i I I If EBCN3BURC, PA.. FRIDAY. - SEPTEMBER S, 1S85. Dcnscnmr state ticket. FOR STATE TREASURER, CONRAD Ii. DAY, of lhila1elphia. nrnocRiTir ffii art elections. The Detne.'rat'o voters of Cambria county will tnet at their respective places ..f Noldlnir elec tti'o on SaturJay, September 1. l.W. and Tote by ballot fnr tb nomination of candidates for con nt t offices. aj follows : One person fr Sheriff. ( me person for poor Director. One person for Jury t'oromlssloncr. ( oe jverson forCoroner. A County Committeeman will also be elected In each district. Tbe polls will be open from 1 to 7 o'clock in tbe .eroon. Ticket and necessary papers for conducting the election will be furnished toeaeh coremlttee mae. The committeemen will take the returns cf the election to Rhenbunr on Monday, Sep tember 21. Inst., where a rneetlnv of the com mtttee will be held at 1 o'clock p. m.. of that daj-. when the vote will be counted and tbs names of the snecessfol candidates will be announced. Ttie members of the new ce remittee will meet In r'benshars:. on Mondav. Mept. 21. 1884, at 4 o'clock p. v.. to elect a Chairman and transact sued other business as may be necessary. P. "oii!rmt.LT. Chairman. Jubnstawn. Sep'. 7, 1884. The following are the roles as amended by the Iiemocratic County Committee for the itovern mentof the Democratic primary elections in this county: Sm-rtow 1. The ttsie of opening; and closing; tie polls In township and horouirhs shall be as follows: The polls unal! be opened at 1 o'clock p. and slod at 7 o'clock p. h. See 1. The Committeemen of the respective township anil boroughs shall be the Judges of the Primary Flections, and shall appoint two In spectors who shall serve as Clerks and who shall be member of the Democratic party. Sr. t. Formal papers shall be sent to the Committeemen by the Chairman, and each Com mitteemen shall make trinitrate returns, slimed by the Judge, and attested by the Inspectors or (Tlerks. I ne of said return shall bo posted np In a conspicuous place at the place of hwldlns: the election Immediately after the returns are made out. with a Uet of names of parties voting st said Primary Election: also, one of said retnrns to re main In the bands of the County Committeeman of each district, and one copy of said returns, with a list of Toter. to be sealed np and returned by the Return Jndite to the Chairman of the County Commutes.. The tickets to be sealed np and kept bv the Commltteraen lor thirty days. Set. 4. Parties shall only be allowed to vote at the place of holding; the lienors I Kteotlon In the district where they actually reside, and none shall vote except those that Toted the Democratic ticket at the preceding; (leneral Election, except those who have arrived at the aire of twenty-one years since the last l General Election and declare themselves Democrats. Sec. 1. The Committeemen shall he elected by ballot on the day of the Primary Election. Sr fl. The newly elected Committee shall elect their Chairman by ballot at their flrat regu lar meeting. Sec. 7. The Chairman shall remain in office until his successor is elected. Seed. The Chairman shall call a meeting of the newly elected Committtee within thirty-five days from the date of Primary Eloction. bc The newlv elected Chairman shall nominate his Secretary Sac. 14. Any contested nomination shall be triad before the County Committee after lormal, specific charges, a In "contested cases at law. No cae of eotileet shall be entertained unless specific charges are preferred nd placed In the hands of theChalrman of the County Committee within thirty davs after the election, and notice there fore shall be given to the candidate contested within ova days. "Those newspaper"," says the Phil adelphia Iitccrrd, "that insist that Mr. Day Is not more competent than Mr. Quay for a place of trust like the State Treasurers!) ip perhaps forget tht City Heeordership. Mr. Day has never been engaged in a scheme to fleece the people whose money he is to take charge of." Col. William Sirwell, who com manded the Seventy-eighth Regiment during the late war, died at his resi dence in Kittanning, on Wednesday of last week, from cancer of the throat, lie was a native of Allegheny county, was sixty-five years old, and was a bom soldier, his love for military affairs from his youth upwards having been the predominating trait in his character. During his army service in Teunesee he was regarded as one of the bravest of the brave, and was repeatedly compli icfn d by his commander for his ski 1 and courage. The late Fattier Christy, of this place, who had charge of a con gregation in Butler county when the war broke ont, became chaplain of Coi. iirwell's regiment, and a warm feeling of personal friendship giew np bet ween the Colonel and the Chaplain which was only terminated by the death of the latter. When Ex-Governor St. John was making a speech at the Prohibition Convention at Syracuse, X. Y., last week, a question was sent to him in wri ting by a Republican, asking him bow much the Democrats bad paid him last fall, the questioner adding : "I have proof of the fact that you sold out." "Now, my friends," the ex-Governor said in answer to the question, "I want to say, once for all, that the Democratic party, neither directly nor indirectly, neither officially nor unofficially, was ever so mean as to even attempt to com municate with me. I brand the man who asked this question as a malicious. Infamous, black-hearted coward, and challenge him to step forth and pioduce thj proof of which he alleges himself to be possessed. Tbe Republican party unblushingly acknowledges that it had a bribery business, but it never had money enough to bribe me." At the Convention of the Irish Cath olic National Benevolent Union held in New York last week, Mr. Anthony M. Keiley. of Richmond, V., was re-elected President, a position he has held for several years. Mr. Keiley has of late become pretty well known to the public from the fact that although Pres dent Cleveland appointed him succes sively to be Minister to Italy and Aus tria, both these governments in turn refused to receive him. The King of Italy didn't like him because about fourteen years ago Keiley, in a public speech in Richmond, denounced in very vizorous terms the treatment of the Pope by Victor Emanuel, the then Kiug of Italy, the father of King Humbert, the present Italian ruler. The objec tion to Keiley by the Emperor of Aus tria was because his wife is a Jewess. It has transpired, however, that this was not the the true reason, but that the present Italian Minister to Austria, who is one of the numerous illegitimate children of Victor Emanuel, aud whose influence at the Austrian Court is po tential, induced tbe Emperor to reject Keiley because of the Richmond speech before referred to. This is said to be the true explanation of the matter, and that the fact or Jvei'eys wire being a Jewess was a mere pretext an after thought. Mr. Keiley. who has returned to this country, was in Washington last week and resigned his position. In this whole business he has been peculiarly unfortunate, and he said to a newpaper reporter a few days ago : "What I shall do now I do not know. I was City Attorney of Richmond before I was appointed. I resigned, sold my li brary and my house. Now I am bro ken up root aud branch." i'i:i: J'. : u ! V . ' is U c unly fiopublictn i:t;er in the Slate, far a our knowie'l exteriu-;. t!;U ha the c-f- frnr.lorr -. tw.1.1 : Piilic.m an 1 AT r Stenger, the Secretary of the Common wealth, responsible for the blonder of one or more of the Republican clerks In the House in permitting the Constitu tional amendment increasing the num ber of inhabitants in a county necessary to elect a President Judge from 40,000 to 60,000, to be laid before the Gover nor for his action, when the fact was that it bad not passed the House at all, but had failed to do so by falling four teen votes below the number (101) re quired by the Constitution. A dis patch from Ilarrisburg, sent abroad after the mistake had been discovered, stated that the blunder was committed by the message clerk of the House, A. J. Colborn, Jr., who is a son of one of the Republican members from Somer set county. How this is we, of course, can't tell, nor ia it necessary now for our purpose to discuss it. Last Satur day" Tribune, in commenting upon what we said on the subject last week. substantially advocates the singular proposition that IS is the duty of the Governor before he signs a bill to con sult the record of the House and Sen ate proceedings, and ascertain for him self whether all the forms of legislation have been complied with in its passage. It has never heretofore been imagined by anyone in this State who was not considered dangerons to run at large, that such was any part of the duty of the Governor in disposing of a bill laid before him signed by the Speakers of both houses. . nere was a bill signed by the Speaker of the Senate and the Speak -er of the House, a fact which imported that it had passed each house legimate ly, brought or "messaged," as it is styled, to the Governor by the message clerk of the House in the line of his duty, and yet the preposterous notion of the Tribune is that it was the duty of Governor Pdttlson, of whom it contemp tuously speaks as an "automation," and a '-baby Governor," to go behind all this evidence of legal formality and hunt through the daily journal kept by each house of its proceedings, to satisfy him self that every requisite in regard to its passage had been complied with, when neither any newspaper nor any human being had ever whispered that there was anything wrong about it. No Gover nor has ever done this no Governor ever will do it. for the plain reasou that he acts on the theory that the clerks of each house faithfully perform their du ties. In this instance some officer of the House was careless, exceptionally so, and when it was announced at Ilar risburg ten days or two weeks ago that the amendment had never passad the House, we simply stated the fact with some comments on the inexcusable neg ligence of some one or more of the cleiks, and would not again have refer red to the matter had not the Tribune, with its chronic inclination to find fault with eyerythlng connected with a Dem ocratic State or National Adminlstra tion, arraigned Governor Pattison and the Secretary of the Commonwealth with having "illegally advertised an amendment to the Constitution through stupidity." Whoever else is amenable to the charge of "stupidity" in this bungling business, the skirts of the Gov ernor and Mr. Stenger are manifestly clear or such an imputation. Miss Ada C. Sweet, who has been Pension Agent at Chicago for a great many year, resigned her position last week for a situation in New York at an increased salary, and the President has appointed Mrs. M. A. Mulligan as her successsor. She is a Marylander by birth, a stylish woman, and well known in tbe best social circles in Chicago. She owes her appointment, however. more to the fact that she is the widow of Col. James A. Mulligan than to any other coLsideration. Those who are fa miliar with the . incidents connected with the breaking out of the rebellion will remember Col. Mulligan's heroic defense of Lexington, Missouri, against the attack made upon it by Gen. Sterling Price, himself a citizen of Missouri, but who had cast his fortunes with the South. For the skill and bravery dis played on that occasion. Col. Mulligan, who went into the war at the head of an Irish regiment which he raised in Chicago, acquired a national reputation, He was killed at the battle of Kearns town, Virginia, in the second year of tbe war, gallantly fighting at tbe head or tm regtment. According to a statement just made public by Mr. Schuyler Crosby, who has been spending some time with Mr Blaine, the latter gentleman has been diligently engaged in ciphering out how many votes he lost at the election last November by Dr. Burchard's cele brated allusion in his New Yoik speech of welcome, to ''Rum, Romanism and Rebellion," and that tbe result of Blaine's figures is that Burchard's three fatal words cost him seventeen thous and votes. This is at the rate of a lit tle over five thousand six hundred and sixty-six votes for each word. As Blaine was only beaten a fraction over eleven hundred votes in New York, and as the result in that State decided the contest against him, he seems to have solved the problem with which ha set out as unerringly as a school boy would demonstrate a simple question in arith metic. Jonx L. Sullivan, Bostoo's big burly prizefighter, arrived in Cleveland on last Friday, having gone there to act as pitcher in a game of base ball be tween two crack clubs on Sunday after noon. Upon his arrival he took quar ters at the Weddell House, where he was at once surrounded by a throng of admirers, most of whom were intent upon securing free drinks. It happened that Governor Hoadly and United States Senator Henry B. Payne were btoppirg at the Weddell nouse on the same day, and although they were frequently In view of the crowd of visitors no one paid the least attention to them, while hundreds crowded around the great man from Boston. Such is life and such is fame. A Dublin dispatch says : "Not even in O'Connell's time was such po litical enthusiasm known as now. Nor has such a general outbreak of Nation alist feeling exhibited itself within tbe memory of man." hash!gio lv;t rtu. Protn our resmlir Correj.on'lcnt. Washington, September 1 i, lsS". The President returned in the most unostentatious way possible last week. His trip has been agreeable and invig orating, and it was limited to tbe thirty days granted to other employes of the Government. The simple and unpretentious way in wnicn Air. iieveiana nas spent nis uuu days might well be taken for an ex ample for future Presidents, ana me memory of man will not nave to go far oack to hnd examples to the contrary. Tbe demands upon the Presidents mental and physical endurance, np to the time of his departure for the Adi- rondacks, bad been simply tremendous. Throughout a weary succession of days be bad been called upon to shake Manas with an icumerable and incessant mul titude, to listen to infinite importunity, to address himself to many intricate problems of politics and government. Immersed for so long in that laborious monotony he had made good his title to a term of rest. Since his return he has been outdriving several afternoons dur ing the week and he has accomplished a good deal of work. Yesterday he re mained in his office during tne aiter- noon while the band played on the lawn. He saw severs! persons during tbe day. including Senator McMillan, of Min nesota and others. Miss Cleveland has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Yeomanans, at Walmoutb, N. Y., and is expected back in tne White House in October. She has al ready received nearly $10,000 on her first book, which will furuish her pin money for a good while. Secretary Manning has finally leased the house of Otis Bigeluw. Esq., at the corner of Eighteenth and P streets, and will occupy it as soon as Mr. .Manning returns to the city. Secretary Whitney has not yet taken a city house. He is spending several thousand dollars in fitting up the Means place, ou the Ten nallytown road, recently bought by him, and will spend the autumn there. Mrs. Whitney will probably be debarred from going much into society by the re cent death of her brother. Sir. Attor ney General Garland has purchased a residence during the past week at the corner of Rhode Island avenue and Fourteenth street, and all the members of the Cabinet except Mr. Lamar may now be said to be provided for as to a borne in the Distrct of Columbia. Advices received at the General Land office from different points la the West indicate that tbe firm attitude of the Administration in its purpose to pro tect the public domain is having a healthy effect. A correspondent in Montana states that the cattlemen are becoming scared and are shipping vast quantities of cattle from tbe ranges il legally occupied by them, and the large milling companies which have been en gaged in tresspassing upon public tim ber are trying to sell, as they now find they cannot pool their interests with the cattlemen and land-grabbers and sell out the whole couutry to the English. Gen. Rosecrans, Register of the Treasury, has for some time past con templated certain changes in bis office with a view to securing nn-Oiased judg ment and co-operation in such changes or methods, distribution or work, and grading of employes as be deemed best in the interest of the public service. L,ast wet-k he called for the resignation of six chiefs o division in the Register's office. Gen. Rr.spcrans says he was au thorized bv the appointing power to re quest the officials to place their resigna tions in his hand without delay, be cause he found that thev were not in sympathy with the reforms he proposes to make. The reports circulated that there was no lack of harmony between Secretary Manning and the Register, growing out of the above changes, are, says Gen. uosecrans, absolutely untrue and directly opposite to the facts. Third Auditor Williams had addressed a letter to the Secretary of the Treas ury, stating that as the result of the im proved condition of the business ot his office, and the fact that ereat efficiency has been obtained, he recommenps a re- auction in the cletical force. The law provides for 158 clerks. There are low six vacaucies caused by resignation, four of which need not be filled. The ser vices of twelve more clerks can be dis pensed with without injury to the pub lic service, making a total reduction of 16 clerks. Mr. Williams has secured Secretary Manning's approval of the dismissals, which are to taka effect irom the 20th instant. K Mr- Hendricks and Ireland. There is a strange mixture of forget- luiut-ss, ignorance ana impertinence in tne resentment shown bv English news papers at an expression of sympathy bv an American citizen with the Irish snuggle ror home rule. The inordinate amount of taffy administered hv Mr Lowell and Mr. Phelps seems to have leu tne liritisn stomach in a supersen Biiive conaitiou. The sole ground for the irritation now betrayed is the fact mat Air. iienancks, who happens to be v ice-i resiaeci, permitted himself to avow at a meeting in Indianapolis his satisfaction at the prospect of Ireland's obtaining the same measure of self-government as is enjoyed by the inhabi tants of one of the United States or of tne Canadian .Dominion. Even if there were anything imoroo er or offensive in such a declaration, it nouiu not no in English mouths to call us to account ror it. Had Mr. Hen- aricRS gone much Turther than he actu ally went, had he encouraged Ireland t Btriv by ciyil war for complete inde pendence of Great Britain, he would simply have followed the example ot Mr. Gladstone, who, while Chancellor of the Exchequer, publicly announced that in his judgmont Mr. Jefferson Da vis had created a nation. The wish was father to the thought, and tbe luuuguuna nugs capabilities of mis cuiet, prociaimea, as it was, at the cri sis of our desperate contention w.th . bellion, when a formal recognition of the Southern Confederacy might have turned the scale againn us. Notwith- owinaing tne interchange of fulsome and hollow compliments between official nr- resentatives of Great Britain and the United States, Americans have not for- Bv...iu avtiiuug assumed oy our transatlantic kinsmen when the Repub lic hung upon the verge of ruin. Neither uavtj iuey rorgotten how generally and how cynically tbe Britl.ih I.irri. whose spokesman Mr. Gladstone was lueuMueu now, disclaimed tbe unc tuous professions of abhorrence tor the crime or slavery oi which they had been lavish for more than a creneratinn But suppose the congratulation on the tr.umph of secession had emanated not iiviu iuo tnauceiior or the Exchequer but from some official supernumerary like a junior Lord of ih Ad whose office is a British synonym for a fifth wheel to a coach. Evidently no well informed Americans would have drawn from It any inferences respecting the intentions of the British Govern ment, or would the Englith journal ists attach any official significance or impute any impropriety to Mr. Hen dricks' remarks upon home rule if they were not suffered to discuss American topics with less knowledge of their sub ject than would be rigidly exacted if the theme were Madairauar Fvr k dense ignorance regarding the funda mental principles of our organic law displayed in their columns, we are justi tied in coubtinirf wht hor Federal Constitution exists in any news- Pf?tr ?fflce ln Great B'aiD. A glance at that document would show that so locg as a President can discharge the duties of his post a Vice-President has ti 10" t-XcX- . 1j f or i de'.ibc-r.i-e funeti'.'Lis those of a IV. right to preside over t! on; s of the e;iat, liia '.' i' e indistinguishable from briviie citizen Whatevt-v ton;cs vould be Srt a nrlvtA lU(?an latri t.i m Zk.tj filll- jects of discussion, Mr. nendricks, noi- may with propriety discuss. The assumption, moreover, that it is unseemly or unfriendly for Americans to appiaua me aspirations or insnmen home rule is a piece of insufferable for im rwrf innnra Tf i a tantamnnnr. Srh av- in g that we ought to be ashamed of our methods n' State government, and should hang our heads. Instead of exult antly acclaiming the adoption of our system in Canada and Australia, and the prospect of its early reproduction in Ireland. To pretend that when Ameri cans hail the promise of a State Legisla- ure at uuDiin tney wisn ror toe aestruc ion of the British Empire is to bee the verv point in controversy. For us who are familiar with the easy adjustment State and Federal machinery the as mption seems ridiculous. But had experience proved that the misgiving was onlv too well founded, were Ireland actually in successful revolt notwith standing all the efforts of England to enforce the imperial authority, and had a prominent member of Mr. Cleveland's Cabinet seized the occasion to declare his a-itifanrirn a f T re. 1 a n d 'a pnnn ti oq t ft in. dependence even then he would have J . A 1 r n, J J!J uuue no more man jir. uisu.iiudd uiu in our hour of peril and of sorrow. N. . oun. Of all the Ditiable Renublican Bour. bons of to-dav. John Sherman is the most pitiable, nis brother fought from Belmont by Vicksburg and the march to the sea to Raleigh, where the Insur gent flag was furled, but he knows that vne war is over. nai peace nas come. that tbe laws are supreme in South and North, and that the humblest citizen. black or white, is protected iu all the prerogatives of citizenship ; but John Sherman, who never faced the perils of battle. And who an firort said in hia last admonition to the country, did not fully warm up to the war until the con flict was over, is now fighting the war over again in Ohio in the frenzy of dot aee. When there is universal neacn and fraternity : when the South is vast ly more successful and harmonious with its labor than is Ohio ; and when the industry of the South presents increased products up in tbe hundreds of millions, John Sherman rises up from his Bour bon tOmb and rhnkon th iwnnla nrith the dust of his tattered Bourbon spoils men's shroud by declaring that there is only lawlessness and anarchy in the whole South, and that the North must return to the dead issues of the war to renew the incalculable evila nf uwtinn al strife. Ten Vears aco there micht. hava neon divided sentiment as to the truthfulness or John Sherman's senseless Bourbon irades aeainst the South, whether true or untrue ; but to-day there can be no divided sentiment among intelligent citizens of any section or party. His statements accusing the Southern States of denying as free and independent suf- j frage to the blacks as is accorded to them in the .North, are not only false, but Sherman must know them t.n h false if he is not bereft of memorv and reason. The colossal fraud of 187. in which John Sherman was one of the chief criminals in the Louisiana electo ral burglary, was the last great wrong perpetrated against the integrity of the ballot in the South, and since then term of thousands of the most intelligent colored voters have openlv voted the Democratic ticket and nt.hpr hnniirsila of thousands of colored voters have re fused to vote because their nartv lead ers, largely appointed bv Sherman. were notorious and shameless thieves. If John Sherman would go to the South ern States, visit the centres of politics, confer fieely with the intelligent col ored voters of each State, he vnnM learn in detail what he must know as a general truth, that Sherman's plundei ing carpetbjtg Treasury agents and their fellow carpetbag adventurers forced everv colored government to separate from the Repub lican party or retire rrom all participa tion in politics. The wntir hereof heard these facts from intellgent awd trustworthv colored men in nearly every Southern State in 1881 and again in 1885, and they are now as well known to every citizen of average information as that two and two make four. Such minaled stupidity and falsehood coming from one of the Republican Bourbon sooilsmen, must grate harshly upon the intelligence of the people of Ohio, and outside of Ohio, both in North and South, thev simnlv tell tha sfnr that Republican Bourbonism is reDeatins the history of Democratic Bourbonism of ju-sou. rnuaaeipma Jmes. What Aggravates Tiiem. What is troubling the Preadamites abut the pwple of the South may not be so ranch their alleged treasonable d dark designs against the Government as me progress thsy are makine in indus trial pursuits and in the development oi tne material resources of their sec tion. It mnst be extremelv nrnvntlncr tn TnVn Sherman and bis set that the people of tne ooutn are Dusy spinning cotton and making iron when for the benfit of the Republican party they should be en- h-km iu kuiiiiK niters ana doing a livelr business in the knklnx line. They are making themselves particularly ob noxious by raising such a large quant ity of cotton and such a small amount of Sheol. Just to think of such an aggravating as mac or .ienrson countv, Ala bama, in which the Birmingham iron works are located, which shows an In- crease of taxable property within the last year amounting to 11,787.663. Would it be any wonder if such alarm ing PrORTterltV shonlrl laramt ihs ines of the politicians who represent the o.m n nsnemg in a state of insurrection JTarrisbttro Patriot. lBE JTaiif. Ttlilleii-n o V.t - ... a. ,rr rTTi LllflU knows what it is talkinc ihnnf ,.iinn of the revival of business throughout -uc vwuuii y, nnys : --10 sum up. there is a revival of confidence, an Increase in lu nsumpcion or nearlv all mannfae tured products, and a strong tendency to higher prices, in many instances nigner prices having already been real ized. Business is certainly better, anc in wool and woolen goods, steel rails gas and other pipes and some other specialties it is very much better. The woe nas rainy turned. . Ttoo Art or emlng Vlsrorstna Is comprised tn one very simple piece of ad vice, improve digestion. No elaborate sys wm or dietetics is needed. If you lack Vigor, use systematically that pleasant pro moter or it, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. If you tare this hint, and do not commit any BiuewB, mere is no reason why you should otn gain in sireosrth, appetite and weight Hosts of whilom invalids &rn n-a Kiu In a foundation for years of vigorous health who this sound and thorough renovator of i dilapidated physique and failing energy, Dyspepsia is eradicated bv it and tha stitutlon fortified against disorders to which, If It were exposed. It must surely succumb notably malarial fever. Rheumatism, inactivity of tbe kidneys and bladder, ner- vousness, and their various symptoms, dis appear when It is used with persistency, not abandoned after a brief and irregular trial. Many a victim of Brlght's disease has Nen restored to sound health by Hunt's Kennedy. Hanfs Remedy it, not new compound . it has been before the public thirty years. ' itch r. (r.'-.BfVi'm vr tiie 1 f.:i ai; lon.l by irciuii- tics. T. J.Ciuveriua, the jouuj Uwjer wbo is under sentence of death for the murder of Fannie Lilian Madison, escaped from the Richmond, Va., Jail on Sunday last. Wlille repairing a mill race In East Bradford township, Chester county, an eel 38 inches in length and weighing 6J4 pounds was caoght. Nicholas Yates, a car cleaner on the Pennsylvania railroad, at Pittsburg, was struck by an engine on Tuesday last and Instantly killed. Mrs. Edmund Smith, of Philadelphia, committed suicide on Tuesday by hanging herself. The death of an only child had un hinged her mind. Try Ayer's Pills, and be cured. Misery is a mild word to describe the mischief to body and mind caused by habitual constipa tion. The regular use of Ayer's Cathartic Pills, in mild doses, will restore the torpid viscera to Jiealthy action. The Weatmghousa air-brake company, of Pittsburg; shipped In the first week of this month to Chill. South America, brakes for two hundred cars to be used on one of the railroads in that country. Grave crimes have been committed on two helpless Insane women in the Schuylkill county asylum. One of the attendants is charged with an outrage. A general over hauling of the Institution will follow. Miss Marion Norwood, a New York ac tress, on last Monday night, lit a cigarette and lay down on tha bed to smoke It. She fell asleep and ber clothing was set on fire. Her injuries were such that she died in a faw hours. A telegram from Everett, Bedford coun ty, says : A gang boss on the South Penn was subbed and beaten by two Italian la borers for some alleged offense and has since died from his wounds. The murderers have not been arrested yet. Thomas M. Caroecrie. of th V.Aaur Thompson steel wotks, FlttsDurg, says that an me steel rail mills in the country are running to their fullest capacity, with enough orders to keep them busy tbe re mainder of the" year. He does not bellevsj there Is a firm in the country can fill an or der for Immediate delivery. The market is firm and prices have advanced J30 per ton. Barney Harvey, a lad seventeen years oia, was instantly killed at Xjocust Street colliery Ic Lehigh county on Saturday morning. It was his first day in tbe mines. lie was employed as door boy. He left bis work and not being acq tinted with the mines was caught between the wagon and timbers and crushed to death. Miguel Zetz, an Italian peanut vender, fatally subbed Charles Bradley, a track man, on Sunday In New York. Bradley, sh - m m . svilu n puny or arunsen companions, an noyed the Italian by tipping his hat ove nis eyes. Zetz plunged tls knife clean through the heart of Bradley, who died In stantly. Zetz was arrested. On Friday afternoon John McGrain went, with Edward Johnston to the house of Robert Wolfe, one mile from Tl mouth, Ky., and began a quarrel with Wolfe. McGrain struck Wolfe in thA fttfjk nereupoo Wolfe drew a knife and kliiPrt mtursin. vy oiro gave n msnlf nn hnt Immediately released on bail. Rev. Andrew D. nunter. an itinomn preacner rrom Charleston. S. C. was hnt and killed on Saturday in the rhifirfli, Nation by a man named White. The lai ter had persuaded Hunter's daughter to elope with him. Honter followed, and was siam wnne trying to force White to make the girl his wife. White escaped. John Ward.azed 15 vears. one of a nnm. ber of boys, who were teasing an old mar named John Anderson, living in Donnellv'i court, In rear of 1813 South street Pbiladel ania on Saturday, was shot In the face by the old man. and It Is probable the lad will lose the sight of one eve. The old man w arrested, and he expressed no regret for the act, as he said the boys were the torment of bis life. Mrs. E. A. CaDfield, was accidentally shot on Saturday night at 11 o'clock and died at 4 o'clock on Sunday morning, at Yonkers, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Canfield were about to retire. Thare was a pistol under Mr. Canfield's pillow, and when he pulled off the cove-lid tbe pistol fell on the floor and was discharged, and the shot strnck Mrs. Canfield on the neck. Internal hemorrhage caused suffocation and death. The engine, baggage car and smoking car of strain on the Kentucky Central rail road tumbled down a thirty foot embank ment near Lexlnglan on Tuesday. Tbe en gineer and fireman were killed. Three oth er train hands and a number of passengers were Injured. Among the latter was T. J. Nichols, the well known horseman of Paris, Kentucky, whose Injuries are thought to be fatal. Mayor Harrison, of Chicago, has vetoed an ordinance imposing a license of $500 on brewers. He seys that "when the high li cence went into operation the brewers, in order to enable reUIIers to pay their license, voluntarily reduced the price of ber ten per cent., amounting in all to more than $800, 000. If, therefore, a license be imposed on the brewers, they will haye to pay a double ux." John Masterson. a well known grocer of Wilkesbarre, was arrested on Monday on a charge' of counterfeiting. On Saturday a fifty dollar bill, with other money, was paid into the city treasury, and ou examina tion proved tobs most clever counterfeit. It had originally been a ten dollar bill, and the figure one, wherever it occurred, had been cut and the figure five, cut from a five dollar bill, substituted. So cleverly had the work been done that it was almost im possible to detect It with the naked eye. George Cacfield, aeed 17, son of Wil liam Canfield, of PleasaDtvllle, Pa., is In the employ of tha Emery Oil company in Brad ford, Pa. While entertaining a friend, named lay lor, by taking a walk in woods on Sunday, he threw a atone at the an empty nltro-glyeerln can. An STr 1 ifii'in Immediately occurred.the ntrmsi uini n.i.j back In fragments, one piece striking Can field In the bead and another In the abdo men, causing horrible wounds. He died In an hour. Taylor was unhurt. -Deputy Sheriff Gurley Taylor.of Boone- .rnrw in Kvansvillsj, ind., on Monday morning, having In charge last one severs. About year ago Severs had a quarrel with a man in Warrick county and he drew a knife and Intended to kill bis enemy J nst as he was about to plunge the blade into the man Abbott Shaw, a friend or Severs, stepped between the two and told them that the thing could be settled with out bloodshed. In his anger Severs plunged tbe knife Into bis friend, killing him almost Instantly. He then fled and was a f,itiye irom justice until a few days ago. when he - MlJiurna m naoaas City. Taylor took t. wooer 10 tne scene of hla crime Tuesday night, where he will be held trial on a charge of murder. on for A Wondsrfnl Discovery. Consumptives and all who suffer from any affection of tbe throat and lung can una a certain cure in rr w . new lJin- covery for Consumption. Thousands of per manent cures attest the truth of this state ment. No medicine can show such a record i "uuuenoi cures. Thousands of c hopeless suffreers now gratefelly procl once they owe their lives to thia K. hi aim It will cost you nothing to give it a trial. Free trial bottle Large size, f u at James drug store. Hunt's Tlerr.edy rurif.iv assisting the kidneys to cat r king Si -r, of Mdc!m.;!.:suu:'! , Pa.. ' v rr t.j a rrites : '-I was Dd ab-s'-es- on 1 vvUh lung , and redii'.-e i rrtikln bki-ietou. Gut a free triai bottie of Dr. Kiua's New D.scovery for Consumption , which did ma so much good that I bocuat a dollar bottle- After using three bottles I found myself once mora a nan, com pletely restored to health, with a good appetite and gain in flesh of 4S pounds." Call at James druz storfl and gat a trial bot tle free ot this certain cure for all lung dis eases. Large bottles St. Thonans May So. Mr. T. W. Atkins, Girard, Kansas, writes: I never hesitate to recommend your Elec tric Bitters to my customers, they give en -tire satifaciion and are rapid sellers." Elec tric Bitters are the purest and best medicine known, and will positively cure kidney and liver complaints. Purify the blood and reg ulate the bowels. No family can afford to be without them. Tney will save hundreds of dollars In doctor bills every yea r. Sold at fifty cents a bottle by E. James. "Ion of letter m day poor In upon Dr. David Kennedy, of Rondout, N. Y., from people who have been benefitted by using his popular preparation called Kennedy's Favorite Remedy.' And they often Illus trate what this remarkable medicine accom plishes In some new and hitherto untried field of operation. Not Infrequently patients the hand and express their gratitude, for de- . ., . T V ' 1 . nverance irom pain. 1 roy ti- vaiiy Time. Take all In all. Takt all the Kidneys and Liver Take all the Blood purifiers. Take all tbt Dypeptia and Indisgeption cure. Take all the Agu; Fever, and bilious tpecific. Take all the Brain and Nerve rorce rtvivt. Take all the Great health restorers. In thort, take all tbe best qualities of all these and the best, Qualities of all the beflt medlcin. s In the world, and you will find that Hop Bitter have the best curative qualities and powers of all concentrated in tbem, And that they will cure when any or all of these, singly or combined. Fail !!!! A thorough trial will give positive proof of this. Iltrdrnsd silver. Five years ago I broke down with kidney and liver complaint and rheumatism. Since then I have been uuable to be about at all. My liver became bard like wood; my limbs were puffed up and filled with water. All the best physicians agreed that noth ing could cure me. I resolved to try Hop Bitters; I have used sevn bottles; tbe hard ness has all gone from my liver, tbe swell ing from my limbs, and it has worked a miracl In my case; otherwise I would have been now in my grave. J. W. Mobet, Buffalo, Oct. 1, 1881 ' Poverty and Snffrrlnsr. "I was dragged down with .lent, poverty and suffering for vears, cansed by a sick family and large hilts for doctoring. I was completely discouraged, until one year a?o, by the 1vic of my pastor, 1 com menced uning Hop Kitteis, and In one month we were all well, and none of us have seen a sick day since, and 1 want to say tn all poor men, you ran keep your families well a year with Hop Bittars for less than one doctor's visit will cost. I know it." A WORKISGMAN. VNone it'n'ilne wirhont a bnnch of green Hops nn ths white label. Shun all the vile, rx.lsi.nous steff with "Hop" or "Hoi.?" ln their nance. TO. THE BEST TQ 1!!C. ? This medicine, eomMnlnr Iron with pnre vegetable tonics, quickiv and er.tnpletaly ( urn lvrrnl, Indlcentlon, Wrsksrsa, Impnrc Blood, Mai Klin, . hills and Favor, nil Nrarntjriiv. Itia an nnfailintr remedy for Disease of tha Ki'lnrsrSi itnrf l.lver. It is invaluable for IMseases: peculiar to Women, and all who lead scdentarr lives. It does not injure the teeth, cause headache.or produce constipation oUirr Iron medicinet do. It enriches and rnii-ifies the blood, stimulate the appetite, aids tbe assimilation of food, re lieves Heartburn and helchins;, and stranglA siu the muscles and nerves. Kor Intermittent Fevers. Lassitude, Lack of Energy, Ac., It has no equal. r- The penntne has ebove trade mark and rosaed red lines ea wrapper. Taka no other. .! mli k; BCanS CHKBICSL CO, BlLTIBOU, BD. Surface Indications TThat a miner would very properly term iurface indications" of what ta beneath, are the Pimples, 8 tie, Soro Kyea, I loll a, and Cutaneous Ernptlons with which people, are, annorsd in spring and rarly summer. The effeta matter accumu lated during the winter months, now makes Iu presence felt, through Is ature'i endeavors to expel it from the system. While It remains. It Is a poison that foafcra In the blood and may develop Into Scrof ula. Thla condition causes derangement of the dieertlve and asstrnilatory organ, with a feeling of enervation, languor, and weariness often llirhtly spoken of as "only prlnjr fever." These are evidences that atura Is not able, unaided, to throw off the corrupt atoms which weaken the vital forces. To retrain henlth. Nature roust be aided by a thorough blood-purifytnff med icine ; aud nothing else la ao effective aa Ayer's Sarsaparilla, which Is sufficiently powerful to expel from the system even the taint of Hered lUtry Sorof olaw The medical profession indorse Aytr's PARSAFARrtXA, and many attestation of the cures effected by It come from all part ef tbe world. It la. In tbe laruruare of the Hon. Francis Jewett, ex-State Sen ator of Massachusetts and ex-Mavor of Lowell, nhe only preparation that does real, lasting good.' Dr. J. C. Ayr A Co., low. Matt. Sold by all Druggista: Price $1; Six bottles for &. MIL t nCASZS AFISIH3 FHCMAH IUPBUS iii u w , tvnea u L u L n d , LRttlPriAS. ScZT.t t Hrtu rrv Cni-jar BUS C'SE4Sf S. SjrKr'rrs PiMPLrs nm tub wcr, Salt Rh e a x . ; : scur t astASESJHO.W ucrrrjs the etjt sFaki .nosufr hedi- crsE t rt R OFFmo 70 THE pypiicTHT I T, amd be ecurmcFD. Im iFLaELrrrcr table PREPiMTICl CMWKCrf 3 FPZX THE FWEST HOOTS, HfTRE J f0 LZAYZS.ViMCH HfiTOBE - J w tVjia v.-'-?::.?;-; -si ,?r. ffo y-i-i i H'i l kKlli.ss.-U,, Kates tar ad -i ..f...... i.. new-jspers seat free. A djr ft H. r h, wnt tv. HSpnic St., A n: Mr. H. Sp.-iii- iiffilli 11 11 II U" ' . H am tr-i H M IT lllbUu- Absolutely Puro. The powder never varies. A marvel of parity. strength and whniesomen-i'S. More economical than the ordlnarv kinds, and cannot re sold in competition with the multitude of the low tet. short wetirnt. alum or inesinaie powaers. aoia only in can. Kotil BAKlifa Powdbb Co., 1 ! wail St.. mw ork ALAR I A L POISON. The principal cause if nearly al! sickness at this time of the year has Its orlitin In a disor dered I.tver.whieh. if not regulated la time, great suffering, wretchedness and death will ensue. A g-entleiijan wrltlnir rrom South America says : 'I have nsed your Simmons' I,lver Regulator with good effect, both aa a prevention and cure for Ea- larial fevers ou tba Isthmus ol Kan am a.' TAKl-1 SIMMONS' LITER REGULATOR, A Purely Vtjit:V,! M:i:5. AN KKKKCTVAb SPECIFIC Volt MAI.AKlOfS FKYKKV BOWEL. COJll'l.MNTS. JAVNl'HT. C U.IC. K K-ST LESS N ESS. MENTAL PKl KTmN. SICK HKAIiAi'HK. C NSlIi'ATION, XATNEA. BIIJOISNESS. DVSi'trMA.iC If yon feel droTvv, dtilltated. have frequent headache, month tatte hdly, poor appetite, and tonrue coated, you are s:t1rinir from torpid liver or biliousness," and notbinic will core you so speedily ana perto&nertlT as to taka SIMMONS' LIVER REGULATOR. It is Riven with safety, and the baiple't results to tho most del'cite inl in;. It tanes Ihe place of quinine and M't-r .f every kind. It Is the cheaj est. inrft and tet family medicine In tbe oz iu. J. E ZEILIN & CO. PMlaJsIplii Solo by all Druggists 1704. iws:t. Policies written at short notice In tba OLD RELIABLE "ETNA" And slhfr Flrsjt l lass CoiapanlfS. rI W. DICK, -HilAT FOR TIIF. 0 1 ,13 1 1 UTFO UD n).MMKXc!::i uusin ess 179-1. Ehen.-tMirtf. ,fny 1SU. liN Cf 'UI Car 111 HOIK. gft'DUSTRY. The sti'.-tr.iiin or .no- rcsn-ctfuil-,- Invited to ELEGA XT FURNITURE, "ON!TINl1 J Parlor and Chamber Suits, WAlU;:0Bl-$. 8IDEK0ARDS, Centre, Extension M Ercalfast Tallies, CHAIRS, CUPBOARDS, SINKS, BED SPRING MATTRESSES, Bad tn fuct PBriy rvrrjthlnu i.crtatnlnn to the r urn.iiim i-iimiihsj Also, any KiKHlS In that lln iiuinii'iict'ir.i in ttie I'nited States S'il'1 at th lun-est catatoy-ic jirtces. Upbolsteria?, Repairing and Painting ol an kind nf Kurnftir. I'lisirs I,oiinres. fcn. TirOmTltlY :n-t Sll t Urni.!,,,-! : v nll.r.l..1 U; room on 11. ah street, ot.j.osi'ie the t Vnirreejational chnrrl:. l"l-e csll and examine (foojs whether juu wiMi ii iurcna.e or riot. I). II. CKbSSWtLU r-t'enstniir. April li. mv-ly. lUMUNlTYfromANNOYANCE Haul. enlyf th, flnMt sand feesrtqtjsil ttw aflilass tor It itbatAnUiBa; heal. Every Rood thlnsr is Cotmtor Tglted, and oonmimers are CAU TIONED agralnst IMITATIONS ol label la oacSeyaTab x-an lop is always dear and bright Glass. K sxt n rM-ta rsd OW1.T hy GEO. A. C3 ACBETI1 (k COi IMttabarrti Less eiatan ITorbs. FOR SALE BY DEALERS. J f ROYAL fViT Jk J fj Vss . ; i'-i-i-v-. . Jr ... :t Vv-st fcSsl' -t'-r ' teten Fire InsaraacB Apncy Gent-rr,! Insurance Agent, t:sa t in;, it . KTKI1Y ONE Who Cwri a M A(;fl , ,, ,. , A r.yn r.u. Vhi.dimj -t V. I V tut off or put (.u !n 3 mln- ir-i-iA anrt buBirlcV. f4 tir lllustrat-d circular aad price lisi. Ags-nia wanted -rr'.ir- rfl.,l,.,.hr tut i..7rr... . 5 ;:.-j.--?if THIS papiS N.W.AVER SON, our author as.ci.ta. C H I C AQo COTTAQS ORGAF'- Hu H-sii -. t". admit of luvj :.r It cm?-ftirs ceryir.; gonitis, skill rjii auw . TO EXCEL 1? lJ isu, 1 . ' ? , ? 'e Tbeae excellent OrsaJ'S are celrVr,-,. . nine, quality of tone, quick rfcj.jr.F ' ;LlV combination, artiatie d'4tn. be-iu-v la VI ffW'.ooi JUTwUun, malting tt.om tan B".."',t ive, ornamental and dsfc.i-Kl.U- nrra: U lttrwi school, cnurcbea, lod, socitece, etc. J"M,L FATlRLnilLh RIP ITATIOB. l-E4l'-I'EI T4 II.ITII.H. hi i.i i n wuBunrv OOMBISPD, M1KR niza THE POPULAR QR2AH latiruotion Cocks and Pii. o Stools, CevtaUsjuoe aud I'ricKs I.'.tt. i.: lj The Chicsgo Ccttsgs Crgaa Cq. .mer uuoeipB aad Ira MtmU. CHICftGO. ILL. R. L. MWM, M. J. fclfK, A.la Johnston, Buck Co Money Received on Depcst i'triHii:ii mini, IMn!ESTALLOWED(tMI!El COLLECTIONS MADE DJ.ASTS tfte JTri nclpnl CM IlWRht r.ntl Sold Bna flnrnrf.' t?nnV;rnr Tn;--. m UOllui.'i DflLliL DLilLCiij IfcIO - i s, i t rt TED. A. W. BUCK, Catier. Uientb'irif, An. :'l.-tr. B. J. LYNCH CXDKliTAKVR, Aad flSBBfsrtsrer and thaler Is HOME AND CITY MADE furniture: ?J lie AV2 f-ivv? "' TABLES. CHAIRS, Mattresses, &cJ 1605 ELEVENTH AVKNTE Betweeu 16th and 17th SN i.rr o o .v. pa. ill tTrsBTisT -.f rn m ri c n- tv . r- j , i ri'f are r-i ? -;u1' ;r - cal before huyiOat ei.-CT' r- , r tbat Wf ran meet v?ry .t , -; tst3. rriffs ;h verv 'vt - . Altoona, April 18. lfcM.-- STltllTUIP' PROTECT if H I' FIREIHSUIU :CT of Ecn?;sr; ii i busiinai iss Only 7 As.essnient in 1 I! t l Ik I ;.) If Good FARIYI PFiCFEPiTlEi E SrECIA LIT b Es Ih FT: NO STEAM RISKS TAKEN GEO. M. READE, Freii: T. JT. DICK, Secretary. F.bensbnrs;, Jr n. 51. ISSl.-lv. CATAR R H r.c mrmmmmemii' m"m vx v u.m wa V 1 e a ntf tt Head. A 1 1 r InflaBimitiHl t : Cfslcrtii HaV-fever f (r A particle Is applied In es -V ti"- - " BMe to use. I'rice. fi c'.. r-y tn ' 1 c' "; ' Send fi.r circular. ELY Hh r-. 1 May 1. 1SS4. i -.. Dr. Hendricks Cnmbri;! Co I'n- OH BO NIC DISEASE UK AI.I. KlMw. Cancerous Tumor VV l. 1 I Y.l'l- -mi rI,, j. difwsxl in a ,-rry aho-t fn 'Kt Ot t S J-tl" ' 1 . - . . . Ho ir- Biw pr-'i red ith efcoicess: l inns -rr COHSULiaiiOH fl Examinations tl.uu. ii n - - Sumtneihill. t'aabria Co., 1 July 1T.BS 8 m-t. ! HIGH STREET. F.r.KIU I.-i.I- J. II. OA NT, lVnri t.,r- H'HE PfBUC srll! a! :'- ',", !.vrl; 1 of business in t.ntne!- I - ir- - , ,,-t neat and cosy. Clbs 5 t. " M. D7 KITTELL, Attorno.v-f - EHENSBl K 1. v ,nb OfBee tn new Armory Hil. ","'"' ' ( ' W. DICK, ATTor.NrT- a ElensbTjrp. "a. O.,., J. Lloyd, dec-d. (first Poor. t ". ,.' raanDerof legal t.asinesi if " r,- J ri nnd eelletffiH8 a speclaltv- , T-T H- MYlHiV ill, aitchM' -1. ' . - HXa ATTOT ' : ( ifflee over t l trance on llth av. . ; Gto M " I " '-,B,ce ou 1 l Jit., ' - STAR -SH&YIKG IP
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers