imiwii. EBEXSBCRG, CAMBRIA CO., PA., FRIDAY. - - SEPTEMBER?, 1M. DEHOCRATIC NTA1E Tit KK r. For Govfrnor. WILLIAM M. NINCERLY, of 1'hilaiJelphia. For LiiiitMi!int (iovi'rnor, JOHN S. KILLING, of Erie. For Auditor (toneral, DAVID F. MAHEK. of Lancaster. For Socri'larv of Internal Affair. WALTER W. (JKEKNLANI), of Clarion. For Con Kress at Larue, JOSEPH C. liL'CHER, of Union. Dl M4I BATH' f (II XTT IK KIT- For Sheriff. ROHEHT II. XIXOX, of Johnstown. For Assembly. DR. V.. W. WAdOXER, of Johnstown. JOHX RICKETTS. Reade. township. For Poor Director, JAMES FLIXX, of Johnstown. For Jury Commissioner. AXSELM WEAK LAX D, of Carroll township. The Democratic congressional confer ence of Erie and Crawford counties met at Meadville on Wednesday and decided not to accept Congressman Sibley's de clinationof the renomination, but voted to certify him to the secretary of state as the candidate of the Democratic par ty in the Twenty-sixth district. There are 6,000 cloak and clothing operatives on strike on the east side of New York. It is estimated that 400 shops have closed, and the men declared that if theirlemands are not acceded to all hands, inl every branch of the trade, in New York, Brooklyn and Jer sey City, will go out on a sympathy Strike. Hox. JosF.ru C. IU'cher. of Lewis burg, on Tuesday filed with the secreta ry of state, in accordance with the seventh section of the ballot reform act, his withdrawal papers. Mr. Bucher sometime ago announced that he would not accept the Democratic nomination for congress-at-Iarge and this formal withdrawal is the end of his candidacy. This leaves two vacancies to be filled by next Tuesday's convention. Chairman Stranahan has not yet received a form al letter of withdrawal from Judge Buch er. General X. B. Banks died at his home in Waltham, Mass., on Saturday last. The prolonged contest iu 185C. which ended in his election as speaker of the national house of representatives first attracted wide-spread attention to him. He was nine times elected to congress and was three times elected governor of Massachusetts. During the last war he served as Major-General of volunteers and at one time commanded the Fifth army corps. He held many other otiiees of honor in his native state aud was universally esteemed for his in tegrity and worth. One of the curiosities of railroad build ing is the construction of a road running from Ismid, a harbor atiout sixty miles from Constantinople, to Angora, about 300 miles. Thebridges, sleepers, string pieces and telegraph poles, as well as the rails, are of iron, nine-tenths of which is of German manufacture. Thebridges are about four to the mile, there teing 1,200 of them, the longest having a Btretch of 500 feet. Iu addition to these there are sixteen tunnels, the longest measuring 1,4.0 feet. This is the only railroad which penetrates the interior of Asiatic Turkey, the Smyrna lines being near the coast. A few days ago a New Yorker was bitten by a dog, which a police justice ordered to be killed. The owner sued out a writ of prohibition, and Justice Gaynor, of the supreme court, in pas.4 ing on the case last Saturday, said that under the common law a dog was not property; that it was not a crime to kill or steal him. adding, however, that the world moves, and that now a dog is property. His master has rights in him But the dog has rights of his own. He "has from the beginning been the friend and solace of man, and law has only rec denized the testimony of human nature history and poetry in withdrawing him from outlawry." A telegram from Washington says the'financial stringency seems to be at an end. This is indicated by the in crease in receipts, and it affords much gratification to treasury officials. The receipts from customs and internal reve nue have been comparatively heavy of late, and have brought the cash balance up beyond the danger point. The gold reserve is also gaining slowly, and it is exjected that as soon as cotton and grain shipments set in in earnest the tide of gold will again 6et toward these shores. The winter trade is expected to exceed that of last year. The situation is regarded by the treasury officials as very encouraging, aDtl puts the necessity of another bond issue out of the ques tion for some time at least. Evidence that a new condition, and not a theory, confronts the business world and that it is a better condition than has prevailed for a year or more, has been furnished by correspondents of the Jtet-ord in Eastern Bennsylvania, .New Jersey and Delaware. Industries that have for months been idle, or at best operating on the short-time plan, are resuming operations. One prominent Cumberland countv capitalist, with very large investments at home and considerable holdings of Iowa land securities., reports not only a gener al revival of trade and industry in East ern Pennsylvania but. the Iowa farmers have begun to pay off mortgages which he holds, some of which would not fall due for two or three years yet. The general purport of the business canvass throughout the regions indica ted is very encouraging. , Ix a contested election case before him Judge Lyon, of the Berry county court, recently rendered a decision that is of general interest in the construction of a part of the new election law. Election officers iu a certain township, in that county, returned 145 and 14G yotes as polled for tax collector. Two ballots cast for the candidate receiviue the 145 votes were marked with a simple single Stroke instead of a cross. Those two were not counted by the election ollicers, aud were made the basis of the contest. Judee Lvoj held that section 14 of the act of June 10, lSH.'i, six-citically prescribed and required that a voter in designating his choice on the ballot whether at the top of the party column or in the space opposite the candidate": name, must do so by a cross mark The act, the -Judge declares, on that point is not directory but mandatory. If the voter chooses to disregard the plain mandate of the law, and mark his ballot in some other way, he voluntari ly disfranchises himself. The election officers, in refusing to count and return ballots marked in any other manner than than the law clearly iirescrilrf-s, cannot be accused of improper conduct. A stroke on a ballot tribes no indica tion of the intention of the voter, the Judge maintains. The election officers are left iu doubt as to whether the voter intended to vote for a candidate on the ballot or a blank ballot. To attempt to count ballots so marked would be mere matter of conjecture aud oien the door to fraud. A little thoughtful reilection will make clear the soundness of this deci sion. Bersons who desire to have their votes counted must mark their ballots with a cross (X) as the law directs. Pennsylvania, says the Bhiladelphia Ilrevnl, that was to te prostrated and Ut terly cast down when sacrilegious hands were laid on the McKinley tariff sched ules, doesn't show a tremor. On the contrary, her manufacturers and mer chants and transportation companies keep well at the front in the line of re sumption and renewed business activity. Instead of getting too much tariff revi sion l'ennsylvania did not get enough. The failure of congress to put iron ore and coal on the free list is a drawback and hinderance to the manufacturing prosperity of the state. For the past two years it has been dinned into the ears of the people night and day that the distressful condition of business affairs that has lecloudcd the country would le intensified when the wicked tariff reformers should lay their impious hands on protective tax rates. Workingmen were threatened with complete loss of employment or a choice of starvation wages. Women and children were almost afraid to go to sleep at night lest the free trade bogy should break into the house and eat out its substance, leaviDg uothiug but bare walls and penury. Thousands upon thousands of persons who have been oppressed with an honest dread of tariff reform will awake to a knowledge of the actual condition with the relief experienced on shaking off a nightmare. From this time forward the movement toward unfettered industrial and commercial activity will le acceler ated by fuller knowledge. It will be hailed and anticipated as a process of betterment and of emancipation from economic mistakes and delusions. A few days before the new tariff measure became a law, the St. Louis (Ufle-Dcmocrit, the great Republican or gan of the southwest, notwithstanding f ' I its contrary name, said: "The Iieruib- lican papers which are predicting that the tariff bill soon to Income a law will extend the existing financial troub les and create some new ones are com mitting a serious blunder. It is a blun der lecaiise the things prophesied have no chance to come to pass and the prophets are well aware of this. An improvement in business, marked enough to le seen by everybody who wants to see, has taken place since the bill was sent to the President. The changes in duties, on the whole, are not radical enough to effect industries injuriously. Two or three months hecce the improvement in business will be so marked and so persistent that the croakers of to-day will le confounded and humiliated. Partisan capital can not be made out of the gloomy ratiocin ations which emanate from certain Re publican journals and statesmen at this time." The question has been raised in the commissioners' office by County Com missioner Wertz as to the condensation that the county commissioners are legal ly entitled to receive. In Is.S'.i a general law was passed fixing the compensation oi county commissioners at y;s.;u er day for each day actually and necessa rily employed in the discharge of the duties of their office. Previous to that time the commissioners of this county had been paid at the rate of $400 per year in accordance with the provisions of a special law passed about 1870 and only applicable to Cambria county. Immediately after the passage of the act of 1SS9 the commissioners of this county proceeded to charge for their ser vices at the rate of 13.50 per day al though it seems to be a well settled principle in law that a special act of assembly cannot le repealed by a gen al law. Commissioner Wertz has raised the question and the indications are that the commissioners will hae to go back to the old rate of $ 100 per year. A tower building designed for the oc cupancy of Gl different small manufac turing concerns is under construction at Pittsburg, in which no belting, shafting or pulleys will be used. A complete sys tem of electric motors will be installed on each floor, the power for which will be supplied by a 250 horse-power steam- driven electric generator located in the basement. Congressman Wilsom has gone to Eu rope to be absent one month. LICKED IT BY FIRE! TOWS! WIPf.lt IT AI APPALL' 1NU LO-S. OF LIFE. St. Paul, September 2. The town of Hinckley, in Pine county, about half way lietween this city and Duhith, has been wiped out by forest tires, and the list of dead nuy reach 1. . It will certainly exceed 2H), and the reports now being received would indicate that the larger figure would not ie too great. On the train to day from there were one or two people who came through the tires anil gave graphic stories of the scene. The train from Duhith reached a point a mile and a half north of Hinck ley sometime after midnight, and was forced to return to a point five miles away on account of the threatening tlames. Half a dozen of the passengers, however, secured a handcar and rode through the llames to Hinckley, taking the northbound train this side of there and returning on it to this city. On their ride on the handcar they counted 27 dead lodies along the line of the railroad: 17 were discolored at Hinck ley during the morning, and 21 cithers have been found up to 1 o'clock. They say the people of Hinckley ran to the woods when their houses caught tire. The whole country around Hinckley is on tire, and the full extent of the disas ter cannot le learned for a day or two. Pine City, Minn., Sedtemler 2. Pine City has turned the skating rink and court house, as well as many pri vate houses, into hospitals, where 50 suf ferers are receiving attention. The school house, church and hotel, U-sides some stores, are used to shelter them by aight. Whichever way the eye turns, heart rending scenes are witnessed. The hos pitals and streets are thronged with peo ple seeking their missit.g loved ones. As Sfon as each train comes in from the north there is a frenied rush of pallid inquirers, some of whom are doomed to disappointment forever. Fathers seek wives and children; sisters their brothers: youths their mothers, and occasionally are made to rejoice by find ing them. Few families are complete, and the torture of anxiety and despair is driving some people out of their senses. A man going insane; a patient groaning life away; a premature birth; a heap of cinders representing a human form these are a few of the incidents of the great forest tires of 1S'.4. No trains are running ;west of Hinck ley, and it is imos.-ible to get accurate information. Carlton, Rutledge and other towns in the north are reorted burned to the ground. The Eastern Minnesota is gutted out, and the Omaha has fared little bettor. The Eastern Minnesota train from Hinckley for St Paul at 4 o'clock, the limited on Sun day, took aUiut 500 jteople to Duluth, all of whom are reported all right. This train got over the bridges safely a few minutes lefore they burned. Iron Mountain, Wis., September o. The whole northern and eastern coun try is a mass of ruins. Yesterday the people of Norway had to tight the fire for 10 hours to save their town. The intense heat may be judged from the fact vegetables were cooked in the ground, Captain John Perkins losing 1,000 bushels (f turnip in this manner. It is estimated that 200,000,000 feet of timher has been scorched, but if lum bered at once the loss will be but 10 per cent The railroad tracks are badly warped in many places. Late Saturday night a train was derailed by warped rails, and the engineer, named, Alm quist, a resident of Outagon, was in stantly killed. Ironwood, Mich., September 3. Tre mendous forest tires are prevailing throughout the upper peninsula of Mich igan and Northern Wisconsin. The dis trict lietween Watersmeeth and lksse mer, over fifty miles, is a mass of seeth ing llames and homesteaders are making desperate efforts to escape. Goebic has been destroyed and it is expected that Wakefield will experience a similar fate. Ironwood, Hosenicr, Hurley and Saxon are surrounded by tires. There is very little water and thousands of men are out with picks and shovels and succeed in keeping the flames back only by throwing dirt upon the burning stumps and brush. Maskfd Men Rob a Bank. Kansas City, Mo., Septemlter 1. Shortly after '. o'clock this morning four masked men rode up to the bank of Tes cott, 14 miles north of Salina, and, dis mounting, and enuring, covered Cash ier Sidmore with revolvers. The leader demanded that the cashier turn over the bank s funds. A farmer who was in the bank and tried to escape was covered and told not to move. Theroblcrs tired several shots, and the cashier threw up his nanus and allowed them to rifle the bank. They secured SlO.OOOand es- CaiH'd. c n gaining tne outside the men turned and ran toward where their horses were tied under the bridge, about loO yards east of the bank. Citizens gathered and fired several shots at them, and John Swart, a lad, was " wounded in the leg by the return fire of the rob- oers, who then mounted and set out southeast. Death Mrikes a irl Peacemaker. NEw York, Septemler 4. In trying to stop a quarrel between Charles Dor- emus, a builder, and her father, Mollie Hayes, aged 10, received a blow on the head from which she will probably die. Hayes taking his daughter with him, went last night to see Doremus at his heme in Brooklyn to settle an old busi ness matter. l'h ere was a dispute and Doremus, seizing a eaib, attempted to strike Hayes Mollie had been begging the men not to quarrel, and now threw herself between him and her father. The club struck her on the head, knocking her sense less and fracturing her skull. Doremus was arrested, and is almost insane from grief. An OH Driller Cremated. Carnegie, Pa., September 4. William Standish, an oil well driller in the Mc- Curdy oil field, was last night burned to death. Standish was seventy feet up in the derrick assisting in pulling the cas ing from a supposed dry well. When the casing was started the well began to flow, lhe oil ignited from the loiler lire, and in an instant the derrick was enveloped in llames. Standish's body was charaed leyond recognition. He was 32 years of age and leaves a wife and six children. Democratic Victory In Arkansas. Little Hook, Ark., September 4. Re turns from thirty-three counties indicate increased Democratic majorities over two years ago, although the total vote will likely le 20 per cent, less on ac count of the new election law. It is es timated that the Democratic state ticket is elected ly at least ,25,0t0 majority. Highest of all in Leavening Tower. Latest U.S. Gov't Report mm Li W V M asiiingion Letter. Washington. D. C. August 31. 1S!4 Chairman Wilson, before leaving Wash ington, took occasion to express his opinion freely concerning the effect of President Cleveland's letter to Represent tative Catch in gs upon the congressional campaisn. Mr. Wilson endorses every word said in that letter; also the actien of the President in allowing the tariff bill to Income a law without his signa ture, and believes that the letter will le of much service in preventing luke warm ness of tariff reformers towards Democratic candidates. Mr. Wilson al so disposed most effectuality of the Re publican argument that the promise of additional tariff reform in the future, which the President made in his letter, meant another general tariff bill anil its consequent upsetting of business. Con cerning this tar-fetched argument he said: "The work of tariff reform will be continued by easy graduations and by special reductions from time to time un til we have accomplished our purpose. There will le no other general tariff bill. The tariff rates will remain stable on the great majority of articles, and it will lie upon comparatively few that the perfect ing of details will le necessary in order that the tariff reform law placed on the statue looks shall le wholly consistent. This work will Ik? performed, however, in such a manner as neither to disturb the business conditions of the country nor to affect either the employer or the employed." Mr. Wilson isconfulent of his re-election, no matter who the Re publicans may run against him. Representative Warner of New York, who strongly believes that sugar should have lieen made free so as to down the sugar trust, said of the President's letter: "The President projKtses to go at the thing right this time. He leads out in an attack against the trusts which occu py the most strongly intrenched, posi tion in the center of the protection line. When once we carry tiie center of the line and rout the trusts, the rest of the light will le easy enough, and we will get free raw material and everything else we want without any difficulty." As a rule, all Democrats: who really lx- lieve in tariff reform, and there are few, I very few", who do not, strongly com- mend President Cleveland's letter to Mr. Catchings, and predict that it will do more to keep the Democrats in control of : the house than any one document that ' will lc a factor in the campaign. President Cleveland does not intend to return to Washington until Octolier, unlesssomething of great public imjiort ance now unforseen shall make it neces sary for him to do so. In the meantime no public business will be ne glected, as he has arranged to have all matters requiring his official attention forwarded to Gray Cables, where with the assistance of private secretary Thur Ikt, au executive oilice will be maintain ed. Secretary Carlisle will not be able to take an extended vacation this year, as there will Ik many questions arising out of the administration of the new tariff law that will require his personal atten- iion ana wnicn ueiav in which delav in answering! would seriously inconvenience many -S men. The condition of thp business men. The condition of the treasury is much totter than it has lKen at the end of any month recently, and the probabilities are all in favor of a con tinued improvement, owing to the in crease in receipts under the new tariff. All of the other mem tors of the cab inet will take vacations. Secretary Her tort went away last week, combining business with recreation by making a tour of the Atlantic coast navy yards; Secretary Lamont left with President Cleveland, and will remain in New York for several weeks; Secretary Gresham e.x lccts to get away in a few days for a month's stay, a portion of which will to spent in Indiana and a M.rtiou fishing; Attorney tieueral OIney has gone to Bos- ton and' the three or four weeks he ex- pects to lie away will le spent in and near the that city; Secretary Smith, who ninmij oven u me seasnore lor a few days, will sjend two weeks in Geor gia; postmaster general Bissell has gone to Buffalo where he will meet Mrs. Bis sell and decide where his vacation shall be sjent, and secretary Morton will de lay his departure until the middle of Septemtor, when he will go to Europe. Washington hasn't had a chance to miss congress yet. This week the uni formed rank Knights of Pythias, aU.ut 10,000 strong, are holding their annual encampment here and the southern de velopment convention, an organization engaged in booming the southland, is also in session here. When things get quiet the absence of congress will begin to to regretted. M. I...O 1 . . I , . Ex-t.orernor I'urtin III. Bellefonte, Pa., Septemtor 4. Owing to the illness w hich has confined him to his room for the past three weeks, ex Gov ernor A. G. Curtin will not to able to at tend the national encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic at Titts burg next week. He was slightly totter to-day than he has been at any time during his illness, but was permitted to sit up only a few hours. The old war governor has never fully recovered from a fall he had on the ice in front of his Lome last winter. It was such a shock to his system that the least excitement completely prostrates him. Even in his present condition he is so enthusiastic over the encampment that were it not for the opposition of his wife he would undertake the journey to Fittsbnrg. Killed Bj a Mob. Chincoteague, Ya., Septemtor 3. Thos. Bowden, a prominent citizen of this place, was assassinated on Sunday night as the result of a sectarian feud. A mob, composed of those who oppose tne teachings of a sect known as "The Sanctified Band," said to believe in free love, attacked and demolished a church tolonging to that sect on Sunday night, after which they stoned the houses of several members of the congregation. While passing Bowden 's hoiis: tl.o .i. fired through the open window, instant ly killing Mr. Bowden. who was asleeD l : r , r . . ' 'luc "a "lie. tie leaves six small children, and his death has wrought the people of the island up to fever heat Seren Aegroes Slain. Atlanta, Ga., September 4. A report was received this afternoon that Rev. A. F. (iaston, a negro, who has getting up immigrant parties for Africa, and who lay in jail in New York for a lomr was shot and killed, together with i; six friends, at Devorant, in Hancock county this morning. Gaston has len mere some time working his immigra tion scheme. It is said his assailants wer negroes, whom he had dn.l a former occasion. Powdes PURE .i:v A.M III llt.K .NOllNt.S. Over frfi kinds of hark are used iu the manufacture of paper. Cholera lias broken out ii." ISurgela. near Marlxirp. Oermany. The greatest handle factory in the world is at Louisville. Kv. Somerset Itoroiigh's new water works will he ready for operation in uslmrt time. Chancy Matthews, a negro. 110 years old died on the .'1st ult. at Little Uock, Ark. Fire among the flower boats moored in the river at Canton, China, destroyed l.i ioo Samuel Liverniore. aged no. a guest at a New Castle. Va., hotel, is dead. He blew out the gas. James Foley, of Philaddelphia, in a drunken frenv. brutally kicked his aged mother to deal h. Frank titles, of ConnelNviile. is in jail for attempting to cut his wife's throat with a butcher knife. While threshing at Adamstown, Hern hart Lulz had a leg torn from its socket by the thresher's cylinder. An unknown man tried to swim across the Lat Kiver at New York on Saturday last and was drowned. Frank Williams, who iu I-'cbmary last murdered Policeman John Adley at Jean nette, has been captured. P.oih of Thomas MoNcilie" were torn ofT at the Lclhlchcm Iron Works. His parents live in Philadelphia. John Itorland, constable of the Nine teenth ward. Pittsburg, committed sui cide. He leaves a wife and U childrt n. During a hammer-throw ing contest at Lancaster, Miss Mary Sterling was struck by the hammer and seriously hurt. Lawrence count y poor directors have asked the court to submit the qin-Uon of bidding a county almshouse to the voters. Mis. Milton Kline, of Liaudoii. Pa., by the giving an ay of a platform, fell to the bottom of a r.'.' fHt well and was in stantly killed. Fred. Faruham. in the woods near Albany. N. Y.. shot at a partridge and killed Mat tii' Cr iss, aged 1 1. and fatally in jured her mother. Urewery Driver SchalTer fell froth his wagon in New York on Saturday lu-t. and the wheels passed over him, severing his head froui his body. Japanese ale reported to U- landing troops north of Takn, preparatory to mak ing a campaign directly against Pckin. the Chinese capital. E. D. McNitt, a legless, otie-.irmei! man, of Konhani, Texas, murdered Mrs. M art iu, with horn he was in love and then committed suicide. Key. Christopher Lakenburg. an H tumwa, la., M. K. minister. usri-d so. has U'tn sued for breach of promise by Mr. Phoebe Irwin, a widow, aged .Ml. Joseph and John Nellis, brothers, while al woik in a trench near Erie. Pa., were buried by quicksands. Joseph per ished, and John, had!y injured internal! v, was rescued. William E. refTer was convicted in the ! J'i'llin i (nn t of assault on his ry;ir-iM ' sislcr-in-law. Kinina Fiti;i iiiM. and sen tenced to two years' imprisonment in the penitentiary. Near Lock Haven. Clinton county. Pa., Andrew Winchester stabbed Joseph Moore with a dirk knife. William Keeder inter fered, and Winchester s'.ahtied him to death. Moore will recover. Chaplain Henry V. Plummer, one of the few negro ollicers in the army, is to he tried liy court martial at Fort Kohinson. Neb., for drunkenness. He is attached to the Ninth Cavalry, a negro regiment. Thomas Nason. of New York, was shot iu an orchard at West Albany, on the "1 inst.. presumably because be intended to steal apples, anil t he owner of the orch- ! anl a" o t"K "arian. is under arrest. The reason given why birds do not fall ! off their perch is ln cause they cannot open the foot when the leu is bent. Look at a hen walking, and you will see it close its toes as it raises the foot and open thetn as it touches the ground. At I'.ntTalo a number of coflins have Ix-en foil ml iu Forest Lawn cemetery rilleij of their contents ai.d placed in a clump of underbrush at some remote spot. It is thought a band of body-snatchers operated regularly after interments. Charles Meyer and Stanley Kyan. two lS-year-old residents of Milton have lecii lodged in the Kellefonte jail to await trial on the charge of stealini; a horse from Michael Strohtu. of Centre Hill. There is. unfortunately, no doubt ot their guilt. Thomas Erwin. a Kraddock painter, stole SCO and $rjo worth of jewelry from Ii is lioarding mistress, Mrs. William Schultz. on Wednesday afternoon. She chased him three-quarters of a mile and gave him battle, but he threw her off and escaped. A gang of railway car burglars were arrested at HulTalo on Tuesday, w ho have Ix-eu litterally living off the roads there. Wagon loads of plunder was found iu the houses of several, which were fitted out like palaces. The men are or have !ecii New York switchmen. .Mrs. v imam l norp. ot Jarnegie. near Pittsburg, was returning from a trip to Europe and died while at sea. The Ixnly was thrown overboard and adanghter who witnessed the ceremony liecame insam and instead of the family welcomii.g home the glad hearted girl and her mother, there arrived alone a demented girl ac companied hy an employe of the steamship company. A cieyer rotioery was perpetrated on Sunday in New York. The thief, after entering into conversation with a well- dressed stranger who lie found on th . i . . . i . i . . '""'. ai.-eieu mm mat lie could not swim the East river. The lict was accept- eu. nut no sooner was the man divested of Ins clothes than the thief made him hand over all his money before lie would ermit turn to dress again. V A XTlT i tner"t"" -" -ii m. jiji our rm.ice n.l complete nui..Uicrj.-w inn smi potatoes llih falary anil cemiutslnn palil weekly, r.ivlnit and ixrmanent ix.-Ulun icuarantoed and meres asMireil to itoo.1 men Special Inducements to tieitlnnera. Kxpeilence not necrary. Exclusive territory anil your on choice of same riven 1k not delay but apply to AM.EN Nl'KSKRY ?o . ' Jrower and Proi-aat-irs, Koehecter N Y auK3 4m DMIN1STK ATI K'S NOT ICR. Kstate ol W lliiam (iarrett. deceased Letters ol a.luilijiottaUon on the esiH:e of v"ll liam Oarrett. deceased, late ol Munxlertownshiu Cambria county. I'a.. havlnit been granted to me. all person indebted to said estate are here by notified to make payment to me without de Iky, and those hahinv claims attains! sal.: estate will (.resent them .rc.eriy authenticated Tor set tlement. HK.iUllt W.OAKKKIT. Monster, Pa., Sent. 7, lm X Administrator. IXKOHTOK'S NOTICE. J Notice is hereby Kiven that letters testa mentary on the estate ol Veronica Spetitelhalter late ol Allegheny township. Cambria county I ennsylvania. deceased, having been granted tne. all persons indebted to .aid estate will please make payment. and those navlnit claims or riemanda aitamsttbe same will make them known without delay. KKANK.NPEIHKI.HALTEK, r iecntorol Veronica Sieiicelhalter. deceased. Allegheny Tmp., Aug . KtB, im. W - . 'tit if I s4 : , w , - '- --'V . r's" s .S --irri m N,' ' Wmnmk Mis m fcSS5i ; 'U 3 i ? 3 v-i - rr - ffMT 0- L - - It v a ? - 1. . - 7,ill- f -aWLiti-ir-1 r 1 were you can get anything you wantw hether for pL-rsun.v -Housefurnishing. ... If you expect to visit the Xaii Army Encampment or the Great Pittsburg Exposition.', easily save your traveling expenses by doing Kaufmann's Big Store, FIFTH AVENUE AND SSVUTHFIELD STRE: LOT .Sa We are now ready to show you the Largest ami Finest Stock of Men's, Youth's, Ioys' ami Chil.lrcn's ( lot liin r in Cambria county, with the Lowest Prices for irooil Goo.l in the State. Our Stock of Spring ami Summer Cloihinir i I complete. We have all the new Spring shapes in Hats ami 1 a complete line of (Jents' Furnishings of all kimls. It will pay you to come to see us this spring as we have prices to suit the times. I Call ami examine our stock. We will sell vou nice j Goo.lsaml SAVK YOU MONEY. Very Respectfully, IIIMHIMinimiMWNIIIIIIHIIII "Thrift is c is &.solid c &he. Try iHnyournexhhouse-cleejiing ajid bs h&pp- J-ookins1 ont over the many homes of this corr?try, wo sr thi-.is -ns Of women wearing away their lives in household drudgery th r.t ai i wh-. l materially lessened by the- use of a few cakes of SAPOLIO. Ii an hoar is snv.xl o-.ch time a cake is used, if one less wrinki.. gathers -a-or, th.e face because the toil is lightened, she must be a foolish -R-r.m.iVv-ho would hesitate to make the experiment, and he a chuilish husbanrJ w ho would grudpo the onts which it cost- E LK H A RT carriage and hahness tm ftf Pr7rmiVTMAv lla.'-ro sold t .V . Hn toMuiiw bfor-i rant l'two Why pm- Ar-nt ln0 loonWIor joa! Wnlc Ta- own ord B.,. WHOLESALE PRICES Mi . i a., ro. 47. Wagon. 943 J&9 CTC1 Otm UfiRMrcc -.... . U'f in , J PW ut l,ir c wi For Sale Finest Building Lots At CrcsGon. Near New Convent Iluihlinjr. Gooil Ground in Ilih State of Cultivation. Call on or address LRMcDermitt, Cresson, Pa. kCH Ia Rill LU -.k var.. sAMtE nit a,; MifiCaair.fi.x 1 i gi G. A. SHARBAUGH. Carroll! own. llMMmMIIMNHMIHltKN tITtT good revenue! n T-5 r n 1 1 r i - c-o cup itt ixn. an; mnn- is ijd M w uatuai to KUpptOf, . . . . . - -. - aii .ub wW ulZ- V-A7? 713'. NX i ry jrc vr .s y W.B.PaATT.Sec'y, ELKHARTJND, To Investors. ",J? ,ron l'ni to v 1r,rt-imT.ti lien ,.u rn buy l'inn.-lran- Kir.i M..rtita- e.-uritte on thr -h ,.r .M.cl.lr I avment (lan an.l hirh !il r,et ..u taentT 5r cent, on your mu&et 'nn-Illjr '! I'D or H. A. KNUI.KH AKT. r-l-rn-l-arg. Pa. aoic5 .vt TI t is hrrehv elvpn that the f .:iolnB ai. X '""" l-rthe tnn.ifr.,1 Ii.ju.t li-n'e trante.1 .y the oort ..I UairterSsi..i ol fatr frla v unly tian bwn hie.1 in thei.me - tl.e rlerk of il-ourt an.l will t- , reent-1 to O r Sl-"pi' r'TIl 'i'."1'',,,'r"t,"n on KI'MDA1, I'etition ..I i harleii A. Incl.oln 1 .r the trin "T i the hrenw a-rantej titn-n I'. Lantrv In Aoe. is-4 I'A liKY -lerk Q. S. F"mJL-UI.ILE NKWS- NKAt. THE FKEK M. MA!s. l bo ir Tear. GANGER; tfwt Tntnoisi ITHrn . tNM-k live lm liurwiit t h 1 SHg I i Lib our b!:c, : V7 v::J w a, a i K v . : v -s .-i:-i '. ; ! w : . . - i ;..-! . s- . -a '.. 1,.- i : - : New Fall Dif- r.. Silk- .-.n. 1:1. t'..r ' ' - All-W,, .I Dre- ; '!-, c , :'.'... :- .. Staple .ili l Novelf v l'r. I Rea.lylm:: : v;i ChiMren 'V ' pdlifl vu. i -instances, at ? . I I::-' if "7, y l : M : B0GOS&BU Allee;eliy 2a Hv I i-!c'.iii- X Klein's Sih- r A-'-t Du-nn-!-''. 15. r'- , Ark f"UT ei-.-T , mt'T!tute- 1- ' - ', V S A tu , le kept nt n; ; : K-.l-rl i . -', K r.mannvi ' '0rm.e l i K - Jel.3.4iy Ntn mf. W e. f e on ! n: to huiii. n-i j. remises, as e t the law. leartlel,l U t I SMiiM K s M ". i .m i,-e is .rt-t .lull an.l :i.-ti ! - iicMnent ot H tr fi.l Jan si W . K .Liu" it.-rf. rti.se in !' ! ' are risj tte-eil t t"r - . he havinc rlaiui i: nwnl llwa 'f l'"'r;- to I I 1 BSC tlement i aoa M. rnn. liaillixin, ra . .