The Somerset Herald. EDWARD 8CTIX, Editor and Proprietor. WEDNESDAY... March K. 1SS3 At Gibson b distillery, in West moreland county, there-are -J2,ft00 barrels of whisky in bond. ' The statistics of South Carolina sliow that out pf fifty-three newspa pers published in that State, fifty are Democratic. Ox Monday of last week the Tres ident sent a special message to Con gress recommending the passage of a law making vaccination compul sory. . The widow cf President Lincoln last week drew from the Tension Agency at Chicago, $15,000, the amount of the pension "lately grant ed her by Congress. Petitions for the pardon of Ser geant Mason are daily pouring in on the President, and a nickle sub scription for the support of his wife and child has been started in Balti more. i At the next election in Nebraska, a vote will be taken on the Consti tutional amendment giving women the ballot- It is said the dear crea tures are actively electioneering with their husbands, brothers and sweet hearts in favor of the amendment. The State Executive Committee of the Greenback-Labor party of Pennsylvania has been called to meet at Harrisburg, on the 29th of this month, to fix the time and place of holding the next State Con vention. " Hark from the tomb." Commissioner Raum has offered a reward of three hundred dollars each for the arrest of the men en gaged in the assassination of Collec tor James W. Davis, lie has also authorized the expenditure of 8"00 in efforts to obtain the necessary information. The miners of the Cumberland coal region to the number of three thousand, are out on a strike. This means a loss to them of at least $0,0(10 per day, not including the wages of the hundreds of railroad and canal hands, who will be thrown out of employment It is estimated that the war be tween the trunk-line railroads of the country, which is now being settled, has cost these corporations over $100,0 (0,000. Now that living through rates are about being re stored, it is to be hoped that the process of skinning shippers of local freights will cease. According to the statement of Treasurer Butler the balance in our State Treasury on the first day of this month, was one million, two hundred and thirty-one thousand, six hundred and sixty-two dollars and thirty cents, ($1,251,GG2.40). Besides this, there was also in hand $535,310.40 applicable to debts then due. The Republican Congressional caucus last week decided to antago nize ths. proposed reduction of the tax on whisky and tobacco. In view of the enormous sums required for pensions, the restoration of our navy, and other extraordinary ex penses, and the further fact that the public has not demanded such a re duction, this action will be com mended by an intelligent people. Roscoe Conkling and Senator Ed munds having declined the appoint ment of Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, the President has nominated Judje Blatchford, of New York, for the position, and he has accepted. The nominee is wide ly known and resnocted, and he is heartily endorsed by all the leading papers of New York and of the country. IJe is at present a Judge of the United States Circuit Court, and was appointed to that position by Abraham Lincoln. ' A report having been circulated in New York and in the West, last, week, that Jay Gould was in a "tight place," and that he was sell ing certain telegraph and other stocks, and that a crash was coming, he called three gentlemen into his office, and there exhibited to them ffty-threc million of the stocks in question, all in his own name, and held by him 'as investments. Evi dently Gould is one of the ' bloated bondholders " the Democrats talked so much about a few years since. A half-dozen of bosses of the u Wolfe Independents " held a meet ing at the Girard House, Philadel phia, last week, and agreed to desig nate one Independent Republican from each of the fifty Senatorial districts of the State " to supervise the preliminaries of the primary elections throughout the State, and to see that one delegate from each Senatorial and Representative dis trict shall be elected and attend the Convention, month after next" The names of the fifty committee men were cot, published, and there fore we cannot as yet announce who as to play Captain General in organ, izing thejlndcpendent army, in this Senatorial district It strikes us that the gentlemen who bojd the primary election iu this .county io select the Representative delegate,, will have a lonely time of it in most of the election precIncU. t However, "large oakg from little acorns groW,""' and who can say what Ue next six weeks may bring forth, Statesmen are born now-a-days. The etrike in the Cnmberland coal region ought to be water on the mill of the operators and miners in this county, unless the latter are bitten by the same tarantula as their brethren in the Cumberland re gion. The vast deficit in the outp put, caused by closing the Cumber land mines must be supplied else where, and aa the B. fc O. railroad will now have plenty of idle motive power, it can well iiflbrd to fur nish to the operators in this county additional and cheaper facilities for transportation. . Of course, every in ducement will be used to prevail on the miners in this county, and in the Clearfield region, to join hands with the Cumberland strikers, but if they are making fair wages, and are wise, they will " let well enough alone." When the Cumberland miners were employed at wages with which they were content, they took little heed of the wages and fa cilities for transportation afforded the miners and operators in this county, and now that they have be come dissatisfied, and have quit work, is no reason why the miners here should be guilty of committing harri-karri to please them. This may be deemed a selfish policy, but self-preservation is the first law of nature. The Cumberland men had the unquestioned right to quit work when they pleased, but they have no right to dictate to, or fix the price of labor for others. The Clear field miners have resolutely refused to join in this strike, and it will be the height of folly for the miners of this county to do so, if they have been getting and still receive wages satisfactory to themselves. Cum berland's loss is tbo'r gain, and not a mere temporary, but a permanent one, if they properly appreciate the present condition of affairs. A largely increased output of Somerset county coal means equally increased business prosperity for the commu nity in and adjacent to the mining regions, and a prosperity that will come to stay, if all pull together for the common good. Reports of strikes and manifesta tions of dissatisfaction among work- incrraen reach us from all parts of the country. At Omaha railroad laborers are on a strike and already rioting has occurred and the milita ry have been called out At Pitts burgh the iron workers in some of the mills are on a strike, and in a spirit of lawlessness are trying to intimidate others from taking their places. In the Cumberland district three thousand coal miners have struck against a reduction of wages In the Lehigh district the miners have been reduced to half time, and signs of a strike are apparent In Lawrence, Massachusetts, and at Fall River, the cotton spinners and operative? in the mills are on a strike, and there is a disposition shown among the Trades' Union everywhere to test their strength with employers. There is no dis guising the fact that the business interests of the country are Ferious ly threatened, as general strikes are alwavs disastrous. 1 1 has been evi dent for some time that there has been an over production in many departments of industry, and an under production in others. Mining and manufacturing have been push td to their utmost capacity, while the cost of living has been increased by the short crop of last year. La borers want increased wages to meet the increased cost of living, while their employers find the market dull and prices falling, because of the over production, and of course, begin to curtail productions and re duce expenses ; then the operatives, instead of curtailing their expenses and tryinz to tide ver until the surplus stock is worked off, and there is asrain an active demand for their laltor at good prices, rush into strikes, and thii3 deprive themselves of the wages they are earning, the mills and mines close, and months of distress and want follow ; meantime the over production is consumed, a demand springs up, wages go up to the old standard, and employment and content again reign for a sea son, and apparently no thought is given to the millions that have been wasted and lost during the time of enforced idleness. Nothing appears to have been learned from experi ence. The los-es, and crimes, and misery, and disgrace of 1S77 are apparently forgotten, and it looks as if the country will be called upon again to endure the depredations of lawless hordes of idle men, without work and without bread. GLEAMXGS. Anon $1,000,000,000 of the na tional debt has been paid since the war ended. France has now nearly treble the debt of the United States, and Great Britain more than dou ble. Even Spain has a bigger debt than that which remains of the United States. Banc bills, ranging in denomk,.i tion from $2 to f 20, have been ac cepted at banks in Troy, N. Y., which it is discovered are an inch short of the regular size. The per sons engaged in the fraud are un known. They have reaped a rich harvest The device consists of cutting two-thirds from a bill, and then one-eighth is cut from another bill of the same denomination, and the two pieces are pasted togetl cr, making an apparantly genuine bank note, Five $2 bills -in, this way are made to yield $12, and five $10 bills make $00. Children in the primary classes of the Cincinnati public schools are urged and even commanded by their teachers a take their books arj4 slates home at night and study, whereupon the fyiquircr vary truth fully remarks that "this is a k,nd of rrammin that helpa to populate ...V. '. the idiot asylums." The admoni tion need not be confined to Cin cinnati. About as certain a method as can be devised of ruining a child both intellectually and physically is to confine it too closely to books and the school room. A prominent cattle man at St fLouis from the Indian Territory, es timated the Texan cattle drive this season at about $300,000 head, in cluding those which will come from the Indian Territory. This enor mous army of cattle will be shipped from Kansas prairies by rail to Chi cago, Kansas City and SL Louis. The 3 and 4 -year old cattle will be scarce. The average price of cattle already contracted for is, for year lings, J13, and for 2-year-olds., $16. Although the outlook for a proa- pcrous cattle business in the sum mer of 1852 is unusually good, the extent of the cattle trade during the next few years will exceed the wild est predictions of the most sanguine. Great as it has been in the past, the future no doubt will far exeeed it, and that immense unoccupied terri tory corampiising the Indian Terri tory, Western and South western Kansas, Texas and the Pan-Handle of Texa3 will soon become and for years remain the great meat centre of the world. How the Wolfe Independents Will Get Delegates. The committeof 6even appointed by the Wolfe Independent Confer ence met at the Girard House yes terday and agreed upon a plan for membership in their Stat6 Conven tion, which meets here on the 2-jth of May next. The committee of seven agreed to select one person in each Senatorial district, and then to empower the committee of fifty to supervise the election of delegates to the State Convention of one from each Senatorial district, and one per son for each Representative. Pri mary elections are to be held the same as other parties. This will make the convention consist of 251 members. The list of those selected for the Senatorial districts was kept secret, because letters were only sent out last night notifyihg them of their appointment, and their names will not be revealed until their acceptances are at hand. "Vl'ITl-i QUITE DOWX." Time was when the paper "found ed by Horace Greeley" was leader ol Republican sentiment, the whole sale and vigorous disseminator of party doctrines, the sturdy defender of party discipline, and the success ful, fearless and honest exponent of party principles. It at all times strove to be just and truthful, and never knowingly circulated a slan der even against its political oppo nent, much less could it be induc ed to assail, vilify and blander those of its own political faith and house hold. This tr as the character of the Tribune. What it is now, and what it has been of late years, very many Republicans know with regret It is no longer the safe counsellor and conscientious guide, conducted upon the high plane of truth and honesty in dealing with political affairs. It is mn in the narrow groove of fac tion, caters to the meanest of all passions and perversions personal rancor, individual vindictiveness and selfish ambitions. It lies like an auctioneer on the slightest pre text, a notable instance being its at tempt to hold Stalwarts responsible for the direct assaults which the Democrats, and t!ie indirect assaults which the faction to which it be longs, have made upon the memory of Garfield in connection with the Chase letter. Again, when it med dles in the politics of tbis State, it is only to slander the party with which it claims to affiliate, and to indulge in forebodings of defeat. Here is a sample : "There is said to be much anxie ty felt by Pennsylvania Republicans concerning the outlook for their party. It all spring from the evi dent determination of the machine to nominate General Beaver for Gov ernor whether the party favors the choice or not. With a free cxpres sion in the convention there would be little chance of General Beaver's nomination. While he is a popular man, his blunder in misrepresent ing his district at Chicago by voting first, last and all the time for the third term, made him many politi cal enemies who reluse to approve his treachery by giving him the highest office in the State. This is his chief cau?e of weakness. Anoth er is the choice of him by the ma chine as its candidate months be fore the State Convention was to be held. He is put forward as the man to be nominated whether the party likes him or not More than this, he is not only put forward, but the convention is appointeS at such a date that the election of delegates by the people is impossible in certain districts, and they will reappointed by local committers in the interest of the machine Thus the candi date is picked out in advance, and his nomination is made sure by sifting opposition to it" The voice of the Iribune used to be potent in aiding Republican suc cess in i ennsyivania, men it could not be induoed to lie in the interest of a faction, and had high er and nobler aims to subserve than spending its energies in giving aid and comfort to the common enemy, Isow it takes up the stale and explo ded stories set afloat by those who had no higher motive than to com pass the defeat of General Beaver's nomination, or to pave the way for a bolt in case he was nominated, which seemed then, as it seems now, almost a foregone conclusion. Where are the complaints that "an election of delegates by the people is impossible ?" In one district, aod one only (Lancaster), has it been al leged that the time was insufficient, and even here it was only necessary for the County Committee to make a slight alteration in the rules to give the peopleall the time required, and much more. The time for holding the State Convention was fixed in January, for May 10th, and more than three months were given in which to prepare for the prima ries. We affirm that in no district in the State have the people been forestalled in thU matter, and in no district was the "election of delegates impossible," if the people had chos en to elect tnena. In Allegheny county, by almost unanimous voice, it was agreed to elect delegates not only through primary conventions, but to cod line the choice of delegates to Senatorial and Representative iistxicte exclusively., There is no comr?ic ssy where in the Stat, from the perir. ht f bv imxi been or will be deprived of the op portunity to choose their delegates in any manner they see fit The Tribune meanly injures the cause it professes to have at heart when it makes such false and unfounded eUetnents as those above quoted, and is placing itself in a position from which it can help to defeat the Republican ticket after the nomina tions imI1 have been made. Asa leader ' f Republican sentiment and defend r of Republican principles it is "quae, quite down " Pittsburgh Commercial. ' Killed By MixmsliiiH-j-H. Nashville, Tenn., March 13. CapL James M. Davis, Deputy United btatcs Kevenue Collector was assassinated at 2 o'clock this after noon, at a point three miles distant from McMinnville. while proceeding from tteersheba bpnng9 to McMinn- ville. the shot was tired lv unknown persons concealed behind the bushes on the roadside, uavis, who was accompained by Thomas Vickers, fell from his horse when the lirstsnot was fired but arose and was proceed ing toward two of his party, named Campbell andCathecart, when a sec ond shot was fired and Davis fell again. Campbell and Cathecart rode up in time to see several men walk out from behind the bushes and fire at Davis, holding their pistols very near his head. Compbell and La- thecart were also fired upon and retreated, leaving the body of their commander. 1 he Coroner was given notice, and, upon examining the body, discoverd 20 bullets in it The skull was crushed as it blows haa been dealt upon it by some weapon. Davis was one of the bravest and best officers in the South. He had a national reputation through the numerous encounters which he had with illicit distillers. He was 34 years of age. One year ago he kill ed John Welch, in Putnam County Welch had previously threatened to kill Davis, and broke Davis's skull in two places, and shot him in the tmsn belore Davis ended ms exist- ance. John Hampton was also shot and killed by Davis near Hampton's distillery, in Lincoln County. At one time in Tracy citv. Davis unaid ed, fought eight illicit distillers, kill ing Joseph Hayhes, wounding two men. and arresting one. He en countered Campbell Morgan's band in Overton county in 1S78, and dur ing the battle, wnieh lasted three davs. wounded several. Morgan was shot in the shoulder by Davis in a contest previous to the Overton county affair. Morgan afterward joined Davis' party and did good service for the revenue department The information of Davis assasin ation was telegraphed to Commis sioner Raum, who will doubtless in crease the revenue force and make a determined fiaht against the out laws. A Smash-Up on the B. & O. K. It. Baltimore, Mar. 10. A collision occurred on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad yesterday afternoon be tween the 4:30 Express from Wash ington and the Accommodation which left Washington ten minutes later. At a point between laurel and Annapolis Junction the engine of the Exurens train became disa bled, was "detached and moved on alone to Annapolis Junction, leaving tha baggage car, a par.or car and two ordinary passenger coaches standii g on the track. Shortly af terwards the way train came rush ine around the curve and the loco motive crushed into the rear parlor car, breaking the platform and the end section. Passengers were thrown from their seats and received severe bruises, but no one was seri ously injured. llliam 1. Hender son, special agent of the Postofiice Department suffered injury to the back ; E. T. Bryan, Indianapolis, Ind., considerably bruised ; Mrs. L. A. Cowan, Baltimore, arm bruis ed. United States Senator Gorman was with his wife in the parlor car, and seeing the way train approach, they moved toward the front end, escaping injury. Samuel Weaver, brakeman on the way train was badly cut about the face and head. The seats in three coaches were nearly all wrenched from their fas tenings. Distressing Accident. St. IiOfis, March 17. Yesterday a horrible accident occurred at M. Joseph. Some boys were digging a tunnel through a hill on the out skirt of the town for boyish purpose. They took turns in small parties. The tunnel was several feet wide, and had been pushed into the hillside about ten feet At 3 o'clock some of the boys went away, leaving at work Michael Garrish, aged seven teen, Allen Failes, aged nine, Samuel Montgomery, aged tight, John Mont-ioruery, aged fourteen, and Nicholas K ell, aged thirteen. When the boys who had left returned at 5 o'clock they found the mouth of the tunnel closed by a heavy mass of earth. 1 heir cries to their compan ions brought no answer, and hastily they began to remove the earth. Two feet from theentrance Ihe protruding hand of young Failei was encounter ed An alarm was then given and soon hundreds gathered on the spot The lifeless bodies of the five bovs were unearthed in the presence of their anguished mothers and sisters. Michael Garrish alone showed symp toms of life by faint pulsations of the heart, which ceased almost as soon as his body was- exhumed. All the boys belonged to well-to-do families. A coroner's inquest was held this morning. on.',aonpn Rolling Mill Burned. Dt xcasnox, March 13. The rol ling mill of the Duncannoo iron company ft this place took fire last evening and was entirely consumed, involving a loss of fronj $50,000 to $75,000, and throwing three hun dred men out of employment No lives were lost John S. Miller, an employee, sustained serious inju ries by falling slate. The building was entirely consumed. The mill consisted of four departments the merchant plaje, rod and puddle all of which Wre rwning at their fullest capacity. A stiff breeze pre vailed, which rendered ?t an impos sibility to save the mill building, as the flames burned with great fierceness. The fire is thought to hare originated from tlie explosion of a lamp in th oil house. The in surance is about $20,000. Kxj!ula of a Steamboats IJoiJer. Cincinnati. March 15. A Piwi.-.l dispatch to the Times-Star gays the steam towboat Etna exploded her ! boilers at 3 o'clock' this the Great Kanawa river, three miles! wife and General 8irnon Cameron, abovelomt Pleasant . Lunc An- returned from Florid this rocrning derson, a colored fireman, was kill- j Mrs. Cameron's health has been re ed, and Captain Henderson and sev- stored. General Cameron appeared era! others severely lmurert. Th Un ,k n. r u c'. . j steamer took fire and burned to the THE DELUGE. Extent of the Overflow Bad Enough Without ExafreraUca. Greenville, Miss., March 16. The backwater in this county is now about stationery, and it is presumed has fully found its level in this vi cinity ; hence, the extent of the overflow can now i i.aicated. A point of varying width is maintain ed almost entire ou ti.e western bank of Deer creek. In front of Lake Lee the places are all -above water; and from Lake Lee to the Isaquna line, the plantations on the river front are entirely, free from water, as are also the places on the west side of Lake Washington. Those on the east of that Lake are above water, except the back por tion. Tbis is an accurate statement of the condition of Washington county the largest cotton-growing county in the State. In the south about half of the cultivated land is under water, and in most of the other, crop preparations are pro gress jig. The people think that the reports sent from here and other points are exaggerated. The situa tion, however, is bad enough al most appalling, in fact when liter ally stated. The counties above and opposite here are now generally inundated, and the distress and losses are greater than they have been in Arkansas. There is very little river land not overflowed, ex cept on the circle of Lake Chicot This is high ground, and its natural protection if exceptionally good. The Delta Levee Gives Wy. New Orleans, March 16. The levee in the rear of Delta gave way yesterday afternoon and the water rushed through with such force that several small houses were carried away. The steamers Desmet and E. C. Carroll left during the night for Yazoo and Tallahatchie rivers. It is expected that they will return with many refugees. The steamer Sunflower" left for Sunflower river last night loaded with supplies for the sufferers of that region. The steamer Guiding Star, which arrived yesterday afternoon, reported the only land visible at Leland, Ark., was the levees, which are aboout one foot out of water ; at the head of Island 95, but six inches of ground was above water. Driven from Home. New Orleans, March 16. The clerk of the steamer J. M. White says there are three breaks in the Hard Times levee, twenty miles above St Joseph, in Tensas parish, on the right bank of the river ; that the water from these breaks floods all the country for many miles back of the Mississippi river, and has created a great disaster to the farm ing interests of that section. He further says some of the people of the regions back of Greenville have lest their homes. Another Big Dynamite Explosion. Bradford, March 14.-While work men were throwing out a tub in whieh dynamite was being made, at Hand factory, & Co.'s Bolivar Run, this af ternoon, sparks flew in the tub and ignited it with a flash. Although burning furiously, a man named Wilkes grabbed the tub and at tempted to remove it from the build ing, but was prevented by the nar iowness of the door. Meanwhile the factory took fire, also that of Wilkfs fc Reynolds. Another work man strove to save some nitro-glyc- erine and carried out a number of cans of the terrible explosive. Sud denly the intense heat indicated that an explosion was about to en sue and both men ran, hatless and coatless, for their lives. There were 140 pounds of nitroglycerine and 400 pounds of dynamite in the facto ry. When the men were several hundred feet away the detonation occuired. The rejiort was the most powerful ever heard in the oil region. Buildings in Bradford, two miles away, with a. mountain between, were shaken, ana in larpot, one mile away, dishes and pictures were rattled from the walls of houses. The effect upon the earth was so great that cans of glycerine, which were carried out of the factory and several hundred feet away by the men in their excitement, were likewise discharged. The ground was torn up and trees cut down like weeds in the accident Although terribly shocked, both men escaped injury. The dynamite factory was located in a wild, uninhabited ra vine, Six hundred pounds of dy namite had been removed from the factory Bhortly before the explosion. Fatal Boiler Explosion. Lykx, Mass., March 15. About seven o'clock this morning a boiler in Goodwin Brothers' shoe factory exploded, completely wrecking the building. The first man taken out was horribly mangled, and he said there were more men in the ruins. Further search revealed the dead body ot.John IVloore, the engineer. Soon after another body was uund, still exposed to the escaping stem Jiut the victim was yet alive. It is feared that there are three or four more victims in the ruins. Had the accident happened an hour later the loss of life would have been much greater, as there would have been rifty workmen in the building. A portion of the boiler weighing one ton was blown a quarter of a mile. No additional bodies had been dis covered up to noon. The name of the second man taken from the ru ins is Perley Doyle, wii will proba bly recover. Several others axe se verely injured. ' A Capture of Counterfeiters. PranouE, March 17. Another gang of Counterfeiters has been un earthed near lk J'ark, Clayton county. (Officers of Elk Park swoop ed down on' a gang'.of five occupy. ing a shanty up in the woods near tlk Port, and succeeded in captur ing two'ijtf ,tem". The officera also captured ij.fty new silver dollars and several " moulds. The money was excellent counterfeit, being composed in part of glass which gave it the ring of genuine money. Only shrewd experts after a care ful inspection could detect it as a counterfeit Officers are now on tbefrack'bf the three who escaped. The prisoners are now in jail at Elk Port, and will' be biouB-ht to this city for triaj before the JJnited states lommissioner. Their names are Ym. Stereos and V. Ferguson. . .rH7l . . ilZZ. - V House, and received quite an tion in each place. THE ASSOCIATE JUSTICESHIP. Iter of Dec-It nation from Mesxu-ev. Conkling and Edmnd& Washington, March 14. The fol lowing letters in .reference to the vacant Asiociate Justiceship of the United States Supreme Court were made public yesterdav. New York, March 3, 1SS2, No. 20 Na3sau street. Mr. President: Ab sence prevented prompt acknowl edgment of your two oteeineJ let ters, which were found litre await ing my return from Utica. The high and unexpected honor you J roller by selecting me as Associate ustice of the Supreme Court of the United States is greatly valued. It will ever be a matter of pride and satisfaction that you and the Senate deemed me fit for so grave and ex alted a trust But. for reasons which you would not fail to appre ciate, 1 am constrained to decline. Although urgent demand on my time just now prevents my accept ing your cordial invitation to pass a few days with you in Washington, let me hold this as a pleasure de ferred but not lost I have the honor to be Sincerely your obedient servant, Roscoe Conkling. His Excellency, the President. ' Senate Chamber, Washington, March 6, 18S2. Mr. President: I have received through the Secretary of State your very flattering offer of the appointment ot Associate J ustice of the Supreme Lourt. 1 thank you sincerely for this highly valuable proof of your good opinion, but I feel for reasons that I have express ed to Mr. Frelinghuysen that I ought not to accept it . 1 shall cherish this mark of your kindness and good opinion though I did not need this proof of it as one of the most pleasant of my life. 1 am, sir, Very faithfully yours, George F. Edmunds. Tlit President 1411 Massachusetts Avenue, March 11, 1832. Mr. President: am deeply touched at the manifest consideration you have shown me in connoction with the Associate Justiceship, but further reflection has not enabled me to change the views I expressed to Mr. Freling huysen. With the sincere hope that you have experienced no em barrassment from the delay your kindness has caused, I am Faithfully yours, . George F. Edmunds. Double Murder. Watf.rbury, Yt, March 14. Mi chael McCaffrie, aged 50 years, while insane on Sunday last, butch ered his wife and his mother and hid the bodies in the cellar of his house near here. Coming to town with his seven children to-day, the eldtstgave the first intimation of the terrible murder. McCaffrie, who is now in jail, talks incessantly. Some doubt his insanity, but every indication points to his being de mented. McCaffrie stated that whatever he had done he thought he did right; that he fought the women in self defence; that they got hold of him but he made "hot work for them ;" that he took tL m by the throats and killed them with a knife, and threw them down the cellar. The two youngest child en of the seven are twins and are a . ear old. Since the murder McCafl'rio iias fed the younger children with the aid of the two oldest, aged 14 and 9 years, and did the chores of the house un til to-day, when he brought the children to Waterbury Centre. The murder was committed in a large room, in which all the parties slept, and the old lady, who was blind, had one of the tv. ins in her arms when she was killed. The neighbors who have seen McCaffrie recently had not noticed any symp toms of insanity about him. lie came to church "here with the whole family two weeks ago. Shot by a Lnnatie. Utica, X. Y., Mar. 1G. Dr. John P. Gray of the State Lunatic Asy lum, was shot in his private office to-night by a lunatic. The wound, which is through the cheeks is not fatal. The assassin iired two shots at others who attempted to detain him. Two hours afterwards he gave himself up at the jail. He told the jailor's wife that he had shot a man. His name is Henry Reimshaw, and he has been insane, about eighteen months. On him were a single-barrel pistol, a revolver, a dirk with cleavers, a bottle of chloroform and about tV.irty bundles of cartridges. He is fnlly identified, and will be caret! for. Dr. John P. Gray, it will be re membered, was the leading expert for the government in the prosecu tion of the Guiteau case, and is a recognized authority and writer of several valuable books on mental diseases. Three Vorktuen Killed. PrrrsBUKfiH, March, 16. An acci dent occurred yesterday afternoon at the Rosetraver coal works a few miles up the Monongahela river, -by which three men, named Ira Smith, William Houseman and Arthur Jones lost their lives. It appears that a loaded coal car broke loose from the top of the incline, which is about three hundred yards long and very steep, and plunged into the tipple at the bottom, where the three unfortunate men were at work. They heard the car descend ing, but did not have time to make their escape. They were dreadfully mangled, and two of them died almost instantly. The other lived long enough to tell how the acci dent happened. Two of them leave families. ' Tampering With Bank Bills. Troy, N. V., March 1C Bank !lll?, ranging in denomination , rom $2 to $217, have be'n accepted at the bank in this city which, it is discovered, are an inch short of the regular si?e. The persons engaged in thA frilllil fir nnWntvn TKfiir nave reaped a rich harvest The de vice consists of cutting two-thirds from a bill and then one eighth is cut from another bill of the same de nomination, and the two pieces are pasted together, making an appar ently genuine bank note. ' Five two dollar bills in this way are made to $12, and five ten dollar bills make SnowBlitlcs. ". '. ' Sa.v Fraxcisco, March 16. The central r acmc traips are lying at liiH-j Can voi), the road being block ndd by a uefevy priow. Three miles eagt ef Emigrant Gap a snow slide carried away the snow shed?, and another sliae has occurred at Tamarae. The damages are not ytt known. Snow-ploughs and a strong force of men are at work clearing the road. srrcATiox at tazoo. Over Five Tlioaaand Mule Drowned. Yazoo City, Miss., March 17. , The river lacks six inches of being i at the high water mark of 1867, and j rising. One hundred dwellings are overflowed and deserted, and many business houses washed out completely. Refugees are daily ar riving, and the destitution ii appali- r 'i-i . i... uijf. i uc iues oi iironenv can uuv w estimated. Over tive thousand mules are drowned in the Upper Tallahatchie. Boats and hastily constructed flats are bringing down large quantities of rtock, (V.itai.t reports are coming of lives lost in en deavoring to escae. The hills are filled with young deer and bears driven from the swamp by water, and several have been seen in the outskirts of the town. The town of Statatia is entirely submerged, not a house being visible, and the peo ple are all camped on a range of hills beyond. New Orleans, March 17. No apprehensions of an overflow of the .city levees. They can stand a foot more water and are likely to re cei.e that much. They are patroll ed at night to prevent attempts to cut them. The Saint Coupe cre vasse widened to 1.000 feet, and wa ter is pouring through it twelve fe ' ' deep, flooding False river and u.jjr 1HSDRASCE CD. CF SOMERSET CO. Pi., urosse lete country, n mere are, no rains alonir Red river the condi- ! tion will brighten. J he worst is considered passed. A break this morning of a hundsed feet wide in the levee five miles below the city will probably flood St. Bernard par ish. St. - Louis, Mar. 17. A special to the Globe-Democrat from Tiptou ville, Lake county Tenn., says that in the country out through the Ten nessee bottoms there were some 800 people in ncnl of thegovernmentaid, though Mr. Arnott received a letter from Mr. JamCS, the United States i KecM iturjnn the year for roemhersulp... Relief Commissioner at Memphw,P'!??.?f... stating that rations would he for warded on application. No applica tion has as yet been made, but one will probably be forwarded in a day or two, Mr. Arnott being constituted the acent for their distribution. The condition of the people tne bottoms has somewhat improved, owing to the fact that the water has receded, but the residents of Tipton ville feel very gloomy over the out look. A large amount of stock has been lost, but that trouble is dwarf ed almost into insignificance beside the fact that no cotton, which forms the staple crop of the countr' could be plated unless the water receded within a very brief period. Fences are down in every direction, and the once prosperous farms are re duced to a condition best described by the generic title, "no man's land," landmarks and other marks of iden tification being almost if not entire ly obliterated. The only things aj parently that have not gone are the titles to the property, which it is to be presumed are stowed away in some safe portion of their owner's habiliments. At Keel's Foot Landing, further down, the abomination of desolation prevails. The village is all under water and entirely deserted, the peo ple who lived there having fled be fore the deluge to the high land, where any existed. Communica between the houses in Xoah Stuart's landing is maintained only by means of skiffs, the water being from two to three feet deep round the buildings, and it i3 a dreary spectacle to watch the boats moving to and fro, the people who remain cheering one another up the while they wait, hoping against hope for the waters to subside, when they can once more resume their normal vacation of tilling the soil. A3 it is,, morning after morning the same dreary spectacle has met their viu'v, that of a laden sky backing up The foam crested waves which chase each other through their dwellings, to the utter demoralization of every thing in view. The river resolves itself into a veritable ocean below Tiptonvillo, there being compara tively r.o dry h.rd between there and Memphis. An eighteen mile bend, known by boatmen as Walk er's, is obliterated, the selttlements in both States being one vast expanse of water A Distillery and Church Burned Incendiaries. by New Haven, March 17. Early this morning Konold sgin distillery, at Grapevine romt, was entirely de stroyed by fire, whice it is supposed wos ot incendiary, origin. 1 he loss on the building is from $3,000 to o,000 ; on the machinery and siock irom -ju,uuu to sl'.j.wju , in surance, 810,000 Mr. Konold was unable to state the exact amount of liquor in the building, the government agent, Warner, having the material under government fastening. An hour la ter, ane before the engines were call ed away from Grapeyine Point, a fire broke out in the Calvary Bap tist church, which was burned out, the steeple and walls remaining standing. The church wa3 built fifteen years ago and cost $100,000. The damage by fire is from $30,000 875,000, and the insurance covers about $.30,000. The fire is also sup posed to have been the work of an incendiary. Trouble t a Funeral. Reading, March 14. Quite an excitement was occasioned in this City yesterday afternoon at the fun eral of Captain A. C. Greth, a leading manufacturer here. The cortege proceeded to St. Peter's Catholic churdh, and included the Reading Artillerists and Keim Post, No. 76, G. A. R. The members ol ,the pos,t were informed that they eould not be allowed to enter th church without firjt reino'ving their badges. A vote wa3 taken and the members unanimously decided not to comply with the order received Jrpm the church authorities. The 6ecret society therefore remained outside of the church, and after ser- j vice and moss the Catholic eWTvrlw! i not accompany the ccrtrge to the cemejtery. A Fatal Quarrel. Galvestox, March 14. The AeaV Dallas special . savs : A diilicultv occurred in the county coi""t :toni between' judjre J. M. ThuraI6hd, ex Mavor, and a prbinineht attorney, ihd another lawve'r'.'Hobcrt Cowart. I tiV whivh Thtirmond adva'rfce'd' upon iowart rith a jerqlvjoha K and a cold-headed cane in the dt nana i other. when Co wait, drawing a revolver sent a bujk-t crasrjinp through Thyrmond's brains. Thurmond has always borne an qnenviable reputation, and wan Impeached from the office of mayor by the City Council in 1SS0. He. was forty-six years of ge. Conart surrendered himself Jo the Bheriff. The killina was entirely in self-defence.' ftOKEKXKT U1HIT f CorrcUi4 Vooa a BMajT. uun is CHOICE GROCERIES, FLOUR Annie, dried. A pplebutter, V ...... hrii. y 1 . Kuf-ar, ft k (k) Kour, V troll Bociivticat.fi baltiri " aaal, luft t. IbatM. V I " .. i,(r f i. lorn, ar 41 'iWkCM...... . n,, ( !! J fr-hmoel .. IN.-o twl f ictu. Ekk. 1- ti.-ur. V Ml K Ve4 a im.. I 1 1 v cs-viI'M' r.vl i!e, 1 uvp-r !, f 111 I'. ta:t, ft bm (new Ttefrtn MM,f6 L, ft bbLextrs Orood Alum, per tack. Ah'j tv per 10 fl 00 i w 4 oo io , 11U 1 Snnr. Tx.l-iw ft a ............ j - white Tsilow. w a ! Wheat. ru I Wool, ) ... Urt ANNUAL STATEMENT FARMERS' UNION ASSOCIATION Fur the Year Ending Poeember 11, im. Number of Kern ben. 757 Total m't of Insurance subject to as- Ksment i 1,111,090 Mill nwiwl UurlDg the year on the dollar 1 Keeuareesut Cotu'y Dee. 31. '80.. mW W) during 1M1....1WS or .: w liabilities. Amount line Dee 31. 1880 300 00 Amount ol ht by fire during 18sl. . eoO Ou Amount due tr all other expenses for the year Im!, including urrtoera' par. euinmiwltms ami exonera tions u9 83 15C 83 Kenourcia in eieeu..., RECEIPTS. v lirii. It tt$3e .....a........ .w.u ' i t 4 13 KecM during the year on aitsesKrnent.. .il'iOS ti ,i 300 00 t i 3D Am i in Treasury at Lit se'.tlement.. S1D33 ) EXPENSES. Jonathan liny, fall of Insurance. Secretary's salary.. Treasurer'ssalary..... IHreotors' pay Frefldel.t's pay Insuring services Printing ;soo o . 40 Ol . ! 4 00 . 17 7S DO Hostage and statluncry i (it 31isceiianeous .1 , 8 vi -J 933 73 ' Balanee in Treasury t 700 17 Am i in l reaanry uc 31, ltKil. ....;oo 17 imuianomg cn duplicates LIABILITIES. .... 94 90 Samuel Oeiger, (uU of insurance. S 300 00 Resource? In ex-eu of liabilities 9 455 13 AJWS WALK EK, President. I. J. BRl'tiAKKK, Secretary, mart E. J. W ALslLR, Treasurer. THE NORMAL TERM ML PLEASANT INSTITUTE CPS1T3 LTALCE 223, 1SS1 KEV. LEKOY STEPHENS. A. T.. Pkesidctt, Theory and Practice of Teaching-. BYRON W. KINO, Elocution, Geometry, and Normal Otoirraphy. KATK REYNOLDS. A. B . Natural Philosophy, Physical Oeoimiphy and Chemlftry. AI. L. PH.M.VlhK. Nurmal anil Commercial Arithmetic, iiookHeeptna- and It. .tan t. E. C. WAJ.TEK, Normal lira amar. Literature, and I'nited States Historf. EMMA Ktt.S. Paintlnv and bra win. ANNA A. PALM, Piano, Onran and Vocal Cul ture. MRS. A. S. WILLIAMS, Matron. A new brick build inir. four stories. l4l feet, exclusively lor lady boarders. A lull course of lectures tree. Superintendent Speiirel and Jmlice Hunter are amona-Um leetnrera. Muin t hrr jut from the Cooaerratnry of Ittuiio in Hiton. An uti , n-nta learner JU4i iron fans. Native Oerman teacher. Prof. Kins;" Taluable Elocu tionary training- fret. Boarding- in clubs, about UW: to the Institute, 3 05 to .'! lii. Tulikm,lo. Scad for catalogue and circulars. LEROY STEPHENS, Jo - President, pUBLieSALE OE- PERSONAL PROPERTY ! ! The undersig-ned win offer for sate at public auction, at his resilience, in Northampton town snip, Somerset county, p., on Thursday, March 23J, 1SS2, the (bilowtag- personal property, to-wlt : Three head Horses, a tine yearling: Colts. Cows, t two-yeaillnir Cattle, Vi otie-Taariinsr Calves 23 head shetp. Hoes. 1 fuur-horse Wag on. I two-bone Wagons, l" liuicgy, Mleds. T Plows, 1 new Fanning; Mill, I Orain Cradles, 1 Champion Mower, one-ball Interest in a Walter c Wood Reaper, 1 Harrow, 1 Cultiator. 4 sets Harness, 1 set Blacksmith Tools, 1 Copper Kettle, Iron Kettles, 1 Hay Fwk, with ropa and pul leys 1 Patent Cutting; Box, Hay hr the tn. Rye hy tbe bushel. Wheat by the bushel, 1 Cook and 1 Heating; store, a Ft I .n.i Ri.nn Cupboards, a Sinks. 1 Bureau. S Tables, 1 Sewing; Machine, S Spinning Wheels. 2 Clocks. 3 sets Chairs. Rocking; Chairs, 1 lot ot Tubs. 1 Kt of Pork hy tiie pound. Dried Apples, Applebutter, 4. barrels inexar and other arii-lHH t... nnm.n.ni to mention. Terms made known on dar of sale, when and where a reasonable credit will be giren. WM. POWELL, Auctioneer. mart Is7 NOTICE IN PARTITION. ro .Martha Mishlcr. Christian Ml.hin c.i Mlshler. Jonas Mijhlcr, Tobias J. illsMer.Pollr. intermarrieit with W illiain Hrant. Sn..r, married with John Hrant. all resi.iing; in Somer- i iV ju iniKoier anil oah Mishli-r, I,, 7, 6 ..,. omniT. ra., ami Wlliiaoa luisnior, oi jiicman, rot Utnce and ooanty un known. ' iou are hereby notified that In pursuance of a w ii. ' pxiiviuu imn oai oi ine Orphans Court o Somerset eounty. Pa.. I will h.ld an imjuest on - '""r "i jouaa munier, ueceaseii in Conernaugb Two., at bis Iitnrai.in,. ... i day, the 231 riav of March a. ii .... can attend if you think pmper. s urnix i j jmo. j. SPAIVGLKK. Ieb.8tn.18si i sheriff. UDITOIVS NOTICE. At an Ornhans Court held at .r.., h. the Sftihday ol Junuary, lfWl, tbe umlei signed Auilitorwusduly appointed to ascertain advance ment and make a distribution ol the funds In the bandsol Peter Pile, and Josiah W. Pi!e. admin istrators trustees of the estate of Jim Pil ceased, to and arnonir thoao lejraily en title.! thereto, hereby gives, notice that he will attend to the duties .,( the above appoint ment on Thursday, the 33rd day of Febr'uarv 1"S3, at 10 o'clock a. in., at Ms oltlee in the bo'r nuirli of Somerset, when arid wh. re all persons interested can attend If they think proper Ieb Auditor. LOTS FOR SALE! o . 11 Ie unerineil ofit-re ior sale a . minilier of Lots, In the BOROUGH OP LICO.MEK ! some of which woold be very suitable for m&klnr Brick. The e!ay is of good quality. Location very convenient to Depot. Brick will be in ereat demand here this Summer, and at all times. , , , . , JOH.V McFAKLA.VH. Llgonler, Westmoreland Co., Pa. marl ASSIGNEE'S NOTICE, N-.rice is hereby given that Charlea L. Peters, or West Salisbury. Elkllek towoship. Somerset eounty, Pennsylvania, by deed r voluntary as siifnment,lias aesiKned all his estate, real and personal, to W. H RupKl, of Somerset, Pa., ia trust for the benefit of th creditors ol tbe said Charles L. Peters. All persons, therefore. In debted to the said Charles L. peters, will make Giyment to the said A miirnee, or his aven', A. A. i-liley, and persons haninar elaima or uem uids will make known lh same without deliv W. H. RI PPkt, oi, Assignee o U. U Pyters. BEST! aslneas now belore fha lib. You ran make nHiey faster at work fur us than at anvLhinir ilu I '...It. I weweu. we win sun you. i a day and up. wards made at home by the industrious. Men and women, boya acd airls. wanted eserywhere lo sorkforus, fiow & the time. Yooeanwork in npare time only, or iclve yuur whole timi to the business. ou can live at home and do toe work No other badnees will pay poa nearlv as well. No one can fail to make enormous pay by eniraiinir at once. Costly outfit and terms tree. Money made fast, easily, and honorably. Address. Tara Jl Co, AuKBsta, Maine. Pec)-ly ADMINISTRATORS NOTICE. Itate ef Abraham Hoover, late of BrothersraUey 1 ' ' 1 Twp-.. deeeaseii. ,'ttersof admmbtratuio oo abore estate havinz Xxtit tranted to the undcrsUrnel by the proper a j thotitV.nofiee'ta hereby Riven to , r!erstni3 debted J said estate to maka InneiiiaLi r.i. ment, and those bavins elaims aarainst it to pre-1 sent them duiy nuthentica-! fpr settlement on ; Saturday, march lit h i a hi. i .i.i.. ' WJM. N.CCLKMAN-. Administrator. NOTICE. Harriet Snyder hereby gives notice that she has mad application ie the secretary of Internal Affairs of Pennsylva nia fr a warrant lor U acre of land, la Mumr creek township, Somerset eonnty. Pa, adHdninc Unds of Joseph Snyder on the aorta, east and th, and lands at Martin Rrant oa the west, sari i . - J 5 J T ' v I ... soe . . w " 4 ... Lou! -m-V:. . . 1 i r,fc','t.-T t ,..c; -1! , 5 i , Z - e i JMWT(tiH, -rcptmi.n ,f lie eg f;i Lnga. Iarira-Mun,ii(U M1 ' it iw:u I mm. Jlillj &a,uutaTJ 1: Hfc-T fcj creduliiifi that a CC?J3U.pi1PTiO?J ff ' " J"-iP"y art.-,: .1 at t" conuueiieeawfef. i, i le, butraittmir." 1 ' tt T-eut, llieeh.::s dmh-daadchiiisBv i j i.nia, cperatta (.:. ,) m,l wniu.,,iuuiMiitr, a..i finally tp ji.:athes)steni. ltsaci;.ti,rar- 3 It tMUtls Merited rcrii!: j! nl relieree tbe conch and main the b. . - . . ii,, , 5 3 am om reducea ,, fcrr. j. j, frn. St . trong opiate and astrinrait artklm, at, P I o'so dnicr a aatnra aa to be i ;. j." Jsstroylnc the aatiene. thnra i... j peTerdrisa or stops the coo-h, Un, hy r i ng ua uvea, gwwrauy Catruys c f bofore the coo a Is entirely g.D , qnently, when tlie cough is cxnil t!., is well. Sead addrraa for pamjihtt ? full directions for cure of pulaoiiarTili Price 35 cisl, AO ct.. anH I n i -7 SOLD IVERrWUtEt. BEttT. J9BJS0I t LOU, rrapt.. Ic-Hart J 2 JOWNS' lUllM jaoU-ly posmvn v --. Benson's Capcina Porous Pia Rmh Why ticy aru irctcrrti Other Porous Plasters or txi- Remedies: First. Because they poeee5s all fie (treugihening orous plaster, and c dition thereto tlie nvwiy (ilacott-ml ,', actiTeYegetahie combination whu a . creased rubefacient, stiaiiilaUoj, sciu counter irritant effects. Second. Because they area penuine plurmirtr oration, and to recognized !)MUe roi . Tiiri Because tticy arc t'.rr oa y plsfca !L p&w at once. loartlu Because tticy will pisaivi ly c-:r- iseui other remedies w::i tiot evea rdicie. Tltih. r.ecauc over rnon p!iy?ir'nc s-il irrr voluntarily testified t!::it lury aresiiprr. thcr piasters or jasdium-s Kr eittma k Sixth. Became the msnnfartr.rerj hire rrrr only mcda ever given for yoruos pjaitr?, ;.i 13 Benson's Caps Pcrcus ft SEABURY &. JOfWSO aannfacrenn? Cbem:. 1 riC'KE RE.1IKHV J.TI..4ST, ft BEAD'S Hedfeatci tO.Vi j Bti0M P! For ia'.e In- .X. WYI SomeiNe: March 1. GOODS LOWEST PRICES Dfiun fc nnrcjorn rurv ?(ttO Fanner can boys F0r:. For s?lS (5201bs;oi POWELi pREPAlRED CHEMICA This .when rr.l.xeda: fime. maLe Op1 of SUPEIilOR rHOSJ'H.-W'E. ey. pbnt-Ufe anj sj cert.iia cf $i:crcsfui production a many L.li priced Thcwp fLffN EXTRA f Ntf trouble tn 1UEXPENS. FiilUirect. PowKLt's Chemicals bare I ?rt &:n tried, give nn;vcTS-l s :;.'..: la. n, tr.d n leading fcm.cn ia ever- w.z as reri i Send tir lir.i-r. Lcwiir of imi; I Brown Chemical 1 sclh ru.-rRirTOKs. .... . ii.vLTlUGlta, . Powell's Tip Top Eone Fe izer. Pries cn'y $ 3 5 a Ton. w Cona Meal. Dissolved Eor 3otas:t. f.ai al b: Am men is. Mi Fcr&Mi'a; COTTOflM K02 BIT-TEE (A .Mcdiriae, -mmt m JrrfaV nors, rrrrr, maxheas I.DELIo, Tinur all vraaa Bittiiu. THEY CUllll AH niwwof taVStoTTmrr.. Paw,? i,lTtr. Kidivr4,tid LnnrT'raTn. ' uuittuM, lTpie.Hnf(nd tnsjxi- gioco in COLD. V! Kf TnfH for fw thT wiH Tf' or iur ihtute Uum uru. fuuud ia tlu-iia. ynrrr itmritf"t fnr flrn l,nn?' ui-tu Ufum )vu alrtrri. TuJte p T. r. tnan htotcanrtinwHfi'-'-Drunkci.iiesa, ue nf iirilua., Ioomih - aarcirficn. C All mMlnr: ..a. roa RALC IT C. N. B0YE-, DRUGGIE Somrrtu- NOTICE IN DIVORCE. Harriet j: Hanson 1 In the Court of by i?xt frleu.1 Pleas ol S,ier- AannR It lmbert, ! Pa.. No. Janna' v- Hi Alias su: Vempsey II Hanson. ) IMvuree, oa the j Desertino. ' To Dempst-y B. Hanson, the defen.l aamed : Yoo are heri-by notified to be an I spf' next Court of Common Pleas of Somen to be held la Somerset, on the Mb ' April, IMi. to answer to the complaint P. Hanson, your wife, the plamtiif ahu and show cause. If aav you have, why wile should ant be dlvnrad from tbr matrimonr entered into with vou sarw. prayer of her retltt and libel sxtubuH you before said -Court. JOHXJ.SPANC Sheriff's Offlee. i Somerset F.b, 182. C00LEYCRE UREATLY I MI':; Iuiuilr iw tub et lee end 1 Jnf.ra. T OKKATiLKT rosniw-' 5 r chum, h.v! Mdo n U( TK.N flZF-S e-.h. rnatlcslly wHhont Efticir tiw ia:i. " i i . .... . .. . - ...... r , i ii ,1frilnl and fix nll.VfifC .Mi-Jt; PEKIOKITV. Alo,IaU Swln I'W W..rrt. t uteris ftc Ht nd pi-tai 1 r T3ZaMT FA;- aUMNE dL.tcilows EUiliek, re ril5.'J!t GOLDJ Ureat eoancetcS y. Thoaa wi- take advaatai 4 that are oflcrM. nerally become weaii those who do not improve such ehaneesl poverty. We want many moo. wunjen.l fli.i. Ihf Mtlihlh their owu4 Any one rm do the work properly fro start. Tbe business will pay ' ordinary wares, tipenslve t fare Nooaa who enraes lalls to make mrn Yo eaa devote your w-ow - m v Toar ssarv winniw -' -t .ii th.t a, seeded seat tree. Aidress i .... .......... ..S&Ue TOWnmiw, 100 l. .............. ..fcl I ' "S'"""""noi -Hem. ) 1001W g5 noreorwm!. - twawf t"i Back Ach GOOD iili V JL1' I I r- -ve ..Portland, Main.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers