SMH)m gxttwm. CBCNSBURC. PA.. KKI li V TD I T o ice" vAUAI " - Al ML loot. " " Thk United States revenue returns show 4,033 saloons in Iowa. l,S52in Xansts, 4 It) in Vermont, and 1 202 in Maine all State iD which prohibition prohibits in theory. Thk Demociatic County Committee tret on Monday last an I fixed upon Sa'nrday. June 4th, next, as the time for holding the primary election, and th follow ire Monday as the time for the metin of the return Judges. It is said that the Tension Bureau at Washington contains more soldiers at imserit as employes than ever before, which was brought about by the Coni inissioneia bouncing civilians and filling their places with worthy veterans of the la'.e war. ." Saturday last, the Democratic j primaries to elect delegates to the i Kentucky Stale Convention, to be held at ( I-ouisville, ou May 4:h, rext, were held ' and the probabilities are that General ' Simon Bolivar Buckner, will be nomi r.aied for Governor with butl:tileor no opposition. The Republican paity now has con trol of the Executive aud both branches of the Legislature of this State and is responsible for all legislation. The Leg islature, however, has done nothing with the exception of putting in time and drawing pay, and havt done very little to be responsible for. i James II. Marr, Chief Clerk of the First Assistant Postmaster-General's ffic, died on Monday last after a 'ong illness. With the exception of Lindsay Muse, the colored doorkeeper of ti e Secretary of th Navy. Marr has betn in the continuous service of the Government for a lunger period than any one now living. He obtained a clerkship in the Post Office Department In l.'Jl, when Andrew Jackson was Pre sident. He has served under twenty six Pi s'.masters-Genera!. The belt in Texas for the last two fears so sorely stricken with drouth and onsequen famine has at last had relief. The bottles of the universe seem fairly i have emptied themselves, and the dis- rtct is now flooded and overflowing. . hoiiftands of the carcasses of animals at have died of thiist by the decrees eiim fate, rover and befoul the rivers jf ater that course along the region that iiut a few days ago was the parched deseit that denied them even a hup of water. Within nine mouths ended March 31 there was a decrease of 21,. "00,000 in the national banking circulation. This was due to the redemption of 3 per cent, bonds aud to the high premium on the bonds nquired as security for national nk notes. But the decline in this cir llation has been far more than compen Ued for by the increase in gold and .-iiver money, of which nearly 75,000, OuO entered into circulation among the people of the L'nited States during those Dine moLlhs. So there need be no great apprehension of a violeut contraction of the currency by accumulations of Trea sury surplus between the close of the fiscal year and the metting of Congress in December. The situation in Europe between France and Germany is agaiu looking warlike. Both countries are carrying immense armies, at an enormous cost, that cannot long be maintained without bankruptcy, as the burden of taxation is too great for the people to bear. Neither country can disarm in the face of th9 other aud although war may be put eff and delayed, it is inevitable and must eventually come. Dispatches from Europe seem inclined to this belief that Bismark is in favor of forsing on war as the only way out of the present strained situation. Both countries have been prepaiing Tor some time, and now that the weather and season will permit of th moviDg of armies, it may be, that the dogs of war may be let loose at any moment. The earnings of fifty-two railroads the first week under the Interstate law showed an increase over the correspond ing wees last year of 32,031 or 17.29 : per cent. It is obvious that it is not the ; railroads that will suffer under the new 1 law, and it is equally evident also th?t ' Jespite the repression iucident to the : operation of the law, the general move- i ment of trade and commerce is great ind bound to be great. The gross ear- 1 nlngs of fifty-seven railroads amount to ' 124.934,900, comparing with ?22, 675,011 ! in 1880, an increase of $2,200,849. i There was an increase in net earnings ' -' !143, 329, or about 2 per cent. The i t earnings of fifty eight roads during ! first two months of the year showed 1 . increase of f 2,889,804. During the 1 week of Apiil sixty-seven railroads ' " :ied $3,817,011, an increase over last ! - : Of 878,577, or 29.90 per cent. j . he singular discovery was made last " :-k at Bridgeport Connecticut, that a ! ang woman. Miss Mattie Morgans, j t -venty-foui years of age, disguised In I ' ale attire Las been running on th ! angatuck railroad for the past two1 iars, and for about two years before I 1 eing promoted to le au engineer had -rrved in the capacity of fireman on the uue road. She was, after Dring for two ; ars, appointed an enginear of ;i freight -in and afterwards promoted to a pas - ogei train. She never met with any ei.ous accident, hut lately killed two Lieu and a short time ago killed a little -.'. 1 that was playing on the track at a ; . ;ce where it was impossible to stop in . us to save it. That was her last trip, e went Lome, took sick and on her re- very told her sex, donntd her skirts ''.r:.iin and it is Baid will seek some other f itployment more suitable to her sex. I 'iring her four ysars term of employ, ruent od the road her sex had never been ' ipected. Tub trial of J .ke Sharp for bribing the boodle alderman of New York city, was on Monday last, ordered to be set down for My 11th. Twenty one in dictments for bribery have been found against him and It is rumored that Mr. j"s,"':,'-"""',',,''"" - u turn i . Sua rp, in order to escape punishment, j may before his trial tell, what he knows lout bribing aldermen and throw him self upon the mercy of the Court. John Boyle O'Reilly, poet aud patriot, estimates that Boston sends ?.-.00,000 to Ireland annually, and New York f 1,000.000. As he says: "Not tc make their homes happy, noi to mke the people comfortable, but to pay to save their lives, to save their little shel ter?, to keep the roofs over their heads, and to keep them from the to ich of G!enbeih." President Cleveland has appoint ed George W. Childs, editor olthe Phil adelphia Ledger, a member of the Board of Visitors to West Point Mili tary Academy. Mi. Childs who has heretofore been tendered by other Presi dents some very important public posi tions but always refused, says in this instance that the appointment was ten dered so gracefully that, he must set aside his determination not to accept public position and enrol himself for this service. A Philadelphia paper gives the result til iuti official calculations re cently made, showiug iiiftt the Lota'. Janthrac.ie area ot Pennsylvania before ; miuiiiir commenceu was jju.vwrj square : i miles, and, allowing 1,0U0 tons to the j acre, a foot in denth would give 320,000,- 000 tons; then, assuming the depth to average tnirty feet a grand total appears of 0 fiOO.OU) 000 tons. At the prtsecf time the onsuuiptiou averages about 30,(KX),000 t r:s a year. Thus al the commencemeui o. miuiog opeiaUuus the supply was sudlcient for 320 years. Dallas Sanders, Esq.. ChairmaD of the Democratic State Committee, has issued the following call : A meet ing of the State Committee, pursuant to adjournment, will be held at Harrls burg, on Wednesday, May 11th, t 12 o'clock, noon, at the Bolton House, to 9x the time of meeting of the next State Convention, to act on the report of the Committee recommending a uniform plan for making Senatorial and Con gressional nominations, to receive the reports of the County organizations, and to transact such other business as may be brought before the Committee. The New York ll'orM has been ma king a study or election figures with in teresting results. The increase of vote in 184 over 1SS0 was, in the total vote, 843,633 ; in the Democratic vote 4,. 082, and in the Republican vote. 390,?81. In 18SG the total vote was 349,480 less than in 18S0. But the Democratic vote increased 20,17(5 in 1886 ovr 1880, and the Republican vote fell off 432,154. In 188G the Democrats polled 448,890 less voUs than 1884, and the Republi cans 831,438 less. The growth of the Prohibition strength is simply marvel lous. From 5.008 in 1872 it increased to 151,071 in 1S4 and to 208,738 last year ; an increase in 1S7G of 117,607 over 184, The Greenback party, which polled an imposing vote of 307,306 in j 1880, has gone gradually down, until in 18.0 it polled -nly 99,400 votes all over the Union. But the Labor vote has come in its place to puzzle the politi cians. The New York World says : The ' Republican organs that concede the pro- ' priety of reducing the surplus revenue , always couple the admission with an t l( if ' ' si., a wl.in , 1 l i l . ,, rr i 1 ii, ui a niiru, ur a UUl. inilS the Cincinnati Commercial Gazette says : "Thesnrplss revenue should be reduced, j out tne reduction should take nlane upon an intelligent system. More than this, before the United States consents to cutting off the surplus we should have firearms in abundance, great and small, equal to any in the world." And so it goes. Mr. Haletead wants more " Srearros," Mr. Sherman more internal improvements, Mr. Hoar more pensions, Mr. Blair more subsidies, and all the leaders more expenditures of some extraordinary sort, before the peo ple are relieved of the war taxes that have already been prolonged twenty-two years after the close of the war, and ten years after any reasonable excuse for their continuance could be urged. Well, perhaps these surplus squander ing statesmen are right. Perhaps the people do "love to be taxed," as Senator Sherman once said. But the fact that the Conventions of both parties continue to promise to reduce the taxes, without any ifs or buts, and that the people have twice elected a Congress and once a i resident committed to a reduction, t militates aeainst this theory ,' A toRUEsroxDExi of the St. Louis Republican, last week started the story, that in an interview with a prominent Democratic senator who was intimate with President Cleveland, the fact was made public that Mr. Cleveland would, upon no consideration, accept a renom ination for the Presidency. The story appears to be without foun d 'it ion and to have started from the well j known disposition of President Cleve i land to be adverse to the usual methods j of stiekiLg a nomination. That, in the i face of strong opposition, he would not enter the convention as a candidate and , make a fight, aud by the use of official power ana tne manipulation of federal patronage secure the nomination is well knon. But if the nomination, how ever, comes to hira from the fact that Tla ailivilnlal.ni: . j kiuhuk-ilhuu m inn umce nas oeen j ume tbe case waa adjourned. Owing , clean, honest anJ popular, and for tte j lo the maqnitndB of the case this pro i best iuiertsts of the country it would be j hal)'e sudn termination of an import j impoasible for Mr. Cleveland to turn Jioi C&36 V100" ; aside from the wishes of the Democracy, ' " ' and he Will, withmit. dnnht a.o. v. . nomination and aeain lead th mn, 1 - ou 10 victory in 1SSS. I rresident j The administration of C eveland, since the day of his inaugu istion, has steadily gaiDed in favor with the people and business intere&ts or the country, and when the next Democratic convention meets his renomination will be demanded by nine-tenths of the Dem ocracy and hia re-election will be sure to follow. The Tenal Colony 1'roject. The proposition to dispose of the prison labor questiou by making Alaska penal colony is bing urged with some vigor. Tne New York Herald has argued in its favor, backing the proposal with the remarkable statement that the transporting system of England was found to be very useful and beuerlcial in its workings. The belief that the op posite is the casd has a rather good foundation in the fact that it has been entirely abandoned. The proposition here arouses two salient objections. The fiist is that if Alaska is a proper country for the in voluntary eettlemeut ef thousands of people, thu plan would be as injurious to one laboring element than the pres ent system is, if no: more so. IfJ that country offers a'.tractions to settlers, our agricultural population will want it; and to shut out that large and important class by fii'ling it wilb convicts would be bad justice and worse policy. On the other hand, if Alaska has no attrac tions to offer to settlers, it would be mere inhumanity to send a loc of con victs to suffer there The other objection to the transporta tion plan is that it is wholly unnrces- th'at'of crowding independent workmen I .,t r,i,..t V. i .nh.nK.ii.Hi ...nr.i . - . ...... J 1 One is that suggested by a labor leader i not long since to limit the number of convicts that can be employed in any one industry. Twenty rive or fifty prisoners in a single industry cannot depress the rate of wages much, and the diversification of prison labor which this would seenro would mnke the in- s' ruction to be obtained in the prisons j much more usetul to the prisoners, than the present s9tem. Another plau w- old be to pay prisoners full wages and 8uppor ()f famUies and let thfir suiplus earnings go to the i The piece- price system offers another method, if rightly administered, to prevent prison labor Irom depressing the rate of wages. With these plans for making prison labor useful to the convict and innocu ous to labor at large, it hardly seems possible that this country will take the step backward implied in adopting the old and semi-civilzed plan of taking convicts to a wild country and turning them loose to get rid of them. Pittx burg Dispatch. And Still They Come. The toilers and some less desirbale classes of the people of the Old World are still possessed of the opiniou ihat America ii the poor mau's paradise. The number of Immigrants landing at New York last week wa 12,454, or beany tv"o thousand a day. The most ot I li is ai my of newcomers were tickHted to th- West and remaiued in New York only lorn enough to transfer their bag gage and themselves to the railway i la ins. This in he test feature of the UTipn cedent ed flow of immigration to our shores at tnis tim-i, as it shows that tlie great liotly of the new candidates for American, citizenship are not mere waifs, helplessly floating and lad of any port. Th'-y know where they are going and what they are going to do wheu they get, iheie. The euortnous figures, representing a single week's arrivals, are staggering. N-w inhabitants enough te populate a respectab'e ci'y each week would have been hailed with njoiciugby the major ity of American citizens a few years ago. But the rapid increase in crime, p.iuprTiSm and Insanity noted recently, and which is chiefly traceable to foreign sources, hus brought the American peo ple iHt-e to face with the fact that for eign immigration on a large scale is not an nnmixed b'esaing. The recent labor troubles h,ye served to show likewise that the advocates of iioting and vio lence are chietiy of foreign birth. The blood and-dynamite school of Anarchists that is beginning to be aggressively prominent in some of onr large cities is composed entirely of foreigners. hetiier tor gooa or ror ev:;, ;joever, the foreigners are coming in swarms. They believe they can better their con dition here, and as American dooio ire not slammed in their faces they are ound to try the experiment anytvay. The year 1882 witnessed the greatest number of arrivals, when 788,992 per sons landed at American ports. At the present rate the prospect is very gjod that the immigration of 1887 will exceed that of 1882. The absorption of this vast body of alien people au1 their trans formation into loyal, law-abidinc and l useful citizens of the United States is a problem of no small proportions and calls for the exercise of the holiest qualities of statesmanship. Philadcl- phia Times. Sovxd Democuatic Sekse. What the Democratic party will require vaxt year is a ticket which will most surely , carry the electiou. If, when the time for iiominatioD comes, Mr. Cleveland i seems to be the man for the head of the i ticket, the Democratic convention would be silly not to rerominate him, whether . this should be agreeable to him or not. If success should be more certain with j some one else, no doubt it will take that man. it is a question which cannot be decided until the time comes. aDd we have no doubt Mr. Cleveland will con sider the other question whether he would accept a renomination when it is offered him, and not until then. Meantime we recall to th reru;ie J tion of Democrats who want their pmy i to win in 1888. certain words of Mr. j Randall : 1 "We can more easily re elect Mr. I Cleveland than elect a new man. Or, to put this in a different shape, if we , cannot re-elect Mr. Cleveland, he bav I inir accomplished in part or in whole the i reforms desired by the neonle. then we cannot elect any one. v e must clusier arHur"l him and his administration, and I thus keep our party together, strengthen i D on onoKlo ir , J, i Liiaijj ,v iMjrrr-.t. im JIH! eij 3 in iawitnasoiid front." If. 1 Herald. Ax Insane Juror. The biggest kind of a sensation was caased in the Hudson county. New Jersey, court of Oyer and Terminer, April 23rd. For over a week the trial of James Kava nagb, charged with the murder of Pa trick Hayden has been on, and was ex pected tc go to the jury to-day, Saturday. During the last few days Dr. Spitzka, the noted expert on Insanity, and others, had been giving considerable testimony on insanity, and this testimony produ ced such an effect upon Juror Freeman that it lecame evident to every one in court that morning that he was violent ly and dangerously insane and unfito be longer on the jury. The unfortunate man was at once removed to Taylor's hoi el, where the jury have been con fined since being empannelled, in the hope that he may be able to resume his IT. . "HV.1I WHICH G"FADvMls. AP" 27.-CaptaIn . 1J. lowiers, of this citv. a traveling salesman for Schmidt & Zeifjler, of New Orleans, hot and tatally wounded Rev. . ir. stivers, of the Episcopal church about noon to day. The shooting oc curred in Towlers' own house. The cause is not known as neither parcy has said anything about the affair. Stivers, expectirg to die, made a confession in which he stated that Captain Towlers was justified and be didn't want him punished. Thysicians say Stlven can not recover. Curiosities or Taris Law. The London Pall Mall Oaziite says : A little book has been published recen tly which gives the public some insight into the functions and power of the pre fect of Pans. No one is allowed to stick a note on door or wiudow tskiug for an employe, or post a bill on a boaid ing unless it be stamped and taxed. Advertisers rosy adopt any color they please except while, which signifies pur ity, aud is exclusively reserved for olli cial announcements. Special permis sion is required to give an assault-at-airrs, but nothing is said about perniis siou to tight a duel. If any one comes to Paris with the ide.i that be can si art business right off as a rag picker he is mistaken. lie will be ruu in if found gathering rags without a license. No reunion or meeting tor political or religious objects cau meet without the consent of the prefect aud under what ever conditions he pleases. In order to hold a rneecing on a non politicai subject seven persons connected with it must make a Uociarai lou at the prelect ure thiee days before the day ot meeting. Special peiiuiMSiou is required to give nails and concei ts and to per ioral teats of agility m music hails. Owing to the exigencies of ihe ocuoi, c"le aa. lue stock " on,v o" enter Paris at certain hours of I he day ud tj certain routes. Merchants o! aud by certain routes. bric-a-brac must be supplied with biass medals and licensed. Dogs are made the subject ot a series ol regui lions. Frenchmen Sceoj to have a teiror of the bulldog, lor it is decreed that "no dog of the race boule dogue or a crossed boule dogue rniiTt be allowed to go at large on the aueeis ; m warehouses, woikshopsor other public places. In side houses thest! dogs must always be kept in a suriug or muzzle." Cuojuoiss ioutrs must make tleclarai ion ami get a medal and livrei before stalling busi ness. Commissioners are shoe-blacks. No organ grinder, street musician or itinerant merchaut can exercise his pro fessions wi'hout pei mission trom the pietect. No permission is granted unless the applicant has resided ai. least one year within the jurisdin iou of tUe prefect and is French. The street musicians, however, sometimes play without per miFsioQ. Should a concierge be in a particularly amiable turu he will allow an Italian to p'ay within his gates, wheie he is as absolute as the prefect,. The prefect supplies workmen with liv rets, without which they are not woilh anything. Porters at the public mar kets must have a certificate of guoJ conduct from the police. Any one who saves a drowning person from any river, either by cailing attention to or rescu ing him, gets 25f. ; whoever discovers a corpse in the rier, receives 15f. ; for rescuing a hoise, Gf. are allowed. Re publican guards employed at fieatersor balls are paid If. per night ; if on horse back, lit. For a private soiree they get of. " Cleveland and a Second Term. The way in which the reported refusal of Mr. Cleveland to be again a candi date has beeu received jy the public is remarkably significant. The itepubli cans accept it with great glee, aud dis cover in the evidence that it is without foundation signs of weakness on 'he president's part, aud that it was put foilh as a "feelei" to uncover public sentiment. They would I ke very much to be convinced of its absolute verity . The Philadelphia Times declares : "There is not a Republican in the country, from Bla.ne down, who does noi regard Cleveland as the one obstacle to Republican success in 18n-(. " Demo crats may think there are ( ther ob stacles, but that the statement is true of Republicans there is no question. One hears it ou every hand, from the shrewd practical politicians as well as the cool and disinterested observeis. The Democratic opposition to Mr. Cleveland's rene-ruination is of very little account. It is much less pro nounced to-day thau a year ago; de monstratively a dwindling force, and unless the unforeseen should happen a year hence wiM have no aggressive ex istence. The New York Evening Post, a mug wump supporter of the president, but disposed to be sevt rely critical of recent j changes in the public serv.ee by the re moval of Republicans aud appointment ot Democrats, holds that the things that have mad6 the president's renomi nation inevitable are "the good he has done aDd the enemies he has made." It says "it is the election and not the renomination which all true friends both of the president and of the Demo cratic party, aow need to look to. There is something in this. The next election will be no holiday tournay, but a closely contested battle. The things that have won for Mr. Cleveland the ndmiration and approval of intelligent public sentiment, it is quiie likely have also laid the basis of possible defection. There are a great many hanging on to the edges of political parties who are ardent Tor prodigal expenditures and all sorts of jobbery. He will have none of it, and hence they will welcome the ad vent of a Blaine or Sherman, who boast the treasury vaults will be opened to all comers. It is said the defeat of the ?0,000,000 Southern educational job and the pocket veto of the river and harbor bill, may cost the Democracy the Spates of Virginia and Nortn Carolina, and make Tennessee a doubtful State. We don't credit this, but such early predic tions show the expectations of the oppo sition, and their plan to buy away south ern States rrom the Democracy. This Is what John feherman's southern tour and Nashville speech meant. The action of the next congress, therefore, tiecomes of vast political importance! The outcome will probably be united Democratic effort in both houses in sup port of a policy of tax reduction that will be pushed as an administration mea- 8urei ana n which we will be able to naieijr K, iu me country, rittshunih Post. TriE New York correspondent of the Philadelphia Ledger says : "The gloved hand . of Mr. John Sherman and his friend is distinctly visible in the pre liminary arrangements for the Repub lican primary elections. Mr. Blaine's friends are not less conscious of this fact than Mr. John Sherman, but, some how or other, so far as your correspond ent :s able to observe at the clubs, the former .have lost, or are losing their 'grip.' They are not manifesting a tithe of the active personal interest in these primaries that they did formerly, whereas the partisans of 'Ohio's favorite son' (that is the new catch-phrase) are leaving not only the smallest stone un turned to secure a voice (and a future vote) in his favor." A Special dispatch from theCity of Mexico triumphantly announces the discovery of two of the seven lost Mex ican bonanza mines by an American party of prospectors. Rfnewn IIr Tenth. Mrs. Tlicebe Chesley, retersion. Clay Co., Iowa, tells tbe following remarkable story, the truth of which is vouched for by tbe resi dents of the town : "I am 73 years old, have been troubled with kidney complaint and lameness for many year9 ; could not dress myself without help. Now I am free from all pain and soreness, and am able to do all my own housework. I owe my thanks to Electric Bitters for havlnir renewed my youth, aud removed completely all disease and pain" Try a bottle, only 50c. at the Draft Stores of E. James, of Ebensburg and W.W. McAteer, of Loretto. AEV1S AM) OT1IEK SOTLNGS. Rains In the cistrkts of Illinois that lipve suffered from drouth are improving the crops aud tbe distress is now over. The body of Edward Reilly, of Shenan doah, aged 10 years, was found in the rooun tain by a hunter late last week. He bad evi dently died of exposure. Oil has been struck in the Zoar Valley, Chautauqua county, New York, and efforts are being mane by parlies irom Bradford and other oil centers to Ie!e all available and. A Mercer couury Iran oiiie t'rae npo gave formal notice that his wife hail eloped with one Daniel Metz, and now Me z comes back with a bill for boarding her durina her stay with him. After a brisk fight at Missouri City, five manufacturers of counterfeit coin that has heen largely distributed about Western Mis ! j sonri have beeu jailed. The leiuitr of ti e t coiners and two t'lei erenped. Jsnif-s Murpt.v. ftued twenty-five years ' Ml ii Rle, wss working ou the Cumberland J v'alley Hailroad bridge over ti e usqaehan- i ' na Kivir. near IJ&rrisfturj, Sunlay, when a ' j rienvi be ni Oil up, .ii inn) and injured him ;' j ,o badly tMtt he died a f,-w hours later. ' I Jroi-s Nixon, a farmer, of flar- 1 inonYille Pa., who had no faith m banks : i i . was decoyed from his !,nuse lest weett by two mt n nd a confsderate rohli -o the p ace ! ; of ii-ailv fG.OUO, wl.ich he !,ad secieted I i lie di.-ieuvered the U1 to day and reported I J to the p;lie. I Nalarday was pay day at the mines at ! Duck pond , Luzerne yimnty. 0:ie hundred Hungarians got Deadly drunk and a general I riot imiowed. ir nrue Keikery had ins j j heart cut out by to fei'ow ct untrymen, ! ' A dtiTen other mjn were :-adly cut, two, it j is believed, fatally. j ! A misting draft for sevfntv-fi ve thou- sand dollar, supposed to linve lien mailed j by the Dunn Brothers, of Philadelphia to j tre AmericMii Exchange National hank, of ; New York, viu fi mul in th- office of the : Dunn Brothers at Philadelphia on Monday, ana me posnriice investigation at once ' ceased j The K.ven-ide Hotel at Chicano, was j totally destroyed by fire on Saturday, caua j inn a less of ?l00,0O;. The insurance is meiely nominal Tl re were 18 families j and 'JO BucNts in the house, but all escp.-d i injury. The Kiversirte was a treat rtruc J tu re of frame built to accommodate summer seekers. When (iage, as City Treasurer, failed, it sank Into comparative insitnifi I canco. ! At a wv'inc .f 'he Miners' and La i borers' Amalgamated aociation at Slia- muk in. on Monday it was decided to demand i an advance of ten per ci nt. in wages, to take ( fTect on the 2d i.f May, aereeini; at the same time to uive the coal companies untii May 9lh to acc. ia fi. Ihc-ir demand. The men exprrt a refusal ard are prepared to strike. I. is eencrally the opinion that the Schu Ik ill county millers Will join in th demand. Samuel I). Conner, a stepson of Gen. William Li'ly, a wealthy coal operator of Mauch Chunk, and prominent in the Repub- 'iean polities of this State, was married on Fri.lay in Camden, X. J.. to Miss Kate It. M iffet. About noon on Saturday, he went to the Monument Cemeteiy and fired a bullet ! into his head. He died in a few minuter No cause can be assigned for the act. Con ner tad not long shire been engaged in j mining in tbe West. He was about forty five years of age and Qwasaratherhandsome.CIX)VKltANI)TIMOTIIY SKED, is twenty-four yenrs old. t.-.,.-uo r.i vnTiVnn. r-.r txm lei, qto! man. Ilia widow A three-year old dau;l.ter of Mrs. Walsh, of Pcranton, Pa,, was burned to ! death on Monday momine. Af er the father j had crone tn mrk rhn nmthpr ctunnod mil in 1 c - - ...... . . , i V . ' U k. . ' . attend to some matters in the yard. Pres ently she heard the shrieks of one of the chil dren and, hasteninK to the house, found it full of siu.jke. The bedroom was on tire , r.t,d her little daughter burned almost to a j crisp. It is supposed that after the mother had left the bed the little one reached to a stand near by and obtained a box of matches, with which she set her clothing on fire. Friday night an old man was locked u; In a Washington police-station who gave the name of Count Zawaski, of Warsaw, Poland. His papers were examined and substantiated his statements, ne was born in 1791, served in the French army under Xapoleon I., was exiled for conspiacy, came to this country with Kossuth and re- i sided for a time in this city. He served sev eral years as drill master at West Point. When the civil war broke out he enlisted j and served in a Pennsylvania regiment. He is seeking admission to the Soldier's iiome at tne capital. Mrs. Elizabeth Goetsch, who lives In the third story of No. 130 Dudley street, Jersey City, went out shopping Friday afternoon, leaving her three-year-old son, Albert, alone In tbe house. As she was returning home the little fellow, who had climbed up tbe window, noticed her on the street when she was within a few feet of the house, and be ean waving his hands to her. The mother had barely noticed the child when it lost Its balance and fell from tte window. With a shriek she rushed forward and put out her hands to catch it, but It slipped through tbem and was instantly killed. The mother fainted. On Saturday morning a freight train coming up tbe heavy grade at Be;iver Can yon, Idaho, with sixteen cars of merchan dise, coal, wood and ties, became uncoupled from the enpine. Conductor Lowry ai.d tbe brakeman began setting the hand brakes, but could not stop tbe cars. They went down the canyon at a frightful rate of speed for oyer three miles when the cars jumped the track, going over the precipice to the roefcs below. Conductor Isaac Lowry had both legs broken and died soon afterwards. The brakman miraculously escaped with slight injuries. Fourteen cars and theircon. tents are a total wreck. i HOW 3 Your Liver? If the Oriental salutation, knowint' that gxd health 'innot xist withv-.it a h-'allliv Livr. WIht. .. -Livr-r i torj.i.l the Tov '. are sliiLru;i-li and con-.-tij-ntil, the fo'xl lies in the f-tomaeh nnli iT'U'il, jioisonintr the l'!ii-l: fnu.-nt ln-ailaclie ti-ue- . ;t feeling r.f l.-'.p-i-tu-li, 'lesiioiiiloiiv p.nd Ti' tv n: ie? in l'i'atf how the wh le pvst'-m i. de range'l. Sininv.i.s I.iwr Jleyularor 1 n jjjrt me;ls. of ivt' r; !:.i'V' p'-''le to li--.;!:!; ,ir 1 j..;:.j.!i,f-.ss liy vri vir.; ,!:T! ti li'-althy Liver than any ag.-ncy known on earth. It u;t3 with extraor dinary power and eraewv. NEVER BEEN DIS A PPOI NTi: D Aoa central f;imily remedv fur liv-ix ,1 Torpid I.ivor, .'nntiptition. etc.." I h ; ; , ever ii anvthinp tl, mid have i.."vt-r lioeri ds;ippointeii In the crt'xot pr.l'iv.t . :! - nis ti 1 almost a perfivt c-uro fi..- .1. iiM.:iscs of tho st'itnncb and Ilow. is. 1 DYSPEPSIA , a dftnjrT": a wpii m drftrvwnnir r-Tmpietint If o1"-tt it tnd; Hy lmpAinijt nutrition, find prT-iiifr iti t..n of the astem, to prppuw the M for Rrtpid IWrlin. rp: THE BEST TONIC ? t-j4ekly tird coTnrtlteiy I nrr DTienif fn all rr. torrui. Ileiirtbiirn, Kclrhinic. Tn-.rirt thai i ttnr. tw It winches and lu-nti the Mood fTmn-lnt-. :.he pief ite and ail the- a'milhf ion of hMd. JitV A T Koatfl.F.R. the honored I-PiKt-ir nl ttl I'm Reforme-I t'h'irrh. Baltimore. 1d . anvs " Having: u-ed Hro-an'a Iron Htr for Ip-3im and InavTion I t.nko itreat tl-uun in re-m-mendiMir tmrlily. A IH con-orler it a splendid (Kud ar.i mvar'irMt.r and Trr t.trr.(rtliiiri5 " ll'iN J'WEl'H O SriT. .Jndtc- .f t'lronit fvi',p1il C'hntoD f.. Ind . aays: ' I bear ch-rTnl teFT:- Fumy to ttie eftiracy of Brown's iron Btttwnt tut lycjwpMijfc. and an a tnntc." 0iiuiiio hitfl aioA Trad Mark ard erfffd nd lioeat im wmmr. Take DO olhrr. W1on!yby BUUW tUtjlKAL CO- BiLXltOH. M Tliis Styls MaflelpMa Sicr. th(r romi-nuif f-ctuirc from 5V to 5'. A c m f trtt set of fittArlmientft with evh nm-hiu. A! J .lifin Uii'll-ir. J-hrou Tnckor, ami Ikx ft Fur tj. rr:n at.'l rt IM-I.r. 15 TRIAL - v.'iir wit !; ; r-vf ,r" yuM -v on t- ciiL. Kvtry r.:ir AKK,M :! F4K .1 VKAUH. ?!. J for fin uinr. V. A. '.VOOD C O.A1IAT', 17 or til loth St.. Ihllalvlpliln, PA. NOI K.'ll. ' nilHK HK1KS AND l.KUAL RKMKKSKJf- 1 tti .l ' :mril lMinean. leat. lane I aotice. thut xu inon 'et will he hhl at th lato i , residcne of Hercar.i iiine.an. dee d In the town- ! I Khiji ( C! jrr;?Ji. j-., the rountv of t "arnhria on ' ; Friday . the 27th dny of May nxt, at 3 cluck in ' j tti? aiit-riioon ol tuatda. lor the ;urpoe ot mH- j ninn iriinun t tlie real estate ot ?ai,l doed:nt t :,I"I "-mon hi? hrir anil l-ial representatives j n.TAhShoJlTt.hlVr.'to '".IS: 'and ' appraise th .m mv:utv1 jug to law. atwrnrh time i I,,ace 'ou re -p5'iiro ! t atten l II vnu think SlierirTj (fnr, Klo!iluru. Pa. Apr. 15. 4t.' Blaiisville, Pa., Ladies' Seminary. Hi -'.i'iM'ii! gTr.n n '1 . ommo!ious 'luiMinif heat ed t)j steam. e th till hK-Htli.n. thorough iristruc 1 1 ' Kintit rrv-iilfiu ti' h-r. Kurnisl ed r .m, bnfi-il( l.ji t, mill TnitM.n ;n regular .-etire S200 PER YEAR. SreH: ,vanlii'f in Art and .MopIc. Tblrty rith yir t.eg;:i- Sepi.pth, H"!. i or 'atH l.jjuo. rpiy " tv. t. k. Lw ixii. n. n.. -luiy -i;. 1 . Print-;!.!. VH:n,o-;tKn.lf,.o,hio. a A" A H-IBnL 1 ihi'l h "r : ' f ;" ' ' - h: i-trm - f - . a v . Our ci . tl.- Crc- Send 1 if P,a li'i I "In pl ;il c CI n iilo, BAUCrl a, SGSS, raw bc: m riAi'-ryns, SO Soul!) I): !;'.v.;iit AvrrtiiP, XSTiri isnrn 1-ss. lIill.A:r:i.l'III . PA. PARKEKS 3 II a in f n t l ft UAt,!Alfl the rntar f -rfirtt- tor drslnr th hjiir, l'..-t.)rln.r r or hr. pray, anil jr?vntii(r lnnrtruU: It clt-aiis.- tlic .-Ji, st.iw thu hair folUnir, anl Ii, rtire to sltiw The ht Cough Care yon ran tv. And th liest rr-'entlTe known for Conwimptln. It w oriily IKUKH. aad all di.-orrtrra i.f thu SJnurh nwla, I.unr. 1.It, Ki.liieya, l- riunry Orpni atui all FuniOe K.nn.laiutu. Tlic fiwl.lo and ji, trrni--fftug at-aim rtraac, and flowly drirtinp tctnr! UiafrraTo, win in nntoaHea reoovvr aheir Ko,tl 1 ttJixily mv of I'AKKBK'a To.vj. , but ili-lav U tlnn Ceruoa. Taka It In time. Sold by aU lruxins tn Inron bottle at H.04. The pntmt, xit-kM, quickest and ht nn for Oorna, Pnnums. Wrt, Mol-.,-n.)!oor,e. ftiniUrj! their fur fKTprovth. Ptsall r-u". iivmanotronM. UlakttnUMa fw- omfortaMe. Hln(!Tr.-ma mirc when everyUiinpr tBatnlla. HaKX by Uriwuwa at l.Vv nimnsiv, . Y. AL1S.V WANTED. to canvass for th sl of Nurserv I Sfpadv I emi lovnii.t eiiarer.tffij. Salary and dy j pens' Taid. App: at once statinL Ex V-iri mi iii, ;jaif r. I.Ii A liKllgfi. Feb. 25 2m. Rufhr ster, N. T. l:OlUHE.?!F;WABK,SEW,IEUiKY. Occnpto"! thro Kjri Mines l.nre. -i nnl B-M lor ritinn for KTHduatoa lhan ;ii! orli.r .i,.ic Ua- ItvAMk yrrro'r- ! A UDITOirs NOTICE. it TJ,. m,?.,he ! 'T'-nns-l-ourt of tmhria cr.tinty in the matter olthe hrt and finul accont of .loah- SfVmTavr0;'.. .r.1 wm nd ' rf.IiV. r "l'l"1,n'c' tld fourt to make cofl,",n?' ,lie'"n'1 ,D han.l.of th ac- i ",,":-n" ltV' hen-hy c,ven t).t I w,M at at the IS day of April. 17,,,, lo o c! . k. a. m., to d.ncharue the dull, ol arnl.i appointment when , and where all persona Inten-Mod may att-nd or -e rorever debarred from c.minif in on ai,l fund Eben-bur-, I'a , Mch. -jr.. Aodlt-.r i7os ilflMl,li .!c anjJur. (T ierta to I,an.wrl hv lb, ,1. . ;JT"J V Bk . " " " " i- -i ,,1 ih-lr aa hrarm aenrtf.taa tn tr j- MlnilM. It . . . J" -r !.rP:.-. I r--m.l Pfcfa-laa la ( bara arl rrt. a ln.Oo.u-. - ,t , ..M? THIS PAPER KAT ? ror-v-n on FII.K AT (iKO. I. It k V a- . ... . - .--- ov a. r -Aareniiinir iiurrnti till t-pftrca nm mn i iifffiili HUH 11 tJ vvy l i f ! '" " r. r - -i ' ft tir ' . t.-j W ; i ii Till- 1: .. CIIlIHj i.i :- Ihmii-i -., ; ;.. i' .; crnr VnlllO i- un-.ii ! -s lim.t :u'(; c-iln -:ttt I i. -Lii 1 11 i 1 1 -;i c to i'iny-li u.)...ir ji, i- inii. 1 rv it ft 11 ' 1 I l'i Ml V ! 1 1 i i 1. If vii'ir i r ii'iiic of cur P'kkI-. on i, a.,.., - .!, ...r .iv!-r (lil'f CL to II-. .UE.r.(r, iir.l K All- rt.mnnisa omkacts utry lie wUe fur it ia PJCm Xnni CARL R I VliSH US PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER & 4EWEtE&, AND DEALER IN Watches, Clocks, JEWEUtY, rats AND Opti Sole Agent -roK I HE Celebrated Rockford Columult and Fredonia Watches In Key an 1 Stem Winders. i hAIir.E SELECTION of AM, Kllh of J EWELKY always on hand. : tf Mv line of Jewelry is unsurpsn Ci.me and see for yourxelf rWnre purchas ne elswhere. t tif AM, WORK GUARANTEED ,;-J CARL RIVINIUS. : EbensburK, Nov 11, 18H5--tf. n'AMbWAl Tlo.7f Tn rpi -77-.-1 I."r.-i'iT"r T'a,,.f?rr-C 33 elthre,4i c-nins nowl.r: P. I,;,': lVli " - .'. I ! ftel hotinc no. mv Vi -a '".-:. .- y it ii u c e l tor n-rt stc- ti 1'iAriLin HHt A n Hii LU., I wo lArcyls niAio -nf '-f c- ft-rflftv b.-t ha-l sybe-ii flrc l onora 'I r.t.m mm - ..... are a.wayt acc.- aM r. llab.e. yii;"'iii;r;V.A x HfTir a Iwm j rnrrtiun ETri1! " nf'XiTnl T1 hurr- t. r n hmniyl bit' Til b r. ci aw nora mawiiii i nwil v i L- .- . ; WABasrSEM I HAL rASTIllESmJrt -'pv ' ite As"d Men- Tte'1 fr iqht Vwim in r-)ant'' V u i T'tiom y. Ts il ac i an 1 TTv-tftnl TtU Mnnlr f rind fall Minlr Prremnh rif Hwltn. fc ill hoe whooTifJir from t 'if mnjiT otct:r di rrnrurht tvnt hy lorlirrwtloil, i-xTWirv i rw-ifraia "Work, or too f ? Lii'ljil?nr w n tht 7011 mmd xm ypnr fern) with wtrtt-rTfnt of 7onrimnhlf, nirl ynre RUPTURE!) PERSON'S can hao FRSE IM tin tarwtoEcy f.pripral Incnranoo Annnl.i KliF.S Sli UR G, I'A . R, L. J0B., H. J. EI CI, L . Bid. Johnston, Ihick & Co., 1 pTwv RefGTnn AcCeiVea OH JOpSll, , I pr4B,ros i :w a i. I INTEREST ALLOWED ON TIME HEFOMTS COLLECTIONS MADE DRAFTS on the rrinripal Citie Ttoniclit ituil Sold anil n General Banting; Ensmcss ransactcfl. A CCO rif VS SO 1.1 CI TMD. A. W. B1TK, rashier. Ehnphurir, April 4. ll?..-t'. its) i. Policies written at fhort notice In the OLD RELIABLE "ETNA" Aaad o(hr Ural ( lavi (ampniilri. T. W. DICK, .FM rOR THE old ha vr i 'O nn FIRBIXSIIRIXGEOHIT. COMMENCEII BVSINESS Eecnr. Jaiy "'l. 1S2. IT." MYERS. ATTI UiNEY-AT-I.AW, Enity.Frn. K. aOfflce In ftillonade Kow. on 'etitro ptret. G EO. M. READE, ATT(KN KY AV-I.AW, F.RgwsBriia, -Office on t"o:iir street, r M. D. KITTELL, Attornoy-n r - i w , EHFINSHVKU. PA. Office Armory BaUJing. i.jip. t'oart Hnu. F ARM FOR SAl.r. ' A valuable f.irm aCunteJ 1n A linheriT town t!ip, Oamorla county d..ut f.ve milm trom Kl'n.l"irif nnl lw ;inr nnelinl' nr'e 'nni l.oretto. R(!o!n!rtir !m o! .ln-nea Kavlor V s Uucfc, ana otlicr.i ooiitnin'mc ABOUTJIOO ACRKH, Havlnir tT.ron t-re-t a tine KHH'K H KI,1. INU Hdl'SK. lni-a-o Inru n 1 all nrrnrr -ut buildiiirs. The f.-t-rr. a in i tin cent it ion . i'l ine all in Ki'f'l cr.icr and It l!l m aoll on nv term. For larthur part If 11! r all on tie 'lmlef. Ikrned OD the iremtsoi!. June l8ti. M.I, PKlsci il.l i A1 DMIXISTRATOR'S OTICK. Efitnte of Patrick R Smith ftrrrnrj ! Letters of adtDiulMratior. un tn'a-nrntn anirio ; havinir hpen ifr:mte.l to the un.1 r"trnel . all r-er-I sons Indebted to the said estate re requeted to j bib ke payment, and tho havlnir claim to pre I lent the came without d'sy to JOHN r. SMITH. Adm'rC. T. A., ! Mnniter Twp.. Jan . 21. lvb -6t. SUM SHAYIHG PARIOR! Opijsite XuBiitaiu Evse, io Lltjd's rHiUins. HIGH STItEET, EBENSBURG. VJ j. ii. OA NT, I roprietor. qfE PVBI.KJarlll alwiyafind n at onr pl A of buplness In buslner? honrs . Kvervthlna ke nea nd coyy. Clki towiu a irtnim. FOKSALE. A vaiual.'e Hotel propei-tv known as th Hiafr Hons, situated In the H'nt war ! ol I t er. sbtiv Pa. For further particulars rail on or adilrs the iindrtand. .1(UN HI.AIK. - P.tjennhuric. May IT, 1SSS. t KVIHIH1HS bv Hdre?!na: i.eaa. I. j V Kow.-I dl A to.. insiriiC St.. New Vorlr can l'irn the ti- c,it of miv proposed line o A I IV FI! II - IX'I in niiriL'iiti Newspaper. lOO '' I'amplilot 1TK."..!I.; AliVt.H lIilRX shonld dress ad- .r.SUE I . IlTF.I.I. v .. IO hprote Mrret, ew.Torh flty.; Fob SitLBCT List ol,m Nrn trirEna Will b lent free on application. .Ian. II ' (HEtPIKT and BKaT. Irlea Rernred unTmrvi.C' vnir didhtttit rmrrm IIUIjIIIAHO -LU IflllilLLDb DlDhliU . : ' All A l:r vs ' , l ;;V:-aA;v-- t r" -' AA A h m!. srTPfi--: ; New Haven, Conn, h'-yj IS c tr noi no .;, - -.-. . s - .'caller lb- J C -ii IW Uouvt rifl an! 4 . rlyauro i t Twji a m ux w fciBi'c t bunaF. or rstw e nn-njrii -r t htrnt.1 rtrtrtsirn -r- i- ar :nm: t nt ti nf 1 if i.rr r v- f .. KARL'S REMEDY CO., re Cns" Trial of our Applienoo7Aii far f errnt t -S H.ToDtt Btr.aet.eT.IjO'CTa, yo. ST. FRANCIS' COLLEGE, LOR hi IO.IW, ! r h ai:c e r FRANCISCAN HIIKKS. Bffirl arnl Tuition the Scholarlio Yenr, .200. for Mr W.ll. I t' RT. j. r. vrwMAv. r.r. "'Ri'rt ro-r trti VERY SALEAELE It EL -TS CUE AM BALM into ncxiriU i qui 'v a' r.Vf. It elxi n -js ihe heid. A'.liya injl-vimation. Ileal t'e tore. I'fuVrrit t'ies of tite and tm 60 err.tt at 1th . i Ij, ma: ', r.vUfcsrrrt, c-1' crt ELY BROTHERS. I)mrfi5t,0weo,Y. X?i in rH its l-raccles. tt tn -2. Trifnniin g I'MHIM; of :i ki,..t r:.., 'in : -n- ; ot -ol i Ui M.HKIf.Sl MTI K ,i th l... j rKK t.s. iw,ll.'.in.s,..,(i vv-U J w'th improve. 1 tna-In-trr. Ai'--. !i k I cvTw,-rk ion. frrtt-.ir itfc -pw I All Mrtirt trnttnir n-e fh w.-k ii t- j ably dealt ltb- H ora. warratt' a-K 11 -v ,HT' l r.nnar.nra . I Iciot-'il. 1 4, Q1W1THH f MI(ikllirH-iUPHI. I i loam Kan tad Bora dia. Vi at) 12 iiiil ironi I li 1 1 a ', o ; j 1. ia . Fixl pr c v-a every ext. eve, I r ?i.iii:-i.ii-ij. No mclce ra I peri Nn mmitaiiiti t r ! iiijiiaion. 1 e.v- ; i-'inj '.f.j tr-ft, h". a i- n, ril a" rHv-'i c- i p. rtu n t . - .i ;udent t . j Iv .me r t iriiy. p-i. ,-r..i r,.r (InM n'1 w- w - - l'r. rr vi:.ti Ttiv ll'.-! ari l:a i:r rl:ivi, :;( ru.r I.i; !' S ' !'' ' . !' i' ' "'- 'jr; or t.i I -tt. neer na: c :-. ?ti.:.M tut'' a: Mda A"1- e:n;. tr . -w , , ot lie- l'i 'VK.t p deui arm to e 10 'n rr r1I MTt-n ' I - i 1 - .. . i i. - ' 1 VP 1 ' 1 1 l 1 d tie wh -l. -. r-,... .- . i- Lll"iK i V ' r.l. ale. FrT"ti'C te ii tn luchnifi Seb'""! 1" Hi. : i: 1VV . j in !4 1 ,i. 'TIT e'ct 1 'l,e eoTi'l"' 'Hi - r A t'V e (,:,. ( I . 1' d. I. 'T'llV NATURC'S.: CURE FCR ' WWtiO li. .it iO.J ' 1 I I -- I..- I I lomrrh. " ' 'irt.M llio. t- ' ' h a ' a ' f e'fT aeas. i n k ,i I fr-T v . 1 I. r r ! 1 - - . 5 J w Mm- 4i f . I v'X0 USA. 0 . .. .i. . . t-.rf. . t lio i i e : . n i u r ' ! : w yor V 'I t i :!.':! . s aitf ; I i 'ei; i i i I fjl J IP! IT.'.' '1, i - r e?i !r i:"re : : ? rar a ; - .J :) frJ. V !'t JtND DYSPEPSIA. ; iirt J f II ll ,,Tr .W Pe". ruth !ntir4 . Air'ts wanted - - a, aav a aa Circular free. A. J. itoluian A (o, lhl1n.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers