'. XT r ? - - 4 -'-'.3 -.: 3 -3 -4 -a - - -a -a 1 :--: Sii :m .j 1 -sr.-- a Si . .. . "i m 3 -a i3 --.-J -3 - -'A m --a m m m m r, . --a m m m KHKNSIU K;. CAMISRIA CO.. PA., K I I A Y. Tin- Iminireiith !:iI!ot forl'nitetl States -en:it..r w.-ts taken by the Delaware leg i.l iture. resulting aliout the same as the lir-i. t;t k n thr- month- Ht;o. Tiik r'sitleri's family left the White Ho'ise .liter luncheon mi TnesI;iy ami t. 'k up their rt-Mtienee at WimhIU-v, th ir -ii!. urban place, where they were j in il l-y the j-re.-iileut later iu t lit afternoon. Thk Illinois Legislature has jtiispw! a hi i hv the provi-ions tf whieli all bach elor.- over thirtv two years ol age are taxed for the j.urjiose of buiMing anil maiiitaitiiii'z home for old maids. A wist- and just law, surely.- s Wedne-ilay Hon. William L. Wil son t"i.k the oath of otlice as rostiiiaster i.'t iit r.i!. Chief Justice Fuller appeared at I i - it"lliie department at 11 A. M. and admuiistereil the oath in the pres cind- of the principal ottii ials of the tie p irtm. iit. Mr. I'.issell received the employes of the department in the afternoon, and ended his ollicial labors. week (Joveruor llastiuirsapjioint ed i "olonel Tliomas ltohinson, of Uutler, snp-: mtendent of puplic printing, vice Colonel W. Haves (irier, of Columbia, n-igneil. Colonel Kohison was form erly engaged in the newspaper business at Under. He is a friend of Senator Juay and has leen for many years one of the foremost Republican leaders of Yetern l'ennsvl vania. At a meeting of the stotkholders of the l'ittsburg antl Kasteru Railroad com pany, held in 1'hiludelphia, on Friday, it was unanimously agreed to increase the capital stock from S-J.ToO.OOO to f.", Ihki.ihk.). The new capital is to be used to complete the line from Mahaffey to West Newton, a distance of 115 miles, when connection is to le made with the l'ittsburg and Jjike Krie road. A muni r of coal lrancht will also be constructed in Indiana county, Covkk.nok Hasiim;s on Wednesday approved the Fow bill abolishing the kit-sing of the Rible in tlie administer ing of oaths and substituting therefor the laying of the hand on the 0en Rook. The approval of this bill alol ishes a law almost as oid as this nation. .Mr. Fow's (ill was endorsed by the state hoard of health because of the great danger of spreading infectious diseases I v the ii.iliM ritninate kissingof the Rible by witnesses aud others in criminal ci urts. Kvkkv wheel on a Pullman car is made of paper. You do not see the pa per because it iscovtertd with iron aud steel. The bttly of the wheel is a block of paper about four inchts thick. Around this is a rim of steel measuring from two to three inches. It is this thin steel rim of course which comes in con tact w tli the rails. The slides are cov ered with circular iron plates bolted on This is not alone confined to l'ullman car-, i. ui some ot tlie Heaviest engines have wheels made as described above. A Nkvt Cash.e dispatch savs a scheme has U-en projected by W. H. Anders, to transport coal in large ejuantities by pip ing. His project is to bring coal from the Connellsville region to New Castle, . oiingsiown, stiaron and other towns and cities throughout the Shenango and Wheeling Valleys through a giant pipe line, and wherever it pays to transfer the coal into coke, there to build coke ovens In order to drive the coal through the pipes ami pumps it is Ie crushed and di luted with water. Rumping stations and reservoirs will be built at interval along the line. Hi-Touir ground, so feet square, on w hich Kaston's court house once stood, and to which the title dates back to an original grant made by Charles II of hngland In lt'.Sl, is involved in a suit now tin trial lefore Judge Dallas and a jury in the the l uited States Circuit court in that city. The plaintiff, Will iam Hugal.l Stuart of Ixmdou, is a di rect descendant of William tl'enn. He sues the city of Has ton, claimiug rever sion of the title to the I'eun estate, be cause the land has beeu diverted from the purpose for w hieli it was explicitly cited a court house site. Ax engineer's presence of mind saved himself aud train crew from death at a 7."-fKit trestle near Portsmouth, Ya., on Saturday, the locomotive leaping the gap caused by fire. The trestle was a mass of llames when the engineer came to it around a sharp curve. He could not stop, so he opened the throttle and las.'ied across, landing with one car on the other side, while the caboose, with the conductor and the rest of the crew, broke from the tody of the train right on the brink. Eighteen cars w ent through the trestle. Three train, who boarded the train at Columbus, are supposed to be iu the ruins. One of the Republican papers, says the Pittsburg W sees, in the western local elections of Monday evidence that the "Republican tide is still on " ot to a very alarming extent. Michigan, which last fall went Republican by l'Jo, OOO. is now claimed for that party by only Jo.ooo. In Ohio the results are of a variable character, but as a whole show sreat reductions in the Republican majorities last vear. The capital city Coiumbus. which the Republican.-swept iu November, elects a Democratic may or bv ,(HH plurality, and in Toledo a Republican majority of J.fMNi has U-en changed to a Democratic plurality for mayor. The Republican majorities last fall reached high tide, and owing to jie culiar causes could not lie claimed as anything like an endui iug test of party Strength. Jugdiaiidled elections are not an enduring quantity, and it is well for the country ihat this is so. Large ma jorities are dangerous. For the first time women voted at the hio elections for school otlicers. and the novelty ran spasmodically over the state, directed by exceptional conditions in the cities and towns where the ladies took au active part. In some places the old parties nominated women for school officers, and iu some cases the sex rallied on tehalf of their co laUirers, and iu others "knifed" them with vigor. We see no objectiou to female suffrage as to school otlicers, and it is a good idea wo men should be represented on the school boards. If the participation of women iu the Ohio elections points any moral, it is that the ladies arequick to acquire the methods of working poli ticians of the older parties. They gen erally helped the sides on which their husbautls, fathers and brothers were en listed. In one of the towns the Repub licans became alarmed at the prosjK-ct of defeat, and at a late hour rallied aheir female relatives and friends to the polls to save their candidates, which they did, although until this pressure was exerted there was no indication of any desire on the part of the ladies to vote. We fancy that this incident fairly indicates how female suffrage will work as to loth po litical parties w hen it settles down to es tablished ways. Those who enjoy the spectacle of seeing huudreds of women Hocking to the election places, excited by the uovelty of a new thing and tak ing an eager part in the strife of con tending parties, doubtless enjoyed wo man's suffrage in Ohio on Monday. Oihers with old fogy ideas about the sex did not. M asliiiigton Letter. Wa-hn-ion, D.C., March .".O, l'-'i President Cleveland and the other mem lers of the administration are entirely satisfied with the present state of the various diplomatic complications. The new ministry of Spain ha- sent a com munication explaining thedela y in reply ing to Secretary lirexhain's demand in the Allianea case, and it i- probable that the demanded apology will speedily follow; there has been a decided letdown in the attitude of the Rritisii govern ment as to its dealings with Nicarauga nnd Venezuela since President Cleveland I instructed Ambassador P.ay ird to inform the l.ntish foreign oHice tiiat if it viola led the Monroe doctrine in its dealings with those countries the I'niied States would forcibly interfere, and all ot tiie other complications are being pushed to a satisfactory settlement. According to the latest 'advices from flerniany. President Cleveland's determi nation not to appoint delegates to the exjiected monetary conference, becau-e of the difference between the avowed purposes for which it was proiiosed to Highest of all in Leavening Tow er. Latest U. S. Gov't Report r? ABSOE-WTECV puke waer One Jailer's Opinion While on the way to Atlantic City on Tuesday afternoon as the train was pass ing through the suburbs of Camuen, N. J., ex-Seaker of the Pennsylvania a islature, John K. F'aunce, was shot in the neck by a bullet from a rille fired by a boy on the roadway. Mr. Faunce was sittiug at the window of the car when the bullet struck him. The train was not stopped at the time, but at the first station w here a stop was made, a telegram was sent to Hammonton for a physician to meet the train. At Ham monton a doctor was in waiting and came aboard the train and went on to Atlantic City with it. He did rot at tempt to remove the bullet from Mr. Faunce 's neck, but the wound is not se rious. John Richardson, aged fourteen years: Gilbert Hulert, aged seventeen, aud Robert Swain, aged sixteen, were ar sested on the charge of having done the shooting. Richardson admits firing the shot that struck Mr. F'aunce, but said that he aimed at the wheels of the car as the train passed him and that his foot slipped just as he pulled the trigger and the barrel of the ritle was thrown upward and the bullet went through the window of the car. The comptroller of the currency in an interview at Washington on Monday says: "The information coming to my ollice indicates the improvement of bus iness all over the country, aud a general exjiectation among business men that it will continue to improve." Nothing shows more plainly how the tide has turned than the returns made by the national banks under the last call, showing their condition on the fifth of March; the deposits of bonds to take out increased circulation, and the in crease in applications for the organiza tion of new national banks. The ua tional bank returns show how large a part of the money lying idle in the banks a year ago has lieen withdrawn into the channels of trade, while the applications for new circulation aud new- bank charters testify to the present and the anticipated demands for money aud for enlarged banking facilities" CoMMKvrrso on improved trade pros KK-ts, th Chicago Tinu Herald declares: Nothing remains to menace business in erest-5. A long respite from political or financial agitation is in view. The pro longed stoppage of production has result ed in the exhaustion of stocks of goods on hantl and there is every reason to an ticipate now a sharp and full recovery in all lines of trade. Similar rejiorts are received from all the great manufacturing and commer cial ceutres. At no time since the be ginning of the trade depression and financial distress which have covered the country as with a pall for the last two years has there Imen such general optimistic belief in immediate future iieUerweuL. At Rrunswick, Germany, United States Consul Tingle has reported to the state department the existence of a re markable appetite for horse meat among the people of his Consular district. The demand for the meat greatly exceeds the supply, aud the price for old jades has risen consequently from about $." or $10 a head to about toO. Since the German government will not permit the people to indulge their taste for American U ef, aud the Rrunswickers seem so anxious to eat horse, a promising market seems to le open to the discarded steeds of the trolley companies: and our sausage fac tories may he obliged to cease mixing chopped Pegasus with their pork, General enthusiasm prevailed th roil h out the German empire and great fetes were held at all points, Mon day, in honor of the Iron Chancellor's SOth birthday. Prince Rismarck re ceived 200,(KK messages of congratula tion from within and without the Fath erland, besides thousands of presents. Celebrations of various kinds were also held bv German citizens in the Ameri can cities in honor of Rismarck. hold the Miit-rence and those of a con ference which the Wolcott amendment to the sundry civil appropriation bill au thorized the I'nitetl States to take part in. was unnecessary. It seems that the government of Germany has been en gaged in a little game of buncombe, for the purpose of placating the bi-nielallists over there who have becu making them selves troublesome, and that it has no real intention of inviting the powers to attend a monetary conference. If there were the same number of changes in the diplomatic corps every week that have been announced during the week just ended it would only take a few weeks to change the whole corps. One ambassador and four ministers re resent the week's changes, not to men tion the small fry. At the last cabinet meeting a local photographer succeeded iu getting a splendid group picture of President Cleve land and his entire cabinet, which will make a filling companion picture for that of President Cleveland's first cabi net, taken just previous to the retirement ot Secretary Manning from the cabinet, just as this one was taken just before the retirement of Postmaster Genera! Rissell. Mr. Rissell will retire on Saturday and on Monday Hon. W. L. Wi.'son will as sume the duties of Postmaster General. Ex Governor Campbell, of hio, w ho is the idol of the Democrats of his ow n state and almost as popular in ail the olher states, is in Washington. He says he is devoting his time exclusively to the practice of law just now, b.it inas much as Senator Rrice and other prom ineut Democrats have been conferring with him it is sale to assume that a little of his time is beintr givjn to a discussion of plans likely to In rig ab uit fiiturt Deni ocrat success, which he is so anxious for. Attorney General Oluey's speech against the granting of a habeas corpus by the United States supreme court in the case of Debs, the leader of the Chi cago railroad strike, has been veiy high ly complimented. Iu the follow iug quo tation therefrom the w hole case is stated in a nutshell: "Ry legislation congress has made steam railroads interstate com merce carriers for both government am! private purposes In July, lS'Jl. inter state railroad transportation was beii.g interferred with in the state of Illinois and the city of Chicago. The interfer rence was on an immense scale and was accompanied with the burning of ears, with the derailment of trains, with as saults upon passengers and employes by which many were killed and many wounded, with howling aud excited mobs in full occupation of entire districts and terrorizing entire communities. It was an interference for which, with all its consequences and incidents, he present etitiouers (Debs and his associates) are to the fullest extent responsible, unless it be true that men can wantonly touch the match to powder and yet be blame less because uot rightly realizing the en suing devastation; unless it be true lhat men can make vehement apjals for something to be done and yet plead not guilty w hen their tools and dupt s re sort to the only means by which that something can be done; unless it l true that those who seek to execute a plot by the only means possible, in the oK'ti, and taking the legal consequences upon their heads, are to U- branded as crim inals, w hile those w ho sit in au ollice and hatch the plot and urge on its consum mation are to go unwhp;ed of justice be cause of loud mouthed professions of vir tue iu general and respect for law and or der in particular." i. 1 he. Iuu Mho Mint Li Hung ( liang. Washington, April 1. It is said t tlie Japanese Legation that the young Japanese who shot Li Hung Chang will probably lie sent to the mines of North ern Japan to serve his life sentence. The locality is much like Siberia, ami a seutence there is dreadeil by the Japan ese as little short of death. Whin the Japanese summarily punished those w ho attempted the life of the Russian Crown Prince, it raised an agitation in the Japanese Parliament, as the govern ment was accused of crowding the trial and not according to the usual rights of defense, in the desire to make amends to Russia. In the present case, the speed of the trial is accounted for by the fact that the offense is regarded as one against the government of Japan, and therefore treasonable. Dr. Scriba's report on I.i Hung Chang's wound is regarded by the Jap anese Legation as assuring his recovery. Scriba is one of four of Germany's most distinguished surgeons who have entered into the service of Japan. Affairs in Cuba. A srECiAL from Uniontown, Pa., says: Judge Ewiug caused a sensation in li cense court on Monday morning by re marking that a hotel proprietor had no right to lake a dritvk of liquor under the .Brook' law. Havana, March SO. During the naat week some 8AHH troops have arrived irom .-pain and have been lauded at various ports, where they were received with great enthusiasm. We understand they will be followed immediately bv a further contingent of some 10,000 men 1 he majority of the people here are much pleased with the appointment of General Campos as governor general of the island. It is confidently hoped that he will succeed in suppressing tlie ores cut disturbance without unnecessary bloodshed. We understand he conies authorized to establish the reforms res cently passed by the Spanish cortes. From what the New York W would call "The seat of war" there is not much to report. Those in arms against the government do not appear to be increas iug in numbers aud it is not likely th-o the present trouble will extend beyond me .Santiago Je Cuba district, the re jiorts from all other centres of the island ! oeing most satisfactory and assuring. Tacoma, Wash., March 31. Misses Anna K. Welds, Eugene Arm strong and Maggie Farrelly. of Eiensburg, Wash., left here to-day to seek their for tunes in the gold fields of Alaska. The young women, who have leen school teachers, have in their outfit a small sail boat, in which they will make the trip up the Yukon river to Forty Mile Creek, a distance of over 1,200 miles. Miss F'arreliy's father has la-en in the gold fields of Forty Mile Creek more than a year, and sent for his daughter. The other girls weie eager to make the trip and fcctk wtalih and go joined her. Scran ton. Pa.. April 1. Ry a deci -ion to day of Judge Gunsler in the Wavcrly borough school case on the read ing of the Rible in the public schools. Judge Gunsler dismissed the demuirel ami ruled that the only question to It decided was one of law, aud on thai point the judge said: "It is too plain for argument that de nominational religious exercises and in struction in sectarian doctrines have no place in our system of common schc o: education. They are not only not au thorized by any law: common or statu tory. but are expre.-sly prohibited ami forbidden by our constitution, the fui: dameolal law of the commonwealth." (Quoting from the constitution and ads (if assembly which comment thereon. Judge iun-ter concluded iiis ruling as fol lows: "If it lc true. a& charged in the bill, that Piof -seor ILinyon is conduct ing sectarian or denominational religi ous exercises with the pupils under lii. eharge, whether these exercises be ac according to the form of the Mt-thodisi Episcopal church or any other church, he ought to discontinue doing so and il is tlie duty of the directors. ( the abu-e exists, to see lhat it is eradicated at once." Here is the Latest. tmil'MK IN JAIL. A Murderous Gang Arrested In Alabama. ONE OF THE ROltRI RS CONFLnsFS. Chicago, April 1 - The Inter Ocean Electric Railway Company, incororaied at Springfield Saturday, proposes mak ing decided changes in the method ol freight transportation. The company has a capital stock of S 200.000,000, the largest ever incorporated iu the West, and a number of Chicago, New York and S in Francisco capitalists are interested. The intention is to construct an elevated electric freight railway between Chicago and New- York for the transportation ot coal and grain. John W. King, attor ney for the company, said: "Ry elevating our road we expect to do away with buying right of way, and all delays incident to surface tratlic. At present it takes six days for freight to travel from Chicago to New York. On the new road the trip will take one. It is proposed in time to extend the 1 ne to San Francisco. Ruilding operations will begin Soon. A huiiiIht of new inven tions in electrical transportation will lo used." The commissioners authorize.) to open stock subscription book-are James G Huise, Parker Crittenden and John W. Hill, all of Chicago. Fatal Roller L'xptosion. Woburn, Mass.. April 1. Ju-t as the men tn Loring A Jones' factory were pre paring to work this morning, the boilor in the engine room blew up with a deaf ening cxpio.-ion, tearing out the end of the building and burying a dozen men in the ruins. The huge chimney, w hich was over eighty feet high, was blown down. The force of the explosion was such that one of the boilers was thrown clear through a heavy partition into the main part of the building, l he follow ing men were killed: Au-tin Clements, foreman: Patrick Laliy, Patrick McGon igle. Frank Mc.Maiion, Patterson. The injured, who were removed to the acjacent residences and cared for are: Patrick Kelly. John Kennedy: John Tracey, Patrick O'Kecfe, Octa via Sand ers, (colori-il ) About fifty men were employed in the building at the time. Had the ac cident occurred ten minutes later, the los tif life would have been much more serious. There were four I .oilers in the building, two of which were new. The cause of the explosion has not been tie term ined. A Riirning .Mountain. Paris, Texas, April 1 Partu s w ho ar rived here to day bring news of a most singular phenomenon recently discover ed in the wildest part of the clioctow na tion. The Nanawoyd mountain is about l." miles long and towers fully l.otni feet above the surrounding country. It is an unfrequented section, no jktsoii living w ithin ;:o miles of it. A party of hunt ers went there, and seeing smoke, took it to be acamp, and proceeded to the place. Arriving they tound that the smoke, was issuing from a fissure in the rock, which was so hot they could not -Mod on it. A strong odor of sulphur pervaded the atmosphere, and occasion al detonations were he;-rd. The party became nlaii ied and le it the vicinity. They went !o an old Indian and told him of their discovery. lie was familiar with the place, but s:'id smoke was issuing from it and the same noises were heard in UsoL, when the Choctaws went to that country. A fur ther investigation will be made, as veins of silver have U-en found at the base of the hurtling mountain. lie antl Hi lal- Kt--oii-iM- l'or Thri--l uriler. ltollerie mtil N iii,t-rii Mui.r C'rinit-4 A ii 1 iiiiiM--iit M:tu In !-i-tt For Some of Tlit-ir ll--il-. P.ikminouam. April Half a dozen ineiiiln-rs of the xvor-t g.i:i of murder ers and robbers ever known- in Alabam t are in jail as the result of the confession of Lee Harris, who i- charge. 1 with mur dering Pleasant Merri weather, a subur ban grocer, with a hatchet and robbing his store a few nights ag i. Jim Webb, one of the gang, was fatally shot while resisting arrest. According to Harris confession he an I his pals are responsible for th; mur!er ami robln-ry of .lames K. Thornton, a Rirmingham grocer, in December: the murder of E. Y. Daniels, an East Luk farmer, and attempted murder of his wife and daughter last Dei-emlier: the murder of William Rarnes, a North Rirmingham distiller, because he re fused to give them whisky; the holdup and robln-ry of two whire women at Thoma-. au 1 numerous minor crimes. A quantity of stolen property was lo cared by Harris and recovered Henry Kimberly i- now in the penitentiary for some of the crimes confessed by Harris THE MURDERESS HELD. Mr. William M u-t An-ui-r Fir-t Decree Mtit-iler '1iiii-h. Col. I'MP.rs April : Mrs. V II P.. Williams, who murdered two of her chil dren ar the Park hotel, has In-eu held without bond to await the action of tlie grand jury on t wocharges of murder in the firsr degree. Siie was at onee taken to the couury jail. Mr. Williams, who was under arrest, was released by order of the coroin r. and the little daughter, Annie, was placed in the care of Mrs. John C. Lester, a friend of the family, to whose home Mrs Williams went after committing the crime. Mrs. Williams seems to have enter tained the mot bitter enm fv toward her husband and s.i.v"- the oulv rea-ou she can give for murdering her children is that she did nor want them to sutler at the hands of their father us she had suffered. Youthful Tliii-t- .l.iili-,1. WiiFKi.iNH. April ."I. The j ml ice have arrested tix-e boy-, white and colored, ranging in age from I I to l." years, xvh.i have been sent to jail to await trial for burglary. Several of the Imivs have Wen arrested for theft and burglary be fore, but were li t go on account of their youth ami the fact that the reform sch. kiI is full. The gang of young thieves were so persi-rcnt. however, that it was in-ee-sary to lock them up to stop their depredations. their last- Work occurred Sunday, when they spent the entire day in carrying preserves, olives and jeliy out of McMeecheli J Soli's canning factory. Tliur-ton San Fraxcisc i Fraiii-i-eo April Mr Thurs ton, the Hawaiian minister, has arrived here from the east. He has taken pass age for Honolulu on the steamer Arawa. which sails on Saturday next Mr Thurston refuses to talk almnt. his reia tions with the officials at Washington A. l o I li i:k .vun ;v masked nun )m In 1.1 up :(,' latiuii at Arroyo loan.;.', i':il.. The Mreugiii d Supers! il ion. Scrauton, April 1. A singular case of sutierstition affecting several hun dreds of people appeared here to day. Some time ago a woman mindreader predicted that there would be an explo sion in the Saquoit siik mills by which a hundred of the girls employed there would be killed. When the prediction was made public it created great conster nation among the oieratives of the mill 1 and as to-day was the time fixed by the mind reader for the explosion to take place the hands went to work this morn ing with great misgivings. The terror of the explosion that they eected to take place proved too great ami six hun dred girls quit work almost as soon a the mill oeiied. The dread of the im pending explosion spread to the hands at work in the Meadowbrook silk mill ami button and woolen factory nearby, and seven hundred hands from these es' tablishments quit work for the day, make a total of l.r.OU people who losta day's wages by the silly prediction of a charlatan. Ffll 111 rough a T resile. A horse hitched to a wagon owned bv Hi PI -ly A- Son. the Allegheny brewers and left standing on StetiU n street, iti the West Knd, late Saturday ni -ht ' be came frightened and ran on the trestle of the Little Sawmill Run railroad Half way over it fell through, whiie the wagon kept the trestle. A large crowd was attracted in a short time. The horse was raised and its legs securelv tied, after which the wagon was removed Some planks were then shoved under ine animal, and the whole tl On.r ,...11. I num., Il.n . 1 . .'I ., iwir latis UUlll the reached. Two railroad gol fT.Jsi. Jake K i Ira i n announces that lu-wiil lighl .1 oli n L. Sullivan on any teMn.il,,. latter may name. David Mitchell's little dauu l.t.-i . at Lut robe, drunk liniment anil will probably die frmii its elTeets. William Jenkins dropped dead from joy at being rrea-ed from the insane hos pital at Spencer. W. Ya. Pre-ident Cleveland has recognized Tl.oiiia J . Ilnni a-consul of t In-republic of Liberia at Philadelphia. Davis Ingersoll and his uncle. Il,.,,i Iiigers.il I. wen- killed l.y the explosion of a sawmill boiler at l 'at ta i augini. V y. -rustnnis ami,,,, j,i,. ;iy n,.,, engaged in siiiuggl.ng Chinaim-i, through Canada and t'uha. exposed a year aim. are lesiimiiig business. Peter Woods, a mill worker at Rrad dock, had both anil- broken by a piece id" belting Saturday night. He w a- taken to Mercv hospital. '1 i.e circuit court at Cincinnati render ed a decision declaring the sl;itl. inheri tance tax hiicoiisiiiui j,,iial. Many have paid this tax w ithout ciiite.st. -Ollicial annoiini em -nt w as in;i,,. j Washington on Monday of t lie engagement of Mis. Helen Ri i.e. daughter of Senator P.rice. of Ohio, to Henry Oiitrani Rax lionsidcs. Second Seccelary of the Knglish embassy in Washington. Japanese houses in the larger .-hies are of one general shape, two stories high, and are put together by a curious method' of liiorticing.at which these people a,e ad epts, not one nail being used throughout the construction of th,- building. The best briar root from which pipe are made comes from the borders of Italy and Fram e. In t he mountainous dist, jet's ..r . i ,,,,-se i-oioui u s roots an- dug ,,ut that nave grown for ages, and are ,.,;,.. Mian's body, weighimr bun strt et was larger than a dri-ds of pounds. -Lucius W. White. -7 years old. forth, 1,'tst lil Vl"l(-S .ni.rln 1 l. . ... -' cerh III tlie V or- chester county iiisiittn ion lor saving, t he oldest and richest savings b:,nk iifvYor-ch.-st. r. Mass.. disappeared, after confess ing to 1 he hank otlicials that he ,it, em bezzled '.Y-'.";-. Henry Thorn.-, ow ner of a stock farm on the state line. (.hi,,. , Saturday shot and kili.-d his wife and th.tn hanged him self in his barn. Their four year old son was prevented from giving an alarm until the father had taken his own life. Thome was crazy because of financial troubles. The pipes of ih. Crescent oil company burst in the Utile Reaver creek, n.-a'i siiasbiitg. Lanca-t. r county on Sunday. The surface of the w ater w as covered w jth oil in a short time. , passer-by applied a match to it and a tierce blae w as s,M.i, in progress. Many buildings were ln ii:lllger and the entire mighlwirliood w as.-n v.lop.-d in smoke. Several hundred barrel of oil were lost. aged twenty-four passenger train iu new PKKni.KNT 1-u.vrusi. has ignetJ the w Japanese treaty. j Joseph llcC.iiire, years, was killed by a the Pennsylvania railroad yard at Thir tieth street, flushing, aliou,. lo Yl, k OII Friday night. He was one of a party of live young men u ho were w alklr.g along the Hacks. Three of his companions were arrested an! held as witnesses at the cor oner's inquest. T hey were not resideiiLs j of l'ittsburg. EH j&iffercfiicc, And a iiig 1 tf.-ieiice in your cash account it the veaMV hilling has tn eu done ju-tlici-m-ly we don't presume lo di.-tao- -will only -uggc-l :i. .--I igal ion and com parison of our method-, goods and pi ic.-s. with with Ix-st you can do el-c-w here. Send fur -ample of I he follow ing few. which vtill give an idea of the m.icy DRL'SS (. ii U)S an.! SI'ITIM; VALl'RS or kuo-.vu :md tried uni'lli. The newe-t, isio-t stylish and U-st of i--.i;, Si. a-o : NK'.V ( OI KRT TvYKLDS .M. -ilium and dark shades lo .Mi-Tent c loi ings jul the goods handsome '1 ailor-iiia.ie suits, 4'i-iiiche w id.-. 7.U'. A YARD. loeat variety in Nr:v ami Ch.u. i. Si it i v. - - A inei i. au mail.-, irregular chcks. i hi ad-about check, neat mixture. lo li il ere nt lines.'j to s ci fir citml lua' urns hi each line at i.-ast ;.", u i lfel ell I St y les - ail Wool, and Silk and Wool full yard wide, ...-inches. X.C. A YARD. :.'4-iti.-!i a!l-Wool Rlack. Navy and Urah M o;r ., VI - j ne in wide, XHKNTS. Ail Wool I MI-OKI I It Rl.At K MnllKKN. -4 niche- wide, joe. A YARD. :s--im I, Imported Rlack aud Drab Wimi. M 01:1 i N , :,oC. A YARD. CRKPON POPCLARITY N..!eeu on the wan.-, and surpassing ;i ii t long y et -bow ii i his seas. m are t hese latest irom I'aris"" Ri.ack I i:m-os al price: l.m. SI..-.OTO SJ .-io A YARD, si ITI Ni; t RKIMtNS. Medium weight, iii the M tllelasse weave - i. dillereiil ,-olor mixtures 40 inches " ide. 7..C. A YARD. RLACK CRKPOXS 4.V. A YARD. ive a w ide and choice range for selection. A M A 1 L RDKR DKPA RTM LXT ready lo seive your slightest order. onie. or w rite lis. gi ving i 11 1 i ma t ion ol goods desired. Samples and Catalogue IKKK. BOGGS&BUHL, Allegheny, Pa. o CD () SJi CfQ p O - 5 O zz co o co "n I" 4 m I H 1 O o CO V A 2 - r PS: B3 mi O ID 3 f 2 Zl o O a c o fc-1 o 03 S3 CS res o in -" en 9! X 3 JOHN PFISTER, nr.Ai r.it ix GIHERU HliDISE, Hardware. QiiDccsirare, MADE-UP CLOTHING, BOOTS AND SHOES, GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS, VriJITAHIK, IX SEASON, UAKXtLSK, KT. OPPOSITE JUNCTION HOTEL, CRESSON, PA. FRA2ER AXLE GREASE Best in the World ! Bet tiie Genoine! Sold Eieryvbere ! JlMEY SAVERS CAiViBSiA COUNTY. While other men hants arc :ilvt rliinir "('h-nr.ttn . shop-woru rool. lrallc have oiolic'l the lnc-l rou.j .- j , new Spring Gooils. All the latent things of the -!.. : .. prires than you ever knew or he:iiil ol'. Come t. ! r,. have a choice. nn uy 25 Yards of YarMMB Muslin for SI. 50-inch Ulaek Henrietta fur cents per yar.l. . shades Ca--shinere at U cents lull :,( m h goods. New Moire Satines at 15 Cents, New Line of Dress Ginghams at 7 rents. These are a few of the many Uargains awaiting y.m at Bradley's Cash Store, MAIN STREET, GALLITZIN. I LEAD THE IX- Ilioh Art Glothinn' for Short, Stout and lui:., Sizes, and Furnishings. v, .--.r Stylish, serviceable ou.ls the correct thin in m. n. money-saving prices. hiMren s Suits m all gra-l.-- i;..u ,.u . Our spring stu-k of High Art Clothing, the pick nu 1-w.-t : : country's clothing, espeeially selected fabrics, tailor nn-le in all the newest and most fashionable shapes. Our m. n". ; . . is made ou the new principle every jrannent is fit;. .! ;, motlel and conforms to the natural lines of the huin in . a result we can guarantee a perfect fit. KI am the only clothier that sells lli-h Art ('; ' :. lllair count v. i:iOO i:iex.tnli Ave., Altoonn. i3ew SPRsrvjc Styles. We have a full, new and complete line of the bet fitting Spring Clothing in Cambria .-ounty :'. : that dely competition. We have the large-: -t k iu N crn Cambria and the make-up of our fine -roods i- . : itistom-made. We have the new Spring Sh:i -i:. and our stock of Gents' Furnishings is eonip! : . Our .'toek is larger and prices lower lh n ,-.-r All we ask is that you call and examine our -....-.: prices and we will convince you that the L.-t j!, Ir. State to buy your Clothing is at C.A.S HARBAUCH'S, CARROLLTOWN, TA. EBENSBURC MARBLE AND CRANITE IVIONUIViENTAL : WORKS! .P.sil t--i' W e :ite iii-cn-ir.-l t.. fur.,;.!, .... .. . . 1 ,. . 1 . .. " ' - ' !' "- lIv eitliijutllloll MARBLE AND GRANITE MONUMENTS. HEADSTONES, VAULTS AND FOSTS WHAT i: H 1 : K-ej. e..n.t;iiiilv on lian.l one ..f ! . ! --le-t-l U 1 f :mv eoi.eein in t! I i:e slij,- i.'i.i.i i,..,- lllellt o ;l . ,, I, t.. 1 n..;ie Lut t!ie IUt t-H k. an- ; . . ; li", I to the -, Hill- ol'aiil olk. Ms.. - l.ioi;. .i, .11 r,.;i I ell. e Al 1. ( 1 u:i:iii Mi;( j; A N-- I; l J. WILKINSON c: SCN. i:i:i-:.-r.r ia i . AMERICAN SILVER TRUSS. 1 "V 1 Ketains I Severest y Hi I Hernia I p na unort. I X LIGHT. COOL. Easy lo Wear. presscre on I or Pack. No understraj-s. ever xiioves. HMVruil-ttD AT 1 20 nln St.. BUFFALO. N. Y. American Silver Truss. Reside the above we han i Hard Rubber, the Renin 1 1 C o and all other Standard Tru- -- ISir'pecial attention :t-n priiper fitting of Truv-es r. T. J. IAVIiO.. EBENSBORG, PA CARRIAGE AMO WAGON SHOP. Ilavin- opened up in the shop lately occupied bv.T. A. he Westward of Kbensbunr, 1 am prepared to do :.U aCon and Canape work on the shortest notice and on i tprinc SJ.:..l ... - - - v m mii iuni "" guaranteed. 1 u H-E-BENDER l..n::e! y 1 n . i. It Pays to Advertise. f