THE QUEEN'S PETS. VICTORIA' COWS, IWHiS, CATS AM) !K"1M, DKKU. t i Ttir "nnnmerahln l'linsnrrj She le rivra Krom Highland! ntlo JliT "lalesty Is mi Amu tciir Agriculturist. THE Queen of England has tiii-co favorite dogs that accompany lirr wherever sh" goes, to Hal-i- moral or to Osborne, writes Frank rope Humphrey, in the Ht. Louis ltepuldic. They are Hoy, n Mack nml Inn colli"; Spot, a fnt nml Tint n.ivt inn lai-l i- li.mif i f nl f.iT lriiir. nml Marco, n pretty HttU-koUU-ii drown I Hint.. ' j l'hu funu'lv arc r.ll dog lovers. Tie! Cnnce Consort hud his favorite dugs, j The only niemln r who seems to linve j n special fondue tor cuts in the I'riiieees of WnU'. Years i.r, when I In- family pawl thru- surntmrs nt. Aliergeldie Cn.ttli', she drought her cnti ; v ith lit r, toft, Huffy, white Persians, imt charming of pi ts. Her cuts were j n;i object of interest nt the railway i r-tut ion nt He.lliiter, where they arrived j j'A u com'ortVv.c e.ii Tim- roni.'tiin.'s wandered off tlie , Ale rpi Idie grounds, nnd n Hiilinorul ; ! tH-r who befriends nil stray nnd J houseless creature, saw one dny n long haired white ent furtively skulking nt tlu.' border of the wood, not venturing fnvSh, though apparently hungry. After judicious convince, supplemented with proff. red milk mid other viand, the little creature ventured to npproneh. For :i dny or two she was fed, nnd then ii v.t.h noised al road that one of the cats o' the Princess of Wales was miss ing, nn l the wrndiTer was identitiid m hi-rs, to the relief of the special le.uid wbj had the cuts in charge mid wan held responsible for their welfare. - Tn tko pink wst o? the entitle, be nido ft pleasant walk, is a life-size bronze of Noble, one of the Ojieeu's favorite collie w hose photographs Hud A place in her 'Leaves." Anritarxme mains C:pon the grauite pedestal is the fol lowing iniicriptioii ; . NOBf.K. For mor" than llfteen years His , ; fnvoritp collli' ami ili-nr ariil Jh it h Till I conipiinlon of (.Mteen Vii'toria. - ' f)iil at H ilmnral. lsth S-.t., !SS7 ''Noble y unnie, by o.nuru uolilo, , I too; I; Fnlthtnl ooaipanion, syff.pntUotie, true." ; Truly, rrvh Sir Walter Scott, il is rvell n dog'a life is short. For if he lived to the ftge of a man and then died, what should we do? Beside the unnie wnlk a amull iron tuMut nmrku thu grave of j ... TSHO . n Ciiinese dog brought from the East by the Dukpnud Duchess of Connaugbt iu 1870, He lived but a short time, and "looked just like a little blnck bear," oaid a Balmoral gillie, who kuew him. Sharp is the ono other dog whose photograph is iu the "Leaves," and a reminiscence of Sharp may not be out of placo. Slurji's faithfulness was incorrupti ble to tliittery, aud teuiptutiou could not win him from the post of duty. One of the actors iu the little comedy ' told me the story. Hlie, with uuotlu r maid, both of Deoside, had gone to John Brown's room at Windsor (Justle on some little mutter of mutual inter est, but (lid liot tlud him iu. Sharp was there, however, and gave them a welcome as warm as was consistent with his senso of responsibility. As John Brown was not in, they de cided to leave note, and availed themselves of his writing materials. Having writteu, they turned to go. But Sharp, who had keen lying by the jbed, instantly sprang iu front of the door and, with a growl subdued but iguiflcaut, intimated that they would ovrxs vvcTonu. oot lie permitted to depart. Having meddled with hi friend's goods, how hiil he know whnt obstructed property they might be conveying away in their pockets? iTsi f3s MIS I'RKTTV, THE I'lMPKIlTV OF TITE QrEK; ; AND T(IC ilAt.MonAI, nt'TOt!! HOLD. In vnin they entreated nnd flattered i S'aurp was ininiovnble, and there was nothing for it but to sit down and wait till John Brown or some one else came to their rescue. An hour hud pr.'sed when a page appeared also looking for John lJrowu. To him the maids appealed for relief. He seized llmrj) bv the collar, told the girls to run, thcl throwing the dog across the room he, too, sprang out and shut the door, leaving the baflled erenture howling with rnge. John Brown afterwards told them that if they had not touched anything Sharp would not have interfered, and if they Imd persisted in going out, he would inevitably have seized upon them. It is the business of somp one of the footmen to see that the dogs are en grande tennip, i. e., bathed, combed, brushed, polished,, with hair parted in a straight line where partnble from head to tail, before they enter the presence of their royal mistress. Hut if, after all this is accomplished, the footman does not keep a strong 1 the (cr.r n rr.v hand on the dog, nine times out. of ten he breaks away and is off for that roll in the dirt in which dog nature so delights, and tlr.i toilet is all to go through again. On the walls of the Glasj,alt Ship! are photographs of many of the Queen's dogs taken singly or in groups. And I recall one largo engraving of "The Queen and tho Princess Beatrice With Their Faithful Friends." There are dogs stag hounds- be longing to her Majesty that live at Balmoral tlie year round. These are kept in kennels near tho house of Don ald Stewart, the head keeper. There are two only of perfectly pure breed, but these, 1 am told, are ns tine speci mens as are found in Great Britain. Speed speaks in their every line; in their slender, lithe bodies, their long, slim legs, even iu their sharp-pointed faces. Full breeds stjd half-breeds, they are all gentle creatures eager to ho caressed much more gentle than the ordinary kennel-bred dogs, astbey are much petted. They are let out daily for exercise, and in the deer stalking season their services are re quired to track the wounded deer. Their food is largely oatmeal or "pur ridge," as tlnit of Highland-brod dos should be. Near the kennels is the caqje of liia eagles, a building twenty feet long, perhaps, partially opened at the sides and netted, but solidly roofed. Hero live a pair of goldeu eagles. They were taken wht u young by a keeper from a nest near Abergeldie Castle. They are magnificent birdH, measuring six feet from tip to tip, untamed and uutumable, though their whole life lias passed in captivity. No ono dares to euter tha cage where thoy are. When food is tobe put in or the cage cleaned, they are shut off in one part by a slid ing partition. Their food is raw meat, venison or rabbit. The meat must be freidi ; there is nothing'nf the carrion bird in their natures, Oil inquiring their mimes I regretted to learn that thene imperial creatures are nameless. The Queen oftti comes to see t In: in , and the pleasure the chil dren tako iu them is insatiable, u plea sure deliriously flavored vitu a sense of their ferocity. The wild deer sometimes become quite tnme iu the winter mouths, and this season have been iu the habit of comiug down twice a day to the keeper's lodge to be fed and petted and caressed. "But yon will have to have thiMo shot," I said. "Oh, us the spriug conies on they will go back to the herd and we shall see no more of thein," was the reply. On the wall of thu lobby at the Dnu zig Hliiel hangs a small sketch iu colors of a deer. It is a portrait of "Vic toria," a pet kind of thu Queen. She fouud ker when very young iu a gravel pit up Olcnmick as she was driv ing one day in 1H77. The small creature was brought home in the Queen's car riage and installed as a pet. She lived until 1887. Oif the pretty collar that encircled her uuvk were the iuitials "V. K." . Highland ponies are kppl for the hills, and these are tnrned out in the winter. At one time spyeral nmlps wpro importpd to Balmoral. Thpy had served iu the Egyptian campaign, nnd v.ep bought by her Majesty. It was thought they might servo In the place of inmica, but the experi ment was a failure. " A shoe on one of the outbuildings nt the Olnssalt Shiel is the sole trace they have left behind. At the Abergeldie Mains is kept the Queen's herd of polled Angus cattle. There are two varieties of polled (horn less) cattle in Scotland, the shaggy Gallowny and tho smooth Angus or Aberdeen. Tho Intter take their name "Angus" from the old district of An gus now comprised in Forfnrshire. They were called "doddies" in Angus and' "humlies" in Beechnn. When Dr. Johnson made his celebrnted tour iu the western islands in 1773 he found black, hornless cattle in Skye, which he remarks, are "called by the Scots humble cows ns we call a bee n humble bee that wants a sting."' The Queen began her herd nt the Abergeldie Mains in 1HH1. Previous to this she had personally inspected n more extinct but valuable herd nt Til liford, Aberdeenshire. One of the first purchases wns a heifer, the "Pride of Aberdeen 24th," for 123 guineas, little over 8rt."i0. In 1 S7;J the Queen had desired to bp enrolled as on ordinary member of the Highland Agricultural Society. There are no favors shown royal exhibitors at the shows of this or any other Brit ish Agricultural Society. They enter on n level with other members, and by no menus always come out first. Shortly after the formation of Her Majesty's herd she presented a splendid challenge cup for the first best animal of the polled breeds exhibited at the shows of the Cromar, Upper Deeside, and Donside Agricultural Society. Competitors are limited to those bred in the district embraced by the socie ty. The Queen is also tho patroness of the Tolled Cattle Society. The herd at Abergeldis numbered about sixty in. tha bogiuuiug of IH2. At CUi'Klm.is ninetoo'i fat cittlo w?re $. At the Highland Society's show at Inverness the same year the Qnesa was a large exhibitor of polled ADlt, and the Balliudallock Challenge Cup for the best cow of tho polled classes was won by "Miss Pretty," who has been several years in the royal kerd, though not bred at Abergeldie. Her Majesty also took prizes for Princess Irene H and "Pretty Teggy," both home-bred snimnls. The morning I saw Miss Pretty nt tho Abergeldie Mains, the grieve, Mr. Cobb opened the door of her cot tkat she might exhibit ker beauties more fully in the open yard. Sho is a large, glossy coated, compact animal, whose lines form almost a parallelogram sup ported on four ckau legs, and with a handsome keail from out of which looked a pair of full, gentle eyes; uo sign of bone or high kips, which is as it should be in a breed devoted to beef. Th pi monarch of the herd fixed a somewhat malevolent eye upon me bm I lifted my arm and he suddenly cangbt sight of my plaid and knew nic for a stranger. He had previously been placidly chewing his cud. Ho does not like strangers. Happily lie was securely tied. Nevertheless 1 willingly backed out of his roval pre. enco. I asked how ke would make his attack, having no korns, and was as sured he could "toss" quite ns well without them. Prince Arthur and another whose name I have forgotten are handsome, low-standing, broad-backed animals, weighing about 1500 pounds. These had large, wild, expressive eyes. A long line of pedigreed cows stood in one byre, one of them, Princess Ireno II., the prize winner. Therowas also a "Pride of Aberdeen. This isa very celebrated strain. Yearlings in a pen came up to in vestigate the visitor's glove w ith their tongue, pretty, geutlu creatures, en tirely black, as thu highbred polled Angus must be. The byres and various compnrt ments at the Abergeldie Mains are like those of tho ordinary furm, with more of the finish of tlie modolarrauge ments of tho Prince Consort's Shaw furm nt Windsor. The farms consists of about 170 iter os. The house nnd byres are not far from Abergeldie cas tle. The grieve lives iu a farmhouse near the kitchen gardens which supply the daily vegetables for Balmoral Cas tle. The Queen not infrequently loans thu house at the Mains to some friends for the summer. The dairy at Balmoral is not to Vie compared with that of Windsor. It is an oi'tagou of plain granite, surmoiii.t eu by a dome-like roof. Below the dome is a row of small stained-glass w '.udows that can be dropped. Beneath are largo windows that can also bo opeued. Open gratings in tho floor admit the air from that direction. So, as we see, the dairy possesses the first requisite for the manufacture of good butter, viz., pure air. The floor is of tiles. A wide marble slab encircles the walls for the pans, which are of plain white lottery. Iu the ctuter is a stationary table of Pa terhead granite (mottled) on an oak stand. Connected with the dairy are two cottages, one of them devoted to thu dairy maid's use. There is a room with a largo set kettle in which the milk pans are boiled, and here also are the presses for the skim milk cheeses which are made iu the winter for thu consumption of thu cottagers. Crossing a small court behind tkese cottages we enter the byre where the dairy cows are feeding, munching con tentedly the oat straw which with tur nips comprises tkeir winter diet. Them nre thirteen pure Ayrskires. A large, kigk, comfortable byre, well-kept aud sweet. The name of each cow i over ker stall. The dairymaid assists in the milking, she told me. Ho there are lands where the dairymaid still et its as in the old poetry. And no dairymaid of poesy ever made more delectable butter than she who presides nt the royal dairy at Balmoral; hard, sweet, nnd of a' fine grain. It is molded into pots of various nizos, each with a crown in tho centre. Her Majesty anprpniatjs kr ex cellent butter, nnd not infrequently visits ker dairy nnd ckeers the heart of her dairymaid by expressing that appreciation. She "is "always nice, gracious nnd kindly." Tho dairy is at the cast of the castle nnd is distinct from the home farm, which is at the west. At the home farm Rre kept tho ponltry which supply eggs for the royal table. The cottagers, too, find a market nt the castle for their fresh laid eggs, for which they are paid nfter the de parture of the Queen, when the accounts nre made up nnd which amount to pretty little sums. Hip Sugar Trpp, The sugar maple of New England has n rival. It grows in the Andes of Chile nt a height of from 8000 to 4."00 feet above the sen. It is a curious variety of that most useful, wonderful tree, the palm, whose varieties nlso give ns dates, and coco, nnd coconniits, and fan. This palm is not slim nnd graceful like most kinds wo see iu tropical pictures. It is about fifty feet tail, with n very thick trunk, enlarging iu diameter from the ground np to about half its height, nnd then tapering ngnin to the top, whero its long leaves spread out. These sugar palms produce great quantities of sweet sap, which, when boiled down, makes both molasses aud sugar of a peculiar but delicious flavor. On one estate the trees grew in such numbers that once it was determined to count them, but after counting sev crnj kttudrcd thousand, and more than half remaining uncounted, the tudc was given up. Whnt "lnrks" it must be for chil dren when "sappiug" tiriie nnd "tt1ar iii i off'' come Toiud! But theCkilosni rio not collect tke snp in tlie way tke "Sew F.nglnud laruieTi CoTfoet sap from tlie maple tree. No; instead of bor ing small boles in tke trunk the palm is cut down and beheaded of its crown of beautiful leaves, and then the sap begins to flow from the upper end and keeps on flowing for months. Every morning a tkin slice is cut off to pre vent the wood frijm hardening and formiug a crust through which the sap could not flow. THE S. OAB r-ALM. A good treo will yield nearly 10C gallons of sop. A very queer thing b the fact that tho sap will not run il the tree lies with its head downwurd. It will only run upwards! St. Louii Ilepublic. Can't Miss a Uattlesiiake, The writer saw an Indian kill a rat' tlcsuake iu a very peculiar inauner recently. Tho rattler was about ten feet from the Indian, who was resting the rifle on his knee, apparently tak' iug aim. Wheuover ho moved the weapon a few inches thu snake would move around and get exactly in lino with it. Then to show how tho thing was doue the ludian moved about the snake iu a circle, aud tho reptile moved as if his tail was a pivot, always keeping hit head and body in line with tke gnu. Tke Indian then agreed to bandage his eyes aud shoot the snake in the mouth. The writer bandaged , tho Indian's eyes, aud, holding the gun by his side at arm's length, the Utter pulled the trigger and the ball entered tke snake's mouth and passed tha wholu length of its body. "How did yon take aim?" was tho query. "Tho snake, ku take aim," was the veply. We have talked with an old kn liter on this proposition, aud ke claims tkat a rattlesnake will always range direct ly iu lino with a gun or stick pointed at it. Curtou (Xev.) Appeal. Obeying Orders. Fullacask (waking with a start media uocto and hearing step sounds in kis bedroom) "Wko's there if Speak I Who's there?" HoarsA Whisner From Dia Duplr. noss "For good il oss sako, husk! 'I'hprM'M A lmrivlnF just innn jl.aivn stairs. I'm a policemau, and if you'll seep quiet anil not sinne a ugui i u nab kiut in two twos." Fullacask obeys, and the wkisperer, whinh him mtnji iu MILaa amltliu .1 ..n stairs and out of back door with kis uooty.- ftck Me Up. KEYSTONE STATE COLLINGS. EDUCATINU TUB RED MAN. till CARLISLE SCHOOL II ATTSMiKD BY 600 ixniAss. CASt.tii.i Tha fourteenth annual report ofCspt. R.ll. I'ratt. auperlntrmlont of tin Carlisle Indian Training school shows 0A p-.tplli at the iJliool st present. 3!7 boys and 209 girls. Thets represent 43 tribes. Dur ing the year A died, 240 returned to their homes and 200 remain upon farms In Pennsylvania for the winter. Six graduat ed during the year, msklnc 09 grsiluates since the school was Cstabl liked, Tlieesrn Inns for tha year were: Boys, l3 81 ; girls, l'i7U(. Tbelr isvlnfci were: boys, fllliM; girls, (32 PI. There are S Indian pupils attending; Dickinson college. 8o great wss the ilea and for Indian boys and girls upon latms this summer that only half th requests could be met. cash ron titAciisns' imtiti t?s. If r.RitBi so The .State superintendent of public schools announces tbat the teachers' Institutes throng hunt the State nre progress ing finely. It Is probable the money re ceived from the county treasurers to aid In the holding or tb Institutes will not fall fat short oft 14.0m), white some .'3, 000 may be expeeied from ether sourcrs. If the at tendance continues as heretofore there will be over 4U.00U spect' .ors piesent.Tbe cost of I structlon will Kg-sregate something like t.'U.OOO and there will be other expeflses to the amount of 110,000. The members them selves, In dues, etc., Hire nearly ti,00U two mex Kii.t.xn. if azu.ton Patrick Mal.siiRlilin anil Da vid Jenkins, two rock miners employed In tin l.aiisfonl colliery, were Instantly killed by a prematura explosion. They bad pre pared s blast, nnd th fuse banting slowly they supposed it hsd eone out. Just ns they reached the place the blast went oil snd the men were torn and mangled In a hor rible manner. WILL FROTKCT Tlir. i)V1L... V.!niN'!ToN l'ilte a number of crack fl-ld shots In Mils welkin lvs ilccmV'l nfl to iiave u"? Miming' this season and will endeavor to Induce others to do so. It has been many years since quail were so scare os the v ore this season, and these gentle men desire to piotect what is remaining iu order that they msy not be tntlrely exter ruinated. Thomas Dcnxti, of Scolldale. a bookkeep er for J lis I'rick Company, died st I'ti'iiii town Saturday night of spinal meningitis. A week befnie Durkin went to I'niontown to marry ilary Heuttv. While overheated he drank Ico water, bet a me 111 aud the fatal malady developed. Tiif largest sheriff" sale of realty held In Mnnlsomerjr county for many years will take plat e at Norrlstown November when 3! properties will be sold by Hheriff stiinpson. ljulte a number of tlie proper ties are farms lliat are being sild ou fore closure. At Huntingdon robbers broke a largs ula-s in tlie show window of J. M. Land s hardware store and stnleguns and cutlery valued at IOO, Mr. Laird shot st tbe thieves but missed them. This is the fourth tints his store has been rubbed within a few months. F.mma lhvnvNVN, the colored nurse girl under arrest fur murdering a baby by forc ing concentrated lys down its throat, at I'n totitosn, has confessed to tho crime, saying a Contiellsville girl bad to.d lierthut lye was KOcd to quiet I'retlul babies. (iroitiir. Mi C'iika, an nil tank builder, was found iincoiisc oils with a gash In his head beneath a bridge at Duller .Saturday night, Httisslive, but slill iiiiionscious. ile prob ably fell from tlie b idge. Om Wednesday morning the Sharon pnst oflice sst'e co iibliiaiion (ailed to work. The sale livid the street box keys ns well as Ilia cash, l etters ren ained Iu the boxes. Tbe safe was drilled open, .I.tcon IUrokr, an old farmer of Khensn go township near New t asile wss lending a cow when tbe omnia! became suddenly mad snd attacked hint, goring him so bully that he cannot live. Ksv. Katiikr (Ir.oRni Mkvrr, pastor of St. Michael s I'stholio church at Kryburg near I lanoii, sceidently swallowed a tooth ache curj and nearly died Munday. At Now ('satis, a 5-year-old daughter of James W. Clark was probably fatally burn ed by her clothing catching lire, while she was nursing a pile of rubbish. Jossm Swkfny, 14 years old, tried to got on a railroad train at Natrona and fed under tbe wheel. 11 died in 10 minutes. I!kv. 8. V. Colt of Wyalusing.aged tCiand the lather of 21 chiltrtu, was married again Saturday. "Tobiiv" Pitzkr, a P. A L. E. brskemsn was killed by tlie cars at New Castle. Smalm-ox has been otilclslly declcred pideiuic at Heading. OV.FATTISON'8 PROCLAMATION Fennsylvsnians Called to Obati ve s Sa ot Thanksgiving sod travsr. (iov. Faltiaon Wedne-ilay issued tbe fol lowing: "In grateful acknowledgement ti God, the beneficent and the all wise, tin tribute of praise and tbankrglvii g Ilia peo ple are jsutly due for the never ceasing stream and constan'ly varied bounty of His munificent providence. Now, therefore, 1, Hubert K.Pultlfon, governor of the common mi alt It of Pennsylvania, iu conformit) with the recommendation of the presiden of the Vniled Mules, do appoint 1 huraduy he 30th day ol November, in the yenrofoui t.ord one thousand eight hundred am ninety-three, uiailay o, thanksgiving auc Srayer. On tbat day lot all ai culur biuinest e nsHtiiileiI and let tin peoplo assemble iu their usua alaces of worship and with great rov trence and diligent consideration manil'i's' ;hmr general grslituile by praver and songs o prais lor Hod's benefits toward us as a eo ile and as individuals fur our securit) igainst pestilence, lor the seed -time and tin harvest, for I he health which has prevails within our borders, for thu abundant re sources of our fruitful laud, which. through His benediction will sgain fill our homes with plenty aud contentment. And let th Jay be marked by deeds of charity and kind remembrance of tbe poor," New Hampshire Curiosity, In Hillsborough County, N. IT., there is a solid rock with a channel seventy feet deep and thirty fcot wide tut through its side. A flight or rude futurul steps leads to the top, where here is natural pulpit aud pool for baptUui. Everything not fully consecrated to God It something the devil still but a claim on. LIKE CINOS 1ELLA. t Remsrkabls Career of -Dette" lllltno. How ,r- Laity Clairsrthy. e t- . . . nome peopie Rre norn mcity, om have luck thrust at them, and som never get a glimpse or It during theli lifetime. One of those born under a lucky atar wna "Bollo" Hilton. Shi was the daughter of a gunner at Woolwich arsenol, England. She in herited no wealth, but possessed whal could comtniind it beauty and good musical talent. She drifted to th London music halls, and while per forming behind the footlights capti vated the heart of William Frederick i.aot CLAscAni hv. I.o I'.Tcr Trench, heir to tho Irlsl Kurldom of Clancarthy. After a br.o: mqualritanre they wero niarr.el Here "Hello's" luck iretned to havi suddenly deserted her. Her husband lfrald that the Karl of Clancarth) would disinherit him, abandoned "Hclle" ami even sued for dlvorco. Hut "Belle's'' luck turned up aaln at (he opportune time, nnd not on! was a U'Teo of scpa-ntluti rofuseri tut f'le jiusbitnl nr.tl wlfo bccann reconcre'. rQn afterward thQ ole Karl 'died aud "Eeile" became Lao!f Clancarthy. - . . . , Lady Clancarthy, beside belni. wealthy, is one of the most beautiful wonK'ti In England. She lives hap (illy with her husband and her hotni Is a center of refinement. Her lean lyi her pique, and her musical powe. are attractions that make her partlei nvled by the proudest of EnglanJ'i nobility. , in ingenious l-.pelient When Sir Christopher Wren bull! iho town hall of Winds r, a fldcty neinber of the corporation, as the itoryiroos, Insisted that tho roof re lulled further support and wished di.it more phlars should te added. Vainly did Sir Christopher assure him (hat tho supposed danger wan linaiflnary, the alarm became In fectious, and the (jreut architect was finally worried Into nddlntf the de sired columns. Years rolled on, but In later times, when architect anil patrons had passed away, cleaning operations In tho roof revealed the fact that the supposed additional supports did not touch the roof by a couple ot Inches, though this was im perceptible to the gazers below. By this Ingenious expedient did Wren pacify his critics, whilo vindicating his own architectural skill to future) gcueratlons. T&EHE8ULT BT COUNTIES. tarty Pluralities In Pennsylvania To f ether With tha Official Figures on Stats Treasurer In 1891. The following table show the voles cast In each county of Pennsylvania for the Re publican and Democratic candidates for Sta'e Treasurer in lS'Jl and tha pluralities at Tuesday's election upon thesame office! In 1U Morrison, Republican, bad 54,377 plurality over Tilden, Democrat. lKfU. M'rs'n Til 'n Hep. Dem a.W 2..VW 139 H.'ISIT 17.781 3).00t) 3 001 2 Hi 1 1 2,W! 4.1! .'1.04'.!! 1,409' 8.577 3.470j M 7.2110 l'J.sHll I),0M fi.Sfl'l 4.410 S.l .l 2.SH.V a.5u0j .... 7.0W 7.27.-I. 1JB 2 072 2,;w.i i,rn 6,720 0,0.10; Toll lii'J oil 2U8 8.044 3.SH2! I 3l 2.7IW 8.4U7! tilll 7..17.1 S.titili 2,3U0 2.S73 a,7il L0. 4.144 3,12 ) 1,0 VJ 2.227 MS 1.H7D .'M4! l.Odil 0. '-'su J.I7I I.X32: 3,-VJI 4.H22 1 37J li.-llO HOKi 5.84H 3.4UO 3,000 W1 1.U73 1 lr) 0 014 ti.a.S 2,ii!)t; 4,3.' 4.770. 3U 4H: .Mil! 126.. .. 4.0S4 3 4 )2 1,200 I.04?i .... 85t) 1. Wi:i .1.221 1,H! 2,0.r)7 I.07o; 1.5s" 3.7L 1.002 2 400 3,72! 3.IVJ.V 1,0 0; 1.47; 1.700 .'0 8.541 0,Ul! 1,000 17.SU. 0,072 S.340 3..10.' I. Mtli 2.173' 4. IN 2.324; 2,32 5.(17'. ,7.012 '2,200 1.B 3.7011' 400.. .. 3,AV 4.377 I tiUO 2.171 L.W1 om 4 5te- 3,071' 2.013 1.1)31 I.UKtj 7i 747 S.5II7I 1,70) 10. lot' 10,740 6U0 I.LW 1,070 1 400 4 85H 7.77B '2,004 6,787 0,705 643, 2.00S 2 S44 450 101,073,410 52,142 310 tibU I 450 I.Sol 1.2S0 400 ,04."i 10.315 Mi 2.237 1.620 800: 3,570 2 Ills' 2,470; 0117 1,021)1 ... . 300 8,05.1 2 4K4 l,400i 4.900 2.315 2,H04 2.201 1.4113 HOO 2,000 2.420 1,281 1 2 880 2.433 1,400! 0,363 6.704 700 2,018 2.283 151) B.04S SOUO 2,500 1,780 1.404 600 0.258 9.027 740 Adams Allegheny Armstrong Hearer. Heilford ISerks Ills'r. Hrmlford Huuki duller Cambria (a melon Cm boil Outer Chexier Clarion Clearlield Clinton Columbia Crawford Cumberland Dauphin Delaware Klk Krid Kayeiie Forest Fran'iliu Kultnii (ireeue Huntingdon Indians Jelter-o.i Juniata I.ackuwuns Lands er I awrence Lebanon 1 .el l till Luzerne Lycoming McKeau Mt-ner Minim ..... .... Monroe Montgomery .... Montour Northampton ... Northumberland I'erry Phils Pik Potter KcbuylkiJI Snyder Homarset Hullivsn Hiuqiit'liaiiiia .... Tiok I'n ion Vensugo Warren Wasbiniiton .... Wsyua , Westmoreland..., Wyoming York..."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers