BTir -it-lntM- - s. t TlK'V III T!.-i; if Y1 I The I 11 For t Thcx f If 1 Tie ; I -v We l:i . In A T i it H n c n c t t I t 1 V ' 5 ft The Somerset Herald. K)VAPI ' I-'- r.'li'"" and Pn-i-rictor. JsSssj V fl'M-i-l'V V July 7. 1;. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. STATE TICKET. run (;iTi!Ntr.. i.vs. jamiis a. r.r.vi:n. for -,- e I oi: MITTKN VNT-iiVl.!:N"li. HuX. W M. T. l'AVII.s. of llriflfor.1. r.ii: At j UT' it ;i"M"i: b. V Ull.SiiN N' iltKIS. of l'liilinlfllii. i oi: s!.i 1:1 i v!.v in- jnti:i:nai. akfaihs, 111". .1. I i V KT. Mi.tii-ioin.-ry. I iii: i ii.lM.SiAN T I. A la i K. r.. a. i -I'.i ii.n ;:. of i.iii TTn-. COUNTY TICKET. "i t - iNi,I;1-S. i:iWAI;I I im-P-t-l Iir.mnli. s.ilij.i-t !.. lift- .Ir.-M.in 1 1 n- lvpuliliran l'is-lri'-t i I'lid r iii -. m:: statk natk. J'UlN 11. m ' t'i"I . oi' Soiiiri-v i iltr(Miv'h. Su ' '! ti I in- . ci-i..;i nl I in- l; .Hl.licaii lii tri"l ..:i!, rr:;-'. iii: -i:mm.y. .IViK- I.. IT'. II i'1' r-i t liMrn'iL-h. .nII . Mil. I II: ..1 .1. mn r '!'. n-hip. t i.i: a-'m i a i t: .ii intK. - WIT:'.. W M.KIJI. "1 ' Allfjilifiiy Timiilii. nl. IV!:!: ;-. -ii v i'.u. j m ti n Ti". I'.'i: r ,.ri"!:M:v. I i: i ii. v. i-.i i ' -1 :i u' r.i:. i.r s.mrN-; lu.rmiii. ie: "i 'Hi: ii"i -!" i'iui: Tni;. 1 1: i :i j k .- ii v! ' .if s.niii-rfi t.ih-Imii. 1-ni: i .ii m y -i uvky' ii:. WlI.l.iAM i:KI.I:. ! M i M". t 'I. Miiliii. Tin: iM.i i u i!! win. 'I'm: i . in K t-i-ii iiui-ls in Au-ri-t. State ( 'i.uvculion t d;f- .M.i:r w ill ino'i.-ilv adjourn mi Moulin- 1 'T i itist. Tm: Port.-:- lent signed tin- Fit. John I, ill !..-! Tiii:i-I.i. Titr diirii!-.: nl s!, ih s a 1 U-iTeasv ',nv: i: :!::! Iaie-- h ad the Pe- publican I. oss to vi-'tory tills fall. Tin: w ratilie.l in iii the colivet'tioli will e 1:1 .oeinlN-r. Cm i vin U'. H. Si:,: ii -presents Soinei-set enmity on the Kepublican State ( 'cut r.;I ( 'oumiit '. . T11:: licket lim is :th a ci lion in eeiv siitii-ii . f the r.lial 1 Slat.-, cep :..,.! tin- i-ampai. Ml -tails o!l we S1.1 i:mm:V I Mi i: has n-rotiiliu'lid-'d in :i 1 11 .i-i 11 ivi.it ii hi nl' :'.T."i'H for the ini- uent of the C;u'.i-'e Indian Si ! 1. oVclll Tm: ' iioiosale vetoing of jK-usion bills Mr. Cleveland very poj.ularin the Smth. Tih:i;k are thru- full tickets for county uHiii-s now 1 f. ire tin- Kiii!o of t 'atnbria county tin- IVni.N-ratic. the Pi-publican and ihe Prohibition. Tin: iii -public. uis of Sniiii rsct county never ptvseiitt d a ticket tiiat met with a better reception iii our ow 11 party m com manded lanre t lie I'l'l'iitV. 1 siH i-t from mir fricm 1 i mother j.age this pajK-r will In a detailed ae.-otiir. of tlie .r'K-ee.l- f.nmd injs oi the Peliilbl .,ud a bvi.-f sk.-t. 11 an f 1 Mate ( '.invention leli of the candi dates nominated. Til 1: farmers . .f I 'a v. lie cm lit y, Illinois, liave 11 -.nl.-. 1 to tie- li.yn.tt f-r :l ;j..od pili j.os.. Thev have :i-jii-i d to sow' tlo u lcat for a j-n .!.' :.i -l.ii i- on! 1 of tli'ee yi-ars, in ihe chinch lilies. F-Pi:i:-;i.i:m' Aktui 1: has Ui-n taken to New li;i.ioii. Conn., w hen-, it is hop ed, tin- iiiotiiil..ii air vv ill as-ist him to r.-e:iK rale. It is the sincere 1iok- of a . nefoiis K opl. that Mr. Arthur may au-ain be restored to j-rfect health. Tlie c .iiiitiv i- Hot done with him vet. Tu i: .llal ha- a-aii! voted ill favor of l ev in- Alueiiea 1 1..- s.-:- ic-- tin y tl.e I'td'e I Stat :: steam. Ii.'tieMly for may 'li icr in cirryiiiir i-s ill :ils, atld the Vote sh..-,v- h;tl at '.east oiue of ilu- a lli i mat i V e Votes were JVhUMTalic. Ifthe s.mu- pro iot:i..ll "i'veas were L'ivell by tin- 1 cmo cl.its ,.i :!ie House it W.ill'd U- adopted. I'. i! 'n ;!n- 1 1. .use the . .bs riii-t ionists are ln-.ii 'v ..-ijuite solid. Tin- I louse cannot I..- ili'vi'-i into iri vi ; i l :u ..-ratie v.-t.-s f. 'V -:eKc:n nic;:-'ii'.'-. li ..' iv i a hi. ii iio'..i:i.;.t': from tin- enthusiastic manner he Pi j.ul.!:. it: ticket p'..nvd in :i ;.t Haiti-! i;-.- !a; week has el! recelXi .1 l '.i"i- of the State, it eh. I of I Vlno- ! larrisl.urg is months. The is vale 1.. pred'e t that tile eratic Ad'iiinislration at now I cil a matter of f. feu only liissi-nii i-s arc lIio-.- who by a long c..iit-M. of kickin-.- and ..': t ruction havi lost all right to call thense! , es Pcinilili- cans, an.l even i:n-v o.ive :i i iK-rsonal . .i objections to make to t.,,- candidates. Wit'.i the 'party uriile l and enthusiastic in the suj.jm.ii of its ticket, tin- majority this fall dmiilil cpia! that of 's. .' ;h llarrisbtuy 7. Iiyiith : It is well wo-;i. .' of notice tiiat the lein.Krats geiieraliy 1. 'd very ditl'.-rent views of the tariil' revi-: ..i j.'.aiik in the Chicago j.lat form. P. -.' t'n- elu-tioii. ihcy said that the r -n iv.i of inc jualili.-s and iinjierl'ee tiotis w.t-what it nie.int, and that liolli i ti vr wou'-l be -1 me to injure the business interests of the country. Tin- Morrison bill tended to the reduction of the tarilf a much as they dared. That was beaten, 1ki-;uiso it was unintelligible and dis b..n.t. P. in kill's bill is denounced as i-ingH j.rotectiotiist measitei-1ni-.uih it sii-ks to n-du.v tlie t evetme by lessening the internal revenue. 1 Vtuocntts w ho do imt c:tn- for the l.tisim-ss inti-n-sts w ill have lion. - of the P.mdall Ik-turn-rney Im-- cause it has soinccan- for the n.utitry. 1 ni iillstlicearly daysof l.epiil.lie.iiu-m. w lu-n j t;(uerul Sickles then dclivcml a sjh-1i in Would it not U- well to hold the i eourage and jiatrioti-iu nuitn.lUil the newly- M ,,ly t., Colonel A. Wilsi.n Norris' attack li-iii.K-r.itic jiartv resjiotisiblt- for its I organization. Again, as ticiicral j ,,,, himself as ii.minander of the Third pledges? Thev "sav thev can- for the '' 1U';,v,r aia '" uu" eonveution, amid storms i ( nut tht-Uittle of ;. ttvshurg. He de . ountry's interest iM-f.nv ehition, but af- I ,,,'i'l,l,;,ut' trt'nt the.U-U-pUes who rcjin-sent- fcdcil hiniM-lf in sln.iig language and gave terward w ill listen to nothing that does net strike thetn down. It is well. They .-atinot i Ige the iss;v- they have made, and 111 a few mou'li must jmvt tlie jki jile, w ho w ill lay the dotibh-fainl niajori--' ty i.n the shelf. They have earned their fate, and cannot -caj.e it Tlie next Congiv-s will Ik K-ej.ublicaiu At Tlx head f these columns will found the UrjiiiMimn State ticket nomi nated at Harris! mot last week. The con vention fairly met the just exj.ei-.atiom-of tin' jieople. It lias jilaoed a strong ticket upon a f-omiil .platform un.l hat discharged the l"ty infnlel to it with wisdom and eoiiraje. The notnit.Htion of tin- gallant, one-legged soldier, t Jeneral Jame A. Beaver, without a disw-ntiu-t voiiv, umjtiestionably n-gistcrs the will of all jpxkI Pennsylvania Republicans an.l was in exact annrdainv with their wish. It was justly ilue him that he shoul.l again Ik- nia.le the rty leader ami standard lx-an-r for the highest otliiv in the gift of the people of this jrrat.il old Commonwealth. Ami with him to lead a llmiiHtghlv uniteil ami enthusiastic j jirty. anxious ami willing to follow i wherever In-may lead, there shoul.l le I no fear or misgiving's as to the result, i The wn.ng he sr.iren.il four years ago, i through no fault of his, ncedst to 1e right ! ed, ami the jKLple an anxious for the opN.rtuiiity of iloingso. The party was thi n iliviii-.l ami ilistraetiil by comli ! lions for which he was in no way n-sjion-i sihlo, ami he fell w it bout Jicrsonal fault lor ucakin-ss. v ithotit uttering a word of cotnj.laint or n proaeh. The party is oihv inoiv unitel ami it now stamls with (ranks unhroken for the gallant sohlii-r, j j)U. .vkwul them as they j the sjM.tlis eitizi-n, the hristian gentle- ,asM, j,!,,, xvjtl, uni-oveml ln-als aiil ilnnip ' man who sunVnil ilefi-.it at the heail of j mp nafpi. IK- was iln-til in the full mii ' ils eolumns four vears ap w ithout a sin- , f,,ri f a Major General, ami won- ujion ! -U- inuniiur. He sesses in a higher his hn-ast the various iln-or.it ions of his ser i Tlivn-t- than anv other man in the State ; xi.e. Ilis empty pantal.H.n le,t hunt: over i -ll ,l...,..titi.. uhieh an- .-ali-ulate.1 i the ariia-e m-.U. a mute hut r.-iviful re- to enlist the hearty and earnest supiort ! of all Ui-ipul.licans in all x-etioiis of the j State. His brilliant military reeonl and j his civic ability make him in every way ja worthy champion of the ftreat party ' w hich In- w ill lead to victory in Novein j Ikt next. The second place on the ticket is ! filled bv Senator William T. Havies. who sulli red defeat with Heaver in 1SS2. ami his friends thought it but fitting that 1,.. J,.,nl.l Ih- i.lai-ed on the ticket with him and share w ith htm tlie victory in , 'sti. He is a strong candidate in every sense of the word ; a Kcpublican whose Hilitical fidelity has never wavcml; a 'etitleni:tn of uniinpi-achable integrity and sHtles character, Im.iIi public and i private; witli an honorable rimrd made in the Slate Senate, a wide aojuaintaiuv i over the State, he is in evety way worthy : to 1m- placed with Ik-aver on the ticket ! to which he will add increased sln-nh. The balance of the ticket is well - . ! U..b b..v.. ,m,.t .K-rsoiial iH.ularitv and I ln.th :,re very i-H'eiiie stuinp sK-akers. The lioiuinaliou of .em ral slM.rne for j CoiiL-ii ssiiian-at-I-aiye bliii'jrs further i strength to tin- ticket. He has a splen did iirmv ni-oid and lias had considera ble Li-v'islative exjH-rieniv. He has U-en an able and ctlicieht n-pn-si-ntative in Coiii.'1-i-ss and is desH-rvinit of the endorse It is a uood tick- ment he thus receives, et from too lo bottom. One that is sun- to will and one that cads for the enthusi astic Mipirt 1 .1" every Republican worthy of tin-name within tin-broad Imarders of the State. THE NESWSPAPERS AND THE TICKET, Many Opinions from Many Journals, for the Most Part Favorable. .liilin-tiiwii TrilniiieJ The Kcpublican State ticket is hailnl with enthusiasm bv all members of the party ill , nil .Uaner..l tl.e Male, n .s cieau. ,.m - ic. brilliant and soldierly. n the who'e.'Tt'islTie I'k-si' platform which the party ha.- framul in many years, and tin work of the Harri-burg 'on vent ion will sat isfy the P. publican voters of the State and prove the casie-t a- well as the most ctHi-tive onslaught in ihe general revolt against Ih ni . ratie aseeiidaiii y in the State and in the Nation. Cleveland biailer. Ki-. I ,, . , ' , ,. . , . , 11.- is blind to political suriis who cannot .' ,,- si. that the action ol the Kepublii iins ol ..... . I . Iin-v iv.uiia ill llicir 1 oiivciuion ai iiarri j Inn;; yctcrday 111-1110 the iv.li lllptioll of thai great State fnun the rule of u 1 einiK-rat-ie Uovinior. pnl hu-iasiii. harmony, and co! i In lei i.e were manifested, w hich means an overwhelming victory in November. ; 1'llila il l. Iliil le-e.ir.1, Ill-Ill. 1 1 tin- 1 ten i.N -ral ic party, following the lead of Mr. Uam'.all. shall practically stand itself on the same platform vv hich tin- Pepubl leans occupy, it certainly will be de-irablc that the Kcpubli. .in party -hall win. !t i- the origi nal Jacobs. We shall see what we shall sec. ; riiilaileipliia Press. K-. J With such a ticket and such a plalliu m. with candidate- vv ho represent the party at its Ih-si and principles which rctlcci .Is Ik-Hit aim-, the Keptib'icaii party of Pennsylvania i liters the campaign secure in tin- pn.si-t of victory and the certainty ofsucv--. !ri,;ia.l. l.liia I.clver. Neutral Tin-re is no siun at this time of any op silion. cither general ..r sjki ial. to any one of ihe candidates that is. Kepiiblican opri lion. such as ssailnl ;ie heads of the ticket four y ears ago. The one ilistiiibiug factor of any dim. :isioi.- : the Prohibition move ment, and the ext lit of this is unknown at thi-time, hi, .lot at all improbable, how ever, in the ab-cuc- of a divided and strong disturbing element, and in view of Mr. i Quay's ruciit majority of -tu.min. that yi tcrday's le iiilnati in- foi-.lia.low the n'sult .f t he clii-tiolis to be held ill next NovcmU-r. I li.iltiiii.in- Aiiu-rieaii. ! The Pe!i:isylvaiiia K -pubiicaiis bave iiom itiate I a ie ke". which will gothn.u'it victorious!-. ruilailelpliia Kveiiing ltullelin. The i invention at Ilarrisl.urg vc1erd.iy iioiniuatel a ticket which will give general satis.i : en; to ihe K. publican voters, rhen- . .. in- cr Iki-ii an asM-nib'.a-r of the kind vv hich h .s more fairly n-jm-seii tul the party's will. The gathering itself was nia.le up in tin- main of earnest, intellig. nt men. and the lin t ho. I- vv ith w hich it wa-con.liict.il were not such as bavc heretofore brought r. J.r.iach iis.u the parly mauageiiiciit. KeaililiL- Times. It is in. small tiibule to the high rs.inal character of I M-ucral I leaver, that ilia Slate which gives such s.lcndi.l K. -publican ma jorities he was ui.oposcd (in ihe guberna torial nomination. jSorristovvit II. ral. I Tin- tilling iu favor of ieiieral ISeavi-r amounts to eiitlmsia-iit. and the other iioini i ltn-s aix- n-g-.inlnl with onlv little less favor. lliiiilini;.l..ii Journul. Tin- iK-rsoiicl. the spirit and the action of j tu. e. invent ion w hich met iu Harrislmrg on Wcdui-silay last, ii.niiiiiat.il such a stn.ng .' and uuexcejitioiuil ticki-t. and adojitnl such a luld and .r..gn-ssive).latf..niiof prineipli-s. in me jKiipieoi i n. i omiuonvveaiih . "it natter. h"t so n inch w ho carrii-s the Hag. but it matters a gn-at deal what's on the' $ - ifliUn-I.-li.t.iii Xnrth Aiiii-rtciiii. which the "onvfiitioii might have met shij wreck, is no li-s admirable than the ticket. chosen. 'otiiistil of honest, learu-ss ; momls ol Kearney. Hooker ami .-sii kits, mi Pepubli. ans. it could not U- improv- i cti'ort was to make it as notable as possible, i d uM.ii Col. Norris and t'ol. Stewart '. How it could have been made inon- pictur-wen-iH.tl, brave soldier an.l Ih.Hi made i -l"' and telliim 1 inmrf i.uane I.x.i-p. i ex.vll.nt mi..ds in the State I.Tis!ature: misshnrthe sentimental ,.1,-a ot ho.hu .lie rriiilicii-lphiu Kemrl. Tlie tii-kft prvM-ntiil for tin- consideration of the ijle is notaMe for a rencirkable av erage of weight ami i aacity. The rail Kvery Kcjihliciin throughout the Key st. me State should siijiH.rt the ticket without lii-situtioii or iii-stion. A Creat Day at Gettysburg. ;nTYsm iti;. July 2. This historic town has iifvi-r Ih-i-ii so arou-iil for years as it is to night. Pat li-tie ami ilrainatie siviu-s an imsinr hen- with even- lli-etinn hour. Not simv two li.Mile annii-' met in the slim k of kiltie Ill-ill the Ih aiitil'ul lieMs whieh tnaile this lihtin Kr"1""' historii-.il has tlien-lvii il. In. t liL,. in h enthusiasm ami n-vival j of patriotie fit ting as then- has lien lo-ihiv. i A the sunset in plory after a ilay of rain ; then- wa a pii iun- of i-ontlii-t that was Imtli ! Ni.l ami heroie. A rhousaml vi-ti rans inan li- til thn.in-'h the stni-ti. heailn! hv hr.iss ; kimlsaml ilnim eorjw ami earn iiifT in their i rauksadozeii lwttle lliip tatt.-ml anil bullet- riven fnun theelash of arms that tookplaie lu n-ainl elM-wlu-n- ihirin the coiilliet. They wen-the Mlerans of the Thinl forps who hae Im-ii Imliliiip their liil n-iliiioll hen--lay. kkvii:wi:i liv sieKl.Ks. Tl.i.ir ..1.1 eiiiniiiaiiiler silt iii a itirriaLi- hy 1 liillnler oi His pan huh men pm in ! ilerfill 1 t tie whieh took plai-e ahout this ! iuiet tow n tweiity-thnv years ajro this alter- i llooll. I hen-was 111 me miiiviiiii mi- niii j am and the emblems of war they carried, as I well as their old mniiiiamlcr. a picture of ! the ist that Minis to have arisen from some old innlallioii. Word. Ji n or In ush cannot ' make a pi-iuiv of the closing sivne of this memorable fathering. I roni early niornin;i i,til .,t- t -iiiylu each mssinv moment has iintnl a m w pit lure of war and cacc. Most ..f the day has Iki ii as dreary as vcsienlav. w hich ushernl in the lieintiiii , of this nunioii. was brifiht and I M-aut i lul. Tlunfon- early this morning then- was a change in the prof.-r.imme. tn the trajric : wheat lield. which the ili-sperate work of the j Third r..rps. mi the 2d of July. !;:;. has : made memorable for all time, the day's jm ! eeiilinpi were to have Ih-cii conducted. A ! battery of artillery, sent hereby the Set n ; tary of War. w as to lend us tire and smoke to make still more vivid the picture of strife this uatheriiii; was to ii vivc. It lM-iiif; the first n-.tssi-mlilain- ol those who won- mcuia- i . ... . 1 ... 1.1 . .1... I "V 'V ' C..11..I1I i-vi'n lliinir has Ui'll ilolie thai could Ik-done to make a menu. rahle day for t icttsviniri:. A Tlllllll foKI-s IlKI'XtoS. Pennsylvania and her bravest and Ih-M have iiil with New Knirland and New York to make this the most notable of nil the pitherins ,(f old soldiers on this soil i sin.t- the war. The imrpis,- of this mall j was not only to bntu: the meinlM-rs ot tin- j Thinl Turps together tor cousullat ion ami rcllntioii. but that they iniht listen to the i words of their old commander, who to-day, ' for tlie first lime, spi-aks in answer to the j criticisms that have Uvli made upon hiscon- ! duct of the I nit lie he foil-dit on tin- siviind i day of July. Always a dramatic and j liictunue figure, eil her i:i ji-jivor war, I tieiieral Panicl K. Si. klcs vva- to-day inon- cvpressive than ever. The rain disttirUil the hattle-tield ai-ranetnciits. hut the rink, j when- the ly and jrirl- who have Ui ti j Ixirn since the n-U llioii skim in the t?raii ful curves of skating or cin l.! in tl damv was Mi uml. Hy eleven o'clm W it was cn.wdnl w ith veterans n pn-s.-ntinr evi rv c.uis that contelldiil Ill-ill thi- Iii Id. 1 lie immune was a Ii kiitilul pn l II re ol life and animation, vv it it it- dm .ration both of rtajrs and soldiery and i iti.ciis. b.th nu n and women. The fair sex wen- there in laiyc iiuiiiIk ts and .n.ud of the males, win. are now but little nmn-than reminders of the stirring and mighty past of which they wen-so much to the nation. A platfortn was cni tnl in fn.nt of the buildiuir ami ! around it thn.nirnl some tlini- thousand , 1 .... .1 1 . souls. A few tatten-d battlc-llas wen- here , 1 and there 111 the tlip.lc' and manv an arm- I ,' , , i liss slnv w;i carrinl t. an.l tro throuixh the cniwd. AH was lili- and inten-t. i.:N. sl. KI.K-' l!Kl l.l-TloN. There was g.Hi.l music by the Hanover I Hand, and the ii-Ikk-. of patriotic songs wen- ringing through the hall, when a veteran on j the stage shoutiil. "The !cncral's coming." Then- was silence tor a second, only to Ik j follownl by one trcmciidoussliout astiencr.1.! : Sicklist hohbled across the threshold llxin j his enitcln-s. Men shoiitnl and women went half mad with delight as loyal hands 1icIk-. him iiim.ii the stage.il noble tiguivof l!n jiast iin.l pn-M iit. The events of nearly a 1 iiiartcr of a n-ntury ago were m-allcd to ' every one by bin martial liKik and li-aring ; and his el.Mpicut crutches. Then- was no ; mistaking the heart of the assemblage, and if either .cneral Sickles or the world ever 'had any doubt as to his standing with the : troops de hi) so long and with w hom he was a regimental, brigade and corps ci.mmainlcr i this days outburst has disjK-liiil it. Jnitiil abiiit him on the stage were his I old division, brigade, n-giiiienta! and battery ii.miuau.lcrs. lienei-.il C.irr. of New York, who startnl tlie corjis towards the tatcful i li. ld of (icltysburg, i ami- mi with tlie old j commander to find already scatnl upon the j stage Cicncral Ilolirt Ward. Cicncral II. I'.. , Tn-lnaine. Sickels' old chief of s(;itf; (Icncral ('. A. T. t'ollis, lieiicral Henry A. llarnum'. ' ticiieral W.J. Sewell. of New Jersey; Major ; tlcm-ral S. W. Cnivvf. .id. tiencral Kols-rt M i Allister. .cncral Adam Kadi-au. (J.-ncral Katferty. liein-ral Henry A. Hunt. Chief of Artillery, who iiuiitnand.il the guns of the Army of the Potomac at Gettysburg, and a 1 -.im- .r inon- incti all bearing illustrious I nam.-. I'or jk.wit and signitiiuu-i-. there has never Iki-ii such a pitheriiig Umii this ; field siiiii- it was laid waste by tlie ItiMif of i war. A STKIKIXO 1-UTI'KK. I j It wa-in. In-.l a striking iiicture of flu-.ast made more uicllow and lK-autifiil by the i ton. he- of tin- K-accful j-n-si-iit which has iu a great measure covered the track and tread l of armed eonlliet with the silver sands of a . new and broader national life and pnisi-rity. Tin- iKiasioti was fraught not only with i intcn-st. but with imK.rt:t:iii-. New words were to Ik- said by the man w ho fought the ; battle of the 2d of July and whose litis have Iki-ii sealed since the day of tin- wonderful j light. While others have sokcn. he has n-iitaimil silent. Having lost his leg iimiii the lield, hi-ollieial reirt of the invasion was not made, llclii-cthc liuvtiugof to-day. j He gathered his old coturades. from lieuteii- j ants to generals an.! fnun generals to pri- j latis. from the four .jiiartcrs of tin- country. i that he might read his otlicial n-Nrt to the World in their hearing. It was a gn-at deliv- cry. The mi ml mi 1m ith sides he held in his j hand and from tlie statements of all the actors in the-great tragnly hen- enactnl he i. i inane ii). unit lo-uay jin-scmeu ins tmal coii trihiition to history in n lation to this liattle. His words were touching and jHiwerful by tunis and his iM-an-rs wcjtt, laiiglml and liurnihiil anoriling as Ids n marks were j ,athiiic. des-riKiv- or critical. the nasons why President I.iim.lii had not granted him a court of inquiry, V. K Martin ..f 1 ..n..7...r .1 at the dedication of the moitiiiiictit of the Ninety-ninth PeiitisylvaniaKegiment. He eulogiziil the work of the n-giment in elo- ijuetit language and dcscr-ilicd the heniie sen ilis- of the men who covered with glory the Union arms. Determined Suicide. '1111'M.o. July .'. Kiehanl Joiu-i, an F.n L'li.!miaii. forty years of ae, who was eoii siilereil in railway ein-li-s one of the most ex--rt aceouiitaiits in Ameriea. was fouiul U:ul ill his nniiii at the Austin Hotel tliis morning. On the hun-au in his mum was fouiul a li tter aihln-ssi.il lo his frieml. 'harli-s K. Shaw. Il ran as follows: 1sar 'iii:lik: (iiMMiwiu promisnl to leave that helMirniweil from meat the ho tel, hut iliil liotiloso. Will you ph ase tell tMin to pay Ilalloweil, ln-twii ii Slate ami Wahash, folly cents unil Xelifelt tw enty-tive cents? That. 1 think, invers mv whisky hills. I w ill my can-ass to some mulii al in stitute for them" to try ami tinil out why the mental ami physical iiiachinery of my sys tem iliil not pull together. With kiml re pinl to the lys, who trail so hanl to make a hail pnI, I am yours in ilealh. as well as in lite. " Dick Junk.-. I'.c-iilc the latti-r lay an oK-n phial which liail iiiiitainiil oni-H-iirlith of an ounce of the sulpliatc of morphia, ami it tohl the story of the man's ili-iith. Helunl mailf two previ ous attempts to take his life one in Mon treal ami the other in this city last hri.-t-mas. At various times he was coiiniiictl w ith the Canailiiin Pacific, the Cliicao Bur liiifrtoii ami tiiincy anil tin- Michigan t'en tr.il Railway t'ompaiiy. He was in the cm ploy of the t cut ral Trallic Association at I In time of his ilealh. He was a hanl ilriulier and hail Irvii on a spree for the last two weeks. The Latest Cave-in Hvzi.ETox, Julv 1. Itetvvii'ii :t and t j o'cl.M-k this morning an ininieiiM- cave in - curml on the Ix hiirh Valley Uailroad at No. i H StiN-kton Pn-aker. The first alarm was 1 1 triven hy a miner employed at the .slope, and I throiip of Kiiile hastened to the sjM.t. The j cave-in is about : fn-t long and l'Mi w ide, j When the aii idcnt oei-urred then- was a ter rible crash, and the shock was felt for some I distatuv. Thru- tracks. 011 one of w ai h j wen- two trucks loaded with lumber, were j swallowed up by the falling in of the earth. 1 Teletn-aph and telephone .es and wires. J and in fact everything in that inmi'-diate : vicinity, went dow n with one sudden crash. 1 The Anchor freight train was due about ait hour later, and pnvaution- were at once . taken to have the train signaled and stop'd I before il colli. 1 reach the scene of the arc: j dent. The freight train, having been sinal nl. n-iuaiueil al StiN-kton. where Ihe freight was iiiil,iai.-il from the cars and di-livcicd lo ; tho-c of the llal.-loii men-hauls who lilt , inclined lo haul it by team to the town. All trains from North and S.i-.th were . I. -laved li.r sonic time, and the . train did not ' leave the dcmt at this place at all. An e j eursion under the atlsjiiees of several of the ! Sunday si-hools was Histp.me.I until some ! future date. This excursion would have Iki ii a Very larre one, and the accident oc i urriiif.' so early as it did. probably prevented a terrible calamity, (.'radium for the laying of a new track was commenced on the north ; side of the cav e-in early this moniinu'. and with the larL'e force of men that arc en paired it is cxni-t-d that the track w ill be in such a -haK- that all trains will be able to pass ; that 1 mini within a day or Ivvo. Boycotters Sentenced. Nkvv Yoiik. July 2. The convicted lu.y- : cotters of Theiss, the proprietor of a n.iie.-rt irarden were arrainul in court to-day for sentence. Jude Pariflt made some strong: remarks to them on the'lavvli .ih-ss of the crime of which they were 11.11vi.-tnl. lb said I ha! it was a violation of pi-to a ! country that weln.mcl fon-ijrn-boni citizens, t.i a conntrv that olfcred fnnloin and tie piiv ilive of riirht. They had violated public rights an.l opinions and their oil. -use was not short of blackmail. The distribution of circulai-s U-lore laces of business was con spiracy and punishable as such. Their chi- , duct if liniunishcd would had to savagery. I Thcv may have bivn misled by bad advice. ' hut their couiisi-1 should have rebuked them. i Thevilidn.it use I he money li.r their own advantage and this pdiiat.il their oir.-ne. He Would not impose the full jM-nalty of the ! law. as they were workiii'men. The.liiiL'e then sentenced Paul itt.iir i ; and Henry Iloldorl' to two years and ten I Julia- Kosi-nherg to one year and six months j iinjirisoumeiit. Iiauicl Iiannhau-cr. tin most violent of the bovrcotters. got thru years and eight months in tin- State Prison. The Fayette Mormon Craze. l-'.v ykttk t'rrv, June :jn. The Mormo:i craze in this iieighliorhood. iu-tead of dving out, seems to gain strcnglli. Several of the new memlK-rs have had alleged rcircsciita tioiis from heaven directing thciu to lake additional wives. This new phae of the natter has tirrcd the community deeper than ever, and it will not be safe for any mlygamoiis marria-.-es to be attempted. tin- i of tin- parties dim-ted to plural marriage is an old man. past To years of age. flic :t i- , Zi-ns have brought tie- Kev . I 'harics Krazicr. j formely of Salt like ity, lure from lirceii burg to comba! the Mormon missionaries. He lias Ui-n lecturing here for several nights on Mornionisiii lo crowded limiscs. At the conclusion of one of his Itvturcs a pr. .mim-nt Mormon anise ami detlouin eil him as a fal-i- I'u-r. Violence would have hi -en done to him, but Frazicr imjilor.il the audici:.- to let him go unnioli-stt-d. The hysi. ians here have ' abaiidoiinl several of theif cases among the 1 Mormons mi in nut of the at icnts claiui- ing that tiod had iiistnieied them not to take ' the perscril.nl meiliciiics. Several Mormon I f.imilii-s have sold ..If their good-, and a'-e preparing to migrate to Plah. Chased by a Panther. I M vi vii Chink. July 2. lames booth, a i switch tender on the l. -hijli Valley railroad i cast of 1'eilii Haven Junction, was c:ia-ed o:i 1 Tuesday night l..v u larc puither. and tool; ; refuge in his shanty until alter the anim al , had .lisapjicarcd. I itinc.diulcly alter his , arrival at the building he telegraphed to the ; station agent to tiiiue to his as-i-laiiec with j a loaded gun. Abe Horner, a :ic-lcggcl I w atchman, armed himself vv it h a rillc, but ! when lie reached the switch the iaut!nr had tied. Iloolh lets no! fully recovered ' from tin-etr.ifs of the scare, but i- now pre ' pan-d to inei't his uigcrous vi-itor day or i night. The first llmlh knew of l he jiivs -nee of the animal was by a terrible y. ll but a I short distance from where he wa standing. The sight which met his gaze almost froze tin' hlood in his veins, ami for the lir-t lime in his life ulthoiigli known to jni-css more than tin- ordinary amount of nerve, his courage failed him. and he ran as fast as his limbs could carry him. When he arrivnl at the shanty the (.anther w.i- close at his h.i-ls. State Supplies. II VI: 111 -in itii, July 2. Contracts were awarded to-.lay to successful bidders for the furnishing of siiii!ics to tin- State. John Wauaniakcr, of Philadelphia, was given the contract to furnish stationery to the Senate and Hons.' at ol kt cent, below the maxi mum Jiriiv fuxed by the Slate, an 1 to the de jiartment at .".27.'". The contract for iaint ing i-ii.l fn-si-oing the depirlin -nt was awar ded to John Ciihsoii. of Pliilad.-lphia. at -;.-!.". and the Sii.renie Court room to F. A. Nichotils, of Philadelphia, at .s2,non The Harrisburg Kln tric Light Company was the lucky bidder for furnishing combi nation electric light fixtures at S7.tl.. A large number of smaller contracts were given out, running the aggregate u to about si union. Shot for one Cent. Nomoi.K. V... July S. Yesterday on ihu ltr.K.ks, farm tn-ar i'ortstii.niiti. two negro hands, W'iJliani lloykin mid James Nichol son, wen; engaged in jiitching Jx-nuies and got to wrangling alsmt the Kse.ssioii of one cent, lioykiu drew a Jiistolaud told Nichol- 1 son to nav him the nioiiev or he woiil.l j sh.Kt him. Nicholson claiiniil that Itoykin had not won the money fairly and n-fusul to give it to him. Itoykin them ainml his Jiistol and flnil. the bullet going through the right hn-ast of Nicholson and juissmg out on the oj.jKvsite side, inusing a jminful and ser ious w ouml. The (i.ndition of Nicholson is eonsidereil critieal. Pout Woktii, Tkx., July 2. Kei-nts fnm throughout the Slate show that two -m-at caltle sections of Texas are siiirerinjf fnun ilroinrht one west of the central art of the Slate ainl the other in the northwest, exteiul iiift into the Panhautllc. Tin- n-jmrts have the most gloomy ontlHik for call..- ..ml crops. In the western country the fit., i nas lieen completely, ilestroyeil. There not enough to suiiiiuer the hcnls unil n me to winter them, tattle an- no fatter than they wen- last spriii).'. after having passed throiif;h the winter. The calves have lu-.irly all dinl. The trrass is too far pun-to In- lienclilnl hv rains. In that sniion ranchmen an- mov ing their henls its. fast as mssihe. 'froiihle has iMiuin-il mi the I rail in New .Mexico. One hundred and eighty liuau ol cattle IV the drought ilistrii-cs of Western Texas are traveling northwest tlimiuili New .Mexico. I'Iua arehiailnl for the Tricheia pass, w hich has Urn foil ed hy local stock men, and is delemiiil hy a lare armed fonv. Thi-si- immense herds must et through the pass or die, as they an- too weak to Ik- driven Lack into Texas. A hloody tijjht is hsikul for. The cattlemen of north Texas an- anx- j ioiisly awaiting the outcome of the uniting I ot catlli-mcii al Kansas ( 'it v, for the purpos.. if possililc, of iiiiluciiig Pn-sidciit t'levelaud to i nsider the order exH-lliiiK the cattle from Indian Territory. Texas cattlemen i timatethcir loss at ?si,uon.iiiiil hy haviiifj their cattle run mil of the Territory. Killed by Slate. j Suviiox, Pu., July 2. Henry Horn, up-d ! alHiut l. yea t-4. was instantly killnl yester i day afteriiiH.il by a fall of slate i'n.m the j nn.f of the .Morris mal hank, near Vienna, 1 where he was work injt. If was several hours I Ik-Ioi-c the debris was cleared away and the I remains rmivcnit. A n-ulariy oif;ani.cd bamlof horse thieves si-cm- to exist si.nu-vv lien-in this vicinity. ju.li.-uif; from tin- mimlN-r of il.-picl ilion committ.il lately. Two horses were stolen from the .-table of lieor.'e St ruble, at l!r.ok- lield. one niiriit thi- wn k. and I'mr were I lak. n from a farmer residing al Payne-i C ; j tiers the -ami- niuht. t Hivcr Whittenbei'cr. j of this place, mourns the loss of a line ani ! mal which was taken Tuesday nijtlit. otiu-r ! thefts are said l have taken piac-within a ! radius often miles. j Job .bines, a veteran of the late war. di..p : ped dead lo-day from heart disease, while at I his brother's r. s-.len. e on the Wi-t Hill, lie was formerly attacli.il to the Twctity-lilth 1 th:o Voiuntiirs. ami will Im- burinl with miliiarv honors bv the Shamn Po-t.i. A. He Wanted to Die. TlKH... July 1. licorge Konian. a i jiroiiiin.-nt and well-to-do farmer of Salem ! town-hip. Wyandotte county, went to 1".kt Sandusky yi-slerday to alien. 1 llarmim's cir cus. n comj.auy w ith a ncighlHir he vi.-w-' ed the street .al'alc and iitlend.il the show . talking plc.i-anilv and ailing ratioirallv. , After the show lie drank a glass of Ik-it and then stalled home. Arriving there he put away his icani and then went deliberately to work and made ire.aralions to suicide and cremate him-elf. He lirsi set lire to his resi dence. I hen to the huge barn, lie then sc-4-ured a stout -trap, and alter selling I'm- to lliecorncrib and granary, went iu ide. and fastening the .-tra around his lin k and over a cro-slM-aiu. hung liim-c If. being dead when found. j P.y hard work memlK-rs of the hoUsch.!! ! and neighbors succeeded in saving the house j and the granary in which he hung, but the j barn vv as ciilireiy di-stroynl. Kossinaii wa : almi Mi years old. and had worried greatly I'or.-evcial yiais aliout losses he siislained iu tin-Central bank, vv hich collapsed al l'.cr Sandusky several veal's ago. Whi n loiuid he had llir.i-large but! hcl-knivi-s and a revol ver in his p lekcts. and w.isi videnlly prejiar cd fordcatii in some manner. This makes i hrcc suici. I.--of firmer-ri-si.i ing in tiiat towiishij. in as many year.-, caii--: nl by w or.-ying over money lost in the sain, i bank. - -- IIostoN. July 1. Kichard J. banc. Presi dent of tlie Abington National Pink, who was arrcstnl in Portland late last night, was arraigned Ik-Ioiv the I'nited Stati-s Comiiii sinner's court iu lliis city this morning. Kaiik-l-'xamiiicr l iatchell tcstilicd that the ; c.Xe.niiiiatioii of the bank's all'air- had not i li.-eii completed, but that the funds fraudu lently obtained would probably amount t : si:;.".,uoo. i ifllds siin s.o.niio is rcjircseuled j by Holes iu dilli n nt uaiiics to cover drafls on i the redemption agent of 1 lie bank. and about j '. i,ni hi rcjiivieiits ovcrdral'ti). Counsel for bine e.xplaJucl that his client had gone to Portland on nii-im ss of the bank. The His. t riil Attorney said the i .vcnimeiil claimed that banc had got large slims of Holes ol w hich the names, other than ltnc', were straw" names. II a-!;ed that hail be lived ! at sT.'i.hon. Commissioner Ilallct li.M'd the ! bail al s.Vi.110.1, and the case was continued i till July 12. The Abington National Hank stoj.jKil iay- mi nt this in. lining. No money will be paid i out until after a meeting of the I tin-dors, i basl evening at I In-close 'of banking hours tin- bank had sll Mmi on hand. It is thought that the shortage will amount to nearly I ' i1 .n. n i. Divorced From a Dead Man. ', Nkvv Y.u:k. Julv 1. An iiitcrc-tiiig.livorce i j case, now being tried in tins city, is that of Kitly . IK-rnciisoii. who sues i have set aside a .l"- :ee ol'divoree against her iu lss.y The f.i -Is ii-elo-e 1 a'V that the c.niple Were marrinl in IsT'I. and lived together for In years, when the hu-'iand accused the wife of unfaithfulness. II- induced her to sign a separation ag.e -iiiclit. by which he was giv en the children, with the condition that, if he ever !ca;iied that the charges he made agaili-l her were false, (- t hililcll vvcre to be ret nr. icd lo her. .Vtil.seijucntly he mini for divorce, and made mil, by ihe aid of deleelivcK a case ujk .hi which 1 lie court granted the dec:-ce oti rcbruary .'. ls-'i. at ' o'clock ill the attcr iiikiii. Al in o'clock mi tlie morning of that day. Mrs. Herrickson alleges, the hu-liand died, and she now demands the divon-e Ik set aside having been granted to a dead man. Considerable proK-rty. and the cus tody of the children, is umlcrstiMKl to hinge upon the decision in the case. Shot the Intruder Dead. Vii.viiN'..r .". July -J. I-Mtv.inl M.-Nelly. a young white m m of Sassafras Nccli. was shut :i:id killed on Wcdiu-sdav evening by V'ii:iaui Webstc;-. i-oloml. A grudge had ciisied hetw.-.-.i th - fvv.i m -n and on the evening of tl; tr.; redy M -Nelly and another man, both itto!e.ted. vv'ent lo Webster's house and thtv.H ciin ) hrcak down tin door. Web.-lcr VV.ll'lc. then) hot lo i.iake tlie attempt, but they K-;-sisted, crashing iu the .loir, vviien he li:il at them. II ha 1 a shot-gun an I the whole load entered MeN'cl ly's hrea-t. killing hini instantly, Weh.tcr at oiu-e siirivtidcnit liimself ditlii. mitliori tics and his wife was held as an aeees-s.ry. Mi-Nelly was a farm hand, eiiijiloynl on the (Jr.. ve Point firm, whither he went from l'.allinu.re. Webslerand his wife are contin ul in the jail al I'.lkton. Life Term in Prison Begun. Nk vvii.iiT. K. I., July '. The Horsevs an.l Kmily l. I'.uHoii vvcre taken this morning to cuter iih.u tin- scrvi.v of a life sentence in the Stale Prison at Howard for the murder of their father. They were taken to the landing in a cab. The two sisli-rs assc.l -milling mi to the iKiat hut Horsey Wore a 14 look of stern iiiditK-n-iuv. He was iu irons. They had their Jilctuie lakeii yesterday. The girls were much fntereslnl, but J)or-iy was iiidilH-rent and wcj.t during the jipk-i-ss. Horsey seems daa-d and uiuihle to n-meinber any .ailiculars uf the murder, hut says that he did the act. He is in a dcj.n-ssi.il state of mind from the n-la.xat: f the terrible strain of tin-j.ast nine 111 uillis. He says he has sutfeml terribly when he M-emed nnwt calm and indifferent. Amaricans In a Mexican Jail. Pvsovvnr.i, Nokt Mkxh-o, July A n--1 Muter obtained K-rmissiim tiwlay from the Mexican authorities to visit A. K. Culling, the American luvvspaiir man iiiiprisi.mil hen- for publishing an exose in the Kl Paso Iff tnlil of Amidis Mcilina. u notorious Mexi can of this city. Culling was found incar cer.itnl in a Lithesome diiiiiini with live other prisoners. The pm.iii has hut one aK-rfnn- for ventilation 11111I that is the d.H.r. It would Ik- ililliciilt for le xiinn hate to conceive of anion- loathsome plan-for the putiishmeiil of a human victim than the dark and n-vkintr cell in which t'ullinir and live oilier human Ik-Shu's an- conlin.il. In the evening the door to this black hole is lai-un-ly 1los.1l. and for twelve hours they art-coiiik1IiiI lo en. lure the intolerable heat and breathe its fetid atmosphen-. Put six n-nts a day is allowiil each prisoner for food, and al such f.Khl a d.. vvmiiI.1 curl his nosi in contempt if it was olli-ml him. Is it any wonder, then, that the jirisoncrs rcscntnl an emaciafiil npK-arani-c and are rij'idly sm clliiibiu todisx-asi-? t'ulliiig. however, as to f.MMl fan-s licttcr than his inmniiles. IK- is supplinl with wholesome diet by friends who have permission fnun the authorities to visit him. He is as cheerful as a man can 1m-under his circumstances and bears up bravely, hut an imadverts sharply iim.h the impotency of the American iovi-rnuicnt, tliroii'-li its ollieials. 1 . I to pmt.i t American citizens in Mexico. He ! Kiiiit. d to several American j.risoiiers who ; are continul in the dismal diinpnii w ith him : and said they have Iki-ii coiifmiil in this loathsome dungeon for months, and have ! not In -ei 1 allowed to communicate with the I outside world. When a government like that of the Pnilnl Slates ierinits its citizens in a nciuhUiriiifr Kepulilie to Ik- tn-atnl in this inhuman manner simply to gratify Mex ican hate, is it any wonder that the country tlagraiitlv committing these outrages 1 ij x i 1 American citizens should hold it in contempt and defy it. or that its citizens so held and treated should share the same fil ling? lie aj.M-al.il in vain to Consul I '.ri--l 1:1 111. w ho said he vv a- iovvitIcss. Mr. Blaine's Book. Mkmi-iiis, Tkxn., July .'I. Judge llam ni. .ml. ot the I'nited Stales Court, to-day forwarded to Ik- tiled, his opinion involving Ihccojiyright of James ;. Illaine's "Twenty Years of l'ongn-.-s." The j a.se was argued Im lore Judge Il.imuioiid, while holding court for Judge Sage, in Ohio, and is of highly im;.rtant interest to the InM.k trade in the I'mtcd Stat. -s, as it is said to go fur ther than any pn-vioiis iln i-ion in the j.ro leclioli of the author's proK-rty in IsM.ks. The jiublisliing coni.any sells Kl. line's Iniok only by siibseritioii and has done every thing H.-sib!e lo kn-p it away fn.lu the gen-i-ral trade; but an agent t.i vv Imiii they sent ' copies for delivery ol.l tl.e hook t. a dealer alld 1"K kctiil the llloln y. -s.lllc io.ics of this pun liasc were ir.-unil by the nhio merchant without noli, col' the fraud, and Judge II. minion. I enjoins him from selling tin-in. holding it - piracy" on the copy right to. sell without the author's consent siirrcji tilioiisly obtain.il eojiies of the genuine jirint as much as it is to sell unlawfully printed eopie-. Tlte ..pinion holds thai it is the duty t the pr.i.-iil dealer, w hen he knows the book i--old only by subscription, to make iii.iiirv is i-:iivalciit to noli. e of any fraud. The a' t of Congress is held to have confer red on the author a luoliojM.ly of sale, which is ii-clf a proju'i-ty incident, and that one I fUtilled to be i:-otti te I iu the c.elu-ivc u-c ofthat which is exclusively his. The fol low ing .jiiotation from the opinion will e. jilaiu it- iiuHirtaiiee and scojic of argutuetit. I do not exalt literary ptujK-rty above other kind, nor hedge it about with a divini ty of right and n-liiedy, but place it in the category of all the sort, only tin. ling, that U-c:ium- of the di lii-utc and jKiuliar charac teristics it is esK-cia!'y liable to jiiratical depmlation like that atteiupted iu this case, whereby the owner looses his fair .mlits. and Congress has j.rov ided as a convey for its il.-ct of rights and rcinnlies .articiilarly adapted for defense against iir.iti-s. whether they sail under the black Hag of the mar- t.n.lli.. 'i4.ltii t.i ll.i ... ! . I .. ..I' mcrce displaynl tor iurM.sc of sM.liatioii. Baltimore the Cardinal City. Itvi.TiMoKt:. July ". At the f'athcdral iu : l'.altiinori- yi--lerday. in the jiresence of a ; congregation of alx.iit four thousand Knple. his grace. James liililn.ns. Anhbishop of baitimorc, was elevated to the. holy sec. through its ajNistolie- delegate. Most llcv. I'cter 1. iehar.l K"tirick. Arehhishoj. of St. j bonis, to the rank a-id dignity of Cardinal ; l'r!c-t iu the S u re 1 I ' .liege of Cardinals of the Koman Catholic Church. The day seln ted for the iiivcsiiturc was it ii..st appro. ri.ite one. it iK'ing tin- twenty lilth uifuivet'sary of Archbisi...liibboiis' or- I i I lift ii ill to tin jM'cUlhnoil. and ihecolnlii -111-ijratioii of sjt. I'.ud. Very lilting. t.. was the sc led i. ii of .;i isiolic delegate, for tie age. a!il venerable .n-lihrsho Kcnriek. of St. I.oills. v Idle being the oldest l!i-!io.in Aiuci'ica, is also the brother ol' the clergy -inati 1 the late A rchhisho( Ketirieli.nl la!ti-niol-e, who dic-l in ls'rjt who twenty-live yean ago ycsln-day 1 lad James (libiK.ns with theonlinarv vi-iineiits of a priest. Kentucky Outlaws. I.01 isvn.i.K. July Another bloody chapter in tin- Koan county factional wa was added to-day. Shcrilf Kainy with a j.sse attcmj.tcd to arrest the notorious l Vaig Tollivar. Cook Humihreys and 11 ivvard Logan, the i.riucials iu tin- trouble. Tolli var submitted quietly. Imt b .g.111 and his son William and H imjihrcys opened lire uji 111 t!u-S'leviif s j. ss... who r.-tu-.i-l tin lire. Shcrilf II liny was shot thr eigh the IkkIv and m u tally wounded, while his sou Henry and a deputy shcrilf were slighily vvoun.led. I.ogati's son was also shot but not fatally. Inf.. filiation received reports that Logan ; j 111 1 luii)ihrcvs arc raising a mob of follow -:ist'i kill the Sa -rili s whole posse. The overi.ir liaa hecj) ti:lcgraplui lo send troops lo loan ioiil,V at olc-e, when: all is fear and excitement, Mi33i33ippi Tragedy. M i:il!!U AN. Miss., July l... ten-ihle trag edy iKiumil live miles south of SiiK.lia, Ki-inK-r foiinty. Miss., yestenlay. The fami lies ..f Cinrge M. Juliet and llartovr livnl in tin-same house. The men were .artncrs in farming, and. while n-sting at ii.hiii. 1 Jullctt fell asleej.. All altercation occurred between I la now and his wife and Mrs. (Jullctt. which aroused (Jullctt. He went into the n..iu and asknl what the matter was. Ilartow iK'gan cursing him. saying that he want.il to kill him li.r some time and would do it right then, seizing a gnu at the same time. I Jullctt sj.rang to a hun-au drawer for a jiis tol and shot Ilartovv in the neck. While he was iu the act of firing. Ilartovv dropped the gun and ran to a fence. (Jullctt jiickul iii the gnu and shot him dead. Turning, he diseovcrcl Hartovy's wife in the ad of killing his wife vjilh :!) a$. vv licrci 1 1 n n he tirnl the rein. lining charge at JJrs. liartovy. killing her iif-tu'illy. 'I'tlli'll siir-n-iidcml tu tlf aithor itiis. Mr. Bercher In London. b'Mms. June 2!. Itcv. Heiiry Ward I'li cchcr and Mrs. IUii her arrived iu Ioudoli to- day. They were met at the dcjK.t by Ir. I'arker, the jtistor of the City Temj.le. and his wife, ami given a most uticctionutv gm-t-ing. The Jsirty wen- at hikv driven to Ir. Parker's house, in St. John's W.kkL Mr. Itiii-her is in giKnl health hut says he intends to rest in-fore lecturing or jm-aching. He is full to-day of the gn-at treat enjovtil by him at LiverjKKil yestcnJay, of listening to Mr. Jladstone's marvelous oratory and watching the enthusiasm of the vast audience. Cut in two by t .q Gars. Asiti.xi, July Patrick l Hara, agul M years, was almost instantly killed on the Reading II lilmad hen- this evening. His Jian-nts n-side at Mahanoy Plane and he at temj.tiil to Isiard a coal train that was going in that direction. Iu jumjiing on Ids f.Kt sh'j.jKiI and he fell In-ncath the ears. Fifteen jiasseil over his body, cutting him in two. Powderly's Hard Work. Nkvv YoKK. July I. Mr. Powdcrly is still stopping at the Parn-tt Hoii-e. iu this city, trying to adjust the ditrerenecs of the stm-t car men and their employers. Ilis jilans were urrangul so that he could huve the city for Si-r.intoii on Friday, but he found so much business need' leg his ii'teiition that it was imHssil.e for him to leave U-fon-iinothi-r vveik. II is working for the Knights of Ijibor on an avenge of cighln ii or twenty hours a day. and. in view of tin hot weather mining mi. his health will Ik materially iinpair.il I fore he is through with his work. The action of the H.Iiee on thiir-.lav night, iu n-fusing to leave I In- hall in Co..ht I'nioii while I list rift Assembly No. 7"wasin ses sion, has greatly irritated Powdcrly, and he says he iiitcnds to call iijm.ii Snj u-ri nti-:n lent Murray U-fon-leaving the city for the j.ur-r-i- of fixing ( aplain JIH ullagh's ri smsi bility in the matter. II- -aid thai he would ii.iivinii- Mii'ullagh that he ha no right to n-fer to Knights of liln.j-a- t 'onimiini-i . and Anan hisfs or to break iii a ret mu t ing of Knights by ordering his in. n to n--inain iu a hall hirnl l.y Knighl- for a pur- I w not inimical to the jiuhlic. Kcgardilig the conv iction of the boy. ..Iters ' he would exin-ss no decided opinion except ! that the boycotts for w hich they' had Im n : ' ii.nvictnl had nm been levied by the Knights of lliinir. The boycotters had. nu.ni.vi r. j carrii-d the tiling to an extreme in thicac. as they had interfered with the K-r-oiial rights of others and not merely alt. mj.lc.1 to damage their business by -accablc iii.-'IlmI-. Kcgardilig the troiibh-s of the strn t ear men 1 he likewise rcfu-cd to talk much, lliswor j rinl. anxious look denoted that ihe busbies ! jinsisjnj; him on every side wa- huoining a i terror to him and only the faintc-t kind of a ; smile crossed his face w hi n he was a-kul to give an o.inioii of Cardinal Ta-i lie:-cau'-I j.riK-laiiiation nlaling to the Knightsof li Ihit. He said that lie had no . .pinion tocx : pn-s. If iii health Mr. Powdcrly will all. ml the ' Central IjiU.r I'liioii demonstration In I n ion S.iiare to-morrow. I 10 Men Blown to Atoms. Mi viNsvii.i.i;, N. J.. July 2. A terrible i'.X.osii.ii occurred al the Atlantic 1 K nainit" Coiniaiiy's works at Kinvil --tatioii. thi Jilacc. at a .plain T of liht'lhis moiniug. whereby ten men lost their lives. The dis aster iKiurrcd in tin- mixing establishment which was totally destroyed, and I In- earth surniundiiig it torn up ov. r a considerable an-a. The men were jircparing to mix li.r the. lay's work an.l wen-all in the building. The works yf the 'otnian are scattered over .Vn) or I'm acres of ground, and then-an- l . twecti thirty and forty building-on the prem ises. The Company employs al '.it loo men. In the va.r or mixing hoii-i- aU. ut l-" men an- u.-ually ni.!ov id. The iuiiiig-loii-c consi-ti .1 of two scmi-d.-ta. bed brick build ings on the si.lc of a hill. Two or three of the other buildings arc al f brick, but most of them arc small frame structures. This i- probably one of the lllosl extell-ive manufactories of its kind iu the country. There was nothing left of the e-talili-li-niciit. and nuboity h it to give tin origin ot the i xplo-i..n, cv.-ry man at vv..rk in the building having been killid. Si.m. .1 tb ImmHcs of the men wen- Mow ii I., pi. . . and the j.arts gathered up can only be identified hv .icces of clothing that remain. -.1 mi them. Solnc of the Jiieees of iioilies were found oil tni-. an.l others many yards from the - n of disa-ter. All the buildings in town wen damaged by the 1 sjilosion. seaivciy a j-aiie ot glass U-ing left unhroken. and not a dish iu any of tin houses left iu its ,roi r j.la.v. The exp.o-..u caused the wi!d.-t i eiti -uifiit. wonieu running about si rc.iiuing and searching for their husband-, mothers l.c their sons, and sisters for their liotli. r. flu cries of the lK-rc.iv.-d jK-ijiie w re heart n ud ing iu the extreme. Hu:idn-l- ..I s..p!e fri.ni far and mar iI.k ked I he --n.-. some came a distance of ten ale! Twelve lie!. -. .,: trai ted to the ilace. they -ay. bv t !:- . . uu -ion of the cxjilo-io!i which they i i i ii nc nl at their lioiut-s. Nearly all the bodie were gotten together by in miu and taken to their homes. Wrecked by an Open Switch. Tvm vr v. Pa.. July ."!. A frightful colli sion took plan- at twelve iiiinuti- pi-t one M. tiday, a'loiil a mile -..uth ol thi- oi... A heavy Philadelphia and Heading Pailroad Jiassciigcr train was apiroaeliing with nm si.lcrablc sjkiiI, when it rati into a long aini heavy coal train with terrific force. The .asscngcr train was well filled and i i an instant tlu-re was a panic on "lie t.-. in. as most of the .asciigi rs vvcre thrown fr-.m their seals and many ipiitc seri..u-Iy ii.jure.!. The engine of the pa cnger train ;i- i-uiii-j.lctcly vvr.i ked and twenty coal ears wen llit to sjtliiiter.s. Ihe tir-t baggage and 1 1 1 :i i 1 car tclcseojHil and both were deiii il ished. 1 VII KKIl i:y Tut: . 1: V-ll .Naii Agent John Hn kcr was badly hurl in tin- d.-hris of the car-, as wa- also i v-l'us-luastei llonckcr. of Mahanoy ( Ity. vvin.se injuries were -1 scvcix- that his friends wen sent liir, The engineer and lir. ni. in jumped ill time to save thcln-elvcs. Tlie cati-v of the accident was a mi-nlaeed switch. The coal train was t.m ling on a siding, and till- switch being .i.-!! the pas senger train .lahcl into tin- standing fain. The money loss w ill he .-sm.ii.ki or m re. A car load of ice cream from llini'mrg w.i wriikc.l. Conspirators Convicted. Mlivv vikkk. Wis.. July 4. To n-oit. after having Ik-cii out twenty-three hour-, tin jury on the trial of the n.in hi-t lead. s. Frank Hirtli. C.irl Simon and A-iiom Palm, found them guilty of conspiring to burn the Coiirt-ho.'i-c and destroy the records, and of inciting mobs to riot. For twenty hour- the ballot sIimk! tin for conviction and two for aciiiiltal. t hie of the jurors vv ho is alleged to Ik- a SiK-ialist voted for conviction alter the (irst levy ballots. The m iximum sentcuee iir riot or conspiring to riot is one year's itujirisiinnicut or a line not exceeding o' '. Hirth i.sa cigar maker, and was manager ,.f ihe co-oK-r.tivc factory started here after the jn-ilt strike several yeats. a--o. Siinui i- a frantic Anarchist. Palm i-a ii irdwo.i -i!n-isherand has Ik-cii iu this coiiuti v but a short time. Neither he nor sinion can speak Knglish. The jirisoners are all married and have large famili.-. I Boy Burglars. lti l!l.ix..r.i. N. J.. July Mayor Sil ; i.ilh and his i.iee:nen have ju-t broiiglil to i light the fact'lhat a gang of regularly organ- iznl Ikivs, from 1J to IU years of age. have i jK-rji-tratnl tin-scries of mysterious robber ies which have caused so i,i:. !i e..iiteriial ion hen-for some time jia-t. The dis. overy wa ma. It- last night ami the boys arrested asthev wi-n- .reiaring to r..h a jewelry t..r.., and the confession of one of the boys name I Johnson has given all their, secrets awav . The K.lice also captured a liook which the Is.ys had. and in which liny kept a record of Jhc v:rioijs places tiny had robbed, the jilundcr-miml, etc. All the biys belong to jpHid families, and the discovery of the Hi larious business iu vv Inch they Were engaged was the source of gn-at surj.risc. The i-niirc gang will jirohahly Ik- sent to the K t'orni S-liooI at Janicshurg. - - --. Bloody Fight for a Baby. Kaixksvi.i.k. (J.. July I. In Ivy . .g district, of t'liiou Coiinty.a shocking Iragedv j has just iHTiirr.il. 1...!k rt Whilmorc had I.U-tniycd a M iss Harkluss. an.l alter she b - came a mother he abaii.loiinl her and mar ricd a Miss Hughes. The wife t.K.k the baby to raise, but Miss Harkm-is. n-ienting her jiurting with the Uiby. sii uriil K.sscssion of it ami n-fuscil to give it up. KoU rt Whit- j inon-, accompanied hy his brut her Wh irt.iu. ! unitnl thciuselvcsanil went to the Harkues' home tu secure the child. Miss Ifirkm-s' two bnithi rs. Harvy and Kdwanl. who were well annul, were ut home and n-fiisul to let : the baby go. Ill the battle which follow. d , iK.th Whitiuores were killed. Harvy Hark- : ni-ss was- mortally woiindul ami Kdvrar.1 Ilarkness ijuite seriously. j Louther's Drug Store, Main Street, Somerset, Pa. This Model Drug Store is Rapidly Becoming a Great Favorite with People in Search of FRESH AND PURE DRUGS, JfaUcitics, Je Stuffs, Sponges, Trusses, Supporters, Toilet Articles, Perfumes, JL'C. TIIK IKK T'.l: I.IVKS l-KI'.-siN Al. ATTK.NTi' N 7 THK t 1 1 H il'NliI N' . of : Til n ., n Tl i-n rnysicians rascnpuonsi i- amny Keceipis i. UK T rtUt: J!f:; T IA..V TO I t: SIMXTACLHS, KVJM; LASSKS, And .1 Full Line of Optical Goods always on hand. Frm suth a lare assortment all can be suited. Tiik Fixkst Brands of Cicars Always on hand. It is always a pleasure to display our ofxi, to intending purchasers, whether tiiey huy from us or elsewhere. J. M. LOUTHER, M. D. MAI X STiniMT, 2 Somerset 1 ..iiMty. win. U km-l all k:ti. ..f Tni I. not put it ..it. I.m ei.iii.-t iiiiec, n.i.l Im-ht!i . Senator Payne's Case. v-iiim.tox. H. ( .. July .". It is under st. -nl tint three n-.-ts on tM. ease ot Sen l tm- 1'av in- will I..- made bv the Senate ( itii- mil in-. (ncvv i!l Ik- against and ..ne in fav r "fan inv.-tigatian. The thinl will be made In . Messrs. -;M-r,s. and f. I!, r. v., vv ill explain w hv they do n.,t reeonuiieiid an investigation. These g.-titl.-ni.-n say that the new s.:,.,-i- attack- 111 ifinn arise from a luisapprehi n-ion of the facts. Tl. r:H aid tol.e inv.-tig.itcil iu a legal way and S ii.ih.r. had to de.-id a- lawyer-. T.'ic .piestion l.elore tin- Kle. lion 1 -ommit-n-e wa- not vv h. th.-r money had or had not been u-eil a! Co! 11 1 1 1 1 Hi s I 1.. but VV hether it had or had not u-.-n u-.-d to c. .rrupt mciu- l.i r- ..1 1!,.. i il,;., Legislature in their v.t tor Senator. It api arid in ev idehc- that luotiev " i u- I -n a caucus at w hich a .-senatorial iiouii:,.,tiou wa- made, hut it did not apj.ear fi.at a dollar w..s used in tin- Senatorial cl.i--tio.. ii-i!:. IM v claim that tiny have no l-'.v. r to ii.w-tigate the ..o. i clings t a can. ii-. an.l there wa- no .r. .1' o bril n rv in cither House of l.egislaiure alter the caucus had nominated Mr Payne in this ground they d.-ci.l, , s..'( ly as t hey did. Poisoned with Tartar-Emetic. A Wii !.:ta Kan. i diKitcli in the New York II'..,... i July I say-: A ut!,. .n v. eo-mf. -at of H ir.i r county. Wii- crowded to-dav with -op!i t.. ei lebrate the Fourth. .Iiiil.-,-C'llver. -s-;ikerof the day. was just ,om Ineni im.. when .bulge Itlai kl.iirn. lYi-siil.-n' of tlie mil ling, and many people were seize I with sev.-iv u riping Jsiili- in he region of t he stomach, and -o..n it became known that th.y Lad bit-n siisoiicd by leiiinnaile made from t::rtar-i in. tie. The ce'. bratiou wa abandoned, wagons and carriages were turn i d into ambulance-, and search jiartii-s were -.nt int.. tin- biinis. out houses and along the road- to gather iu and care for tin- -utli-rer-. in tie- osp,! thai had bean imnrovi-ed sixty H-rsoi;s at one time lay writhing with pain. The !.. iii physi, ran- a-id -1I. I1 a 1 -on !. I.. - e il!ed lid 1 -. . ry tiling in their i.wcr to allay l!.e..r:i. Tii lix. -o;' many were .ie-p.,ircl of but all ex. ep? M Northrop. a widow. Tt Isb.-iicvcd will leci.,i. Two of I I.e booths i-otit'rilicd t" -ill until stopjH . I hy ilu siic.-; :i. w a. 1 j" .iind not ev civ di'"-.. An investigation wiil he m ide. iid liie party guilty of t! iiniua! iieligi-iiiv will la de!.! lain. I. Tho Guard Withdrawn. Nkvv Yoiik.Iuih :;.i. Ait.- nearly a year of duty, the artillery . amp at Hiv cr-idc l'ark wa-bioken 11. 1 iit no.ei t i-d iv. Ilattcry I of the l'i:';l. Artillery a pl.t cl iu charge of .rani - t.-iu-. on Aug. ist s. lss'i. tic .lav of ti..- tun.-..!!. ' Sin.-c that time the miliurv hav e kepi elo-i watch oVerthe .laec where lie the remain- ot the great U -tieraL To-day the l'ark i iin. ; . ;-s :: .f!icd charge of the tomb arid ii- ..intents. The key of the vault, hcretoiore held bv the l uitiil Stati troops. u.,s rur.i I i. to thetn. and the oldiers were i r.i.isp .n,-. I to tJovcnior's Is land 011 the -1 miu -i- ( lu ster A. Arthur. Visitor-to the tomb wiil le-l..u, r witn.-s, the sole 1 1 1 1 i-.:ari ..f the s mau l nor the s.i tioiiiil lioc.s. u-e. I a- liiirr.n ks. Allev; ilciice of the camj. vv a- rem. vcl t!ii- morn ing, and the l'ark w ill -.n Ik- r.-torc I to i--norina! condition. The President's New House. W vsiiix., ton. July I. The Prc-ide-it h;i takcti steji- toward rci:iring his rn-ciitly plireliascd residence, on (u-olgelow u If igllt . Inr ociaipatioii. Il is understood lr..;u tin an hilcets. ho w-terday tiH.k out tin- l i mit to :inpro, the plan- that it will be ii-.ii iv bv Hi fob -r. Tin- hoi'sewiil be en larged and iv in . lel.-d to conform to what is know n a- the 1 ..Ionia! stv U- of architecture There w ill bea high piethed roof, witli dor mer window and (.fojeeting caves, the whole being in harmony witli the !o.at:..n. It is a lovely she. and the cottage w ill be the most pietur.-s.pie of the Height, i. i I. A go . l in my p.- .pi. drive by it daily, and would st ,p. too. an I . irry away .ic-. of the hoii-c or fc-iee or something if the j.lace was not guarded. A Colt Chases a Train. M vi:-il via.. 1 1. 1 July '.A two-inonths'- old colt belonging to W. l: v Holds s-rforiiui a marvelous exploit to-day. Keyuolds wa nt the (Quaker ( ity mill w itli his team, and as tin- noon train went by the eolt siiddeiilv .raiig iij. and started after it. and followed it l..r ov.-r half a mile, crossing thr.i- tr. -tli s. one of them -lo li ct long. How it crossed thi hist one no one can nndt rslaiul. It fmallv si.K-d and fell int.. a cattle-guard, but w.i n ot injured. - Ireland's Gratitude to America. Hi hi.in. June ". Mr. Healy n-sidtil at tin- regular fortnightly tn.i ting of the Na tional "Li-ague held hen- to-day. lb- an uoiinivd " vv ith gratiludc." he said, the rc-n-ij.f of tii.mii 1 froin America for the Parlia mentary fund since the last mu ting. It was also announced that the Parm-Hite would contest every jiarliameiitan' scat iu I'lster. a an answer to the ln.ast of the I. .yalists aln.ut th- ir long jinr-i--. Murdered by His Son. I'i.v viot 111. N. C, June Lti. Yesterday James N. r.ascinon', who lives mar Windsor. I'.crtie county, imd his son. Stone Ita-einore. ipiancllcil. The sou timl Inith harn-ls ,,( a s!i..igun IiKidul with buckshot into hi, fath itsUkIv. lie then broke oK-n a Nile. tiH.k then from ssuoan.l tied. TheShcritl" and a large j--m- are siouring the country iu search of him. The father is v-t alive, hut w ill die. Then- is gn-at excitement over this awful crime. v'L 9 ssX O.M.y H:KII AM' WUK .HTl .. so.MKi.srr. i. rl'piu in-: Instantly relieved bv u-ing t!.. .. 1. rated i -. VWY T1JUSS" Wliii-h g:.sa:l -1 n 1 . u:,, k..c --i . sum.-a hi.l.fihj r;i;ei,-i-ij:. u .v.. .-,-ss,-.r.- ..11 f.:.. ..ii.-k'..r ti.;i", .... -.- .',.,!. I I'.I iV 1 . - :ilt. Si;,i-in,T.' ..,r i,,,;, i.,,.L. s ,,, . , rlv titt-1! S...Mr.i i-lmr.-.- :..r tittii. Wheat Shortage Threatened. -'vi:i.o. Il-ak.. July 2.- II. ...rt- tr.-m hard wheat region an- vcrv i,.-;,,. ..r. I nles, there is a m iii! rain i-rv crop in the in.rtliiv.si will fecit .i,..r .. era I million bn-hel-. Tli.-d;i;ii.,g. ;-. ... ; has iiu .-iei,sixe. in .rtio',. .,1 . ... of the a- w h.-.it c .i.nti. -. colupletelv rilill.-d -cores ,. i .; ... -'S to:Mo.i.-r.-s each. I r Ad.-:,, vv 71 1 a.-r. s av . 1 in- hail ti ;! to a !., ;. . e imhes. ami he could have run .1 i-..i: ... hi- farm. The ta ld- i :i rh.- ; .1' I, ..,:!;. - - look a- though the cr,,p had ! a . ,- a mow e.-iiml w ati r tiiriied on. I .j. . tin tl of all .Tot.- toin lied is fata'. A Bold Robbery on a Train. Mi.iux. V Y . June .Jo A l.'ei :.. Wii- j K-rj m-t r.jt.- I at A l.ioii hist nl.-l,: - iark-eouipl. -xion.-d. unknown men v. hanging about the de..-t in the .-arlv p.:-tin- evening. When tin- 'hieag.. 1..; -. wa- llcv ing out I,.-jnuiped aj. .ar-l : into a ear. st,a!c!i.-d :l l,and-i.ag fr..m tl. of a lt.st.,1, I -,.v on ih,- wav to ai.....i i ... juiuH". ti:. in.... ing train .m.j . flu- bag co.-ita-itcd a !iirg. -;:n, ..I n,..,., valuable J.ep and a ticket !;..m !:..-: .;. Niagara Kails and return. Th- ?!' . r- i...-!i- ov.-mi 110 , lue to the thief . : '!':., .. i.r . ed.-d on her wav . High Water in Virginia. PlillVlo.Mi.Jlliy J. The heaVV rail, t'.l i I. the pa-r s hours ha- . aii-e.l a dainai:.g ill ail Ihe stream- in thi- -. ctioii of the The Jam- riverat thi-.int i- lo lis-t a' higii water mark, and all the w harv.-s i., lower part of the .-ity an- ilniii -rgi-l. -i. vvaler li-ing ali.ttt two (,-,-t deej. in Main street and -tiil rising. Tie- -...', . v ing iu that vicinity an- moving our ,-. m -n lianfs are removing f heir good- . .. , . .f -af.-ty. No ;.;.pri !teii-i..!is arc i !t. n.-.i ever, of il -erlolis freshet, 'file Nor'ii A:. 1... a-id ot.her streams are very high. NoV-e--. crn mails were reei ivi-1 thi- cveuing. -st- . Cannot Keep the B. & O. RoaJ Out. Pitil.vni I fill v. July The I'.i.i ... , Uailroad C Hup u 1 v h..- n a-.-l i'- .e. -r : . -to the ltaitiiiioie and 1 (hi.. Piii i r. 1 ..1 ... ny not to enter New work as a trunk !:.- I' has recognized the fact that the !a'- . . a- - 1.1 ! iv cannot be kept ..ut. :-n 1 I- inn, nd. . .ring to get it into the trunk line p. oi i: -harinoiiioiis r. lati. lis to tin- ..tier ia:, that 1 ..nbil.ati..ii as j ,,..il,ir $1000 GUARANTEED FERTILIZERS ANIMAL BONE InurpC ro mimI Im)rivc4 liir ii-t ftr 4 irt-ul.r. IHHMIIM MHt(IM 4i m Wl i mm I Living .ureii;,,.i a fnii . t ..f -'i! -Li-li-i-s." 1 am How .rcj.:;:-.-.i t.. i';' iin.st ! i i ! i . 1 1 ' t ci-.--. I: von !..i. t mtible to get glass, es to suit V oil. 1 ' : once and give me a trial. . '."'i'. a..-. . I at. 1 -olc agent : 1 King's Celebrated SK Ct.l. !cs. I : . :l e: of t In-iii. and v on will in- ii.. ..tin KcsjK-ctfllllv. C. N. !'."Y1 H.MIMSTPA Ti HIS N1.TI1 1. K-tate of .l.xepli Kaiiltni.in. .1.-. . a- I i -eiiiaugli Tiivi ii-liip. sum r 1 '..aie. 1'.. I.etl.-rs of a.hnhusiraTa.Ti t -in- ;i'.c . fiax mir ts-ell gram.-il to the 1 : 1 a !. rsia. .! J-rop. r iiuthorliy. notiee is . . ' S.1I1- illileiil.-.l jo sai.l e- ale t . la.ik. me. I-iiv incut, an.l tli.i-,. Inn ing l imin- a: 1 - same to present Ihelll .Iuiv alltllelil.iai!. : tlt-im iit ..11 XI..11.I11V. August J. !-.. .,, residence of the ileet hs .1. s Vf I. "l Mr jime.'. di.i;ii:-r, I'l TtU's ru F (11 tie- loot!, r 1 tl the eMail- In the :. ul liv id sehrm k. .I.i-'.l. Curt .!' latent l . furk.-v t.K T.. M oiuuv . I' i Notice I- lu rt hy itiveii that the nia - VM.Iltor. Hi.illt.ii t. - ll.ll .ilirt to Ilia. . Hirt 11 ili-11 1I.11I11.11 ..f ihe fund- in the ' 1 liri-tiuii Rrcgur. Administrator l !iui 1! -. .Ie.-e:i-... I.. an.l unions th.rs- Ui:aii lliereto. n ill sit m hi-..iliee in s,,,,,, r i 1:. : ii Tii.-.lay. tin-'.".nil .liiv ..f June. A 1' 1 tin- juiris-s.- ol iilieii.lnis.' io hi. s,ii,l a;. ..e.. when unit here all urti.- in inien-i 'a . iilt.-li'l. H. .psl 1 V la : Yl'iNKKS NOTIt'K. Notice is lien hv niven that i.e.. re- K.-n-t Murifiirci. his wile, of Alleglii-uv r,.wnslii. -er-s-t ( .unity. I'l inisylvaiiia. I.i .l.r.l .! 1 rv Assis-iuiieiit. Iliive ilssiiied ail the e-! il. and (H-rsoiml. i.l'tlie si. i..ige K.m-t I . I T.ipi-r. nl' .New Hnltiniore H. .n.imli. 111 -nal ty. in tru-l torthc N-ii.-iit of Die rn .l:' .rs . siii.l i.tsirge Knus(. H fsiui-. Iln-n i-.n !'a; i-.i to tlicsaiij ido-ge t-iu-t. will .ti.il;.- i :'C to the. si, A-siymv. un.l tho.. Iiuvinx .-!. vt liliillds will lin.se known li- shiii" 1.1 !. IyUve. at his resMen.-e ..a Tlmrs.ho . t:.. .t.iv uf Julv. A. I. Is-.. .K ill X M. Tui-ri-1: Jiim-grlt. As-iginx ,.f o. ..r-e '.. : AA1 DITOKS NoTICK. The undersigned tiaviti!. In-i-ii ai-is.iiite ' " -r- 2e"" P . liter hy the I irphHiis-1 .mn uf Sniii-rs. t lo take tin-ti-stiiininv. Iiml and n-s.rt 111. vi iih an ... m ion. in Un- ni.nier ol Hie ., ;I : .li-cn-i-..f sH'i-ilie H-ri'..riiiiini-e 1.1' cntia. 1 i i-sale of ll.iirv I'enri-I. ili-.-ea-.-d. un.l t.e lite the funds in the hiiml- of Lis, 1 a'.l miiiisinitor f said ih-e used, lu-n-l.v u-o. -; thai hi- Hill iill.-liil to the duties of his al mi-lit al his utrii-f in Somerset, fu.. en Th e the Jlth day of .lime. A. I. ISNi. .if r 1. elm k ulii-11 and when- all parties int. n--l. .1 ht'iinl. DKXXH MKYKK And- ill i - b (1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers