(Cambria nwnan. EDENSBURC. PA., FRIDAY, OCT. 27, 1SS2. DEJIOUUTIL' STATE TICKET. FOR OOVKRJTOR. KOB T E. PATTISON, of rhHad'a. FOR I JfiUTENAT OOVEUSO'it. CHAUNCEV I'. BLACK!, of York. 'mm jxdk of rpp.EME wcht. MLAS M. CLARK, of Indian. FOP. SBC.MTASY OF rSTXfilfAt. AFFAIRS, J. SIMPSON' AFRICA, or Hnntinlon. FOR OISRIWy M-AT-I,ATtOE. MORTIMER F. EI7LI0TT, of Tioga. DEfUKIliTl): f-ol'XTT TIC'KOT. A. II. OOFVROTII. of Somerset. r'(l A"MELT : "y ATM A ! TFT, FIORVE, of .Tormjtown. JOSEPH McDOXALD, of Ehpnsbtirfi;. r-Tt sprRirr: D. A. LL'THKR, Sn , of Cnrrol! Twp. ron rons ikt- mnr'TOR: JOK'S POHAHA I'Oir, of Croyie Twp. Tow .trr.T rr-wiirtin : Af5.ELM WE AKLKX. of EMrr Twp. JO!IX(H)X, F'v,of Conpmaiich rioro. Titk Miotic fditor rf Hip Pittsburgh Tim (3 annonnc"!. tliat Hon. Cyrus T,. TV rah in 2 ' 'Tins hpcnmi convincr-d that the welfnre of tho Stato tlrppntls upon the suitors of Prpnhlipfin princiiilos. and litis rnmo ovrr to thfi TV-pnl)' ican party.'' Wlint Cvrns 1.. Porphiritr turns j his Lark on th Tpniocrntic! jwrty arvl j wandors n-ftfr sf rrmcrr politionl trod a, his j ritrlit hand will forgot its oimninj and ! his t on crno rlr-nvo to hc roof of his month I Citftfu A. Ar.Tnm on Satnrdav last deridrd to rrrnovo a woman who postmistross at M;inasas. Virprinia. al- thoncrh she is endorsed by everv citi7en of the town, simply because Mahone wanted the pl.ioe for ono of his "strik ers."' A President who mkes a bar- pain with a repudiation thief like Ma- ' hone and puts t tie on ire rrovernmont pa- ! tropnrre of a 'State under his control, has ' sounded the depths of politic! infamy ' to a lower evff nt. than wni pvt reached ; by any former ireupiiw:if. of that once i and exalt'd pi'Mtion. ; TThf:? did the Fbenslinrrr Fr.EFM.w. as the Altooria J?-J'rtiJ assorted last, wek. evr-r rMicnV ttio ido:i of .Tiefd) M. Campbell securing a frr- delivery svstem for our ( ! h A"oona) peopV- ?" We know nbsolutelv no' hincr about fJon. Campbell's efforts in re-rrd to the free delivery of tiriil ma'tn- in Altoona never cared a straw whether they were preaf. or otherwise, rot beiprr specially interested in the qriestion -pnd never in any way referral to the matter pxpet1. to sav in our iss-ie th-it Alf"ppa is to have a frro mail delivery to all o.irts of the ppy. To u -e a poli'o but vicror our Preii''h phrase. "hen redured to Enclish. the I!;.V.;,1 i- "inxaef" A ror. n fspovpfnt of the Philadel- ' pliia TiVir. writlnrr from Frie, is re-; sponsible for the statement that the ' name and post-ofVe address of every Catholic in the diocese of Frie have ! leen forwardeil to (liny, at the P.eaver i State Committee hoad-mnr'ers, with! the purpose iu view of piailip? to each of these vo'ers. j;ist a few d;l"S bf-fiire j the elrctio'i. the fabricated version of i Mr. Pattison's Philadelphia speech of, January. 1-1. in which he is made to , use offensive lancrnaee acraipst the Irish. ! As the forjTorv lias been thoroughly ex- j posed by the Tihux and the arielp repub lished bv the Democratic papers of the .';taf e. ( Vviv u i'l doubtless ab.apdon his program n;n. This low and dirty bnsi ress of dracrinT the CatluVio Church in to every pol'Henl rapipai,j,!i of this State by the Penphijean bosses, oucrht to dis pnst everv 'at hoi ic Ih'pnblican and cop strait: him to vote afaint a party that Countpp:pees sucli b:ise juid shameless exped:e;.ts bv i t leaders. Tiif Democratic conferees of the Sen atorial district composed of counties of Cumberland and Adams, having held repeated meetincs ami being ppahte to make a nomination the two candiil ites A. S. Mv eis. of Adams, and S. C. AVag ner. of Cumberland, agreo-d last week to submit- the toa'trr to Cer. Coffroth Wm.Mef'lell.ind. of Pittsburgh, and .Tas II. TJonrMns. of the same eitv, who was selected umpire. Bv t he agreement, the j decision was to put a foal termination to the contest. The three gentlemen named met at th Tlulbert House in ! Johnstown on last Monday and de cided in favor of Wagner as the nnnii- ! nee. As the District is largely Demo cratic James W. P.os'er. of Cumber land county, the Republican n-irtineo j will not have occasion to spend near as much of his surplus cash accumulated 1 in furnishing tieef to the Western In- 1 dians bv contract with the Government ! as he was prepared fo do if the dead- I lock had not I .pen broken. Mi:. Pattfsov's reception at the dif ferent points in the oil regions at which he stopiwd during his visit last week, was equally as enthusiastic as were the demonstrations in his behalf in the an thracite coal oo'inties during the week previous. He arrived at Ilarrisbnrg on his homeward trip on Friday afternoon and in the evening a.ldress,, what is admitted on all hands to have lwen the largest political meeting that has ever assembled at the State eapitol for twen ty years. That ope speech of Mr. Pat ti son contained more g'od, common pense than all the sever.tv-live or eighty self-laud itory harangues by which Gen. Beaver has sought to bolster up hissink ing and de-perate cause since he first took the stump. On Saturday Patt ison went to Reading, ir. "Old Berks' and ad dressed a very large crowd of her unter ritled Democracy. To-night he will lak in Altoona, and to-morrow morn in,r he v. ill make a brief speech from the platform of the cars at the Johnstown station. In tun af!frn..nn he will ad- j ,k,s demons! rut ion at Columbus on Sat dressa meeting at Greonsburg and at j ur.lay last. The city was crowded with night will Fy-r-dk in Pitt-burg. Daniel . twenty thousand Democrats from all ..,. , , ' j who is falser represented by the Pep.,b- "inni iii, nn .nil i-iu i' i r i hi i i r ' ' i ncan p:i tiers as Jiemcr opposed tn Patti--n. will deliver a speech in Johnstown in favor of his election tefore the clo.se cf the campaign. t f.n". iEA v Fi! addressed a nioctinii of his forlorn and dispirited friends at Johr.stown on last Friday evening. Har ry "Boggs, who is about as much of a Re Publican at heart as we are, made a speech as is a speech. We once read of a Connecticut fiddler who always ended the tune he began playing with 'Yankee Doodle.' And so it is with Harry Boprcfs' speeches. No matter what the subject is upon which he starts out, he invaria bly winds up with a dissertation on the tariff that question being his political meat and drink. Boffcs evidently be lieves that the people are all fools, for in hissjwech he exclaimed: "Mark what I say, if the Democrats are triumphant your Tariff (with a big T) will be re pealed, as it was in 1840 ?' "When the democrats after the election, in 1874 controlled the lower branch of Congress for six years and the Senate for a por tion of the same time, did they attempt to repeal Harry liotrgs' dearly beloved tariff ? Not much. Ros will find out on the morninrr after the election that the people can't be fooled any long er by this cheap cry about the tariff. That kind of argument has had its day, and is now as ineffectual as the once po tent Republican appeal to the Xorth nsrainst the "old rebel yell." But TJoecs means business and that promptly. Lis ten to him : "There ja rdprify of t!mp to eet warmed up in this rnmmirrn. T want von to meet m on Saturday niirht flown at tho Market Tlouie, an;l lot ti ?o into triw h,.!rip5 in enrnpt and von will find that ve wIM he iil"t as vic torious wo wore during tho war : von will nnrl Mint wo will arnuso a cnlrit that will wpj?p ovorHiP fntiro eommnnitv ovot the pntiro southern portion of our eonntv, aruT OTnionto into r.thor coiintios. and wo will ho triumphant at tho poll?. I have no doubt ai'iout p.pavor's elopf'on " That Market House meet in? on Sat nrdav nichf was ni donbt a bitr thin? and foreshadowed the political fate of Robert E. Pattison in Western Pennsvl- van I a The wail of porrsrs and men of his stripe in the Hancock and Garfield campaign, two years acro. was; "Tf Han cock is elected, this establishment will close." "If you want your iron mills closed and all industries dependent npon them binr brought to a stand-still. vote for Hancock." Well. Hancock wasn't elected, but Garfield was, and ne hun dred thousand men for months were out of work, and the present tariff in full operation all tho same. Time and acrain has this stale crv about the tariff beircr in dan-rer if the Democrats tret into power been re-hashed and the work-inp-men bave too often swallowed the ly in? bait. P'it thov have, eot their eyes open since 1-sO and will not now even nibble at it. TnF. Johnstown Trihunr., on two or three occasion, of late, made the charge lhat Chauncev P. Black, the Democrat ic candidate for Lieutenant Governor, "was drunk aol made a hosr of himself at Bedford. I"niontwn and several oth er places." and that "he u now no bet ter nor no worse than he has been for twopf ? years past." We don't suppose the editor of the Trihunr knew anything about how Mr. Black conduct ed himself at ' Bedford. Uniontown, and other pla ces." but that lieinfj alwavs ready to pick up a slander azainst a Democratic candidato for office, and roll it under nis toncrno as a sweet morsel, he quietly transferred the charge from the Pitts bnrsr f'nmnrril Gnztttr to the columns of the TrVnnt and adopted it as his own. The Lancaster 'Ermmurr published the same storv, and Walter M. Franklin, a i , leadinsr Republican of that city stated last week to the editor of the Lancaster hitrlUqmrrr that he had received adis j patch from Mr. Farqnhar, of York, I where Chauncev F. Black resides, Mr. ' Farqnhar beincr a Republican, statin? that the charcre in the F..rnminrr was fiiNe that he (Farqnhar) had beep so ! informed bv reliable parties in Bedford ; and T'niontown that he had known Mr : Black for twenty years knew his hab i its to be unexceptionable, and that he ' was as froo 1 a man as a Democrat could ; be made." Resides this, the charge , was promptly denied as a bold ar.d na j keil lie by tb-" Democratic papers pub- i!-neii af t no places referred to Reppb- 1 , 11 j j- 7 ' 1 ; the tickets, and to avoid disagreement .ican testimony like that of Mr. Farqn- 1 ami grounds for contest, the chairmen bar stamps the charge as an infamous j of the four committees, held a confer fal.sehood. The Trinir avers that Mr. I Pncp a few 1vs Ri'ic,' ar"1 adopted the drunk fnr twenty years, but Farqnhar. who lives in the same town with him, savs he has known him for twenty years and knows that his habits are good, or. in other words, that he is a sober man. AVill the Tril'mr do Mr. Black justice, by publishing Mr. Farqnhar's denial of the charge in his dispatch to Walter M Franklin ? AVe will see. TnFRK is magic in some men's names and you can conjure with them, but yon : can't do it with a man who glories in j the outlandish and grating name of Sch r.attPrlv. T. B. Schnatterly, the pres i ent Democratic Senator from the Fay ! etfo and Greene district, having failed to secure a re-nomination from the dis ; trict conferif nee, and the conference i having adjourned nine lie the county ' committees of the two counties took up ; the matter in tho supreme interest of j Democracy of the district, appointed : new conferees, who met, and on the sec ond ballot unanimously nominated Dr. ' Pat ton. of Greene. Schnatterly's own , conferees from Fayette voting for him. ! Then the Republicans met and conclnd j ed not to make a nomination and on the following day Schnatterly .appears in the t role of a full-fledged independent candi i date, which means that if the Republi I car.s sustain him and if by their votes ; and the Di-moi-rath: support he counts j in, he is elected, he will vote, as in duty bound, for C.i'iuron ,,r P". $. Senator ' in iss.j. Has political perfidity and in ' gratitude ever equalled tho low game i that Schnatterly is now playing ? His ; ambition has overleaped itself and the . indications are that the voters of the I 1 district. Republican as well as Demo- j t-rats, will sweep him into oblivion with ! a surjjuiy wave of popular contempt. I Tiik Democracy of Ohio celebrated M.mr rP".''i.t o-roit sections or iiie .stare, live thousand of wnoin marciua tome music of the band, That iiobk and distinguished veteran . in the cause. Fx-Senator Allen G. Tlmr- loan, presided, and speeches were made by Senator PeiidJetou, mid several of tLo (successful caadidates for Congress- Popular Estimate of Pattison. Controller Pattison. of Philadelphia, the Democratic candidate for Governor, lias made a tour of the State, and is aeain housed at home, not to leave it un til after the election, except tovisit two of the important points left untouched in his travels. Mr. Pattison was a personal stranger to most of those whom he met. They only knew him through the story of his economical administration of his office, The public were anxious to see him and hear him speak. The impression that he seems to have created is that he is a practical, unassuming man, who, in of fice, would carefully perform hi3 duties, turning neither to the right nor to the left to prosecute xilitical schemes. The popular verdict is that he is not as able a speaker as Stewart ; that he lacks even the readiness of Beaver ; that in com mon sense and straightforward, business like views he is the peer or either. This, in brief, is the estimate placed upon Pat tison. It must appear, then, that Mr. Patti son 's only crime is that he is a Demo crat, and this 13 probably enough to prevent any Republican from voting for him. But Republicans cannot prevent his elect ion by vot ine for Beaver. The prospect of electing Beaver is complete ly faded. The only hope of the Stal warts was that they could frighten the people into a reaction by a howl about the tariff. This has utterly failed, and the Stalwart cause is prone upon its back. Therefore, if Republicans do not want even so clean-handed and safe a Democrat as Pattison elected, they should eo in a body to the Independent ticket, which, none can deny, represents pure. old-fashioned Republicanism. This is all that can save the State to the Re publicans. Of course there is a way by which Re publicans can still prove that they hold numerical supremacy, even though Pat tison be elected : That is by splitting the party and giving the Independents and Stalwarts each a half. But it would doubtless ?w much more satisfactory to all Republicans to elect Republican State officers. The only way to do this is to vote for the entire Stalwart ticket. Even the most sanguine Stalwart pol iticians have in their hearts abandoned all hope, and their only desire is to de ceive those who follow them into a be lief that there is yet a fighting chance, and thus prevent them from joining the Independents. The Stalwarts accuse the Independents of preferring Patti pon's election to Beaver's. Perhaps so. But will any Stalwart denv that he pre fers Pattison 's election to Stewart's ? JrsT on thp eve of an election, says the Altoona Sun, Gen. Campbell, who has not botheied himself much during his offcial term as a member of Congress al)out,hi3 constitnents.come3 to the front with a bait for the Altoona people. We are promised free delivery or mail car riers by the 1st of N'ovember. Does anvlody believe that if General Camp bell were not a candidate for re-election he would not have given the matter a thonuht ? No. But something has to be done to heal the disaffection of his constituents here and the eovernment is called upon to assist him by the show of free mail delivery. That is all well enousih but the people have very little confidence in Gen. Campbell's sincerity. They know the scheme too well. What we want is a new post-office building one which will afford ample space and accommodations such a building as a city of 2.".(iOO inhabitants needs nad Gen. Carnpliell inserted a clause for such a building in the appropriation bills, we would think that he cared at least to some extent for his constituents. General Coffroth, while in Congress, had a bill introduced for a new post-of-fice'and had he been retured to Congress in place of Campbell, the Altoona peo ple would now enjoy a new post-office, but Campbell never gave the subject a thought. Let the people of Altoona re member this and support den. Coffroth, their friend. Let the people of this dis trict purify the halls of Congress as far as lies in their power, and let them leave the small politicians at home and elect a man like Coffroth who is an honor to the State and ration, a man whom the people can trust and will honestly repre sent tbem. How to Print tijf. Tickkts. There has been considerable uncertain ty as to how the tickets for the coming election should le printed in order that they may conform to the provision of the law. The oilice of Congressman-at-Large, rendered necessary bv the fact that no new apportionment bill has been passed by the Legislature, is to all in tents a State office, and would naturally be included in tho State ticket, were it r.ot that the law of March .10th, 1 directs that all members of Congress shall be. included in the ticket headed 'county." In order that there may be and directions accordingly are given to i all the county chairmen of the Republi can, Democratic. Independent Uepuoii can and National Greenback-Labor par ties, that at the coming election the name of the candidate for Congressman at-Large shall be printed on the county ticket as follows. Immediately under the word "County" the title Congress-man-at-Large. and the name of the re sictive candidate for this office, to le followed bv the title "Congress" and the name of the district candidate." BiiinKRY ix Elf.ctions. The fol lowing is a copy of the "poster" now being distributed all over the State : 5,000 REWARD. The purpose of the Cameron Stalwait Re publicans of Pennsylvania have been dis closed by tlie b mst of one of their own agents over his own signature, that they will put j out "the created amount of cash ever spent ! in a State fiulit." i The DiMiiocntfii; State Coimuitteelpropos- J es ro try and put, a step to tu iherv and cor- ' ruption at elections in Pennsylvania. ' I will pay the following reward for the prosecution and conviction of persons who ! violate any of the stat utes of this Common wealth a,niut bribery or corruption at elec tions : f 1,000 for the first. f.'.oo for each of the next two. 6100 for each of the next ten. ?."o for each of the next twenty. f 10 for each of the next loo. In ail cases the money will be paid to the party r parties to w hose efforts the prosecu ting 'iflicer will certify that ttie conviction is due. These rewards to apply to any offences against said statutes committed between now and the time for the return of the vote by the election officers. ion officers W. P. IlENSEL. (Girard House, Philadelphia, Pa.) Chairman of Deni. State Committee. A TOTAL ri'MRSG of all other n:eIi"ines by Pr. K. V. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" is approaching. I Pnrivalled In bilious disorders, impure i blood, and consumption, which is scrofulous ; disease of the lungs. It is announced that President Arthnr is i ! going back to New York this week, tope- I j main till after the election. The Time sue- I ; gests that hereafter the Stalwarts provide j , this country with two Presidents; one to ' i 8ttend to business at Washington and tne other to run the machine in New York. Cameron and Mahone will look after tht rest of the country. Mothers Should Know It. Fretful ba bies cannot help disturbing everybody, and mothers should know how toothing Parker's GingerTotii.; is. It stops babies' pains, makes them healthy, relieves tiieir own anxiety acd is safe to use. Journal. 01R PHILADELPHIA LETTER. QUITTIKG.'TOI.ITICS TIM. O'LEART AND PAT. M'ATAMMASA TfO UlSGER WARD POLITI CIANS WHY TIMOTHY O'LEART, A XOTED WARD POLITICIAN, SWORE OFF POLITIC AND TOOK IRS TEMPERANCE PLEDGE, AND HOW HE INDUCED HIS FRIEND PATRICK U 'AT AM MAN A TO DO LIKKW78K. Philadelphia, Oct. 24, 1882. Dear McPniE-My letter this week is en tirely devoted to the rehearing of a cniloqny I heard this morning between Mr. Timothy O Leary and Mr. Taerick McAtamman. Meeting on Broad strett,, Mr. O'Lcary salu ted Mr. McAtammana thus : "(iood moroin', rat!" "Ah I Tim, me boy. is that you? How's the world thratin' you ?" "rarty faiily, thanks be to God I An how is it wid yerself, Pat?" "Bravely ! bravely ! What way's the Mic tion goin', Tim ?" "Troth. Pat, an It's little call I have to dolitics ; ao don't be axin' me aggravatln' questions." ""Why, Tim, I thousrht you was a red-hot politician." "Indade an' I was once, but rl've know. Pat. that them politicians or office-seekers is the biccest thaves alive, an' I sold ont pol itics, tuck the pledge, an' am a dacent man agin." "Weil, troth, I belave ve, Tim. It's little an Irishman makes bethim politicians in the long run." "Makes, is It? Tie makes ruination an' disgrace, loss av time, loss av character, an' sometimes loss av sowl." "But ye don't mane to say, Tim, that all politicians is alike." "By no manner av manes, Pat, for some av 'em may he vartuous and upright; but it's little call us poor Irish bovs has to the likes av 'em. Tho dirty workers kape ap pailin' to us as Irishmen, an' not as American citizens, thus makin' us n kind av distinct party, just as if we didn't love the country and its institutions every bit as mnch as any av 'em ; an' then it's bard work they give us for rtoin their biddin' " "For all the world, Tim, like knooktn' a man down and kickin him for fallin'." ".Tnot so, Pat. A n ' what T say now is that us Irish hoys hasn't anv call to be mindin' their meetin's or flalherv ; It's onlv ladin' ns asthray. If an Irishman has pot a votp let. him;make nse av it to ttie best av his thinkin' and lave the rest av it to the offipp-saker. It'll save himself a dale av thronblo an' his connthry a dale av disgrace. Thp kind av Irishmen wp sometimes see on 'lection tick ets is no credit, the Lord knows, toanyconn thrv min wldout edication, hreedin' or prin ciple nothin'. indae. to ripommend "em butthennmp, which, aftherall. Is only a thrap to patch Irish votes for offiee-sakprs on the same tickpt. Only look at Mickv Donovan, the ass he fstmakin' avjhimsplf sittin"himself up as Assissor. Why. it's not lone stnpe he rtruv a coal part. But thim ofnep-sakers. in hopps to catch Irish votes, kept puffin" htm on phairs in eommattpps an' callln' him Es quirp till he's ent so big that a who'e web v cloth won't make him a pair of britches, an so lazv he won't work barrin' von give him six houre out av everv five to rist himself." "Well. Tim, take any hoy widout larnin', that's ripen horn an' bred io slavery, an put him red-hot nmone these politicians, to be flathered an' made mucn av, an' its enonqh to turn his head." "Thrue for ye, Tat; but when Irishmen see themselves made tools av made sthep ladders av why don't thevqult, an' not lavp it in the power av dacint min to find fault wid 'cm. What's all their meddlin' for? Share the tiiecet place an Irishman gits from 'em is a poliMiman, an' to trit that hn mnst dfirink, an talk, an fieht, an' lose his reli gion, an widout thai lie a man's no more than a baste. Half these politicians is infi dels, an' the lad that takes up wid 'em is verv swn but httle bet her." "Talkin' av thrt. Tim, shure Corney Don avan's on the polish." "Is it big Corner, Tat?" "Sorra a word av a lie about ft, an' small blame to him whin he gits a big salary just for pathrolin" a block wid a badge on his bus sum, like the Juke av Leinfhpr." "Well, it's alwavs mighty fine, Pat. 'as long as the wages last, hut do ye'think Onrnev's eot a lase av his place fnr life, or that he'll be fit, for anything when his time's up ? Xo, faix, not h. A mpcham'e or a lahorin' man, Pat. who idles about for a few years, schmo kin here an' dhrinkin there, "an meddlin and mixin' wid had characters, won't be wll lin' to tackle hard work agin, nis hands is soft, his joints is stiff, an' his mind Is lazv. He's nothin' left hut politics, an' thin maybe it's a 'will o' tho wisp he'll he followin' for the rest 'a v his days. Just look at me, Pat, thp sthate I was left in by that tarin' villain, that thavin robber. Gammon." "I niver heard av that, Tim, at laste I mver heard the rights av it. Come tell me how tt was, Tim." "Well, just walk a hit an' I'll tell ye. Ye see this tarin villain an' thavin' robber. Gam mon, know'd 1 had influence in the facthory, an' was purty well acquainted in the ward, so he kern to me an' suthered me to eanvass for him, as Iip said the run was goin to he a hard one, an' if the other fellow got in no Irishman could live'in the connthry. So'he gey me a ten dollar bill to titrate the boys an a hint that if he was elected my fortune was made, an that T could hev pick and choosin for myself. Well, see I was flathered, and worked hard for Gammon. On the day av the 'lection I bawled myself hoarse, eot two hlapk'eyes, an' dhrank as much bad liquor as won'd burn the. bowels out of an ostrich ; but that's all I got barrin' a mnrtherin' headache an bein' nut of work for two mortal months, an' them's the months Gammon kep me run tun' n ft her him puttin' his ringer in my eye for a posish." J ' I wonder, Tim, ye didn't keep clear av him after that." "Well, ye see, Pat, work was slack and times was hard, an' me brains was turned heariu' av Paddy this an' Tim that itn' fine corporation Places where there was big i pay an' little work, so one afternoon as I kem up hestnnt street, who should I meet but Magistrate Gammon. "Mr. O'Learv, sez hp puttin' his hand out and shakin' mine as if r was his aunt or fosfber mother, 'how are ye''' sez he. 'Oh! but your lookin' bravelv. The dav is dustv,' sez he: 'won't vou come in an' take a dhrink?' 'There's no usn in throwin a good offer over one's shoulder ' sez I, an' so in we went into one av the most beautifnlest ister'eetlars I ever laid mv eyes on:'Iookin glass from flnre io cornish, an' al! gilded over with eoold. 'What'll ye take. Air. O'Lonry?' sez Gammon. 'Punch, sir,5 sez I, 'as I'm not particklar. 'Punch it is, I hen,' sez he, slappjn' me on the back. Mr. O'Lenry,' sez he, -what has betaken ye this long time ? I had a ereat place entirely for ye, hut didn't know where to find ye.' 'Well Mael'thrate, sez I. 'when ve wanted me to help yn was it an alsv matter for ve ro find me?' Wid that he began conchih' miehty hard, as if the punch was goin' agin him. Niver mind.' sez he, 'p'r'aps I'll make It all rieut afore long.' 'Morp power to ve. sur,' says I, 'the sooner the hether.' For a time we discoursed aisy an' pleanant as possible, until we were on the fourth tumbler and gettin mighty thick, when Gammon sez : 'Mr. O' Peary. there's some talk av me runnin' aeln, and I want ye in the nominating commatfee, which can tie donp If vnu'rp'agreeahle 'I'ra agreeable,' spz I. vow, to tell the honest truth. Pat, I know'd no more what a nomi nating committee rm.ant than a cow knows about a holiday, morn than that it was some thing bie jr, politics. But I didn't want irammon. tr know that I didn't nndersthand wl;at this big thing was that ooliticiana nso so lookin niighty wise. I eev the table a biij ! .Vi . ha'r mp punch, an' ont I kern, Magistrate,' sez I, 'the ward knows its jutv. ix,, ..i.oi-t-i n n mart sis is a man is no i one's bus'ness. ftv ,e is thrne to the commat tee,' sez I. -Oh, ho! sez Gammon, with a concated prin, -I see vou're an old practi tioner,' and with ttat 1 eev a wink, ns much as to sav, I'm at it since I ivns n hnhv 'SUielr i to me, Tim, wid vour whole sowl.' sez Gani ! mon, 'an' your fortune's made.' 'Magistrate ! dear," sez I, risin' me voice nn me fist, for j the liquor was tn me. ye nndersthand, ye I know me, Magistrate.' 'Ilowld yer whist I there an' make less noise, sez the chap at ; the bar. But there's no use goin' over all : our discoorse. I made an ass av meself anv- " 1 W."K7 "p. nxt "'rnin' in the station now. l woke up next niornin ou-e, nn a jus, ice av tne pace nned me two I dollars for bein' dhriink an' five dollars for i brakin decanters an' tarin' the barkeeper's fdiirt off him. From that till pnrty near 'lec tion time I loafed about, workin one day an' idlin two, muddlin' an' talkin' politics till I ; lelr as if 1 couldn't do widout it." I .lit did they niver put ye on the commat- P Tom " tee, Tom ? "Av course thev did, an' a blpssed com mattee it was. Only listen, Pat. First there was two gossoon lawyers ; then there was a countryman of ours thev called Miekpv. thA j heart's blood av a ruffian a stout, chnnkv .lmP "jessed up m good clothes, wid a face ;"af ,ul rnKe a brass knocker blush He llH1 keI!t a portlier house till ho chated so '''"" liquor dealers that he could net no "re crwun ; so ne put inquire to Ms name . nu no iieu jiouncioner. i lien there was : IVte ThtimiH-r, Hie policy daler, that robs the poor nagurs bv manes of insurin lottery mimliers ; Sam Shyster, thp mock auctinn i eer; Bill Stul.bs, the boanlin house runner .- 1 . 1 1 ( . I I ' ' .. . 1 1 . 1 ( l i. : . , ' " ' ' !', an i n-j i-d urn mm, a rea-nosea oi i.i cnap who ?1ept all the time, barrin i whin he was II,rii,k.n:, an sich likes. For ! uuuj irtk:ntu one Hnoiner. till to save splittin our own beads, we split the commuttee, and made two tickets, both reg lar tickets, a v course." "Well, Tim, did Gammon git in ?" Not ne. faix. gome av hisdirthy work an double dalin's got wind the dayav the leetion. so that before twilve o'clock it was almost mnrther.to mintion his name nearthe polls. I know'd nothin" av It. though, bein' all the momin' drummin ud vothers, whin Gammon kem to me an' axed me to go down an make a sppch for him an' rally the y he said pome vagabonds were bely In him ; so off I started like a gammon as I was to where the boys was gathered, and gettin' on a stool l began : 'Vothers of the war.i,' sez I, 'don't be dhrawn awav by the eolloquin av inlmies. but vote the reg'lar ticket, for George Washington Gammon, the poor man's friend the honest.' I had hardly the words out av roe mouth when the sthool was tripped from nnthpr me an' I felt meself sprawlin in the sthreet. 'Pitch into him. sez one: 'murther him,' sez an other. 'It's lettin' him off chape ve are, sez Mike Mulligan, makin' a dhrift at me. 'Aisy, gintlemin.' sez I. 'give a poor boy a chanpp, ;' and with that I took the measure of Tim Finnegan's pose wid me fist, and knocked Ted O'Brien's teeth out wid me el bow. For fifteen or twenty minutes we had as pnrty a runnin fight as yon'd wish to see ; but thev was too much for me. I de clare to ye that ff it wasn't for the blpssin av hpaven and Paddv Doolin's ppllar door, that was open, by raison of which I fell in an' broke tro of me ribs, the sorra a screed they'd av left me. But that is not all. Six weeks after, whin T kem out av the hospital, what do von think Gammon towld me ?" "Troth, I dunno. Tim." "lie towld me that he wished mpself and all the bloody Irish was in h 1 ; that it was a disgracp for any dacent man to be pon sarnpd wid them, and if 1 showed my piaty face ni"h his door agin, he'd set the dogs on me. From that blissed minute me mind was made ud. I swore agin politics, took the pledge, and now. thanks be to God, I'm a dacpnt man agin, and mane to stay so." "Well, dear knows. Tim, but vou was badlv trated. You've convinced "me that Irishmen 'nd be more respected an' bether cilizens If tbcy'd Just vote accord in' to the bpst av their own thinkin. When they be come politicians they make asses of thern spIvps. Like yourself, Tim. I will take the pledge and swear off politics." G. N. S. Pattison's Personality. A word as to the personal appearance of the man. A tall, well-knit frame, and of fine appearance. A. long hpad and clparly-pnt featurps. ITis pic tures do not do him Justice. Keen, sharp, deep-set black eyes, with set Jaws, and heavy, sqnarp chin. TPs expression Is kind ly and fripndly, and wben he takes you by the hand and yon look up into that face vou feel at once a though you had known him for years. Nature made no mistake, for every feature says, "TIere Is a man ; trust him, and he will not betray vou." Honesty, firmness and decision are written in his face as plainly as though spared in with a hot iron. Hp talks like a presiding elder at a campineeting, voice as clear as a bugle, and can be heard squares away. There isnoex citement in tone or manner, but a terrible earppotness that holds his hparers spell bound, because h knows what, he believes and says it in that manner. His words are well chosen and tils sentences clean cut Eng lish. Everv word is heard distinctly, and every word Is listened for. When a sentence is uttered in that firm, fearless and precise manner of his, his jaws close over it as much as to sav, "True, true, and it will not be ta ken back." If there is any Democrat who will vote for Pnttisiin, thinking he will run the administration of the State in the inter est of the Democratic partv. or grant favors not authorized bv law. although by prece dentif such there be, he is greatlv mistaken and if pxpecting reward for political service, lie had better vote at once for a machine can didate like Cameron's. A Democrat that administers an ofRee'dis bursing over fit. ooo OOOayearln the Repub lican city of Philadelphia in such a manner as to be re-elected by over thirteen thousand majority in a presidential year, when Gener al iarfield received twenty-seven thousand majoritv at the same election, is no ordinary man. Clinton Democrat. A rf.m ark apltc circumstances Is report ed from Fort Wayne, Tnd. On Tuesday af ternoon of last week Mrs. W. L. Petit wife of the teller of the First National bank of Fort Wayne, apparently died and the under taker took charge of the body. Arrange ments were making for the funeral and wat chers sitting with tne supposed corpse. At 10 o'clock a faint sigh was heard coming from the body. The watchers started to tiieir feet with alarm, stepped to her side, found her eyes were wide open, while In a voice that was searcly an audible whisper she recog nized fhem and asked for her husband. For a moment the attendants wew speechlpss with wonder at this resurrection of the dead ; then, with the revulsion of feeling they al most screamed with excitement. The hus band came in. and with joy unspeakable clasped again his living wife in his arms. The doctor was sent for, and he was as much astonished as the rest of the household at beholding living what in his exact medical science he had declared dead. He adminis tered the proper restoratives, and the patient rapidly recovered, and wasldeclared at a late hour to be In a more hooeful condition. A RFPnonucnvE Comet. The present comet in the Eastern sky, which can be dis tinctly seen by everyone at early morning, is certainly th most remarkable one of all", the mod. rn eompts. Prof. Lewis Swift, director of the Warnpr Observatory. Rochester, N. Y., states lhat the comet grazed the sun so close ly ns to causi great disturbance, so much so that it has divided into no less than eight sep erate. parts, all of which can be distinctly seen by a good telescope. There is only one other instance on record where a comet has divided, that one being Biella's comet of '46 which separated into two'parts. Applica tions have been made on Mr. II. II. Warner bv parties who have noted these cometary offshoots, claiming tho ?2oo prize for each one of them. Whether the great comet will continue to produce a brood of smaller com ets remains to be seen. Don't give up and say there Is no help for Catarrh, ITay Fever and Cold in head, since thousands testify that Elys' Cream Balm bas entirely cured them. Price 50 eta. Apply into nostrils with little finger. I am cured of Catarrh and deafness after ! giving Elys' Cream Balm a thorough trial. My aunt was deaf in one ear. After using the Balm a few times her hearing was re stored. F. D. Morse. I j Elizabeth, N. J. Many who have used Elys' Cream Balm as a remedy for Catarrh, Cold in the head, &c, report that the immediate results are wonderfully beneficial. Many cures of ob stinate cases of catarrh are renorted. Chas Stopdahp, Druggist, 84 East Seneca St., Buffalo, N. Y. Thipp's Astounding Titeft. ThoSecord publisnes an exposure of Phipp's almhouse frauds. The article says that Phipp's stole a total of ?!rtn,ooo In nine years ; that he made a bargain when elected superintendent in July, 1873, to divide the profits of his of fice with four members of the Kard of guar dians of the poor, and that under this agree ment ff75,ooo was stolen every year. lie managed to steal $40,000 between January and J uly of the present year after city coun cils had instituted an investigation; of the charges against him. Phipps supported fif- 'een families. Among them were those of Poor guardians, five contractors, and two uwuimrgea employees. A pass booK shows maritet supplies for various persons at Phipps expense amounting to 529,000. In imb J'hipps expended $10,000 for cigars, which he scattered in electioneering. FREE OF COST. All persons wishing to test the merits of a great remedy one that will positively cure Consumntion. Con.rhs CoMa .uti,u l'.rn j ehitis, or any affection of the Throat and L.ungs are requested to call at E James' drug store, and get a Trial Bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, free oeost, which will show you what a regular dollar-size bottle will do. Democrats Making Merry. The loog pent up enthusiasm of the Ohio Democracy was given full vent in Columbus Friday nisht, and the Jollification over the late election was a complete success aud thor oughly Democratic in all ita features, Spec tal trains were run on the beveral railroads, and there was a general outpouring from Central Ohio. The fire-works acd proces sion were unusually attractive. Nearly all the Democratic Congressmen-elect, as well as prominent leaders were present. Some of the transparencies were decidedly ridicu lous, one being Gov. Fosler on his knees be fore the Goddess of Liberty imploring for giveness. The City Hall was densely pack ed and the streets at some points completely blo:keded, Ex-Senator Allen G. Thurman was the presiding officer. fi-.ak aua. All kidney and urinary complaints, espe dally bright' Disease, Diabetes and L,ivei Livpr rrouoies, nop Mitters will surely and lasting !y cure. Cases exactlv like your own have been cured in your own neighborhood, and you can find reliable proof at home of what Jiop Diners has aud ca do. EYS AM) OTHER NOTIXUS. Leavenworth, Kansas, was shaken by an earthquake on Sunday night. The best Spring medicine known is that wonderful tonic, Biown's Iron Bitters. An Illinois cow swallowed $600 in green backs. She was Killed and the money re covered. Mrs. Langtry, the "Jersey Lily," arrived at New York on Monday morning in the steamer Arizona. Twelve hundred head of sheep sold in England lately for $l,RoO. the highest price on record at a large sale. Shiloh'a Cough and Consumption Cure is sold by us on a guarantee. It cures con sumption. At James'drug store. Malignant diphtheria prevails at Great Neck and Manhasset, L. I. Several deaths j occurred during last week. croup, w nooping uougn ana uroncnuw mmediately relieved by Shiloh's Cure. At James' drug store. A cat killed a Louisville boy with a pis tol. The weapon lay cocked on a shelf, and the beat stepped on the trigger. A clergyman and his wife and daughter have been sent to a Wisconsin insane asylum, all crazed by the excitement of a religious revival. There Is on exhibition in New York an armless negro youth who plays the piano with his toes with the skill of a veritable Blind Tom. The stock raisers of Colorado estimate the aggrpgate value of their flocks and herds at $35,000,000. The number of horned cattie Is placed at 2,250,000. Farmer John Knapp, at Portland, N. Y., shot his wife, a hired man and himself on Monday last lie is dead and the other two are fatally wounded. On the day previous to the death of George Fox, who wa killed at Corry on Fri day, he told his wife he had a dream in which he saw himself killed. New Zealand has had a wonderful hop crop this year. Soil and climate both favor the production, and there are plenty of col onists who understand the culture. Three weeks ago Mary Gilson, of To wanda, was shot and painfully injured by her jealous lover. A few days ago she was taken to the jail and united to him in mar riage. William Wyncoop, of Allegheny City, aged 19 years, inflicted two wounds upon himself with a pistol on Thursday, which will prove fatal. The cause for the act Is not known. Mary Griffiths, whose arm was torn off two weeks ago bv tho machinery in the laun dry of the Seventh Avenue Hotel, Pittsburg, died on Saturday evening, in Mercy Hospital, from lock jaw. Lincoln Nimmy, a prisonerjfrom West moreland county, aged 17 years, died in the Western Penitentiary on Thursday. He was serving a term of twenty years for poisoning his father and mother. At BoocherviUe, near Montreal, a young farmer named Deragon, a bridegroom of eight days, arose early Saturday morning, walked into the river and held his head under the water until he was dead At Calhoun Station, Miss., on Friday evening, Isaac Jourdan attacked his wife with an axe and after felling her nearly cut her head off, because she refused to pick cot ton. He has not since been seen. S. R. Mason, of Mercer, who was the Greenback candidate, for Governor in 1R7S, and has since gone over to the Stalwarts, is making speeches in behalf of Armstrong throughout the anthracite coal region. A teacher in a school at Adel, Iowa, shut a little boy up in the cloak room with the command, "Go in there and let the snakes eat you up." Fright caused fever and deli rium, and he wi'l die in consequence. A Chinese coin 2,0o0 years old has been found by gold miners digging in a claim at Cassair. B. C. It is supposed to have been left there by Chinese mariners wrecked on the coast long before the Christian era. Mr. Farnach, of Kaieith, N. C, reports that in April and May he, with his daughter and an ordinary laborer, gathered a crop of 200 dozen silkworm eggs, worth $1,000, fiom a four years orchard of 3,000 white mulberry p lants. Thirty-fhree railroad employees wptp In jured, several of them fatally, by a railroad collision near North Adams, BMass., on Sat urday. Four of the injured died on Sunday and five others were not expected to live uu til Monday morning. It is reported that the Pennsylvania Rail road Company is negotiating for the Nation al Hotel property at Washington. D. C, with a view of erecting a hotel upon that site and the adjoining ground which shall rival the Grand Hotel of Paris. On Friday last. Fatrick O Connell and Matthew Conuers, of Lewistown, Me., ma sons' tenders working on a building at Au burn, were scuffling on the third story, when both fell through a window to the ground, a distanceof thirty feet, and were killed An earthquake occurred at Wichita, Kas., 19 minutes past 4 o'clock on Monday morning. The duration was about five sec onds. There were three puisations, the llrst being the strongest, rattling windows, sway ing walls of buildings and moving furniture. Kate Thompson was so eager to niarrv Andrww Van Horn, at Hope, lnd., that she eloped with him ; but when, within an hour of the ceremony, he got hilariously drunk, she was so eager to get rid of him that Mie went home alone, and has sued for a divorce. Five horse thieves stole thirty-six mules and horses from eight freighters at Albuquer que, N. M., on Thursday evening. They were pursued and captured on Friday morn ing near that place. All the thieves were shot dead. Two of the freighters were wounded. The Democratic conferees of the Forty sixth Senatorial district, composed of Wash ington and Beaver counties, met at the Cen tral Hotel. Pittsliurah.on Monday afternoon . Captain Daniel M.iDoiiehoo, of Beaver coun ty, received the unanimous nomination ou the first ballot. The well known case of Silas Gray, con victed ot murder in the first degree in the Courts of Westmoreland county, was argued In the Supreme Court, Pittsburgh, on Mon day. Gray was convicted of killing a Mrs. Mary McCready, who lived on the Kiskiiuiu itas river, two miles fiom 1'aulton. Albert Hardies was killed at Chicago on Sunday night by Frank Miller. The latter was drunk and engaged in an altercation with bis wife on the sidewalk. Hardies at tempted to act the part of a jieacemaker, when Mrs. Miller slapped his face and Miller Bevered his jugalar vpin with a knife. Miss Turner, eldest daughter of Mr. Henry Turner, was killed at Turner's, N. Y., Friday eveuing. while walking on the track of the New York, Lake Erie and Western railroad by being run over by a Newburgh train. She was 2 years old and was to have been married this ("Thursday) evening. A party of young men who gave Mr. Johu E. Hinnerdeer, of Dillersville, Lancaster county, a serendade of the noisy kind upon his wedding night, recently, were arrested aud paid lines and costs amounting in the aggregate to $180. They assaulted the groom when he asked them to leave, and shot one Of his dogs. Mrs. Mary Austin, who lately died at Washington, had forty-four male children, eleven of whom survive. She was a doctor of medicine and surgeon, and served through the war with the rank of Major. Dr. Mary Walker is small potatoes indeed as compared with this lady, never having even had twins, while Mrs. Austin had triplets six times. Numbers of German emigrants who landed in this country last spring and sum mer have already returned home to Germany much wiser than when they went away. They state, according to the London Times, that they found New York and other large ciuesswarming with their own ciass,and that all available lalior was already monopolized Joseph Wood worth who died In San Francisco a few days ago, was the first man in California to become a millionaire. He was known on the Pacific Slope as Ophir" Wood worth because he made his money out of the Ophir mines. InlftiSMr. Woodworth was fabulously wealthy, the next year there waa a collapse in Onhir and he died almost penniless. A child named Beall, while playing near the residenceof its parents in Belleville, Ont., on Saturday, was seized by an eagle which swooped down upon and seized it with its talons. The bird, however, was unable to rise with its burden, and the child, making a loud outcry, attracted the attention of an older sister, who drove off the bird of piey The child's injuries were serious. The Conyers Weekly was shown a week ago last Saturday a most wonderful natural cunosity. It was a very large catfish which was literally covered with very fi ne hair, from six inches to a foot in length. The hair was .h111 Vtf COI:,1(, npt Penetrate it, and the body of the fish underneath the hair hkeSitC?neL,h Th"e,S A Philadelphia despatch of the 24th Inst says ; during the pyrotechnic display at Fair mount park this evening Mrs, David Coaklv residing at Forty-second and Wood street's was instautly killed and five other persons were injured by the explosion of a bomb and Mrs. Eva McCarrie, residing at 5 5 Gold street, had both legs fractured by the explo sion of a mortar. A young girl, daughter of George Walter In Salstou township, says the Greensboro (NT' C.) ife-nrer, was bitten in the lei; one day last week by a snake of the poisonous whit oak species. The snake was killed The girl shortly after began experiencing severe pain, and the leg commenced swelling wten ilor fth5f "PP"81 a Pie-e of the snake's flesh which adhered to the wound and gaye relief Oliver L. Benton, a young man employ ed as a teleeraphJoperntor at the pumping station of thp'.Tide Water Pipp Linp near Muncy, fell about forty feet on Sunday last from a chestnut tree, and was terribly cut and bruised about the face and bodv, and i.t first it was feared that ne had sustained In ternal injuties. In his fall helandcrt on a pile of stones, and bis escape from instant death was almost minculous- A miraculous escape from death occur red at McKeesport, Pa., on Sunday evening. A party of young men were on the top floor of the Opera House, which is in course of erection, when one of thein, Kem Miller, sterped on the brick elevator, which had not been properly fastened and immediately dropped ith hiin to the ground, a distance of 70 feet, rebounding several feet and throw ing Miller into the street. The crowd below expected to find Miller dead, hut althouc'i severely shaken up and bruisd, his reeowry is not consuleied impossible. An engineer on the New Pine Creek, Jersey Shore fc Buffalo railroad, climbed a rocky bluff on Pine Cieek, Pa, to make an observation. lie was holding on to a small tree, some fifty feet upthe almost perpendic ular bluff, when lie was alarmed at seeing a huge rattlesnake preparing to spring at him. In a flash he had to decide whether to drop to the bottom of the bluff and proba!' break his nec k or to grasp the snake with other han 1. Ho cliosp the later as ttie lesser of the two evils, seized the rattlesnake wi'h a firm grip in the left hand, hurled it from him dowu the precipice aud saved his own life. The Westmoreland Itcmocrut of this week says: While driving down a hill yes terday morning, Mr. John Smith, who re sides about five miles from this place, on the Salem rond, met with an accident by which it is most rem.ii kab'.e that lie did not lose his life. Mr, Smith was engaged in drawing a rubber and while in the act, placing the whole weight of his bodytheion, the lever broke, and, falling in front of the fore wheel, both it ai.d the hind wheel passed directly over his npek. The wagon was loaded with about six tons of lime stone and with all this weight running over him Mr. Smith got up apparently very little hurt, if any. At Eastman, Ga., at one o'clock on Fri day last, lieddick Powell, Simon Oeuinn, Joe King, Bob Donaldson and Ella Moore, ne groes were hanged in the jail-yard for com plicity in a riot which occurred at that place August 6th during a camp-meeting, :n which a young white man named James Harvard was set upon by an infuriated mob, and af ur being shot by one of them was beaten almost to a jelly by others. The woman raised the, first howl which excited the mob to ttie des perate work. No attempt was made to res cue them, and not more than fifty negioes from whom violence was expected were in town. A detachment of military from Macon was present for protection. A CAFvOLIMA (TIII.D-PATER. FRIGHTFUL ANTICS OF A WII.ll WOMAN IN THE OLD TAH STATE. The story of a female crank who wants n'l the children she can catch for food is told in a Charlotte (N. C.) telegram of Friday l.i-t, as follows : For TiiontliF pat tliero hare been rumor o! i terrible npparitlun wlii'-h tins tem.rli.e-1 ail 11. , wnmm an.l rhil.t'-en in iearrreek Ii.kiiMiIu. Tin women r iv that I'.r two w. , Ks tliey have l.e'en set. ject ti torfify I nit visit? tn the ai.ei:Pe e( t tieir 1 in hnnils from a creature like a Finny Mark n. LTt with lonir hair and teleaininir eye... She a- in har.lly (liMiniraiiOiithle nit'Lerish for a t.:ihy to :it. and makes rtlnrt? to itet leiM of the chiMren. 1 men ifettinic tire-1 of the fear? of their wives i!M-r-mlne.l to catch the creature, arid for the Ian w- k crowrls of inrinera have teen daily an.l niijt.t'y ch.isiuie her without ?iicees. The Uiti flU rt to rate )i her was ma-le a week no Iv .Tc.hn Koocrts. a Maelfinlth. The wi I creature li:ul apnea red sevi nil t iun s at a ft re li .. h It was the liahit of "arey M iore. (colored ). of the ne; uhnrli'iod to 1 itrht after dark in the yard cfhis house for the preparation of his meal. K I ."-t-was jmt there to watch tor her an 1 yhe ;,pe :ir-d even before the tl.ones w.-re w.-il hin lit J. She presented such i wild look in the half lii;ht and a-ked for foo, In suh a wil.i !a-liton lhat Kot.eris was demorai ird. Ho recovered, however, mad" n outcry and aiteninied to soize the woman. to;t she slipped through his hands and disappeared in the dark shadows of the woods. Tue.l iv ne.ritlri; Major Steven I'nwel! caught slieht ol toe creature and chased h-r ocr is -in open h"ld. lie waK ha-i-ly hurt in his er'ort.- to keep up with her, and re ported that she ootmn a Puck and cleared four corn rows at a leap. That fame nljrht she was aitaln enticed away from the irlootn of the woods by the kindlinic ot a fire, mad wasclia.-cd Ly thirty tucu without aii"''e;?. t'aptaiii Marsh Al'en. later In the J..y, i..; ; i. r In the ocitrhhorhood. with 1 er lace ton: "lii ! i ii e l lnir. and a lon. Moody knite In l.er hands. '1 he creature was naked and so unearthly and terriule lookinr to liliu that he says he is tibf sure H l .1 Tuuman teinir Her buir reached almost to her feet, but was kinky Pke that ot the African. It Is not mere frmht which tin cause ! the country peo ple to orcanire In their attempt to cath the crea ture which has been living In the forest and swamp fastness for a year or more. Some months aito, it Is reported, an infant was spirited amy fr..:n it-s parent " y rd. t,ile they were in the "corn-field, and wns never lo :.rj X-.dli. and tl- 1 .it p.'p-ir"... was from that e. i:oii u: thfc unty l i w' -1. the w ild woman lias heen pe-'Ti. an1 others. whUeatid hlack. nre in terror for feart':e'r l t!e ( ni-s limy also Pe-,.itie fo- 1 t- r the caunl'':.! to ures. Yetr.-rday the farmers, s -inc moun'.id and others on foot , R-soinNU-d t'-r t he purp..e ! surrou i.ti .i .: a swam p tn hteh the c-aliro is kti" n to ' e h :!. 1 here were -Jo.' men bunded t' u ct le-r for t he chase. At nr-t it was Mtemptc.i to run l.er d"Wn niMi 1 loodiiounds. t-uT they refu-c .1 to ehaje her. wh-h deepened the sit .or: iti'.n fcehni: with h:ch t;,e men. as wi ll as the women, of tiie c immunity tn.. via to regard tier. The men then ma le ti e .i tte:r f t to catch tier but without sieves. T;ie ex,-!?eme: t iiiiiiii( the neitp.es and simple country t"ls is in tense. Uv tli more Intelligent tanners from that sect!. in the ttie-.ry is advam-ed tht the creature ,? some half-witted woman, wlei his been so b in; hunted down that she lives i:i terror of nil hum an beiiois, and therefore lives like an animal ia the forest, her necessities havno; f.i-ced he- to eat any thii.g she can net, !i.elud:iii even human fic-h. MAI.M T I I Al II A I II IllMORr i'.. It is entirely different from all others. It is as cle.ir as wafer, and. as its name I ndieates, is a per fect cuei ible lia:r Kestoier. It will immediate ly free the head irom all dandrutt. restore yr.iv hatr to i ts n-:t oral color, and produce itawtroirtii where ft ha la'len oft. It does not in any manner atiect the hea ! i h. 1, u-li Sulpliur, uifar"ot 1-ead. and Nitrate ot Silver preparation? have done. 1; wiil cliatme htht or faded hair tn a lew day-s to a beautiful ulospy brown. Ak your drnitnist l,.r it. Fnch bottle Is warranted. Smith. Klim! a Co., Wholesale Aeenrs. I'luladelohia, and N. t "kit-tbn-tos. New York. r-2--ly. j mm Absolutely Pure. The powder never varies. A marvel ot purity, strenntli an l wholesnment . More economical than the ordinary kind's, and cannot be sold In competition witn the multitude of low te-t short weiicht. alum or phosphate powders. No,f only tn rant. Kotal Hikixu Fowinit i. w.n New York. v2i'i.irV' 1'Ki.QUALLtD IX Tone, Toncli.fcteiisIiiD & Minty. TTlLLIAJf Hvinu St CO. ""d 9 Wet Iialtlmors Stre, Daltltnon. x 113 Flfih AT.nae, Kew Tork. 20,000 to In legitimate ludlcious S. emulation In drain. Tr Tisiorn and Stock, oc our pertected t lan ; vle'di lire monthly profits to larite and mail Investors Address. f.,r f.ill particulars. R. Kendall A ., om i n SIirhuU, 177 aud 1TW lasaileSi., .'hicigo, 111. 5 an 1 t-uaiiies quAi iflat ioiis. Mtift irtivel ' short J stArirv-g in ?wti"n ia , wtiirh l,i' rw,,l. Ai i.Iv. with fr-nre. to ItF.ZHil K UKorHt RS, 511 nroadwnj. .New York, lu-li.-ot. I BOYS ; T!e:id tl is. A little print- I iiif pre.-i: f-ir sale at naif j rice. ici,i n tff. ne i can ra inn, one can I-iacK inK. two lonis csrii type anil one thonsind fam-y car ts Kien with press. rue to i:iiromo C ard t o., t.t.eiislurif lor price -- AITKKTISKKM send Inrour Select List nf I.ooel Wewj.apr. tlen, p, IJowe'l . Of., 1" r-rttee street, Nei- Vort. ? f ROYAL MSWlt Zk is ls sjy gzzy i;v 1 s j i t i,;i i AT WANAMAKKR's Visitors to Philac!- n,v,;, invited to visit t!- c Sir whether to see or t Your parcels are lIk-.m-.v' tvaitin-room is rn,vi;..'j xvhere you r-ay r. ,: v ladies and children; -u v'.' conduct you tl.ro;: . h house, or you wand, r'at v.-"-there are many tl.l; -s 7 Interest to see, and a. Come. For two years. r crl::- s have had the rieheit. ..r most varied and most ex::---1 live collection of cYe.-s- -.-"j. in Philadelphia. I)f, rt-T we may have had tLc Lrcr and even the most cxh'a- tive, but perhaps net tl--richest. The slowest tr;1 to come to a new rr.-.rchL- is the trade of luxury, li the slowest to char.-o one to another. But it de j change. We may say cur c ;-?!--poods of all sorts are l: about their highest now. fctcenl n1 !.pr, clr-li-s. f -.::!..; :ec e. niii. Silks of all sorts Lav come; and never wore silk; more acceptable. And the-e words have a meaning her; beyond any they could ha-.-; elsewhere; because tf the f greater variety of v. ar.is th- ook to us for supply. We must have all accepted styles, and all the approved quali ties of those styles; ar.d, as to colors, can you think J one that wc can do without? A store that has only o:.; class of trade can get ale nj with comparatively few Which .stock would ycu rather buy out of? Rtxt outer circle. Buti! tklraacc Iv Llliili. Two damask towels at i; and iS cents may serve il show what we gain by Lay ing of the makers. The Very same towels are in the whole sale trade in New York at about 2i and 22 cents, whih means at least 25 cents at retail. We are not goln to say that all our retail prices are below New York whole-sale; nothing of the sort. "Mere than one swallow to make a summer." But where sud towels are to be got for 1; cents is a good place tjb;k for bed and table-linen, ar.i all the other linens. Ti- - - 1 u. 3 true, too. Ou-r cirUe, Clty-LaU square eE-.rice. A very wide and surpris ingly good navy-blue twilled flannel for 50 cents; 45-ir.uh. Do you remember a 35 cent flannel for 25 cents, el which we had iS.oco yards last fall? Afterward we a 7,000 yards more of it; ar.d a little of it is left yet. That is 23-inch. This wide flan nel is fully as good as that. XLird circle, eouiULtit fcuia cv.L'..r. All the warmer sorts ci underwear are ready; f.r men, women and children; thick-cotton, merino, wo.l and silk. All the sorts need ed for all sorts of pec:!: with all sorts of not-ens. and, for people who want it, there is quite a little vit about underwear to be pick ed up at the counter. Where else would you look for it5 Not in books surely; goods are changing all th time; and so get ahead books. West of Arcade. 1S13 CLci.r-ut , vrc&t courier. John Wanamaker. l'HZLAI ti: K'- Cfcttrct. Thirteenth. Marie: at. ! " acceaeihie L j hore crs fri-. cT,..':- - - - --f A t- T - - ... I J . 1 1 r, . - A. - .. a '-. I . I'fi J: :. : ,t 1. . - 1 .: . . --I- '. (.-,:'.: .. r j s ' ' 31.. ii li . .1 . l -i i- --v - ( " IV T- . r -.- v k is ! ' " JO fci 1 .' - - - - .' . i - 1 , t -,v. ." n I I A -r A i. r - Staves, Heading and iin.iifsr n iii PAiun'ii A" hX'V ' 8TxVY.-:s, HKMM- 1 and i.i m:-i Also. New and Se ! ! !! '" ; 1 ', I reteren. e-. A ! i ',-."' H . 1 . 1 M , i Wv. 1-l-tWl.l: i. -!!! ' t j- s ! ' I t.uiili. I n. 1 t j o .in-.. km .yj.-..v ' . Mf I ':ti .t i.n 'ti!Tf r.e t""U.-f II .: l:tl ' ":'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers