The Somerset JleraM. K;WARI) HTI.U Kl;!.r ami J"mprinr WEDSESPAT- ..July 25, WW. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. NATIONAL. von rnitiKXT, K.r.S. BEN J. IIAKKISON, OK lMilANA. KoR VICE PRESIDENT, HON". LEVI T. MORTON, or K' V'IKK. STATE. y.jaTOBS-AT-LA'K, Thomas Dolan, Lewii Pugh. IllCTRKT Eleitobs. John H. Twirt. IV Mm R. Grant '. J. .tin Wanainaker. '!. ''""'.J'- K,,VT- Hblx-rt P. John. IT. Iwvi.l . lark. Wm. Hamilton. H. " i- HmchwoQ. ; Johu S lleKiiilrv. 1. John C . lx' Jowiih R T. Coale. J'. Jeremiah K. Miller. ' W m H K!li.. -I- eonfe J. KluoiL i 10. 31. li J i. 11. Kdnar I1neh.it. -'- H"? mm. Kumiel 1- Kiiru. -I. mre hira. Jr. Kl..H.ri.-t. 24. P. S. Nfwmyi-r. w illiam toniK-11. i. John W. Walla,. William a. l-aviic . J. Minwvaiit. Peter K Bii'k.' J'M.!i T. J.inea, llcury H. BeeiiU:!. L. il. TruxeL JUDICIARY. II ImJKOF THEBl !'KE5!KXl KT. JAMES T. MITCHELL, of Philadelphia. COUNTY. FUR CON'iUK-iS, EDWARD TLI, of rianeniet ItotiKudi. fiiihjwt to the dccMon of the DLstrlet ( onference. F'R I.E'ilSLATl RE, NOAH S. MII.LKR, of JeunrrTwp. JA3. L. IT(,H. of Somerset Borough. FOR JI'KY CtiMMlSSIoSKK. KAMCEL It. VODER, of Stimycreek Tup. EuR 1-ixiR MIC F.TiR, ALEX. IH'STF.R, of Pomenn-I Tap. Jamks (i. Blaine w ill sail far New York .uirust it. Tim majority lor the Mills bill wan thir teen. An unlucky number. 'i.EVKi.AMi will write bis letter of acceptance- when lie ran Piwrc time from V I it inn I"ensioii vetoed. Evi.i.ami Hviiiabi'"l with the. Con federacy during the war iieouti.se it was for free tra.le. It now favors Cleveland for the same reason. I'oi r yearn in as lotijr a lime as the De mocracy can be trusted w ith the manage ment of public affairs in this country. Turn the rancals out ! (ieoin.k Alfred Tow she sn, one of the most fawinatini; writer of the day, is to v rite the authorized campaign biography f Iipvi P. Morton to accompany General lw Wulluev's life of Harrison. Tiioe I eniier-.its w ho express a belief that Cleveland w ill carry Michigan this fall by the unscrupulous use of the Jost office patroiiage should read w hat some of the leading IVmocrats are saying about the effect of the Mills bill in that Hate. It will destroy the principal in dustries of the State. A call has been isnucd by Chairman Cooper for a meeting of the Republican State Committee at the Continental Ho tel, Philadelphia, Wednesday, August Hth, for the ptirjKise of placing in nomi nation a candidate for Auditor General. Colonel Thomas 15. McCamant, of Blair county, w ho was appointed by Governor Heaver as the successor of Colonel A. Wilson Norris, deceased, w ill in all prob ability be the unanimous choice of the committee. Tin list is daily grow ing larger of Dem ocrats who have announced their deter mination to vote for Harrison and pro tection, and the Democrats are becoming Very nervous over tlwse signs that a tide lias set in against Cleveland that will sweep him and his fellow free traders into obscurity. The political horisson is bright w ith promise for the Republican jwrty, and these daily defections from the Jemocracy add to the liocs of the friends of American industries and Amer ican workingmen. The four Democrats who refused to Jiull in the traces and vote for the Mills bill came from the two great Sates, New York and Pennsylvania. The jxisition of the two Pennsylvanians Randall and rwiwden has no Sccial significance. Their State is safely Republican anyway, but it is deeply significant that the other two recruits come from New York. If t wo of the four I teniocratic Congressmen who could not be coaxed or bulldozed into voting for free trade come from New York, the fair inference is that the defec tion in the ranks of the party will be unusually large in that State. It is not iuiiortant w bether the iH'tnocratic jmrty -au oll its full vote or not in Pennsyl vania, but if it cannot do it in New York it is irretrievably lost. Four year ago the Republican free traders left the party and now it is in order for the protection democrats to mugwump. Can the Bel tdiazzar of the White House see the hand w riting ou the wall, and "catch on" to the meaning of the fact that one-half of 11 the Ikemocratic opposition in the House of Representatives came from his own verv close Stateof New York? Some of the Democratic papers express the fear that General Harrison is talking too much early in the campaign. The reason for their nervousness is apparent w hen the General's little njieecliea to the delegations that call upon him are exam ined. He never fails in the midst of praix-ful and earnest resjsinsc to enthusi astic utterances to direct the attention of those who call upon him to the leading issues of the campaign. He finds in ev vry case an opsrtunity to make referein-e to the advantages of home markets and to illustrate the principles of the protect ive system. In speaking to the citizens of Kokomo on Wednesday he Soke of the rapid development of the county and of the extended markets that came with this development, and said; "You may not notice the advantage of having borne market so much in the apprecia tion of the prices of the staple products of roar farms, but you w ill notice it in the exjiansion of the markets for those more perishable products which cannot reach a distant market ami must be con sumed near home. Is it not, then, time for you, as thoughtful citizens whatever your previous affiliations may have leen to consider the question, what legisla tion will most promote the development of the manufacturing interests of your county and enlarge the home market for the product of your farm T A man who Is all the time saying tilings like that is a very dangerous speaker for tl Demo cratic party, and as General Harrisons sj-eeches aru just now receiving a very wide circulation no wonder the Demo crats would like to silence him. As was generally expected, the Mills bill passed the House of Representatives Saturday, the vote being yeas, nays,14'.t. Ouly two Republicans votod for it Fitch, of New York, and Nelson, of Minnesota and only four Democrats, including Mr. Randall, who was not per sonally present, but was paired with a Democrat, voted against it. n the one amendment w hich was separately voted on, cotton tie, Gear, of Iowa, voted with the Democrats, but when it came to the bill as a whole, he returned to the fold. The sultstanlial unanimity of the two parties was forefe'iadowed by the debate and numerous votes on amend uients, but at Che opening of the session it did not seem probable. It is especially remark able that the Republicans should be so harmonious. On the Iemocratic side was the club of patronage, wielded-nn-blushingly for the bill. The administra tion championed it froni the start and resorted to all available means to bring pressure to bear in iU favor. No Demo cratic Congressman could hope to get fa vors from any of the departments who was not in line. Notwithstanding all that Cleveland and his cabinet could do four of their ow n parly refused to vote for the measure. The Republicans, on the other hand, had no club which they could use if they would, yet the "kick ers" in the two parties stood 4 to 2. Ev idently the free trade sentiment in the Republican party has almost reached the vanishing point. And what a bill it is ! The New York 'v says of it : "First, it is a sectional bill of the rankest type. It leaves the duty on rice, on sugar, on iron ore and on pig iron in fact ou nearly every oth er industry in which the Siuthern States are interested and remorselessly takes the products of a hundred iniortant Northern industries from the dutiable schedule and places them on the free list. It is an unscientific and inharmonious bill, because it lias been patcheJ up w holly w ith the view of securing enough votes to drag it through Congress by the ears. It pretemUs to give the manufact urers of woolen goods, of worsteds, of cari-ts, of flax, of jute, of hemp, of chemicals, of woodenware, of paints and a variety of other commodities of fn r.i material, but with malicious intent to de stroy the industries the bill makes a rel atively greater reduction in duty on the manufactured article. In this way the producers of the raw material will be en tirely destroyed and the manufacturers of the finished article seriously crippled. It is in no "sense w hatever a revision of the tariff. Every irregularity, every sec tion capable of misconstruction, every loose phrase, every loophole by which foreign importers are enabled to take ad vantage of domestic producers is left ill a hopeless state of uncertainty. Tiie in equalities of the present tariff would bo greatly magnified by this bill. For ex ample, in the metal schedule the rate of duty on the highly manufactured articles has lieen reduced below the importing point, but the duty on iron ore and pig iron remains the same. It is, moreover, a cow ardly bill not an 0en, daring attack, such as those led by Morrison, but a bill that remorselessly at tacks the unorganized industries, like the production of wool, and has not the cour age to face an organized industry like that of iron ore mining, coal mining, the production of pig iron, or the great sugar tmsL And why? Because the friends of President Cleveland and the men ho expects to furnish the money for hiscani pa;gn are largely interested in these great mining, oil and railroad trusts, while Democratic interests ow n the sugar uio nopolv. Yes, the bill is passed, and Mills is elated. It was a great victory. And one that marks out certain defeat for the IVmocratic party next fall. The imme diate effect of the passage of this bill w ill be business disaster. Should it become a law it means thirty js-r cent, lower wages to a majority of our wage earners and no work w hatever for a very large minority. In spite of the lying state ments that it is not a free trade bill it w ill bring ruin and desolation into thous ands of happy homes and give no equiv alent. It is the first step toward the ab solute free trade which Mr. Cleveland and a majority of his party believe in and advocate w ith the same arguments that Cobden used fortv-fivc vears ago." A Sectional Tariff. Krm tl.o X. Y. Tritiine. Another Southern Tariff bill has Ixvn passed by the House. It is direst fruit of tiial great crime against against fiw govern ment by which freedom of votmg ill the Siiitliern Stales was picvenled and President Cleveland wa c!ect-d. Including men pair ed, (i;. Northern mcndier voted f"r tin mrus ureandlll against it. With the Northern Stales more than two to one against the bill it nevertheless wseil, because I"j Southern ers were for it, of whieli at leat twenty had Ui'ii secured by fraud. Sectional in its ori gin and spirit, Kvuliarly sectional in its pro visions and in the the iry whieli I,aHsI it, this bill cannot carry a single Northern state and yet it w ill be iiiipo-Hl upm the iiidus-trii-s of the North unless the Senate defeats it by votes obtained in S iiithern States through flagrant defiance ofllieCoii-'titiition and the laws. If the Northern pMple w i sh to l ruled ;n that way, if they are willing to have their industries prostrated and their ptvpcritv ar rested by a sectional measure ussed by Southern crimes, they will continue to snocr at the "bloody shirt" and to (icriuil the I teniocratic arty to govern the country. This great city and the crowded adjacent population from which the Deniocrtie arty draws all its holies of success have a deep in terest iu the result, and yet cannot defend their industries against the foreign inllueiice hero prevailing. Hut for the imputation within ten miles of the City Hall New Jer sey would not be doubtful, and New York would give over .Vl.OiM majority against free trade and the sectional pilicy of the Demo cratic party. But here the foreign agents Olid those identified in interest with them have something to gain by free trade. Out side of this little circle the great Northern States have everything to bse by breaking down home industries, and it is for the peo ple of those States to say whether a sectional Southern policy shall prevail. They can outvote this city and its environs if they choose. Even afli-r a Democratic Congress had been elected by Southern crimes this or any similar measure would still have been !eat en but for the patronage and irresistible power of a President w ho bad deliberately chosen to serve the South and to betray the North. More than twenty IVmocratic mem bers were pledged to their constituents to support the policy outlined by Mr. Randall, of Pennsylvania, but have been bullied or bribed into betraying the interests of con stituents. To some Sham Reform has prom ised places in navy yards, custom houses and postoflice ; to some it has promised jobs and contracts ; and some it has brought to their knees by the threat that the id hirelings of the Administration would pack conventions to dclcat them unless they yielded. It is a good thing for the country that the irrcsisibie momentum toward a Southern policy within the IVmocratic party has been thus plainly shown before the Presidential election. Senator JaiV'S Donald Onuron does not talk at all; but, a they ray to: W t, " he gets there jast.the same." Heaccjniplislics more in his juiet, effective way than half bis talk ative colleagues with their speech making. Take his suivessful effort to keep that $ii2 000 appropriation for the rehabilitation of the Uauguc Island Nary Yard in the Naval ApjorpriatKjn bill in spite of the deter mination of Hale and other influential mem bers of the Appropriations Committee to get it out. Twenty speeches In the senate would not have saved that appropriation, but half that many private talks clinched and riveted it in the bill. Washington corresoiidence in Philadelphia AVw. No Dodging. Hiirristiirg Telegraph- IVmocrats object to being termed free tra ders. They say it is not true that they are free trailers. That is true. They are not, in all tilings. For instance: They opjosed admitting sngar free, a Southern industry, while admitting wool free, a Northern in dustry. They discriminated in favor of their own household. They know that the great North and West will have few Congressional votes, and in all probability no electoral votes this year for them, and they therefore arrange the schedule to suit the business in terests of their friends. To this extent they are not free traders, no more. But the at tempt that w ill I made to juggle, as the fact of their approaching defeat liecomes more and more apparent, must tie watched closely by every lover of his country. I: 1S-50 the Democracy resolved in favor of a "tariff for revenue onlv," and then a month or two lie fore the election, when Hancock's defeat be cani moiaily certain, the leaders shuttled and juggled and skulked like a pack of cow arils. They are preparing to do the same thing this year, and they should be made to fail this ytar as they failed iu lsso. No skulking this year. Stand up and take your gruel. Talks on the Tar'if. The follow ing tariff talk comes from the Illinois Home Market Club of Chicago, III. It will Ik; of interest to those who want to know about sail gla-s, pig iron and steel rails, and the relation of th.ise commodities to the tariff : " The attorneys for free trade, w ho seek to create prejudice against the policy of pro tection by charging that it enhances the cost to consumers, can Ix-st c met by a compari son of prices of a few articles in common use. " In salt, then on the free list, sold to consumers at an average price of & per bar rel. The tariff on salt in barrels is 12 cents -r hu H)imds (or say S'ij cents icr barrel,) and the average price is not more than half that of 10 J. As salt has been made the subject of sjpccial attack, it may be well to itMvrlaiu just how much ot the present sidl ing price g'M-stothe manufacturer, against whom it is sought to create prejudice. In is7. at the works in Michigan, salt sold for in cents er barrel, and of this sum 1M cents was jwid to the cooper tor making the bar rel. All between thi-"rice and that paid by consumers went for lr.in-ixrtation and prof its of middlemen. " The manufacture, of plate glass was c-i-tahlishcd in Is'!, when the foreign made ar ticle sold for tlM per square foot. The tar iffon a similar quality of glass is now 50 cents ier f.sit, and the price has steadily lowered until it is now 7." cents per square foot " Pig iron in SioW), for 22.1't per ton. With a tariff of jMi.TJ per bin it now sells for " Steel rails were first made here iu ISO", when the price was ? l;d x-r ton. The tariff has been as high as .'s per toll and is now s-17. Stisil rails are now quoted at isil, and have sometime lieen lower. " A favorite plea of free traders is that with wools and woolens ou the free list 'the Ixior man's blanket' would lie sold for one half its present price, when the fact is prices for blanket of equal quality are about the same in the Vnited States and England. Here is the proof: Last year the Swretary of War invited bids for supplying army blankets of four pounds weight, and allow ed foreigners to compete ou the same terms as American manufacturers ; that is without paying the tariff. The lowest British bid was only thirty cents kt blanket less tlian that of an American. The tariff, if it had Iss ti charged, would be alsmt iM. Our free trade Cabinet officer gave the contract to the foreigner who pays no taxes and buys nothing in this country, instead of favoring the American, who supplies work to hun dred." of people and otherwise adds to the wealth of our country. The money from our national Treasury went to a foreign country, and American soldiers arc to sleep under British blankets because they can be made in England for 30 cents less than in this country. "And heic is some testimony from the other side. Matthew Arnold, the eminent English scholar, statesman and free trade ad vocate, recently deceased, last year made a tour of this country, and afterward gave his conclusions in the .YoirecaA Cciry J i(.-i-ziitt (April, Is.) In this paper the writer admits that conditions in tiie I'nitcd States arc favorable to 'that immense class of peo ple' whose incomes an; less than $l,.OU a year, while in England the advantage 'is greatly in favor of those w ith incomes above that sum.' Of wages he says : "The humbler kind of work is belter paid in America than with us, the higher kind worse. Luxuries are, as I have said, very dear almvc all, European luxuries; but a workingman's dothing is nearly as cheap as in Kiiglnnd, and plain food is on the whole, cheaiier " PRESS COMMENTS. Toledo (i)til'i : The Democratic ticket Fur President, a ninetecn-inch collar ; for Vice President, a bandana handkerchief. Ohio Slnle Jnururi ; That vote on free wool added P'.OoO to the Republican majority in Ohio this fall. Our thanks are due and hereby tendered to the Democracy. Omaha lirmM'traii : Four years ago the Democrats shrieked: "Examine the luniks ami discover Republican frauds." Now they are silent, lieeause the examination has disclosed the fact that the Republicans ad ministered affairs honestly. Atlanta Cuiirtitntli'u : The fad that the Re publicans have placed Senator Matthew Stanley Quay at the head of their organiza tion ought to be a sulHeient notice to the IVmocratic leaders to clear the decks, for tuay is admirably suited for the work that he has in hand. He is reckless, resolute, daring and sleepless. He was cut out for just such work as he will be called upon to erform. Itochotcr Tcmncral : The Mills bill is con fessedly but the beginning of the free trade raid ojieiily proclaimed by its champions. If they can re-elect President Cleveland, retain their majority in the Lower House and wrest the Senate from K -publican coutrol, they will feel warranted in m iking an indiscrim inate onslaught upin articles which are now protected from ruinous competition. Their animus is toward free trade. They begin with free wool; and a very pronounced be ginning it is. There is no telling where they w ill stop, if they are invested with full jww er. Tiie way to apjical their assaults is to elect Harrison and Morton, and a Republican Congress who will stand by the principle of protcchon. Baltimore Jncrii-.m .- Mr. Bamum's selec tion of the members of the National Execu tive couimitte shows plainly that he has con sidered financial soundness to lie as essential as political training. Not desiring to be icr sonal. it can safely lie said that Mr. Ham urn would scarcely have dreamed of putting cer tain gentlemen on so vital a committee had he not know iH-rfect'y well that the gentle men so preeminently honored would show themselves grateful in prosrtion. Nor was be deceived. Mr. Scott has already shown bis appreciation, for he has subscriiied no less thanI.t.i,iJiiO for tiie coming campaign. Calvin ltrice has some twenty millions, and so has Herman Oelrichs of New York. Doubtless both these gentlemen will realize as promptly as did Mr. Scott the reason of their selection. THE. TARIFF BILL PASSED. Mill's Mosaic Coes Through the House by 162 Yeas to 149 Nays. Washixotox. July 21. The Mills Tariff bili passed the House at 1 M o'clock today by a vote of 102 yeas to US) nays. The IVm ocrats who voted against the bill are.Sowden, of Pennsylvania, and Morriruan, Greenan and Bliss, of New York. Mr. Randall went on record against the bill, being (aired wilh Hogg of West Yirgiuia : SfessK. Filch, of New York ; Brower, of North Carolina, aad Nelson, of Minnesota, Republicans, voted with tiie IVmocrats. as did Anderson, of Iowa; Hopkins, of Virginia, and Smith, of Wisconsin, Independents. Koran, of Ohio, did not vote. Wilkins, of Ohio, voted for the bill. The result was hailed with cheers by the Democrats and an outburst of laugh ter presumably an expression of glee by Mrs. Cleveland in the gallery, and with ab solute s'lencc by the Republicans. It was a great day for h Mills, who was by the nature of the case the central tigur in the House and the locus of all eyes in the crowded galleries. The whole scene was ssx'tacular, as became the last and decisive step taken by a political party coerced by the power of the Executive. It was an event in political history which will long hi remem bered and, doubtless, bitterly remembered by the Democratic party. It was fitting that the occasion should be marked by formality and distinguished by a great attendance. The galleries were a uniform hank of people, stretching from rail to walls on all four sides of the great hail. There was but one break to this circle of onlookers, and that was in the diplomatic gallery, where no foreign dip lomats were present to behold the attempt by American legislators to destroy American industries for the benefit of foreign capital. Not even the British legation was represent ed. Miss Cleveland sat in the Speaker's section of the gallery with the wives' of several Sen ators, and in the front seat of the Executive gallery, at t he far opposite end of the hall, were Mrs. Cleveland and Mrs. Folsom, who were afterward joined by Mrs. Fairchild. The wife of the President was ga,:ed at a good ileal by cop!e iu the galleries, as well as memiiers on the floor. She dutifully paid attention to Mr. Mill's final .sccch, and while the roll call was going on she listened to every resjMmse. She sat next to the wire netting that separates the executive; from the diplomatic gallery, and through this perfor ated ict it ion she occasionally exchanged a remark with Assistant Secretary of Slate, Rivers, who was her neighbor on the other side of the screen. She wore a dress with sleeves of some dark checked material and a loose bodice of white, on which two pink rosebuds were fastened, and she kept a lav endar f iu iu constant motion. When the result of the vote tiiat is a direct im nance to the prosjierity of millions of workingmen was announced Mrs. Cleveland laughed. Then, accompanied by the two ladii-s, she left the gallery and rodo down stairs in the public elevator with a crowd of other ieo ple, in true IVmocratic style. This was her f til birthday. Mr. Mills spoke an hour and the roll call was at once begun. Ail the leaders were ap plauded when they voted. At the proper time Mr. Sow.icn, of Pennsylvania, obtain ed recognition and said that his distinguish ed colleague, Mr. Randall, wiio was absent from the House by reason of severe illness, had sent him a letter which he wished to have read at this time. The letter was read as follows : July Ul.lsSs. Holt. IT. If. Sitcihti, (tn- tt ll-jrfiattiti'-c. Mv Dkak Snt: If a vote on Mr. Mills" Tariff bill is to be taken Saturday, the 2!st inst.. I fear my strength, by reason of recent illness, will not ieruiit my presence iu the House on that day, and if absent I want you to secure me a pair with some one who favors that bill, as I would, if present, record my vote iu opjiosition to it. liivc this im mediate care, as I do not want to l misun derstood. I want it announced and distinct ly known that I am opjscd to the passage of the bill in question. Yours truly, Sami'el J. Raxiiaix. The letter was loudly applaud-d by the Republican memiiers of the House. The roll call was then proceeded with and the bill was passed yeas I'M, nays lit, as fol lows : All the Pennsylvanians voted on the bill except Randall, who is sick, and who sent word that he would have voted against the bill, and Hicstand, who was also paired in 'he same way. The vote was as follows : Navs fMsirne, Bingham, O'Neill, Kelley, Harnier, Darlington, Yardley, Patten, Me Cullough, Dalzell, liayne, Jackson. Mottitt, Bound, McCormick, Scull, Atkinson, Brumm, Bunnell, andSowden 'M. All Re publicans except Sowden. Yeas Ernicntrout, Maish, Hall, Scott, Buekalew anil Lynch 'J. All IVmocrats. The Headquarters Chosen. New York, July 18. The Republican Na tional Committee headquarters have finally Imi selected after much tribulation. They are to be at ill Fifth avenue, between Six teenth and Sevtiaii streets, and three doors above the city house of Vice Presidential candidate Morton. It is an old-fashioned three-stnry brick house belonging to the (iriswuld estate. In width and depth it makes up for lack in height, and it contains no less than 4-') rooms. A secluded alley en trance from Seventeenth street to its back door is one of the Hiu!s iu its favor that im pressed the committee of house hunters. Af ter ii;s;eciirig and approving the choii-e Chairman jnav went ou to Washington in the afternoon, and Colonel Dudley went with him. The committee w ill move in at om-e, and by Saturday morning they expivt to 1 ready to throw oj-en the headquarters. Sen ator tjnay will Is1 in Washington most of the time until September 1, and Messrs. C'.arkson, Dudley, New, Fessendeii and 1 lo bar! will divide the work and resp msibili ities until then. , At the headquarters of the Republican I.-aguea great show of activity was observ able. "It proved to be principally ou account of the preparations for the demonstration over Mr. Blaine's return early in August. The elulis all over the country arc showing great interest in the event, anil a great time is anticipated. Tho Blaino Welcome. New York, July L'.'. The reception of Mr. Blaine in this city bill lie something much beyond what Mr. Blaine himself de sires. He wrote to the New York Republi can Club, accepting the otter of a reception, but asking that it be simple and informal. It has been found by the club simply inqwis sible to keep down the deinostratiou, and it will be something immense. The club will go down the bay on the steamer Sam Sloan to meet Mr. Biaiue. There will lie about 1, (mi iersonS aboard. These will he the mem bers of the club, the National Republican Cmimittec, the Natimal L-ugu.; odlcials, the State Committee, the County Committee and a iiumlier of invited guests. The other clubs and organizations from all parts of the I'nion, will follow on other steamboats, suit ably decoroated for the occasion. It will make quite a naval display, for almost every boat in the port has been engaged, or will be in a few days. There will be a great parade in the city, to lie reviewed by Mr. Blaine. Every large city iu the country will send delegations, and there will be l.oott clubs represented. Mr. Blaine will be given an inklifig of the affair by cable to-morrow. A Diabolical Deed. Lancaster, Pa., July 19. An attempt was made to wreck the Western Express of the Pennsylvania Railroad, due here at 11 o'clock last night and at Pittsburgh at 8 this morn ing. Just east of Coalesville the engineer felt the locomotive jar as though it had run over something. Tne train was stopped and a heavy oak plank eight feet long and six inches thick was (bund wedged so tightly between the engine pilot and front wheels that it required a half hour to get ft out. It is not known who put the plairlr oil the track. Nearly all the passengers were asleep and knew nothing of their narrow escape. ONE HOUR'S HAVOC. Great Loss of Life and Damage by the Wheeling Storm. Wheeli.w, W. Va., July 20. Last night's cloud burst and the preceding storm of less than an hour caused a loss of perhaps 25 lives, and the destruction of many thousand dollars' 'worth of prorierty in this neighbor hood alone. Hourly reports from dis tant sin:s in Ohio and West Virginia indi cale that the damage elsewhere is immense, while there is little room for doubt that many persons perished. The cloud burst here occurred at 0 o'clock and the rain was over before T. In that hour territic dannwe was done, but long after the tremendous vol time of water that fell was swelling the streams and Hooding streets and houses. PERHAfS A DOZES UROWXED. At 0:30 last night the Baltimore and Ohio wooilen bridge across Main street was swept away with from twenty to thirty on it. Of these ten are known to have been saved. Several of the rescued were on a tow boat which could not land at the wharf owing to the current, and bad to seek a landing lower down. The river rose three feet in fifty min utes. Out the National road the trains, coal chutes, hoiLses and all are gone. The Wheel ing and Elm Grove Railroad was swept away for miles, and the roads covered six feet with water. Over the river the ruin is even worse. The storm lasted less than an hour, but flooded the streets from house to house. On the upper end of (!off street, high on the hill in the Second ward, the water was over the top of stoves and like objects. Wagons iu the valley of Wheeling creek were buried beneath tiie mud and debris. The Chaplain street and Goff street bridges are both gone. Wood street bridge is impas sable. Nine residents on the banks of Cald well's ruu are known to have been drowned, and six houses are gone, I'OIViE OF MAXV KIN US. The Pittsburgh, Wheeling and Kentucky division of the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and St. Louis road is badly washed at places and at others covered a foot deep. The Ohio riv er trestle at the creek is gone. Sewers burst in several places, and ro.i.ls were washed out so as to lie imiasuhle. A substantial bridge on the suburban Elm Grove motor line at I-catherwood was washed away. The loss in the city will reach SoO,!") and the dam age to crops iu the country is inestimable The ruin wrought by the cloud burst out of town is awful. Every hour or so new fatal ities are reported. A man named Keliz was washed away by Boggs run, and he and his horses were drowned. Four lives were lost at Elm Grove. jdUO.tlOO LOST AT ST. CLAIKSVILLE Sr. Chjhsvillk, O., July 20. This place and vicinity were visited last evening by a most territic thunder storm, with violent wind.-, and a rainfall that ecliiised the aver age waterspout. Grain fields were laid waste, ami shocked wheat wjs swept away, and the growing corn is not to be seen. The Bellaire and St. Clairsvillc ami the St. C'lairsville and Northern raib'oads are almost entirely wash ed out. The incoming train on the Balti more and Ohio was stranded at Echo, and the trainmen and passengers escaied as best as they could with their lives, the water, fill ed with drift, running to the headlight of the engine. Several narrow escajies are re- .orteil, and it is feared that a number of lives were lost. This place and vicinity arc damaged fully $bWoi Randall 111 with Cancer. New York, July 22 The UV.f Wash ington correpondent says : Ten days agj it was intimated that Samuel J. Randall would in all probability not be again able to re sume his seat in this Congress, and also that his physicians might forbid his ever again accepting a nomination to any public office. This fear has within the past few days be come a certainty. The long and honorable public career of this faithful servant of the iieople is definite ly ended, for his physicians have discovered that he is suffering from cancer of the stom ach, and they are forced to the conviction that it is incurable. Their examination has not proceeded further than this as yet, and there is at least hope that the effects of the malady are not immediately dangerous. When Mr. Randall was suddenly striken a fortnight ago his family physician, Doctor Thomas Mallou, had not known he had been previously under treatment for hemor rhages. He had apparently arso concealed the fact from his family, but it is now knon that Dr. Robert Martin, of Philadelphia, had c-rformed oieratious iion him for the disease. He was away from home when a telegram was sent summoning him here, and Dr. Nathan Lincoln, the eminent physician of this city, was called in consultation by Dr. Mallon. Both, after careful examination, united in deciding that the disease is without question cancer of the stomach. They decline to ex press any opinion or give a statement to the public, but it is known that both have ex pressed themselves without reserve to asso ciate physicians and that the sad truth can not longer be concealed. Mr. Randall him self had previously had no suspicion of the fact, hut bears its revelation with character istic fortitude. It has been stated that he would shortly lie removed to his home in Pennsylvania. Dr. Mallon, however, is very uncertain of the prudence of this. In a few days an ex act diagnosis of his condition will be possi ble, and its result will divide whether it will be best to take him from Washington. Piiii.Aiu:i.PiiiA, July 23. Dr. R. W. Mar tin, Mr. Randall's family physician, said to day that there was no truth in the rcjiort that Mr. Randail was suffering from a can cer. He says Mr. Rindall has been a very sick man without knowing it for several years ; that his disease is organic, but that Mr. Randall is ignorant of its character and that ail his physicians have agreed it shall not be made public. The doctor's tone and actions, as well as his language, indicated that he has very lit t'e, if any, hope that Mr. Randall will ever recover sufficiently to re-enter public life. Dr. Martin told a friend on Friday that ? e was afraid Mr. Kami, ill cannot be brought from Washington until he was brought iu an ice box. Creek Meets Creek. At 4:'M o'clock, Thursday afternoon, the German yacht Hohenzollern, with Eiiqs'ror Wiliiain on board, entered the "roads" at Cronstadt amid volleys of salutes from the war ships and forts. The Hohenzollern was received by the Russian yacht Djerava, on board of which was the Czar. The Iuqicrial yachts approached each other between a double line of Russian and German war ships, bedecked with bunting. The weather was fine and the scene was an imposing one. The German Inqierial party went aboard the Ru-sian yacht Alexandra, which thence pro ceeded to the Petrchof Palace. The Czarina, iu a handsome pavilion erected on the quay of the military harb.ir. cordially greeted Euicror William. The hitter insected the Guard of Honor, the hand in the meantime playing the Prussian national anthem. The party then proceeded to the palace. The Czar, Emperor William, Prince Henry, and the Czarowitch rode in a kind of wagonette. The Czarina and the other iiuunbers of the Ini;erial party followed in open carriage. The route was lined w ith troops. The Jackson Outrage. Wasiiixotox, July Zi. The majority re port of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which investigated the Jackson (Mississippi) municipal election, was presented in the Senate to-day. The committee in its report reaches the conclusion that the entire colored vote of Jackson was suppressed at the last municipal election by intimidation, and that the Deputy I'nited States Marshal, the Cnited States District Attorney and Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue iu that section particqiated and iu some degree aided in the suppression of the colored vole. C larles Lemley, recently nominated by the Presi dent as J lost master for Jackson, is also men tioned as one of those who participated in the wholesale suppression of colored votes. The whole proceeding is condemned in strong terms and the removal of the guilty officials demanded. The Anarchist Plot. Chicaoo, July IX Frank Chkboun, the brown-hairot blue-eyc-d, sweet voiced fiend who, with John Ilronek. and Frank C'he pek, schemed to murder Judge Gray, Judge Grinnell and Inspector Bin field, has made a full and complete confession. Chleboun was locked up at the armory yesterday, as were the other two, and when Chejiek was taken to the central station and Ilronek to jail, Chlebourn was sent to an outlying police station. He was not subjected, as were the others, to the ordeal of having his picture taken for the rogues' gallery. Last night Inspector Bon field, accompa nied by two of his Bohemian secret service operatives, clad in workingmen s suits, wilh soft black hats and blu; flannel shirts, visit ed the innocent looking prisoners. Tiie pre ceding day he intimated that he was ready to tell all he knew, and last evening the in spector went to hear his story. Through the interpreters, Chleboun went" into the whole story, from his first meeting wilh ilronek and Chejiek. After telling how he ticcanic ai-qiiainlcd with them, bis confession was that Ilronek had unfolded his plans for revenge and had told of a bomb which he (Ilronek) had invented. Il was small, no larger than a baseb ill, and was to be loaded with dynamite and bits of broken glass. It was denied by ''hlcboun that the plot was to murder the judges and the instiector. That is, he heard of no such definite scheme. They were talked of as was Captain Schaak, and he understood he was to pay more attention to the captain than to anyone else. There was no concern ed plan of action, but it was agreed that when all preparations were made he and two others were to bs informal by Ilronek at the door just what they were to do in the way of avenging the dead "martyrs." About July 1st he was visited by Jlronck, who brought him two bombs of the broken glass variety, anj two sticks of dynamite fro.n which he was to make bombs of gas pipe af ter the usual pattern. The other two men were also supplied with bombs and dyna mite. He had the stuff in his house for about a week, and then grew so afraid that it would lie discovered that he made away with it by throwing it into a privy. This was the substance of the confession which Inspector l'onfield to day placed in the hands of a type writer ojierator for the purpose of having it put in shape for use iu court. The confession U much more in de tail and covers about thirty closely printed pages. By his confession it is under ood Chle boun has virtually secured immunity from prosecution. He is in reality much less guilty" than cither Ilronek, Chepek or any one of the men yet arrested. He has agreed to give his testimony iu iqien court, when it will corroberate the other evideni-e secured by the iicqiector against the eonspiraters. The other men are still at large, but may be arrested at any moment. Sowden's Last Effort. Wasiiivitox, July 111. Immediately after the tariff hill had lieen disosed of in Com mittee of the whoic in the House to-day, the committee on public buildings and grounds called up the Ailentown public building bill which was vetoed by the President, and rec ommended that the measure be passed over the President's veto. In the brief time al lowed for debate Mr. Sowden made a Sieec!i, which was much more temperate than it was expected it Would be. considering the feeling the Ailentown member had display ed when the veto was sent iu. Mr. Blount, chairman of the ostot!iee committee, made the lead ing speech in op position to Mr. Sowden, and the debate was not a prot racted one, the House designing to settle the question by vote and not by discussion. Mr. Sowden, who had drummed up a very respectable support, got 111 votes for bis side, mostly lh-puhlican.s, the Mem bers of that side, of course merely di-siring to show tle-ir opposition to the President. The negative vote was 81. If he hail secured seven more he would have had the eoiititu tional majority of two-thirds required to override a veto. The Pennsylvania members voting in the affirmative were Bayne, Bound, Brumin, Bunnell, Dalzel!, Darlington, Erineiitrout, Hall, Hauler, Jackson, Lynch, MeCuIluugh, Osborne, Patton, Scull, Sowden and Yardly. The Pennsylvanians in the negative were Buekalew and Maish. Randall, Kelley and Scott were absent, and Bingham, McCor mick, O'Neil and Iliestan 1 did not vote. Held for Court. Ciiinoo, July 1!). W. B. Hoskey, Chair man of the Grievance Committee of the Chi cago and Alton road, said to-day that they had enough evidence to show that Bowles. Broderick, Wilson and Smith, the alleged conspirators against the Chicago, Burlington and tiuincey road, are Pinkcrto'i men. They have also learned that not an ounce of dyna mite has been exploded on the Chicago Bur lington and tjiiincey track. The prosecution rested when court opened this morning. Mr. Ewing said that tqion the strength of the evidence submitted to the court, he was content to rest, and did not care to make anv argument. Attorneys David and Donohue made argu ments to show that Godding was not impli cated. Commissioner Hovnc, however held him, w ilh Broderick and Itaurerese, iu $.,OoO bail each for court. CjrixcT, ill., July ID. In the case of Chicago, Burlington and luincy railroad vs. Edward Kinneo, Leon Gerry, Frank Sccll, John Schell and Henry Steiner, Jus tice Allen, this morning, dismissed the case ugaiust the first two mentioned and bound the remaining four over in tfoni) bonds each They are charged with conspiracy to injure the Burlington property and with killing Burlington Engineer. George Nickel, alias George Gebhardt, was to-day bound over in the sum of PM for placing ties on the Burlington track below this city yesterday. Ohio's Centennial, Marietta, July 2o. Ohio day has crown ed the Centennial Jubilee w ith inqsising lau rels. Although the weather was forbidding the streets were with filled 1'iiioO ieople and from the lsjint where the fathers landed to the fair grounds, one mile alsive, the sea of humanity surged. At the hall there was a large attendance to hear Senator John Sherman, who was the oiator of the da v. Mr. Sherman's sieech, which was deliver ed extenqiore, was an exhaustive review of the history of the State. "In the first forty years of the settlement of this State," he siid, " nearly all the jHHiple were Isirn in this country. The foreign population did not come in until nearly IS30, the Germans commencing then. So the new territory drew strength from all these. There was the New England Puritan, who landed ou the Ireary coast of new England with his hard and severe iihas; there was the Virginia cavalier, irallant and brave, the Scotch-Irish and the Huegenots of France. We had the choice blood of ull these races, and this choice production sends its representatives all over the world, for I have traveled all over the world, in every State and Territory, and 1 never was hi a village or hamlet but some Buckeye came to me to say be had seen me or heard me make a speech, and that was enou h " Mall Coach Robbery. Sax Lfis CtHisro, C'al., July 22. The stage running between this place and Templeton was robbed by a masked man last night while crossing the mountains about five miles from here. The robber ordered the driver to stop, and immediately covered him with a revolver. He then compelled the passengers, six in number, and the driver to alight from the stage, and covered the heads of all with masks. The passengers were placed in a row and robbed of about t-sX altogether. Theie was one lady passenger, and nothing was taken from her. The driver was then ordered to throw of the Wells Fargo express box, and the I'nited States mail bags. The box was chopped open and the contents, about il '', taken. The mail was also oened. and a number of let ters were examined. The roblier col lected his booty and disappeared up the mountains. The Sheriff and posse are in pursuit. -J5ngerous Counterfeits. . New York, July Ls.-The PnilisI States Si-cret Service agents have been busy for the past week in attempting to trace the new silver certificates. They are most the danger ous that have appeared in this city tor many years. The bill is not the same one that Ims lieen puzzling the Secret Service men in the West for six months back, but was HooteJ in this city less thau two weeks ago. It has not appeared elsewhere, so far as can be learned. The bill is almost like the genuine bill after being hadied fir some time. The green ink in the note is lighter than that ia the genuine, but the difference is only no ticeable when the counterfeit is compared with the genuine. None of the silk fibres that distinguishes the government bills is found iu the counterfeit, nor is there any imitation of it. In the blank Sjioces, where the fibre is usually nnst easily distinguished however, the ar has a crumpled aiqiear ance that is very deceptive. A number of arrests have been made of Italians, who have been mainly coucerned in scattering the counterfiets. A new counterfeit was discovered to-day that is even more dangerous than the $S certi ficates. It is a t silver certificate, evident ly the work of the same hands that produced the $. bill. It has the same merits and the same defects, but a ft bill is likely to pass current more easily than a bill. This is the first counterfeit $1 bill that has lieen well executed. Treasury Agent Brooks placed the counterfeit beside a genune bill for a re porter to-day, and it required a close scruitny to tell which was genuine. Mr. Brooks said that although both the new counterfeit bills were being circulated by Italians he did nut believe they hod produced .them. Swept Over NIAGARA. Niagara Falls, N. Y., Juiy 20. Mrs. P. J. Tully, the pretty, black-haired wife of Tully, the leather renovator, went over the falls to-day. She was invited to go out sail ing on the river above the reservation groumls by W. H. Barber, the son of Mrs. E. Bar ber, the Grand Trunk agent of this place, and accepted the invitation. Barber had rented a yatch from Jesse Shortbrigiit, of Fort-Iay, and though not an expert sailor, thought be was competent to manage a small sail boat in the stn.xith water above the rapids. At 4 o'clock, in lacking, the boat dipped enough to take in a little water and Mrs. Tully screamed and rushed to the wrong side. In his anxiety to save her Bar!er let go the sail and over went the yacht. Barber heroically clung to the woman and made a grab for the boat. He succeeded ill drawing himself up on the bottom, and there for two hours clung, holding the helpless woman. When his strengh failed him she slipied from bis grasp and he became insensible. At i o'clock the boat was described just drifting into the upnT rapids. A tug put out for and succeed ed in saving the man. He was brought ashore and resuscitated. The body of Mrs. Tully was seen to pass under the Goat Island bridge and over the Hills, at C:2U p. M. by some tourists standing on the banks. It has not yet been recovered. Tully's grief was terrible. He knew nothing of his wife's trip until told of it by those who had saved young Barlier. Mrs. Tully came from Georgia. She had been married only three years, and had no children. Seven men blown to Death. LorisviLLE, Kv., July 20. A steampipe on the tugboat Conway exploded this morn ing at a point on the Ohio river twenty-six miles alxive this city and seven men, the crew of the boat, wi re killed by the explo sion. When the lsiat reached Westisirt every thing, according to the first mate's story, was running smoothly. He took a walk back to the cabin and found ull quiet. He stopjied and talked to his friend, George McCann, who was lying on a lower berth near the door. The latter half rose in his bed and re marked : "I'll soon beat home with my family." Then he lay down and went to sleep. The mate returned to the pilot house and was conversing with Capt. Reno, the pilot. They were then two miles above Westport, Sud denly there was a terrifle explosion, the whole boat became envi loped in steam and the machinery stopped. The Captain, who was asleep, hurriedly dressed, called bis men, and made preparations to land. The yawl was lowered, a line taken on and the boat was towed ashore and made fast to a tree. Then the Captain proceeded to tiie after cabin where the explosion occurred. William Page lay near the door dead, the blood rushing from his mouth and ears, and the flesh scalded offhisWly. William llar rigan was iu hislsTth. I lis death inns tbave been instantaneous, for he lay in the same position as when he retired. Robert Jones was on the llmr and barely alive. He was horribly burned and lived but fifteen minutes. He died w ith his wife's name on his lifts. The Snake Liar Again. Parkeksiicro, W. Va. Hart Rader, a well-known farmer of Jackson county, has learned that a Mark snake can climb better than tiie average school loy. Radcr had been missing bis chickens for some time, and having reason to believe that a large snake had devoured them, he fastened them up se curely a few nights since. The chickens were safe the next morning, but the colony of martins which had made their nests in a box at tiie top of a 20-foot pole failed to awaken the family that morning with their usual noise. They had completely disappeared and Rader was puzzled over the cause, but thai evening the mystery was explained when Rader saw a huge black snake, over five fi-et in length, climbing the pile. The snake was killed and a post-mortem held, which disclosed the bodies of three full grown and two young martins inside the snake's com missary department. The reptile had climb ed the pole and wiped out the whole colony. Ten Killed. I.vxcmu'jtn, Va., July 22. A terriblecolli sion oceured on the Norfolk and Western Railroad this morning alsmt 2 o'clock, right miles above the city, between a freight and a material train, killing both engineers, one fireman and five of the crews. Both engines are completely wrecked and seven cars de molished. A large force of hands has been at work all day moving the wreck, and the track has been clean d. The loss is est i met I fpKI, 0K. Engineers Henry and Harris, Fireman Danilcy, of the material train, and seven colored train hands whose names are un known, were killed. Fireman Mays, of the freight train, was fatally injured. The conductor escqied with slight bruises. The accident was caused, it is claimed, by the conductor of the material train misun derstanding orders. Smothered In Mud. New York, July 21. Marcus Tallman, 11 years old, of E est Bnsiklyn, was suffocated this afternoon in a mndhoic. The boy had been in bathing and was alone, when he tried to reach solid ground by tramping through the mud, lieeause he hail found it too hard work to climb the oil-soaked logs of the wharf from w hich he had plunged in to the dirty stream. As he ploughed through the mire he struck one of the in ud holes and sunk to his waist. His cries for assistance were not heard. His strngglcs seemed only to sink him deep er into the mire. When a boatman discov ered him he had sunk up to his chin, and was making weak and piteous cries. By the time the boatman and others got to the little fellow on a plank the mud engulfed and suf focated him. His body was drawn out and removed to his home. Gurry University, zz PITTSBURGH, PA. Ovsr 1,400 Students Last Year. Classical . Scientific , Ladies Seminsrv : Normal : IViiuianship ; Music anil tiocutioii liepanmeut. Curry liutittens College ami Curry School of Shorthand are separate sen. wis. each bftvinst Its own eom iilete FseultT. i.roTi.lm the m.t th,,i,i, practical ilriil in iu line i,Muirml.. Jpend for Catalogue ot the ix-panmeul you de- 7-2VSm. MS. CURK WILLIAMS. A. H Prw. The Chance TO T3UV FIINTE CLOTI-IIXG- FOR LIl'TLE AJXXSTEY AT HEFFLEY'S. i i FOR YOUR INFORMATION I OFFER A FEv BARGAINS. READ: Mans' Dress and Business Suits. Wage Workers Suits at $5, Cut to $3. Cheviot Suits at $10, are now cut to $3 Nov is your chance. Sfcrsuvkor Coats ami Vest almost tru.-n aur Uliie Suits from $7 to $10, fast color. Prices of FURNISHIG GOODS AND HA TS TORN ASUNDER ! Caps at 10e: Straw Hats at your own jrice. A jfrcat rciuct;,.,. . V XKCKWEAU of all kiu.Is. f t Trunks, Sachels, and Wall Paper less than Costj CALL AND GET BARGAINS BEFORE TOO LATE. AT; ' HEFFLEY'S, Somerset, vC FOR HARDWARE AND IMPLEMB'TS' JAS. B. HOLDERBAUM, Somerset, Pe:::;'; x Ve have just received for the Spring Trade a Car Load of! he IVk-sr;:,,! STUDEBAKER WAGONS. IF YOl WANT A BUGGY, SPRING WAGON, BU K BOARD OR ROAD CART, You can find w hat you want, ami none better for the money than 1111-. V, L ; p fit ronf.' a larj;e stock of ciUMriox nixnr.ns, ukaveus, mou i:i:s. nr.r.nuy. Champion Ciuimuliid Aniut llnnj nlfirr Hake that Kirr Slim,! on ,,. Plows, Harrows, Feed Cutters, Jfcc. J. 13. ITOHiDIEI vI3 ATJ I , NO. 'i. 15AKRS IJLOfJIv. I ARISK TO HAY THAT THE OLD tf-M Reliable Firm M J OK A. H. PERNER & ERO. STIXL EXISTS, Ami for the good of the iilo of Somerset ami community. Km- may they exi.-t. Turn: LINK OK GENTS' FINE SHOES THE EMKIiSOV, I'KTlOI.K, ( ON'i ; ItK.-'S, lilTToX, AND HAL, IN" PORPOISE, OlIilxiVAN, KANfiAlloo, JxiNGor.A, AND CAI.F. W. L. Douglas' 2.."A J-t.oo. ami 1 do Slim, fire from tack and nails. Kvery pair Warranted. JvlENS' WORKING SJHOES, 90 Cents to $2.50. Tailics Iinc Shoes! Flexihle. Latent Stvlen. for Spring nnd Summer. Iiw and iP-h lleels.lt C , l. and E. Widths. SOMERSET MARKET. Corrected Weekly by COOK BEERITS, DKALCilS IS Choice Croceries, Flour & Feed Apple", itrieff. ? ... .. A pi.le Butter, y gul .'. Beams y hu Brnn, A lmUS" Kiitt-r. (mil.) y t Buckwheat, fl liu meal, Beewax t... ttuiuu, (UHnr-cured Ham:.) y 'flb'l" CiHintry ham! fc.. ...... " (Shoulders) f B S.r . 4U.i..'i!r .- I II ....l-'e 3oe lie zz: '" ",ZZic T.T,1I.-WJ U...... (helleiil 9 bu '. Meal li Chop, eoni ami nat. lot) iba " all rye, f luo lba ir, 1 80 .I HI r t 7"i(b:i m) e;j 11,11 'litir. Roller PniriAa, 1'i'f,..l , iciuia. wm . .... ....... Flaiel )i bu Lard. t . Miitdiiiuri, 10) lba... ...." "' (law, fbn AallOe 51 lsl n0 VMie H)c nnaioea. v bu f ache. dried, y i Rr, lui 8ltlc Halt. l I I KM " (l, round Alum) il laeicZ lAaniou) inn aacK... Suirar, yellow, y t. wmie, y .... Tallow, y Wawaw Halt i bbl 1 J;i 5,) . " '"""'' "" l . 7c ! ne v " - met. Wheat, bo .....60M 2 . UUAVS of Yqur Lip- l I i i i - i i Hay Bakes B. & B. SPECIAL SPP.; NG SALE OF Silks A; Dress CJ.k-Is. In Plain Blacks, Colors, Fancy Combini tions and Weaves. This is a ni.i-t extm-i-. v oiJ.-r.iu-. :r ':.- mmr- KSV.IKK.iHI.IS RMli. l.w-a..! .ry 'lay Uir-'iiilts hut M,m,-t!iiiir ur::-i:u!. l"'"'.'i erxiif l'r i;.m.! will i-ih-T.Il t!i, !r . in '.v.', I'V writinc our M ill ird.-r In-firtiiieM " of the-e vultie-. ivhiih, lii--!!:rr w:?f: i.T. ::-'! mati-in in reunl T,t .-N. ct m :'! . !:-. - !y e!it to any Md.Ire.. '1 h; t.mv h I wir t mpi'liy Km;n every :Liv. V '.i ' , m develop jut f:i sopi,rtioii n t!ie tt:.f .t VHIltui-nnf ,Mrrll(L-il'ir fn'.:l our et-r -:- writ re nuiiiy rare lniru-.au ,-ir! -.,n.f.,:!-:y . ''.--i routes to In- flilly ll;i, !--(.'! nl.d :i " :u. -i liuyera liviuic at a dL-htui-c ftu :.i .- ;: i-elitrei. The brauelie: In the i!i I- v.i:;v.i :: .:. ? clilil;' in-li l:;.i!-k i,riM l.r.i::;-. '-. . " 1.(. 5!.;.'.. ?i."ii. i .:.ii, -iueh l;lK-k Surah, trli rly nii '! iuali:y not hou .!!..' :- '' " -and TV-, AUo. Sl--iiil Vulu.-i in Ill,e k .-.ir.i'i-. 7.V. 'Jl-ineh Plirah. l.lm. 1 S. !." . Full line Ulaek Ann.ire ,-iik-. -:.-'. i :-V : real value. S.J . COloOfED DfESSSIbKS CR0S CRM US, SURAHS. , P.HADAMES, faille f;::v5E rc A few !'- iul imn; - H"' ;' ;:..'.'" ' '-ln h alt wool rhe -Sc and - . ' regular .W. ouilitr. Line of .vi iti'-h nil .!.,! ip!-. . ',':':' IV. m-ineh Freneh SuHinS". ' ; ! ' an,l M. liai.imn yarils vt rriulcKd -er- - ' at .". f,. K- a yard ; uile ' I'niiole thc-e pri"-v-. Wry i-xienive n .-.ir:iii . nf -ME-Te. SATI N ES at U r-and iii.-. id F.. -t ' "' Ailing al ''k-. :i!-f v.r. a.tiiMHHl. of ,.,-,tv 1 , -! ; r ; -i ' ' diu Linen, lin-w iiitich i:n- i r. -.- ' - !' ' " -te., !((.. at iliaii regular '.- - "THE BtST QUALITIES AT L0W5T PRICES" Pirn!! and in I'-iltr Kr- ' r Iltwlery and Oli l-.h. I.;i,li,--' N.--I.W .i. II '' ' i-hiefr, Kiltbon. Lh.-,--. hmrM-l'-r.- -. . ' Hie in.4 for vi.ur in.n.,-y. Write lt I'rie.-s. BQGGS & BUHL 115.1!?. II? & 121 FEDZS.U STBEET. tloloEGENY, Py. de.,-'!vl.l-v. State Normal School California, pa. FAbb TERM OFEjNS SEfT 3 Ai!e-.i!nceiii 1337, 513; It3i 6J. TTi-itni'-tin men nru vmnu-u ( ni(- 1 ' W ViJ-KTloVM. UNM'hfPi ffl'-'HUt'! t'T )' "'.'r. .-I-H--1 ytmr thte Wfrv Ir. h!-tnnl llrn- n- i"' okv. .I -(;'. I.f!; K. PartrMk'- . l,'';'r . wvktl Ityrtiit W. KiliK, r.i"-t Term,. M4t. " RwM In er.'rt ttrinir " : t'l.n. U-t fjifiliii for !i ?i nil Pif h i ' " lrtiiijry jw-itntrkfHi:irt'v tar1 rf ruttf iter t U'tK. BKirli!uc, wif''. -l- etl niton. :t'm hont. lutit. "' spring water on every tJjir, lr.. "" Tuition Almost Tn tbeyrliiatii) J within !w v of tnitito. aiwive -Hai !, frt;l : only lhrttii !!: i Wii.liT free -'' V j n.ntnii ith sn 1 : s e;r. Tr-v '"';-1' , Nnnat i-our vtiW krnin ilee:ii! si'' wve nnit' y iy e:iiennif nt iiiift.n'it .. to pl.-ice k eufjtlii-jiif in tbe hii't--i i"',rv '-.f in? faHier nittt evry inter etl ir- ",u fitr full int'trraiti..n. Weeiiji.r an-- '" tionM. t nit Hire rnr ?arly. linr-i. '' Mm! aaWiiy lut year fr wunt n-::i-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers