Beworvaic Watcpan Terms 2.00 4 Year,in Advance Bellefonte, Pa., Dec. 2t, 1894. P. GRAY MEEK, - - - Epiror A Week of Rest. The thirty n'nth volume of the Deyocratic WaTcHNMAY is concluded with this issue and its readers will pot see it again until it begins the fortieth year, on the morning of January 4th 1895. As is the custom all hands will rest next week the holiday season the better to enjoy. We have tried to give you a paper upon which you could rely and when we look back over the year's work we feel that our efforts have not been fruitless. The WamcumAN has always enjoyed a reputation for frankness that has had much to do with giving it prestige as a reliable journal. For local news it has a record for accuracy and scope that knows no equal, while its editorial, telegraphic and literary de- partments have been far above the | high standard of former years. Wishing you ail a bright and joy- ous Christmas and & prosperous New Year we bid adieu to '94, with the hope that its successor will bring mu. tual blessings and prosperity" TC ST. The Gazette Trying to Excuse Itself. In the last issue of the Keystone Ga. zette appeared two letters, the text of which were intended to relieve that paper of all responsibility for the re- lease of Mr. THoMas BENNER from the mail carrier service in Bellefonte. Im giving a news account of Mr. Bex- NERS release, in a previous issue, the WarcEMAN had stated that it was made on account of complaints of ir- regularity in the mails at the Gazette office. We had no idea of casting any reflec- tions on the Gazette for complaining about the mail service and only pub- lished the action as a matter of news, relying on the editor of another town paper for the correctness of our story. Now whether the Gazette did com- plain or not, the rumor on the streets was that it did and when we come to look into the circumstances there is every reason to believe the rumor true. The Gazette is the only paper in town on Mr. BenxEer’s route. He carried its mail and had nothing whatever to do with the mail relations of any of the other papers. It was the Gazette that complained to this office that it did not get its regular quota of two Wate: mans and we made the same complaint to the Gazette office, because we did notireceive two papers regularly from it. We did not consider it ill ground- ed to publish the story as we did, under such circumstances, and are surprised 10 see the Gazette making such stren- «ous efforts to get out of it. There is nothing for it to be ashamed of. If it did not get its mail regularly it had a perfect right to complain. LST ALSACE. We Will Have to Vote on the Poor House Question. The question as to whether Centre county shall have a poor farm, at whieh all ber paupers will be given a heme and the township overseer sys- tem done away with, or whether the manaer of supporting the poor will continue as in the past, has at length taken definite shape. It has been agitating the minds of some ever since the seheme was voted down at a popu- lar election twelve years, and largely through the efforts of Mr. Jounx B. Long, of Rush township, it is to be brought up again fer public consider- ation. He has studied the matter thorough- ly and believes it both practicable and advisable for the county to unite in the establishment of a poor farm. Under the act of Assembly of June 4th, 1879, if a majority of the poor overseers of a county petition to the court to submit the question to an election, it must be done. A majority of the names of the overseers were found on a petition sub. mitted to the court last Saturday and in response to their prayer, it ruled that at an election to be held the third Tussday in February, in 1895 | the people of Centre county can decide by ballot whether they want to abandon the old system and take up the new. The districts petitioning for the election are: Walker, Boggs, Spring, Bellefonte. Milesburg, Phil- ipsburg, Rush, South Philipsburg, Taylor, Worth, Union, Union- ville, Liberty, Howard, Huston, Snow Shoe, Curtin, Howard, Walker, Patton, Benner, Half Moon, Ferguscn, and College. Heavy Withdrawals of Gold. W asHINGTON, Dec. 18—The treas- ury department is informed that $1, 800 000 in gold was withdrawa from the sub-treasury at New York to day, thus reducing the gold reserve to $91.- 554.909. The treasury gold reserve to- day stands $8.500 000 below the reserve limit ot $100.000000. The rapidity with which the gold has been with- drawn from thie treasury, since the second bond issue on Nov. 24, has given the officials at the New York sub- treasury so much work in bandling and counting the money that extra force bas had to be employed aud worked over time. Since Nov, 24 last the treasury has lost $25.500,000 in gold by withdrawals, two-thirds of which have probahly been exported. ARR The Inquirer in Its New Home. What may be definitely considered as one of the most notable and important events in the recent history of American journalism was the formal opening of the gplendidly equipped new building of the Philadelphia Inquirer, which took place last Saturday evening, in the presence of thousands of distingushed men from all parts of the United States. The Inquirer has long since come to be recognized as one of the leading news- papers of Pennsylvania, and its final settlement in its new and magnificent home, at Eleventh and Market streets, in the very centre of Philadelphia’s business section, give it prestige among the greatest of the metropolitian dailies of New York and Chicago. “The Only” is King. The Pittsburg Daily Post gives all the latest news of the entire world for one cent. It is in the front rank of jour- palism. It is pre-eminently a family paper. It devotes a department daily to women and their doings. Its markets are complete and accurate. It is admir- ably illustrated and the best printed. In short, it is bright, clean, newsy, and costs only one cent, and is read by many thousands of people daily. Terms by mail— Daily Post, one year........ccceceen. rrreraannre iB 0D Daily Post, six months....... . 1 50 Semi weekly Post, one year.. - 1 00 Semi-weekly Post, six months...... 50 A free copy of semi-weekly with every club of 10. Send for sample copy. Ad- dress. The Post, Pittsburg, Pa. ADDITIONAL LOCALS. — Within four weeks Mr. Reuben ‘Watkins, of Mt. Eagle, and four mem- bers of his family have died from ty- phoid fever. —Wardner Willard, a son of Mrs. Nan Willard, of Reynolds avenue, fell off the vaulting horso in the Y. M. C. A. gymnasium, on Monday, and frac- tured some of the bones of his wrist. ——RElectric cars are running on the streets of Lock Haven now. ‘On Satur- day, the first day, between seven and eight hundred fares were rung up. One car on Sunday picked up over a thous- and nickels.’ ——Mrs. Amelia Harper was found dead on the floor of her home in Aaronsburg on Tuesday morning. She had suffered with cancer but she was able to be about, as she had apparently been doing her morning work when «death overtook her. A few friends who happened in found her shortly after life had fled. ——A pleasant way to spend Christ- mas evening will be to go to the opera house and see Diehl’s stereopticon exhibition. tive as well as amusing. You can see more of the world in an hour up there than you can in years of travel. Many views have been added to the well se- lected list. Among them the celebrated «Ten Night's in a bar-room” series. Cepars’ Horipay DarnNties.--The best candies, clearest toys, the freshest cakes and breads, the largest nuts and the greatest variety of ices are to ke found only at Cedars’ Allegheny street bakery and confectionery. Special at- tention is being paid to the holiday trade up there and you can buy more good things at Cedars’ this year than ever before, and for less money. Call and see for yourself. ——The Karthause Times says deer are so plenty in West Keating township that a lady caught one and put it into an outbuilding and kept it until Deacon Jones came home and killed it on Mon- day of last week. The deer dressed about 100 pounds. He ran against a wire fence on the old Jones’ farm turning somersaults and landing in the yard on his back. Before he could regain his feet Miss Jones caught the deer and handed him into the meat house and closed the door. ——Boys and girls grain shoes, solar tip 60 cts., 5 ets., 70 cts,, 75 cts. 90 cts. and $1.00. Lyon & Co. ——Holiday goods at Green's pbar- macy. Arp THE LoaaNs:—The fair which the Logan Steam Engine Co. intends holding in Temple Court all of next week will be wholly dependent for its success or failure, on the good feeling of the people of tha town. If you are dis- posed to help ibem a little present some trinket suitable for such a sale. It will nct cost you much, but it will mean a great deal to Lhe firemen, who have been trying to get their apparatus paid for. They can do it mn this way without much expense to anyone and as it is wholly to the public interest their work is directed the firemen should receive every encouragement. The views will be instruc- | News For PENsIoNERS —By the jor) sue of December 5th Oliver P. Wilson, of Hublersburg, was granted a pension and George M. Fransler, of Port Ma- tilda, was awarded an increase. A FareweLL BanqQuer.—The Belle- fonte lodge I. O. O. F. had a social ses- sion in their rooms in the Exchange an- nex last night, the object being a fare- well banquet to their brother Odd Fellow Rev. Miles O. Noll. Rev. Noll expects to leave for his new field of pastoral duty, at Carlisle, before the first of the year and the fraternal spirit that has al- ways manifested itself in his relations with his brothers of the order found its response in the testimonial given him last night. During Mr. Noll’s stay in Bellefonte he has made friends of every- one and his departure will leave a sphere unfilled that will be noticed in more ways than one. BierLy’s FEsTaL Davs.—The latest musical compilation by Prof. Alfred Bierly, of Chicago, Ill. is out under an attractive cover and the caption “Festal Days.” It is specially adapted for singing classes, musical conventions and societies in that it begins with the rudiments of music and ends with the highest grade of choral music. The frontispiece is a handsome full page picture of the composer and publisher, whose music bas become so popular in this section. The book contains more than one hundred choice selections, is printed on good paper and should prove a ready seller. Two oF THE TripLETS DEAD.—The trio of baby girls that has been the cen- tre of attraction at the home of Robert Boslough, on east Bishop street this place, for the past fifteen months, is broken and little Ruth, the prettiest of the triplets is dead. Several weeks ago the babies ell took the measles, that is epidemic in the town, and were}getting along fairly well until Ruth was pros- trated with pneumonia. She died on Tuesday evening. Yesterday at noon another of the two died but the third was on a fair road to recovery. It is too bad that after having lived this long, with every promise of growing up into strong healthful children those interesting triplets should fall victims to disease. The two will be buried in the same coffin this afternoon at 8 o’clock. MARRIAGE LicENCES.—Issued dur- ing the past week taken from the docket: Franklin E. Scantling, of Blanchard, and Mamie Jackson, of Lock Haven. John S. Daleand Caroline Summy, both of Lemont. John T. Watson and Laura E. Con- fer, both of Boggs Twp. Geo. B. Lee and Kate C. Moyer, of Potter Twp. Chas. E. Cowdrick, of Bellefonte, and Emma J. Ross, of Spring Twp. John B. Ruble, of State College, and Sarah Hoy, of Lemont. Jas. C. Gilliland, of Oak Hall, and Nannie M. Campbell, of Linden Hall: Wm. J. Howe and Mary Frank, both of Philipsburg. J. H. Fogelman, and Sarah E. Mechtly, both of Patton Twp. Elmer E. Bartley, of Bellefonte ; and Ella M, Stover, of Aaronsburg. ——Two thousand heavy flannel shirts worth $1.50 are selling at 50 cts. Lyon & Co. ——A half hour spent in looking over our assortment will give you a fair idea of the popular styles. and we can only hope that it will be as much pleasure for you to see as for us to show our goods.—Samuel Lewin’s. ——Shaeffer the photographer is offer- ing some great enducements until Jan 1st, 1895. Foster STILL TALKS WEATHER.— My last bulletin gave forecasts of the storm wave to cross the continent from 16th to 20th, and the next, which was due in Japan about Dec. 8, will reach the Pacific coast, near the Columbia river’s mouth, about the 20th, cross the western mountains by close of 21st, the Mississippt valley and upper lakes 23d, Ohio valley, east gulf and lower lakes 24th, eastern states 25th, and New- foundland 26th. The path of this storm center will lie along the northern boundary of .the United States, causing unusually warm weather all over the country preceding and during the passage of the disturb- ance, only moderately cool weather fol- lowing. Rainfall from this disturbance will be limited to small areas and excessive evaporation will cause drouth in many parts of the country. Better rains may be expected from the next disturbance. ‘Warm waves will cross the western mountain country about the 20th, the great central valleys about 22d and the eastern states about the 24th. Cool waves will cross the western mountain country about the 28d, the great cen- tral valleys about the 25th and the east. ern states about the 27th. My forecast of a dry November has been wonderfully well verified, not more than half the usual amount of rain having fallen during the past ee WaY CHILDREN HANG STOCKINGS — The custom of hanging stockings on Christmas eve, like that of preparing the Christmas tree, is derived from the Germans, who have a fable that while the stockings of good children are filled with toys and sweetmeats by Kris King- le, a corruption of Christ Kindlin, or Christ child—those of bad ones receive nothing but a small rod or switch, which is placed in them by another personage, known as Pelsnichol, literally Nicholar with fur, meaning St. Nicholas dressed in fur. Itis a rare sight on Christmas morning in a German household to see the expression of abject misery and broken heartedness on the face of some poor little wight who, having been dis, obedient or otherwise naughty on Christ- mas eve, finds in his stocking cnly a small birch rod, while the hosiery of his brothers and sisters is filled with bon- bons and playthings. The dread of get- ting the rod, from old Pelsnichol on Christmas, keeps many a German child in order throughout the entire year. —Ez. | WEDDING BELLS CHIME FORTH.—A pretty wedding ceremony was solemniz- ed at the palatial country home of Mr. Joseph Ross, near Pleasant Gap, on Wednesday evening, at 7 o’clock. The colonial stone homestead was thronged with merry people who had assembled to witness the nuptials of the daughter of the family, Miss Emma Ross, to Mr. C. E. Cowdrick, the youngest son of contractor Morris Cowdrick, of east Linn street, this place. Rev. J. C. Young, of the Methodist church pro- nounced the ceremony after which a reception was held and a sumptuous wedding supper served. The bride is a charming young girl who will make a loving and practical wife. Her husband is a brick layer and a young man of good habits and kind disposition. Their union will prove a happy one, no doubt, and the WATCHMAN extends its hearty congratulations. Among those present were : Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Cowdrick, Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Garman, Mr. and Mrs. H M, Cowdrick, Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Riddle, Miss Mable Cowdrick, Mr. Christ Dale, Misses May Eckenrotb, Nettie Gill, and Mamie Dolan, Messrs. T. P. Cowdrick, Role Miller, Ammon Kerstetter, Will Harrison, Harry Hile, Mr. and Mrs, William Ross, and Mr. and Mrs. Potter Tate. Many useful and costly presents wera received and the Pleasant Gap band rendered a delightful serenade shortly after the ceremony. ——Holiday goods at Green’s phar- macy. ——Those fine enameled photos of Shaeffer’s greatly slaughtered in price until Jan. 1st, 1895. . MORE NOTORIETY FOR BELLEFONTE— "Bellefonte or some of her people seem to be continually gaining notoriety in one way or another. Last week it was the dedication of the new armory that at- tracted attention from all parts of the country. This week the town of Belle- fonte is being talked of because of the escapades of one of her former sons. Charley Valentine, oldest son, of Mr. Abram Valentine formerly of this place, now of Atlantic City, N. J., was ar- rested in El Paso, Tex., one day last week, while eloping with a Mrs. Mul- vaney, whom he had met at the seaside resort and who had grown tired of her ancient husband. The story runs as follows: The Mul- vaneys were wealthy and Charley meg them at the shore. Mrs. Mulvaney, young and pretty, had married for money and was consequently little in love with her husband. When he fell from a carriage last September and broke his wrist, the doctors advised a western trip for recuperation. They de- cided to go but the Mrs. insisted that her husband should have a nurse and as Charley Valentine had n. hing in par- ticular to do, the wife though. .¢ would be just the plan. Well Charley wa just looking for that kind of a job, so the party set off, with San Francisco as their destination. The nurse kept the old man’s nerves up by liberal doses from a «plack bottle,” but by the time they reached Omaha, Neb., such a meta- morphosis had transpired that Valen- tine had become Mulvaney, while old Mulvacey was known as Valentine. The patient was in a stupor and was put to bed at a hotel, where Charley left instructions that he and his wife were going away for a day and the old man should not be disturbed. Immediately upon their departure the suspicions of the hotel people were aroused and going to the old man’s room they found him lying on the bed fully dressed. When he regained conscious- ness he would not believe that his wife had gone off until be missed $10,000 in cash and $7,000 worth of jewelry. War- rants were issued and the elopers were arrested in Texas. Mrs. Mulvaney promptly furnished cash bail for the two, but they were held on other charges. Charley Valentine is well known here and this escapade is a great surprise lo those who knew him. It is not thought with the intent of putting him out of month. the way, as the city papers assert. here that he drugged old Mulvaney ! How CurTIN Was To Have BEEN CARRIED OFF.—A short time after the death of the lamented Andrew G. Cur- tin, the WATCHMAN published a clip- pling from Kate Field's Washington. The story that article told was of a plan which the confederate soldiers bad con- cocted to capture and carry off Curtin, who was then one of the central figures of the North, and whosesojourn at Bed- ford Springs brought him within a single night’s march of the rebel lines. The article, as it appeared, was incor- rect as to the date of the proposed car. rying off of Pennsylvania's Governor and as it reached the eye of a friend of the rebel General, who had planned the capture, he sent a marked copy to him asking for his confirmation or correction of the story. The officer in question was none other than the daring General Imboden, who was campaigning and recruiting in the Shenandoah valley at the time, and his answer which ap- peared in a recent issue of the Everett Republican is especially interesting to Centre countians who will be surprised to learn how narrowly Curtin did escape talling into rebel hands. The letter is as follows: Damascus, Va, November 29, 1894. It was indeed a pleasant surprise to see your handwriting once more ina letter ad- dressed to me. The accompanying newspa- per. The Everett Republican, also has come to hand. 1 inclose you a letter from Mr. Parthemore referring to the same matter. He also sent me Kate Field's mention of the incident. It has some foundation in fact, but there are some errors in it—especially as tothe date of my intended raid, and as to my telling Gov- Curtin that “if he had stayed in Altoor® a couple of hours longer he wculd have been captured and carried off.” I have promised Mr. Parthemore to send to him a condensed statement of the facts on the Confederate side for Gov. Curtin’s biographer and am only delayed by an effort to find some- thing in the Government's publication of the “Records of the War,” of which some 96 vol. umes have been issued, that will fix accurate- ly the date of my “raid.” All my military pa: pers were lost or burnt after the surrender of Gen. Lee's army in 1865. Typhoid fever so prostrated me in the Fall of 1864 that T got a temporary transfer to light duty in Georgia, to terminate April 1st, 1865. But at that time Generals Sherman and Ston e- man had so completely cut off communication between Virginia and Georgia that it was im" possible for me to reach the former State from the latter. When Gen. Lee surrendered my brigade was scattered on detached duty in the Shen® andoah valley, from Harrisonburg to Fincas tle, in Botetourt county. Hearing of Lee’s surrender the officers disbanded my men, who went to their homes in the mountains of Virginia, taking their horses and arms along, and I suppose secreted or burnt my official books and papers. At least all efforts on my part to recover them have failed. The pres ent Governor of Virginia, Lieut. Col. O’Ferrall” of the 23d Virginia cavalry of my brigade’ marched a fragment of the regiment to Win. chester and surrendered formally. So you see I have norecords to fix dates and events, except by reference to General Lee's records or those of the War Department at Washington, and they are far from complete as to my little command in the Valley and North- west Virginia. In 1862 I was withdrawn from Gon. Joseph E. Johnston's army at Yorktown and sent by President Davis to the Virginia mountains to enlist, from beyond our then occupied lines all the men I could “Stonewall” Jackson dislodging Schenck, Milroy, Fremont, Banks and Shields from the Valley in May and June, 1862, (in which I took an humble part with on- ly about 200 men I had secured in 2 or 3 weeks), greatly facilitated my recruiting. In fact men came in so fast I had difficalty in arming them, and by October of that year I had over 2,000 mountaineers in rank, and by January, 1863, a full brigade, including a 6-gun battery of horse artillery. Of my command 200 or 300 were Marylanders, so that I had a com- mand embracing men who were admirable guides to go where I wished, and they all had left friends at home whose deepest sym- pathies were with us. My aim and duty were to cripple the B. & 0. R. R. as ofcen and as much as possible. My information of affairs on that road fro Har per’s Ferry to Cumberland was as accurate al most as they had at Washington, and I was thus enabled. to strike it many a disastrous blow, with little loss on my part. I nearly al- ways surprised the road guard by; night marches of from 30 to 50 miles. Such was my success on the B. & O. that I conferred with Gen. Lee to try to get him to send a co-operat- ing cavalry force of 2,600 men whose move- ments [ would mask in an effort for them to reach Pittsburg via Fairmount and the Mo- nongehala river, whilst I,c rossing the Potomac below Cumberland, would make a dash at Al toona and burn all the shops there and blow up the engines, and take such a course for re, treat into the Virginia mountains as would en- able me to unite with the then retreating col- umn from Pittsburg. Thif scheme made a deep impressicn on Gen. Lee, but with McClelland im his front he did not feel safe in detaching the force I deem" ed necessary to certain success. Ihad plenty of men with men to send in little squads a day or two in advance, who, with the aid of their friends at home, could have cut and kept cut and unserviceable all the wires that could betray our movements, That big raid was never undertaken, but my “heart was set’ on “getting a lick” at Altoona. I kept ham. mering away at the B. & O. during the Sum- mer of 1862, and thinking much about the Pennsylvania road, but never saw an opening that I deemed safe, and Gen. Lee had caution- ed me against rashness. 1 think it was August, or early in September, 1862—not 1864, as Kate Field has, nor 1863, as the editor of the Everett Republican has it, but in 1862—that I heard via Cumberland that Governor Curtin, Hon. Simon Cameron and Col. A. K. McClure were at Bedford Springs for a brief period of rest; and I thought that possibly where these important public and brainy men were others of note would be ! about. So I sought more positive information to reach me at Hancock, and to be governed by it, and set out to cross the Potomac there with about 1000 men, sending detachments up and down the B. O. road to do what damage they could. and to join me «t Hen, cock; intending, if the information justified it, to make a night dash on Bedford, “bag the big game," and, if the wires were cut on the Pennsylvania road, send my prisoners back to Virginia and go on for Altoona. 1 remember my plan thea was to fire up every locomotive, put on a forced draft, chain down the safety vaives, and wait at a safe dis- tance, covering all entrances to the shops with our rifles, "till the explosions began, then re- tire as we came till after night fall and make for the Potomac where we might be least ex- pected I waited an hour or two at Hancock in vain for the positive information I wanted» and for lack of which I turned back to Virginia, no one the wiser as to what brought me there, except to do some ‘‘work” on the B. & O. which being done it was natural we should go back to our camp at Moorfield. But for some mmpradence on the part of some one—perhaps an over-eager inquiry for Governor Curtin ex- citing suspicion—I might have gone and cap- tured him and his friends, who would have proved a *‘big card” in our hands to force ex- changes then in a muddle The truth is I should have pushed right cn. It has been said that “the woman who hesitates is lost.” So I am convinced that in war the command- er who_hesitates, where the chances are even and the object to be achieved is important, commits a great blunder. Hoping for another opportunity I kept this scheme vey quiet but noj such chance ever presented itself again. To show what cool daring may accomplish I need only refer to the capture of Generals Crook and Kelly, at Cumberland, a little over two years later, by Capatin Jesse McNeill, of my brigade, where, with 40 men, he took them out of their beds late at night when their army of 8,000 men lay asleep all around and in tke city, and sent them to Richmond. In 1876-7 1 became intimately acquainted with Governor Curtin and often discussed this affair with him. He was a great and lovable man, and I am proud to have numbered him among my warm friends, and often told him how much I regretted not forming his ac- quaintance at Bedford and shown him chival. rous hospitality in my mountain camp—an honor I surely should have had that night but for some one’s blundering or my lack of nerve to push on. He told me he and his friends were amusing themselves in a pleasant game at cards, which was summarily ended How he said they got away I do notremember, Truly your friend, J. D. IMBODEN. P. S.—A later letter from Gen. Imboden fixes the date of his intended raid on Bedford: as in August or September, 1862. A QUARTER OF A CENTURY OLD.— The Young Men’s Christian Associa- tion of this place celebrated the twenty- fifth anniversary of its organization by a joint meeting in the Methodist and Presbyterian churches last Sunday night. In the former a male quartet, with full crchestral accompaniment, lent at. tracti veness to the services, while in the latterjchurch a male choir, accompanied by Mr. Meyer on the pipe organ, led the singing. State !Secretary Hurlburt, Assistant State Secretary, Gilbert A. Beaver, J. W. Gephart Esq., and Mr. F. H. Cota, gacretary of the local association, were the speakersjwho entertained the people with the factsZof the objects and re- markable work and growth of the Y. M. C. A. all over the world. To most of those present Mr. Cota’s report for the year was a revelation. Very little attention is paid, by a ma- jority of our people, to the stone house, on north Allegheny street, which af- fords an asylum for all kinds of men, where a wholesome christian atmosphere pervades a cheerful reading room, a cosy parlor and an attractive game room, and where a fully equipped gymnasium and clean baths afford a means of physica] development and culture. The eighteen thousand men, who visited the place dur- ing the year just closed attest, however, what such a place means to them. Many of them with no homes, find there a bright, cosy place where they are al- ways welcome and the result is, they frequent it, Others without employ- ment improve; their idle moments in the reading rooms and every night parties of young men unre kept off the streets by the] attractive gymnasium. During the year 2,000 young men at- tended gospel meetings in the rooms, 21 young men confessed Christ there, 1,500 attended receptions and entertain- ments, 600 took baths and 140 attend- ed educational classes. Is this not a record that should in- spire a generous support ? The as30cia- tion has never donesuch good work and its secretary is to be congratulated on the zealous manner in which he has labored for its success. Help your own son, by helping such a telling work. BorouGH Business TRANSACTED.— Council met as usual on Monday night and transacted the following business : Upon a petition presented by Jas. I. McClure the matter of laying a board walk out to the Brown row, at the car shops, was referred to the Street commit- tee with power to act in requiring prop- erty owners to build same. Petitions from residents of Curtin street for anoth- or arc and several incandescent lights for that thoroughfare and from resi- dents of Howard street for another arc light were referred to the same commit- tee. The Street committee reported that the end of the Curtin street fiasco is in sight and recommended the payment of $280.54 for two week’s work thereon. The water committee reported the low- ering of pipes on Curtin street at a cost of $220. There were no further reports and council adjourned after instructing the Street committee to confer with the County Commissioners for the immediate erection of the new bridge over Spring creek, at the foot of Lamb street, which was recommended by the grand jury gome time ago. : — Notwithstanding the strike we have received two hundred Misses coats from $2 00 to $5 25. They are really worth from $4 00 to $9.00. Sd