i ! ; i . . FPKNSni'UO. CAMTtCIA ., I A. KIM lAY, - iicntii KtiK' rfi: ii i.t. ',,r .Iiul'r of Stipri-tiH' Court. SAMl'lX (i. TIIO.M I SoN. t'f n.ihuli-l- lli:l. Kir Sl.iii- Tri'a-iiiivr, FRAN K '. USUI' UN. of INU-Imii-u. liEMOCRATia- 1IT Tl KKT. Kit TnaMiivr. joskpii p.f.nuki.k. ..r ;;iiut.in i.r. Kr (Hint v '(iiiiniis-iiuii.-i s, rTIM'K H. DU.I.oN.uf Kl.l. rTup. .MlIlN KI1MSY. ( .lolnistuwn. Ki.r l'Mr 1 iivtr, .lollN l!i:sT, of J.-tinstou 11. For A mi i tors, V. C. I'.KICUV. of Wilmoiv V.or. K. K. I'AliAHAl (ill. f i :nioll Twp. Ok tlie 2tM,iWK) Uiniiiers who rusheil into tli.'Cli.'rokre Htrip, S-pt, lt', fully ll0,(HK) have left. M A.-s'Hl sKri!i l)fini.cr:its have nonii nati'il x (mgrissniiin John K. Kus-H for piVfrnor. In the platform n.Ioptol the election of I'niti'd Senators by pop ular vote is mlvoeatcil. A i;aik. at Mohile, Ala., hlew the wat- r in front the jjiilf, aninf,r the riv'r l" rise an.l tl.Hl almost the entire city. Several persons were lrownel. many houses wrecked; many warehouses anil nnieh shippintr were tlestrove.1. .Jkrky SiMcsos- wants eaeh (n-res.-man to he allowed to have ( extra copies of the ( 'onirri sional l.'ri iml, that the silver disen.-sion of this session may l; given the fullest remling. The tabulation numhiT of Keeonls to Con-gres-man is twi-nty-t wo. Thk new Chini se minister, Vang Yn, is ahont fill years of age, and iiite stout, with a round, full faee. .Mrs. ang Yu is rarely visible to profane eyes. In ae. cordanee with Chinese custom she lives a life of almost hermitlike seclusion, dining alone and seeing no one, for visi tors are not permitted to enter her apartment. Mus. Fuask I .i-yi.iK, publisher of the Frank Lrxlii Magazines, succeeded in getting a divorce from her fourth husband who was Scar Wilde's brother William. It is the third tin e she has been divorced and courts should now refuse her further licence. A woman who can't pick a man in four trials t-hould.have sense enough to let the men alone. TlIK employees of the Citizens Street raihvay company in l'ittshtirg have agreed to accept a wage reduction of j seven and one half per cent, with the j understanding that with the improve- incut of business wages will be restored 1 to the present rat- s. The indications j now arc that some action will be taken by the employees of all the street railway companies in Allegheny and l'ittsburg. 'Sovkksoh Patiison has received a letter from Kxeciitive Comniissoner Faraipihar, of the State World's Fair commission, stating that the Pennsyl vania, state building had been accepted by the Chicago naval school in preference ; about exhausted all their material for to the New York building, w hich was j delays, and the representatives of the tendered with a donation of $.",( MM) in j many millions of people who want re cash. The trustees of the naval school ; peal are ready to make a warlike ad- examined both buildings and decided in favor of the Pcnnsvlv inia. Which represents the Republican par- ty in this state, says the Harrisburg l',t- , lih-t, the state convention or the Itt-puh- hcan dulis. The convention advocated ! repeal of the Sherman law and instruct ed coiigiessmen to vote for it. Cameron Spoke against it. The clubs favored re peal but an effort to denounce Cameron was defeated. If his desertion of the Tin: war claims committee (.f the na eause be condoned by his party his posi- j tional House of lleprt seiitativts has re turn is practically endorsed by it, an en- ' jiorteii favorably the bill for the payment dorsemeut of his position is destructive j of $', 1 17,'.' I-V- ' to residents of Fran k of the resolution favoring rejieal. The I lin county and the adjoining counties party cannot blow hot and cold at the j in Southern Pennsylvania, for damages same time. It must le either for or j sustained by the invasion of Confederates against repeal. The first test of its de- and the presenceof Union forces during Votioii to the resolution found that party J the late war. These claims giew out of faltering. It overlooked Cameron's of- ! three expeditions into thisstate in lSt'.2, fense, refused to punish it and the party is therefore against repeal. THK matrimonial alliance between Command. -r W. H. Whiiing, United Stales navy, and Miss-Ah Kong the Cni- j Ikii . iiiii.I..ii ,if ll-au.iii ti-ill I... 1 , ., , ', ! consummated. 1 he only olistat !e in the 1 , , " , Way has been removed by an order I . , , J , is-u.il from the navv department reliev- - ' lug Commander u luting in command! . ..... . ,. of the Alliance and granting him a aiiwiiiii c it. ,i Ill . ..llll lllll l.-Vll l to apply for an, extension. This leave, it is understood, is desired bv Command- er Whiting for the puriiose of going to ,. , . ,. v & inn.iin 111 meet iiii iimrry ins tiancee, who had just arrived there from ' Honolulu. He applied for it a mouth or more ago, but on account of the troubles in Nicaiagua the department was unwilling to have him leave Corinto, where the Alliance is now stationed. Pkksiuk.nt Ci.kvki.ask h.is made a rad ical change in the matter of fulcra) ap pointments, lie proposes hereafter to accept the recommendations made by the heads of the departim-uts to which the apiMiintmenLs relate, instead of undertaking, to pass personally on the merits of tlie applicant's individual case and make the selection himself. He pursued this latter course during his first administration and undertook to continue in this, but the pressure im him fur office has liecome so great that lie has finally tf n compelled, in the in- ! terest of his health, to abandon the task and to divide the work of filling tho of fices among his fight assistants in the Cahi net. Senators and representatives J in (Congress and jxiliticians generally have leen informed of the new order of things, and now instead ot making ier Bonal appeals to the President they di rect their best energies to secure the in dorsement of the cabinet, having juris diction in the matter. Ik the people of the United States had nny doubts as to President Cleveland's position with respect to the tlnancial policy vt the country his letter to (lov ernor Northern, of Georgia, and pub lished in the Atlanta ftntMitx itm, should rein ..-them. In this letter, after ex-prccs-ing surprise that there should le any doubt as to the pi-ition, In' says: "1 want a currency that is stable and sate in the hands of our eopIe. I will not knowingly be implicated in a condi tion that will justly make me in the lear-t degree answerable to any laborer or farmer in the United States for a shrink age in the purchasing jwer of the dol lar he has received fur a full dollar's worth of work, or for a good dollar's worth of product of his soil. I not only want our currency to le of such a char acter that all kinds of dollars will be of eipial purchasing power at home, bat I want it to be of such n character as will demon.-trate abroad our wiiisom and good faith, thus placing us upon a firm foundation and rt dit among the nations of the earth. I want our financial con ditions and the laws relating to our cur rencj safe and n-iuring that those who have money will spend and invest it in biiMiiessand new enterprises instead of hoarding it. You cannot cure fright by calling it foolish and unreasonable and you cannot prevent the f righti-uctl man from boarding his money. I want truod sound and stable money, and a j condition of confidence that will keep it in Use." As to the silver (piestionhe is uneipiiv i it-ally in favorof the re-al of the Sher man law. At the same time he is a friend of silver, but is opposed to the fiee and unlimited coinage of silver by this country alone and ind'ndent ly, holding that the projM-r place for sil ver in our currency can only l' fixed by a re adjustment of our currency leg islation and the inauguration of a con sistent comprehensive financial scheme which can only In-entered upon profi tably and hopefully after the real of the Sherman law, which is charged with all our financial wots. In the present State of public mind, this law cannot Ix: built upon or patched in such a way as to relieve the situation. Tins will be an important week in th. United States Senate. Something of a definite nature, says the Philadelphia ll'ialil, may be done looking to the re peal of the infamous Sherman silver law. The sooner the senate in its ma jority overrides the distuiln-d minus of the silver leaders and their werful but decidedly objectionable arguments, the better it will be for the prosperity of the nation. Something in the way of a level headed, can fully executed move to upset the obstructions to repeal and rout the obstreperous anti-rceal kickers Woulil lie a blessing for the country, -pi,,, straight out silvcrites and mongrels of the Cameron kind have stirred up nothing but grave apprehension a tend- ency to despondency in the business world. All the good accomplished by the prompt, desirable and decisive ac tion of the House in voting for uncon ditional repeal has sadly suffered through the obstructionists and their delays. Careful observers now think that the time is at hand for the silvcrites to re- I eeive a set back. 1 he objectors have vanee. No one Ix'lieves that tin' seriate will dare oppose the will of the jieople. No one w ill concede that su h a result is possible. The time for the majority tu rt. ;ri Ilow )lt ll:uu. The time for a Vote to Ik; taken is here. Iilu.-ter and the w ild, be w hiskered bull dog is now out of the question. The battle is over, and all that remains for the country is to know the result. by (ici.eral Stewart; in lMi;, by General Ie, and in lMi l, by General Jubal Kar ly. The Confederate brigades of John son and McClausland crossed the Poto mac July Im'iI, and advanced upon Chambcrsblirg. The town was invested by the t-utire command of Johnson and . . . , . . . , , -McC aiisland, and a demand made upon , , - . , . . . ,, ... thejKople for f lOO.IXH) m gold or f.HKI,- . , . tHH in government funds as a ransom, a , , . . . . , , nnnilxT of citizens Uing arrested and , , , , , lielil us tio;t:iiri f i ,r ilc t .ii v t it. it t X.. offer of money was made by the jeple, and the tow n was burned by theConfed- I iI:tOt fi iri.M Tl ! I. II ri. i ...r . .f i '1 .u . 1 ...... i , ' , , , , 7. , . . M'lirg occurred July ."(, l sr.l, and resulted in a loss which was estimated by com mission apo'mtcd by two acts of assem bly of Pennsylvania of lscs and 1S7I. The most expensive raid to Pennsylvania was the raid of 1m'i4 br General Karly. Stewart's raid in lt'(2 amounted to 12;.(M'.7, CO. A vkky large and enthusiastic repre sentation from all parts ot thestato a -tcndetl the general assembly of Demo cratic societies at Allentown last week. ice President Stevenson was among the distinguished lemocrats from outside the state in attendance. He was very warmly received, A ban. put texjk place in the evening to which 1 , COO j er gons oat down. Chauneey F. I Hack was re-elected president; Major John I. Wor man seretary, and Kolwrt K. Wright trea.surT. Altoona was seleeteil as the pla e of meeting next year, The Government of Saxony has adopt- ed a novel method to secure the pay ment of taxes. The names of persons who did not pay their taxes last year are printed and hnng up in all the restau rants and saloons. The proprietors dare not serve those mentioned on the lists with food or driuk, under penalty of lobing their liiust. UasliiiigN'ii Lettrr. Washington, Oct. .", 180.'. Senators Vorhees, tSorman and Palmer, at differ ent timtS this week took occasion to de fend President Cicvelan.1 from the news-j..ii- charge, which Senator Stewart !.,i-t ikeiily dignilied by reading in the Senate, of attempting by the use of pat ronage lo control tiie legislative branch of the government. Of course iveiy body in Washington knows a weli as thtsethne Snators do that Pnsi.'ent Cleveland n-i!S no defense, but there m;iv In- jH'ople elsewhere w ho are liable to he misled by constant reiteration f the chaige. When Senator Palmer told Senator Su wart ttiat it he would name one senator who had been controlled by the President through patronage he would gladly join him in getting a reso lution passed providing for an investi gation, Seuator Stewart did not name a senator, Why? Sim; !y liecaiise he knew of none. Senato. Gorman's few remarks on the subject covered the case fully. Hesaid: "1 am not the mouth piece of the President. His patronage 1 know nothing of or care nothing for. I neither have it nor want it. No Presi dent has ever Im cu so careful to avoid the appearance of distributing patronage for his own ends. He has scarcely done his party justice." Kveryliody has heard of that frequent ly mentioned article 'Senatorial cour tesy" , but with all due re.-pec t to the eminent and dignified gentlemen who compose the U. S. Senate it must be said that "Senatorial discouttesy'' more tiu lv applies to the numerous "lils" l.' t wee ii Senators which have la-en slich a feature of the debate this week. Space forbids their enumeration, but one spec imen will give a general idea .f ;tit of them. Senator Wolcott referred to Sen ators Goinian and Aldiich as stecrers of the Senators who favor the Vorhet s re peal bill, and told of their hav ing decid eit to tieg.ii next Week holding twelve hour Sessions of the senate. Senator Gorman in reply said: This is the first lime that I have ever known a sen ator or his agents to listen at the com mittee room d'H-rs to tell the s.-nato of the private conference of senators on any subject whatever," The ultimate fate of the Vorhees bill is still very much in doubt. Cloture is a two edged weapon, and althoiin its present adoption wouid be of great bene fit to the 1 icinocratic party it is not prob able that Senator 1 laU's rc-olutioii will even lie reported back from the commit tee on Kules. lo which it was referred, and without clofuie there is small prob ability that the bill will ever ! voted upon without the consent of its oppo nents. Can thai ton.-ent Ik- obtained; That is a .i:e.-tion lh.it only the future can answer, but senators havccni, faience tiiat it will le obtained through a move ment now on loot among IVmo cratic senators w ho favor the hill. This movement conn mpl.ttes gi iting the con sent of the opponents of the bill to the taking of a vote in exchange for the promise of enough von s to make the passage of a silver bill, something on the order of Senator Fau!kn rs proposed amendment to tlie orhees bill, a cer tainty immediately after the Yorhee bill is passed. The House lag. in the debate on the 'flicker hi!! for the reH id of the Federal election laws according to programme, and so far it has been conducted upon Con.-ti-tulioiial grounds, although it may get down to part'.mship any hour. Al though it will not alter or postpone the nslilt, the order under w hich the I louse is acting making t Ictolw-r '.'i h t he last i lav of the debate, the absence of a quorum of Democrats at times is enough to ag gravate the party leaders and to justify the adoption ot a proposition which has Imcu made, to keep a record of the ab sent rs and to see that their constituents are informed through the party papers in their districts of every day's absence without leave. This would be trouble some to the congressmen, but ju.-t to their eon-titiients. The House committee on banking and currency af'er mature- delitx-ration decided that more information should he obtained by the committee before it reported any financial bill to the House. In accordance with that decision the committee has given IScprcscntativc Gates a hearing on his bill for the repeal of the tax on state ban enrrcnev and has listened to an argument by lo pre seutative McLaur in favor of his propo sition to issue $1 Jo ,1100.0! 10 in green backs to increase tin' currency in circu lation. The chairman ( f the commit tee has lieen requested to obtain as much information as po -si hie from the various state governments on the sub ject fif state banks. The sensational Ftatemnts concern ing the nomination of Mr. J. J. Van Allen to le Ambassador to Italy will doubtless lie investigated by the senate committee of foreign relations Ik 'fore his nomination is acted upon. No one be lieves that either President Cleveland or ex Secretary Whitney was a party to any promi-' made to give Mr. Van Allen this po.-iti.m hecauscof his having made a large campaign contribution, and an investigation will probably show that no such promise was made by anybody. M." A floating lltail llo.ise. Gknoa, Octolor 1. The steamer Itemn, which sailed from this jmrt for Kio )e Janeiro Santos, Hrail, Augn-t with 1, I-".: emigrants has arrived at SantaCruz He'I'enerifl" in theCanaries tin hern turn voyage. Cholera broke.out iiU.ard her luring her outward voyage and the health otlicersat the I'raxilian Mrts refu-cd to let her passengers ! lauded. Up to the time of her arrival at Santa Cruz, then' were 1 -.1 ea.-es of choicra on the llemo and sixty-four deaths. She is still infected. Her oilicers say that the return voyage has Uin made under great dilhculties. The steamer was in great need of coal, water and provisions and the lack of projw r bod and drink is believed to have facilitated the spread of the disease among the emigrants. The otlicials at SantaCruz provisioned the Kemo and got sutlii ient coal alxiard her for the rest of the voyage back to this JTt. Resumptions At ISradtlork. P.hadixm k, (Vt. 3. Ycsterda was one of the most encouraging days in indus trial circles which JSraddock has had for some time. The Miller forge at Kankin started up one hammer and the machine shops. They will employ probably frit men. They will work on a big rt'ddcr shaft for a new war vc-scl now ticing constructed near I'.altiinore. The ma chine shop of the F.xpanded Metal Works at Kankin, also started, employing 15 men, who have htn idle a mouth. The galvanizing department of Uraddock Wire Works was put on fulldouble turn, it having lieen single, thus giving work to more men. The nail mill of the same it ncern will work for a time extra in the evening until S o'clock. The Pittsburg Wire Company state that they have orders that will keep them in ojera lion until January. Five negroes were legally hanged for murder in Mt. Vernon, G:i., Friday, on one scaffold. AUait 1,000 persons wit nessed the executions. Highest of all in Leavening Tower. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. K chirm of The Tar i If. Wash ixi. ion, October '2. The Demo- : ratio members of the wavs and means committee are making progress with the tariff bill. The groundwork is under stood to In fne raw materials, with imn-(H-nsatory reductions in other directions. Chairman Wiisoti is said to lie puzzled over the demand by many Ieniociats in his state for therelcntionof the coal and iron duties, hut he looks to other sched ules where reductions will more than make up any loss, real or anticipated. As an in.-tance of coniiensatory reduc tion several staphs in Michigan art' ci ted. Here are largely produced iron, copper, salt and lumber. There is also talk that, in making reductions, suffi cient duty w ill be levied to ield a reve nue on the increased importations af fording more money than the present taiiff. I5ur the increase of the free li-t will off.- t 'this increase in the duties bv ! reducing the duty on articles to the rev enue point. The customs revenues, with the pres ent internal revenue las. will not. thi rct'ore. sutlice to meet the increased ex-H' lit. ires, even if the sinking fund is not provided for. There is a growing impii.-s.-ion that the deficit will U- met by an increase in internal revenue taxes on whisky and tobacco. This mailer is in the hands of a sub coiiuiiilfeo, of which Mr. McMiiiin, of Tcnnc.-.--e, i. the obaii man. Secretary Carii.-Ie is un dersltHHl to favor an increase i: the case of whisky to 1 per gallon, calcula ting that each oeut of tax added lo the present tax. VO cents, will afford 1 ,' 1 (HHi additional revenue. Nothing has a yet b.-eii decided upon, the niriiil.-rs of the coin.idttec insist, hut it seems lo be the fil ling that if the present idea that controls the committee prevails this W lil he t he ilitcome. I iitt t or His v n's Crime. Nrw Yoi:k, Octoin-r "J A sensational story came to light in the Tombs Poii e Court to ila . w hen a hunchback naiiHit Oscar A. Her, 1'.' years old, of L'lo Fast Forty ninth .-tret t, was charged with f. irgery. His father, Samuel Alder, was a mar ble merchant doing an extensive busi ness in this city until .lime IS last, when hi- committed suicide. At that time he was threatened with arrest by Mucus J. Kraus-, of the firm of IJ'ooiuiogdale Piros., dry goods merchants, who had charged that a note discounted by him for 9-7'a' was a foigery. The police have sine.- Ik-cIi ijtiit t!y working on the csae, and t!n ir investigations have led tolhe lielu-f that Samuel Adit r was not the guilty x r-oii, hut that his voiing sou, Oscar, who was his tniste.l clerk, was theeuipiit, and when his father was threatened with arre.-t he qu.-st iomil .h'- son. The latter is supposed to have confessed to his father, and then the old man. in a lit of grief, shot hi:n.-e!f just as the othe rs were about tocnterthe house and arre.-t him. The fact has I ecn discover ed that over ?-JO.OOO is involved in the transaction of the Adiers of which alxnit all is .-aid to ill forged notes. A Mrict Treasury Vt aU lmi.in. Wash in. ton. 1. C., Oct. 2 No one is admitteil to the Treasury after o'clock without a propet ly signed j'.is-, except by card at the main door. About half past 4 to day a gentleman approached one of the corner entrances and asked admission. I lis attention was called to the rule, when he asked pTiiiission to send up his card, but the watchman re fused to leave his post. The visit r said "I am the Vice President and have an engagement with Mr. Ca.lisle." The information mad" no iir.pii-ssion tin the watchman, w ho iff. rr.-d to the tinier again, and said the Vict- President must goto the main ntrance. The Vice. President proti stetl, but the gatekeejier was immovable and Mr. Stevenson had lo go to the main entrance. Turin l On His Assailant. Pakkkksiu k;, V. Va., OctoU-r '2. Thomas l)oiigherty, George Fox ami Richard and Perry Spronse waylaid Henry Wttel as he was returning from work at the Glens' Falls mines. They U-at him and left him for dead. Wet zel recovered consciousness and crawled home. When the gang heard that he was still alive they returned to his house, and battered down a door. Wetzel, weak and covered with blood, stood on the tlcfenisve with a butcher knife, and stabbed Uichard Sprouse three times in the left brea.-t, two of the thrusts jtene trated his heart. Wetzel and Fox are in jail. Iioogherty, Perry and the other Sprou.-e have tied. The coroner's jury has returned 'i verdict finding Wetzel guilty of murder. HoiUtl to Death. Cincinnati, OctolsT '2 At ":.".0 this morning freight train No. '' on the P.ig Four K.tilroad ran into three loaded Hat cars at Kdgewood. The engine was lifted 1-odily from its trucks ant! the tender thrown down a thirty foot em bankment, tin the front of the first car three tramps from Columbus were riding. They wen pinned in the wreck age and two of them I mi i led to death by .-scaping steam. Theother was fearfully crushed jiln.ut the head and breast, and was taken from the debris only to die shortly afterward. Tiie names of the killed are Joe Jordan, a chainrnaker of Columbus, O., Jamt-s Murphy, Colum bus, foundryman. and Joseph Hlaucit. Mill ItuilJ a P.ig Plant. PiTTsiit kg, October 2. The mysteri ous purchase of land at Ashtabula, the great iron ore receiving jmrt of Ijike Krie, comprising Jl.tNiO acres, has de-velo-ied into the fact that the Standard Oil company, or more properly Seak ing, the Hi K-kefellers, are the interested partit-s. It is said that an immense steel works will 1-e erected to compete with the Carnegie and Illinois steel eomjianies. Twenty-one open hearth furnaces w:ll lie openited, it is saitl, with an output of 2,000 tons fif steel a day. Cow? Main fur J-eicnre. Newtown, Pa., Sept. .'JO.-A herd of blotxleii cows on the farm of Alfred to Johnson, near here, was slaughtered to day by order of the State Veterinary Surgom. It had leen tleterminetl that the cattle were suffering from tulercu losis. They were principally Alderneys, and all were worth more than if 11H each and some were valued at'iiX). The hiss to the ow ner is in the neighborhood of Powder ft KW S A l I II K OIJii. The an iVi-.N of train shipments aro so large tli;;t -l bliH-kade is tluealeiietl al San 1'raiicisci.i. A new machine ha N en invented that wi'.l ere ally reduce the cost of making binder tw me. ne man was ttntwruiJ ami several narrowly escaped by the collapse of a tiriiiiie at Cli;cai!.i. Thousands of coal miners are quitting work to join tin strikers in the Ciiarlertii and It.iiinagi ii-tirct. The :o crop nf Get iiianv is I be stiUill-e-t for many ears and she will be c.m pell. tl to iiiipor l largely. . Happy ami content is a I.onie with "The Ro chester," a lamp with the light :f theuioriung. Clalogues,u rile Rochester LanipCoXewYurk. 'J In ltig livel ton sleel plant at Ken wood. W. Va.. empliiv nu l.un liamls, have started work after a three iuontlis' shut ll.OV II. A panic ir. .lev i-h "yriagogue at Kal warva. Poland, can-. l l' a false alarm of tile, reslilleii ill '.I pl'lsilllS lieillg kiileii arid Pki iiijurifi. Kvpcrienceil enj-iiieers say that revers ing the lever when a train is at full sjn-i-d w hen mi arenh nl is inq hiliiig only makes tin train su fa -lei. Nancy CamplH-ll. an ::t'e.l Carlisle. Pa., colored unmiii, i-iil ln-i ll.i'oal with a ra zor t-eallse she couldn't ral-e cents to see the coiiul y fair. A n iml, now n ueru a-saultcil a w hile girl in l. I. .mi- n-cenrly, ami in try ing lo escape J4jm;eii into tlie Mississippi nvi r a id wis ilrnwneil. 11:- i .-at-, i ai.iif.it ln-r, grain! fat h r ale! 1 it ln-r hung I liemsel v--, ami 1'ai im r Joseph M v till, ot ;reen ille. 111., lus just follow -i liieii' example. Three coti-pii alois who were lo have wir.'ii to tin- Ka-l iHigu- drawings from tin l-'i.o kl:n I.olteiy at Kuiii.-ville Ky.. ere - p.iseil ami arreslt-tl. A inn ica u w iii k men have Im-cii given all i he -il iiiii ions of tin riotous Huns ami Ilaliai.s a Ik. leceully struck Ut the liivcr-siu- Steel Wor ks. lie'IW.Ml.1, W.N' a. Car shops of the Philadelphia and Kca.lii.g Kii.lr.iaii t ompaiiy al I'ain Alio an.i Schuylkill Haven ha- been ordered to woik lo hours ami lo take mi mure men. A hurricane in the vicinity of New Orieu us. Su inlay night, causeti the tieath of Jl pi i-oiis and destroyed hundreds of 1 1, on-in. U of ii, .;us' uorlh of property. Frank (h rha. l. of l)ei ry, iged 1-J years, fell thirty feet I r..m a hickory tree Monday and hi oke h i- r igli' aim in two places a 'id In- I. 11 in l.v e, besides su-tahiing internal ilij lil ies. Ail the .1. p:u I lu-ii ts of the Pennsyl vania Steel Wolks at Sleeltotr, with the exoplioii of tin- merchant mill, resumed on .No.iulav morning will, a full employ ment of men. At Sioiiilslnirg illhini IJnlT. a lad Hi years oid. w ho recent ly set lire to his l-tl in his cell, was senr to the penitentiary fr 11 year-, lie hit. I Ix-en i-..u v icleil of arson, criminal a-sault and ot ln-r ofTeiiees. William l.'-.in;ii.l. a Texas millionare, w ho lias ;ii.ut j l.OnO ,i iiioiith speii.linu miuii'V r- i ii tat uar e.l wu h 1'ay 'l'eiiipli liiiithat h- has taken fb ii week po-it ion as c hoi ir- singer ir: her opera cmipany. Wallace i tut. a half-tu'eed Indian, sllspeeti it of the Hi 111 ,1.1 of Samuel Viligl.tiv .mil wife. an aged couple, a l Newton. Pa.. Sepi- uilier -t. was captured in a sw aiiip near Mm r i-v ille, N.J. on Tues day. The train for 1'iiUiison the Clear lield ami Mahuiii:g railroa.l ran into a I. cni of cow s a lew days ago. near the Ko. ky mills and kill, d liv e of l hem. This is said lo be the greatest number of call le killed by a train at one time. A miner named Shecner, employed in the mines at Sim t hlow n, esi una eland county, was killed Friday evening by be ing run over by loaded trip. He was aged al.oiir 4o year s and lea ves a large fam ily in very ueslilutc circumstances. tJeiage Walker, probably the biggest man in tin- I'nited Slates, tlied at his home in Kim kiand, l.iiode Isliud, of typhoid feer hl-t week. The deceased Welched .".oil pounds and w as feet 11 in -lies tall, and his wai.-t measure w as 7g inches. F.rv in Ki-agie, a promim-nl citizen of Portlarnl, Peniia. has IisapH-ard. On Moieiav he and hi- wife made all assinu ment for the iM-netii of his creditors. A few days later Keagle could not Ik found. His 'nihilities arc -aid to U m arly SKi,ii. Ar t hur W. ( ampin II. w hoclaims Piti-j-tori. as his home, was arrested in itoston, ciiarge.l with pa--iiiu worthless -hecks on locai drygoods houses. Campbell, had many iet ims among church x-opl anJ oilier s w hit have Ix-en led to assist him in varoiis sc'uelnes. I.igonier township, Westmoreland county, was iuiil.-d Monday riij-ht by thieves, who stole 1UI Hiunds tif honey from Henry Swank, twenty-tiye bushels of Ciirn Irom J. N. I'lerick. all of Mrs. Scotfs eai.l iige, and a - o pound hog from tietir-je Weirner. The itibU'is were tracked as far as New Florence. Mike Mulligan, a resident of Harris burg. aged about i", years ai.d a fireman on the M iddle division of the Pennsylv ania railroad, had his neck l.rokenon Thursday morning of la-t week at MoVcytow u liy lieing caught in the mail catcher. He was leaning out the w indow loo far w heu lie met with the accident. At Nevada. Mo , on Tuesday a woman arid her two lit lie daughters. .1 and i years old respfticly. narrow ly eseain-d in-lanl death on a railway trestle. Tht woman leaH d as a train approached. 'I'd.; engine kliocked I Mill, girls down lntueen the ties, and :;s eats pa.l over them; tiut the children were unhurt. loilli-h ('raver, a Herman, aged almul 21 years, of Philadelphia, while endeavor ing to l-oard a moving freight train at New port on Wednesday of last week, w as thrown lo the track ami so severely injur ed that deal h ensued shor tly afterwards. Ieceasil was a morocco liuisher and was in search of employ meni. The Joli.-t branch of the Illinois Steel Company has given its ultimatum to the men to go to wor k on a Xy er cent, re duction, or they will start tip with non union men. Sucriiiteiid.-nt Pettiprew told therrr he could get all the men he wauled at tl a day. The mills readiness to start H-tolier l."l Ii. There is a iiroiionnced brightening of the imiusrr ia! situation at Scrar.torr. On Monday tin it were two resumutioiis. one at the north mill of the Laikanaima Iron t Steel Company, employiriK hands, and the other al the works of the Scraritott lace curtain manufactory, giving work to m more. The South Side works will all resume November 1, euiployiug over l,(Ui hands. EtJERYTHmC ON WHEEtS. Buggies, "Wagons, Farm Macliinery, Saw Mills, Engines and Boilers. s3 TV, Oliver Invented and Cave to tho World the Chilled Plow. Tiasmm OLIVER CHILLED PLOWS MADE ONLY BY THC Oliver Chilled Plow Works, South Bend, Indiana, ARE THE BEST GENERAL PURPOSE PLOWS IN THE WORLD. A strong statement but a true one, for these plows are better known, have reached a larger sale, have had a longer run, have proved more popular and given better satisfaction than any other plows on the face of the globe. .... , . We mean the GENUINE OLIVER, and not the imitations claim ing to be the Oliver, or equally as good. Such imitations are on the market, placed there by unscrupulous manufacturers who seek to trade on the good name of the Oliver. Look out for imitations, buy oniy the genuine Oliver plows and repairs, and be sure you are right before you take the plow home. ioTOnce more Beware of "bogus" Oliver plows and repairs, and take none but the genuine, made by the Oliver Chilled Plow Works, South Bend, Indiana. Ijook at My Unconditional Guarantee. I guarantee the Rice Coil Spring Vehicles to be tlie easiest ridinp; an.l most durable made in tri 1 the Rice Coil is found not to be the easiest riding spring you ever used, I will exchange for any other style. MILBURN Hollow I AEE. MY CUSTOMERS SAY IT IS TI1K Easiest Running, Uest Made, They EVERYONE rTMIl.l'.riiX NEW Sl'OK'E LEAVKS Sllol MIKKN. The Weak, est Point in a Spoke is where it enters the Huh. Milhurn C is the Strongest. TlifSf fon r Sk-s art a mi as ust bv other tnannfacturcrs of Farm Wagons. MILBURN NEW HUB. fST'St'iid for sptH-ial t-irt ulars and nic-s f anylliinif in my line. NT . B . SWANK, 307 Oor. Main and Iledfortl Streets, JOHNSTOWN.PA. TAKE If You Want GpOOB KXaOTJK. TAKE YOUR GRAIN TO THE OLD SMEC'LE EUUDLL In Ebensburg. THE Full Roller Process For the Manufacture of Flour has been put in the Old Shenkle Grist Mill in Ebensburg and turns out nothing but FIRST cASS WORK. Bring in your Grain and give us a trial Each man's grain is ground separately and you get the flour of your own wheat The mill is run every day with the BEST OF POWER. SAMUEL D. LTJDWIG, Proprietor. FEES BROS.' CASSIDAY'S Shaving Parlor, 'Shaving Parlor, Mam Street, Near Post Office LTh nndernlgned dr'tra to Inform the pub lic that they bare oienel blvlD piroroa Main ftreet. near the poet otfloe where bartterln la all Ita branch- ev 1 1 1 c earrtad on la the future. KrorvLhinit neat and cieea. Y or aUwnaa aulloltad. FEES It HOB. Facts FOR Farmers EXOKMOI'S 1X( KKASi: IX SALKS IN RICE COIL SPRINGS ! the world. If after six weeks Best Painted, 3iest Ironed Wagon Can Buy. GUARANTEED. THE YHH AT linTII TMK.T AMI W&mm FARM "pJS rsr-r-;,--- not cut away XTvIW '-y a ne center y.-fess. and the Npokes rM lo not come EBENSBURG. HHIS well-known Mhavlna Parlor Ir Uiratetl on A Centre alreel. near (be County Jail. !' re cently ten linli.aiely returuii-lird. aere1. and otted lU every uitlrn ruotraleiiwi, end U one el the pretllota. neateat. and leet lii' In Nurttiern taiulria. Ii tm In chance ol im tent work me a am will le every atu-nllou lo acUttaava. Vaar pabaa aidteitad. KUHIMT CJA.SS1DAV. NEW Dress Woolens nil: AUTI MX AM) WIXTKl:. '.'ra. i iiir i in n nii- I i 1 . tlt-xii all stiitT. wHI-Imii:nI ai, .1 Icfttil iroill I In- l-l M I In- ;ii,i, . jl( (ii( tiiin. tif luitli fni'1-ii.'ti ami ii,,,, , . ' llMlllI. 1'rici-s ttiMiit yon all. ftiun v.'h-. t,,. yard. '' A yry di-siralile and i-vli-n-ivi- i.n,.-. , lieW FALL DRESS ft ln-v lot , 1 1 1 ili-aiU-". 1 1 1 u in i i,,i i, ,i ,,, 'J'v-ii-tiin-il I alilH-s, Mivtn,,. riaiti-i, ( li. etc.. in im-w i li-r ndii Iii ti ;i t H hi- :;i, aim Inc h - 'M rt-ii t flu lis. At 45 Cents A yanl. y CKNTS A YAIMI i ii..t a lL- . ,v-!... tint .' i--nt! mi i l y anl ail 1 1,,- , " I-quit--Ull ill-Ill, am! uot tli lu iinj , ., tllt-M! twin-. lii-n mi rimii- t I In- i t.-in -. ,,, KxMisilioll, tin- la(iii li'iin-il I... ,. lalilf ami -li--tti- rai. Mill l,in;; v.,,, tin- All-fc'ln-iiy fi.l- in tlii-i-i- inn, hi. its trl Ii youi wliili- i-oiiii- in h ., if vou liav-'Hny 1 1 ml i iil' 1 1. d' i if you'rt- nut loiiiiii to tli- -u ni- n- for SAMPLES. PRICES. ami a fny of our IIIUSTATKIK'ATAUH.'I K AM FASHION JorilNAL. or v i iii-ii-any way, wIh-iIht iu,';:i., ,,, lin- city in not. l'ost your-i-lf npoti i Ik- styi, - MI,, j,, , ... BOGGS&BUHL, 115, 117, 119 & 121 Fefieral St: ALLEGHENY, PA. CO H CO w M O W P b 9 P b O 4 JOHN PFISTEE, GENERAL MERCHANDISE, Hariware, Qnccnsvare, MADE-UP CLOTHING, BOOTS AND SHOES, GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS, vr.ui:TAm.ij iw m .!. OPPOSITE JUNCTION HOTEL CRESS0N, PA. DtW "lily A ? Is o c re 2 ' 2. " o i o - I w g S3 cc - n R); re TO m O x H -a o S3 m 2 O 5 o O 5 & O a - W 1,'XW-t'VIIKTI Rlllli:r. . i,J lellem tenlauientarj lim lmr -" 4Jr""., othe undernlitnol in ! ei-tjii "' .-,,. Tomlln..n. laie A lli- h-uy iowiipHii-. ' ' fi, -ria eouniy, uwiHir-i. wl.l eataie are irri.y pntin-.l u ' " , ment to o wlllioul lny "'' ... ,.,oi -lelma aicalnat aald i- ,(VT "i 'W ntj. dixMe.l. " .. r.iin M tU....t. iVJ.Tlli 1 1 .M I J (Jiaura f t ata-rmo Tuuiiia'u. GQUHS