Clmita freeman. EENSBURC, PA.. FKIDAY, - - OCTOBER 29, If 86. DEMOCRATIC S f ATE TICKET. tor. i.'.ivEr.Nnn. c'mi:nci:y f. blai'k. Foil LIKITKNW" T-OOY EUNOII, It. l'.RUCi: IUCKKTTS, of I,uzerne. yon ?r. r.FTAKY istf.unal affair, J.IMTSON AFIlICA.of Hunting-Jon. FOIt AUDITOi: OKNKUAL, WILLI AM. T. r.IIKNXEN", AUheny. TOR ( OV; RK?.M A X-AT-LA HOT., MAXWrM STj-.VI:.ON, riiiUd'a. nKMoi R atic rorsrr tic ket. foii congress: IIUMI'IIKEY I). TATF, of Bedford. FOR ASsRMIlLY. l)ANH:LMLl.AU(;iILIN",.TohnstowD. JOHNS. HIIKY, Etiensburg. FOR PROTIIONOT ARY: H. A. SHOEMAKER. Eofusbur. FDR KFfJISTER AND RECORDER: CE LEST INK J. BLAIH, Ebensburg. FOR IHSTI'JCT ATTORNEY': II. (J. ROE, Johnstown. for. roon iiorfE director: JACOB SIIAFEK, Allegheny Twp. L 1 The I'araile of thn Knisrhtsof Ivibor in riiilaH-!p'iia on last SiturJay night in honor of the return of the delegates t the Richmond Convention, was the greatest demonstration of the kind ever seen ic th;it city. Thirty thousand men were in lir.e, arid the pageant was nearly five mites long. Along the route of the parade there were fully -2j0,j00 spectator?. The Republican Congressional con ferrees from this district, after having spent six w eeks in -balloting for a cav.di date, succeeded on Saturday last in breaking the deadlock by nominating Edward Scull, of Somerset. This? result wis brought aou: by General Campbell, the candidate from this county, appear ing before the conference and in a brief speech withdrawing hi? nam. On the fourth bill.it after Campbell s'er-t-d down and out. Scull received the nine votes of t r,f Bl;:ir, Cambria and Somerset conferrees, the B dfor.i ram adhering to the last to their candidate. Lons 'tuck er. Ttie nominee. Mi. S:-ull. is the editor of th-. S un--rs-rt HcrcC-l. pud has filled that position for along time. It i.1 alleged that lie is not a strong man wi'h his party in his own county, but whether he is or not can only be demon strated when the dreaded secrets of the ballot boxes are revealed on rext Tues day night. Edward IVvll, the Republican can didate for Congress in this district, was Collector of Internal Revenue in Som erset county for twenty years prior to his removal by President Cleveland. This long pull at the public teat ought to have satisfied his chronic thirst for office, buf it didn't, and he now thinks he is ent;tled to a seat in Congress. He is said to have amassed a handsome for tune through his long lease of office. The political muddle in the Westmore land district, to which reference is made In another article, has been rendered sfi'.l more complicated by the Democratic conf em who originally nominated lV.fi . holding a me ting ct Fiftsburg on Tuesday Inst, anil puffing in nomir'sttion Dr. II. L. IonneI!y, o L.frobe, jr. op position t llaff-rty, ra iki: :g t wo D cratic and one U-pu'iIiea-i candid. .ts in the field. Arter us the delun. j We stated last w?ek in regard to the ; j dispute in the Westmoreland, Fayette t and Greene Congressional district, be- I j tween Gilbert, T. Rafferty and ex Lieu i tenant Governor John Latta. both cla'm j ing to be the regular Democratic ! candidate, tha; Mr. Rafferty had ad i dressed a letter to Mr. Latta agreeing J to submit the trouble to the decision of 1 j the Executive State Committee. Mr. ; Latta promptly accepted the proposition and in pursuance of the submission five ; of 'he committee rnet at fin1 lisbnrg on Monday last. The Committee, in the lancuiige of an award of arbitrators, having heard t lie parties, their proofs . and allegations, decide j that Mr. Raffer ; ty had been regularly norainatfd, Mr. Latta immediately published a letter addressed t the Democratic vo'ers of ( the district withdrawing from the con test and reqtiesiing them to give Mr. Rafferty their support. If there is any virtue in arbitrating a question of this kind the decision of the Committee ought to have disposed of it finally, and it did jo, so far at leasta3 Mr. Latta is concerned. Rut the leading friends of that gentleman in Greensburg refused to abide by the decision and held an indignation meeting after the mem bers of the Executive Committee had left on the cars, at which they protested against the action of the Committee and refused to recognize Rafferty as the nominee. Several prominent Democrats from Greene and Fayette counties, who attended the meeting, endorsed its pro ceedings. We assume that all hope of electing a Democrat from that district will now have to be abandoned. Passion : and prejudice have controlled the Dem ocratic councils in the district from the beginning of the trouble and the result will be ignominious defeat. Chaiincey Black on Irish Home Kule. ! The following letter of Lieutenant Governor U. .'k was read at the great meeting of sympat hizt-rs with the de mand of th" Iiish people for home ruie, heid in Music Hail, Pittsburg, on May 4, lSWtj. Its read'ng created the ijreatest enthusiasm smong the thousands of people there assembled. Mr. B'nck wrote : "It ought to oe a pleasure to any gen uine American to meet those sons of Ireland who. whilescrving thair adopted country with devoud patriotism and gallantry, rt member ever the bittei sor rows of the old land and maintain tin) s'lu'jsr'e for her liberation here, as they migV., have done at home. It is a splendid tribute to the nat.de. cha-acter of thtse scattered children of the Greer Isle, the woild over, as well as to the holiness of their cause. deacon. -ded from one gt-nerat i j:, to another, that at last all c:viiiz.'d mtukind stand with them and raise a common voice against ; the hideous wrong which incenses all men because if is wrong. 1 Il-re in the most blessed of all coun ; tries there is, IK us thank God, no long 1 er a difierence of opinion. Men of all parties and of all shades of religious be ' lief crowd together to offer their sympa ' thies and their means to strengthen the steady parliamentary phalanx, under Parnell, by whose invincible constancy it now appears the liberty of Ireland is at length to be extorted from the better nature, of England. It would he H range indeed if any man born under our institutions could at this supremo moment deny his sympathy to ' Ireland. We, at least, whatever mav be thought elsewhere, hold that the right of home rule and honw trial, of home law and home magistracy, is born with and in a nun as much as 'he right to drink fiom the home fountain or breathe the home air. Let Ireland remember the bloodshed and the heroic effort spent, without avail in her long and cruel struggle for domes tic rights, and let hr now, without looking too narrowly into the details of the measure, expect from the awakened conscience of Great Britain and from the hands of her enlightened minister, any concession which the wise and wary Parnell shall be willing to take, the dis ruption of a corrupt Union, an Irish Parliament in Dublin. An ingpnious, br ve and steadfast leople, with these means in their hands, w ilt ultimately attain all that may be be sirable. I remair with great resppct. Your obedient servant, C. F. Br.ACK." The President at Richmond. Mr. Cleveland, accompanied by sever al r-v loners of his Cabinet, vi3ited the Agricultural Fair at Richmond on yes terday week. Governor Lee delivered the address of welcome and after paying a glowing tribute to the mineral resour ces of Virginia and the influence they wtre bound to ex? rt on the commercial advance ;)( the Commonwealth, said : 'I speak of all that, sir, because, while occupying ti e position you do of knowing no North, no South, no East or no West, ;t will give you pleasure to know that the South wi.l contribute her SEWS AID OTHER SOTlMiS. The new United States silver certificates bear the head of Martha Waibington. instead of itie conventional Fattier of tiis Conn Try. The office of the American Ex pre .-a Co-, at Vermontville, Mich., was entered by three unknown men, who hound and gagged Ageut Rail, and rifled the safe of f ,000. Amomr the passengers of the steamer Schoiten, at New York from Rotterdam, on Monday were fifty gypsies. They were i'i a very filthy condition, and were ordered back immediately. Miss Susannah Whitney, a New York school teacher, has jn-t resigned after fifty I proportionate share to the grandeur and y ; : - fiye of wMch ctrry of the Ameri. an Republic. The ' l.,.,L, , ,.hM:. 1',- .Wits In t:V Wei- wrir Vr , ui . t v.. .. .. Our Coneresslonal Candidate. The population of the United States is now computed at s;xty millions, which is an increase of ten millions since the census of 15). When we consider the rapid growth of the country in the pas', and judge from the judications of the present, it is r. t pn phe5 isg wildly when the prediction is made that w.'i-'n the next census is ti-ken in lS'.tO, the Great Republic of the West will contain a population of over seventy -five mi'.ions. In addition to the S'itt-s of Alabama, Arkansas, Gemgia, Maine. Oregon and Vermont, which have already chosen Governors during the present year, the following States will ch- os" h ir Exec utive heads on next Tuesda . : California, Colorado, Connecticu', Delaware, Kan sas, Massachusetts, Michigan. Minneso ta, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, South Caro lina, Tennessee, Texas and Wisconsin, in all seventeen Slates. The President and nearly all the mtmlf is ot his Cabinet left Washington on Wednesday afternoon for New York, to attend the ceremonies at the unveil ing of Bartholdi's statue of '-Liberty Enlightening the World," which would take place yesterday on an island in the harbor of that city, Quite a large num ber of distinguished Frenchmen arrived at New York on Monday to be present at the interesting ceremonies. Among them was M. P.artholdi himself, who designed the statue, and M. de Lesseps, the celebrated French engineer, who constructed the canal across the Isthmus of Suez, aud Is now engaged in excava ting a similar work across the Isthmus of Panama. It is utterly idle and a pure waste of t:me to trouble tir r-adrs with our views in rerard to the result of th-State flection on Tnes-lay n xt. Col. M" 'lure, of the Philadelphia 7i'!ks, who i? ?s well equipped a politician as thrr? is in the State, has summed up the situation in a w;y that so fully coincides with what has always been our own notion on the subject, that we reproduce if . TI-ays: "Th-i Prohibition vote 5 variously estimated at from 25 000 to P0.0OO, wi'h little da' a to verify efher ; and there remains the unknown and unknowable poli'it;al quantity classed as 'he Labor vote, I' muld knock out eith'f parfy or at y part of both tickets, the firt round, if it chose to do ar but it has not stood up to be counted by the politi cians. With snob large and undt finable fa"fors in the contest . noise can estfmu'e results with an approach to accuracy. "The isroie between General Beavet and Lieutenant Governor Black :s row reasonably certain to be decided by the Labor vote. If it shall ake no part in the s' rngg'e in in the spcnl interes of organized labor. General Beaver will be elected, and with him a Republican : Legislature that will elect State Treas i urer (uay to Cue L'nited States Sena'e, If it shall carry ifs battle to the polls ; and vote in even an approach to unity on the distinctive issue it declares to lie paramount, Black will be elee'ed. and ' with him a Legislature in which the Labor element will hold th balance of power. Organized Labor has the decis ion of the issue in its own hands ; it, can elect or defeat whom it will, and it will . assert itself in the present contest, or it ; will never greatly assert itself hereafter, in either popular elections or in molding the kgis'ation of the State." Humphrey D. Tate is a born leader. His influence has always been on the side of integrity and honor. While a Democrat from conviction and principle, he is also such from inheritance. His father, the 'ate Samuel II. Tate, Esq., was for many years the most popular exponent of those principles in Bedford, his nat ive county. His grandfather, the late venerable Samuei Tate, was a pow er in the party in the earlier days of the republic and was an honored personal friend of president Jackson White ;v lawyer, s his father was, well edec.ai'd ;ird :.c.!ot;jplished. Mr. Tate liiis e'ii', oaib-d from the general prac tice of ;.:s profession in positions of public frust. Before his i wenty-liPh jear he w.ts elected Dis rict Attorney and before ti e expiiathiii ot his term in lb it fllc-e he was nominated and e eeied Pro: hor.otary .-.nd Cieik ot ttie Courls, and lb led the pos;'io:s ?o acceptably he was renominated and re -elect fal by n increas d vo"e, and then he was by ao elania' ion nonvnated aud el.-ct d for ; he thii 1 term, ty a majority unpreced-r,! d in the h.'oiy of ttie pir'y in B-df'ord r-oun'y. lie is now (i'brg 'he Chief Clerkship in lh eflice of Secretary of t he Commonwealth, Jo whh he was called from 'he p.itinn in I5edfod coa-ry in to which his fallow ci' izns had, wi h such um-xc-ptioi-,i! unanimity piaerd l.iin. When a candid i'e for Pror bono' ,iry for th" third term, his v -te whs im-re tli a; 1 a thon-t.d in excess of tha' of bis .syoc'ate candidates, ar d the usual uia j irity ot Mie party. As a candidate f.r Corgr-? I: s vot i j? expected to be -veii larger. The bifer wrangle between the Re pnb'tcan t: iid'da'es during the hist six we.ks his disgusted Republican voters, and Scull's nomination, like a wet blan ket, smothers the amni'ions rf at least two of the Republican Congressional aspirens. Under the rircnrnsance3 Mr. Tate's e'ection seems reasonably certain. .Vtorma Thnf,. o'd mother of comes within her boroevs a t resident or the United S'.ates, ari? I know that I voice the. sentiments of this vast multi tude when I tender to you and the dis tinauished citizens and statesmen who accompany you, a sincere, hearty and cordial welcome to Virginia. Virginians not onlv feel the most profound venera tion for the high office whose duties you so ably discharge, but they respect the man who fills it. We share, sir, the feeling so prevalent elsewhere, that un der your administration the destiny of the country has been committed to wise, conservative and safe hands, and that constitut'ona! liberty is secure. Aye, that constitutional liberty which has been compared to a tall tree which covers with Hs shade a large surface, whose roots shoot wide and deep through the soil, and entwine themselves around the eternal rocks so that to pull it down the earth itself must be uptom." Deafening applause greeted the Presi dent when he rose to reply In a clear voice, loud enough to be heard upon the borders of the great multitude, he spoke as tollows : "Fellow citizens of Vireinia, whi'e I thank you most sincerely for your kind receptior and recognize in its heartiness the hospitality tor which the people of Virginia have always been dis inguish td. I am fully aware that your demon stration of welcome is Tendered, not to an individual, but to an incumbent of an office which crowns the government of the United States. The Slate of Virginia, the mother 01 Presidents, sev en of whose sons have filled that high office, to day greets a Piesinent who for the first time meets Virginians upon Virginia soil. "I congratulate myself that my first introduction to the people of Virginia occurs nt a time when they are -urround ed by the exhibits of the productiveness i aud prosperity of their State. Whatever there may be of honor in her history. 1 and however much of pride there may be in her traditions, hei true great ne-s is here exemplified. In our sisterhood of States the leading and most commanding ptace must be gained and kept by that Commonwealth which, by the labor and intelligence of her citizens, can produce the most of those ttiines which meet the ' necessities and desires of mankind. But the full advantage of that which may be yielded to a State by the toil and inge nuity of her people is not measured alone by the money value of the produc tions. The efforts and the struggles of her farmers and her artisans not only create new values in the fields of agri cu'ture iiiid the arts anil manufactures, but they at the came time produce I nnrgeil, self-reliant id independent The Constitutional Convention Com mitteee, composed of twelve gentlemen, Democrats and Republicans, who assist ed in framing the new Constitution of this State, has addressed a printed cir cular to the candidates for the Legisla ture of all parties in every county In the State, requesting from each an answer to the following inquiry: "If elected will you earnestly advocate legislation enforcing Articles XVI and XVII of the New Constitution, with appropriate civil and criminal remedies?" A Dem ocratic candidate can, of coorse, give but one answer to this question, aud that in the affirmative, because it is the most vital plank in the Democratic platform. The Committee states its intention to publish the replies to this :i quiry lefore the election. In view of the fact that a-, the last Republican Sta'e Convent ion Mr. Ilulings of Venango county, a i'.. l egate to it, and who is a member of the present Legislature, off red the follow ing resolution : "Zva,!v., that the Repub lican rally pledges itself to enforce Articles XVI and XVII ot the Consti tution, relating to priva'e Corporations, railroads, telegraphs and canals, with appropriate legislation," and that the Convention rejected it by a vote, of ayes 05, nays. 79, it will be in It resting to read the replies of Joseph Masters and E. James, the Republican candidates 111 this county. If they answer in the af firmative they repudiate the action of their own Slate Convention, and if they reply iu the ni-gative they repudiate the State Constitution which they will be rtquiriri to lake a sjltixiti oath to sop port, if Ihey are elect J.d. It is a trying position in whici. to be placed, and they w ill pei haps avoid ttie dilemma by taking to the woods. Wk had only time to announce last week the fact that the Democratic Con gressional conference of this district which met at Somerset on Tuesday, had nominated Humphrey D. Tate, of Bed ford. Taking all the circumstances into considerat ion this is undoubtedly as ' strong, if it is rot the very strongest nomination that could have been made. In the first place Mr. Tate's ample qual ifications for the position are admitted by all who know him. arid in the second place his remarkable strength as a can didate in his own county, in which the majority sometimes falls on the one side and sometimes on the other, was well attested when he was a candidate for Prothonotary of Bedford county in 181 and was elected by the unprecedented majority of 1,434 votes. Mr. Tate is a lawyer by profession and soon after his admission to the bar was elected District Attorney of his native county. At present he fills the position of Chief Clerk in the office of William II. Sfeng er. Secretary of the Commonwealth He stards, therefore, in the presence of the people of this district backed by the most emphat ic endorsement of the voters of his own county that they could give him. to which may be added as convin cing testimony of his fitness for the discharge of important public duties the rf sensible pos'tion he now holds. The district is Republican, but it is not hope-les-.i" so, since John Reiliy, of A'loona, elected in 174. and Gen. CofTrr.pi, ot Somerset, in 17S. Whether Mr. Tate can t e elected or not will only be known after the votes ,iro counted on rext Tutsday. Let the result be what it may, howaver. tl.-ie is s metbing to stimulate ev ry Democrat in the reflec tion that be is a candidate who is emi nently fit to 1-e voted h-r, and that, he well deM-rvta tn enthusiastic and gener ous support. T t the Democracy of Cambria will give him a snid vote does not admit of the shadow of a doubt. Welcomed by the South. President Cleveland, on the occasion of his firsL jaunt into the Sou'h. was received in the warm-st manner all along 'tie route, aod Governor Lee in .is address, no doubt, spoke truthfully when he said that he voiced the seri;i mem of the multitude in bidding 'he President, and his party welcome to Vu g'nia. The fact t hat Mr Cleveland was elected by Democrat; votes may have added to the enthusiasm with which lie was received, and is perfectly nat urai, yet the main consideration in the minds of the peopie was that he was tha Chief Magistrate of this nation, knowing no North, no Sou'h, no East, no West. The pointed reference to this fact made by Governor Lee was very appropriate to the occasion, and his promise that "the South will contribute her proportionatt share to the future grandeur and glory of the American Republic," may be ac cepted as the honest sentiment of the great mass of the Southern people. That the party organs will rake up political material from the President's visit to the whilom capital of the South ern Confederacy, is to be expected, but that any of the silly stories trumped up will have any effect on sober-minded people is improbable. When the Presi dent grace any public occasion north of Mason and Dixon's line by his presence, the Southern people do not complain of his showing favoritism or political pref erence, and in justice to the truth that he is president of the whole people, knowing no North and no South, the partisan press on this side of the line should not draw invidious inferences. rittuburg Dispatch. men Hiitl cultivate that nr duc which more t! an all others eniiobVs h State a pi'riotic, earnest, American citizenship. This will tl uir sh in every part of ttie American domain ; neither drought nor rain can injure it, for it takes root in true heaits enriched by love of country. There are no new varieties in this pro duct i n. It must be the same wherev -r aeen, ai'd its quaii'y is neither sound nor genuine unless it glows to d-ek ami beautify an entire and united nation, nor unless ir supports and sustains the its' it ut ions a 'id : he government founded to proer-t American I hetty nnd happi ness. The present administration of the government is pledged to reTurn tor stuili husbandry not oe.'y promises, toi1 actual tenders of fairness and justice wi'h qoal projection and 11 full partici pa'iop in rational achievements. If in ttie p 1st we have been estranged, and tie- cultivation of American ci iz-nslup has been interrupted, y cm enthusias' ic welcome to-day demons-ra'es that there is an end to such est rai. cement , and that the t ime o'' suspicion ,i:.d feai is succeed ed by an era of fai'h and confidence. In such a kii'd'y a'mophere and beneath SlW) cheering skies I areet the people of Virginia as co-laborers in the field where gro'.-s the h.ve of our united coun'ry. Gc.,1 rrrant 'ha, in dm years to come Virginia ' he O d Dominion the moth er of Presidents, she who looked on the na'ion at its birth, may no' only incease her trophies of growoti in agriculture arel rnauufac' ures, t ut that she may tie among the fir-it of a. II the S'ates in the cultivation of true American ci' izen-sh.p." Black and lilalne. From Maine to Missouri there is a re markable concurrence of opinion in op position to the methods of the coal com bination and the Trunk-Line Pool. Extractfa from articles on thi3subj-cr. in leading papers are published in another colnmn this morning. The only defen ders of these combinations are found in Pennsylvania, where corporate oppres sion has been the most severly felt. The explanation may be that, in Pennsylvania the railroad companies control many of the newspapers. Mr. Blaine has nearly finished the j iurney which he undertook in tulthment of a pious reso:ution to revisit his birth place tielore the faded leaves ha.1 ad fallen Ir .m the trees. The political ad which he has given to his friends h ng th way has been, we take it, merely incidental. Summed up in brief. Mr. Blaine's counsel to the voters of Pennsylvania is that the tariff, the amelioration of the condition of the Southern blacks, and all the other great nation! questions are involved in the candidacy of General Reaver. Mr. Blaine's speeches, with trifling alterations, would serve qually well in Minnesota. Mr. Black is also makintr a sort of ' ttiumphal progress through Pennsylva nia, and he is received everywhere with unbounded enthusiasm. He is speaking too, but he is speaking right to the point. The issues w hich he presents to the voters are those immediately con cerning the honest administra' ion of the business of the State, the strict enforce ment of the constitutional safeguards against oppression and discrimination by monopolies, and the amelioration of the condition, not of the negroes of the South, but of the workingmen of the State of Pennsylvania. ! Although the two distinguished gen i tlemen have not, met, there has been in ! a certain sense a joint discussion I between thetn as to what questions are . involved in the pending election. It seems to us that Mr. Black has clearly got I he tw-tter of Mr. Blaine in the nrenment. But could the Beaver managers have paid a mere sitrrpticant tribute to the vigor with which Mr. Bh-ck is prosecut ing his campaign than bv sending all the way to the Kennebec for the fore most of living R publicans to come and try to beat him. A". V. Stm. ilALi " If people caul' 1 only know what a spk'telid Medicine Simmons Liver Ileirnialor is there wouM oe manv a r-liy- pat tent, and e .... lor i'k-r i'. inial al infection. Yi-ar.-i l'en a perfect physical wreck from combination of com plaints, all the outgrowth of malaria in my f-y.-lem, ati'l even un-ler (he fkii'ful har. l of Dr. J. I". Jones, 0f this city, I hal de-paired of ever 1 H-incr a w.'il woman r-h sictan without , many an intoi . bill saved. I co m no; lib I had for mr.! and thirty-five in a single institution. Rain fell for several minutes from a clear sky, nt Rondoiit, N. T.. on Friday afternoon- A dispatch reports that many people witnessed the njiiisual recurrence, anft the sun Fhone brightly during the shower. The Secretary of War has directed Gen Sheridan to send Geronlmo and fourteen of : his band to Fort Tiekens. Florida, to be kept . until farther orders. The other Apaches : captured at the same tim are to be taken j to Fort Marion, Florida. The people of Melbourne. Australia, are 1 pning to erect a statue in memory of O'Con- j nell, the ereat Irish agitator. It will be like 1 the. otie In O'Connell street. Dublin, aud ! Mr. Brock, an Irishman living in London, i who was the sculptor then, has also been eD- : gged for the work on the Melbourne rnnnu- menf I At Boston on Wednesday mornine of i last week James A. L Whitteer, the lawyer j who, as a frnstee of the estate of Miss j rTarriet. D. Reirl. is chnrced with emherz- 1 I inj $100 000 worth of the tatter's property 1 p'etirterl cuilty to the extent of ?20.fl(O. He ; was sentenced to 4 years and three months . impa'snnment. i A. K. famine, the Texas editor who ; was re;enliy imprisor.ect in Mexico for an : ahevPfl, libel, has It is understood, fi'ed. at the S'ate Department a hill for fiftv thou sand dollars damages against the 'M -xican government, together with a, statement, of bis s'de of the case. No official information on the subject is yet obtained. Winnie Johnson, who is on exhibition , in Cincinnati, is probahlvthe tareest woman in th world. She l five feet eieht. and a hslf inches in hcicht. measnrei three feet a-onnrt the npper arm. four feet five Inches around the thieh, eicbt. feet nine inches aronnd the bvtt, and is taid to weigh 7.13 ponnds. Winnie is a black woman. Tlon. Joseph R. Clark one of the most prominent citizens of Manchester, N. n. . tins committer! suicide through political disap pointment, fie was f!2 years of aee, and was tne late Republican candidate for the nomination in the First New Hampshire Coneressional Convention, hut was defeated. He was found hangina dead in the barn. Prince Napoleon and party, of France, arrived in the city of Chicago, on Tuesday of Tuesday of last week, from San Francisco. The party went to the Orand Pacific notel. The Prince's traveling companion and phy sician is Dr. M. Mlchets He wilt remain there a few rtays and then trave1 eastward, stopping nt Niagara, en route to New Yo'k. Yhei. CeorgeH. Potts, of Philadelphia, wa in California eme venrs ago a friend offered him f.'.OoO worth of stock in an Alaska cold mine Potts rrfnsed to buy, hecnuse he knew nothing about the mine, a'tfnugh the friend said It was a good one. A few days ago the fiiend wrote that the ?.") 000 investment was paving f.1,000 cash each month' The Innd stii' of 'iorge A. Fletcher and th children of Chirtes W. Mitchell agoie.st the Philadelphia. Ncrrisfown and PI ien'xvi!'e Railroad Cemnany. which f. rnis part of the Schuvlkill division of the Pennsylvania railroad t. re iver dsmazes to a trict of l3r,d owned bv Hip plaintiffs ended on Fridiy hist by the jny rendering a v"r';c ;:i fa.or of the plaintiffs, for ft.. i-J2. Some time ago-n immigrant, suppose to be without means, was I nner", in Nev York at the public expense. Suhsrqnentlv the relative? abroad of 'he deceased wrote to Corporation Coun--l T.icnmbo sta'ing ttat the deca-ied man had a large amount of money. Then the corpse was exhumed and a belt con'a'ning ?" 0'0 was found beneath the underclothing. This was after the body had been buried five months. Thp family of (Jen. II. F. T.ntler are greatly exercised over the disappearance of the General's brother-in-'a w. Col. .7. M. (r. Parker, a prominent resident of Lowell, Muss- Coun'ed with the disappearance Is tha Announcement that, the unfortunate man Is insane. It is feared that he has taken his life, as he has often threatet.ed o do. ITe is worth f .TOO 000, and has a large family. ITe wa Celiect'-r of the Port of New Orleans after Gen Buttei captured that city. Senator Ttutler. of Suth Carolina, after a sojourn of two months on the continent, passed severa' honr in Washington en route for home. In rplv to the qnrv of a repre sentative of the prss. the Senator said: ' Yes preparations for war spi-m to be goine on everywhere. Kvervbody was speaking of war. It was in the i ir, and on the tongue of all c lasses. I don't think there will be a war over the present Eastern troubles in Bulgaria, but that Europe will soon witness a terrible conflict seems to me inevitable. France is the most prosperous country In the world, and it is a mistake to suppose that she will be crushed by Germany." Robert G Ingersoll is sufferir r fn va a throat trouble similar to that which affl'cted General Grant, and it. Is believed o b" in- j curable. An operation was performed in j Philadelphia last Sunday, but It was not ' bucw ssful, and it Is thought he will live only as long as he can fight the disease. Tlis strong phvf'qne is In his favor he is very cheerful and as genial as evr. but his wife says that this is for the sake of his family and that at heart he renlixes the fatality of . the disease. 1 j The thirty foot python which recently j got away in the Citv flail Park. New York, again escaped on Monday morning wnue being transferred from his box to a cage at a museum in Bostou. Crawling under the stage, the snake broke away several boards, entered the cold air box of the furnace and burst open its sides, the bricks ffying in all directions. Four men seized him, and after a terrible struggle Inst'ng an hourand a half they succeeded in caging him- During the flight the python wound himself around two thick Joists and snapped them as easily as if they were only pipe stems ITe bit one man in thp wrist, and squeezed the breath out of another by jamming him agiinst th. wall. CARL HIV I NI l.rs PRACTICAL AND DKALKll IN artain. Siminoi nlator wa? recommended to . - I tried it ; it helped me, and it i- the only thinf that ever did me any rood. I persevered in it u-e, and i ant now in pophvt hoaith. I know the m'-dicine- cured mo, nnd I fdvoiv.s keep it ad a reliable 'st t'ldby in my family." : !-;"'. Mrs. Iv -v..v i i--w,'. . i.;-., Ala. Watches, Clocks, iKWKl.liY. SDverwartijIorSiili&iiflsiis N! 131 Optical Crzzdz. Sole Agent F'K I MK Celebrated Rockford Columbia and Fredonia Watches In Key and Stem Wind ts 5 Mi I' Vv Nr V LAMGK SRI.fX'TfON of ALL 'KIN I of JEWF.I.KV always on hi'i-1. Ms lir.e of J A-. 'rv Cf.nie and se - for yo'l'-e'f ing el- where. i UP -ilirji '.s -.1. If ir- pn reh.-s - Surface !n$c ? ? , i t all wniis i;ronNTF.v.n j CARL RIVINIUS. Ehnsburg. N w. 11, 1 h.s. -tf. Si: 1 ; ii. 1 V. i 1 n -in ; t. ii ' I S V i; :i . . .Ill I .-, li'.'.V .. -it v.v'i s . -- 1:1. .. !. - r-t s-orof- !i: ( 11. 1 P.t Viint a niin'-r xrn: 'surfnee iieliea;, in-' are tho I'iiii!Ie.-,, i'i: .. . Ilolls, anil ur.iiie-n.r. ! whi' h ie ple ur ' in:i ' ' 1 " cm !v sinniiier. Thv ' l- ' luted (lu: inr the V ! r i ir. il.es i-J nrcs! i.ee f. I:, tl.r rii.-;iv..is t ) e' 1 ir fr. : "While, it renrdn-, it U n i '-: In the b! ex! nn d neiv i- tilA. This ('oiidilinn c::a- s of the digestive and asiiiiilat.r.- or.-.iu. vhh af- t linof enervatien. lan-.-aor. :i:id weariue-s often lightly spoken of as ny snrins; fever." These are id.-nees that Nature Is not able, unaided, to throw oif the corrupt atoms vhi-!i ' aU-n the ilal forces. To retrain health. Naiare uai-t hi; ahl"d bv a thorough blood-inirifln lneil letue; aud nothing tlsc i- bJ tllectise as Ayers Sarsaparilla, which 1s FtifTirlcnfly powerful to exp'l from the system even the taint of ller-l-Itary Scrofula. The medical profession Indorse Aykp.'S pARSAPARrr.I.A. and many attestati ; - of the cures effected by It come from nil j art-) ct thn world. It Is. in the Inntnuc of the lion. Francis Jcwett. eT-S;ate Sen ator of Manchusetts and ex-Ma- -r of lxwell. "the only preparation ttiul il'os real, lasting good.1' rrtr.PARET dt Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by ail Druar.cists: Trice $1; hii bottles for ?o. P. VAcxi-:ih dii 401 WOOD STREET suiTPnr to Ai r: nil . (o. CORNER rOURTH AVENUE PA. PITTSOURCH, TS !er-n'e and He'i:! . 1 BOOTS, SHOES m THE BEST HRAIjES 0? St HI I) LEATHER ;m; IKII S Itl I'liOMI'i I.V .'. ( Ki n Tiff AT? X,I1T 3VJ-vxi-ii: xliix.e Best In Tlio WorlH c-r ... r - --i r sr.: V- r--. " - Km 'a--l 11 ". Y ircp or ma1! pamp ?,2 callbrr,40 eralns r vcif r; :v t hS .a'.uin' fs ti:a;ll---' all n liiP f-Ti v ai SO;;.l. .y 6J.ie Till'- c ti in? T:- N. . -TO,- Hd'ntf i TI f T.T. 77 Yl ;nllcrI".P'"-i'ienndTar- ..urtcr-n riin,T..Lt et j ii-, t.n. fri.iu il:w no. ?. 1 r .- ,"- mhdi Tni rmr n m c rn u n """ii' rim. H.ii'u lu., new lijtven. to- n j Two Hrt-tn tiui'lR :t!i !: i t v.r ra 11 t r',:'.- tw. i -. F ifter tlf:v t (.1 1 a --a-!v b.'i-n fir. ! a-i-i ni c ::i,v ,n:-- t , .' "ts l M' v- eir.r rn-ry ii r. r.y a.1 te i,mv at uc-t r- are a. ways a.-'-.a.-te aii 1 r'-.lui .e. STEUBlNVILLE.-.FEMALE.-.SEiMINARY. ' ' 7 xvr o ry E :: t'; i r ?a. jL.'it ; - an r I ; -. :- r o ' A. O S .- :-i:l-'7il f"r"J---M . 4'j k l r . ? " -It lif-i ,-. - S 1 HUT, VFKI1M' will Lllll'- I .1' 11 1:1 t . lia t? X-' T"I . Vii:t. i . 61 i hJA v F? ill" f 1.TPT7 Ftratn or rold attjwVa that weak back ana orarr protrai yoa. Wi. V ill U i ;-"vi-' rW'eiitb THE OESTTQHIC &Lrnchons the itloKrlpw, Knrlrbcn fhr F.lood. -.tm New Vlor. K T. L. MFi KairtieM. T w. mfi: " jHnwn'fl lr -ri llittrs in tin bwt lrm fwvrlw I tHT knriwti :p tji ynvr' prartic. I ha fnnml p-iily biinr'.rtl in nerm tr phTri"aJ ihan'ft', an4 m J1 itriiitinujc mlmf-nts !iM iv tvT-iaj Oc th wvmm. lf it frwly m my own family." Mb, Vr" F Bkwn F:i7 M-nn St . (Vtnrifx). tmr "I fm cotijpltiy brukm d.iwn rn bMiib mm tnnhlfd w.rh y.:v. in my b-k. Hrwwii' Ir Kltrfi entirely reetntwl tn to boalth. Gwnin bM aloTeTTa.Jo Mnrk and ct.wnJ red Ttnag on wTfpr-r Tnko no other. Ma. only by BlOW. lUEMK ALC KALT1MOKL, MB Actual College, 1"1 I'iriM Vvts: k. I'lTrsiirr-u. 1'a. n'y c.iil" I a the whole wori.l where mca cari larn lckkef'ip.i; ly actual lice - he !.! i..i.-il.I. wv :.. l.-.ru It. the kkoot'ini- h"ini m:i lo eniirplv f- )fn ll.e lui- np? tr:in-:'rTei! 'n '1; s-T-.i-len '.s tnmriMrc", th semens thHy tiu-i It In real tiuainc.3?. I.ern easy. r. i w r.tiau t y our new ev: leiu. W rite foj I'oiii'i'-M .t .i-ira; I ; r--e:. T. 51. Williams. jreii.-ut ri.t pro'es'or of pliln an l i rnal'KDt.il im '-.n. uhiji. .1. M . I'Hii.Lirs. iryir ot the tlieory ar.iS onctiee of accounts no hors, t'c tcrlr aiij I'riu'rieiGrs. lfi3. S m. AjL'UUuuiiij altiu) i! ITS lll'il rr. . DICK". Connrol Soctinnnn K n.ml 5 . p.. I., jonv.nv s. j. kick, . w. i:i ck. Johnston. Huck S: Co., Received on uoiiSxt, The young .ra-hok Pittsbxtrg, J'a. The olilest an.l best appointed Institution for obtainini a Business KJucatlon. Kor t'lrculara Bd.lreps I'. Iitirt: Nona. 24 1SS3. 2 m. A1 nvmiisi KN I.t ali1resstn Joo. I'. Kowrll a '., lflSpruee St.. New York" can learn the t-i'M cost or any proporail nne o. AHVHIi 1I-1N'( in A mt-rioan Newspapers. IOO I'we Iaiiiplil vt, liie. Honey Ptfll'M. dN HM.Ol:. ime!:esilloU!! a im. um COLLECTIONS MADE at ALr. Ac"Kss: bli; re'rs. 1)1! A F"I'S an thr rrinrijtnl 0"r- nnnclit r.ml Sult nnil r General Banius: Business Trasactci!. Accnryrs solicited. A. W. RUCK, raliier. KiienshnrK, April 4. IW.-tf. - - - . . j 1'oltclep wrlt'en at short n ..tlcc In the OLD RELIABLE "ETNA" j Anl olltcr First In- Compaiiten. T. W. DICK, OLD HAHTFOU1) s,iii.!Rn:nii,y. CilMMENCill Kl'SlNKSS KhenshuTif . July l. l?S2. ST. FRANCIS C-OLLEbt LOliKTTO.rA, FK AN CISC AN lisiuTHKKS. ro:ivl ami Tuiti"'t for tho Scholastic Yo;.r, Ebensburg Insurance Agency T. W. DICK. General I n s u r a n o e A ? ? 11 1 EBENSOURC. PA., Tollrics written at J:ost nr ; r e 1 i i ! e Old Ilar.'tsfJ Ann other llrM-t U" 'Vn Blairsil'e, Pa., Ladies' Seminary. II." mviii: i it iitaim sr nmi in t. m!o ns onMin tirst- i'.n, tt orMiwti ln-t-n., r-. l-'uT-ni-l e-' to-td. ri'k ul;i r ti.m ?e (iolden Words. Ttii.s is the languaRt1 of Thoin.ts Jv fffr pon't1 inavicural uisaapre? : Tlioupti the will of the majority is in ' all s to irev;tit. tliar will, to bp iif;ht ful. n:ust rea:''n;iHe ; tlie minority , posse-sj U.eir qiial rights which rqirl ! I iw.s n.r.dt. protect, atnl to violate wtiich : wo'ii'1 be oiiiireflsiorj.' j Tin se ! jroldni worrit. We corumeiitl ' ttiri to cur ruistrnitieil friends, Lri I'ro h i'ii t ion if!s. Tl'-y aie iWtj word.! of a -oniiine teirj ler:iiioe. raari, & utdtesmatj, a schoi;ir auil a pitliiol. Thry wuiiltl look well in a Democratic I state platfoim. r. Y. Sun. An r.nd to Pons Nr raping. Ed war.l Sheperd, of HarrisburR, Hi., says '"Ilavina received so much Ix-nefit frorr. Electric Hitters, I fel it my duty to let Miflerina lumianity brow It. Have had a running sore on mv leg for eieht year ; my doctors told me I would have to have the bone scraped or the leg amputated. I used, instead, three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven boxes, of Buckln"s Arnica Salve, and my leg Is now sound and well," Electric Bitters are now sold at fifty cents a bottle, and Bncklen's Arnica Salye at 25c per box by E. Jnmes. TnE Kiiisr of IlolUnti heats hisp-tlncn in Air.sferJ:.m with base-burDhig coal etoves of American make. President, Cleveland had among his viritors at his pnhlic reception on onday a ladv about sixty years old, dressed in monrninij. Sho-il a mothprlv lock, nnd wore her gold rimmed spectacles resting upon her forehead. As she approached the President she qnUtty slinr 3d into his band a delicate roll of man nscript, saying: "Mr. President, here are a tew lines I have written to you wbicri T want von to read at your leisure. It is a hit of poetry and I dont want yon to attempt to read it until you fire at your leisure." The President took the paper, thankpd her for her kind ness, 8nd promised to do as requested. The old lady gave his hand several vigorous shakes and deputed, apna-cntiv contented with the result of her visit to the White t llouse. Bi'utitul ifr -iiO'ls, ennia etl t.y s m. hevtitu! ii. tion. Ksa !-t r"-it-nt tear, bourd. i a:! -. i n. ! n: t "n : r gSOO PUR Y!- AR. -r n:aj- in Al in f i it s S-rit . s' t . Ur.v. T. K rf-OTi.-e ir, fi-Ilo km:y-.t-i. w. t , , . . i-h-"' !: . Ml' 't.MY Speial n fi t h y e r f applr ;o ! w-f. Thirtv- V- r -!it:ih (ioe. KW iMl. I. 1)., 1'rlneipal. ;- T. K . i'.I KVSiit ' A '..Ml Si Frciacli'a Hotel. CITY II F.I. S'H AHJ, r.'I'.W YOI1K, brw'f ' it? Hal! hi;. I th !'' Oitlre. Thi" 1! ' i on- ot !'. mi.'i -"rofl'te in apt i.l 'M'nlMir : ft r-rti t Y 0.1 no ' not m. ho Sew Yo- k K ami.- o:,'v walk r oo l'. All IT:- ( Hotel in Nc in Ko i!u i nil the I ii x ti r ii.; 1 ' A - ti.t ,1 .-. 1 1 -i 1 1 mtrvi'oV . i.-.y, V ti:1 Ki v ii- l K. K Y ' 'T AIp-'i i nt i to -op at. li'v -.i -tt . i h o-h vu n ' ct rvpU'te w : t Kt mo'tcrite prio-K July 2, 1S(,C lyr. M. C. KITTEUL, Attorn x - ; t - j a s v . 1 PI -T.t I ,1. 'flire Xrtn ry Vi i i l ii . o;i. Conn K .-use. W-ircr! .r. .. O. I.F.I VN. 4 rr.iri.li . , 1 b p ,l'.iT r-J I. r l.t-3T ::.,; I,, ; thHart Of fiw Of wont ftn.J u'. '.I lonC it.Btln h"t corM -.rt'-. f.r. bi ry rlt-. y f -T . Ihkl 1 w" Tl B 'IT! FUKS, l':ti-r ':h . ll'r CAR1.I TRtiTISH o It' (liM.t-i rr-.-tr Ot. .- i4 f. 0.djru. DK.T. AoiJCLB, IM furl St., M.T. M I' I. oiiitv V .i II ! : 11 " I.- M - ii'u mi; '.: t " .1.1' - 1 i X : A H'O VhVF.:irr,.'RS.-l o.vf?' lia'M li.rn l X i-rf . -. ..i !'7i Lr ofl Lcwvpupf ser.t rr' -AJlrai lika. F. l. t5Lt, .., l i ri.; WAHTE!I-liCY;:,,;: n 1.1 ' !.! in't -l ,H . .. . N. V,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers