The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, September 17, 1886, Image 2

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CARL RI V I N I I
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c UtlNSBUKC. PA..
FRIDAY, -- SEPTEMBER 17, 16.
l!t MMVIHTIC ST.ATK TH'KET.
.M.i'
I'r.r
p.rr t " hire tbe v ar.
i. .- i.. i.. r ;: ' - i
i is'.. 11 M ' M t - ll.:-. .1 I H'i-I ..Mliln"
tor teveirtl firs, and Lis ika'li vis liOt Marcus J. Wright, Chief of the
therefore unexpected. He was in the Confederate records Office, is preparing
"..I- li vpar nf Ilia aire wa a native of I a. hiop-raoriiCiil work in which the for-
r:rn..t...rT i,w f!hpr iwina T)tiipl TI. tunes of the ex Confederate
l 11 A I
Nrr:v
.v KiiM'i;,
F. r.LAt'K,
.f Voik.
I ' !'. 1.1 i:t i KNA N r-(.tiVUNOK,
. ill". I t K I.' !( K KTTS, of Luzerne.
l.r.TAUV INTKUNAl. AKKAIRS,
I. SIM!"-ON A FHK'A, of Huntingdon.
: .'. i ;i ror iiKseiial,
I.1AM.I. IVH i:XKX, Allegheny.
(. O N li ESr- M A S-AT-I.A I'M E, ;
MAWM'.l.i.Mi'.VLNMiN, I'liiUd'a.
HKMOlA TIT fOI"5ITT TICK F.T.
M'R on;i;k-: ;
TIlU.MAS COLLINS,
n.u assembly:
1 1 A N 1 111. Mi LA l' J 11 LI X, Johnstown, i
JOHNS. ItHKV, Ktiensburj?.
rmt ri:"T!ONmAi:v:
II. A. SIIOK.MAKLn. Knslur.
i "i: j: u ' ; - r f.k am r.Ecor.DKn:
l l.K-1 LSI: .1. l'.I.AIK, Kbendhurg.
Mm i'i-ii;icr attorney:
II. (r. UOSE, Johnstown,
no; norsec iioi'sf hitiectok:
JAIOI! SIIAFKi:, Allegheny Twp.
- j in. '' 11
'Vhat cr he accomplished by work
; ii if mm through an intelligent exercise
of the rifc'.t of suffrage, is well expressed
n the following paragraph : "In eery
Lff'i.-ila! ive imd Congressional district
i'ley can exercise a controlling influence
i:i the choice of Representatives. IJy
j ;nIicious'y n ieldiog this influence they
c-iii h'R'1 to I'ongress and to the State
I.--l.-lnture men who will faithfully and
courageously defend their own and the
i jVti and interests of their fellow citi-
' Hfruinst monopoly in all its forms.
T!.:s is the only rational aril patriotic
u'3 t which they can
V' it e. '
llarr, an Irishman, and a thorough Jef
feisoniati Democrat, who afterwards
moved to liiairsviKe. where lie died at a
lipeo.d age, lionoreil and respected by
all who knew him. Col. liari went to
Pittsburg in 1SU and there learned the
trade of a printer. In 14; he purchased
the Pittsburg CltfiiivU and edited that
paper until 1."4 when he sold it and be
came business manager of the J'n t. In
1S.77 he became pole owner of that paper
Generals
will tie traced up to date. According to
the iuforma'ioii collected by him. a good
many of the Southern leaders who found
themselves penniless after the war, have
carved out new fortunes for themselves,
some of them even ranking among ihe
millionaires. Gen. Mahone, of Virgin
ia, is the richest of them. After the
surrender at Appomattox he owned a
horse, some war trappings and his box
of surveying instruments which, before
the warhe had used as a civil engineei.
In less than a week after the last gun
had been fired, he was employed by the
nod has been ita principal proprietor t Orauae and Alexandria liailroad at civ-
ever since. In 1SC2 he was the Demo- j H engineering. 1 SJ
. the savings liom his salary, soiii it op
eratic nominee for Surveyor General, an roituIieiV) invested in other Virginia
office now known as that of SecreUiy of j railroads,' and in a few years retired
Internal Affairs, and was elected. In i from the civil engineering to take the
lT.'i he was chosen a member of the
Constitutional Convention to succeed '
the late Judge Black, who had resigned.
He frequently served as a delegate to
Democratic State snd National Conven
tions, had an extensive acquaintance
with the leading Democrats throughout
the Union, and was a steadfast friend
of Mi. Tildnn. He took a lively interest
in public charities, and was closely
identified with the Mercy Hospital and
1 the Moreanz Reform School. He was
j a strict member of the Catholic church,
i was a man of unyielding integrit, and
; as a public spirited citizen erjoyed the
! respect and confidence of the people of
Pittsburg in an eminent degree. He is
survived by five sodj and two daughters.
ville road. From that position lie, grad
uated to the Presidency of the orto.k
and Tennessee road. After ten years
had passed he was the railroad prince of
Virginia, and is now a uiilii"nane. His
fortune is estimated at 815,tW.(HA, and .
he is adding to it daily by shrewd invest- i
ments. Sen tlor Mahone is one of the
very fe men wtio have never lost in an ;
enterprise undertaken. Whatever he ;
touches seems to turn to gold. He is ;
sometimes called the Virginia "Ed j
S'okes" for this reason. j
The two Senators from Louisiana. ;
Gibson and Eustis, rank next to Mahone
in wealth. Gibson whs a Confederate I
General and served throughout: the war. !
At :ts close he had several hundred a reg '
of land, which had not been tilled for j
four years, and had a must y law office in '
New Orleans which he had not entered :
since his brigade was order?d to the :
front. With borrowed money he set to ;
work planting, and at the same time ;
beaan once more the practice of his pro- i
fession. Now, after thelapseof twenty
years, he ranks among the wealthiest
planters in Louisiana, is at the head of
the bar in New Orleans, and is worth 1
considerably over half a million dollars.
This will be increased eventually to a ;
million or more, as his wife will come i
A Ku.e a-. I Keliaf'.e Mr.'.ii-irr. A com
pound fliii.l extiact of roots, learrs, h.irba
and herr!e Is Iinr liTk Wood Bitters. They
cuie all diseases of the blood, liver and
kidneys.
For Earache. Toothache, Sore Throat,
Swelled Neck, and the result of cold and In
flammation, u-e Dr. Thomas Electric Oil
the great pain destroyer.
Clarksville, Md.. bee hunters recently
cut down a tree and found in a hollow thirty-five
feet from the ground plenty of honey
and a black snake nine feet lonR.
The prohibitory law of Rhode Island
wert into effect July 1, and the arrests for
that month are less than one-half what they
were the same month In a nnmber of pre
ceding years.
The secret of successful advertising is to
tell the trut'i. When we say that Drey
doppel's Borax Soap is the best and cheaptst
soap you can use for all purposes, it is plain
statement of fact, and t'ae best way to satis
of yourself Is to try a pound.
How many bald heads you see. Work,
worry, disease, dissipation. These do it.
Parker's Hair Balsam stops falling hair and
restores gloss and vouthtul color. Excep
ts no gieater reason for believing that tionaily clean, elegant, a perfect dressing,
the iava comes from the earth's centre ! D0t greasy. Prevents dandruff,
than there is for supposing that the gas ;
we have cornea thence ; and no one has-' -A quarrel growing out of a base ball
ever yet suggested that gas, bursting out ! came at Summerville, Texas co.. Mo., was
of the earth with great force, may from ! resumed at a merry making the next even
its nature be more rationally supposed j ing, rrsultiug In two men being fatally shot
to bave come from its innermost, ooweia : and another badly wounded. The man who
than the volcano's solid lava.
: n .. p-.-.vde h m' l!f.-ory Pu.u'.i.Mt of
the earthquake phenomena, leaves ! h
Uiost of mankind quae free to tiame
their own theories concerning them, in
entire confidence that they are as likely
as anybody to be right about it and also
about as certain to be wrong. We seem
to be going backward in our knowledge
of the woild and its movements, in these
days, or learning, at least, that we know
less than we thought w did. Professor
Rush, of our comity, finds that the ac
cepted laws of celestial motion are
wrong; and the Russian, Krapotkin,
claimed to have made a discovery akin
to this, before be committed suicide.
We used to be taught in our schools,
and probably the same thing is yet gen
erally taught, that the earth was once a
molten mass, and that it Is still moker
in the c-ntre, the lape of ages having
only cooled down a matter of fifty or a
hundred miles of the crust. This molten
centre was supposed to have the volca
noes for Its chimneys, and earthquakes
wre the refult of the slowness of the
cbimneysto let out the confined gases.
There was no particular reason that we
know of why the earth should be consid
ered molten, save that the lava that the
volcano emits is so ; and there seems to
mm.
Rf.fehrino to the present flourishing
condition of the dry good trade in New
York, the Tribune of that city, the lead
ing Republican paper of the country, is
gratified to learn that "large and numer
ous sales are now reported by New York
merchants generally"1 that "the busi
ness is well distributdd and navments
are unusually r-iomnt." and also that I into a !r5.e fortune at the death of her : . . nayp knowledge with which
uiMtuci, Jin. .umiim.mr.,. ! to krock it down, though that countless
Nearly as wealthy as the toregomg is sppms extravagant enough.
Gen. Brown, of Tennessee, twice Gover- , Tn ear(nailiike used to be the strong
IIIJI Ul lliau Otrttr Ellin r- wic n i , fim u'"
If the
earth was ever a molten mass It is rea
sonable to conclude that as it has cooled
on the surface it has cooled all the way
through ; and there is no trouble about
giving it all the time it needs for the
cooling piocess. Men of science take
all the time they want for the work of
the world's creation. A few millions or
billions of years, more or less, are of no
no possible consequence to them. And
as it is conceded that the earth is cooled
off for a hundred miles down, we can
affirm that the cooling process is done
with, and that there is a polar coldness
down at the centre ; and we find it get
ting cooler as we go down. It may tie
even that icebergs are floating through
it from pole to pole, as the author of the
famous hole theory declared. There is
no denying any theory aliout it, as we
Tkf l.iwi r branch of Congress which
is I r-rr;u ratic. passed bills at tfie late
session forfeitig to the government
ahon ij-th rtr millions of acres of
public land which had been eranted by
preyi.-us Congresses to railroad corpora
tiers. Tl f se forfeiture bills were based
upon the gr und that the different rail
road co'iipnles affected by them bad
failed to comply with the conditions of
the sev-r',1 grants. Of thse bills only
two it three were passed finally by the
Republicnn mnj irity in the Senate, and
ari now laws. They embrace probably
a rtil'v-fi md a half of acres leaving the
t.V.a:,ce of ti.e forty-three millions cov
e ifd by the bills which passed the IP-use
-li 1 in possession of the railroad cnrpo
raM'r.s, a'-d which, of right, belong to
U.n gove rp'pont. No nation ever squan
deied public domain with such ciim
ir.al leckl'-.ssnessjas the United States.
Tit. counterpart rf the won.ierful
f. sit of the Dutch taking Holland was
; hived on Monday last in Maine, bv the
li i lib! -car. agj.iin carrying tfi election
i:i t'.at State. NCaine has uniformly
been a Itl :iblican state ever since it
"went L!I bent for Governor Kent,"
which was several years before the po
to rot appeared in Ireland. That it
wr-uM go Republican ag iin on Monday
t ii:- uo 'r' o man doubt ed. It didn't
however l-ick so high as at the election
two vei'JS pgo. vben tin' Republican
ni;i ri' v v.;.s 19.ik It is from lO.fiini
to PV'.K'". Mr. Plaine uever worked
hi rd.-r to carrv Maine than be did in
t!:'!s Crtnv'srgn. If" slump-d the state
frm one t :id of it to the other, and if
his purpo?" was to show the country
imt bis bold Upon the people of Maine
Is Mroi ger now than it was two yenrs
itu be was a Presidr-i.ii.il candi
dff, h'-' v,!cci-i l a i been p.r.ytbing but
fla' trig. Maine is a fixed Republican
sta'e "'' ns Alabsma in a fixed D-mo
cratic s'iite, arid nothing else can tie said
ot either. Dow's Prohibition voe in
the tate is probably 3 (hh. Two years
no tl;e Prohibitory amendment was put
Ihrnnrh in Maine by a majority of near
ly .pi. (imi, but it don't prohibit. Neal
Dow himself say3 so, and if be don't
know how it is away down in Maine no
other man does.
this "pleasing condition of affairs could .
... T , ; not be if the country to day were not in
put the Labor : , , , , , .... r
much better shape than it has been for
; a long time.'' In the face of this admis
sion by the Tribune what becomes of the
dreadful prophecies of evil to the busi
ness interests of the country which were
the stock in trade of 'he Republicans
two years ago, in case the Democrats
were entrusted with the control of the
government ? The Democratic party
has been in power a year and a half and
will continue in power for two years and
a half more, and yet the great mouth
piece of the Republican party is forced
! to admit that the country is to-day "in
: much better shape than It has been for
' a long time." When ths next Presiden
tial campaign comes on and the Demo
crats ask the people for a new lease of
power, basing their rfquest upon the
i prosperous condition of the country un
der Mr. Cleveland's administration, and
when the same Republican prophets of
evil make the same doleful predictions
i of ruin ar.d disasters they did before his
: election in 14, the people, in the light
of accomplished facts, will not be likely
to place the least confidence in their
dismal howl. Cleveland is performing
. his duty m -.in fully and courasreous'y, the
business of the country is slowly but
surely becoming brightei and brighter,
; and all classes of pople seem to be well
' satisfied with the present administration
of public affairs.
Titi;s begin to loek decidedly bad
ior William V. Smith, the present May
or of Philadelphia. On Monday last a
t orniuiiteeof the Common Council, a'ter
a lonr investigation of the charges
ag.iinst. him, reported by a vote of seven
to one. m favor of bis impeachment. The
n't ii it charges him with five acts of
"oi il-administration in office ," but the
p: incipal ones being fl igiant misappro
priation of funis. Without specifying
amounts involved, the report alleges
t!. it license fees have been converted to j
his own us", that his chief c'eik retaine d j
i "tiiic furds in his possession, and that
his private scretary altered check9 j
dr imi to the order of the city treasurer i
and deposited them to the order of the I
i'ayor. f'oming right on iho heels of I
t! " corrupt disclosures in New York, 1
tl.e question arises, i3 it possible any
l.'tier to put an honest man in office in j
a larg city V
Rot.ff. S. Avxni:i'.s, of Tennessee, a
well known D-. r.iocratic politician e;f
that sta'e, in tbe vulgar slp.r.g of the
d iv. "bit c ff more than he could chaw,"
in the manner following : After having
fpent nearly a year at Washington in
the pursuit of a desirable sit uat ion undt r
Mr. Cleveland he was at lact appointed
ns agent to allot tbe lanJs in severalty
now held by the Crow Indians. He was
regarded as a lucky man ns the office
was worth eight dollars per day and ex
pmepe atid general surprise was'xpress
ed last week t,en it was learned that
Saunders bud resigned. It has since
transpired that he owes the government
fifty-ene thousand dollars, dating back
to tbe time when he was Revenue Col
lector in Tennessee, under President
Andrew Johnson. It seems that, under
tbe law an officer cannot draw his salary
when he is indebted to the Treasury, and
as Saurders would have been obliged to
serve twenty years in his new office be
fore his salary would extinguish his
indebtedness to the govern ment, which
was a state of affairs ho never dreamed
of, he concluded to withdraw in favor of
some man who was not laboring under
such a load of financial embarrassment.
There will uot be any alarming amount
of sympathy felt for Rolfe S; Saunders,
of Tennessee.
the receiver of the Texas Pacific Rail
road. Gen. P.rown, like so many of his
associates, took to civil engineering and
railroading when he laid down his arms.
After constructing several small roads
in Tennessee lie entered the service of
the Texas Pacific at a salary of ?20 0O0
a year and has bis headquarters at Dal
las. As a result of his railroad adven- :
t tires he is worth nearly ?1,(XH),(h)c, and
is increasing his fortune yearly. After ;
the surrender be was as penniless as
Gen. Mahone, but, like Mahone. he did
not lie back and complain. His fiist
surveying job brought him 515 a week, i
but in a year thereafter he was receiving ,
?5 I"") a year as President of the Nash- ;
vi!!e Railroad. '
Gen. Rosser, of the Northern Virginia j
ava'ry, now living in retirement at
Charlo'tesville, lias an estate valued at
over ?700.hT. Hp made it all since the
war and in railroading. After surveying
for several years in Western S'ates, he
became connected with the Northern
Pacific liailroad and was elected its
Vice President eight years ago. His
es'ate is almost adjoining the old home
stead of Thomas Jefferson, at Monticel
lo. and is generally conceded to be the
finest in Virginia.
Gen. Polignac, who served in the
Western Tennessee army, is worth not
far from a minion He is tbe French
soldier who. at the outbreak of the war,
came to this coun'ry and offered his
sword to the Confederate cause. Tho'
he gained no especial distinction in tho
(i-!d, he fought bravely until liT).
; Gen. Gordon' of Georgia, made a for
i tune since the war. but lost it recently
through injudicious speculation. Five
years ago he w as a m Hionaire ; to day
he is literally not worth a dollar.
Gen. Johnson. Fnited States Rai'road
Commissioner, has a snug fortune, and
a few oihei ex-Con fedi ra' e genera's ire
woi h a hundred thousand or more all
mad? after laying down their pnns.
l'!;iJ".. 7"fwe..
did the shooting escaped
M. L. Welch, a farmer rslding about
six miles west of Ashmore, III., has a enrioe
ity iu the 6hape of a yearling colt, which is
producing two apparently naturally-growing j
horns. They are already about two Inches
long, and developing rapidly.
Louisville has 40,000 colored people, of
whom many are prosperous and some rich,
Sou.e of the best real estate in tbe city is
owned by colored men ; there are three or
four large furniture dealers, and many coal
yards, groceries and saloons owned by them.
Miss Amelia Jackson, daughter of Capt.
Jackson, who killed Colonel Ellsworth at
Alexandria In 18GI, for pulling down the
Contederate flag, and was himse'f killed by
one of Ellsworth's men Immediately after
ward, has been appointed to a clerkship In
the Tatent Office, at Washington.
- A Nova Scotia farmer, bunting for his
cows at dusk, came upon a big black bear
that at once showed fight. The farmer was
about to seek safety in flight, when his three
"If poojilo couLi only know
what a splorjili'l medicine
Simmons Liver Regulator is
the-re wouM tt many a phy
sician without a patient, and
many an interminable doctor
bill saved. I consider it infal
lible in malarial infection.
I had for many years liec-n
a peridot physical wreck
from a combination of com
plaints, all the outgrowth
of malaria in mv sy.tem,
and even under the skillful
Land of Pr. J. T. .Tone?, of
thi.Veitv, I had despaired of
ever Lejno; a well woman
aprain. Simmons Liver Reg
ulator was recommended to
me. I tried it; it helped
me, and it is the only thing
that ever did me any good.
I persevered in its u:se, and
I am now in jerftct health.
I know the medicine cured
me, and I always keep it as
a reliable 'standby' in my
family." Re.p'y,
MrS. M UtY HAY, Camden, Ala.
V
IMIACTH' A L
AND 1)1' A LI. Ii IN-
! Watches, Clocks,
-J RWKRRV
A N I
Optical a
ode.
Sole Agent
H pK 1 UK
Celebrated Rockford
WATCFIK.S.
Columbia and F'fJonia Watches
In Key and .Stem Winders.
argument foT the molten centre theory,
since it seemed to need something ex- i
(....rnnaru t.f lliat binrt t n flrennnt. fnr i
th mmmn'irai and it was a Dlausible ! -"ws. bellowing loudly, with tailsereet and
explanation that the pent-up gases
caused it in seeking their way out thio'
the volcano exit ; though it has never
been satisfactorily explained why they
do not keep on coming out after they
had once found their way, and conduct
themselves quietly into the outer air
through their chimneys, as the gases of
our hearth fires do. The molten centre
would keep up a constant gas creation
if it kept up any, and the volcanoes
should 1 alwav? active while this con
dition lasted. Our present earthquake
experience has given a severe, it not a
finishing blow, to the molten centre-vol-cano-ehimney
idea, since there was no
i volcano to it. We had the earthquake
and it passed away, and we have had no
volcano eruption as a tender to it that
we know of. Tb earth this time ap
pears to bave quakeil without the aid of
central fires. And it did not disturb
the ocean either, as is the wont of earth
quakes to do, but spent itself upon the
land, which felt it in distant and widely
separated placfS, t tie regions between
being wholly unconscious of it.
A scientific gent'eman undertook to
exp'ain the thir.g by siying that a slice
i of the land had siid off into the water.
! along our coast, or words to that effect,
but when he took a closer look at the
region chiefly affected, he said that the
; facts and li is theorj seemed to be at
right angles, and be has not been heard
i from since, but is supposed to be getting
i them into line. We should think that
the facts would prove pretty stubborn
. when mustered into the support of such
a theory, if for no other reason than that
the ocean showed no disturbance and
the hmd no severance.
The fact in the situation is thai bbe
shook ; a reasonable suggestion, ;s that
it was due to some change in tbe earth's
equilibrium, from soma transposition of
i's gaseous oi solid matter ; but, what
that transposition was remains to be
discovered, if there was any such. And
we ought to find it out to stop it from
A month ago I met a massive-faced ! (1oinK 80 me' 8iPcce farUiqaakes
ad massive bodied Irishman on Rroad- ! ai" not comfortable. If we are doing
A DMfnsruNlied Irish Patriot.
anything in the way of disturbing the
earth's poise by letting out its gases we
need to stop it; and it is just possible
th 't this may have been at the bottom
of the commotion. Lancaster Intclli-
How to Settle Labor Troubles.
way. A Mowing blacK neurit nearly cov- i
ered his brawny chest, and mustaches'
of great lengtli fluttered o'er his cheek.
IIs eves were gray and sugges'ive of a !
mirthful disposition. He carried a stout
blackthorn, and limped as though suf- '
fering from rheumatism. This was j
another Irish patriot. lie has stood j
within the shadow of the gallows. When
about to be sentenced to be hanged, There is oulv one way to eettle and
drawn and quartered for high treason, i heal all the existing troubles between
he made a speech second only in elo- ; employer and employe, and aalamfeel
quence to that which burst frnm the j in(r quite generous to-day I do not mind
nps oi noueri r.mmet. wnne awaiting
bis doom. Last winter he defied the
English Government by appearing in
Montreal at an Irish celebration and
making a patriotic address. The hand
bills announcing his intent bore in
mourning borders copies of his speech
Tiif. Republican Congressional coti
ferrees from this district met at Bedford
or. Wednesday of Is't week, in pursuance
of -i resolution adopted at their first
nutting at Somerset on the previous
week, at which no ballot was taken ow
ing to the abserce of J ,hn A. Lemon, in
whose favor the RIair county conferrees
un instructed. Several ballots were
Uifcen at the liedf .nl meeting, but no
nomination was made, each county vo
ting for itsown "favorite son," Cambria
'r Campbell, JUnir for Lemon, Redford
fur Lorgepei ker, and Somerset for
-"u'l. The conference adjourned to
Ti bet at Somerset on the 2lst. next
Tuesday. Wo are not a prophet, and
herefore will not hazard an opinion as
' i which one of the four candidates will
.nentually be nominated. Two years
jgo it required several meetings of the
lunfTT.i" b-i'i re a nomination wps ef
iTted, and it rnav li that the same
prjce-"i v;i!l be repeated now. T!ier :
a vast deal f insincerity arid fn'-.e pr"
tense in an average ' 'otigit.--;;onal conference.
Two years ago William L. Scott, of
the city of Erie, was the Democratic
candidate for Congress, against Charles
W. Mickey, Republican, of Venango
county, in the district composed of the
counties of Erie, Warren and Venango. '
In these three counties Blaine had a
majority of 1.2(.d and ScotCs-majority in
the same counties on tbe same day was
r.G2, bis majority in Erie county being
1,0"W, while Elaine carried the same
county by 2,Jit. It was said at that
time that aliont ttrtln hundred Republi- .
cans in Erie county I ad pledged them- ;
selves in writing to support Scott. The J
result in that county shows that this !
statement was correct. It is now said ;
that last week papers were laid before i
Mr. Scott, containing the names of 1
i
fitftn hundred Republicans in Erie
county pledging themselves again to vote !
for him, and although he did not desire i
to run the race over again, owing to the i
pressing nature of his extensive business '
affairs, be consented to be a candidate
in view of the strong Republican support :
tendered him. The contest will, of
course, be very exciting, and the result ;
will be awaited with more than ordinary 1
ir.terest. If Scott crn run in the other
counties, Warren nr.d Venango, as well
as he did two year? ?go, there is not
much doubt ab jut bis election.
when arraigned for sentence.
This man is Gen. Thomas Francis
limirke. .A more modest, whole souled
fellow never breathed. He has endeared
himself to Americans even more than to
his native countrymen. Everybody ad
mires and everybody likes him. Barring
Englishmen it is safe to say he hasn't an
enemy in the world. Nominated for a
imparting it to the public. Iet employ
ers pay as generous wages as iossib!e
and let employes faithfully earn their
wages, and all hands treat each other as
members of a common brotherhood, and i
then things will move along tolerably !
smooth. Of course, this plan will not j
be carried out, but it costs nothing to !
submit it. All our labor troubles have j
begun with great corporations, and from j
thence extended into the smaller and j
more diversified industries. Tbe origin
ot these troubles is the enormously dis
proportionate salaries paid to a limited
number of persons, and the miserably
small wages paid to the mass of the em
county office by any political party, he i pioyes. I take it that in some of these
would assuredly sweep the deck. Indeed
he once came very near being elected to
great corporations fifty men can be found
on salaries whose combined earnings
fire in their unialiy placid eves, charged j
the bear so fiercely that he turned tall and j
fled. j
Mr. Alfred Rinsee. of Otis, Mass., who j
has visited nearly every lnnd under the I
sun, has been called upon to bury his trar- I
eling crmpanion. Ned. a setter dog, 20 j
years old. Ned had crossed the ocean If!
times and Journeveyod 50 000 miles with
Mr. Blnsee over Europe, Asia and Africa.
They tell in Brattleboro, Vt., of a cler
gyman who refused to take meat of his
butcher be.-ause it had been killed on Sun
dav. A few days later the preacher told
! the butcher b wanted some meat. "I have
i not any to sell yon," said the conscientious
; man. "I have stopped receiving money j
! that is earned on Snndav."
! The Rev. (ieorge TTortzlow. who has
: just been sent to the Aikmsas penitentia
ry fnr five years on a charge of forgery, was
conducting a revival when arrested, and
' was in the act of immersing converts in a
stream near his church. At the trial be
pleaded guilty, because an Illinois Sheriff
i was in the room with a warrant for bis r
! rest for bigamy.
j -Oen. Frank Cheatham, accounts from
i Nashville say, was sitting in a chair just
! be fore his death, and hearing the rumble of
a passing wagon, raised his head, opened
j his eyes and said : "There rro the troops.
, Bang me mv ho-s. I am going to the front."
II is head fell and be was no more. Tbe
' story recalls Sr-warrVs pen picture of the
dyine Napoleon inagining himself at the
be:ul of his army.
' A Catholic rriest, nam-d Joseph F.
Ralmer. dropped dead of apoplexy in Bal
timore, on Friday last, on the corner of
North and Bath streets. Fiom papers
i found in his pockets it i? supposed be be-
longed in Canada. A document signed by
Cardinel N'wman, of England, invested
; him with the right to hear confessions, and
one bearing Cardinal Simeoni's signature
i extended to him privilege of an audience
1 with the pope.
I A few weeks ago two young persons
were rowing on White Bear Lake, Minn.,
j and the young woman trailed her hand In
j the water and thus lost a ring. A week af
j terward the same couple were agnin out
I rowing and the gentleman saw the ring
i lying on the hard bottom of the lake cov
' ered with ten feet of clear water. He
dropped his knife by the side of the ring to
mark the spot, rowed the young woman to
the shore, and while she hid in the bushes
be rowed back, stripped, dived, and got
both ring and knife.
A well known married woman in Grant
county, Ore., according to a paper from
that neighborhood, has during the past
spring and summer done a good job of farm
ing. When plowing time came, this enter
prising mother constructed a box on the
plow In whlh to carry her bahy, and thus
she plowed the ground. She then proceed
ed to harrow, plant and cultivate, carrying
her child on her back, and In this way pro
duced a fine crop, and Is now engaged in
carting the trucft to a neighooring town and
disposing of it,
About fifty persons were poisoned at a
Surface Indications
What a rntner would verr properly terra
"urface lndfeutions" of what U beneath,
are tho Pimples, tMlcs, Sore Kye
Boils, and Cutaneous Kruptions with
which people ai autiovid in i-pring and
earlv summer. The ert.-te matter accumu
lated during the winter nmnth, now
makes Its presence felt, through Nature's
endeavors to expel it from the system.
While it remains. It is apoUon that fetors
In the blood and may develop inio Scrof
ula. This condition causes derangement
of the iHge-flve and assimilatory or-'Hns,
with a feeling of enervation, languor, and
weariness often lightly ppoken of as "only
fprlng fever." These "are evidences that
Nature is not able, unaided, to throw off
the corrupt atoms which weaken the vital
forces. To refrain health. Nature must be
aided bv a thorough blood-purifying med
icine ; find nothing else U u effective ad
Ayer's Sarsaparilla,
which is ftufRcleiitly powerful to expel
from the tiyntem even the taint of Hered
itary Scrofula.
The medical profession indorse Avtr'8
Farsaparii.la. and many attestations of
the rures effected by it come from all parts
of the world. It is. In the iHniruaee of
the Hon. Francis Jewett, ex-State Sen
ator of Massachusetts and ex-Mayor of
Lowell, "the onlr preparation that docs
real, lasting good.'
PREPARED BT
Dr. J. C. Jer & Co., Lowell, Mast.
Sold by all Druggists: Trice $1;
Six bottles for -5.
LARGE SKLKCTfON of ALL KIND
of JEWKI.Ur alwayp on hand.
i-if Mv line of Jewelry is unsurptss l
O.me and see for yourvlf before pur (us
ing els wnere.
Z-ST" ALI WORK GUARANTEED f-J
CARL RTVINIUS.
Ebensburg, Nov. 11, ins tf.
. j. ..... ,
USEE I
Iia
m -f . aru i iiuutwiiu inai
X-AJL IVAiI.of whom k fu.il trf a-
Oient h lid Rem r-ftirl to b '-u.it h of
M??,FS-. SEMINAL PASTILLES:
j la Vouriff or Mid
rv Mfek nem una I'UfM rt 1 t in
flie Ai?ed Alfn. l tci Tor r trfct nm 1 n nuiii
jnvi BDrl brokn H awrj mm tothe fj!l njoymntof
erfmrtt nd fall Man! Pt.renrth n4 Virouf Ii-nith.
To tho4 who Puffer from tt9 murif obtcarti d im
bronjtbt boat by Inditcrttion, li!ufi,(r Hmin
Work, or too f IndaUrtif"s. w ttmU thnt yoa ivnd oa
yrmr name withfrtiiteTrtent of ynnr trrmMn, ni tnirfl
TULA L I'ACRAOE FI.I- R.wih Illut'd J'irxrbM Ac
M. inn"... ..-.. .
UIBRlMUIiaflnull m.Jl vn ul'... ' "i
TREATMEWT. Ct X:z: liTrtn. K rl
HARRIS REMEDY CO., kVrTr,
RUPTOREO PERSONS can hav FREI Trial of our Appliance". Asii forTe
STEUBENVILLE.". FEMALE.'. SEMINARY.
rtpr-ns rpt. istn. Locution healthrtir. rr-ma tor vn-mir's r."f r. i v
MKr:;Fcultram;l:wrrlcthrAnetiinall't-parn:ien'." M -l.-rr. l.a:
ft '.O ill psT ) 1 x i'"i:is rf a ct ufnt ir t 1 : nr r ':r. F'- ' j'
r. .st. Std t-'.i( J. W. VVK.lfTM t. n. !.. IT! nclun.1.
fSt ub d Hlo, tltn.
M. E. KIT TE LI
Altoriif v-ji i . i
1. 1 . ! v - i
Ar-r rs f.s
: w
r. . -V i
.la i
-FOU-
U". DK
r Nptf' ur
D-x.i.i r. i"!
ATH'lAi
ill j THE
C&I.1BRI& FB,Ut!,
M V Ki'-
IT'
i.Nrv
! 1C .
Win -r ::t r-d f lit tnof t porfrrt Vorrr-rewl
IVri 1 1 1 ISri'llii rtltt-:-. cnl ror
riri"u!.i".
B. FA''JHin, Tork, Pa.
THIS PAPER
LdTrrtlclna
E'tfS HEW YORK.
KKAI'
at: i o.
MAI : TVTION
aril r. i - - . . - -KOWM.1.A
-H
lilnrtllllif Bureau ! HIITK
S-TRIKTi, WHF.
TfcBrlHIQ "'
uij be lumle
o
L
' J
1.50 PER YEAR 1,50
WITHIN THE COI'N'TY.
II."
-i i'rii-e .
B. )
rA a r n t r. r ! u r . r r ' I
HOME AND CITY
rur: ri i
i;yxcii.
i
A
o
toncrress in the strongest Democratic j annually are equal to the combined an- I country wedding in Illinois, on Wednesday
ilistiict in the United States as the reg
ular Republican nominee. For the past
euht years re has trained with the
county Democracy. He has been the
life of many a city delegation to State
conventions. I remember seeing him
once heading a brigade of men arrayed
ir. night-shirts. They marched through
the corridors of a Syracuse hotel two
hours after midnight, beating tin pans
and tooting'horns. They tramped round
the Tammany cohorts like .Joshua's ar
my around the walls of Jericho, and
with very nearly as much success. Well,
this same brave and genial Tom B inrke,
in this great city of New York, where
an Irishman in a fat office is a rule and
not an exception, is earning a bare liv
ing as a clerk in the Department of
l'uhlic Works. Amos L. Cummings in
Chicago Times.
nual earnings of from 1000 to 1500 other
employes who are under them, and 50
per cent, of whom rank the higher-paid
men in general character and ability.
This disproportion of salaes in our im
mense corporations is the bane of our
industries, and the real source from
which all our troubles ramify in modified
forms. Whin we find men in these
night of last week it '.9 supposed frem eat
ing chicken, which had beeu cooked in a
copper kettle. The brtde and croona. Miss
Alice Glasgow and Thomas Jacobs, were
amone the victims. AH the available phy
eicians have been kept hard at work attend
ing the afflicted persons. Tiie loctors
believe that all will recover. It is thought
HI
f1
O
ESS
5
CD
IrJ
IV-
i i
o
o
o
SB
8
Mint whnn aKInlrnna rck r a an 1 f t In (Ha
positions at salaries of J3000. ?10,000 or ! ' , -
515,(HiO coolly asserting that the great kettel the salt caused the metal to corrode
mass of employes under them ought to and mix wlth the chickens.
j Twenty-two years ago Fatrick Driscoll,
j just arrived from Ireland, found a pocket
j book containing over f 150 in Salem, N. J.
I lie told his employer, who advised him to
We understand that William II. Hose,
j F.s'i. , and Charles J. Mayer, both of
' Johnstown, and M. D. Kitfell, F-sq., of
i r.tierihhuTg, have hern selected as the
; Dt inuciatic cmiferrbcs fn-m this county,
to in. ft toe cohferreos from Blair, Bed
i'urd and r-i -set counties, fr the
purpose of placing in nomination a i"an
1 di-la'e fnr 'onsrre.
The most elalxirate precautions have
leen taken to protect the czir during
his journey to the scene of the autumn
maneuvers of the Russian army. He
travels in a train cf three sections taking
care that all the window blinds of every
carriage in each section is closed, when
ever a station is passed, so that no one
not connected with his party can tell
which section or car he occupies. Troops
will line the entire route with loaded
riiles as the train passes, and 50,000 of
them have been detailed especially for
this duty. Yet this man wields greater
power than any other living human be
ii g. Responsible to do one, dependent
on no popular assembly, his word is law,
and its tremendous power is further
auiruented by the religious fanaticism
and awe that is his due as the h"a I of
t!.e (irk church.
be content with wages enough to clothe
and board them, we may expect trouble,
discontent and even violence. It is al
most time that the stock and bondhold
ers of nn r (Y.rnnrat inn flhmiM apt ftnmA
radical reforms on foot. Ctu. Enquirer. ! k(,eP u nnti: the owner appeared. The
I other day Charles W. Dunti happened to
" j speak in the presence of Mr. Driscoll, now
Not even the earthquake has been j a prosperous merchant, f.bout ni3 brother,
able to dislodge the Republican postma9-i Samuel Dunn, now dead, losing a pocket
ter at Savannah. He informs his Dem- book ypar9 before. Mr. Driscoll at once
ocratic successor that he proposes to took a hook from his pwket and handed tt
stick because the Presulent "had no au- to M Du who ,ndeDtlfied u as tne one
.iiorwy iu remove iiuu
N'ovemer -nd wil
be a Black day
or
' M. II. Curtis was drivine on Xanta-
I hala mountain, X. C, last Sunday with
I his family, when they were startled by a
panther, which followed them a consid-
: erable distance, then skulked away,
i
C'aa't Make Anything: I.I be It.
I have been practicing medicine for twen-
tv years, and have never been able to put up
a vegetable compound that would, like Sim
j raons' Liver Regulator, promptly and effect -j
ively move the liver to action, and at the
same time aid (instead of weakening) the
digestive and assimilative powers of the
i system.
! No other remedy within my knowledge
can fill its place.
L, M. jJiMON, M. D., Waailatoj, Ark.
his brother had
j count the money.
losi. lie was aked to
There was just $151.78.
o
o
o
OUTSIDE THE COUNTY, $170
K. L. JOHNS.OV M. J. U'CK, A. W. HifK.
JoliDston, Buck ("o..
1 1 .V TV Iv I C I ,
Money Received on Depsit,
I A T1RI.F. IKM AM.
INTEREST ALLOWED ON TIME HEPrtSITS
COLLECTIONS MADE
AT AC. ACVKPIBI.B rol?IT?.
DRAWS on the rri'tcljtal Cities
Ilnnthl and Sol d t a
General Banins; Eusiness Transacted.
AVCOVXTS SW1C1TF.T.
A. W. BUCK, fashir-T.
Kl'cnshuru, April 4. lS4.-tl.
17-S I.
Pollclc- wr'urn ! ?lmrt n.iln- In tne
OLD RELIABLE "ETNA"
And oltirr I'lrit flaw I iimimn ien.
T. W. DICK,
r ir rr t on tii f.
OFjO HAHTFOUn
WB INSURANCE COST.
f'OMMENCKH Ht'SINKSS
EVensi'uric. .1 uty vi. i85i.
a I a t a
ill'
;ii
tl'l'w'lttH
Mil
trni
LOVXGKS. HHIWHAlb,
TABLES, CHAIRS,
ki.kmai;!
r.i'tw e. n 1 ; ii .m.i i;
.viroo .v
PA.
R I'
II fT'V W '
I.:i. A, Tl.
F. bensburg Insurance Aeerry
T. W.I)ICK. j
1
General I n u r a u - ' ' I
EBENSBURC. P
l'ni i'i- v f rt-.i at l..-lt ! ' I
r e ! i a ' r
.ETNA,
Old I la;:i r.i
And oilirr l'irf-4 la .in'iil'
ST. FRANCIS mUl
i.oi:i:iK . pa.
Mr. Dunn tried to get Mr. Dtiscoll to keep
the money, but he refused. lie said it was j
a load off his mind to f?et rid of that $151.78.
A f'aplaln'n Fortnnate ninro Tcrjr,
Capt. Coleman, schx. Weyrnonth, plying
between Atlantic City and N. T., had beeu
troubled with a cough so that he was unable
to sleep, and was induced to try Dr. King's
New Discovery for Consumption. It not
ouly gave him instant relief, but allayed the
extreme soreness in his breast His children
were birollarly affected, and a single dose
had the same happy effect. Dr. King's New
Discovery is now the standard remedy in the
Coleman household and on board the Bchoon
er. Free Trial bottles of this Standard
i RcUJfdy at E. Jame&' Drug Store.
o
o
H
H
h:mimn
" Huaril ." 'i-t
ihc Sh.'la-ti-
l-r
Mir.-h -J
Agents Vanled Everywhere.
elegant Fomnans!
EnlarjM &nr liUhM) 1n oil rolorn, fmn; ? ku d rf
' 1 ,'i'1u-t. Vrt x pr1nr- t f -1 inn r
rtfcT ItlTM th MfDl w.-w i-r .fit snri r r '
aud fa' I rrU n 1 a r. 8 t fl I trrf.
H. V. HKLLI.T, ?ll Kaivm t..
rf"fi ;YSxi
i-i i i
m
ism?
fa t' 1 f tfi:i r- r.li m
C T r
a-.tfA-- llltratl t'i-i '
Mr, bint- and hlp 1 .
I h uSM, prrtl;l r-
l4lte fmmry -ork.
na" 'r ''I'nrM ta .i i tn
w r ibJ fr., f1t la.
n4 tsttvtifrv Marker.
rnrtH.irj ot ft Li1vT Kli
Imii'.s: r .urt- re a an'. trl
a toll' n lc J'ili lab and ?m4.
Tt'i la aa '!. m-iaa-iiri
an martt :Idi aa-1 I'llUii'T b-atrall aa4 in':ibf.
r hara aarTt at.4 bosato:a lia t a Ha a-1 to
t ah "ad ana aaVor aa4 aa a fMi(i l 'rr. 1 3-r Yw vt ,
tar t fa; farf-atl rlaaj. a ark a ad laaMr..- . -v rt
ah or tail ant. Fita wat laiila! a rrle ; r K
A4.1rB at -a tea liij Ir lr-.p or I' m! i1 --
'T r"r t' i r-m.uia r"v ml. THE r AMI LY
11 I OR, rallaarlnMa. l-r.aa.
rkv Id a trnn neatVai
fOADf-
a. ki and Toun mar if k
d arn(aatir l''-Tfi n t"
rti" th flrwi afa, rat
rick, anrra mf tttS. rvrvr
of ttrlttk Irtar. ili-atrayar mt
m- yi ll? iJafJagra -jirin tb-. aid.,
ruit ui.ti-iu.iuti rtfvmatJon. mi ir;a mmum
1 ta af tr!fkttc. . m."i . a . -.-I'-le a-i--
l-ara-Li4 Ti. ...- , r. Trm.-v k. tllar4
aa 6brt of tk N. T . 4 . T. I". 1-. it i- a r- . ,r j--to1a.
bat a rniiL. wa-k af art. P"t.'. 1 n al i .-lora -a
t iwhM win auv anJ 'nruraf ih a. itit.c - i :t. I!fi i
It anil it aall 'if ftalf viri!r mi ui V. f rr
ample mit an4 r-' ti'. , R K l
iX
r I 1 naiom t.. rh"i.da, a if.
(- lilt fr;
consunPTiorj
1 aava a (kmHUt rmJy lor taa bMv Ataaaaa: lis aaa
baaaa4 of maaa af to amrat klaa a 4 ol oaT ataaatac
aaa laaaa taraa. Iaad. ao atronf la my lalta la m A. yt
ckal I wlU Mai TWO BOTTLE VKKK, toffaibr wUfc a T&Lr
CBU TtliTUI mm lata ai to any aaSarar aMaa m.
araaa a4 r. O. araaa. &. T. a. ULajW H, l4 Taart IK., m. V.
- -
Ak j -n r Or.-fr f r i
S..rtli Fi !
tii.
lit AIM ST nnl HI S r If-
HCLMAN'S NEW FARAUEL
ivfr 2 in
t'iriMilars trer A.J. tiltni
Tall
AM ri-lj !" ' -1 '
homes. f.l t.i t .'.ii '
wrrk ptu I-t nmil : ii" 'M' v '
80.nl ilrinan-i 'i'T fill w.-r k '
viornipni. v. !--. . m'"
1--i (OMfOT.Sff fnr
natl. (Ihlo
Kl"
L
AII1
Itrir r
'-all f ("
h.'ti-f- ftT
i ii s : '
I
tt .1 m i
Mi M . l
it w
I.1V r N
1 V f I v II -1 "'' i
W W i I n- n ' .
M M
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Bcyf n i BB ul i.
Kfar S.J : t
-..: r '
I -'. - Is-
- .Vi f.
ry Ci
:-i- mm . j- . m m.mmjnn
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