3. gcmccrat nntr Stntintl. CLAUK WILSOX, Krtltor t Proprietor EIJEXSWJRG, JUNE 7,:::::::::::1SCG. fok i;om:i:.noi;. WESTER CLYMER. Hon. A. A. Barker. How is the mighty fallen ! The Kadi- j c&l Convention has thrown Mr. Uarker j overboard. Contrary to all usage he has j been cut off with a single term, by a Con- veution which "approve J" and "endorse.!"' every public act ot" his, and expressed by resolution its gratitude to him for his ser vices. This harrowing result was initiated is Blair county, and originated in the Hall of the Senate, pressed by would be post- i roasters at the North, and removed post- ! masters at the South, who, by tickling j tbo vanity of Morrell, induced hini to take ' the field against Ihirker. From that mo- . ment Mr. Earker'3 destinv was scaled. j And it shows the enormous power of the Tdoliing Mil!, that it was able to run the convention without stopping its opera tions. Of the twenty-six delegates from I tho Johnstown districts, some twentv were I in Morrell's employ while nearly all the j others were indirectly connected with the j mill. Even the Summerlnll delegates, i who were elected for Barker, were unable j ts ri-f f:-om im.'Iiir trin tlm:Liv rS tht Titl ! to attend the Convention ; while with Uox like cunning, Washington was carried by Democratic votes against him, and the i 'still email voice" of Munster was utter ed through a Glass tube for Morrell, be cause of Barker's temjierance principles. Wo cannot sympathize with Mr. Bar ker, lie came among us when the Know Nothing dodge had left the opposition without a party in the North outside of White and Susquehanna, and by his un ceasing labor built up a Kepubiican or ganization in every township and village, he even used his admitted business intc rity to make inroads into the Democratic party aud build up the radicals. Prior to his advent among us the North was ! scarcely represented in the Conventions of his party. Now, they present a solid phalanx on all occasions a minority, it is true, but a well drilled, fighting minority. Politically, then, we rejoice in his de feat. No other radical candidate could have combined so many elements of suc cess; and certainly nona could have used them so skilfully and successfully. In Ehort, he has been the soul of the oppo nents of the Democracy, planning, direct ing, and enforcing their efforts, and since we were unable to vanquish him, we are glad he has fallen "in the house of his friends. " Personal!', wo have no hostility to Mr. Barker. We have fought him as a poli tician not as a man. We feel, on the contrary, that the people owe him a debt of gratitude for those sturdy efforts by which, in improving his own condition, ho has improved theirs. And if their "grateful" feelings do not appear in the shape of sycopantic praise to-day, and vin dictive and unmeritited abuse to-morrow, they will at least be shown in that confid ing faith which one honest man may feel fir another. "All Wool am no Shuhdv." This is the significant heading of an advertise ment in one of our exchange?, the adver tiser being tho "head centre" of the Abo lition paper, aforesaid. "All wool" suits the prcdelictions of the journal to a letter, and the "no shoddy" is merely an ac knowledgment that Totn. Williams & Co. didn't think it would be "proper nice" to allow him to pull nt the public teat. The Arch Dislmonist Endorsed. The Allegheny County Disunion conven tion, at its meeting a few days ago, pass ed the following : "Resolved, That the unfaltering devo tion of Hon. Thaddeus Stevens, dining a long and illustrious career in the cause of freedom and humanity, his hatred of treason and traitors, and his fearless ad vocacy of the right, stamps him as the man above all others whom we can trust as a leader in the crisis." The followers of such a leader can be none others than plundering contractors, greedy demagogues and negro equality ad vocates. CJT Mrs. Annie M. Moreland, a young actress performing at the Olympic Thea ter, New Orleans, committed suicide on Wednesday last by taking chloriform. She was a native of Birmingham, near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Hunt up the Record.. Will our friend Myers, of the Bedford Ga:Me look up a chapter of the Geary record, which may be found in letters pnb'.ished in the Bedford Inquirer during the Mexican war, and were written by David Over, Esq., then a member of the '2d liogiraent 1. V., and now publishing an Abolition paper somewhere in Pennsyl vania. Whether he is supporting the brave (?) Geary we know not, but in a conversation, at which wo were present, he asserted that he saw Colonel Geary "playing off," and "letting on he was wounded" and skulking to the rear, during the hottest of the fray at Chapul tapec, and added, that if he evinced any bravery in this war he "had changed the damndest." Hunt up the record, and let the curse of his cowardly and tyranical conduct come home to roost. Significant. The Philadelphia Daily AVmv, one of the oldest "Kepubiican" pa pers in the State, refuses to support Geary for Governor. The Pittsburg Republic is in a similar predicament. The Easton Argus of May 2 1, has the following : II.vvlixo ivx The Gkakv Fi.au. The Easton Gegemrart, the German or gan of the "Kepubiican" party in North ampton county, has hauled down the Gea ry Hag for Governor. The editor can no longer support the ncaro suffrage doctrines of Thad. Stevens & Co." It is said that "straws show which way the wind blows." "The Chicago Times, a Copperhead paper, in a recent article draws a compari son between General Grant and the butch er Probst." Jo!ai4ov:n Tribune, May 25. Xot the "Times, a Copperhead paper," but the Chicago Tribune, a disunion Rtanj) Congress paper, made that comparison Stop your canards, Mr. Johnstown Trib une. 1'atrivt j- 1'iuoa. No Sympathy on Aid for White Sol piehs. A few days ago the New York 1'lrprvss stated that a large number of disa bled soldiers were in a starving condition in Brooklyn, and that at a meeting of the Army and Navy Association several cases of actual death from starvation were reported.- A few days ago, also, a dischar ged German soldier, late of the 50th New York heavy artillery, committed suicide in Philadelphia, because, as he stated in a letter written before his death, he was unable to work on account of palsy indu ced by the service and because he could not get a pension. These are not the only cases of suffer ing and death of men who have faithfully served their country. There have been scores of such cases, and hundreds and thousands of others of destitution, in every section of the country, so that it is impos sible for Sumner's "scrap book"' not to con tain some of them, if the disposition ex isted to secure them. Notwithstanding these deplorable facts, however, the Kurup Congress does nothing to relieve the suf fering soldiers and their families, but is lavish of the public treasure for the "pet lambs" of John Brown. Twelve millions dollars were lately donated to them ; a bill increasing this sum to seventy or eighty million dollars aj-ear was passed, but, be ing vetoed, has just gone through in anoth er shape, quite as expensive and making the negro bureau perpetual: All this, too, after it has been proved that thieves with out number are plundering in every imag inable way within the bureau. We ask, under these circumstances, whether a white soldier has any rights or is deserving of sympathy in any form? Judging from the neglect of the Kump Congress qnd the Disunion leaders, we are forced to the con clusion that they are not? Patriot and Union. Siu Moit roN Veto. The London cor respondent of the Boston Adix rtiser says the failure of Veto, Belts & Co. was not unexpected. Says the writer: "When Sir Morton was starring in the United States as a millionaire, many of us knew the dangers he was running, and how near he had been to bankruptcy. He and his firm, more than any others, had rais ed up an cdiSce of credit which frightened the ordinary spectator. Ever on those dizzy heights, where their work of doing and undoing was incessant, they have trod the edge of precipices like Alphine goats, with only a hair between them and des truction, and now the hair seems to have gone. I think, however, the firm will rally. They have rich friends in the dis counting interest to whom a few millions of money is rt much, and these will en able him, at all events, to prosecute his home and foreign contracts." 9 Good News. A telegram from Car isle received by the Philadelphia Age, on Monday evening announces "the gratify iug fact that the soldiers of Cumberland county, who gallantly fought for tho Un ion, have spoken out boldly in favor of the President's wise and patriotic policy. They sternly denounce the Kadical diun ionists in Congress, and manfully stand up for the great champion of Union, Kesto ration aud Constitutional Liberty. All honor to "the boys in blue" of "old Moth er Cumberland." Death of General Scott. West Point, May 29. General Scott died this morning at five minutes past el even o'clock. He was out on Saturday afternoon and then showed no signs of his early demise. On Sunday he began failing quite fast though none of his physicians expected he would expire at such an early day. lie was perfectly conscious up to the moment of his death, though he had lost his voice two hours previous. He recognized the Chaplain of the post ten minutes before he died and clasped his hand in silence. Washington, May 29. 1 Executive Mansion, j The President, with profound sorrow, announces to" the people of the United States the death of Winfield Scott, the late Lieutenant General of the army. On the day which may be appointed for his funeral, the several Executive departments of the Government will be closed. The heads of the War and Navy Departments will respectively give orders for "the pay ment of appropriate honors to memory of the deceased. Signed, Andkew Johnson. Destitution in Alabama. Governor Parson, of Alabama, has addressed a let ter to General Howard, urging the necess ity of the Bureau increasing its distribu tion of rations. By a recent census of that State, forty-three out of fifty-two counties return 52,921 destitute persons, and lie averages the starving poor at G4, 000. During the war Alabama lost 40, 000 men, one-half heads of families, and there are 00,000 white widows and orph ans. They could raise no crop" last year on account of the presence of the armies, and the legislature at its recent session au thorized tho issuing of State bonds, for the purpose of securing food but they have failed to make them negotiable and the Governor proposes coming North to put them in the market for provisions. The citizens who are able contribute freely, and the mortgaging of farms and crops to raise food is almost universal. Feeble women and decrepid old men walk miles to obtain rations, and it is quite customary to meet frantic mothers on the road-side crying with their starving children. There are 100,000 destitute whites and blacks, and to the 20,000 to which rations were issu ed daily during May, ho urges that the number be increased from June to 30,000. Their wheat and potato crop gathered in daily will give great relief, and it is be lieved the number of rations after A'ugust can be materially reduced. Thaddeus Stevens, in company with his brother Kump?, is hard at work "re constructing'' the government. On Mon day la.-t the great leader introduced a bill "to enable the States lately in rebellion to regain their privileges in the Union." The only object of this measure is to force up on the Southern people negro suffrage and negro equality, and like all the pet schemes of the Kadical disunionists, it is based upon tho principle of humiliation. The public mind, however, is getting so accus tomed to the absurd propositions of these "Constitution tinkers." that but little at tention is now paid to them, and really, no one would be at all surprised if an amendment was proposed that, in future, no one should be eligible to a scat in Con gress from Pennsylvania who jumped from the back window of the Capitol at Ilarris burg during the Buckshot war. Age. Disfranchising Deserters. In the case of the Commonwealth against the the several election boards of Wayne county, tried in court on Tuesday, Judge Barret rendered his opinion, emphatically against the constitutionality or legality of of the legislation, both in Congress and our State Legislature, attempting to dis franchise so-called deserters, and gave warning through those present, that here after no election board in Wayne county could come iDto that court and plead ig norance of the law. His remarks were very severe toward election boards, here ami elsewhere, who endeavor, through malice or otherwise, to carry out uncon stitutional legislation in opposition to the present fixed law of the State. 1 lis ar gument conformed to our remarks on the subject published in our issue of April 1 4 th. Ilonesdale Monitor. One after another, tho gallant soldiers of the nation are repudiating the Kadicals, and declaring for such a constitutional ad- j justment of our present difficulties as will make us a united and happy people. The gallant General James Shields has writt en a letter from Carrohon, Missouri, hear tily sustaining the President, and denoun cing the Kadical and revolutionary meas ures of the present Congress. He is par ticularly severe upon the Civil Eights Bill, and concludes his letter with the following truthful and pointed language : "We owe it to the noble stand taken by the Presi dent to sustain him. But what is more, we owe it to ourselves and to the country, and to the principles of constitutional lib erty, to sustain his policy so long as ha sustains the Constitution and the Union. This faction (the Kadical) must be put down by a peaceable organization or the country will drift rapidly into a social civil revolution." Tficre were ten deaths from cholera at New York quarantine on Saturday, and twenty-six new cases of the disease. A case of yellow fever is also reported THE SHAMROCK. New York, June 3. The Hercdl contains the following account : Buffalo, June 2, 7 r. m. An eye witness of the engagement near Kidgway says the Fenians were 1,000 strong, under O'Neill, and had reached a small village i about ten miles from Waterloo ferry, when , their scouts announced the approach of a ! large force of Canadian volunteers. The j I-emails tore down a fence and went into an adjoining field and formed in line of battle, General O'Neill, being assisted by Col. Starr and O'Brien, in making a dis position of the troops. The volunteers advanced upon the Fenians, and the action commenced, the skirmishers on either side exchanging a brisk fire. The order was then given for the Fenians skirmishers to fall back to the main body. Both parties fired several rounds, when the Fenians advanced on the double quick, with fixed bavonets, but as the Canadians were ranged in an orchard, on either side of a swamp, and were separated from the remans oy a imck urusti wood, u .eiii deemed a charge useless, anil gave the or der to halt and fall back. The Canadians believing this a retreat advanced from their shelter and run, but were "met by the Fe nians with a countercharge, and were in stantly worsted, the Fenians pursuing them for two miles, when O'Neill ordered a halt. The Canadians, completely demor alized, continued their flight to Port Col borne. The Fenians lost six killed and fifteen wounded, and the Canadians twenty-three killed and wounded in all. The Fenians fought bravely, throwing off their coats, vests and even their shirts, and fighting half naked. After stopping the pursuit the main body of Fenians proceeded toward Fort Erie, leaving a guard over the wounded on both sides. The Canadians were 1,-100 strong, under command of Col. Buchanan. Lt. Kouth, when dying, asked permission of O'Neill to retain his sword, which was granted, and a guard placed to see that n was not taken from him. Buffalo, N. Y., June 4 9.30 a. m. The following Fenian officers are cap tured : Col. Ould, Col. Hay, Lieut. Col. Jno. Spaulding, Lieut. Col. Gruce, and Major Moore. All quiet this morning. Watertown, N. Y., June 4. Gener al Meade and staff passed here this mor ning en route for the North. General Sweenev and 150 Fenians were on tho j same train. The United States Marshal here seized nine boxes of arms and accou trements on Saturday evening's train. All is quiet north of Ogdcnsburg this mor ning. Buffalo, N. Y. , June 4. All is qui et on the Niagara frontier. The arms of the captured Fenians are on board the steamer Michigan. The British colors captured by the Fe nians at the battle of Kidgeway, which the Canadians call Limestone Kidge, arc also on board the Michigan. ' The Tribune, in its notice of General Scott, uses this singular language : He was an "old whig," according to his own showing, though he had a hohj ha tred of Alul;tioni.-f, and with all his ster ling patriotism he had no sympathy with the Kepubiican party. In the election of 1SC0 he sided with the Bell and Everett faction. To say that although a man i3 a sterling patriot he does not sympathize with the Kadicals, is quite as rediculous a form of words as to declare that although he is a good Christian drunk. he doesn't steal or get I low Sugar is Made White. The ar is made perfectly way in which sugar is white, it is said, was found out in a curi ous way. A hen that had gone through a clay rnud-puddle went with her muddy feet into a sugar house. She left her track on a pile of sugar. It was observed by some one that wherever the tracks were the sugar was whitened. This led to some experiments. The result was. that wet clay came to be used in refining sugar. It is used in this way: The sugar is put in to earthen jars, shaped as j-ou see the su gar loaves are. The large ends are up wards. The smaller ends have a hole in them. The jar is filled with sugar, the clay put over the top, and kept wet. The moisture goes down through the j ir. This makes the sugar perfectly white. C5T A few days since two maiden ladies named Hollo way, residing in Lowville, Erie county, Pa., received the sum of 8000 which they concealed about their premises. Two ruffians, knowing this, broke into the house a night or two after, with the intention of robbing them of their money. The ladies refused to tell anything about it, when the burglars chok ed them to make them confess, but they would only acknowledge the possession of 49, which they had upon their persons. The burglars took this and left. They have since been arrested, and, being iden tified, are now confined in the Erie jail to await trial. 3" A special to the Chicago Evening Journal, from Detroit, says three children died there on Saturday from a disease supposed to be Asiatic cholera. The chil dren belonged to an emigrant party, just arrived on the Great Western Kailroad. News Items. The Senate has refused to confirm Wade Hampton as Postmaster at Pitts burgh, Pa. Ex-President Pierce was confirmed a member of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, by Bishop Chase, at Concord, New Hamp shire, on Sunday. On the 15th inst., Mary Ann Bostine died at the Almshouse, aged 118 years. She was a native of New York City and j was nevcr married The commission of General Sickles as Minister to the Hague was sent to him on Saturday. He has not yet signified his acceptance or declination of the appoint ment. Isaac Dokg.vn, a former slave of Gen. Lee, of Virginia, was arrested in lijston, last week, for robbing his employer of clothing and jewelry valued at one hun dred dollars. The exchanges and disnafches from all i -ls West auJ South, report unusually i , j ,vcathcr for the season. It is feared ! .i... ,1,.. ,-,. .. :n n iLiliALZLl lULi J uaiuu a a v-wUifc w tuts serious crops. Four seperate specimens of the new five-cent coin have been struck off, and were on the 30th ult., submitted to the Secretary of the Treasury as samples, from which he will select one for issue. At Memphis the Congressional Com mittee has begun its investigation of the late riots. There was trouble there again on Tuesday by means of a strike among the negro levee laborers for higher wages. Two hundred and thirty-five (235) hon orably dischared soldiers of York bor ough lately enrolled themelves as mem bers of the Clymer Club, at the first meet ing. The names were published in the York Gazette. The Sweeny wing of the Fenian party appears to have taken the field. Fenians by train loads have been arriving at Buf falo, Cleveland, and other cities along the border confronting Canada, and the move ment has assumed a threatening attitude. From the reports made to the Columbus, Ohio, Horticultural Society, at their last meeting, it seems that in that vicinity the crop of all kinds of fruit is likely to be a small one. Peaches and cherries are en tirely destroyed. The Abingdon Virginian says the wheat crop in that section will be almost a total fail are at best not moro than a fourth of the usual yield. To make amends, how ever, the prospect is excellent for an un usually large corn crop. The report that three emigrant children died from Asiatic cholera in Detroit on Saturday is positively contradicted. The disease with which the children died was pronounced by leading physicians simple dysentery, induced by .ulthines3 and expo sure. The pick-pockets have been reaping a harvest at the railroad depot in New Ha ven during the past week. In all losses to the amount of 1,985 are reported, of which a Mr. Sherry, of Philadelphia, lost $1,020. A switch tender lias been convicted of manslaughter, with a recommendation to mercy, at Newark, N. J. By his neglect to replace a switch on the New Jersey Kailroad the through Washington train ran ell" the track and two lives were lost New Yfi;K, June 1. Dr. Bisseli's re port to-day shows that fifty-nine new cases and eight deaths from cholera have oc curred on board the Peruvian and Union since the last report, leaving ninety-seven cases on the hospital ship. The Lynchburg Virginieui says : "We understand that there are a great many muskets in the hands mostly of the ne groes in this city and neighborhood. We even learn that they are forming companies and mustering and drilling in the suburbs. Tin; editor of the La crosse (Wiscon sin) "Democrat" says: "He who called ; the Kepubiican party a Union party is a j liar, and the truth is not in him. He who calls Thad Stevens or any of his fullowcrs ; a patriot, is himself a traitor." The British steamship Union, after a i passage of sixteen and a half days from Liverpool, arrived at the Lower Quaran tine at New York, on Tuesday afternoon, with '431 passengers, about a score of whom were down with cholera. Thirty passengers and two of the crew died of cholera on the passage. The President has approved the bill authorizing tho Secretary of the Treasury to make and carry into effect such orders and regulations of quarantine, as may be deemed necessary and proper, to guard against the introduction of the cholera in to the ports of the United States. Not only is General Grant himself lib erally rewarded for his services, but all his relations and friends are being taken care of by the Government. We find the following in an exchange : Douglass Grant, a son of General Grant, has been appointed cadet at West Point by the President. When Andrew Johnson first became President the Disunionists declared that Providence, for some wise and good pur pose, had called him to the Executive chair. Since, however, his course has not turned out to be in consonance with their plundering and bloodthirsty anticipa tions, Andrew Johnson is only the Presi dent by accident. Pennsylvania Iterr.s. Shocking Casualty in C:: v vr.!-r tt -1 Young drl Burned to l y other most shocking ca-..H,-v. red on Sunday morning at th .".; v. Mr. Joseph Anderton, a cm:.! m.,,. ding in Rochester township, :, Brighton, Beaver county. I: . . Mary, daughter of Mr. A:. r: r about fourteen years, ha 1 U- r.. . tcrday morning to prepare 1 ; in going down stairs she proco. ! It,:, a fire in the cooking stove, a:; 1 -n expediate the combustion, c-ijii-. pouring some oil from a large r;;n . tire. The ilames immediately q. cated to the fluid contained ia t' and an instantaneous explosion t. -;-The unfortunate girl was co:i;;.!t.'v ered with the burning ilui l. n:l enveloped in Ilames. Her rh:i.-!;-. her father and mother to her a-- but before the flames were ox;;:.;.' she was terribly burned. Mrs. Andertou's clothing a'.-., vi and die flames were ex:::o.i-!.. . great difficulty. Mary lir.j-.ivd '; most intense agony until four '. : i; day afternoon. Mrs. An L i t :iu ., . ed about the arms, neck r.v. 1 I. her injuries are sj severe that herr:.-, is very doubtful. Mr. An ! n;: burned about the hands and f.-..t. injuries are nut serious. The the room where the explosion . also took fire, but the flames w r-j ; guished before any uiatvrial i..;:; done. The accident should servn a? :i :.. warning to those who imp-r;'. lives and the lives of others by t'. r .; use of burning fluids in kindl::: seems, however, that no atuu'.: of . ing is sufficient to d-'ter som? p -r.-o pursuing a like course. PiU.-'.'-irj'. f tele. S. SI- Petteugill & Co Advertising Agents, 37 i'ii.r. New York, aud 10 State vrc.-, I' are the authorized A:p-ui f r t;.c ockat & Sextisel," and the ir.. -1 It tialand largest circulating Xeu-ju: the United States an 1 Can.vhi.-. are empowered to contract fur lowest tekms. TO CONSLTJIPTJ VES. Tliff .rlvi rtis'T. Lavia k't:i ns: heaith ia a fv.v wetks I y a very : remedy, after Laving tu!:Vri-J f.-r years with a wvere lung afii'ttlja, dread disease, C n.-umptit n is make known t Lis LlLw-tu:; : . ii.eai.s of cure. To all who dvrlre it, he wi'l .-e: : s of the j rescript ion u.-ed (i'lve .'' i: with the iMrcctious fi.-r prc-.tr::.; the same, wl.i h they wiii iL; ,i -for Consumption, Asthma, V-?.: Coughs, Coi.iw, and all Thr-vit ::.! Affections. The only 'Vj-ct f t:..' fr in ei!.ling the Prescript! :i I.- t : the ii'ilicted, a!;d spread iuf.-na :. he conceives to be i.ival liable, z:.Z it every s'.:!:'c-ur will try his re:.. civ. ;; cot them not Ling, &ud m.y : r -in. Parties wishing the j re.- r'::''. :.. : by ret urn rr.ivl. will ph-a.-e Kkv. KDWAKl) A. WIL- " Williams-burg, Kings Cj , -v -Fob. 1, lSG'J.ly. LOVE AND MATLIM 0 Ladles an ! gentleuc:,, if y--u marry, address the tn.dersiiii stud you, iti.( at nioiiey a:.J v-!;! valuable information th.u w'.i. t to i:i,vry happily aa-i spt-. of age. wea'th, cr Ve.ir.ty txen will cost y-'-u r. thir to marry, I will cheerfully letters strictly eo;fi,leuti:il '1": formation sent by return tu i ward asked. Address SAIIA1I D. L Grc! poii-t, Kiai's C June 7,oo-Lia ELROllS of vol" i::. A Gentleman who suiVere; f ; '' Nervous IV1. i'.ity. Pieruatuie I:- the aft'-'cts -f youthful in-IL-crt-: . ' the sake offiiiTeiiLg huma-.ity. s i. : all who need it, the rtvt i j t a: : " for making the simple lenudy ! y was cured. Sufu rers vi.-h:ng t the advertiser's experkoce, can addresc'mrr. JOHN I. Or; PUN. No. 13 Chambers St., - Fob. 1st, lbO'J. lv. STUAXGi:, HUT TKIX Every young lady aud gc:.t! r-" ' United States can hear so;ik ; , much to their advantage by n-t -of charge,) by addressing the v.' Those bavin fears of bch:g la:: .'.-;'' oblige by iv. -t lioticin? th'u curd. will please address their obedi. .t :'; TIIOS. V. t HA I'M A S:U r.roadway, N.'.v V: Feb. 1 1SGG. lv. TT7AXTLD. AGENTS .$75 u I If MONTH kr 'geutien.cn, r.r.d i tor ladies, everywhere, to ir.tr- t.- t-brate.l Common Sense 1 ar..:.y chine, im proved and perf-ct- 1. " " ;' fell, stitch, quilt, bind, braid and ; r beautifully. Trice only $"J0, r-1- -elastic lock stitch, and fully war:.'.:-'-"-three years. We pay the above v commission, from which twice that can be made. Address with stand'. on C. BOWEUS CO., Sahsr ; -'255 South FIFTH street, FLihidcd All letters answered promptly, " lars and terms. May SI, l-'-' ("Qjl A MONTH ! Agents war.nd -Q j entirdu new articles, out O. T. GAREY, City Building, b: Me. !y 31,