tCamlivh freeman. 1 VUIIWY - - AI'KIL 11, Tin: Mi " i i i II . Il 'jirt-SKi.t.i-tlVf-l ft ttf p t--iI . h- !! ' : l'li!'.! W 'iit- II th tr'f. v.'e in ni i i'-Mj.tl elections. 'I'll :: ( i.i:"f ;ci: II it-' of it -preterit -atives i'Ii 1 ! ur-'I .f 1 i-' week tit (-sited t p: ' -) rmi.-t i ' nt ) hi il ati in 1 ii) 'i t desi'.-'l t" t-Ircl S t. Hi ri ty ;i pluri ;y ni.ttn.1 of a :ii:'iin!y vi.te. V . h.sve .i iviin't.1 fi tn s t 10 per fe t!.i- H'lvt ut of i!h; Jl.mo- crati' j.irv t::'i p-wrr m.-i the ruin tliuL S'i; i i'il wouM follow wlien the U-pi.!.: tiiii J r : y go; the bounce has fiiiU-! to us e i.tl '". Tin: 'aLest is t fiat Mr. Daine u-a par-tt-il l h- crisis of hi drsea.se .nut is Ste.idt'y iii'.'iov ii although he will no. bf aMe to travtl east trtun Indian Terri'c ry, whop- he now is, for a week or inure. Ii is admitted, however, that ilr. 1J aiiie id stii! stronger than his par'y. TiiK S'lpvenie court of this .State bu .main rait d that a married woman is not ct ii'petHii to testify to matters of a Cdtifidt-ptia! nature, which o.'t'lirreU he t.Nten tier and lor hi. stand during the existence oftlieii n; trriage relation even though a div'ice has i.itervt-ned before she tt s' ifi'-S. Til I ';i5l niari. -s t!.t ircr i h- r ;.: im el of 15 diir"et"s sum t h-'U-a: i r-p m.-i L-oiii;ern- r of ; r 1 i : s i i a 1 f-unp'oye.s at woik i .tl.f to-.:. try at this tint", as compare. i ni'li twoyc-.rs ;iLr'. together w ith the cfiar.y;' s in wair-- d'liing that pui. d ail'! i; jui'-s ! :i r. '. h-re are at least four L u 1 r -.! h is-tti.i nere iti-iustria! errjpii w i a ii;-.v than in 1 an.d th -it Y.t a'e a- hi:;! as in . w hrii th- i.;.:ii" v.i'ii::h hi pan in 1-7'i :'. ,.s t. Its i. i.'l.t. It is. h.-.;- ! 1 i :: 1- tw.i hois-s at any titn i-.n'l ts"'ia-iy iia:-I when the hor - ar- it:.' in rp;-o: ite d.tections. In rid-i.tf ti... !'...!, hri n huis- i-i M ten ia -ft the i; -; : j i :c : s h: ve off r.-'.t-d Ihe ieia.n vo't-is. N sw that I'rohiniLion has t gsp defeated t is proposed to r'Cov pi ; s.. uiMi,;,.! hy tuakinff a Inch wlii3ky and iow Lei r hct ne. Tiie Teuton loves his ti-'.r. !. .' he will hanliy walk hack into th - i; : eh' :,: ri eami on such a shallow and l p n-r iital 'ndir e ut nt. In view ; t!-.- la--' that i.-r-rf !d-nt aliei s w 1. i I . i:.te:,' .,, !., j.-n.. ing c li.: :h .: p-tt'-i.-.M Ui i'.- ,!. ot ..hi ! i i-. ;!.;-- t"n. r ;!.! h ! ! !i hern for -pt t :' .t' r t i.i ! -. . to fe d -t nriM nt of t!i- ! , -. : !' .. -ipe. the JI i ! i - - - Ii "i- .it U-pi:-.-:-!.t.ttve has a hi ! 'i:,e- t o'l l 1- r, aliens ho'ttif !;-..' ! '' ( ' . -j, of it n i !. ' ; ' : i ' v? . I a '' t the o a is:- tioi. r thr of f .-i'.r- t ; . revr 1 1 to i - ! pr -v .!;!;' iti case ".-.I land shall Tin. I! ' .T. tTi . y II .: , vea's t! ! .:. tha i.-i ik i n The t '.'! -:f r: I Il-i.ry t 1 'I ; trap's . the i tril'.s if !!. ;, in ?i---.;:i tody "A is en.'i ii bein? ; 1 M,r.h ill '. '.ITi. Tl i , i -. (. i"e". .! n f i J iyUr., Utiio, r- f I 'i. 5- S-.r-Ui?a ,:;U !s ; iir-ii . hp: : is. h--r o' th' i itr t i"-n .1 iTreys, txn Ihtz" fi!:d if .-1. tl rein: T ( 'ld l h't over twenty f.ii""n died, i' r, tint ii'T p. ho:rie. sl'f 1 in 1 . v'.-.m futo-ral w-.is a relig'cnis cere:;! iv in c:i irj drew toeth'-r S t..- t a pastor, and bj'i gypsies and crow lis of oiitv.'lt-r? Tin-: Nw (-''-i-.s '('-.('' proposes, as a mean.-? of coun r-c::r.g the terrible dry fitr.f,itvs i'h v. '-.ich the people living in AVt a i n Te. is are liat-le to tie nf fLcted. that drin? shall be thrown acmes the sevt r.il riv ts tl;.f peneliate that region f.rtili-'ia! bodirs rf v,h'a-t fornit-d. Tiie r e ',il'.;int inert i:se of Lumidi y fiom evapuvatiou and the use of tie we.ter supp'y for irrig.it infr pur poses i; tinie of i:e 1 would improve tlin clitn ite and h.sur th successful cul tiv;i'i n of areiis t!: it ran-' otherwise ren.in '.v isit. Th- ijuur ? ys the rivets any be p.i-i.y ilinirri 'd n';-.r their he.vl-.v -iters iu ti e deep c.i.iv.k.s thf y have wnri! through 1 1 1 - - liil:.'-. TiiK Washrru-toti f ,'.-.. t;, s,.s: Tiie I'r.--:d -n : il r!,;r is nccepied bv a man ail over ; i liysoi ,v .iS we '.I as c:en- tai!y : a i:uu ' ni 1 iMiy health is as sound ,tnd rolfj-t us his tr.ental health is 1 ri.'ot a'.-l g 'el. lie .i j.ini'g man yet ,)i,'v li :y. IL' hadn't '1 -r.e gn. in? jet. II- ;'.l I e in ?j-i. ndid trim ;o lead tie C.i!"-erv;Uir,-i (.f the ci.';-.';y i.i l--; to vii.-t-iry : :! ". --r I'r. s I tial r i'-e. :.nd attrr 'h -it ;is a trured lender, fr nuif t'i.m a g-n-r i in, of inpi!,-t:!.ib!e va!u; to the t -nsnTvative . elctnei ts of tl e l oim'iy. IInw pr-onle could have get the i l a that Mr. Cleve land was in jvi.tr Iic-ai'h w e cannot ima gine. Thy certainly coul-1 not have ; seen or ta'ked with him. Xo man look ing in l is bright, cV.ir eye and o';serv ing his firm, springy s't p. c.-nl l possibly say he was i-i other than the most ro bust and vigoious b.e.i Tim: Cis: ap.iiio.rion of the low a un.-i ih)i'it;-.i ("nulr.icl ! it or in 1 1 h ton, was i :i '.ut J.iy w.'.en right e.ni grou'.s vv:ie h-'.i.irr-d fr.,':i landing. Th'-'y a-e :;o ! o ' t-! i ig-'i' ! : of persons : ill are f-'inie-. ranei';g in tig from eighteen to f,r ; .i ;i. 1 ,.ne h is i Child 10 ii.o-.:hs ...'.1 Willi her. Ti.ev ciaie mi n.: !er c-'ii.r.tc. - i h t' e c.i ton CoiiH-.iiT, rf Prov i. .!. -. i., and their w. iv v..is!uil thr-eij!. ' l'-,:vi-denct-. Tue c ::' r i ;-r iv.d s'i.i.tio-v shall w-rk for oil-y---ii--i v-ivf' tv ic? .-.-i-l are to pay -1 ; p. r w k thri-Ogoout thu i ar ;,) c ,v r the pay s.ig i ty a 1 vnr.r--1 to tl TI.ey ar tiativ.s o! M i:!ch"rer. En;ri.i:.3, and vijiji'j'. T.'.ij.r detention is a most di'i" "'i rr.z'i.j sfli'r I-r t5 w.-.n-.t-u, .- hr-'.i ,-e.l th .t th.-y were exempt from the pr.j .1,5 tf i he law since thfy were, a-t t'.ey suj -nisei, to he -.'in a i.ew ioduauy, t'.r wini.-h the 1 allows im- j igrai ts to enter. i Xk lias Iteen received of the si eat. dt-sti tie; ioii of proper-j id Isle of Vi oite coun'y, Virpnit, on Monday uiirht by a tii (i.ido. T.'ie sterm was at teriible that the people tl-j'l from their houses for safety, f".tiun that the roofs and walls teu!i! !- Mown tl nvn up m them. Te.e i. mail t started on he Norfolk and W.s em ra:!road, afiout eight miles west of Norfolk and two miles from Wii.dsor s'llion. Xt'ar tliia station live,! .1 . .1 1 T Wi in?it, a prosperous firmer, w.th h:s wifV and thi.ichter. Wright's dw t il i;: I was bo t.adiy Itlown to pieces that it prist-n ted the appearance of having he-n ties rivfl by dynamite. Tl." whde family were instantly killed, their fiid e? heiiig horrilly mangled. Ano'her firmer living in t' e eame neig!, i;. .rhocil was also killed, and a nnrutit-r of d-Aeiiings were (hstrojed. Tne helief prevails that a great many other lives have Leen lost, hut owing to lack o! telegraphic communication it is impossible to jet piiticulars. If is lean ed that the tornado also pssv-d over S uithimpton County, where it tli'i gieat damage to fences and out houses. Immense trees were uprooted and great damage was done to the or chards. The boss to the farmers will he very heavv. Tin: l'hiladelphia U-rn-d says: Some of the Jl-puhlican organs affect to re joice very much over the separate or -ganizition of workingrnen iu politics. At.r'il;' ') '.he speculations of these organs the I in. icrats w.ju'd sufTVr the etiief los- in the event of the entrance of a w oi kiiiirmau's party into the great I'lesidi-ntial canvass of l. Hut there are U i uhlican p )litici ma wlio do not iici i-;i: this aiip'-rlicia'. forecast of the effect of a third party orgmization in dr r the hairier of L ihor. Tti1 strong est ii- tli it has held tin; workingmen of the c, :n " ry to the K puhl 'can pirly has lieeti t:e;;4iilT. I; p. th-.-ir tV.ilti la the fallacies :-n:l humbugs of protection has been rudely sliaken by ihtr exp?rience iti rec-i.t years. In the latest Mayoralty elect i ".r, in New York city the great to isses of woikingnien divided their ..!. s between Abr .m S. Hewitt ar.d Ilr'iry (jr-org-', bo'h able and prominent opponents of the existing turiff policy, i; -publican workingman xho were once fv vo e 1 to protection could be no longer detuned from voting for a candidate by tf:e cry that be was an advocate of free trade. Should a Libor party be organized for th.. next Presidential contest its candi dal would doubtless receive ttie sup port of multitudes of Republican work iegmen whom the tariff would no longer be n.He to hold to their p.rly allegiance. I'.i;t should the two parties confront each other wi'.hoat the a"ti.- intervention of a thir l politlc.il org uiizition m jst of 'hi ;.; Republican workingmen would I i.diaLiy vo'e for the Pi t sidt-ntial can did ite of their party from n;ere force of hr.bit. In case a l.-.bor c-'ti.lidate for fit-si Jerit shoit'd b" put into the field I ) in. 't.-r it ic woikingnien would finve no motive for abandoning a great pirty or- g. nit it ion that affords them the best prosp- vt or attainiii all d-sir-iMe politi cal ends. Asth.e Democratic party i? r.',-7!ii.--d as th'- d-f.-nder of the true interacts of lab .r it wouM b ' wjis'3 th m a was,. oi poii'ictl energy to form a v.- p.t'ilic.il orgauiz it ion to sap the frrei.g'li of t li ; 3 greit prty. Hence D i-iiit-.cr.it ii; workingmen everywhere would he ex: rein. -ly dist rus' f ul of a third party roovenienf , r. foot fop the pur po?e of ive.ikerili.g their polttieal power. Republican, workingmen. on the other h. 'td. would have no such motive for adhering to .-'.n org iniz uion entirely out tif s-n. pithy with ttieir highest aims, and sliou'd a i-ibor candidate be pre sented next year they doubtless would tfo over to him in shoals. Tiirc Sr. I -mis uhhm pays : I'nder a law jiassed by a TtJp'.iblican Egili.'.ure Pennsylvania allows corpo ra ions to maintain bodies of armed n-unii'.'Vr license frcru the Ciovei nor. C.-.vernor P.'.li30n rt fined to issue suuh licenses, lint his Kepublican successor, (i-overnor Heaver, has just authorizod the Cambria Iron Compmy to arm, equip and maintain a force of seventy five men, subject to its orders. Tiie object for which these troops are m.-iintatiied is, Tn short, to shoot strikers. Thry ar not a part of the militia force of the S a'.e. nor are trn'y S ate officers, fr,r the respor.aibility of the Slate officer is not to any private individudl, but to the jipop'e. The responsibility of these private troops is to their private employ er, and they w ill kill when he shall order them to kill. The statue wh'ch author- iz-sthfir maintenance is a revival of f.-u liVsai with jut the r.ecessi: ies of feudal '.in.vs to excise it. The feu 1 1! biioi: siq p ir'.eil military retainers as a pirt of the duty he. owed to bis feud i! superior, the Stat-, represented directly by th King. When the King riitf not n-.n! tliein they were Under the control of tl.eir in;no d:ate feudal lord, who u-t ,l '.fu-in in liis private business of rob ber and cut-throat. The troops of the Pennsylvania tariff barons, however, owe r.o servic to the State ; they are simp'y private retainers, employed by a corporation which, as the Philadelphia Jicord well says, can easily afford to support them out of the enormous pro li'.s of its tariff-protected monoply. The men whom they are to k:I! wLvn ordt red to do so are men who have, been imported like cattle to work in ttie mini s and furnaces at wages on which an American wcrkingman wou'-J starve. The money paid the mercenary troops :s tak"n from the j.ivketa of the At.ieri--.ia people ly a pr-c--s which, in the lai-cui-p-e of Piesi.b lit CievehiLd, -'is no! 1-ss a tax We.tuse it is indirectly but si.rt-ly added lo the cost of the nation's life.'' The iYdero' Const ii tit inn makes it the imp.r.iiivc duty of tiie United S.i.'es to kep ihe separate ;ates from ai andonii.g "a repnblica.i form of j;ov-er!.iii-ir.." I'ndei : he I; -publican par t iVii:..-- Ivniiia is Mt'.tirij.iiug to di-le-e.te to corpora: ious its sovueiguty as a 'a'e; l.ji tho rigkt to liiaint-.tn an ano.d fer e :s one of the hid es', pre riaLives vi covert ignty. The Federal (Joverrrc. o t has n-c-niatructed f;ates cn !e-s provocation. How much more pro v.,c.uion vvi:l Pennsylvania have to give before the recotbtruction shall begin V A Cheerinir ypriii:r Outlook. Ttit-re has bein no year siace the war when the business outlook was so , clieert'ul as it is t.iis spiir.K ; nod is can- . tineJ to no particular ch mnel of indm ; try or trade and to no section of coun- . try. O.i every side ; in every channel of productive indus ry ; n every mart of comni"ice, and in every portion of th I'nion, there is the same promising outdo, k for a spring trade of immense volume and and liberal profit. We h mi infli'ions during the war tun"S which gave the mock semhlance of mo.e ac tiviiv iu business, liar they were un health., subject to smhien slnicks and ended in uis ister. Speculations was rife in all classes ; I fie p-ople were tempted into extravagance and debt, and the in evitable resu't was a general prostra tion and severe hisses in all channels of trade. The cheering outlook of the present spring is based only on the most sub stantial foundation. Capital is rapidiv diffusing itself into productive enter prises ; labor is much better reward ed than it was during the exceptional ly high wages of war times, as the ne cessaries of life are greatly reduced :n cost ; the people were never so free from debt and never so able to consume, and there is genera! hope ant! confidence throughout all the various producing in terists of the entire country Employ en and employed are gradually attain ing better relations toward each other, j and the universal distrust of one year ago. caused by the unfortunate cyclone ; of labor strikes started in Missouii, has been effaced from business circles. Thre is everything to encourage le gitimate business enterprise in the pres i ent cheering spring outlook. Being ; based on the solid foundation of the ; general business solvency of ths people, it is no unhealthy inllition; no specu ! lative (low to be followed by the sudden ; ebb of prostration. It is substantially free from speculative stimulus, and both :: industry ar.d trade should gather the ! richest fruits of the season just, opened. Altogether the year lST should be one of the most prosperous, for every legiti mate class and interest, recorded in the : history of our heaven-Messed people. I Phibi, Tours. Interstate Commerce Complaints. j Complaints against the operation cf the Interstate Commerce law are nu i meroufdy arisirg. And there are many : people who are disposed to take this fact as a proof that it should not have ! been enacted. Upon close investigation i it will be found that in almost every i case t hese complaints come either from incl i vein lis wh ; hive be-, n favored by the railroads at the expense of others or ; from s-c'i-Mis that have simtl.tilj pnSt i ed. I' wnstrie pnrpos of the law to 1 stop a'l such favoritism. It was in tend. 1 iheieby to prevent individuals or corporal ions from using the roads as weapons tj strikt down their competi tors with, as the Standard Oil Company dirl ; and al-o to prevent those having din. tilt rea'-es ate investments from enhancing them at the expr.se of those having in eres s nearer the seaboard. The 'aw was aimed ag-iitiat evils, and wherever it strikes one there is natur ally disa,isract io-i. The iegislH'ion wm il noe have been cail-d for if it elicited no outcry. There js no ?uch thirg as reform without involving a transit ion st ate whu-h is more or less painful, and tim is rt quired for the es'ab! M.ment of the new and better eqii'ii'a iuiu. Water competition and, p''Ssib'y, a few other circumstances may interfere with a uniform tippbc-ition of the law. 1 1, Is the tu;in-M of the Commissioners to invf s' ig lie tlr se and act accordingly. I' Was no' to be expected that the law w iii'd woik sm ;oth:y at once, or tha it Mon'd h- p rri"-i hi i:s; If. Its ni air, ni lM'ip'e, ho-vev.-r, wh-ch is fair and mu,. 1 trtatnnnl for all, is one of vital const ipn nce. P is the purpose of the people to hew to this !iri. let th--chips faM where they wM'. All mod'ti oat inns eorsistt nt w:t!i this nrincitile in its large sense that, are demanded mav be m.Kp'.and the Commission willdoubt le.'s be guided ly this p licy. Put the complain! s are no criterion of their cwn plaice. A". V. Worlh The venrib!e h.is'ori?n. George Pan croft, has teen on a vis t to Mrs. Polk, at Nashvi.le. and it is said will wri'.e a life of President Polk and a history of Lis administration, of which he was part as secretary of the navy for a yar and a half, w hen Mr. Po k made him minis ter to (M-t Pntain. where he remained until 1-40, having peculiar au V nil ingS in collecting material for his history. As secretary of the navy Mr. Bancroft won n honored nance in administration by establishing the naval school at An napolis and th r.aval obsTVatory at Washington. From 107 to 1874 he was minister at P.erlin, The administration of Mr. Polk has never had justice ren dered it, and it will be fortunate if the weight of Bancroft 's name is given to the narration of its great achievements. The conduct of the Mexican war and and the acquisition of California, Ne vada. Xew Mexico and other territory marked it es only second to that of Jef ferson in ex! ending the national area, and adding to the glory and power of the I" nion. Xext Oetober Mrt. Ban croft wi'l bn eightv-seven years of ago, but on his visit to Nashville last week his mental powers seeded at (heir best, and the flow of remin iscense between him snd Mrs. Polk of mr-n find events in Washington 10 vears agr. was of RiirrasMntr interest. When a st.iidpnt in Europe C.." years ago he made the acquaintance or Goethe and T'vron, and that distinction can hardly be cla'med for any now living on either side of the Atlantic. Qi f.f.n Kaplolani, of the Hawaiian Kine doni, arrived a t .San Francisco, on Wedues . day mnrninc troru Honolulu on the steaniPr Australia. Sr-.o was accompanied by Prin : cess l,ilinokalaui nd a nnmher of high : officials of the Hawaiian Government. Tbe ; principal object of the Queen's voyage ; Is to be present at (,ieen Victoria's jubilee : celebration in London In June next. The i royal party remain here about a week, when they will leave for Washington to pay i their respects to President and Mrs. Cleve land. After a short stay at the capital they will proceed to Xew York ana thence to London. Before retnrnlng Q jeen Kapiolaui will also visit tno principal cities of the world, ishe has r.ever before been outside of her k tig.iom. Thf osseous remains of a mastodon were found on Monday near the village of Tiro, on t lie Northwestern Bailroad, about twenty-five miles southeast of Tiii:' Ohio. While engaged in ditch ing on Th" Walter Green farm, a mile . and a ha ? east of Tiro, J. J). Mitchner cam upon th decayed bones of mam moth proportions. The remains thus fr ii'ie;:rihed were found at a depth of no- more than two feet in h. raarshv piece of ground just east of the house", a- d tl a other bonts wo'l et be. found is quite sure. Ti.e bons are of unusual proportions, but nn mostly so far decayed as to ren der it imp ssitile to measure them. The teeth of tie animal are almost perfectly preserved because of the enamel. The largest tooth found measured six and three-quar ers inches in width and twenty inches in circumference ; it weighed two pounds and ten ounces. ; The other teeth diminish in siza to the ; smallest, which is three inches each j way, and weighs less than one pound. These are the second reunaios of this I class found in this section. Lei F.iiehuid He Unriied. S:r Wi'tiam Ilircouil cold no m-re than the nu ti w0,-, ( nserred m t. he debate in Parliament last Friday that , the greater pirt of the Am-ricn go'd which went to Ireland found its way into the p 'ckeis of the aliei raok rent : landlords. Tiiere is scarcely an Irish ' family in the United S.atos tbat tloes ! not si'd moiiy to the fitfrerland to maintain kinsinn: on the famiy lots and acres. I f ' he Tories were nor mad as well as sttioid they would carefuliy refrain from abusing the funds taised in other lands for the 12 unteinnee of the Irih peiu-.h'. Churcoill is fond of alluding to American contributions as blood money ; but he. like many an, it her among the go-eaiied nobles, ot Great Pritaln. should be the las' to disparage dollars which thev have gained by mar riage. .Since, however, the present rul ing faction of Great Riitain objects to the monetary form American sympathy takes, perhaps they maybe prep i red t.) givn more resp-etful attention to some thing else. Tiie time seems to have come for the government of the United S:ie3 to en ter a protest, not only in the name of the Irish millions of this land, but in the interests of international comity. England has always been ready to pro test against the misgovernment of down : trodden peoples. She went to war to '. rescue the Turks from Russian aggres sion. She prepared for war in to , save the Afghans from Muscovite sei i ztire. She intervened in Kaypt to save the natives from the intolerable burdens j of Turkish rule. She, has repeatedly i remonstrated with Russia about, the ; harsh measures dealt against the Poles, j She went to the verge of war with Aus- tria on behalf of the Italian provinces, j Indeed, people whose lives were happy j compared with the Irish have received ! the diplomatic aid of England. Why, then, should our government hesitate to open negotiations with the English Cabinet on the subject of Ireland? Never was a people so oppressed ; r.ever was a province given over more ruthless : ly to the barbarism of feudal tenure and partisan tyranny. Under the ooritem : plated Coercion bill Ireland will be in a worse case han the Tuscan duchies when Austria held the territory, for j those unhappy countries preserved the form of autonomy nndei Aust ria's arch dukes. What the state of Ireland is pvery one knows a peasantry ground down by alien land owners; a msgistra i cv appointed by alien rulers ; parasites ' applying laws that foreien ereed and I malice devise, p.id as the present is, the future is a hundred fold worpe, for, when the pending coercion measure goes into operation. Ireland wm! be as help- lessly under the heel of handful of marp1oa as thf S.uth was undr the carpet-baggers arter the war. The Americ?n government has re mained silent urder this spectacle of savago misrule long enonzh to prove that intervention ia not the passionate Ln pulse of undue partisinship. In lGl before the seceding S'ates were evn agreed themselves as to what they wand, England hastened to recopnize the inchoate rebellion s succsssful belligerency. We have waited one hundred years and watched the experi ment of a union brought nbout by blood shed and fraud, anil we have never offi dally protested. It is time that the civilized p.'onlfs of the world raised a voice against the odious barbarism of P.riMsh Tu'e in Ireland. France, Tlnssia and the United S'atei hiive long looked upon English government in Ireland as a bTot upon civilizHlion. It is time for the United States to speak officially as it has repeatedly spoken throneh its legislatures. It is time to ask England to deal wiMi the Irish peorde a? civil izu 1 govr-nrr!ents deal wifh conquered or co-ordinate peoples. .V. Y. Strir. Carlisle Defines Democracy. Speaker Carlisle in his spp-ech at Cov ington. Kentucky, said : I want to say lo all Democrats that we would br, un worthy of our name if we allowed any number of reverses to dishearten us. Th growth of the Democratic paity in the hist twenty-five years has been won derful. At the close of tha war we were entirely out of power ; we had no offices or patronage, and were practi callv ostracized from share in the affairs of th Governmet t. TIip D.-rn-ocraey had a political faith founded or. the prineinies of Jefferson, and they fought for it. gallantly, without bop" of reward. There has never been a time eince 1870 when the majority of the peo ple were not in favor of the principles of the Democratic party. I want to im press upon you the necessity of stand ing to your piinciples in any eQimergen cy and at al! elections, no matter bow small and nmimport.ant they may seem to be. No party can lie success ful in any country unless it bas princi- , pies upon which it will stake its exist- ence before the people. This country is full of vagaries cn the powers of Gov ernrcent, ome want it to become a j great eleemosynary institution for the- care of everybody; some want it to pur j chase the railroads and telegraph lines ; ; some want it to interfere with the peo 1 pie's private business ; so tne want it to ' lortn money to indigeut people. It is impossible to enumerate schemes to rob i the taxpayers for the benefit of some : bodv else. We must overcome the Soci I alitic theories abroad in the land. We I must stand everywhere for the prot.ee ; tion of both capUal and labor. We ; must stand everywhere for the rights of j men to do business with their own mon i ev in their own way. If the Democratic ; parly does not do this it might as well i cease Vi exist. A little more than a century the Philadelphia Lrrforr -points 3ff0, out. Great Britain tried in Massachusetts a coercion bill bearing a strong family resemblance, in some respects, to that now proposal for Ireland. Certain classes of offenders were to be taken to England for trial, on the allegation that they could not get a fair trial in Boston. The mother country had 11 regiments of tioops in Boston, and scarcely any one believed at the time that resistance by force of arms could succeed. A very little measure of home rule would have satisfied the leaders of the American people in 1774, but coercion was tried instead, and in less than two years noth lngshort of entire absolute independence would be accepted, and after a few years of war. P was granted. Coercion forced the revolution of I77G-S3, as it has re peatedly produced revolts in Ireland and yet coercion is still the sovereign lemedy with the smaller class of Eng lish statesmen for resistance to govern ment injustice. Wn ilk other nations are spending millions in large armies and war ma terials, and thus increasing their public debt, the United States is satisfied with an army of less than 2o,OX) men, aDd is reducing its national debt steadily seve ral millions every month in the year. The United States is beginning to be somewhat of a great country. 'Ilirlr Rnlnri Boomlntc. rroha'oly no one tiling has caused such a funeral revival of trade at tbe drtie stores or E .lanit-s, of Ebf-nsbure and W. W. McAteer, of Lorn tto, a their givitit; away to their cus tomera of so many free trial bottles of Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption. Their trade is simply enormous in this very valuable article from the faci that it always cures and never disappoints. Couehs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, Croup, and all throat and lunc diseases quickly cured. You can test it before buvlug hy gettin? a trial bot tle free, large size (I. Every bottle warranted. EWS OfHKK SOTIMJS. Tnx Collector Metz, of Reading, who re slenert his ofTi',e some time eo, han been found to t about $2,500 short In his ac counts. His bondsmen will have to make the shortaee good. Jarnes Kiners, fcnown in the theatrical profession as James Rsynolds, shot his wife and then shot himself at Philadelphia on Tuesday afternoon. The wife's injuries are only slight, but Riners is not expected to live. Iti a runaway accident on last Tuesday. Major James F. Ryan, of McKepsport, wa throw n from a wagon and instantly killed. Major Ryan was a brother of ArctiV) isho Ryan, of Philadelphia, and one of the wealthiest citizens of McKeesport. It is not enough that the sugar refineries n the United States hava a total refining eapacltj of about 1,000.000 barrels per month, but we must have imitation sugar. It costs abmit 1 2' cents a j.ound to manufac ture "sugarlne" by the secret formula which is in use. The barn of John Henry, in Summit town-diip, Crawford county, was struck by linhtninn one evening last week. Three horses, two cows, and two calves, together with all the hay, grain, etc., stored on the premises wero consumed. Los,?l,ooo ; no Insurance. Ttie house of a man named lirewles, in Smith county, Va , was destroyed by fire on Monday night, in which two of his daugh ters, aged 19 and 21 years, were burned to ! death and three other persons so severely 1 injured that they cannot survive. The fire was caused by a defective flue. J Joseph Burch, a woll-to-du farmer, liv j in six miles west of Lima, Ohio, on Wed j nesday last, tilled his sick wife with a hammer, and then went to the woods near I by, twisted some bark into a noose, n1 haneed himself. F,nrch was temperate but I weak minded, and the pair had had frequent ! quarrels. I Assistant Paymaster Joseph Frick, of i the United States steamer Michigan, was i mortally wounded on Monday near F.rie, I Pa., whili; out gunning. He used the butt I of his gun to start a balky horpe. In the j operation the horse kiciced, discharging the i weapon, shooting Frick's arm off. He lies j dyintr in St. Vincent's hospital. ! Mrs. B. S. Smoot. aeed 17, a bride of ! eight weeks committed suicide by taking a ! dose of "rough on rats" at Topeka, Kansas ; on Saturday. Her husband is an engineer I on the AtcMson, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad, she had in her pocfeet at the time of her death the photograph ofa young man to whom she was at ore time engaged. ! At Menasha, Wisconsin, all the girls in the carding department or the Menasha j woolen mills went on a strike Friday after noon. The propietors of the ml'I ordered . all the windows facing the street painted recently, so that the girls employed would attend strictly to business and not betempt ! ed to watch passers-by. The girls refuse to i return unleis the paint is removed. The town of Washington was shaken on Saturday os if by a small earthquake. Af ter shooting oil wells with nitro glvcerine, the cans that had contained the explosives : were cathered together and placed around the carcass of an old cow and exploded. I The noise was deafening, and many homes in Wahliiuton were shaken. Not six hairs i were afterward found of the cow. Near Dolores. Argentine Republic, 1 there was recently a shower of stones. A few nioment.i af-pr the plains were covered with the bodies of geese, storks, and other birds and animals killed by the stones One j inhabitant of the place cnrri.'d 4s head of j geese home in the space of half an hour, j Great loss was sustained. Many animals . were killed and crops and trees destroyed. Pnring a ferlfic storm at Pdreville Sec tion, N. C , on Tuesday, the house of Tay lor Kastman, a prominent, farmer, was struck ! bv lichtinsr Mrs. Eastman was sitting near ' 1 the window and Eastman and his son at ' another window, while a daughter had a seat in front of the fireplace. Eastman and ! bis son were killed ontrieht and Mrs. East- man and her daughter were rendered uncon- ' j scious. ! j John Lnnocks, a night watchman at j j Edward MeO'auley A Co.'s coal yard, Thila- f delphia, was seized in tbe office by four men about 1 o'clock on Saturday night, 1 , bound and gagged and tied to a chair with ' ropes. The men then broke open the mon- ; ey-drawer, took the conten ts 1103 In cash, 1 1 and departed L?nnocks liberated himself ; by freeing one hand and cutting the ropes j which bound him to the chair. i On last Friday afternoon George WeT ner, a teacher in a Suburban village school i in the town of W;illani3bnrg, Wisconsin, i punished a refractorv pupil named Ilenry i Zugbusch by applying a ruler sharply to i his wrists, and the latter fell back uncon J scious In his seat. Supposing that the boy : had fainted, he threw two rails of water j over bim but the pupil was dead. The ' teacher fl ed and has not been seen since. The farmers of the community are looking i for bim ar.fl threaten to lynch him, as the boy's father claims that Werner choked him to death. On Sunday mornin one of the straneest accidents occurred at New York that bas ever been witnessed by railroad men. Thomas Quinn, white wa'felng along the tracl-", was struck by a freight train and his body was thrown upon the pilot of '.he en gine, where it lay nntil Larchnu nt was reached. There it fell to the roadbed r.nd both feet were cut off. Another train on the o ppesite track struck the body and it was burled upon the pilot and lay there I until New Kochelle was anain reached. I when it rolled oil and the trunk fell under I the wheels a second time . When tbe train moved off it was seen that only the headless trunk remained after the terrible buffeting it had received . Is Life Worth Living? That depends upon the Liver, for if the Liver is inactive the whole pys tem i.s out of order the breath is Lad, digestion poor, he; id dull or aching, energy and Lopo fulness gone, the spirits are de pressed, a heavy weight exists after eating, with general despondency and the blues. The Liver is the housekeeper of the health ; and a harmless, simple remedy that acts like Nature, does not constipate riftc-rvrard-? or require constant takinsr, does not interfere with business or pleasure dur ing its use, makes Sim mons Liver Regulator a medical perfection. I have toKtPd it virtues i os porsonaliy, ana know tL; t fur 1 iiopMu, i ll I loudness ana Throl.blnc Hfad !io. It is tiie bst medi cine Mic wurlil ever saw. Have tried forty other remedies lelore Simmons Liver Regulator, and none i( them pave mrs than twiuiiorary relief, but the llcgulatm not oniy relieved ut c ured. r . I.i. II. lo.vt Mucon, Ga. WOMEN fr1tne rrnrwr1 trneth, or mho mnlfrr frm laflrmltlr peculiar to their iti. should try A3 A 1 li H - r-"w3 LC stX Ai U BEST T0KIC. Tit mrtirini cttVHws Iron with T-'ir1 Tpcptirjl for-i. '. mui i- inv.n! ml.!- tr p-;hnr to W OI'ICU. n'1 U - bt- J-i "1-:tTn- hv.-f If l.n T!i ii' uno 1'Mrifn' t!i" tl.ii, irtiiln I n tim piiir, f rrnci lion Mavlt?H aS trv- iniM't.tLiTo-! ln morn Cln-fl th cmvlptii'n, ar1 Tn-kM4 1 hp kin TO'vith. It l--f n- t him Ken tV.o T-"t!i. titi- liesd.vb'i, or prt-lli" ' Cor.-(luH'l- " '' !'' Ttirit rn Mrs Lttzaukth Ehho, Tl r irw-fll At.. Milwaa ' 1 have u 14r'wn Ir -ti l'..t tis. it t:abo irjef thui a d'rf-Tort' rn-, havtn rrtl m of th ver.kne-K !n-li" hnT in iif'1. Al"o rur1 m of I.iv er -"uii)nir!t. ani my ctt,jI-i -n i t )r and gcy-. Ilah sluo hfn tnvhi'iAl to n;y chii'trwn." Mrs. Inn r Bhmuviv, Ft IKkprt, Y., y: " 1 have P';rtrtv1 uti'M iritry Tr-'tn r''mt l"'fnilaint4. an.1 cm! ! t t;c.n relief fiviu uvain ext-;it Hrtiwn's Ir'ii Bittft-K.' Genuine hw bor Trnd Mrk find r n linoa on srn-T ThUf no olhrr. Mrl" cn)y ty BUOW.N 1 HLMICAL CO.. UALT1UOHE, MD. m Style PtnMelplift Sinjer. Otl" T- r.-TiipT. " .-i j,l,.f.. ,.( f nf : 1.!.,. .?, ' : n in.;'!-! . J i II. : r- ;.-! n !t,i. i". '.-;r ! v ; a :i r..A ) I., r. ,ii ! 1 5 V iir ; ! '. ii i I. i - . . t. . ... t lv. rv ji.n. ' ir. V.'.IV.K i'f.l i'-.'tt a Alts. V. A. W!OH (OMl'AXY. 17 Aorlli imli -... I':iilwtilliin, I'a. N I I( I I. TO Tl! K IlIOi; N!' I.K'JAI. KKPIU SKN tativea el l-ieriunl 1 u ttvu -i !i. .!p-;i-.. Taite ne'lce. t Ii T un in.iT.r-: f.e l.rM the late rei.enc ol Hcrr.ar l IK':i"t:ui. rler'.i I -i ti p town ship nl Clrmrtirl.!. in I in- eoity oi aml.rin on t relay, tiie th May r May n xt. nt a i.Yrk In thf! attcrnnou nl that l-iv. Ir Hie jrjrpu-e oi tna- : kin partition -f th rra: et..-e -il l .le-lent ' to anil amon&r til Iteoi nn.l I'-khI rrj re? -ntatlve1. j II the nrnr can re lone wirh-eit .r: jti.li'-e to or j ppoillni ol the whole; otherwise, to vniiie a.n.1 ! nppr;iie the gtme aeconliim to law. At wlii. li time and place you are ren,n"ee. to n'ten.1 II t..o think proper. Jr.ru A. ii II Y. Sherift. Mictlir KMlcc, I-.'- t:'.!irj. V Aj r is. 4!. Blaiisville, I';i., JM's Sf-minary. II' nute'i;. t'r.'-1 e ry re.-i rn. In- tion. Kiitht r 1 t'o:irJ, li:.t. .1 on I in-' heat--"iiti ii.-tmo--i:-'!.e.! ro .ta. I.- I f..T . ti :.-t.I t ,.,!). -r. I E i.tt' n ;n r-i-ii! .r P.f? Yr'AH. S;.f-;.-i' a :-.n-;...-s Art r I I I, :rt v - hrh j c.r -;- ,- S.-i . ; ..-. y. . (-, ,!..z,.c aj ply to Kkv. 1'. i; KU l.Ni; . n . July 2.:. I'r.i :j nl. doVKi; ) TIMOTHY SKK1). I ri r . . K. 1 - ! -, i i:. !,(' tatlo r at' tl -.. -.I r A- I TisIrM LARGE AND EARLY CROPS Arc wr.ntcd by all fanners. The earlier the better. Thu way to get these needed results, is to use reliable fertilizers. Eaugh's $25 Phosphate, Pure Raw Bone Meal, Agricultural Chemicals, and other brands which wc manufacture or import are reliable, cheap and lasting fer tilizers. If your dealer lias none of our goods on hand, send your order direct to us. Send for Baugh's Phosphate Guide, Trices and other informa tion. BAUGH & SONS, Manufacturers and Importers, 20 South Delaware Ave., PHILADELPHIA, PA. TSTinll-iHED 1S5S, y-i HAIR nAL.ASW I T nviT fr-o fr-r rlesITlC Mi'! is pni-p to i nml :it Ii -i.rzitts. M o V.di - U 'LA -VS v; j HN' T'k" l'st Cou-li Cfirc yon can tine, JLnd the I. -t i - vi iitlvo knnu n furOrtn-vmi !ou. Tt Tire iw!ry v.-vi:iii. iuirl ufl Hirrlf tJ-. St'iinnli, Bv'W-', l-uii;.-, l.ivcr. Kidnt-yK, Vrlniu y m nu nil Tvinr tt- ( . n'; l.-ihitP. Tito fi f-to r.ri i . -c , strn--irlrnfT nrnjnt i and fthtwly iliifrtn- T.wp-! tiie-ravt will in irmnl i-o.-' rt".i- t'i-::- l.r.iitli l,v !l.:iv ly tw ;i j'AlUCKR'S TK", Imt 'I-I.i'- j- ii ui-tfvr-. -.k. Ink it In time. Sold by all JVjj:.,-isij in larp-- toll W at f i .n. Tli- iviftvt, mirvf-t, ui'kit and tict cim tnr Corn, PiJtti. : , Wan-. Moi,rl!wiiwPs.Ac. Html rth-ir fnr-HxTi-i ov.ih. Moi'snil rum. '-in f?ii.itr.iuMi. V. !: the fret cn:f'iji;-. Hint:' r-tnis cm v hen rvorrH'.incr 4se ftsibw Mil bv IruMiavs at 1 r. Sli?':ux f'u., N. V- ALESMEgy to canvass for the 8 i It; uf Xursery ! Sleady enifilo n.Hiit un ireniPCil. AUllY AJD mif rENSEsI'MD Applv at o'ire sianne Ex (K-ler in rtiw paper. CHAIS. liK'OSaee. Feb. 2.'. 2.H. Kicti"ter, N. Y. CUL1..E, NEWAl'.K, "FV .".I'rv. 0-.-llliii ttirt-o B' ild'nss l,nrr-n aiif! It -I M prwtif'H! f r er-i-lntp? r han I c -I.'-r '-li... .r cs.m. biln-il l.;" S'-ho.:. rshi p. ;; VV;u- tor vnr ir.. luLfcMAN, VA l.M-s C '.. Vp.i'r 'lr. A1 i'!!T(iirs NOTicr.. In Hie I )ri.rir.!'-oiirt at ':irnhria mnn'v iu tli t ni.ittei- n1 'lit nrst and t1n:l f -mu .il .In?i na Auran.lt. ex -i iiliir ot last will an. I tiManjent of WiMiaiii i 1 1 v . itfi-e.-ii-. : lisvir.j: i e n .ip; ointi , h s ii.i r.-urt t. make distrii.ut n.ii ..i i It- land in the liHti.Ni.f th ac eoiir.t i nt . :i ,t -,- t iieri-n.r t'ven that I v .-ill 'It at roy r.lti -.. it. tl.p In. rmii! h i l;.ent.iirir on Mundav, the day oi Aj.nl. ls-7. a' lu o t-i.M k. a. tn.. to di.-eli.-ime the . I u i o! aid ajifointtnent when anjwl.ei, .i il i ..-1 .- . ti.- it!'er.-te.l rna atnnd or )e fnrtvi r tel- irrr, tr, ,r - ,.n ,Tllr in , ,, .n,. I iN ( l.li K. 1I Kl . E!-cnlmrir. I 'a . Me!., jr.. AmliMr. r..--T-T. V, v: .., :.-.a.rr-,, Vrl,,'' (rr.:,-KI A.Tfr;mr. N-:-t" fir lr-JfMic .t; s f fl-vl ti- .-' ... ;. : ' J ,( , , (1. w - (.,r As. ,iv H-s. t-i'.-j-j!. d'r tin Hi i;ri i i.y. m PfT , l fir r n! I n -iiNif: tj, nr - 1 !. tr i r.nlsut. I ii not a -Tri.. . ,irr. I antit .(t. L'"it f. I. '!(.. TiSIS PAPER VAi rt- FOrvT) OH I II K AT .F.O. 1. noinxi. A o- lVe-iTapaper Ail vert ialnif Itnrean (10 r-ri:rrH MUKETI, W11FRF. A 1 VHFIIM.I ( OM8AOTS may hj uudc tve it iu fCLJ VflBI lMif lUlli ttf l " I I CARL RIIjSnTJS PRACTICAL AND DEALER IN Watches, Clocks, JEWEI.IiV. Silverware,- Husicallistnils ASH o Sole Agent FOR THK Celebrated Rockford WATCHRS, Columbia ,nd Fredonia Watches In Key and Stem V-'i J -rs. ! LARGE SELECTION op ALL KIVHi of jEWELTtr always nn hn;. t-i?" My line of Jewplrv is unsurp,ser1. Come and pee for your.pf before purrha, ng el whe re. t" ALT. WOKKGIAIIANTEED.H CARL RIVINIUS. E'oensburg, Nov. 11. lss.-, -tf. itV6M& Xlcst F--r Isrtf or wsmX rV!I--. (rratn, r wd'- i -j.i.j.)Fr.:4c 7"i.l l:,.--,.t,.v..'t ,!,.'ti e-r,c- tar -ur.i v Bn-s'ita nu-l t..- . . r a...... t BilXXiilXlD Wtiz'r:??-- r..-''A WAR LIN FIRE ARMS CO., ftrCrt h'.u i.a i'm.!mii fl red "' IH cti'. fa-rv ,.r vn'.j a.l &fe a.wms a.cu'aie aiij rtilatr.e. i.i.-iii..' iti.:u.l lr.u'1 SEMINAL PASTlLlES - VrV (bnitanrl cw tbT Bboi tt-. r" T ,Tfunr r'd una hroknn down r.i-n t-"t ir tin f-n yr-rT pc-tt and fill Mnnly S prcth & i-i Vi.T-': Hmi'n. "Worn, nrtgof"o Iii'iiU(r?r, w k tht yon nnl d fuimn wftb nm-r.t of ywir tmniiln. nirl -yirc RUPTURED PERSON'S can have FREE Fm taraDceApcy;ST. FRANCIS' COLLEGE, T. AV I General Insurance Agent, I EiiExsituna, rA. 1 R, L. J0fiS.O, M. i. K. A. ff. EKK. ; Johnston, Buck iV Co., Eb e 1 1 1 ) 11 r , IP n Mcnej Received on Depsit, i r.Aiii.i: iii;m mi INTEREST ALLOWED ON TIME HEPftITS COULECTIONS MADE AT AL-. ArOE.IRI-E ?l'!STf . DIZJEl'S on the ri-inclpal Cities Rouctit anil Void anil n General Mfcg BnsincHs ransactefl. 4CCOCXT.S SOLICITED. A. W. TJITK. fashier. El'er.i-I.aru, Auril 4. i4.-t:. 1'ollcles wrlltea at flu rt EM'rr In tT:e OLD RELIAQLC "ETNA" And oilier Ki rl ( lain I'oiupnnlev. T W. DICK urT i or i ii r. 0 1,1 I i z i vr FO I i o niu: isi iiwlk c(mv. (IOMMENTKII Bl'SINESS ii. n MYEKS. ATTt IKNKY-AT-I.AV.-, OfTlce In 'i.llc.nB1e Row, no I'eritrc Hreet. OEO. M. K KATIE. ATI'OKN K - A -I. A W , EBlSi'iii-r.' -( iffioc M. D. ICITTELL, tto rnoyn t - ir kben"ht:k, i-a. HfBce Armory Buiriinic. ojip. t'ourt H' lisr. F AUM FOT1 SA1.EJ A vftiimMc firm tijatod In A !ai ny t"n- ', hip. ";nihr1n ooni;tv ndoiit five r".:lep fr'.'r F.t'i-r. itt'.irsr n- t'' n-l onebw! ti'J;r trrn JwiX't !jn!nirjf 't-i "1 .lanjes Ky!r, V.'.S j Hivk. Mii'l .Th.-r? ronTiiinir.it ; ABOUT IOOACHKH, Ilnvtrir t'.eTnn rre'tc i n li'ieKRIi'K I'WKI.I, IN'H Hdl'SK, h-ai" harn an.l nil n-tiFrvi'.' j finilillriiiT'". Tl. e f ir-r. Is in a Hue -"n.; i i -n . Imh I I ! I nv: all In if'-vo.l or l(r sni It will e toM tin ey I terms. Vor turther prti.'iilsT mil .n tt.e 'ln.lcr siifne-1 on In irein!p. 1 June M . I.. II!ISi' I.l. A DMINTSTRATOR'S XOTK'K. Irt tnrs o f a.l i1 i .iiQtrallf.n ru ttttamrn n annt ' bnvina h-n tr;.nto.l tn the undersigned . sll yr ' sotij lntk'hte.l to the sai.l tnte ar reqnetoi tu . mk payment, and thne having cllmi to r re 1 sent the fame wl'h.mt dolaT to JOHN F. SMITH. Adm'r V. T. A.. : MunpterTwp., Jan. 21, lS7.-6t. m SH&V1HG P&P.10B! OfpoMte Monmiu Home, in llftjd'i BuiMini. HIGH STREET, EBENSBUKG, IV J. H. GAM, l'roiirietor. rVrH K r''BT.I' will always Bnd n- at onr pi. 1 of hnlne In r.uirie" honrs. T.verytliltiR te nc .nd cofy. Cma n towbls a srsi i alty. VOK SAI 1". A vain a Lie Hotel property known the J-:.!r Hottce. si tuated in th W e?t war.1 of Fbrvhn-u I'a. For further i irtirnlnra call en or adir.--- ti e underiifne 1. JOHN A. HI. A 1 1 . --Khenf hnrir. May 17, T-itJ. 4 1VI RUSFIt-a h artdrr-ini I. j HnaMU .. l'nsrntce St.. Nee ..r chi 'e-irn the 'Ti"i rot of anT r,r.'.o'e l lin- AI'VKH1I-IX. InAmerlear. Nwpaper. H 1-nre I'amptilel ine. -- - TXTI'MtlXi A1):KTIIR f-oill al Mtmn-tr a vnll'lll X tt. lft hprnre fttrrel. 'ea,Yrk a'ltj 1'ob Selrt Hist .otI, ffv Nmvjrinn aprlleatioo. Jan. II '. Will be jent free on i t llKAPrsi anil BF.ST.-1-rlrea Rernrnl H0T.MAN-S HEW PARALLEL EIBTHS! ' Over 1.000 pace". Fully 1 1 hint rat, -4 . Aif'ts wante.l j (''rculars tree. A. 3 . llolman A o,IMilln. -Vx f . 4 tt 1 I' Til Tlir XArTl V .- - . - - i:. si - - New Haven, Conn. '; - A ail n. riat.ir-.- . . . Z- ."- tu prUrt at ur;. ; ; f.'-r 3:raiT: i-to! f. ; t .ottjm?. : . 14 u-i- t - : - - ' w, u . t- t r-t.i.Ttjt d-4 TtiP cai-ir' TBEATVErTT. ri j katfc.t3. Tvo tt. Tirt.;, ; HArP3RrEDY CO., Wrx twrr .-rs ,x -. tne tree VBT.IX)T71S. m Trial of our App'iBnce. Alk for Termr LOHKTTD.PA, i ( m r:r;K f FRANCISCAN HKOTIIKKS. lu-trl Tuitioa for ih- Sc;..-.t-ti.- Yrar, 52"0. iwt. j. r. vrv;'A,j.,r. wr.T'7?rr kt lth 1 !&G .ir " - m.a: ! -....--.. VERY SALEABLE . rx rvt fel y '4 U hrZ tr m w ti r 9 - ELT. CREAM BALM It tut a liquid, snvf cr p--rj. r. Apr inti nstriiJ i quirk It bWN f. It ru.iTrX thefaid. Alljiinjiarnimiti--n. Ilt-a'V-t tnrt. rt ViCf'-nt-t cf f-i-f; a -I r(U. ELY BROTHERS. Hmgxil,0ero,5Y. (Ml-UMirS WAGONS & SLEIGHS Ciirri -it' Makins in all i?s Franc ytfiffin, Tri)!inin I ti . snoiiri M.rii t; s...i -! r- i nvK?r I'lili'fX Al.-o. I 'Unini:. i; -r. ; V. ... j Turn . iiiK with lrnprr.l rr.a-!. ir.t --. ..:- .. f, k'n4 ! ' tiery.rl ilijiif. I arnnir f rr i i .-i rtl I A'! i -.i rt tru'.tina- me wirN i-e aonor- a-l ! i.'t with- ;: w-.rk rr..'.t . I'. V.. HI TE. tt--nhnr. leti.hrr 14. S or nant Ifn lid Rnya Mella. rm IV i- -.le- t.-.i-Ti rh'.a I 'ft r . r .! ,-.r -e fl n i rv ex;e i e. even l"Mk, &.n. .No extra et. : . .-njl ext'-eet o eini'niti i. tor '--.. n. IwHve l-et inted t ;. r r . ad lEac. ai; l nil Krulm.1 Sr.r ii ......tmimEm-, f.ir tfl .; t" a.iv tnte ra i . i 1 . St-s. .'r 1 fr !tt -.T.-l l-nkwird I..-1. Va--f ..r :-.:1rci li.i - ! -l m, l li .1 ' - - f' .. .-f : .n' rt f I : f . ' . ., rifcw t "..;.---. r t : ' T ' T.e I ' r.-; r-f. S!n j, i .- rt'f1 ; .''.-it a f H v r.. n w . 1 1 v: r--.i r 1 . j a 'f 1 - .-. ... Iir: .Pl l.i.Klin'l I.' I I !l Tl i'- r. - i.-"t - nt t erll'-e in 15 In 1 1 ta-. A ir r! iia i na rla in 't.e r.t-: :!( e-rry i.jr I I I- f ' I.i .frat'.T-T . J v iti n c n ir " t. 1 I: - tin t tea l'j na- -B I"'-. 'u tn rr a! t OIL il-iirl . Me.fa - .-'la'-.er . . . - - h t . . a. l a I 1". il . . - I.I In ti- l.i'iisrj : ;: I In - Ti . ti er h. l a t- . v t . ' ; - t, t T I ' .. f I . : ' I ' ;.(.- r . - J - i . : t '. I '- : rrt. r s ' T 1 1 ' ; i ,:. t . . Harvard lit..,- ,-. . ! WATMRr"? nii.r.n p.itEi ! - f ar sirk ,. rh. CURE FOR lorlor,.!' I i.er. B.lioin ILadaeae, j TP vTjUfl TH ' " "' i VUliO I it i i T rrmit - r . . rut .fj'jes. S.-ltx.-t- -vreid. - j "--,-' .v I- - t ., - . i--,.'ec-.a r v-srj-ai i W. 1 1 I ' -e-t'f t. t' ' V:'---f'Ty ' '- l- t'-t-i- - XVvX --.lie- yv-.- S:cKD3dacho,S:;'.'! -. -it i t r i r. l arJt.-tt. kr ra - a rtk '' DYSPEPSIA.:?:'; V::' f; y Aii K :'x..,. - - - jkj. - er. k m w tj r . " u Xf Lot L3 ,iT-",' - - . - - j
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers