.talma Jxtcrann. KBKXSnrRfi, CAMIIRI.V C I., PA., JANC AKY 10. lS-. Two years hence the Republicans ex-j.-t to have a deciiled majority in the pemiie, hut it will ie a silver minority. Sfxatou Hai.e propose to have 1,000 additional men eniistod in the navy, and has reported a bill appropriating $3S0, OO'i to pay them. S J. Hoi;n. of Parker.burg, W. Va , stiDi-oseil to be very poor and a recipient of rtiarity, revealed the fact on his .i.-atli bed tha; he had $50,000 in the l;ink. Oi.ivkr I'. H. Kei-most, a rich New York clubman, and the divorced wife of Win. K. Vanderbilt, will soon be niar ried. lielmont is divorced from a form er wife. !v an explosion of a boiler in a St Luiis printing ofhce, and the explosion of a lot of fireworks in an adjoining l.uil.hnir, 1- per?ous were killed, many injured and jlOO.IKH) worth of property destroyed. The Dowager Empress of China has slmwn herself favorable toward the txiilding by an American syndicate of a railway from tidewater to Pekin, China, a distance of 200 miles, and is said to have r.sed her influence with Li Hung Chang in regard to the matter. The monitor Amphitrite has been or dered to Cedar Keys, Florida, to take the place of the cruiser Cincinnati, in patrolling that coast so that filibustering parties cannot leave for Cuba. The Amphitrite is a coast defense vessel and couldn't catch an oyster boat, let alone a tiiibuster; but she could waltz right through those fortifications at Havana. As it stands to day in message of the president, the Monroe doctrine is clear, grave aversion that the United States will see justice done, neither asking- more nor accepting less, to any inde pendent state on tnis continent, io mat princip'e soon or late we believe Great Kritain will assent. Py that principle, in any event, the American nation will S'a-id. The state treasurer reports the amount in the general fund at the beginning of the new year $2,lSt,515. Since the close of lS'.'O the revenues have been steadily decreasing and the amonnt now in the general fund is not even as great as it appears, for a large sum is due to Philadelphia, to be returned for state p rsonal taxes. Within the next month sntl'ieient revenue will probably come in to enable the state treasurer to cancel all indebtedness, but he will be compelled to borrow nearly $3,000,0(N) from the 1. '.'' account to square up the accounts of the last year. Os Wednesday, eighty one years ago, General Jackson defeated the flower of the British army under General Packens ham at New Orleans. In that remarka battle the P.ritish loss was 700 killed, 1, Uh wounded and 500 taken prisoners. Among the dead was General Packen hani, the British commander. The American loss was only S killed and 13 wounded. A treaty of peace had been signed at Ghent, Belgium, on the 24th December previous, but as there were no ocean cables then, the news of the treaty had not reached this country. A telegram would have saved this great slaughter of invaders. An interesting report has been sub' mitted by State Forestry Commissioner J. T. Kothrock concerning the wood lands of the state. He says the losses by forest fires are euormous. The loss of logs, bark, standing timber, fences and occasionally buildings amounts, as a direct loss to the state, of not ltss than il.OWMKiO annually. The direct loss to the commonwealth is almost incredible; it is fairly within the bounds of reason to say that if all the unproductive lands now vacant at d uncared for which exist within the state were protected from forest tires, say, for 40 years, the timber growing at the end of that time would be worth not less thon $l,SO0,000, A more important issue than that over the Venezuelan boundary may soon le raised U-tween the United States and Great Britain, if recent reports from Nicaragua are confirmed by later de velopments. The substance of these reports, sus tained by important evidence, is to the effect that British interests are reaching out for the control of the Nicargua ca Da!, and that the Nicargua government is being urged to annul the charter to the existing American corporation. The reports of British intrigue in Nic aragua which have been sent to the slate department are likely to receive very serious attention before the trans mission of the report of the Nicarguan commission to congress, and it may give a sensational turn to the special message c f the president on the subject, which is expected in the near future. An Esglish paper, the Westminister Giz tti , says a movement is on foot in Ixtndon to put into effect the suggestion alleged to have been made by Justice Harlan, of the United States supreme court, that differences between Great Britain and the United States be settled by a commission composed of an equal number of Judges of her Majesty's High Court of Justice and of the United States supreme court. Already a private meet ing, composed of Englishmen and Amer icans, has been held to consider what father action 6hall be taken. The dis closures made in the Chronicle's Wash ington dispatches concerning the Vene zuelan dispute have encouraged the leaders in this movement to publish their proposals, which amount to advo racy of the establishment of a perm a -" ' of arbitration. The continent of South America, says an exchange, is a land of promise. For centuries, under Spanish control, its growth and development were retarded by the tyranny and oppression by means of which Spain ba3 not only succeeded in wrecking one of the greatest colonial powers the world has ever known, but has paralyzed almost the capacities of its colonies for their own upbuilding. The influence of the depressing rule of the Spaniards until rf late has been like a pall over the fair face of the land and only of recent year.-? have these people begun to awake to the possibilities of their future Not m-.iny years from now and South America will take rank with Europe in the wealth and inrluenc of its nations if their present rate of develop ment continues. It is, then, of the highest importance that the immense profits which always come to those who aid and promote the upbuilding of new countries shall come into the hands of the people of the United States, and no measure, directed intelligently, toward this end should be neglected by con gress. The truth is that congess pays too lit tle attention to the development of the foreien trade of the United States. Now is a great opportunity to obtain a commanding influence in the markets of South America which should not be overlooked. If congress will do its share in attending to the commercial end of our friendly rela tions with South America, it will per form a service the magnitude and bene fits of which cannot be overestimated and which will increase in more than a geometrical ratio as time goes on. By all means, let the nation's representa tives take up this matter and give it the intelligent consideration and action that it so manifestly deserves. If Mr. Bull is not allowed to crowd the Venezuelans in South America, he will take it out on the Boers in South Africa. John has a way of showing his neighbors, and it cannot be claimed by his warmest admirers that his behavior toward the Dutch colonists has been otherwise than bru'al. No doubt it is the way of the world that when people of different national ties colonize a wild continent, the strong- ! er will crowd out the weaker as each has crowded out the native population. But the Dutch, who have established a republic of their own in South Africa, and are industrious people who mind their own business, ara entitled to be let alone. The English has been crowds ing in on them, pushing back their boundary line and forcing them to re linquish land that they had fairly won; and now the English who have got in among them are making trouble and threatening revolt, and their govern ment seems disposed to back them up. It is just this kind of thing, observed all over the world, that makes Ameri cans jealous of British aggression in this continent. We are not concerned in Africa, but we have seen how the Brit ish possessions there have been gradually and forcibly extended and we don't mean to have the same policy repeated over here. The government of the Netherlands is in no position to protect the Boers even if it wished to, but it is not unlikely that other European pow ers may have something to say in the matter, lo Americans the trouble is interesting chiefly as a warning and it will not make this country any less " de termined in its attitude with regard to Venezuela. Since the war, for nearly the whole time, says the Philadelphia Record, the treasury of the United States has been kept overfull; and as a result there has been a riotous excess of expenditure, culminating in the performance of the Billion Dollar congress. The failure in the anticipated revenue from the income tax has put a temporary pinch upon the treasury resources. Receipts under the new tariff, though steadily gaining in volume, have not reached the sum re quired for covering heavy fixed expendi ture. As a result of these conditions the tumultuous and incongruous assem blage at Washington, whose business it is to make necessary dispositions for car rying on the government, is confronted with new and difficult duties. It is much easier to provide for spend ing money than to find means of saving it. Speaker Reed was in his element as a surplus smasher. He has yet to develop his genius for hand to-mouth administration. With a determination not to bring in a revenue bill which it would be possible for the president to approve, he will find himself confronted with the necessity of curbing appropria tions. The country will look with no little interest upon the performances of Republican statesmen in a role entirely new to them, but of obvious advantage to the taxpayers. While the Republicans in congress, says the Bellefonte Watchmnn, are doing what they can to restore high tariff du ties, the wages of workmen go on in creasing under the lower Democratic tariff. Since the Wilson law has been in operation tnere has been more general advance in the pay of working people than at any time under the high protective policy. When was there such a wholesale increase of wages as that which took place week before last in the Conneilsville coke region' Upwards of 16,000 coke workers found tnetr wages auvanceu at a rate ranging from 12 to IS per cent, without solicita tion on their part. This increase of pay was brought about, as H. C. Frick states "solely by the iacreased demand and increased price of Conneilsville coke. Altogether ther ehas been an advance in the wages of the coke workers to the ex tent of 35 per cent since the 1st of Oc tober all under the Wilson tariff. Of course this flourishing condition of the coke industry is attributable to the equally flourishing condition of the iron manufacture, which has entirely recov ered from the prostration that overtook it when the McKinlev policy was in operation. Washington Letter. Washington, D. C, Jan., 4, 1S96. President Cleveland may or may not have felt comnlimented when Senator Sherman offered a resolution providing that when greenbacks or I nited Mates treasury notes are redeemed for gold they shell not be reissued except for gol.i, but that resolution and a sjeech made in its favor by Mr. S;iernuu have been the most sensational occurrences of the week in congress It will be re menibered that when President Cleve land in his anuual message aud Secre tary Carlisle in his annual report recom mended the retirement of the greenbacks and treasury notes as the btst remedy for our financial troubles. Senator Sherman was foremost amoug those Re publicans who hooted at the idea. Now Senator Sherman offers a resolution which, if it became a law, would prob ably result in retiring the greenbacks and treasury notes, although he claims thai it wouldn't. The basis for his claim is not, however, a very substantial one He figures that the law would work like the assurauce of a bank cashifr to a frightened depositor, that he could have his money if he wanted it; aud that those who have been presenting these notes for redemption iu gold will stop as soon as they know that the notes so presented will not be again paid out for them to present again. The scrambling among those who want more of the protection pork than the tariff bill which the house passed gives them has not been equalled since the McKinlev bill was being made up It has been and is making life miserable for the Republican members of the sen ate finance committee, which is now trying to decide in what shape the bill is j to be reported back to tne senate, me greed of those seeking protection for special lines, at the expeuse of every body else, would make the scramble suf ficienily disagreeable, but presidential politics have also been brought into it. The McKinleyites declare that the bill as passed by the house is in the interest of Reed's candidacy, aud that they will have more McKinleyism put into it, or know the reason why it isn't done. The Democrats are not taking much interest in the bill, although the nearer it gets to McKinleyism the better it will suit them: they believe that the country is as strongly opposed to McKinleyism now as it was when it elected the Democratic house of the Fifty-second congress and when it elected Mr. Cleveland president and gave the Democrats control of both branches of the Fifty third congress and that the nearer the bill approaches the original McKinley bill the greater will be its effect towards helping to elect a l)em ocratic president next November. Dem ocratic senators have not aggreed upon any programme ou the tariff bill, but the general sentiment among them in dicates that after putting the party ou record against the bill they will place no obstructions in the way of reaching a vote. Even if the bill passes tne senate n a shape to meet the approval of Mr. Reed, who is to all intents and purposes the house, it is well-nigh certain it will be vetoed by President Cleveland. Mr. Reed wanted a rest this week Consequently the house has done not'n ing except to go through the form of holding sessions Tuesday aud to day. There has been a considerable change of opinion as to the attitude of England towards the enezuehau boundary com. mission, the membership of which could hardly have been improved. Instead of being violently opposed to the com mis Sion as many suppose it would be, it seems, from trustworthy information, that the British government while not officially recognizing the conimision. proposes to unofficially assist it in every way possible to get at the actual facts as to the true boundary between Venezuela and British Suiana. The resolution adopted by the senate, calling upon the secretary of the navy to state whether in his opinion it would le advantageous to contract for six battle ships, instead of two as authorized by the last congress, is intended to give Secretary Herbert an opportunity to call the attention of congress to the favor able nature of the bids submitted to the department for the building of battle ships, and it is expected that his com mumcation will result in congress auth orizincr the rpnstriicf inn of fnnr lint!! ships in addition to the two which have I been ordered of the Newport News ship yards. New York City is for the first time in my recollection makiug a real effort to secure the Democratic national conven tion, or in fact, any convention. The residents of that city seem at last to realize that this is the day of the hustler and that things not worked for are sel dom obtained. Whether New York will get the convention is a problem. Only two of the Democratic national commit tee Wall, of Wisconsin, and Wallace, of Washington, are now in Washings ton and neither will commit himself on the subject. m. Tragedy in Indianapolis. Indianapolis, January C. Patrick Galvin, supposed to be partially insane, began to shoot his neighbors in Deloss Street this afternoon. His first bullet fatally injured Samuel Paul. He then began to shoot in the Murphy family homestead. Before he could be dis armed he had shot Mrs. W. C. Murphy, perhaps fatally. Mr. Murphy then went to the defense of his wife and shot Gal vin dead on the spot. The families had quarreled a year ago and the sudden re newal of the quarrel is supposed to have driven Galvin into a frenzy, which end ed in his death. Cheering for Mine orkerg. Pittsburg, Jaonary 3. The joint com niittee of coal operators and miners to determine whether a uniform mining rate exists in this district met here yes terday afternoon. President Penna, of the United Mine Workers of America, was much pleased at the action of the New lork and Cleveland Gas Coal com pany iu advancing the rate to sixtv-four cents. He said the result would be uni form wages here, and that it would have a beneficial effect in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. District Attorney Accused. Reading, Ta., January 6. Following quickly upon the heels of the alleged at tempt to bribe a Prison Inspector with $500 came a warrant to-night for the ar rest of District Attorney Frank K. Flood. lie retired from the office to day. The charge against him is extortion and bribery. The allegation is that he ac cepted $150 from Jacob Walters, a sa loonkeeper, because an indictment against Walters has been ignored by the granu jury. Blown I p by a Boiler. Lancaster, Ta , Jan. 8. A six horse power boiler in the butcher shop of C. F. Fenton, at Mt. Joy, exploded this after noon with terrible force, blowing to : i i . -i i . ... . fields me ouiuung m wnicn it was located. C. K Fenton, the owner, was iatauy injured, one leg being torn off. fl : i 1 : i . Christflin f.infyris.1, an - . &, u myiKjjc, was in- jured about the head, and is in a pre- carious condition. .best of all in Leavening Tower. H 1 w a ( ardiual. Baltimore, January 5. Under the 1 great dome of that classic edifice the Baltimore cathedral the mother church of America where so many memora ble and imposing ceremonies have taken place, Francis Satolli, Titular archbishop of Lepanto, and papal ablegate to the United States was to day elevated to thf cardinalate and formally invested with the scarlet which marks the rank of car dinal. It was an event of extraordina ry interest in the world of religion. It was a consecration for services rendered and a seal set on a settlement of religi ous and social affairs in the United Suites. It was an unusually grand and picturesque ceremony, even in Balti more, where so many elaborate ecclesi astical events have leen celebrated. The ceremonies of the day were inau gurated with an imposing procession, which moved shortly after 10 o'clock this morni' g. It was made up of mem lers of the hierarchy, clergy and sem inarians to the number of several hun dreds. It was, with possibly oue excep tion, the greatest ecclesiastical pageant ever witnessed in the city, which is called "The Cradle of American Cath- olism." After the ceremonies, which lasted a ittle more than three hours, Cardinals Satolli and Gibbons were entertained at a dinner at St. Mary's seminary. Two hundred prominent clergymen and lay men were seated at the tables. Cardiu al Satolli and the members if his official household returned to Washington to night. After having been the represen tative of Rome in Washington Cardinal Satolli will be, on his return to the Vati can, the representative of Washington in Rome. Oeadly Naval Machine Uua. Washington, D, C. January 5. A new machine gun has been adopted for t ,-i . t l it use on naval sunns wnicn rue Lilian Arms Board reports to be the most de structive weatn firing a bullet ot its calibre yet found. The gun has a record of 420 shots a minute, and re quires no work, except the pressure of an electric button to maintain the ter rific fire. As compared to the Gatling, which has leen the naval machine gun for years, it it as superior as the modern rilled gun is to the old smooth bore. The new gun weighs but 35 pounds. A continuous b'-lt feeds the gun, and one man with his finger pressed on a button fires it. With his other hand he trains it from side to side as if the muz zle were a hose, and as fast as one band of cartridges runs out another is at tached and a record can be maintained unprecedented in the recorc'sof machine gun tests. Mie Whipped the Hcleclive. Williamsport, Pa., January f. A T'li I tailltklii -i l.t rl i t-i n.-hn Cfl ire bic name is Miller received a horse whipping here at the hands of an indignant wo man. He was employed by W. H. Bloom to watch his wife, who has be gun divorce proceedings. Mrs. Bloom has apartments in the Stearns block, and declares that she and her daughter have been hounded by the detectives. East night, in a hallway. Detective Miller brushed against Mrs. Bloom, and the woman, who is physically more than the little detective's match, clutched him by the collar and rained stinging blows on his face and shoulders with a raw hide. The detective legged for mercy, and when the infuriated woman allowed him to go, he fled to the City Hall for police protection. Protesting Cherokee Indians. Washington, January 4 The president has accorded a hearing to a delegation from the Cherokee council, composed of O. W. B?nge, E T. Harris. Roach Young and Joseph Smallwood, who came to protest against the penping sen ate bill permitting the continuance on their lands of white squatters. Mr. Benge, the spokesman, told the presi how his people had leen obliged to give, up much of their land to the whites aud how they had suffered from the in coming of squatters. The Cherokccs had been paid $8'.t,000 to settle claims, yet it was now proposed to authorize by law the continued presence of the squat ters. The president will investigate. Wager on a pirtualist Test. Anderson, Ind., January 4. Two $500 deposits were made to day by Rev Y. R. Covert, the grest anti Spirttialist, and Dr. Frank Milton, of Williamstown, Pa., a noted medium, which settles be yond all doubt a test of the challenge issued by W. R. Covert to all mediums that he would forfeit $500 if he could uot duplicate and expose any phenome na they attributed to communication be tween the dead and the living. All the articles were 6igned and the agreement reached. The tests and ex posures are to be given in the Church of God, in this city, beginning with the night of the 20th. There will be six meetings, covering six nights. 'Bat" Miea Sot to Die. Albany, N. Y., Jan. 5. "Bat" Shea, who was convicted of murdering Robert Ross, in the Troy election riot of Match 1SD4, and who was to have been exe cuted at Clinton prison, has been saved by the written confession of John Mc Gough, that it was he and not Shea, who killed Ross. Ihe confession reached Governor Morton this morning, and he decided to issue a respite in Shea's case for four weeks iu order to give his counsel op portunity to move for a new trial Mc Gough is in Clinton Prison, serving a term of nearly twenty years for shooting v mam lxoss in the neck in the same row in which Robert Roes was killed. Big Haul by a Clever Forger. San Francisco, January 7. A forger, who is thought to be a New York expert, has just looted the Nevada bank of $20, 000 and fled with the coin, without leaving a clew by which the detectives can track him. He had for gome time been doing a brokerage bussiness in the Clironicle building under the name of A. A. Holmes, and deposited at the Ne vada bank, where he became well known. On December 14 he presented a check for $22,000 on the Crocker-Woolworth bank, of this city. He took $20,000 in coin and left the balance on deposit. It I . - .1 . ., . uow transpires trial tne check was ortg- inally for $12. having been "raised" to 1 iHX) Latest U. S. Gov't Report m;m aad hi iikk .noi i .. The Allegheny eonnty bar deciiled to admit women to practice law. Christmas this year will fall upon a Friday, and Easter Sunday will come with Aprils. John T. Iliidhes, of Lexington. Ky.. has in yeara taken f ill,"." in premium it the state fair. When opening his newly rented hmi.ie at Herndon. Howard Knulu found iiuoiu gold buried in the cellar. Crandall t Co.? of Buffalo. N. Y.. have orders to supply "bus and cab companies in London with ii.i horses. The Federal supreme court lias award ed New York stale 131,fi"0, the claim in full for interest on a war loan lo the gov crnmeiit. . For betraying a plan of Ids fellow -prisoners to esca', at Cairo. I Charles Wilson, colored, w as disemti-iwed by Con vict Henry Dickson. Mrs. Mary Toy, twenty-throe year old. locked herself in her upai tmeuls. in West Sixteenth street. New York, and gashed her throat with a razor. Mrs. Andrew Cranston. of McKeesport, died suddenly Saturday while siuing in front of a grate. Her clothing caught lire and the body was bally burned when found. The supremo court has set January "JO for hearing the cases presentiuz the long and short haul clause of the Intor-tato Commerce act for judicial construction and settlement. Dora Knight, a colore-1 girl, five years old, was burned to death at her parents' homo on Pasture street, Pittsburg, Satur day, while sleeping. Her elotluug took lire from a spark from the grate. The contracts for the new battleships Kearsarge and Kentucky were delivered to the seeretary of the navy duly executed and work on the ships has already ! n commenced by the Newport News com pany. A strike of .Ton workmen in the West ern New York t Pennsylvania simps at I5utTalo,N. York., was inaugurated Thurs day because of the refusal of the company lo restore the 10 per cent, reduction of wages. The Pennsylvania company has awarded the following contracts for cm: Michigan Peninsular Car company, : Missouri Car and Foundry cutiiOany, t'liio: Terra Haute Car works, .Ki: Carlisle Manufacturing company, l-'.o, and the Middletown Car works, 1.V1. Daniel Matthews, of Buffalo, N. Y., one of the oldest engineers on the Western New York & Pennsylvania railroad, while hunting near Lilierty on Sunday, acci dentally shot hiui-elf and died from the effects of liie wound that evening. He had been an engineer on the road for 'Si years. Charles Colvanz. a farm hand, who says he has found a barrel of gold imn buried many years ago, astonished the people of Franklin, N. J., on Saturday by scattering in the street .land-ful of coins, some cold dollars, $J.."iO ph-cos, and even SC. coins. The poor Poles reap"'l a harvest for a while. A workman in a limestone quarry at Maquoketa. Ia., the other day , found im bedded in the rock, -'." feet below the sur face, a fly. The fossil is perfect. The feelers and legs and delicate w ings, as well as the body, are as complete us w hen the insect alighted and stuck in the ooze away back in the upper Silurian period ages ago. While Samuel Lance, aged fourteen years, was attempting lo draw a charge from an old rille near Akron. 1 1., on Satur day the weapon was discharged, the ball entering his breast below the hi art. Lance saddled a horse and rode two mi les a: a gallop to the house of a doctor, but fell in a faint on the doctor's step and died soon after. -Michael Schafer found years, hanging in the his wife, aged ol years, hanging in the cellar ol their home on Sciota street, Pittsburg, at 4 o'clock on Sunday morning and w atched the body until daybreak, when he uotiiii'd an undertaker, who cut it down b.-fore the coroner had been notilieii. Mrs. Scliah-r had been si-k and was considered mildly iDsane. An oyster boat with three colored dredgers drifted into the mouth of the Savannah river ou Sunday afternoon w ith one of the men Iro.cn to death, anothi r barely alive and the third scarcely able to talk. They were blow u lo sea while at tempting to cross Calahogue sound in . northwest gale last t riday and were sixty - five hours without food or water. jamos ii. t'age, .: years oio. once a prominent lawyer of San Francisco, w as arrested in New York on .Saturday on a telegram from the San Francisco police. Page is accused of having embezzled tru funds of the estate of an insane ward named Lichtonberg, whose guardian hi was, to the amount of f4. Extradition papers for his return to California are now being prepared. The National Tube Works company of McKeesport, Pa., the laigcst manufac turers ot steel and wrought iron pipe in the world, after their annual shut dow n for extensions and repairs, started up their welding departments on Monday morning with fourteen furnaces, double turn, which is very nearly full capacity. The com pany reports good deu. aud for steel pipe, considering the time of year. Valentine Brandt, a New "ork butch er, went to his home ou Saturday night after a six weeks' debauch, shot his wife and, leaving her fordead, put a bullet into his right temple, liiandt and iiis wife have not got along very well of late. About six weeks ago the family dissension culminated iu Brandt's leaving home. From time to time since he left home Brandt has come home and abused his wife. The contract for furnishing projectiles for new warships in course of construction with the Sterling Coaqiany, of McKees port, Pa., and the Carpenter Projectile company, another Pennsylvania firm, has finally been concluded, and the amonnt allotted for the purpose has been equally divided between the concerns, each receiv ing fci'iO.ono. No bids were made, but the government offered the work at a certain price and it was accepted. Lively mm aCrlrhft. Although In the tim Instance s .luniii5h . a tortoise, the kidney become u lively as a cricket when a healthful Impulse Is idven to them w:tb Hom tetter's Stomach Kilters, a promoter ot ac tivity In these organs which counteracts a ten dency to their lethariry and disease Innctlnn of the kidneys, tt should he remembered. U the first stave ol those dantccrous reual maladies ag-alasr which the resource ol medical science are too often exhausted In vain. Peril Is fore stalled by tl e Bitters, which avert Hrto fit's dis ease, diabetes, dropsy, uravel and the troubles arislnn Irom a weak biadder. tqually ffi -acious Is It In checking and eradication malarial, bill. Ions and nervous ailments, dj m el-Ma. constipa tion and rheumatism. A(.ettte and sltep are Improved and convaleaence naatened by Its bene hcient action, fcltlifr when health Is slittbtly or Jraiuueij iuiiireu. me value ol tn.a restorative and preventative medicine Is sieedlly made manliest. SILKS.. Black Dau as that arr so much beyond theu-iinl in stylo and quality lor the money il.al everyone vtli sees the glints Mtmplcs Wil l.iiv -j:i inches wide-oxtia heavy and the price is f 1. Another lot of Silks-ltlack Brocade with in at w hite stripes, .Vn-. Silks that w ill teil their ow n st4.ry. and we'd like to send every reader of this paper samples of them, so they can -i-e how ibis stnrc ii s I he Silk business. A collection of Silks for Wai-ts. Reception and Wed ding ('-owns thai are riaht tip to the latest iasMonaMe idea, on the same lnw tice basis that this store does all its selii ng. New re-H-sortmciils of Fine Ulaek Dress i ods have just come in 7.".., $!(. $!.'. to J..Vi -the latest foreign things few, if any, bring out new things as late in the season as we. do. and that" one of the reasons why we do it there are a lot or people w no w ant lin e things now, just aj- much as earlier in the scasi.n. and we propose to see that llcy i hey get them, and at right pi ices, o us lo make friends for this stole. (lot in some new now Novelty Dress (ioods and Suitings 7.V.. fS.n0 and fl.."U. that you'll be glad to know about, and w e're letting out some oth er lilies that are good, and nice, and correct as to style, but not newly ar rived like the ati jvc, at very much less than their actual value -bolii black and colored. Write our Mail Order Department to send you samples of tin spi-cial values at .Kic. and 7."e.., and you'll -ee line Dress tioods that will surprise you style, qualtiy atid price considered. We're always glad to send samples. BOGGSOTJHL, Allegheny, Pa. 60 O o 3 K. L. JUHSSTOS. M. J. HH'k. A. H.HLl K. KSTAHLIHHHD IST'i. Johnston, Buck & Co.7 BANKKI EBEXSBUBG. iS, PENN'A. A. W. KI CK, Ublrr. KPTABLlSRED Carrolltown Bank, UAKKOU.TIIWH, FA. MI AKKA141II, t'ablrr. T. A. General Banting Bnsiness Transacted. The following are the principal features ol Keneral baLKtnir bnsiness : DEPOSITS Kecetved payable on demand, and Interest bear Ing certificates Issued to time depositors. I.OA.NN Extended to rastomers on favorable terms and approved paper discounted at all times. I.I.F.TIO.S Made In the locality and upon all the hanklnu towns In the United States. t.hances moderate. IsKAFTM Issned negotiable In all parts of the t'nltod State?, and loreiitn exchange issued oa ill parts ot Europe. AtTOIKTH til merchants, farmers and others solicited, tt whom reasonable accomodation will be extended. Tatrcns are rs.'ured that all transactions shall be held as strictly private and confidential, and that they win be treated as liberally as good banking rules will permit. Ke&pectfully, JOHNSTON. Bl t'K A CO. A. E. PA TTO v. WM. II. BASDFOttlt, Cashier. THE First National Bank Or PaTTOS, PATTON, Cambria Co., Pa. Capital, paid up, - - $50,000. Accounts of Corporations. Firms and Individuals received upon the most favoratde terms consistent with sate and conserva tive Bankiag. Steamship Ticket lor sale by all the leading I.mes and Korelicn limits payable In any ot (be principal cities ol the Old World. All correspondence will have onr personal and prompt attention. Infrrrsl Palrt on Time Icpolt. ortl.'l.83 AGENTS lo roprv?MTit the Most iVni'' Nurwrtna in Atnenc-ia- tM-k wulflv M.lvrt ifw-rl liftv. four ymn: known ami mumu. iy vt linifr. That in m hy brcinnrr I ways nnrrred with un and f xpf rienreil Ant double thrir alrtt and inromr Now is the lime to Mart, Wri4e ELLWANGER A. BARRY, Nu Hope Karserlns K cheater, K. V. OK ALLTHK NEWS. KK&U THK IKES s k i Id I'll s I. S3 2 ri.i . WANTED WAN. n.W pr jcar. 73 Is raj net i.ine:of si LSI t5J SI SI Ik NOW ON SALE AT BRADLEYS' GASH STORE, GALLITZIN, PINNA. LSI raj Isi New Dress Gr.otls. New Lininrrs ;tml New Trimminps. Full line of Print?, Mucins :uil Novelty Goo.ls of all descriptions. Plenty of Fall Trailer-wear s s a s s rS 5 S a s a s 5 a s a s a S1 a s a s a si HI s a s for Ladies. Men nnl Children, 17c. for Hcarv Weisht Ladies' Vest Men's Shirts and E Drawers from 25c. up to Finest Made. Hew Patterns from 75c. up to $3.50 for all New Styles in Shoes, ilats WE XXSrome in Complete. and see THOS. Li",;;'." 1;." ..... LO tin CARL ill V I jNTI US, PRACTICAL W ATOHMAm $ tJEWStEH, -AND DEALER IN- " 7 Ml "Solii by tin- fo'lnwii'Z i.-;i.-r: Jr.: ' r ' i aji ' - !. (. 1 i 5 if! t .i r . . Ki;t-:NM:l"l:i II. A. SIhm-ui;-. k.t. " i:i:ii.i.i I. K. !:'iiir. Si-AM.i kk K. M. l:ii!it-r. EMMD We have a full line of TRUSSES and SUPPORTERS' of every description. A rupture is of such vital im portance that we keep in stock all sizes and makes of TRUSSES. We solicit correspondence and can fill orders ly mail. In all its Latest assl fcfAl! work u; two i1mis north Dec. 0, is'.ir.r,m Carriage and Having om nel up in the shoj lat ly occuj.ie.1 ly J. A. P-oiicy in the West icnr.f of Kl (cnshnr.:, I am .reartl to lo all kimis ol W ul'oii an-l ( aniaire Work on ihe shortM. notice anl at reasoiiahle terms. Cai riaire Triiniiiin-i. Cushions ami Sile Curtains fur nisheil to or.ler. tin let's taken for S.i in-' Wav'oi's ami Puies. ge"SiKvial attention uiven to Kt pair Work ami Painting iiikI satisfaction niaraiitc-I. H. E. BENDER, 5.31.9.-, Formerly of Carrolltown. FOLKS REDUCED PATIEffTS TREATED BY MAIL fOB PAPTKULai CA.il. oft aooQtiSwiTie!MArI O.W. I.StiVUlDMl). '.17 Krcri.. .t;. ocfj6.5 ly Willi GOODS LSI ai 151 ai si ai S! ral 151 SI ral is r?3 SI al si aJ si commencing in pric e from r?l ral in Blankets 151 ai - wool Pl;iid Blanket. isi everything all at the m GASH FRIGES. ral is our Stork. It is full and ADLEY'S, i'lll IN 'Tt pTCHfX CLOCKS,! JEWELRY, SILYEMYAIIE, IMU3ICAL INSTRUMENTS: AM- ? OPTICAL GOODS. I SULK AliE.NT 1 OK TIIK X CELEBRATED BQCKFOBD WATHIKS. tCclifflfeariFieSciiiaTafc: In Kt-v ami Stem W i n-i.-r- lak;i-: m:i.i:itiix or All. KIM S K JKWKLUY WAYS N HAMi. Al.- Zti' M v I i :" 'f -'i y i iinur- i:t '!. I'(i;n- lilnl f.ir i"l.l- !! iM-fi-ri- i nn liu-int: -K- L.-r.- i.?5"AIl work ciui ;ii!l-'l. CARL E1YIHUS. Before Deciding. uIhiiiI Hit new H,k M..-. ! tin- . . r; xin:i:i:f,i..t si t rs imi i;.t.ti ;.s. K :i n; i 5 1.i tn. :ml niiiviinv ycur (l ll.at v 1 in we ;iy lliey :ne ll..' l.esl. e (ill : y -1 ;l'.e f;ti t. M mil in l y I Kverv ne fea: ill i iiM-k.-.-i.i-r. - and -.ie. 1 hat i of atiie t. Tl-eir eietlli linens ie-e!is lulnir. Tiieir economy -a inom-v. w x- r. l'AVTl'N J. I'i. -A. M. Ti. h. IIatisi. Tl.omas. Ifetc-J.v: TAIMS DAVISON'S - DRUG - STORE. Most ImproYcfl Hettois. Tit tli exti':u-t-l without pain l.v umii Prof. MayV K. P.. Ar tilicial I ; h it hoiit olate jui like l ho luitmal lii l Ii. 1 el .i l tivi li, n pair ti: in :m. rvo ace llim in tin ir natiitai jahioii. I'iit-cl:( v .i k !. ne at the iinM rcaoiial -lo ratc. rrantol. Tcrrns Cah. f.l. K. Church." I nlice on M.iin sin i I. DR. A. LA I NO, GALLITZIN, PA. Wagon Shop. HA YAKli'S FINK - DYSPEPSIA - TABLETS. A SI RE I I RK l K DYSPEPSIA AD INDIGESTION. Will immr ilialeU Strumthm Slma.-b and h n..re Ai.i-etile. Kor pale ! 1iuk1i"! 'T wnt I r rai'llT lj mail n ol price, it. Bll i Kl HKI li i O., 1'hiladrli hi Not. 1.6m. Ik-I. rf t I li in v n i i. I - Si ' ha - 9 '. dv. 4 t a l . 10 ft i j u i dl a I di '. Id . n 4 1 tl n P. u
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers