A i i'l' H. L i , 3 fcnwlma freeman. F.BKNSBUKti, CAMHIII.V CO., PA. FRIDAY, SEITEMBKR 4, l)fmurrnll lonnlj Tie bet. For Pr,siilent Jiulfje, JOHN 1. LINTON, of Johnstown. For Delegate to Gmstitutkmal Conven tion. JOSEPH M' DONALD, of Ebensburg. For Shoriff, JOSEPH A. GRAY, of Carrolltown. For Poor Director, JOHN F. LOXU, of Kbenslnirg. For Jury Commissioner, E. J. ULoC(iH, of Johnstown. Watermelons are so ahuniluiit in the south that the railrojuLs will no longer receive them for shipment unless the freight is prepaid. Dr. H. L. Oktu, of Ilarrisl.urg, has been selected Suporintond nt of the Har rishurs Lima ic Asylum to succeed Dr. J. F. Gerhard, who declined a re-election on account of ill-health. Ar tlieir Ptate convention, licll at llarrisbun? last week, the Frohibitionist.s nominated W. W. Hague, of Warren, for Auditor General, and George Drnyfon, of Media, for state treasurer. Governor Page, of Vermont has no tified Redtield Proctor, Secretary of War , that he will appoint him U. S. Senator from that ttatc, to fill the unexpired term of Hon. Geo. F. Edmunds, who resigned. Hon. Gj-Exsi W. Scokield, an ex mcmber of Congress, and register of the treasury under Hayes, died at Warren, Ta., on Sunday. He was appoint ed by President Garfield judge of the court of claims, but resigned last July. If putting sugar on the free list is a good thing and every housekeeper in the United States knows that it is, would it not Ik; a good thing to put every other necessary of life on the free list. Sugar has given the people a taste of what the tariff protected interet-ts cost- them. The marriage of Miss Mary Lincoln daughter of United States Minister Lin coln took place at London, on Wednes day to Charles li. Isham, of Chicago. A nunikT of fashionable English and American people filled the church. Thh speakership of the next House is claimed by a Western paper for the Northwest on the ground that ''there will sit in the Fifty-second Congress C6 Democratic mem tiers from the North west as against 127 who sat in the Fifty first Congress." (ovkunor Campbell, of Ohio, is so seriously indisposed that he had to give up campaign work. The Governor will probably go to the seaside to remain several weeks, or jerhaps longer, asjiis physician and his friends are determined he shall have rest and quiet until he en tirely recovers his strength. IIev. Geokok Moore, pastor of a col ored Baptist church at Louisville, Ky., has been held for coirrt on a charge of Stealing from the church a Bible, clock and chandelier. Moore claims that the Bible is his but admits stealing the other articles. He says lie only received 47 cents a month aud had to live. hfo little is General Greecr. the Renubli can candidate for Auditor General, though of in his ownh ijine that three of the Berks oounty delegates refused to vote for him In the Mate convention. It is extremely doubtful if he rim poll his full party vote in the city of Heading where he resides and where he has few intimate friends or associates. By a collision of the steamers Gaiii-4 bier and Easby, inside tWe port of Philip Heads, Australia, on last Friday, twenty fix lives were lost. Seven minutes after the collision the Gambier went down, Stern first, carrying with her five saloon passengers, fifteen steerage passengers and six of the crew. The Easby was considerably damaged, but remained alongside and rescued many of the other vessel's passengers and crew. Another large party of Hebrew re fugees was landed at the barge office in New York Monday from the Cunard Steamer Etruria. They were detained by the immigration authorities for ex amination as to their physical and finan cial condition. Many of them arc pen niless and wune here with their families because they had been deceived into be lieving that they would bo welcomed here and provided with homes by this govei nment. Chinese passengers to the number of 240, says the New York Sun were landed at the Canadian port of Vancouver last Sunday, from the steerage of a steam ship that then arrived there, and the re venues of the Canadian Government were increased by the amount of the head tax imposed upon each of them. It is a noteworthy fact that while gangs of Chinaman are constantly arriving in the Canadian part of the American con tinent the Chinese population of Canada is not increasing. The United States is an attractive country to them. The National Lulxr Tribune, noting Mr. Powderly's acceptance of the Quay nomination for lelegate-at-large to the proposed constitutional convention, adds rtto voice : 'The cost of a consti tu tinal convention would Ikj probably not less than $500,000, which is a prety stiff figure when one considers that all the revision of the constitution that is necessary can be done by amendment at small expense in the way laid dow n by the fundamental law." Mr. Poweler ly may blame himself if he shall liud himself in the soup next fall. News has Ken received ot the State Department at Washington, that the war in Chile is about ended by the cap ture of Valparaiso and the overthrow of Balmaceda, the president of the Repub lic. There are two interpretations of the Chilean situation as given by the friends ami enemies, respectively, of President Bulmaceda. According to the claims of the friends of the deposed president they say he was eiected by a LiU ral party, which is com posed of a dozen factions. It was im possible to please all of them. The politicians there, as in this country, triel toxlictateto Balmaceda in his appoint ments. The President protested, and the hostiles in Congress having a majority- endeavored to imDeach him. Fail- mg in this they declared an vn revolt . w hich occurred on January 7. Congress has no turner there to impeach a 1 resi- dent, but a resolution declaring Balma ceda unseated was pa.-ed. The Consti tution of Chile gives the President power to make and unmake officials at will and and without the consent of Congnss. Balmaceda's friends say he was only ex ercising his constitutional duty. The enemies, however, declare that Balmaceda, after the expiration of four years of his term of office, became des potic, and tried to usurp the powers of Congress. As he could not hold the Presidency a second time he bent all his energies in selecting a successor w hom he could use at will. The Revolutionists say that Balmaceda sunk his high otliee to a low level iu using the machinery of the Government to further his political ambitions. Eliminating Russia, says the New York Sun, Euroe will beslurt I'Cl'.OOO, 000 bushels of wheat and rye after the outside world has sent to that country all that can be spared. What does this portend? Is it possible to conceive the unutterable, misery and distress, desola tion and death which a famine of such proportions is likely to bring in ite train ? Is not Europe face to face with a state of want such as has never threatened so great a population since the dawn of history. Has men ever witnessed starvation upon the scale which is probable as the result of the continent's wide destruction of en ps ? On all the earth there is but one sul Etitute possible for the deficient rye and wheat; but one means of preventing, even in part, the devastation threatened, aud that is by the use of the American maize should we Ikj so fortunate as to harvest a full crop. If there are ships enough on the ocean to transport it, Europe will take not only the 250,000,000, bushels of wheat which we can squeeze out, but hundreds of millions also of our corn. The distaste for such food will disappear in the pres ence of famine, and we may command any price for our products that we have the heart to exact. The tariff on sugar, says the Philadel phia Record was repealed not in order to relieve the taxpayer, but to fasten more firmly ujon the county the policy of protection. Concurrently with the abolition of the sugar tax the average of protective duties on other necessaries of living was raised from 49 to G7 per cent. The tax on sugar went into the Federal Treasury and helied to pay off public debt. The added protective taxes, on the contrary, never reach the Treasury. They go into the iockets of the people who devised them ami who elected Pres ident Harrison in order to have them put in shape for collection. But nearly always some good conies out of eAil do ing. There never was a more effective objeet-lrsnou to show that tariff duties are taxes than has resulted from putting sugar on tho fiiaj Hat. People who were paying 7 cunt a pound for granulated sugar a year ago, ami w'no are now get ting it for 4i cents a pound, can no longer be bamboozled into the belief that protection protectst the consumer. And they will aek for the repeal of the duty on coal, salt, wool and other thibgS of use aud necessity, knowing that they will reap the full benefit therefrom. Congressman Jerry Simpson: We are in earnest aud we think that the people of America have been greatly wrongeel. I go to the Republican party and ask them for its remedy. It replies: "rut tip the tariff." And yet you have been putting up the tariff for thirty two years. I asked Mr. McKinley: "If tariffs raise wages, why is it that Great Britain, a free trade country, pays twice the wages protected Italy docs; why is it that Great Britian pays double to her wage-earners what sho paid in 1S47, when she became a free-trade country? Why is it that Great Britian pays her laborers one-third more than the !alKrers receive in the protected countries of Europe ?" The Vesuvius iron works, says the rittsburg Post, started on Monday with colored puddlers who have been import ed to take the places of white men at lower wages. It was at the Vesuvius works suoscripton papers were passed around among the workers in 18SS, w ith the assurance if they would "ante" with liberality they would be sure of steady work for four years as the result of the triumph of Harrison and Protec tion. Can't always tell about these things; but this flash in the pan need not deter our workingmen from coming down handsomely for Major McKinley He needs it. A despatch to the EtUaftite fro m Vien na says: "The Empressof Austria shows symptoms of insanity. She is very ec centric, desiring bizarre costumes in w hich to appear in public and indulging in other oddities. The Emperor has called in medical experts, who have pro nounced the case a grave one, being as sociated with an hereditary malady. The Duchess d' Alencon, a Bister of the Empress, is in an insane asylum at Grate, and the mad King of Bavaria is a cousin of the Empre-ss." Washiugton Letter. Washington-. D. C. Aug. 2Sth, 1891. Sxrctary Foster is in a fair way of earn ing the title of the "Colonel Sellers of the administration" from his propensi ty to see everything in its rosiest light. About the first of July he was telling everyone of the great benefits which would follow the extension of the $51. (H0,000 of 41 per cent bonds at 2 per cent, and how glad the national banks would le to take all that might be sur rendered by private parties in order that they might increase their circulation. Now that the extension of the bonds has proven a frizzle, not half of them having been presented for extension, one would suppose that Mr. Foster would feel bad enough to at least keep quiet. Not he. He is, according to his own statement, not at all disappointed over the failure of his first large financial transaction, hjnj? .( fof . tlfr ,.deur lieople" th;lt $25,000,000 or f 30,000,000 to be j)Ut iu circulation by the redemption of these bonds and how much jrood this increase in the circulation w ill do busi ness circles. He reminds one of the young physician who when asked how he was making out in a family where he was attending a womau in confinement, said: "The mother is dead and the child is dead, but I hepe to pull the father through." Representative Mills has gone over to New York and it is probable that while there he will make a little investigation into a statement made here a few days ago that the New York delegation was divided in its choice for speaker as fol lows: Crisp 16, McMillin C, Mills 1. The statement was made by a member of Tammany Hall, but its accuracy was at once questioned by Mr. Mills friends, who claim to have the best of evidence to prove that it was wrong in every case. Mr. Mills will go to Ohio shortly to make speedup in the campaign. The noble army of "ex's" is again marching upon Washington, each and every memlier of it anxious to get the place which is to lo vacated by Secreta ry IVoetor, who has leen formally noti fied that he is to be apriosnted to serve out the unexpired term of Mr. Edmunds in the United Suites Senate, and those who fail will at least have the satisfac tien of knowing that they have tempo rarily got out of the e.bscurity into which they had sunk, by having their names mentioned as ossibilities for the vacant seat in the cabinet by the oblig ing newspapers. If you have curiosity to see these name's get a copy of the hist Congressional 1 i rectory and e-heck off the names of all the men who retired frem Congress with the Fifty-first Con gress, and you will have a correct list of them. It is said that the New England Senators have demanded of Mr. Harri son that he shall appoint a man from that section to the vacancy and that the Republicans of the northwestern States have made a like demand. Mr. Harri son will place the appointment where it will fetch the most votes for Harrison in the next Republican national conven tion, no matter who it may please er dis please, ami the lelief here is that the place will go to ex-Governor Cheney, of New Hampshire, unless Gen. Alger can le persuadetl to accept it. Some queer steries are being told around here of how Prof. Dyenforth is manipulating his dynamite aud gun penvder rain-forcer for the purpose of getting a big appropriation from the next Congress to pay all further experi ments. It is said, he took advantage of climatic conditions, which made it cer tain that he could not fail, when he made the recent expe riment about which so much has been printed. It is also said that none of the party now in Tex as with the Professor have any faith in the efficiency of the apparatus to pro duce rain iu a really arid section, and that they regnrd the whole business as a sort of scientific humbug, which promi ses to furnish profitable employment for a long time, at least that is said to be tho substance of letters that have been received in Washington. There is a clash of opinion between the Interior Department and the Depart ment of Justice. Secretary Noble holds that notwithstanding the recent judicial decision that the sale of lager laer in Indian Territory was illegal, that he has the iower, under a U. S. Statue, to pro vent it, and has instructed the Indian agents to se ize all found in the Territo ry. The Attorney General holds that the decision ff Judge Bryant of the Eastern District of Texas is good law until it is reversed by a higher Court, and under that decision dealers have a right to sell leer and to demand jwy for jd! the beer seized by the Indian agents. M. Higher tnaii tiff I. Cimcack), Aug. 29. Chicago capital ists are ready to build a tower at Jackson Park 250 feet higher than the Eiffel tower at Paris. Yesterday afternoon their prcposition was laid before the Wavs and Means Committee. Geo. A. Fuller, Wm. E. Hale, and E. F. Cragin made the proposition. These gentlemen Said they were ready to build a tower 1, 2O0 feet high and to spend $2,000,000 in its construction. All they asked was space at Jackson Park large enough to accomodate the crewds that they expect will crowd around the tower. This offer was discussed several hours. MeimVrs of the committee are not posi tive that a tower is needed. They will think about it several days and get the opinions of the other directors. If a tower is built, however, Chicago men will undoubtedly be granted the jrivi lege. -A Woman Triumphed. Tiffin, O., Sept. 2. While Miss Anna Slosser, an aged maiden residing on a farm about six miles west of this city, was engaged in her household duties, she was confronted by a man in mask, who presented a pistol and demanded her money. She jerked the mask from his face and eneleavored to wrest the weapon from his hand. A terrible struggle ensued, when fortunately the woman's nephew, a nervy youngster of 12 years, came to her rescue with a knife, which he used in a vigorous man ner, slashing his aunt's assailant severe ly about the nee'e and shoulders. Fi nally he tore himse lf loose and beat a haty retreat. Miss Slosser had a large amount of money in the house. Balmaceda said to be Dead. Santiago, Chile, Sept. 2. It is re ported here that while Balmaceda was trying to escape over the mountains, ac companied by muleteers, the latter want ed to turn back on account of the deep snow. Balmaceda would not hear of such a thing, and struck one of the muleteers, who shot him. Then the muleteers shot Balmaceda's companion and robbed the dead bodies. Balmaceda was on his way to Buenos Ayres. Grand Forks, Sept. 2T Five thousand acres of hay land, studded with stacks was swept clean by a prairie fire last night, supposed to have caught from a Northern Pacific locomotive, burning to I the banks of the Turtle River. How a Ureal Mate Urows. The completed census figures for IS'.K) show that Pednsylvania has a total popu lation of 5,253,014, an increase of 975, 123, or 22.77 per cent, in the decade. It u not only the second state in the Union in population, but it is growing at a rate which, if mantained, will even tually make it the first. ' New York, which still holds first place, only added 8W.003 to its population, or at the rate of 17.'. per cent., as against an increase of 075,123, or 22.77 per cent for Penn sylvania. The increase in teu years was more than twice the total population of the state at the taking of the first cen sus, in 1790, when Pennsylvania was, as now, the second state in population, Virginia at that time ranking first. . There is one feature of the phenomenal growth in population in the Keystone State that cannot fail to command mar ked attention, and that is that the bulk of the increase is in town and city popu lation. In 1S.S0 there were fifty-six loroughs and cities with a population of 4.0(H) or more and an aggregate popula tion of 658,523. The towns and cities of the same class have increased to eighty-two with a population of 2,308, 007, an increase in towns of twenty-six and in population of 710,0S4, or nearly three-fourths of the entire increase in the state. The country population has grown comparatively "little; in twelve of the agricultural counties it has de creased, but in the towns and cities the increase has been nearly fifty per cent. The development of the marvelous mineral resources of the state furnishes tho very obvious reason for this increase of nearly a million in ten years, and as these resources are practically inexhaust ible the same reason will hold good for years to come. Pennsylvania is a great state now, but the limit of its greatness has not been reached and is not likely to be for a long time yet. This is shown by the rate of increase, which was only 21.19 per cent, from 1S00 to 1870, 21.61 per cent, during the next decade, and 22.77 during the hist. PhiLi. Tinui. Tortured and Murdered. Monroe, Mich., August 31. John Wilkinson and his wife were brutally tortured and murdered ky two tramps on Saturday afternoon at their farm, near here. The motive of the tranqis was robbery. They found a couple alone at home late in the afternnon and demanded from Wilkinson a sum of money which they had learned tie had recently received. Wilkinson refused, whereupon the tramps set upon the farmer and his wife, and, after beating them almost into in insensibility, tortured them in the most cruel manner, in the hope of extorting from them the hiding place of their money. Failing in this, the tramps lecame enraged and finished their fiend ish work by murdering the couple. Re tribution, however, was quick, and jus tice of the mo6t summary nature was desalt out to the fiends. A 10-year-old son of farmer Wilkinson who had been in an out-house, heard the shrieks of his mother, and gave the alarm. The tramps fled, but were hotly persued by a posse of citizens, who ciime upon them near Maybee station. They were not even given time to say their prayers, but were shot on sight by the infuriated citizens. Their bodies were completely riddled with bullets. A Fattier' AnTul Death. New York, Aug. 29. What is evi dently a triple murder and suicide was discovered on the third floor of a four story tenement in Harlem. A police man entered the rooms and found the dead bodies of" John Baxter, aged 30, a painter; his wife Mary, 2S years old; the 0-year-old daughter, Kate, and the 4-year-old son John. All four bodies lay on the floor in a pool of blood. They had been shot in the head. Close by the body of Baxter lay a revolver con taining three cartridges and four empty shells. Shote were heard by other ten ants in the house, but no investigation was made at the time. A policeman found on a table in the room where the bodies lay a letter addressed to Baxter's mother. It was in the hand writing of the dead man, and showed he contem plated the murder of his family and then suicide. No reason was given for the terrible deed. It was evident all four shots were instantly fatal. The wounds showed the pistol was placed close to the head of each victim. The children were probably shot while asleep. Baxter is pronounced to have been insane, as no other motive is known. Great excitement prevails iu the neighborhood. , A Daring Sank Robbery. Kansas City, Aug. 31. A daring and successful bank robbery took place to day at Cordera, a small station on the Chicago and Alton railroad, near Hig ginsville, Lafayette county. Cordea is a small town and the America bank, a branch of the Higginsville bank of the same name, is a small bank. It has only two regular employees, a cashier ami bookkeeper. The bookkeeper was out on business at 2.30 oclock this afternoon, when two men rode up to the bank, dismounted, walked into the bank, shut the door and locked it before the cashier took notice to what was going on. When he did take notice he noticed that two revolvers were levelled at his head. At the same time one of the men commanded him to throw up his hands. He obeyed. One of the men kept him covered with a re volver while the other went through the bank. He secured only $090 in currency representing the receipts of the day, and both escaped. Hid the 'Snag" in a Mump. Peoria, Ills., Aug. 29. Xelllago, the alleged wife of Lousis G. Bottenheim, who was found in a deserted house cov ered with bruizes and blood, says Bot tenheim assisted in robbing a bank in Sedalia. Mo., several years ago, when $43,000 wasjsecured. The men hid $20, 000 under a stump, but were captured, and the bank people recovered $23,000. The two robbers were sent up for five years. Bottenheim 'a partner died in the penitentiary. Since Bottenheim has been out he has been searching for the $20,000, but the locality has changed so he cannot find it. Returning from one of these fruitless searches four days ago he kicked and beat her nearly to death, charging that she took the money. He has been arrested and held. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. AESQlHITEUtf P1TRE HEWS AMD OTHER XOllSGS. Th -n are said to be 2O.0 different kinds of postage stamps in the worM. Four houses were struck by lightning bt Wernersville, 1 Jerks eon nty, on Wed nesday. While returning from a funeral, Mr. Peter Cummings. of Scrantoa, w as thrown from a carriage and killed. The manufacture of false ireth for horses is a new industry Jst pend in Paris with a rapital of 2,0U0,0U0 francs. At Lowell, Ark., lightning struck and killed a two-year-old baby "at play in the mother's arms. The mother was not hurt. A man invaded a convent at Williams burg, N. Y.. Sunday night. After attempt ing to assault several of the sisters, the brute was finally seared away. Levi Longeneclcer, of Rome. Lancaster county, has a cornstalk growing on his premises 1 feet 5 inches in height, with three ers cf corn, tlie top one being nine feet from the ground. Charlie Ross' a New York butcher, while trying to haa g tip a side of beef, slipped from the ladder om which he was standing and w as impaled on a hook, which passed through his heart. The railroads of the country employ 700,000 men. Each year they lose 2,000 of their number In killed, and 20.000 of them are Injured annually. It is estimated that 3,or),ouo pople depend on these employees for a living. Elmer Steele, arrested for burning his father-in-law's barn and poisoning his horses, boarded a train at Greensburg and skipied out- Rediscovered thathis bonds men could not be held, they not owning any prope-rty. Fire at Ceres, Pa., on Monday morn ing destroyed theOs-wayo House, the Val ley 3fuI oflice, Hackett's drug store, D. II. Miller's office, Lampier's 11 very aud the residence of A. Kimball.LiOss a boat $30, 0u; partly insured. The revlsejd census gives Braddock a population of 10,.Vjo, or about S, snore than was sent in by the enumerators. This entitles ltradduck to free mail diKv ery, and an effort will be made at ouoei-jr Postmaster Sheets to secure It. The bi-carbonate wurks of the Penn sylvania Salt Company's big plant at Na trona, alKut twenty miles from Pittsburg, on the West Penn rood, was destroyed by fire on Sunday morning. The Ws will be fully $100,ooo, covered by insurance. Therais an "Ohio Beauty" cherry tree In the old Bassford orchard In Brow n's Valley' Cal., w hit h bears from 11,000 to 15,- 000 pounds of fruit per Tear.3.The tree is so large that each year a big scaffoldihg has to be built around it so that the cher- j ries can be picked. ' j A special from Hazleton says: The annual report of Mine Inspector Lewis has just been made public The total number of fatal accidents was fifty-two The number of .non fatal acrideut was 134, being an increase of six fatal and eight non-fatal accidents. About 200 deaf mutes from all parts of the State met In Allen town on Wednesday in biennial session, the chief object beiag to arouse interest in the project for the erection ot a home for blind, aged and in firm deaf mutes. All the proceedings were conducted in the sign language. A handful of raw pig iron, weighing about five pounds, is worth 5 cents; it would make about sixty table knife blades, worth $15; converted into steel watch springs, there would be about 110,200 of these little coils, which, at the rate of 11.75 a dozen, would be valued at $16,070.S3. Mrs. Frank Neptune, who lives in Browiistuwn. near Larimer Station, fell down stairs one evening last week with a lamp in her hand. The lampexploded and Ignited her clothing, and before the flames could be extinguished she was burned so badly that she died in a short time after ward. At the request of several of the leading citizens of Unfoutown, Pa,, II. L. Robin son, Esq., has entered suit against the di rectors of the fair, which was held there last week. The Information charges them with renting ground to men for gambling purposes. There were many farmers and others who lost heavily by the gambling "fakirs." Thecase is exciting a great deal of intere-st. A special to the. Star from Arkansas City, Kas., says: It was learned to-day that a secret order of boomers has been or ganized all along the border of Southern Kansas. Already over throe thousand membe-rs have been sworn In. They pro Iose to arm themselves early in October aud make a raid on the Cherokee Strip. They will burn the grass, kill the cattle, and make a determined stand to hold the Strip for homes. ' Robert Yocum, who votes and pays taxes In Carnarvon township, Berks coun ty. Is rather mixed up in his county allegi ance. His farm lies where the three coun ties of Berks, Lancaster and Chester join. A part of his grain crop this year that was grown in Chester had to be hauled through a part of Berks and Chester in order to be housed in his barn, which is In Lancaster. He grows crops in three counties, but all his fruit is In Berks. His house Is in Berks, and in the cellar are frequently ci der and apples from Berks, potatoes from Lancaster and Chester, aud other root crops from all three. Professor Hogan. the balloonist at the exposition grounds, at Detroit, fell from his balloon aud was killed at 5.30 o'clock on Friday afternoon. He had ascended to a height of nearly a mile and was prepar ing to cut loose with his parachute, when he lost his hold and fell to the ground, striking without the exposition bounda ries. When picked up he was a shapeless mass, mangled beyond recognition. The catastrophe was witnessed by about 30, 000 people. Not a bone in his body es caped breakage, and his head especially was horribly mangled. The victim was a brother of Hogan, who made an ascension in Campbell's air ship in New York some years ago and never returned. Desirable fr Ladles. The new fashion journals published by A. McDowell & Co., 4 West ltth street. New York, are again on our table. The superiority of these journals is abundantly shown on every page. "La Mode" is the smallest of the three, and is intended for family use. It has many styles for children and Is only 1.S0 per year, or 15 cents per copy. "La Mode de Paris" is an elegant journal, filled with everything of the latest style in Paris. This is a great favorite with ladies who wish to keep posted in the new styles as they come out. "Album des Modes" is also a popular Parisian publica tion, many ladies sivine it the Dreferenen. These three monthly journals claim to give the earliest fashions, . and thev are all printed in Paris. They contain lessons in practical dressmaking which are of incom parable value and easy to understand. ' Lia Modede l'aris" and the "Album des Modes" are each (3.50 per annum, or thir ty-five cents foi a single copy. Samples can be obtained from the house at single copy prices. I. P. Thomas & Son Co. For the same reason you don't tie your horw to an empty man ger for mouths at a time, you don't want to put In your wheat this fall without au ample quantity of food enough to grow a full crop of wheat and succeding grass. To supply this plant-food in th proper shape is our business. We say jmjtcr shaie because most anybody can mix a little South Carolina Rock and Paint together and call It fertilizer; but twenty-three years' experience at the business, w ith our complete fa cilities has enabled us to make fertilizers that will produce the de-sln-d results. There isn't any question about it. You will say so too, if you have used our goads, and if you haven't, you can get, them and all desired information from our agents. The Thomas' Phosphates are standard and thoroughly guaranteed. I'UH SALE BY W. 1. AN STEAD, JOS. A. NOEL, CLOTHING! Overcoats! We are now prepared to show you the largest and best selected stock of FALL AND WINTER CLOTHING AND OVER COATS in the county and give GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS is always complete. Am now ger assortment than ever before. nice goods and save you money. Very Respectfully, C. SII. llilt. il K II, oetS-90-ly Read the $1.50 EcIieiLcode -DEALEItS IX- General.'. Merchandise, CLOTHIJG,FLOUR FEED, Lumber and Shingles. Wo keep our Stockah ax- Full and Complete. Give us a Call. Our Enormous Spring Stock of Carpets. Foster's are now fully prepared to meet the demands of such of their housekseper friends as contemplate making the improve ments in their homes that Spring always sujrfrests. And in this connection let the fact be recorded ied and Excellent a Stock of Carpets of and description as can be seen in this very desirable state of affairs particular. THE PRICE. Also, BEAUTIFUL VARIETY OF CURTAINS ANL DRA PERIES. New Spring Styles ready. ANDREW FOSTER, 247 M GREATEST BARGAINS EVER OF FERED IN EBENSBURG IN Men's, Boys', and Children's Shoes, Also, a fnll line of Hats and Hosiery, Gloves and Shirts of all Opposite Cambria House. VaMe Beal Estate FOR SALE ! ALUT ol arrooad la th Wt ward oftha bor omen of Keobarir. Cmbrta county. Pa, fronting oa Sample itreat baTlau-tneraon eraot d a FRAME HOUSE and outbuilding., all la good repair. or term or particular call on or addreaa JOHN NEALAN. Nlcktown, Pa., or M. LI. JUITLLL, Ebenabarg, Pa. Etenslnn Fire Insurance A&ency T. "W. DICK, General Insurance Agent. EBENSBURG. TA. 1 ASHMTQN & JEFFERSON COLLEGE, WtBUIHUTOS, PA. Th lt year beartat Sept. IS. Classical, Latla Seieotlbe aad Scieatins eoomea ol atudr. re baMtorr lieot. ooodnetad by tbe (VtUeire Faculty. fcxpeasea low. Morale ol the place koo. Is'o aluooa. For catalogue awy to aoaT.vLlai. l'aaaiiaiT AlorraT. Johnstown, Pa. Ebcnsburg, Pa. CLOTHING! Overcoats! you the lowesf prices. My line of prepared to show you a much lar Call and see me as I will sell you CARROLLTOWN, PA. per Year. r - & Hoppel, CARROLLTOAVN, 1V. that they show as Grand, Var Every Kind the lanrer cities. And behind stands the even more importan of Dress Goods and Trimmings now & 24J MAIN STREET, JOHNSTOWN. I'A Ladies', Misses Oxford Ties and Slippers. Caps, Ties and Scarfs, Underwea descriptions. . J. D. LUCAS, EBENSBURC, PENNA SOW Hi THE TIME To but a Shot (Inn or Klfle. and w bare tbe tuca to eeieci irom. r a nave uu m Double Barrel BREECH LOADERS; from mso rr. SINGLE BREECH LOADERS, fbom t.o rr. Breech Loading Klfle, ti 00 and op ; also com Dleta line ol Sbeli. Tool, etc. Larvet aaiurt mem ol Diamond. Walcbea, Jewelry. Silverware and Clock la i enofviaDie. K SMIT. Fire floret In one. 932 and W4 Liberty treet. and 703, 70S and 707 bmiuneia sireev, riiisuura. N. R Send lor nnr new annual CJun Cata logue, No. 18, tree ol chance. e3.vl.3m nOTfcL L.E (1KANHE. H. J.SHETTlt. Faopairroit. JUocaled at liuBol. Fa., near the B. K. V. Hallway Iiepot. V e alwayi endeavor to fur nish tbe beet accommodation to builneea men, pleasure seeker and boarder. Ferson In search ol soinlort and quiet will find It a desirable place to (top. Tbe Table 1 unurpeaed and I alway (applied with the best the market aflord,aod all tbe delicacies of the (easoa. The Bar I (ap plied with the eboloeetol pure liquor and elKar and nothlnr but the best 1 cold. Special alien tion given to the care ol horso. H. J.SOHETTH. CANCER and Tumors rt'RFD 1 (to kntfei ixok rt.. lira (a.TieKV Ht.H, No. UA Llut bw. tuaiimau. " BI.E No. i. .. n tiled . V orcMoD, 'lenrSanl Stiort KottU Kailrotd. b. Ian. 'oaaelln Jao m free. yter Kin 9 tA . . tarn Kp.. H3 i a mu. .. Altix.nn tip"-" !H tip V 1'l.lla ti,,. ."" l-.x.-ern Ki """ rai ; " John Ujwo tly.l XT A M fie 1 UP A M Mall 4 r m l.toe....... 47 p m eu i6 r m Wajr Inrona 1 tp.t.. 8 jil'i??!: reh Ira Ft Line" Mall r. H as llt .. ParlCe Kip... CC--ra.er.f.fc. -il tr T- -1 mn - k - Mall" Church Traipf.l ireMQ n tip t-.l ? Ieae dally ex'-ept SonJuy. It Sunday ony ! Black let tr Indicate teleifrai.h utl. i Ienn'(. Moore and Ortnie . i w.Br ' be flK tatlon lor i; train ,t"', ' No. 1 oonnrct at I'rtiiuo with Jchnm Tren at B TI lor nolnu ix-to.. ... - b t Jurtntuown. and with Paoitic kzrwi n . ' point wet of JobD.u.wn. A!o with il.i " ' at v i lor point eaat ol t:r'in. Io. 6 connect with MilTra:n t 4 . Wet of Vre eon. and Mai: Lxre tut eart ol Vrrrroa From point wet ol Oernon K0 , i 1th Mall train at V 3D. ani ir.m ixktii refnun with Jchnttuwa tii.rem at r . ." he txpre. at b 46. "-h: No. 8 connect with Mali Trmln , : point eaatol Creon. and Mu tii,r.L Irom point wet ol ('reaoon. 1 Sunday train connect with pelfl li,. 1 Mall Train west and mail tij.re.i cut l ' PaenKer to or lrm point on heniini k. Norlbwettern Kallroad can U trir , ... !,i port or Irri.na. tstatlob marked f" are fU; run, u j fencer wlubinic to ret off wiij nutifjts. ' doctor. Paisenirm wiiblDK 1" et on T? the train at tb e nation. 1 rtn m .1' unlest ao notil ed. W. V. li ATHBI V- i en. r.l Mnatr-r end uiriiii. I F. J. Bl'KUm ia. Train Maatt-r. KAIDROAK TIMETAHI.K OKTHt bur l (Jreuuu branch KUroaU une 7lb 1H91. yler Kxi M a tn ItKii, . Weitern Exp.... 4 3 a o Mail 1U, : II-. ohnatown txp..8 27 a m A lUxm F.tti . Ik L . . I . L . ... " ' M HCIUC JC.)J..w...O lilBBI .11.11 f.Xlt lall 4 M b m Hlill Kit. t 11 De. 8 IT U 111 kjLlrn f ..."'" Way iViim M Uptu Ken L.ln... 10 1"; sou th w Alii). IH- No. 1. Ko.l tance. a m ax , ! .... 3.0 7 4" n u 4 8 re n.35"" e.i 7 ;.i ij " 7 6 7 iA . 1. .41 " ........ ti ua i. 4 11 8 8 lu Hij, " Frienpliiir;.... Mralley Kayloi .......... Noel Muumer I.ucket (Jreeaon MJliTHWAKD. Ins tance. ' 17"" 8 8.... .... e.6.. 8 .... 11 3.... No. 1. A H 4!.... ii... ... Si... ... W ...10 W... ...1" 07... ..10 16... o 2. Ht. M 11 I6..J Ill 1. .11 IU 1: .-..11 41 1; 11 n .-...U.I li I'rwjnn l.urkct M nnnler Noel Kaylor .. Bradley Kbeneburg ...... Bradley, Noel and Lucket are Flag Su:v No train on Sunday. ASSIGNEE'S SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE BY Tlrtue of an order Inmlnir cut cf Uifir ol Oimmi'D plea of Cmijl.rU ciuc:;. undemlgnsd ail export to at.ilr uit 00 ' FrlQHDAY.SlPT. 7THJBSI at I o'clock, p. m., on the premise, the lullotrintr Km! 1uu n Alltnoae two certain lulu i.l ir round t'.WJ' the borouKb ol Aalivllle. 4"int.ria cul;; ri bounded and deecrtNed an lullowe: Bfi im. a ot on the corner ol Walnut i:rwt t. .7 (tap road: thence Iodk aaul Walnut 22 deitreea wit 1W leet to Hronj alone fald yro.d ftreet north t deermrmr. leet to Boeeh alley: tlienoe alonir mij ..! - 3i devree went 11" leet to IT) C. r.u. thence a Ion; (aid romd UO leet to tat bcglnnln;, liavlOK thereon erecieO a A DWELLING HOUSE, Slid ' 1 ani Necessary Ost-Eaife Trnne of 4le: I ine-tl.ird ol tU - money to be paid on connrniktioniil tutfm f tbe balance In two njual jru.-ut Hint twelve, month, with intrruet. lo be "ecurKsj the prTmlaew by bond ami inert' I - J.J hudi'l Af rticnee of Peter W . SUjJ Hi r Aahrllle. l'a Auirust 15. h! 41. Widows clppraiseinents: VOTICE 1 beret. T ulron that the lo" X . ... ..1 t.r..irtr a.;.r- .X 1 I1.IDOU .IPjri.irBit-uv. I ' ' . and fet apart l..r wldc of dece.lculs ur Act 01 Aaeroiuy 01 iub .to 01 .1 1 have been filed 'n the Keu.ur- ofu-e lr , a! county ol Cambria and w.ll ! preceniet tbe Orphan' Court ol m.a eouutv Ml-:'l tion aud allowance on WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 9H Bj 1 lr...nlr anj an.iraletBCDt ot "t1a property appraised and eel apart lor l'" J widow 01 nenry ! i eeaaed. 4UM.JU . ... . I ... ... rt tttr I.T I bart, widow ol H. C. Lenb.rt. late ol I Ounum. Mkjuu.w. nl! 1 ......... ., ai.nra nement 01 IT! property appralae.1 and et apart fori J Sheeheo. widow ol .lereniian ii..... - ciearneia lowneuip, oew. - 4. Inventory aud ai-prHiment " 1 1 . . protwrty appralned and mt a).art r , children ol Andrew We.trlcii. " townnblp, deceiaed. :iuJ. 6. Inventory and appramement 0 I"-'t V--i" proerty ppralea ana rci "i''" ,..-... ; Llna. widow ol John l.iuk late ' rr ' J reaped, lor the u ol f 1 n-ell an.1 ' ' , ;. 8. Inventory nd appraineuient "i 1 projrty appraised and rei , Spot, wide of J. W. Sp-tr. hue ol t- j township, deoeaaed. f-wo " . .kK'I 7. Inventory and .ropertr appraised and fet . iewJ 11 " eC lofkey late ol . iiiiiim , in. i-iuo.uo. C tUlr 1 1 t- . J4. IV - Kealater' office. Fbcusl-uri. !'. 0. A. LANGBEI Manufacturer ol ' Itlrr"1 ALL KINDS of HiRS TI '"ri."... k Mi ha nni.iL. HKI - COLLARS EARKESS CHS, BU;; Kobe. Fly Net. -urry ''V .uarantetKl to Rive llf lat-uoa. Kldlaif Bridle. Iroui... -3 K Jj- eaui Bridle, in.ua - LI? . .MIt . . . I ... . rm I rl III ' IT M Kriieni. Iroui- a jianu Hi."" k rf" V .ar-tall and examine my Mi; chaMnic elsewhere. I nuar.ntee w a th cheapest. 1ntr 'tI j-Shop Barker Ko- .. - . . - ,1 trow . r hereby Klven . 'I;.. have lw" n I'fns" .TtlTlCE :N account IS Iiwrv.v Comioou I'lea .Vm,n.,u I'lea o' Cambria e..u . u and will 'nnrm.wi,.,T; r. BC I Mi bowu to tbe contrary . . 0, , r Klrt and II nal aco.. , .lineeol W.F.Buird. r KNcnsbors.ra 11 " ' Faaaxaa a T A1I.KOAOTIMKTA -. --s i;,;-. : : : : : : : r