; 3 EBKXSBl-KO. CAMFIIIA CO., PA. kuiday. - - - i -roiu:u--o. l..Q. )Kli K IIIC NTilK TH'tiKT. For .Jiuliri' of Supreme Court. SAMLKI- H. TIIOMFSON, of Fliiladel pliia. For Stan Treasurer, FIIAXK C. OSJU'KN, of Pittsburg. ir.!worKTi corsiTV tu ket. For Treasurer, J.tSKPH r.KNiiKLK. of tJallitzin lMr. For County Ciniiiiision-rs, PATKU'K K. liM.LON.of F.liierTwp. JoliN KIUUY, of Johnstown. For Poor Director. JOIIX IIF.ST. of Johnstown. For Auditors. W P. ItKUKY. n( Wilmore P.or. F K FAUAIiAl tiH, of Carroll Twp. The Treasury 1 Vpartinent at Wash ington has notified the Dominion of I. 'un.-uli authorities tliat fresher frozen fish caught in Canadian fresh waters will lie ndmittetl into the 1'niteil States free when caught with nets or other devices ownitl by citizens of the 1'nited States. A i!i.oori iiihsty engine of war has re cently been invented. Klectricity is the chief point in its construction, ami it is curried on a light wagon drawn by a couple of horses. Four men can dis charge it four times in l't minutes, each discharge throwing il.OOO bullets over a ctirfa-e of -J'J.OOO yards. Visitors to the World' s fair who have been kissing what they believed to bethe IJIarney stone have Ikvii wasting their time, as it is said that the original stone is still in Ireland, while the Chicago stone is nothing more than a fake. Ac cording to an allidavit of Sir (ieorge Covethwist, owner of Klarney Castle, the real stone is intact and is lieing kissed regularly by pilgrims to the Castle. Is the test of eudurance in the Tin ted States senate in order to repeal the Sherman silver law, the sillver Senators came out best, the rejM'alers lieing obliged to give up the idea of keeping the senate in session until the bill to re-pe-il the law was passed. The bill is still before the senate and it is only a ouestiou of time until public opinion will compel the senate to find some way of allowing the majority to rule. The supply of wheat in this conntry decreased iu market value some $'.',(H0, (HK last week. Nothing in the matter of supply and demand caused this de crease. Its cause is attributed by men of judgment and experience to the delay in the senate on the silver bill. This is what the silver senators are costing the farmers. What are the laboring men and manufacturers and merchants pay ing for their share iu the glorious sen ate? I r is stated that Kx-President Harri son does not approve of the House bill repealing the obnoxious provisions rf the Federal F.'.ection law. In the course of l)t moeratic administration many things are likely to be done which will not please Mr. Harrison. One of tiie reasons why the people of the United States concluded to dispense with his services was U'causeof his belief in pro priety of Federal interferences with elec tions. IUtitrxs of the condition of the na tional banks on OctoU-r o received by the Comptroller of currency indicate a marked increase in reserve over the pnm9 so held on July l'J last. The large additions to the currency and the tlood of gold imports within the last three months have given desired stability to our financial institutions; which, but for the lack of confidence caused by Con gressional inaction, would speedily be re lleeted in every branch of industrial and commercial enterprise. Tiik projxisitiou of Senator Hill, of New York, to so amend the senate rules as to provide that after a question shall have U.-en under consideration for thirty days the senate may, by a majority vote, fix the time for taking a final vote, is altogether fair. It would give full time for discussion in the Senate, anil for criticism and protest in the country at large. We trust that Senator Hill will find a way to get a vote on his proposi tion. Majorities tmi.-t rule in this country. If the majorities make mis takes, the corrective power lies with Un people. Some scientist has figured out that wheat from the time it is threshed will Phrink two quarts to the bushel or f jut c-nt. in six months, even under the ni ist favorable circumstances. Hence it follows that !4 cents jier bushel when it is first threshed "in August is as good as tl the following February. Corn shrinks much more from the time it is husked. It Hi bushels of ears from the field in November leing reduced to about SO. So 40 cents jx r bushel for corn as it comes from the field is as good as 50 cents the next March. Potatoes shrink so much that lotween October and next spring the loss to the owner who holds them is nearly '20 per cent. The Government rejKrt on bread stuffs, has fit last made its appear ance. The returns indicate a yield of about 11. S bushels (O the acre which is 1.7 bushels per acre Ielow the figures of 18".2. The falling off isattributed chief ly to drouth and backward weather in many states. The quality of the Kast, " J-Huth and Pacific states is up to the average, but in the territory from which the commercial supplies are obtained it is Ix'lovv this point. With a big surplus on baud lat(full, it was .argued that there would have been more money in a smaller crop, as the great supply had a tendency to keep prices dow n. The verdict of the producers on the yield of 1S'J;J has not been received yet, iut un less Prof. Tot ten's millennium asserts itself very soon, it .will likely reverse ihe opinious of but year. So eminent an authority as Judge Cooley says that the situation in the senate is a revolution. Under the sen ate rules we uo longer have majority government. We have only such gov ernment as minorities may choice to permit. This is not the government contemplated by the constitution. It is the exact reverse of all that the consti tution intends, remarks the New York UVif The practical results of this new sys tem are obvious. If a determined min ority can forbid a vote on the silver le peal bill, a similar minority can forbid legislation upon any anil every other subject. It is certain that this will le done in every case iu which the opposi tion is strenuous. Now that such use of the Senate rules is accepted as legitimate the senate bro ken down as a legislative Unly. It has Ix-comea mere debuting society worse than thai, a UkIv where brawn counts for more than brains and talk obstructs action. It has no power to act except ii'mii measures to which there is uo strong opposition. Thellouse hill for the rejieiil of the Federal Flection laws will presently come before the senate. Every member of the Democratic majority desires to pass it. r.nt it cannot le passed without a vote, and the majority need never allow a vote to I- had upou it while the pres ent system endures. The same thing is true of the coming tariff bill ami of every other measure which this Congress may try to enact by way of w riting Democratic principles and polices into the law. These IVmocratie Senators who have put this veto power into the hands of there adversaries by alliance with the mining camp and sage brush llepubli eans will hardly contemplate their work with complacency when its full effects appear. JrsT how much of this county, says the Johnstown I nun-rat, the Parkers own or are pretending to own can not be defi nitely settled yet; they still appear to have the jKiwerof indefinitely expanding their hold ukii the public. -Not only did Flory step forward at the last minute, and take the treasurership nomination for himself, thrusting aside other men who had been lieforemade to s'and back for ring favorites, but his lieutenants are now promising next year's ollices. As a means of "taffying" the friends of David Coulter, who were very sore over Mr. Coulter's being thrust aside to make way for Flory, at the Republican convention, the "leaders" are telling them that they the Parker ring will make Mr. Coulter sheriff next year. This might work pretty well, except for the fact that the friends of Capt. Thomas Davis claim that the shrievalty plum has In-en promised to their favorite. Of course the Parker people ow n the whole string of ollices; they can promise nominations a year ahead, and make them, too. The rank and tile the vo ters of the Republican party have nothing to say ; they are not consulted until the Parker gang have fixed things up. Put we shall see; there are a great many Republican voters who are getting tired of the Parker yoke. Their voice will le heard in NovemlxT. At the closing of the session of the state board of agriculture in Kittanning, on Thursday afternoon, Governor Pat tison was requested to give his views on the question of taxation. He began by saying that the only way to decrease taxes is to decrease expeti Jitures. He said the revenue laws of this state are the most complicated work imaginable, ami no lawyer outside of Dauphin coun ty pretends to 1 able to construe them coirectly. They are a secial study. As a remedy he advised the atolishment of the w hole system and the adoption, in stead, of the plans of the larger munici palities for raising finances. His scheme is that the auditor general and legislature every two years, in January, llx a rate on the basis of the amount taxable, con sisting of the paid-up capital of corona tions, collateral inheritance tax ami in come from fees. The auditor is to sub mit his budget to the legislature and it shall fix the millage. In this way the necessary amount of tax, and only that, can le raised yearly. Another result would be that corporations would lobby for economical legislation rather than for extravagance. Conokess on Monday afternoon, by a vote of 1'.7 to '., passed the McCreary Chinese bill with amendments. The bill as j i i. -Mil extends the provisions of the Geary law six months, defines Chinese I ilorers ami Chinese merchants, makes mandatory photographic identification, requires marshals to carry out orders for deKrtation, jailing Chiuese without bail pending the execution of deportation write, and excludes Chinamen convicted of felony from (M-rmission to register. Mr. Geary declaresthat tbfl billaspass sed is ierfectly satisfactory to the coast and if enforced at the expiration of the time limit w ill settle the Chinese problem Those who departed will not le able to transfer their registration certificates, and in course of time all will disap'iear from these shores. The administration is also satisfied with the bill, so chair man McCreary, of the foreign affairs committee, avers. Although the Columbian Exposition will formally close Octoir31, the direct ors declare that it will be re-oened on November 1, and will continue as long as the enterprise shall be prolitable. Supplimentfvry seasons are rarely suc cessful, but there's uo telling what those wonderful Chicago geniuses may do if only the November skies shall prove kiudly. The President has written to Presi dent lliginbothamof the World's Colum- bian Exposition, expressing his regrets that be and Mrs. Cleveland are unable to accept the invitation recently tender ed them to visit the World's Fair Lefore it is jierniancuUy closed. aslnnu'ien Letter. Washington, D. C, Oct. 11, lS'.'o. Senator Yoorhees Ix-gan his attempt to force a vote on his bill for the uncondi tional report of the purchasing clause of the Sliermansilver law. on Wednesday, by coiiiclling the Senate to remain in ittiitinous session. It was clear from the beginning that the margin over :ind above a qiiorvm, which the fol uwers of Mr. VtHirhecS were ctmijielUil to keep on the lloor constantly, was entirely too small, even if half of them were not Republicans who had not pledged them selves to any extra efforts, to give any resonable hope of tiring out the oppon ents of the hill, w ho could get all the rest they nettled, as they only kept two or three Senators on the lloor at a time, one to speak and the others to demand a call of the Senate whenever the num ber prtsent fell In-low a quorum. That tx ing the situation it so-ms to jour cor resdoinlcnt that the only real reason for holding this continuous session is to convince those oiit.-ide of Congress who have licet) so strenuously insisting upon unconditional repeal of the impossibility of securing uneonditonal repeal, and of the necessity for a compromise. There was some talk earlier in the week of ad journing Congress if the continued es sion of the Senate failed to reach a vote, but the idea was not popular with the Senators, and it looks now as though Some disposition will certainly be made of the silver question before then; is an adjournment, aud that w ill lca compro mise which can Ik- accepted without any sacrilice of principle by all the Demo cratic Senators, although Senator Yoor hees is very positive in sa ing that be will take no part in a compromise. Everybody in Washington knew that the numlier of i n.it are u.-uallv spoken of as "ollicc-holding famlies," Ihe inein liers of which were never known to engage in any other employment than woi king for Ihe Government, was con siderable, but no one dreamed its actual extent until Representative iWkery this week presented to thellouse a par tial rejiort of the joint committee which is investigating departmental methods and work. More tiiau li'OO famlies have two or more ioemlcrs in ollice, and some as many as seven, eight and nine. More than half of the 17. United States employes iu this city are furnish ed by these 40 H famlies. and yet there is a rule against the employment of two memtiers of the same family. No one was more surprised at the figures in this rejmrt than were the heads of the de partments, and it can be stated to a ccrtanty that they will not wait for the legislation to reduce the number of one family employes in their rtspeclive de partments. To put it in popular lan guage, these families have had a snap for a long time and will now be made to step down and out and give other jieople a chance. The ''. majority by which the House passed the Tucker bill for the repeal of the Federal election laws, promptly at the time designated for taking the vote when the bill was first taken up, was a great disappointment to the Republicans who had lieen persistent in circulating false stories aliotit the existence; of Dem ocratic dissatisfactii-n with the bill and the difficulty then- would be in getting a Democratic quorum on the floor w hen the time came to Vote. Every Demo cratic member of the House who was in Washington voted forth- bill, and none were absent except from unavoidable causes. Tht; Democrats of the House lielievc in doing buisuess and doing it promptly, and their records up to this time have lieen unexcelled. Representative Met 'reary's bill proposed an extension of six months in the time within which Chinese in this country may register.nnd other modifications in the Geary Chinese exclusion act, is now being considered by the House, w here it has lieen given the right of way until disposed of. This bill, which Represent ative McCreary told the House was'' in the interest of civilization and human ity," is the result of a reqii"st of the Chines' government made of Secretary (in-sham by the new Chinese minister, who promised that all of tl.e Chinamen now in the United States should register if the time was extended. Senators and Representatives Seem very much in earnest almut providing for the erection of a new Government Printing Oilier, and fresh efforts are lieing made to determine ujion the loca tion of a site therefor. It is certainly to I n; hoped that the present efforts w ill succeed. A new building is a necessity. There is not one word of truth in the sensational tory sent out from hen early this week saying that Secretary Grcsham bad asked Postmaster General Pissell to reinstate a dismissed Republi can jMistollice offical, stationed in Ohio, and had lieen refused. m. Prominent Pliji-iaii Suicides. Gkeexsi-.i'Ij:, Pa.. Oct. 12. Shortly after S o'clock last night the jieople of Irwin were startled upon learning that Dr. John C. Tai lor, one of the oldest and most prominent physicians, had coinitted suicide at his home l.v si looting himself in tht had, death n-sultmg a few minutes later. Dr. Taylor during the day had Ix-cn in an unusally cheerful mood, spent the evening with his friends about town, and when it was learned that he had gone to his room and ileliU'rat'y killed himself they could not at first tx-licve it. Mem tiers of the family w ho heard the report of the pistol ran into the room and found him lying on the floor, the smoking weajx.n in his hand. The cause of the tragedy is not known. Dr. Taylor was .tIkuiI ."7 years old and leaves a wife and family. Two of his children, William and Charles, are physicians, practicing in Irwin. The doctor was quite wealthy and was owner and manager of the Irwin opera house. Fatal Hail road Collision. St. I-ocis, Oct. It" A :,,ubi;v Topeki, Kansas, sjiecial says: "Yesterday morn ing the regular iH-nver, Rock Island train eolided with a freight train near Paxi county, twenty iniies west of Topeka. Two colored tramps, w ho were stealing a fide on the platform of the baggage car, were killed. E. E. Harter, the mail agent, jumiied and sustained serious injuries on the head. Chas. Topjien, of Kansas City.-the engineer of the pas senger train, made a jump for life, but sustained fractures of the skull from which he w ill die. liapgagemaster Forsthe Of Kansas City, is injured internally and his recovery is doubtful. Assistant Superintendent Bears Pays the wreck was the result of the failure by tbe pas senger crew to oliserve train orders." SinalNPox In Heading. Reading, Oct. 15. Yesterday no Jess than sixteen new cases of small pox were reported, making forty-one new cases for the week. During the same jicriod there were thirty discharges. There are now thirty-eignt houses marked and forty cases iu the hospital, and the unru lier of deaths fifteen. With all this in crease the Hoard of Health could not secure a quorum to-day, its regular meeting day. IIi"hest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. Another Kail Vrtck. .I.M Kso. Mich., Oct. i:. A Michigan Central wreck occured at i':40 A. M. The second section of the Oswego special ran into the rear end of the head section. Inside of ' minut.-s six dead bodii-S were taken nut and the work had oniy liegan. The acidt-iit'oceured liecause of misplaced switch. The number of dead is placed by smiiic at l!", and they claim the list of injured will reach at least '.o. The dead are: Mrs. I.lovd Wood bury, of Rath, N. Y.: James Woodbury, Path, N. Y.; Mrs. Woodbury's father-in-law; Airs. li -arils lee. Canton. P.i. The injured are: Mrs. S-arle, Elmira, N. Y., badly injured about head; Ed ward Fav, Sirs. C. W. Fav, Miss U-tura Fay, all of Elmira. X. Y., all badly in jured; Miss Planche Peard.-lee, Canton, Pa., iu a precarious condition. There an' six dead at Webb A' Crandall's undertaking establishment, and six more at Pol (on A Pil!shury's. The dead have all been removed and are now lying at the hotels and morgues. So far it is known that ." 1 iersons were injured, many of them, it is feared, fatally. The trains were Delaware A: Ijtck awana day coach excursion sjiecials. The tir.-t section had Stopp-d to let passengers take breakfast. It had ln-en .-landing at the tlejHit Ininiltes when the second Section came crashing into it. 'Ihe signal semaphore was up all right but the engiiu cr claimed that his air brake would not work and he wasjiower less to avoid the accident. The Jllglost Pnlilt r t.ets If. It has Im-cii decided by the executive committee of I ennsvlvani:! to place the matter of the disn isition of the state's World's Fair building in the hands of the I. niltling eommillee, which is com posed of Messers. Hasson of Venango Whitman of Erie and Pigler of Clearfield counties, with instructions to advertise the same for sale to the highest bidder. Executive Commissoiicr Farquhar's plan of giving the building to the Chicago Yacht Club for a military acad emy is not so favorably thought of by several members of the commisson who have lieen making a quiet investigation on their own account. One of them has written to a well-known state otlical that the club lias no assets whatever except subscription pajier, and that there is not even a cnrjxiration. He states that the commission would willingly do nate the building to some reliable scien tific society, but does not favor giving it to private individuals. A evm Year Sleeper. Piiii.AHKi.1 in a, Oct, 1"., The case of a "seven year sleejier" has greatly puz zled physicians ami others in New Castle Iel. He is Tax Collector John Parthol emv, who has leen in Ik-I five weeks, evidently determined to break his own wonderful record. S une years ago, just after he had liet-n shocked by the loss of l,t'Mi in tax money in a tlood, he took to his bed, an apparently healthy man, and never got out of it for seven years. Doctors who have visited him during his present mysterious attack cannot explain it, and insist that he is a well in.iii ; but oii e in a whilr he yells and groans and calls for all the physicians in the neighliorhood. Pig Fire At Allt ntown. Ai i extown, Pa.,Vt" 1 1. A destnict- ive lire visited this place lae last night. I deslroving proiiertv to the amount of nearly S;'.(Ki,(Hm. The tire bn.ke out in the telephone exchange, located in the live-story structureof lining A Pachman clothiers, and the annexed building ot Mr. W'eightman. In a remarkably short time the handsome structure was one mass of (lames. The falling walls of the burning build ings crushed in P. . Dunn A- Co. and V. F. S-hlechter's structure alongside and damaged them to a great extent. From approximate figures it is stated that the total loss is almut .".tHl,(HH. Chloroform L'setl. Hi xiinoton, Ink., Oct. 17. All the pa.-seiigers ill one of the 'ay coaches fill Ihe Chicago and Erie Poad were chloro formed shortly after leaving this city Saturday night. The passengers were most all asleep when the chloroform w as used. The break man on going through the car saw that something was wrong. He went into one one if the sleepers and found a doctor, who detect ed the smell of chloroform as soon as he entered the car. The doors and win dows were thrown open and the victims were soon all right again. Pobliery was evidently intended. Female burglars. Aukiax, Mich., OctoU-r IT,. S. Seo ville, of this place, is visiting the world's fair with all his family. Ijtst night ollicers saw two burglars in the Seoville residence and arrested them after a struggle, in which one of the officers had his eyes tilled with cayenne jiejijier. The two burglars were found to lie Pssie Church and Mrs. Church, mother of Itessie. They were dressed in masculine garb when arrested. Poth Mrs. Church and herdaughter have moved in the highest society circles of Adrian. F.iglilt-cn Sailors lrowned. P.i fkau), N. Y., Oct. 15. Eighteen jiersons. the entire crew of the projieller Dean Richmond, are given up for lost in last night's storm on Ijike Erie. The corpses of live have Iteen washed ashore at Van Puren Point, 40 miles from this city. The shore of the lake is strewn with wreckage and merchandise, and the waves are hourly yielding up fur ther evidences of the fate to which the Pichmcnd has gone. The schoouer Typo is thought to have gone down, with her crew, off Gravel bay, ou the Canadian S'de. Had To Pawn HU Hatch. McKfefitikt, Oct. 17.' Iew Delmer and Miss Ida Wilson, a very youthful couple, claming to hail from California, Pa., came to this city last evening and took the llaltitnore A Ohio Eastern Ex press for Cumberland, where they expect to lie married. Their departure fnr,i home was so sudden that the young man forgot his money and was comjiell ed to sell bis watch in order to raise funds to make the journey. bwder .N AS It OTII K ! MUM. The situation at Kb) Janeiro is un changed anil the contending parlies are awaiting the result- of elections. 1 1.-xppy and content is a I.-inie w ith "The Ro chester," a lamp w ith the light of themorning. Catalogues, rile Rochester LampCo-Cew Yurk. .Iinlge Marline, of New York, has sen teuced Einina ( ioldnian. the Anarchist, to one year's imprisonment iu the penitenti ary. Late reports say that many people, among them a nuiiilierof foreigners, were killed in the recent tKimliardmeiii of Rio. but tin- government snppn-ssiil Ibenews. PiilTalo Pill has just Imiight a KMI residence in North Platte, Nei.. very near t he -pot w liere In- killed hi- lirst Indian, and lliere be intends to sM-nd the rest of his life. Joseph Eans, a sailor, w as arraigned at Liverpool on his ow u confession thai he had murdered a shipmate named Charles Poyle in New Orleans live years auo and remanded lor trial. Mrs. F. A. MiNire, of LisUiu Centre, X. Y., blew out the Kus in a Chicago boarding house, her sister. Miss Jennie M iilleu. being asphyxiated whi'eshe her self nalT.itt ly escipi-d ileal h. In Prazil imt - M-r cent tif the male or female servants w ill sli p iu their master's house. They insist on leaving at the la test by 7 o'clock iu theeveiiing, and return before 7 or S o'clock in tin- morning. A missionary in Chiii-choo, received a letter troin a banker a-kiug him to recom mend ten or inoreChristians to be employed in his bunk, "liecause," be said, "the Christians are tho only trustworthy men in the city." The bonded warehouse in Lancaster of Jacob F Sheafler, was totally destroyed by lire Sunday night with all its contents, consisting of over thirteen hundred barrels tif wlii-ky, the loss being (sO.UMai d insur ance $.JI.OlO. The czarew itch has U-eii formally lie I rot bed to IVincess Victoria, second daughter of the Prince of Wales. The c.arcw itch of Ptissia, (irund I)uke Nicho las, was horn May is, svs. Princess Vic toria was Uiru .July 1, lsis. While descending the Jeanesville hill at Ilai'lton, Pa., on Monday Motorman Purns, of t he Lehigh Traction company, lost control of his car and ran on the rail road crossing just as a Lehigh Valley coal train was approaching. The trolley car w as demolished and its live passengers had a miraculous escape. A freight train on the Motion ran into a Chicago and Erie freight on the crossing at Wilih-r's, completely wrecking both en gines and a dozen freight cars. T o of the cars were jammed into the depot, demol ishing it an I throw ing the operator through a window. One of the engineers was seriously injured. Interesting relics of dead and gone In dian trilies are the great mounds of oyster shells foi in ed along the seashore iu South ern Delaware. According to local tradi tion, the Nanticokesof Pennsylvania were in the habit of wandering along the sea shore in lower Delaware and of eating enormous quantities of oysters. Near Truin-es O. T.. Charles Priinn-r. an Indian MIicem:iu. attempted to arrest his brother Alie for lieing drunk and dis orderly an. I w hen Abe drew a revolver anil In g.m shooting, his brother wasobliged to kill him iu self-defense. The light took place in a country store. Uichmond Caro lina, a bystander, was killed by a Hying bullet. Cieurge Dunn, an engineer at the Marl- horoiiirh hotel. New York, died mi Sunday morning al the .r lurk hospital from injuries received at the hands of his wife on Saturday night. Dunn came home and found his wife intoxicated and the child ren neglected. A quarrel followed, and M r. Dunn attacked him with a hammer, fracturing his skull in twenty-six places. Tin-woman was arrested at her home on Sunday. Three thousand women, men and children striking operaliv-s from Tolney ville mills. U. I., marched through the streets of Providence on Monday to attend a mass meeting in Music hall. A like demonstration w as never liefore seen in this city. The operatives were neatly dressed and made a favorable impression up'tu t he thousands of S(n-ctatois w ho liiu-d the streets. Several speakers ad-dr-ssed the meeting. Haven F. Winn, killed his 2 year-old son ui Sunday morning by cutting his throat with a razor aud th.-n committed siii -ide in the same way at Springfield, Mass. His ife obtained a decree for sep arate maintenance from the probate court on Wednesday and had lieen given thecux tody of their child. She then Went to live with her father. Since his wife left h!m Winn tiad showed a determination to ob tain pos-icssioti of his child at any enst. There Is great excitement over the mysterious disappearance and probable death ofour hunter on the Urease Wood in Poult county, Colo., w ho have Ix-en lost since Sept. ,".. The missing men are named Dumber, Key holds. Mack and Prow n. The men, w ith T. H. Merrell. were out hunting and one of them had got lost and the others went out to find him, and as none of the four returned Mr. Mer rill went to Uawlins, Wyo., aud Informed the authorities. Charles Parker, a Swede, 23 years old, who has worked as a farm hand near Zumhreta Minn., for four years, and later in a dairy in St. Paul, was arrested on Friday morning on a spree and turned out to lie a woman, Anna lletlestrom by name. She said: "As a girl I worked in St. Paul when I first came to this country. I didn't like the work I had and could not make a living, so I concluded to dres as a Imy and work out at men's work." Her hands aj-e as horny as a bricklayer's. V. T. Tyler shot his wife, Emma F. Tyler, and then put a bulletin his own head at Minneapolis, Minn., on Sunday. The woman w il! recoyer, hut the man w ill die. The couple have Ix-en separated. They w ere man led at Oshkosh, Wis. Ty ler had just returned to the city and met his wife on the street. The couple bad some words and the wife threatened to call a policeman. Tyler at once pulled a re volver and tired tive shop at her and then shot himself through the head. A bombshell was lately hurled by the commsssioners of the county fair of Perry county, Kan., among the farmers daugh ters who paint startling plaques and im possible landscaifS aud embioider gaudy hammock spreads for exhibition and com petition at the county fairs, by announc ing that the prize premium in this depart ment w ill be given "for tl.e best, neatest and most complete pair of patched panta loons." It is needless to say that an cdi tor'h wife captured the prize by the artis tic way In which she put a new seat In her husband's trousers. Mow Much ? The question w ith us in extending this al ready euormous busineKt. is, not how much we can net for the merchandise, but for HOW LITTLE CAN IT HE SOLD? This but enemplilies how it's to your iu teiest and pro 'it to trade w ith us. Autumn Dress Woolens. Sale of 5 (Ml yards double w idth Suitings half wool, neat styles; every yard worth X.V. to .'inc. all at one price, and it's popular price. 15 Cents a Yard. .M) inch Scotch Suitings, (reys. Prow ns. Tans, 25 Cents you've paid 5Ue. for Dress Fabrics not so good . 5,oiio yards genuine Imported Tailor Suitings, finest wool IS inches wide new fall col orings and the choicest of this season's sly Us neat checks, stripes and mixtures, $1.00 a Yard. Some stores and good stores, too get tl.-toa yard some1.2" aud the universal selling price the closest price for these choice Kress Fabrics is fl.l.'t. We sell tliem atfl.ooand you're ahead the differ ence. Our Mail Order Department will send you samples if you w ish. BOGGS&BUHL, 115, 117. 119 & 121 rederal St, ALLEGHENY, PA. JOHN PFISTEB; DEALER IN GEHERU MERCHAHD1SE, Hardware, Qneecswarc, HADE-UP CLOTHING, BOOTS AND SHOES, GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS, VKUF.TABf.CH IN feF.AMON. I A R X rjiS, ETC . . OPPOSITE JUNCTION HOTEL CRESSON, PA. JUST RECEIVED! a laiu;e lot Boots & Shoes BOUGHT AT Sheriff's Sale ! FROM Til E STOCK OF-A W. E. SCHMERTZ &L CO., pimmt RH, ha. The public invited to call. Prices away down. JNO. LLOYD & SONS. V 7C o S" mZ o b.. - 0 o o a 73 m O m CO w mm P 5 s o -i i cn 5- -T : o CO . o tdJ"? - T3 O o p 5 rn W E3 i O S3 o i3 Steel Picket Fence. LntAPEH . THAN i WOOD iVJIRA A A ft M " " " 11 " iH1 TAYLOR Ot DEAN. 201. 203 206 lUrktSu lttr,a, Pa. To Investors. iro away from horn to teek lnementi M when you can buy PeDnayWtnla. Flmt Murtuws tecuntlar on the Cmn or Montblr Payment plan and which win net you twenty mi ennt. on your muneyt For particular call on or 1) H. A. UV1H.KHAKT, Ann. S. Eben'jurK, fa. n 1 a II EE U U I U KT WHOM ITMAYIUNCEKN: Ail irni harlnicelaimi against the etat ol Jeremiah Nuooaa. late ol Munrler towa.htp I'ainhri oouniy deceased. or aalot the ettate ol Kllza Notman. late ot aali! towuahlp. deoeared are requeued u iraeni their claims iiroixvl probated to me by May 2ta. itnO. tlxnabara:. Pa, Maech U. lava. EttefcYTMHC Buggies, "Wagons, Farm Machinery, Saw Mills, Engines and Boilers. Oliver Invented and Gave to tho World the Chilled Plow. v&swm OLIVER CHILLED FLOWS MADE ON 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 glole. 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 arc right before you take the plow home. ka?-Once more Beware of "bogus" Oliver plows and repairs, and take none but the genuine, made by the Oliver Chilled Plow Wokk-., South Bend, Indiana. Look at My Unconditional Guarantee. T guarantee the Rice Coil Spring Vehicles to be tho paAvA riding and most durable made in the world. If after six weeks' tri 1 the Rice Coil is found not to be the easiest riding spring y..u ever used, I will exchange for any other style. M I L Hollow AXLE. MY CUSTOMERS SAY IT IS TIIK Easiest Running, Rest Made, Rest Painted, Rest Ironed Wagon They Can Ruy. EVERY ONE GUARANTEED. r?TMILI'.l'KN NEW Sl'tiKi: LI:a1:s Till: VO(l) AT i:TH TIIIIOAT SIloLLULKS. The Weak est Point in a Spoke is where v.-'. -c- a it enters the Hub. Milburn is the Strong est. Tln"ii- ffiur Sik-! an-same a iisinl liv illii-r inaiuifai tiin rs (f Farm Wairon. MILBURN NEW HUB. 2Tsi-iid for special circulars and prices of anything in my line N. B. SWANK, 307 Cor. Main and IlcJford Stroels, J0HNST0WN.PA. -F,in.in:its TAKE NOTICE. If You Want GcOOJ) J?X0VJI TAKE YOUR GRAIN TO THE OLD SHENKLE SUiILL In Ebensbnrg. THE Full Roller Process For the Manufacture of Flour has been put in the Old ShenkK Grist Mill in Ebensburg, and turns out nothing but FIRST CLASS WORK. Rring in your Gram and give us a trial Each man's grain U ground separately and you get the flour of your own wheat The mill is run every day with the REST OF POWER. SAM U35L U. LUDAVIG, NOTICE IS HKKKHV OIVKN THAT1HK tullowlnv ppllcktln lor the trannlir ol llcenae he beq filed In tha ottlce ol ttie Nurt ol Uuartar Saaalon of Cambria, county ami will be (.ream ted I) the .al.l court t'ir ita (xmnidera tlon on Monday, -lr so, isvm retllloo olJotiu UalilT lur ttie traji-lrr til II cenne arranled Ui Juhn . Kllauf! In Toonelbill bnroiiKh. Petit Ion of M. 1. Herk lor the tranir ol II cenae g-rmntel to Samuel Kelly in 'nrriU toain Dl. 1- etltlon ol John York ley lur the trniler ol II oenae nrnjiiad to t:ku. klonejr la WanhifiKtoa tvv atalp. J.II.I)KBV. Kintairg. Pa . Oac . IkhX t:Urk U..S. OW WHEEtS, Facts &- ARMERS LV BY THE i;.okmoi:s jni IN SALKS IN RICE COIL SPRINGS ! B U R N .'; rrXA' The Huh U 1- FARM .":' '.yuy-.z z not cut away ; tT ' Stn Ij-J-CJ" at the t enter '"-r'J$K i'-H-U? and the Spokes r 1 ''ytS-l. t Z. .i. ..... ..... uu nut ciuue together. Proprietor. (KMMS1(NKK'S"NIIT1CK. j llavinir Ih-ou aiilntrd a ci'mml'HloniT l- llir Court .l t -(.miuun I'lraa ol ;uilirl to take an.l rt-iort tc'tlmonr In Ilie uiatler ttie iM-tltlon ol Ji.lin Nell lor a ilrcri-e ol . ... . . ... .... v ., it in ,v.r- i laciion i-i Dioruaue given or in"'"i I tnirct Jane I'rlnKle. aJuiinln'tralTii l the lBl oi Aiinoin ivuetier. ue4ieaii !' - - -- -- - Klffli lliat 1 will alt at my oltl.-e lo Hie '",r'""t" ol KtK-nat-uri;. Ha . on kalarda. " lay al Orlakrr. at l elra. 91.. to attend to tlie duilM ul aald a.Hiiiiiui-iii at which time and place all iein lnlerc.a auay attend if thej aoe jiroM)r. XTl K 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers