. it t I Hi SimiTs('I I It'LUlL U'VAi:n f ' i.u r..'..-r rr..riw r wUiNEsl'AY. !rch 1. 1WT. Tive n.iist hatic heavily on the 1'r.f i- j J.-f ""'. m0re tl-i'Hl ll Ib t" Vft' ,. lat ii'ini'r ISeaver 1 l !;!. n . !a- ill tin' 1'ine Mri't l'n-!iy-l. ti.iii i-iiiir. !i I Ihirn-burj. the recuiar I., r fiv- Ii'- T,i, tn. i.- 'i'.ii..'' i- !" U'iiij: r!e-iii- .1 :u,.i i I .i..Mii t .r re'"iiiai;e, a . d. :x in. m:h i the time .1 f..r r. Tut: an: --'""' a allowed to t .,.,,!,. a i.i without the Presidents t...-t. ..tin-, i! 1'si's as if lie had'nt frit II h u.li'il any tiling, except ,-i i.i- !. 1. ..i.:.:iiii! theMrenjrth of in ti,. next M-.ii-.- .f Kepr.-s. rita i f.un i b. i- ae follows: Ii-'puV I'.:', i I. I'io. Tills. !::' , Jllde-IldeU!h, e.ile 1 1. Ne ivilie plurality, 17. f..i; T.i i. ::. tiie Irie: U . :'Mr. i: .-ml.!. , t'i" .linn' ! le t had Hone of ,,k ,,f Hi bin hen- the funer i mi the contrary, .! Were us.'d in I r" "ill. !; tl I- "I the l.e S..IIntor frilll .:,!,, . :u ,'.:: I a hi: his n.-r;ts. I... t :i..t I..' " - r I nit ii . ii-tin.ti.m I ..;' .i.T.ilc Vr:i.i." This ie the . .i I r. nii'l -lire juaraiit.-. r. : rt:;. 1 -ii I i.. s. ,u; h . i.,en;ii!ent d" I.i. t 'ire arid saie of r i: only ins;-t ed 1111. 1 sold it shliil M l. s t tint rant -. !! it. I! i- tl, Tm. Ti say , the jirisat ( ...v-:.-.! a in.yi-ott which :...n with youtiir met! ..- .-iris have i nt rod uc- ' a l W ;t erioiih to de- ,,t i- I. .til eH-.lietit - s.-,r, n,,. t'.iutt ha 1 '. ah iils.1 he j r' .11 rii 1... ac. l I. lit. As 1. I ..lllllilt suicide. iisir".,Uce Colllpallies it :hi lak. the risk u .at 1- .lis. .f iiisaiiitv 1 II. In.-nds ... I '... ' 'I' rimes. n lor state . tl it. i c I I -o .1 1'i, ll.l lw.. The lia has aie .1.1. -I a i.::r.-ssa .;i.' ol v hom is to wait iip.u tin lpH.iiitmelit. all I'.o't He I in. hain. his 1 t I I: a ! si i i .-.I.-. II .ii. I!. I". Mey . hit Ii is foes and se at !larribiira. There arty . w ho ha- U tter II ol his pilitiea! S.T- M. vers, and we arc -istaitt di votioii thii nil a, h-d II i in.- p..-' !:.. - le . i ...:. u. h nn.- 1 a r.-.- -L'li.t e I-.-- than I..,- M. lad t h.s . o i a r. 1 ' I . I ! Is tl v -.iiil I hat tin- House ( "oin t '. hi .Ha! .ii,...rt 'ollllienl oil . i l. I that Phi'.ad. lphia is not i n to n ad liti. ma! oi.L'i'essiiiau, and r -p-.-t a bill '.iloltiii her the usual 1 1' 'nl .. is. a- a . -a leu la I ion show's that. . i'y i- a', , . ii six, I iie balance of the Inll-l s,i;h. Tin :ii i- shot,! I take n-.ti. e that, the ' 'ur? "f this t:,t. has decided wl, in '. marry a man in or.lin ti.' s. and make an ante- eelil. lit 1 of.!. accept '!... W.T. tili'V . certain pro innot.if the I ad iitioiial bargain is a i.i. - I hi ...I the s,.,,. ;,n ,, .,,,. ..I. - has .:,K1.l, d that st.it,. and ! n'Cii..: .In-. b..ve no rijfht to 1 I. 1 s i... ten: i:..p. .-. a ii. . i,- i a on . i .la'ii. rci.d trav ellers, th. -if. i 'I. ' drummer " can dnmi w ii.'i.s .. ver le- list.-th, win, no l.wal .it'.n'iai- to 1 1 -.. 1 1 1 i hi.ii. or make him a I '"a stat ..id I. Tins i- an. . ih. r ictorv lor Jiit.-r- '. . and a blue I slate re-ht- i-ve for the : rends t.. !,. .f mil, !i f the press v the blame vv holi'some il a .plan.' l-.r th. i. e- last ( 'ol,- I ne si-I- that :t Hot the fail t ol the al lr. I: indal! is riot ii.n Ml. Callisle is II ill a .' II. T.ll chorus t i.-s; sihie. I tear ii-re. l ha! ii was t he -.I 1 1 n. .ii lift,!! I'ics.t.o th. s;n us', i .en. -nil Si l '.microti ceh lirate.! his eichtv l.ir: li.lnv . 'I he venerable eiitle- iiciii was ailed upon and e. ..-rriltll!a!e.l -vol in r the beads of dt'lurt- . iii::..'oe:s o s,,.,,.,),,, ,.,) : ! the I., -isl.it ure. ami a host Mr i .. w orii.'iis. 1 .vv men have re violent p .iitieal s'oriusatiid Hole J rsoll; i.Mieron. I friends iii !... In a! I lin V.-vv Y.ek II r.tl-1 delilx-ratelv ild- v sc. ti,.. iK , latic party 1.. make no l-i'-Th.T :' :.! i.,r.t! .i-lation. " be- a .s. tti.-s. ,...ii,.n!y ai;i'aiud alienate I. ..:-.;.(.:. and '.h.- iiianiila.-tiir.ti; and m-t.-d p.-...... parts oi the middle "s-.u'.h." Ili.le.il of this the ll.abl ur-r-s rc',,l oi th,. internal taxes on vvhis kv .and I ilsimi This sounds rather o.-l! from til. I i. in.HTatie taritf reform !-. i!l ot the cle.il eoln'liel'cial IlletM oils. T is iii.tioci 1 that J,.; la vis is pre- . inn..' to v ,-,: Washinelon for the first " saiec he Jeft it to tak 11. arms a-i list the v i !! le curi. .us t runieiit The country j .lay iould. and the Pennsylvania rail-s.1- h.-w the Pn-snient I road eouomnv are now in the held as ..ft!..- I til'e! state- will renive the ar ' -1 -ir. v leveiami .(an- let ta-i- .ii.r.-the pr.-sen,-,. ,,f this n-pro-en- " ";'!" s""lo else there will I-- a j.!.!!. al . arihipi.ike that will unset- tl. '!..n.s. ,.N' than did the late South ::k. 1 r is jf, iiev.il that this is " ..over,o,.. .,t ..I'.l ..I.. ... ..... . -I : , .. ' '" ', " , 1 '" ' .... r--r.. ni i . . a iii.ieiii.esi ifa i;..n snows that r, i. a ifovennnetit eti- is.iif..i;,-.! .v . r . . irple of IS-.,,,,- the d.ill M . . - on. Samuel J. Ilan- . . . , . Iictated what iiieasun-s 1.1k. .bite I..,,. i.i,- ... shomd It- broiled,! lK fore tlie Houe. and ,r , , ... ., i ' icisiauon that did not mix t willi bis appn.bation and when I. .lis passed thecritica I exami- , : . i ,i, it . i , . - " " ".-. nun i. . v ei i ueir approval. I 'r. -l.b 111 Cleveland di.-taled hi. h oi tie in si:- et.i lxxiene laws. All 1 .is a'.e.ii tii.-n f.m-, was sol. iy at the wil! an I pleasure ,.f th.-s,- two jri-nile-iii. n. and -..iii..n-ss simply carried out tl..-ir v lews, and n -.-.ster. d their d.x-ns-s. N llllt M-ntt ot llle i.id u orl.l n.i.n. ull. s..- .m a i....n- .iniatorial sp.nt ami jx.mer. than .l-i.l i. . i . . " r"--"""'e i--ui.-raw uur- injr the hte .,l the last oonres. I Ji i- Miui.xiii.Y.1 ' I' H'-.iti..ii 1 r .l.ut tl... I:, .i.iil.lusit.o ! i J it that a aUtrict i? earve.1 ..-it of H.ila-M- I phia that will KM-un hio rr.iitin.ii.il.- in Cmmvw. N. ... How long will It Ik- Mt.tv these ItVi-uttliran im-nilier who ; . ... !aiv1iniitfto'nvMr. Kan.IaH, will I l. .OK.utinjt " jiti.-k to the ticket " " Put ! none but Reput-lit-ani. on jruarri. On- i tlen.en ! " The Kinp ha got to travel the : n-lin.ni road " , " ' Thk late lH-n,.a."tic II-u a,.j-ars to ; have nit it.fiei neither fn ii'Ih nor foe . , , . i In.,,,, II ,rtf Thert.ai.try it i" -' ru.lely an.l -verely , rit..-i-.l. l.ven - ra.li.'ala Hemoeratir journal ac the Char- ; l.tton .V" a,.-' ' V,.,,t .1 lar.1. that it 'had done more by it rtuj.iility a'l c.wardi.-e to l-rins reria-h Un k.j.ii- ur poverninenl than any Miniiar io that liai met in Wash imt-.n for years." We infer that it was tlie failure to pass Morrison' fr.- trade bill, that ho stirn d up the bile of our Southern I 'eni.s nitic c. .iiteiiipirary. fi hino the life of the last ConcTess rn-sident Cleveland v.-t.-l Ml' bi!!, or 21 ni..re titan the total nutiiber of bills .-t. d from tiie foundation of the jrov erntnent down to the la finniliir of that Coheres. Tlns- facts indicate cither that the f)eui"T:itic majority mtitrollin: the Lite ('..ni'lisji, were t.s. stupid to comprehend and proju-rly frame Icyisla ti..n. ..r that the President is too thi. k-h.-llded tonilderstand, ort.s. w'f opinion ated to hlT-- with the majority .f his .nriv. It is the old story over aiMin, of the eleven stubborn jurors who would not airrce viitli the other fellow who was cut;. lent he knew all about it. I':i:viois t the ela tion of the inein-U-rs ..f the lions.- which has jut ad journed, it wit-unfed by the I e.ii. rat that it would " redu. e taxation " " revise the turiM ' mid '"n-t.n- n.iiiiv." In stead of this, the House increased the i x p ens,-over ri i.i i. i.i ton.. I id not disturb the t.ixes, except to add anew .me on ol.o Inanfarine. i.-fus.-l to reduce or ah .l.sh the internal revenue tax.-, and did not touch tlie tan!!', while at the same time a continual how I was kept up over the sur plus revenue said t. be a.vuniuialiiiif in the Tr.-asurv As the eol..r.-d brother ri.marU, - d n-arliiiif similar .r..inise h.ii-riitic " w bite num. very on.-erta: Tut I'liiLeieipliiii 7'on-j' is ineonsistant, in its anxiety t have a district cirved out of that city tiiat wiilcii i mi.- to re itiin Mr. Iwiii'lali to ( 'oii.'r.-s--. It insists I ii.it it is "folly run mad" not to iriv , the 1 h-tll. "Tats ill I'liiiade!). hia olle ( '..!,- : i'n-iiinii out of the six. and alter cat.h iii. it br. ath as--i1s that if the ity should ! divided into six K. publican . .'.istriets the 1 KTli.M lats "would Im' iiiu.1i ' more likclv to elect lllorc tllall one !em- i .M-ratic ( oiiu'ressiiian." The 7'ocji has; i mo notes in its whistle. We . 1. o: i t not . 'that if the '-ity is apiiorti.med into six ' compact contiguous districts they will ail 1 be Kepubliciin. but it is un.jUest ion;, i iy ! ' the riifht of Mr. llandall. or any other ! I leinocrat, to carrv one or ail of them if they -an. We are opMisi-d to (ferryman i del iiijr the city to make a district ej-c-, Tally for Mr. llandall. and a larifc num- I" r ol Philadelphia I'cm.sT.iis. a.-ri--;vviih us. althou.di for widely dilli-rent reasons. Tnr journals of Philadelphia are cm- tinually apptilin to the inuntry m.Tn ! I rs " in the Ijeislatun- to jirot.-ct their ! city from nieasur-s introduce.', by their i own repr.-. ntatives. Yearafter year the same cry comes from the city, and time j and uirain they re-elect the same men. I and then follows the demand upon ! "country member" to vote against the i bill- ..f the city repr. s. ntat ives, and a j failure to do this, is oenerallv attributed to corrupt motives. If the interests of i j Philadelphia are Hot proiTly cared for' ; l.y its repres. iiLitiv.-s. it is the fault of its ! ' ....mi citieiis. and it is as mean as it is J j loob-h to exis t country memU-rs to l shoulder the res.nsibi!ity and antaifon- I j is.- measures solely H-rtaiiii!i- to the i;i- I , t. rests of tin- city, and introduced and j ! urifed by its ovv ii mcmlN-rs. Ifmemls-rs j , from the country districts in-lect or op- i i p..-.- the interests of their constituents ; th.-v are at once retired and other and I truer m.-n s, lecte.1 to fill their pines, i l..t Philadelphia foilow tiiis wholesome rule, and she will no lonifer be forced to I apal to Hercules to help her out of the i : nun-. Si-i ak iso of the Presidents veto 1 lii'ix-ndeiit Pension bill. Senator I the W ar m r Miller of New V..rk. says: "That biil should have become a law. I Its failure will place many a veteran sol dier on the paii-r list and cause him to I so.-k tin- pM.rh"iiso in hiscoiintv ..r t n ship. If he had the s-iision riulitluily he j would not be on the paiinT list, but as i im leTi lent and proud aciti.-nof the ; i-oiiiitrv be foiiifht 1" keep united :i. tin j Wealtliiesl citl.ei. Hue of the T.-at wrongs tlie v leran wddier will fi-el is that the country lie fotiiflit for jH-rmits lii'u linally to U-i-ome a nn.. r Mnd liy iHoti the puhiic charity of his I'oiintry. I'h.-re an- thousinds of soldiers who fought bravely and nobly tlirou..-lioiil tli war. w ho i-h .sed thems.dves to a II k in. Is of weather and from that cx;iosiirc they arc pr. 'inatui-ep decrepit ate I pbvsicaiiy unable to do anv work. They never ! made any hospital records becaii-.- t hoy : were coiiniL'eous and tried to keep to the .nt Some had to k.i ; to the Iroiit. or - then- would have Ihi ii no army to ht. and even ifthev had made r rds t! they can mt prove it n..w Ik-ciiUs.' tin-d-x -tors are .lead and their io in rad.ss w im knew , val of these facts have passed away. prool, tilerelop.. IS llliK.ssihe. None the tlley deserve tile X'nslolls. ears of hardships they eii- Is'.-aiis- the e .bir. d an- now ti.em.' 1s L.'iniiinif to tell upon l oi; the st week the newspaiers of lb.- eastern cities have li n publishinj. full, vatitsl an.l s. iisati..nal details jrwss- .slat- of the sale of the P.alti re and iti.io railroad firs', to a syndicate of Southern railroad men with Mr. Alfred Sully at its head, secondly to a syndicate of New Yorkers eombinisl with whom at. the oiii. ials ,.f the Heading and the Central New Jersey roads, and thirdly and fourthly the last allojfat jons are that pun has. rs It a)s ars to Ih- taken for . irrai.ted that, when- then- is so niu. h ! smoke I hen-must U-some tire am! that , Mr. .am-tt is willinif if not anxious i .art with the interest of liiui-clf and , friends, which is a controliin. nc in the j mad. The whole matter so far as the ! outside world and the n.-Wspaiers are ' .s.M.s.r,,..! i. ...!, .1 -..e .....j.s ,,,,.,,,. me ' alK-ip-l 'lctails (fii.-Hs.si at ur ifin-ss is that. Mr. t.arn-tt is atteiuptinc to arrantn- for M entisiili.h.lioti ot is, 1 1 ..1 11.... ,1. . ... ...ooru., lines inai ... . . . v- . . ..... s-.s ..., .iit.uii.i ii..,; ..ew i orit. ! mi.l .....iu..ii..n 1 1. s .,..!,. . ... .1... ...c .... ...... Li.i.Tt.i:tie.ii im; .--OIHII. i i -.-rhajis with the int-iit .f s-cut t. a ; . . , . i ..'o'oii.ous inn- irom .-vew X ork lo New , . i s; i , . I Orleans. So sujf rba line as the H. ,v. I. I is not likely to be east Ux.n the market i in sean-h of a pun haser bv so hhrew d , .i,i,.. . :. ... -....!. sc. i.u. nn as is .nr. "irar- r.-lt. In the death of Henry Ward llvecher the world has lost one of its i-reat.st ora tors and me of the most n-inarkahle men ot the century. Mr. Inxs hcrwas sinpu larlv endow.-.!. U,rs- ,.f brain, stmni?- i . .11.. 1 .. If - v . iuei, sen rcuaiiL. iiannif. resolute nn- ix-rious. o-uravcoiu. and brilliant he 1 ' came a imat loer and l.sl multitadi j by his fore of rW.1er and the irresia- lui.l.- J- of his. -i"--!...). II I In. .., j ai.-rr.,tir. lint it v.-. l.rieht and h..i- j ..: i ; r.,.r.-l un.l I built n and made Ktn.rnr hn follower. He nf int-n ly an Aii.. ri-..n. he knew j tin-muntn m me j-f-'.-, " f with the love of coiintrr. In the . . ... i' i ii. . i uayn ol M prime ne ciiani'tion.-u -ne ! au- of liU rty an.! of the slave, ami by j hi- Uibor in that direction d-d much toward awakening me American mnsci- enee from the i-tlianrv l" wni.T. It tia.l .. ..... .. . . lie-en -.teened lv the mxitliou- wiu ol tlie ai,mh,.rn ,v ,.,er. In the darkest (lr ftl( iiuntr-i i-tnimle with trea- , ' . .. , , he rrol over int.. Ki.dan.J an.l on . ,irjt;h j-latfonu, U f..r- an infuriate.! . ,b f I!riti-h Kynifth w p. itli ; . j,,,. han.le.! ale! alone, by the spirit ofhin mai.hoo.1. and defyinc and r,v,.rtll;,t,.niitf oratory lowed and abash- j d the jrn-edv h.rde, w h" f.r the money- i ami everywhere one - emblem of ipe, t-.-ttiiijltliat wa. in it. d.-ired the diri!J.- a Mr. lieeeberdi-Mred. instead of the funer-ti.-nofth.- I'tiioii. and the -1ablUhnielit : al r!Miii that usuaMy jTva.l. on su. h oe- ..f a confed'Tacv f..r the perpetration of -iacry. No country in the world was ever bl.-xs.Nl w ith a nobler or braver or more powerful champion in its hour of T-.n st n.s-d. Mr. I'mss her bad his de'ts ts, but who that is mortal is infallible? Whatever they may have Insn they shoiiMlw- buried with him in his trrave. l-t us reiiiember only the jrreat p.Hl he a.comtilished for his country and for lankind. and pay to his memory a grate- j fill tribute of admiration. Probability that Conftress Will be Called Together in the Month of October. W.V-IHN". tier.- .)"( -..(., to the l'r.-; I he sal.;.-, i. .i!.ility now. Tl.. by a ' ii r Tii.inti.-r- -.ii-re- w p '-hal' ill 1 imjH.r: ant T... March ! 1'. lU K-ratic mein ...1s. and others who have acc.-ss d. lit ilti.l lllealls ,,f know le.l'c oil do not ln-iiev.-thai tln-n- is any .1' an vtra s,r.si.,n ,.f C.u-.tc-s t.-.-v illelil impress;. .11. as -.-at li.-re. I . e-.rter t'r..m conversation with if I oNL'ress is licit the Fiftieth il be call. si too ther ill the fall. IiIhUt. in or. I. r l hat somen! the a-i.-i-i.-tioti !-ciireit may U- ma- 1 1 1 n, -. i i-ariy. It is a well known fad I hat I 'onirics- scarcely ever do. s any hnsincss un- tii alter tie- holiday reiess. In view of the la.-t that the .picsiimi- ..t' revenue and taa ti -ii. o! 'fortifications, and . .! her- ..t hreat pu' iic inieic-t ni'i-i r.-ccve attcilion at T!.c l.el sc..; CI. il is ih iiiL-hl that the 1'rcsid. llt will... da s,-si,,n t,, h.-in iii the fall, alii that it will ran i.Ioliif iiitoth.-rcL'Uiar si-ssi,,ii. A Family Murdered. PuiM.i:-! . i.... W V.... M.itvi. !.-A ;.t r:! I.- ir.e.'edv i- r.-l.rlc.l fi.cu m ar I ere low . W.Va. HI. ..! the loli.-lv streams winch . -' ; . ' -i .i ii... l!icic.- s-itidy from the K--n-tu.kv -id.-, s.iui.i. . Miiith. 1 Pi v.ar-. had a .i .hca'-y ivifh s:c. Hammond, a ii. :.r!.;o rin.' :. .rue t. V.-tcrday t:ii: li. aimed w it n a r- '. '. ,.-; . v . :.t ..o r to the Hammond 1c .a-.' a t.d a:i. t - .in. w.rds with Hammond followed I, .m int.. the hoii-e. Hamuioii I reached for his ti. . w hen youn- Smith tiled instantly kiiiii:.- h.m. Smith was then attacked by Hammond's vv lie. daughter and son. the latter little more than children. The yomhli.l murderer '..e ked up ..-.iiiist the side .f tlie room and tired three halls int.. Mrs. Hammond s body, mill, tin fatal wound-. .is the woman .ir--p-d t" the floor l.y the side ol h. r .lead hllsi ..11. d. Sunt h icaj'd over ii. r oroslrale lo.-m and lir. d al tiie b.v and j ri rl who wet.- r.treatiiiu' throiieli ad.s.r. two hails takim; etll ct in the d!im.-hte- and one ! in the son, hot!. ilr..ppin. i S.itisji.sl ihai hi- work was done an.l that mi mi-Hi vn-left to tell of the awful ' hiiichery. and na im: ii" moo- ammunition. ! the murden-r tied to the mountains. It was j hours afterward before the lici.-hhors di-co -I enslthv '.iI.hi.Iv .1.-.-1. allraet.-il by the f.s hle j cri.-s ..I th. hoy. The alarm was pveii at once, hill lip to this Ullle Mil. ,li lias .1.11 IM-eil apprehended. Ml-s II lllllll'.lel is rejiorl.il dead, and il is s;h,l that Ihe men who have ;oiie in M-.ir.-li ..t Su.illi will lynch him a. soon as ca.ii lu. The liunily was wa ll know n in this Slate and were auioiiv; the most r-siM-.-ial.le in i h. mmuiiitv in which they liv.sl. Murderous Robbers kl'.r.Nsia k. Pa Minn it. eol.lUliltittj c vicinitv . A hand of : numerous (' l.iu'ollier. rohlxTs have dcprci.il ions tli I 1.1-1 III I III IV Im lit tueir eo'iduet cuiiiiiuate-i in w nat a iniiroer. M,.j.h, u Hutlon vva- l'o- iliL' into his furniture works when he was attack, d l.v t hiis in. -I. vv il It cluiis and ku. x k j i--l ai.'.el unlii coinplelcly lilico.iscioiis. He ' was toe.nd later by a usinif n.-ilibor. and frn nd-soon c. .v .-y.sl hi m to his house nc ir ; by. lbs a-sadants lb-1 and n clue to ihur j id -ntity i- known. They were in the shop, ! il is ai.p-..d for ihe pnrpo-c of sccur-in ! tool- to rot. his house, thai contained more Ixx.ty . Tlie iuhahitants of tin- vieinityarc vvoli-.l.-r-fu!!y aroused and should the lu.-ll he catlL-ht tlicy vvilr hcsi vcr.-'y dealt with. Th assailanis arc siipp.,-, d r- Ir .m the " Pid-.x-" and lo Is- part of tm--.'am.' w ho r..hh.s so ni i. l: aiMMit one year an... Senator Sherman and Politics. .1 . 'Wii.i.n. -'la.. Mar. In. S-nator Me rman -a;. to a Jii":.-l i'i r.-N.rter -.his iiioriune : "1 v alii y. 'l to .-orr.-i't a ..us iuipr -s-i-.ii. While al break rr lle- I thi a l .ie.' trip to uioriiuiL 1 saw V is I, a: lie e s. it.i..- (i.rtii t rid... a! iv id -la I :i Ii I it i.-arelv a i I i- I ha U. 1 o .1- li 1 -inc.- 1 I. fi U a-h irlou. I Were ! . r I i.iil ait'T I ::.-..--- i ..inp.-l. 1 i's w orfc , and ncidc up a party and -iar-,-d .low Ii her. sinic'v l'..r ni r. atioii. 1 am out of p.li-li.-s just now , I do not want p ih: ic- lo ctilcr my head i.-rtwo wc-ks. 1 -.v al n-n say a v. -rd aho'.u pihfi.-s until I rea- h Nashville on my return, ('h- n I will take up ihe po- ll! ical .ple-I rod a-, i i Ii. iiud will hold to it lor tiioin ; i rue " - - Armed Kentuckians Resistinx the Collection of Taxes. 1 1 i sii..i:o. in.. March 1 1 Ktlorts ar.-lx--injr made t.. coll. i t ihe ixnnleii debt of Muh-iciiix-ri; .- .tuiiy. and tin- .-oh.-, lion is Ix-ine; v i -roroiisly ics,si,,f 'farce hundred armed lli.-n a.'-.- i Hi alnped ill .r.s uv ill--, ihe eoulity scat, and ti..-;. -.ty lh.-v iiicau war to the hit ter end il t ii.-. if ,rt ti. i .-ilivt ilir i;iv i- ht-sist.-d in. The railroad debt of Mulileics-rif i-oUll1 is s '...-, ,Vl while I lie a--l-ssed vaill- alion ..I' pr..s-r: v in I he c cmi v is only si.-pxi.li.-o. Tr nit-!., is I.H.k.s for, and l.l.x.il shed will certainly toliovv ihe ai'emptcd col-lei-lioll. They Knifed Each Other. Simkk-i.-t. K.. Manh 11 - I vvo i'hurics Plicii.s alni Jack llovvcil. w ho Hi. -ll. have near Isx-ii at etitniiv for maiiv vi-ur.. in.-i this place la-t nii-hl an.l a deadly encounter t. .k place. Phelps pla.-cl his knit'.- uifaii.st llewi-ll". br- rt-i and n-markisl . - I've a no tion t. cut voiir neart oui. ' Howell nlaeixl hi knife against Phelj--' Ihroal and .-ool!y n-pliisl. " cut away." Phelj -lid i ut iiw ty hut mifort.iiiah lv f.r him his knife blade broke oil' al the s-ni.1 thrust. Howcoiui Phelps, throat, intlictiruf a i.-rnhle wound, lb.weii wa- not hadlv in jured ph'l.x i- siiU alive. I.i. it is thou.-lu cannot live. The Kansas Town War. Ahiii vk M in Ii in Another chapter iu tl.- or.iiia.lo sh.x.tiu was ,.x-msl nt I-oti yesterday. Adiutai. I .eneral amplH-11 hav- iht'ert.x-hd the arn-sl, if fourteen nl thi -lor..- )Kx.ple enlered by the dnuitfe Stnx-t .n na.1.. inen.cliaivevl with Ihe killing of I'oul- ; inmiv. and wen' shown to their seat. by the ter, Peaiusndoth. rs. Warrants ere issutxj nsliers. I hiring- the interval, the organist, for alxmt f..ny. hut only foun.x n could he i Harry Howe Shelly, played low. sweet mu lom.d. Iknh towns threw up forts and were sic Ux.n the pnuid oriian. The first four ireMnxi f..r a war Titw arn-lnl wen- all i s.-als on the rivrht of the ventre aisle were re taken lot.ardcii fiiv for trial. . M.rv,.,j f.,r the relativ of the ietuased. Mr. Twelve ThousandAcres Submerged '"""'.v were not present, and the . taimly pew was fille.1 with flowers. Mrs. 'i:i.1 III.. Man h 11. -The Kaska-kia ; lkvcher was in the ehun h for a few minutes river is still ri-iin:rapi.llyaiidtheiii.icutious lx-fore the .l.x.rs were ox-ned. and U-ft with an that th. pn-M-m rise ail) lx- ihe lii-iu-t li.-r sons lx-1'..re the crowd entered, know n for y ear.. Twelve thousand a.-n of At 1 1:.i o cl.x-k Rev. lr. Charles II . Hall, splendid farmin;: lamb ar- now submers'isl. ; mIxiI in his while surjilice an.l axiniiaiiied A levix- was built last ycariii Santa Fe lx.t- l.y Kev. S. K. Halli.lay, entered the ehorcb torn, six miles south of here, which pnnects i and as.vnd.sl the platform. When the niusie about 4..aen-. Tin-lever will l? extend- i ceased Ir. Hall eorumenred to read theopen ed next year. j lng xenten.es of the Protestant KpiscopaJ THE DEAD PREACHER. l at PitosDver the Remains of Mr- Beecner. REV DR HALI.S ELOQUENT ' EULOGY. ... vii i r tw -ohk. .Man n nt. me wy . ry W ard lieecher lie m state in the rhun-n wi.k-i.Mk puipn oramrv i iamou "- - - -"-- - l;,.,i;.l,n,U The interment at lireell- ' ' Si""1r'.l:,v 'riv' . . . . In the meantime, however, thoumnila after ,1,llsan,u Hlv al-.nt the I.ier on m(ir Mr lt,v.,.r reIuaill(i ,k.Snthe nUdat U.w.t of K-aiililnl flower, an.l r,, rj,,. Witnh f iymonth Chun h are ani,t hidden from ii:ht with lluw floral ..tliriiiL-s to the memory of it, dead preaeher, a-ioiis Not an inch of black is to lie seen inside the church. Even the "ombre drapins of the cothii are hidden underneath rose and f.-rus. The four walls, tlie irall.-ri.v. orpin and pulpit arc one mass of i:rs-n, while and pe lints. Noclianp- has b-eii made in the furniture of ihechiin li except the removal of the l-w dins-tly in front of the reading desk al which Mr. B.-echer was austometl to stand. Here the black catafalque was placed- cd. ! The family service over Mr. lleecher's re- mains were held in the house at half-pas; 9 this moruinir. Only relatives of the dead pn-a.-lier attended. The Key. Mr. H.iII. in ' full I'.piscopul canonicals, conducted theser-vii-es. He pnxnl.sl ii With a short addn-ss, in w hich In- said : mr licloved brother, w hose fa.-e we now ; s. e almost for the lust time, was a man of the tx-ople. a Kepublican of Kepiihli.-aiis. a lieiii.x-ral of IS-iii.M-r.its, a man of the eom- ' moil w-opic. I'lu-re was no man in all this w idc i-olitincnf who was so ilear to my heart as he w ho lii-s .lead U-fon- me. There was la. man aIioiii l have ever met or heard of whose works I have ever n-ad who im p:c . .I me so il.-cply w ith llie iuspiralioii of ti.e lloiv Spirit. He w as a man of men the !no-t manly man I ever met, but he was also a man of liinl in a pre-eminent sense of the word. Hi utterance wen- often said by those who heard him to have come from a L-reat. overllovvinn f. uiutiii noils heart, but I U li.-ve the soiinc w as even d.x-(x-r tliiiti that Tin v i-ome from a ifreat soul. The piercim; vision ol his inspiration saw thro. nth the veils wliieh it.xhJs put on. ami w hat thai vision saw the touj-'lu- llttenil : it was tic- truth, the ifr.-at truth of the ur -at hoc of Ii.kI which oilier pn-achcrs would lain have bruited. I lirst me! theiftvat mail, wiioni we !inve patherisl hen- lo honor for tt. I .si tun, on earth, in those Irving days vv iii. h pr.i-.-d.-d and came immediately after the o x -niiiL' of tin- war. 1 found him the sturdy ehanipioii of union an.l fnxslom of the -lav.-., the f.x- of n-lx-llion: and vet im m.sjialely after the close of the war 1 found him in a new character the staunch friend of tlie.lefeat.d Smth. I loved and revered this man mon- than any other on the faiv of the earth. Spiritu ally I owed mole to him than any other. I was sx-ciu!ly drawn toward him Ix-cause I hate sham.-, and Ix-lit-ve lhal pililcness. tliou'h all very well in its way, is often t.xi fill ..f itis'nt.-crity Mr. Ixx-chcr w as tlien--f. .re Ix lovisl of csixviaMy me. Ixx-ause he was a man of transparent sincerity. Why he loviil nn- ! do not know. Why 1 love him all men who ever knew him will umlcr st.m.l. TIIK eolll K..K Y VSSI To TI1K CMCKCH. Whih the .itarlette saui: ' .b-sus Ixverof Mc S.ul." theiMiim was i-arrivl from the , house by eii:ht ill-!x-ar-rs. iutsidelhe btth K.-.rimeiii was drawn up lo escort ihe hearse to Plym-iuih ('hur.li. An immense cmw.l ot'(K.s..e st.N.d alone- the route, and the xi licc had their hands lull iu k-x-pin them in line. Company I. was the jfuard of honor at tlie cliun h. into w hich the casket was car ried as Iti-ethoven's riiuer.il March" was t. laved on the orL'.m. Henry Ward Hcii'licr, .Ii.. a irran.lson of the preacher, walked inl ine hateiy Ix-hiud the -asket. He was the only relative present. After the eotlin lid a a- removed the Pith Kejriment viewtxl the r mains, and the puhlir wen- then admitted. I iiev fihil st the is. tli n in twos and the due was eoiitiniious thnuiirhoiit the after- 11' Mill. TIIE I VIN.i IM STATE. liurinjf the evening the cmwd mcn-aw-d nd thousands of p-rsons viewad the face of the dead pn-acher. I'r. Parker the blind preacher of linn.klyn. Iiil by his wife was in th pmci-ssion, ami when he n-ached the e.skct he touchtxl it. with his hand. and. ralsinif his siifhtiiss eyes towanl Heaven, iruirmunxl a prayer. Tlmse who saw the touchinir tribute paid by the clerirvman w en-much atr.x-te.1 many women wept, and not a few fail.-d to muster up sutlicieut i-oiir-ae to l.xik into the casket. Acc-ontpauid by his son. Hr. Talmajfe jaid his n;sKx-tx to tin dead. He took a long lixik at the faix- in I In- casket, and the xiluv waitx ns.xf tfully until he was ready lo Move on. Fully o.-oo-i -rsons, it is estimati-d, pasm-d tlinnii.'h the church, and when the irahs. were elox.-d at 7 o'cl.M-k thousands who had waited for ho'irs were tnrn.sl away. The chun-h was clo-xsl. t!ie sentries went to their xsts and the lights thn-w rliekerinif shadows ai-niss tin flower-.-. .venxl asket. and all was still, s ivc f..r the ln-avy tn-ad of thejfuard as they pi-sinl up and dow n the aisles. To-niom.w. after the serviii-s. ihe public wall uain lx- jfiven an opjxjrtunity to view I he remains Anions the floral tributes were tw im mense wn-alhs of roses, lilies of the valley and stniiax troiu Henry Irvinirand Miss Klleii Terry. Mrs. S. V. White sent a pillar of W ilite rose- VN IMI'liK-slVK I KKKN.IMU. i w Vnuk. Mar ii tl. All ltns.kly-ii was in motiniim: lo-day over the death of K.-v. I Henry Ward lUis her. The public ntlii-es wen elosi-,1, business vvas entin-ly siispend.xl and memorial scrvi.is. wen. held in a larfe nuiiiIxT of cliun-lus iu the vicinity of Ply mouth I'hnn h. .si-arly as To'el.x-k pulton A venue was ihninifed with ptxiplc hurryinif in the dirtx-tiou of Plymouth I'liiin-h. lt.--I..-T S o'cl.x-k the line on Oranjfe Stnx-t was ivvo hl.x ks lony. thnx? ahn-.isl. Whili- the vast emwd of xxip!e wen- (fath riiiii .. inside of tin- ehun h the lady memlx-rs of the coiiun-uatioii were working hard with in, dn im; Ihe pulpit and casket with Mow ers. The whole interior was turned into a p-rfect flower irarden ami a fragrant ixTlunie of ros.-. x-rva.l. d the air. Tlie walls, piller i.s. and orif in wen-covenil with cverirreetis an.l calla lilies. The readinc-desk was eov- ; en-.l with French nises and vines, as was al-.. tin-eh iir in which Mr. lkxx-her sat for so many years. Mrs. S. V. While and sev eral ladii-s devoted their time lx-fore t he doors , were op-lied in -ovt riii;the-a.skel with lilies of the vali.-v. Faicliarisi nixes, smilax. maid en hair ferns, tulx-ntsi-s and Fn-iich moss. Wheiithey linished not a vasitie of I, la. k cloth covering of the casket could he seen. TIIF. INTKKIOK Vl l t VKVM E 111 Till CHI RcH. Tiien- w as noihinif to indicate the presents? ol death, cvavpt the stillnesx which prevailed ' the nxun and the IiusIkxI .xiiiversatiou of the worker-. The chun-h had more the apjx?ar-ami-of a wed lin than a funeral. It was ne.iriy u o'cl.x k Ix-tore the d.xirs were i thmwii ox'n to those w ho had l-n waitinir impatiently for nearly three hours. The burial ivrvioes. Aftcrthi-- tlied uhle o'lar- tette, contfMMe.1 of Mrs. Shelly. !Mnino; Mii Caranah. alto; Mrs. Urant, soprano: Mra. RoKan, alto; Mr. (tuff, Mr. Warren roth, temirs ; Mr. Brown, Mr. 8tew, liso ; and a ehonis of sixty roiies sane the burial chant. - Lord Let Me Know Mine End." The lion read hr Dr, Hall and a prayer wan delivere.1 by Rev. S. B. Halliday. The rest of the musieal program was a follows; Anthem, " Blewd Are The Departed. " SfVihr; hymn, " Jesu LoTer f My roal. " Zundel ; sentenee, " 1 H.wrd A Vol'.. " Shelley; hymn, '"Hark, Hark, My Soul." The oreun was piwided over by Henry Kyre Brown and Ceneral Honitio C King. 1R. HAI.L s rrNKKM. OKVTION. After the first lesson Dr. Hall eonnneiuvl bin oration. Ptiritnr it delivery there wa.s iet a dry eye in the house, and several limes lie w as compelled to stop for a short time to frain control of his voice. He said : The hand that rests so still yonder laid aide the pen over a page of the unfinished ' Life of Christ." Possibly the last flash of thought, as the conviction grew upon him of the pnihable end of life, was that his life was to Im-left unfinished that he had not told all men that he would have them know of precious revelation. Pie-sibly ax the spirit thxl awav to be with Christ, w hom he had been serving, the full knowledge came to ! partmerit was called ukiii to prevent the him of that shoreless ocean of eternal life burning of the unhappy (xxiple who were which is to know ti.xl and Jesus Christ, j buried in the heap, which the wrecked ears whom He had sent, that is Ihe Ix-atil'ie vision ; formed. 'lie car took fire, but it was quiek t lie love of Christ which tassel ii knowledge. ly extinguished. We dwell on one tiny bay of il here a id j tiikiikath roll. dream alstut it. j As it is the loss of life is proliahlv as gn-at riiedcltartedsainlsofliod havealn-ady put ! as that in the White Uiver disaster. The out on its immeasurcablc spaces and lenrn -d ' evu.-t liiitnls-r of victims is not yet known. that the life oi Christ is never finished, li is the one word of iod w hich is ever spakeii, echoing again and aginoii and on with ivitss less ivverlieratioii down Ihe n-nluries. If there w. is one thing that stirred th heart that now rests fn.m its lals.rs, itior than any other that has marked his life a i 1 makes his memory precious to us now . n was his many-si. led utteraiii-es of a Christ living, as going alxuit among men, a master who lirst and last asks us to lx-lieve in II im ralherthaii to believe what others say about Him. The radical question of this age has h ,-n : Is there a faculty of illumiiint- I reason to rccogni.c a living Christ w ho n i I nk to us. and by the gn-at coiiiiniinii aiio i of His mind and spirit directly lead us into all truths?'' As moiian-hies and hereditary institutions, and, at last, African slavery, have fallen to the dust, the quest ion gathers voin- and insists ujxin an answer. It will not lx- put otf by any comproiuisi-s with past or ders and institutions, but renews itself al every turn, ech. H-s in every advan.v in science and art. comes up in every development of lia-i.itun- and s.x-ial progris.s. V MIX OK TIIK l-Kol-I.E I II 11 s T V Kl. Is then a faith in Christ Ix-hind the con sciousness of the individual that can lx- I., him the very word of liod the illuminated mandatory conscience Iu a country that iln-ams as yet of a government of the x-op!e l.y Ihe xoplc and for 1 he people, that ques tion is inevitable, and, even if it should sr-nd tin sord among us for aw hile in the etfort for x-acc. it must lie answered. Il is ln.i an accident. I hen, altogether that the man whose life has lxx-n moulded by that ques tion and its pissible answers should have paused mi the unfinished volume of the " Life of Christ. " He has lxx-n a man of the ieoplr. I hristward. We remind you lliat. though the Kuglish sp aking race to-.lay mourns his fall an.l n-co.L'tiiic-s his loss, Americans fiv! that he has lxx-n a great leader or adviser in the guid-au.-eofall maimer of substantial interests: though the Li-gislalun- of the State has paid him the unusual honor of adjourning as his right : though the pn-sx and divinisi and orators uf all di-gn-es an- trying to compass the mighty theme,in glowing wonls. in words of exulting grief that we have had him with us so long and have hist him. yd that a- he li.-s then so quiet we may lixik at him as one who has been thntiigh all ami in all things, an aftitstle .f one supn-iu thought, a preacher of the everlasting gospel ot Ihe ever-living Christ. You who know him Is-d, you w ho li.ive listi-iuxl to him in this chun-h, know well tli.it first, IumI un.l ulwuys, in no liarn?i. or ami they, with t!u uninjim-.! fnmithe work dn-.uiiin ?hmi?. his lift' has hctn HbsinU-.l in j wtn hanl at work. firt n-wnintr the irn this work ami hint with Christ iu sioi. hi ! prison.-! o-f. who wtrrt injure.1 nl aftrr tliv iraytrs whirh he hrwilhetl out hrn- for i ward wvre nnployrd in the mon ditHeult forty years mo ilply. you have ln-en iH-jrin ! ta-k of liir,'inj; out the tiv fnun the shaK'- an inner ei-ho, a.s if it had mine out of the h.'.irt of Jesus. In his ordinary t-ai iiii!r. iu le inrtfs and sermons the one thou'Iit iu tN in ha-U-en to lead you to ttvlieve lift s .in -thinir a.wmt rtirist, Imt to helive II, m- rilK PKROKrioN. In rlosiu !iis sermon Ir. Hall siiid : A hrave and weary heart is here al n-i : brave of old to .lare brutal fonvand d-fy the vioiruee of niotis and rutlimi; in sikin.j f r ttit-lave: hrave to Hx'xVpt tlie murmurs and d'Miits of his iiti.-ul friends when on-ei-eni-e pntuipteil to jiart fnm tiiem; bravrst to wrt,stle along with a tfreat sorrow when he could find earthly help. We honor him for thi- eou rage f his former art ; we love him an! wonder at him for the calm, sweet tfvn tle n-signation of these lx-t year. iid. 1 believe, lias led him step by Mep t sKnd his lat days amoii; us with a wisdom jrui ti ed fnmi the enuss : a tender, petitle soU-n wixloni which heled him to see the Captain of our salvation who wa jterfcvt through sutrerint; that we may be one. and the ..nut Sufferer not a.-hamed t rail us brethern. Tt?e :rtat ' Life of Christ " is h ft unfin ished for us to do our little part and weave our humble deeds and teat-hings into 1 hi story. Men will praise our brother for geni us, patriotism, victories and intellectual la bors. My love lor him has hal its origin in his bniad humanity, his utter lack of sham, his trHiian,nt love ofthe "ruction fmm alnve" that dwells iu and teachs and beau tiful the line?- of duty, lie said of his fa- tl.t-r: "The two tiling whirl, he .l.-sir,-,l 1 ,""l,m ."...uvumiK ... an. ....si wort-thl(..i..rv..fi.Hl itii.l the p.. f j the -r;il.ii. I.ii.Ihts wl.,,1, fill alh.i.t. hut I.H-..." S. it was with hi.... as tl- l.t-an's f ' '" n"' ,"" r la-v ,llere "llm "I Kn.ti.ful myriads att.-st. lint c l.i.l din, i rr ! W ''' ' ' 11,1 tin-w.ll. a'n.l ut ...... ,ft.-...-st will i'l-t'iti-'M in whirl, thi-UkIv lay It-tin.., l.iuht vision ,.f hit. i i.Ls.siti nut of yomlrr tloor. ! with his arms alw.ut tlu- Itt.ys, passing on to tht- rily ofliiHl. whriv he hi-ars air-.i" the i familiar voire uf the Master sayini;. of sil.l. j Ls the Kiiipl.in. of H.-aveu. j Dr. Hall r.inouiiitsl the ht-uisli.-tjnu ami : the vast ail'licniv ylowlr til.il nut of tlie I rhiirrh. It w;us a n.ilalilei.cheriiii;. an.l one i long to le n-mriiiiK-re.1 hy those r- nl. Alirr th mrlusiou of Ihe s-rvir,-s tlie ; tuhlir was a.h.iitie.1 to view the h-xly as it laid ill slate. The i-ole wrn- f .rim-l in line along Oranjje anil tlowu Henry sti-ivt, j with (mlire at every few yards to ke.-j. the lute eon.ers from hn-ukiiig in. In u short : time the line extended for two hlurk, and ' two hiiiirs after the il....rs were thrown oix-u the line was nearly u quarter of a mile It.i.,!, to-nieht. in cmseinieiH-e of a hrt.kei. rail, or three times the lenirth of that of the pn-- ! The mail ear and a passenger ear were vinus day. i thntwn from the tr.irk. and the former was Mrs. Idvi-herand family will .Mine down j l,med and all the mails d.-sfroved. at.VI.K-k in the inon.il...'. and then the j p.t:1 Cl,.rk A. A. IVrrine. of Hihtstown eortin-lid will Ih- cl.wed ami Ihe lly n-iin.v- j w t, hemm.sl in his i-ar and was hurn.-d I e.1 to the eemetery. It was iioti,-.,l lo-nijrhi j y-Mi.i nisipnition, his rharreil b-nlv falling that the ljily had ln-.mil lo thaiie the j uf the ruins as the ear hntke ajtart. rn fatte was slightly ilisi-olonsl n,-ar the eyes. .1. ..,.. ..Y: v;i.... wl... Iiv i.. i-,.,...l.. None hut Ihe family will Ih' pnwnt t tin private interment. Met by Enthusiastic Admirers. HtKHl-Bl K... Man h H. The news that lieiijamin K. Meyers ofthe Pulriitt. had been apaiinted sistnuister was haileil with de light by Harrishur Ilemornits. who have l-n waiting for years for the sist-oniee loaves and tishes. All aw that I'n-sident Cleveland has stret);ti.eiied his fem-e in this seeliou. Mr. Meyers had about given up hope .and it is said that he wmtea letter re cently endorsing another eandi.htte. He was met at the detot this evening on his return home fntm I'hiladelpl.ia hy a cniwd of en thusiastic iK-nioerat and a band of music and escorted Ut the I'ttlrvit uftiec. Burned to Death In His Mother's Absence. Piirnm.wti, March in. Mm. William F. Orhs left her i-hildm alone in the house while she visited a neighbor. The little ones played with the fire, and Pallid, as.'ed 5 was terribly burned that he died thin morning. ANOTHER RAILROAD HORROR. Thirty-Two Persons Killed and Sev enty Injured Near Boston Men and Women Crushed to Shapeless Masses. Bosroit, Man-h 14. thieof the mt sh.x-k-inif accidents in the history of New England railnittdinp occurred this momin-c at the Bussey Park BritltfC, b-lween Forest Hill and Rossi indale. on the Dcdham branch of the Boston and Pmvidence line. The branch leave the main line alxuit a mile from Ja maica Plain and sweeps anmnd a curve up on a lihili embankment on the side of the valley. The bridge was over South State St., which is in a deep cut. The train leavini; Mcdluim at 7 )" anil due here at 7:4", was tilled with persons coming to work, anions' thera a numlx-r of girls. It : w a composed of eight cars. The first tlm-e iassed over safely, but the bridge gave way under the other five, w hich drew the first j three after them, as they crashed down iixm the slnx-t. a distance of .Hi feet The engineer as soon as the engine broke fniitl the train, seeing what had hapiened. j turned on steam and flew over the road to i Forest Hill and gave the alarm. Meanwhile the noise of the crash dn-w the attention of every one near, who rushtxl to thesceiie. In a little w hile it was crowded. The lire de- i but .'(J tx-rxons an' known to have txi-n It i 1 1 -: cl and at least 7'i injunxl, many fatally, j Ax stxiu as the natunt of the disaster was ; known il.xTorx and amhulauii-s wen- scut i for ill every dlni-li.ui and many sixm arriv , tsl. Their services were put iu execution al onti-as the di-a.l and woun.l.xl wen- taken out. Most of Ihe dead and those of the in- juftsl who wen able to Ik- moved wen- sent lo Uoshudale or Iiixlham. The train was iu charge of Conductor Til-d.-ii. whomel a lerril.le. leatli. He was found on the bank w ith one leg literally torn ot!': hi ahdometi separated, and Ih.wi-Is pntriid ing. He vvas olhervv i.se badly mangled, lie died a few moments after Ix-ing found. The cars were all well filled and the seals of the destroyed cars were so occupied that it was fora long time iinpissihle lo ascertain who was killed and who was saved. The terrible fall hud resulted in mangling Ixidies Ix-yond recognition and had actually cut iu pie.-ex men and women. In one plan- seven IxMlii-x taken out wen placed in a row. All were badly mangled, tine women was cut completely iu two. the upx-r half only' Ix-ing found. Two men who were saved had their faces hacked and Ihe li-si.fone wen- cut ..If. A pathetic sight was that of two girls with arms around one another in the cmbriiceof death, they having been killed by blows upiii ihe head. At first ail utti-ntioii was given to the vvouu.lisl, trie dead Ix-iug left ill the w reck. The wounds of nearly all those w !iu were not kilh-d instantly wen-of the most painful character, and the air was filled with their agonizing cri.-s. limn vni. nvixti. When J. II. l-cnnoli. a fish dealer, who vvas first on the ground, arrived, cries and groans were coming In. in all pirts of ihe awful heap. Itruistxl and wounded Mxiph were craw ling out from all sides. He found an axe and cliiuhisl upui the third car that lay in the trench, the others being liencath it. The cries of the injured came most troni lliisi-.ir, he thought, lb-craw led through a window ami went lo work. A woman first ilemanil.il his attention, she was pinned down hy the f.x'I and two seals ami Ihe lnlv of a man lay on lop of her. The Ixxly anil seats wen-xxiii got out ofthe way. Work ing on the w.MxIan.I iron that held her do n caused her lo scream with fresh agony, and it wxs some moments before she was fni-d. laimon dnigged her to a window, ami two j men, James M.-Clan-n and Cnuiau, helix-d i him lift her out. Four men. thnx- of tlieui ! dead weret-'ken fnun Ibis ear by these thm men. By this time the fin-men had arrivtxi. v tangle if debris. In one of the forwanl ear- and amon the tirst passen-ri'r! to h taken out w;i a youiitf woman whoe name haj not yet btn aser tained, and who- diuth wastlie mot shK-k- inirofany of the px-stnrers. Whtn ingn-ss , was obtained to the smashed car and when . the splintered timlters bad Uen sutliriently : removed to allow of any work upon the ; wreck, alsmt the first IhhIv reaehe.1 was that ; of this unfortunate woman, wlio was piiimil dttwn in the car with the f;ice jammed Ih- twe'n tW4 sills and in the most shocking j condition. That she wasalive se'tneI doubt I ful. still the ImmIv w;is moved, when to the termr of her rescuers, it was found that the j head undone arm wen seven-d from the ' body as thoutrh done by a knife. Covered I with the rubbish, of the wreck, as she lay there, no jmssible identification of the rv 1 mains could Im- made, and atler fruitless at j tempts to ninove her with their hands the n-M uers obtained sjiw- ami jarksenws. and after much hanl wirk suct:eeied in extriea , ting all that n-maiued ofthe woman, wlm i but a uximcnt U fore was full of life, hope j ami ambition. The Imm ly was the lirt n I coven-d. then the mutilated and unreco'rni.- able heail, and finally the arm. Tenderly I tlie n-mains wen iv.venti. and s-mhi after re I moveii to Fonst Hill, and later taken to the ! city morgue. Another woman lay cramied lMtwi'ii two cars ats. with life extinct. Not a mark aj j jeared her IhmIv to iudieate bow dmth ; appniacbtsl. Kxteinled, with arms pushed hut that ill the upheaval ofthe overtiiniint; r:ir the woman lierame weilnl hetweei. the seals and her youi.jr life slowly erushed from the frail hotly. It was an awful .ii;ht. The majority ofthe lasst-mrer in the ears whirl, plunpsl tudrath werv women, all yotiiij:. happy. h..N-ful rre-atures. whose liny satrhels with earrfully pnpare.1 liiiirhen. told pathetiuilly as no wonls jiossihly ran. tin- i-in-umstaiiri-s of their dailv live,.. A Postal Clerk I m prisoned In His Car. Moi st Holly. Man-h . An ait-i.leiit ix eiimil to a Lssi nor tniih on the lY-mlier-t. m ami Hiht.stown hranrh of the IVnnsyl vunia railroad at Sharon, near Hiu'litstou n. I was l.dly woiindisl, and it is feared his in- ' ...:n r.....u.. , : . j.tii.-s mil ii-sun iaiitii-1. r.iiffineer .aron keynolds was injunsl internally. Daniel Kogcro, iKiggage muster, was cut on the leg and hand. Janus. I.. line, of Cream Rnlge, tine of the otli.-ers of the road, was on the train, un.l was also injured, hut not serious ly. Suiri..t.-nileiit Itannard sent a sinvial train with surnns to the scene to care for the wounded, und stsin after a wrecking train was disatcl.etl from Camden. Wilson was brought to Hightstown and Rogers and Keydnolds were taken to Camden. I'errine"s body will 1 bmiigl.t home to-morntw. He leaves a widow. Big Profits from Coffee Speculation. i I'lrrsm-Bii. March 10. A pmvision hn.kcr ! said to-day that speculation on the uppisfd failure ofthe Itruzilutn colfrc cnip has ncttisl ! Arhurklcit Co., whose main establishments are in New York and l'ittsburg, at least , OUi,mi. They h:ul :if).nt U.gs on hand when the advance began, and on some of this the pmfit was s a bag. Dilwortl. Bn., a PitLshurs cotHvni. hail 2.tMibagson hand and n.ale about ICtOmo. Wrecked for Revenge. H.iwelu Mich., Manh IS A little Itefore midnight last night lire was discovered in F. X. Moiin-e's hanlvvare store by a couple of young men who Were p-issing at th.' lime. Ail explosion occurred at that time, the store being badly torn ami the men knocked down. In a short time the entin- mur of business blocks on tinind l'iv.-r Street, lx--tween Winans avenue and 1-ist Stn-et. thrit-bks-ks on Winans, avenue and a row of frame buildings on Hist Stn-et were ill llaiin-s. Tne euving inwanl. instead of outward, of the linx-iciW.iv hl.B-k was all that saved the n--maiiider of the hiisinisis part of town. Mr. Monroe is chairman of Ihe county Pnthihi lioti party committee and a hard worker for tlie prohibitory aiiieiidnii-nt, an I the first of the mouth received the following letter : IKTRoir, Feb. L'7. Iss;. F. X. Mi.nnx-, Howell Mich. "Sir: 1 wish to inform you thai you musi stop your work iu the prohibition cau-e. or we w ill hum you out. root and branch. You may pn-pare lor the worst as wv arc on v-.tir I rack. " Many sal.xiu kec-r. Prohihitionistscoiisi.ler thi- an explanation of the cause of the tire. As the lire engine made its iipn-araiice a voi.-e iu the eoiirt yanl opxisite M. tunic's said : " Tom I '.ark." and a.ld.sl rsoine remark. A pistol shot then graced Clark's clothes, glanced on the engine ami buried itself against Alt". F.-hha.-k's collar hone. A revolver willi o n- empty chamlx-r was afterward picked up in the courtyard, This fin, coming so soon after an incendiary fire, of two w.i-ks ago, has thrown the city intoa fever of excitement. So tar as known lite losses aggregate sto.iHBi. on w hich there is al.oul 1i.oo insurance. A Mormon Apostle. KtYroiiT, Mich.. Man ii in. Klder" Cor nish, a Mormon of Salt Like, h.t-- laUir ing in this vicinity for several his k- s. .-king to proM'lyie. Kev. John It. I 'avis, of the Methodist Chun h ehalh-nged Cornish to a debate. The lirst ofthe contests t-k place Satuniay night ami was attetnltsl by a iar'e crowd. Rich -H-aker to..k half hour Units for two hours. Sunday night the en.wd oN-ned with considerable lMii-tert'U-siu and Rev. Mr. Davis was driven from the church, escaping hy a window. The Mormon chair man of the meeting pulled of his coat and seized a chair, slashing around wiitily. knock ing down a half do.eii safnis and (-entiles in his efforts to preserve teacc. The third contest took place yesterday afteriitMtu and the church w.i- crowded at an early hour. Cornish ojK-iietl with a volume of jM-roiial abuv of op(Mineiit ,nnil tlie n-monst ranees of the men and wonn ii pre- nt. 1 1 is laiiiruage Imi ihih mi brutal and threatening that fearing a light, a panic seiz ed the people, ami the-.- was a ni-h tor the diKr. In tlie melee s veral v mcn were knH ked down an 1 tra:nph-l upii. lavis rallied his fopt- out-id the buildiiii:, but i they wen frightcucil and -piit kly di-jer-etl. Cornish baptised twi-nty-three convert-. Trains Stuck in Snow. drifts. CosofKir. N. H., Man it I I. The roads iu New Hamphin' and Vermont are tied up hy the worst snow bhx kade on record. n the Northern road the gale which prevailed c terday afternoon and evening piled the snow on tlie tracks. A freight train which lei; Concord each last eeuiiig g-t stuck in a long cut known a "Hog- Hack." between Franklin and Andovcr. and it has no; yri U'eii pulied out. The trainmen had a hard time in their efforts t move the train, ant) ah. nidi Hied the job for the night. The drifting snow was whirled so rapidly into the cut that the train was almost buried, the 1ko motive Iteing buried up to the smoke stack. The Central Vermont pa-eiiL'cr train tor Montreal was detained at Franklin, where it now is. The Central Vermont night train for Itostoii and Ihe Northern local morning train from the junction an Intth at Andovcr. Various freight trains are side-tracked at dif ferent places tu the line. All the m-u that the nad could -pare at Amlover and vicini ty wen set to work in the cut. One hun dred men have Ihs-u sent np on a special from Conconi. If is almost imimible to dig out the cut by throw ing snow over tlie high hank, and it must be drawn away at either end. Arrested for Killing His Father. Iii isvillk. Man li 1 1. Walh.ret ar-iiti-r. ai-'isl is years, a sou of Adam C:.r iiti-r. who was assassinated n.-ar Housionvillr. K v.. latt Friday night. h;.s In-en arrrsii-d rhar-eri-.l w ith the n.unli-r ..t his fatlier. A-lam I 'ar-nlrr was a wralthy and promising f.innrr .t" l.iuli rharart.-r. and imii-ii 1h-!.v,-.I in flu- romniii uity iu whirl, he n-sidetl. Alsnil 11 nt Fri day nii:iit some our kii.N-ke I sharply ms. it the front .l.sir ..f tin iimnlen-1 man's Iimiis,-. The kn.K-kin Wi.s i-.-s-al.s a third ami a fourth time. Car-icntcr an.sr and weni out hy a hark door to see what tin- rausr of tht noise was. H,- hail Inir.llv passed out ofthe house whrn the murderer, win. was con.-ral-cd in a co:il-shi-d. tirrd iioi him wit li a shot-iruti rhari.'eil with oblong pist.-l or rifle halls. Mr. Car-ent.-r was sii-in-k l.y thr.-i-ItalN in theriirht side, and with an ex.-lama tion of surprise he Irll and epin-d on tin simiI. The son had .piarr.-lml with his fa ther, and had thn-ati-urd to kill him. The New Flyer. Nkw York. Marrh 1.''.. Tin- new fast mail ; U'twei-n N-w York and Kansas City via the : Pennsylvania iiii.i Missouri Tai-ilir lii n;..s. whirh left N. w Y..rk at s orl.u k S itiir.lay ni.jht. was on time when lost heard from. It ; is cx-erttd lo arrive hen- promptly at .!-" ; this morning, leaving hrn- al .'I a. m.. and i arriving at Kansas City at II a. in. The time i lj.-tw.-en Kansas City and New York is s.-v.-u hours shorter, l-tlrrs and m-w-ji ip.-rs will rrarh Kansas t "ity almost ;m rntirr itiisiin-ss day earlier than hen-tofon-. This will apply , to (s.int-i in ihesoiithwest and west. A inim Int of grntlrmrn left for I ii. liana-, .lis to m.s-t the train then, and when it l.avi-s here , for the west it will have on board sou. -JO grtilli'ineii comprising n-prrs,ittativrs of the postal .riartm.nt. .-itirns and iininli, rs of the pnss of St Louis, wiio will assist i the inauguration ofthe new service. An Anarchist's Funeral. Ciiii-A.io. M;n-h lo. Uv-ar Nee!c. the' Anarrhisl, to-d:y selected I'aul Cni'.tkau and lieorgeS.-liilliinr to drliv-rr the orations at his w ife's funeral services in Miller's Hall on Sundiiy. (irottkau Wiis Spii-s' pnlrr'-ss,.r is editor of ihe Arbeitrr Zrititmr and was a j pnim incut ligun in the riots af Milwaukee last Spring. Schilling is a noted l.s-al Ss-ia-list, laltor agitator an.l wanl --..litician. Nothing of a religious rhara.trr will enter; into the ceremonies. It has In-en drri.l.sl thai tlie pr.-eessioii will only accompany the corpse lo the city limits. j The Central lils.r 1'nion inemtM-rs say i they will carry the n-gulation banners of the : various societies com-iosiii'; the orgniizafiou. . Should they do so. there w ill lx- no alisrnee j of red flair. F.ah sisiirty is providing itself j with altaud of music forthe.H-i-asion. Sheriff Mattson to-day decided that Xeelie should. I iiiimanacled. lie allowed to ai-eompanv his ! wife's coriise to the ccmi-lery, guardisl l.y a j single deputy. j A Barrel Mystery. Ifn-rrox, Manh In. A barrel upon w hirl', there were heavy chargen was received by the Ailams Kxpress Company to-day from New Y'ork. via the New York and New Kngland Railroad, for delivery to the American Kx press Company to lie forwarded to parties ii. New Burnswick. The American Express Canipany refused to nt eive the barrel, on ac count of certain suspicious marks n-seniblimr blood stains upon its side. wlii-n-u-oi the Adams ComgKiny look it back to their main ottice. Here the barrel was oetied, when the head of a woman was discovered parked in straw, and enough wxs seen to otivitire the olticials that the barn-l containe. other tort ions of a human IbkIv. The head was replaced and the barrel with its contents re moved to an undertaker's, where an exam ination will pmbably It made in the morn ing. Those who an? cognizant of the facts lielieve that the body was intended for gome medical college. DRUGS! DRUGS' GEO. W. BENFORD & SOX., OLDEST DRUG STORE IX SOMERSET COUNTY At No. 1, Baer's Block, SOMERSET, PKNN'A. We kep constantly on hand a la- e "X k. of DRUGS, MEDICINKS, CIIKMICAI s DYE STUFFS, PAINTS, OILS AND VARNISH KS. Tlit- .un-st aiil bvrtt to bv f.un.l in llii.t nmrkct. V- als-i k.-ii.n ia;i,i a . ; ,, TRUSSES BRACES. SUPPORTERS. And all the leading appurtenances u d both by rhvsic.ms cm l t fainiKc-. Vt- iu this iine, er!cct salistati"ii. ' ' TOILET ARTICLES ASD SUNDRIES f! EX Ell ALL Y Kt.fr is A FIRST CLASS DRUG STORE. LAFGE ASSORTMENT OF BIRTjH DAY If TS ALWjAYS IJM STOCK TOBACCO and CIGARS. TIIK V.ET TIIK MAKKKT A CF il: I is, l;ull I .M K-1 H AM. ( Prescriptions ConipoiM, Family Eeceipts Filled Wi Correctaa Our own inakf of HORSE AND CATTLE POWDER. It is .,i ;1 tiiality. We ktt-t in Imlk, m that miy M4--i:il inLri-iit-iit ran 1- a. 1. Ir.l. Sil.l at '"i tt-iits a hiiiihI. Wt ilo a s.iiare liusint-ss anl will :ie you ymir innnrv's w,,r!i V tnniltlt- t. shuw pmmU. ' " ""' J PURE WINES AND LIQUORS FOR MEDICINAL PURPOSES CMv LHauL b aniLi i vr rnt.ori Jau. :, Mow a Superstitous Woman doctor ed a Man Suffering From the Measles. I1 kk KK-ni ' Ki, V. Va.. Mareh 1 1 That suj-rMition has not t ntirely disapteared i evident from the following c.t-e t Hi"! niar veluus ignorance, whicl h.tpjM-iie.' a f. ;v miles fnun this city in th.- adj-ininr county of Kitchie. A youinr ni.ui named Atvin i ' n ver Wib taken with tlie uiej-ie n VelniIay, and instead of a phyifian. hi LTandmother. an old. illiterate. HupT-titioii-charaeicr. was called in. She ititiuedi.iteiy ordereI him put to U-d. The p t u w a- theti heatiil to nearly luo--. II.- v:i- p.u .-1 be tween two leather bed and lnl "ti.ue- put I" hi- i;.t.t. S:i then had a live shit-p bmuIit in. and ain-r :lior';iiihiy w iriiiin-.' it. put it info le- 1 ui'ii the man. In -a few hour her patw-nt was dead. The ex-ite!iit'-,if and indij'ii.iti.'ii over the atlair are inten-. Killed By An Indian. A NufcLK-. - al.. March i l M-m ral Miles yesterday r.--eiv-d a feieiam an:i"uu I'inz The death of Lieutenant Si ward M ti. of tlie Tenth f-,i!velry at San C.irls n--ra-tiii, Arizona. I,i.-ii tenant M-itt had Urn a-si, tiller i aptuin Ii rce. the a"-nt at tlie n-s-ervation, in tie division of hind. The ipfher day a yotmr Apache trhi-f. wImn- father was in the i;uar 1 h-eie. ijii:ireh', with l.ieiiien ant M't over a diviiu.i of land and stab1- i him several tllil" !! died ye-ferdaV. T-se murderer t-scapd and is nmv witii Tlir-e n neirrades who went out to e-ea- p-;ni-ii-tnent for drunkenness an.i are rew bein pursued by scoats. Mo'.t graduated fr m West I'oint last year and it h. eoiumis. sjoii in July. He wa- a native .f New York. The Three Unfinished Cruisers. W siniiTo, It. C.. Man'h 1 1. - - I'einlii.g a .lerision by the Attorney linicral ..f the ijmstion as to whether tin cruisers . 'hi, -air... Atlanta and IJoston can he completed hy the Navy iH-parti.ient in view of the failure of C.iiu;res.s to iinike it sjni-ilir ai.pn.priation for the pnrj. is,, ail work on th" vessels--at I 'hr s trr and New York has Urn siisHn.lr.l. Thr opinion is generally eiitrrta;n."l at ihr drpanmru! thill the ueuenil fund appropria te.! for the isitistrurtiou an.l rrpuir, r;.n Ih used to finish tin work on the rrui-ers. At the U-i:iniiin.jr of thr pn-sent inonih .io,tMio of this fund n.-maiii'-.l avaihihle al'L-r n lis t ing the n-iiintii.tits of the various navy y.n-.ls, and it is believed that this sum, i! u piir'l to the nrw rruisers wmiSd siiji,-e to .i'i!iplete them. "The Crusaders." P.i.o .in..t.in. 111.. Marrii !. At Kl'.sworth it l'.-w n.iU-s east of lliihtiMitieton. the ..nivr li-atun-s of tin- . rusa.ie were r. ivr.l on Siirur .l;iy. A hand of thirly-eiizhf Moiih-n man-h- sl to the "liallon II. .us,-.'- of A.. I. Miirevy and asked him to riosr up li is saloon ami leave the plait. This hr refused to do. when I hey charged on the place. M'Crrvv met Ihrni at thr door wild a hatehrt. hut was promptly kn.M-krd down by ti, s.rgr Whitta-k.-r. The woturii th.-n raid.sl :hr pla.-e. roll ed out :ill thr li.p.iors and spi'le-l Ihrm in tht mud. The wotii.-n .Ir.-htrr that lliry will clear out all the - Ualloii Houi-. " that may roinr hi n-. - - Hungarians Mangled by Dynamite. M m . il Chi nk. I'a.. Man h 1 1 Nine IIuii--rarian latwirrrs crupii.ye.l .n the exi,-iisi..ii ofthe b-high Valley Railroad near Highland w rn sitting near a bjx of .Iviiami'r rating .liiiher. w In n our of their iiuin'-tT thought lessly threw alighted mat.-h into tiie !-.. ; Tln-rr was a trrritir explosion, line man was thrown ."to fe.-t in ihr air. in-tantiy kili.-d ami dreadfully mangled. Another Wiis s,, badly injured that In has since died. The . other .seven were more or less injured, hut none fatally. , ! Pulled His WhiskersOut. j II nk. O.. M.irch 14 A n int;triiiiw out nit wa r"-traiil near ht-rv iumd an th inan aL'f'l Mty. !iariifl Jvji!i I'ftn!. A he Kii" walking al'invr a Juiirh ria"l hy Uim-s4-!f a ni'lit r tvvn ai:-. a r.ini.iny uf yuiitJi: ffilnw .iillinu tiu-n wivt (he Wiiitt-, " rauht him. ami thnW)UL' him to tin 'PiiutuI feu 1 11 tint rwrv liair in U-.inl. which ) fn va- i.Tiji an I li'iary with v!iiif iic-. Thy claim In- hall"'! imilty !' ha. oin diK t. Hi" itijtirii are vry taititul. Mrs. Lucy Parsons Sent to Jail. 'niJ'MHis. U., Man-h 1 I airy l'ar4ii, tlit wif of the "hii-ai;t A nan hi-i-, was :ir nuLrneil iKtiin tin Mayor tfiir fvcniu on a rharir f fh-nnlcrly coijiluct anii u- was roriimiltf! uini jil:iftl iiiiIt hoii'U of to ktrn the (K-are. Mrs. Pardons nniM not jiiv a ImmhI anl wa st-nt to th 'outiTy Jail. Sht-niaio a -ibii-Ii lothi-Iart crovnl which liail pulif ml then aUntt this U-in tlit- tv !' liU-rty. A Deadly Affray in Mississippi. K.VFrrK.Miss.. Man-I. M. A .lea.lly atl'rjy I iM-eurnsl In-re tt-lay In-tweet. a tiii.ti iiiim.-.l , I Mr an.l Lis tliree -soils, all arunil witliie-i vt ilvers, ami l.u.l t'liunhwill ami his two! nous, the former iK-iiifranneil with a .shot-rni i ami the latter with axes. In the li.ulit l.u.l Chuixhwell wa-. kilk-il ami one of hi.ss.nis! wan ii.urtallv wuuinleil. Ji.in.-s . rr was alstt kille.1 ami hi, hrulher Aa was hn.llv hurt. As I In was killeil l.v a .ist..l shot it Is tliiui;ht that the W'.tuml wxs intli.-tetl l.y one uf hit. own .i.ny. as their antnironists ha.l no .istols. A Murderer Lynched In Kentucky. Falm.uth, Ky., Manh 11. William Jacks.. n w:li yester.lav (iinvi. te.1 ami wn tet.eeil tit twenty yeam imprisonnieiit for the niiir.Ierof I'mlie Tryer in Ins",. Jt, i.i'ht a crow 1 1 of ma-ktsl met. bn.ke into the jail, took Jai ksttti ami lianue.1 him to a tree. Harrisburg s Sheriff Dead. II tKRism no Man h 111. A few dayt iu;,,, while SI.erifT Miintnta, of this enmity. a. takiliji a J rive in the euiuitry, lie wa.s.tniken with f-aralysia which this evening termina te,! fatally. The leeeasel was tine of the a-'-siKMate jmlirett of Daiiphiu ciunty for a liutulx-r ttf years and served one term an countv cumuiufioner. I ai;k h i kn: uhaulii tnu r LUVV LK SEEDS CEORCE W. EENFORD i S0 Trustee's Sale D TIIK I N!.K!:-.,NI I. vl-i!;-.r., ... I le.- ..! l!,e le ni K-I.ll.- . 'I J.,1 I, K.-. I ..lleniil.ief, ..U "l-hij.. s,!.-,..!-.. .lt-.'i-;i. .!. -,i iii ,,tl. p t..r -ii.,- ,i, ...e ',' Iht- l.r.-iui i n stli.l l.e.i ,, TIlll:sl. . VI.' J .1. . Is.; ill I I. I-. M . n.- nii.:v-.. .1 ,.,. , ..li.. in.- 1. ..nt.. , !;,.. K-.:.- Tract No. i. .m. ppeiuii t..u :j-t.. a. ;j. -t .-" :. ,. M. lU.Mia. Ur,.r, ;;J,.r ,!t. T ..', 4"!i-t.T ftur-.- tf..:-ii;.:.ii- ;f;.( '-;t, f ., th.-r-.iri r.H-!,..i M i;---t .n'.u itun .,. aa.l -ii, iff ..iif.,i:;.:-ti-. V , , :t i T tr- - "!!. 1. 1 -t;i.ir ' : m ;r.ii , tiiuK.-.-.-.! Hi- r.-r nejtrmi.i ,u c Bi , Tract Xo. 2. Tt.i: f'it'Ticiht.iUiL T. ,u ?;-h : f . a-ii-. , -' Tle.i.m. .Imm:, H iC.uu. ,ir.. - H. ',' .. l."i-lii- K --M'-r a:i'l l:.i l ... I 1'iftnfc; him--thereon tT-r-:-.j - . ir.n-l 1- ei.-,,r. :tu- :,.- r.-i u.-.. w fntet ik TERMS I'K.U T No. 1. l.-n - r . . or ,,: ,. If, ,.. - v to U- w!..-!! .!-.. ;.ert i- I.-, .. ...i iili.- lilir-i ea ei.iiririliii. . .t' i, , ' ltl e.jUui Ullllilul -aV llli'Iii-, a, ,r..- . , lav .'I sb!,.. III. I." 1 NL .' Tel. per -.!,! .1..,,., .rep-T-v j. kii.H-kel ili.vin iu.!-.;..- sail- eolilirili. -l i i f n .' m:k ""f- A !u.r. an i , .. . Kvr gil.-li u ith a li. .lin:..- is lieu -.i ' ;, . , gl II Willi IM f.e J.,..., , !. l:- ... i.-re-il Kr Ii'-ii K. mr-IV I'.I e-iii-i;. - . . .. le.Il. ail'l II M ! il-e- ..I la, liTeie , ' lilligs. Kw-r '-; I : i- . -it v g-i.i:.;: ;. . tt.--thiris ..i'la. i.i:, ll.el: ;i e. -: :' -I--elly .ull-ti..! V..U in, iv r.-Iiirn il ur;.: . MiIiU-rrPni.il-. Il i. ii..t a n.-w .-. : :e i-, an . t . t Kr.-ii.-li e...iii;iin.i u.ii. e :i-e.i-. . tor teur. iri.f hit- eiiretl Us lii,.i.:iiM!- ..,,:. ilil'l Is l l.-niu .1 ;iiin..- liiiraeie-.nn . i;. . , lion .11 lliis ..miiir. I ry u. It :i,ir:;i - I .-I.ssi- heniiriii I i -int'it.iv . -s.l. f'r- i.r:. ;. -I . N. li...!. s.,1, Ag,i. ' CWITHIN C. SHORTLIDCES ACADEMY, "i lofVi, in ii,, ("l.s. Mt.l-J.i. ;-.l. mil.-s from I-.. ...... yhiii. Kix.-.l .rir- rovers every t-xprn-.. li.ks. At. No exlra .-hiirues. So iiici.t,. . v jk-iisi-s. No .x.-iniitiiii ion ior a.liiiissn.n I .. ,r e.erien..-.i tem-lt.---. nil iii,ji hii.I nil ,,'r.,,- ., ,. - --i.i: .rl laitv l'..r.-i;.l -tii.e:ii. t,, ,.;.. rapi.liy. S- i.il drill i'..r ,h.il und le.. .. .-.i b..ys. i'atri.iis ,,r -lu.l. iiis iiuv s-l-l k:.v .i . : i.-s. ..r rli..-s' Ihe r.-g.i,ir Kngli-h t- i. ill.-ss. I lllssii'iil r I iv ii Kln.'i;ie,-r,lu; e.,ii-.. drills tin. -il ai Media i. in y arc n..i, ii ,- vnrd. Yal.-. 1t:i.. . t..n. an.l u n ,.i.-i,.r i ..... -. . ,. I'olyl.-i-liiiii -N ii.;.. la -tii-iviit- s. m 111 IsSii. ., HI 1SS. lli, JSV,. ,1,, ,.;;, . 4 gr.i'hiuliiig rUss ,m crv .-:ir in the .-..i t. .lefariineiit. A I'liy-ii-'iil'un.f I "n.-ii: :. i i I i -.. r . .yinnusnitn ,t,i,i i1i; i,r,,mi.. !. . a.l.l.sl to I.il.rBry in lss.;. M.sha i, riinr.-h.-s. au.la l.-iii--riiur,- rhur'- r v. a;- . --llll.lt- I'll Silie ol' ail ilil.-.ieMiiii- .i- h. i -in-w ill!l-lrnt.-.l rirenhir a.l.irrss tr,.- rr-,..;.., ,:. i lr...n.-l..r. 'IIHI I. ll L1 1.1 i. I i i Hwtnt 'r"...ieit i M"1ia. 111. m:.-l- 1 - Kv. rv l-.llle ..f Wei In- Less,..,. N.-r-:, i . I . -i.- soi.i on u Kuiv. e-iarutiti-. r. i--. : s . Agent. Tia sTKKs sai.i: Valuable Rsal Estits! THK CM.KIiSlt.VKI" A.ll,.:!.i-T-:,-..r .... I I I III.- Kelt! K-..-1I.- of K-:..n K- lale of . i.nem.iiigli Ton ii.iiij.. S..:ii' p- ! Ti.. wiil oif.-r t..r iiie at i. iii. in- ..ni. o finises in said low n.,i, ,,11 7,77. v'.l j", .1 !: J4. I ' . i.--k i. s.. Hi.- an lo. ;,!, ;ng .1 .-r:U-.l Ke.,i j-.-:..;. loii. Tract No. 1 n'HiiiUi;.ri It n-hin a. !'!. liiiL' i.i 11. Int. tiu'. i. A.ir--n Msiicr. Amm K.-Y t i.i.-r. luirli- H..U(!,..Ir hi,.) tr i- ; ..i--.v-.ri tT.-t i.-.l u it-kh! l ink : an! ! iii-r ui.itii i-iMii.'-. u irt-xl i i-"-" uftpiV irit", -mail -u-ur -imii . :i'-n w- li inntwTi'fl. Otf rt-t vh-nr aii-1 in ;i i Tract No. 2 TIiali-MllU li li-n;i.. tl;i-l!iir:i' i.iT:-:-l -.-.lua- II. UI.-M-i.; rr...:!.- II ... li'i'in- K' !ii'T till' I traci .N.i. I th-r. . jtiik li hi !litTMiti tTfc.-il. K:t! " tr.t' t l rli-iir. nixl t;ir rt-( VM-ii U lilt.' IMtlw. ! TERMS. TI: ' T No. t. T-n iht i-.-nt fi !ii.tii' t.i U- .u.M m hc!i tlif tin-!- "S II. I'hf-tlllPl 'ill c..;;:irin;ll."ll - 'iii'-.- hi tw.i t'.i'ial;t:i:f:,l j.a lin-td-rn-Tu .lay 4i't-. ! ii T N . T.-ti Jht r.'!it .i I.rr.(- rty i- kniN-li.-M .i..W!.l!i.l t'..- .I"H 1 marj. A'l.nr. i . Kt-wanl i"..rti:c Htaii. wii-.i.a- a i-ii'iirh -ri-..ii :w i V"r:ii in !.a!-aui will imi t-im-. A:.'in. CatarrH mm ! I. K X-J KSTII I UKAIl AI.I.AV-. IN K !. A V M A T I 1 1 N HKAI.s TIIK St :Ks Ke.to--.-s rli,- Sense, v T s T K. S M K I. I ft I A .lll,l: ll-lief A pi-sitive i are. 'fi-slf'ZvA HAY-FEVES A lilrli. le i i.i.T.li...l irilo -a lurr. 'i".-. i ri.-i ... e.-n.s tu tr r.-.".s:r..l Ktc-,.nt i 'iri-ulars fr iwi.-nri.l-. owegit. S. Y. K! v ' Jt. Pure E-i StotkEe -' - Inil""'""' iirnvi.i-' ,111,.- li l.r.s !iii- p:pr-IC'-,--. . OWAN OR F-.E".' -t 'f ENC,i'-s so.-l- H)'5ES TA Tc.r.. CLLtc-Ar3 eVS ."O F f - " SADDLE N0 CARRIACF. H0"--E5 .CELAN j ANO -' T-s: HOLS'rll--eIA' ''' f.r''-N " itiir CII-I..IH. , - i.-o - ih. .. i ITHI,' e,eri Il.-e ill - i.iiii.-ri..r ..ti .',.v ; litnrr j.ti-I. - ' eoileet. i..: ,.i.. -.r. .,( -ni breeds: ami low orires. l,e- I'l- i.l r...t:le(! fjietlil.es. etel.l l, r;,tes ... l--n-t".r.:.'i n , III I1 It tit I -.r I - f" "' , l 111,1. It ...I. rs -li. I. i i- i.e ' 1 I KH l HIM TH l'isi..,rs .-l.-,,l,ie. i .,ire.. ..It It 4 ireulrs fn-e. -o.l IT.I. ili.ftl' -srtl,i;lMr.'. .'rut-1..,, When tmi ,il, n-'.'i.-t' ttn-- I'-'i ! lx not sutler with rmiuh orc-i'l "' ' it' have remisty .tr,-re,l ym on 'l'1,'J?','",j Te Les-sep' .NortuMi) Balsuia. I . it-. AgeuL V ama He Real Esta l T . .!! --iW.. "imi in whim 1 1 ii in 1 1 li i-jTiiin'iffitHfliift .riV-ji-tKXSsS--