- - " - 1 '- - The Somerset Herald. EDWARD SCULL. t:J I'rorielr. WEDNESDAY. July . U. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS state. FOIl OOVEKNOR. GrJ'iRfiE WALLACE DELAMATER. FOR I.IEITKSAVT GOVERNOR. LOUS AhTHt K WATRES. FOB SECRETARY OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS, THOMAS 3. STEWART. COUNTY. FOR CONURESS, EDWARD SCCLL. of Somerset Borough. eubject to the dcciaionof tbe District Confcr cwt FUR fTATE SENATOR. NORMAN B. CRITCHFIEl.D. of Jeuner TWP- Subject to tbe decision of the district Confer ence. FOR ASSEMBLY, EfHRAlM D. MILLER of Ko.ktoi.1 Borough. JoHSC VEI.LER,of Mltford TownsLip. FOR SHERIFF. . ISAIAH fMKiJi. o Stanena Township. K(-R 1'ROTHONOTARY, WM. II . BANNER, of Somerset boTounh. FOR REGISTER AND RECOVER. A. J. HlLEilAN", of Somerset Borough. FOR TREA8IREK, JOHN' JIAMEK, ofoucmahoiiiin! Township. FOR COMMISSIONERS, ,E0 r. K I MM ELL, of Miiford Township. KAMI EL V. S1I0BER, of Somerset Township. FOR KX'R DIRECTOR. Wll. DICKEY, or Broth.TitTullejr Township. FOR AUDITORS, H ERM A S Sll AFFER. of Somerset Township. V. D. HROI CHER. of Somerset Township. The Sonipret county tlt-lopates to the JvranUn convention voted for Wallace. The luljlicau party is not leaning on a broken Reetl. How occasion .le- velopg the man, to be sure! The manner in which William L. Scott bned the late IemocraticSute Convcn tion wan a caution to ace. Usri.it amV toile were first invoiced 100 years ago, and numbered about 4,0o0,- )00. The family m prow ing. Colonel Amwkw Athwart, of Fayette county, wag last week nominated for Congress by the liepublican conference of the Twenty-fourth litrict. The campaign will be ojiened earlier this year than usual. Chairman An drew propom s owning head(juarteni in Philadelphia this week. The Republican Stat ticket i truly a young man'a ticket Delamater is but 41 years of ape; Watres is but 39, and Stewart brr II'. l to date the Democrat of this sec tion haven't exhibited much enthusiasm over tbe nomination of the "old ticket" No man with a grain of political judg ment thinks for a moment that it can win. Thk Treasury otlicials estimate that for the month of June the net debt of the government has been reduced f'.'O.OOO, O00, making the total reduction for the fiscal year closing w ith June 00 $87,800, 000. Thk Pattison crowd captured every thing in sight at Scranton. It will now be in order for the Wallace men to turn in and do some extremely hard work for the ticket. Just keep an eve on them and see how hard they work ! If the liepublican opposition to Sena tor Delamater for Ciovernor continues to le headed by Wherton llarker it will not be formidable. On election day it will consist solely of Wharton Barker. He never allows any one to agree with liim in politics. NoTwrTiiTAsniN all thecarefully pre pared reports to the contrary, the nomi nation of the "old ticket" lias fallen like a wet blanket over a great portion of the liemocrats of the Stnte. Its nomination was dictated by mugwump Republicans, and there can be but one liite in store for it to te overwhelmingly defeated. All the Iuisiana lottery wants of Ixmisiana is legal standing room for its "nvict feet. Its long armx will reach out and do the bulk of its robbery in other Stutes. It will (icrhups aim only to make Louisiana pay into its treasury a million or so each year, so that it can arrant" for "objects of benevolence and charity." Svs the llan itiburg TeUtjrapU: Yes, it is even so that W. H. Barclay, the Democratic nominee for Secretary of In ternal Affairs, rs "a well known businew man f Pittbburg." His business prin ciples sjern to lie in achieving notoriety in the purchase of lottery tickets, one of w hich received a prize of flio.fXKl. When the unterrified get scent of that $2",(00 there will be a large demand for "catn aign funds." DEMix-rtATi of South Carolina are mak ing canvas that is growing in interest. At a weent meeting they refused to listen to Wade Hampton talk against Federal election laws, and cheered his opponent who assailed Democratic rule in the Ptate. At one meeting tbe opposing parties held, one bandied loaded revol vers in their hands, and they were none of them black Republicans either. Even South Carolina w ill wake up one of these days. Th Baltimore Amrrinm hay ; "Penn sylvania is a great and glorious old State, and one of the greaUwt and most glorious things about her is that large and com prehensive Republican majority of 80, M0, which hhould come out strong and vigorous this fall." It may not be out to the extent above named, for such a ma jority is an off year would be little lens than paralyzing, but it w ill be out, nev ertheless, strong and vigorous, and amply big for all iMactical uses. If the Federal Flection bill, which tossed the House by a vote of ;.V yeas to 14 nays, is not defeated in the Semite he pledge of the Republican party that "every lawful citizen, rich or poor, native or foreign born, white or black, shall cast owe free ballot in public elections and tiavethat ballot duly counted," will have een redeemed. The present condition of affairs in many Southern States is nothing short of revolutionary, and yet strong and powerful has the minority iwcome in usurping the powers and function of the majority that it has in KKt threaWtfd WoodaWd and strife if this twcefary Vvuslation is enacted. J'.y systematic fraud poa the suffrage the Iemocratie party i,s lug ble to otisUin a respectable majority in Con Teas. ard in elected a President, i uai party never baa, since the war, been ustaiued by an honest majority of the vote of the American tnr.u t-.ii. , bout Hi Fedaral Eltiqn bilTwfci passed the House Wednesday being un constitutional ! The bill iwpi oe that the Democratic, members paint it, anJ yetLe constitutional, j'ist and fair, hen compared with the methods exer cised by the party op,'twing it in order to sustain a "solid South." The bill as it passed the House prac tically endeavors tosee tliat every Amer ican voter in a national election shall find the ballot box free, the process peaceful and the result honest. It is proposed to do this by law, and the law will I onfoiced. Its opponents say it cannot be. The same thing was said with reiect to President Lincoln's poli cy for suppressing Uis slave-holders' re bellion. Nearly a quarter of a century of unbroken Republican supremacy and consequent National prosperity a pros perity unparalleled is the historic an swer to those pygmies of howling parti san clacquers. The government that cannot en'orc the laws i&d by a ma jority of tLe representatives of the people is indeed feeble and impotent, l ne op nonents of this measure have claimed that the Stat should perform these functions, but they have utterly ignored tbe fact that the States have failed to exercise this power and joined the con spiracy of minority rnle. Every true Republican will rejoice at the action oi the House. ireat credit is due tue co hesive liepublican majority which, in ppite of some defection and of assaults within its ranks, was able to carry the day for a free, fair and honest count Discipunk and leadership have their reward. The Republicans of the House have accomplished magnificent work, which it was hardly believed they could jiossibly accomplish within a single ses sion. Fraud in a score of districts had made the majority so scanty that at the outset it was questioned w hether it could hold the quorum necessary for the pas- wiire of anv disputed bill. Democrats of large experience publicly boasted that they were organized to filibuster a year if necessary, but that frauds in returns should not be righted, and no Tariff bill or Flection bill should be passed. The.-e threats helped Republican discipline. Leaders of sagacity and power were se lected, Mr. Reed in the chair, Mr. Mc Kinley on the floor, and others for im portant committees. Six months of work have given the country a complete and long needed reform of the rules, so that the tyranny of the minority no longer exists, and the majority intrusted by the people with responsibility can perform its duties : iust decisions as to a number of contested scabs, so that the men actu ally chosen by the people are now mak ing the laws ; the bravest and most statesmanlike Tariff iill ever passed by the Houne; a Silvei bill which would expand the currency largely and yet with safety; and finally, the admirable Flection bill which passed last week in spite of a minority at once foolish and frantic. i No such work had been done by any other legislative body for many years The modern collapse of parliamentary methods has made lawmaking well-nigh imiiossible in fireat Britain or France, but the American House has solved the seemingly insoluble problem by a few changes of the rules. Men made shame less by partisan frenzy talk of dictator ship, but the fact is plain to all that the new rules give absolutely no power to the Speaker unless he is sustained by a majority in the House, With a splendid disci pi rue, for which nothing but high patriotic purpose can account, Republi can Representatives have sustained their leaders in all these, measures, even though some of theui have had the strongest possible motives for desiring different action from that upon which the uisjority decided. Every Republi can supported the change in the rule?,, every Republican but one in the House Mipported the T;iriff bill, every Republi can but seven supported the Silver bill, and out of a hundred anil seventy-three Republican members of the Home only two voted agairst the Flection bill. These votes proved not only the disci pline of tbe Republicans, but the fact that sagacious leadership had first fram ed measures w hich a clear majority of the House was prepared to support. Large legislative bodies are usually hard to manage. But in the Senate only one of these great measures has been touched, and on that one a minority of Republicans joined with the Democrats for free silver coinage. The Tariff bill waits, and tbe Flection bill has still to be considered, and yet the Senate has not so reformed its methods that the majority has any power to control business or to reach a vote on any question. But the same wise leadership and patriotic feel ing in the Senate may yet enable that body to share wi:h the House the honor of the iiiost useful session on record, anil secure final action on all these great measures in accord with the earned w itdies of the Republican party. It is interesting to observe how labor iously the opponents of the Republican policy have cheated tkemwlves by false reports about the wishes of Republican members. At the ontnet it was solemnly predicted that there were a great many Republicans who would never sustain "Speaker Reed's revolutionary rules," but every one of them voted for the rules f aforesaid. Then for months there were printed almost daily in Free-Trade papers accounts of many Republicans who would never support the McKinley bill, but the "many" dwindled to one. It was the open boast of tue free-coinage men in the House that they would beat the Silver bill of the Republican caucus. But they have tried twice and failed. Down to the very close of tbe voting self-cheated Democrats reckoned upon the support of a score or more Republicans in defeating Uie Election bill, and they are raging about their disappointment still. Next, the same stories are told about the action of Republican in tbe Senate, and by Democrats and Fre T.Jers are gener ally believed But tbe Republicans of tbe Nation do not expect to have cause r indignation in the conduct of those to whom tJy bve intrusted the grave responsibility and bi'h honor or the Senatorship. I'tobttbl? iemQcratic re port only iiMHin more Itenuocratic self deception. A'. Trilntnt. Tins is what the Pblladeljnbia 7iv TiLyraph, the Independent liopublican paper which supported Pattiaon so vig. orously in 1SS2, say of the Republican prospect now : Altogether the ticket is one which in its pemoual and io!iticI character is wholly unassailable, ahd there is no reason to doi-bt that it will poll practically the full Republi can vote of the Mite. Of course, there is more or lew feeling in certain quarUirs, par ticularly in ttie western (lart of the State, but this will soon pass away. The Republi can patty in that section is founded on a rock, and cannot be shaken by personal pique. Throughout the .State the Upi.i.I.H. can party to-day is in the best possible trim w.m.mg mis uwitie as easily as it did that of 'w or that of W. The ien.r.1 thusiasni and ,tood fceling at Harrisburg plainly showed this. I'nder tSenator Ie!ania!r'a leadership the people will be stir re, I un tn K. of theirdiity.and with efti. ient manap-ment or the details of the canvass the only ques tion will be the sire of the Reuuhli. n ma- jonty. lem.ieratic hallucinations to the r..n. Irary mm itlistandinir. Thi.i.M i? ..,i.u late, and this is sure to l a Republican year fr,e people, therefore, are to be con prainlated un the aturanee of a State administration during the rxt four vear loat will b eoual to lU highest demand in every respect. PRESS COMMENTS. From the We Chester Record. Mr. IV.tison :s Mr. Cleveland' caimiuate and represents all tli.it the ex-I'resideul sig- tiilie. From Uif ScTnuton Rri'uMlcan. The Humiliation ot' Senator Delamater for iovenior was tue uee a"" uuiimiiun action of a niajorty of the 204 delegates of that body. The delegate? were, in the main, ntelligent, conscientous' hep'iuucans who respected what they believed to ce tne wishes of their constituents a:il tue in terests of the party. From the X. Y. Fresa. When the old s.Idiers were oboerving Decoration Day in lsrt Jrover Cleveland, then President, went afishing. hen ine Bourbon Democrats' were unveiling the monument to Thomas A. Hetiilricis on Tuesday G rover Cleveland, ex-President, and Hendrick's fellow ticket man, went afislmig. He is at least impartial in his discourtesy and impropriety. From the Pblladelphl Press. Postmaster and Editor B. F. Meyers, of Harrinburg, that dolightful old dyed-in-the-wool Bourbon, who was one of Mr. Wal lace's warmest supporters at Scranton, has pot his second wind now and has come out for Pattison. His eloquent editorial silence on the day following the nomination is an indication that a good deal of the harmony in the Democratic party this year will be promoted with a club. From the UreeDftburg The pegs upon which the Democrat hung their hopes of electing Pattison this fall have about all fallen out. The thousands of kickers and bolters of whom so much was heard before and immediately after the nomination of Delamater have dwindled to corporal's guard. Defections from the Republican ranks will be more tlian ollset by the votes of Democrats who will take revenge for the defeat of the Democrat, Wal lace, by refusing to support the mugwump, Patlison. From the Altona Tribune. Our Democratic friends will fight a losing campaign from the start. Their ticket was stronger yesterday than it is to-day ; it is stronger to-day than it will be to-morrow. When the votes are counted in NoveiiilK-r it will be discovered that the Republicans of Pennsylvania have pretty generally voted for their own candidates. Much as tliey re- sjiectMr. Pittison they dou't mean to give the old Bourbon Democratic party a new ease of power. Republican principles suit them and they will give their ballots to the candidates who represent those principles. That is the situation in a nutshell. From the Beaver Time. The Republican Slate Convention did up its work at llarrisburg in short and particu lar metre. As had been forsecn, with rea sonable certainty, fur weeks past, Mr. Dela mater, of Crawford comity, was made the nominee on the second ballot. His lead on the first ballot was so marked over Gen. Hasting!", his chief competitor, and the second choice of many of the counties, that his speedy nomination was certain and in evitable. Of course the cry is raised, and still kept up. that he was nominated by Juay influences. Had he been defeated, and Gen. Hasting orex-Gov. Stone nominated in his stead, the cry would have been the same. His strong plea was, that his section of the State had never had a Governor ; and by his pluck and untiring energy, gathered in dele gates while his competitors were asleep. Scott' Mugwump Canditate. From the Kew York Press. William L. Scott's Mugwump candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania, Robert K. Pattison, received the Democratic nomina tion for that office yesterday in the Scranton convention. Pattison is what Dr. Halstead called Campbell, of Ohio ; not merely an ac cident, but a sort of anecdote. He is a rem iniscence of the tidal vaveof when he and Cleveland and Butler were made Gov ernors of their respective States by the Mur wump skirmish that preceded the battle of 18S2. He is a cold, narrowminded, cross grained young man, whose career as Govern or of Pennsylvania was dominated almost entirely by that unscrupulous, scheming and artful Democratic politician, LawisC. Cassi dy, who had been associated with the worst period of Philadelphia olitics, and whom Pattison appointed Attorney General of the State in defiance of a tempest of indignant protests from reputable citizens of all par lies. For all that, such.successas did attend his administration was largely due to Lew Cassidy a shrewdness. Casjidy is now dead, but tbe mediocre Pattison has another lmder in the jiersou of ex Congressman William I.. Scott, of Krie, Scott Haven, and Spring Valley ; the same Soott who jaid. " We (capitalists) can con trol the workingmen only so long as he eats up to-day what heearus to-morrow." His nomination will fall like a cloud burst of ice water Ukjii the Democratic workers all over tlie Keystone State, whose hearts beat warmly for Wallace and a straight Democratic ticket, with no mug wumpery in it. Tattison was elected in 'S2 only because fjrty-five thousand Republi cans voted fur the independent ticket, headed by Stewart, and nouie thousands more voted directly for him. But they all got back into line in 1RH4. when Blaine's magnificent ma jority of 81,0rt0 w as rolled up, and they have mostly remained there ever since. The actual strength of the Republican op position to Senator ljuay himself was tested in lis,), when, in a light vote, he w as elect ed State Treasurer by about 4".K)0, or the same majority as that given to Governor Beaver a year later. ' The (?pnblican ma jority on county tickets in 843 was about (il.lfiOor IH.UisJ more. 1 he Stale gave Har rison .l,i-2 over Cleveland in IH.H.S, and Slate Treasurer Coyer last year carried it by flli,!l.'(l, which is very near the usual majori ty in an off year. Allowing, therefore, for the lrt.uw anli-tjuay vote indiiiated by the election of U looks a if Scott's friend Pattison would I elected to stay in the peaceful kbades of Philadelphia by about 4.oi0 majority for George Wallace Djlaina ter. Murder Will Out. St. Joseph, Mo., July C Joseph Tnbble, whose residence is on a plantation in the Slate of Mississippi, was arrested at an early hour this morning at Wathena, a little town across the river from St. Joseph and in the State of Kansas. Tribble was a resident of Wathenia 20 years ago, at the time when the bonier ruttians and the bushwhackers run almost everything on the Kansas and Mis souri i;ltx of the river. It was during these times in the year 1901 that Tribble, who sympathized with the Confederate cause, murdered Thomas Kin caid, who was a Northern syruthizer, and who at tbe time was preparing to enlist in the L'nion army. Immediately after the murder, on account of the feud then exist ing between Missourians and Kansana, Tribble made his eat ape. going to Mississippi, where iieeniistetj "0 the Confederate army and se rytd as a private until lee surren uW. After tii war he settled down on a Missis sippi plantation, was married and now has in Mississippi wife and three children. lie had never visited his old home until the first day of the present month, when he came to St. Joe, then went to see friends in a little town 10 miles uorth of here, and on the Fourth attended a celebration. He had no idea that any ol his old ac quaintance vot,U Rjooguiye bi?, but they did, and his arrest followed. The tuardef was committed wiih a butaher knife in the month of September, lAil, and, curious to say, the identical knife was found on -his pereon when arrested. Tribble is now in jail at Troy, Kan. Died With a Body of Bone. Cosoosn. Mass., July 3. James Melvin, a war veteran, portions of whose boly had be come ossified within a few years, and for whom a pension of J100 a month specially paosed Congress last month, died todiy. His suffering tor several years have been excruciating, and his case attracted wideat-tmtion. At Dunbar's Burning Mine. rrniit Pa.. July 2. The work of smoth ering or putting out the firo in the Hill Farm Mine has com inrnrcd. 1 he mine can i a. 1.1 .nJ an ff.rt is being made tosuiotli- er the flumes. It is thought there is o..iy oneway in which the property will te o. any use aeain. That is xo sum up iuC o...u- . i- r.. - r.. ing portion in walls ul nnck. ijr " n it in this manner part oi me ... ... never heeri reached will be within reach. The Coroner's inquest over the bodies of the two men brought out of the slope will la-gin Monday. It will be one of the most important ever held in this district. It will be the aim of the Coroner to try and tet the entire work done from the fir-t. What is most needed here now is relief for the twen iv ine wi,loi ami seven! v seven orphans of the victims of the explosion. Money is needed badly, as there is mucn suiienng. A telegram to the Pittsburgh Commercial n,ke!le of this morning from Dunbar says : Dunbar is enshrouded in gloom to-nigbt, all hope of lecovering the bodies of the entomb ed miners having been tiven up. Whether alive or dead before their fate was definitely learntd to day, when the exploring party found fiamw raging in the place where the men evidently sought refuge after the ex plosion, all the bodies have no doubt been burned to ashes long ere this. To-night widows and orphans, mothers and sweet hearts morn their loss and will not be com forted. The first reverse was met when the test of air was made. The atmosphere in the burn ing mine was found to contain A) per cent, of fire damp, as well as much smoke. The possibility of any one living in such a plate can be imagined when it is known that live sixths of 1 r cent, of fire damp will kill a human being who breathes it. The men had but eleven feet of coal to cut away. Re fore their willing tools the barrier of coal almost melted. After an entrance bed been effected the miners withdrew to prepare fur the momentous exploration. Karly this morning the exploring party was formed. At the face it wastuet by great clouds of smoke, which heat them back after traveling a few feet into the Hill Farm en trance. At 11 o'clock this party returned from the face. They had not y el given up all bojie. The fan at the mouth or the Mahoning mine was increased in speed. A current of air was forced into the mine at a great velocity. The smoke at the Hill Farm mine increased and changed in color, show ing that the fan was doing the task required of it. For two hours and a half the Mahon ing mine was abandoned. At 2:30 o'clock the exploring party forji- ed and started down into the pit. The con fidence of the men had been shaken by the first failure and they carried with thera sev eral coffins At the foot of the msnway a line of sentries was formed. Along the nar row passageway the Inectors crouched ready for the signal to advance or retreat. T'p at the opening was a little group who had in their hands the signal ropes, which connected them with the men who were to go in advance. There was little time wasted in idle talk. Inspector Frank Keighley, Hugh Dolan, a pit boss, and Secretary Watchorn were selected to invade the realms where death held undisputablc sway. Tyiiu? the life lines about their waists they plunged into the hell. The air was heavy, and the smoky air could scarcely be breathed. The men climbed over gob piles and through vacant rooms, and not onesight or sound of life rewarded them. When tbey reached the first room, where Dan Smith and Jack Mitchell had worked, it was found vacant, not even a dinner-bucket or a too! beine left as evidence of the whereabouts of the men. The men then entered the drain room. It was expected that the men would be found here huddled in a gang. This was the room the rescuing party had aimed for and missed. There were two places at the end of the room where James and Thomas McLsry had worked. Nothing was in the room. The drain was filled with water over two feet deep. Kvery nook and cranny was examined to find some clue of the workers, but the search was fruit less. The men had lived after tVe explosion and had gathered up all their belongings be fore they started for the surface of the earth. There were no milages showing that the men had expected to escape. With sinking hearts the tiio started for the lower part of the mine where the butt heading is located The journey was accomplished under the most trying circumstance. This was the room in which John Coke worked. It was here the dinner bucket of l'atruk Devlin was found. Besides it lay his blue blouse. The bucket was partially emptied. It con tained only bread and ham. A piece of bread was partly eaten. The miner had evidently been partaking of his humble rpast when the accident occurred. He had thrown his bread hack in the pail, closed the lid, and rushed to his death. The contents of the puil were danined and smelled strongly of fire damp. Klated by their meager success the men renewed their explorations. In the passage leading to the room was found the body of a mule. It was neither burned nor cut. The body had been bursted by the gases o decomposition. The mule had lived after the explosion, but not many hours. In the train to which the ani mal was attached were six empty and four loaded cars. The stench was almost over powering. There was hut six inches of a passageway between the dead animal's body and the mine wall. Through this the men had to force their way. They came to a line of brattice one hun dred feet long, Not one whiff of smoke pierced the heavy canvass, but back of it raged an awful lire, the heat was intense. They left a chalk line on the wall and re turned. Tbey then started in a new direc. tion. The length of the signal-line had ex pired. Tying their end to a post the three started down toward the main slope, where they proceeded slowly. Keighley was in advanpe, Donavan next, holding to him, and Watchorn brought up the rear, clinging to Donavan. When within a few feet of the fire and thirty feet of where ttie men lay they tuioouiitered fire-damp. The stench from the subterranean charnel-house was sickening. The roar of the (tames drowned all conversational sounds. The men clung together for an Instant, and in their secret souls prayed God to spare them from such a frightful death. Then the gas commenced to act upon their lungs. Tbe lights in the clenny lamps dickered and died out. Turning the men started to re trace their steps. Watchorn was in the lead. On and on they staggered and stumbled away from the polluted air. Watchorn lost his way and started down an entry, carrying with bim bis two companions. " This way, this way," whispered Donovan as he pulled Watchorn back after a few steps. Starting anew the meu rushed on back to the safety line and back to life. Panting and tremb ling from exhaustion the three men huddled together. Mr. Watchorn said the pressure of his fingers on that clothes-line gave him great er pleasure than he ever experienced in his life, while the air which he breathed, bur dened with the stench from the decaying animal, seemed sweeter to his lungs than tbe perfumes of a garden of roses. Across the fiery waste the odor of burning human flesh again saluted their nostrils. Then and not till then did these men forsake all hope. Tbe men retraced their steps to the drain room. ' In an adjoining room they f und the bucket and blouse of Jack Mitch ell. l contained his dinner. His blouse lay nearby. His picks an.! shovels lay at flip face of tbe coal. He had evidently dropped them and hurried with i isconijun ion for the slops, The explorers traveled over two miles through the Hill Farm Mine. Five work ing rooms and niue places had been visited. In some places they had to crawl on their stomachs over falls and piles of gob. Their only reward was the finding the body of a mule, two dinner pails and two blonses. Everywhere the air was foul. Before this time to morrow night the spots which they viwled will be a raging fire. The men could dn no more. With sinking hearts they slowly made their way back to the Maho ning mine opening, where their companions were anxiously awaiting them, and told tbe result of their search. After the exhaustive search of the three men they agreed that the task of securing the bodies of the entombed miners was hope less, and at a meeting held later the search was abandoned. Attention will now be turned to fighting the fire in tbe mine. THE SAME OLD TICKET. Pattison and Black Once Mora. The Democratic State Convention met in Scranton on Wednesday. Eckley B. Coxe was chosen temorary chairman and Win. F. Harity permanent chairman. t Robert K. Pattison was nominated for Governor on the first ballot, receiving 200 votes to 132 for Wallace, 12 for Robert K Wright, of Lehigh; 13 for W. V. Hensel.of Lancaster, and 10 for Black, of York. Cbanncey F. Black was nominated for Lieutenant Governor, and William A. Bar clay, of Allegheny county, for Secretary of Internal Affairs. The platform declares among other things for ballot and tariff reforms, and the enforce ment of the law requiring that the surplus in the State Treasury shall be invested in State or Vnited States bonds ; invites com parison between the administration of G ro ver Cleveland and the present Federal ad ministration ; "accepts the issue of Quayism as now tendered by the Republican State Committee and Convention," and arraigns tbe liepublican party for usurpation of pow er in the administration of the Federal gov ernment. The Democratic State Committee met af ter tbe adjournment of the convention, ac cepted Chairman Kisner's resignation and unanimously elected William F. Harrity as successor. WALLACE ON HIS EAR. , The Wallace feeling is: "Well, they have nominated Pattison, now let's see thera elect him." This sentiment was very well ex pressed by Benjamin F.Meyers, the Wallace leader of llarrisburg. An acquaintance re marked to him, r-Well, Wallace will support Pattison." Meyers Replied, "Wallace is a Democrat, but- he has a good deal of busi ness to attend to in Europe." He Cut Her Throat. Altooxa, Pa., July G. Shortly after" o'clock this morning the inhabitants of Gal litzin, a mining town seveu miles distant from this city, were thrown into great ex vi'enient by the report that a young man bau cruelly murdered a young girl, and shortly afterward an oflicer came to town with Harry Marsh, aged 27 years and a coal minor by occupation, a prisoner. Marsh had been met by two men on the outskirts of the town and confessed that he had mur dered Clara Jones, a domestic in the hotel at Gallitzin. As near as can lie learned, Marsh had been paying attention to the young woman and it is said that his advances were not kindly received by her, and he having been drink ing heavily for some time, made himself re pulsive to her. Last evening Marsh called at the hotel and was refused admittance, the young girl having told the proprietor that Marsh's attentions were distasteful to her. About 7 o'clock this morning Marsh and Miss Jones were seen going in the direction of Amalercy, where the girl's mother lived and it was afterward learned that they were going to get the mother's consent to their marriage. It is suppose. 1 that the quarrel being renewed on the way, Marsh determin ed to kill tbe girl. Her throat was cut from ear to ear with a razor and she was left ly ing for dead. Marsh then came back to town, confessed that be bad killed tbe girl, and was taken to jail at Ebensburg to await the result of her injuries. The young woman was found shortly af terward with a terrible gash in ber throat and her windpipe severed. She was bleed ing profusely and was given medical as sistance. It is thought that she cannot pos sibly recover. j . Hi Nerve Failed Him at the Rapids Niaoba Fills, July 4. John Lincoln Soules made an attempt to swim the Whirl pool Rapids this afternoon, but unlike oth ers who have attempted this feat he only went a short distance in the wild waters of the narrow gorge before be was pulled ashore, much to his pleasure and before he got fairly into the rapids. It had been an nounced that Soules and Samuel Smith, of Lewiston, would have a race, but Smith backed out. The start was made at 3:15 p. m., from a point ou the Canadian shore short distance above the cantilever bridge. Soules wore a pair of trunks and a cork life- preserver, the same one that Campbell wore on his trip, September 15, lSS'J. It was with an apparently bold stroke that the swimmer struck out, but all who watched him were surprised that be did not make for midstream. Not one stioke did he take so as to be free from the treacherous rocks that lay submerged here anil there along the Ca nadian shore. At no time was be over for ty feet from the shore. He passed the first breaker in an upright position. The second breaker carried him in under, and for minute lie was out of sight. As be was ruthlessly hurled along down stream there appeared before him a huge rock, and just as he was about to be dashed against it he threw out his arms and shoved himself away from It. After he had passed another breaker he floated into an eddy behind rock and made for the shore, landing about fifty feet from the inclined railway on the Canada aide, and about 3oO feet below the railway susension bridge. After he had landed It was discovered that his left knee had been baoly injured by coming in cor. tact with a rock. The wound was bound up and he was taken to the American side. Soules was born in Dowagiac, Cass county, iju'h. He is unmarried and has brother, a butcher, Alfred Soules, in Chicago, and sister, Mrs. Mary Ladder, lu Rochester. A Reapportion merit. W AsuiJfOTOM, July ".Superintendent Porter has stated that the first, or rough, count of the population of the country may be completed by August J. This is all lhat is necessary for a reapportionment of Con gressmen among the several States, Wheth er the reapportionment will be made in time for the November elections Is a question. However it It thought that it cannot possi bly be done. A new apportionment passed by a Republican House and Senate, and ap proved by a Republican President, strik ing off 15 or 20 Representatives from districts now represented by Democrats, and adding 30 or 40 .new members to States deemed reliably Republican, It is hoped will give a steady working majority in the House for 10 years to come. A Juvenile Firebug Caught. Isdiasapous, Ind., July 4. For two or three weeks tbe police have been puzzled by Incendiary fires in the southern part of the city. Wednesday Antioch Church was mys teriously fired, and a little girl in the vicini ty said that she saw a five-year-old boy, Jobny Hampdon, running from the struct ure just as the flames burst ont. Investiga tion satisfied the police that the lad was the troublesome firebug. Just before the trial he confessed to setting tie church on fire, and said that he bad also fired the Excelsior works and Friek's livery stable. The only reason that he gave fr thus destroying the property was that he wanted to see the fire department bones run." A Courf Qarlng Jct. Wasuikotos. July fi. Count Maurice 8-ila, First Secretary to the French Legation at the peril f bit life, stopped a runaway horse attached lo a handsome cab to day on Madison Place, just in front of Secretary Blaine's residence, and prevented the ani mal from dashing into a crowd of people. He was knocked down, but held on to the reins. When picked up and taken to a neighboring bouse the physicians found that the Count's richt lea; was broken abnnt midway between the knee and thigh. Later be was removed to the Legation building, and. although suffering terribly to-nigbt, no erious consequence are feared. FOUR PERSONS DROWNED, Terrible End of a Pleasure Party at McKaesoort. The overturriinp of a skiff in the Youghio gheny river, causing the death of four per sons, was a tragedy that i.iih.I the Fourth of July to end in k'.o'uu at McKrtsrMrL At .1 ..dixit Friday al'ienioi Mr. and Mrs. Jtfhu Thompson and tb.-irtwo children F.lizA. aged 2 year, and an Infant in arms and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith with their two children Priseilla, a little girl, and Rjhert, ajied l. g,t into a large flat bottomed skitf for a row on the Youghio gheny. The Thompson and Smiths are neighlKirs. All went well for a short time. But when the larty was opiosite the foot of Eleventh s'reef, McKeesport. the stem of the skiff.ln which the women ami children were seated, gave way. Iu another moment the boat sank, and all its occupants were struggling in the water, which is quite deep at the point where the accident occurred. It was a time to try men's souls. The fathers, being expert swimmers, could t asily have saved themselves. But their first thought was for the helpless ones. Mrs, Thompson clung to her baby, and after a struggle her husband succeeded in getting her and the child ashore. Thompson was exhausted, but bis 2-year-old daughter was still in the water. Giving no thought to himself, he again plunged into the river. He struck out bravely for the place where his child had gone down, but it was too late. The little one had gone down for the last time. Realizing this, the father discovered too late that bis strength was gone, and, with a despairing cry, he sank under water, out of the sight of his wife who was watching and praying on the bank. Richard Smith met the fate of Thompson. He also saved his wife, and then plunged into the water again to rescue his little daughter, Priscilla. The little girl was drowiml before the father could reach her, and Smith, too weak to swim the river a second lime, was also drowned. Robert Smith, the boy, swam to the shore. The bodies were soon recovered and the Coroner notified. Thompson was a watch maker and Smith was employed at the Na tional Tube Works. Wholesale Horse Stealing. Si-okam Falls, Wash., July 4. Horse thieves have made a grand round up in eastern Washington and northern Idaho during the past few days. The method of their operations indicates they have a regu larly organized band, with a leader and numbers sufficient to cover a Urge area of country. Saturday and Sunday last they rendezvoused near this city and hastened away with 500 head of horses toward the British Columbia line, through tbe Flat Head Indian country, in northwestern Mon tana. A. L. Smith's ranch near this city was visited Sunday night and several fine animals were stolen. A Walla Walla farm er reports the loss of 50 head, which were traced to with a few miles of Spokane Falls. A large number of ranchers are here to- day organizing for pursuit of the thieves, but with little hope of success, as the vil lains have several hundred miles start. A small posse started last night under the direction of Deputy Marshal Warren. A battle is sure to occur if the pursuers over take the thieves. A Fearful Storm. Fa edo, N. P., July 7. About midnight last night a strong wind prevailed here, but no attention was paid to it until 2:o0 o'clock, when in a few nintites the citizens realized that a terrible toanado had veered down up on the city by the Red river, and left a birth mark that will be remembered in years to come. The storm demolished the Milwau kee and Manitoba freight houses, threw down the etectric light towers, destroyed the fronts of several blocks and demolished doz ens of smaller buildings. The saddest of all is the death of the en- tire family, consisting of the mother and 7 children of the late Captain McCarthy, which occurred at their residence. They had taken refuge in the cellar and In some manner were caught in the timbers of the falling building and crushed to death. The Northern Pacific passenger train No. 1 waa caught just as it was departing from Fargo and was toppled over into a ditch. No one was killed although a number were injured. Tbe passengers in the sleepers sue ceeded in dressing and saving their valu ables, although it was difficult in the dark. Tbe storm extended over northern Minne sota, and at Moorehead fully iJj.Ouo damage to property was done. 'Pike' Peak Painted Red. Colorado Sprinos, Col., July 5. One of the most novel exhibitions ever devised for the celebration of the Fourth of July was put on exhibition last evening. The origin ator of the idea is George W. Altemus, of Camden, N. J. Two barrels of kerosene and one of red fire were taken np to the summit of Pike's Peak with great effort yesterday, together with'a large supply of rockets and other fireworks. Last night at 8:30 o'clock a bonfire was built on the oil and powder and the Peak was brilliantly illuminated. The mountain had all the appearance of an enormous volcano vomiting forth immense columns of lire, and rockets shooting in all directions added to the effect. The illumin ations could be seen for 100 miles in all di rections. Idaho Now a State, WASHiN.iTOJt, July 3. The President sign ed the act for the admission of Idaho as a State of the Union at 10 o'clock this morn ing. Bojhe City, Idaho, July 3, The long look ed for- news of statehood was received here directly aftere the paaaage by the Senate of the admission bill. The people in all parts of the State are jubilant and are now cele brating. In Boise City, the permanent capi tut, all business waa suspended on receipt of the news, and general celebration was commenced. Delegate Dubois, chairman of the Republican State Committee, has tele graphed a call f r a meeting of the Republi can Slato Committee for the 15th iust. at this place. All Caused by Bees. Of wberkrcru, July 3. Henry Angle- miller, a well known fainter of near Mer- cersburg, slopped bis mowing machine near bis home this morning and went into the bouse for some articles. While he was away from the team a swarm of bees settled on the horses and stung thera so badly that thry started to run away. Mrs. George Mil ler, sister of Anglemiller, tried to check the horses, but was thrown in front of the mow ing knives. Both of her legs were cut off between the knee and ankle, and she will die. Angle miller went to the rescue of his sister, but was thrown under the machine and dangerously injured. Caught by the Old Card Bait. Beaver Falls, Pa., July 5. -Joseph Shan non, a wealthy farmer aged 63 years, was swindled out of 0O0 on Thursday by a roan named Harper and his confederate, who induced Shannon to pick out a card, and then told him he had won $'J000, but before the money would be paid over he must pro duce that amount to prove that be could have paid if he had lost. Shannon a ent to the bank and drew tle nwney, and let It get into the hands of the sharpers who fled. He Offers $,VJ00 for their apprehension. Sam Jones's Ravings. Wbkkliso. W. Vs.. Julv 5. Sam Jones talked to lO.OuO people at Moundsville yes terday at the opening of the Ohio Valley Temperance Assembly. The burden of his address was a bitter condemnation of the ministry of all churches, which he condemn ed as inefficient -and cowardly. Tbe high license ministers, be said, were doomed to hell, and they would not be five minutes in hell until the devil had saddles and bridles on thera drivinv them around abowimr them off. The bitterness of tbe address created a sensation. Revenge Years After. Nasti-ceit, Mass.. July 4 While the It-year-old daughter "f I S. Farnham was ou her way borne fiora a neighbors laat night she was beset and nearly drowned by a man who, 10 years ago, figured as a rejected suitor of the girl's nioturr. W. J. Appleby, the uiau alio is accused of commitiiiig the act. ruhd upon the young girl as she was strolling "ear ,u bore, threw a rope around ber and, drag ging her lo the surf, forced ber to deep wa ter and left Ler there to drown. But his supposed victim is an expert swimmer, and after a severe struggle manaisl to regain the shore. Fpon arriving home she told her story, and among other details says that as Appleby dragged her toward the water be exclaimed : " If I cannot have your mother's life I will have yours. " The authorities are after the assailant. Remarkable Work of Lightning. 'Jolubbia, S. C, July 4. A remarkable f:k ol lightning was observed near Martin's Point in Berkely county yesterday. A negro woman was sitting in her bouse with a two- Year-old child in ber lap. Her husband was standing on the opposite side of the room. A thunder storm was in progress and a stroke of lightning descended upon tbe house. The child was kistantly killed, its father severely, perhaps fatally shocked and the mother was not injured or even shocked by the stroke. The same bolt of lightning killed a workman in a field near by. A Love-Sick Lass' Suicide. Parkersbcsg, W. Ya., July 5. Leonora Vincent, a daughter of one of the wealthiest residents of Swift, O., committed suicide early this morning. Miss Vincent was en gaged to be married to a prominent young man, to whom her parents objected. Ijist night he called, and in a heated quarrel her father forbade him the house. The gir sided with her lover. When he left she walked up stairs, secured a revolver and blew her brains out. She was a popular belle, and the affair has caused a sensation. His Hand Blown Off. Stecbesvtlle, July 3. While conatnict ing a large fire cracker out of a piece of gas pie, this evening, Eddie Pickers was badly injured by a premature explosion. He was working in a garret, where be does a great deal of experimenting, and bad the cracker naerly finished, when it exploded, blowing off the left hand near the wrist, and making a severe wound on the right leg1.' A piece offas pipe was blown into the floor and all the windows broken. Confessed His Crime. Baltimore, July 7. Ex-State Treasurer Stevenson Archer this morning came into the Criminal Court in this city, plead guilty to the indictment charging with bim em bezzling State funds, and was sentenced by Judge Stewrrt to five years in the peniten tiary. Be Sure If you have made up your mind to buy Hood's Sarsaparllla do not be Induced ta take any other. A Boston l:uly, whose example is worthy Imitation, tells ber experience below: " In one store where I went to buy Hood's Sarsaparllla the clerk tried to Induce me bay their own instead of Hood's; be told me their' J would last longer; that I might take It on ten To Get days' trial; that if I did not like It I need not pay anything, etc But be eould not prevail on me to change. I told bim I had taken Hood's Sarsaparilla, knew what it was, was satisfied with it, and did not want any other. When I began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla I was feeling real miserable with dyspepsia, and so weak that at times I could hardly Hood's stand. I looked like a person In consump tion. Hood's Sarsaparilla did me so much good that I wonder at myself sometimes, and my friends frequently speak of It" Mua. Ella A. Goff, St Terrace Street, Boston. Sarsaparilla Sold by atl druKKbta. f 1 ; six for (a. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD a CO., ApoUieeariea, Lowell, luua. IOO Doses One Dollar m A SOLID DTE EL FENCE! MAUK or EXPANDED METAL urrtwTM:i. SOMETHING HEW. 'or Residences. Churchm. Ccmeterics, Frm GARDENS Gntw. Arbor., Window Guard., TreUton, Flre-wrtwr PLASTKUIMfl LATH, IMIOB ITS, tx. Write for Illustrated Catalogue: mailed fret; :entbal expanded metal co ll Water HI., PlflNburfrb, Pw. ' arJn atea keep lb Give aim of Uua paper 13. B. A SHORT ADVERTISEMENT On the Subject of WASH FABRICS. We have in progress a special sale of this class of Dry ixxK whicli is in most rguel and particularly suited to this hut weather, including : HUNTED CHAIXIS At Sc. 0c. 8c, 10c, av, fx, in larg est and choicest assortments f.ir selections. Anderson's 40c Quality Scotch Press Ginghanfci now 'J5c. One and (0c quality at 35c. SATUTE? 371 quality French 3atines at ic 35c " ' ' at l.V. 25c " " at U5c Figured Dimitys, fast colors, for Wash Dresses, SOc. WHITE GOODS. 27 inch Hemstitched India Linens, 15c For Children's Dresses. 40 Inch H. S. India Linens, with tucks above the hem, 4iv, (ic, 75c. Plain Nainsooks, 1-ic to 50c. UNSHRINKABLE FLANNELS. For Ladies' Outing Garments, lilouse Waists, Boys' Waists and Men's Negligee Shirts. A very lanre and elegant line of these Flannels at 35c 28 Inches wide and at G5c the very finest quality Unshrinkahle Flan nels, in very light weights for Sum ner DressesSliirts, etc, in handsome stripes and checks. CREAM WOOLENS For Seaside and Mountain wear.- Cream A'hatross. 3TJc, 5u, UV, " all. wool Caahmere 3Ue, ile 7.V-, $1.00. " i'Qting Flannels, (Xie, 75c, $1 tnj. M Serges, 8.1 cents. " Tasso cloths, $1.00. " Lansdownes, $1.25. A most comprehensive assortment of La dies', Men's and Children's Furnishings of every kind and at money saving prices on every item. Write onr Mail Order Department for par ticulars, or for samples, or for copy of our Illustrated Catalogue and Fashion Journal. BoggS' & Buhl, 115,117119, an.l 121 Federal Street, ALLEGHENY, Pa. - TS-S BET 3M "HE7ER m IT AGAIS!" Was doiiltlc.-3 Uie advice riv en to Geortre Washington at the episode of the cherry tri'e " MEYER BO IT AGAIK!" Is our advice to yoa, if you have been paying too much for votir Furniture. . " We Love to be Liberal, but Hate to Lose what we G;,. A GRAND CHANCE! For buyers to obtain Furniture of all kinds, at little more than ma facturers' prices. If you have lieen passing our store without gettins o prices, vner Jo it n.rai. for you lo?e every time you do it. " COFEOTII&CO., Louther's Drug Store, Main Street, Somerset, Pa. Tliis Model Drug Store is Rapidly Becoming aGre:: Favorite with People in Search of FRESH AND PURE DRUGS, Medicines, Bye Stuffs, Sponges, Trusa Supporters, Toilet Articles, Perfumes, &c. THK DOCTOa GIVE8 PERSONAL ATTENTION TO THE COMPOCNDING OF rujsns HuMi'ipus i amy hi GREAT CARE BEISO 7USXV TO VSE 0.LT FRESH ASD PURE ARUCLES SPECTACLES, EYE-GLASSES. And a Full Line of Optical Goods always on hand. Froc such a large assortment all can be suited. THE flHEST BHAHDS OF CIGABS Always on hand. It is always a pleasure to display our "OoZ-. to intending purchasers, whether they buy from us or elsewhere. J. M. LOUTHER, M. D. MAIN STREET - - SOMERSET. PA. John Thomas & :: MA.MMOTPI STORES, ::::::: 240 to 248 Main Street, Is one of the wonders of Johnstown, with its Several Department?. L Department "A" are Dry Goods In s. Department " B," Boots and Shoes. lV Department " C," Carpets. In Department " D," Clothing, Hats, and Furnishing Goods.' Department " E," Groceries. Department " F," Feed. For Good Goofs, Cheap Gocds, and Seasonable Goods,'; They cannot be excelled. An examination will convince the menf " doubting Thomas " of Somerset County. f 8tIE.VI)(lUAltTER.S FOR COI XTRY PRODl'CK. THE COMPANY' STORE, At the Cli Stand, is Carres its Usuallj Largs aid Varied Stcck of I GrEiSTEnjLj merchandise:! Buyers Can Fin J all they may CLOTHING, HATS, DRY COOPS, NOTIONS. ? QUEENSWARE, GROCERIES, BOOTS AND SII0l AND AM. OF THE FIRST tjt'AMTY, AND AT BKASONABI.K PUK E-i. SATISFACTION ALWAYS GUARANTEED. . WOOD, MORRELL & QO. ESTA fi L.I S 1 1 EI j 117. FRANK W. HAY & SONS, Manufacturers and Dealers in Ranges, Stove?, Tinware, Hollow-ware,' Refrigerator?. Ice Cream Freezer, Water Coolers, Clothes Wrini:erj "Washing Machine?, and a full line of HOUSE - - FURNISHING - - GOODS Oven Door?, Cellar "Window?. Grating, Smoke Stack?, Engine Breeching, and all kind.- of Sheet Metal Work, to order Dairy Sjjlie? of all Kind?, Shipping, Delivery and Cream Cans. (CREAMERIES REPAIRED No. 78 Franklin St., Xear Poi.office. Johnstown, Pa. IN OUR NEW STORE! WE OFFER SOME SPECIAL BARGAINS IS Chalies, Cinghacs, Satines, Cutirg Cloths. TJThita Goads, Black and Colored Heariatas. Sic AT THE T3SET LOWEST Laoo Curtains, from 50 Cents a pair up. Bwuletl Wpajx", as low a 51 .V). GEORGE KEIPER. KllWT NATIONAL BANK. JohmAtw, 1 SOMERSET MARKETS. Corrected WMkly by COOK A IEER1TS, OCALMta is Choice Groceries, Flour & Feed. Apple, dried, flft Apple Htitler, gal Ik-Hua. V tu . Bran, 4 ltiulba Butler, (roll, ) t Buck w bent, bu Beeswax yt t ." Bacon. (Sugar-cured llama) ft.. (Cuuulnr hauu) .. ' (Shoulifem) V (WiUea) fi Corn, (ear) V h " (shelled) ft bu Meal i it'7ie Ir.'mraj ijo S"c it .jOc !".'""..'ie JOxl-Je " x"e ............. 6 c 4.'0otte Vie 4 M Oi l H W) ..7:c ...lne II an.ti-js :.-.. . Srt"c ndk!ie .5umm4c 1 24 . tl JO M 40 $1 M .. 9ta!e sa II Ml w - -5 Chop, coru aud oat, V 100 lba...... ii rye, y iuu iua Kus i- . Klour, Roller Provus, fl bbl . " Vlenua. V bbl .. " Uoldt-n Patent, V Flaxaeed. V bu . Ijird. Tf Middlings. lUOlba Oata. Vim rNjtatoea, fiba Peai-hen. urted. Tf m Rve, bu silt,(Sol.bbl ..- " (Orouud Alum) ft aaek.MH. " (Asbtou) full aw k H " Sugar, yellow, ... .. ' white. ft Tallow, ft ttarww bhl " Mck Wheat v bn... Pittsburgh Female College AND CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC. AImx Sc hools of Eli init ton and Tine Art". Full eoiirae of -uur leading to graduation in eaeh. Alxi, veeial course of Mu.1t. ( eutral. lleailli tuL Z 'iVaebara. .Superior 'home cutnfuru and rare Ut young iadiex, Thirty-sixth Tearopena September Kh. Katea moderate, gend f'jr rata, loeue and full Information to the President, 7-2-lm. Rn. A. H. N0RCB0SS Pirn rgh. SOMERSET, PENN'A. t Need in the SeTer! Departments of Pennsylvania College vtMEN. Situated in ats-antifnl park, on a rtiromari'li p'.al'-xu. In the suburb of Pittlu rjj, a' from city Doi and dat. rnurp-d lor h'' ty and braltkfiiinem. Kxrelleiu uwilitir fnru study of Natural St-ient-es. t'lamf-s and Mitr nutt;tA in abort, every deportment well .iti" pad. Season opens Vpte)iiber lo, vfl. Karly plia'ation ia d.rrabie. For rmUilnt and ! ther information applv to M:ss lUi.r s k. Piu- TBI; a t1. frtaideiit, I'llb-burh i Ka.-l r.nd.. Pa. jTUJtlFetlW. ARTSTIC JOB PRINim A SPECIALTY. HARRY M. BENSHOFF. j MANUFACTURING STATIONER I AND - BLANK BOOK MAKEK f HANNAM BLOCK, J O H N STOW N . PA . 1 w. s. bell: 431 Wood St, Pittas11 : tai.ee in ' Photographic Si-ppl " View Cameras. Iete tve Caioe.-as. and tM -famous K DOAK . seven diflereut atyk Jnl-C-im. Send liar Catalogue, fn- LUMBER IS ADVANCING ! I saw mills, steam exuink 8hinl1 hay i-p.rssk. ' If you want tint i-utsaSAW VII.L. tend Cdarne and special price lo introduce in ? section to A a EAKQCS AR CO; (Limited.) York, P j Sonsl s' jre F iurti. fit!11 Tt .-r Ik Ti A inte -J f
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers