New Advertisements. STABRED THE MAID. An Atluntie Clty Girl's Reward for Ine torference in a Family Quarrel, ATLANTIC CITY, Aug, 27.-Mrs, Vie. toria Hanalton, wife of BR. H. Hamilton, who 15 said to be a grandson of Alexan- der Hamilton and son of Gen, Schuyler Hamilton, of New York, arrested here for a assault on nurse She riously cut the girl with a Mexican dag ger, The latter is Iving at the point] of death, while Mrs, Hamilton is held with out bail to await the result of her in ——————— AO - New Advertisements ATEUTONC TRIVNPH How the Dutch Have Captured Pennsylvania, NOT A CONFERENCE. £'rofessional Cards, The BMeoting of Wallace, Pattison and Cassidy Declared to Be Aceldental, PRILADELFHIA, Aug. 27.—1t soems the meeting of ex-Senator William A, Wal- lace the other day with ex-Governor Pattison and ex-Attorney General Cas. sidy in the office of William M. Singerly ESTATE HARTINGS WILBUK ¥, RERDEN "\/ALUABLE REAL ST. 0-)JAT(-0 HASTINGS & KEEDER! [ } & IB PUBLIC SALE !! i North ANG ea netadl-iaw, ® ® ots By virtue of an order of the Orphans Court of Centee county, to me directed there will be was purely accidental, and the reported exposed to public sale at Spring Mills, BEAVER, GEPHART & conference was, after all, purely imagi- | hl ' FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1 2 ’ Alt nary. The two gentlemen bh \ppen: d to 0 stitution of Rea rit The following described real exia ified og sheny street drop inte Mr. Singerly's office shortly |’ erty of Henry Kemrine, deed. viz after the ex-senator called, and knew | : Nol ALOTOF GROUND at nothing about the Intter's intended visit, | - be! A ad folniug lands of Mis After a few pleasantries, which occupied | ris edgier, fron oki but two or three minutes, the ex-gov- enienily oes ernor and ex-attorney general withdr i. WW, GEFBan? dN0G. MM, DALY DALE Law, north wis Wie yx her murderous of Criders THEY SUPERSEDE THE QUAKERS the prop | new bloek gizt, Mary O'Donnell, se The Friends Were Too Because Live—=Who Are~=Tholr Died Good Pennsylvanian Dutch cuallarities of Speech and Ont to They the Pe- Custom--Nao Barer LRANK F. BIBLE, ip the { as ND 5 coitainieg ONE Af ted toy but 10t is conn Ww, Reverence for the Fatherland. ALLENTOWN, Pa., Aug. 20.—~''Are all governor's now?" inquired the youth- ful son of Joseph Ritner soon after the Pennsylvania general election of 1835, “Nay; only me und Pop,” replied the good wife of the governor-elect. Whether it was the result of this joint tenure of office 1 do not know, but cer- tain it is that the state never had a bet- ter governor than the shrewd, honest, obstinate old farmer, Joseph Ritner, Pennsylvania Dutch was then at highest influence; Ritner its truest type. Who Are the Pennsylvania Dutch? And who are the Pennsylvania Duteh? We read of the Quaker in history; we are told that he settled the state, and then'we are left to assume that he form the backbone of its greatness today. Yet. as a matter of fact. to a people all unknown to fame, a people more inte: esting, with characteristics more sharply defined and persistent than the creoles of Louisiana, numbering nearly 4,000,- 000 souls, belongs the honor of ferming the policy ahd character of the second state of the Union One hundred and seventy-two years ago this present month the Quaker as- sembly of Pennsylvania ordered that none but English speaking immigrants should be the subject of naturalization The same body provided a few vears later that every foreigner to the English government arriving should duty of 40 shillings and swear allegiance to 2 Great Britain and the province The Quaker Has Vanished. Strange things have come to pass since then. The Quaker has vanished. There remains nothing to tell the story of his former greatness but the quaint old burying ground on Arch street. and a dozen faded shadbelly coats, heirlooms in as many Philadelphia garrets. He perished in no great tumult of arms, nor by the march of any pestilence. He was neither indolent or lacking in shrewdness; he did not starve to death, nor did the Germans so much as crowd him. He died simply because he was too good to live—a melancholy warning which has not been lost upon his cessors in Pennsylvania politics, we MY & SUC The Puissant Teuton. But the proscribed German stolidly bided his time. He came, paid his duty and stayed. He took possesion of the rich farms along the Susquehanna, the Lehigh. and the Juniata, and filled the glorious valleys which lead down to the rivers. He began to have things his own way and when the new order was established after the revolution, he held in his hands the political power of the great state which » had turned into a garden where the gods might dwell The most timorous Quaker, fearful of German ascendancy, could scarcely have had a provision of the completo Y triumph attained by his Teutonic rival at the beginning of the present century, The Quaker was already little more than a memory: the German the pots fact of the and political order. But lo! when the victor proclaimed his con- quest It was in a strange tongue; he no longer thought nor felt as a German. The fatherland was not beyond seas, but here. Germaany was no to him than it was to Patrick. He had become a Pennsyivania Dutchman. nt social more A Peculiar Dialect. The Teutonic immigrant brought with him to Pennsylvania only the limited vocabulary of a German peasant nearly 200 years ago. His pronunciation of the native tongue was often inaccurate, of the English worse: and the deviation from the vernacular has increased with every generation until all semblance of the original is in many cases lost. ““Top- per,” meaning hurry; “fat,” forward: “nooner,” under; ‘‘fattish.” done or fin- ished, are a few examples of many words not easily accounted for. Neither a German nor an Englishman would make much of “croombeera The for mer would say kartaffel, the latter po tato. But our Pennsylvania Dutchman examines the tuber and after much Asmelling and tasting decides that it is a berry. “If it isn't a deinhinker is it” said me the other day, Vawir Ideal Momes. These people have retained all the ad- mirable domestic, home loving charac- teristics of the race from which they sprung. No wives are more loyal, no mothers more devoted to their children than these. Among the young people the singing school is a weekly entertain ment during the winter and dancing is held in favor, But the great social event of the year in every family is the “schnitzen.” *“Schnitz” are sliced ap- ples, and the fruit in that form retains the name after it is dried, stewed and baked into ple. “Schnitzen.” one of them to @ way in which many German verbs turn up in Pennsylvania Dutch, without any modification, with all the effect of the English participle, The Schalizen, The German verb “schnitzen,” to cut, or slice, becories the Dutch “*schnitzing,” pronounced with- out sounding the “g.” But socially it denotes the harvest home, a combination of easy work and pleasure, the time when all the pent u gayety of the yoar is turned loose, An #0 it is that when the apples are all schnitzed and the young people have feasted on cakes and cider and the fun begins in earnest. Games and dancing turn into a general romp continuing until long after midnight. green schoiiz are afterward strung on stout rds with a damning needle and hung in font loops and festoons about the itchen walls to dry. The Face Losing Its Identity. Asa le, with language, customs ind traditions peculiar to Shthae vives, they are rapidly away. A hia Blood Is the beet rena oF heal 000,000 Pennsylvanians and of some- g like 1000000 more in other states there Runa bts ow thousand ies probably 25, amilies—of the old unchanged stock, such and its | berry vas der | | charged with attempting etymolo- | gheally considered, illustrates very well | t | up Pennsylvania | juries Mr. and Mrs, Hamilton quarreled fre quently, During a quarrel in which they were both clinched in the room a Mary Donnelly passed by she ran in to get their S-months’-old baby out of the room. She had to separates the com batants apd shielded Hamilton's bods with her en when the wife plunged a Mexican dagger to the hilt in the abdomen, exposing her intestines She coolly wiped the blood off the dagg and laid it away Fadl » TORIES CRYING FOR BLOOD | What is Their Navy for if Not (le press Unele Sam?” 20 Some of Supe LONDON, Aug the more belligerant Tories are no end of for Lord Salisbury and his making trouble nands . States for ernment by their absurd d reprisals a ainst the Unites ti scrzure of Canadian sea in Beh- ring sen They want to know what's the use r a great big navy if it is not the Ih the staun the government hith their denunciation Lord Salist Iry's milk a: toward th United likely, however, that allow themselves to be pressure tro TRISTE havin used when Some of from their 8 GRI KNOXVILLE EF. The City in Mourning and Nusiness Suse pended ~The Coroner's Verdiet ISAK] t ign Barry. Barker w for more than Maloney is ir will hardly pints or Liew nous unts Car vy Judge He are broken and thigh fra tL was h i over Co ition nd a verdict of a m unavoidable « His funeral occurred at 4 terday afternoon, and his re were shipped to Augusta, Ky. City 15 in mourning and business pri ally suspended A mass meeting of ens was held resolutions of respect drafted, USER Was 7 and MRS. M! YBRICK SAVED. Her Sentence ta Penal Servis Life, Commuted tude for kK OF Cape Matteras Aug. 27 J hue port that the sel hored half =» abreast of Cape Hen going to pieces, Nor nave thought have bes Linon 1s ashore, and it is thought sl down with her crew In the Cape Henry There was a heavy caster blowing on the telegraph win ru Henry to Kitt The storm off ( to have been very severe LK STVIOS © i Nous ie 1 Jose ph Wilde ¥ on rapidly Crew shore Deen seen, and : i" i “ n drowned. Wreckage of the schooner being washed has cinity of v north LIN “Out of Pure PITTSBURG, Aug. John Wilson and Wilbert Douden were committed to Jail in default of $2500 bail each to wreck the owl train on the Pennsylvania railroad, | Monongahela division. On the night of | July 20 two heavy oak planks were wedged over the rails at the curve near Lostock station. The engine and train | fortunately passed safely over the planks. Wikkon and Douden confessed stating that they had sat on the hillside to watch the train go to pieces. They say that a companion named Gales suggested the crime and that they assisted from “pure hellishness,™ Hellishness, 34 1 wh, At Deer Park. Deer Park, Md., Aug. 27. The pres. dent spent the morning hours of the day with Private Secretary Halford and Miss Sawyer, the ste nographer, writing the president's correspondence, a ! large amount of which was disposed of The president also read a number of | public papers, but did not determine or | dispose of any matter. Governor Jack- {son, Mrs. Jackson, Senator and Mrs. | Gorman called on the executive and Gad their respects to the president, ‘esterday afternoon President and Mrs, | Harrison drove over to Oakland. Barnum's Clrews Wreoked, Porspam, N. Y., Aug. 24. The second train of the Barnum and Bailey show was wrecked two and a half miles cast of Potsdam, while on the way, on the Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg rail- road, from Governeur to Montreal. A broken axle was the cause, Twenty. Ea ams ma a Despair Stamped on Their Paces | Age passengers sik nothing having been said by them of a political character. The ex-senator was then left with Mr. Singerly, but at the same time a well known politician hap- pened to be present, Politics was not discussed, the Clearfield county man’s errand being purely upon business matoers, The reported hus stoned considerable comment, but stated today in tic terms that no meeting had that the ’ | 841 1 stat conference OCR IL Was empn been srranged nd ‘ ¢1 a y i HL : La 4 tdental Ominatiaon, it is a cox named was entn rubernatorial was not discuss that the ex-gov general were not pre talk about anything n erted, lared TIE ormey senator | from that res Then, it is said, nomination to be wished it distinctly wr candidat wis not th nomination and A Pennsylvania 1) Vain tempt to Mab a Pullms ss Car. a ‘lu t LI shwayman's Ate Aries IN WON i R Reading's President Has No Intention of from Of NEw YOorx, Aug Lt for the pa Retiring ce, exnimtion Manager 1 which the pres le during ti s It that 10,000 persons will bx i today here A Brakeman Under the Wheels Aug a brake Bethie. killed, rake to ne at the A instantly ng the running down of the blast fur: parted, throwing y traan passing his lege and arms and band The unfortunate | and leaves a wife. Two More Mod Ran Salta Pa 2 were a OOH, the brake on the rails, cutting off | bruising h man was 2% vears ol Over him, am SORANTON Ang | Lehigh Valley railroad October received two additions in this city Patrick | aver, who hurt in the collision, suing the company for 840.000, and his father. who damages for the lows of bh suing for 85,000, ity on the Mis Services, A Typhoid ASHLAND, Pa, Aug. U.-An epi demic of typhoid fever is provailin here, There are a number of cases fn three persons are lving dead from the disease. The citizens are much alarmed and the authorities have urged that street sanitary precautions be observed. Fpidemie, Arrivals nt Castle Garden, New York, Aug. M4.--The steamer Italy, from Liverpool, landed 106 steer. at Castle Garden this morning. The Germanic, also from Liverpool, landed 428, and the Trave, from Bremen, brought over 620, A Mine Gas Vietim. BoraNToN, Pa. Aug. 27, Foreman John Jones, who was burned in the explomon of gas in No. 2 shaft at Olyphant last Thursday, died yesterday. Foreman Richard Mason, who was also burned, is sinking rapidly, «ov a WANTED "i REE NER ene Fruthtul He-Ne Hats wanted. New blood place tt hy Raparion sy a. = ty od ben \ (OF commis sioner), true, NURSERYMAN, BOX Cy GENEVA, N,V { It at once Uemen | The | 8 ©XN ted . i William | him | The law. | suits growing out of the Mud Run calam- | last | this | wan wants | Mail Order Department |* adjoining Krumrine tering favors bestowed upon it hy testimony of Its benefits to Wweompltiment this department iH good, in The Jin the people are thes Lhe way PT to communicate with Your every want will be satisfied promptly, ail iy i VE money on every article or t 5 I BOOS You buy What isgeingon here Now? immer Clearance Sales, wh # hundreds of Dress Goo worth AJ a ¢ Vv ol h-Goods Prices adjoining the lat of said | : FX {x GS & BUHL, {15 to 121 4 doo a 2 Cw XA XY o A" A from— w— CARTERS] cus has been shown in curing Headaches, yo Canren's Tarnie Loaves Pra fi, Curie i aint, while 2 fa { the gtomach ver and reguiste the bowels, Even if they only cured HEAD Arh they wonld be almost priceless to those who suffer from this distressing complaint but fortunately their goodness does not ved herws, and those who once try them will And these Hitthe pills valuable in so many ways that they will not be willing to do without them Put alter all sick head ACHE Is the hane of so many lives that here is where we make our great hoast. Our pills cure while others do pot Canren's Lorne Liven Pros are very small and very enay 10 take. Ope or two pills make a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action deane all who use them Tn vials at © conte; five for $1. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail. CARTER NEDICIVE CO. Mew Tok, mall FL Smal Doss Small Price MARVELOUS MEMORY DISCOVERY. Only Genuine System of Memory Training. Foar Beoks Learned in one reading. Mind wandering cured, Every child and adalt greatly benefitted. Great ind te bo Correspond Classen, Pie + ith Opin of Dr. Wm. A, Ham. " rh Hae pf he in adh rw 3 Lin Pape ! Spells sD, bor ot $02 Uh orlan » ‘ Cong Elen dan fren by ster, AY 1 ol A LOIRE 2 T Pink Ave NY. ’ uinte ors Bon vey ICRA REAM Meraal & Butt aoe Co. S58 BL STABLY, NO. & Brockerhoff Row, Allegheny Street, P. F. KEICHLINE, wf DEALER In fo FINE CIGARS, TOBACCOS, CANDIES AND GREEN GROUERIES, Fresh fraits received Dally In season. Leave your orders, 10.00, AL STREET, and prices LOCATED IN ] : | : F AGRICULTURE i ] | 2«BOoTAXY and Be dCHEMISTRY L-Livn A LOT OF thie deed niine of "0, d ALOT OF GROUND in Hey fronting « 1) GROUS resides and fr ad at the nore! NG A $60.00 Sewing Machine FOR $14.90. finger Model’ i Ringer Equal Superior lo in the 4 all necessary needies hdd and dm ase for $12 n which we can save Standard Watches at unus nd for catslognes EVANS & O00, 182 State 51, Chicago. rhments ar tr IAFKOND Linseed Oil NORKS THOMPSGx & CO, (yer Callie 11 meal G Known market the pid as For HORSES, a sms v with juan) valuable results Mea! always on Send your « THOMPSON & ANTED Agents wanted s=ilth onl autl ye Johinstowy enti cted with the tery SING, #5 a 1a . we THE »» PENN'A STATE COLLEGE OXE OF THE NOST BEAUTIFUL AND HEALTHFUL SPOTS IN THE ALLER ONEXY REGION | OPFEX 10 BOTH AEX A: TUITION raen : BOARD AXD EXPENSES OTHER Low LEADING DEFARTMENTS OF STUDY {three courses.) and Aont CULTURAL CHEMISTRY ; with constant (lus trations on the Farm and in the Laboratory HORTICULTURE | and practical with the microsoope, with an unusually fall and thorough course in the Laboratory. PSGINEERING : very extensive field puactice with best modern instraments S.Hiwrony : Ancient and Modern, with origi nal Investigation Seelapies’ Counse IX LITERATURE AND BO ExOR: Two years. Ample facilities for Musie, voes land instramental ToLANGUAGE AXD LITERATURE: Latin (op tional.) French, German and English (re quired.) ohe or more continued through the entire course, Sa MATREMATICN AND ASTRONOMY ; pure and applied. PoMpOnANIC ARTS; combining shop work with study, three years’ course ; new building and equipment. 10, ««Mpenaxioat, ENGINEERING ; theoretical and practical. TL =MENTAL MORAL AND POLITICAL BOIRNOR Constitutional Law and History, Politiesl Eeonomy, ete, 12.MILITAnyY BCimnen : instruction theoretioal and practical, including each arm of the service, 13.PrYsics: Mechanies, Sound, Light, Heat, Electricity, ote, a very full course, with ex- tensive Laboratory practiet, PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT | TWO yoars-— carefully graded and thorough, Atlorn TARMAN I Hig AUMMINGS HOUS] \V Eas Is thearetioal | Stodents tanght original study i Hotels, YROCKERHOFF HOU y A oy . . GOE. B. BR HOUSE Street, HAAG, Toprietor, i LOUNTAIN HOUN] EMANUEL BROWNX, N'th Broad Street (above Arch.) PHILADELPHIA, PENN A 1 Academy of Fine Arts, hree om Academy of Music and Horticul 1: one block from the new City Hall, Pennsylvania railway passenger depot : ir National Institution : half a block Masonie Temple, and within three squares he Philadelphia & Reading passenger depot. { opposite ns Lhe TERMS, $1.50 PER DAY. Mrs. ELIZABETH A. HUTTON, Proprietress. JPASSMORE HOUSE, Frost and proce Stree, PHILIPEBRTRG, PA Good Meals and Lodging st moderat tes, ttabling stisched EY JAMES PASSMORR, Prop. {ENTRAL HOTEL, {Opposite the Rullrond Station,) MILRSRURG, CENTRE COUNTY, PA A. A. KOHLBECKER, Proprietor, THROUGH TRAVELERS on the rallrond will fine this Hotel an excellent pine to lunch, or procure meal a0 ALL TRAINS stopabout 26 minutes. Banks, NATIONAL BANK. Allegheny street. EC. HUMES, INO, P, MARRS, President, Cashier, Will scoupy the new Bank building corner of Allegheny and High streets, inside of thirty days WW F. REYNOLDS & CO. . BANKERS, Banking House in Reynolds New Riock., 8, East corner of Allegheny and High streets, WM. F. REYNOLDS, GRO. W, JACKSON, President, Cashier, jase BANKING D. SmunoERY “ . . ENTRE COUNTY COMPANY, Corner of High and Jas A. Evin
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers