedy. One Is that the woman was poisoned, and the other that a sharp instrument was driven into her breast. The girls had not taken kindly to their stepmother for some time past. The Ro-kir.gham 7lrgiter says that twenty-seven years ago Mr. David Eiier, who lived near Keezletown. Va., built a dairy and placed in it two yellow suckers as pets. Mr. Filer has been dead for a number of years, but Aunt Harriet, his widow, still lives, and during all these ears she has carefully fed and cared for her pet fish. One of them died several years ago, and the last one gave up the ghost only a few days ago, after having lived in the dairy twenty-seven years. The fish was about eighteen inches long and had became so tame that it was not the least frightened hy the approach of its mistress with its feed. A colored man entered the house of R. W. Gibson. No. 208 North Thirty-fourth street, Philadelphia, one night last week, and after obtaining a box containing nearly f.i00 worth of jewelry, was about to leave when lie was detected hy Emma Ryan, the domes tic, who caught him by the arm and held him while she called for help. The intruder made a thrust at the girl with a large knife, cutting her ctotliing but she held on, scream ing all the time for assistance. Finally the thief succeeded in escaping : but shn had noticed his appearance so well that from her descpptiori a detective soon after arrested the culprit, and he was at once recotiized by the plucky girl. James F. Walsh, aged nineteen years, was hanged at Brooklyn, N. Y., at five min utes past ten o'clock Friday morning, for the murder of Barbara Oroenthal, aged sixteen, January 3, issi. Barbara was a domestic, and by the advice of her employers refused to receive the ntteutions of Walsh, whose reputation was bad. He bluntly asked her on New Year's Day to marry him. She re fused. He bought a pocket knife with a four inch blade, sharpened both edges in a paint shop where he worked, learned by many in quiries the ex.Tct location of the beat t. called on Barbara the night of January 3d. and upon her refusnl to accept him as a lover, lie stabbed her thnsiij;!! the heart, killing, heriu sfnutiy. A" Philadelphia beer garden hrs for one of its waiters a genuine ptince, the son of Piincp Veronna de Fanara, who fought as a general with Garibaldi at Soiferino. The young man was reared in the luxury of a Modona villa, and in his youth became the victim of indolence and luxurious extrava gance. He broke his mother's heart, wasted his fortune in gaming, and then lived for several years upon the indulgence of friends of better days. He n.arriei an American who was thought to be an heiress, but who was penniless. He deserted her, jnined a pirate crew, was caught, escaped and fled to New Orleans. Then he tended bar in a wine bouse; went to Philadelphia during the Cen tennial, and has remained there ever since. Late fdi Saturday night five negro rail road laborers left Meridan, Miss., tor home, walking or. the Mobile and Ohio railroad track. All being under the influence of drink they sat down on the track and fell asleep. A train ran over them, ki'ling one and severely wound ing three. Monday, two miles from Desoto, on the Mobile ami Ohio railroad, the mangled remains of six negroes were found on the track, having been run over by a train. They had been employed on the New Orleans and North Eastern rail road, and had just been paid. They were bound home. One regio lias been arrested, and another is being hin ted np on a strong suspicion of having murdered and robbed the negroes and placed their bodies on the track. The funeral of Miss Fanny Parnell took place on Monday morning at B .rdentown, N. J. A largp number of the residents of the city and vicinitv were present, and the trains from New York and Philadelphia btought .members from different Land League organizations- A harp at the head of the casket bore ti e following inscription : "Cede Deo." A white satin pillow with harp at tached, had on it a quotation from her last poem, "The Utterance of the Irish Heart. " Rev. N. Petit, rector of Christ Episcopal Church, read the burial service of the Epis copal Church at the mansion. A plastercast of the features of the deceased was taken hy a Philadelphia sculptor. The remains, will lie in the receiving vault, Trenton, until such time as final arrangements can be made. Ni?r .Tf.hset (Jkapk Wink. The twees, of Mr. Speer, the great wine nian of New Jersey, has arisen from the'strict purity and valuable propeities of his wines for invalids and feeble persons, and his reputation ex tends over the whole union as being a relia ble pioclucer of pure wines. His Port (irape wine is now being ordered by families in Dresden. London and Paris for its superior medicinal virtues, owing probably to the iron contained in the brown shale rock soil in which the Tines grow. For sale tt James' drug store. EbensUurg, Pa. Miss Greyson, who had for many years been bedridden with spinal disease, at Krie, Pa., believed that she could be cured by prayer, fchei talked with the attending phy sician about it, and he said that he would arrange for a meeting of devout persons, at the house of a neighbor, when her recovery should be earnestly implored. At the ap pointed time she sprang from the coucll s.u 1 declared herself minc'ilou-dy recovered. Hut tbe perfidious doctor had culled no meeting, and no pi ay ing had been done. tl t KI.F.X'N ARMt A HALVE, The I'.kst Salve in the world for Cuts, r.ruiM-s, Hurts, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Kheum, Fever .Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chil blains. Corns, and all skin Krupiions, and positively cures Piles. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 2.j cts. per box. for sale by E. James, sole agent, Ebensburg, Ta. 3-. -ly. Sherman Miller, a hotel keeper at Millers town, Perry county, was killed on Saturday night by Wm. agner. A white man and a negro were quarreling. Wagner entered Mi l r s bar r.Miui, and Miller attacked hint for defending the negro aud then struck him. In the nt.ht ensuing Wagner shot Mill dead. Miller's sou tried to shoot Warner. Time Maid Expense Sated. Hard workers are subject to bilious attacks which may end in dangerous illness. Park er's (ringer Fonic keeps the kidneysand liver active, and by preventing the attack saves sickness, time and expense. Drtroit Pres.'. Miss Sarah, Sargeaut, aged 1, and very pretty, is a mail carrier in Washinnto.! coin. Louis Cook Manufaclurii!v ( CARRIAGE WORKS, CINCINNATI, OHIO. THE LARGEST AND MOST FULL CAPACITY, "THE STANDARD YEIllCl.i s AKL ,MAHS AT llll-t WdKKS, l.MliKALlMi Brewster, Whitney, Cooper and Timpkin Side Bars, idee or Monarch Triple Spring Buggies, ' Ua c The Greatest Varieties of Styles, The Finest Two and Three Spring rha:tona, The Handsomest Haroitches in the Market, Stylish Carriages,' Kour and Six I'asse , Can op if Top liasket Than tons. The Jiesl Vlatforin Spring llart Jee COOK'S STANDARD VEHICLES" the least mokey. Do not under any circumstances buy unt'.l jou l ave cular of Mylfs and Prices. Wholesale trade a srix l alt T. Ktiuemb. -i ,. Wheels, the SA It VENT PATENT, aud warrant every vehicle. A Passing Word. AXYTHT.XG THAT C.LY HEASChTABL ) . w 7 -FOR LY SUMMER CLOTHLXG FOR ,VLV,(U i',y, A II AITS YOU at OAK HALL. The PRC 7:.v , u :,' THLX STUFFS and U VOLF.VS ar c FJ.XLh ,.r j';r JUSTED XY THE SCHEME of OUR LIST . Vf , y -UPSET SALE. Wanamaker & Brown Oak Hall, Sixth and Market, l'Liladcij-liia. Renouncing the World and Its ricusnrcs. A SOTABLK YOCXOj I.ADT EXCH ANOINO) IUCH Bl'.IDAL KOBES KOI! A NU-S't HAK1T. A Baltimore telegram of the 2M Inst, tells of an interesting religious ceiemony which took place iu that city on the day indicated, as follows : Mia Fmlly MoTvt'h. thf wealtbv ryltT ronrg 11 who in May Inn eu.l lenlv Vcnuum-ed '.lie world and entered the convent ot Meant 1 e Sulin R novice, was yesterday invested with ti e cuu'i hal'it nt tlmt institution, adeptinif the came of lister Xnry Aene. 1 tie cereniunie? were per formed in the cliM;eI. there teinv no one j-resw-nt except feveral meint.er- of her liiniiy and lou or three Invited friend. Thee occupied sen'f at the clmticel rn il. 1 he ; ecu Han tv of tie cer-men v was that neither the asplrnnt n..f the no,- were in tl e clKipel. Imt were In a frrnil a l n'l k Winr to t.': left ot the Jit nr. and separated Ireln It bv a tietivv Iron eratinir. In tle. plnce thev ere n"..t vt-Pde from Ui chapel er- i er. and hud there ei n a 1 ioj?o conirreiration present, only those who ni.rp !' t the chancel nil could have ?een tbem. Th' trratmif 1? typical ot the renuncUt ten ot the werld by the order. Tie ions :: net it niinu-!e wsti the worldly pe.'ple outside tvie convert, ei t.; t tv perujl'ion of the !!-! r Sm fmr. V!-iti r may Ve received by them ti, !c the convert. The Sis ters, therefor, do r.ut or.Li;i In tbe Uia; el, hut behind the jrrat-uiir. Throuirh a tiuatl door In the rratir.i: t : p; commtini-atod with the aspirant who ,rss,t in lull and handfome t ridal cotut:ie. she wore a heavy white eatin dres. cut en trnlti, an i mutl.t up with 1miiI and orar.ye I,i..--mh. Atul veil enveloped hr fliriire in a ni-, v cloud. This tvpi hed her d line, with the t liun h. Attending her were the nuns of the convent, each with a l;'ite,l can lie, w hi -h wa ef.rrled lut 1nif a portion of .he pervlcer. rather Kitzoatric oftici ited. Moisted hy Father l.e. I'nri'i. and nron. There a choir In attendance, con stituted hy tl.f lniru -tor In ton? r at the coven?, ad the f-inuiu j exceptionally beautiful and linprc-!ve. At the bf irlnnfrir of t rie rorptnon'e Father Fltl- rstriclt deliver i a brief ad Ires. t(, the rellth-ufe. le lutorroL-atert her a.- to her desire to enter the convent. ak-lni it fhe was re.idv to embr-x-c that which wm the death of her h.rujer life. To these question her answers were finn and dc!dej. Tho attend inn Si'frs then carried the young re wieue way, ui.d. a fti r removnjr the we'jdm att re. re priced it with the nun' habit of dnrk rloth.Hn 1 linen. H-r hair w not cut. m.r will it he uui:l She take, the solemn v w a vt-ftr htn-e. Mlf McTuvlsh I descended frem one of fie ol 1 ef famine of this- c.iirit-v, wh-en t closely c.oi nectel with noted fane lies ofF.nn'ind. ' Thr-mtsti the aton they ere verv closely relate 1 to thre noble houses, and Uen" Winheid Sett wm the fTTand'athe? of the children ol the present irenera tion. The tep taken was to her manr friend a : pudden one. but It had Ion been conM ie'e 1 For ! mny year patMi McT.'ivish had been remark ed aiuont' tho-e ol her religion a one exemi Urily piou. She i wealthy, exceed. r.alv handsome and unicetul. well e l ueated. aud was appreciative of the pleasures and healthluines of outdoor H .rt. especially a dash aOr the hound arris country. She wa widl- known In th hle'ie't eoclnl cirrl of tho State. She Is believed to have a private fortune ot over Vj0,0o0. Thb Washington Tost is authority for the statement that Mr. William C'alver, a mining expert, haw received a patent for an inven tion which Fin. ply consists ff an arrange ment whereby the rays of the sun are reflect ed from any number of mi-mr upon a com mon focus. Happening to direct the light from twoordinaty looking glasses upon the same surface he noticed that the resultant neat was about doubled. lie proceeded with his experiments, and succeeded in le ducing wood to ashes and metal to a liquid state by simply concentrating upon tbem the n fleeted light of the sun from twenty small mirrors with flat sui faces. The principle is an nnexplainable one. It has never hither to been .suspected that lapping one ray of sunlight upon another increased the heat The P.itt thus descrilva. an experiment wit nessed by one ol its reporters : "Forty innocent, ttuileles looking fifteen ee-t irilt frame mirror, ear h three and three-ton rths lnche hy five and tbree-fonrtht Inchc we-e ar ranged upon a frame propped up like an artist's easel and hearing a striking resemblance thereto m r.-e wns me irairment of what was once e a barn door. a!o t reppe 1 up and partly 1 with a worn and laded sheet of tine that ore eov. unmistakable evidences of having bore throuirh in several place. It was hut the w.,rk of a minute to converge the f,.rtv mirrort utin a space three and three-quarter Inch hv five and three quarter inches upou the barn doof and then the revelations bex-.in. A each mirror eat Its quota of sunhifht upon the common store the par allelogram ol in lit e-rewwhlterar.d more darrl'nif until at last It looked iie a patch of electric liicht Rut ,itti paMonce was re., u, red to await re.Vlt" In 1-ss th in thirty seconds a thin, curling- puff of smoke a-ve evidence of the progress f the exnert rnent. In a minute a board was bursting oiit in Oame. The focu was then shilt-d upon the zinc In a few moments It bi-ean to tnrn color: then shrink at If anxions to L-et away where It wat cool er. and. then in less than three minutes the entire surface covered by the focu wa literally melting drop by drop. To molt tine requires a tempera-' ture of over 7'o decree fahreuheit The mot wonderful "Hture a.,.ut the who! thina- is the brillinney of thel-ht. Fach mlrr-radd not onlv heat, hit liht. Ihe forty m'rrnr rroduced a inept more enlllant than an ordinary electric Lost in the Woods. -a dispatch from Marquette, Mich.. July 10, says: The hodies .( Mr. WHon and her on were found yesfdav niornlntr In the wood within two mile, of their house. Mr. w.;,,.D ,,It nme Pn Jane 15 t. visit a neighbor, taking her son. aged year, and a daughter. air.-d 7 vear. leaving a son. aged It. to take care of the house. Five dav Iterward the hoy who wa 1-q at home made hu way to the railroad, where hi father wa at work, e KJ' teen ml'es di-t,nt, and r-iorted tlwt the tn.-ther had heen absent fire davt. s.-ar-ii was imm-dtnu-iy li7un, but no trace of the w,.m.lu csuld be found. Yeerday one of the railroad men who was ont bunting cenie npon Hie three Ivlng on the ground sheltered by tile root of a t ilien tree. The mother nd son were dead. The daughter wa still Mire, she said that tn starting f.r a neighbor's house. mile and a quarter distant. th mother mitook' a deer trail for the path, and alter an1-rtcg about lor several ,!av without food, tfcev eame upon a cranberry marh. and therein, r live I upon green rruit. In order n.. to loe her wav back to tt.e rit of the fallen tr where thev were round the woman tore her dress into strips and tied" The fragments to the trees a she went alorg. When found the motut-r and sr.n lav -id hv si,l the lit tle girl e-ittlng on the ground keeping .(lent rigM over the bodies The boy had been dead five davs. 1 he mnth.-r had died only two hoar before being JiscovereJ. "C'"S WAI..M T 1.T.W HAIR RFSTOKFR. It is entirely dif.ertit from all other, it 1 Clear as water, and. a Its name indicate. . a t.er- l v fre vrltt:1" ";r It il' Immediat;. JJ tree the. head from all dandrnll. restore grav riair to it natural color, iml pro,ce a new gromth ThA1 hr ,ft!itn "fl " ' ? n" 1" rnantier Mltectthe health, which Sulphur. Sicar ot Lead and J-itrat ot Silver preinratio,,. have done It will change light or faded hair In a lew davs to a eeautitul K,.sy hron n. Ak vmir drnggtu fr,r it tnittle Is warranted. Smith. Klik n t0 W hole.,).- Atr-nt. Fhil tel. -hi .. -nd ' N IVrr' IMoji, New Vrk. r-i -lv J COMPLETE IN THr 1,000 PER WEEK. i mji i u u rt ft A Klin .S.i. Ip Open and Top Sn,;;v n are known all the wor'.t 'J'u 11 A Won tv'f bviT Atlanta, Oft., is eve'! : - :' c of that c:tv, with the i"o" ' feat of holding by th. g. probability sairg t..,. , ;,. ,, '.mnaniiniiist w io nie!tr ed from a window. Here I- Iftt i.'wl t a htdv !.. y -"at home" to quite a i x,' .: ' i rli'.nnt efr.:i.p '! t( . for separation .ad arriv.'o ) , lfucts ,.f ji,e ln.lv was -a.:- . forte J t a hi :r m. v : . - . made p. feel h t;t-v as . ould otter. About ii' eY. sleep, and the voimu la 'v her side, thlt kit'- that l.ef u ills in sweet intnber. Jay v . a window in t he ro. r r. . curef ol tin world. ' . t. . not k uow .ir v . r, ,1' tlrraui.she I. it ,, a-..i. !.t. i . u .-. "i . Me of t.er friend, fu: . -iu-e : e i dentti. '1 he ometh1nir wVi, ...... and awoke her ws tne r who had. In a s elir -lTT ; . i. . i(, t e ) and t ke, a. C , , betde which the -.1v wi,- .;-FI window c; " c-rie 1 i,r,.r r. . . heit, and then I ej in a:i ev- ... suitel In !'.! I,-.,; f r t.... Hardly re-lilTi what she w irral.bvd ttie white i:.r- ' with both t.r.n.'s. ..n,j as ,. ' , preeted wit!, si-r-a:,,. ,.t o,;- . j -an Instaiit she rt ani- 'd .. -i , lrlind in mld-alr. en 1 thi.: t.. the cloth wn to iosi:re ,--hyiei!y str-.CK. hot wi-i. h' . led she ll.'hteTie.j her le ' ! ;i'. I -htr Ir'eu d s .-all f.,r aid' ' scream awoke the fua..-;. toned to the r- m ar i r . Ir 'tn her e-tsl p..r-i:,.ti. As fo,.n at the ".:. atn: ; kcwiediced lii-n.fi! to i rinn. thcy,.uiiu ladv wi.., a and thtt uiort- rir t r str- nt ti.at bci ; s , . . ,, .. -A State Normal Si: 1X131 AX , l I'rMsnts rnnriaiil FariiitM I'rfirliiu lea-hiri for ro'e Ing Itieir I'ielu ol Isatx.r. There Is no more r. j t :. that of mottlJfri: hfti.an t r.. . : t Co greater heiietao: r tl..i:. t:.e l -ce.fni tear l.tr. If you Intend t te i ! . p- i --e .. -thonitJKhly , auj t-.ti !'....- j. - pleasant and i r, h'! :.t j. : rral rauc tn o; 'e-rt. Iery te.-i-l.er ek-.i.M p.i,e a .- at a profession!,! s ,. a-j ; -. ..j oft.rs yon none -ijj, t. th. INDIANA Nom SCEj; T I. 1. 1. I-'H-ATIKN. he.Lt..iil. . and healthful. 2. UriLUlNij ini. A; pi j -'ES, unexcelled. 8. lNsTHVt.n iil.S, e; : f uccesaiul. 4. IJKAl'VATKS sta-.l 1 known. 6. t'tiT KSE of STt l'Y at,! : ftructivn are v. lint yotiJt..-J termtned to l'ec,.t:!e an eirti"-t cess ful teacher. t . ' FALL Term will open SEIT. 0 For further parti.-nla- ! 'r -t I. II. li:i:MV: July i4. issc.-1-t. rt: ' The King r the Itody ! t stomach :t n-a-n fv. j.o-r : f " pert; the bow,-l. ti'e k idr' - " ' guards. lndigit on crtites m . : these atta -h es ! ti e re-il .t them 1,-u.k to Itiir .1 -i. tln-f t ' nsuiatttis. puroytrg tt.vie '- " ation ol 1 i,k r s Ski 1 r.'i " ovate the sweui -.nd re-t. r-" t. body and the rund. SUI I) BY Aid. l'Kt -O ; IOWA and I HUV MINNESOTA Li -K Oa theOMetgn i!rkf i l Cheap Prices, Ym Tinn', I ff And Itsliales tnr 1 ri.;r" -,r' For map at; 1 foil , r. .,- s - W1I.1 1- l 4 l.and . V tn:.i:--- "" RAMDOLPH. Send I'o-tal for t ' give lull li.o.rnin-'on c and weii-kn..wn Sen,.- ary Ts-rsn t-n "H" ' '. t Address PROF. J. T. rt' F ..V. Antm,y"- As.n, o M,e pel. ... .- For terms. i,.d:r-: w Cir?fi er w,,'h r'r 'TV - - - ' outfit tree. .. H. IX.IUHj1 AlrKTivK: . . : "'7' i '.--' NewM.a !!.. e..f ' St.. X. V. " ' .