The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, October 21, 1887, Image 2

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    EDNSDURC, PA..
j
UCl. -II,
FliI DAY, - -
Il MO K I l sr I . ill lil.I.
i: ji in.v: oh' nil. t I'KtMK rot'HT :
J. UOS.S THOMSON, of I'.rie county.
K!l sTAT E TKKASUKtK :
11. .1. M- ii!(ANX,o( Lnc.is:er ror.n'y-
ii:o unit ni! n rit unr.
koi; 1'u i-i vt'Kt:i; :
THOMAS K. IIOWK, C.tmbria.
:: immis-iom-:i:n :
.HHIX KIllllV. Johnstown.
JOHN ,'AMri;KI.L, .iiiema.ugh.
VOU I'uliK IHilK MIlKi TiiU.
GKUKHK W. KASLY, Johnstown.
roi: a i i! rn.
J, W. GKIFFI.W Munster Twp.
LOUIS KOLAXH, Johnstown.
Til v. otliciHt m.tjoity atiost the I'ro
hlbition Amendment at the rec;-nt Hec
tion in Tennessee has at last been pub
lished, and is shown to be JT.i'i'.t.",.
A. K. I'akm. one of the convicted
'hit-ago Amtichis'. s, has addressed an
open letter tofiorernoi I glesby, of Il
linois, in which hv ileuiands that he be
declared innocent or guilty upon the ex
aminiit'on of the record of hij trial, and
protect ing. that so tar as he is concerned
he does not want a coin tn .it at ion of his
sentence, and will not accept any mercy
of tnat kind.
A i:i.Nii.i:ri(is expres-sirg sympathy
with, the condemned Chicago Anarchists
ai.d A dt-sile thai then srulences should
be commuted to imprisonment for life,
was utTered in the Convention of the
KnightJ of I.ibor at Mmneaiohs lat
week and was defeated by a vote of .".J
In its favor and 1"1 aguiurt it. The
ympathi.ers as indicated ty this vote
was almost exactly one out of every four
of the to hole number of delegates to the
Convention.
Somk bank clli;-i i!s in tins State have
ore iriotilly w recked their own institu
tion by eml. ling ih.'ir funds, and in
nv8 instances have managed to escape
punishment. Th. re is hop-, however,
that a better I inie has dawned in this
respect. Some time in the early part ot
last winter the First National Hank. f
i!cn Kock, York county, ?ail"d through
th thieving operations of its President,
William Herbs' und his son Jacob S.
Herbst, who aided and abetted him In
his game of plunder. They were both
indn- ed in the 1'r.lted Statts District
Court at Philadelphia for embe7:!ing
the money of the bank, and convicted. A
motion for :i t'ew was tri.tl made, but on
Monday last Judge ISntler overruled it
and sentt nceii each of thetn to an im
prisonment of five years in the Kastern
IVnitenti;rv.
TiiF.nr. will tie .v. r. ?i. if not t'j'-i tirk
ets for S. ate ot1' . i-i New Yolk at the
November election, and no man outside
the state can therefore form an intelli
gent opinion as to the result. List
November Henry (o-oigp, the Labor
candidate for Mayor, polled iN.um votes.
He is now running uu the Labor ticket
for Secretary of State. The Socialists
who are njv bittnly hostile to George,
a'.lege that they gave him at least
4KHt0f his ;.! m votes last year. If this
is trui it would reduce his vote in the
city to about t.'.tiuu. George himself
claims double that tiiuuber. The Pro
hibitionist j claim that tiny will poll
oViO vote la the St.ita and it Iooks
now as though they would do s.t. Gov
ernor Hill, who Is admitted to be the
best pollution in ".ho State, expresses
the iittuont, confidence in the election ot
the Ivim.rrutic ticket. We have no
doubt that Gov. Hid is correct iu his
judgment unless he underestimates the
George vote.
PUKSIPKNT l'!.E ki.anu and his wife
resumed their long journey at Madison.
Wis., on M nnlty of last week and stoo
ped at St. Paul. Minneapolis, Oniiha,
St. Joseph, K ns w City, Memphis and
.Nashville, hi the vicinity of w'uich they
remaiued over uud.iy. While at Nash
ville they piid a visit to Mrs. Polk, the
widow of President Polk, who resides
near that city aud is in the "..h year of
iier age. A stop was male at Chitta
n oga on Mond-ty and At'anta was
reached on the night of tho same day.
The p op!eof the entire tate of Georgia
seemed to have come to Atlanta and the
reception of Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland
was exceptionally enthusiastic. The
Preseridei.ti.il party would leave A' lit -t.i
on Tuesday at midnight for Mont
gymery, the state Capitol of Alabama,
where they would remain for a few hours
on Wednesday, and pass on into North
Carolina making only cue stop in that
State, Aahwille. The travelers expected
to arrive at Washington some time to
day. It will be just three weeks situ
Mr. Cleveland left Washington and his
long journey has Uen made without a-.
accident. It has teen the longest excur
sion ever taken by a President.
A i ami ak.n mk. t men r, says the
Philadelphia L'-r-nt, issued by the lie
publican Couimittee of New York,
modestly claims that the Ki publtcai
party "has practically given each citi
zen a free home ty securirg the public
lomaiu fiom the monopoly of capital."
As Mr. Squeers remalked, "Here's
richneisl" S.r.ce President Cleveland
went into iftice, two years and a hall
ago, his Administration has been busily
engagtd in the e (Tort to restore to the
jeople a poition of the public domain
that the ll-publioan party letkltU
squandered in land grutb to railroad
corporations or permitted cattle rand,
syndicates, Spanish grant claimants and
foreign earth-hungerers to steal. Com
missioner Spaiks in hi annual report
estimates that in this lime the General
Lind Otlice has recovered for the Gov
ernment and res'cred to the pe "pie lard
greater in aiea than the entire state of
New York. This work of land restora
tion is still going on. and a lar larger
portion of the sibilated public domain
will be recovered unless the Adminis
tration shall le driven from liower or
balked by a Kpullican majority in the
Senate. Such is the vivid contrast
ret ween Republican profession and
I mot-ratio p rf.irujance lu ti e matter
f the public kind.
.inuiii'iMi u the Louis U'i-it'iU-I
(,i, when Senator Din Ctmeioti was in.
I that city lsr. week on hi- way to New
! Mexico he We to t.'ol. Uickey. of the
l same city, abo:i; 1'itside nt Ceve'.azd, s
I follows :
'"The only t h ! n thr.t can beat Cleve-
Un.t next ye.ir is souie sort of a
financial punic which can laid at the ! l)HT.r. The pith of it is that there is a
-loors ot the administrv.ion. In such n j secret understanding tietween the lrra
case he would probably be btaten, 1.0 ocratic organisation c.f the State and
.. w i ... i ' fome or the countirs with the liquor
matter whorn we might put ngamst b;ru. , , , , ,
r ' I leagues, personal liberty societies, Ger-
As it stands now, however, I think he j nH1 si,,,; S1,. it ies. ti e Anarchists.
is sure ot re-election. lie has shown !
himself to m hi nest, independent
i f...i. . ,r....j .... rA;, ,., i
vuv ........ v . . . . , ' - --.v. f. .........
that Gt.anci.il ruin would follow his
e'.ert ion have beeu disproved.
"Do you,'' Colonel Uickey asked,
ta'.k this way to members of your own
party V"
"Why not " Senator Cameron an
swered. "I have no desire to cheat
them or to cheat myself ; the conditions
are p'am. ,
Cameron spent last Tuesday in Santa
Fe and was called on by a number ot
prominent citizens. In speaking of the
Presidential contest nest year ho said
he did not regard Mr. lllameauy strong
er to-lay than he was Ihree years ao,
ad that if lie was nominated ty the
Kepnhlicans ho was afraid of another
defeat. His preference for the I'resi
dency was U. S. Seuaor AUIsoti, of
Iowa, and he thought that Allison and
Hawley,ot ("ounecticiit, would ru.ike a
verv strong ticket.
II Joil llAMX'I.I H Ti KKI1, the
we.i known member of Congress from
Vngiria. who is one of the counsel for
the Chicago Anarchists, had an inter
view with Just ice Harlan of the Supreme
Court of the I nited States, at Wash
n g'oo on Mondav lav in reference to
the.ipplict'i m for ii writ of etror in
the case, and it was arranged that the
argument for and against the anima
tion should take place ou yesterday at
10:.'.! o'clock in the conference room of
the Supreme Court. Associated with
Mr. Tucker as counsel ate Captain
Iilack, of I hicago, who defended the
Anarchisms on their trial, Hoger A.
Pryor, of New York. Pt.d Hen. P.utler,
the latter having been retained as
counsel only a few days ago. The sum
of thiitv thousand dollars will be re
quired to pay tne.-e four lawyers. At
least it is ji stated. The money will
be raised Ly assessments among the
d.rterent Anarchist Societies throughout
the country.
Cooper's Fietj K'aeket.
Th worst scared man in this State
to-day is Thomas V. Cooper. Chairman
of the Republican State (,'ommittee.
In former campaigns the taiilT was the
beginning, middle aud ending of his ap
lieals to the peopie for their votes in
tavnr of continuing in power the "grand
old party" of which lie is so thorough a
representative. Last week, however,
he charged his olJ tacties and in a long
address to the people he had the bra.t-u
effrontery to charge that a conspiracy
had been entered into by the Demo
crats, Personal Liberty Leagues, brew
ers, diitil'.ers, Anarch'sts and other
unluly elements, to defeat the Repub
lican State ticket and abolish the Christ
ian Sunday by illimitable supplies of
lager I eer. In order to accomplish this
wicked purpose he deliberately asserted i
in the address that the liquor dealers j
throughout the state had put up JJot),- I
WK, which was beirg used "through and !
by the Democratic organization." !
Cooper knows, of course, that all this j
is the veriest moonshine, but it suits j
him in his desperate strait to resort to i
it. Tom Cooper in print as ths defend
er of the sanctity of the Sabbath is a
s;ectacle for the laughter of bjth gods !
at d men. Trie matter with Cooper is
that he can't "work'' the saloon inter- i
est in this campaign iu favor of the Re- '
publican ring, aj he has successfully i
tloue in former years, and is finding out i
that when, at th? last session of the 1
Legislature, he passed a Prohibitory
Amendment and followed it up with the i
Rrooks High L:censd law, he commit- i
ted the biggest mist ike of hi life. The
Philadelphia A -r.l of Wednesday last
directs Cooper's ad Ir.ss as follow :
There is a refreshing simplicity in the
charge ot tho Republican orgats and
Pnj manage IU tunsy,vania tnat
the distilling aud Lrcweiy interests have
enteied into a "combir.a'ior." or ar
raiigt tnent with. tLj D-uiocraiic prty.
What wouM the organs and rnauugeis
aforesaid uave 'i Alter having ludoced
a Republican Legislature to submit a
prohibitoty amendment, hich if adopt
ed would cause a SAteping coniiscatioti
of millions of capital invested in brew
eries, distilleries and hotel property,
they seem to expect that the mteisU
thus assayed will meekly submit with
out a struggle. They Lave b-en p'aying
the Prohibitionists and lnjujr interest's
against eat h oilier so 1. ng that they
imagined that t his game of "progressive
euchre" could go ou for an indefinite
period.
s j f ar as the liquor inteiests are con
cerned the Republican party of Pecn
svivanU is the i arty of Piohition. If
the Prohibitionists should themselves
get into power they could do tor them
selves Put little more than the Repub
licans have done tor them. The Pro
hibitionists might with just as much
propriety complain that the brewers
and distillers of Pennsylvania are not in
political sympathy with them.
As for the talk of "arrangememts"'
aid "alliances" of the Liquor League
with the Democratic party, that is mere
childishness. The Iemocrals of Penn
sylvania have r.o need to make sucn al
liances. Their position on this question
has lorg been clearly defined. They
hsve not courted and cajoled the men
wno are engaged iu the nianura-;ture and
sale of liquors on tbe one hand, nor have
they nienar.:d th u;n with hostile
'. faii-vu-.il lo-s1t ion on the other
.1 id. Wlil e tVm-v o.itMwii,,. ...-j...:,.
upon t'.e Personal Ltl er y of u. ,.,t zn
t prohibitory umet.du:ens and b-go.ed
bb.t'.arian odes, the l-mncrts of
l-r.: slvaiiia have always favored rea
.on.ir.le li-t'i' lilivr res'raints .n the
evi's and abuses of the liipjoi irallic.
In ho i.mg this pisnion they i,.,ve been
d. noui.ced the "'wi isKy par " Ahjie
Hie whisky interest h.vo Ir". queniiy
i.e i.vc-r to tl.eir opp -ne;i's. s,,uie in
ten ' ir.g facts on h mo nt lec.nta n-d
in Hie history of i.quor letr'slat i n m
Pennsylvania. R.il the lMiioc-atic
p.riy or this :ate his intrigued or com',
promised neither with the advocites of
a fariHti-jal sumptuary code t,or w ith the
votai its of fre whisky. Since the,
pubiicaii leaders in attempting to carrv
woissy on jue siioaider and rain-water i
on the other have managed to spill a
why tney should cbHice their mis.,.,. , '
...... . mere is no rt-xsm, i
. t . "
tut i'rmojr..i.c prty. i
I liairtiian 1'eupcr I'!as Hi Lat lard.
The most atistactory evidence that
has come to light of the scire that has
taken hold of the Republican bosses in
this S'ateis the Temperance and morali
ty dodge State Chairman LVioper plays
t in a lengthy address to the taithrui just,
i issned. Xerer was more pitiful derta
( rrirucism or ilon nritit Ivinsr put op
Socialists and (' mnjniii.sts to work for
he common end ot creaking down me
C'nristian Sabbath, legalizing the free
and unrestricted sale of liquor, and
handing communities over to Anarchy,
licentiousness and drunkenness. The
audacious liar alleges in as many words
that there is "an agreement upon a
combined effort for the repeal of the
Sunday 5aw letween the Hemocratic
and liquor organizations," allied with
"all who are willing to war upon socie
ty.' meaning the Anarchists and Socia
lists. The avowed purpose of this infa
mous address Is to conciliate the
Prohibitionists and alarm the rural
Kerubacans, so many of whom are in
different, for well understood reasons, to
the success of the Itepublican party
this fall. It is left to the local efforts
of politicians in Pittsburg and Philadel
phia to hold tiie saloon element Chair
man Coo;er rinds it expedient tn
denounce in hi address. Last year Mr.
Coojer caused to le circulated special
appeals to the saloon keepers in the
S'ate to stand by the Republican party,
ami they were put up and marked on
the Sunday before election by the order
of this now stalwart champion of "the
Chiistian Sabbath." And in that can
vas be had as chief of staff and memtit-r
of his State finance committee. 'olonel
Keller, of I.erks county, president of
the State Liquor League. According
to ex-Senator Lar.don. in the Prohibi
ion Sta'e Convention, when Colonel
(uav completed his arduous task of
drawing the resolution committing the
Republican party to the submission of
the Prohibition amendment, he threw
down his :en with the exclamation :
"lt'anketv-blank. boys, this is dry work:
let's take a drink.'' We onlv mention
these incidents to show the sinceiitv of
the men who suddenlv wake to the dnn- !
. . ..t ..IIIMII... ... ,
gers to society, morality and Christian
ity involved in a pospit.fe Republican
defeat. a-d so il.wxl the S'Bte with infa
mous lil-Ison thi Iiemocratir party.
Th country people are indignant at
the defeat of the revenue bill bv the
last Republican lecislature. It would
I ave divided a million of dollars among
the counties of the. 'ate and reduced
local tax v ion. The solemn pledge of
the Republican i .irtv in S a'e Conven- !
tioa to pas.- laws to enfoice the railroad
article of the constitution whs repudi
a'ed at the bidding of the corporations,
whom Ch.t'rman Coo;er served as State
senator and ehief lobbyist. Th rernpm
brance causes discontent. This year's
plan of cmpiign.
with w hi.sk v on one
shoulder and Prohibition on the o'her,
has rot inspired coi.fnler.ee. So Chair
man Cooper jumps into the arena with
loud clamor to alarm tl sewing socie-
ties, the churches and Sunday schools,
that the hi'.lf million Democrats of
Pennsylvania are iu leacue with whikv
and anarchy to uproot Chris'.ianity and ,
pulverize society. '
Judging by the past we have little ;
doubt It is accompanied by a secret cir-
cular to the Republican saloon interest 1
reassuring
it the Republican leaders '.
will see that no harm comes to tho traf
fic. That is the ti-ual way (he jig is
worked bv th-se eminent moralists, who
run the R pub'ican ni '.cf.ine :n the in
terest of G d arid morality, or ths devil
arid depravi' y, whichever promises the
largest d: vid-nd-j and affords the great
est sc'pe for falsehood.
I -mocrats can tp.lie one enmfort from
this insulMr.g and irrrdacictis a;pal.
Ir shows M.e t.-es are in a terrible
fright. J'Ut.-lu,;j l' . t.
Cardinal Gibbous to Tenderly.
Tha following is the letter addressea :
bv Cardinal Gibbons to Grand Master
Workman Powderly, to which we brief
ly referrid last week
15.i.timi:k, Mn., Sept. oi.ls7.
i .hi ln.Ai: .ii: ioiii letter was re
t ceived yesterday informing rne that the
' next convention of the Knightaof Iabor
will be held at Minneapolis on the oth
prox. "When absent from America I did
. not hesitate to advocate the just rights
j of the laboring classes and to point out
j wrongs under which they were suffering.
Now that I am again at home. I may tie
permitted to speak in a friendly spiiit
; of the duties aud responsibilities which
, they owe to themselves, to their country
and to society. I entertain the hope
' that good counsels will prevail ;n your
i deliberations and that a c5m. conserva
! live spirit will control all your proceed
ing. It is self evident that there '
snould be no conflict between capital
nr.it lufiitr ninon KAth a. -,.. . r
I the common
; sist without the other, and therefore n i
i measures should be countenanced which
! oo not provide ror the protection of
both. I.xpenetice has proved that
strikes are a questionable remedy for the
redress of your grievance?. They para
ge industry ; they foment fierce pass
ions, aad lead to the destruction of
property, and, above all, they result in
nrl cring serious injury on the laborer
himself, by keepirg him in enforced
idleness, during which hisroind is cloud,
ed with discontent while brooding over
bis situation, and his family not infre
quently suffers from the want of even
tbe necessaries of life. Strikes, there
fore, should be rarely if ever resorted to.
Royeottii g. as far as I understand its
methods, infringes on the just rights of
others, and will therefore never meet
with approval from an observing public.
Remember that the eyes of your country
men re upon yon, and that they will
watch your proceeding with the deep
est interest. A3 a lawabiding and in
dustrious bo ly, seeking to improve your
condition, you owe it to yourseivea and
ti tbe good name of your order to set
your face against Anarchisms, Nihilists
and other dangerous associa'ions which
are guilty of the base ingratitude of at
tempting ti undermine the government j
-.nat protects mem, and trie temple of
ii... . . i . . . . ;
mc niiiriiLuiiuii mat siieiters them.
I) not pefrnit your reputation to be
tainted by any morbid sym pithy for
nun who have no substantial grievance
to redress, and who strive to make their
cause respectable by obtaining the con-
iii. tine, n i in iu. sanction vmir
ir
powerful orgau'zttion. Rut, for my'
pirt. I have no fear that they wIM sue-
cecd in infusing the leaven of their toi- !
son into the ranks of the honest sons of !
toil, i or what concern hath Christ I 1 PPr Sandusky, Gallon, and other
with Relial, or what participation P,aCPS- General Powell has engage
bath justice with injustice, or what fel- j n3"13 for nearly every afternoon and
lowshiphath light with darkness? j v,ning up tothe day of election. Hon.
.My oniy motive in venturing to offer I
thesrt suggestions is my sincere affection I
for tbe liibonrg class, whose sterling:
virtues I admire ; my sense of the digl i
... .it 1 I. .. i .. - m . . . . . ',
""j -'' men e.iii.n uti'i ui tneir mnu-1
erceontha future well beir.tr r
country hs well as my ardent desire for
iiinr material ana moral elevation.
May God grant that your deliberations i
may be marked by a wisdom and discre- I
tion and a spirit of trne patriotism
which, while seeking to advance your j
temporal interests, will merit the ap- J
proyal of heaven as well as of your fel-
low citizens,
I'errnit me in conclusion to express
my Appreciation of the fuccessful efforts
i,H.T r'"ay mad. in fullilling
I tif iiMM'Jitt n ,1 iw.ii 1 H..ii. . l : i
,,, ,", '", icu ;
hive, developed uuou von as 1WW :
j - - i
of the ;Knigrrs of Labor. Iam your
obedient servant in Christ.
James. Cardinal iiuwoxs.
Archbishop of Baltimore.
To Mr. T. V. Powderly, Scranton, I'a.
The Monument to Meade.
I'Liladelphia honors herself to-day in
in the honors raid to the memory of one
cd br distinguished sons. The statue
of Ceceral Meade is the work of a Phila
delphia sculptor and has been paid for
by the contributions of l'hiladelphians.
It will stand in the great Park as a
monument of a PbiladeMnia soldier,
whos city owes him gratitude, not only
for the lustre of his honorable and use
ful life, but in an especial sense for that
great military achieviment which saved
Pennsylvania from the invador and
broke the power of the great rebellion.
Though born away from home, Meade
was altogether a Philade'phian bv par
ent3ge and breeding as well as by later
residence, and his military service asso
ciated him so closely with his own State
that jn the gallery of Pennsylvania wor
thies he must always have a conspicuous
place. He was. moreover, of the type
of man whom we mav be glad to claim
a3 represenative. Loyal, modest and
brave, never seeking advancement, but
ready to do his uttermost in every duty
laid upon bun, we may search long for a
nobler example of the soldier and the
gentleman whose unsullied character
will keep his fame secure when lights
that flashed more brightly have begun
to pale.
While the monument in Fairmount
Park Is distinctly Philadelphia's tribute
to her knightly son. the dedication to
day will bring tozether representative
soldiers from rmny States, but especial
to the survivors of that glorious army
which Meade commanded in its crucial
victory and with whose s'uperdous his
tory his name is indiso!ubly associated.
Ir will be a day to remember not only
Meade and Gettysburg, hut the Armvof
the Potomac, and there can be no trn
American, North or South, whose heart
wi'l not beat proudly at the mention of
that name. 1'hihu Tinus, O-f 13.
Jerome It. Mies and Got Rearer.
No man took a more active part in the
preparation of the lost revenue bill of the
, . . . , T . - , .. . .
V. V. ul -
-vuuoor iienerai -Mies, rie was equai-
ly as industrious in the preperation of
the rew bill by the Revenue Commission
w hich is now in the hands cf Gov. Hea
ver, with the endorsement ot the com
mission in favor of an extra session to
enact the bill tnto a Jaw. Mr, Niles
live in "WellsUiro, Tioga county, and
the following article tak'-n fiotn last
V K . ''"P"0110" orau 1,1
M,at county niayli taken m anexpres-
sion rf Mr. Niles views in the premises
l li. .rn.'.r ltftvor nur tliint ir mn ot
ot statemnnsbip to refuse to ritht the wronit !
: done in the people lut May because he is
ursed tolo so by M.me men whom he dwsn't
! like ; but he should rellect that the sreat ma
jority of the people know little anil care less
a!,ul an man s personal ami partisan likes
I niiii niMises, wniie ttiey no care tor their
. own interests He should understand that
very few of the "plain people" are evr
, likely to write letters to jjoverners on any
subject, tint that every man of them has a
very decidvd opinion of tiie pubic c-flicf r who
rails to protect the runt and interests of
the common people who mind their own
ilulltatlons f ieeislativ; powt
er are clearly defined by the Constitution :
tout it Is no pr.rt oi his duties to frame bins
br the legislature to enact, and that the.
Tenr ,liat ,tl legislature may not pass an act
'V"! 1 IKCi.shn ' d'-sires does not jus-
1T h 1 .1 1 It. ...f 1 1 . 1. ... m . . - .1... , .
' .i.iii i. iriw.-iun ,if)i,ff-Lle INU tiUMses A
chance to pass at y act at all. And fi
nally, he should ber in mind that the peo
pie jud e public officers by general results,
and that in their eyes hair-splitting quibbles
on constitutional points will not justify arts
that re evidently daroacirg to their dscided
convictions of riuh. They understand very
well that It re-ts with the tioverner alone to
say whether there shall be an extra ses-ion.
They now want a revenue bdl promptly
passed for their relief, in accordance witn
the pledges made bv the Governor's friends
last summer. It niut soon be determined
whether those pledges are to be redeemed
or repudiated.
Mrs. Cleveland's Speech.
Mr. and Mr3. Cleveland bavp been
away from St. Louis for many days, but
here is a reminiscent paragraph from
the (ihlr-lhhifjcri't that is both newsy
and nice :
While the throng was held at bay.
Colonel Havid Caruth, as President of
the Hendricks Association, was admit
ted through a sido door, and he
. w . . ...
aP-
proacut-u .Mrs. t teveiar.a witn nerves
that, suguested the sensitive tdant aud a
complexion that rivaled the jacque
minot, and presented her with a beauti
ful floral offering. As the Colonel
closed ids little speech be breathed a
great sigh of relief, and an immaculate
handkerchief passed once over his bead
and was wtt enough to hangout on the
liue. Mrs Cleveland took the basket
and said : "I am suretht my husband
is as grateful to the gentlemen of your
association for these beautiful flowers
as I am. There is nothing 1 love so
much 8S (lowers and were 1 iriilin,
epeech in this place I would say tiTat, i
coming irom an organization that has
done so mnch, and all that, for our com
mon country but, seriously. Colonel
Caruth, let me thank you and the gen
tlemen you represent for this courtesy.
I hope to see you again." The Colonel
retired with a memory of Mrs. Cleve-
iana s Bewitching ftnile, and a9 he
passto his friend Ilanneiman be said :
There is no use talking, dim, he is a
dandy ; but she. why. she is a daisy and
a thoroughb.ed." Tbe Colonel then
went down stairs, and to every frieLd
he met he repeated his eulogy in terms
that were more or ess indicative of his
Kentucky birth and breeding.
The strike in the anthracite coal
region has reached a desperate point.
Business is degressed, and many of the
3torc3 have ltn closed for lack of
patronage. Destitution, misery and
suffering exist on every hand, and mat
ters are growing worse, while no hope
of a settlement appears. To add to all
this, there is an excellent prospect of
the strike extending to the Wyoming
and Lackawanna regions bv the close
of the month. The anarchist eiement
is being encouraged by the desiderate
situation and
outbreak may Pe ex-
pecttd
any moment. The resnonsi-
oiiny ior tins state cf things rests
heavily upon somebody's shoulders. A
board of arbitrament, clothed with the
spirit of compromise, might have saved
all this deprivation.
fc.. .
Tun camn.iign In Ohio is being waged
on lr,e P1,1"" ot ln Democrats with
markf'd aggressiveness. Monday night
massmeetings weie held at Cincinnati,
r'U3lB"K iiinson, or west lrg.nia
l,on- " Crain. of Texap ; Hon. "V
- " - mil. C.eneral S.imnel Carv. and
ot'"T3 of equal reputation as Ptump ora-
t Arc n ...... T .. - - . . . ... .
' olr msihuhk hi me ngnr. me
prostcts of success are verv bright if
1 ,,raker's mouth can only l"e kept going !
13 "o aouot ot tne result. A 11 the
l,pcuocrats have to fear is that he may
te forced to withdraw from the stump,
. .
Karklrn'ii ArnlraMlir.
The best salve In the world for Cntb,
Uruises, Sores. Ulcers, Malt Kh nro, Fever
Sores, Tetter. Chapped Hands. Chillblains,
Corns and all Skin Eruptions, and positively
cures Piles or no pay required. It is guar
anteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money
.rJ"J,a..:... I.rlrf.:V Cf.'A' .
refunded.
auics iuu
W. W. McAteer.of Loretto.
An IntereMloK I.eltrr.
V. L. Jones, of Johnstown., a practical
driller of ltf years expel ience. has given to
the Demorra t, of that place, an Interesting
letter received by him from J. P. Lesley,
State Geologist, on the subject of oil end
gas. It contains so morn information, and
so many good suggestions, that the letter
is reproduced at length :
Dkak Sin. It Is ruy c fficlal duty to fur
nish any geological knowledge I have freely
to any citizen of Pennsylvania, and 1 am al
ways pleased to do it. Rut, there are points
of geological u'f (nof jt'iic!'"') concealed
from us all; and you are aware that the
attaul txiftcrue of petroleum and gas under
anv given farm or township is one of them.
In the disturbed country east of the Alle
ghenies no experienced geologist will hesi
tate to affirm as certain that none will ever
be found. Sat in the undisturbed region
west ot the Allegheny mountains a ceulou
ist wou'd act rashly to express any fuch
conlident opinion. There may be places in
the counties you mention (Somerset and
Cambria) where oil and gas exist , but, as
yet, we have Dot the slightest evidence of
the fact I mean the fact of their exigence
'n itnv such quantities a tcoubt payor boriny
for thnn. As a geologist I should not risk
my money in boring for them. On the
other hand, i should be very glad and I
should encourage rich men, or companies
villi a surplus of money, to bore very deep
wells in those counties, for the sake uf ob
taining iufoi nation. If I were a Napole
onic dictator of Pennsylvania. I should
spend sei-craZ million dollars of the State's
revenue in systematic boring all along the
first and second bituminous basins, to en
hir'je vsful kuoicleJ'je. Hut I should dis
courage witn all ay might individuals of
small rueai.s from boring at all in them, ex
cept for c'xd bels. And for this purpose I
should advise them to club together, in
boring associations." to bore V.ong the en
tire lines of the sub-basins, i. e. along the
synclinal lines ; especially for the coal bed
next above the Cnnu'.omerate- I think a
line of holes a mile urf, for fifty miles,
would be one of the most practically usetil
tliinKS that the people of those counties
could undertake.
In Cambria county, for example, such a
line uf bore holes, properly watched, meas
ured aud satnpied by expert geuloeit ap
pointed to do this whil- the tools were going
down, would lay a solid foundation for the
future wealth of the county, which would
have the hieh''t value. Experience lias
proved that the weilborers, who work by
contract, and therefore hurry down the bore
bole as fast as they can. and pay little or no
recard to anything they pass through until
tt-ey have nearly reaehed tin required depth,
are rot to be expected to f urni-h any eful
practical Information to the public. They
are not to be blamed for this, for they have
thIr living to eet and their families to sup
port, and they cannot afford to 1? t
I time and money in constant measurements.
I samplings, and careful records of all the
; strata they pass through. This must be
done by somebody else who is especially
paid for this particular duty.
I Uutil a large number of borings are done in
; tliis fashion, our geology will remain very
j uncertain and o jscure. In spite of the
I amount of expensive prospecting which is
done all the time along t lie outcrops.
I Two wells (for example) at Dawson's
! mill (Cambrii mills) :i miles c . w. of Gallit
i in, were bored for oil twenty-four years
I ago, nearly along the centre line of the first
j sub-basin and are said to have struck (one
I of them) a 7 -foot coal bed, (coal A) some
I where bft ween ."00 and 400 feet down: but
I no records exist of eith?r of the wells
i although one went down S20 feet and was
( abandoned. Had a j.ro;.-?r record of these
two wells been taken they would be enor
mously valuable for settling the number and
the character of the coals between the Con
elomerate and Mahoning (the Clearfield
coal measures), which have been grcslv
, misrepresented by the prospectors along the
i OMtcrops. No oil or gas were got In these
wells ; but then, ViiO feet would not reach
the Venango oil sands, at this
anything lite reach them; for
point, nor
they must
lie at a depth beneath Cambria mills of at
least .'1,000 feet and perhaps as much as 4.
500 feet ; owing to the thickening cf forma
tions of XI, X and IX (under th Con
glomerate) going east. The Conglomerates
at the bottom of IX which seem to represent
the Venango oil sands, He in Huntingdon
county (Rroad Top) more than COtO feet
i beneath the Mahoning sandstone of Cam-
brla county.
Your opinion that oil and gas will not be
found in the first bituminous coal basin bae'e
of the Allegheny Mountains In Clearfield,
Cambria and Somerset is a sound one ;
because evtn if the oil sands exist there,
they probably do not hold oil. and veiy
little, if any gas ; and especially because
they lie certainly more than twice, probably
three times, as far down In the series, as
they do In the oil regions proper.
The same is true (to a less extent) in the
second (Llgonier) basin in Clearfield. Indl-
ana' Westmoreland and Fayette. In
his '
basin ttey lie at least twice as deep as in the
oil regions, that is, twice as far beneath the
Ferriferous limestone, or rather, beneath the I
Conglomerate, for the Ferriferous limestone j
was not deposited south-east of Indiana
county. Yours respectfully,
J. P. Lesley.
SEWS AM) UT1ILR .0TI.GS.
A woman at the Summit county, O., In
firmary is slowiv but surely turning black.
She is seemingly in good health and the
physicians are unable to ascribe a reason
for the cradual clians of color.
F. A. Paddoek, a N'ew York man fura
mering at Delhi, dreamed he was diving at
Coney Island the other night, and came
within an ace of knocking bis brains out
against the side of his bedroom.
F.phraim Lemley and Mrs. Mary Bur
ton were made one in Tope county. Ark.,
recently. Tbe groom is 1'2 years old, has 2."
children and has been married times.
The bride is enly i0 and has no family worth
mentioning.
Mrs. Clarissa Cox. of Wakefield, Mass.,
who on Thursday rouuded out 100 years of
life in this vale of tears, was asked tbe secret
of ber loncevity. "Hard work." said she ;
"hard woik has always been good for me,
and I've always had plenty of it to do."
Frank Moxie, of Dakota, was about to
be married, 'but was busy with a game of
poker. The minister who was to perform
the ceremony went to inform him that the
company was waiting, got interested and
! look a hand, and the wedding had
to be
postpoued.
In Sumter county, Ga., recently, a negro
woman ate 16 ears of corn witn a large 1
piece of greasy meat and then tried to die. j
but another woman gave her a quart of salt i
and water with a gill a cator oil. She it i
uuw up cu sajs: - aion i tninn corn
! would hurt a pusson
I
A covared farm wagon, eastward bound,
passed through a Nebraska town a few days
ago, containing the owner of the outfit, his
wife aud five children, a live buffalo, an
antelope, a pair of wolves, a pair of swifts
or praitie foxes, a box of white rats, besides
considerable store of provisions.
James Williamson, of Toronto, O., cap
tured a live crow in his cornfield. While car
rying it borne he was attacked by hundreds
of other crows. He first tried to run away .
then he made a vigorous attempt to defend
himself with a club ; next he sought bbelter
In a bhed, where the besieging crows kept
hmi a prisoner for mote than an Lour.
fin in OFiTS FOSTER
w v- i - - - '
Carpets, MnttinS, luigs, Stair 1'iuls, Stair Kods. Mair inuons.
Oilcloths, Linoleum, Lace Curtains, Feathers,
Turcoman Curtains, Madras Curtain Goods, clc. etc. Quality of (iooK
uncqualed and prices the lowest.
T!-... XI. c Thurnaa Wall of SxCCt- I
water. Tenn., committeJ suicide slie had
prepared a certified check that would meet
her funeral expenses and erect a monument
over her grave.
There bs never been a period in the
history of the American watch trade when
the business was of such vast propoitinns a
now. All the larger factories that have run
all summer, as well as those that shut down
for a short Interval, are behind orders at the
present time, with the piospect of the largest
holiday trado demand ever known before
them.
An Ogdenburg newspaper says that
some citizens have been aunoyed by their
cows cotninar home at night without the
usual amount of milk. One i ight oue of
their owners saw a strange dog approach
one of the cows and rub against her legs.
The cow put her foot bar'-, when the dog
sat upon his haunches and sucked her dry.
lie was as fat as a seal.
Contrary to the popular impression,
there is no statutory provision for the execu
tion of criminals on Friday. It seems that
in very early times in the history af Kaglish
jurisprudence it became a comnioa practice
in selecting a day for the execution of crim
inals to choose Friday. This practice was
transplanted to the American colonies and
has been continued until this day. It was
probabli oi initially founded on the super
stition that Friday was an unlucky day.
A young may squiirel fouud by a party
of children at Ivoryton. Conn , was cared
for until it had grown lame enouch to lielp
itself when it was set at liberty. The chil
dren had no idea it would ever come back,
but the same night the, squirrel came to the
window and tapped upon the pane. It was
admitted, and the next morning whisked
awav anain. It has buiit two nests, iisir.g
whichever It chooses in the night iini- ex
cept when it rains. Then it always asks for j
admission to the house.
The fishery business.of this country i-? a j
very important interest. It employs i pi.nuo
men and .10,00 000 ,f capital ara invested.
The last reliable reports shows the total
merrhant tonnage of the United States to be,
4.1110,000 tons, of which 1.000. 000 tons are
foreign and :!,l.'0.oi-o tons coastwise and ir
land. The total tonage of vessels engaged
in the fisheries in ls;; was 127, 412. and in
lssi; only loit.st."? tons. Tne totI value of
ou r American fisheries at rt hands is about
Jh,0"iii,hio a year, selling to the consumer at 1
loo to 'oo per cent, more then this.
One of the richest mines of roc k silt in
the world has been discovered in South
Hutchinson, Kansas. The salt was struck
at a depth of 470 feet, and veins varying in
thickness from 7 to 40 feet, separated by a
thin strata of shale, were found. At a
depth of Mo feel a vein was struck which.
np to Wednesday night, had been penetiat- j
I ed to a depth of ;5.1 feet, without the dri l
reachinsr through. An ollieial analysis of
the product shows it to be over !; per cent,
pure, and absolutely free from the princi
pal impurities which make rock sait unfit
for domestic purpo-es.
The bones of the discoverer of America
are to be once more removed, as if they had
not yet earned rest. When Columbus died
l ne nrst found a resting place at Vallidolld.
rju it was not for long. In seven years his
remains were taken to Seville and in i
across the ocean to llayti, where they were
depositei In the Cathedral of San Dominco.
In 170." it was ttoueht to be high time that I
the bones of Columbus were distur bed again,
and they were taken to Havana, in Cu'j?..
Now, after a further rest of a hundred years,
a fresh transfer let us hope the last is p
be made, and" Genoa, the navigator's hirtli
place, will finally claim its own.
It has been calculated thatun the aver-
j age each man who attains the r.ge of thiee
; score and ten consumes during the ei urse of
his lite twenty wagcn-londs o food, solid
i and liquid. At four tors to the wagon this
would correspond to sn average of about r.
I hundred ounces of food tier day, or siy
v some 120 ounces per day durir.c adult life.
and about eithty ounces during infancy r.nd
youth. Most modern doctors agree in r-
l garding 120 ounces of food per day, corre
sponding to five or six half pints of liquid
food and seven or eiht pouruls of golld
food, as an excess cf the real daily require
ments of a healthy man or woman.
There are at the present moment a to
tal of 9, .".s banking institutions in tin
United State-s, an increase ot iv'i'12, or .in per
cent., during the past ten years. Of these
2,045 are national banks, 1, 7i.il State insti
tutions, C20 saving banks, and ",'.r,l private
banking firms. The wonderful increase
during the past decade represents the
growth if the business of the country.
While the banking facilities of the country
have increased so rapidly, it has neverthe
less been ou a safe and sound financial ba-is.
There is more confidence in their soundness
and stability than there has been at any pre
vious period. There are failures, it is true,
and there always will be, but the losses to
the public have been far less in recent years
in proportion to the value of business done,
than at my previous period of our Mstory.
At a negro camp meeting at Hillsbor
ough, III., the other day there was a bit of
realism that carries one back to the d iys i f
the Passion Play. The preacher gave an
eloquent discourse on the prodigal son.
During its delivery a young darkey arrayed
in picturesque and many colored tatters to
j represent the prodigal son stood in a dumb
, of bushes waiting for his cue. At last the
i cue came iu the shape of a powerful blust
j on a tin horn, when he rushed out and (ell
I into the arms of the old pieaeher, who en
! aetea the part of father. Then some sisters
! brought forward a fatted calf which had
i been previously killed and nicely roasted,
I and every one began to be merry just as in
! the days of old. The story as related Pounds
j somewhat sacrilegious, but It was enacted
j bv the colored brethren in entire good faith
I and without a suspicion of llppancv.
The Southern Tacifie train which left
El Paso. Tex., at 4:50 last Friday evening
returned three hours later with the mail car 1
badly knocked to pieces by a bomb and a
dead train robber on board. When the train j
had reached a point about four miles r-ist of :
El Puso it was flagged, and the engineer i
stopped the train immediately. Three men j
ran up and hurled dynamite bombs at the
door of the mail car. The door was badly
shattered and the mail agent considerably
shaken un. but he te,.,tr c.
oi.l,n.rij
seize a double-barreled shotgun, and when
the foremost robber appeared in the door
way the mail acent filled hiui full of buck
shot, and the robber fell dead. Tha other
two started away as fast a they could run.
The agent fired the second brrrel at them
and thinks he hit one of them. The tiain
then returned to Ei iv so and rtu.aii.ed
there all night.
& OUIXX'S. Clinton
. ;
CARL RIVINTUS,
PRACTICAL
WAT
VND DKALKli IN
v.
71 V
Best
Nits Sr'r '-'-j?
1 f.i j ' - . . . . it
Ci 3 . v - U
F r ;iir:-it- ema!l 32 r-liLrf.j rralns p. -v u r:
i I 1. ;-r. : i.al 7n n.l . .' ;;r. 1 it- trcli;.-i t i '.'rft;n.-
t . a.
j- -h v ui u.t. i.-.y
I I. I'M. . s
le u u cc .1.
f .t t!!'-' t':
;.Tller
Crl li.llrn
FIRE ARMS CO.,
ft ; m 1 i 'i u ': I :i 'At 1
fcM ncd hrnKfn rivn mn tt'i tv : i :'i nt i?
r -ffw. And fail V. -tn !y f.tn np"lh ni;I V itr -i f,ui 0,hii 'i.
Ti t ho-t .rortfl-r m-m t h ninnr ol is ? i-r-.ri
rs,ac:.t u'O iC l y 1 r,r. i- r--t .on. i.x:nri". I vr-.l r..:a
V,.-k rl'i f r 1 1"!" J,'-rir.. ii If tn; t yua (H.-1'l u
y.-n- f.-.n-n w-.t h t ntrr.. net your t .vwiMa. n.n-1 Mxr-r
tiJUAM-AORA'il. I ll
nUPTUKtO PtRSOWj ciO ti 0.113 FKtfc
jYalnallB Fropsrtr for Sale.'
; ri,ni: vmki;!;;m:i ikilio tI'i:ivatk
HiH i; A.N I I- T,
' pitunto -r NI:i1ti ?;rt-ft. M farrr.ll: v?n f i-ri nifti,
i :ini (t: tNe lusirn-- ciiTf1! llic town 'j.j,, s to
j ihf i-iiUTij t rtworv. I l.e hcusc j-- a !;.rfcr two
! tMry '-at,.! .ii-. 2 y :"J f-rt. 1 T-hitcrt-.l t hr uu- h
: cut, v':t;::.T-';;r.l. 1 :i:i't rMni'K-tc:v fii te-.l nil !
i..i u u'jw. A k'Od.l .-tut-if 'n e l"t mp-i u
iH-v.-r in: h iiii w U oi cx.?vls-nt. wjii.t. It vr.-uM
ar.'Wi-r ! r .:.v-i: , an 1 l;u.-no.-? !n it, : in- I.
cr i T il l.-'cl I'l" f'-TlV,
ri is;:ssi' i.n tii'. iiN i-i:.ii-:i1 i lii.V.
tz parti'-u';it-.- ill -r. r a-i In - th-- ,,:n r,
ii 'at-.- 'M II t
i i. i:iiKin
i- Arl.-i-o,,;,
I 1', 1-T.
K s-N V ld-.U.
11 ,1-!, Altn..Ii i. i'ri.
FARM FjOR SALE.
M'.IK ST'HSCHIKKH tt l I.I. s! I.I. Ills K A 1. " 1 (
I knuwn :i t l.e 1.1 I 'K 1 .
I 1
I'A KM.
utility, i
iltllilii- 1!.
itiliiiti 1:11:
Munstcr lowr.flnj,
'amt-ria i
I
oo At Kl.s.Aliiii.i ;oa'i;;;
j ravine t.i n'fi rrc.-ti 1 a ir I Iri
i Irati.e 1. irn. I h" Kirni 1 1 rt a l'l.p
I.KAK!
'.I',
an.l
ol
I
att-in. 1.- woii watfre-1 ai.il l,a a ,' ,,1 i,' I,;ir,l
la-arm tr-i;f Trnps. 1'i.e I inn Is w,il:.n t:r
riiitiui walk 1,1 l.ti'-kctt's Stati,-il on t:.e K'.i
l,-:- nr,! l'r.'-s,.ii 1. 1 : iro'i,! .
1 ,,r .'ar'i'i'r ).iiTt ifiilars iu.juirc i-f (Jc rwi
K0.1 -I e . 1 Is . j llSpu-iriirL., Pa,, e- ot the u:w r-i:
cd ii th- -ri. 111 i -i-s.
John Mn.niv
.luly '. IssT.
M.
DONALD K. DI'FTCW
A Till UN I. Y-.VI -LAW.
e.r.Kssi;
ir:r.a.!o lOov.
I'KS!
e- (.1i,.-e In ful
II. "
Mvr.us.
A th ii:m:y-.t-i.. v; .
IlliKNMtl HO
I'i.
-Ottie in ,:!iTia,k- Ku
i n 'ci,lrc f trcct.
G
EO. M.
KKADK.
AlTCIl.NKV-
V LAW,
KltKS'PIO'R'i,
t.o. r i 1 1 i . .
ii!nco on I'catro MrH-;
EtcnEtmi Fire Insurance Ancy
rjT. AV. 1ICK,
General Insurance Agenti
AiiMiNisri:
A'l'OK'S
SA1 1-
; VALUABLE REAL ESTATE
i
1Y VI If VI
.l.tlTls'
I. ( K
,.rrt. oi
A N Hllll .!; I y ri!K K-l"aml.r-a
County, tlir KUbS'-ri-:
i,- Sale un tin- pri-tii Ues in i tn'
'1 "i , m 'iiiul. rut cuun'v.
' 1 IT will
Hit at I'iiV
H' l .Uiil.
i I'li., IU
1 no.-1
THliiSIIW, iTII HAY OfTOliER .
t ?.'K i''i l, i-k. p. in., ttio lolhiwinir cb
; Heal Kptiitc. sitiiati. in the Iti-n-itKii i
Jsj-rimi. Oaiut ria county, ,Un led u 1
, a- t, ! lo- :
,cTll'P,l
i rii.-t
-.Tll.fd
All that ivrt iin jne -e or
o tii F.i. st ! .i str'Tt
I..t or tr
on thi-
v.'o-i :
.in,! I.,
tin lo 1
,- lot i t
-l iry Ann onra.l.on too
c -i ' In? ,n t Ii l..- a i, a ! l'v.
AI.-i (All i'l.u . .-riain
j -it-iatf la tl.e l',,r,o!i ot
j Oriii cotitcy. I'a.. a,!;. netiM
uroiiti J
: I
sill.
Ii M ,i- ti-r.
n.l n ii allrv
an. i iroiiiiiii: ot: s : ri.-,
! i'ulh:"x
i l . II M s j - sai.k.
Ton iier cent, ot the tmr -ha unmev to he pui,l
on the ilay ot f al.., on.- th'r.l ot the" tvi Ian.-,- , n
continuation ot the j.ili-, at., I the remain l-r In two
'iial annual payments, Willi interest ou i!c!iTT,t
pavuietits. and to Oe se.-tire.l by the )u Um. nt
"iml and morinm-e "f tt - pur-l-.H "t on the i rem
". Ii".. .1. H. .( ii i
Ailuiini.-Tat .-i f .1:. m..!! Susan Mcaluilen. .
Svl'tiiiiun-r li, lr s..
! -
! TAL!',U!Iil': ,'Alni at run i
i ;.J T",.1": ''r!' ''"'"'.L ui" "-'u
S A I.
,1111. sit-
1.1,1 .. ...
. un l.-u in -V I , lll.l.. ' on I1-- o 1 1 ,, a , : ,
1 A. Al.-ilotltll. A. .1. Ne'l. Henri- -l .-. -n.i . I
I A-'SAMARLIN FIRE ARMS CO., - New Haven, Conn. I- r. .
i t'jL-" Vi 1 ''ir,: t - i:..i : n itli :: T .U' 71 ra Ibr . tw1!v i.M.fi s-'uts F-. -Jj 'A
j t3 ."V -7 -sJ if t..r v ft a i a & !v t n !lr I : t:-. . ati:i,-- c.r::... t:i r :!-,. . r. i tv V
T",Ji: .t - ii...-- cut- . arrv t i -nr.y n.l te vriiia ul U'tt.; iit . . -s V.-' . r
i
Harris ScMiKAI. PhST ILlcd.CrnrM K;.M ,:,eo.r' 'l1 rr m'f I
i t-;o nt-'i jicu. i ? jt-n I'-rr ujit x ti i ri iami x - k i'f-
an.l others. ..ouriitiin- I H,-r,.., ncrrf elear. a
n,l is nr.-- well tinil.ert.. with .. a k . tiet'i li
. u.-uiuliv-r ali.l hlrlcry. Aito. ,1 tivf-M rv plunk
house an ! Ir.nie l.arn, t., nether it ti till n'cTatv
out t.uild nii;s. a tieier tailum s.r::,,;' -, ,i;er anil
a sfoiiu ol uater rioirut.i: iliroauh tie firin
There is also 7a choue apjilti. ear n,l i..-:iei
tree on the (.reiiilseii I tie ahoie propt-rtr will
t.e ,.li! al a i rl.-e ami trrms to -uit t!,e lutri-h ver
aud a koo.1 warrantee deed tr.iar.ini. .-,1
.UAin n ky,
ann I I I ; ' .
J--- !-'. !.. L'T' Ito l',,,'.,.liu , , I-.,
St.. Johnstown, P
lor
Watches, Clocks,
. ji:wi:i.rv. -
AMI
Sole Agent
KUK 1 HI.
Celebrated Rockford
WATCHJIH.
fdlauiMa an. F:eJoiii.i WatrliK.
In Key and Stern Viti !, rs.
.ARGT-: SELKCTiO.V ok ALL KiNLi-,
of JKWEIiRV always on ha:j 1.
f My lin' r.f Jewelry is u:t
Ci.ine and see for yourself before
:ng elswhere.
-AI.L WORK OfAIiANTKI'Ii .-.5-J
CARL RIVLN'JUS
Ebenshurg, Nov. 11, lssr,--tf.
Xii mao World
err S
-r. s r j -. ;
Mil- n.a le
on tiie rin:-
iiuriins nnd Tnr-
1. II n yT.ir ;a"'l
rr-s T- i-i r' t J5. Ha. .- in
lo- l.:u--a;c.l .au.y;r.c.
New Haven, Conn.
1" 5. t"'n:v rr if!-' l.t'V.- i-'H tS
a- ; i ti;:.-
tiltlti nii r,f tht hiirr-.n orFU.um rc. " -
i:,o Brumal - r'-f:.T tt rif jit.- fcjr rr:v-n I-- ini , .1
bccouincLrew.fci.d r; ni yiiu boC a.- J. :.c4-it
TS CATX EKT. C;Tks i. wTTBJfct Jl Z., :
KAf.PI3 UZKEDY CO., Wrts Cerrtf-
OTHS T.Tsrt'jS'.roet.aT.lyOtna. KO.
Trial of our Appliance. Abu. tor Tormi"
T.
W. Kit K. ATT'UlNKY-AT-h.Cf.
Ht'erflurir. fa.. I'lMre In Ivul.tlm: c T
.1 LlM-1. i!C'-',i. mrst ti'Mir.i l enlrc ftrext.
in mn -r cf leual liusmeM1 8i:fTi,leil tf salt? la-t-.j
rii hi. 1 "(.lleM E8 a f;.eclalt ili-l4.-lt. ,
Foit ti.r srr.AM k.ninks. -i. i
ure l':ii.-. Holler nn-1 !iet-lr.!. V. -r. -s.cfonil-h:m,l
t-nuiii.-p ari,l 1 M.liT-i,n l.ar. 1 h .'
Inif ni-' iiif t nil iii:n-liin;rv a s i , v-in 1 t v -T 'V
A- "Alvl-IN. Allei.-t.etiy. I'a. (J ..ii . I
A1
lVntTlsi;lt.S tv ao.Ir.-ss.r.z -co.
idHfll A ( ., lOj.r-io Sr.. Ni V
i-h!i I. urn th.- fm" ritt rf arv i,r,.i"-ol i:t"
1 1 'I'.K I I si N i iriAm.-rii.au .New.-;. a;
l'au' t'amitiilct inc.
I no
VliTH'H Ti S
Ti iCKIli iI.M.l
L 1 1 Ii'- n '.iti'.la I liit-i-i in
i: tin 'r.-- s i'r.iii: - ",-n
i ! t';
l.ai.v w
!.. i'a
l!..- M
A
Pre.-M.
.1 1! ! v
: I ta I Ti
k . A . M
.1AM h 11
,l I.I l.K.
1-.
M. D.
KITTELL.
v - i 1 x - a i "v v
1. 1 ! II
i:iii:.rsi
1 then Ariti'iry Hull,
HO, PA.
-,,url H
'!-:"r l KI MHicH.
11- ta.t- .lulm ( Iriitics. ile'-'Mfie,!.
Letters t. -ta iiietitiry .n the eMutr ' ' -ilnincs,
lcci-a-i-,l , 1ki1ti ta-i-n irrant'-l T -:
ua,h'riKnt.-,i. Uuta,-. 1 1 : r o l j. t..i-u :: t '1 1 tf
t in.- iti,l--,Ti-,J tn ai, I e-;.iti :nut inai- ! '
w.lh ilelav, :m, ttn.8e liavmz i laiia.- .m i !-' '"
aIIlv stintil.l .r-Hi-nt t.'iom, j,r .,t--ly a : i-, :.'
teii. In Mc'.il.'inent.
MAKU.i;i:riii:iMi.
Alleifhr-ny twn., .luly J ', 1' 'i': '
BARBER SHOP.
Tli'." uralcr.-'iirrioil iiiviti-s t!:r , : '-n "'
l-ura Ht',1 .iii.he tiei.cr.illy t r.i.l at tn- :
,n t'ciitri. St.. l;:,ei..-i tiri;. pa.. if
l'"lt!ta!il Hon-.. ! i .1 , o , . w1,iti, lie wi.l !' '
ra, y i-i iiriiiMli-Ia l !t,i-m w.t;. a - li-ali 1..,,
It u 1 1- rut i-li. - rt n, a
H.V ki-cjiiliit -. trvth Hit; neat ii'mI tl,!y a'
h,,p l ex,ei-L.to uient a hierai .-h ire oi ) .
Uu'
Mari-h 11, 'ST.
n-TElt W II.HI.I.M.
I
A3
1 ) M I X 1 S T J 1 A T ) 1 1 ' S N O T 1 ( K .
Letters ot administration on the i-: .'-
William. I. Me( i uire. lute ot l'leartiel.1 t :
i'.m.l,tu eonntv. deeeased. haviiiir l e-:. .n'.:
.to ti.o t:ii.liTii:neil. nil persons in.lehi.- i : -
estate, are hereoy notined to make pajiiii t.: '
out delay, and all t hose liavlnic .-laim - a.i : -'
fame will presetit tliciu, properly auti.e:::: -lur
settlement to
I-i I II AM V.-iil I 1 1 K .
Ailra'r ot William .1 . M.-i i aire. 1
("learlield twp., April IssT.-ct.
its-i. ""
l'ldletes written nt snort notl -e tn tt.e
OLD RELIABLE "ETNA"
Ami oilier lirsl 4'laHW l"onipinle.
T. AV. DICK,
jrT hk i ii r
OISO HAUTH)K
fiub ixsuRArrnur
CU.M31L.NCK!! H1MM
1794.
Ki cr.shurif. .Iniy 'i.isi.
Il, L. JilH.XSiUI,' J. B! IK. A. KH.-
JolmstDii, Iuck iV: C
lllDeiiSsliii-,
fiToney Received on D?p-C
I'.tr.tHI.IlON 1I.M.M.
IMEiiEST AI.LOWEI) ON TIMEP
COLLECTIONS HADE
AT Ai.- Al l ESSlKl K r.'IM?'.
J)i: ATI'S on the rri'i' il"'1
Houtrlit mill Sold rtti "
General Banking Easiness Trans:
Acctryrs su.it im.
A. W. BITK. t'ashit'
l-'hnshnr
April . p
4.-tf.
i. I'rmtliiL-
lill.N y,
yo.i want
lie i; i 0 th,
.1
1KIAM l