EVENING HERALD Published dally, exoept Sim Jay by mXRAtlt l'VlthXSUlXtt (jOMVASr, Fabrication offloe and meobanloal department, North Market Street. 'Si.'he Tiasald ls ael'vere 'n Shenandoah and surrounding towns for Six Cents B week, payable to the carriers, lly mall, Three Dollars a year or Twenty-five cents per month, IB advance. Advertisements charged according to space ftfid peeltlon. The publishers reservo tho right to ehango tho position ot advertisements when ever the publication of news requires It. The rtcht la alBO reserved to reject nny advortlso Stent, whother paid for or not, that tho pub ttrurs may doom Improper. Advertising rates tsade known upon application. Entered at tho post office at Shenandoah, Pi, as second closj mall matter. Til J! JSVElfWQ HJHlAZn, Shenandoah, Poena. Evening Herald. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 'id, 1893. It is easy to Imagine that Glerelnnd'i (hardest task must be that of continuing & o b a Democrat. Ghover Cleveland's flnancfal policy epitomized: Givo me the pleasure of pil ing up the public debt, and I care not who lias to pay it. There are repeated assurances from Washington that financial legislation is dead. It ls a queer thing to say of that which was never alive. As LONG as labor leaders keep up fight ing each other like the bear and the lion in the fable, they must expect to see the capitalistic fox get away with the booty, MB. Bland has discovered a way to free -coinage through an old statute requiring the government to receive and pay out Spanish pillar dollars and the parts thereof. What he wants to solve now is tbe problem as to where the pillar dollars are to come from. The enemies to the Protection of Amer ican industries are daily reading a lesson -which should impress them as has noth ing before in their entire lives. The financial condition of the government to day affords one of the most remarkable and most effectual illustrations of the damaging eHect of the Democratic Free Trade policy the most skeptical could de sire. Restore adequate Protection to the &reat industries of 'a great country and the revenues will increase and the coun try will steadily advance toward prosper Sty and happiness. But we cannot look to the destructive policy of the party now u power for this. The spectacle of a doctor containing an arerdose of his oarn medicine driving with infuriate speed across a long stretch f country to reach another doctor and obtsiu relief is not so common as it might toe, but when it does occur is a thrilling episode, exciting as much local attention as the ride of John Gilpin. The labt recorded Incident of the kind took place ear Schenectady, N. Y., to which latter mlace the imperiled physlclaa betook himself at such a headlong rate of Bpeed as to leave one horse dead behind him, and seriously to impair the market value of t second one which was hurriedly lm jpresbed Into the' service. The doctor had .-swallowed a teaspoonful of tincture of aconite, mistaking it for a harmless tonic which was kept upon the same shelf, a practice which he should have known was sure to issue in accidents of that sort id from which he should have warned ibis patients, instead of carelessly adopting it himself. The lesson of care in this prticular is so urgent, and unfortunately little heeded, as many a fatal Incident testifies, that all suitable occasions of afrcing it should be improved. Fojs all the cost of getting and main taining & gold reserve, whatever that cost aay be, the responsibility rests directly t poathe President himself, because the ruinous ourtailment of revenue could not xcre taken effect had he refused ; and be um it was by him, or at his detrire, that oic partisan scheme after another has u loroeil upon the Rttntion of Con grew since the session began. The Cabinet ad the majority In Congress have their kare of responsibility, of course, for they whald have checked the President's keadstroug unwisdom. The great body of Democratic leaders, managers and f omtatle have their responsibility also, car instead of protesting with vigor agadost fuloous partisan measures they fctvetpenttoantbs In demanding them, weclferatig that each in its turn was Kie and ly thing to save the coun try, and is buslng those who have Booted out their defeots. In short, a trty has been on trial, and has shown -what it can do in the government of the icouatry. All the cost, however great It imay be, must be oharged to the account the party as a whole, and to those who Ue represented or directed It. That the c-iarge In a heavy one everybody ls already it iw-are. Wli;if Arc Comln t To? Simntor Morgan of Alabama lias pre parcel a bill for tho reconstruction of the United Slates consular service. It is a severe blow, this bill, to tho good old doctriiiH thnt n public oClce is n private snap. Siuintor Morgan nctvmlly proposes that our consuls slmll bo put through mi examination for nil the world liko col lego xtudents or letter carriers. Ho thinks that the time hits conic when tho United Stntes consular sorvico will lmvo to niako n fctronuous effort, :md that n steady odd, not to ho outdone by tho consular service of other nations and not to show off slimnofully nnd scandalously in comparison with that Our commercial interests doninnd this, and we shall bo criminally negligent un less wo attend to it. Meantime tho branches in which tho candidato will havo to pass oxiuniiin tion, if tho Morgan bill becomes a law, aro firwt of nil tho common school stud ies. The embryo foreign consul must tivon know tho constitution of the Unit ed States, nud besides that must actu ally understand how to spell at sight As if this were, not tyrannical enough, ho must be' between tho oges of 5l and 45 and must be familiar with tho his tory of nil (ho world's most important treaties "from tho poaco of Westphalia to the present time." That is tough. Can no old political heeler who'has been voting tho boys straight for 40 years any longer got tho small recognition of a foroign consulship? What are we coming to? Tho last indignity, howovor, tho feather that breaks tho eamol's back, so to speak, will bo tho requirement that a candidato for consul must know at least ouo foreign language and pass examina tion therein. If tho day has como when an appointee to a foroign consulship must actually bo roquirod to understand tho languago of tho land ho is going to transact business in, thon indeed it is time to quit. What England Would Like In China. In Tho Cosmopolitan, Lord Wolseley says that unless China can at onco or- ganizo an efficient army of 100,000 men "under English or other foroign officers sho ought by Juno next to bo under the hool of her present invader. " Ho wants, does Wolsoloy, an Englishman to jump in right quick and save China. It must bo an Englishman becauso "wo seom to have greater aptitudo for that sort of thing than gentlemen of other nation alities." Dear, dear, how modest! But Englishmen aro nothing if not modest. Wolseley points with prido to how Englishmen saved Egypt and concludes that thoy could "savo" China in n sim ilar mnuner. Just so. But heaven savo tho saving. One would think that England's courso in Egypt would scarcoly bo a chapter which Englishmen would bo proud of. Her rule is an iron yoke, from which tho young khedive has tried, and tried in vain, to free his neck. Ho will never do it. When England sots her good sized foot down upon a weak na tion, sho sets it to stay. Look at India. Look at Matabolelaud in Africa. As India, Egypt aud South Africa now aro, so China will bo once she lots English men officer her army aud fight tho Japs for a consideration. Wolsoloy speaks out the dosiro of overy ouo of his fellow countrymen when horocommeuds China to reorganize hor army nnd officer it by Englishmen. Then eIio would whip Ja pan, he says. No doubt. But hotter trust to tho tender mercies of Japan than do that. China's last estate under the be novolent oversight of Groat Britain would bo worse than her first. "The powers" aro very ready with thoir ultimatum to Japan about what she Bhall not do to China. They hope, "tho powers" do, that tho United Statos will join them in thoir say. The prin cipal point in thoir dictum is that Ja pan shall not bo allowed to annex an Inoh of Chinese mainland. What is it tho blessed business of tho powers any how? They have not dono any of the fighting and have not furnishod n dollar or n man to win tho victory. China would be better off today and so would all tho rest of tho world if 6ho were handed over body and bonos to Japan. In some respects Japan is a moro oivilized coun try than England herself. Thore are now proseut in the Unltod States senate 87 members. Thero aro 43 Democrats, 80 Republicans aud 5 Populists. If the Republicans and Pop ulists acted together, they could over come the Demoorate. If tho Democrats nud one Populist hung solid together, they could defeat the Republicans nnd tho rest of tho Populists. But thore is no chance of anybody hanging to any body. Ono likes that tho recommondation of tho American congress to Great Brit' ain to arbitrate tho British Guiana boundary lino disputo with Vonozuela. It sounds ns though the United States woro getting to bo ono of "tho powers." Threo weoks after tho new diph theria remedy, nntitoxiuo, was intro duced into Now York oity deaths from that dlsoaso had fallen off 25 per cent. The pleasing, ponsivo melanoholy in tho pictured countonanco of Mr. Thom as C. Piatt can only bo compared to the soft gliut of sunsot upon tho waves. Queen Liliuokalaui as the sworn, faithful subject of a healthy and thriv ing Hawalian-Yankoo ropubllo is a most pleasing spectacle Eopublioans Eloot Thoir Candidate for Mayor of Philadelphia, MAJ0EITY LARQEE THAN HOPED. It In KXInmti 1 That Wnrwlek'a Vote 13x- ceods That or Kx-Govrrmir I'attlvm by fSO.OOO to OO.OOO nrcreiucil Iti.puliltenu Majority In Si-nntor lVimixi'n Wnrd. Philadelphia, Feb. 20. All indications point Vi tho election of Charles V, War wick as mayor of this city by a majority estimated at from 50,000 to 00,000 over Robert E. Pattlson, tho ox-governor of tho state. William J. Rouoy, tho Republican cnndldute for rocolvor of taxes, has evi dently been largoly cut by his party, but his mnjorlty over Colonel Sylvester Bon- uallon, tho Democratic nnd reform candi date, ls estimated at 40,000. Twelve police magistrates, eleven select councllmou and sovonty-nlne common councllmcn havo been elected, ond present indications are that tho Republicans havo theso ofllccs. Unusual Interest was manifested in the election, aud a remarkably largo vote was polled. It was ideal "Republican weather" mild and springlike, with a bright sun shining. Tho day was generally observed as a holiday, and tho streets woro crowded. CHARLES FRANKLIN WARWICK. Tho fight waged by tho two reform organ izations tho Municipal Leaguo and tho Citizons' Committee of Ninety-five was directed against tho councllmen whose records justified their "turning down." Tho most sanguino of the Republican leaders did not hope for a majority higher than 35,000 or 40,000, while Governor Pat tlson yesterday expressed himself as con fident that ho would bo elected by about 20,000 plurality. That tho Pennsylvania Democracy tho faction opposed to tho leadership of Na tional Chairman Harrity cut Pattison is indicated by tho fact that tho Twelfth ward, which usually goes Democratic, gavo Warwick 400 majority. The Municipal Leaguo made a strenuous effort to prevent fraud, and had watchers omployed in nearly every ono of tho al most 1,000 divisions in tho city. It nlso notified every election officer that any ono caught signing an election return before tho polls closed would bo prosecuted and sent to jail. In somo divisions it has been tho practice to prepare tho returns early in tho day, giving whntovcr majority may bo" mutually agreed upon, without tho voto usually cast. Tho returns came In very slowly, but in fifteen wards out of tho thirty-seven thero was a majority of 38,000 for Warwick. Theso snmo wards gavo Hastings 33,000 over Singorly in tho loto gubernatorial election, when tho total municipal major ity was 85,000. The greatest Interest was manifested in this election, ns It long sinco assumed tho shapo of a desperate light against tho Re publican "combino," headed by David Martin and Senator Charles A. Porter. Tho "throwing down" by these leaders of Senator Penrose just boforo tho conven tion, at which it was generally supposed he would bo nominated, created a great deal of disaffection among Republicans, nnd led to tho open breach between Sonator Quay and the leaders of tho "combine," From that time it was thought that Quay would give his support to Mr. Pattlson, but tho overwhelming majority rolled up by tho Republicans yesterday clearly dem onstrates that Mr. Quay decided to sacri fice his porsonal feelings to tho good of his party, and turnod In for the support of tho ticket. Mr. Warwick received tho returns at Mayor Stuart's ofllco, and expressed his great satisfaction at tho result, though somewhat surprlsod at tho large figures. Mr. Pattlson remained at his country homo ot Ovorbrook, and rccolvcd tho re turns over a special wlro, Tho roturns from tho Eighth ward Sen ator Penrose's ward show a majority for Warwick of 1,007. Hastings' majority in tho ward last November was 1,898. IN OTIIEU PENNSYLVANIA CITIES. Governor Hasting Did Not Leave tho Cup Itnl to Cast His Voto. Harrlsburg This city has novor seen a less oxoltlug municipal election than that of yesterday. A light voto was polled aud comparatively llttlo Interost was taken by either party. Business was practically suspouded at tho capltol, as, with few ex ceptions, tho heads of departments and their aMletaute went home to vote. Gover nor Hastings, howover, was at his post, his candidates at Bellefoute being sure of election. Lancaster The election here was for councllmen nud school directors. The Re publicans curried overy ward but tho Eighth. Thoy elected 34 out of 27 com mon couucilmen and tho selectmen in tho Fifth, Sixth and Seventh wards. Tholuttor has always been Demooratlo. Each party elected six school directors. Tho proposi tion to Increase the city dobt $170,000 wus defeatod. Tunkhunnook A light vote has boon polled in this county, owing to tho bud roads. The election of E. J. Jordan and James II. Codding, Republican candidates to fill tho unexpired torni of Myron B. Wright In tho present congross nnd tho full term lu tho Fifty-fourth congross, re spectively, ls assured. Pittsburg Tho oleotlon horo passod off quietly, with a light voto cast. Tho only contest of any consequtneo was that over tho lssuo by tho city of $1,750,000 worth of bonds for street improvements, water ex tension, sewors, oto. Tho Indications are that the bond issue has been agreed to by at least 15 to 1. Sunbury Tho Republicans in Sunbury and Kuit Sunbury boroughs havo olectcd a majority of councilmou. The other bor ough offices aro divided Sunbury defeated the proposition to increase the school debt i r. ' by ft) vote. Sunbury Tteil for elo trie lights. Ha.leton Tho vote In tbtc clt, ls very oliMo, but tho Indications ore that tho fol lowing having lioon elected; Altmlllcr (rep.) for mayor, (J reveling (rep.) for treas urer, Jacobs (dem.) for controller. The township ticket is Republican. Reading Reading defeated a proposi tion to borrow H)J0,OD0 for permanent im provements by a majority of J, 500. The Republicans will have a majority of nliout three on joint bulletin the new council. Chumbersbtirg The Republicans elected their borough ticket by 275 majority, and carried overy ward except tho Third, whore tho Democrats elected tho assessor and school director. Carlisle Tho Carlisle Democrats gain ono councilman, making that) body Demo cratic by a majority ot 0 t 3. Tho Repub licans elected thoir candidates for assessor and auditor. Erie Tho election in Erie for council and school directors resulted in a majority In both for the Republicans. Tho govern ment is entirely Republican now. Wllkosbarre Francis M. Nichols was re-elected mayor of Wllkesburro by 000 plurality. Ho was a non-partisan candi date. AN INDIANA SENSATION. Legislators Clin'crd with Keeping Whisky on Tup While Talking; Temperance. Indianapolis, Feb. 20. Whllo tho house of representatives was dlscusslnc iso Nich olson temporanco bill, a bombshell was ex. ploded by Mr. Jackson, of Carroll county. Speaking to galleries which vwcrr flllod with friends of tho bill from ah over tho stuto ho exclaimed dramatically: "You say this houso ls not subsidized, and you get angry when you aro charged with it. No wonder you ratso your hypo critical eyes in horror. Hon; you nretalk Ing tills temperance legislation to theso good peoplo In the galleries, and all tho time thero ls a barrel of whisky In the basement of this stato houso which Is froo to tho members on this floor." Pandemonium reigned Immediately and personul encounters were with difficulty avoided. There wero crios of "Provo It," nud Mr. Jackson continued: "Iropeatjust what I said. And now you want to hush mo up. There is a larrel of whisky down there, and it was furnished you by tho whisky leaguo. You aro shackled by It," Mr. Jackson claimed he had been in vited to partnko of the whisky, and when tho uproar had subsided n committeo of three was appointed by tho speaker to lo cato tho barrel and report. Pardoned by Michigan's Governor. Lansing, Mich., Feb. 20. Governor Rich, upon recommeudatlpn of tho pardon board, Issued a pardon yesterday for Har old O. Henderson, convicted of burglary ond sentenced to threo years' imprison ment. Henderson is a civil engineer, n graduate of Yalo and has wealthy parents lu California, who have not heard of their son's disgraco. Henderson, while calling upon a married womuh, was attacked by hor husband.aud lu his eagerness to escopo iumned throuirh it wlnrlnw TTn l. his possession tho woman's watch, and tho nusDanu nail htm arrested for burglary. For fear of blasting tho wlfo's reputatlun Henderson would not oxplaln ills presence in tho house, aud was convicted. Ho has served two years of his term. Deserted Their Vessel Through Tear. Savannah, Feb. 20. Tho eutiro ciew of tho schooner .Tnnnv Thrinina frr,, h.,im moro, loft tho vessel yesterday and sought iuu pruiucuou oi uniteu statos (Join missinnnr f!nnnnllv MMm ft,-o unUr. t.,t... that they aro in fear of death at tho hands ui v usi, jiauj uuuer, unit roluso to return to Baltimore on tho vessel, us ho has threatened to kill ono and to violently treat tho others ns soon as tho schooner gets to sea. Tho schooner may havo to get a new crew. Tho niinfnln t.l onilnT-a claim, give them no protection. Shipwrecked Crew Landed. Queesstown, Feb. 20. Tho Cuuard Hue steamer Catalonia, which arrived horo vesterdav from Itnatnn mnnrii ti,nt tho 18th Inst, tho Norwegian bafk Lind- biij-, tupiuiu reierson, was sighted dis abled. One of tho Catalonia's lifeboats was sent to hor assistance and rescued hor captain and crew, who were brought to this city. Ilaltlmore Hanks Swindled. Baltimore, Fob. SO.-William Crozlor, of tho firm of H. S. Lanfuir & Co., who committed suicide a few weeks ago, is found to havo swindled throe banks put of several thousand dollars each by hypothe cating receipts for a stock of canned oys ters, which was in reality corn, etc. Murderers Get a Itespite. JEFFERSOX ClTV.Mcv. Pel, on Th . ornor has respited Henry Kaiser and Jacob avium, who wero to nang tomorrow for tho murder of Stockman Brown. This additional time is clvnn hv thn in order that thoy may prepare for the Duimiiii uruuui wnicn inns to them. Death or General John L. Swift. BoSTON.Fob. 20. doputy collector of customs at this pert! muu mat uignt oi uoart uiseuse. Ho was for years a popular Republican campaign Orator. TO not be deceived. -L This brand of White Lead is still made by the "Old Dutch" process of slew corrosion. It is a standard brand of Strictly Pure White Lead The recommendation of "John T. Lewis &Bros." to you by your merchant is an evidence of his reliability, as he can sell you cheap ready-mixed paints and bogus White Lead and make a larger profit Many short-sighted dealers do so. i,t?r, cL?s-rNat'nd Lead Co 's Pure White Lead Tinting Colors, a rarmund can S a K-Pouml keg of Lead and mix yoV own P'- Saves time and annoyance In matching shades, and Insures the best paint that It if possible to put on wood, v 1 X 11 Send us a postal card and get our book on paints and color-caro, Yreej 1 will c?obabW wve you a good many dollars. Pr"ably JOHN T, LEWIS & BROS. CO., 1'hlladelphla. A Specific i a remedy Hint will remove n particular disease rather than any other. DANA'S Snrsnparilln is a specific for all diseases having their origin in Impute Blood; or those in which the cleaning of the Blood means good -by to the disease. These comprise nearly all the ills human flesh is heir to. Rheumatism, Catarrh, La Grippe, Malaria, arc all constitutional dis eases of the blood. Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Constipation, Liver Complaints, Kidney Diseases, all cause Impure Blood. Purify the blood and the disease goes out of the system with the impurities. SARSAPARILIA The Kind that Cures is the most thorough, energetic, yet gentle blood purifier known. It is not we alone who say this ; those that use it do. C. R. BARNES, of BEACH POND, Wayne Co., Pa., had Erysipelas two successive springs ; culminating in a severe attack of Eczema. The burning and itching was intense, and the presence of both these blood diseases showed how full of impurities his system must have been. D A N A' S cleaned his blood thoroughly. He says it took five bottles of DANA'S Sarsaparilla to do it; but it was done. That was what he was after. See that you get DANA'S. n&vo yon BoreTbraat, Pimples, Copper-Colored Spots, Aches, Old Bores. Ulcers In Mouth. Ilalr FaUlnK? Write Cook Remedy Co., S07 Ma onlcTemple,Chlcnno,IlI.,for proofs of cures. Capltnl8500,000. l'aticntscurednlneyenrs nijomlayountyiridwelllOXKrm 1317 Arch St. Phila. Pa. R PtllCnU Kidney. Ulnddcrl ULUUU UIUMIV mill S.wnl,. I 111 I BenNeM etireil in tnlHl.lni-M iti..,n,w.u ll'lociH.SIiiii IINt-nnt-N. Ncrvoim Dclillllvl I nnd ICrrnrx at oulli, I,oh ol'l'oivrr nmli Strictures OoCuttiuB) Cured for u llfe-l time. 1 Lost niniilinod nnd Sinnll Shrunken Or-B dins f ully Restored. g SSclentillc method never falls unless! easels beyond human aid. llellef atB once, and you feel llkonman among! men In mlml and body. All losses! checked Immediately and continued I Improvement. Kverv obstacle toB napoy marneu nie removed. -Nerve force, will, energy, brain power,! Wbeil faillni? nr nm c.ulnrori I...B Ithe combined N1!V ireaimpnt. vioi i, a ml J abuses nnd excesses, reclaim your manhood ! . . 13 overworn, early errors, 1U-I health and excesses In married lira rminl I your strength. Don't despair, even if in thel lost staees. Don't bo discouraged, If quaclc6l have robbed you. 1 will prove to you that! S"w" nuciiws ttuu iiunur sun exisc Kenan nve ¢ ntamDs for honir "P3riTTir.'hol I only Medical book exposing quacks (no matter! what tbey advertise tp save themselves froml exposure) their tricks and devices, calling! themselves Celehrfttpri and fnmnna frlvlnr. frcl advlca and guarantee, charging enormous! IiJti3 iur cneap, poisonous drugs, ana there I oy rulnlnc thousands. IlniirM s tn a ir.ven I Blngs, 6-&30. Wed. and Sat. Kve'gs, 6-ft!0. Bun.,1 nuuee ah amiciea wun dangerous and Iuuirocas uwn, Duuum can ior examination.! Dally, from o-l. Wed. and Bat. eve'gs. 6-9, and! sun..B-l3. Wrlteorcnll. Treatmentby mall! AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT THE OLD RELIABLE SPECIALIST 329 N 15th St Below Callowhlll, d&D a. WW CU Philadelphia, Pa! Thirty years' Continuous Practice In all special disease) of bath sexes. Dr. Lobb guarintees a radical and perma nent cure of Impotence Diseases ol the Blood, Skin, Nerves, Bladder and Kidneys, resulting from Excess, Sell-Abuse, Imprudenco or Inheritance, restoring the systom to its normal condition, building up tne constitution and bringing baclr. Health and Manly Vigor, ohanglng the weik ana wretched into hearty, strongmen. Consultation and nxfinllnatlnn traa nnri strictly confidential Hemomber that in Buuauiuiig r. tiooo you are getting the uenefltof his thirty years' continuous prac tice as a specialist Offloe hours, dally antl Sundays, from B a. m. to 3 p. m. and B to 9 evenings, wend for free book on Errors ol Youth -tod obsoure diseases ot both sexes. Lager ant Finest, Purest, Healthcst. Chris. Sckmidt, Agt 307 West Coal St., Shenandoah. WholeBalo agent for Ftlgtiiii'i Rcwtiki I. Ju Expert Lager aid Stazer Pile Beer, No finer made. rine llquora and Olrarg lSUBouth lUlalit. PilsnerBeers orecastfor 1895 Itor Shenandoah and Vicinity. Vair trade winds, with Increasing; velocity In nil branches of bus iness, followed by frequent showers of Dollars Into the coffers of the IlEUALl) adver tisers. ShowerofDollars Everybody in Shenandoah looks to the columns of For an advertisement of anything- worth briug-ing- to the notice of the public. They rarely waste time over other papers. Do you see the point? ..The Moral. Is that if you have any induce ment to hold out to the 17,000 residents and the throngs of strangers constantly isiting tne largest town in Schuylkill you should use the columns of the HeraIvD. Not only does it guarantee the widest publicity, but its rates are proportionately low. Printing The reputation of our job department for neatness and despatch is well known, as the amount of work turned out will attest. We have just added to this department, all of the latest and neatest faces of type, mak ing it one of the most complete job offices in the county. If you are in need of this class of work leave your order with nTheH eralc Market St., btw. Lloyd and Coniro. To be in the b