.at '4 ( All ABOUND THB STATU im CMhwW from all tsettoas sf ths t CMsasswsalUs. AtrooitA, Juns 7. Ia tbs Blair county sfcnmiisUc convention, which met her ysstenlsr, A. V. DtvellT, of Altoona, and Boa. S. Landii, of Hollidaysburg, wei placed in nomiustlon for president judge. A tftoputs aroea ovtr decision girtn by flaa sommlttse on credentials, wheieupoa UaDiTfllT delegation retired from the MTsotien. The Landle delegation then unanimously iwlnated their candidate. Mora disputes tmsa than at any other similar meeting em girea in the county. Sereral of the v IM Telly men who remained in the room t n and stated that they would not SBACtlaa tbe Landis nomination. For v Sears than an hour it was impossible for Chain an Thomas Uckiernan to keep sjsdss in the house. Media, June 5. A trolley car on the Madia and Cheiter line ran into a lot of attie instantly killing two cows and a bull. Ths eattle were not seen by the tuotormnn a til a moment before they were struck. Tksy were walking up the track in a line, esttk their heads toward tbs approaching nr. The car was thrown off the track and ditched. There were only fire passengers board, and none of them were hurt. The eattle killed belonged to Rufus Ingram, a adgbboring farmer, and had broken out at a field near where the accident occurred. LsncamR, June S. Dr. S. E. Weber, irk has been iurestigating the flea or kmss plague in the northern part of the aunty, was summoned to Washington (or conference with Secretary of Agriculture Morton and Professor Riley, of tbe Ento mological bureau. There is no doubt that the plague Is spreading in the country and Is growing in sriousnes. At Petersburg tbe insects aa been discovered In a tobacco ware- booas, and a number of people have beeu deprived of work in consequence. Dr. Weber has been adrised of their presence hi tw mors houses in East Earl. Bxaclko, Juns 6. In tbe equity pro sidings brought by Mrs. Angelins Fox, widow of Adam Fox, against the children of her late husband by a former marriage, a decision has Jnst been rendered in favor of Mrs. Fox. awarding her property of the mine of $3,000. The decedent devised his property to his children, but his widow claimed that certain real estate did not be long to her husband, bat was her separate property acquired by her personal earnings. Hsjuusbcro, June 6. Ths following , were chartered yesterday: Arandale Mar ble Oempany, of Chester county; capital, $330,000; to operate in London Grove township. Among ths incorporators are William Vollmer, S. Croft Register and Phillip S. VoUmer, Philadelphia. Coplay Knitting Company, of Lehigh county; capi tal, $3,000. St. Mary's Creamery Com pany, of Elk county; capital $5,000. Citi rns Eleutrio Light Company, of Wayne, Beiawar county; capital, $5,000. Rxadiko. June 5. Work upon the pro posed Reading, Lancaster and Baltimore sailroad having been abandoned, the por tions of the roadwey already graded having been plowed under and planted with corn, tbe last chapter in this enterprise is about being completed in tbs seizure and sale of he contractor's plant. Tbs receivers of the Reading Railroad Company will sell on lbs 81st inst., to secure freight charges, tbe carta, wagons and tools consigned to V. E. Warren, the contractor. Lawnwrr.o, June 7. At the Union eooaty democratic convention resolutions indorsing the national and state adminis trations were passed, and Governor Paul son was indorsed for ths presidency in "James Glace was nominated for edmmlssioner and Adam Krng for auditor. After a lively time ths nominations for treasurer and register and recorder were referred to the standing committee for set tlement. Rcadko, Juns 6. Everything is In readiness for completing the Sooth Moun tain railroad from tfao Sohaylkill to the Snuqnehanna river, through the counties at Berks, Lebanon and Dauphin. Work will be commenced this week on tbs seo tiarxUcweea this city and Bernville. Ths greater part of tbe roadbed has been com pleted from Eernville to GrantviUs, Dau phin county. , Eastok, June . Whlls John Cols, aged beat 80, and George Baltai, aged 45, wars breaking np stone ia the Liscio Clay and Pulp Company's quarry yesterday, a mils aorta of Phillipsburg, N.J.,', slids oo snrred end they wars buried under 100 tons of rock. .The bodies were recovered a few aaurs Ister. Both wars terribly man 11, . BalUi leaves -a wifs and firs call inn,.1 ".' , , Hazletox. Jnns 7. An srplosion sf gas Mntred in No. 2 Stockton colliery, ope rated M Lindermsn Skeer, yesterday, by Anica, Martin Kosack, Michael Lsaako, Seers Palcko and Joba Mortoils wtrs horribly bnrned. The explosion was caused by a naked lamp coring la con tret with a body of gas wbicU had collected ia a bertflng. " The injurwd men wars taken to the hospital. i m ' ; Rxadptq, Jane 6. Ths annual report of State Adjutant Hammer, of the Sons of Veteran, has just been Issued from tbe headquarters ia this city. It shows orer 1.000 members ia the state, twsnty-foar new camps having been - Instituted during she past year. The new members mustered sum be red 2,701, while there was a loss of 132 members. Habjuebuko, Juns 7. Governor Patti on yesterday attached his signsturs to ths general appropriation bill, which appro priates about (13,500.000 for the ordinary expenses of tbs executive, Judicial and leg islative department of the commonwealth, interest on ths public debt and for ths sup port of tbe public schools for ths nsxt two fiscal years beginning Jane 1. Potts viixi, Juns 8. The Reading Com pany inaugurated a new policy in its coal traffic snd sent out no trains on Sunday. Until tbe coal trade warrants it no coal trains will be moved hereafter on that day. This is done to give train hands rest and at tbe earns time will very materially cut down expenses. La.ncamtr, Juns 6. The horribly mu: tiljted remains of James McCarty, of Fall 2irer, Mass., were found along tbe Prnn trlvnuin railroad, near Columbia. It is supposed be tried to board a freight and AjIi under the cars. IToLMDATfBrp.fi, June 8. The rate room of the I). M. Bate Company, at Roaring spring, this county, took lire from spon tanrous combustion snd was entirely de stroyed. The main buildings of tbe mill were saved by eueiyttic work of tbe fire krig'uls. I'oiTRViixn, June 3. Winfield W. Scott has made an assignment. Scott ran stores st Mtnetxrille, (Jlen Ciirlwio and William Penn, in th'.s county, sud aiKOiiettr Wilkes Rarre. Ho is alro engaged in contracting, K statement filed. Kkamojiik, Juns 5. D. H. Rotbermel, at Trevertm, extreasurer of Zerby town ship, lias been found to be t900 short ia .las accounts by tha auditors. the Kicwa rmoit au. abound. Condenaed Aeeoaau of all the Important appeatags. " Thirty-four states are represented In at anti-tnist convention at Cbioago, Trolley charter franchises In Bncki county are a drug la the market. Andrew Trayer, accused of being ens ol the watch fuctory robbers, has been set free. By a fall of coal at Mahanoy City col liery, August Rathway was instantly killed. Reading proposes to build a new pest hospital, in which to treat all contagious diseases. John P. Csrey, a Memphis (Tenn.) grocer, was frightened to death during a tnunder shower. The coke orens of tus Rockhlll Company at Orbisonla, are being operated with non union men. The Clearfield and Mahoning mllroad, from Clearfield to DuBois, has beeu opened for business. An explosion of lime In a bucket serious ly burned Mrs. Maul and her two children, of Lansdale. There was no demonstration at Johns town to mark ths fourth anniversary of the great flood. A mine wagon at bnamoWn ran away, terribly mangling Andrew Deennot and Jobn Locoskie. A coroner's Jury decided that the dis astrous wreck of Main's circus near Tyrone was accidental. Weavers in the Potchogtis (L. L) lace mills struck in revolt against a 80 per cent, reduction. Bishop Paret says the project for a great new cathedral la Washington, D. C, is flourishing nicely. Sowden & Webster, furriers of Kew York, have assigned, owing $16,833 and having only $9,UO0. Mexico has imposed a stamp tax of three cents for every $5 worth of gold or silver coined or exported. Doylestown stockholders In the defunct National Bank of Kansas, bars been as sessed 75 per cent. The forty-ninth general assembly of the national division, Sons of Temperance, is in session in Chicago. Dr. Alfred J. Britt, of West Consho sorken, became resident physician of Char ity hospital, Norristown. Harry Hill, who is wanted In Atlanta, G a , for a forgery amounting to $20,000, was arrested in Chicago. Murderer Buccleri objects to being hsng ed Juae 39, because that is St. Peter's day, a general holiday Jn Italy. By dropping a stick of dynamite to the ground, Nicholas Carman, a Vulnersville miner, was blown to atoms. To end her domestic woes, Mrs. John Ward jumped in front of a train at Ash land and was instantly a corpse. Afraid of becoming blind, Charles Kaer nesky, a New York carpenter, 77 years aid, hanged himself with a clothes tins. Smugglers bringing la tinplate on an East port, Me., schooner were detected, after long cheating the government. A decree ordering ths sals of tbs Brady's Bend Iron Company's property has been filed at Eittanning by Judge Mihard. The wholesale lumber firm sf Mutaleisen & Co., of St. Joseph, Mo., has assigned. The liabilities are estimated at $130,000. Instead of hitting the mark, a esmpaaion accidentally shot William WesUey, of Reading, inflicting a daagerous wound. Dr. Charles E. Washbara, of Ithaca, N. Y., wealthy, and lassos from orarstudy, banged himself ia a Cincinnati sanitarium. It has turned out that ths farm of Hoy, who killed his wifs, children and himself, near Connslls rills, was eaten np by mort gages. Dr. George F. Shrady baa been appoint ed chief consulting physician to the hos pitals of New York city .health depart ment. After a four years' fight the Knight of Labor hare raised their boycott from Lig gett & Myers, St. Louis tobacco manufac turer. A Juror's dismissal by ths judga, who de clared murderer Porter Stacks' case a mis trial, ia held by Stocks traassl to quash toe Four North Wales young men were ar rested for talking so loud that ths prayers of worshipers la a near-by. caareb. war disturbed. . ; Two bloodhounds and 100 persons are bunting down murderer Antonio Saoeo, of Boston, hidden in ths swamp aeat 8waarp scott, Mass. . ...j- - .-- C. C. Daley A Co., lira stack commis sion men of St. Louis, hsvs awsgned, ow ing $23,000 and having aooslnal suits at $43,000. ...... Suits far $ I IW, 000 agsinstrari on bras cu es of the Standard Oil Company bars grown out of ths big flood and ,1k sa . Oil creek last summer. Counsel for Dr. Wyckoff, charged with murder and bank robbery at Leechbarg, will contend that ths prisoner was made insane by poker. E. U. Tata, editor of ths Hopkins county, Texas, Echo, who killed K. a Moors, editor of tbs Alliance Vindicator, la September. 1891, has been acquitted. Demoralization of ths msrket has caused ths shutting down of ths Diamond plats glsss works, of Kokomo and El wood, Ind., throwing 1,4000 men out of work. An attachment of $16,128 has been served against ths Madison (Me.) Woolen Company for Jobn H. Earle, of New York. The company has $200,000 liabilities and 1 389.000 assets. Samuel B. Barker, of Chicago, one of the largest lumber dealers in the north wtt, has suspended. His assets will ax ceed his liabilities by half a million and he may resume soon. ' Plxty six members of ths Amalgamated Aiuociatiou ars on strike from the Wayne irau works, of Pittsburg, because they ob jected to waiting long on a heat. An amic able settlement is expected. The Montgomery county democratic committee baa adopted new rules provid ing that hereafter there shall be ons dele gate for seventy-five democratic voters and tin additional delegate for each 125 votes in addition. The body of a man with a self-inflicted suifv wound lu the breast, was fonnd under tbe porch of tbe Sttirgis Hotel at Coney Island. Letters addressed to Edward C. Harris, No. 600 Paul street, Baltimore, were found in the pockets. Tbe J. H. McLnln Machine Company, snd J. n. McLain and Frank C. McLntu. Individually, dealer la art and Oriental goods, at Canton, O., bare asstgbsd. Tbs liabilities will undoubtedly exceed iiHO,' 000. Ths asaetu may reach $130,00. Lippinoott's lbguina for Jane. The complete novel in the June number ol Lippincott's is "The Trans lation of a Savage," by Gilbert Parker, author of "The Chief Factor," "Pierre and his People," "Mrs. Falchion," etc. It has an unusual subject, and tells how an Englishman of family and wealth married an Indian ejrl of Hud son s Bav and took her home, with re sults naturally mixed, but better than might have been expected. The fourth in the series of Lippin cott's Notable Stories "The Philoso phers," by Geraldine Bonner deals with an extraordinary wedding, in which the men concerned were phil osophers indeed. It is illustrated. "Ambition," a play in one act, by Johanna Staats, has a double love story. The Athletic Series is continued in an illustrated article on "Amateur Rowing," by John F. Huneker. In the Journalist Series, Theodore Stan ton descants on "The Foreign Corres pondent." John Burroughs gives 'A Glance into Walt Whitman," and Frank A. Burr tells "How Afen Write," with portraits of Captain King, J. G. Blair.e, Julian Hawthorne, Eugene Firkl, Joel Chandler Harris. J. W. Riley, Bill Nye, and Walt Whitman. W. S. Walsh supplies anecdotes il lustrating the methods, now more honored in breach than in the obser vance, of "The Practical Jester." Al fred Stoddart, in "An Actor's Art,' contributes a brief study ot Edward S. Willard. "A Colonial Vista," by F. H. W., is a notice of Miss Wharton's "Througn Colonial Doorways." "When Doctors" Differ," by F. M. B., is a com ment on a recent deliverance of Mr. F. Marion Crawford. M. Crofton, in "Men of the Day," offers pen-pictures of Ambassador Bayard, Millionaire Mackay, Com poser Verdi, and Editor Burnand. The poetry of the number is un usual'y full, containing lyrics by Gra ham R. Tomson, the late Phillip Bourke Marston, Lorimer Stoddard, Bliss Carman, and Harrison S. Morris, besides quatrains by Frank Dempster Sherman, Clinton Scollard, and Joel Benton. "Is this hot enoueh for vou?" is a silly question ; but if you meet a man who complains of suffering from the heat, ten to one vou will find, on in quiry, that he does not use Ayer's Sarsaparilla to tone up his system and frse his blood from irritating humors. The statistics of crime throughout the country show a marked increase in the numoer of murders during re cent years fiom 2,335 m l887 to 5,906 in 1 89 1 while for several years prior to 18S7 the number fell short of 3,000. Strength & Health. If you are not feeling strong and healthy, try Electric Bitters. If "La Gripp" has left you weak and weary, use Electric Bitters. This remedy acts directly on Liver, Stomach and Kidneys, gently aiding those organs to perform their functions. If you are amictea wiw sick Headacne, you will find speedy and permanent relief by takinc Electric Bitters. One trial will convince you that this is the remedy you neea. .Large Dot ties only 50c at C. A. Kleim s Drug Store. He "Bwothah Chawley has the bwain fevah and he cawn't find a nurse high or low." She "Sit up with him yourself. There is no human mss'i- bility of your catching the disease." Detroit J1 ret frttt. tfe of people have piles, hu DtWitte Witch Hazel Salve trill cure them. W. S. Jiishton, JDrvg-ffit- 10-14-iyr. "Poverty is a disease," howled speak, er. "And yet," murmured the poor chap in the back of the hall, "we who are afflicted with it are arrested when ever we take anything for it !" Vogue. Woman's Mistake. She tries to do too much. This applies to all women. The ambitious girl striving for school honors. The busy house wife, the shop girl, the society woman. What follows? Nervous prostration, excita bility, fainting spells, dizziness, sleeplessness, backache, and most likely organic diseases of the uterus or womb, causing bearing-down pains and irreg ularity. Oh! women, if you must bring upon yourself these trou bles, remember that Lydia E. Pinkhanis Vegetable Compound has done more to relieve such suffering than anyotherremedy. "It cured me, and will you." Jtfri. Jtttni L. A'tan, JJ Afaritt Strut, F Ilarritburg, Pa. Fv All drarpUu sell it, Address in cnandence, n - tvDu K. 1'inkham Mao. Ear? CO.. l.YNN. MU. w f , OdO'S I UvrPUlM.es cents. V run llivn Wfnr 'fw.fi ViOnTpft Iheia ITfo.ft Ji; JJ Axis. Aiy 4J W J V ' JX. K H-A UOHor HWIJI. D. 1 LOWENBERG t CLOTHING STORE exMed miclen.joy Dtl the patronage and cn itlenee f the people llironghont the Conn, ty. We merited it because we have always stood on the rook of Truth,' Honesty anil Fair dealing to all, Nothing is misrepresented and everyone pleased; We are showing a Beautiful line of SPBIITQ SUITS for MEN, BOYS and CHILDREN. Also a fall line of TOURIST ZEaiTS in all Colors, and the flew Shape AMBER Colored STIFF HAT at the POPULAR CLOTHING STORE. OF D. LOWENBERG. t THE DEERING JOINTED PLATFORM BINDER. mi s s iM v.J-cA ssssissssa sssBk r-4rua thorough test I twO YEARS, the JOINTED PLAT FORM has proven a wonderful NOSES OUT OF JOINT. Our eomnptirnr rln nrt liir fV.is CnUIn DU.r nr .1 1 . 1 j 11a. wiiurm. w c never inougm mey wouia. vvno could expect them U go into ecstasies over a valuable invention upon which we own and ,v-..-.-. .v."""'''"! oamc 01a case 01 sour grapes, uareiy loowng on thern has set their teeth on edge, and it is amusing to hear them chatter. Every intelligent farmer knows that the true test of an invention is the character of the work it does. The uwruusib iws rnaae prove tne ueerm Jointed Platform to be a marve lous success. Farmers who have used it are charmed with it. It is a great boon to farm ers, and it has come to stay. It simply adds another mechanical triumph to the long list of labor-saving devices patented and given to the world by William Deering & Co. 1 rib UbbKIHu PONY BINDER chdiyffOWnr t"g;ed.th?th DURING PONY BINDER cannot cut, elevate, bind and di charge everv straw of it. T.t vr nk .ti .1 . . . . . . . ' ' . . ., who used it,' A Marvelous svcW" J -mosi .evere ies, ana n as Men pronounced oy an D- W. KITCHEN agricultural implements 1X1 ' T AND REPAIRS. AC. AC atiVmnsDunii, PENNA. and Who FiEost Patterns, The Finest Material, me Finest Tke Finest Trimmed, me Snest mt, The &nest Made, The FINEST FITTING Ik TIM that can be. found in Bloomsburg is at D. 'LOADER'S THE RELIABLE CLOTHIER. You will positively get the most value by trading with I. Maier for your CLOTHING, HATS. SHIRTS, NECKWEAR, &C. lotliing made to order ol correct styles, and Satisfaction guaranteed. I. MAIER, Bloomsburg, Pa. BLOOMSBURG, PA. ; 1